|. CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY 620 CONGRESS, IsT SESSION MAY, 181t win La Class. 2D No. D4 \ nea Se Adulte College. NG. LIBRARY REGULATIONS. 1. The use of the Library is free: (a) To all students in attendance at College. (6) To alumni of the College. (¢) To persons officially connected with the College, and to members of their families. 2. Members of the third- and fourth-year classes can have out but three, and other persons but one, book at a time, except by permission of the Librarian. 3. Books must not be kept out more than two weeks. 4. Any one desiring a book that is drawn may record, in the Library, his name and the title of the book wanted, and he will be entitled to the book as soon as returned. If there is no application on record, a book may be once redrawn by the person returning it. The request for renewal must be made before the expiration of the first two weeks. 5. A fine of two cents a day shall be paid on each volume which is not returned according to the provi- sions of the preceding rules. Any one failing to return a book within one week after due will be deprived of the privilege of drawing books from the Library. Instruct- ors needing books for class work, and postgraduate stu- dents upon recommendation of the instructor, may, by arrangement with the Librarian, draw such books for a term. 6. Volumes marked ‘‘Boox OF REFERENCE’’ cannot be drawn. 7. Books, when returned, are to be left upon the Li- brarian’s desk. 8. All damage to books must be reported to the Li- brarian. Ne YA Id Wl IAN DN NOH KALTEN I Se rR SE a 4 >F LA J od LN NX Sigh ey \ Rl Hk a ——————————— SO —— ————— I I TN A I RT EE rrr Tm I eT, T= ANC), NOTES ANC), A vacancy exists in the Senate caused by the death of Hon. Charles J. Hughes, jr., who died January 11, 1911, the Legislature of Colorado failing to elect his successor. Two vacancies exist in the House of Representatives—one in the secand district of Pennsylvania and the other in the ninth district of Iowa. Hon. William P. Frye, Senator from Maine, resigned the office of President pro tempore of the Senate April 27, 1911. Hon. Asle J. Gronna, Representative at large from North. Dakota, was elected by the Legislature of North Dakota to succeed Hon. William E. Purcell, appointed to succeed Hon. Fountain I. Thompson, resigned, and resigned his seat in the House of- Representatives to enter the Senate February 2, 1911. Hon. ILafayette Young, who was appointed United States Senator from Iowa November 12, 1910, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Jonathan P. Dol- liver, was succeeded by Hon. William S. Kenyon, who was elected a United States Senator by the Iowa Legislature April 12, 1911. Hon. Walter I. Smith, Representative from the ninth district of Towa, having been appointed judge of the eighth judicial circuit, resigned his seat March 15, 1911. All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest unless otherwise indi- cated. III JANUARY JULY Sun| M [Tu |W | Th| F |Sat||Sun| M | Tu| W | Th| F |Sat Pojgeimigiler a toils gil 1 gl ool rz fra lial 2 31 4-28] 6] 7] 3 151617 |18|19|20| 21 | 910 |11|12|13|14 | 15 22123 |24|25|26|27|28|/16|17|18|19| 2021 | 22 29 | 30 | 31 23 | 24 |25|26|27| 2829 30 | 31 FEBRUARY AUGUST vol sl 1] 24 31 4] 5 st -6il 7 a] onfi10 atl 6 lat 8:09: 105) 115-12 121314 |15|16 | 17 | 18|/ 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 19|20]21|22|23|24|25||20|21|22]23|24]|25]26 26 | 27 | 28 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 MARCH SEPTEMBER 1] 2 34 1] 2 sie zis iial0fiall sf al 50 6 78 9 12131415 |16 | 17 |18| 10 [11 |12|13| 14 | 15] 16 192021 |22|23|24 25 17 |18|19|20 | 21 [-22 | 23 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 2829 |30 APRIL OCTOBER : 1-12-34] 806 7 gil adiva lsd igor ilag lle gt Foiled sta [3 nd 9|10|11|12]|13|14|15||15|16|17|18|19| 20 | 21 16 | 17118 |19| 20 | 21 | 22/22 | 23 | 24 |25| 26 | 27 | 28 23 | 24 | 25|26|27|28|291 2930] 31 30 MAY NOVEMBER 123 45] 6 1 20 3/4 vis] ol doris] 5 6( 71 8] 910711 1415 161718 |19|20( 12 | 13 | 14 |15| 16 | 17 |-18 212212324 25|26|27|19|20|21|22|23|24]25 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 26 | 27 | 282930 JUNE DECEMBER v2 3 12 dis el gl sto lao] shal 56 7 89 111121314 |15|16 | 17||10 | 11 |12|13| 14] 15 | 16 1819 |20|21|22|23|24|/17|18|19|20| 21] 22 | 23 25126 | 2728) 2930 24 | 25 | 2627] 2829 |30 31 Iv JANUARY JULY Sun| M | Tu| W |Th| F |Sat||Sun| M | Tu| W | Th| F |Sat 1) 2s arse tf 2d soa] 5) 6 yl el olor lath 70 83 910111213 14 |15|16 | 17 | 18 |19 | 20 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 21 | 22|23|24|25|26|27| 21 |22|23|24] 25] 26] 27 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 FEBRUARY AUGUST tlizis ¥l2ls gil sl elan li sloiqgell « 50 gl 71 38] 910 111213 |14|15|16| 17/11] 12|13| 14] 15 | 16 | 17 18 [19 | 20 [21 | 22 | 23 | 24/18 |19|20 | 21] 22 | 23 | 24 2526 | 27 | 2829 25 |26|27|28|29|30]31 MARCH SEPTEMBER iol gl cals l gl 7 Std] 5) 6] 7] 2 olf s| 9f10l11]|12]13]14 10 | 11 | 12 (13.14 | 15 | 16| 15|16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 17°18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 || 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 24 | 2526 |27| 282930] 29] 30 31 APRIL OCTOBER 1] 2h sl. 4] 56 1 2d:stiqal 5 ol gil oem a2 asl ey 7 gf olde 112 14 [15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 || 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 21 [22 |23| 24 |25|26 | 27(|20|21|22|23|24| 25] 26 28 | 29 | 30 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 MAY NOVEMBER ti 2] 3 4 102 sl ol 7:8] ordg late! 2} 51 6 7] 8; 9 12 | 1314 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 || 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 19 20 21 |22|23|24|25| 17 |18|19|20| 21 | 22 23 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 24 |25|26|27| 2829] 30 JUNE DECEMBER 112s af 57 0] 7 2:3 4) 51 6 71 84 8) 9110] 111213" 1a 9|10|11|12|13|14|15|15]|16|17|18|19| 20 | 21 16/17 |18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22|/ 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 23124 |25|26| 27 | 28) 20 20 | 30 | 31 30 OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS > 620 CONGRESS, 15T SESSION BEGINNING APRIL 4, 1911 ERRATA. Page 131, after Mr. Akin’s name, “D?” should be “R.” Pages 138 and 221, Mr. Akin’s name should be in roman instead of italics. Also, page 138, Democrats, 22; Republicans, 15. MAY, 1911 COMPILED UNDER. THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING: : By JAMES S. HENRY OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS > 62° CONGRESS, 1ST SESSION BEGINNING APRIL 4, 1911 MAY, 1911 > COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING: : By JAMES S. HENRY This publication is corrected to May 2, 1911 gale a Gutrernment Printing Difice Washington CONTENTS Page Addreasenol Members a iis Tris He Bare rR ies Batate Stn erk eho as 383 Adjutant Generaliof the AFy. or. sd ie anh ents rast ie 241 Admivalofthe Navy ooo iu aba lind nh sat bhi be rs Sanh sata Sete eae 246 Agricultural Department osc ona lholi ns bu i an 254 tes OF ition a a i a any EA os 294 American EB hme omy Tea Or i he i uhh hie hs rh fe ah beh ats pesto Batten a a 262 National Red Cross ........ me an sata ke oft of eta te Fa Tat wate Matai sa eT RO a e te ie + 266 Amimaliindustnry, Bureatt of unl 0 os i ihn Tht bss SE Sn bre dt al epi A tal 255 Apartment houses, clubs, and Netels il io tu i rl oh ii ti eke bk Le 392 Apportionment of Representatives, by States, under each Census... .........ooveruinevrnennn. 143 SE AT Se NT Ee a SR EL ESE Pe RE 240 Anny Medical Museum and TABFATY 0 0h Dl ll ia 0 Foti Sage ins hik « Seations hiss 241 Assignment of rooms on basement floor ANd LerTACE. .. im. he oii iss iulete nies Sih oh sail 211 gallery floorof the Capliol. ....... criwhhs Sdiiiarsids Jost: woes babi shat wits 217 ground floor of The Caplio). ... iil ihn cash vais sia brie seb ail whe ais 213 princival floor of the CapIlol.. i. ii vs hie. veh soe ious ohbaimtenioin sets ohio 215 . Assignments of Representatives and Delegates to committees ..... .....vorrr ones ronen nnn. 181 Senafors torcommitlees.. he a RB 159 Astrophysical Ose Val Ory i a I a I a 262 Attending Surgeomof the Amy. 8. 000 Jr tis al a Al 0s Aagine ll (10 100 xo li. 242 Attorney General, Blog raply of J ee ee hi ri 243 Ginibn rR Seles bn nn Mada edn ied Be Ria rn Us se Ra nie 283 Anditor for the Interior Department. SESE a is cn a i 238 NAY De pa OnE ol Yb 238 Post Office Pear ben. a 239 State'and Other Departments... 0 ol Ty 238 Treasuty Deparborenl on Sa i ls a ER i ri a abi 238 War De pA IIE. rE a rs te 238 Basement floor and terrace of Capitol, assignment of TOOMS OM... uuu vrrn essere ran aseerenns 211 diagrams of... Sh er a Steir ih vid 210 Biographies of Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commissioners ........... 3-119 the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States .......... iveeeiveinennn 310 Biography of the ALOrNEVGEHeral. co. i. ti. ou ass tor sinianovsis PRES einibh DS tas fh baal od 243 Postmaster General ....c ein nie vase hn pues vss BRSLA STII debe va « 244 President of the United States ......... 00 dvnvsies ibis des iel 30. soit s Lauds 235 Secreiany cE AGTICUIIUTE. |. i... ARKANSAS [REEH (Population (1910), 1,574,449.) 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 the 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 moved to Little Rock and resumed the practice of the law. He was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. James XK. Jones, and took his seat March 9, 1903; reelected in 1909. His term of service will ‘expire March 3, 1915. 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 Democratic national 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.—CounTIESs: Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, St. Francis, and Woodruff (11 counties). Population (1910), 255,301. ROBERT BRUCE MACON, Democrat, of Helena, was elected to the Fifty-eighth and to each succeeding Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTtIES: Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, Jackson, Lawrence, Monroe, Prairie, Randolph, Sharp, Stone, and White (12 counties). Population (1910), 208,890. WILLIAM A. OLDFIELD, Democrat, of Batesville, was born in Franklin, Izard County, Ark., February 4, 1874; was educated in the common schools of the county and at Arkansas College, Batesville, taking the degree of A. B. in the latter institu- tion in 1896; is a lawyer by profession; was elected prosecuting attorney in Septem- “ ber, 1902, and reelected to the same office in 1904. When war broke out between the United States and Spain, in 1898, he enlisted in Company M, Second Regiment Arkansas Infantry, as a private; was promoted to first sergeant of the same company, and later to first lieutenant, and was mustered out with that rank in March, 1899; is married; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, Van: Buren, and Washington (1o counties). Population (1910), 174,019. 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, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crawford, Howazid, Little River, Logan, Miller, Montgomery, Pike, Polk, Scott, Sebastian, and Sevier (11 counties). Population (1910), 225,774. BEN CRAVENS, Democrat, of Fost Smith, was born at Fort Smith, Ark., Jan- uary 17, 1872; was married at Fort Smith; graduated from the law school of the University of Missouri in 1893; is a practicing lawyer; served as city attorney of Fort Smith for two terms, and district attorney of the twelfth judicial district for three terms; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. ARKANSAS Biographical. Bes FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Conway, Faulkner, Franklin, Johnson, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, and Yell (8 counties). Population (1910), 233,776. ] HENDERSON MADISON JACOWAY, Democrat, of Dardanelle, was born in Dardanelle, Yell County, November 7, 1870, and is the third son of Judge W. D. Jacoway and Elizabeth Davis Jacoway; was graduated from the Dardanelle High School at the age of 16 years and subsequently was graduated from the Winchester Literary College, Winchester, Tenn., in 1892. In 1898 was graduated from the law department of the Vanderbilt University, receiving a degree of LI. B. Served as secretary of the Dawes Commission during the Cleveland administration; waselected to the office of prosecuting attorney in 1904, having two opponents in that race, and was reelected in 1906 without opposition. On the 19th day of September, 1907, was married to Miss Margaret Helena Cooper, daughter of Hon. and Mrs. S. B. Cooper, of Beaumont, Tex.; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress over Hon. Gus Remmel, a Republican, carrying every county in the district and every voting pre- cinct with a few exceptions. SIXTF DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, I,onoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1910), 243,649. JOSEPH TAYLOR ROBINSON, Democrat, of Lonoke, was born August 26, 1872; educated in the common schools and the University 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Hemp- stead, Lafayette, Nevada, Ouachita, and Union (11 counties). Population (1910), 233,040. WILLIAM SHIELDS GOODWIN, Democrat, of Warren, was born in Warren, Ark., May 2, 1866, the son of T.M. and Esther (Shields) Goodwin, of Gwinnett and Milton County, Ga., respectively; was educated in the public schools of his home town, at Farmers’ Academy, near Duluth, Ga., and at Moore’s Business College, Atlanta, Ga., Universities of Arkansas and Mississippi; is a lawyer; in 1897 was mar- ried to Miss Sue Meek, of Warren, Ark.; in 1895 was member of Arkansas General Assembly; in 1goo was Democratic presidential elector; in 1go5 and 1907 was State senator; since 1907 has been a member of the board of trustees of the University of Arkansas; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress over Hon. Abraham I,. Wilson, Republican, of Warren. 3X9] CALIFORNIA [2439 (Population (1910), 2,377,549.) 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 Furopean trade. In 1855he shipped ‘“before the mast’’ on the sailing ship Galatea, bound for San Francisco, where he arrived in the autumn of that year. Since that time he has been engaged in mercantile business, banking, farming, mining, whale fishery, and steamship trans- portation. He has been president of the Chamber of Commerce of San Francisco; also of the San Francisco Art Association; is a director of the California Academy of Sciences and other public institutions. He has also been grand master of the grand lodge, F. & A. M. of California; also grand commander of the grand com- mandery of the Knights Templar, State of California; he is also a member of the California Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion. In 1869 he was elected to the State Senate, serving eight years; in 1879 he was elected governor of California, serving until January, 1883; was appointed, July 26, 1893, United States Senator to fill, until the election of his successor, a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Leland Stanford, and took his seat August8, 1893. In January, 1895, having made a thorough canvass before the people of his State, he was elected by the legis- lature 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 in- dorsement of the Republican county conventions that comprised a majority of the senatorial and assembly districts in the State. When the legislature convened in Joint convention (January, 3897) for the purpose of electing a United States Senator, 8 Congressional Directory. CALIFORNIA 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 legislature. Again, in 1909, he was reelected on the first ballot for another term of six years, receiving every Republican vote except two, and at the same time receiving Democratic support. At the time of his election in 1897, 1903, and 1909 he was absent from the State attending to his congressional duties in Washington. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. : JOHN DOWNEY WORKS, Republican, was born in Ohio County, Ind., March 29, 1847; was reared on a farm until sixteen and a half years of age, when he enlisted in the Army of the Civil War, serving 18 months and until the close of the war; was educated in the common schools of Indiana; was married to Alice Banta November 8, 1868, and has six children; is a lawyer and practiced his profession for 15 years at Vevay, Ind.; in 1883 moved to California; served one term as a member of the Legis- lature of Indiana in 1879; was judge of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Cal., and a justice of the Supreme Court of that State; was for a short time, in 19170, a mem- ber of the City Council of the city of Los Angeles, Cal., and its president; has been a member of the American Bar Association for more than 20 years; was elected United States Senator for California by the legislature of that State on the first ballot, receiving 92 votes out of 120. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Del Norte, Eldorado, Humboldt, I,as- sen, Mariposa, Modoc, Mono, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Nevada, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne (19 counties). Population (1910), 184,274. JOHN E. RAKER, Democrat, of Alturas, Modoc County, was born on a farm near Knoxville, Knox County, Ill., February 22, 1863. Soon after his parents moved to Sedalia, Mo., and remaining there but a short time, removed to Knoxville. In 1873 moved with his parents to Lassen County, Cal.; worked on the ranch and farm and attended the public schools,working his own way; attended the grammar school at Susanville, and the State Normal School at San Jose, Cal., 1882-1884. In the ' spring of 1885 entered the law office of Judge E. V. Spencer, of Susanville, where he studied law and was admitted to the bar in the fall of 1885; became a partner of Judge Spencer under the firm name of Spencer & Raker. This firm became one of the leading law firms of northern California, and was engaged in many important suits involving water rights and land matters, as well as many noted criminal cases. By special order of the Superior Court of Lassen County in 1885, before being admitted to the bar, was permitted to defend an important murder trial; was his party’s candi- date for district attorney of Lassen County in 1886. December 6, 1886, moved to Alturas, where he has resided ever since, engaging in the practice of the law, the firm having an extended practice in California, Oregon, and Nevada. In 1894 was elected district attorney of Modoc County,which office he held four years, 1895-1898; at the general election in 1898 was the Democratic nominee for State senator. In 1901 was the attorney for the defendants in the criminal case known as the Modoc Lynching case. This case became famous in California and the West, 21 men in- dicted for five separate murder charges; the trial commenced in November, 19o0I, and ended in March, 1902, no conviction had, and all defendants discharged. Flected judge of the Superior Court of California in and for the county of Modoc in 1902 and reelected in 1908, which position he resigned December 19, 1910. Admitted to the Supreme Court of Oregon, the United States Circuit and District Courts of Cal- ifornia, United States Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court of the United States. Assisted in organizing the First National Bank of Alturas, and has been one of the directors ever since. In 1906 was elected grand sachem of the Democratic Iroquois Clubs of California, and reelected in 1907; delegate to many Democratic State conven- tions, chairman committee on platform and resolutions at one time, and in 1908-1910 chairman Democratic State central committee, resigning on becoming a candidate for Congress; was delegate to the Democratic national convention at Denver in 19o8. Grand master Independent Order of Odd Fellows, 1908-9 of California, and rep- resentative to the Sovereign Grand Lodge at Seattle; delegate to Grand Lodge F. & - A. M. of California at several sessions; was married November 21, 1889, to Iva G. Spencer, daughter of Judge E. V. Spencer, of Susanville, at Anaheim, in southern California. Was elected to the Sixty-second Congress against W. F. Englebright, Republican, W. H. Morgan, Socialist, and C. H. Essex, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Iake, Marin, Mendocino, Napa, Sactra- mento, Sonoma, Sutter, Yolo, and Yuba (12 counties). Population (1910), 263,070. WILLIAM KENT, Republican, of Kentfield, was born in Chicago March 29, 1864, and is the son of Albert E. and Adaline Elizabeth (Dutton) Kent. His parents CALIFORNIA Biographical. 9 moved to California in 1871 and settled in Marin County, where Mr. Kent spent his boyhood: His preliminary education was received in private schools in California and at Hopkin’s Grammar School, New Haven, Conn. - He entered Yale in 1883 and graduated in 1887, with the degree of A. B. Immediately upon graduation he located in Chicago to look after his father’s business interests. In 1890 he entered into partnership with his father, under the firm name of A. E. Kent & Son. He was married to Elizabeth Thatcher, of Ojai Valley, Cal., February 26, 18go. His father died in 1901 and since that time Mr. Kent has had the exclusive handling of the property belonging to the estate, which is owned jointly by himself and his mother. He is the owner of real estate and business interests in Chicago as well as in Cali- fornia; has large interests in land in Nebraska, Nevada, Michigan, Kansas, and North Carolina, and is a member of the firm of Kent & Burke, cattle dealers, Genoa, Nebr. His business is given as dealer in lands and live stock. Has always been active in civic affairs and took a prominent part in the settlement of the Chicago traction problem; was a member of the Chicago City Council from 1895 to 1897; was president of the Municipal Voters’ Teague of Chicago, 1899-1900, and a member of its executive committee from 1897 to 1904; was a member of the Illinois Civil Service Association and of the Civil Service Reform League of Chicago. He presented a tract of land consisting of 295 acres of redwood forest to the Government as a public park, which is known as Muir Woods and is situated about 12 miles from San Francisco. He is the author of a number of pamphlets on national and municipal civics. He is a member of the following clubs: Union League; University; City (Chicago); Yale (New York) University; Bohemian (San Francisco); Graduates (Yale). He sought the Republican nomination for Congress as a Progressive against Duncan XH. Mec- Kinlay, and defeated the latter by 3,819 votes, under the direct primary law of California; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, defeating his Democratic opponent by 3,117 votes. ; THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alameda, Contra Costa, and Solano (3 counties). Population (1910), 305,364. JOSEPH RUSSELI, KNOWLAND, Republican, of Alalneda, 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 National Bank, the Alameda Bank of Savings, and the Union Savings Bank of Oakland; in 1898, at the age of 25, was elected to the lower house of the California State Legislature; was reelected in 1goo; in 1902 was elected to the State senate, resigniug in 1904, after serving one session, having in the meantime received the Republican nomination for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second by a plurality of 27,238 over a Social- ist opponent. No Democratic candidate filed a petition for a place on the Demo- cratic ticket at the direct primary election, the result being that several hundred Democrats wrote in Knowland’s name on the party ballot, and as he received a majority vote was declared to be, under the California direct primary law, the nomi- nee of the Democratic as well as the Republican Party. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Crty OF SAN FRANCISCO: T'wenty-eighth, Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, Thirty- first, Fortieth, Forty-first, Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, and Forty-fifth assembly districts. Population (1910), 153,404. JULIUS KAHN, Republican, of San Francisco, was born on the 28th day of Feb- ruary, 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. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 10,188 votes, to 6,636 for Walter MacArthur, Democrat, 1,178 for Austin Lewis, Socialist,and 35 for E. S. Dinsmore, Prohibitionist. FIFTH K 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 (1910), 373,632. 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 LIL. 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. 10 Congressional Directory. CALIFORNIA 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, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 33,265 votes, to 15,345 for Thomas E. Hayden, Democrat, 5,539 for Ernest I, Reguin, Socialist, and 357 for F. E. Caton, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Fresno, Kings, Madera, Merced, Monterey, San Benito, San Joa- quin, Santa Cruz, and Stanislaus (9 counties). Population (1910), 246,983. 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 189o 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, Fifty- ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 19,717 votes, to 18,408 for A. I,. Cowell, Democrat, 2,568 for Richard Kirk, Socialist, and 951 for Ira HE. Surface, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Los Angeles. Population (1910), 504,131. WILLIAM DENNISON STEPHENS, Republican, of I,os Angeles, son of Martin F. ‘and Alvira (Leibee) Stephens, was born at Eaton, Preble County, Ohio, December 26, 1859; was educated in the public schools; graduated from the Katon High School; taught country school three years, beginning at the age of 16; studied law during vacations but never appligd for admission to practice, being obliged to earn immediate money. In 1880 joined engineering corps, and for eight years was engaged in construc- tion and operation of railroads in Ohio, Indiana, lowa, and Louisiana. On account of mother’s health moved to Los Angeles, Cal., in 1887, and in 1888 became manager for large retail grocery. From 189I to 1902 was traveling salesman for wholesale grocery house in Los Angeles; from 1902 to 190g was partner in wholesale and retail grocery business of Carr & Stephens. He was director of Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce, 1902 to 1911; president in 1907; and chairman or member of its harbor com- mittee during entire time. Was member of board of education in 1906, mayor of Los Angeles in 1909, and president of board. of water commissioners and member of advi- sory committee for the building of the Los Angeles aqueduct, costing $25,000,000, in 1910. Since 1903 has been major and commissary First Brigade California National Guard, and saw active service at San Francisco after its destruction; was in San Fran- cisco at the beginning of and during the earthquake and fire which destroyed it in 1906. He is a thirty-third degree Scottish Rite Mason; was grand commander of Knights Templar of California in 1908; charter member Red Cross of Constantine and potentate of the shrine in 1904. Was active vice president of the American National Bank in 1909 and has been a director in other banks. He is married and has one daughter. Was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 36,435 votes, to 13,340 for Lorin A. Handley, Democrat, 10,305 for T. W, Williams, Socialist, and 1,990 for C. V. La Fontaine, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Imperial, Inyo, Kern, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Disge, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura (11 counties). Population (1910), 340,001. 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 elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 28,202 votes, to 18,958 for W, E. Irving, Democrat. COLORADO B 10q7 aphical 4 11 C9] COLORADO ®) (Population (1910), 799,024.) SENATORS. SIMON GUGGENHEIM, Republican, of Denver, was born at Philadelphia December 30, 1867, the son of Meyer and Barbara (Myers) Guggenheim ; 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; elected to the United States Senate to suc- ceed Thomas M. Patterson, Democrat. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. Vacancy. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 799,024. EDWARD THOMAS TAYLOR, Democrat, of Glenwood Springs, was born at Metamora, Woodford County, Ill., June 19, 1858; son of Henry R.and Anna (Evans) Taylor; spent his early life on farm and stock ranch; was educated in the common schools of Illinois and Kansas; graduated from Leavenworth (Kans.), High School in 1881; moved to Leadville, Colo., that summer, and during the school year of 1881-82 was principal of the Leadville High School; that fall entered the law department of the University of Michigan; was president of his class, and graduated in 1884, receiv- ing the degree of LL. B.; returned to Leadville and at once began the practice of the law. In the fall of 1884 was elected county superintendent of schools of that (Lake) county; in 1885 was deputy district attorney; in the spring of 1886 moved to Aspen, Colo., and in February, 1887, to Glenwood Springs, where he has since resided and practiced his profession. In 1887 was elected district attorney of the ninth’judicial district; 1896 was elected State senator for the twenty-first senatorial district, and reelected in Igoo and 1904, his 12 years’ service ending December, 1908; was president pro tempore of the senate ome term, and was the author of 40 statutes and 5 constitutional amendments adopted by a general vote of the people; he also served five terms as city attorney and two terms as county attorney of his home town and county. He is a Mystic Shriner and an Elk, and served two terms as eminent commander of the Glenwood Commandery of Knights Templar; has been president of the Rocky Mountain Alumni Association of the University of Michigan, and vice president of the State Bar Assqciation, and is now vice president of the State Associ- ation of the Sons of Colorado, and has been active in public life in Colorado for 30 years. He is the Colorado member of the Democratic national congressional cam- paign committee. He is married and has three children. He was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 105,700 votes to 101,722 for Isaac N. Stevens, Republican, 8,620 for W. C. Bently, Socialist, and 4,689 for Alexander Craise, Prohibitionist. : FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Denver, Jefferson, Lake, Larimer, Logan, Morgan, Park, Phillips, Sedgwick, Washington, Weld, and Yuma (15 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 394,503. ATTERSON WALDEN RUCKER, Democrat, of Rucker Ridge (Fort Logan post office), was born in Harrodsburg, Mercer County, Ky., April 3, 1847. He received his education in the common schools of Kentucky and Missouri; served four years in the Confederate Army; was admitted to the bar in Lexington, Mo., and practiced law in the courts of Missouri and Kansas before moving to Colorado in 1879; in 1873 was married to Miss Celeste E. Caruth, who died in 1906; he served upon the bench (court of record) in Lake County, Colo.; was elected to the Sixty- y first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Archuleta, Baca, Bent, Chaffee, Cheyenne, Clear Creek, Conejos, Costilla, Custer, Delta, Dolores, Douglas, Kagle, Elbert, El Paso, Fremont, Garfield, Gilpin, Grand, Gunnison, Hinsdale, Huerfano, Jackson, Kiowa, Kit Carson, La Plata, I,as Animas, Lincoln, Mesa, Mineral, Montezuma, Montrose, Otero, Ouray, Pitkin, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, Rio Grande, Routt, Saguache, San Juan, San Miguel, Summit, and Teller (45 counties). Population (1910), 404,521. . JOHN A. MARTIN, Democrat, of Pueblo, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, April 10, 1868; was educated in the public schools of Mexico and Fulton, Mo.; is a lawyer by profession; served one term in the Colorado General Assembly; is married and has one child; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. 12 Congressional Directory. CONNECTICUT 519] CONNECTICUT 19 (Population (1910), 1,114,756.) SENATORS. 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 of New London County in 1888; was elected a representative to the general assembly in 1888; was for 10 years corporation counsel of the city of New London; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1888, 1892, 1900, and 1904; was speaker of the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1899; was elected a Rep- resentative to the secondesession of the Fifty-seventh Congress, to fill a vacancy in 1902; was reelected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was elected United States Senator for an unexpired term on May 9, 1905, and was reelected January 20, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. GEORGE PAYNE McLEAN, Republican, of Simsbury, was born in Simsbury October 7, 1857; graduated from Hartford High School; admitted to the bar in 1881 and practiced in Hartford; member of the Connecticut House of Representatives in 1883-84; member of the commission to revise the Connecticut statutes in 188s; member of the Connecticut Senate in 1886; was United States district attorney for Connecticut from 1892 to 1896; governor of Connecticut 1go1-2; received the degree of A. M. from Yale University in 1904; was nominated in Republican caucus by a vote of 113 to 64 for opposing candidates and elected by the general assembly by a vote of 158 to 96 for Homer S. Cummings, Democrat, and 1 for Morgan G. Bulkeley, Republican, His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 1,114,756. JOHN QUILLIN TILSON, Republican, of New Haven, was born at Clearbranch, Tenn., April 5, 1866, son of William KE. and Katharine (Sams) Tilson; spent his early life on a farm; educated in public and private schools and Yale College, graduat- ing from the latter in 1891, and from the Yale Law School in 1893; began the prac- tice of law in the offices of ‘White & Daggett in New Haven, and later became a member of the firm of White, Daggett & Tilson. During the War with Spain he served as a second lieutenant in the Sixth United States Volunteer Infantry; now major in the Second Regiment Infantry, Connecticut National Guard; in 1904 he was elected a representative in the Connecticut General Assembly from the town of New Haven; was reelected in 1906, and was speaker of the Connecticut House of Representatives during the session of 1907; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 79,585 votes to 73,221 for George P. Ingersoll, Democrat, 10,304 for Samuel E. Beardsley, Socialist, 1,874 for William P. Barstow, Prohibitionist, 1,163 for Max Feldman, Socialist I.abor, and 6 scattering. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Hartford and Tolland, including the cities of Hartford, New Brit- ain, and Rockville. Population (1910), 276,641. E. STEVENS HENRY, Republican, of Rockville, is of Scotch-Irish ancestry, and was born in Gill, Mass., in 1836, moving when 13 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 1887-88; delegate at large tothe 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, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Middlesex and New Haven, including the cities of New Haven, Meriden, Waterbury, Ansonia, Derby, and Middletown. Population (1910), 382,919. THOMAS LAWRENCE REILLY, Democrat, of Meriden, was born September 20, 1858, at New Britain, Conn.; was educated in the common schools and Connecti- cut State Normal School, of New Britain, graduating in the class of 76; has been engaged in the newspaper business for the last 25 years with the Meriden Daily Journal and was one of its founders; member of the board of education of Meriden for several years and mayor of Meriden since January, 1906, being elected three CONNECTICUT B 10g aphical ; 13 times, two-year terms; member of Second Company Governor’s Foot Guard of Con- necticut, established in 1775; is married and has seven children; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: New London and Windham, including the cities of New London, Norwich, Putnam, and Willimantic, Population (1910), 139,614. 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 was health officer for the county of New London at the time of his election to Congress; served on the Republican State central committee from 19oo until his election to Congress, and was prosecuting attorney for city of Norwich when elected to Con- gress; a delegate to the Republican national convention of 1904; he was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. : FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Fairfield and Iitchfield, including the cities of Bridgeport, Danbury, Norwalk, South Norwalk, and Stamford. Population (1910), 315,582. EBENEZER J. HILL, Republican, of Norwalk, was born in Redding, Conn., August 4, 1845; prepared for college at the public school in Norwalk and entered Yale 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 close of the war. He was engaged in business from that time until elected to the Rifty-fourth Congress. He has held the commercial positions of secretary and treasurer of the Norwalk Iron Works, president of the Norwalk Street Railway Co., president of the Norwalk Gaslight Co., and is now 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 Republican national convention of 1884; was a member of the Con- necticut Senate for 1886-87; served one term on the Republican State central com- mittee; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty- eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 23,479 votes, to 20,636 for Lynn W. Wilson, Democrat. (Population (1910), 202,322.) SENATORS. HENRY ALGERNON du PONT, Republican, of Winterthur, was born at the Fleutherean 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 United States 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; act- ing assistant adjutant general April, 1862, to July, 1863, of troops in New York Harbor; adjutant Fifth United States Artillery July 6, 1861, until his promotion as captain, and in command of Tight Battery B, Fifth United States 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 United States Artillery, March 24, 1864, and in command of Light Battery B of that regiment during Sigel’s campaign in the valley of Virginia, participating 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 Liynchburg campaign at the battle of Piedmont, June 5, engagement at Lexington, June 11, affair near Lynchburg, June 17, battle of Lynchburg, June 18, and affairs at Liberty, June 19, and Masons Creek, June 21, 1864; chief of artillery, 14 Congressional Directory. DELAWARE 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 United States Artillery, Cumberland, Md., July 20 to October 20, 1865, of a battalion of Fifth United States Artillery at camp near Hampton, Va., October 21 to 30, 1863, of the post of Fort Monroe, Va., October 31 to December 15, 1865, and of Battery B, Fifth United States Artillery, December 15, 1865, to October 27, 1866; transferred to Light Battery F, Fifth United States 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 Maj. Gen. Schofield, commanding the First Military District, for ‘his efficient services at Fortress Monroe ”’; commanding the post of Camp Williams and Light Battery F, Fifth United States Artillery, from July 15, 1867, to October 1, 1868; in command of Sedgwick Barracks, Washington, D. C., and of Light Battery F, Fifth United States Artillery, October 7, 1868, until July 3, 1870; served at Fort Adams, Newport, R. I., in command of Light Battery F, Fifth United States Artillery, July 5, 1870, to Jamuary 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, United States Army, September 19, 1864, for ‘‘ gallant and meritorious conduct at the battles of Opequan and Fishers Hill, Va.”’; brevet lieutenant colonel, United States Army, October 19, 1864, for ‘‘dis- tinguished services at the battle of Cedar Creek,” and awarded a congressional medal of 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 Wilmin gton & Northern Railroad Co. 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, and took his seat December 3, 1906. He was reelected January 25, 1911, receiving the entire Republican vote of the legislature. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 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 his 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 1890 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 (1910), 202,322. WILLIAM HENRY HEALD, Republican, of Wilmington, was born at Wil- mington, Del., August 27, 1864; was educated in the public schools of Wilmington, and graduated from the high school in that city in 1880; the same year entered the sophomore class of Delaware College and graduated therefrom in 1883; read law with Charles B. Lore, now chief justice of the State; graduated from the law school of Columbian University, of Washington, D. C., in 1888, and the same year was appointed national-bank examiner for the States of Montana, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon, where he served for four years; commenced the practice of law in 1897 and is still practicing his profession; was appointed postmaster of Wilmington by President Roosevelt in 1901, and served one term; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receivin g 22,410 votes, to 20,281 for Robert C. White, Democrat, 775 for Lewis P. Brosius, Prohibitionist, and 556 for Frank A. Houck, Socialist. LB J FLORIDA Biographical. 13 FLORIDA A) (Population (1910), 752,619.) SENATORS. DUNCAN U. FLETCHER, Democrat, of Jacksonville, was born in Sumter County, Ga., January 6, 1859. His parents, Capt. Thomas J. and Rebecca Ellen McCowen Fletcher, moved the following year to Monroe County, Ga., where he resided until July, 1881. He was educated in the country schools, preparatory school, Gordon Institute, Barnesville, Ga., and Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., where he graduated in June, 1880; studied law. there, and has practiced law in Jacksonville since July, 1881, in State and Federal courts, including the United States Supreme Court; he was a member of the legislature in 1893; mayor of Jack- sonville, 1893-1895 and 1901-1903; chairman board of public instruction, Duval County, 1900-1906; chairman Democratic State executive committee 1904-1907; was nominated for United States Senator in primary election June 16, 1908, and elected by the legislature next convening. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. NATHAN PHILEMON BRYAN, Democrat, of Jacksonville, was born in Orange (now Lake) County, Fla., April 23, 1872; was graduated at Emory College, Oxford, Ga., in 1893; studied law at Washington and Lee University, graduating in 1895, and has since practiced law at Jacksonville; was chairman of the board of control of the Florida State Institutions of Higher Education 1905-1909; was nominated for United States Senator in the Democratic primary election of January 31, 1911, and elected by the legislature. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Citrus, De Soto, Hernando, Hillsboro, Lafayette, Lake, Lee, Levy, Manatee, Marion, Monroe, Pasco, Polk, Sumter, and Taylor (15 counties). Population (1910), 240,679. 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 Gov. Henry I,. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Brevard, Clay, Columbia, Dade, Duval, Hamilton, Nassau, Orange, Osceola, Palm Beach, Putnam, St. Johns, St. Lucie, Suwanee, + and Volusia (18 counties). Population (1910), 286,851. 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 thé practice of the 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 he was chosen 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, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 171,626 votes, to 1,804 for Thomas W. Cox, Socialist, and 1,372 for Thomas C. Buddington, Socialist-Democrat. : THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Holmes, Jackson, Jef- erson, Leon, Liberty, Madison, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1910), 225,089. : DANNITTE HILI, MAYS, Democrat, of Monticello, was born in Madison County, Fla., April 28, 1852; attended the country schools and later the Washington and Lee University at Lexington, Va., from 1866 to 1870; *returning to his home, engaged in farming, which has been his life-long occupation; in 1880 was married to Emmala Bellamy Parkhill; served three terms in the Florida Legislature, and one" term as speaker of the house of representatives; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. Ew 16 Congressional Directory. GEORGIA XY] GEORGIA [2&9 Population (1910), 2,609,121. 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 14 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 hasbeen 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 againin 1907, having been, by a general State primary, unanimously renomi- nated. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. JOSEPH MERIWETHER TERRELL, Democrat, of Greenville, was born June 6, 1861, at that place; received academic education; married on October 19, 1886, Miss Jessie Lee Spivey; studied law and was admitted to the bar; represented Meriwether County in the general assembly in 1884-85 and 1886-87; served in the State Senate 1890-91; elected attorney general and served for 10 years, from 1892 to 1902; re- y signed to make the race for governor, and served from October, 1902, to July, 1907; was engaged in the practice of law in Atlanta when appointed to the United States Senate on November 17, 1910, to succeed the Hon. A. S. Clay, deceased. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Chatham, Effingham, Emanuel, Jenkins, Liberty, McIntosh, Screven, Tattnall, and Toombs (12 counties). Population (1910), 256,008. 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.; 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, 1898; has since practiced law at Reidsville and Savannah; married Miss Ora Beach, daughter of the late Hon. and Mrs. W. W. Beach, of Waycross, Ga., i December 17, 1902. October II, 1906, was nominated by the Democrats and elected to the Sixtieth Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Berrien, Calhous, Clay, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Karly, Grady, Miller, Mitchell, Quitman, Randolph, Terrell, Tift, ‘’homas, ‘I'urner, and Worth (18 counties). Population (1910), 297,805. SEABORN ANDERSON RODDENBERY, Democrat, of Thomasville, was born on his father’s farm in Decatur County, Ga., January 12, 1870; moved to ‘T‘homas County in early childhood; worked alternately on the farm and in a country store I at Cairo, Ga.; was educated in the common schools and attended college at Mercer University, Macon, Ga., for three years; occupied the chair of language and mathe- matics at South Georgia College ome year; married in 1891; was elected to the Georgia Legislature at the age of 21 andserved for the sessions of 1892 and 1893, | declining reelection; studied law under Hon. A. T. MacIntyre while teaching school, lac and was admitted to the bar in October, 1894; appointed judge of county court, GEORGIA Biographical. 17 Thomas County, by Gov. Atkinson in 1897 for four years, declining reappoint- ment to return to general practice and to give attention to farming interests; was elected mayor of Thomasville, and reelected without opposition in 1905; was presi- dent of the board of education of Thomas County for four years and member of board of trustees of Young’s Female College and of the Norman Institute; on Feb- ruary 16, 1910, elected to the Sixty-first Congress to fill the unexpired term of Hon. J. M. Griggs, and took his seat February 28, 1910; in party primary on February 10 nominated by 5,000 plurality, and in the general election received all the votes cast. - Reelected to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ben Hill, Crawford, Crisp, Dooly, Houston, I,ee, Macon, Pulaski, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Taylor, Twiggs, Webster, and Wilcox (15 counties). Population - (1910), 219,243. : DUDLEY MAYS HUGHES, Democrat, of Danville, was born October 10, 1848, in Twiggs County, Ga. His youth was passed on his father’s plantation, his education being received in the country schools and later at the University of Georgia, at Athens. He began business life in 1870 and has since conducted large agricultural interests; November 25, 1873, married Mary Frances, daughter of Capt. Hugh I. Den- nard, and has three children—two sons and one daughter; was elected State senator, serving one term, retiring voluntarily; was elected president of the Georgia State Agricultural Society, serving four years with great ability, declining reelection; was commissioner general of Georgia to the World’s Fair at St. Louis; for twenty years has been connected with the educational interests of his State, being trustee of his home school, of the State Normal Institute, and of the University of Georgia; as . a farmer, and not a practical railroad man, he led in the construction of the Macon, Dublin & Savannah Railroad, a line running from Macon to Dublin, which was built after years of effort; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress without opposition. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Carroll, Chattahoochee, Coweta, Harris, Heard, Marion, Meri- wether, Muscogee, Talbot, and Troup (Io counties). Population (1910), 202,794. WILLIAM CHARLES ADAMSON, Democrat, of Carrollton, was born at Bowdon, Ga., August 13, 1854; spent his youth alternately in working on the farm and in hauling goods and cotton between the markets and Bowdon; graduated at Bowdon College with the degree of A. B. in 1874, the degree of A. M. being confefred 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 Carrollton, Ga., ever since, practicing law in the circuit and supreme courts of the State and the Federal - courts until elected to Congress, when he abandoned the practiceand devoted himself excluively to his official duties; 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses; and was renomi- nated and reelected without opposition to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving all the votes cast in both the primary and the final election. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Campbell, Clayton, Dekalb, Douglas, Fulton, Newton, Rockdale, and Walton (8 counties). Population (1910), 288,652. } WILLIAM SCHLEY HOWARD, Democrat, of Decatur, was born at Kirkwood, Dekalb County, Ga., June 29, 1875; attended Neel’s Academy until 12 years of age, and went to work for himself; was a page in the House of Representatives of Georgia in 1888-89; was calendar clerk of the house in 1890-91; was appointed private secre- tary to United States Senator Patrick Walsh, of Georgia, in 1893, and served in that capacity during his term; studied law at nights and was admitted to the bar at . Wrightsville, Ga., 1895; enlisted in the Third Georgia Volunteer Infantry on July 2, 1898, serving during the Spanish-American War as sergeant; on his return from the war he moved back to Dekalb County and began the practice of his profession; was elected to the House of Representatives of Georgia in 1899, and was a member of the judiciary committee and committee on county and county matters; introduced what is now known as the Howard franchise tax act, the first of its kind introduced in the South; was elected solicitor general of the Stone Mountain judicial circuit in 1905, defeating four opponents, receiving more votes than all combined opponents; was reelected in 1908 without opposition; married Miss Lucia Augusta du Vinage, of Texas, in 1905; was a candidate for the Sixty-second Congress against the Hon. Leonidas F. Livingston, carrying six of the eight counties in the district, and receiving 16 of the 24 votes in the convention; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress without opposition, receiving 8,205 votes, 18 Congressional Directory. GrORGIA SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Baldwin, Bibb, Butts, Fayette, Henry, Jones, Monroe, Pike, Spalding, and Upson (Io counties). Population (1910), 205,063. 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; waselected 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (13 counties). Population (1910), 223,543. 7 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 elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, defeating Hon. Walter Akerman, Republican, by 4,866 votes. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clarke, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Jasper, Madison, Morgan, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Putnam, and Wilkes (12 counties). Population (1910), 220,241. SAMUEL J. TRIBBLE, Democrat, of Athens, was reared in Franklin County, Ga.,and is 42 years of age; received college and legal education at the University of Georgia; located in Athens, Ga., where he now resides and is engaged in the practice of law; served five years as solicitor of the city court and four years as solicitor general of the western circuit; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, defeating Hon. William M. Howard, Democrat, in the primary election by a majority of 668, and in the general election by 2,413 votes. : . NINTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Banks, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Milton, Pickens, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union, and White (18 counties). Population (1910), 214,173. THOMAS MONTGOMERY BELIL, 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, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Columbia, Glascock, Jefferson, Hancock, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, Taliaferro, Warren, Washington, and Wilkinson (11 counties). Population (1910), 94,300. THOMAS WILLIAM HARDWICK, Democrat, of Sandersville; born December 9, 1872; served two terms in Georgia Legislature; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress over C. E. McGregor, Independent. 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 (1910), 287,141. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 3,160 votes. There was no oppos- ing candidate. ~ rt gp a AOR i ok ] AI werd WL YR IDAHO Brographical. 1G CoS ano [29 (Population (1910), 325,594.) SENATORS. WELDON BRINTON HEYBURN, Republican, of the city of Wallace, Idaho, was born in Delaware County, Pa., May 23, 1852; his parents, John Brinton and Sarah Gilpin Heyburn, were Quakers, of English descent. He married Gheretein Veatman, daughter of John Marshall and Lavinia Passmore Yeatman. He received an academic education; was admitted to the bar in 1876, and practiced law continu- ously up to the time when he entered the Senate; in the winter of 1883 he moved to Shoshone County, Idaho, and has resided there ever since. He was a member of the convention which framed the constitution of the State of Idaho, and was chair- man of the judiciary committee of that body. He has always voted and supported the Republican ticket; was elected delegate to the Republican national convention in 1888, 1892, 1900, and 1904; was national committeeman for Idaho from 1904 to 1908; was the nominee of the Republican Party of Idaho for Congress in 1898, but was defeated by a fusion of 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 Hon. Henry Heitfeld, Democrat, for the term beginning March 4, 1903; was unanimously reelected by the legislature January 13, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. WILLIAM EDGAR BORAH, Republican, of Boise, was born June 29, 1865, in Wayne County, I1l.; was educated in the common schools of Wayne County, at the Southern Illinois Academy, Enfield, Ill., and at the Kansas State University, Law- rence; 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 (1910), 325,594. BURTON LEE FRENCH, Republican, of Moscow, was born near Delphi, Tnd., August 1, 1875; moved with his parents, Charles A. and Mina P. French, to Kearney, Nebr., in 1880, and moved to Idaho in 1882; was graduated from the University of Idaho in 1go1 with the degree of A. B., and was fellow in the University of Chicago in 1901-1903, graduating with the degree of Ph. M.; is an attorney at law; was mem- bet of the Fifth and Sixth sessions of the Idaho Legislature, and in the last session was the Republican nominee for speaker, was a Member of the Fifty-eighth, Fifty- ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiv- ing 46,401 votes, to 31,832 for A. M. Bowen, Democrat, and 5,463 for Rolla Myer, Socialist. © Ga NA ce 9] ILLINOIS O) (Population (1910), 5,638,591.) SENATORS. "SHELBY MOORE CULI,OM, 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 Republican national convention at Philadelphia in 1872, being chairman of the Illinois delegation, and placed Gen. Grant in nomination; was a delegate to the Republican national convention in 1884 and chairman of the Illinois 84259°—62-1—IST ED——3 20 Congressional Directory. 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. WILLIAM LORIMER, Republican, of Chicago, was born in Manchester, Eng- land; was elected a Representative to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses; was elected to the United States Senate by the Illinois State Legislature May 27, 1909; resigned his seat in the House of Representatives June 17, 1909, and took his seat in the United States Senate June 18, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—Crtvy OF CaIcAGo: First and second wards; part of the third ward east of Halsted Street; part of the sixth ward north of Forty-third Street. Population (1910), 169,828. MARTIN B. MADDEN, Republican, of Chicago, was born March 20, 1855; edu- cated in the public schools and business colleges; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,920 votes to 13,466 for Michael E. Maher, Democrat, 1,165 for Joseph H. Greer, Socialist, and 293 for H. E. Eckles, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—Crty oF CHICAGO: Seventh, eighth, and thirty-third wards; part of the sixth ward south of Forty-third Street. Population (1910), 279,646. 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 of the Union College of Law in Chicago; member of the law firm of Mann & Miller; was elected to the Fifty-fifth and each succeeding Congress; reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,128 votes to 18,717 for Charles Vaughan, Democrat, and 2,711 for J. O. Bentall, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—C00K COUNTY: Towns of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, I,emont, Orland, Palos, Rich, Thornton, and Worth. City or CHICAGO: Thirty-first and thirty-second wards; parts of the twenty-ninth and thirtieth wards south of Fifty-first Street. Population (1910), 250,328. 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 LL.D.and LL. B.; is a lawyer by profession, admitted to the bar in 1893; was married to Sarah M. Moore in 1892 and has one son, Stephen Askew Wilson; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,661 votes, to 16,604 for Fred J. Crowley, Democrat, 885 for Charles G. Kindred, Prohibitionist, and 2,920 for J. Clifford Cox, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CiTY or Caicaco: Fifth ward; part of the third ward west of Stuart Avenue; part of the fourth ward west of Halsted Street; part of the eleventh and twelfth wards south of T'wenty-second Street; part of the twenty-ninth and thirtieth wards north of Fifty-first Street. Population (1910), 229,963. JAMES THOMAS McDERMOTT, Democrat, of Chicago, was born at Grand Rapids, Mich., February 13, 1872. Twelve years later his family moved to Detroit, and there he became a messenger boy for a telegraph company, and later learned telegraphy. In 1889 he moved to Chicago, where he followed his vocation as a tele- graph operator until 1906, when he was elected to the Sixtieth Congress; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,764 votes, to 7,028 for Michael G. Walsh, Republican, 1,994 for Peter Bulthouse, Socialist, and 259 for Franklin J. Reed, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Crry oF CHICAGO: Ninth and tenth wards; part of the eleventh and twelfth wards north of Twenty-second Street. Population (1910), 192,411. ADOLPH J. SABATH, Democrat, of Chicago, was born April 4, 1866, in Bohemia; there attended graminar 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 the same year; received the degree of LL. B. from Lake 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 ILLINOIS Brographical. 21 municipal judge (six-year term), also for Congress; declined the former and accepted the latter, and was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,936 votes, to 3,533 for Louis H. Clusmann, Republican, 1,775 for Joseph J. Kral, Socialist, and 207 for George H. Van Dyke, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Cooxk County: Towns of Cicero, Lyons, Proviso, Riverside, and Stickney. CrTy 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 (1910), 283,148. EDMUND JOHN STACK, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Chicago January 31, 1874; educated in the public, grammar, and high schools and Lake Forest Univer- sity, receiving the degree of LI. B., and was admitted to the bar in 1895; was asso- ciated with ex-Chief Justice Simon P. Shope, of the Illinois Supreme Court, until appointed assistant corporation counsel of the city of Chicago, under Charles M. Walker, now circuit court judge; later was chief trial attorney for the city of Chi- cago, under John KE. Owens, now county judge of Cook County, with. whom he has been associated in the general practice of law since 1903. Married Miss Mary A. R. Brazzell, April 12, 1911. In 1906 was nominated on the Democratic ticket for the Sixtieth Congress against William Iorimer and was defeated; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 22,951 votes to 17,178 for William J]. Moxley, Republican, 1,257 for Joseph P. Ellacott, Prohibitionist, and 3,551 for George Chant, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Coox County; Towns of Barrington, Elkgrove, Hanover, Leyden, Maine; Norwood Park, Palatine, Schaumberg, and Wheeling. City oF CHICAGO: Fourteenth, twenty- seventh, and twenty-eighth wards, and that part of the fifteenth ward west of Robey Street, part of the thirty-fifth ward north of the Chicago and North Western Railway right of way. Population (1910), 349,883. FRANK BUCHANAN, Democrat, of Chicago, was born on a farm in Jefferson County, Ind., on the 14th day of June, 1862; attended country school, worked on the farm, and later became abridge builder and structural iron worker; became the presi- dent of the Bridge and Structural Iron Workers’ Local Union No. 1, at Chicago, in 1898; served as president for several terms, and was elected the international presi- dent of the Bridge and Structural Iron Workers’ Union in September, 1go1; served for four successive terms and declined to be a candidate for reelection in 1905; has been active in the general organized labor movement for yeats; previous to his elec- tion to Congress was working at the structural iron trade as inspector and foreman; is married; never held a political office until elected to the Sixty-second Congress; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 22,520 votes to 21,096 for Fred- erick Lundin, Republican, and 7,016 for Collins, the Socialist candidate. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Crty oF CHICAGO: Sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth wards ; part of the fifteenth ward east of Robey Street. Population (1910), 236,481. THOMAS GALLAGHER, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Concord, N. H., in 1850; moved to Chicago in 1866; was educated in the public schools; learned the trade of iron molder; in 1878 he entered the hat business, and has been a dealer in hats since that time; is a director of the Cook County State Savings Bank; mar- ried since 1886; was elected twice a member of the city council of Chicago, and was for six years a member of the board of education; has served as president of the county Democracy, chairman of the county central committee of the Democratic Party of Cook County, and is at present a member of the executive committee of that body; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, receiving 14,281 + votes to 7,975 for Daniel D. Coffey, Republican, 1,903 for John Drexler, Socialist, and 174 for J. W. Cronker, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT.—CitY oF CHICAGO: Twenty-first and twenty-second wards; part of the twenty- third ward east of Halsted Street; part of the twenty-fifth ward south of Graceland Avenue. Population (1910), 132,104. LYNDEN EVANS, Democrat, of Chicago, son of Judge Daniel Evans and Emma Ryder Evans, was born at La Salle, I11., in 1858; graduated cum honore at Knox Col- lege in 1882; taught in the schools of La Salle and Evanston, Ill., until admitted to the bar of Illinois in 1885; admitted to the United States Supreme Court in 1896; is a member of the University Club, City Club, and Iroquois Club, also of the American Bar Association and the Illinois and Chicago Bar Associations; in 1907 and 1908 was a lecturer on corporation law in the John Marshall Law School; is the author of Illinois Citations and Overruled Cases published in 1900; in 1896 he married Bonnie, daughter of the late Thomas F. Withrow and Jennie Goodwin Withrow, of Chicago; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,501 votes to 12,991 for Fred- erick H. Gansbergen, Republican, 2,650 for Frank Shiflersmith, Socialist, and 404 for John R. Boynton, Prohibitionist. 22 Congressional Directory. ILLINOTS TENTH DISTRICT.—Coox County: Towns of Evanston, Niles, New Trier, and Northfield. City oF CHICAGO: Twenty-fourth and twenty-sixth wards; part of the twenty-third ward west of Halsted Street; part of the twenty-fifth ward north of Graceland Avenue. I,AKE COUNTY. Population (1910), 336, 499. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,130 votes, to 17,541 for Richard J. Finnegan, Democrat, 3,370 for Robert C. Magisen, Socialist, and 1,185 for Charles O. Boring, Prohibitionist. a DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Dupage, Kane, McHenry, and Will (4 counties). Population : 1910), 242,174. S : IRA CLIFTON COPLEY, Republican, of Aurora, was born in Knox County, October 25, 1864. His family moved to Aurora in 1867; graduated from West Aurora High School in 1881; prepared for college at Jennings Seminary, Aurora, and gradu- ated from Yale College in 1887, receiving the degree of bachelor of arts; graduated from Union College of Law, Chicago, in 1889, and has been connected with the gas and electric business in Aurora since that year; is married; was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 17,899 votes, to 11,276 for Frank O. Hawley, Democrat, 1,106 for Jonas G. Brooks, Prohibitionist, and 1,047 for James H. Brower, Socialist. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Boone, Dekalb, Grundy, Kendall, Lasalle, and Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1910), 237,162. CHARLES E. FULLER, Republican, of Belvidere, was born near Belvidere, Ill.; 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 Gov. Tanner, but 'the regiment was never called into the service; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,665 votes, to 9,185 for J. W. Rausch, Democrat, 2,277 for Thomas Johnson, Socialist, and 1,054 for Frederick E. Farmiloe, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and White- side (6 counties). Population (1910), 167,634. ; JOHN CHARLES McKENZIE, Republican, of Elizabeth, I11., was born on a farm in Woodbine Township, Jo Daviess County, Ill., February 18, 1860; educated in the common schools; taught school, farmed for a number of years, then read law; was admitted to the bar and is now engaged in the practice of the profession; served four years as member of the Illinois State Claims Commission under Gov. John R. Tanner; served two terms in the House and three terms in the Senate of the Illinois General Assembly; served one term as president pro tempore of the senate; is a widower; has one child, a daughter; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress by a majority of approximately 8,000. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island, " and Warren (6 counties). Population (1910), 180,689. JAMES McKINNEY, Republican, of Aledo, was born at Oquawka, I1l., 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, serving until 1907, when he retired from the bank. In 1894 Mr. McKinney became a member of the Republican State committee, serving 12 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, hav- ing direct charge of the presidential campaign in Illinois; was appointed in 1901 a member of the State railroad and warehouse commission, but resigned in 1902; was president of the Illinois Bankers’ Association in 1908-9; was elected to the Fifty- ninth Congress at a special election held November 7, 1905, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. B. F. Marsh, elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, ILLINOIS Biographical. : 23 and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,004 votes, to 12,980 for Clyde H. Tavenner, Democrat, 852 for Samuel S. Chapman, Prohibitionist, and 1,658 for Milton I,. Morrill, Socialist.’ FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Fulton, Henry, Knox, and Schuyler (5 counties). Population (1910), 216,884. GEORGE W. PRINCE, Republican, of Galesburg, was born March 4, 1854, in Taze- well County, Ill.; attended the public schools and graduated from Knox College, Galesburg, Ill, in 1878; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1880; was elected city attorney of Galesburg in 1881; was chairman of the Republican county central committee of Knox County in 1884; was elected a member of the lower house of the General Assembly of Illinois in 1888; was reelected in 1890; was the candidate for attorney general of Illinois on the Republican ticket in 1892; was elected to the Rifty-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, Fifty-ninth, Six- tieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,753 votes, to 16,487 for Albert E. Bergland, Democrat, goo for Paul D. Ransom, Prohibitionist, and 1,501 for John C. Sjodin, Socialist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, Stark, and Tazewell _ (6 counties). Population (1910), 211,595. CLAUDIUS ULYSSES STONE, Democrat, of Peoria, Peoria County, was born on a farm in Menard County, Ill., May 11, 1879.. He was educated in the public schools and later completed commercial and college courses. He took up teaching, and his experience as a teacher includes rural, village, and high-school work and a short period as an instructor in a small college. He served as a corporal in Company K, Fourth Illinois Volunteer Infantry, for 12 months during the Spanish-American War. Four months of this time he spent in Cuba. In 1902 he was chosen county superin- tendent of schools of Peoria County, running over 2,000 votes ahead of his ticket. In 1906 he was reelected county superintendent of schools, again leading his ticket by 3,000 votes. In 1909 he was chosen president of the association of county super- intendents of schools of the State; is State historian of the United Spanish-American War Veterans; while county superintendent of schools he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and formed a partnership with Judge IL. O. Eagleton for the practice of the profession under the firm name of Eagleton & Stone; was married in 1902 to Miss Genevieve C. Francis; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,633 votes, to 15,024 for Joseph V. Graff, Republican, 1,162 for John Panier, Socialist, and 648 for Charles C. Edwards, Prohibitionist. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Ford, Livingston, Logan, McLean, and Woodford (5 counties). Population (1910), 176,291. JOHN A. STERLING, Republican, of Bloomington, was born on a farm near Leroy, - Ill., February 1, 1857; attended the public schools, and took the classical course at the Illinois Wesleyan University, graduating in June, 1831; after graduation was superintendent of the public schools of Lexington for two years; was admitted to the bar in December, 1884, since which time he has been 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 elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,601 votes, to 14,215 for I,. Ritzhenry, Democrat, 817 for Robert Means, Prohibitionist, and 292 for J. H. Sanders, Socialist. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clark, Cumberland, Edgar, Iroquois, Kankakee, and Ver- milion (6 counties). Population (1910), 219,425. JOSEPH GURNEY CANNON, Republican, of Danville, wasborn 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,943 votes, to 16,186 for William I. Cundiff, Democrat, 1,664 for George W. Woollsey, Prohibi- tionist, and 725 for H. M. Brooks, Socialist. Mr. Cannon was elected Speaker in the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Champaign, Coles, Dewitt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties). Population (1910), 241,728. WILLIAM BROWN McKINLEY, Republican, of Champaign, was born Septem- ber 5, 1856, in Petersburg, I11.; was educated in the common schools and spent two 24 Congressional Directory. ILLINOIS years in the University of Illinois; is a farmer and banker; trustee of the University of Illinois; is married; delegate to the Republican national convention in 1908; elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,107 votes, to 19,259 for I. J. Martin, Democrat, - 1,073 for Thomas C. Eiler, Prohibitionist, and 459 for J. W. Easley, Socialist. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Mason, Menard, Morgan, Pike, and Scott (10 counties). Population (1910), 175,978. HENRY T. RAINEY, Democrat, of Carrollton, was born August 20, 1860, at Car- rollton, I11., 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 degreeof A. M. He graduated from Union College of Law, Chicago, in 1885, receiving the degree of B. L. Soon afterwards he was admitted to the bar. Since that time he has practiced law at Carrollton, Ill. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,194 votes, to 12,961 for James H. Danskin, Republican, 550 for Charles Temple, Prohibitionist, and 380 for W. L,. Heberling, Socialist. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon (4 counties). Population (1910), 211,614. JAMES M. GRAHAM, Democrat, of Springfield, was born in Ireland, April 14, 1852; came to Sangamon County, Ill., in 1868; when of age began teaching in the public schools of Champaign County, I11., and continued teaching for about seven years; was admitted to the bar in 1835; was married in 1876 to Miss Kate Wallace, of Rantoul, Ill.; has seven children, all living. Served one term in the Illinois Legislature and one term as State’s attorney for Sangamon County; also served as member of the Springfield School Board; became associated with the late United States Senator John M. Palmer in the law firm of Palmer, Shutt & Graham, which continued till the death of Senator Palmer, and later of Mr. Shutt; since that the firm is Graham & Graham; served in the Sixty-first and was reelected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 19,886 votes, to 17,318 for H. Clay Wilson, Republican, 889 for Edmund Miller, Prohibitionist, and 1,593 for Herman Rahm, Socialist. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. CouNTIES: Bond, Madison, Monroe, St. Clair, and Washington (5 counties), Population (1910), 259,059. WILLIAM A. RODENBERG, Republican, of Kast 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 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 conventions of 1896 and 1908; was appointed a member of the United States Civil Service Commis- sion by President McKinley, March 25, 1gor, which position he resigned on April 1, 1902; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,024 votes, to 18,787 for the Democratic candidate, 3,826 for the Socialist candidate, and 654 for the Prohibitionist candidate. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jeffer- son, Lawrence, Marion, Richland, and Wabash (10 counties). Population (1910), 233,149. 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 Fureka, 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, Il., 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 Olney in 1895 and again in 1902. He is married; he was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,535 votes, to 18,230 for J. H. Loy, Republican, 1,096 for D. R. Bebout, Prohibitionist, and ¢81 for Rikus A. Jeths, Socialist. 0 TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Clay, Edwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, John- ‘ son, Massac, Pope, Saline, Wayne, and White (11 counties). Population (1910), 187,279. H. ROBERT FOWLER, Democrat, of Elizabethtown, was born in Polk County, I11., and resided in that county until the age of 15 years, subsequently attending the Old Normal University at Normal, Ill., graduating in 1880; attended the law school of ILLINOIS Biographical : 25 the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, Mich., graduating in 1887 with the degree of LL. B.; is a lawyer by profession and enjoys a large personal-injury practice, never taking the side of a corporation; was admitted to the bar in Michigan in 1886, having passed the bar examination before graduating from college, and admitted to the Illinois bar in 1887; admitted to practice before the circuit and Federal courts in 1904 and the Federal Court of Appeals in 1907; was State’s attorney of Hardin County, Ill., from 1888 to 1892; member of the House of Representatives of Illinois from 1893 to 1895, and of the Senate of Illinois from 1900 to 1904; is a Mason and a member of the Historical Society of Illinois; married Miss Mary E. Griffith, daughter of James Griffith, a Mexican War soldier, and has one daughter; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,235 votes, to 16,918 for Pleasant T. Chapman, Republican, 630 for T. J. Scott, Prohibitionist, and 521 for M. S. Dickerson, Socialist. The head of the ticket received a Republican plurality of 3,159 votes. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Ran- dolph, Union, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1910), 217,639. 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 Gov. 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 1901; was department commander for Illinois Grand Army of the Republic in 1901; was married in 1866 at Mason, Ill.; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress to fill a vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. George W. Smith; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,233 votes to 16,442 for William D. Lyerle, Democrat, 1,815 for Daniel Boone, Socialist, and 675 for J. H. Davis, Prohibitionist. [50] iNoiaNa [0250 (Population (1910), 2,700,876.) ; SENATORS. BENJAMIN F. SHIVELY, Democrat, of South Bend, was born in St. Joseph County, Ind., March 20, 1857; was educated in the common schools of his county and at the Northern Indiana Normal School at Valparaiso and the University of Michigan; taught school from 1874 to 1880, after which he engaged in journalism; is the president of the board of trustees of Indiana University; in 1884 was elected a Representative to the short term of the Forty-eighth Congress to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Maj. William H. Calkins; was elected a Representative in the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, and Fifty-second Congresses; declined a renomination in 1892; was the Democratic nominee for governor of Indiana in 1896; received the complimentary vote of the Democrats in the general assembly for United States Senator in 1903 and 1905; was elected to the United States Senate in January, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. JOHN WORTH KERN, Democrat, of Indianapolis, was born December 20, 1849, in Howard County, Ind.; was educated in the common schools, Normal College at Kokomo, Ind., and graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan with degree of bachelor of laws, class of 1869; by profession, a lawyer, practicing at Kokomo, Ind., until 1885, since that time at Indianapolis; member of bar of Supreme Court of the United States and member of American Bar Association; was reporter of the Indiana Supreme Court from 1885 to 1889, and edited and published 17 volumes of Indiana Reports—volumes 100 to 116, inclusive; member of Indiana State Senate 1893-1897; city solicitor of Indianapolis, 1897-1901; special assistant United States district attorney 1893-4; Democratic candidate for governor in 1900 and 1904; Demo- cratic candidate for Vice President in 1908; is married and has three children; was nominated as the party’s candidate for United States Senator by a unanimous vote of the Democratic State convention in 1910, and elected to the Senate by the legislature January 18, 1911, receiving go votes as against 60 votes received by Albert J. Beveridge, the Republican candidate. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 26 Congressional Directory. INDIANA REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Gibson, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick (6 coun- ties). Population (1910), 191,516. v JOHN WILLIAM BOEHNE, Democrat, of Evansville, was born October 28, 1856, in Vanderburg County, Ind.; was reared on a farm; attended the district public school and the German parochial school of the Lutheran Church; later attended business college; at the age of 16 he became a resident of Evansville; later became an accountant; since 1881 has been a manufacturer of stoves and ranges; is also inter- ested in other manufacturing enterprises; is married, and has five children—four daughters and one son. In 1897 he was elected councilman at large, and reelected in 1899; in 1901 was nominated for mayor, but declared not elected by 82 votes; in 1905 was again a candidate for mayor and was elected by a majority of 1,590; was serving his third year as mayor when nominated for Congress; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention held at Denver in 1908; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 22,420 votes, to 18,606 for F. B. Posey, Republican, 1,027 for Romelia Bishop, Socialist, and 853 for William V. Harrel, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Daviess, Greene, Knox, Lawrence, Martin, Monroe, Owen, and Sullivan (8 counties). Population (1910), 217,296. WILLIAM ALLEN CULLOP, Democrat, of Vincennes, was born on a farm in Knox County, Ind., March 28, 1853; attended the common schools until prepared for college; entered Hanover College in September, 1874, and was graduated therefrom in June, 1878; received the degree of A. M. in 1883; taught for two years in the Vincennes University; then studied law and was admitted to practice at Vincennes, Ind., in June, 1880, and began practice at once. Was prosecuting attorney of the twelfth judicial circuit from 1883 to 1886; was a member of the Indiana Legislature 1891 and 1893; at the latter session was chairman of the ways and means committee of the house, and leader of his party on the floor; was a delegate to the Democratic national conventions of 1892 and 1896; in 1892 was the Indiana member of the committee to notify Cleveland and Stevenson of their nomination; in 1goo was a candidate for elector on the Democratic ticket; in 1904 was chairman of the committee on resolu- tions at the Indiana Democratic State convention, and reported the platform to the convention; was married in 1898 to Mrs. Artie Goodwin, of Chicago; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Orange, Perry, Scott, and Washington (9 counties). Population (1910), 173,723. WILLIAM ELIJAH COX, Democrat, of Jasper, was born in Dubois County, Ind., September 6, 1865; is a graduate of the I.ebanon University, of I,ebanon, 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 and Sixty-first Congresses and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bartholomew, Brown, Dearborn, Jackson, Jefferson, Jennings, Johnson, Ohio, Ripley, and Switzerland (10 counties). Population (1910), 167,686. 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; 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 committee from 1897 until nominated for Congress in 1904; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- first Congresses and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Clay, Hendricks, Morgan, Parke, Putnam, Vermilion, and Vigo (7 counties). Population (1910), 224,086. RALPH W. MOSS, Democrat, of Center Point, was born at Center Point, Clay County, Ind., April 21, 1862; secured his education in the common schools of the township, with two years’ additional work in Purdue University; is a farmer; his parents were poor, and he has actively engaged in the labor of cultivating his farm; was elected to the Indiana State Senate in 1904, serving four years; married; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. INDIANA Biographical. 27 SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Decatur, Fayette, Franklin, Hancock, Henry, Rush, Shelbys Union, and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1910), 193,499. FINLY H. GRAY, Democrat, of Connersville, was born July 24, 1864, in Payette County, Ind.; received common-school education in country district only; began the study and practice of law alone in Connersville, Ind., in 1893; elected mayor of Connersville in 1904; reelected to said office in 1909; received the nomination as Democratic candidate for Congress, May 25, 1910, at Richmond, Ind., over Leonidas - Mull, of Rush County, and Thomas H. Kuhn, of Wayne County; was elected to the Sixty- -second Congress, receiving 23,740 votes, to 22,242 for William O. Barnard, Republican, 1,40T1 For Aaron Worth, Prohibitionist, and 1 ,057 for William 1,. Perkins, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counrty: Marion. Population (1910), 263,661. CHARLES ALEXANDER XKORBLY, Democrat, of Indianapolis, was born March 24, 1871, in Madison, Ind.; was a reporter and editor of the Madison Herald for three years, then moved to Indianapolis and resumed the study of law under his father; was married in 1902 to Isabel Palmer and has four children; was elected to the Sixty- -first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, Teceiving 30,330 votes, to 26,968 for Linton A. Cox, Republican, 719 for James Lewis, Prohibitionist, 2,295 for Carl L. P. Ott, Socialist, and 172 for Social Labor. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Adams, Delaware, Jay, Madison, Randolph, and Wells (6 coun- ties). Population (1910), 214,870. 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 189I, and has one child, ‘Herbert J. Adair, age 18 years; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1895; was elected representative to the General 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 attention to the banking business; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Con- gress, receiving 25,455 votes, to 19,309 for Rollin Warner, Republican, 1,429 for Carey S. Ayers, Prohibitionist, and 2,910 for Orville G. Overcash, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Carroll, Clinton, Fountain, Hamilton, Howard, Mont- gomery, and Tipton (8 counties). - Population (1910), 196,714. MARTIN ANDREW MORRISON, Democrat, of Frankfort, was born at Frank- fort, Ind., April 15, 1862; was educated in the public schools of that city, graduating from its high school in June, 1878; graduated from Butler University in June, 1883, receiving the degree of bachelor of arts; in June, 1886, graduated from the Univer- sity of Virginia, receiving the degree of bachelor of laws; from Butler University, in June, 1887, received the degree of master of arts; has been engaged in the practice of law since 18386; served two terms as county attorney and one term as a mem- ber of the school board of the city of Frankfort; is a widower; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Benton, Jasper, Lake, Taporte, Newton, Porter, Tippecanoe, Warren, and White (9 counties). Population (1910), 254,001. 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 Gov. Hovey, from March, 1891, to January 1, 1893; was elected . to the Fifty-fiftth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fiffy-ninth Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blackford, Cass, Grant, Huntington, Miami, and Wabash (6 counties). Population (1910), 188,872. GEORGE W. 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the 28 Congressional Directory. INDIANA Sixty-second Congress, receiving 22,528 votes, to 21,282 for John I,. Thompson, - Republican, 1,860 for Charles P. Baldwin, Prohibitionist, and 1,551 for N. G. Marlott, Socialist. : TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Dekalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley (6 counties). Population (1910), 188,763. CYRUS CLINE, Democrat, of Angola, was born in Richland County, Ohio, July 12, 1856, the son of Michael and Barbara Cline; his parents moved very early to Steuben County, Ind., where he has resided ever since. He was educated in the Angola High School and Hillsdale College, Mich., graduating in the scientific course in 1876, receiving the master’s degree in 1878; was elected superintendent of schools of Steuben County in 1877, and remained in that work till 1883; in 1884 began the practice of law, continuing in the practice to this time. Mr. Cline also engaged in the banking business in connection with several other gentlemen, who organized the First National Bank of Angola in November, 1903; at that time Mr. Cline was elected as its president, and has continued in that capacity ever since. He was married October 6, 1880, to Jennie Gibson, daughter of Bush and Susan Gibson, of Thetford, Vt.; they have one daughter. He was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Klkhart, Fulton, Kosciusko, Marshall, Laporte, St. Joseph, and Starke (7 counties). Population (1910), 226,189. HENRY A. BARNHART, Democrat, of Rochester, was born near Twelve Mile, Ind., September 11, 1858, the son of a German Baptist minister. He was educated in the common schools, Amboy Academy, and Wabash Training School, and taught school several terms. He was then elected county surveyor, and a year later pur- chased the Rochester Sentinel, and has been its publisher and editor ever since. He has been president and manager of the Rochester Telephone Co., and president of the National Telephone Association; was a director of the Northern Prison at Michi- gan City for three years, and a trustee of the hospital for the insane at Loongcliff for seven years. He 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; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. CY Iowa [ORA10 (Population (1910), 2,224,771.) SENATORS. 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 LIL. D. upon him, and Cornell College, Iowa, that of LL. D.; 1s 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 governcr of Towa from January, 1902, until elected, November 24, 1908, to fill a vacancy in the United States Senate caused by the death of Hon. W. B. Allison; was reelected January 19, 1909, for the term beginning March 4, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. WILLIAM SQUIRE KENYON, Republican, of Fort Dodge, Iowa, was born at Elyria, Ohio, June 10, 1869; educated at Iowa College, Grinnell, Jowa, and law school of the State University of Iowa; was prosecuting attorney for Webster County, Iowa, for five years; district judge for two years; general attorney Illinois Central Railroad Co. for three years; Assistant to the Attorney General of the United States one year. He was elected to the United States Senate April 12, 1911, to suec- ceed the Hon. Lafayette Young, who was appointed United States Senator Novem- ber 12, 1910, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Jonathan P. Dolliver, and took his seat April 24, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. 10waA Biographical. 29 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Iouisa, Van Buren, and Wash- ington (7 counties). Population (1910), 155,238. 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 Towa Legislature, serving in that position two terms; is an agricul- turist, being a member of the firm of Kennedy Bros., nurserymen; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Clinton, Iowa, Jackson, Johnson, Muscatine, and Scott (6 counties). Population (1910), 200,480. IRVIN S. PEPPER, Democrat, of Muscatine, Iowa, was born on a farm in Davis County, Iowa, June 10, 1876; attended country school and later graduated from Southern Iowa Normal at Bloomfield, Towa; taught school, and while serving as private secretary to Congressman M. J. Wade, studied law, graduating from the George Washington University Law School, of Washington, D. C., in 1905; while serving his second term as prosecuting attorney of Muscatine County, Towa, was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,815 votes, to 16,971 for Charles Grilk, Republican, 1,507 for George C. Cook, “Socialist, and 211 for John Bernet, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blackhawk, Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Delaware, Dubuque, Franklin, Hardin, and Wright (9 counties). Population (1910), 226,565. ~~ CHARLES EDGAR PICKETT, Republican, of Waterloo, was born in Van Buren County, Iowa, January 14, 1866; graduated from collegiate department of the State University in 1888 and from the law in 1890, and has since been engaged in the prac- tice of his profession; was a regent of the State University from 1896 to 1909; elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Allamakee, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, pasts, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, Winneshiek, and Worth (10 counties). Population (1910), 186,362. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Cedar, Grundy, Jones, Linn, Marshall, and Tama (7 counties). Population (1910), 186,700. JAMES WILLIAM GOOD, Republican, of Cedar Rapids, was born September 24, 1866, near that place in Linn County, Iowa; graduated from Coe College, Cedar Rapids, in 1892, receiving the degree of bachelor of sciences: also graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1893, receiving the degree of bachelor of laws; is a lawyer by profession; has never before held any office of a public nature except that of city attorney for the city of Cedar Rapids, from April, 1906, to April, 1908; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,953 votes, to 14,676 for S. C. Huber, Democrat, 557 for Frank Swearinger, Prohibitionist, and 560 for W. B. Goulding, Socialist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Davis, Jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, and ‘Wapello (7 counties). Population (1910), 174,130. N. E. KENDALL, Republican, of Albia, was born at Greenville, Lucas County, Iowa, March 17, 1868, and attended the rural schools of that county; has practiced law since May 15, 1889; was five terms a member and once speaker of the Iowa House of Representatives; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,335 votes, to 15,914 for Hon. D. W. Hamilton, Democrat, 1,062 for Hon. W. C. Minnick, Socialist, and 583 for Hon. F. M. Barrett, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1910), 214,959. SOLOMON FRANCIS PROUTY, Republican, of Des Moines, was born at Dela- ware, Delaware County, Ohio, January 17, 1854, and moved with his father to Marion County, Iowa, in 1855; was educated in the public schools of Iowa and graduated at 30 Congressional Directory. Towa the Central University of Iowa in 1877, and now holds his degree of M. A. of that institution; he also attended the Simpson College at Indianola, Iowa, for two years; won the first prize in oratory in the oratorical State contest in Towa in 1876, and won second prize in oratory in the interstate contest held at Madison, Wis., in 1877; graduated from the Central University of Towa in 1877 and was elected professor of Latin in that institution, a position that he filled for four years; was elected to the State Legislature of Towa in 1879; was elected district judge of Des Moines, Polk County, Towa, in 1890; married Ida E. Warren, daughter of Hon. R. B. Warren, in 1888; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,722 votes, to 14,597 for Clinton I,. Price, Democrat, and 1,138 for William I,. Wilson, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Appanoose, Clarke, Decatur, Fremont, Iucas, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, Union, and Wayne (11 counties). Population (1910), 181,885. HORACE MANN TOWNER, Republican, of Corning, was born at Belvidere, 111., October 23, 1855; was educated at the public and high schools of Belvidere, Chicago University, and Union College of Law; was married to Harriet Elizabeth Cole in 1887; admitted to the bar in 1877, and practiced law in Corning until 18go; was elected judge of the third judicial district of Iowa in 1890, and served until January 1, 1911; has been for 10 years lecturer on constitutional law in the State University of Towa, from which he received the degree of LY. B.; served as president of the Towa State Bar Association; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiv- ing 19,548 votes, to 15,565 for Frank Q. Stuart, Democrat, and 509 for S. D. Mercer, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Adair, Audubon, Cass, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Pottawattamie, and Shelby (9 counties). Population (1910), 191,473. Vacancy. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmet, Greene, Hamilton, Hancock, Humboldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, and Winnebago (14 counties), Population (1910), 252,035. FRANK P. WOODS, Republican, of Estherville, was born in Walworth County, Wis., where he attended the public schools, afterwards finishing his education at the Northern Indiana Normal School at Valparaiso; in 1887 moved to Iowa; in 1906 and 1go7 was chairman of the Republican State central committee; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. ; ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, I,yon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (13 counties). Population (1910), 254,944. 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, ¥. H., Charlotte, Lyle, and Eleanor; served as a member of the house of representatives, nineteenth general assembly of Iowa, and of the senate in the twenty-seventh and twenty-eighth general assemblies; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. ce “KANSAS 4609) (Population (1910), 1,690,949.) SENATORS. 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, Fifty- ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses 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. KANSAS Brographical. 31 JOSEPH LITTLE BRISTOW, Republican, of Salina, was born in Wolf County, Ky., July 22, 1861; moved to Kansas in 1873 with his father; was married in 1879 to Margaret Hendrix, of Flemingsburg, Ky.; graduated from Baker University, Baldwin, Kans., in 1886; the same year he was elected clerk of the district court of Douglas County, which position he held four years; in 1890 bought the Daily Repub- lican at Salina, Kans., which he edited for five years. In 1894 he was elected secre- tary of the Republican State committee and was appointed private secretary to Gov. E. N. Morrill] in 1895; the same year he sold the Salina Republican and bought the Ottawa (Kauns.) Herald, which he owned for more than ten years; in 1898 was again elected secretary of the Republican State committee; in March, 1897, was appointed Fourth Assistant Postmaster General by President McKinley; in 1900, under direction of the President, investigated the Cuban postal frauds; in 1903, under direction of President Roosevelt, conducted an extensive investigation of the Post Office Depart- ment; in 1903 purchased the Salina Daily Republican-Journal; in 19o5 was appointed by President Roosevelt as special commissioner of thePanama Railroad, in which capacity he filed two elaborate reports, one in August, 1905, and the other in January, 1908; was nominated in August, 1908, by the Republicans of Kansas for the United States Senate to succeed Hon. Chester I. Long, and was elected in January, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. —COUNTIES: Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, I,eavenworth, Nemaha, and Shawnee (8 counties). Population (1910), 218,683. DANIEL, READ ANTHONY, Jr., Republican, of I,eavenworth, 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 in 1903-1905; succeeded to the management of the Leavenworth 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, 1go7, and was elected to the Sixtieth Congress to fill a vacancy caused by the election of Hon. Charles Curtis to be United States Senator; elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,852 votes, to 7,486 for J. B. Chapman, Independent Democrat, and 878 for E. B. Keck, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte (9 counties). Population (1910), 264,205. ALEXANDER CLARK MITCHELL, Republican, of I.awrence, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, October 11, 1860; was educated in the common schools and the University of Kansas, graduating in June, 1889, with the degree of LI,. B.; engaged in the practice of law at Lawrence, Kans.; was county attorney of Douglas County, Kans., for four years; member of board of regents of the University of Kansas for six years; member of the Kansas Legislature for four years and of the State board of law examiners three years; married Miss Helen M. Baldwin July, 1890; was the successful candidate at the Republican primary August 2, 1910, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,282 votes, to 19,852 for John Caldwell, Democrat, 2,272 for Kate Richards O’Hare, Socialist, and 324 for C. H. Smith, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTtIiEs: Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Mont- gomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). Population (1910), 267,148. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, I,yon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Potta- watomie, Wabaunsee, and Woodson (10 counties). Population (1910), 158,129. FRED SCHUYLER JACKSON, Republican, of Eureka, Greenwood County, Kans., was born at Stanton, Miami County, Kans., April 19, 1868, and was educated at Madison and other public schools of Kansas; was a teacher in the schools of the State for five years, and was admitted to practice law in Greenwood County in 1891; attended the State University and graduated from that institution in the school of law with the degree of LL. B., in 1892; was elected county attorney of Greenwood 32 Congressional Directory. KANSAS County in the same year and served two terms, from 1893 to 1897; was married in "1905 to Inez S. Wood, of Brown County, Kans.; appointed assistant attorney general of Kansas by Attorney General C. C. Coleman in 1906, and in the same year was elected attorney general of Kansas, serving two terms, from 1907 to 1911; was nomi- nated for Congress, 1910, at the primary election as a progressive Republican, receiv- ing 9,717 votes to 5,609 for J. M. Miller, then serving his sixth term, and was elected ‘to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,111 votes to 14,051 for Henderson Martin, chairman of the Democratic State committee. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clay, Cloud, Dickinson, Geary, Marshall, Ottawa, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1910), 180,169. ROLLIN R. REES, Republican, of Minneapolis, Kans., was born in Camden, Ohio, in 1865, and came with his parents to Ottawa County in 1867; his father, Victor D. Rees, was one of the early settlers of Ottawa County and afterwards : became president of the Citizens National Bank; young Rees attended the local schools and afterwards attended the Agricultural College at Manhattan, Kans., from which he graduated with the degree of B. Sc. in 1885; immediately after graduation he commenced the study of law and was admitted to the bar in 1887 and formed a partnership with R. F. Thompson, one of the prominent lawyers of Kansas; the latter was soon after appointed to the bench and Mr. Rees carried on the large prac- tice that had theretofore belonged to the firm; he afterwards formed a partnership with J. B. Tomlinson and continued the practice under the firm name of Rees & Tomlinson until the latter was appointed warden of the State penitentiary; was twice elected county attorney of Ottawa County and was sent to represent his county in the State Legislature during the sessions of 1899 and 1901; was elected judge of the thirtieth judicial district in 1903 and served with such general satisfaction to the people that he was reelected four years later and continued to serve until he resigned to become a candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress ; was married in 1896 to Hattie FE. Merrick, and they have two small children; is a life-long Repub- lican; he is president of the Citizens National Bank of Minneapolis, Kans. He received the Republican nomination for Congress over the veteran William A. Calderhead at the primaries in August, 1910, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,680 votes, to 15,775 for G. T. Helvering, Democrat, and 1,028 for Jesse R. Johnson, Socialist. i ~ SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTIES: Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lin- coln, I,ogan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Rooks, Russell, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace (22 counties). Population (1910), 203,431. I. D. YOUNG, Republican, of Beloit, was born on a farm near Pleasantville, Marion County, Iowa, and when at the age of 6 years, with his father’s family, moved to and settled upon a farm in Adams County, Iowa; was educated there in the common and high schools of the county; began teaching at the age of 15 and continued in that profession for royears. Moved from there with his wife to Mitchell County, Kans,, where he homesteaded in 1874; farmed the same for more than 12 years; studied law while on the farm, and in 1888 moved from there to Beloit, where he began and ever since has continued in the practice of the law. Was elected super- intendent of public instruction of Mitchell County, Kans., in 1876, and reelected in 1878; was elected for a four-year term to the Kansas State Senate, being one of the youngest members of that body; was again elected to the senate in 1904; and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,220 votes, to 18,985 for Frank S. Rockefeller, Democrat. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwgrds, Finney, Ford, Grant, Gray, Greeley, Hamilton, Harper, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearny, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane, Meade, Morton, Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens, and Wichita (32 counties). Population (1910), 231,655. EDMOND H. MADISON, Republican, of Dodge City, was born at Plymouth, I1l., 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. RANSAS i Biographical. 33 EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Butler, Harvey, McPherson, Sedgwick, and Sumner (5 coun- ties). Population (1910), 167,529. VICTOR MURDOCK, Republican, of Wichita, was born in Burlingame, Kans., March 18, 1871, the son of Marshall M. and Victoria Murdock. He moved to the then frontier town of Wichita early in 1872, and was educated in the common schools and in Lewis Academy, Wichita. He began the printer’s trade during vaca- tions at the age of 10 years; became a newspaper reporter at 15, and at 20 moved to Chicago and worked there as a newspaper reporter. He married Miss M. P. Allen in 18go. In 1894 he became managing editor of the Wichita Daily Eagle. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. 3 XO] KENTUCKY 39 (Population (1910), 2,289,905.) SENATORS... THOMAS H. PAYNTER, Democrat, was born in Lewis County, Ky.; was educated in the common schools, Rand’s Academy, and at Center College, Dan- ville, 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. : WILLIAM O’CONNELI, BRADLEY, Republican, of Beechmont, a suburb of Louisville, was born near Lancaster, Ky., March 18, 1847, being the only son of Robert McAfee Bradley, one of Kentucky’s greatest lawyers; educated in the ordinary local schools, never having attended college, and at the age of 14, on account of the breaking out of the Civil War, ceased to attend school and ran away from home, joining the Union Army twice, but on account of youthfulness was taken from the Army by his father on each occasion; was a page in the lower house of the Kentucky Legislature; was licensed to practice law by special act of the legislature when 18 years of age if found competent by two circuit judges, and from that time has been engaged actively in the practice in the State and Federal courts, of Kentucky and other States, the United States circuit court of appeals, and the Supreme Court of the United States. July 11, 1867, he married Margaret Robertson Duncan, of Lancas- ter, Ky., a granddaughter of Samuel McKee, who was a Member of Congress, a great niece of Chief Justice Robertson, of the court of appeals, and of Gov. Robert P. Letcher; was elected county attorney of Garrard County in 1870; Repub- lican candidate for Congress in 1872 and 1876 in a hopelessly Democratic district; unanimously elected delegate at large to six Republican national conventions, sec- _ onding the nomination of Gen. Grant in 1880, defeating the motion to curtail south- ern representation in 1884, and seconding nomination of Roosevelt for President in 1904; was three times elected member of the Republican national committee; received 105 votes for Vice President in the convention of 1888; was indorsed for President by the Kentucky State convention in 1896; appointed minister to Korea in 1889 and de- clined; defeated for governor in 1887, reducing the Democratic majority of 47,000 in the previous race for governor to less than 17,000; was elected governor in 1895 by a plurality of 8,912; was nominated by his party for United States Senator and voted for four times prior to 1908, and in February, 1go8, was elected to the United States Senate, the general assembly having a Democratic majority of 8 on joint ballot; was appointed to institute suits for damages against star-route contractors by President Arthur, but declined to accept; twice elected chairman of the Kentucky delegation 1n national conventions; received degree of LL. D. from Kentucky University; deliv- ered the oration at the Kentucky Building, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, in 1893; delivered the oration at the dedication of the Jefferson Statue in Louisville: delivered the oration at the dedication of the Chickamauga Monument, and also delivered an oration at the dedication of the Kentucky State capitol in 1910. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. 34 Congressional Directory. KENTUCKY REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Livingston, Iyon, McCracken, Marshall, and ‘I'rigg (13 counties). Population (1910), 213,791. 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 Gov. Goebel in his celebrated con- test 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; delegate from the State at large to the Demo- cratic national convention at Denver, Colo., in 1908, and elected chairman of the Kentucky delegation at all three conventions; made a speech seconding the nomi- nation of William J. Bryan for President of the United States; served as chairman of the State convention of 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, McLean, Union, and Webster (8 counties). Population (1910), 206,121. AUGUSTUS OWSLEY STANLEY, Democrat, of Henderson, was born May 271, 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 188g and 1894 as school-teacher; was presidential elector in 1900, which is the only office or public position of any kind ever held by him prior to his election to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and was reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Barren, Butler, Edmonson, Logan, Metcalfe, Muhlenberg, Simpson, Todd, and Warren (ro counties). "Population (1910), 189,004. ROBERT YOUNG THOMAS, Jr., Democrat, of Central City, was born in Logan County, Ky.; was educated at Bethel College, Russellville, Ky.; received the degrees of A. B. and A. M.; is married; is a lawyer by profession; was a member of the State Legislature in 1886; was elected Commonwealth’s attorney for the seventh judicial dis- trict, which office he held when nominated for Congress; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Breckinridge, Bullitt, Bray Green, Hardin, Hart, Larue, Marion, Meade, Nelson, Ohio, Taylor, and Washington (13 counties). Population (1910), 210,406. 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; 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; was chairman of the Democratic State campaign committee, 1908; on November 5, 1905, was elected a member of the Kentucky State Senate, but resigned November 5, 1906; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTtyY: Jefferson. Population (1910), 262,920. SWAGAR SHERLEY, Democrat, of T,ouisville, 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; was married to Miss Mignon Critten, of Staten Island, N. Y., April 21, 1906; never held public office prior to his election to Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,437 votes to 17,376 for J. Wheeler McGee, Republican. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Boone, Campbell, Carroll, Gallatin, Grant, Kenton, Pendleton, and Trimble (8 counties). Population (1910), 181,029. ARTHUR B. ROUSE, Democrat, of Burlington, Boone County, was born June 20, 1874. Attended school at Burlington and graduated from Hanover College, Indiana, with the degree of B. S. in 1906; graduated from the Louisville Law School in 1900. KENTUCKY Biographical. oh 28 Served as a member of the State executive committee for seven years and resigned to become a candidate for Congress in 1910, Married Minnie Elizabeth Kelly De- cember 14, 1910; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,454 votes, to 11,007 for Charles W. Nagel, Republican, and 1,337 for Charles W. Lanfersick, Socialist. ; SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bourbon, Fayette, Franklin, Henry, Oldham, Owen, Scott, and Woodford (8 counties). Population (1910), 151,051. JAMES CAMPBELI, CANTRILIL, Democrat, of Georgetown, was born at George- town, Scott County, Ky., July 9, 1870; was educated at Georgetown (Ky. ) College; in 1893 he married Miss Carrie Payne, of Georgetown; in 1895 was elected chairman of the Scott County Democratic committee; in 1897 elected a member of the Kentucky House of Representatives and reelected in 1899; in 1901 was elected a member of the Kentucky Senate from the twenty-second senatorial district; in 1904 was elected chairman of the joint caucus of the Kentucky Legislature; in 1904 was nominated at Lexington for Congress, but declined the nomination, although the nomination was equivalent to election; the same year he was elected a delegate to the Democratic national convention; in 1906 Mr. Cantrill became active in the work of organizing the tobacco growers of Kentucky, and for several years past has given almost his entire time to this work; January, 1908, he was elected president of the American Society of Equity for Kentucky, an organization for the cooperation of farmers in securing more profitable prices for their products; was elected to the Sixty-first Conggess and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Anderson, Boyle, Garrard, Jessamine, Lincoln, Madison, Mer- cer, Rockcastle, Shelby, and Spencer (10 counties). Population (1910), 148,313. HARVEY HELM, Democrat, of Stanford, was born at Danville, Boyle County, Ky.; attended school at the Stanford Male Academy, and graduated from the Central University of Kentucky, with the degree of A. B.; began the practice of law in 1890; elected a member of the house of representatives in 1893; served as such in the Gen- eral Assembly of Kentucky, session of 1894; elected county attorney of Iincoln County in 1897 for the term of four years, and reelected in 1900; was delegate from the eighth district to the Democratic national convention at Kansas City in 1900; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, arid reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving a plurality of 3,027 votes over Hugh P. Miller, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Carter, Fleming, Greenup, Harrison, Law- rence, Lewis, Mason, Nicholas, Robertson, and Rowan (13 counties). Population (1910), 200,845. WILLIAM JASON FIELDS, Democrat, of Olive Hill, Carter County, Ky., was born at Willard, Carter County, Ky., December 29, 1874; was educated in the com- mon schools of Carter County; was married October 28, 1893, to Miss Dora McDavid, of Rosedale, Ky.; is a farmer and real estate dealer; was a traveling salesman for 12 years preceding his nomination to Congress; was nominated July 27, 1910, and elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,339 votes, to 18,717 for J. B. Ben- nett, Republican. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Breathitt, Clark, Elliott, Estill, Floyd, Johnson, Knott, Lee, Magoffin, Martin, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Pike, Powell, and Wolfe (16 counties). Population (1910), 218,077. JOHN WESLEY LANGLEY, Republican, of Pikeville, 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 Iegislature, 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. ; ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Adair, Bell, Casey, Clay, Clinton, Cumberland, Harlan, Jack- son, Knox, Ietcher, Leslie, Laurel, Monroe, Owsley, Perry, Pulaski, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley (19 counties). Population (1910), 308,348. CALEB POWERS, Republican, of Barbourville, was born in Whitley County, Ky., February 1, 1869; attended Union College, Barbourville, Ky., State University, 84259°—62-1—18T ED—4 36 Congressional Directory. KENTUCKY Lexington, Ky., Centre College, Danville, Ky., and the Valparaiso Indiana Univer- sity, Valparaiso, Ind., where he graduated in law and was admitted to the bar in 1894; was elected superintendent of public schools for Knox County, Ky., in 1894 and reelected in 1897; in 1899 was elected secretary of state for the State of Kentucky. Contests were instituted by the Democratic opponents for all the State offices, includ- ing the one for which he was elected. During the contests Senator William Goebel, the Democratic contestant for governor, was shot and killed by an unknown assas- sin; and upon the heels of that followed Mr. Powers’s long persecution with which the public is familiar. After having served eight years three months and three days in the jails of Kentucky was given his freedom and was nominated for Congress in a Republican primary over his opponent, Congressman D. C. Edwards, . by 9,861 majority, carrying 16 of the 19 counties in the district. In the final election, November, 1910, defeated the Democratic opponent, Senator Elza Bertram, by 9,265 majority, again carrying 16 of the 19 counties. XX] LOUISIANA" [7409 (Population (1910), 1,656,388.) SENATORS. MURPHY J. FOSTER, Democrat, of Franklin, was born at Franklin, La., January 12,1849; after the Civil War attended preparatory school at Whites 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 T'ulane 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 Sfate 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. JOHN RANDOLPH THORNTON, Democrat, was born in Iberville Parish, ILa., August 25, 1846; resided in Rapides Parish, La., since 1853; left Louisiana State University in beginning of 1863 and volunteered in Confederate States Army, in which he served as private until close of Civil War; followed agriculture for an occupation until 1877, when he was licensed by the Supreme Court of Louisiana to ° practice law and has followed that profession ever since; served-as judge of Rapides Parish, La., from 1878 to 1880; was a member of the last State constitutional con- vention of Louisiana in 1898; member of the board of supervisors, Louisiana State University; one of the three louisiana commissioners to conference on uniform laws for the United States, and vice president of that body; member of the American Bar Association and one of the local council of that body in Iouisiana; was appointed August 27, 1910, by the governor of Louisiana as United States Senator in place of Hon. S. D. McEnery, deceased, and elected December 7, 1910, by the General Assem- bly of Iouisiana to fill the unexpired term of Senator McEnery, and took his seat December 12, 1910. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. . REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CiTy OF NEW ORLEANS: Third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and fifteenth wards. PARISHES: St. Bernard and Plaquemines. Population (1910), 203,120. ALBERT ESTOPINAIL, Democrat, of Estopinal, was born in the parish of St. Bernard, La., January 30, 1845; educated in the public schools of his native parish LOUISIANA B 10q7 aphical AAA 37 and of New Orleans and by private teachers; left school in January, 1862, to enlist in the Confederate 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 Gen. Canby, at Meridian, Miss., in March, 1865; married Miss Eliska Legier, of New Orleans, in February, 1868, from which marriage he has ten children—nine sons and one daughter—all living; elected sheriff of St. Bernard Parish in 1872 and again in 1874; elected to the Louisiana House of Representatives in 1876 and again in 1878; member of the Louisiana constitutional convention of 1879; elected to the State Senate in 1880 and served continuously in that body until 1goo, when he was elected lieutenant governor of the State, serving four years; member of the Louisiana con- stitutional convention of 1898; elected to the Sixtieth Congress to fill a vacancy; elected to the Sixty-first Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 11,932 votes, to 1,408 for John A. Wogan, Republican. i SECOND DISTRICT.—City oF NEW ORLEANS: First, second, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth wards. PARISHES: Jefferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. Population (1910), 220,557. HENRY GARLAND DUPRE, Democrat, was born at Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, La., on July 28, 1873; was educated in the public schools of Opelousas and was graduated in 1892 from the Tulane University of Louisiana, at New Orleans, with the degree of bachelor of arts. He subsequently received the degree of bachelor of laws from the same institution; began the practice of his profession in the city of New Orleans in 1895 and has been continuously engaged therein since that time, serving as assistant city attorney of New Orleans from 1goo to 1910; Was elected to the House of Representatives of the State of Louisiana from the fourteenth ward of the parish of Orleans in 1900; was reelected in 1904 and in 1908; was elected speaker of the House of Representatives of the State of Louisiana for the ses- sion of 1908, and served in that capacity through the regular and extra sessions of 1910; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress on November 8, 1910, to fill the unex- pired term occasioned by the death of the Hon. Samuel I. Gilmore, receiving 10,333 votes, to 2,160 for Hon. Victor Loisel, Republican. At the same election he was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 10,218 votes, to 2,071 for. Hon. Victor Loisel, Republican. THIRD DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Assumption, Iberia, T,afayette, Lafourche, St. Martin, St. Mary, Terrebonne, and Vermilion (8 parishes). Population (1910), 234,382. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 4,011 votes, to 395 for Jules "Dreyfus, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, De Soto, Natchitoches, Red River, Sabine, Webster, and Winn (9 parishes). Population (1910), 234,677. JOHN THOMAS WATKINS, Democrat, of Minden, was born at Minden, La., 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, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. Ha FIFTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Caldwell, Catahoula, Claiborne, Concordia, Fast Carroll, Frank- lin, Jackson, Ia Salle, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, Union, and West Carroll (15 parishes). Population (1910), 238,488. JOSEPH EUGENE RANSDELI, 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 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 i 38 Congressional Directory. LOUISIANA judicial district of Louisiana in April, 1884, which office he held for 12 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 Carroll Parish. On November 15, 1885, Mr. Ransdell was married to Miss Olive Irene Powell, of I,ake Providence, IL,a. ‘They have no children.. Since Decem- ber, 1901, he has been a member of the Committee on Rivers and Harbors of the House of Representatives, and has devoted himself to legislation in regard to water- ways, especially to that part of the Mississippi River between Cairo and the Gulf, with its great levee system. In 1g9o5 Mr. Ransdell was one of the active leaders in reorganizing the National Rivers and Harbors Congress, and has been its president for several years. This congress is a voluntary organization, composed of in- dividuals, commercial bodies, boards of trade, municipalities, and waterway asso- ciations 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.” Was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress to fill the unex- pired term of Hon. S. T. Baird, who died April 22, 1899, and to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 4,255 votes, to 44 for E. C. Holmes, Socialist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Ascension, Iberville, Fast Baton Rouge, Hast Feliciana, Living- ston, Pointe Coupee, St. Helena, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Washington, West Baton Rouge, and West Feliciana (12 parishes). Population (1910), 247,612. ROBERT C. WICKLIFFE, Democrat, of St. Francisville, was born at Bardstown, Ky., May 1, 1874, while his parents were on a visit to relatives in that State, He is the son of the late Robert C. Wickliffe, and wasreared at his father’s home in the parish of West Feliciana, Ia. He was educated in the public schools of St. Francisville, La., whence he entered Center College, Danville, Ky., from which institution he was graduated in 1895 with the degree of B. S. He then entered the law department of Tulane University, New Orleans, La., graduating in 1897. Returning to his home in West Feliciana he began the practice of his profession at St. Francis- ville, in that parish. In 1898 he was elected to represent the parish of West Felici- ° _ ana in the constitutional convention of that year which framed the present consti- tution of Louisiana. Upon the adjournment of that body in May, 1898, he enlisted as a private in Company E, First Louisiana Volunteer Infantry, serving during the Spanish-American War. He was mustered out of the service with his regiment in October, 1898, and returned to West Feliciana and resumed the practice of his pro- fession. In 1900 he was elected district attorney of the twenty-fourth judicial dis- trict of Louisiana, and after serving out his term continued to practice his profession. Mr. Wickliffe was married April 20, 1903, to Miss Lydia W. Cooke, of Louis-' ville, Ky. In 1908 he became a candidate in the Democratic primaries for the nomination for Congress from the sixth district of Louisiana, held under the new primary election law of Louisiana, and received the nomination in the second run- off, and was elected to the Sixty-first Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—ParIsHES: Acadia, Avoyelles, Calcasieu, Cameron, Grant, Rapides, St. Landry, and Vernon (8 parishes). Population (1910), 277,552. ARSENE P. PUJO, Democrat, of Lake Charles, was born December 16, 1861, near Take 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; was appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives as a member of the National Monetary Commission, upon which body he is now serving; elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 7,393 votes, to 706 for J. A. Jones, Socialist.. | MAINE Biographical. 39 xO) MAINE 9 (Population (1910), 742,371.) SENATORS. WILLIAM PIERCE FRYE, Republican, of Lewiston, was born at Lewiston, Me., September 2, 1830; graduated at Bowdoin College, Maine, 1850; studied and practiced law; was a member of the Statelegislature in 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 Republican national executive committee in 1872 and reelected in 1876 and 1880; was elected a trustee of Bowdoin College in June, 1880; received the degree of LI. D. from Bates College in July, 1881, and the same degree from Bowdoin College in 1889; was a presidential elector in 1864; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions in 1872, 1876, and 1880; was elected chairman of the Republican State committee of Maine in place of Hon. James G. Blaine, resigned, in November, 1881; was elected a Representative in the Forty-second, Forty-third, Forty-fourth, Forty-fifth, Forty-sixth, and Forty-seventh Congresses; was elected 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 1907, and again in 1907; was elected President pro tempore of the Senate February 7, 1896, and reelected March 7, 1go1, 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. CHARLES F. JOHNSON, Democrat, of Waterville, was born in Winslow, Me., February 14, 1859; attended the common schools of Winslow and Waterville Classi- cal Institute; graduated from Bowdoin College in 1879; taught school and read law; was admitted to the bar in 1886 and began practice in Waterville; was the Democratic candidate for governor of Maine in 1892 and 1894; was a member of the State Legis- lature in 1905 and 1907, serving both terms on the judiciary committee; was a dele- gate to the Democratic national convention in 1904; was grand master of the Grand Lodge of Masons of Maine in 1906 and 1907; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed the Hon. Fugene Hale for the term beginning March 4, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cumberland and York (2 counties). Population (1910), 180,540. ASHER CROSBY HINDS, Republican, of Portland, was born at Benton, Me., February 6, 1863; graduated from Colby College, 1883; began newspaper work in Portland in 1884; Speaker’s clerk, United States House of Representatives, 1890-91; clerk at Speaker’s table, United States House of Representatives, 1895-1911; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,521 votes, to 16,901 for William NM. open Democrat, 433 for James Perrigo, Prohibitionist, and 332 for Percy F. Morse, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Androscoggin, Franklin, Knox, Lincoln, Oxford, and Saga- dahoc (6 counties). Population (1910), 180,968. DANTIET, J. McGILLICUDDY, Democrat, of Lewiston, was born August 27, 1859, in Lewiston, Me.; is a graduate of Bowdoin College, 1881; lawyer by profession; meinber of Maine Legislature 1884-85; mayor of Lewiston, 1887, 1890, and 1go2; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,938 votes, to 16,227 for John P. Swasey, Republican, 508 for Walter R. Pickering, Socialist, and 310 for Charles E. Emerson, Prohibitionist. ; : THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Hancock, Kennebec, Somerset, and Waldo (4 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 158,122. SAMUEL WADSWORTH GOULD, Democrat, of Skowhegan, was born in Porter, Oxford County, Me., January 1, 1852; moved to the town of Hiram when a small boy; was educated in the public schools of that town, North Parsonsfield Seminary, and the University of Maine, from which college he was graduated in 1877; read law in the office of Ayre & Clifford in Cornish and was admitted to the har of Maine in 1879, and opened an office in Skowhegan, where he has practiced law up to the present time; was secretary of the Democratic State committee for many years, and delegate to the Democratic national conventions at Kansas City in 40 Congressional Darectory. MAINE 1900 and Denver in 1908; was! the Democratic nominee for governor of Maine in 1902, and candidate for Congress in 1908. He is one of the trustees of the University of Maine; president and director in several corporations; was married to Nellie I.. Winslow, of Gorham, Me., in 1879; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, re- ceiving 17,187 votes, to 15,798 for Edwin C. Burleigh, Republican, 447 for J. W. Brown, Socialist, and 224 for William I. Sterling, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aroostook, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (4 coun- ties). Population (1910), 222,741. FRANK EDWARD GUERNSEY, Republican, of Dover, was born in Dover, Piscataquis County, Me. He received a common-school education, attended Foxcroft Academy, Fastern Maine Conference Seminary at Bucksport, Maine Wesleyan Seminary, Kents Hill, Me., and FEastman’s Business College, Pough- keepsie, N. Y.; studied law, and was admitted to the bar at Dover in 1890. Was elected treasurer of Piscataquis County in 1890, 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 ismarried. He was elected to fill a vacancy in the Sixtieth Congress, caused by death of Hon. Llewellyn Powers, and elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,017 votes, to 17,516 votes for George M. Hanson, Democrat, and 290 for William A. Rideout, Prohibitionist. C59] MARYLAND 9) (Population (1910), 1,295,346.) SENATORS. ISIDOR RAYNER, Demeccrat, 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, and reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 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 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 1900 to 1904; was a delegate at large to the Democratic national convention held at Kansas City in 1900 and also to the St. Louis 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 MARYLAND Biographical. ) 41 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, 1908. He was elected United States Senator at the same session of the Maryland Iegislature 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 March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester (9 counties). Population (1910), 200,171. J. HARRY COVINGTON, Democrat, of Easton, was born May 3, 1870, and’ has always resided at Easton, Talbot County, Md.; received an academic education in the public schools of Talbot County and at the Maryland Military Academy; entered the law department of the University of Pennsylvania in 1891, attended at the same time some special lectures in history, literature, and economics, and graduated with the degree of LI. B. in 1894; since that time has continuously practiced his profession at Easton; was the Democratic nominee for State senator for Talbot County in 1901, but while running ahead of his legislative associates on the same ticket was defeated; in 1903 was elected State’s attorney for Talbot County for a term of four years, and was reelected in 1907; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,346 votes to 16,071 for A. Lincoln Dryden, Republican, and 1,050 for George W. Elderdice, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford; and fifteenth and sixteenth wards of Baltimore City. Population (1910), 239,891. JOSHUA FREDERICK C. TALBOTT, Democrat, of Towson, was born near Lutherville, Baltimore County, Md., July 29, 1843; received a public school educa- tion; began the study of law in 1862; joined the Confederate Army in 1864, and served as a private in the Second Maryland Cavalry until the close of the war; was admitted to the bar September 6, 1866; married Laura B. Cockey, of Lutherville, - Baltimore County, February 3, 1869; was 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 Democratic national convention at St. Louis in 1876, and to the Democratic national con- vention at St. Louis in 1904; was a delegate at large to the Democratic national con- vention at Denver, Colo., 1908, and is the member from Maryland of the Democratic - national committee; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty- eighth Congresses; was appointed insurance commissioner of the State of Mary- land in October, 1889, and resigned the position January, 1893, having been elected to the Fifty-third Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,352 votes to 17,124 for William B. Baker, Republican, 480 for Gilbert, Prohibitionist, and 424 for Smiley, Socialist. ~ THIRD DISTRICT.—Crry OF BALTIMORE: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and twenty-second wards, and the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and thirteenth precincts of the eight- eenth ward. Population (1910), 215,914. GEORGE KONIG, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born on a farm at North Point, Baltimore County, Md., January 26, 1856. Shortly after his birth his father, the late George Konig, moved with his family to Baltimore City. Being compelled at a very early age to work to earn his livelihood, Mr. Konig was denied the opportu- nity of acquiring a school education, and it was not until quite advanced in years that he taught himself, under great difficulties, reading and writing. He learned the trade of ship calker and worked at it for some 10 years. As a young man he took an active part in organized-labor movements. He tas president of the Ship Calkers’ Union, and was prominent in the councils of the Knights of Labor and of the Federation of Labor. He is now the superintendent and general manager of the Baltimore Pulverizing Co., one of Baltimore’s leading manufacturing enterprises. Mr. Konig has always taken an active interest in the politics of Baltimore, and has always voted the straight Democratic ticket. He has served two terms in the first branch of the City Council of Baltimore, and was closing out his first term in the second branch of the city council when elected to Congress. He is married and lives with his wife, Margaret A. Konig, and children at 2733 Eastern Avenue, Balti- more. Was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,028 votes, to 14,740 for Charles W. Main, Republican, 985 for Robert J. Fields, Socialist, and 314 for Conrad Mauler, jr., Prohibitionist. 2 Congressional Directory. | MARVLAND FOURTH DISTRICT.—CiTY OF BALTIMORE: Ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, four- teenth, seventeenth, nineteenth, and twentieth wards, and the first, second, third, and twelfth precincts of the eighteenth ward. Population (1910), 218,416. ? JOHN CHARLES LINTHICUM, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born at Iinthicum, Anne Arundel County, Md., November 26, 1867, and received his early education in the public schools of that county and of Baltimore City, later entering the State Normal School, from which he graduated in 1886, when he became principal of Braddock School, Frederick County, and later taught school in his native county of Anne Arundel; returning to Baltimore he took a special course in the historical and political department of the Johns Hopkins University, after which he entered the University of Maryland school of law, from which he obtained his degree of LI. B. in 18go; has since practiced law in the city of Baltimore, some years ago having associated with himself his brother, Seth Hance Linthicum, under the firm name of J. Chas. Linthicum & Bro.; in 1903 was elected to the house of delegates from the third legislative district of Baltimore City. During the session of 1904 he was chair- man of the city delegation, chairman of the elections committee, a member of the judiciary committee and of the printing committee, and performed valuable service for the State and city during that session of the legislature. In 19o5 he was nominated to the State senate from his district after one of the most spirited primary elections ever held in the city of Baltimore, and was duly elected to the State senate in the election of November of that year, and in 1907 was reelected by the largest majority ever received by any candidate for the State senate in that district; . was appointed in 1908 by his excellency, Governor Crothers, as judge advocate general upon his staff. He has always been a Democrat and taken great interest in party affairs and especially in the welfare and prosperity of his city. He is married, residing at 705 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, his wife being formerly Mrs. Gabriel D. Clark, née Perry, a daughter of the late Dr. John I. Perry, of Saratoga Springs, N. Y.; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,478 votes to 15,698 for Addison ¥. Mullikin, Republican, 765 for Klein, Prohibitionist, and 446 for Le Compe, Socialist. ~ 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. Popula- tion (1910), 204,059. THOMAS PARRAN, Republican, of St. Leonard, was born in Calvert County, Md., February 12, 1860; was a member of the House of Delegates of Maryland, 1884 and 1886, and a member of the State Senate of Maryland in 1894; was assistant enrolling clerk in the years 1895-1897 and index clerk from 1897-1901 in the House of Representatives of the United States; elected to the clerkship of the Court of Appeals of Maryland in 19o1 and served until 1907; educated in the public schools of Mary- land and Charlotte Hall Academy of Maryland; occupation, a farmer; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receivihg 15,706 votes to 14,879 for J. Enos Roy, Democrat. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1910), 216,895. DAVID JOHN LEWIS, Democrat, of Cumberland, was born May 1, 1869, at Nuttals Bank, Center County, Pa., near Osceola, Clearfield County; son of Richard I,. Iewis and Catharine Watkins I,ewis, who migrated from Wales; began coal min- ing at g years of age and learned to read at Sunday school; continued at mining until 1892, when he was admitted to the bar of Allegany County, having pursued his occupation as a miner and his studies in law and Latin at the same time; was assisted in his law studies by Hon. Benjamin A. Richmond and in Latin by Rev. John W. Nott, D. D. In 1893 was married to Florida M. Bohn, and was elected to the Maryland Senate in 1901, and to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,585 votes to 15,895 for Brainard H. Warner, jr., Republican, 848 for Finley C. Hendrickson, Prohibitionist, and 1,158 for Oswald P. Weber, Socialist. CIS] MASSACHUSETTS 5) (Population (1910), 3,366,416.) 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 MASSACHUSETTS B 10 qr aphical Hig 43 year—1876—received the degree of Ph. D. from Harvard University for his thesis on “The T,and Law of the Anglo-Saxons;’’ profession, that of literature; has published, 1877, “Life and Letters of George Cabot;’’ 1881, ‘Short History of the English Colonies in America; ’ 1882, ‘“ Life of Alexander Hamilton; 1883, ‘‘ Life of Daniel Webster; ’ 1885, edited the works of Alexander Hamilton in g volumes; published, in 1886, ‘‘Studies in History;’’ 1889, ‘‘ Life of Washington,” 2 volumes; 1891, « History of Boston’ (in the Historic Towns Series, published by the Longmans); 1892, ‘‘ Historical and Political Hssays,’’ and a volume of selections from speeches; 1805, 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;’’ 1910, ‘Speeches and addresses 1884-1909’ ; 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 Anti- quarian Society, and has received the degree of doctor of laws from Williams College, Clark University, Yale University, and Harvard University; was perma- . nent 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 1go4 at Chicago; permanent chairman of the Republican national con- vention of 1908 at Chicago; was a member of the Commission on Alaskan Boundary appointed by President Roosevelt; Regent of the Smithsonian 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 Legisla- ture; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, and Fifty-third Congresses; was elected to the Senate January 17, 1893, to succeed Henry L. Dawes; resigned his seat in the House and took his seat in the Senate March 4, 1893. He was reelected in 1899, 1905, and 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 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, i896, 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, 19goo-1902; was appointed to the United States Senate October 12, 1904, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. G. F. Hoar, and took his seat December 6. 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: Townsof Ashfield, Bernardston, Buckland, Charlemont, Colerain, Conway, Deerfield, Gill, Greenfield, Hawley, Heath, Leyden, Monroe, Rowe, Shelburne, and Whately. HAMPDEN CoUNTY: City of Holyoke and towns of Agawam, Blandford, Chester, Granville, Montgomery, Russell, Southwick, Tolland, Westfield, and West Springfield. HAMPSHIRE County: Towns of Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Hatfield, Huntington, Middlefield, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, Williamsburg, and Worthington. Population (1910), 231,682. GEORGE PEI/TON 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 I,aw School; was admitted to the bar in 1883; has received degrees of master of arts from Williams College, and doctor of laws from Amherst College; was appointed judge of the district court of northern Berkshire in 1885; resigned in 1894 upon being elected to the Massachusetts Senate; was a mem- ber of the Massachusetts Senate in 1895, 1896, and 1897; was president of that body in 1896 and 1897, being elected each year by unanimous vote; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Rifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,109 votes, 2 1 3,244 for Edward Morgan Lewis, Democrat, and 1,476 for Louis B. Clark, Socialist, ; SECOND DISTRICT.—FRANKLIN County: Towns of Erving, Ieverett, Montague, New Salem, Northfield, Orange, Shutesbury, Sunderland, Warwick, and Wendell. HAMPDEN COUNTY: Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Brimfield, Fast Longmeadow, Hampden, Hol- land, Longmeadow, Ludlow, Monson, Palmer, Wales, and Wilbraham. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, Belchertown, Easthampton, Enfield, Granby, Green- wich, Hadley, Pelham, Prescott, South Hadley, and Ware. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Athol, Barre, Brookfield, Dana, Hardwick, New Braintree, North Brookfield, Oakham, Peters- ham, Phillipston, Royalston, Warren, and West Brookfield. Population (1910), 241,413. 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 44 Congressional Directory. MASSACHUSETTS attorney general of Massachusetts from 1879 to 1882; was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 18go and 1891; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,242 votes, to 13,774 for William G. McKechnie, Democrat, 1,623 for George W. Curtis, Inde- pendence League, and 1,177 for Alva KE. Fenton, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—WORCESTER COUNTY: City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Charlton, Doug- lass, Dudley, Grafton, Holden, Ieicester, Millbury, Northbridge, Oxford, Paxton, Rutland, Shrewsbury, Southbridge, Spencer, Sturbridge, Sutton, Uxbridge, Webster, Westboro, and West Boylston. Population (1910), 236,222. / JOHN ALDEN THAYER, Democrat, of Worcester, was born December 22, 1857, in Worcester, son of Eli Thayer, M. C., 1857-1861 (founder of the New England Emi- grant Aid Co., which did so much to save Kansas from slavery and the Nation to freedom; who was largely instrumental in securing the admission of Oregon as a State), and of Caroline Maria (Capron) Thayer; was educated at public grade schools and High School of Worcester; four years at Harvard College, receiving the degree A. B. in 1879; Columbia College School of Law, receiving the degree 1,1. B. in 1889; clerk of the central district court of Worcester 1892-1897; practicing lawyer in Worcester; married Maude Albee, June 20, 1906, and his son, John Alden Thayer, jr., was born March 22, 1910; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,243 votes to 14,544 for Washburn, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of Marlboro and Waltham; towns of Acton, Ashby, Ashland, Ayer, Bedford, Boxboro, Concord, Framingham, Groton, Hudson, Lexing- ton , Lincoln, Iittleton, Maynard, Natick, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Sudbury, Townsend, Wayland, Westford, and Weston. WORCESTER COUNTY: City of Fitchburg; towns of Ash- burnham, Berlin, Bolton, Boylston, Clinton, Gardner, Harvard, Hubbardston, Lancaster, Lunenburg, Leominster, Northboro, Princeton, Southboro, Sterling, Templeton, Westminster, and Winchendon. Population (1910), 229,612. WILLIAM HENRY WILDER, Republican, of Gardner, was born May 14, 1855, in Belfast, Me., remaining there until 1866, when his family moved to Massachusetts; worked on a farm, attending school in the winter, until his seventeenth year, when he engaged in the paint and mercantile business, later organizing the Wilder Indus- tries (Inc.); studied law at the age of 45 years and admitted to the bar, engaging in the practice of corporation, bankruptcy, patent, and general-business law, mak- ing a special study of monetary affairs, visiting Europe for this purpose in 1909; is a thirty-second degree Mason, being the head of Hope Lodge, A. F. & A. M., and Gardner Chapter Royal Arch Masons; member of Ivanhoe Commandery, Knights Templar, of Gardner, and Aleppo Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, Boston; honorary member of D. G. Farragut Post No. 116, Grand Army of the Republic; is a widower, having two sons and three daughters; cast his first ballot for Hayes and Wheeler and has been active in politics ever since; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,960 votes to 16,840 for John J. Mitchell, Democrat, and 500 for James D. Ryan, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—EsseExX County: City of Lawrence; towns of Andover, Iynnfield, Methuen, and North Andover. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Lowell; towns of Billerica, Burlington, Car- lisle, Chelmsford, Dracut, Dunstable, North Reading, Reading, Tewksbury, Tyngsboro, and Wilmington. Population (1910), 243,499. : 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 Co., of Lowell; joined Iight 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 acting engineer of the Second Army Corps, under Gen. Graham, in addition to his duties as adjutant; went to Cuba and Porto Rico under Gen. 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, MASSACHUSETTS Biographical. 45 1898, 1899; chairman of committee on street railways; was elected to the Fifty- eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. : : SIXTH DISTRICT.—Essex County: Cities of Beverly, Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, and Salem, and towns of Amesbury, Boxford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Groveland, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester, Marblehead, Merrimac, Middleton, Newbury, Peabody, Rockport, Row- ley, Salisbury, Swampscott, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury. Population (1910), 226,829. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,272 votes to 12,038 for William H. O’Brien, Democrat, and 2,667. for James F. Carey, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—EsseEX CouNTY: City of Lynn; towns of Nahant and Saugus. MIDDLESEX CouNnTY: Cities of Everett, Malden, and Melrose; towns of Stoneham and Wakefield. SUF- FOLK COUNTY: City of Chelsea; town of Revere. Population (1910), 261,335. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress by 2,287 votes over Walter H. Cramer, Democrat. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of Cambridge, Medford, Somerville, and Woburn; towns of Arlington, Belmont, and Winchester. Population (1910), 246,571. SAMUEL WALKER McCALI, Republican, of Winchester, was born in Kast Prov- idence, Pa., February 28, 1851; graduated at New Hampton (N. H.) Academy in 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,854 votes, to 13,842 for Fred- erick S. Deitrick, Democrat. NINTH DISTRICT.—SUFFOLK COUNTY: Wards one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, and nine, and precincts six and seven of ward twelve, in the city of Boston; the town of Winthrop. Population (1910), 227,663. WILLIAM FRANCIS MURRAY, Democrat, of Boston, was born in Boston, Sep- tember 7, 1881, and was educated in the Boston public schools, graduating from the Boston Latin School in 1900. He received the degree of bachglor of arts from Har- vard College in June, 1904, and graduated from the Harvard Law School in June, 1906; has since practiced law in Boston in the firm of Brown, Field & Murray. He served in Company 10, United States Volunteer Signal Corps; as private and corporal in 1898, during the Spanish-American War. He was elected successively to the Boston City Council, the Massachusetts House of Representatives, and the Governor’s Council of Massachusetts, before his election to Congress in 1910; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 11,652 votes, to 10,037 for John A. Keliher, Demo- cratic Independent, and 2,081 for William H. Oakes, Republican. 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 (1910), 252,455. JAMES M. CURLEY, Democrat, of Boston, was born at Boston, November 20, 1874; attended grammar school and the evening high school, afterwards engaging in the real estate and insurance business; was a member of the Boston Common Coun- cil for two years, 1900 and 1901; the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1902 and 1903; and the Boston Board of Aldermen from 1go4 to 1911; was married June 27, 1906; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,345 votes, to 15,783 for J. Mitchell Galvin, Republican. 46 Congressional Directory. MASSACHUSETTS ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—SUrrFoLK 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 (1910), 241,165. ANDREW JAMES PETERS, Democrat, of Jamaica Plain, Boston, was born at that place April 3, 1872; is a graduate of Harvard College, 1895; graduate of Harvard . Law School, 1898; is a lawyer by profession; was a member of the Massachusetts Legislature in 1902; of the State senate of Massachusetts, 1904 and 1905; married June 23, 1910, Miss Martha R. Phillips; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,933 votes, to 13,033 for W. Dudley Cotton, jr., Republican. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—BrisTtoL 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. Popula- tion (1910), 237,031. JOHN WINGATE WEEKS, Republican, of West 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 from graduation until 1883; served in the Massachusetts Naval Brigade 10 years, the last 6 years as commanding officer of the organization; served in the Volunteer Navy during the Spanish-American War; is married; is a banker and broker; was for 3 years—19o0, 1go1, 1go2—alderman, and 2 years—Iqo3 and 1904—mayor of the city of Newton; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,037 votes, to 14,696 for Daniel J. Daley, Democrat. 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. PLYMOUTH COUNTY: Towns of Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester. Population (1910), 255,195. WILLIAM STEDMAN GREENE, Republican, of Fall River, was born in Tremont, Tazewell County, I1l., 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 Gov. 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 Simpkins for the Fifty-fifth Congress, also elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, : Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,079 votes, to 9,831 for James F. Morris, Democrat, and 11 for all others. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—BARNSTABLE COUNTY. BRISTOL CouUNTY: City of Taunton; towns of Attleboro, Easton, Mansfield, Norton, and Raynham. NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of Cohasset. PLymoUuTH COUNTY: City of Brockton; towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury, Fast Bridgewater, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marshfield, Middleboro, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rockland, Scituate, Wareham, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. Population (1910), 235,746. ROBERT ORR HARRIS, Republican, of Fast Bridgewater, Plymouth County, was born in Boston November 8, 1854; was educated in primary public schools of Fast Bridgewater and Boston, private school Phillips Exeter Academy, and Harvard University; graduate of Harvard in the class of 1877; is a lawyer; has been a mem- ber of the Massachusetts Legislature; district attorney for the southeastern district of Massachusetts for nine years; justice of Superior Court of Massachusetts from June, 1902, until March 1, 1911; is married and has five children; was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 15,753 votes, to 15,686 for Thomas C. Thacher, Democrat, and 1,480 for John McCarty, Socialist. : MICHIGAN : B roqy aphical. C9] MICHIGAN (Population (1910), 2,810,173.) SENATORS. 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, rgo1; 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 beginning 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. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; was nominated United States Senator at the primaries on September 7, 1910, receiv- ing a majority of 41,000 over Senator Burrows, and elected by the Michigan Legisla- ture January 18, 1911, receiving 115 votes, to 14 for John T. Winship, Democrat. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. : REPRESENTATIVES. y FIRST DISTRICT.—Crry oF DETROIT: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, thirteenth, fifteenth, and seventeenth wards. Population (1910), 354,731. FRANK FE. DOREMUS, Democrat, of Detroit, was born in Venango County, Pa., August 31, 1865; a lawyer by profession; served in the Legislature of Michigan 1891-2; has been assistant corporation counsel and controller of the city of Detroit; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,843 votes, to 17,676 for Edwin Denby, Republican, 1,286 for Charles Erb, Socialist, and 315 for Alfred Lowther, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw. WAYNE COUNTY: Townships of Brownstone, Canton, Kcorse, Huron, Monguagon, Northville, Plymouth, Romulus, Sumpter, Taylor, and Van Buren, and Wyandotte City. Population (1910), 215,090. WILLIAM W. WEDEMEYER, Republican, of Ann Arbor, was born of German parentage on a farm in Lima, Washtenaw County, Mich., March 22, 1873; attended district school, from which he went to Ann Arbor High School, graduating in 1890. ‘He then entered the University of Michigan, graduating from the literary depart- ment of that institution in 1894, and from the law department in 1895; he was en- gaged in school work for a time and served one term as commissioner of schools of Washtenaw County; he was also deputy commissioner of railroads under Gov. Hazen S. Pingree; in 1899 he eutered upon the practice of law in Ann Arbor, in which he has been engaged ever since except for a brief career as American consul at George- town, British Guiana, in South America. He was married in 1901 to Louise Locher; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,485 votes, to 15,125 for John V. Sheehan, Democrat, 725 for Edward P. Bates, and 375 for David J. Malloy. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). Population (1910), 202,842. JOHN M. C. SMITH, Republican, of Charlotte, was born in Ireland in 1853; came to the United States when he was two years of age; was educated in the Char- lotte High School and University of Michigan at Ann Arbor; learned the painter’s trade; moved to Michigan at the age of 13 and lived on a farm until he was 21; learned the mason’s trade; then took up the study of law, being admitted to the bar in 1882 at Detroit and engaged in active practice since that time; is president of the First National Bank of Charlotte, having held the position since 1898; was a manu- facturer for 12 years, and is now largely engaged in farming and stock raising; has been prosecuting attorney, alderman, and member of the Michigan constitutional 48 Congressional Directory. MICHIGAN convention of 1908; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,606 votes, to 11,925 for Nathaniel H. Stewart, Democrat, 844 for Frederick Goodrich, Socialist, and 883 for Charles R. Price, Socialist Labor. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties). Population (1910), 195,382. EDWARD IL. HAMILTON, Republican, of Niles, was born in Niles, Mich., December 9, 1857; was admitted to the bar in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,282 votes, to 12,185 for John E. Barnes, Democrat, 653 for Henry Andrews, Prohibitionist, and 650 for Otis M. Southworth, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ionia, Kent, and Ottawa (3 counties). Population (1910), 237,996. EDWIN EF. SWEET, Democrat, of Grand Rapids, Mich., was born in Dansville, N. Y., November 21, 1847; graduated from Yale University in 1871 with degree of A. B., and from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1874; mayor of Grand Rapids, 1904-1906; married to Sophia Fuller, 1876; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress over Hon. Gerrit J. Diekema, Republican, by a majority of 630. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Genesee, Ingham, Livingston, 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 (1910), 313,310. : SAMUEL WILLIAM SMITH, Republican, of Pontiac, was elected to the Fifty- fifth Congress, and has been reelected to each succeeding Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and St. Clair, and Grosse Pointe, Gratiot, and Hamtranck townships of Wayne County. Population (1910), 192,269. 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 Rail- way from 1878 to 1889, when it was sold to the Flint & Pere Marquette Co.; 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clinton, Saginaw, Shiawassee, and Tuscola (4 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 180,578. : 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Benzie, Lake, Leelanau, Manistee, Mason, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (g counties). Population (1910), 173,650. 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 1901 he was appointed by the governor of the State a member 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alcona, Alpena, Arenac, Bay, Cheboygan, Crawford, Emmet, Gladwin, Iosco, Midland, Montmorency, Ogemaw, Oscoda, Otsego, and Presque Isle (15 coun- ties). Population (1910), 208,574. GEORGE ALVIN LOUD, Republican, of Au Sable, was born at Bracebridge, Ohio, June 18, 1852, descending from American parents and in direct line from Colonial and Puritan dancesters who served in the Revolutionary War. He lived in MICHIGAN Biographical. 49 ’ Massachusetts until 15 years of age, when he came to Au Sable, Mich. He is a lumberman and, starting with his father, H. M. Loud, for the past 32 years has been engaged in lumber operations in Michigan; is now a member of the lumber firm of H. M. Loud’s Sons Co., and vice president and general manager of the Au Sable & Northwestern Railroad. He was paymaster on the United States revenue cutter McCullough, which participated in the naval battle of Manila Bay. In the summer of 1898 he represented Gov. Pingree at Montauk Point, and made an excellent record in caring for the sick and disabled soldiers at that point, sent there from Cuba. Mr. Loud was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,060 votes, to 8,746 for Albert Miller, Democrat. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Antrim, Charlevoix, Clare, Grand Traverse, Gratiot, Isa- bella, Kalkaska, Mecosta, Missaukee, Montcalm, Osceola, and Roscommon (12 counties). Population (1910), 210,123. 2 FRANCIS H. DODDS, Republican, of Mount Pleasant, was born in the township of Iouisville, St. Lawrence County, N. V., June 9, 1858; moved to Isabella County, Mich., with his parents, in 1866; is a graduate of Olivet College; was graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1880, and was elected president of the law alumai of that institution for the then ensuing year; has been engaged in the practice of the law continuously since then—from 1884 to 1886, at Bay City, Mich., and during the rest of the time at Mount Pleasant, Mich. ; has served as city attorney and as member of the board of education at the latter place; was elected to the Sixty- first Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Alger, Baraga, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Gogebic, Hough- ton, Iron, Keweenaw, Luce, Mackinac, Marquette, Menominee, Ontonagon, and Schoolcraft - (15 counties). Population (1910), 325,628. H. OLIN YOUNG, Republican, of Ishpeming, was born August 4, 1850, at New Albion, Cattaraugus County, N. V.; 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and. Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 24,663 votes to 8,547 for Gilbert C. McLane, Democrat. = i Cleo9] MINNESOTA ) (Population (1910), 2,075,708.) 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 1, 1893; was a member of the Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses for the fifth district of Minnesota; was elected governor of Minnesota in the fall of 1892 and reelected in the fall of 1894; was elected United States Senator for Minnesota January 23, 1895, for the term commencing March 4, 1895; reelected in Igor and 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. . 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 two children living, a son and a daughter; 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 a vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. Cushman K. Davis, and took his seat January 28, 1gor, and reelected in 1905 and 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 50: Congressional Directory. MINNESOTA REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Dodge, Fillmore, Freeborn, Houston, Mower, Olmsted, Steele, Wabasha, Waseca, and Winona (10 counties). Population (1910), 201,054. ; SYDNEY ANDERSON, Republican, of Lanesboro, was born in Goodhue County, Minn., September 17, 1880; was educated in the common schools of Zumbrota, Minn., and the University of Minnesota; is a lawyer; served as a private in Company D, Fourteenth Regiment Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, during the Spanish-American War; is married and has two children; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,315 votes to 14,816 for H. I. Buck, Democrat. : ' SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Blue Earth, Brown, Cottonwood, Faribault, Jackson, Martin, Murray, Nobles, Pipestone, Rock, and Watonwan (11 counties). Population (1910), 172,202. WINFIELD SCOTT HAMMOND, Democrat, of St. James, was born in South- boro, Worcester County, Mass., November 17, 1863. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1884. 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 as a member of the State board of normal school directors for Minnesota for eight years. He was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carver, Dakota, Goodhue, Le Sueur, McLeod, Nicollet, Rice, Scott, and Sibley (9 counties). Population (1910), 182,027. CHARLES RUSSELL DAVIS, Republican, of St. Peter, was born at "Pittsfield, Ill.; moved to Le Sueur County, Minn., at an early age; was educated in the common schools; for several years thereafter received private instruction 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 30 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 To years, and city attorney and city clerk of St. Peter for 18 years; was elected and served for 2 years in the house of representatives, and 4 years in the State senate of Minnesota; for 4 years was captain in a regiment of the Minnesota National Guard; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected without opposition to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chisago, Ramsey, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1910), 263,225. FREDERICK CLEMENT STEVENS, Republican, of St. Paul, was born in Boston, Mass., January 1, 1861; attended the common schools of Rockland, Me.; was grad- nated from Bowdoin College in 1881; from law school of the State University of Iowa in 1884; admitted to the bar in 1884, and commenced practice in St. Paul; was elected to the Legislature of Minnesota in 1888 and 1890, and to the Fifty-fifth and following Congresses. 7 FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Hennepin. Population (1910), 333,480. 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Cass, Crow Wing, Douglas, Hubbard, Meeker, Morrison, Sherburne, Stearns, Todd, Wadena, and Wright (12 counties), Population (1910), 224,681. CHARLES A. LINDBERGH, Republican, of Little Falls, was elected to the Six- tieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bigstone, Chippewa, Grant, Kandiyohi, Tac qui Parle, Iincoln, Lyon, Pope, Redwood, Renville, Stevens, Swift, I'raverse, and Yellow Medicine (14 counties). Population (1910), 190,930. ’ ANDREW J. VOLSTEAD, Republican, of Granite Falls, was elected to the Fifty- eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. MINNESOTA Brographical. 51 EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Aitkin, Anoka, Carlton, Cook, Isanti, Itasca, Kanabec, Koochi- ching, Lake, Millelacs, Pine, and St. Louis (12 counties). Population (1910), 282,342. CLARENCE BENJAMIN MILLER, Republican, of Duluth, was born March 13, 1872, on a farm in Goodhue County, Minn., the son of a veteran of the civil war who died in 1876; was educated in country school, high school, and Minneapolis Acad- emy; graduated from the University of Minnesqta in 1895, and from the law depart- ment of the same institution in 1g9oo; was superintendent of public schools of Rush- ford, Minn., 1895 to 1898; since 1900 has practiced law at Duluth; was a member of the Minnesota Legislature 1907; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,018 votes to 10,305 for Alfred Jaques, Democrat, and 4,354 for Dr. O. S. Watkins, Public Ownership. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Becker, Beltrami, Clay, Clearwater, Kittson, Mahnomen, Mar- shall, Norman, Ottertail, Pennington, Polk, Red Lake, Roseau, and Wilkin (14 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 225,767. HALVOR STEENERSON, Republican, of Crookston, was born in Dane County, Wis. , but moved to Minnesota when a year old, his parents having settled in Houston County, where he was educated in the common schools and at the high school; 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 for. four years; was delegate to the Republican national conventions at Chicago in 1884 and 1888. Was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 24,572 votes to 8,421 for David Sanders, Public Ownership candidate. = 29] MISSISSIPPI D (Population (1910), 1,797,114.) SENATORS. LE ROY PERCY, Democrat, of Greenville, Miss., was born November 9, 1860, in Washington County, Miss., his father being William A. Percy and mother Nannie I. Percy; was educated at the University of the South; and graduated from the law department of the University of Virginia in 1881; returned to Mississippi and began the practice of law at Greenville; elected by Legislature of Mississippi to fill the un- expired term of Senator A. J. McLaurin, deceased, February 22, and took his seat February 24, 1910. Never held office prior to his election as Senator. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. JOHN SHARP WILIIAMS, Democrat, of Benton, R. F. D. 1, Miss., was born July 30, 1854, at Memphis, 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 Vir- ginia, and the University of Heidelberg, in Baden, Germany; subsequently studied law under Profs. 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 Stevenson; served as temporary chairman of the Demo- cratic national 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 opposi- tion either for renomination or election; was the candidate of his party for the office of Speaker in the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses. On August I, 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, and took his seat April 4, 1011. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 84259°—62-1—18T ED—73 52 Congressional Directory. MIssISSTPPT REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES: Alcorn, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Noxubee, Oktibbeha, Prentiss, ana Tishomingo (9 counties). Population (1910), 205,637. FZEKIEL SAMUEL CANDLER, Jr., Democrat, of Corinth, was born in Bell- ville, Hamilton County, Fla., January 18, 1862, but moved with his parents to Tishomingo County, Miss., when 8 years old, and grew te manhood in that county; is the oldest son of Ezekiel Samuel Candler, sr., and Julia Beville Candler, who are natives of Georgia; isa direct descendant of Col. William Candler, who was a colonel in the Army of the American Revolution and the ancestor of the Candler family of Georgia, who have been prominently identified with the history of that State from the days of the Revolution up to and including the present; received a common school education in the Iuka Male Academy, at Iuka, Miss.; attended the law department of the University of Mississippi, at Oxford, term of 1880-81, and on June 30, 1881, graduated in law, when a little over 19 years of age, 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 but 22 years old; moved from Iuka to Corinth January 1, 1887, where he has since resided, 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 acclama- tion, when 26 years old, for presidential elector for the first congressional district, and was elected by the largest majority received by any district presidential elector at that election in the State, and voted for Cleveland and Thurman; was for 10 years a mem- ber of the Democratic executive 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; a Mason, Odd Fellow, Woodman, Beta Theta Pi, Knight of Honor, Elk, and Knight of Pythias, of which last-named order he was grand chancellor in the domain of Mississippi from May, 1904, to May, 1905; was unanimously elected head adviser of the Woodmen of the World at Columbus, Miss., at the meeting of Head Camp M in 1909, and unanimously reelected at the meeting of Head Camp M At Biloxi, Miss., March, 1911; was married to Miss Nancy Priscilla Hazlewood, daughter of Thomas B. and Susan Hazlewood, of Towncreek, Lawrence County, Ala., April 26, 1883, and has three children, Julia Beville Candler (now Mrs. Franklin G. Swift, of Sheffield, Ala.), Susan Hazlewood Candler (now Mrs. William E. Small, jr., of Corinth, Miss.), and Lucy Alice Candler; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, having no opposition for nomination or election to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate, Tippah, and Union (9 counties). Population (1910), 195,748. HUBERT DURRETT STEPHENS, Democrat, of New Albany, was born in New Albany, Union County, Miss., on July 2, 1875, and is the oldest child of Judge Z. M. and Mrs. Lethe A. Stephens; has always lived in his native town; received a com- mon-school education, graduated in law at the University of Mississippi, and was admitted to the bar shortly before reaching his majority; in 1899 was married to Miss Delia Glenn, of Courtland, Miss., and has two boys, Hubert D. Stephens, jr., and Marion Glenn Stephens; in 1907 was elected district attorney in a district composed of eight counties, resigned that office in April, 1910, to make the race for Congress, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bolivar, Coahoma, Holmes, Issaquena, Leflore, Quitman, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1910), 292,713. 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, United States Army, who succeeded him as military governor; his mother was Mildred Hickman Maury, of T'ennessee; he was educated at the University of Mississippi, in the class of 1885, but left before graduation, having completed the junior year; he engaged in mercantile pursuits, first as a clerk, afterwards as a commercial traveler, or ¢‘ drummer,’’ and subsequently on his own account; he was married to Miss Louise Yerger, of Greenville, Miss., October 9, 1889; studied law, and was admitted to the bar November, 1891; was . appointed superintendent of education for Leflore County in January, 1892, for a MISSISSIPPI B tographical . 53 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clay, Grenada, Montgomery, Pontotoc, Webster, and Yalobusha (rr counties). Population (1910), 216,615. THOMAS UPTON SISSON, of Winona, Montgomery County, was born September 22, 1869, in Attala County, Miss, He moved with his father when a boy to Choctaw County, Miss., where he attended the common schools in the county, and later the French Camp Academy, located at French Camp, Miss. ; graduated at the Southwestern Presbyterian University, at Clarkesville, Tenn., taking the degree of A. B. in 188g; was principal of the Carthage High School the session of 1889-90, and the next two years was principal of the graded schools of Kosciusko, Attala County, Miss. He graduated in law at Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., and was admitted to the bar at Memphis, Tenn., in 1894; moved from Memphis to Winona, Miss., in 1895, where he has since practiced law. He was elected grand master of Masons in 1904, being the youngest man ever elected to that position in Mississippi; was mar- ried June 5, 1901, to Miss Mamie Purnell, and has three children. He was elected to the State senate from the twenty-sixth senatorial district, embracing the counties of Montgomery and Carroll, being nominated as a Democrat without opposition; was Democratic elector for the State at large in 1900; was nominated and elected district attorney of the fifth judicial district as a Democrat in 1903, carrying eight out of the nine counties; was a candidate for governor of Mississippi in 1907, and was defeated by a small plurality, there being six candidates in the race, and only a small difference in the vote received by the four highest candidates; was nominated for Congress over two opponents in the first primary, 1908; elected to the Sixty-first Congress without opposition, receiving 8,059 votes, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. : FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Smith, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1910), 217,223. SAMUEI, ANDREW WITHERSPOON, Democrat, of Meridian, Miss., was born on the 4th day of May, 1855, in Lowndes County, Miss.; was educated at the Uni- versity of Mississippi and was graduated in 1876; after graduation was for three years a tutor of Iatin in the State University, and that institution has conferred upon him the degrees of A. B., A. M., and LL. D.; is a lawyer by profession, but never held any public office except the position as Congressman; was married on the 17th day of June, 1880, to Miss Sue E. May, of Versailles, Ky. In the election to the Sixty: second Congress was the nominee of the Democratic Party and had no opponent. In the contest for the nomination was opposed by his predecessor, Hon. Adam M. Byrd, and in the primary election which gave him the nomination he received 7,321 votes, to 6,851 for Mr. Byrd. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Covington, Forrest, George, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Jones, Lawrence, Marion, Lamar, Pearl River, Perry, Simpson, and Wayne (16 counties). Population (1910), 244,949. BYRON PATTON HARRISON, Democrat, of Gulfport, Harrison County, Miss., one of the youngest members of the Sixty-second Congress, was born in Crystal Springs, Copiah County, Miss., August 29, 1881, and is now in his twenty-ninth year. He was educated in the public schools of Crystal Springs, Miss., and the Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge, La. He married Mary Edwina McInnis, of Leakes- ville, Greene County, Miss., in January, 1905, and has two children. He is a mem- ber of the Z. A. E. fraternity, W. O. W., Knights of Pythias, Odd Fellows, Elks, and Masons. He was elected district attorney of his district at the age of 24 years and served in that capacity for two terms, until September, 1910, when he resigned to accept the nomination to the Sixty-second Congress; was nominated over two strong Democrats, leading his opponents in the first primary by 1,500 votes and in the sec- ond primary by 2,000 votes, and elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 4,005 votes, to 65 for Myers, Socialist. : 54 Congressional Directory. MISSISSIPF SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Jefferson, Lin- coln, Pike, and Wilkinson (9 counties). Population (1910), 218,894. WILLIAM ALEXANDER DICKSON, Democrat, of Centerville, Wilkinson County, was born on the site of his present residence July 20, 1861; was educated at the private and public schools of his neighborhood, and Pleasant Grove School, in that county, conducted then by the Rev. Thomas W. Brown and his wife, educators of distinction and success; was by them prepared for college; entered Centenary College, Jackson, La., and completed his junior year in that insti- tution, going from there to Vanderbilt University; he did not graduate, leaving there in his senior year, by reason of failing health; is, and has been all his life, a farmer on the land where born; on his return from the university read law under private instruction of Chief Justice H. F. Simrall, but never applied for license; was married December 12, 1888, to Miss Lucy Baily Hampton, of Hampton Station, Tenn., daughter of George W. Hampton, for more than 20 years a judge of the courts of his State; seven children bless their union; was member of the board of super- visors two years, beginning January, 1886; elected as a representative to the legisla- ture in 1887, and reelected in 1890; was not a candidate for reelection; served as school commissioner of Wilkinson County; chosen, 1904, presidential elector for the seventh congressional district on the Parker and Davis ticket; served five years as trustee of the Agricultural and Mechanical College, Starkville, Miss., and for the same time as trustee of the Edward Magehee College, of Woodville, Miss., the same position filled by his father preceding him; was nominated for Congress over Hon. J. B. Webb, September 19, 1908, receiving 5,247 votes, to 4,380 for his opponent; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress (being the only Democratic nominee of Mis- sissippi opposed), receiving 6,807 votes, to 384 for H. C. Turley, Republican. Mr. Dickson is the first native of his county to represent his district in Congress; was reelected to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Hinds, Madison, Rankin, Warren, and Yazoo (5 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 205,335. JAMES WILLIAM COLLIER, Democrat, of Vicksburg, was born at Glenwood plantation, near Vicksburg, in Warren County, Miss., September 28, 1872. He attended the public and high schools of his county until 1890, when he entered the State University; in 1894 he graduated in law from that institution; in 1895 he was elected a member of the lower house of the Mississippi Legislature, being the youngest member of that body; was elected circuit clerk of Warren County in 1899, and reelected without opposition in 1903 and 1907. In 1900 he married Miss Emma H. Klein; they have two children. In 1908 he was nominated by the Democratic Party for the Sixty-first Congress and elected without opposition, receiving 5,657 votes; was reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. : CE 9] MISSOURI 9 (Population (1910), 3,293,335.) 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 19oo-1904; married Sarah Louise Winston Aprit 2, 1874, and has three children; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed Hon. George Graham Vest, for the term beginning March 4, 1903, and reelected in 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. JAMES A. REED, Democrat, of Kansas City, was born November 9, 1861, on a farm near Mansfield, Richland County, Ohio; moved to Linn County, Iowa, in 1864 and to Kansas City, Mo., in 1887; was educated at Cedar Rapids (Iowa), public schools and Coe College; is a lawyer and was admitted to the bar in 1885; was appointed county counselor of Jackson County, Mo., in 1897; was elected prosecuting attorney of Jackson County in 1898 and resigned the office to become mayor of Kansas City in April, 1900; reelected mayor of Kansas City in 1902; was delegate at large from Mis- souri to the Democratic national convention at Denver in 1908; was nominated by the Democrats for United States Senator November 8, 1910, in a State-wide primary MISSOURI : B 10g aphical % 55 election, defeating his closest competitor, ex-Gov. David Rowland Francis, by more than 29,000 votes. Klected to the United States Senate to succeed Maj. William Warner, Republican, for a term beginning March 4, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adair, Clark, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Putnath, Schuyler, Scotland, and Shelby (Io counties). Population (1910), 174,971. JAMES TIGHLMAN LLOYD, Democrat, of Shelbyville,was born at Canton, I.ewis 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 avacancy; elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,953 votes, to 15,572 for Walter A. Higbee, Republican, 667 for W. L,. Pico, Socialist, and 653 for Roy A. Youtz, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carroll, Chariton, Grundy, Linn, Livingston, Monroe, Ran- dolph, and Sullivan (8 counties). Population (1910), 171,135. WILLIAM WALLER RUCKER, Democrat, of Keytesville, was born February 1, 1855, near Covington, Va.; at the beginning of the war moved with his parents to West Virginia, in which State he attended the common schools; at the age of 18 he moved to Chariton County, Mo., and for two years engaged in teaching district schools, during which time he continued the study of law; was admitted to the bar in 1876; in 1886 was elected prosecuting attorney of Chariton County, which office he held for three consecutive terms and until he was nominated for circuit judge of the twelfth judicial circuit; in 1892 was elected circuit judge for a term of six years, which position he held at the time he was nominated for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT. —Countiks: Caldwell, Clay, Clinton, Daviess, Dekalb, Gentry, Harrison, Mercer, Ray, and Worth (10 counties). Population (1910), 159,419. 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. DM., in Jue, 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 administrator 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 21 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. 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. Richardson in February, 1876; his wife and eight children, five sons and three daughters, are living; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Holt, Nodaway, and Platte (6 counties). Population (1910), 179,707. CHARLES F. 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 Fiftieth Congress to fill the unexpired term of the Hon. James N. Burnes, deceased, and to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Con- 56 Congressional Directory. MISSOURI gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,231 votes, to 15,825 for W. K. Amick, Republican; and 318 for A. B. Wray, Prohibitionist, and 344 for E. D. Wilcox, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Jackson. Population (1910), 283,522. WILLIAM PATTERSON BORLAND, Democrat, of Kansas City, Mo., was born in Leavenworth, Kans., October 14, 1867; has resided in Kansas City, Mo., since September, 1880; attended the ward and high schools of Kansas City; read law in the office of Pratt-McCrary-Ferry & Hagerman; entered the law department of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and was graduated in 1892; entered upon the practice of law at Kansas City; in 1895 helped to organize the Kansas City school of law, and was elected dean, being reelected each year since; has been continuously engaged in the active practice of law; married in 1904 to Ona Winants, daughter of W. H. Winants, of Kansas City, and has one son; published in 1907 a text-book on the Law of Willsand Administrations; served on the ‘‘ Municipal Lobby’ of Kansas City at the legislature of 1907, and drafted several laws relating to city government, including the act empowering cities to regulate charges of public-service corpora- tions; was elected April, 1908, member of the board of thirteen freeholders to draft new charter for Kansas City; charter as drafted was adopted by popular vote August 4, 1908; elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiv- ing 31,026 votes, to 23,982 for Howard Lea, Republican, 781 for Stokes, Prohibition- ist, and 1,008 for Webe, Socialist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bates, Cass, Cedar, Dade, ‘Henry, Johnson, and St. Clair (7 coun- ties). Population(1910), 150,486. ‘ CLEMENT CABELL DICKINSON, Democrat, of Clinton, Henry County, Mo., was born December 6, 1849, in Prince Edward County, Va.; graduated from Hamp- den Sidney College, Virginia, in June, 1869; taught school thereafter in Virginia, Kentucky, and Missouri; located at Clinton, Mo., in September, 1872; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1875; was elected prosecuting attorney of Henry County, Mo., in 1876, and served three terms of two years each; was Democratic presidential elector in 1896; was elected to the Missouri House of Representatives in 1900 and served one term of two years; was elected to the State Senate of Missouri in 1902, and served one term of four years. In 1907 was appointed a member of the board of regents of the State Normal ‘School at Warrensburg, Mo., for a term of six years; was elected to Congress from the sixth congressional district of Missouri at the special election on February 1, 1910, to fill the unexpired term of David A. De Armond, deceased, and took his seat February 7, 1910. Reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Benton, Greene, Hickory, Howard, I.afayette, Pettis, Polk, and Saline (8 counties). Population (1910), 218,182. “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- eighth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Camden, Cole, Cooper, Miller, Moniteau, Morgan, and Osage (8 counties), Population (1910), 142,621. DORSEY W. SHACKLEFORD, Democrat, of Jefferson City, was born August 27,1853; elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTtIES. Audrain, Callaway, Franklin, Gasconade, Lincoln, Montgomery, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren (Io counties). Population (1910), 190,688. 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 Democratic national 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, Sssotiny Biographical. | 57 Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, with a majority of 4,019 votes; was the unanimous nominee of the Demo- crats in Congress for the Speakership of the Sixty-first Congress; was again unani- mously nominated for Speaker in the Sixty-second Congress and elected Speaker on April 4, 1911. : TENTH DISTRICT.—Crry oF ST. Louis: First, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, twenty-first, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, and twenty-eighth wards; also ninth, tenth, eleventh, thirteenth, and fourteenth precincts of the second ward; the first and second precincts of the fifteenth ward; the eleventh and twelfth precincts of the twenty-second ward; the fourteenth and fifteenth precincts of the twenty-third ward; the first, second, and third precincts of the twenty-seventh ward; and all of St. Louis County. Population (1910), 416,389. RICHARD BARTHOILDT, Republican, of St. Louis, was born in Germany, Novem- ber 2, 1855; came to this country when a boy; received a classical education; learned the printing trade and has remained a newspaper man ever since; was connected with several eastern papers as reporter, legislative correspondent, and editor, and was at the time of his election to Congress editor in chief of the St. Louis Tribune; was elected to the board of public schools of St. Louis, and in November, 1891, was chosen its president; was elected president of the Interparliamentary Union in 1904, and since that year to the present has been annually elected president of the Arbi- tration Group in Congress, which organization he founded in 1904; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 53,298 votes, to 28,054 for Charles J. Maurer, Democrat, and 5,865 for G. A. Hoehen, Socialist, and 471 for John H. Flower, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CITy oF ST. Lous: Precincts one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, and twelve of the second ward, third, fourth, eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth" wards, precincts one to ten, inclusive, of the twenty-second ward, twenty-sixth ward, and pre- cincts four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, and ten of the twenty-seventh ward. Population (1910), 203,667. - THERON FE. CATLIN, Republican, of St. Louis, was born in St. Louis in 1878; was graduated from Harvard College in 1899, and from the Harvard Law School in 1902, with the degrees of A. B. and LL. B.; served one term in the lower house of the Missouri Legislature; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,089 votes, to 18,693 for Patrick F. Gill, Democrat, and 1,605 for Max Stopp, Socialist. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—City oF ST. I,ours: Fifth, sixth, seventh, sixteenth, andj seventeenth wards, and precincts three to fourteen, inclusive, of the fifteenth ward, and precincts one to thirteen, inclusive, of the twenty-third ward. Population (1910), 149,390. LEONIDAS CARSTARPHEN DYER, Republican, of St. Louis, was born in Warren County, Mo., June 11, 1871; was educated in the common schools; Central Wesleyan College, at Warrenton, Mo., and the law department of the Washington University; is a lawyer and served as assistant circuit attorney of the city of St. Louis; is married and has two children; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,965 votes, to 13,121 votes for Thomas E. Kinney, Democrat, and g77 for Chris Rocker, Socialist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bollinger, Carter, Iron, Jefferson, Madison, Perry, Rey- Ee Francois, Ste. Genevieve, Washington, and Wayne (11 counties). Population (1910), WALTER LEWIS HENSLEY, Democrat, son of Thomas J. and Emily E. Hens- ley, was born in Jefferson County, Mo., September 3, 1871; was reared upon the farm upon which he was born; was educated in the public schools of his county and the law department of the Missouri University; was admitted to the bar in 1894, and located for a short time in Wayne County, Mo., for the practice of his profession; later located at Bonne Terre, St. Francois County, Mo., and in 1898 was elected pros- ecuting attorney of the county, moving to Farmington, the county seat; was reelected in 1900; during the interim from 1902, the expiration of his last term as prosecuting attorney, to 1910 was engaged in the general practice of law, the latter part of which period under the firm name of Marbury & Hensley; is married; on August 2, 1910, was nominated for Congress from the Thirteenth Missouri district over Hon. Edward Robb by more than 1,000 votes, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress by more than 600 votes over Hon. Politte Elvins, Republican. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT. —CouUNTIES: Butler, Cape Girardeau, Christian, Douglas, Dunklin, Howell, Mississippi, New Madrid, Oregon, Ozark, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott; Stoddard, Stone, and Taney (16 counties). Population (1910), 296,316. JOSEPH JAMES RUSSELI,, Democrat, of Charleston, was born in Mississippi County Mo., on a farm, August 23, 1854, and was educated in the public schools / 58 Congressional Directory. MISSOURI and in the Charleston Academy;. graduated from law school, Missouri State Univer- sity, in 1880, with degree LI. B.; was county school commissioner in 1878-79; elected prosecuting attorney in 1880 and 1882; in 1884 was a Cleveland elector for his dis- trict; in 1886 and 1888 was elected to the State Legislature, and in his last term was speaker of the house; in 1892 was a delegate to the Democratic national convention: was judge advocate general on Gov. A. M. Dockery’s staff; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth and to the Sixty-second Congresses, receiving 23,612 votes, to 22,463 for Charles A. Crow, Republican, and 2,973 for Phil A. Hafner, Socialist. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barry, Barton, Jasper, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, and Vernon (7 counties). Population (1910), 226,374. : JAMES ALEXANDER DAUGHERTY, Democrat, of Webb City, was born at Athens, McMinn County, Tenn., August 30, 1847; was reared on a farm, educated in the common schools, and has had a conspicuously successful career as a farmer, miner, and banker; came to Missouri in 1867; is married and has several children; is particularly prominent in the lead and zinc fields of Missouri, and his efforts have contributed materially to the development of the industry in that State; was a part- ner in the pioneer grocery house of Webb City and president of the First National Bank of Carterville for several years; was associate judge of the western district of Jasper County two terms and a member of the Missouri Legislature one term; also served as president of the board of managers State Asylum No. 3, Nevada, Mo.; takes a deep interest in economic problems, is a militant Democrat, has been active in politics many years, is an ardent party worker, and is regarded as one of the strong men of the Missouri delegation; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,259 votes, to 20,443 for Charles H. Morgan, Republican, 2,182 for Berry, and 1,000 for Dalton. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Crawford, Dallas, Dent, Laclede, Maries, Phelps, Pulaski, Shannon, Texas, Webster, and Wright (11 counties). Population (1910), 163,280. THOMAS LEWIS RUBEY, Democrat, of Lebanon, Laclede County, Mo., was born at Lebanon, September 27, 1862; spent his early life on the farm, going to dis- trict school and later to a near-by town school; graduated from the University of Missouri; was for five years superintendent of schools of I.ebanon, Mo., and later, for a number of years, taught in the Missouri School of Mines, a department of the University of Missouri, located at Rolla, Mo.; served in both branches of the general assembly of his State and while in the State senate was president pro tempore of that body; was lieutenant governor of Missouri from 1903 to 1905; was married in 1885 to Miss Fannie J. Horner, of Columbia, Mo.; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, defeating his Republican opponent, Hon. A. P. Murphy, by 1,476 votes. CEC] MONTANA [02200 (Population (19710), 376,053.) SENATORS. JOSEPH M. DIXON, Republican, of Missoula, was born at Snow Camp, N. C., July 31, 1867; attended Earlham College, Richmond, Ind., and graduated from Guiiford 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 Republican national convention at Chicago in 1904; was elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hom. W. A. Clark, Democrat, for the term beginning March 4, 1907. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. HENRY I. MYERS, Democrat, of Hamilton, Mont., was born in Cooper County, Mo., October 9, 1862; was educated in the private schools of Booneville, Mo., and afterwards taught school; licensed to practice law; in 1893 he moved to Hamilton, Mont., and has since served four years as county attorney, four years as State sena- tor, and four years as district judge, filling the latter position when elected United States Senator for the term beginning March 4, 1911, to succeed Hon. Thomas H. Carter; in 1896 was married to Miss Nora S. Doran, of Hamilton, Mont., and has one child, Mary Annetta Myers, 11 years of age. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917, MORLA ~~ Buographical. : 59 REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 376,053. 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 1900, 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; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 32,519 votes to 28,071 for Hartman, Democrat, and 5,184 for Mabie, Socialist. >| NEBRASKA [7409 (Population (1910), 1,192,214.) SENATORS. NORRIS BROWN, Republican, of Kearney, was born May 2, 1863, at Maquoketa, 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 county attorney of Buffalo County from 1892 to 1896; served as deputyattorney general 1900 to 1904, and as attorney general 1904 to 1906; was elected to the United States Senate January, 19o7. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. 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 of the Omaha Morning, Evening, and Sunday World-Herald; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, defeated for reelection to the Fifty-ninth Congress, elected to the Sixtieth Congress, and reelected to the Sixty- first Congress; nominated in Democratic primaries for United States Senator in August, 1910; under the Oregon plan ran for United States Senator at the election .in November, receiving 122,517 votes to 102,861 for E. J. Burkett, Republican, 5,093 for I. P. Lippincott, Socialist, and 3,323 for Thos. M. C. Birmingham, Prohibitionist; was elected Senator by the legislature January 18, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Cass, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee, and Richardson (7 counties). Population (1910), 164,214. JOHN A. MAGUIRE, Democrat, of Lincoln, was born in Jo Daviess County, Ill., ‘November 29, 1872; moved with his parents to near Plankinton, S. Dak., where they settled on a Government homestead; worked on the farm and attended district school during the winter months, and later taught in both district and city schools; attended the Agricultural College of South Dakota for three years; graduated from the Iowa College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts; graduated from the academic department of the University of Nebraska with the degree of A. M. in 1898, and from the law department in 1899; was then appointed deputy treasurer of Lancaster County and served two years; entered the practice of law in 1902; in 1904 he was a delegate to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis; was secretary of the Democratic State committee in 1905; was nominated by direct primary and elected to the Sixty- first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,501 votes to 15,763 for William Hayward, Republican, and 474 for C. R. Oyler, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1910), 190,558. : CHARLES OTTO LOBECK, Democrat, of Omaha, was born at Andover, Ill., April 6, 1852. Received a common-school education at Andover, later at high school, Geneseo, Ill., and one year at German Wallace College, Berea, Ohio, and later a term at Dyhrenfurth Commercial College, Chicago. As a boy clerked in a * general store during vacations; at 17 years of age commenced regular work as sales- man in general store at Dayton, Iowa. From 1875 to 1892 was a commercial traveler 60 Congressional Directory. | NEBRASKA in western Iowa and the State of Nebraska, selling dry goods the first four years and hardware from 1880 to 1892; is a member of the Travelers’ Protective Association; is married and has two daughters, Gladys and Marguerite; is a Methodist; entered political life in 1892, being elected State senator (Omaha district), Nebraska, as a Republican; in 1896 became a Silver Republican, supporting Mr. Bryan; in 1897 was elected a three-year term city councilman of Omaha and reelected in 1900; was elected city comptroller of Omaha in 1903 and reelected in 1906 and 1909 for three-year terms; was Democratic presidential elector for Nebraska in 1900; was nominated at the primary election August 16, 1910, over four competitors and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,912 votes to 15,673 for A. I. Sutton, Republican, and 982 for Peter Mehrens, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Antelope, Boone, Burt, Cedar, Colfax, Cuming, Dakota, Dixon, Dodge, Knox, Madison, Merrick, Nance, Pierce, Platte, Stanton, Thurston, and Wayne (18 counties). Population (1910), 233,178. JAMES P. LATTA, Democrat, of Tekamah, was born near Ashland, Ohio, October 31, 1844; two years later his parents moved to eastern Iowa where they engaged in farming, being among the earliest pioneers of that territory. Here he grew to man- hood, working on his father’s farm during the summers and attending district school during the winters, making the most of the opportunities thus afforded for securing an education. In 1863, before the overland railroads had been constructed, he walked across the State of Iowa, crossed the Missouri, and took up a homestead in the Territory of Nebraska, tocating in Burt County, which county has since been his home, and where on December 29, 1870, he married Miss Iibbie Jonas, of Jackson County, Towa. Being one‘of the pioneer settlers, he was closely identified with the early development and activities of eastern Nebraska, and during his long residence there has been engaged in farming and stock raising, at present owning and operating a large stock farm a few miles north of Tekamah; is president of the First National Bank of that city. In 1837 herepresented his district in the lower house of the State legislature and at the time of his election to Congress was a member of the State senate; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Butler, Fillmore, Gage, Hamilton, Jefferson, Polk, Saline, Saunders, Seward, Thayer, and York (11 counties). Population (1910), 189,670. CHARLES H. SLOAN, Republican, of Geneva, Nebr., was born at Monticello, Iowa, May 2, 1863; graduated at the Iowa State Agricultural College in 1884 and moved to Nebraska the same year; was superintendent of the Fairmont city schools for three years; was twice elected prosecuting attorney of Fillmore County and served for four years. In 1894 was elected to the Nebraska State Senate from the district comprising York and Fillmore Counties. On October 1, 1889, married Emma M. Porter, of Woodbine, Iowa, and has four children—FEthel, age 20; Frank Blaine, age 18; Charles Porter, age 17; and William McKinley, age 12. Was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,807 votes, to 19,540 for B. F. Good, Democrat, and 578 for A. H. Martin, Socialist. 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 (1910), 176,806. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Banner, Blaine, Boxbutte, Boyd, Brown, Buffalo,Cherry, Cheyenne, Custer, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Garden, Garfield, Grant, Greeley, Holt, Hooker, Howard, Keith, Keyapaha, Kimball, Iincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Morrill, Rock, Scotts Bluffs, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux, Thomas, Valley, and Wheeler (35 counties). Population (1910), 237,788. MOSES P. KINKAID, Republican, of O'Neill, was born in West Virginia; a resi- dent of the State of Nebraska since 1881; lawyer by profession; graduate of the law NEBRASKA Biographical. 61 department, University of Michigan; president of the class of 1876; State senator in Nebraska in 1883 and chairman of the judiciary committee of that body; district judge for three terms; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving a major- ity of 4,735 votes over W. J. Taylor, Democrat and People’s Independent candidate. CISC] Nevada [GZA00 (Population (1910), 81,875.) SENATORS. FRANCIS GRIFFITH NEWILANDS, Democrat, of Reno, was born near Natchez, Miss., August 28, 1848; entered the class of 1867 at Yale College and remained until the middle of his junior year; later on attended the Columbian College Law School at Washington, but prior to graduation was admitted to the bar by the supreme court of the District of Columbia and went to San Francisco, where he entered upon the practice of law 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 Hon. John P. Jones, Republican, for the term beginning March 4, 1903. In the general election of 1908 Mr. Newlands submitted his candidacy for reelection to a popular vote, under the election law of Nevada, and received a large majority over the votes of all competi- tors. The legislature, being pledged in advance by the party platforms to carry out the popular will, thereupon, without opposition, reelected him United States Senator for the term ending March 3, 1915. GEORGE S. NIXON, Republican, of Reno, was born April 2, 1860, in Placer County, Cal.; moved to Nevada in 1881; served as a member of the Nevada Legisla- ture in 1891; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. William M. Stewart for the term beginning March 4, 1905; was renominated without opposi- tion and reelected by popular vote, ‘or what is commonly known as the Oregon plan. The legislature, while Democratic by four majority, ratified his election by the people unanimously. .His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 81,875. EDWIN EWING ROBERTS, Republican, of Nevada, was born at Pleasant Grove, Sutter County, Cal., December 12, 1870; was educated in the public rural schools and in the State Normal School at San Jose; taught school for several years in California and Nevada; studied law and was elected district attorney of Ormsby County, Nev., in 1900; reelected in 1902, 1904, and 1906, and again reelected in 1908, being indorsed by all parties. He is married and has one daughter, Miss Hazel Roberts, now attending the Carson City High School. His home is at Carson City, where he is a member of the law firm of Roberts & Sanford; was nominated at the primary election for Representative in Congress, and later elected at the general election over Charles S. Sprague, Democrat, receiving a majority of 2,500 votes, being the first Republican elected from the State of Nevada since November, 1890. ©] NEW HAMPSHIRE [2409 (Population (1910), 430,572.) SENATORS. JACOB H. GALLINGER, Republican, of Concord, is of Dutch ancestry on his father’s side, and his mother (Catherine Cook ) was of American stock; was born ona farm in Cornwall, Ontario, Canada, March 28, 1837, being one of twelve children; re- ceived a common school and academic education; was a printer in early life; studied medicine and was graduated in 1858; followed the profession of medicine and sur- gery until he entered Congress; is on the board of trustees of Columbia Hospital for rr 62 Congressional Directory. NEW HAMPSHIRE Women, and a member of the board of visitors to Providence Hospital; was a mem- ber of the House of Representatives of New Hampshire in 1872, 1873, 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; served as trustee of George Washington University for several years; 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, and continued to serve until 1908, when he declined reelection; was chairman of the delegations from his State to the Republican national conventions of 1888, 1900, 1904, and 1908; was for a time a member of the Republican national committee; was chairman of the Merchant Marine Commission of 1904-5, composed of five Senators and five Representatives in Congress; is a member of the National Forest Reserve Commission; was elected to the Forty-ninth and Fiftieth Congresses, and declined renomination to the Fifty-first Congress; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. Henry W. Blair, for the term beginning March 4, 1891, and successively reelected in 1897, 1903, and 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. : 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 KE. S. Cutter and Judge Lewis W. Clark, Manchester; was admitted to the bar in April, 1868, and since that time has practiced in Manchester; was judge of probate for Hillsboro County in 1876-1879; representa- tive in the State legislature in 1873-74; has been treasurer of Hillsboro County; was a member of the constitutional convention of 1889, and has served as ballot law commissioner; in 1888 was chairman of the Republican State convention to nominate delegates to the national convention; is president of the Mechanics Savings Bank, and member of the board of directors of the Amoskeag National Bank, and of the New Hampshire Fire Insurance Co., 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.—CoUNTIES: Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford. HILLSBORO County: City of Manchester; towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Merrimack, Hudson, Litchfield, and Pelham. MERRIMACK COUNTY: Towns of Allenstown, Canterbury, Chichester, Epsom, Hooksett, Loudon, Northfield, Pembroke, and Pittsfield. Population (1910), 218,572. CYRUS ADAMS SULLOWAY, Republican, of Manchester, was born at Grafton, N. H., June 8, 1839; received a common school and academic education; studied law with Austin F. Pike at Franklin, N. H.; was admitted to the bar in 1863 and has practiced law at Manchester since January, 1864; was a member of the New Hamp- shire House of Representativesin 1872-73 and from 1887 to 1893, inclusive; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HILLSBORO COUNTY: City of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deering, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, I,yndeboro, Mason, Milford, Mount Vernon, New Boston, New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wilton, and Windsor. MERRIMACK COUNTY: Cities of Concord and Franklin; towns of Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Bradford, Danbury, Dunbarton, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salis- bury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wilmot. Population (1910), 212,000. 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 1890 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,639 votes, to 16,913 for Henry H. Metcalf, Democrat, 659 for William H. Wilkins, Socialist, and 188 for Roger FE. Thompson, Prohibitionist. NEW JERSEY B 1oqr aphical ; i OD) 2 9] NEW JERSEY (Population (1910), 2,537,167.) SENATORS. 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 United States Infantry as second lieutenant until 1877, when he moved to Trenton, N. J. 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 I, 1902; was appointed a member of the State board of education by Gov. Voorhees in 1901 for a term of three years, but resigned that office January 3, 1902, when he was appointed State treasurer by Gov. 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 legislature for a full term of three years, and reelected in 1905. In 1904 he was elected chairman of the State Republican com- mittee. Mr. 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. JAMES EDGAR MARTINE, Democrat, of Plainfield, was born in the city of New York, August, 1850; attended the public schools, but owing to the death of his father was compelled to leave school at the age of 13 years; is by occupation a farmer; is married; never held public office; at the primary election for United States Senator he received 48,458 votes, to 39,554 for Charles E. Stokes, 38,818 for Charles N. Fowler, and 36,240 for Franklin Murphy, Republicans, Frank McDermit, the other Demo- cratic candidate, receiving 15,575 votes. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. ones DISTRICT ~Counmas: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). Population (1910), 206,396. HENRY CLAY LOUDENSLAGER, 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 10 years; was elected county clerk in 13882; reelected in 1887; secretary of the Republican congressional ‘campaign committee in 1906, 1908, and 1910; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty- sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,394 votes, to 20,554 for Mowrey, Democrat, 1,258 for Harkins, National Prohibitionist, and 8o2 for Dempsey, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES : Atlantic, Burlington, Cumberland, and Cape May (4 counties). Population (1910), 213,357. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 22,861 votes, to 16,915 for Hampton, Democrat, 205 id Radcliffe, Socialist, 738 for Hughes, National Prohibitionist, and 3,508 for Riddle. THIRD DISTRICT. Counties: Middlesex, Monmouth, and Ocean (3 counties). Population (1910), 230,478. THOMAS J. SCULLY, Democrat, of Perth Amboy, was born in South Amboy, N. J., September 19, 1868; was educated in the public schools of South Amboy and Seton Hall College, South Orange, N. J.; engaged in the towing and transportation business; served three years as member of the board of education; was a Democratic presidential elector in 1908; was mayor of South Amboy 1909-10; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 24,657 votes, to 20,160 for Benj. F. Howell, Republican, and 210 for Hoagland, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Hunterdon, Mercer, and Somerset (3 counties). Population (1910), 198,046. 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; 64 Congressional Directory. NEW JERSEY was president of the board of trade of Trenton; was elected to the New Jersey Iegis- lature as a member of assembly in 1899 and 1900; was appointed by Gov. 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 Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,354 votes, to 19,089 for Libbey, Democrat, 649 for Pette, Socialist, and 338 for Bunger, National Prohibi- tionist. pre DISTRIGI Copy Morris, Union, and Warren (3 counties). Population (1910), 258,088. WILLIAM EDGAR TUTTLE, Jr., Democrat, of Westfield, was born in Horse- heads, N. Y., December 10, 1870; was graduated from Elmira Free Academy in 1887, and was a student at Cornell University two years; is engaged in the lumber busi- ness; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,768 votes, to 20,675 for William -N. Runyon, Republican, 1,556 for Matthews, Socialist, 412 for Hedges, National Prohibitionist, and 209 for Reese, Socialist Labor. SIZTH DISTRICT~Conmeins: Bergen, Passaic, and Sussex (3 counties). Population (1910), 380,005. 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, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 29,458 votes, to 25,301 for McClave, Republican, 1,573 for Hubschmidt, Socialist, 341 for Reed, Prohibitionist, and 403 for Berdan, Socialist Labor. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Hssex County: First, fourth, sixth, seventh, eighth, eleventh, and fifteenth wards and the third district of the thirteenth ward 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 (1910), 240,947. EDWARD W. TOWNSEND, Democrat, of Montclair, son of Horace Gilbert and Ann Eliza (Thornton) Townsend; was born in Cleveland, Ohio, March 10, 1855; received a public and private school education in that city; married, in San Fran- cisco, in 1884, Annie, daughter of Judge Delos and Myra (Clarke) Lake; has one daughter, Ruth, born in 1894. He is the author of a number of novels, plays, books of short stories, and a text-book on the Constitution of the United States; was his party’s candidate for Representative in the Sixty-first Congress, receiving about 6,000 more votes than the head of his ticket; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 21,962 votes to 17,756 for R. Wayne Parker, Republican, 835 for Edward H. Ashton, Socialist, and 98 for Theodore M. Logan, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—EsseEx CouNTY: Second, third, fifth, ninth, tenth, twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth wards of the city of Newark; city of East Orange; town of Irvington; the borough of Vailsburgh; the village and township of South Orange, and the townships of Clinton and Millburn. Population (1910), 212,978. WALTER IRVING McCOY, Democrat, of South Orange, was born at Troy, N. V., December 8, 1859; graduated from Harvard College in 1882, taking the degree of A. B.; graduated from Harvard Law School in 1886, taking the degrees of ILI,. B. and A. M.; admitted to practice law in the courts of New York State in 1886, and has practiced law in New York City since then; alternate delegate to the Democratic national convention in 1904 and attended the convention in the absence of a dele- gate; was delegate to Democratic national convention in 1908; was trustee of the village of South Orange for several years; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,364 votes, to 16,847 for William H. Wiley, Republican, 1,498 for Riley, Socialist, and 101 for Stokes, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT.—HupsoN CouNTy: City of Bayonne; seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth wards and part of the sixth ward of Jersey City; the towns of Harrison and Kearny, and the borough of Fast Newark. Population (1910), 251,792. EUGENE F. KINKEAD, Democrat, of Jersey City, was born March 27, 1876; was graduated from Seton Hall College, South Orange, N. J., in 1895, with degree of A. B.; elected alderman in Jersey City, 1898, serving as president of the board; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,784 votes, to 13,390 for Record, Republican, and 1,028 for Paine, Socialist. NEW JERSEY Buographical. i ] 635 : 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 Guttenberg; the townships of North Bergen and Weehawken, and the borough of Secaucus. Population (1910), 285,439. 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 LL. 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 26,266 votes, to 10,104 for Seibel, Republican, and 1,051 for Ufert, Socialist. NEW YORK [02400 (Population (1910), 9,113,614.) SENATORS. ELIHU ROOT, Republican, of New York City, was born in Clinton, Oneida County, N. Y., February 15, 1845; was graduated in 1864 from Hamilton College, where his father, Oren Root, was for many years professor of mathematics; taught school at the Rome Academy in 1865; graduated in 1867 from the Law School of the University of the City of New York, 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 Sf 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 January 31, 1904; was appointed Secretary of State July 7, 1905, resigning that office January 22, 1909, upon his election to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. T. C. Platt; counsel for the United States in the North Atlantic Fisheries Arbitration at The Hague, 1910. His term of office will expire March 3, 1915. JAMES A. O'GORMAN, Democrat, of New York City, was born in New York City May 5, 1860. Educated in the public schools, the College of the City of New York, and the law department of the New York University, graduating with LI. B. in 1882. Admitted to the bar in 1882; served as justice of the district court, 1893-1899; justice of the supreme court, State of New York, 1900-1911. Elected United States Senator from tHe State of New York to succeed Hon. Chauncey M. Depew March 31, 19II. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Nassau and Suffolk. BOorRoUGH OF QUEENS (COUNTY OF QUEENS).—Third, fourth, and fifth wards. Population (1910), 297,127. ; \ MARTIN WILEY LITTLETON, Democrat, of Port Washington, Long Island, N. Y., was born near the town of Kingston, in Roane County, Tenn., on January 12, 1872; lived there and thereabouts with his father and family until January 18, 1881, when he moved to Texas; worked on a farm and at other kinds of work until 19, years of age, when he was, on application, admitted to practice law; practiced law in Texas until 1896, when he moved to New York; has practiced law in New York City since that time with the exception of two years when he was president of the Borough of Brooklyn (1904-5). Between September 9, 1889, and November, 1890, went to school at Springtown, Tex.; was married to Maud Elizabeth Wilson on December 1, 1896, and has two sons, Martin Wilson and Douglas Marshall; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 27,246 votes, to 21,826 for Cocks, Republican, 699 for Walsh, Socialist, and 220 for Winthrop, Prohibitionist. 66 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK SECOND DISTRICT.—BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (CouNTY OF KINGS): The fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth wards, and also that portion of the twenty-seventh ward bounded on the north by the line dividing Kings and Quéens 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 (1910), 264,488. 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 1886 was elected coroner for the second district of Kings County and served six years, being reelected in 1889; in 1898 was appointed assistant tax commissioner in the department of taxes and assessments of the city of New York; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,248 votes, to 8,304 for Ladislaus W. Schwenk, Republican and Inde- pendence Teague, 1,428 for Paul Muller, jr., Socialist, and 107 for James B. Davie, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT.—BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF KiINnGs); 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 Bushwick Avenue, east to Kosciusko Street, south to Broadway, west to Arion Place, north to Bushwick Avenue, west to Noll Street, north to Evergreen Avenue, east to Jefferson Street, and north to point of beginning; and also that part of the twenty-third ward bounded on the north by Lafayette Avenue, from Bedford Avenue to Stuyvesant Avenue, south to Bain- bridge 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 (1910), 244,489. JAMES P. MAHER, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., No- vember 3, 1865; was educated in St. Patrick’s Academy at Brooklyn, N. Y.; upon graduating he entered as an apprentice in the hatters’ trade. In 1887 went to Dan- bury, ‘Conn., to work at his trade as a journeyman hatter; in 1894 was elected presi- dent of the Danbury Hat Makers’ Society, and in 1897 was elected national treasurer of the United Hatters of North America. Returning to Brooklyn in 1902, was nomi- nated for Congress by the Democratic Party in 1908 and was defeated; was again nominated by the Democratic Party in 1910 and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,432 votes, to 14,570 for Alfred T. Hobley, Republican and Independence League. 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 twenty- sixth ‘ward, south to Atlantic Avenue, west to Howard Avenue, north to Fulton Street, west to Howard Avenue, and north to point of beginning: Population (1910), 347,400. FRANK E. WILSON, M. D., Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in 1857, at Rox- bury, Delaware County, N. V.; graduated from the Jefferson Medical College at Philadelphia in 1882; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,676 votes to 20,295 for Charles B. Law, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT.—BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF Kings): The eighth, twenty-fourth, twenty-ninth, and thirtieth wards, and also that portion of the twenty-third ward bounded on the north by Lafayette 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 Ave- nue, 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 Aventie, south to Atlantic Avenue, west to Utica Avenue, north to Fulton Street, east to Reid Avenue, and north to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 361,621. WILLIAM C. REDFIELD, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving a majority of 3,700 votes. SIXTH DISTRICT.—BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNY 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 (1910), 216,342. WILLIAM M. CALDER, Republican, of Brooklyn, was born in Brooklyn, N. V., 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 Coopei @ NEW YORK Brographical. 67 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 1902-3; is vice president of the Home Trust Co. of the city of New York, and a director of the Montauk Bank of Brooklyn; was a delegate to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1908; is married; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,249 votes to 16,804 for Michael E. Butler, Democrat. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—BOROUGH OF BROOKLYN (COUNTY OF Kings): The first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, tenth, and twelfth wards, and also that portion of the eleventh ward bounded on the north by Flushing Avenue, from Navy Street east to North Portland Avenue, across Fort Greene Park to De Kalb Avenue, opposite South Portland Avenue, west to Navy Street, north to Willoughby Street, west to Hudson Avenue, north to Bolivar Street, east to Navy Street, north to Myrtle Avenue, west to Hudson Avenue, north to Johnson Street, east to Navy Street, and north fo point of beginning. Population (1910), 200,011. 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 Democratic national convention at Kansas City in 1900; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—RICHEMOND COUNTY. NEW YORK CoUuNTY: 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, south- east to Cornelia Street, northeast to Sixth Avenue, south to West Third Street, east to Broad- way, north to Kast 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 Chat- ham Square and Catherine Street, southeasterly to Monroe Street, east to Mechanic Alley, and south to Cherry Street, west to Market Slip, south to the Hast River. Population (1910), 296,005. 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 1890, 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 Lieut. Gov. Higgins a member of the committees on insurance and military affairs. He was renominated for State senator in 19o4 and on his election was appointed by Lieut. Gov. 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, to serve out the unexpired term of Timothy D. Sullivan, resigned, in the Fifty-ninth Congress, and to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CoUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at the Fast River and Market Slip, north to Cherry Street, east to Mechanic Alley, north to Monroe Street, west to Catherine Street, north to Division Street, east to Chrystie Street, north to Stan- ton 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 Hast River, thence along the East River to the point or place of beginning. Population (1910), 201,920. HENRY M. GOLDFOGLE, Democrat, of New York City, was born in New York City; educated in the public schools and on attaining his majority was admitted to the bar; was elected justice of the fifth district 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; drafted and secured the enactment of a law by the State legislature allowing an execution against the body to issue against delinquent debtors on judgments in favor of working women for services performed; 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; is prominently identified with many of the leading fraternal organizations, clubs, and societies in his city and various financial and charitable institutions; has been a delegate to almost every State convention since he attained his majority; in 1892 was an alternate to the New York Democratic convention, and in 1896, and also in 84259°—62-1—1ST ED—~6% 68 : Congressional Directory. NEW YORK 1908, a delegate to the Democratic national convention; was elected to the Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That part bounded as follows: Beginning at Kast Fourteenth Street and the Fast 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 Fast Houston Street, west to Eldridge Street, south to Stanton Street, east to Cannon Street, south to Broome Street, west to Sheriff Street, south to Grand Street, west on the south side of Grand Street to Pitt Street, south to Division Street, west to Montgomery Street, to northeast corner of Henry Street and Montgomery Street, diagonally through said block to the southwest corner of Madison Street and Clinton Street, south to the East River, thence along the Fast River tothe point or place of beginning. Population (1910), 296,856. WILLIAM SULZER, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Elizabeth, N. J., March 18, 1863; admitted to practice law in New York City at a general term of the supreme court 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 Democratic national conventions in 1896, 1900, 1904, and 1908; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Six- tieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiv- ing 9,850 votes, to 4,807 for Anthony McCabe, Republican, and 1,694 to John Mullen, Socialist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That part bounded as follows: Beginning at Hud- son River and Barrow Street, east to Hudson Street, north to Grove Street, easterly to Bleecker Street, easterly on Bleecker Street to Cornelia Street, easterly on Cornelia Street to Sixth Avenue, south to West Third Street, east to Broadway, north to East Fourth Street, east to Third Avenue, north to Fast Fourteenth Street, west to University Place, south to East Tenth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, south to West Ninth Street, west to Christopher Street, westerly to West Fourth Street, northerly to Eighth Avenue, to Hudson Street, southerly along Hudson Street to West Eleventh Street, west to Greenwich Street, north to Horatio Street, east to Hud- son 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. Popu- lation (1910), 219,560. CHARLES VINCENT FORNES, Democrat, of New York City, was born, 1848, in Erie County, N. VY.; 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 18go trustee of the New York Catholic Protectory, and since 1903 vice president of the Columbian National Life Insurance Co. of Boston; was president of the Catholic Club from 1889 to 1894, and an incorporator of the City Trust Co. of New York; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Fast River and Hast Fourteenth Street, west to Second Avenue, north to East Eighteenth Street, west to Third Avenue, north to Hast Twenty-third Street, west to Iexington Avenue, north to Fast Twenty-ninth Street, east to Second Avenue, north to East Thirty-seventh Street, west to Third Avenue, north to East Thirty-ninth Street, west to Lexington Avenue, north to Fast Forty-second Street, east to Third Avenue, north to East Fifty-third Street, west to Lex- ington Avenue, north to Fast Fifty-ninth Street, east to Third Avenue, north to East Sixty- fourth Street, west to Lexington Avenue, north to East Seventy-second Street, tothe East River to point of beginning at the Fast River and East Fourteenth Street, including Blackwells Island. Population (1910), 224,306. MICHAEL ¥. CONRY, Democrat, of New York City, was born at Shenandoah, Pa., April 2, 1870; was educated in the public schools of his native town. Taught school for seven years; attended the University of Michigan and graduated from that institution in 1896, receiving the degree of LL.B.; is a lawyer by profession; is married and has three children; served two years as assistant corporation counsel of the city of New York; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the northwest corner of Hudson 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 Fast Tenth Street, east to University Place, north to East Fourteenth Street, east to Second Avenue, north to Fast Eighteenth Street, west to Third Avenue, north to Hast Twenty- third Street, west to Lexington Avenue, north to Hast T'wenty-ninth Street, east to Second Avenue, north to Fast Thirty-seventh Street, west to Third Avenue, north to East Thirty-ninth Street, west to Iexington Avenue, north to East Forty-second Street, east to Third Avenue, north to Fast Fifty-third Street, west to Lexington Avenue, north to East Fifty-ninth Street, east to Third Avenue, north to Sixty-fourth Street, west to Lexington Avenue, north to East Eighty- ninth Street, west to Park Avenue, north to East Ninety-third Street, west to Fifth Avenue, south | i H NEW YORK Biographical. 69 along Fifth Avenue to Eighty-sixth Street, west across Central Park to West Highty-sixth Street and Central Park west, south to West Fifty-ninth Street, east to Sixth Avenue, south to West Fifty-fifth Street, westto Seventh Avenue, south toWest Fifty-third Street, west to Highth Avenue, south to West Fortieth Street, east to Seventh Avenue, south to West Twenty-third Street west to Eighth Avenue, south to West Twenty-first Street, east to Seventh Avenue, south to West Nine- teenth Street, west to Eighth Avenue, south to West Fourteenth Street, west to Hudson Street, south to Horatio Street, west to Greenwich Street, south to West Eleventh Street, east to point of beginning at the northwest corner of West Eleventh Street and Hudson Street. Population (1910), 141,888. ; JEFFERSON M. LEVY, Democrat, of New York City, was born in his district, the son of Capt. Jonas P. Levy, and a nephew of Commodore Uriah P. Levy, a distin- guished naval officer of the last generation, who was mainly instrumental in the abo- lition of flogging in the United States Navy; graduated from the University of New York, studied law with the late Clarkson N. Potter and was associated with him in various important litigations; was one of the founders of the Democratic Club of New York; member of the Chamber of Commerce and Board of Trade and Transporta- tion of New York. Commodore Levy, in 1830, at the suggestion of President Jack- son, became the owner of Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson, and at his uncle’s death Mr. Levy became, and still remains, the owner. . The homestead is maintained by Mr. Levy in keeping with its distinguished traditions. Mr. Levy was elected to the Fifty-sixth Congress by a majority of 6,600 over Hon. James W. Perry, chairman of the New York Republican county committee, turning a Republican majority of 7,000 at the preceding congressional election to a Democratic majority of 6,600; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress over Hon. Herbert Parsons, chairman of the Republican county committee, turning a Republican majority of 2,800 at the preced- ing congressional election to a Democratic majority of 1,600. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEw YORK CouNTY: That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Hast River and East Seventy-second Street, west to Lexington Avenue, north to East Kighty- ninth Street, east to Third Avenue, south to East Eighty-eighth Street, east to the East River, to point of beginning at the Kast River and East Seventy-second Street. QUEENS County: That part known as the firstand second wards of Queens County, whose boundaries are as follows: Beginning at Newtown Creek and the Fast River to Flushing Creek, south to Ward Street, Rich- mond 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 (1910), 285,878. JOHN JOSEPH KINDRED, Democrat, physician, of Loong Island City, was born in Southampton County, Va., July 15, 1864. He was educated in the Suffolk Military Academy (Va.), paying practically all his expenses from his savings by clerking in a country store; at Randolph-Macon College; and at the University of Virginia. He completed his medical studies at the hospital course in Louisville, Ky., graduating as an M. D. in 1889. Removing to New York in 1889, without friends or money, he served as physician in many hospitals and institutions for mental and nervous diseases, including Bloomingdale Asylum (New York), Hudson River State Hospital, the Maryland General Hospital, etc.; he also took post-graduate courses in medicine in New York, spending some time abroad in study. He was graduated in the depart- ment of mental diseases in the University of Edinburgh, Scotland, and served as extra assistant physician in the Royal Asylum, Morningside, Edinburgh, Scotland. A year later he established a sanitarium in Stamford, Conn. In 1896 he established the River Crest Sanitarium at Astoria, Borough of Queens, New York City, for mental and nervous diseases, one of the largest private institutions of the kind in the country. He is recognized as an authority in the treatment of mental and nervous diseases and has lectured and published many articles on these subjects. He has always taken an active interest in public affairs, devoting all possible time to effect the betterment of conditions and the higher efficiency of public officials, keeping posted on State and national issues. He has in no sense been a politician, His nomination and elec- tion to Congress came without any solicitation on his part. He is also extensively engaged in agriculture. He is an active and liberal member of many civic, benefi- cent, and business organizations. He is largely interested in real estate. Is married. Was elected by 6,900 majority over his Socialist and Republican opponents, leading the Democratic ticket in his district. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW 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 Righth 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 Righty-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 I,exington Avenue, north to Kast 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 (1910), 180,300. ‘THOMAS GEDNEY PATTEN, Democrat, of New York, was born in New Vork City September 12, 1861; was educated at Mount Pleasant Academy, Ossining, N. Y., 70 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK Columbia College, and Columbia College Law School; entered business in New York City; is president of the New York & Long Branch Steamboat Co.; is married; never held public office until elected as Representative to the Sixty-second Congress from the fifteenth congressional district of New York, receiving, Democratic and Indepen- dence Teague, 13,338 votes to 11,152 for William M. Bennett, Republican, and 430 for J. J. Flanagan, Socialist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK CoUNTY: That part bounded as follows: Beginning at the Fast River and East Fighty-eighth Street, west to Third Avenue, north to Kast Eighty-ninth Street, west to Lexington Avenue, north to Hast Ninety-sixth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One hundred and twentieth Street, east to Park Avenue, south to Fast One hun- dred and nineteenth Street, east to the Fast River to point of beginning at the Fast River and Fast Eighty-eighth Street, including Randalls and Wards Islands. Population (1910), 276,334. 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 LL. B. from New York Taw 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, 1904; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second 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 Fast 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 hun- dred and first Street. Population (1910), 409,858. HENRY GEORGE, Jr., was born in Sacramento, Cal., November 3, 1863. He was educated in the public school and entered a printing office at the age of 16. Since 1831 has been steadily engaged in newspaper and magazine work. He was a special newspaper correspondent in Japan in 1906. On the sudden death of his father, Henry George, during the mayoralty campaign in New York City in 1897, Henry George, jr., was nominated to succeed his father on the ticket as the candi- date of the Jeffersonian Party. But he was defeated at the election. He married Marie M. Hitch, of Chicago, December 2, 1897. In 1909, as a special correspondent, he made a tour of the world and a special study of the economic conditions existing in the countries through which he passed. He is the author of the ‘‘ Life of Henry George,’’ published in 1900; the ‘Menace of Privilege,” published in 1905, and the ‘“‘Romance of John Bainbridge,’ published in 1906. He was elected to the Sixty- - second Congress from the seventeenth congressional district. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEw YORK County: The thirty-first, thirty-second, thirty-third thirty-fourth, and thirty-fifth assembly districts bounded as follows: Beginning at the Fast River and Fast One hundred and nineteenth Street, Manhattan, west to Park Avenue, north to East One hundred and twenty-ninth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to the Harlem River, to the Hudson River, to the Yonkers city line, to Long Island Sound, to the Fast River to the point of beginning at the East River and Fast One hundred and nineteenth Street, including islands in Tong Island Sound and Harlem River attached to the said assembly districts. Population (1910), 482,568. STEVEN B. AYRES, Democrat, of Spuyten Duyvil, Borough of the Bronx, New York City, was born October 27, 1861, at Fort Dodge, Iowa; was graduated from Syracuse University, B. A.; married; business man; author of two or three books and many historical articles; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 33,600 votes to 27,607 for Gottlieb Haneke, Republican and Independence League, 4,354 for Joshua Wanhope, Socialist, and 111 for William A. Mapes, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CountyY: Westchester. Population (1910), 283,055. 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 Co.; treasurer of the Arlington Chemical Co.; trustee of Wesleyan University and other institutions; was elected mayor of Yonkers in 1903; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,126 votes to 22,236 for Cornelius A. Pugsley, Democrat, 929 for Alfred E. Dixon, Socialist, and 286 for Charles A. . Brady, Prohibitionist. NEW YORK Biographical. 7X Dy TT Cor Orange, Rockland, and Sullivan (3 counties). Population 1910), 196,682. THOMAS W. BRADLEY, Republican, of Walden, retired manufacturer and banker, 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 member of the New York Chattanooga- Gettysburg Battlefields Commission; was a member of the New York Iegislature; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1892, 1896, 1900, and 1908; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, and Putnam (4 counties). Population (1910), 176,198. RICHARD E. CONNELL, Democrat, of Poughkeepsie, was born in Poughkeep- sie, N. Y., November 16, 1857. He attended St. Peter’s Parochial School and the public school in that city. At 14 years of age he went to work to support his wid- owed mother. After trying many lines of ordinary work he became a reporter on the Poughkeepsie News-Press in 1887; worked on that paper as reporter and edi- tor 23 years; began making political speeches in support of Grover Cleveland in 1884; was appointed police commissioner of Poughkeepsie in 1892, and served two years; in 1896 was a candidate for Member of Congress in the district then composed of Putnam, Dutchess, and Ulster Counties, and was defeated by the late Gen. John H. Ketcham by 8,000 majority; in 1898 and 1900 he was the unsuccessful candidate for member of assembly in the second district of Dutchess County; in 1907 was appointed inheritance-tax appraiser for Dutchess County, and served two years. Mr. Connell was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention held in Kansas City, Mo., in 1900, and at St. Louis, Mo., in 1904. He has a wife and three daughters, the oldest of whom is 19, the youngest 11, and one son, 18 years old. Mr. Connell’s parents, Richard Connell and Ann Phelan, came to the United States from Kilkenny, Ireland, in 1846. In 1910 he was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,832 votes to 18,315 for Hamilton Fish, Republican, and 677 for David R. Slater, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Rensselaer and Washington (2 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 170,054. WILLIAM H. DRAPER, Republican, of Troy, born in Worcester County, Mass., Juue 24, 1841; moved to Troy in 1847 and has resided there ever since; attended the public schools until 1856 and then entered upon a mercantile career; is now engaged in manufacturing cordage and twine under the firm name of William H. Draper & Sons; 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,422 votes, to 17,294 for Elisha C. Tower, Demo- crat, 734 for E. M. Hewitt, Prohibitionist, 632 for William Nugent, Socialist, and 382 for Lee, Independence League. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Albany and Schenectady (2 counties). Population (1910), 261,901, HENRY S. DE FOREST, Republican, of Schenectady, was born in that city Feb- ruary 16, 1847; was educated in the Schenectady High School and at Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; has been successfully engaged in the business of real estate, banking, con- tracting, etc.; has served two terms as mayor, of two years each, and one term of four years as recorder of the city of Schenectady; his family consists of a wife and two married daughters; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 28,218 votes to 26,228 for Curtis N. Douglas, Democrat; 2,978 for H. A. Simmons, Socialist; 704 for George H. Houghton, Independent Labor; and 563 for E. M. Sipperly, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Delaware, Otsego, Schoharie, and Ulster (4 counties). Population (1910), 208,415. GEORGE WINTHROP FAIRCHILD, Republican, of Oneonta, was born in One- onta, Otsego County, N. Y., May 6, 1854, 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; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 23,636 votes to 22,416 for George M. Palmer Democrat. i 72 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, Saratoga, and Warren (5 counties). Population (1910), 200,614. THERON AKIN, Progressive Republican, of Akin, was born in Johnstown, N.Y, county of Fulton, in the year 1855; was educated in the common school of Amster- dam and at home; is the son of Ethen Akin, a lawyer by profession and farmer by occupation; is married and has two children, son and daughter; is the president of the village of Akin, N. Y.; never held public office, except presidency of the above- named village; farmer by occupation; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,673 votes to 21,442 for Cyrus Durey, standpat Republican, TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES. Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and St. Lawrence (4 counties). Population (1910), 216,410. 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 5 years; was elected leader of his party in 1893 in that body, and speaker in 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 11 years member of the finance committee, and the last 4 years its chairman; married in 1883; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,980 votes, to 15,584 for Thomas R. Cantwell, Democrat. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties). Population (1910), 210,513. CHARLES A. TALCOTT, Democrat, of Utica, N. V., was born June 10, 1857; attended public schools, including Utica Free Academy; graduated at Princeton in 1879, receiving the degree of A. B.; is a lawyer; was city counsel of Utica in 1886; member of Board of Police and Fire Commissioners of Utica, 1888 to 1892; trustee of the Utica Public Library 1893 to December, 1901; mayor of the city of Utica Jan- uary, 1902, to January, 1906; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 22,458 votes, to 20,242 for Charles S. Millington, Republican, 798 for Arthur I,. B. Curtiss, Socialist, and 737 for Frederick W. Barnaclo, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Jefferson, Lewis, and Oswego (3 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 176,895. LUTHER WRIGHT MOTT, Republican, of Oswego, was born in Oswego Novem- ber 30, 1874; was educated at the Oswego High School and Harvard College, gradu- ating from the latter institution in 1896; since that time he has been in the banking business at Oswego, and is now president of the New York State Bankers’ Associa- tion; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, defeating Judge George W. Reeves, of Watertown, who was nominated by the Democrats and Independents. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Onondaga and Madison (2 counties). Population - (1910), 239,587. MICHAEL EDWARD DRISCOLL, Republican, of Syracuse, was born 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 Gov. 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 campaigns. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and NEW YORK Biographical. 73 Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 26,589 votes, to 20,281 for Henry E. Wilson, Democrat and Independence League, 2,375 for George L. Casler, Socialist, and 1,418 for William G. Morrell, Prohibitionist. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Broome, Chenango, Cortland, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1910), 202,904. JOHN WILBUR DWIGHT, Republican, of Dryden, was born May 24, 1859, in that place; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cayuga, Ontario, Wayne, and Yates (4 counties). - Popu- lation (1910), 188,213. SERENO ELISHA PAYNE, Republican, of Auburn, was born at Hamilton, N. V., 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 LIL. 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 Republican national 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to Sixty-second Congress. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUuNTY: Monroe. “Population (1910), 283,212. HENRY GOLD DANFORTH, Republican, of Rochester, was born June 14, 1854, in the town of Gates (now part of Rochester), Monroe County, N. Y.; was educated in private schools in Rochester, at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, N. H., and was graduated from Harvard College in 1877, from the Harvard Law School in 1880; was admitted to the bar in 1880, and has since that time practiced his profession at Roch- ester; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 26,375 votes to 21,176 for George P. Decker, Democrat, 437 for W. B. Palliser, Indepeudence League, and 2,106 for Herbert E. Steiner, Socialist. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chemung, Schuyler, Seneca, and Steuben (4 counties). Population (1910), 179,000. EDWIN STEWART UNDERHIL]I, Democrat, of Bath, was born at Bath, N. Y., October 7, 1861. His parents were Anthony L. Underhill and Charlotte McBeth, of Bath. He graduated from Haverling High School in Bath and entered Yale, where he graduated from the academic department in 1881; soon after graduation he entered the office of the Steuben Farmers’ Advocate, and was associated with his father in its publication during the latter’s lifetime. In 1888 he was the nominee of the Demo- cratic Party for presidential elector for his district. In September, 1899, with his father, he purchased the Corning Daily Democrat, since changed to the Corning Evening Leader; since his father’s death, in 1902, he has been the publisher of the Advocate and the T,eader. He was married October 9, 1884, to Minerva Elizabeth, only daughter of William W. Allen and Helen M. Gansevoort; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,517 votes, to 17,556 for J. S. Fassett, Republican, 1,388 for M. C. Beardsley, Prohibitionist, 663 for James T. Agan, Socialist, and 348 for E. D. Hees, Independence League. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Genesee, Livingston, Niagara, Orleans, and Wyoming (5 counties). Population (1910), 231,568. ' JAMES S. SIMMONS, Republican, of Niagara Falls, was born in Frederick County, Mad., November 25, 1861; was educated at Liberty Academy and Frederick College; has been engaged in the real estate business during all of his business life; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 25,051 votes, to 19,307 for Elliot W. Horton, Democrat, 366 for Frederick Hart, Independence League, and 1,678 for William Van R. Blighton, Prohibitionist. THIRTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—C1TY oF BUFFALO: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, and sixteenth wards. Popula- tion (1910), 263,663. DANIEL A. DRISCOLTI, Democrat, of Buffalo, was born in the city of Buffalo, N. V., March 6, 1875; never held public office prior to his election to Congress; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. 74 Congressional Dwrectory. NEW YORE PORCHES JOR [1 THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—ERIE CoUuNTY: Seventh and eighth assembly districts. City oF 1 BUFFALO: Fifteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-first, twenty- i second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, and twenty-fifth wards. Population (1910), 265,322. CHARLES BENNETT SMITH, Democrat, was born in Erie County, N. Y., on September 14, 1870. After having attended the district schools he went to the Arcade Academy, where he completed the full course and was graduated. For several years he worked, alternately, at farming and railroad telegraphing. His native literary taste, however, led him to newspaper work, and while still in boyhood he became a reporter on the Buffalo Courier, of which he later in life was made editor in chief. At the age of 24 he was appointed managing editor of the Buffalo Times, a position which he held till he tendered his resignation to take editorial charge of the Buffalo Evening Enquirer and the Buffalo Morning Courier. For a short period, during his connection with the Buffalo Times, he acted as Albany correspondent of that publi- cation, and he was at the same time one of the associate editors of the Albany Argus. While editor in chief of the Buffalo Courier, from which Mr. Smith resigned to take up his duties as Member of Congress, he was appointed a member of the Buffalo board of school examiners and was chairman of the board at the time of his elec- tion to Congress, in November, 1910. Mr. Smith is the owner and editor of the Niagara Falls Journal, in which he had for two years previous to his election been interested, but of which last fall he secured complete ownership. Although nomi- nated as the candidate of the regular Democratic convention in September, 1910, Mr. Smith was also chosen by the Prohibition and Independence League Parties and his name placed on all three tickets. The thirty-sixth congressional district of New York is one of the Republican strongholds of the State. The official vote gave D. S. Alexander, Republican, 20,585 votes, and Mr. Smith 20,586, leaving a plurality of 1 vote for Mr. Smith. THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). Population (1910), 212,457. EDWARD BUTTERFIELD VREELAND, Republican, of Salamanca, was born at Cuba, Allegany County, N. VY.,in 1857; received an academic education and served as superintendent of the schools of Salamanca from 1877 to 1882; was admitted to the practice of law in 1881; since 1891 has been president of the Salamanca Trust Co., 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. XO] NORTH CAROLINA [G2 25D) (Population (1910), 2,206,287.) SENATORS. F. M. SIMMONS, Democrat, of Newbern, was born January 20, 1854, in the county of Jones, N. C.; graduated at Trinity College, that State, with the degree of A. B., in June, 1873; was admitted to the bar in 1875, and has practiced the profession of law since then ; in 1886 was elected a member of the Fiftieth Con- gress from the second congressional district of North Carolina; in 1893 was appointed collector of internal revenue for the fourth collection district of North Carolina, and served in that office during the term of Mr. Cleveland; in the cam- paigns of 1892, 1898, 1900, 1902, 1904, and 1906 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 Hon. 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 degree of A. B., June, 1874; the degree of M. A. was conferred upon him two | yearslater; taught school two years; was private secretary to Gov. Z. B. Vance in | 1877-78, and private secretary to Gov. Thomas J. Jarvis in 1879; began the practice i of law in his native town in 1880; has had a leading practice; was five times a i 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 NORTH CAROLINA B toqr aphical. 75 choice of his party and elected speaker of the house of representatives, session of 1893; was president of the North Carolina Railroad Co. 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 1900 and 1911; has been for 10 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; married Mary P., the eldest daughter of United States Senator, afterwards Chief Justice, A. S. Merrimon, October 31, 1878; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. Jeter C. Pritchard, Republican, for the term beginning March 4, 1903, and reelected in 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Martin, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 193,250. 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, 1881; 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 im 1888; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Beaufort County from 1889 to 1898; was the Democratic presidential elector in the first congressional district in 1896; has been for several years and is now chairman of the publicsc-hool committee of Washington; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 11,544 votes, to 3,721 for Henry T. King, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bertie, Kdgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Lenoir, Northampton, Warren, and Wilson (8 counties). Population (1910), 199,405. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Carteret, Craven, Duplin, Jones, Onslow, Pamlico, Pender, Sampson, and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1910), 178,775. JOHN MILLER FAISON, Democrat, of Faison, was born near Faison, N. C., April 17, 1862; attended Faison Male Academy and lived on farm in early life; grad- uated in B. S. course at Davidson College, North Carolina, in 1883, and studied medicine at University of Virginia and received M. D. diploma; then attended post- graduate medical course at New York Polyclinic in 1885 and was licensed to practice medicine in North Carolina in 1885 and became a member of the North Carolina Medical Society; has practiced medicine and surgery and farmed at Faison, N. C., since; has for many years taken an active interest in politics and other public ques- tions, being a member of the county and State Democratic executive committees and a member of the North Carolina Jamestown Exposition Commission; was married to Miss Eliza F. De Vane, of Clinton, N. C., in December, 1837, who, with their six children, is now living; was nominated at the Democratic convention of the third North Carolina congressional district and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress. _ FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Tee, Nash, Vance, and Wake (7 counties). Population (1910), 205,109. 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 76 Congressional Directory. NORTH CAROLINA the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress by a majority of 6,550 votes over R. A. P. Cooley, Inde- pendent, indorsed by Republican convention. FIFTH DISTRICT. —CouNTIES: Alamance, Caswell, Durham, Forsyth, Granville, Guilford, Orange, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry (=r counties), Population (1910), 330,474. CHARLES MANLY STEDMAN, Democrat, of Greensboro, was born January 29, 1841, in Pittsboro, Chatham County; moved with his father’s family to Fayetteville when he was 12 years of age. He was prepared for college at the Pittsboro Academy by Rev. Daniel McGilvary, afterwards missionary to Siam, and at the Donaldson Academy in Fayetteville by Rev. Daniel Johnson. He entered the University of North Carolina when he was 16 years of age, and graduated from that institution in 1861. When Mr. Buchanan, the President of the United States, visited the uni- versity in 1859 he was chosen by the Philanthropic Society as one of its orators for the occasion. He received his diploma, but before the commencement exercises, when he was to deliver the salutatory address, in response to the call for volunteers, he left the university and volunteered as a private in the Fayetteville Independent Light Infantry Company, which was in the First North Carolina (or Bethel) Regi- ment. Upon the disbanding of this regiment he joined a company from Chatham County; was lieutenant, then captain, and afterwards its major. This company belonged to the Forty-fourth North Carolina Regiment. He served with Lee’s army during the entire war; was three times wounded, and surrendered at Appomattox. He is one of the 12 soldiers who were engaged in the first battle at* Bethel and who surrendered with Lee at Appomattox. At the close of the Civil War he returned to Chatham County, where he taught school for a year; while there he studied law under Hon. John Manning and procured his license to practice. On January 8, 1866, he was married to Miss Catherine de Rosset Wright, daughter of Joshua G. Wright, of Wilmington. In 1867 he moved to Wilmington, where he practiced law for many years. He was amember of the firm of Wright & Stedman. In 1880 he was chosen as a delegate to the Democratic national convention which nominated Gen. Winfield S. Hancock. He was elected lieutenant governor in November, 1884, and assumed the duties of his office in January, 1883, filling the position for four years until the expiration of the term. When nominated for lieutenant governor he resigned the attorneyship which he held for several railway systems, believing it to be his duty so to act when entering upon official life of this nature. In 1888, after a prolonged contest, he was defeated by Judge Daniel G. Fowle for the nomination for governor by a very small majority. In 1898 he moved to Greensboro and formed a copartner- ship with A. Wayland Cooke, under the firm name of Stedman & Cooke. Since “residing in Greensboro he has served as president of the North Carolina Bar Associa- tion. In 1909 he was appointed by Gov. Kitchin a director of the North Carolina Railroad Co., representing the State’s interest, and was afterwards elected its presi- dent. For many years he was trustee of the University of North Carolina. He is a director of the Guilford Battle Ground Co.; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 20,392 votes, to 17,060 for D. H. Blair, Republican. Before the com- mencement of his duties as a Member of Congress he resigned the presidency of the North Carolina Railroad Co. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES:. Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus, Cumberland, Harnett, New Hanover, and Robeson (7 counties). Population (1910), 201,898. 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 mayor of Dunn in 1897; 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 10,806 votes, to 4,257 for Iredell Meares, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anson, Davidson, Davie, I. ee, Montgomery, Moore, Randolph, Richmond, Scotland, Union, and Yadkin (11 counties). Population (1910), 224,848. ROBERT NEWTON PAGE, Democrat, of Biscoe, was born at Cary, Wake County, N. C., October 26, 1859; educated at Cary High School and Bingham Military School; moved to Moore County in 1880, and was for 20 years actively engaged in the manufacture of lumber; was treasurer of the Asheboro & Aber- deen Railroad Co. from 18go to 1902; moved to Montgomery County in 1897; elected from that county to the legislature of 1g9or; married in 1888 to Miss Flora NORTH CAROLINA B oq aphical 2 77 Shaw, of Moore County, and has four children; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,367 votes, to 11,006 for John J. Parker, Republican. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan, Stanly, Watauga, and Wilkes (10 counties). Population (1910), 220,813. ROBERT I. DOUGHTON, Democrat, of Laurel Springs, was born at Laurel Springs, N. C., November 7, 1863; was educated in the public schools and at Laurel Springs High School; is a farmer, stock raiser, and banker; is president of the Deposit and Savings Bank of North Wilkesboro, N. C.; was elected to the State senate from the thirty-fifth North Carolina senatorial district November, 1908; has always been a Democrat; is married and has four children; was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving a majority of 759 votes over Charles H. Cowles, Republican. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Burke, Catawba, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Madison, Mecklen- burg, Mitchell, and Yancey (9 counties). Population (1910), 249,495. 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 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 Democratic State convention in 19oo, chairman of the senatorial district in 1896; was chairman of the Democratic county 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, Fifty- ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 16,574 votes, to 11,332 for S. S. McNinch, Republican. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, McDowell, Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania (13 counties). Pop- ulation (1910), 202,220. JAMES M. GUDGER, Jr., Democrat, of Asheville, is a lawyer by profession; married Miss Katie M. Hawkins, of Hendersonville; educated at Emory and Henry, Virginia; elected to the State senate in 1900; was solicitor of the fifteenth district; elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress, defeating Maj. James M. Moody, Republican, by 184 votes; reelected to the Fifty-ninth Congress, defeating ex-Congressman Judge H. G. Ewart, Republican, by 888 votes, and again elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 15,459 votes, to 14,307 for John G. Grant, Republican, Xo] NORTH DAKOTA 3 (Population (1910), 577,056.) SENATORS. 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 1831, 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. He was nominated to succeed himself by State-wide primary nominating elec- tion June 29, 1910, and reelected by the State legislature January 17, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. ASLE J. GRONNA, Republican, of T,akota, was born at Elkader, Clayton County, Iowa, 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 78 Congressional Durectory. NORTH DAKOTA’ in the mercantile business; moved to Lakota, 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 Gov. Frank White; married August 31. 1884, to Bertha M. Ostby, of Spring Grove, Minn., and has two sons and three daughters; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses. On the death of the late Senator M. N. Johnson, he became a candidate for the unexpired term. Sub- mitting his candidacy to the people, he received the Republican nomination by a majority of 12,500 votes over his opponent, Judge Edward Engerud. He was elected by the legislature in January, 1911, and took his seat in the Senate February 2, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 577,056. L,OUIS BENJAMIN HANNA, Republican, of Fargo was born at New Brighton, Pa., August 9, 1861; his father was Jason R. Hanna, captain of Company C, Sixty-third Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, during the Civil War; was educated in Ohio, Mas- sachusetts, and New York; moved to North Dakota in 1881. Mr. Hanna is a thirty- third degree Mason; is president of the First National Bank of argo, the largest banking institution in the State; is one of the owners of the Carrington & Casey farm, one of the large farms in North Dakota, and has been prominently identified with the business interests of the State for many years; is married and has three children, two daughters and one son. He was a member of the house in the State legislature from 1895 to 1897, and from 1897 to 1901; and from 1905 to 190g was a - member of the State senate; was chairman of the Republican State central committee from 1902 to 1908; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. > H. T. HEL,GESEN, Republican, of Milton, was born near Decorah, Winneshiek, County, Iowa, June 26, 1857. He was educated in the Decorah public schools, Nor- mal Institute, and Business College; after graduating he entered the mercantile business, operating a large store in Decorah; in 1887 he moved to Milton, N. Dak., where he operated an extensive lumber and hardware business, and has been exten- sively engaged in farming; has served as president of the school board in his home town, and is now serving his third term as a member of the board of regents of the State University, and his services have been of great value in making that institution one of the foremost institutions of the West; in 1880 married Bessie H. Nelson, of Decorah, Iowa, and they have a family of three boys and four girls; in 1889 he became the first commissioner of agriculture and labor in the newly admitted State of North Dakota, being elected by a large majority, serving two terms, during which time he performed much valuable work; after retiring from this office he devoted himself to business, not being a candidate for any State office until 1908, when he became Republican candidate for Congress; was candidate again for the office of Representative to Congress in the primary election of June, 1910, receiving the nom- ination, and in the general election held November, 1910, was elected by one of the largest majorities ever given a candidate in North Dakota, receivitig 50,424 votes, while his highest opponent, Tobias Casey, received 25,015 votes. NG OHIO 9) (Population (1910), 4,767,121.) SENATORS. THEODORE E. BURTON, Republican, of Cleveland, was born at Jefferson, Ashtabula County, Ohio, December 20, 1851; studied at Grand River Institute, Austinburg, Ohio, at Towa College, Grinnell, Iowa, and at Oberlin College, from which last institution 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 and Industrial Depression,’’ published in 1902; also, a ‘‘ Life of John Sherman’’ in the ‘“ American Statesmen Series,’ published in 1906; received the degree of LL.D. from Oberlin College in 1900, and from Dartmouth College and Ohio University in 1907; was a Representative in the Fifty-first, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty- omIo Biographical. 79 seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses; for thirteen years was a member and for ten years chairman of the Committee on Rivers and Harbors; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1904 and 1908, and presented the name of William H. Taft for nomination for the Presidency at the Chicago convention in 1908; member of the National Monetary Commission; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, but resigned when elected to the United States Senate by the Ohio Legislature in January, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. ATLEE POMERENE, Democrat, of Canton, Ohio, was born at Berlin, Holmes County, Ohio, December 6, 1863, a son of Dr. Peter P. and Flizabeth (Wise) Pomerene; attended village school; later went to Vermillion Institute, Hayesville, Ohio, where he was tutor of Latin and Greek for one year; graduate of Princeton College in 1884 and of the Cincinnati Law School in 1886; received the degrees of A. B. and A. M. at Princeton and degree of B. L. at the Cincinnati Law School; located at Canton, Ohio, in the practice of law in 1886; was elected and served as city solicitor from 1887 to 1891; was elected prosecuting attorney of Stark County in 1896, serving three years; was a member of the honorary tax commission of Ohio, appointed by Gov. Andrew L,. Harris in 1906; was chairman of the Ohio State Democratic convention at Dayton, Ohio, held in June, 1910, which nominated him for lieutenant governor on the ticket with Gov. Judson Harmon; he was elected lieutenant governor November 8, 1910, and the general assembly on January 10, 1911, elected him United States Senator to succeed Senator Charles Dick. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 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 thirteenth ward, except part of precinct B, precincts A, B, C, D, FE, and F of the eighteenth ward of the city of Cincinnati; the townships of Anderson, Columbia, Millcreek (including Millcreek Hast), Carthage East, Carthage West, part of Chester Park, Norwood, St. Bernard North, St. Bernard South, Spencer, Sycamore, Symmes, Columbia and Sycamore, including Madeira and Silver- ton precincts, and Springfield and Sycamore, including part of Arlington Heights precinct. Population (1910), 204,698. NICHOLAS IL,LONGWORTH, Republican, of Cincinnati, was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, November 5, 1869; his preliminary education was at Franklin School, in Cin- cinnati; graduated A. B. from Harvard University, 1891; spent one year at Harvard Taw 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 1go1. On February 17, 1906, married Miss Alice Roosevelt, daughter of President Roosevelt. Was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMILTON COUNTY: Precincts I and K 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, twenty-third, and twenty-fourth wards of the city of Cincinnati; the town- ships of Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Green, Harrison, Miami, Millcreek (including part of Chester Park, Elmwood Place Rast, Elmwood Place West, West precinct, and Winton Place North), Springfield, 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 (1910), 256,034. ALFRED G. ALLEN, Democrat, of Cincinnati, was born on a farm near Wil- mington, Ohio, July 23, 1867; he attended the public schools of Wilmington, and afterwards entered the law school of the Cincinnati College, from which he was graduated in 1890, when he was admitted to the bar; since that time he has been in active practice of the law in the city of Cincinnati. He served two years as council- man at large, and two years as a member of the board of sinking fund trustees of the city of Cincinnati. On December To, 1901, married Miss Clara B. Forbes of St. Louis, Mo., and has two children; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 24,323 votes to 23,834 for Herman P. Goebel, Republican, and 2,287 for Louis F. Schweickart, Socialist. THIRD PISIRICT~CouNTIES: Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1910), 257, . JAMES M. COX, Democrat, of Dayton, was born on a farm near Jacksonburg, Butler County, Ohio, March 31, 1870; was educated in the country school at Jack- sonburg and the high school at Amanda; worked as a farmet’s boy, newsboy, print- er’s devil,” and reporter; is married and has three children; is the owner and pub- lisher of the Dayton Daily News and the Springfield Daily News; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 31.539 votes, to 18,730 for George R. Young, Republican. A 80 Congressional Directory. omo FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby (5 counties). Pop- ulation (1910), 182,958. J. HENRY GOEKE, Democrat, of Wapakoneta, was born on a farm near Minster, Auglaize County, Ohio, October 28, 1869; his preliminary education was in the com- mon schools at Minster, Celina, and Coldwater, Ohio; graduated from Pio Nono College, St. Francis, Wis., 1888; attended Cincinnati Law School for two years and graduated there in 1891; was admitted to the bar in May, 1891, and has ever since been engaged in the general practice of the law; was elected prosecuting attorney of Auglaize County, 1894, and reelected in 1897, serving for six years; was chairman of the Democratic State convention that nominated Tom I,. Johnson for governor in 1903; was married to Catherine N. Nichols in September, 1907; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,885 votes, to 13,482 for C. KE. Johnston, Repub- lican, and 1,405 for Arthur A. Heusch, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Defiance, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (6 counties). Population (1910), 156,636. | TIMOTHY T. ANSBERRY, Democrat, of Defiance, was born December 24, 1871, at Defiance, Ohio; graduated from the University of Notre Dame in 1893; is a lawyer; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,201 votes, to 13,482 for C. S. Roe, Repub- lican, 589 for Allen Jackson, Socialist, and 157 for S. F. Welty, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Greene, Highland, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1910), 161,004. | MATTHEW ROMBACH DENVER, Democrat, of Wilmington, son of the late | Gen. James W. Denver, was born December 21, 1870, at Wilmington, Ohio; educated in the public schools and Georgetown (D. C.) University, receiving the degree of B. A. in 1892; has served on State Democratic central and executive committees; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention at Chicago in 1896; was a delegate at large from Ohio to the national Democratic convention at Denver in 1908; is engaged in farming, manufacturing, and banking; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,057 votes, to 17,105 for Jesse Taylor, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Clark, Fayette, Madison, Miami, and Pickaway (5 counties). Population (1910), 179,286. JAMES D. POST, Democrat, of Washington Courthouse, was born on the 25th day of November, 1863, on a farm near Washington Courthouse, Fayette County, Ohio. He resided with his parents and worked on the farm, attending the country school in the winter months and assisted his father in the farm work during the summer months; his education was that acquired in the country school and at the National Normal University at Lebanon, Warren County, Ohio, at which institution he graduated in the summer of 1882, receiving the degree of bachelor of sciences; taught school in the country and village schools of his county for five years, during which time he borrowed the requisite law books from the members of the local bar, read law at night, and was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of Ohio in June, 1887, beginning the practice of his chosen profession at the county seat of his native county. He has ever since continued in the legal profession, and has enjoyed a large and lucrative practice, covering the courts of his State, and is admitted to practice in the United States District and Circuit Courts and Circuit Court of Appeals. Shortly before commencing the practice of law he was married to Mrs. May J. Snider, | of Washington Courthouse, Ohio. They have one son, Claude I,., now a student in the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. Coming from a family of Whigs, most of whom allied themselves with the Republican Party, he early in life espoused the tenets of the Democratic faith, and has always been affiliated with that party, being | intimately connected with the local organization, and has served for years as the chairman of its executive committee. He never sought political preferment until he was nominated to the office of Representative to Congress upon the Democratic ticket from the seventh congressional district of the State of Ohio at the primary held in that district on the 17th day of May, 1910; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,874 votes, to 17,498 for Gen. J. Warren Keifer, Republican. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Champaign, Delaware, Hancock, Hardin, I,ogan, and Union (6 counties). Population (1910), 173,755. : FRANK B. WILLIS, Republican, of Ada, was born at Lewis Center, Delaware County, Ohio, on December 28, 1871. His father, Jay B. Willis, and his mother, Lavinia A. Willis, are living in ripe old age at Delaware, Ohio; he received his edu- cation in the common schools of Delaware County, at the Galena High School in - OHIO Buographical. 81 the same county, and at the Ohio Northern University at Ada, Ohio; he received the degree of A. M. from that institution and subsequently took up the study of law and was admitted to the bar in 1906. He was a teacher for several years in the Ohio Northern University, occupying the chair of history and economics; since his admis- sion to the bar he has taught in the law department of his alma mater. He was married in 1894 to Miss Allie Dustin, of Galena, Ohio; was a member of the Seventy- fourth and Seventy-fifth General Assemblies of Ohio, having been elected from Hardin County as a Republican; as a member of the taxation committee in the Seventy-fifth General Assembly he took a prominent part in the enactment of taxa- tion reform measures outlined by Gov. George K. Nash; he introduced and aided in the passage of the corporation tax law which bears his name. During the extraordi- nary session of the General Assembly in 1902 was chairman pro tempore of the com- mittee which prepared the Municipal Code of Ohio; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,030 votes to 19,519 for Thomas C. Mahon, Democrat, 1,497 for Arthur C. Parthemer, Socialist, and 8 for Charles Mason, Prohibitionist. MENTE DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Fulton, I,ucas, Ottawa, and Wood (4 counties). Population (1910), 205,332. ; 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. Gen. Sherwood was educated at Hudson River Institute, Claverack, N. Y., at Antioch College, Ohio, and at Pough- keepsie Law College. Enlisted April 16, 1861, as a private in the Volunteer Army, and was mustered out as a brigadier general October 8, 1865, by order of the Secre- tary of War. Served in 42 battles. He commanded his regiment in all the battles of the Atlanta campaign; and after the battles of Franklin and Nashville, Tenn., upon recommendation of the officers of his brigade and division, he was made brevet brigadier general by President Lincoln February 16 for long and faithful service and conspicuous gallantry at the battles of Resaca, Franklin, and Nashville. Isa journalist by profession. Gen. Sherwood was twice elected secretary of state of Ohio, three times elected judge, and was elected to the Forty-third, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses; was reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,908 votes, to 19,593 for Gen. J. Kent Hamilton, Republican, 3,917 for W. F. Reis, Socialist, and 191 for M. A. Gibson, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Adams, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, and Scioto (6 coun- ties). Population (1910), 184,965. ROBERT MAUCK SWITZER, Republican, a resident of Gallia County, Ohio, was born March 6, 1863, near Gallipolis, Ohio, and his education consisted of instruc- tion in the country district schools, a few terms at the Gallia Academy, and about five © terms at Rio Grande College, all in his native county. He hasalways lived in Gallia County, Ohio, at or near Gallipolis, Ohio, excepting from August, 1883, until March, 1885, when he was a resident of Butler County, Kans.; he served as deputy sheriff of Gallia County, Ohio, from January, 1888, to January, 1892; during the year 1892, he attended the summer course of law lectures under the supervision of the late Prof. John G. Minor, of the University of Virginia, at Charlottesville, Va., and the law course of the Ohio State University, at Columbus, Ohio, during the fall of the same year, and was admitted to the practice of law in the courts of Ohio in December, 1892, and since that time he has been continuously engaged in the practice of law at Gallipolis, Ohio; he was married in December, 1896, to Miss Alice M. Simmons, of Pittsburg, Pa., formerly of Lawrence County, Ohio; was elected prosecuting attorney of Gallia County on the Republican ticket in the fall of 1893, and reelected without opposition in 1896, serving as such until January, 1900; was one of the delegates from the tenth congressional district of Ohio to the Republican national convention held at Philadelphia in 1900, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,548 votes, to 16,250 for Edmund H. Willis, Democrat, 1,122 for George A. Mooney, Socialist, and 231 for W. J. Henry, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Athens, Fairfield, Hocking, Meigs, Perry, Ross, and Vinton (7 counties). Population (1910), 224,804.- HORATIO C. CILAYPOOIL, Democrat, of Chillicothe, was born at McArthur, Ohio, February 9, 1859; graduated at the National Normal in 1880; admitted to the bar at Columbus, Ohio, in 1882; married in 1883; elected prosecuting attorney of Ross County, Ohio, 1898, and again in 1901; elected judge of the probate court of 82 Congressional Directory. . omIo Ross County, Ohio, 1905, and again in 1908; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 22,894 votes to 20,168 for Albert Douglas, Republican, 2,387 for Chinn, Socialist, and 400 for Creamer, Prohibitionist. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNtTy: Franklin. Population (1910), 221,567. EDWARD LIVINGSTON TAYLOR, Jr., Republican, of 1260 Fast 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 and Sixtieth Congresses, and Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,696 votes to 15,151 for Frank S. Monett, Democrat; 11,142 for John I, Bachman, Socialist; and 360 for Alfred B. Paul, Prohibitionist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiESs: Crawford, Frie, Marion, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wyandot (6 counties). Population (1910), 204,686. CARI, CAREY ANDERSON, Democrat, of Fostoria, was born at Bluffton, Allen County, Ohio, December 2, 1877; when a lad his parents moved to Fremont; at 10 years of age he was a newsboy and bootblack; had a partial high-school education, but early began a business career; at 16 he had saved money enough to buy a home for his mother; was married September, 1904, to Miss Nellie Ford, of Fremont, and has two sons; was twice elected mayor of Fostoria; is president of the board of trade, president of the city hospital board, and director in a number of manu- facturing enterprises; is a member of the Order of Odd Fellows, Flks, Mystic Shrine, and the Knights of Pythias; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES; Ashland, Huron, Knox, Lorain, Morrow, and Richland (6 counties). Population (1910), 227,881. WILLIAM GRAVES SHARP, Democrat, of Elyria, was born in Mount Gilead, Ohio, March 14, 1859; after spending his childhood days in that place, he moved to Elyria with his grandparents; entered the public schools of that city, and later graduated from them; at the end of two years entered the law department of the University of Michigan, from which he graduated in 1881; in the spring of the same year was admitted to the bar in the State of Ohio, and three years later was elected prosecuting attorney in Lorain County; after his term of office expired he engaged in the manufacturing business, becoming interested in a small way in the manufac- ture of wood by-products; the business rapidly enlarged and soon included the manu- facture of charcoal pig iron, in which business for a number of years past he has been extensively engaged; in 1895 he married Miss Hallie M. Clough, and has five children; was presidential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1892; nominee of that party for Congress in 1900, and delegate to the Democratic national convention in St. Louis in 1904; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Guernsey, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1910), 180,324. GEORGE WHITE, Democrat, of Marietta, Ohio, was born at Elmira, N. Y., August 21, 1872; attended the common schools of Titusville, Pa., and graduated from the High School in 1891, and in that year entered Princeton University, grad- uating in the class of 1895 with the degree of B. A.; taught school for the following year, then entered the oil business; mined in the Klondike 1898-19071; has resided in Marietta since 1902; was elected to the legislature and represented Washington County, Ohio, from 1905 to 1908; was married September 25, 1900, to Miss Charlotte McKelvy, daughter of David McKelvy, of Titusville, Pa., and has three children; at present engaged in the production of crude petroleum and natural gas; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,723 votesito 17,674 for James Joyce, Republican; 2,2:8 for Frank Martin, Socialist; and 372 for Leslie E. Howk, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Belmont, Carroll, Harrison, Jefferson, and Monroe (5 coun- ties). Population (1910), 201,360. WILLIAM BATES FRANCIS, Democrat, of Martins Ferry, was born at Upde- graff, Jefferson County, Ohio, of German and Irish parentage; is married and has one child, a daughter; was admitted to practice law in 1889. Practices in all State and Federal Courts; was delegate to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis in 1904; member of city board of school examiners of Martins Ferry, Ohio, for six years and elected member of the board of education in 1908; elected and served as city solicitor for Martins Ferry three years; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 15,731 votes to 15,323 for Hon. David A. Hollingsworth, Republican; 2.323 for Robert J. Murray, Socialist; and 404 for Robert J. Crawford, Prohibitionist. omio Biographical. 83 SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Coshocton, Holmes, Licking, Tuscarawas, and Wayne (5 counties). Population (1910), 198,713. 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. He began the publication of the Johnstown Independ- ent before he was 18 years old and has since continued to publish it; he was for three years secretary of the National Editorial Association of the United States; for the past 15 yearshas been interested in banking. He was married to Jennie B. Willison Decembér 24, 1889; has no children. He was postmaster of his town during the second Cleveland administration, but never entered politics until 1905, when he was elected to the State legislature; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, defeating Judge Smyzer, Republican, for reelection by 485 plurality; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress by 7,173 plurality, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress by 10,934. : EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Columbiana, Mahoning, and Stark (3 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 315,757. JOHN J. WHITACRE, Democrat, of Canton, was born December 28, 1860; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, November 8, 1910. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashtabula, Geauga, Portage, Summit, and Trumbull (5 counties). Population (1910), 265,543. ELLSWORTH R. BATHRICK, Democrat, of Akron, was born on a farm in Oakland County, Mich., January 6, 1863; attended country schools in White Lake and Bloomfield Townships and the high school at Pontiac, Mich.; married May IL. Clark, of Akron, Ohio, in 1889; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress November 8, 1910, being the first Democrat to represent this district since 1852; never held public office before. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Lake, Medina, and the townships of Bedford, Brecks- ville, Brooklyn, Chagrin Falls, Collinwood, Dover, East Cleveland, Euclid, Glenville, Inde- pendence, Mayfield, Middleburg, Newburg, Olmstead, Orange, Parma, Rockport, Royalton, Solon, Strongsville, Warrensville, and West Park, of Cuyahoga County, and the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, eighteenth (part of), nineteenth (part of), twenty- fourth (part of), twenty-sixth (part of), twenty-seventh, twenty-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 (1910), 315,980. PAUL HOWLAND, Republican, of Cleveland, was born at Jefferson, Ashtabula County, Ohio, December 5, 1865; holds the degrees of A. B. and M. A. from Oberlin College, and of ILI. B. from Harvard University; was second lieutenant First Ohio Volunteer Cavalry during the Spanish-American War; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CITY OF CLEVELAND: Ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth wards; precincts D, E, F, G, H, I, J of eigh- teenth ward; precincts A, B,C, D, E, F, G, I, J, K, L, M, N of nineteenth ward; twentieth, twenty-first, twenty-second, twenty-third wards; precincts A, B,C, D, E, ¥, G, H, 1, J, N, O, P, 0, R of twenty-fourth ward; twenty-fifth ward; precincts A, B,C, D, KE, G, H, L,I, M, 0, P, Q of tweny-sixth ward. Population (1910), 367,970. ROBERT JOHNS BULKLEY, Democrat, of Cleveland, was born in Cleveland October 8, 1880; graduated from Harvard College with the degree of A. B. in 1902; studied law at Harvard Law School and in Cleveland; received the degree of A. M. from Harvard University in 1906; married Miss Katharine Pope at Helena, Mont., February 17, 1909; efigaged in practice of law; never was a candidate for public office prior to 1910; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,091 votes to 16,716 for James H. Casa, Republican; 2,649 for Karl A. Cheyney, Socialist, and 124 for J. Walter Malone, Prohibitionist. 39] OKLAHOMA > (Population (1910), 1,657,155.) SENATORS. THOMAS PRYOR GORE, Democrat, of Lawton, was born in Webster County, Miss., December 10, 1870; his parents were Tom M. Gore and Carrie E. Gore, née Wingo; attended a local school at Walthall, Miss., and graduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., 1892; moved to Texas in 84259°—62-1—18T ED——7 | 84 Congressional Directory. OKLAHOMA 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; drew the short term, expiring March 3, 1909; immediately announced himself for reelection and was renominated without opposition in the State Democratic primary August 4, 1908. He was reelected for a full term by the legislature, January 20, 1909, receiving 100 votes as against 48 votes for Dennis T. Flynn, Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. ROBERT LATHAM OWEN, Democrat, of Muskogee, was born February 2, 1856, at Lynchburg, Va.; son of Robert I. Owen, president of the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad, and of Narcissa Chisholm, of the Cherokee Nation; was educated in Lynchburg, Va., Baltianore, Md., and at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.; has served as teacher, editor, lawyer, banker, and business man; was a member of the Democratic national committee from 1892 to 1896; was member of subcom- | mittee that drew the Democratic national platform in 1896, etc., vice chairman of the Democratic campaign committee in Oklahoma in 1906; is an Episcopalian, Mason, ' 32°, W. O. W., life-member Elk, etc. 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 Senatorship, by about 10,000; elected United States Senator by the unanimous vote of the Democrats of the Legis- lature 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 (1910), 240,266. BIRD SEGLE McGUIRE, Republican, of Pawnee, was born at Belleville, I11., in 1864, and when but a child of 2 years his parents, Joel and Rachael McGuire, moved to Randolph County, north central Missouri, where they resided upon a farm until the spring of 1881, at which time they moved to Chautauqua County, Kans.; after remaining there a few months Mr. McGuire left home and lived for three years in different parts of the Indian Territory, a part of which is now Oklahoma, being engaged a greater portion of the time in the cattle business; having been able to save a small sum of money, returned home and entered the State Normal School at Emporia, Kans,, remaining for two years; then taught school several terms and entered the law department of the university at Lawrence, remaining one year and again returning home to Chautauqua, Kans.; in the fall of 18go 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 Ea and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress September 17, 1907, his term of service beginning upon the admission of Oklahoma as a State; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving a plurality of 3,000 votes over his Democratic opponent. 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 (1910), 344,867. : DICK THOMPSON MORGAN, Republican, of Woodward, was born on a farm in Prairie Creek, Vigo County, Ind., December 6, 1853, son of Valentine and Frances Morgan, and his mother, at the ripe age of 87, still resides on the old farm home- stead; he received his primary education in the country schools of his neighborhood; graduated from the Prairie Creek High School in 1872, at which time he entered Union Christian College at Merom, Ind., from which institution he graduated in 1876 with the degree of B. S.; for a time he was professor of mathematics in his alma mater, from which institution, in 1879, he received the degree of M. S.; in 1880 he graduated from the Central Law School of Indianapolis, Ind., and was a member of the lower house of the Indiana Legislature in the session of 1880-81; was appointed register of the United States land office at Woodward, Okla., by President Roose- velt in 1904, and served until May 1, 1908; married in 1876 to Miss Ora Heath, daughter of Rev. A. R. and Mary Heath, of Covington, Ind.; from this union one son was born, Porter Heath Morgan, now an attorney of Oklahoma City, and who OKLAHOMA B 1oqr aphical ) 85 married Miss Clemmer Deupree, of Bloomfield, Towa; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 25,134 votes, to 24,062 for Elmer 1,. Fulton, Democrat, and 5,382 for H. I. Bryant, Socialist. 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 (1910), 343,194. 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. N. Bruce, Conway, Ark., and was admitted to the bar of Faulkner County, February 14, 18go; 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 continued the practice of his profession; has been twice married, in 1892 to Gulielma Ross, who died in 1898, and on June 15, 1907, to Miss Byrd Ironside, 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 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; 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; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress September. 17, 1907, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 25,312 votes to 21,767 for Charles E. Creager, Republican, and 2,932 for G. M. Snyder, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Atoka, Bryan, part of Carter, Choctaw, Coal, Haskell, part of Hughes, Johnston, Latimer, Le Flore, part of Love, McCurtain, part of McIntosh, Marshall, part of Murray, part of Muskogee, part of Okfuskee, Pittsburg, Pontotoc, and Pushmataha (20 counties). Population (1910), 354,837. CHARLES D. CARTER, Democrat, of Ardmore, seven-sixteenths Chickasaw and Cherokee Indian (a descendant of Nathan Carter, who was captured when a small boy by Shawnee Indians at Wyoming Valley massacre, Pennsylvania), was born at Boggy Depot, Choctaw Nation, August 16, 1869. When 7 years old moved with his father (Benjamin W. Carter) to Mill Creek post office and stage stand on the western frontier of the Chickasaw Nation. His early lifewas spent as a cow puncher and in attendance at Indian school, Tishomingo, Chickasaw Nation; left school June, 1887, and con- tinued ranch work until September 1, 1889, when he began work in a store at Ardmore, continuing there as clerk, bookkeeper, and cotton man until January, 1893; served the tribal government as auditor, member of lower house of legislature, super- intendent of Indian schools, and mining trustee, though all the time maintaining his farm and ranch at Mill Creek; was secretary of first Democratic State committee for proposed State of Oklahoma; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,959 votes to 11,979 for Charles M. Campbell, Republican, and 5,534 for J. N. Gilmore, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beckham, part of Carter, Cleveland, Comanche, Garvin, part of Grady, Greer, Harmon, Jackson, Jefferson, Kiowa, part of Love, McLain, part of Murray, Pottawatomie, part of Roger Mills, Stephens, Swanson, Tillman, and Washita (19 counties). Population (1910), 373,991. | 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 Law, 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. N 86 Congressional Directory. : OREGON NO OREGON 0 (Population (1910), 672,765.) | SENATORS. 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 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. GEORGE EARLE CHAMBERLAIN, Democrat, of Portland, was born on a plan- tation near Natchez, Miss., January 1, 1854. His early education was obtained in pri- vate and later in the public schools of Natchez, which he attended until 1870. Inthe latter year he began work as a clerk in a general merchandise store in Natchez, hold- ing this position until June, 1872, when he went to Lexington, Va., to attend Wash- ington and Lee University, from which institution he graduated in the academic and law departments in June, 1876, receiving in the former the degree of B. A. and in the latter the degree of II. B. After graduation he returned home, where he remained for a short time, leaving there to take up his residence in Oregon, arriving there [ December 6, 1876. Since that time he has made Oregon his home. During a part of 1877 Mr. Chamberlain taught a country school in Linn County, Oreg., and in the latter part of that year was appointed deputy clerk of that county; this position he held until the summer of 1879, resigning to practice law at Albany. He was united in marriage to Miss Sallie N. Welch, of Natchez, Miss., May 21, 1879; six children have been born of this marriage, all of whom are living and three married. In 1830 Mr. Chamberlain was elected to the legislature, and in 1884 district attorney for the third judicial district, embracing the counties of Marion, Linn, Polk, Yamhill, and Tilla- mook, and served for a term of two years; in 1891 was appointed attorney general I - of the State of Oregon by the then governor, Hon. Sylvester Pennoyer, his : term expiring in 1892, when he was nominated for the position by his party and elected; moving to Portland shortly thereafter he was nominated as district attorney for the fourth judicial district, embracing Multnomah County, and was elected for a term of four years; in 1902 was nominated as a candidate for governor; was elected i for four years, and reelected to the same position in 1906; in 1908 he was nominated in the primaries for United States Senator on the Democratic ticket and elected over | his opponent, H. M. Cake, the Republican candidate, and elected by the legislature of the State, January 19, 1909, to the United States Senate, to succeed Hon. C. W. Fulton. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CULUNTIES: Benton, Clackamas, Coos, Curry, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Klamath, Lake, Iane, Lincoln, Linn, Marion, Polk, Tillamook, Washington, and Yamhill (17 counties). Population (1910), 290,160. WILLIS CHATMAN HAWLEY, Republican, of Salem, was born near Monroe, in Benton County, Oreg., May 5, 1864; his parents crossed the plains to Oregon in 1847 and 1848. He was educated in the country schools of the State, and at the Willamette University, Salem, Oreg., from which he has received the degrees of B. S. (1884), A. B. and LI. B. (1888), and A. M. (1891), in cursu, and that of LL. D. (1909) in honore; was regularly admitted to the bar in Oregon in 1893 and to the district and circuit courts of the United States in 1906; engaged in educational work in | several institutions, including the Willamette University, which he served for over 8 years as its president and for 16 years as professor of history, economics, and public law, and until elected to Congress; has been head manager of the Pacific Jurisdiction of the Woodmen of the World since 1896, this institution having about a OREGON Biographical. 87 $200,000,000 of insurance in force; is a member of the National Forest Reservation Commission, created by the act of March 1, 1911; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 26,256 votes to 18,232 for R. G. Smith, Democrat, 4,971 for C. W. Sherman, Socialist, and 4,585 for W. P. Elmore, Prohibitionist. © SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Baker, Clatsop, Columbia, Crook, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Hood y River, Malheur, Morrow, Multnomah, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Wheeler (17 counties). Population (1910), 382,605. ABRAHAM WALTER LAFFERTY, Republican, of Portland, Oreg., was born in Audrain County, Mo., June 10, 1875; attended the law department of the Missouri State University, 1895 and 1896; was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of Missouri on examination June 5, 1896, and practiced law at Montgomery City, Mo., until December, 1904, during which time he served three years with the rank of cap- tain in the Missouri National Guard and one term as prosecuting attorney; in 1909 he was given the degree of LI. B. by the law department of the Missouri University; December, 1904, he was appointed special agent of the General Land Office, and after brief preliminary instruction at Washington, D. C., was sent to Oregon, arriv- ing at Portland the 1st of March, 1905, where he has since resided; resigned as spe- cial agent of the Land Office October 1, 1906, and reentered the private practice of law; instituted the litigation now pending in the Federal court in Oregon to compel the Oregon & California Railroad Co. to sell 2,300,000 acres of lands granted to it by act of Congress in accordance with the terms of the grant, which require that the lands shall be sold by the railroad company to actual settlers only in quantities not greater than a quarter section to any one settler, and at prices not exceeding $2.50 per acre; became a candidate for Congress in 1910 as a progressive Republican and favoring greater liberality to homesteaders and the giving to Oregon of the benefit of her own natural resources; was nominated .in the primaries and was successful at the general election, receiving 30,642 votes. John Manning, Democrat, received 19,477 votes; William A. Crawford, Socialist, 5,583; and George B. Pratt, Prohibitionist, 3,464. C9] PENNSYLVANIA [RZD (Population (1910), 7,665,111.) 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 188, 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 Republican national 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; reelected in 1903 and 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. : GEORGE T. OLIVER, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in Ireland during a visit of his parents, January 26, 1848; was graduated from Bethany College, West Virginia, in 1868; admitted to the Allegheny County (Pa.) bar in 1871, and in active practice 10 years. In 1881 engaged in manufacturing, becoming vice president and subsequently president of the Oliver Wire Co., with which he remained until 189, when that company sold its plant; also from 1889 president of the Hainsworth Steel Co. until its merger in 1897 with Oliver & Snyder Steel Co., of which he was presi- dent until he disposed of his manufacturing interests in gor. Since 1900 engaged in the newspaper business as principal owner of the Pittsburg Gazette-Times and Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. President of the Pittsburg Central Board of Educa- tion from 1881 to 1884, and a presidential elector in 1884. In 1904 was tendered the appointment to the United States Senate to succeed Matthew Stanley Quay, deceased, but declined for personal reasons. He was elected Senator March 17, 1909, to fill out the unexpired term of Hon. P. C. Knox, resigned. On January 18, 1911, was reelected for the full term of six years, His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 88 Congressional Directory. PENNSYLVANIA REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: First, seventh, twenty-sixth, thirtieth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-ninth wards. Population (1910), 274,960. 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 LIL. 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, at St. Louis in 1896, at Philadelphia, 1900, and at Chicago in I9o4; 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, Fifty-ninth, Six- tieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiv- ing 28,054 votes, to 8,827 for Henry V. Garrett, Keystone, 2,657 for Michael J. Geraghty, Democrat, and 597 for James F. Lynch, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Eighth, ninth, tenth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, twentieth, and thirty-seventh wards. Population (1910), 193,447. Vacancy. THIRD DISTRICT.— CITY OF PHILADELPHIA: Second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, eleventh, twelfth, sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth wards. Population (1910), 251,826. J. HAMPTON MOORE, Republican, of Philadelphia, born at Woodbury, N. J., March 8, 1864; educated in common schools; law student in Philadelphia, 1877 to 1880; reporter in the courts and on the Public Ledger, 1881 to 1894; chief clerk to city treasurer, 1894 to 1897; editor and publisher, 1898-99; secretary to mayor, 1900; city treasurer, 1901-1903; Chief Bureau of Manufactures, Department of Commerce and Labor, January, 1905; resigned June I, 1905, to become president City Trust, Safe Deposit & Surety Co. of Philadelphia; appointed by the court June 24, 1905, receiver of the company; president of the Allied Republican Clubs of Philadel- phia, 1900-1909; president of the Pennsylvania State League in 1900, and reelected in 19071; elected president of the National Republican League, at Chicago, in 1902, and reelected at Indianapolis in 1904; president Atlantic Deeper Waterways Associa- tion, Philadelphia, 1907; Baltimore, 1908; Norfolk, 1909; Providence, 1910; married Adelaide Stone in 1889; elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress for the unexpired term; reelected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses; also reelected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 23,994 votes, to 7,030 for James G. Ramsdell, Keystone Party, 2,712 for William A. Hayes, Democrat, 791 for Felix Heinzel, Socialist, and 142 for Samuel D. Strohm, City Party and William Penn. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CiTYy OF PHILADELPHIA: Twenty-eighth, twenty-ninth, thirty-second, thirty-eighth, and forty-seventh wards. Population (1910), 198,693. REUBEN OSBORNE MOON, Republican, of Philadelphia, descended from John Moon, one of the earliest judges of the State of Pennsylvania, was born in the State of New Jersey, son of Aaron I,. Moon, a well-known teacher of that State; was edu- cated 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 learn- ing in Philadelphia; engaged in the educational lecture field; studied law, being admitted to the bar in 1884, to the suprenie 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 prominent Pennsylvania associations; married Mary A. Predmore, of Barnegat, N. J., in 1876, and has two children; was elected to the Fifty-eighth Congress to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Robert H. Foederer, and to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,309 votes, to 2,459 for William C. Mitchell, Democrat, 1,049 for Josef Doerr, Socialist, 2,903 for Albert W. Sanson, City and William Penn, and 132 for H. C. Russell, Prohibitionist. PENNSYLVANIA B 10g7 aph C al 5 80 Pd FIFTH DISTRICT.—CiTYy OF PHILADELPHIA: Twenty-third, twenty-fifth, thirty-first, thirty- third, thirty-fifth, and forty-first wards. Population (1910), 252,893. MICHAEL DONOHOE, Democrat, of Philadelphia, was born in Killeshandra, Ireland, February 22, 1864; attended the national schools and also a private classical school in his native village; at the age of 20 obtained a teacher’s certificate and taught as principal of a national school for two years when he resigned and came to Philadelphia, November 8, 1886; is secretary and treasurer of Gill & Co. (Inc.), manufacturers of glassware; a director of Girard Avenue Title & Trust Co.; a trustee of the Northwestern General Hospital; a member of the Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,209 votes, to 18,016 for William W. Foulkrod, Republican, 2,328 for Martin McCue, Socialist, and 124 for Marion Benjamin, Prohibitionist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CiTY OF PHILADELPHIA: Twenty-first, twenty-second, twenty-fourth, twenty- seventh, thirty-fourth, fortieth, forty-second, forty-fourth, and forty-sixth wards. Population (1910), 377,189. 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 eoal 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 Co., 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; is an officer in and director of a number of successful financial, mining, and business companies, and is also associated in church and philanthropic institutiods; was married June 18, 1878, to Kate R. Howell; has traveled extensively in this and foreign countries; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and reelected for the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 25,747 votes to 23,672 for Frank H. Hawkins, City, Keystone, and William Penn, 4,319 for William Carr, Democrat, 1,171 for George A. Marr, Socialist, 621 for Wharton Barker, Independent, and 182 for George B. Cook, Prohibition. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Chester and Delaware (2 counties). Population (1910), 227,119. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,490 votes, to 14,498 for Eugene C. Bonniwell, Keystone and Democrat, 466 for Walter N. Lodge, Socialist, and 435 for Joseph H. Paschall, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bucks and Montgomery (2 counties). Population (1910), 246,120. ROBERT E. DIFENDERFER, Democrat, of Ashbourne, Montgomery County, was born at Lewisburg, Union County, Pa., June 7, 1849, and is the eldest son of the late Solomon and Mary A. (Neff) Difenderfer; received an academic education; in early life worked on a farm and later took up the trade of house painter; studied dentistry, practicing this profession for a period of more than 14 years in his native town and Pottsville, Pa.; built and operated the first woolen mill in the Chinese Empire at Tientsin; passed through the Chinese Boxer insurrection in rgoo, and returned to the United States in August of the same year, since which time he has followed the wholesale lumber business and contracting, his present occupation; is married and has two sons; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,683 votes, to 19,106 for Hon. Irving P. Wanger, Republican, and 928 for Henry J. Weisser, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTy: Lancaster. Population (1910), 167,029. WILLIAM WALTON GRIEST, Republican, of Tancaster, was born September 22, 1859; graduated from the Millersville ( Pa.) State Normal School in 1876; taught school; was a school director for many years, and is a director and an incorporator of EE El ll TI 90 Congressional Directory. : PENNSYLVANIA the Pennsylvania Public School Memorial Association; engaged in newspaper work; was chief clerk in the county commissioners’ office from 1887 to 1899; was elected delegate to the Republican national conventions in 1896, 1900, 1904, and 1908; was secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania from 1899 to 1903; is president of electric railways and of lighting companies; publisher of a newspaper, and engaged in various business enterprises; is married; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,718 votes, to 3,120 for James G. McSparran, Democrat, 408 for D. S. Von Neida, Prohibitionist, and 367 for Elmer Smith, Socialist. TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTy: Lackawanna. Population (1910), 259,570. JOHN RICHARD FARR, Republican, of Scranton, Pa., was born in Scranton, Pa., July 18, 1857; educated in public schools, School of the Lackawanna, Scranton, Pa., Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., and Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. News- boy, printer, publisher, now in the real-estate business. Married Miss Justine Levy, of Pittston, Pa., in 1884, and has five children—four daughters and one son. Served four years on Scranton school board and five terms in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 1891, 1893, 1895, 1897, 1899. Speaker, session of 1899. Author of free school book and compulsory education laws; elected to the Sixty-second * Congress, defeating his Democratic opponent, Hon. P. F. Calpin, by 2,217 votes. | ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTy: Luzerne. Population (19:10), 343,186. CHARLES CALVIN BOWMAN, Republican, of Pittston, Luzerne County, was born at Troy, N. Y., November 14, 1852; was educated in the common schools; learned the woodworking trade; graduated from Union College with the degree of C. E. in 1875; engaged in civil engineering work for the State of Massachusetts, near Boston, during the season of 1875. In the following year he organized the | western shipping department of the Pennsylvania Coal Co., of Pittston, Pa., and 8 ; managed this department until 1883; served as superintendent of mines of the Flor- | | ence Coal Co., 1883-84, and was part owner. At this time he engaged in selling | coal at wholesale, which has since been his principal business, owning an interest in several mines. He is trustee of the Pittston Hospital Association; secretary of the | Twin Shaft Relief Association; treasurer of the Memorial Presbyterian Church; sec- | retary of the Soldiers’ Relief Association; president of the Taxpayers’ Association: mayor of the city of Pittston, 1886; member of the select, or common, council five or six terms; delegate to the Independent Republican State convention; delegate to the ~ Republican State convention; past master of Valley Lodge, F. & A. M., 1885; treas- urer local State Armory Board, etc., and is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,384 votes, to 13,834 for George R. Mclean, Democrat, and | 2,079 for Charles ¥. Quinn, Socialist and Labor. ; TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CounTy: Schuylkill. Population (1910), 207,894. ROBERT E. LEE, Democrat, of Pottsville, was born in Schuylkill County, Pa.; was educated in the common schools of Pottsville, and is a business man; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 9,492 votes, to 9,441 for Robert D. Heaton, Republican, and 4,739 for C. F. Foley, Socialist. : THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Berks and Lehigh (2 counties). Population (1910), 302,054. JOHN H. ROTHERMEL, Democrat, of Reading, was born in Richmond Town- ship, Berks County, Pa.; was admitted to the bar August 20, 1881; was elected to : the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 19,680 votes, to 12,0939 for John XK. Hahn, Republican, 691 for Martin Miller, Prohibitionist, and 6,209 for Caleb Harrison, Socialist. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (4 coun- ties). Population (1910), 137,017. 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 35 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 and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. : FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Clinton, I,ycoming, Potter, and Tioga (4 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 184,916. WILLIAM BAUCHOP WILSON, 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; PENNSYLVANIA B ogy a phic al. OI 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 1900 until 1908, having been elected each year without opposition; is engaged in farming at Blossburg; is mar- ried and has nine children; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,624 votes, to 10,588 for Clarence I,. Peaslee, Republican, 2,004 for Clarence C. Ricker, Socialist, and 1,199 for Stephen Soars, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Sullivan (4 counties). Population (1910), 186,048. JOHN GEISER McHENRY, Democrat, was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty- first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder, and Union (8 counties). Population (1910), 207,765. BENJAMIN K. FOCHT, Republican, of Lewisburg, was born in New Bloomfield, Pa., March 12, 1863, the son of a Lutheran minister who was an orator and author of note; was educated at Bucknell University, Pennsylvania State College, and Sus- quehanna University; was editor and proprietor of the Saturday News, published at Lewisburg, since 18 years of age; is now president of the Saturday News Publishing Co. (Inc.); vice president National Granite Co.; served as an officer of the National Guard of Pennsylvania; is an authority on the history of Pennsylvania Germans; was given the degree of A. M. by Susquehanna University in 1906; is married to Edith ¥., daughter of the late Henry G. Wolf, and has three children—two daughters, Ellen W. and Edith V., and a son, Brown; has been active in Pennsyl- vania politics for nearly 30 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; is engaged in industrial operations, with headquarters in Philadelphia and Washington; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,473 votes, to 11,681 for J. Murray Africa, Democrat, 1,340 for J. Emory Weeks, Prohi- bitionist, and 1,006 for John A. Horn, Socialist. Sh BIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIEs: Cumberland, Dauphin, and I,ebanon (3 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 250,196. 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 Gov.) 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses from the Eighteenth district; reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,221 votes, to 11,686 for W. Jonathan Kiefer, Democrat, 1,643 for James V. Zerbe, Socialist, and 998 for F. Harry Hoffer, Prohibitionist. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CountIes: Bedford, Blair, and Cambria (3 counties). Population (1910), 313,868. JESSE I. HARTMAN, Republican, of Hollidaysburg, was born at Cottage, Huntingdon County, Pa., June 18, 1853; received his education in the public and academic schools; was engaged in the iron business from 1878 to 1891 as general manager of the Hollidaysburg & Gap Iron Works; was elected prothonotary of Blair ‘County in 1891; reelected in 1894 and 1897; is extensively engaged in the quarrying and shipping of ganister rock used in the manufacture of refractory linings for steel furnaces; is president of the First National Bank of Hollidaysburg; has participated in the last three national conventions of the Republican Party—twice as an alternate at large and in 1908 as delegate from his district; was married to Ella M. Denniston in 1878 and has one son; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,133 votes, to 7,669 for Isaiah Sheeline, Democrat, 2,173 for Stewart C. Cowen, Prohibitionist, and 2,048 for Anselm B. Kirsch, Socialist. 92 as Congressional Directory. | PENNSYLVANIA TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams and York (2 counties). Population (1910), 170,724. DANIEL FRANKLIN LAFEAN, Republican, of York, was born at York, Pa., February 7, 1861; was educated in the public schools of his native city; is actively engaged in the manufacturing business and banking; married Emma B. Krone in 1882,and has three sons; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,714 votes, to 13,786 for Andrew R. Brodbeck, Democrat, 471 for Abia Smucker, Prohi- bitionist, and 874 for William Kelly, Socialist. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cameron, Center, Clearfield, and McKean (4 counties). Population (1910), 192,704. : CHARLES E. PATTON, Republican, of Curwensville, was born July 5, 1859, in Curwensville, Clearfield County, Pa., where he now resides; he received his early edu- cation inthe common schools of his native placeand later attended Dickinson Seminary at Williamsport, Pa.; was married in 1883 to Mary R. Beggs, of Ebensburg, Pa.; he started in business as a dry goods merchant, but later branched out in various lines of business and won general success in all; is now identified with many of the most important business ventures of the community in which he resides, being stockholder and director in the Curwensville National Bank, president of the Curwensville Light & Power Co., interested in lumber and contracting business, besides owning several fine farms, in which he takes an unusual interest, and his agricultural experiments have been of great benefit to the community; he has held nearly every elective office in his own town; in the nomination for Congress he defeated Hon. Lewis Emery, jr., of Bradford, Pa., who four years ago was candidate for governor on the Independent | and Democratic ticket and was defeated by Gov. Stuart; he carried the district by I 1,355 over Emery; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving a majority over William C. Heinle of 4,953 votes, the largest majority ever given for Congress in the district. : TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT. COUNTIES: Butler and Westmoreland (2 counties). Population (1910), 303,993. ; CURTIS HUSSEY GREGG, Democrat, of Greensburg, was born at Adamsburg, | Westmoreland County, Pa., on the gth day of August, 1865; received a common | school education, which, with almost two years spent at the Greensburg Seminary, | a preparatory school, was the extent of his education; afterwards taught school for | © one year and then became city editor of the Greensburg Press; served five years on the council of the borough of Greensburg and four years on the school board; after being admitted to the bar of his native county, in 1888, he served as district attorney | of Westmoreland County. Since his admission to the bar he has been engaged in | law as a general practitioner; is married and has two sons, James and George; was fi elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 12,988 votes, to 12,490 for J. David | McJunkin, Republican, 1,981 for E. S. Littell, Prohibitionist, and 3,242 for Robert Dudley, Socialist, > I TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Fayette, Greene, and Somerset (3 counties). Popula- Bl tion (1910), 264,048. | THOMAS SPENCER CRAGO, Republican, of Waynesburg, was born August 8, | 1866, at Carmichaels, Greene County, Pa.; was educated at Greene Academy, | Waynesburg College, and Princeton University, graduating from Princeton in the class of 1893; admitted to the bar of Greene County in 1894, and later admitted to | practice in the Superior and Supreme Courts of Pennsylvania, and in the Circuit and I District Court and Supreme Court of the United States; served as captain of Company K, Tenth Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, during the war with Spain and the Philip- pine insurrection; after returning from the Philippine service was elected major of the Tenth Regiment National Guard of Pennsylvania, and at present is serving as lieutenant colonel of this regiment; was presidential elector in the year 1900, and delegate to the Republican national convention in the year 1904; was married October 27, 1897, and has three children; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,665 votes, to 6,331 for Jesse H. Wise, Democrat, 2,563 for Jesse H. Wise, Keystone, 1,223 for J. C. Speicher, Prohibitionist, and 2,036 for Washington Herd, Socialist. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaver, Lawrence, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1910), 292,065. CHARLES MATTHEWS, Republican, of New Castle, was born at New Castle, Lawrence County, Pa., October 15, 1856; attended public schools until 14 years of age; on leaving school was employed in rolling mills and attended night school; has served in both branches of city councils; was elected sheriff of Lawrence County f in 1897; is engaged in manufacturing and banking; is married and has three chil- PENNSYLVANIA Biographical : : 93 dren—two sons and a daughter; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,177 votes, to 14,365 for H. H. Wilson, Keystone-Democrat, 1,523 for M. S. Mar- quis, Prohibitionist, and 3,332 for Charles A. Collins, Socialist. TWoNy Tee DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Crawford and Hrie (2 counties). Population (1910), 177,052. 2 ARTHUR LABAN BATES, Republican, of Meadville, was born in Meadville, Pa., June 6, 1859; son of the late Samuel P. Bates, LL. D.; was graduated from Allegheny College in the class of 1880; admitted to the bar in 1882, and has practiced his pro- fession 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 com- mittee; is a trustee of Allegheny College; married October 20, 1909, to Emily Wells Rusling, daughter of Gen. J. F. Rusling, of Trenton, N. J.; was elected to the Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 10,668 votes, to 6,473 for John B. Brooks, Democrat, 1,313 for Richard A. Buzza, Prohibitionist, 1,377 for George B. Allen, Socialist, and 3,159 for John B. Brooks, Keystone. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carbon, Monroe, Northampton, and Pike (4 counties). Population (1910), 211,487. A. MITCHELL PALMER, Democrat, of Stroudsburg, was born May 4, 1872; attended the public schools and prepared for college at the Moravian Parochial School, Bethlehem, Pa.; in the fall of 1887 entered Swarthmore College, from which he was graduated in 1891 with the highest honors in his class; member of Phi Beta Kappa Society; was appointed official stenographer of the forty-third judicial district of Pennsylvania, 1892, and while occupying this position studied law; upon admis- sion to the bar in 1893 formed a partnership with Hon. John B. Storm, which con- tinued until the latter’s death, in 1901, when Mr. Palmer succeeded to the business of the firm; is a member of the bar of the supreme and superior courts of Penn- sylvania; director in the Scranton Trust Co., Stroudsburg National Bank, and a number of other financial and industrial institutions; has been a member of the Democratic State executive committee of Pennsylvania, but was never a candidate for public office before his nomination for Congress; married Roberta Bartlett Dixon, daughter of Hon. Robert B. Dixon, of Easton, Md., in 1898; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 16,284 votes; to 8,867 for Robert Brown, Republican, 879 for Edward R. Evans, Socialist, and 536 for Arthur E. Meaker, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Armstrong, Clarion, Indiana, and Jefferson (4 counties). Population (1910) 233,818. JONATHAN NICHOLAS LANGHAM, Republican, of Indiana, Pa., was born in Indiana County, Pa., August 4, 1861; worked on the home farm and attended the common schools of his county until 16 years old, when he began teaching; entered the State Normal School at Indiana, graduating therefrom in the class of 1882; read law in the office of John N. Banks, and was admitted to the Indiana county bar in December, 1888; was appointed postmaster at Indiana, Pa., under President Harrison; served six years as assistant United States attorney for the western district of Penn- sylvania; served as chief clerk and corporation deputy in the auditor general’s department of Pennsylvania; is at present the senior member of the law firm of Langham & Elkin, at Indiana, Pa.; on August 12, 1891, married Clara Cameron, of Indiana, Pa., and has two daughters, Louise and Elizabeth; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,073 votes, to 5,451 for John S. Shirler, Democrat, 2,479 for John Houk, Prohibitionist, and 1,245 for M. A. Van Horn, Socialist. : TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Elk, Forest, Mercer, Venango, and Warren (5 coun- ties). Population (1910), 218,937. PETER MOORE SPEER, Republican, of Oil City, was born December 29, 1862, on a farm in Venango County, Pa.; received early education in country schools; attended Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa., and Westminster College, New Wil- mington, Pa.; and graduated from Washington and Jefferson College at Washing- ton, Pa., in 1887; afterwards, in 1890, received the degree of A. M.; admitted to the bar of Venango County, Pa., in 1889; was elected district attorney of Venango County in 1891; was city solicitor of Oil City for five terms, from 1895 to 1906; elected to the Pennsylvania Legislature, and served during the session of 1897; mar- ried in 1891, and has one son and one daughter; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 10,932 votes to 9,492 for William J. Breene, Democrat, 3,047 for John Gill, Prohibitionist, 2,163 for McKeown, Socialist, and 562 for William Looser, Labor. 04 Congressional Directory. PENNSYLVANIA TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: Twenty-first, twenty-second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth, and twenty-seventh wards of the city of Greater Pittsburg (formerly the city of Allegheny); and the whole of Allegheny County north of the Ohio River, including the boroughs of Aspinwall, Avalon, Bellevue, Ben Avon, Brackenridge, Cheswick, Edgeworth, Emsworth, Etna, Glenfield, Haysville, I,eetsdale, Millvale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sharpsburg, Spring Garden, Springdale, Tarentum, and West View; and the townships of Alleppo, Fast Deer, Fawn, Franklin, Hampton, Harmar, Harrison, Indiana, Kilbuck, Leet, McCandless, Marshall, O'Hara, Ohio, Pine, Reserve, Richland, Ross, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Shaler, Springdale, and West Deer. Population (1910), 236,012. STEPHEN GEYER PORTER, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born near Salem, Columbiana County, Ohio, May 18, 1869; moved to Allegheny, Pa., in 1877, where he has since resided; received a common and high school education in that city; studied medicine two years; read law in the office of his brother, I,. K. Porter, and was admitted to the Allegheny County bar in December, 1893; has since practiced his profession; is junior member of the law firm of IL. K. & S. G. Porter, Pittsburg, | Pa.; never held any office until he was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, except | that of city solicitor of the city of Allegheny from 1903 to 1906; was married April 11, 1895, to Elizabeth F. Ramaley, of Allegheny, Pa., and has one daughter, Lucy Foster Porter; was nominated in the Republican primaries June 4, 1910, receiving 13,722 votes, to 6,872 for Hon. William H. Graham, and was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 14,785 votes, to 2,110 for Fleming Jamieson, Democrat, 2,468 for George T. McConnell, Socialist, and 552 for John A. McConnell, Prohi- bitionist. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: Seventh, eighth, twelfth, thirteenth, and four- teenth wards of the city of Pittsburg, the city of McKeesport, boroughs of Braddock, Hast McKeesport, Fast Pittsburg, Edgewood, Elizabeth, North Braddock, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Port Vue, Rankin, Swissvale, Turtle Creek, Verona, Versailles, Wilkinsburg, and Wilmerding; town ships of Braddock, Elizabeth, Forward, Lincoln, North Versailles, Patton, Penn, Plum, South | Versailles, Sterrett, Versailles, and Wilkins. Population (1910), 278,397. , | | JOHN DALZELTL, 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, | Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,261 votes, to 7,807 for Robert J. Black, Prohibitionist and United Labor, 3,208 for James A. Wakefield, Keystone, 2,942 for W. J. Wright, : Socialist, 1,569 for James A. Wakefield, Democrat, and 291 for James A. Fulton, | Independent. fl THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—Crty oF PITTSBURG: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, ninth, i tenth, eleventh, and fifteenth wards. Population (1910), 204,489. \ JAMES FRANCIS BURKE, Republican, of Pittsburg, was born in Petroleum i Center, Venango County, Pa., October 21, 1867; educated in public schools, and in I 1892 graduated from the University of Michigan with the degree of LIL. B.; has practiced law at Pittsburg since 1893; admitted to the practice 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 Republican national committee, the youngest man ever holding that office; was an officer of the Republican national conventions of 1892, 1896, and 1900, and a delegate to the Republican national con- vention of 1908. As a member of its committee on rules he led the fight for a new I basis of representation; is a member of the leading clubs and commercial organiza- tH tions of Pittsburg; on April 15, 1895, married Josephine Birch Scott, of Detroit; was q elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 12,996 votes to 5,798 for John J. Thorpe, Democrat and Keystone, and 1,164 for John Conner, Socialist. THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: Sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nine- teenth, and twentieth wards of the city of Pittsburg; boroughs of Coraopolis, Crafton, Carnegie, Duquesne, Greentree, Homestead, Knoxville, Mount Oliver, McKees Rocks, Oakdale, and “West Elizabeth; townships of Baldwin, Bethel, Crescent, Chartiers, Collier, Findley, Jefferson, ILowes, Mifflin, Moon, North Fayette, Neville, Robinson, St. Clair, Scott, Snowden, South Fay- ette, Stowe, Union, and Upper St, Clair. Population (1910), 299,565. 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 PENNSYLVANIA B 10qr aphical : 95 State committee; was the nominee of his party in 1902 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; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,483 votes, to 9,933 for Hermann I, Hegner, Democrat and Keystone, 3,152 for Valentine Remmel, Socialist, and 566 for James I,, McKee, Prohibitionist. [EEX] RHODE ISLAND [©7499 (Population (1910), 542,610.) SENATORS. GEORGE PEABODY WETMORE, Republican, of Newport, was born during a visit of his parents abroad, at London, England, August 2, 1846; was graduated from Vale College in 1867, receiving the degree of A. B., and that of A. M. in 1871; studied law at Columbia College Law School, and was graduated in 1869, receiving the de- gree of L1,. 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. HENRY F. LIPPITT, Republican, of Providence, was born in the city of Provi- dence, October 12, 1856. He received an academical education, graduating from Brown University, class of 1879, with the degree of A. B.; immediately after gradu- ating he entered the cotton manufacturing business, in which he has served in various capacities from day operative to general manager; he is a director in the Mechanics National Bank, of Providence, in several of the mill mutual insurance companies, and is vice president of the Peoples Savings Bank, of Providence; was a colonel on the staff of Royal C. Taft, governor of Rhode Island in 1888-89; was elected January 18, 1911, to succeed Hon. Nelson W. Aldrich, receiving on the second ballot 72 votes, as against 44 for Judge Arthur I. Brown; Democrat, and 23 for Judge Le Baron B. Colt, Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bristol and Newport, the city of Providence, and the town of East Providence. Population (1910), 297,181. ; GEORGE FRANCIS O'SHAUNESSY, Democrat, of Providence, was born in Galway, Ireland, May 1, 1868; came to this country when 4 years of age with his parents, who settled in New York, where he was educated at St. Theresa’s school, De La Salle Institute, and Columbia College Law School. He was admitted to the New York bar in 1889; was deputy attorney general for New York State 1904-5 and in 1906 assistant corporation counsel, New York City, which position he resigned, coming to Providence in 1907; was admitted to the Rhode Island bar in that year; was elected to the Rhode Island House of Representatives in 1909; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,532 votes, to 15,681 for William Paine Sheffield, Republican, 529 for Stanley Curtis, Socialist, and 431 for Richard R. Macomber, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Kent and Washington, and all of Providence outside the city of Providence and the town of East Providence. Population (1910), 245,429. GEORGE HERBERT UTTER, Republican, of Westerly, was born in Plainfield, N. J., July 24, 1854; came to Westerly in 1861, where he has since resided; is mar- 96 Congressional Directory. RHODE ISLAND ried; a printer by trade and publisher and printer by occupation; was fitted for college at Alfred (N. VY.) Academy and in Westerly High School; graduated from Ambherst College in 1877; aid on staff of Gov. Bourn from May, 1883, to May, 1885; member of Rhode Island House of Representatives from May, 1885, to May, 1889, the last year being speaker; member of the Rhode Island Senate from May, 1889, to May, 1891; secretary of state from May, 1891, to May, 1894; was lieutenant governor in 1904 and governor in 1905 and 1906; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,983 votes, to 13,704 for Cooney, Democrat, and 492 for Helme, Prohibitionist. 29) SOUTH CAROLINA [©7809 (Population (1910) 1,515,400.) 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 1890; 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, dnd 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 Gen. Butler in 1894, 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 fo 21 for Butler; was reelected in 1gor and in 1907 without opposition. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. ELLISON DURANT SMITH, Democrat, of Florence, was born August 1, 1866, at Lynchburg, Sumter (now Lee) County, S. C., the son of Rev. Wm. H. and Mary Isabella McLeod Smith; the late Bishop A. Coke Smith and presiding elder Rev. Charles B. Smith are his brothers; attended private and public schools of Lynch- burg; was prepared for college at Stewart’s school, Charleston, S. C.; entered the freshman class of the University of South Carolina; afterwards entered Wofford Col- lege, Spartanburg, S. C., from which institution he graduated in 1889; at Wofford he won gold medals in debate, science, and literature in his sophomore, junior, and senior years; married May 26, 1892, to Miss Mattie Moorer, which union was blessed with one son; married, second time, to Miss Farley, of Spartanburg, S. C., niece of former Adjt. Gen. Farley and of Will Farley, the famous Confederate scout; mem- ber of the legislature from Sumter County 1896 to 1900, this being his only previous political experience; is a merchant and planter; began the cotton movement in 1901, which resulted in the organization of the Farmers’ Proteétive Association; after the Sulley ‘‘break,” when cotton dropped from 17 to 674 cents, began a study of the cotton movement; attended boll-weevil convention at Shreveport, La., which resulted in plans for New Orleans convention, January, 1905, which culminated in the formation of the Southern Cotton Association; was made field agent and general organizer, in which capacity he served three years, January, 1905, to June, 1908, his territory covering the entire South; became a national figure on account of addresses at New Orleans, Birmingham, Dallas, and Shreveport; was nominated for United States Senator at a primary election in September, 1908, receiving 69,318 votes, to 39,655 for John Gary Evans, his majority being the largest ever given any candidate for the office; was elected to the United States Senate January, 1909, for the term beginning March 4. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. SOUTH CAROLINA : Brographical. 97 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton, and Dorchester (5 counties). Population (1910), 197,550. 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; from there he went to the Georgetown University Law School, Washington, D. C., from which institution, in 1893, he graduated with the degree of LI. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Beaufort, Edgefield, Hampton, and Saluda (7 counties). Population (1910), 199,307. JAMES FRANCIS BYRNES, Democrat, of Aiken, S. C., was born in Charles- ton, S. C., May 2, 1879; received only a common school education. In 1900 was ap- pointed official court reporter of the second circuit of South Carolina. For several years edited a newspaper. In 1903 was admitted to the bar, and in 1908 was elected solicitor of the second circuit of South Carolina; was married in 1906. In 19710, re- ceiving the Democratic nomination over two opponents, was elected to the Sixty- second Congress without opposition. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Abbeville, Anderson, Greenwood, Newberry, Oconee, and Pick- ens (6 counties). Population (1910), 225,942. ~~ 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; was an official court stenographer in South Carolina 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; never held a political office before, but has been a delegate to several State conventions; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Greenville, Laurens, Spartanburg, and Union (4 counties). Population (1910), 223,303. JOSEPH TRAVIS JOHNSON, Democrat, of Spartanburg, was born at Brewerton, Laurens County, S. C., February 28, 1858; was graduated from FErskine College July 2, 1879; admitted to the practice of the law in all the courts of South Carolina May 30,1883; never held office until elected to Congress; elected to the Fifty-seventh, ~ Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and York (7 counties). Population (1910), 212,809. . DAVID EDWARD FINLEY, Democrat, of Yorkville, was born February 28, 1861, at Trenton, Ark.; is a lawyer; was a member of the House of Representatives of South Carolina in 1890-91, and of the State senate 1892-1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Marion, Marl- boro, and Williamsburg (8 counties). Population (1910), 232,989. JAMES EDWIN ELLERBE, of Marion, was born 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 legis- lature, and in 1895 represented, in part, Marion County in the State constitutional convention; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. ‘ 08 Congressional Directory. SOUTH CAROLINA SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Calhoun, Lee, Lexington, Orangeburg, Richland, and Sumter (6 counties). Population (1910), 223,500. 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 1900 was elected to the State legislature from Lexington County, hold- ing that position until his resignation to enter the race to fill the unexpired term of the Hon. J. William Stokes in the Fifty-seventh Congress, and to this position he was selected without opposition; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 4,762 votes, to 214 for R. H. Richardson, Republican. C39] SOUTH DAKOTA [7409 (Population (1910), 583,888.) SENATORS. ROBERT JACKSON GAMBLE, Republican, of Yankton, was born in Genesee County, N. Y., February 7, 1851; moved to Fox Lake, Wis., in 1862; graduated from Lawrence University, Appleton, Wis., in 1874, and received the degree of LL.D. from that institution in 1909; located at Yankton in 1875, where he hassince been engaged in the practice of law; was district attorney for the second judicial district of the Territory in 1880; city attorney of Yankton for two terms; State senator in 1835, 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. COE I. CRAWFORD, of Huron, was born on a farm near Volney, Allamakee County, Iowa, January 14, 1858; was educated in the common and graded schools and by private tutor; graduated from the law department of the University of Iowa in 1882; located for the practice of law at Independence, Towa, and after one year in practice went to Pierre, Dakota Territory, where he continued in the practice of law 13 years; was States attorney of Hughes County 1887-88; member of the Terri- torial legislature in 1889; upon the admission of South Dakota into the Union as a State, in 1889, became a member of the first State senate; was elected attorney gen- eral in 1892 and reelected in 1894; ran for Congressman at large in 896 as a Repub- lican, and was defeated by a majority of 550 votes in favor of John E. Kelley, Populist; became attorney for the Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co. for the State of South Dakota in 1897, and moved to Huron; was president of the South Dakota State Bar Association in 1899; he resigned the railroad attorneyship in 1903; was a candidate before the Republican State convention of 1904 for nomination for governor and was defeated; was a candidate a second time, and was nominated and elected, receiving 48,709 votes against 19,923 for John'A. Stransky, Democrat; was nominated at the election held under the new South Dakota primary law on June 9, 1908, as the Republican candidate for United States Senator, receiving 35,151 votes, to 33,086 for Alfred B. Kittredge, and was elected by the legislature, which was overwhelmingly Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE. — Population (1910), 583,888. EBEN WEVER MARTIN, Republican, of Deadwood, was born at Maquoketa, Jackson County, Towa, 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; Cornell College has also conferred upon him the degree of LL. D.; attended the law school of the Uni- versity of Michigan in 1879-80, 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 SOUTH DAKOTA B 10g aphical ‘ : 99 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 1885; was for several years president of the board of education of the city of Deadwood; is a member of the Sons of the American Revolution, South Dakota Chapter, and of the Iowa Commandery of the Loyal Legion, the latter by inherit- ance from his father, Capt. James W. Martin, of Company I, Twenty-fourth Iowa Volunteers, now deceased; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty- ninth Congresses, and to the Sixtieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. William H. Parker, and to the Sixty-first Congress; reelected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 64,495 votes to 32,655 for W. W. Soule, Democrat. CHARLES HENRY BURKE, Republican, of Pierre, was born on a farm in Genesee County, N. V., April 1, 1861; was educated in the public schools of Batavia, N. Y.; moved to Dakota Territory in 1832; entered and settled upon a homestead in Beadle County, and moved to Hughes County in March, 1883; was admitted to the bar in 1886, but has never actively engaged in the practice of law, having had charge of closing up the affairs of a farm loan company, and engaging in a general real estate and investment business; is married and has three daughters and one son; was elected to the legislature in 1894 and reelected in 1896; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was defeated in the convention in 1906, but was again nominated in June, 1908, in a State-wide primary, and elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. ©] TENNESSEE [@Z&D9 (Population (1910), 2,184,789.) SENATORS. ROBERT LOVE TAYLOR, Democrat, of Nashville, was born July 31, 1850, at Happy Valley, Carter County, Fast Tennessee, at the place on the Watauga River where the first fort was established by John Sevier; is the 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 1836 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. LUKE LEA, Democrat, of Nashville, was born April 12, 1879, at Nashville, Tenn.; received, in 1899, the degree of B. A., and in 1900, the degree of M. A. in the Uni- versity of the South; received, in 1903, the degree of LL. B. in the Columbia Law School, Columbia University, New York City; profession, lawyer; married Miss Mary Louise Warner on November 1, 1906; was elected to the United States Senate on Jan- uary 23, 1911, on the eleventh ballot, but it was the first ballot upon which his name was presented, receiving 68 votes, 66 being necessary to elect. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hancock, Hawkins, Johnson, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington (12 counties). Population (1910), 241,853. SAM R. SELLS, Republican, of Johnson City, Tenn., was born August 2, 1871, at Bristol, Tenn.; was educated at King College, Bristol, Tenn.; business, lumberman; served one term in the Tennessee Senate; was private in the Spanish-American War; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving a majority over Democratic candidate, Cy H. Lyle, of 13,700 votes. 84259°—62-1—18T ED—8 100 Congressional Directory. TENNESSEE SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Hamblen, Jefferson, Knox, Lou- don, Roane, Scott, and Union (10 counties). Population (1910), 252,338. RICHARD WILSON AUSTIN, Republican, of Knoxville, was born at Decatur, Ala., August 26, 1857; educated at the Loudon High School and the University of Tennessee; is married, and has two children, a son and a daughter; is a member of the bar; was assistant doorkeeper of the House of Representatives in the Forty- seventh Congress; was United States marshal for the eastern district of Tennessee from 1897 to 1906; served as American consul at Glasgow, Scotland, from July, 1906, to November, 1907, when he resigned to make the race for Congress; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congresses, receiving 4,006 majority. THIRD DISTRICT.—-CouNTIES: Bledsoe, Bradley, Franklin, Grundy, Hamilton, James, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Monroe, Polk, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (15 counties). Population (1910), 265,724. : 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 Tennessee; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,854 votes, to 12,944 for C. R. Evans, Republican, and 438 for G. W. Crouch, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Morgan, Over- ton, Pickett, Putnam, Rhea, Smith, Sumner, Trousdale, and Wilson (14 counties). Population (1910), 198,646. CORDELL HULIL, Democrat, of Carthage, was born October 2, 1871, in Overton (flow Pickett) County, Tenn.; is and has been for a number of years a citizen of Jackson County, but present business resident address is Carthage, Tenn.; was graduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., and is a lawyer by profession; was 2 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 and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, Dekalb, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, and Rutherford (8 counties). Population (1910), 145,330. 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, one daughter, and six sons; is a mem- ber of the Christian Church, and lives on a farm; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cheatham, Davidson, Montgomery, Robertson, and Stewart (5 counties). Population (1910), 234,016. JOSEPH W. BYRNS, Democrat, of Nashville, was born near Cedar Hill, Robert- son County, Tenn., and lived on a farm until early manhood; attended schools of . his native country; was graduated from the law department of Vanderbilt University, Nashville, and is a lawyer by profession; was married to Miss Julia Woodard, of Nashville, in 1898; was three times elected a member of the lower house of the Tennessee State Legislature; was unanimously chosen speaker of that body in 1899; was elected to the Tennessee State Senate in 1900; was a Democratic presidential elector in 1904; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Con- gress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Dickson, Giles, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Wayne, and Williamson (Io counties). Population (1910), 189,576. LEMUEL PHILLIPS PADGETT, Democrat, of Columbia, was born November 28, 1855, in Columbia, Tenn.; attended the ordinary private schools of the county 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 TENNESSEE B 10q7 aphic al. ’ I0I State senate and served during the term; was elected tothe Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, - McNairy, Madison, and Perry (Io counties). Population (1910), 180,119. THETUS WILLRETTE SIMS, Democrat, was born April 25, 1852, in Wayne County, Tenn.; was reared on a farm; was educated at Savannah College, Savannah, Tenn.; graduated in the law department of the Cumberland University at Lebanon, Tenn., June, 1876; located at Linden, Tenn., where he has resided ever since in the practice of his profession; was elected county superintendent of public instruction for Perry County, Tenn., in 1882, and held that office for two years; was chosen an elector on the Cleveland and Stevenson ticket in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,764 votes, to 9,830 for S. E. Murray, Republican, and 144 for F. W. Karnshaw, Socialist. [ NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion, and Weakley (8 counties). Population (1910), 203,021. 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 bar in 1899; married in 1gor 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, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and re- elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,000 votes, to 1,406 for J. W. Brown, Republican, and 940 for W. P. I.andrem. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Fayette, Hardeman, Shelby, and Tipton (4 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 274,166. ; 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 given at 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 July, 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 the Sixtieth Congress. He was reelected to the Sixty-first Congress and again to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,862 votes, to 844 for T. H. Haines, Socialist. He is now commander in chief of the Federation of United Confederate Veterans. XO) TEXAS R49) (Population (1910), 3,896,542.) 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 22 years consecutively a member of the House of Representatives from Texas, and 102 * Congressional Directory. TEXAS 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 Profs. 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 Q. Mills, and was unanimously reelected in 1905 and in 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 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. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bowie, Camp, Cass, Delta, Franklin, Hopkins, I.amar, Marion. Morris, Red River, and Titus (11 counties). Population (1910), 239,341. 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 LL. 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 on the stump in several States in the national campaigns of 1904 and 1908; was married to Miss Lucile Sanderson, of Texarkana, Tex., December 1, 1909; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill out the unexpired term of his father, the Hon. John I. Sheppard, deceased; also elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty- ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. : SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Angelina, Cherokee, Hardin, Harrison, Jasper, Jefferson, Nacogdoches, Newton, Orange, Panola, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (14 coun- ties). Population (1910), 273,842. MARTIN DIES, Democrat, of Beaumont, was born in Jackson Parish, La., March 13, 1870; moved to Texas with his parents in 1876; received the rudiments of an English education in the public schools of Texas; is married; elected county judge of Tyler County in 1894; elected district attorney of the first judicial district of Texas in 1898; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Gregg, Henderson, Kaufman, Rusk, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and Wood (8 counties). Population (1910), 207,314. JAMES YOUNG, Democrat, of Kaufman, was born July 18, 1866, at Henderson, Tex.; was educated at the State University, Austin, Tex., graduating in June, 1891, with the degree of LL..B.; was engaged in the practice of law when nominated for Congress, never having held public office; is married; was elected to the Sixty-sec- ond Congress. : FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIESs: Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, and Rains (5 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 214,721. CHOICE BOSWELL RANDELIL, Democrat, of Sherman, a native Georgian, was born January 1, 1857; removed to Texas in 1879; is a lawyer by profession; married Miss Anna Marschalk, of Natchez, Miss.; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Rifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 9,719 votes, to 1,208 for C. A. Gray, Republican. TEXAS ; Biographical. 103 FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bosque, Dallas, KEllis, Hill, and Rockwall (5 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 263,222. 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 18qo; 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- - first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Brazos, Freestone, Limestone, Milam, Navarro, and Robertson (6 counties). Population (1910), 185,401. RUFUS HARDY, Democrat, of Corsicana, was born December 16, 1855, in » Mow: roe County, Miss.; educated in common schools (not public) and at Somerville In- "stitute, Mississippi, and at University of Georgia; finished junior literary course in said university and graduated from law department in 1875; was member Phi Delta Theta Fraternity; was admitted to the bar in 1875; was married in 1881; elected county attorney of Navarro County, Tex., in 1880 and 1882; was district attorney for the thirteenth judicial district in 1884 and 1886; district judge of same district’ in 1888 and 1892; retired from the bench December, 1896; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Anderson, Chambers, Galveston, Houston, Liberty, Polk, San Jacinto, and Trinity (8 counties). Population (1910), 158,382. 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; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Austin, Fort Bend, Grimes, Harris, I,eon, Madison, Montgomery, Walker, and Waller (9 counties). Population (1910), 243,544. 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, 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; 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 elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aransas, Brazoria, Calhoun, Colorado, Dewitt, Fayette, Goliad, Gonzales, Jackson, Karnes, Lavaca, Matagorda, Refugio, Victoria, and Wharton (15 counties). Population (1910), 229,550. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bastrop, Burleson, Caldwell, Hays, Lee, Travis, Washington, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1910), 220,327. : 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, each time without opposition in his own party. 104 | Congressional Directory. : TEXAS ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bell, Coryell, Falls, Hamilton, and McLennan (5 counties). | Population (1910), 195,103. ROBERT LEE HENRY, Democrat, of Waco, is a native Texan; graduated from the Southwestern University of Texas in 1885, valedictorian of his class; was licensed to practice law in 1886; took the degree of B. L. at the University of Texas 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress without opposition. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Comanche, FErath, Hood, Johnson, Parker, Somervell, and Tarrant (7 counties). Population (1910), 242,583. OSCAR CALLAWAY, Democrat, of Comanche, Comanche County, Tex., was born October 2, 1872, at Harmony Hill (Nip-and-Tuck), Rusk County, Tex. He is the second child and oldest son of a family of nine children-—three girls and six boys. His parents, C. C. Callaway and Louise Atwood, moved from Rusk County, Tex., to Comanche County, Tex., in 1877, where they settled on a farm. He was educated in * the public schools, the high school of the town of Comanche, and the State University at Austin, Tex. After finishing the high school he taught three terms in the public schools of Comanche County; was elected as a free-silver delegate to the State Demo- cratic convention in 1896; entered the academic department of the State University in the fall of 1897, and took his degree of bachelor of laws from that institution in June, 1900; he was married to Miss Stella Couch also a B. A. from the University of Texas, on December 29, 1904; he was nominated for county attorney in April before he graduated in June, 1900, and was elected to that office in November of that year; was nominated over Congressman O. W. Gillespie and Senator D. M. Alexander in the July primaries, 1910, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress over Littleton, Republican, and Martin, Socialist. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Archer, Armstrong, Bailey, Baylor, Briscoe, Carson, Castro, Childress, Clay, Collingsworth, 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 (1910), 338,333. 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, Fifty-ninth, Six- tieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bexar, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Coleman, Comal, Gillespie, Kendall, Kerr, Lampasas, I,lano, McCulloch, Mason, Mills, and San Saba (15 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 264,277. JAMES I.. SLAYDEN, Democrat, of San Antonio, was born in Kentucky; attended country schools of his native State and Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.; was a member of the twenty-third legislature of Texas, but declined reelection; was elected to the Fifty-fifth and all subsequent Congresses, including the Sixty- second, receiving at the election in November, 1910, 14,256 votes, to 234 for the Republican, and 544 for the Socialist candidate. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Atascosa, Bandera, Bee, Cameron, Dimmit, Duval, Frio, Guadalupe, Hidalgo, Kinney, Lasalle, Live Oak, Maverick, McMullen, Medina, Nueces, San Patricio, Starr, Terrell] Uvalde, Valverde, Webb, Wilson, Zapata, and Zavalla (25 counties). Population (1910), 252,906. JOHN NANCE GARNER, Democrat, of Uvalde, was born in Red River County, Tex., November 22, 1868; 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 Democratic national convention at Kansas City, 1900, and to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis, 1904; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 14,300 votes, to 5,287 for Noah Allen, Republican, and 355 for Oscar Krohn, Socialist. TEXAS Biographical. 105 SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Andrews, Borden, Brewster, Callahan, Cochran, Coke, Con- cho, 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, Martin, Menard, Midland, Mitchell, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Pecos, Presidio, Rea- gan, Reeves, Runnels, Schleicher, Scurry, Shackelford, Stephens, Sterling, Stonewall, Sutton, Taylor, ng Tom Green, Upton, Ward, Winkler, and Yoakum (56 counties). Population (1910), 367,696. WILLIAM ROBERT SMITH, Democrat, of Colorado, was born August 18, 1863, in Smith County, Tex.; was educated in the country schools of that county and at the Sam Houston Normal Institute at Huntsville, Tex., graduating from that institution in 1883; studied law in Tyler, Tex., and was admitted to the bar in 1885; practiced law in Tyler until February, 1888, when he moved to Colorado, Tex., his present place of residence, where he continued the practice of his profession until he was appointed by the governor in May, 1897, judge of the thirty-second judicial district of Texas, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the late Judge William Ken- nedy; was reelected to the same office in 1898 and 1900 without opposition; was married November 6, 1890, to Miss Frances Lipscomb Breedlove, of Brenham, Tex.; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,058 votes, to 1,384 for Robert M. Webb, Republican, and 1,749 for W. H. Harvey, Socialist. NE UTAHR ® (Population (1910), 373,351.) SENATORS. REED SMOOT, Republican, of Provo City, was born January 10, 1862, at Salt Lake City, Utah; was educated at the State University and Brigham Young Acad- emy, being a graduate of the latter institution; is a banker and woolen manufacturer; . married September 17, 1884, to Alpha M. Eldredge; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Joseph L. Rawlins, Democrat, and took his seat March 5, 1903; was reelected by the unanimous Republican vote of the Utah State Legislature for a second term of six years to begin March 4, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. 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 1900, 1904, and 1908; 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, and was reelected in 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 373,351. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. 106 Congressional Directory. VERMONT 2X9] VERMONT > (Population (1910), 355,956.) SENATORS. WILLIAM PAUL DILLINGHAM, Republican, of Montpelier, was born at Water- bury, Vt., December 12, 1843; received an academic education and was admitted to the bar in 1867; was State’s attorney for Washington County two terms; was com- missioner of State taxes for several years; was a member of the Vermont House of Representatives in 1876 and again in 1884; was a State senator from Washington . County in 1878 and again in 1880; was governor of Vermont from 1888 to 18go. Octo- ber 18, 1900, was elected United States Senator from Vermont to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Justin S. Morrill; on October 15, 1902, was elected to succeed himself, and was reelected October 21, 1908. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. 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 Lamoille 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 committee for 18 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 18go to 1892; was elected to the United States Senate October 21, 1908, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Redfield Proctor, and on the 19th of October, 1910, was reelected for the full term of six years, as a Republican, although receiving every vote of the Democratic mem- bers of the legislature. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Addison, Bennington, Chittenden, Franklin, Grand Isle, La- moille, and Rutland (7 counties). Population (1910), 178,186. DAVID JOHNSON FOSTER, Republican, of Burlington, was born in Barnet, Caledonia County, Vt., June 27, 1857; was graduated from the St. Johnsbury Acad- emy, at St. Johnsbury, Vt., in 1876, and from Dartmouth College in 1880; was admitted to the bar in 1883; was prosecuting attorney of Chittenden County 1886-1890; was State senator from Chittenden County, 1892-1894; was commissioner of State taxes 1894-1898; was chairman of the board of railroad commissioners, 1898-1900; was chairman of the commission representing the Government and people of the United States at the celebration of the first centennial of the independence of the Mexican Republic at the City of Mexico in September, 1910; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Caledonia, Essex, Orange, Orleans, Washington, Windham, and ‘Windsor (7 counties). Population (1910), 177,770. FRANK PLUMLEY, Republican, of Northfield, was born in Eden, Vt., December 17, 1844; was educated in the public schools, academies, and by private tutors, with one year at the Michigan University in the law department; was admitted to the bar at the Lamoille County (Vt.) court, May, 1869, and came immediately to North- field, where he has since practiced his profession; was State’s attorney of Washing- ton County, 1876 to 1880, inclusive; district attorney of the United States for the district of Vermont from 1889 to 1894; was appointed second member of the Ver- mont court of claims in 1902, elected as chief judge in 1904, and reelected in 1906; was appointed umpire by President Roosevelt in 1903 of the mixed commissions of Great Britain and Venezuela and Holland and Venezuela, sitting in Caracas; was later selected by France and by Venezuela as umpire in the French-Venezuela mixed commission, which sat in Northfield in 1905; has the honorary degrees of A. M. and of LI. D. (Norwich University and University of Vermont); is trustee of and lecturer on international law at Norwich University; was elected to the Vermont House of Representatives in 1882, serving on the judiciary committee v ii mn hh... VERMONT Biographical. 107 and the committee of the insane, and in 1894 was elected to the Vermont Senate, of which he was pro tempore president, and served on the committees of the judiciary, of rules, and was chairman of the joint committee on temperance; was delegate at large to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1888, | and a member of the committee on platform; was chairman of the Vermont Republican convention in 1886; in 1884 was sent by the Republican national com- mittee to Michigan as a political orator, and was returned to that State by the | national committee for the same purpose in 1888, 1892, and 1896, and was called into | the State by the Republican State committee as an orator in the State campaigns | of 1886 and 1890; has been married, but is now a widower; for many years has been trustee of the Northfield Savings Bank and is now vice president. He was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 18,185 votes, to 6,226 for Alexander Cochran, Democrat, and 366 for Eugene M. Campbell, Prohibitionist. C9 VIRGINIA JE (Population (1910), 2,061,612.) SENATORS. THOMAS STAPLES MARTIN, Democrat, of Albemarle County (post office, A Charlottesville), was born in Scottsville, Albemarle County, July 29, 1847, and since 1853, at which time his parents moved to the country, has lived in the. county; i was educated at the Virginia Military Institute, where he was a cadet from March T, 1864, to April 9g, 1865, and at the University of Virginia, where he was a student in MA the academic schools for two sessions, from October 1, 1865, to June 29, 1866, and i from October 1, 1866, to June 29, 1867; a considerable part of the time while he was i a cadet at the Virginia Military Institute was spent in the military service of the i 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 J - reading at home, and was licensed to practice law in the fall of 1869, since which il 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 Iabor 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 1899 and again in 1905. His term of service will expire March 3, 1913. CLAUDE AUGUSTUS SWANSON, Democrat, of Chatham, Va., was born at Swansonville, Pittsylvania County, Va., March 31, 1862; attended public schools until he attained the age of 16, at which time he taught public school for one year; then attended the Virginia Polytechnic Institute for one session; not having the means to complete his college course he held a position in Danville as a clerk for two years; made arrangements to enter college after that time; matriculated at : A Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va., and remained there three sessions, gradu- ho ating with the degree of A. B. in 1885; studied law at the University of Virginia, | * graduating with the degree of B. L. in 1886; practiced law at Chatham, Va., until : he was nominated and elected to the Fifty-third Congress; was reelected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was a candidate in the Democratic primary for governor of the State of | Virginia in 1905, was nominated, and elected in November, 1905; resigned his seat i in Congress and was inaugurated February 1, 1906, and served as governor of Vir- ginia until February 1, 1910; on August 1, 1910, he was appointed by Gov. William Hodges Mann to fill the vacancy in the United States Senate occasioned by the death of Senator John Warwick Daniel for the remainder of his unexpired term, ending | March 3, 1911. Reappointed by Gov. Mann from March 4, 1911, until the meeting | of the Legislature of Virginia. 0% Congressional Directory. VIRGINIA REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Accomac, Caroline, Elizabeth City, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queen, Lancaster, Mathews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spottsyl- vania, Warwick, Westmoreland, and York. Crries: Fredericksburg and Newport News. Pop- ulation (1910), 227,144. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Isle of Wight, Nansemond, Norfolk, Princess Anne, and South- ampton. CITIES: Norfolk and Portsmouth. Population (1910), 233,029. EDWARD EVERETT HOLLAND, Democrat, of Suffolk, Va., was born in Nanse- mond County, Va., February 26, 1861; educated in private schools in the county, at Richmond College, Richmond, Va., and University of Virginia; married S. Otelia Lee, of Nansemond County, November 26, 1884; is an attorney at law, arid since 1892 president of the Farmers’ Bank of Nansemond; mayor of Suffolk from 1885 to 1887; Commonwealth’s attorney for Nansemond County from 1887 to 1907; State senator from 1907 to 1911; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 6,587 votes to 1,653 for H. H. Rumble, Republican, 57 for G. B. Good, Socialist Democrat, and 6 for G. H. Gaskins, Independent. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Charles City, Chesterfield, Goochland, Hanover, Henrico, James City, King William, and New Kent. CITIES: Manchester, Richmond, and Williamsburg. Pop- ulation (1910), 223,621. ' 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Amelia, Brunswick, Dinwiddie, Greenesville, Lunenburg, Meck- lenburg, Nottoway, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, Surry, and Sussex. CITY: Peters- burg. Population (1910), 186,213. ROBERT TURNBULL, Democrat, of Brunswick County, Va., whose post-office address is Lawrenceville, Va., was born in Lawrenceville on the 11th day of January, 1850; was educated at the private schools in that county and entered the University of Virginia in 1870-71 and took the degree of B. L. at that institution in one session; has been honored in many ways by the people of his county; was elected to the Vir- ginia Senate from his district in 1894, and represented his county in the constitu- tional convention of Virginia in 1gor—2; was sentas a delegate from the fourth district to the Democratic national conventions of 1896 and 1904; was elected to Congress March 8, to fill the unexpired term of the Hon. Francis Rives Lassiter, and took his seat March 16, 1910. He is at present president of the board of trustees of the State Female Normal School at Farmville, Prince Edward County, Va. Was re- elected to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Carroll, Franklin, Grayson, Henry, Patrick, and Pittsylvania. City: Danville. Population (1910), 172,835. EDWARD WATTS SAUNDERS, Democrat, of Rocky Mount, Va., was born in ; Franklin County, Va., October 25, 1860, and has always resided in that county; was educated at home, at the Bellevue High School of Bedford County, and at the University of Virginia, where he graduated in a number of academic schools, and in 1881-82, received the degree of bachelor of law; was associated with Prof. F. P. Brent in the conduct of a high school at Onancock, Accomac County; 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 1901; under the operation of the new constitution he became judge of the seventh circuit, and while serving in that position was elected to fill the vacancy in the Fifty-ninth Congress caused by the resignation of Hon. C. A. Swanson, and to the Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses; reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, VIRGINIA Biographical. 109 SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bedford, Campbell, Charlotte, Floyd, Halifax, Montgomery, and Roanoke. CITIES: Lynchburg, Radford, and Roanoke. Population (1910), 227,974. 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 1goi-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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. : SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Albemarle, Clarke, Frederick, Greene, Madison, Page, Rap- pahannock, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren. CrTies: Charlottesville and Winchester. Population (1910), 166,372. : JAMES HAY, Democrat, of Madison, was born in Millwood, Clarke County, Va., was educated at private schools in Maryland and Virginia, at the University of Pennsylvania, and Washington and Lee University, Virginia, from which latter insti- tution he graduated in law in June, 1877; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth; Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. Was elected chairman of the Democratic caucus of the House of Representatives in the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty- eighth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alexandria, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, King George, Lou- doun, Louisa, Orange, Prince William, and Stafford. Crrv: Alexandria. Population (1910), 159,799: 3 CHARLES CREIGHTON CARLIN, Democrat, of Alexandria, Va., was born in Alexandria, Va.; was educated in the public schools, Alexandria Academy, and at the National Law University, of which latter institution he is a graduate, and has since practiced his profession; was presidential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1904; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, November 5, 1907, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. John F. Rixey, over Ernest I. Howard, Republican; reelected to the Sixty-first Congress over J. W. Gregg, Republican, and to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bland, Buchanan, Dickenson, Giles, Lee, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, Wise, and Wythe. Crry.—Bristol. Population (1910), 265,567. 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 19oI 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 the largest majority ever recorded in the district, and reelected State chairman by unanimous vote in State convention in 1908; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty- second Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alleghany, Amherst, Appomattox, Augusta, Bath, Botetourt, Buckingham, Craig, Cumberland, Fluvanna, Highland, Nelson, and Rockbridge. CITIES: Buena Vista, Clifton Forge, and Staunton. Population (1910), 199,058. 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; member board of visitors of University of Virginia; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, -Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition. 110 Congressional Directory. WASHINGTON C50] WASHINGTON [OZ400 (Population (1910), 1,141,990.) SENATORS. WESLEY IL. JONES, Republican, an attorney of North Yakima, was born Octo- ber 9, 1863; is married and has two children; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses as Representative at large, and was elected to the United States Senate. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. MILES POINDEXTER, Republican, of Spokane, was born at Memphis, Tenn., April 22, 1868; was educated at Fancy Hill Academy, Rockbridge County, Va., and at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va., in both the academic and law departments, and took the degree of B. L. in that institution June, 1891; October 10, 1891, located at Walla Walla, Wash., and began the practice of law; in November, 1892, was elected prosecuting attorney of Walla Walla County; in June, 1892, mar- ried Elizabeth Gale Page, of Walla Walla; October 10, 1897, moved from Walla Walla to Spokane; for six years was assistant prosecuting attorney for Spokane County, until elected judge of the superior court of the district in November, 1904; remained upon the bench from thaf time until nominated for Congress in the newly created third district at the primary election September 8, 1908; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress. In the primary September 13, 1910, to show preference for United States Senator, he received 67,714 votes, to 26,846 for Thomas Burke, 14,581 for James M. Ashton, 3,924 for John E. Humphries, and 1,975 for Legh R. Freeman; was elected United States Senator by the Washington Legislature January 18, 1911, by a vote of 126 to 11, and took his seat April 17, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Island, King, Kitsap, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, and Whatcom (7 counties). Population (1910), 448,553. 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, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Con- gresses from the State at large, to the Sixty-first Congress from the newly consti- tuted first district, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress from that district. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chehalis, Clallam, Clarke, Cowlitz, Jefferson, Klickitat, I,ewis, Mason, Pacific, Pierce, Skamania, Thurston, and Wahkiakum (12 counties). Population (1910), 293,918. 8 STANTON WARBURTON, Republican, of Tacoma, Wash., was born in Sulli- van County, Pa., April 13, 1865. His early education was obtained in the common schools and he was graduated from the high school at Cherokee, Iowa, in 1884, and from Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in 1888. In August of that year he moved to Tacoma, Wash., where he finished reading law and was admitted to the bar. Mr. Warburton was elected to the Washington State Senate in 1896, and reelected in 1900; is married and has three children. His nomination for Congress was received at the Republican primaries, defeating Congressman W. W. McCredie and Charles E. Claypool for the honor, and was subsequently elected to the Sixty-second Congress by a majority of over 10,000 votes. : THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Asotin, Benton, Chelan, Columbia, Douglas, Ferry, Franklin, Garfield, Grant, Kittitas, Lincoln, Okanogan, Spokane, Stevens, Walla Walla, Whit- man, and Yakima (18 counties). Population (1910), 399,519. ; WILLIAM L. LA FOLLETTE, Republican, of Pullman, Wash., was born in Boone County, Ind., November 30, 1860, and went West at the age of 16 years, set- tling in eastern Washington. He engaged in fruit, grain, and stock raising for 30 years, and served one term in the Washington Legislature and on various appointive commissions. He was elected to the Sixty-second Congress as a progres- sive Republican by a plurality of 15,703 votes over Harry D. Merritt, Democrat. WEST VIRGINIA B 10g aphical. ; 1 II >>] WEST VIRGINIA ) (Population (1910), 1,221,119.) SENATORS. CLARENCE WAYLAND WATSON, Democrat, of Fairmont, W. Va., was born in that town on May 8, 1864; he was educated in the public schools of Marion County, leaving school when young to engage in the coal-mining industry, in which his father, the late James Otis Watson, was the pioneer in the State of West Virginia. In July, 1908, he was a delegate from the first district of his State to the Democratic national convention at Denver, Colo. He was elected United States Senator by the ‘West Virginia Legislature on January 25, 1911, to fill the unexpired term of the late Stephen B. Elkins, Republican; was elected president of the Consolidation Coal Co. - in January, 1911,-but resigned when elected to the Senate. His term of service will expire on March 3, 1913. WILLIAM EDWIN CHILTON, Democrat, of Charleston, was born in Kanawha March 17, 1858; began the practice of law in 1882 in Charleston; was appointed prosecuting attorney of Kanawha County in 1883 to fill out the unexpired term of Hon. C. P. Snyder, elected to Congress; was the Democratic nominee for prosecut- ing attorney of Kanawha County in 1884, and was defeated by S. C. Burdette, now judge of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County; was candidate for the State Senate on the Democratic ticket in 1886, but was defeated by Hon. R. S. Carr; was chair- man of the Democratic State executive committee during the campaign of 1892, the last time that the State was Democratic, and was appointed secretary of state by Gov. MacCorkle to serve from March 4, 1893, to March 4, 1897; was law partner of the late John E. Kenna, Senator from West Virginia, until the death of the latter in 1893, since which time he has been a member of the law firm of Chilton, MacCorkle & Chilton, composed of ex-Gov. William A. MacCorkle, Joseph E. Chilton, William E. Chilton, and T. S. Clark. While always active in politics, he has given close attention to his law business, in which he takes great pride, practicing in both the Federal and State courts; was admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of the United States in 1891, since which time he has been a regular practitioner in that court; was married to Mary Louise Tarr December 19, 1892, and has four children— William FE. Chilton, aged 17; Joseph KE. Chilton, aged 15; Eleanor Carroll Chilton, aged 12; and Elizabeth Leigh Chilton, aged 10; was elected to the United States Sen- ate February 1, 1911, to succeed Senator Nathan Bay Scott, for a term of six years beginning March 4, 1911, receiving 72 votes to 28 for Nathan Bay Scott, 5 for C. C. Beury, 3 for Lewis Bennett, 2 for John W. Davis, 1 for Nathan Goff, and 1 for Joseph H. Gaines, His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brooke, Hancock, Harrison, I.ewis, Marion, Marshall, Ohio, and Wetzel (8 counties). Population (1910), 244,834. JOHN WILLIAM DAVIS, Democrat, of Clarksburg, was born on April 13, 1873, at Clarksburg, W. Va., where he now resides; his parents are John J. Davis and Anna (Kennedy) Davis; he graduated from Washington and Lee University in 1892 with degree of A. B.; taught school and reentered the law department of Washington and Lee University; was graduated with degree of B. L. in 1895 and admitted to practice in September of that year; acted as assistant professor of law at Washington and Lee University, session of 1896-97, but resigned to resume practice; was elected to the House of Delegates of West Virginia, session 1899, and made chairman of the judiciary committee of that body; was candidate on the Democratic ticket for elector at large in 1900, and a delegate to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis in 1904; was president of the West Virginia Bar Association in 1906, and appointed in 1909 a member of the West Virginia Commission on Uniform State I.aws; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,370 votes, to 16,962 for Charles E. Carrigan, Republican, 3,239 for A. I. Bauer, Socialist, and 1,099 for U. A. Clayton, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, and ‘Tucker (14 coun- ties). Population (1910), 228,244. WILLIAM G. BROWN, Jr., Democrat, of Kingwood, was born in Kingwood, Va, April 7, 1856; his grandfather, James Brown, came from Ireland and settled in Kingwood in 1789; his father was born there in 1800, and when 21 years of age was 712 Congressional Directory. WEST VIRGINIA admitted to the practice of law. William G. Brown, sr., was a life-long Democrat and served his party in many positions of trust and honor; he served several terms in the Virginia Legislature and was a Member of Congress from Virginia from 1844 to 1848, and was elected to Congress from West Virginia, serving from 1861 to 1865. The subject of this sketch after receiving a common-school education went to the West Virginia University, at Morgantown, and graduated in 1877, receiving the degree of A. B.; was admitted to the bar and engaged in the practice of law; sub- sequently the degree of A. M. was conferred upon him by his alma mater; was a cousin of the late Senator J. P. Dolliver, of Iowa, and they were roommates in college. While of opposite politics, they entered into a boyish pact to meet again in afterlife in Congress; he early became engaged in the banking business and has followed it continuously in connection with the practice of the law; in addition to other lines of business, he is an extensive landowner and ardently devotes much of his time to agriculture and the raising of thoroughbred stock for practical use on the farm; an ardent member of the Democratic Party, he has represented it in many national and State conventions; in the memorable campaign of 1896 he received the Democratic nomination for Congress in the second congressional district of West Virginia and was defeated by Judge Alston Gordon Dayton; he ran as presidential elector in 1908, and was nominated again for Congress at Moorefield on the 21st day of July, 1910. In 1883 was married to Miss Jessie Thomas, of Tyrone, Pa., who died in 1886. In 1902 he married Miss Flora B. Martin, of Kingwood, W. Va., a niece of the late Hon. B. F. Martin, of Grafton. Was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 21,276 votes to 16,793 for George C. Sturgiss, Republican, 715 for R. M. Strickler, Prohibi- tionist, and 1,121 for W. S. Garner, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Kanawha, Monroe, Nicholas, Pocahon- tas, Summers, Upshur, and Webster (10 counties). Population (1910), 258,649. ADAM BROWN LITTLEPAGE, Democrat, of Charleston, was born on April 14, 1859, near Charleston, Kanawha County, W. Va. His father was killed in a duel at Dublin, Va., in 1862, who, at the time of his death, had accumulated quite a fortune, but the northern and southern armies confiscated and destroyed about everything the family had, with the exception of the land and one dwelling house built of stone, thereby reducing the family to want. Adam was the youngest of five boys. He is a self-made man, has been a hard student and faithful worker all his life, a consistent Democrat, never wavering in his political convictions. He has estab- lished a very lucrative law practice at Charleston. Was nominated in a district 3,200 Republican for the State Senate of West Virginia in 1906, and was elected, serving four years, making a fine record; and in 1910 he was nominated by the Democratic congressional convention by acclamation, over his protest and against his will, while he was in another State trying a law case. He regarded the nomina- tion as a party call, and went into the race against Hon. Joseph Holt Gaines, the Republican nominee, to overcome a Republican majority in the district in round numbers of about 6,500. In that campaign Mr. Littlepage made 103 speeches— sometimes three speeches a day—and waged the most determined contest that has ever been witnessed in West Virginia, with the result that he overcame the Republican majority and secured his election by a majority of 1,866 votes, being the first Demo- crat elected in the district in about 20 years. His district includes in part the Kanawha and New River coal fields, and is a very wealthy district. Mr. Littlepage stands very high as a lawyer and citizen throughout his district and State. He was a candidate for the nomination for governor two years ago, but was defeated in the convention by Hon. Lewis Bennett. The sentiment is now prevailing throughout the State that had Mr. Littlepage been nominated he would have been elected. He bears the reputation of being a very grateful man, never forgetting a kindness, and is faithful in his friendships and thoroughly reliable. He stands for the under man in life. Works hard, late, and early as a Congressman, and is reflecting credit upon the country by his manly, conservative, and wise course in Washington as a repre- sentative of all the people. He is a patriotic man, of ability and fine qualities of mind and heart. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Braxton, Calhoun, Doddridge, Gilmer, Jackson, Pleasants, Ritchie, Roane, Tyler, Wirt, and Wood (11 counties). Population (1910), 190,039. JOHN M. HAMILTON, Democrat, of Grantsville, was born at Weston, Va., now West Virginia, March 16, 1855; educated in the public schools; married October 29, 1885, to Minnie Cook; was admitted to practice law in 1887, and has since practiced at Grantsville, Calhoun County, and in surrounding counties and the supreme court of appeals; was recorder of the town of Weston in 1876; committee clerk in the Senate of West Virginia in 1881-82; assistant clerk of senate from 1883 to 1887; member of house of delegates and chairman of judiciary committee 1887-88; clerk . WEST VIRGINIA Biographical. 113 of house of delegates 1889—go; grand master of Masons of Grand Lodge of West Virginia 1890-91, and is believed to be the only mere Blue Lodge Mason who has held that position; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,823 votes, to 15,593 for Harry C. Woodyard, Republican, 382 for H. W. Houston, Social- ist, and 485 for G. P. Sigler, Prohibitionist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Boone, Cabell, Lincoln, I,ogan, McDowell, Mason, Mercer, Mingo, Putnam, Raleigh, Wayne, and Wyoming (12 counties). Population (1910), 299,353. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. SX] WISCONSIN [Z409) (Population (1910), 2,333,860.) 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 Republican national convention held at St. Louis in June, 1896, and elected by the Wisconsin Republican State convention as delegate at large to the Republican national con- vention 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. He was reelected in 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 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, and was reelected March 4, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. : REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Green, Kenosha, Lafayette, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (6 counties). Population (1910), 217,231. 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 I,aw, 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, Tiity-nlaih, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second ongress, Ee SE DE rh mae 114 Congressional Directory. WISCONSIN SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES : Adams, Columbia, Dane, Green Lake, Jefferson, and Marquette (6 counties). Population (1910), 177,706. 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 1897-98; correspondent in State treasury 1898-1902; was graduated from the law department of the University of Wisconsin, 1896; pursued post-graduate studies at the university 1904-5; 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 the Fifty-ninth Congress September 4, 1906, to fill a vacancy, to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 14,009 votes, to 12,090 for Albert G. Schmedeman, Democrat, 865 for Francis I. Cook, Socialist-Democrat, and 234 for J. B. Smith, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, Richland, Sauk, and Vernon (7 counties). Population (1910), 177,155. ARTHUR W. KOPP, Republican, of Platteville, was born February 28, 1874, at Big Patch, Grant County, Wis.; was educated in the common schools of Grant County and graduated from the State Normal School at Platteville in 1895; taught school for three years; graduated from the law department of the University of Wisconsin in 19oo, and commenced his practice at Platteville the same year; has served as alderman of the city of Platteville; city attorney for two terms, and four years as district attorney of Grant County; is married and has two children; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiv- ing 13,310 votes, to 9,042 for William Coffland, Democrat, 821 for Charles Berryman, Prohibitionist, and 650 for Jesse Stoddard, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUKEE COUNTY: Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, Eighth, Hleventh, Twelfth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Twenty-third wards of the city of Milwaukee; cities of South Milwaukee and Wauwatosa; towns of Franklin, Green- field Lake Oak Creek, and Wauwatosa; villages of Cudahy and West Allis. Population (1910), 240,588. ; : 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 1890; elected alderman in 1900 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 over Hon. Theobald Otjen, at the first trial of the Wisconsin primary election law, and elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses; reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 12,218 votes, to 11,730 for W. R. Gaylord, Social Democrat, and 8,058 for William J. Kershaw, Democrat. FIFTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUKEE COUNTY: First, sixth, ninth, tenth, thirteenth, eighteenth, nine- teenth, twentieth, 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 (1910), 229,699. VICTOR I. BERGER, the first Socialist ever elected to Congress, was born at Nieder Rebbuch, Austria-Hungary, February 28, 1860. He attended the gymnasia and universities of Budapest and Vienna, but before his graduation financial reverses caused his family to emigrate to the United States. He was married to Meta Schlich- ting, December 4, 1897, and has two children. He worked at various trades and was later a teacher in the public schools. He was editor of the Milwaukee Daily Vorwaerts from 1892 until its suspension in 1898, and was for many years editor of the Wahrheit (German) and the Social Democratic Herald (English). He has written many pamphlets and essays on social questions. He has been prominent as a pioneer organizer in the Socialist movement. He was a delegate to the People’s Party con- vention at St. Louis in 1896, where he supported an unsuccessful movement to nominate Eugene V. Debs. He was one of the organizers of the Social Democracy (1897) and of the Social Democratic Party (1898), known since 1900 as the Socialist Party, and, except for a short interval, has been a member of the national executive committee of that party since its origin. He is one of the three secretaries for the United States of the International Socialist Bureau, at Brussels. He was the Social Democratic candidate for mayor of Milwaukee and for Congress from the fifth Wis- WISCONSIN : B 10g aphical. II5 » consin district in 1904. In 1905 he received the votes of the five Socialist legislators for United States Senator. He was elected alderman at large for the city April 3, 1910; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 13,497 votes, to 13,147 for H. F. Cochems, Republican, and 8,433 for J. P. Carney, Democrat. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTIES: Dodge, Fond du ILac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1910), 194,841. MICHAEL FE. BURKE, Democrat, of Beaver Dam, was born in that city October 15, 1863; was educated in the district schools of the town of Beaver Dam and in Wayland Academy, in said city, from which institution he graduated in 1884; com- menced the study of law in the law department of the University of Wisconsin in 1886 and was admitted to the bar in 1888, and has followed the practice of his pro- fession continuously at his native city and vicinity until he entered Congress. In 1890 and 1892 he was elected to the Assembly of the State of Wisconsin, in which body he served as chairman of the committee on legislative expenditures in 1891 and chairman of the assembly committee on judiciary in 1893; in 1894 he was elected to the Senate of the State of Wisconsin, in which body he served for one term of four years; in 1893 he was elected city atiorney of Beaver Dam, and was reelected for 15 consecutive terms thereafter to such position. He was serving his second con- secutive term as mayor of his native city when he was elected to Congress. He has attended many conventions of his party, and in 1904 was a district delegate to the Democratic national convention held at St. Louis; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,682 votes, to 13,201 for W. H. Froehlich, Republican, and 1,781 for John C. Boll, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Buffalo, Clark, Eau Claire, Jackson, Ia Crosse, Monroe, Pepin, and Trempealeau (8 counties). Population (1910), 199,258. 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 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 La 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 Gov. W. H. Upham, holding the office for two years; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 15,365 votes, to 7,365 for Paul W. Mahoney, Democrat, 1,180 for John Marquet, Socialist- Democrat, and 458 for A. A. Merrill, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Calumet, Manitowoc, Portage, Waupaca, Waushara, and Winne- bago (6 counties). Population (1910), 206,408. 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Brown, Door, Kewaunee, Marinette, Oconto, and Outagamie (6 counties). Population (1910), 198,154. THOMAS F. KONOP, Democrat, of Kewaunee, was born in the town of Franklin, Kewaunee County, Wis., August 17, 1879; attended a country school until 12 years of age and then for two winters attended the Two Rivers High School, Two Rivers, Wis. ; prepared himself for the teaching profession; attended the State Normal 84259°—62-1—18T ED——Q 116 Congresstonal Directory. WISCONSIN . : School at Oshkosh for three years and taught for five years, earning enough money to enable him to take a course in law. He studied law at the Northern Illinois College of Law and at the State University of Nebraska, from which last-named institution he received his degree of LI. B. in 1904; was admitted to the bar in Wisconsin in the fall of that year and has since been in active practice at Kewau- nee, Wis., during which time he served three terms as district attorney of his county; married Madge Lucile Nolan, of Sheboygan County, August 22, 1905, and has four children—Kathleen Elizabeth, William Henry, Kenneth Joseph, and Philip Laurence. Mr. Konop was nominated for Congress in September, 1910, on the Democratic ticket in a district safely Republican by 5,000; after a hard campaign of two months, during which he visited every corner of his district, he was elected by a plurality of 5 votes, the Republican State ticket carrying the district at the same time by about 5,000 plurality; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 12,140 votes to 12,135 for Gustav Kiistermann, Republican, 555 for Alexander McEathron, Prohibitionist, and 1,777 for Thos. J. Oliver, Socialist Democrat. TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Ashland, Florence, Forest, Iron, Langlade, Lincoln, Marathon, Oneida, Price, Shawano, Taylor, Vilas, and Wood (13 counties). Population (1910), 238,969. 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 1895, 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 elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 17,360 votes, to 11,798 for John Tamont, Democrat, and 2,882 for Lynn Thompson, Socialist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barron, Bayfield, Burnett, Chippewa, Douglas, Dunn, Pierce, Polk, Rusk, St. Croix, Sawyer, and Washburn (12 counties). Population (1910), 253,851. IRVINE L. LENROOT, Republican, of Superior, was born in Superior, Wis., January 31, 1869, received a common-school education, became a court reporter, studied law, and was admitted to the bar in 1897; is married; was elected to the Wis- consin Legislature in 1900, 1902, and 1904; was elected speaker of the Assembly in 1903 and 1905; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second Con- gress, receiving 19,680 votes, to 2,474 for Henry M. Parks, Socialist-Democrat. X09] WYOMING [02409 (Population (1910), 145,965.) 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 battle field 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 mémber 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 Republican national convention at Chicago in 1888 and chairman of the Wyoming delegation to the Republican national conventions at Philadelphia in 1900 and at Chicago in 1904 and 1908; was chairman of the Republican Territorial central committee, and chairman of Republi- can State central committee of Wyoming in 1896; was appointed governor of Wyoming by President Arthur in February, 1885, and removed by President Cleveland in No- vember, 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 WYOMING Biographical. 117 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; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1888, 1900, 1904, and 1908; was appointed associate justice of the Territory of Wyoming in 189o, 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 a vacancy caused by the failure of the legislature to elect in 1892-93, and was reelected in 1899, 1905, and 1910. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 145,965. FRANK WHEELER MONDELL, Republican, of Newcastle, was born in St. Louis, Mo.,November 6, 1860; was left an orphan before reaching his sixth year; lived on a farm in Jowa until his eighteenth year; attended the local district schools; engaged in mercantile pursuits, stock raising, mining, and railway construction in various Western States and Territories; settled in Wyoming in 1887 and 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 elected president of the Dry Farming Congress in October, 1909; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress; served as Assistant Commissioner of the General Land Office from November 15, 1897, to March 3, 1899; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 20,308 votes, to 14,655 for W. B. Ross, Democrat, and 2,155 for James Morgan, Socialist. 118 Congressional Directory. TERRITORIES TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. 30] ALASKA [2409 Population (1910), 64,356. JAMES WICKERSHAM, Republican, of Fairbanks, was born August 24, 1857; was appointed United States district judge, third division, of Alaska, June 6, 1900, and served two terms; was elected Delegate to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress with an increased majority. 29] ARIZONA [7409 Population (1910), 204,354. RALPH HENRY CAMERON, Republican, of Flagstaff, was born at Southport, Me., October 21, 1863; received a common-school education, augmented later by night schools and study; is interested in mining and stock raising, and is the locator and builder of the Bright Angel Trail into the Grand Canyon of the Colorado in Arizona, which he is still maintaining; moved to Arizona in 1883; was sheriff of Coconino County, Ariz., for three terms and served one term as member and one term as chairman of the board of supervisors of Coconino County; is married; was elected Delegate to the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 12,435 votes, to 11,727 for M. A. Smith, Democrat, 1,912 for J. D. Cannon, Socialist, 118 for William B. Cleary, Independence League, 69 for J. W. Stewart, Socialist-Labor, and 106 for R. Roy Sibley, Prohibitionist. BX HAWAIL D Population (1910), 191,909. J. KUHIO KALLANIANAOLE, Republican, of Waikiki, district of Honolulu, 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 em- ployed in the office of minister of the interior and in the customhouse 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, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, receiving 8,049 votes, to 4,503 for IL. L. McCandless, Democrat, and 989g for C. K. Notley, Home Ruler. =X] NEW MEXICO [2409 Population (1910), 327,301. 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 and Sixtieth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-first Congress, receiving 27,605 votes, to 27,217 for O, A. Larrazola, Democrat, and 1,056 for W, F, Metcalf, Socialist, : TERRITORIES Brographical. 119 & RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS. 2X9) PHILIPPINE ISLANDS | 9 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. MANUEL IL. QUEZON, Nationalist, of Tayabas, was born in Baler, Province of Tayabas, August 19, 1878; received his primary and secondary education in the Col- lege of San Juan de Ietran, obtaining the degrees of bachelor of arts and expert land surveyor; studied law in the University of St. Thomas, and, having lost his parents, worked in order to graduate; was admitted to the Filipino bar in April, 1903. During the revolution was a major of the Philippine army, and was detailed, first, to Gen. Aguinaldo’s staff and then as chief of staff of the general command- ing the Department of Central Luzon. Under the American Government he held the office of prosecuting attorney for the Province of Mindoro, and was subsequently transferred to the Province of Tayabas with the same office; after a year in the latter Province he resigned and was elected provincial governor of Tayabas, holding this office from 1906 to July, 1907, when he also resigned to become a candidate for dele- gate to the Philippine Assembly from the first district of Tayabas and was elected. In the Philippine Assembly he was the floor leader of his party. On May 15, 1909, the Philippine Legislature elected him Resident Commissioner of the Philippine Islands in the United States to succeed Hon. Pablo Ocampo .de Leon. 29] PORTO RICO [F439 Population (1910), 1,118,012. I,UIS MUNOZ RIVERA, Unionist, of San Juan, was born in the town of Barran- quitas July 17, 1859, and educated in the public schools. Early in life he engaged in cigar manufacturing and general business. At the age of 20 his writings were already published by the most progressive papers of the country. At 30 he founded La Democracia, a daily newspaper in Ponce, for the purpose of opposing the Spanish colonial régime. This paper is still published by him in San Juan. From 1887 to +1897 he was constantly subjected to persecutions by the Government, because of his _ patriotic activities. In 1896 he was sent to Madrid as a special representative of his party, for the purpose of consummating an agreement with the Iiberal Party of Spain for the establishment of home rule for Porto Rico. He founded the Liberal Party in 1897. During this year Queen Maria Christina decreed an ample system of self- government for the island, and he was appointed secretary of state, and subsequently president of the cabinet. When American sovereignty was declared in 1898 he was serving in this latter capacity. He then presented his resignation to Gen. Brooke, military governor, who declined to accept it, and he continued in the cabinet until 1899, when that system of self-government was changed by Gen. Henry, who suc- ceeded Gen. Brooke. Then he came for the first time to Washington as the repre- sentative of his party and of the farming interests of the islands, in order to procure free-trade relations between the United States and Porto Rico. Returning to Porto Rico in 1900, he organized the Federal Party. One year later he came to New York and established The Puerto Rico Herald, which paper was published in that city for a period of four years. At the dissolution of the Federal Party in 1904, he organized the Unionist Party, of which he is still the leader. Three times he was chosen to the lower House of the Legislature in Porto Rico. In 1910 he was elected Resident Commissioner to Washington by about 105,000 votes as against about 58,000 for his opponent. Mr, Rivera is married and has one son who is studying in New York City. 120 : Congressional Directory. STATISTICAL EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS. Crass L—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1917. (Thirty Senators in this class. ) Name. Residence. Bryan, Naa a i ae Jacksonville, Fla. Chilton, William E. .. ... RE a mS SARL | Charleston, W. Va. Clapp, Moses Bl. us aiid ane, Slagny wo akan St. Paul, Minn. Clark, Clarence Dil. c svi wiaevn Jill Winnie wih Sos Evanston, Wyo. Culberson, Charles A. ....u. oo davidani oz PILATE Dallas, Tex. du Pout, Henry Au oivio ll de. Sov aasavii oh al Winterthur, Del. Hitcheock, Gilbert iM. 1% in ii tania hin clan. Omaha, Nebr. Johnson, Charles Bio colin iid ad Edn. tibia sire Waterville, Me. Kem, John: Woo. oh cou fade bo. mitdan. mei. bao Indianapolis, Ind. LaFollette, Robert Mo ivuinds Saas oduind. vo aiin Madison, Wis. lea, Duke a oni, bis Shun I de admin Sa wii Nashville, Tenn. Tdppitt, Henry I... 21 colin suing ov. dobiin Providence, R. I. Yodge, Henry Cabot. ... .ouliovi. dine ath Nahant, Mass. McCuamber, Porter J ud of beodiewi aad. 3d som Wahpeton, N. Dak. Mclean, George Bi. on. a i bad mile vind Simsbury, Conn, Martine, James B. . von isl Soraalimid sil 0% wii Plainfield, N. J. Myers, Blenry Ti. oii cal itiul ld. Jus sind, Sibiu Hamilton, Mont. Nixon, George: 8.3.5 whores vide sol idiamans Reno, Nev. O)Corman, James A. ........... 5 0 in di New York City. Oliver, George T ...... EAGAN PUT Is edb oot Pittsburg, Pa. Pagel CamrolllS, sui... ov obi vinta ads aa vl Hyde Park, Vt. Poindexter, Miles: 1. .... 5.1 ud. 5.40. . SL LA 3 Spokane, Wash. Pomerene Atlee i. Li. siivie on rida die ibia Canton, Ohio. Bayner, Isidor. ... «0% 0 rind hl Sh an vas Baltimore, Md. Beed, James A... iu. 00 00s, Soilive. Wil ids Kansas City, Mo. Sutherland; George iii ical md Taves Ja Saku Salt Lake City, Utah. Swanson, Claude A.......... nuns rdeat Sl EN Bh Chatham, Va. Townsend; 1Qharleg Bi on ili, bie. J ahivanb iil Jackson, Mich. Williams, John'Sharpii noo .<0k dois pL HE go Yazoo, Miss. Works, John ID ioc. su ifn A 3 Sins ais Los Angeles, Cal. Crass II.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1913. (Thirty-one Senators in this class.) Bacon, AngustusiQ.c...l. Lid, SGI TO HR RAR Bailey, Joseph WL LLL Sil Jl, Vogl plat) JUG JO Bankhead, John FH. . 0000000 00 GL 30 Gas a Boraly, William Bio. Lei adil Jil aa ii Bourne, Jonathan, Jr... 000000 vu allos odes Briggs, Frank: O.. .L0L 000th ali dla pilin Brown, NOTES, i. . 2000000 Bon mninlo, SE Burnham, Henry FL L000 0 ple a0 Alo ia Crane, W. Murray |... U0 0800 Fd da, Soni oh shah Cullom, ShelbyM ....... 5.0.0. DENI SEL BSE Curtis, ‘Charles i. [Gl BIOL os Saklip, ant dian 5 Pavis, Jelf 0. iv. 2 iv wilds S80 SA Dixon, Joseph ML... Jui. ivi. oh Red V0 ae JORG 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. ‘. Service of Senators. I21 Crass IL—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1913—Continued. Name. Residence. Roget Murphy Join coer irs cine nin unis, Franklin, La. Frye, Wag PP... ocneii sss ninaeb lp Aedelg, Lewiston, Me. Gamble Robert J. oi nil cn. LL re A Yankton, S. Dak. Guggentelm, SIMON. «| Leer sr coisa cman sds ainsnansie Denver, Colo. Kenyon, WILHAIES. . J. cos: vncons sviovs sods Fort Dodge, Iowa. Martin I NOmAS STE, Lo Cn eb a, Charlottesville, Va. INCISOm, ACHMEG co ise oes nn baeart Salen dw hee Alexandria, Minn. Over" ROBertL,. . ii Eth one A Ts Muskogee, Okla. Bovntar, Thomas Bll. ci 0, oe fone svn lsiihbaihy Greenup, Ky. Perey, eBoy. +o. Sol iii af mye SNE Greenville, Miss. Richardson, FIATIy A... ...., cdtet oo iailotisy Dover, Del. SH rie ST I) BET Be Sai Bee ESR er aT Raleigh, N. C. Smith, Willlame Alden... o.oo ides thine Grand Rapids, Mich. Taylor, Robert 1/0 ic... ivi nocippensvessinioan Nashville, Tenn. Tilman, Benjamin R ...... cc srr sie srriiesssloniais Trenton, S. C. Warren, Biancis B. 0 .0. o oi ann AALS Cheyenne, Wyo. Watson, Clarence iW... ......, iiiisernvs mst Fairmont, W. Va. Wetmore, George Pi... .. cc ovo tvevvon shiv vs Newport, R. I. Crass IIL--SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1915. (Thirty-one Senators in this class.*) Bradley Willlann O10 LL ln nd. Te ni ann, Brandegee Frame Br... 0... 0 ie aiav aaa gl a Bristow Joseple Tri... 0 a unas. orden SEL Burton; «Theodore ls; 0 arr ries ie Chamberlain, George EB ....... os vio vidisdn Clarke, James Po. (00 Lr al nae Crawford, Coed i. 1. on. cise or ay aia Cummins; Abert Bin... os ee Dillingham, William Poo. o.oo. dad inion Fletcher, Duncan U..... LL Ear Ballinger, Jacob TL 5. clave 0 a des Gore, I homas Pc... 0 a nda ane nia Grong, Astle J ca tee det ie cies Heyburn, Weldon B... 0... i000 cas ile ac ioe los Johnston, Joseplt IB . 5... i. on a ath ao ee Jories, Wesleyil,... 0... oe ran Yorimery William, oo ania eb Newlands, Brancis CG. . or nao, Overman, Lee S.-C. 0... nT a Ry RT Ln ho PvE i We a lat me ri Sl Perkins, Georze C . i. ih... i eda dna, Roo BH, dr Te re sore Shively Benjamin I. i a Soh i il ad Smith, BHsont Do ss aaa ha Smith, John Walters. © oo 0 ah ob Lora. Ee eR SB a a RRC Sa Stephenson, Isaac 1. 0. or ris doa ied Stone, William Lon rat aa aaa, Perrell, Joseph WM... 0h oy dein ne Phernton, JOM RB. Jl nnn wm bar Louisville, Ky. New London, Conn. Salina, Kans. Cleveland, Ohio. Portland, Oreg. Little Rock, Ark. Huron, S. Dak. Des Moines, Iowa. Montpelier, Vt. Jacksonville, Fla. Concord, N. H. Lawton, Okla. Lakota, N. Dak. Wallace, Idaho. Birmingham, Ala. North Yakima, Wash. Chicago, Ill. Reno, Nev. Salisbury, N. C. Philadelphia, Pa. Oakland, Cal. New York City. South Bend, Ind. Florence, S. C. Snow Hill, Md. Provo City, Utah. Marinette, Wis. Jefferson City, Mo. Greenville, Ga. | Alexandria, La. * One vacancy caused by no election in Colorado. } 122 Congressional Directory. CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS. 2 Beginning = Name. State. of present service. ¥ | Prye William Py. oo. ve a Maine... 00 > kes Mar, 13, 1381 2. Cullom, Shelby Mo ion Suisse Tinos: face Mar. 4, 1883 3 | Gallinger, Jacob ML... cui... ou vues New Hampshire ......... Mar. 4, 1891 4 | Lodge, Henry. Cabot. i. 0... 00000 Massachusetts ......... Mar. 4, 1893 5 Perlting George (Cu. iu. vn vias on ois California’... 00000 July 26, 1893 6: Clark Clarerice D....L 0.0.00... ‘Wyoming... ii Jan. 23, 1895 ml Warren, JBraneis IF. Loan. 000000 Wyoming ...0n ea, Mar. 4, 1895 Bacon: Angistns Q., |. vas cia'sa vn Georgi. oo. .o0 0 ve po Mar. 4, 1805 3 LR Thomas Soa. ui vol 000 Napginid. Lo aay Mar. 4, 1895 INEISOW, AHUEE Got i ie ocean satis Minnesota... "oor. Mar, 4, 1805 Millman, Benjamin Bi. ............ South Carolina’ ........ Mar. 4, 1895 Ou Penrose, BOIES., i. in | us vis vivre sss Pennsylvania... ....... Mar. 4, 1897 os ( Charles du. vol vii diades Pexgae i. 05.20 SE Mar. 4, 1899 McCumber Porler J. Jia. scores North Dakota. ;........, Mar. 4, 1899 zr: [fDillingham, William P.............. Vesmonti- © 00 any 50 Oct. 18, 1900 12. Clapp, Moses Bw... ....... oe he ; Minnesota... oi Jan. 23, 1901 Bailey, Joseph W ........... ERAS ge Texas, Foo ol Mar, "2, 7001 Burnham, Henry Buu ivusiris vive New Hampshire ....... Mar. 4, 1901 | 13 J Boster, MusplHy J... ... 00min vviivis Lonjglang .. ..o id. Mar. 4, 1901 | Gamble, Robert J. .5.. J... pe rat South Dakota... ..L... Mar. 4, 1901 Simonse BM. .......vii dents snssi North Caroling... =... .. Mar. 4, 1901 Clarkes TameniB co ea Arkansas’ Tr onda Mar. 4, 1903 Heyburn, Weldon B.................. Tdghe in. ren Mar. 4, 1903 Newlands, Brancis CG... iene ons. Nevada. J. oo abs Mar. - 4, 1903 4 Overmam lee S. oun. fr.0. uid North Carolina. ....... Mar. 4, 1903 Smoot, Reed... iiash SEL vse Wiah oo aie, Mar. 4, 1903 Stone a WRTHANET ion. ois oo sie srnvitiin Missouri... 0 leis. Mar. 4, 1903 15 | Crane, WosMuryay or. vuoi, vii Massachusetts ......... Oct... 12, 1904 Ia Bollette Robert MM...» .:....vu.in. WISCONSIN. . ov ss anit Mar. 4, 1905 6 NIXON, GC EOLTE Sic. Th vo 51h s wiviata ininiats Nevada, 0... 0 00 Mar. 4, 1905 | 1 Rayners TSldOria. oh 3. ih dive taieistes Maryland... 0. 4%. Mar. 4, 1905 Sutherland Georges. .. ii-liv vs viii. s tah: 1, sar, Mar. 4, 1905 17.1 Brandegee Frank Bi .; ci.i wa iavniainny Connecticut... 0 May 10, 1905 | 118i dn Ponf, Henry A ind. gah cis hvinainic Delaware’... 50. Tax, June 13, 1906 | 10: Curtis; Ohiatles, of 4 #3. vii vue Kansas. 50. 00% vate Jan. 23, 1007 | 20: Smith, William Alden. .............4 Michigan... i000 Yeh. ..6, 1907 Boral, WAIHAMLE, or. i. ai cho canna ains Tedaho itr hoi aa, Mar. 4, 1907 Bourne, Jonatha, Jr. .. cx.hvssoniivans Oregon... ... cs Mar. 4, 1907 Briggs, Fraplk Or ann: gah iverson New Jersey... oc. vip Mar. 4, 1907 | Brow, NOI ISH fdas fo SL alse o oien ins Nebraska. coil Mar. 4, 1907 H DAVIS, JET ar tit. Soak hiss ian inte Arkansas. i. 0 mn. Mar. 4, 1907 | 21 Dizon; Joseph, Mende oooh nh LL, Montana...... ae Trl Mar. 4, 1907 il Guggenheim, Simeon .. i... ........ Colorado... ... - Jar, 4.7907 i Paynter; ThomasiEl .... oo... vies Kentucky ........... 5. Mar. 4, 1907 ul Richardson, Harvey A. orl... ....... Delaware... has. Mar. 4, 1907 i Taylogs Robert Ly. 0 2d A. oes. Tennessee, ...v. Jk: nici: Mar. 4, 1907 | 22. Stephenson ISaac sir.) . ih ei ta vus va WISCONSIN, ic iih nines May 17, 1907 il ogi Bankhead tJohn Bln ovo viis unis ine Alabama... 00 Dn June 18, 1907 | 24. Johnston, Joseph Biv. J. 23 nu suanviains Alabama, 0 uta Aug. 6, 1907 | 5 jGore, Thoms P...i.. ... wb Oklahoma... 0 /.. .h Dec. 11, 1907 5 Owen, Robert Tade.i. ih to nrsrnons- Oklahoma... 0.00 00%, Dec. 11, 1907 26 | Wetmore, George Peabody ......... Rhode Island ......... on Jan. 21, 1908 | 27. Smith. JohmiWaltem. i. 5.1... oo... Maryland... .... ha... ‘Mar. 25,1908 28 Page, Carvel §.... hil LL Vermont dna Oct. 21, 1908 | zo Commins, Albert Bio vvivuia Towa. odin iin, Nov. 24, 1908 * Mr. Warren also served as a United States Senator from the State of Wyoming from Dec. 1, 1890, | oN ber re also served as a United States Senator from the State of Rhode Island from if Mar. 4, 1895, to Mar. 4, 1907. | | : f Continuous Terms of Services of Senators. 123 CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued. M Beginning = Name. State. of present o service. Bradley, William O'........ J. ..hiveas Wentueky ito. Lon Mar. 4, 1909 Bristow, Joseph L. ..... TRIES Kansas ala... cues Mar. 4, 1909 Bupteon, Theodore B.. .........-...... ER ee Ce Mar. 4, 1909 Chamberlain, George EB... ............ OEegom i hati Mar. 4, 1909 ° Crawford, Coe 1... ....0. . TEL South Dakota. ......... Mar. 4, 1909 30 Pletcher, Duncan U1 .. 20.00. 0 El Blofida.. oh, Loan Rs Mar. 4, 1909 Jones, Wesley I... 0. ni ol hey Washington ........... Mar. 4, 1909 Root, Bhi oie. coli. ob fase shimaads New: Yorll 5 nh Mar. 4, 1909 Shively, Benjamin Bo. ian ildos, sles Tovdnama Oboe a 0 soa, Mar. 4, 1909 Smith, Bllison'D... .... Foi ath SouthiCarolina......... Mar. 4, 1909 31 Oliver, George '[........... sd. darts Pennsylvania. ......... Mar. 17, 1909 32 | ‘Lorimer, Willlam .. ................. Hlivols .... a ea June 18, 1909 355 fF Perey Ve Rey, fu. i oa sade Mississippi + Loui. 0 a Feb. 24, 1910 34.1 Swanson, Clande A... cons o vt sisi sins Vivoimia, opi aul. a Aug. 1, 1910 35 | Terrell, Joseph WE. ©." Ce tn dling Georglms st Tuli Nov. 17, 1910 36: Thornton, John! R 4 fi boc Rn iscs, LoniSiang. .. il. «anh swe Dee. :12,, 1010 Gronna, Asle Jv BO yo NorthiDakeota. .. ....... Feb. 2, 10IT 37 Bibi ClatenceW......... .....L..- West Virginia... 0 Feb. "2, 101% Bryan, Nathan P........... fr SIAR Werida.....c5.. 00.00. Mar. 4, 1911 Chilton, Williath-B. Jw. 50 oe ibbih. ai West Virginia. ......... Mar. 4, 1911 Lea, Take stig. 0s. dads sot .ilane Tennessee... .......0. Mar. 4, 1911 Tippitt, Henry FP... ... Loa, tui Lido Rhede Island. ......... Mar. 4, I0LT FHhitchecock, Gilbert!M., . 2.0... .. 2. Nebraska... on oor tev Mar. 4, 1011 Johnsen, Charles B.............. a. EA EA A Mar. 4, TOL] ern Jom Wi is Deis tiinins ens sons Indidne Jv ahs 0h Mar. 4, 1911 Mel ean, George PL. ih oh Lo Sal Conmecticntt,. Lin. Mar. 4, 1011 33 li Martine, James B'..0 ocr LL New Jersey. 7. Lu. Mar. 4, 1911 Myers, Henryl, .... B52 ER TIN a is Montana ........ 0... Mar, 4, 1011 OiGorman, James A... ......L.. 0 80 NewYork... .....% Mar. 4, 1911 Pomdexter, Miles. 00 (oot. Washington ........... Mar, 4, 1081 Pomergene, Atlee vik hide fae, ER REE SRA LS Mar. 4, 1911 Reed, Tamed An . tui caliud, divi. luis, Bs Brey a a Mar, 4 doiT Townsend, CharlesiB... ...0 0. un. Michigan. Ji000 Siang Mar. 4, 1911 Williams, John Sharp... ..........00 0 Mississippi... cui. a. Mar. 4, 1911 Works: Joh Df anus dhs oi California’, ovis. Mar. 4,701 30 | Kenyon, William 8... io, SH. 000 Towa inl a rat ka Apr. ra 1911 el 124 Congressional Directory. CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH BEGINNING OF THEIR PRESENT SERVICE. J Beginning Name. State. | Congresses. of present a service. 79 terms—Not con- tinuous. *Cannon,J. G..... IH. 18 | 43d, 44th, 45th, 46th, 47th, 48th, | Mar. 4, 1893 49th, 50th, 51st,53d,54th, 55th, ; 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. 17 tevms—Continu- ous. Bingham, H.H..... Pa I | 46th, 47th 48th, 49th, 50th, 51st, | Mar. 4, 1879 : 52d,53d,54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, i 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. 14 tevms—Not con- tinuous. Payne, S: Bi... N. Y.| 31 | 48th, 49th, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, | Mar. 4, 1889 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 6oth, 61st, 62d. 13 tevms—Continu- ois. Dalzell, John ...... Pa ...| 30 | 50th, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, | Mar. 4, 1887 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 6oth, 61st. 62d. 11 tevms—Continu- ous. : : Jones, W. A... .. Va. 1 | 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, | Mar. 4, 1801 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. 10 tevms— Continu- ous. Bartholdt, Richard. Mo. 10 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 6oth, 61st, 62d. Cooper, H. AD. uns, Wis 1 | 53d,54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 6oth, 61st, 62d. Gardner, J.J... N.]J 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. Gillett, TB. Hine, Mass 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. TLoudenslager, H. C. N.J 1 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th,57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. MeCall, SW... Mass 8 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. : 9 tevms— Continu- ous. : : Bartlett, C. 1,....... Ga...| 6 | 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th, 509th, | Mar. 4, 1895 60th, 61st, 62d. Poss, C.F... ...... I11 ...| 10 | 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1895 6oth, 61st, 62d. Henry, BE. S......c.. Conn.| 1 | 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1895 60th, 61st, 62d. HOLE. .......... Conn.| 4 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 50th, | Mar. 4, 1895 6oth, 61st, 62d. Prince, G.W....... TH...) 15" {541h, ssth, 56th, 57th, 58th, Apr. 2,1805 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. * Speaker of the Fifty-eighth. Fifty-ninth. Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses. + Vacancy. Service of Representatives. 125 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. : Beginning Name. State. | & Congresses. of present a service. 9 terms— Continu- ous—Continued, Sparkman, S. M.... Fla I | 54th,55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1895 6oth, 61st, 62d. Sulloway, C. A'...... N. H.| 1 | 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1895 60th, 61st, 62d. : Sulzer, William . ... N.Y .| 10 | 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1895 6oth, 61st, 62d. Underwood, O. W .. Ala 9 | 54th,55th,56th,57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1895 . 6oth, 61st, 62d. 9 tevms— Not con- tinuous. ®Clark, Champ... .. Mo. 9 | 53d,55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1897 6oth, 61st, 62d. Talbott, J. Fred.C.. Md 2 | 46th, 47th, 48th, 53d, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1903 6oth, 61st, 62d. 8 terms—Contin- uous. Adamson, W.C .... Ga 4 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 . 61st, 62d. : Brantley, W. G..... Ga. 11 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Broussard, R.F .... Ta 3 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Buller, TT. SL... Pa 7 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Clayton, H.D...... Ala 3 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Crumpacker, E. D.. Ind 10 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. : Davidson, J. H..... Wis 8 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Greene, W. S ...... Mass .| 13 | T55th,56th,57th,58th,59th,60th, | May 31,1898 » 61st, 62d. Hamilton, FE. 1, .... Mich.| 4 | 55th,56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Hay, James... ..... Va. 7 | 55th, 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 : 61st, 62d. Henry, R.L:.--.. 5. Tex 11 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. . Lamb, John... ..... Va. 3 | 55th,56th,57th,58th, 59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 : 61st, 62d. Lawrence,G.P..... Mass .| 1 |t55th,56th,57th,58th,59th,60th, | Nov. 29,1897 : : 61st, 62d. Vloyd, J.°T ..0.. 4. Mo. I |t 55th,56th,57th,58th,59th, 60th, | June 1, 1897 : 61st, 62d. Mam, J.B oo I11 2 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Moon, J: A... Jus os Tenn.| 3 | 55th,56th,s57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Olmsted, M. Fi... .. Pa 18 | 55th, 56th,57th, 58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Sims, T-W.....«.. 0 Tenn.| 8 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th, 59th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Slayden, J. 1, iq Tex ..| 14 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th, 509th,60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. Smith,S.W ........ Mich.| 6 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th, 59th 60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. * Speaker of the Sixty-second Congress. 1 Vacancy. 126 Congressional Directory. ‘SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. ; Beginning Name. State. | § Congresses. of present a service. 8 terms— Continu- ous—Continued. Stephens, J. 5 ... .... D | Tex ..| 13 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th,59th, 60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. : Stevens, F.C... ..... R | Minn. | 4 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th,59th, 60th, | Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d daylor, GC. W!...... D | Ala ..| 1 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th,59th,60th,| Mar. 4, 1897 61st, 62d. 8 terms—INot con- tinuous. Mondel, FE. W ..... R | Wyo .|(*)| 54th, 56th,57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mat. 4, 1899 61st, 62d. 7 tevms—Continu- ous. \ Burleson, A. S...:.. D | Tex ..| 10 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th,61st,| Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Burnett, 7. L,....... D | Ala ..| 7 | 56th,57th,58th,59th,60th,61st,| Mar. 4, 1899 62d. : Driscoll, M. E....... R | N. Y .| 29 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th,60th,61st,| Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Boch, J. au. conics - R | Wis 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Binley, D.IE |...... DS. C 5 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th,61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Fitzgerald, 7.7... DN, Y 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th,61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Pordney, J. W....... R | Mich.| 8 | 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th,61st,| Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Hangen,G.N ... ..... R | Iowa 56th, 57th, 58th, 509th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 i 62d. Needham, J: C .ix.:- R [:Cal 6 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th,61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Ransdell, J. BE... .; . D [Ta . 5 sein, 57th,58th, 59th, 60th,61st, | Aug. 2, 1899 62d.. Richardson, William| D | Ala ..| 8 | f56th,57th,58th,59th,60th,61st,| Aug. 6, 1900 62d. Roberts, B. W.:. ... R | Mass 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th,61st,| Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Rucker, W.W..:.... D | Mo. 2 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Shackleford, D. W..| D | Mo. 8 T3oih, 57th,58th, 59th 60th,61st, | Aug. 29, 1899 62d. Small, LE... ..ii0n D [N.C 1 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 50th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 62d. Vreeland, E. B...... R N.Y... 37 isi 57th,58th,509th,60th,61st, | Nov. 6, 1899 62d. 6 terms—Continu- ous. Bates, AFT 0.400, R | Pa.. .| 25 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Burgess 6. F....... D | Tex. .| 9 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Candler, E. S., jr. D | Miss .| 1 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Currier, 5... .. R | N. H.| 2 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Draper, W.H C0: R | N.Y..| 22 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Dwight, J. W....... R | N.Y..| 30 | f57th,58th,59th,60th,61st,62d.| Nov. 4, 1902 Flood, I. DB... Ul D | Va. ..| 10 | 57th, 58th, 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Poster, D. Jiu. ...... R | Vt... 1 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. Mar. 4, 1901 * At large. 1 Vacancy. Service of Representatives. 127 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. : Beginning Name. State. | © Congresses. of present Aa service, 6 terms—Continu- ous—Continued. Gardner, A. P...... R | Mass.| 6 | *57th,58th,59th,60th, 61st,62d.| Nov. 4, 1902 Glass, Carter. ...... D | Va...| 6 | *57th,58th, 59th, 60th, 61st,62d.; Nov. 4, 1902 Goldfogle, H. M....| D | N.Y..| 9 {| 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Hughes, J. A......... R | W.Va| 5 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Johnson; J.7F......... DSC 4 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Kitchin, Claude....| D | N.C 2 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Lever, AB ol... DSC 7 | *57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st,62d.| Nov. 5, 1901 Lindsay, GH... .. D | NY 2 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Padgett, I. Pl... D | Tenn.| 7 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Pou, BF. Wild... Dy iN.C 4 | 57th, 58th, 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1goI" Randell, C. BL. .... D | Tex 4 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1901 Sheppard, Morris...| D | Tex 1 | *57th, 58th, 59th,60th, 61st,62d.| Nov. 4, 1902 6 terms—INol con- tinuous. Burke, C:oFL....... R | S.Dak|(}) | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 61st, 62d .| Mar. 4, 1909 Rahn, Julius .o.... R | Cal ..| 4 | 56th, 57th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4, 1905 Martin, BE.W....... R | S.Dak| (1) | 57th, 58th,59th,*60th,61st,62d.| June 27,1908 Rodenberg, W. A...| R | Ill ...| 22 | 56th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d.| Mar. 4,1903 5 tevims—Continu- ous. Aitken, Wyatt ...... DS. 'C..|" 3 55th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Ames; Butler....... R | Mass.|" 5 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 63st, 62d... .. Mar. 4, 1903 Renllpfack C. noa, D "Tex", 5 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Bradley, BW..1.05, R ['N.Y..|"20 | 58th, 50th, 6oth,'61st, 62d... ..-.. Mar. 4, 1903 Campbell, P,P... R | Rans. |" 3 |'58th, 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d... .. .. Mar. 4, 1903 Davis) CR... 0 R | Minn.| 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Baller COB. 00) R «| TI 12 | 58th, 59th, 6oth, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Garner, I. NN... D | Tex 15 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Gregg AW ........ Dl ex 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Hardwick, T. W....[ D ‘| Ga, 10 | 58th, 59th, 6oth, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Wellin, LX. 5 D | Ala 5 | *58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... .. May 19, 1904 Howell, Joseph ....| R | Utah .| (1) | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Humphrey, W. E...| R | Wash T “58th, soil, 60th, 61st, 62d... Mar. 4, 1903 Humphreys, B.G ..| D | Miss 3 158th) 50th, ‘Goth, ‘61st; 62d... .- Mar. 4, 1903 Jarmres, OM... .. DP By. I "58th 'soth, ‘Goth, 61st, 62d... .....\ Mar. 4, 1903 Kinkaid, M.P ..... R | Nebr 6 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Knowland, J. B--. | R'[ Cal» |" 3'P*s58tho soth, 60th, 61st, 62d... Nov. 8, 1904 Tafean DD. B....... R (| Pa...| 20 | 53th 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d...... Mar. 4, 1903 legare, GC. 8... DS C..] ‘z|58th:soth6eth, 61st, 62d. "30. Mar. 4, 1903 Longworth,Nicholas| R | Ohio .| 1 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d. ..... Mar. 4, 1903 Loud, G. A, ........ R | Mich.| ro | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 MeCreary, G.D ....| R | Pa.: 6 i} 53th; 509th, 60th, 61st, 62d. . . ... Mar. 4, 1903 McMorran, Henry. .| R | Mich.| 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Macon, R.B:....... D | Ark 1 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Moon, B.:@......... .. R [Pan 4 | *58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... .. Nov. 2,1903 Murdock, Victor ...| R | Kans 7.41: £58th, 50th, 60th, 61st,62d. . .: . May 26, 1903 Norris, GC. W......... R | Nebr 5.1" 58th 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... . Mar. 4, 1903 Page, BR. Nol... Di N.C. 7 | 58th, 50th, 6oth, 61st, 62d. .....c.c Mar. 4, 1903 Pujo, A. Pot... D | Ta 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Raney, BH T.: yt Tl 20 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Robinson, J. T..... D | Ark 6 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Sherley, Swagar ...| D | Ky. 5 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Smith, W. R ....... D | Tex 16 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Stanley; A. Q ...... DD Ky..[” 2" 58¢h, =gth 160th, 63st, 62d... . J; Mar. 4, 1903 Steenerson, Halvor .| R | Minn.| ¢ | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 * Vacancy. 1 At large, 128 Congressional Directory. SERVICE, OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.— Continued. I *Vacancy, J Beginning Name. State. | § Congresses. of present A service. 5 terms—Continu- ous—Continued. Sterling, Jo A... ives R | Il ...[ 17 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Volstead, A.J ...... R | Minn.| 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Webb, BE. X50 D | IN.C..[- o| 53th, 50th, 6oth,61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Wilson, W. W...... RB [I id 3:1:58th, 50th, 60th; 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 Wood, I. Wi ..5u.. R | N. J..| 4 | *58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... .. Nov. 8, 1904 Young, H. 0. .:.... R | Mich.| 12 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... Mar. 4, 1903 5 tevms— Not con- tinuous. Riordan, DJ... ... D | N.Y..| 8 | 56th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d...... Nov. 6, 1906 4 tevms—Continit- ous. Andrus, J.X ....... R | N.V.. [rg soth, 60th, 61st 62d. .......... Mar. 4, 1905 Barchield, AT... ... R | Pa: i 32 'soth Goth, 616t,62d........... Mar. 4, 1905 Bell 4 Bete (EEE, D Gai [Co seth 60th, 61st, 62d. .......... Mar. 4, 1905 Burke, J. F...-~.f RB [Pa danilseih Goth, 61st, 60d... ....+0. Mar. 4, 1905 Calder, W. MM... . RN. V. [56 | soth, 6oth, 61st, 62d..... ...... Mar. 4,1905 Clark, Prank... Df Fla ic 2] 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d...%...... Mar. 4, 1905 Dizon, Lincoln..... Df Ind..[ a | soth, 60th, 61st, 62d........... Mar. 4, 1905 Bliethe, J. B....... D'S. C..| 6 | zoth, 6oth, 61st, 62d. ....... 28, Mar. 4, 1905 Bloyd, J. C........ D{Ark..! 3 50th 6oth 61st. 62d............ Mar. 4, 1905 Garrett, B.J....... D, | Tenm: ly gi 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d... ... . =. Mar. 4, 1905 Hayes, B.A:....... Rs [Cal 56 50th, 60th; 61st, 62d... ... ...... Mar. 4, 1905 Higgins, B.W ..... R [: Conm.} 350th, 60th, 61st,62d.......... Oct. 2, 1005 Houston; W.C ..... D. | Tenn.|; 5 | 5othy 60th, 618;,62d.. .......... Mar. 4, 1905 Hubbard, E. H ...... BR. | Towa. | 11: | 50th; 60th, 61st, 62d. .......... Mar. 4, 1905 Lee, Gordon ....... D .Ga.: 7 sath 60th, 61st, 62d. .......... Mar. 4, 1905 McKinley, W.B....[R: [11 ; 194 oth, 60th, 61st, 62d... i... .. ... Mar. 4, 1905 McKinney, James ..| R | Ill . 14+ *soth, 60th, 61st, 62d. .; ........ Nov. 7, 1905 Madden, MB. ...../R [11 . Ii} 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d. .......... Mar. 4, 1905 Moore, J. Hampton .| R | Pa 3 il. Z50th, 60th, 61st,62d..:.....: Nov. 6, 1906 Moore, JoM:L 05, Dil Tex 8. | *soth 60th, 618, 60d. .......... June 6, 1905 Nelson, J. M ....... R | Wis 2 [i %sothy 60th, 618t,62d. -. ........ Sept. 4, 1906 Saunders, BE. W ..... iD: |: Na... 5:4 %50th; 60th, 61st, 62d .......... Nov. 6, 1906 Smith, S.C........ R: {Cal ui Siy-5oth;60th, 61et, 62d .. 05... .4%. Mar. 4, 1905 Taylor, B..1., jr ....[! R: |: Ohle . {72:1 { 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d... .....:%. : Mar. 4, 1905 Watkins, J.T ...... Df: La. 4 i 50th:60th, 618t,62d ...;....... Mar. 4, 1905 Weeks, T.W ....... B. | Mass.| 12. 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d. ..;......... Mar. 4, 1905 4 tevms—INot con- tinuous. Boolier, C.F... .... DB’ Mol. | 4} soth,60th,'61st, 62d... ....... Mar. 4, 1907 Hamlin CW ...... DB 3Mow Lf 7 sSth Goth, 61st; 60d 0 LL... Mar. 4, 1907 Harrison, B.D. ..... BD I'N. N96 [58th 60th, Gist, 62d .. o.oo LN Mar. 4, 1907 Hughes, William... I'D { N. J..[" 6 | 58th, 60th, 61st;62d ..........: Mar. 4, 1907 Sherwood, 1.R...... D | Ohio 0 (43d, Goth, 61st, 62d... 2%. i. Mar. 4, 1907 Wilson, Frank E...| D | N.Y 4° 56th south 58th '6ad 5.000. Mar. 4, 1911 3 tevms— Continuous Adair, JAM. ..... D: [Ind Sil 60M, 61st, 62d. oi. ah Mar. 4, 1907 Alexander, J. W....[iD: Mo.. gil Goth,61et, Gad . vc... ln Mar. 4, 1907 Ansherry, T. T..... D | Ohio 560th, 61st, 63d... hh sik vise Mar. 4, 1907 Anthony, D. R., jr.| R | Kans Li 6oth, 6186, 62d..0%. 05... May 23, 1907 Ashbrook, W. A....|!D: [i Ohio. 174. 6oth, 618, 62d... .... in... Mar. 4, 1907 Barnhart, HL A ....0D: Ind bag ®6oth, 61st, 62d. 000... itv visas Apr. 8, 1908 Service of Representatives. 129 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. 2 Beginning Name. State. | § Congresses. of present [a service. 3 tevms—Continu- ous—Continued. Caplin, CIC... 5... el Va... Sil=%6oth, 61st, 624.5... ........... Nov. 5, 1907 Carter, CD. ......... D | Okla 4 [B6oth, 61st, 62d ali. L.A. Nov. 16, 1907 Cary iW. bin R | Wis 4.560 6Tst, 62d... A Lh a Mar. 4, 1907 Cos, W. 10.0... D:| Ind 3ilc60th, 61st, 62d. iL. LLL VL Mar. 4, 1907 Cravens, Ben....... Di Ark. 4iE6oth,61st Gadel 5... Lh. Mar. 4, 1907 Denver, M.R ...... D | Ohio 6. 60th, 61st,:62d. . 0.0... iL. Mar. 4, 1907 Edwards, C.G........ Dil Ga... I: Goth6ist, 62d ol UL. 0 Mar. 4, 1907 Estopinal, Albert. ..[. D+ La... 1ijc#6oth 63st, 62d JL Mar. 9, 1908 Fairchild; G.W.....| Ri N. V.[ 24! i6cthy6rsat, 62d 20), LL. 1 wk Mar. 4, 1907 Ferris, Scott ....... D | Okla Sir6oth Bret, 6d. Lv). LAL LLL Nov. 16, 1907 Bochit, BIZ... .. Ro} Pao..l 1700 60th, 67st 62d uri... 4... 508 Mar. 4, 1907 Pornes, CV ........ D.[ N..Y:.| 1ri{c6otl6rst iad... AL... 55 Mar. 4, 1907 Foster, M. D........ D:| 11 23%: 160th 61st, 62d ..5.. LLL J. aL Mar. 4, 1907 Godwin, H.1,...... Dil NC 6: [c60thi 61st, 62d... i... LL Mar. 4, 1907 Gordon, G. W...... D | Tenn. roijc6oth,61st, 62d... 5... Mar. 4, 1907 Guernsey, FP. E..... Ri] Me 4 %60th, 61st, 62d... LL. HG July 29, 1908 Hamill, J AC ....... D+ Noi] Jo: E6othie6Tst, 62d ...v. a. SEA Mar. 4, 1907 Hammond, W.S ...|. D. | Minn.| 260th 61st, 62d... .50. 0... . iL Mar. 4, 1907 Hardy, Rufus...... D.| Tex 6. 60th618h, 62d... L.A... 5 Mar. 4, 1907 Hawley, W.C...... R | Oreg Ii [F6oth, 61st, 62d... LL Mar. 4, 1907 Helm, Harvey. ..... D.| Ky. Sl Goth 6rah, 62d... 0h... Mar. 4, 1907 Hobson, R.P ...... D | Ala 6: li6oth Gust, 62d... ol. 4 +7: Mar. 24, Toy Howland, Paul. .... D. | Ohio..| 20 |t6otl, 61st, 62d... 0... 0... ... Mar. 4, 1907 Hull, Cordell ...... Dr: Tenn.[: Ak 6othi6brst, 62d 00... ..0 & Mar. 4, 1907 Johnson, Ben ...... DD Ky... Jijc6oth c6ret; Gad. 05... 0... Mar. 4, 1907 Kennedy, C. A... R | Iowa I [t6othy61st, 60d... .. 5h. ..... Mar. 4, 1907 Langley, J. W....... Ral Ky...| 7oic6oth,c61et 62d 530. 5.0 Mar. 4, 1907 Lindbergh, CA... IR | Mun! 6 6othd6rst, 6adutn.. LL... . 0. Mar. 4, 1907 McDermott, J.T... Dy TIL .. 4: 6othibrst, Gade i, il. Cd | Mar. 4, 1907 McGuire, Bird ..... R | Okla IT e6oth, 61st 6ad. 5.00. ln... La Nov. 16, 1907 McHenry, J. G..... D. | Pa... 716i 6oth 61s 6odiniil... 8... 00 Mar. 4, 1907 MeLaughlin, J. C..| BR. | Mich.| oifi6oth /6ust 62d... ....... 1.0. Mar. 4, 1907 Madison, BE. H ..... RR Kans.| 7/[c60thc6rel, 62d. 0d. 0... A 8 Mar. 4, 1907 Malby, George..... Re N.Y. .| 260 6ollyc6ret, 6ad.l i. ol. Mar. 4, 1907 Viorse, BA. .......... R | Wis T0600, 6Tst, Gad uh. ci. Mar. 4, 1907 Nye, ¥, MZ....... R| Minn.|. 50} 60th, 61st 62d... 4...50, .. Sain Mar. 4, 1907 Peters, AJ ........ Di] Mass | 11 k6oths6ust 62d.0. i... 0.8 Mar. 4, 1907 Pray, C.N......... BR. | Mont.| (1) 60th, 6ist,62d.......5......5. Mar. 4, 1907 Rauch, GW. ...... DD: Ind 17 [6othisarst, 6ad. Jo. iL. fe Mar. 4, 1907 Rothermel i]. HF ...| D | Pa 1g [c 60th, 61ef, 6oduii i. Joh. da Mar. 4, 1907 Sabbath, A. J......... De | 11. SHlt6oth 6rsf, 62d... Lh Mar. 4, 1907 Slemp, C. Bascom..| R | Va. 9 |: 360th, 63st, 62d. .......... 5. Oct. 14, 1907 Thistlewood, N. B..| R | Ill. 257 #6oth, 61st, Gadi... Lh. la Dec. . 1, 1907 Wilson, W. B...... DD. | Pa 315 (60th, 61st, Badu. ol. a Mar. 4, 1907 3terms—Not con- tinuous. Cudoer, James M ..|'D | N.C. .[ 10] 5Sth, soth, 62d. .... 5... ... Mar. 4, 1911 2 terms. Anderson, Carl..... DD. [Ohio | x3:[ 61st, Bad... ...00. 0000s Mar. 4, 1909 Austin, Richard W.! BR. | Tenn.| 2. [ 6188, 628... uu tion tiatis: Mar. 4, 1909 Bochme, John W-., .... DD "Ind. 3 61st Gad... 0. iy Mar. 4, 1909 Borland, William P.. D | Mo... st 6st, 60. i... .... 0% Mar. 4, 1909 Byins, Joseph W...[D | Tenn. 6 | 61st, 628... 0... one iia Mar, 4, 1909 * Vacancy. tT At large, . 130 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. : Beginning Name. State. | 4 Congresses. of present A service. 2 terms—Continued. Cantrill, James C...| D | Ky. 7 RL ERC ae CR SE Sn Mar. 4, 1909 Cline;;Cyrus ........ D. | Ind 2: [560st6ad mth el Mar. 4, 1909 Collier, James W...| D | Miss Ber BTstbad i. Linh. a Mar. 4, 1909 Conry, Michael F..| D. | N. Yiqtaz i61et,62d,..0..0u0 coin. in. Mar. 4, 1909 Covington, J. Harry.| D | Md . Ty I EE rT ee CE Mar. 4, 1909 Cox, James M...... D | Ohio Sel Ostnbadin. lh ER Mar. 4, 1909 Cullop, William A..| D | Ind 2u06T8, 6d Oo. ain El Mar. 4, 1909 Dent, Stanley H.,jr.| D | Ala afiebnstibads. ound Liha. Mar. 4, 1909 Dickinson, iC. C....| D.{ Mo Grirorsinbad i. Lal ke Feb. 7, 1910 Dickson, William A.| D | Miss od Te ERS 0 SS GE Mar. 4, 1909 Dies, Martin ....... D | Tex LTT be RE ST Re (A Mar. 4, 1909 Dodds, Francis. Fl ..[ BR. | Michi lean: f6rstybedy:.....00 .. 80. ...... Mar. 4, 1909 Driscoll, Manjel A... D | N. Vid iggeli6mst6ad i ...0. Jd il. 0. Mar. 4, 1909 Dupre, H. Garland. D | La... CINE TR eL GE HS SE Nov. 8, 1910 Gallagher, Thomas.| D | Ill .. SaliionetuGad:. 0 Hh sae Mar. 4, 1909 Good, James W....| R | Iowa seleonsthbados. Shue. 0 vw Mar. 4, 1909 Graham; James M.D: [TIL Fie) adi FOTE36Td LL. viv his. oh wisn is Mar. 4, 1909 Griest, William W..[ R | Pa .. id or| 6ast,62d.....0..0.. 0h. iein, Mar. 4, 1909 Hanna, Jouwis B... | BR. | N.D'ld(7) Bust, 62d... anti. . oh, 05, Mar. 4, 1909 Heald, William H. .|'R [Del L(y 0638t,:62d.. 00, oak vai vnns Mar. 4, 1909 Hughes, Dudley M.| D | Ga.. Qe OTSEaGa LR Le es Mar. 4, 1909 Rendall; NJ E ..... R.. | Towa {0 6: 6net,6adi... in. on. calli. oui Mar. 4, 1909 Kinkead, FugeneF. D | N.J 9 [Bret Bad. oan te el Mar. 4, 1909 Kopp, Arthur W...| R | Wis gelibuet Gados. Lain Cha a A Mar. 4, 1909 Korbly, Charles A..| D | Ind SaliGTshnGad. Lanai, Rh a a Mar. 4, 1909 Langham, Ino. N...| RB. | Pa. .luo27 (c61st,62d.. . ... 000. idle ni. oi Mar. 4, 1909 Latta, James P..... DD. |. Nebr se lconst bad... bwadi 5 oo ous Mar. 4, 1909 Lenroot, Irvine I, ..| R | Wis LI Eosto6edi in. ui dal dd ve Mar. 4, 1909 Maguire, John A...| D | Nebr | 26ust6ads)., usd. Lod nL Luh, ar. 4, 1909 Martin, Jolin’A ....["D. | Colo ECT EE BR SI DE Mar. 4, 1909 Mays, Dannitte H..| D | Fla CA DE UE eR SHE Mar. 4, 1909 Miller, Clarence B.. BR. | Minn. 8 |06ast, 62d... ....600 . Ahi... Mar. 4, 1909 Morgan, Dick T'....| R | Okla 2 eGIst6ad., LURE. , LH Sa Mar. 4, 1909 Morrison, Martin A .| D | Ind gr j06Ish6ad. Lon. LB Mar. 4, 1909 Moss, Ralph W....| D | Ind oni ct le a aan Ar THR A EE Mar. 4, 1909 Oldfield, William A.| D | Ark gi|terst adn. cnn SRL LS Mar. 4, 1909 Palmer, As Mitchell.l' D. | Pa . 026: 0061sb:62d... ota. i 0h vi. ous Mar. 4, 1909 Pickett, Charles E .| R | Iowa sleet bad) Cok i. Lath a Mar. 4, 1909 Plumley;iPrank.. ../'R. |. Vii. pe6asti6adli dil. chao Mar. 4, 1909 Roddenbery, S. A..| D | Ga. ZE6Ish 6d el Feb. 28, 1910 Rucker, AttersonW.| D | Colo Bons 6ade ti, hs As es Mar. 4, 1909 Sharp, William G..| D. |.Ohio::p1a{d6ist, 62d. ...... LL. Cla... ... Mar. 4, 1909 Simmons, James S| RB | N.Y. 34: 6rsti6adu. i... wid. Lak. ot Mar. 4, 1909 Sisson, Thomas U ..| D | Miss Ail 6usty6adrn LLL RE Mar. 4, 1909 Taylor, Edward T..| D. | Colob:p (p)o6asty6adss. .... od... Luo Mar. 4, 1909 Thomas, RB. V., jr... D | Ky CCE I SR SE Mar. 4, 1909 Tilson, John Q..... Rif Com. (7) 638t,62d ..... ih .ii is 0000 Mar. 4, 1909 Turnbull, R....... .. D Va... SER eR I le i Mar. 16, 1910 Wickliffe, RobertC.| D | Ia .. 6. Greh 60d... wh Pal Mar. 4, 1909 Woods, rank PP... R Towa ./ 10: 618, 62d... .... .., i. vivian Mar. 4, 1909 2 termms—INot con- tinuous. Davenport, James S.| D | Okla afhbatlinod on oun aa Mar. 4, 1911 French, Burton L,. || R' | Idaho (i) 60th, 60d. ...... ore. up = messi Mar. 4, 1911 pp, George WW... ...lD | Pa. ..l 34 1 60th,:62d: .....0... 00. «oo deity. Mar. 4, 1911 Levy, Jefferson MI [DD N.Y. [13 [56th 6ad... oi. 00. 2 Mar. 4, I9II Russell, Joseph J...| D | Mo. 34 Goth, 60d .. 228s Mar. 4, 1911 * Vacancy. T At large. | : : TR WR RR Service of Representatives. 131 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. : Beginning Name. State. | Congresses. of present A; service. I term. Akin, Theron...... 1B EE I CE a a I Mar. 4, 1911 Allen, Alfred Go... DD Ohio fi 2 Gad... ... 0. isa Mar. 4, 19II Anderson, Sidney. [RB [Minn.| 1.( 62d i... ooh a Mar. 4, I9II Ayres, Steven'B, ...['D | N.Y | 18. £62d til ms vs oes va Mar. 4, I9II Bathrick, BE. R..... Dil Ohio. 19 Gad as. i sarees ahs Mar. 4, 1911 Berger, Victor 1. ...| S| Wis. | g62diy soa ter, iain ah Mar. 4, I91I Blackmon, Fred I../ D Ala. a 6dr. i... tai Ss Mar. 4, 191 Bowtian, CharlesCH R [. Pa.. . x1 46d i... ui isan Mar. 4, 1911 Brown, Wm. G.; jr. fl D | W Val a l6ad .........00 oui, Mar. 4, 1911 Bachanan, Frank «0 TLL ol 0706ad ov. iia, ea. oh vhs Mar. 4, 1911 Bulkley, Robert J. D | Ohio | 21 [| 620.....\ i. oh rasa Mar. 4, 191 Burke, Michael Bi D- [ Wis. .| 6: 62d .......... nai. Mar. 4, 1911 Byrnes, James B.D SC. a lh 6ad .. Joi niin ahi a Mar. 4, 1911 Callaway, Oscar-.«f Di Tex. [ro fb2d oo. 00 ninih sii: Mar. 4, 19II Catlin, Theron B=. RB {Mo ..0 IT (62@;. con oda sini Mar. 4, 1911 Claypool, HoratioC.['D | ‘Ohio .[ 13. | 62d ........ ceva iin Mar. 4, 1911 Connell; Richard BB. DNV lan 6nd... 00 wi. vas. Mar. 4, 1911 Copley, ra C...... Beeler mn 62d, Si i aii shia Mar. 4, 1911 Crage, Thomas S$. ..{ R | Pa... [23 62d o.............. cou... Mar. 4, 1911 Curley, James M....{ D { Mass. b av | Gad J. onl oa. Mar. 4, 1911 Danforth, Henry G.| B | N. Vga 6d i. ooo. 0 oo nova: Mar. 4, 1911 Daugherty, JamesA.| D1 Mo J 15/1 62d .... 0c... hve ai Mar. 4, 19II Davis, John W..... DY W.Va x i6ad.... .0..00ci00 0a Mar. 4, 1911 De Porest, Henry S.F RI N.Y. 23 | 62d... no eliidiann Mar. 4, 1911 Difenderfer, R. E..| D | Pa. en BT A ieee A SE Mar. 4, 1911 Donohoe, Michael..| D | Pa .. FAR OR NR tt RS Mar. 4, 1911 Doremus, Frank E..| D | Mich ERE oe eT Re Mar. 4, 1911 Bonghton, BR. L,. :..[ Df N.C.| Sl62d cee. lil pir dad Mar. 4, 1911 Dyer, 1. C......-. i Di Mo.. [rz {62d 50h a Gane, Mar. 4, 1911 Evans, Lynden... .. DT -n le op Gods ue oti pao Mar. 4, 1911 Faison, JohmM... ..D | N.C.o{ 362d... 0u.l. coiiiii a n Mar. 4, 1911 Pare, John R....... Ro Pa dire Gedy i ran aah Mar. 4, 1911 Fields, W. J........ DIRy...L 9 62@. 20 i ae Mar. 4, I9II Fowler, H. Robert: DI. olieg [62d viva. alo no nl, Mar. 4, 1911 Yrancis, W. B...... D-Ohlo.f 16 6ad |... oon Mar. 4, 19II George, Henry, jr... D [N.Y J x7:06ad ..... o.oo ve nininas Mar. 4, 1911 Goeke,;J. H........ D | Ohio dl 6ad a a Mar. 4, I9IX Goodwin, W. S..... D | Ark lad A A Mar. 4, 1911 Gould, Samuel W..! D | Me. gelbGad a ER Mar. 4, I9II Gray, Finly H..... D | Ind Bl Bod sa Re Mar. 4, 1911 Gregg, Curtis H.....| D. | Pa. ya Eee LL Re Rl Be Mar. 4, I91I Hamilton, John M..| D | W.Va] 4 [62d ........-5.. onli. Mar. 4, 1911 Harrie, Robert O...' BR | Mass llvqg [62d 2... iv avai i. Mar. 4, 1911 Harrison, B.P...... D | Miss Re LO SR Mi Mar. 4, 1911 Hartman, Jessel... RB [Pai lag Gad oo. oii aniiee ide Mar. 4, 1911 Helgesen, H.T..... RINDakl (3) 62d... i. a in Oe Mar. 4, 1911 Hensley: Walter. - D:| Mo. ...l 13 [62d 2 oon 000 on dan a Mar. 4, 1911 Hinds, Asher C... | R | Me. E00d vn a A SUR ke Mar. 4, 1911 Holland, B. FE ...... DP [Va. FI Ee ER ER EC RB Mar. 4, 1911 Howard, William S.| D | Ga. en A SO SRSA ee Mar. 4, I91I Jackson, Bred:S....| RB I Rang.| 4 [62d io fo ilicinan indo. Mar. 4, 1911 Jacoway, H. M..... D | Ark Bah Bod Os dR Ee Mar. 4, 1911 Kent, William..... R {Cal I EE ES LR ER Ee Mar. 4, 1911 Rindred, JohnJ. .. DI NV. .bagl 6d. 00.00. Sling ia Mar. 4, 1911 Konig, George... .. DL Md. fl 3 62d ae Re Mar. 4, I9II Konop, George W..| D | Wis Gf Bad etn i Es Mar. 4, 1911 * At large. 84259°—62-1— 1ST ED——IO 132 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. *At large. : . Beginning Name. State. | 5 Congresses. of present a service. 1 term—Continued. LaFolletie William| BR | Wash, 35 | 6adi.. o.oo. 30.0 000s, Mar. 4, 1911 Lafferty, A. W..... BR Orem. | "al 6aden’ oi dooddiy tts Mar. 4, 1911 Yee, Robetl'E .....4. 0 |. Pa... lo 34 6d od avidin alias Mar. 4, 1911 . Lewis, David J..... DE LME. Lo 6dent nn oar Ladd Mar. 4, 1911 Linthicumy:]. Clas. | D | Md... 0 4 | Gade. fins mists viotlis Mar. 4, 1911 Littlepage; Adam B.D | W.Va, 31 6adis... 0. oii aly, Mar. 4, 1911 Littleton, Martin W.I' D ( N.V il pl 6adia iL a. coniniodben Mar. 4, 1911 Lobeclz,. C.70O...... D | Nebr 2 Le Gadea Fine doc asin oe Mar. 4, 1911 MeCoy, Walter T.- .I I | No J. 8 Gadi hunt bi thc, Mar. 4, 1911 McGillicuddy, D: 7.0. OD [| Mei. || 2 [ 62aden: cw... 005. dbaes Mar. 4, I19I1I McEenzie; John. C.| Ri [| Wl ..0 15 | 62d Fine Ju nioityes Bh 20s Mar. 4, 1911 Maher, James P....| B INV. 3 [6adio a... addi dhe Mar. 4, 1911 Maithews Charles | B [Pa .. 124 [bad 5. la. 0.0.0 Lhe, Mar. 4, 1911 Mitchell A; C. 0... RB [Bang.l' 2 (62decs) un dem Toiodl Mar. 4, 1911 Mott, Tather W ...{ R | NV. V 28 [62d ov vrai d,, Mar. 4,1911 Murray, William F.| D | Mass RT EL ee Cr Te Mar. 4, 1911 O2Shaunessy, | D | RB. I al 1 CE TI Ed er Mar. 4, 19171 George F. Parran, Thomas. ...! R [ Md . Gade) ng. mT Mar. 4, 1911 Patten, Thomas G..| D | N.Y. ord] Dorn PC SRE SS A Mar. 4, 1911 Patton, Charles B..[ R | Pa... ORES « can sind ile dit Mar. 4, 1911 Pepper, 1.8 1... ... D | Iowa Batis ber do eid ds Mar. 4, 1911 Porter, Stephen G.. R | Pa .. ot ne He (GET Mar. 4, I9II Post J. Dwr 1.0... D | Ohio Galen oan MEAL SS Mar. 4, 1911 Powers, Caleb ..... R [Ky.. rE A a Mar. 4, 1911 Prouty, S$, F....... R | Iowa CA Te CR Re Mar. 4, 1911 Raker, John E..... Cal lr LE aR a TE Ea Mar. 4, 1911 Redfield, William C.| D | N.Y TR ee RE a Mar. 4, 1911 Rees, Rollin R..... R Kang. 5 ['6odi bes adk 5.300, Mar. 4, I9II Reilly, Thomas 1... D | Conmn.| 2 | 62d... foo ills oh as Mar. 4, I9IT Roberts, BE. F...... R | Nev... ("Yl 62d....0 4.03 thd, Mar. 4, 1911 Rubey, Thomas L,.... D [ Mo...[ 16. [ 62d... os 1... cadet Biv Mar. 4, 1911 Rouse, Arthur B....| D | Ky. iE i ee SL aR Mar. 4, 1911 Scully, Thomas J...| D | N. J Cae VE ROC SE A Mar. 4, I9II Sells, Sam BR... .... R | Tenn TY 6d sas dais on a Mar. 4, I191I Sloan, Charles H...| R Nebr. - gl 6ad ... nc... 00 don, Mar. 4, TIT Smith, Charles B...I D | NV... 296 [ 62d. niin. 4 hits ov olhidas Mar. 4, 1911 Smith, J. M.C..... BR [Mich] 30 6adis n.d deh abatids, Mar. 4, 1911 Speer, Peter M... .... RB [Pa.. a8 [Godel tin. i nin Gl Mar. 4, 1911 Stack, Bdmund J..| D | Tl. CR AL ARE aL fe Mar. 4, 1911 Stedman, CharlesM.| D | N.C Gadi Sa ea Mar. 4, 1911 Stephens, Hubert D.| D | Miss ACT Te CERNE td © Se Mar. 4, 1911 Stephens, William D| R | Cal. wide Bodie bln pa Mar. 4, 1911 Stone, Clandipe U..] DD [ OL... .| 96 | 6adis foo.) eatii «4% Js Mar. 4, 1911 Sweet, Edwin P....| D.| Mich.| 5 | 62@i.- 55 cirri od co 880, Mar. 4, 1911 Switzer, Robert M..| RB ! Ohio .] 10) 62dcn . ce iciinid 14 co 80a Mar. 4, 1911 Talcott, Charles A... D | NV..l 27 | 62Q.v. nn iso cnidic vo Ch hse Mar. 4, 1911 Thaver, Jom A ....| D | Mass .i: 31 62d: ..;..L. alii lv8l.0. Mar. 4, 1911 Towner, Horace M.| R | Iowa RGF fied gto Mar. 4, 1911 Townsend, E. W...| D | N. J ar A NE EC Mar. 4, I9II Tribble, Samuel J...| D | Ga. 8 LBadion dh snnd A Mar, 4, 1911 Tuttle Wm B., jr.{ D | N. J IEE GR RS a Mar. 4, 1911 Underhill, Edwin S.| Dl N,YV..J 33.1 62dici 5. vt ci Fal 2h 5h eins Mar. 4, I9II Utter, George H....| R | R. 1. nr PR I ET Le Mar. 4, I91I Warburton, Stanton, RB | Wash.[ +2 | 62dic....u. dad. 2 05.0. Mar. 4, 1911 Wedemeyer,Wm.W. R | Mich.! 2 | 62d:....0....0n0ideevisehs Mar. 4, 1911 Whitacre, John J.... D1 Ohio .t 18 1 62d... .................. .. Mar. 4, I9II ————— ——— A HE i = ——— Service of Representatives. 133 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. ; Beginning . Name. State. | 5 Congresses. of present A service. 7 term—Cont’d. White, George..... D | Ohio Pasieadiadati lint, 0, voile chivas Mar. 4, 1911 Wilder, William BL. .|.R | Mass." 44 Godocarsil. .... scr nia Mar. 4, 1911 Willis, Frank B....| R | Ohio eR NTC Ne CO ala Ea Mar. 4, 1911 Witherspoon, S. A..| D | Miss a ET LC RE SR ES RS LR | Mar. 4, 1911 Young Ish... ou Ry [olanss 06] Bahia oie ode ve vive cil eion Mar. 4, 1911 Young, James...... D | Tex CH Sep BBR Sha Mar. 4, 1911 DELEGATES. . TER. Andrews, W. H ... RM Wo M....[ 50th, Goth, Gad... .....0)0 £2.05 Mar. 4, 1905 Cameron, Ralph H.| R | Ariz. 3 Me 0 TT SEER Mar. 4, 1909 Kalanianaole, Jonah| R | H. I. .1 53th, 'soth, 60th, 62d.......... Mar. 4, 1903 Wickersham, James| R | Alaska]... ['678t,6000.. ......0veeosvnussnn Mar. 4, 1909 RESIDENT COMMIS- SIONERS. ; Rivera, Luis M..... RI|PR Son NC EER RE Mar. 4, 1911 Legarda, Benito... Lu... Po. L ....p6oth 61s, 62d... .......... 0... Mar. 4, 1909 Quezon, Manuel L..|.. «iP. d wea) OTSLIOAA 0, 0 pte «ste Nov. 15, 1909 134 Congressional Directory. STATE DELEGATIONS. [Republicans in roman ; Democrats in italic; Socialist in SMALL CAPS.] ALABAMA. : SENATORS. John H. Bankhead. : Joseph F. Johnston. REPRESENTATIVES. Tuy [Democrats, g.] 1. George W. Taylor. 2.Slanley H. Dent, jr. 4. 5. J. Thomas Heflin. 8. William Richardson. 3. Henry D. Clayton. 6. Fred L. Blackmon. 7. John L. Burnett. Richmond P. Hobson. | 9. Oscar W. Underwood. ARKANSAS. SENATORS. James P. Clarke. Jeff Davis. * REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 7.] I. Robert B. Macon. 4. Ben Cravens. 6. Joseph 1. Robinson. 2. William A. Oldfield. 5. H. M. Jacoway. 7. W.S. Goodwin. 3. John C. Floyd. : CALIFORNIA. ! : SENATORS. George C. Perkins. John D. Works. REPRESENTATIVES. : [Republicans, 7; Democrat, 1.] 4. Julius Kahn. 5. Everis A. Hayes. 6. James C. Needham 1. John FE. Raker. 2. William Kent. 3. Joseph R. Knowland. 7. William D. Stepbens. 8. Sylvester C. Smith. COLORADO. SENATORS. Simon Guggenheim. —_— REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 3.] At large— Edward 7. Taylor. 1. Atterson W. Rucker. | 2. John A. Martin. CONNECTICUT. SENATORS. Frank B. Brandegee. George P. McLean. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 4; Democrat, 1.] At large—John Q. Tilson. 1. E. Stevens Henry. 3. Edwin W. Higgins. 4. Ebenezer J. Hill. 2. Thomas L. Reilly. ; DELAWARE. SENATORS.’ Henry A. du Pont. Harry A. Richardson, REPRESENTATIVE. At large—William H. Heald. FLORIDA. SENATORS. Duncan U. Fletcher. Nathan P. Bryan. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 3.] 1. Stephen M. Sparkman. | 2. Frank Clark, | 3. Dannitte H. Mays. Augustus O. Bacon. 2, Seaborn Anderson Rod- denbery. 3. Dudley M. Hughes. | 1. Charles G. Edwards. | Weldon B. Heyburn. State Delegations. 135 GEORGIA. SENATORS. Joseph M. Terrell. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 11.] 4. William C. Adamson. 5. William S. Howard. 6. Charles L. Bartlett. 7. Gordon Lee. IDAHO. SENATORS. 8. Samuel J. Tribble. 9. Thomas M. Bell. 10. Thos. W. Hardwick. 11. Wm. G. Brantley. William E. Borah. REPRESENTATIVE, At large—Burton I,. French. Shelby M. Cullom. ILLINOIS. SENATORS. William Lorimer, REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 11; Republicans, 14.] I. Martin B. Madden. 10. George E. Foss. 19. William B. McKinley. 2. James'R. Mann. 11. Ira C. Copley. 20. Henry 7. Rainey. 3. William W. Wilson. 12, Charles E. Fuller. 21. James M. Graham. 4. James T. McDermott. 13. John C. McKenzie. 22. William A. Roden- 5. Adolph J. Sabath. 14. James McKinney. berg. 6. Edmund J. Stack. 15. George W. Prince. 23. Martin D. Foster. 7. Frank Buchanan. 16. Claudius U. Stone. 24. H. Robert Fowler. 8. Thomas Gallagher. 17. John A. Sterling. 25. Napoleon B. Thistle- 9. Lynden Evans. 18. Joseph G. Cannon. wood. INDIANA. SENATORS. Benjamin F. Shively. John W. Kern. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 12; Republican, 1.] 1. John W. Boehne. 6. Finly H. Gray. 11. George W. Rauch. 2. William A. Cullop. 7. Charles A. Korbly. 12. Cyrus Cline. 3. William E. Cox. 8. John A. M. Adarr. 13. Henry A. Barnhart. 4. Lincoln Dixon. 9. Martin A. Morrison. 5. Ralph W. Moss. 10. Edgar D. Crumpacker. IOWA. SENATORS. Albert B. Cummins. William S. Kenyon. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 9.] I. Charles A. Kennedy. 5. James W. Good. 9. — ey 2. 1 S. Pepper. 6. N. E. Kendall. 10. Frank P. Woods. 3. Charles E. Pickett. 7. 8S. F. Prouty. 11. Elbert H. Hubbard. 4. Gilbert N. Haugen. 8. Horace M. Towner, * Charles Curtis. I. Daniel R. Anthony, jr. . A. C. Mitchell. 3. Philip P. Campbell. N KANSAS. SENATORS. Joseph I. Bristow. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 8.] 4. Fred S. Jackson. 5. Rollin R. Rees. 6. I. D. Young. 7. Edmond H. Madison. 8. Victor Murdock. 136 Congressional Directory. KENTUCKY. SENATORS. Thomas H. Paynter. William O. Bradley. 4 REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 9; Republicans 2.] { 1. Ollie M. James. 5. Swagar Sheriey. o. “WF. Fields. 2. Augustus O. Stanley. 6. Arthur B. Rouse. 10. John W. Langley. 3. Robert Y. Thomas, jr. 7. J. Campbell Cantril. 11. Caleb Powers. 4. Ben Johnson. 8. Harvey Helm. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. Murphy J. Foster. John R. Thornton. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats 7.] 1 6. Robert C. Wickliffe. . Albert Estopinal. | 4. John T. Watkins. 2. H. Garland Dupre. 5. Joseph E. Ransdell. 7. Arséne P. Pujo. 3. Robert F. Broussard. : MAINE. SENATORS. William P. Frye. Charles F. Johnson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2; Democrats, 2.] I. Asher C. Hinds. 3. Samuel W. Gould. 4. Frank E. Guernsey. 2. Daniel J. McGillicuddy. MARYLAND. SENATORS. Isidor Rayner. John Walter Smith. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 5; Republican, 1.] 1. J. Harry Covington. 3. George Konig. 5. Thomas Parran. 2. /. Fyed. .C. Talbott. 4. J. Chas. Linthicum. 6. David J. Lewis. MASSACHUSETTS. SENATORS. Henry Cabot Lodge. W. Murray Crane. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 4; Republicans, 10.] 1. George P. Lawrence. 6. Augustus P.Gardner. 11. Andrew J. Peiers. 2. Frederick H. Gillett. 7. Ernest W. Roberts. 12. John W. Weeks. 3. John A. Thayer. 8. Samuel W. McCall. 13. William S. Greene. 4. William H. Wilder. 9. William F. Murray. 14. Robert O. Harris. 5. Butler Ames. 10. James M. Curley. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. William Alden Smith. Charles E. Townsend. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 10; Democrats, 2.] 1. Frank E. Doremus. 5. Edwin F. Sweet. 9. Jas.C. McLaughlin. 2. William W. Wedemeyer. | 6. Samuel W. Smith, 10. George A. Loud. 3.1. MC Smith, 7. Henry McMorran. 11. Francis H. Dodds. 4. Edward L. Hamilton. 8. Joseph W. Fordney. 12. H. Olin Young. + = AUN RL NH 1 2. . Sidney Anderson. . Winpeld S. Hammond. . Charles R. Davis. State Delegations. MINNESOTA. SENATORS. Knute Nelson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 8.] 4. Frederick C. Stevens. 5. Frank M. Nye. 6. Charles A. Lindbergh. MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. Le Roy Percy. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 8.] . Ezekiel S. Candler, jr. | 4. Thomas U. Sisson. . Hubert D. Stephens. | 5. SS. A. Witherspoon. . Benj. G. Humphreys. 6. B. P. Harrison. MISSOURI. SENATORS. William J. Stone. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 13; Republicans, 3.] . James T. Lloyd. 7. Courtney W. Hamlin. . William W. Rucker. 8. Dorsey W. Shackleford. . Joshua W. Alexander. 9. Champ Clark. . Charles F. Booher. 10. Richard Bartholdt. . William P. Borland. 11. Theron E. Catlin. . Clement C. Dickinson. | 12. 1. C. Dyer. MONTANA. SENATORS. Joseph M. Dixon. REPRESENTATIVE. At large—Charles N. Pray. NEBRASKA. SENATORS. Norris Brown. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 3.] . John A. Maguire. 3. James P. Laila, C. O. Lobeck. 4. Charles H. Sloan. NEVADA. SENATORS. Francis G. Newlands. REPRESENTATIVE. At large—F. KE. Roberts. NEW HAMPSHIRE. ; SENATORS. Jacob H. Gallinger. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] 1. Cyrus A. Sulloway. L137 Moses E. Clapp. 8. Clarence B. Miller. 7. Andrew J.Volstead. 9. Halvor Steenerson. John Sharp Williams. 7. William A. Dickson. 8. James W. Collier. James A. Reed. 13. Waller L. Hensley. 14. Joseph J. Russell. 15. James A. Daugherty. 16. Thomas L. Rubey. Henry L. Myers. Gilbert M. Hitchcock. 5. George W. Norris. 6. Moses P. Kinkaid. George S. Nixon, Henry E. Burnham. 2. Frank D. Currier. PRN HH PN nh NH \O Frank O. Briggs. . John J. Gardner. Thomas J. Scully. . Ira W. Wood. Elihu Root. . Martin W. Littleton. . George H. Lindsay. . James P. Maker. Frank E. Wilson. William C. Redfield. . William M. Calder. . John J. Fitzgerald. . Daniel J. Riordan. . Henry M. Goldfogle. 10. William Sulzer. 1. Charles V. Fornes. 12. Michael F. Conny. 13. Jefferson M. Levy. SNH INNS EN F. M. Simmons. . John H. Small. Claude Kitchin. . John M. Faison. . Edward W. Pou. Porter J. McCumber. . Henry C. Loudenslager.| 5. NEW JERSEY. . SENATORS. Congressional Directory. James E. Martine. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 7; Republicans, 3.] William E. Tuttle, jr. 6. William Hughes. 7. Edward W. Townsend. NEW YORK. SENATORS. 8. Walter I. McCoy. 9. Eugene F. Kinkead. 10. James A. Hamill. James A. OQ Gorman. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 23; Republicans, 14.] 14: John J. Kindred. 15. Thomas G. Patten. 16. Francis B. Harrison. 17. Henry George, jr. 18. Steven B. Ayres. 19. John KE. Andrus. 20. Thomas W. Bradley. 21. Richard E. Connell. 22. William H. Draper. 23. Henry S. De Forest. 24. George W. Fairchild. 25. Theron Akin. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. . George R. Malby. . Charles A. Talcott. .- Luther W. Mott. . Michael E. Driscoll. . John W. Dwight. . Sereno E. Payne. . Henry G. Danforth. . Edwin S. Underhill. . James S. Simmions. . Daniel A. Driscoll. . Charles B. Smith. . Hdward B. Vreeland. . Lee S. Overman. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 10.] . Charles M. Stedman. . Hannibal I.. Godwin. 7. Robert N. Page. an NORTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] 8. Robert L. Doughion. 9. Edwin Y. Webb. 10. James M. Gudger. Asle J. Gronna. At large—I,ouis B. Hanna; H. T. Helgesen. OHIO. SENATORS. Theodore E. Burton. . Nicholas Longworth. . Alfred G. Allen. . James M. Cox. . J. H. Goeke. Timothy T. Ansberry. . Matthew R. Denver. . 1D. Lost. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 16; Republicans, 5.] 8. Frank B. Willis. 9. Isaac R. Sherwood. 10. Robert M. Switzer. 11. Horatio C. Claypool. 12. Edward L. Taylor, jr. 13. Carl C. Anderson. 14. William G. Sharp. Atlee Pomerene. 16. 18. 19. 20. ar. 15. 17. George White. W. B. Francis. William A. Ashbrook. John J. Whitacre. E. R. Bathrick. Paul Howland. Robert J. Bulkley. State Delegations. OKLAHOMA. SENATORS. Thomas P. Gore. ; Robert L. Owen. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 2.] 3. James'S. Davenport. 4. Charies D. Carter. ‘I. Bird McGuire. 5. Scott Ferris. 2. Dick T. Morgan. OREGON. SENATORS. George E. Chambeviain. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] 1. Willis C. Hawley. | Jonathan Bourne, jr. 2. A.W. Lafferty. PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. Boies Penrose. George T. Oliver. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 9; Republicans, 22; vacancy, I.] RHODE ISLAND. SENATORS. I. Henry H. Bingham. 12. Robert E. Lee, 23. Thomas S. Crago. 2, ; 13. John H. Rothermel. 24. Charles Matthews, 3. J. Hampton Moore. 14. George W. Kipp. 25. Arthur I. Bates. 4. Reuben O. Moon. 15. William B. Wilson. | 26. A. Mitchell Palmer. 5. Michael Donohoe. 16. John G. McHenry. 27. Jonathan N. Langham. 6. George D. McCreary. | 17. Benjamin K. Focht. 28. Peter M. Speer. 7. Thomas S. Butler. 18. Marlin E. Olmsted. 29. Stephen G. Porter. 8. Robert E. Difenderfer.| 19. Jesse I. Hartman. 30. John Dalzell. 9. William W. Griest. 20. Daniel F. Lafean. 31. James Francis Burke. 10. John R. Farr. 21. Charles E. Patton. 32. Andrew J. Barchfeld. 11. Charles C. Bowman. 22...Curtis H, Gregg, Henry F. Lippitt. George P. Wetmore. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republican, 1; Democrat, I1.] 1. George IF. O'Shaunessy. 2. George H. Utter. SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Benjamin R. Tillman. Ellison D. Smith. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 7.] 4. Joseph T. Johnson. 5. David E. Finley. 6. J. Edwin Ellervbe. 1. George S. Legare. y. Asbury F. Lever. 2. James F. Byrnes. 3. Wyatt Aiken. SOUTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. Robert J. Gamble. : Coe I. Crawford. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] At large—Charles H. Burke, Eben W. Martin. 140 Congressional Directory. TENNESSEE. SENATORS. Robert L. Taylor. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 8 ; Republicans, 2.] 1. Sam R. Sells. 5. William C. Houston. 2. Richard W. Austin. 6. Joseph W. Byrns. 3. John A. Moon. 7. Lemuel P. Padgett. 4. Cordell Hull. 8. Thetus W. Sims. TEXAS. SENATORS. Charles A. Culberson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 16.] 7. A.W. Gregy. 8. John M. Moore. 9. George F. Burgess. 10. Albert S. Burleson. 1. Morris Sheppard. 2. Martin Dies. 3. James Young. 4. Choice B. Randell. Luke Lea. 9. Finis J. Garrelt. 10. George W. Gordon. Joseph W. Bailey. 13. John H. Stephens. 14. James L. Slayden. 15. John N. Garner. 16. William R. Smith. 4. Robert Turnbull. 5. Jack Beall. 11. Robert L. Henry. 6. Rufus Hardy. 12. Oscar Callaway. UTAH. SENATORS. Reed Smoot. George Sutherland. REPRESENTATIVE. At large—Joseph Howell. VERMONT. SENATORS. William P. Dillingham. Carroll S. Page. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans 2.] 1. David J. Foster. f 2. Frank Plumley. VIRGINIA. SENATORS. Thomas S. Martin. Claude A. Swanson. REPRESENTATIVES. : [Democrats, 9; Republican, 1.] 1. William A. Jones. 2. FE. LE. Holland. 3. John Lamb. 5. Edward W. Saunders. | 9. C. Bascom Slemp, 6. Carter Glass. 7. James Hay. 8. Charles C. Carlin. 10. Henry D. Flood. State Delegations. 141 WASHINGTON. SENATORS. Wesley L,. Jones. Miles Poindexter. REPRESENTATIVES. : [Republicans, 3.] 1. William E. Humphrey. 2. Stanton Warburton. 3. William I. La Follette. WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. Clarence W. Watson. : William E. Chilton. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 4; Republicans, I1.] I. John W. Davis. 3. Adam B. Littlepage. | 5. James A. Hughes. 2. William G. Brown, jr. | 4. John M. Hamilton. WISCONSIN. SENATORS. ‘Robert M. La Follette. Isaac Stephenson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, o1 Repubtiontis, 8; Socialist, 1.] I. Henry A. Cooper. 5. VICTOR LI. BERGER. 9. Thomas F. Konop. 2. John M. Nelson. 6. Michael E. Burke. 10. Elmer A. Morse. 3. Arthur W. Kopp. 7. John J. Esch. 11. Irvine L. Lenroot. J 4. William J. Cary. 8. James H. Davidson. | WYOMING. | SENATORS. : Francis E. Warren. Clarence D. Clark. REPRESENTATIVE. At large—Frank W. Mondell. DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES. ALASKA. James Wickersham. ARIZONA. Ralph H. Cameron. HAWAII. J. Kuhio Kalanianaole. NEW MEXICO. William H. Andrews. 142 Congressional Directory. RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS. PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. | Benito Legarda. Manuel I. Quezon. PORTO RICO. Luis M. Rivera. CLASSIFICATION. Senate: House of Representatives: BepnbHCANES.., . x ot src= ons 51 DeMoCIats aun run Democrats) 2. i cha 40 Republicans... .. Nacamey «0 ain gay I Seeialiste o.oo neon — Vacancies. «qb iia, Total... ..........., pian 92 Total tvs sen. x Apportionments. REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH 143 APPORTIONMENT. 221% JE AE |Z /% (2 dF IF {R015 (iF yi 4% 8 (2 [8 12 94% [% F2-l8 [Yg|& states REAR ER RE I AR RR 3 2. ~ DQ 3) [oe] foe) 0 | Ho +2) B.S hii a ri 9% a g" — = LH on a ar 5g a= 2 8 0 t=] js p=} v = = > 0 | TQ BRIE 1948 (BEB (5 IE AF (B® PEE [25°45 Ow | |W 0) H = = 5) 9) ol 4 = = = Alabang ion an iy, cleats I S 5 7 4 6 8 8 9 9 Aransas o.oo Behe sh oi sie owes YrivaTein ie I 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Calliformia. ....... 8 5.5. ol. Be oo Sev cdfei vt fe vee ue 2 2 3 4 6 8 Colorader,. o.com. amet Ll Ll ls oh frre ef aie en ful ie 1 I 2 3 Connectieut........... 5 7 7 2 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 Delaware .......... I ¥ I 2 I I I I I I 1 1 I FI ST pa ea eer eee ER ein Ie SOU RE LA INT Pant I I 1 2 2 2 3 Georgia... uh dees 3 2 4 6 7 9 8 8 7 9 10 II 11 UAT ed SEG Sih Peet ee ve en Late a] RSI BONAR Fi nS Re Ht a I I I I TIED RTE SA i hte] ob Sy Bae BE I 1 3 7 9 14 19 20 22 25 Indiana... wtih dais foes tf sen 1 3 ” 10 11 11 13 13 13 13 Yowa, = oo BS at ldnam dan vee a od ee aie a sa 2 2 6 9 II II ) Kameds,.. Sen rr ml a ane oo ee Re ae Se se i de Se Vs I 3 7 8 8 Kentucky... ot... Al obe, 2 6 10 12 13 10 10 9 10 11 II 11 Louisiana ..o..... of. aint ha NE I 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 MATIC 2... cov i vs 25 fe iarapmsn f+ oe 5% 4s rodagerin 7 7 8 4 6 5 5 4 4 4 Maryland ...... 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 Massachusetts a0 8 14 17 13 13 12 10 11 10 II 12 x3 14 Michigan. Soar dif ts Foe nn lac 20 iil, I 3 4 6 9 II 12 12 MINIESOtAS J; aes Ble ah] Tove fears tote a a og 2 [ies oid o lis oe ait 2 fr iv ate a 2 2 3 5 4 9 MASSISSIDDL 2s crs safe cloraiete] « 0s 0 bfoleteiinin I I 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 Missoufl, . Jib Slim] as ei A 0s 1 2 5 7 9 13 14 15 16 Montama). =r. or.u Sle conlih]e salen lelesiniaiol « vo wut flemtloiute [2 simata ol] iets ios 0g 2% iti na lice 5ts mrakis ies apts I I TF 130 I Decl Bret f wl en RIPE IBC 480: Lies UT I sO Lot RET Geer Be Be JB HRT I I 3 6 6 NEVAAAL 25.0 dl ail anil ats a 5 of etn] oo oie ams ite ee Ba UE PA are fie 3s = et ie ie 1 1 1 I I New Hampshire .. 3 4 55 6 6 5 4 Zl 3 3 2 2 2 New Jersey... i... 4 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 7 8 10 New York. ...-:.... 6 10 17 27 34 40 34 33 31 33 34 34 37 North Carolina..... 5 10 12 13 13 13 9 8 7 8 9 9 10 North Dakota: salts aba oo oh so ailo i Sven El Saal vo den Sesion se i Seedy I 1 2 Ohjo.. mr mr mh es 1 6 14 19 21 21 19 20 21 21 21 OkIahoma .. 0. he Seat coi fee een salons [oisnicic alin ote miainif ioe wuin [s n'nie 55 juin Sie a lniete a «fain omin]sieieeldle 5 OT CSO jai eisneirinasinioimifrisisinioss aitisinsis fordinivipiel)ists siuicisiliaidivtutet nf isdingessiss ieteinivis I I 1 I 2 2 Pennsylvania ...... 8 13 18 23 26 28 24 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 7 6 4 5 7 ; 7 SOUT Dalton. 1.0 ole ces inis gee oiateds amas Sind iof nnieie she steTepeiied ie veresvisl hl wees: sou: ws shes statu tis nse oie” sifbie: winkabs 2 2 2 TENNEEVEL. uve vei eivinlineiese I 3 6 9 13 II 10 8 10 10 10 10 TEXAS 0 ono eis ate slepuiainienin) oie s oie sila taisie s ofninieth po [5s Bataleon 2 2 4 6 II 13 16 DEE POR Ber gat IB Al Re re WAS BE I Se RR PRA UR SE 1 SL We GA RO SR ea I BRE I I VEEMONE sfc cris eiais f= vmanie = 2 4 6 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 Virginia. =o 0A 10 19 22 23 22 21 15 13 II 9 10 10 10 Washington. loin lo sal. dod bila ol Lg dle ove deen io tama omen fe 22 vs ¥ 2 3 WES VITGUIIa vols fies oe So vie fh aren aif sios esa buints doi vor ona) wit oe oof otal 20 oi fre oie ie 3 4 4 5 Wisconsin. ..... loeb de LL Le 2 3 6,3 9 10 II Wyoemingaso. coi dhe. oe idan nin fe a fe el ed I I I Total ...o 00. 65 106-0 142% 186 V 213 | 242% 232 |: 237 243 | 2093 . 332 {i 357 391 The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated and is included in the above table: First—Tenmnessee, I. Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; I,ouisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, I. Second—Ohio, 1. Third—Alabama, 1; Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Sixth—California, 2; Florida, 1; Iowa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Seventh—Massachusetts, 1; Minne- sota, 2; Oregon, I. Ohio, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Rhode Island, 1; Vermont, 1. Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; New Hampshire, 1; New York, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Tennessee, 1; Ver- mont, 1. Tenth—Idaho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota, 1; South Dakota, 2; Washington, 1; Wyom- ng, 1. Rleventh—Utah, 1. Twelfth—Oklahoma, 5. Eighth—Illinois, 1; Iowa, 1; Kentucky, 1; Minnesota, 1; Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1; Ninth—Alabama, 1; Colorado, 1; Florida, 1; SESSIONS OF CONGRESS. 147 Congress. Se Date of beginning. | Date of adjournment. sy 1 President pro tempore of the Senate. Speaker of the House of Representatives. Bist ooo sensl ad Mar. 4,:7780, . ox. e. Sept. 29,1789... van 210 [3 John Langdon, of New Hampshire........ Frederick A. Muhlenburg, of Pennsylvania, Zo Jan: 4, 1700 ve evevnes AU. 12, 1700 + c/s oie» sieie RN BL Cs Cs ST ARR 3 cDec,; 6, 1700. vv vasa Mar. 3, 1701 coor. BB rr iy PTR rT er y Second... ce coness of BL:I0Oets 24, OT vs tea ve May 8S 1792) 5. She 197 | Richard Henry Lee, of Virginia............ Jonathan Trumbull, of Connecticut. 2 | "NOV. 5, 17925 +c x sis MAT. 2 T7070 ren ee TET EEE SEE eT i A I Ee Third... .erodeaeie Ti Dec: 2, 1703 irmivsineis JUNE 9, 1700+ csivsieionin 190 | Ralph Izard, of South Carolina............. Frederick A. Muhlenburg, of Pennsylvania, 2. NOV, 3.81704 . | « edie ore Mar. 3 E705 es vue 121 | Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire.... Pournth... cio. 1 SDee: 7, 2785 cn «soe sete Jime 1, 1706 «00s. 177 | Henry Tazewell, of Virginia ............... Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. 2 DeC: 550706 cairns MAT. 3, 3707 sie cs nisie sion nr Sr A SA BIE ora ae. 12 May 35; 1707 «serves July 10,1707 «. oc sesmnis 57 | William Bingham, of Pennsylvania........ Do. NOV. 18-1797. « 4... July 16, 1798. cece vs. 246 | William Bradford, of Rhode Island ........ OQ S2liDec, 3, T708 As oeveines Mar. 3, 1700. cscs seis sie 91 | John Iawrence, of New York .............. George Dent, of Maryland, pro tempore. S . | Jacob Read, of South Carolina.............. George Dent, of Maryland. S Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts.... S Sheth. 5 ee TE ["Dee.'2, 1700.5... 5. 3.5 May 14,1800 cas eesees. 164 | Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire....| Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts. ISN 21 Nov. T7, 18000. s i:a'vie sie EL EE eT YT ed RO 107 "Uriah Fracy,;of- Connecticut. .. nro, > James Hillhouse, of Connecticut............ =. John E. Howard, of Maryland ............. S Seventh ........0. 1 | Dec. 7, 1801 May 3,97502 seicemraniveis 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of Georgia ............. Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina. S 2 | Dec. 6, 1802 Mar. 3,803 ies vote te via 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont........... 8, Bighth............ A 1EOct. 17,17803 . + +'vc sein Mar. 27,3804 ci cuiv 163 | John Brown, of Kentucky..........:....... Do. 2 | NOV.:5,3804 . coves nies MAY. 3.1805. civ vrnne 119 | Jesse Franklin, of North Carolina ......... no) Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee ...... ee. Sn. Ninth... 0 1-2 Dec. 2,805 cr + «oven: Apr. 2v 1806. te. us 141 | Samuel Smith, of Maryland .......c......... Do. 8 Zs DeC. Ty T1806. vous res Mat, 3, 1807. consis suis I Me ME RE i i Shes S Tenth oii colis. 1550ct’ 16/1807... .. | ‘Apr. 25, 1808... ....... 182 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont ........... Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts. S 2. Nov. 7, 1808... ..5+ +.» Mar. 3, 1309. icc seinen 117 | John Milledge, of Georgia ......:.cvsuvui... S Bleventh......-... 1:1" May 22,1300... «cass June a8; 1800... .ou. 38 | Andrew Gregg, of Pennsylvania ........... Do. x 2-1:Nov: 27, 1809. «vv May 1,°38700 07 ceed es 156 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... * Sal SDEC. 3, ISTO. « «ase Mar. 3, 3851. Lh gt | John Pope, of Kentucky... i coco tua. Twelfth... oi: A "NOV. 4,38 0 cesses July 6, 1812. ceive 245 | William H. Crawford, of Georgia .......... Henry Clay, of Kentucky. BD AINOV: 2, I8T2 hs ve viii MAT. 3 TS IG nivswarsieriess 1 £2 2 CHEM Se I SO ASL Be PREM oe Pe ‘Thirteenth. ....... 1: May 2451813... eete ANG. 2, 1813. veo bith sle 71 | Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts........ Do. 2 Deec:6,a813........5 Apr, 18, 1874 : ivr -0ne- 134 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... 4 Tangdon Cheeves, of South Carolina. ; 3. Sept. 10,3814 ....... Mar, IB seein 1 BL I Mr SR Le, Fourteenth........ AoC: Ay JOT loo vier soe ADE. 20, T8160: «lesa vs 148 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... Henry Clay, of Kentucky. Ril -Deer2, 9816... ......\0 Mar, 2,087... gz bl wea Bet il eh hon seis Aes TE Pifteenth.......... I= Dec: 5 3817.5. vi Apr. zo, 1318... 5 1... 141 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... Do. 2. Nov.16,1818........ Mar, 3, 1819.» oF fe ere se 108 1 James Barbour, of Virginia... ......... ... Sixteenth .........[ 1 15DeC. 6,51810.i - uric - == May 15, 1320. . J. 5a 162 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina..... ..... Do. 2 (\Nov.'18, 1820...5%.. 5: Moy. 2 1821 #.05 8 58. pi iff CATR alg Sd 8 a Ip Re Fl SRE John W. Taylor, of New York. Seventeenth...... T.Decr 3, 1821.0... 2% May 3 9802.0 5 a 157 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina........... Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia. 2: Dec. za... 5 Mar. 3,:1823. 4. a. en or EE ON er Eighteenth........ 2 Dec: 3,.3823.-.... 0 5 Mayia7,; 1824 ©. oe sie ine 178 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina...........| Henry Clay, of Kentucky. (e () Nineteenth ....... ‘Twentieth ........ Twenty-first ...... Twenty-second ... Twenty-third ..... Twenty-fourth.... Twenty-fifth ...... Twenty-sixth ..... Twenty-seventh .. Twenty-eighth .... Twenty-ninth..... Thirtieth.......... Thirty-first.......- Thirty-second..... Thirty-third ...... Thirty-fourth ..... Thirty-fifth ....... 1 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 ° 0 bd OO QO bd QU bb QO Pt QU Beeb QO bed QO ped 0 pd CO QU bb QO bd GO QO bem 10 Feb QO Feb QO bomb 10 boeb QO posk QD pk 0 Dec. 7, 1840 May 3%, 1343.0. 054. Dec. 6, 1841 Dec. 5, 1842 Dec. 4, 1843 Dec. 2, 1844 Dee. X, 13454. vas Dee. 7, 18464: unis DEC, 6, 1847 i vn vives Dec. a;1848 covers DEC: 3,340.1 + ov vivins Dec. 2, 1850 DRC TIBET. vais wives Dec. 6.518524 0 os Dee. 5.1853. vtiatei Dec, 4,.3854. . avis DEC. 5,41855.5. . 50. hii Aug. 21, 1856... .... Dec. 1, 1856 Dec. 7, 1857 Dec. 6, 1858 Mar. 3, 1835; .. 0. Ln. May 22, 1826... uv sin Mar: 3, 1827. c= tah . May 26,1828... ...... Mar. 3,1820. cee vinin May, 371, 1830. ++: conse Mar. 3, 783%. enwe sin Julyi16, 1832 icv vinsn Mar. 2, 1833. «x sr erin June 30,7834. +. cavnin Mar. 2, 1835. 5. cn, Oct. 36, 3887s «502i nits July 0, 283805 «i china Mar: 53038300... son July 3%, 3840. «init nvis Mar. 3, IAT. «vivniiiis Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee........ George Poindexter, of Mississippi ......... Jom Tyler, of Virginia: .. oo. too insieinas a Ra l0 Sse enn A aR atin an AR SRS RIA RT a Charles E. Stuart, of Michigan ............. James M. Mason, of Virginia ........ a Benjamin Fitzpatrick, of Alabama ......... Siew DN John W. Taylor, of New York. Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, Do. Do. Do. 3 6 John Bell, of Tennessee. James K. Polk, of Tennessee, Do. Robert M. T. Hunter, of Virginia, John White, of Kentucky. John W. Jones, of Virginia. John W. Davis, of Indiana. Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts. Howell Cobb, of Georgia. Linn Boyd, of Kentucky. Do. Nathaniel P. Banks, of Massachusetts. James I,. Orr, of South Carolina. appears in several sessions and in others none were chosen. Since Mar. 12, 18go, they have served until ‘the Senate otherwise ordered.” 2 The Constitution (Art. I, sec. 4) provided that the Congress should assemble Mar. 4, 1789,’and thereafter ‘‘in every year * * December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.” Up to, and including, May 20, 1820, eighteen acts were passed providin Since that year Congress has met regularly on the first Monday in December. other days in the year. New York; subsequently, until the second session of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting place; since then Congress has convened in Washington. 8 Hlected to count the vote for President and Vice-President, which was done Apr. 6, 1789, a quorum of the Senate then appearing for the first time, John Adams, Vice President, appeared Apr. 21, 1789, and took his seat as President of the Senate. 4 Klected Speaker, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814. 5Flected Speaker Nov. 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Oct. 28, 1820. 6 Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned. * on the first Monday in for the meeting of Congress on The first and second sessions of the First Congress were held in "ssa4buo?) fo suoissag C1 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued. i, [@p} Congress. Ses. Date of beginning. | Date of adjournment. fenen President pro tempore of the Senate. Speaker of the House of Representatives. ‘Thirty-sixth ...... Dec. is “185g. 0 June 2s, 1860... .....5. 202 | Benjamin Fitzpatrick, of Alabama......... William Pennington, of New Jersey. 2 [ Dee.-z, 1360... Mar, 3 1861. ese ans 03 1.0% GU Ar A edd png Dida tin ans Jesse D. Bright of Indiana... ec. ... chee : Solomon Foot, PE Vermont oe a a ‘Thirty-seventh....! 1 | July 4, 186r......... ANC. 6 P1367, aes I pe 0 PERL pet Re hit RD anes Lod ..| Galusha A. Grow, of Pennsylvania. ® "Dec. z, 1367, >. CL July 17, 18362........., 228 Ye i nid te indie Si SUE Tn Loic ie tel adn 3 © Dec. r,~1862%.0. 55000, MAT. 3, 38063 ccc eh vse of foie 5 minal A SE pal GAN DB yo Thirty-eighth ..... 1 Dec..7,3863 vu July 4,:3864 i ieiie.isn 200 |... er I Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana. 2 Dec. 5.3864 -. viva vil Mar. 3; 1865... csv. vne QO! [suis1es Os Se Be on Sai ats a oe Glia 4 4 SrA ‘Thirty-ninth...... 1 {i Dec. 43865... July 28,1860... 0... ve 237 | Lafayette S. Foster, of Connecticut... ..... Do. 2 | Dee. 3, 18506... ivi Mar. 2, "1867 SARs. 92 (Benjamin F. Wade, of Ohio)....:....:..i..; 50 Bortieth. ves vevovie XT LW Mar. 4, 1867... .cvve Dec. 2, 1867 ...... 0... TA RR EO Se I SLE Do. =) 2 2 Dec.i2,1867 «vu nns Nov. 10, i868.......... BAB J cit rar it aa eB eS SI Sheela so aR BE 4a 4 BE Ra : 3 31: Dec.i7,1868 .. vn fp Mar. 23,3860: . sais uih rN PE DE Cnt ea Rs 3 Theodore M. Pomeroy, of New York. Q Forty-first......... 1 Mar. 4; 1860...000, Apr. 22,1869... 0h. 37 | Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island ....... James G. Blaine, of Maine. x 2 |: Dec. 61860: «iv L . July:3s,3870..... 5... 2220: 0 HOV: sho i SR ES rear he dd a Es SRT “ St |v Dec. 8.13870: -=n ihn Mata 1871: csi avin rea aR Fes & Forty-second. .....| 1 |" Mar.4, 1877. «seni. May 27, BFL. ev viics 47 Tens B. Athens, of Rhode Island Do. S° 2 Iv Dec.i4, 3871. woah June 10,3872... hl ty CH EE UE I Se ar a A He EE RE SS = 8 I"Dec..2, 1872. «viii. Mar, 3, 1873. vais Of |...s. Ey 2 Sh se SU a Ce a SS EE AE Q Forty-third .......| 1 | ‘Dec 1/1873... ..+-.. June 23, 1874. vc. 0 vvn 204 | Matthew H. Carpenter, of Wisconsin...... Do. = 2 (YDECH 7, ES hve vs MAT. 3, 1875. + ve sans 87... Fe a I REE R P J Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island....... = Forty-fourth ......| 1 [(Dec.i6, 1878... uss Aug. 15, 1876... iss 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan ............ 4 Michael C. Kerr, of Indiana. N' 5 Samuel S. Cox, of New York, pro ROLE. 6 Milton Sayler, "of Ohio, pro tempore. RY Dec. 4, 1876. ..iviis. Mar, 3, 1877. vv isviaains Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. 2 Forty-fifth ........ 1 [LOCt. 35,01877 . vai Dec, 3877... voviis, Do. < 2 [1DECABUTSTT ini va ine June 20, 878... ivi cia. . Sr Dee. 12, I878 viii. Mar. 3,:3870.5 «. civiin Forty-sixth........ 1. | Mar. 18, 1879. ....5.. Jy x, X879 «voi Do. Bi. Dee. 1,1879 «cia sik June 36,1880. ... 3; "Dee. 6,1880 ....::440 Mar. 3,388... Le. Forty-seventh..... x Dec. 5, I88F «vi: isi Aug. 8,1883.....c...0. 247 | Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware ........... J. Warren Keifer, of Ohio. David Davis. of IIHNeis. ..... icv vu sieviins 2 | Dec. 4, 1882 90 | George F. Edmunds, of Vermont ......... Forty-eighth...... 1 | Dec. 3,1883 218) aves ola gran atid spe John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 1, 1884 el Se Er EE : Forty-ninth ....... 1 | Dec. 7, 1885 242 John Sherman, of Ohio... .....einfenpeets sis John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 6, 1886 88 | John J. Ingalls, Ol Kansas =... cieieciiacias Wiftieth'.... c.o.d 1 | Dec. 5, 1887 Fo el ee SS Sn BI RY epi] Do. 2 [i Dee. 3,;1888 ..:..... OT [ois lels slau a BITE A eos AU. 5, T0000 sls sie sineinse 144 oY VA NR Sn BEC Ra SR A Do. 2 1 Dec.i6, 19007... 555 June 25,1910... ie - -. 20250 QO x vr ote ervion o ael Beste reileit viv) wa slate nckldinse Stew ive Do. S34. Dec, 5, 10107"... ... = MAY, 3, I9IL. vs. Soils I Fi Tr CR Rall GT ie SR Do. Sixty-second ...... AV ADL 4, 3018.0. 00. BF. melanie ie ue ov wotnR]vre w eels Jomrorers BOT R53 stasis sin 5 abe aR en, VATE IN be ew Champ Clark, of Missouri. 1'There were recesses in this session from Saturday, Mar. 30, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 21. 2There were recesses in this session from Monday, July 27, to Monday, Sept. 21, to Friday, Oct. 6, and to Tuesday, Nov. 10. No business was transacted subsequent to July 27 3 Flected Speaker Mar. 3, 1869, and served one day. 4 Died Aug. 19, 1876. 5 Appointed Speaker pro tempore Feb. 17, May 12, June 19, 6 Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4. 7 Resigned as President pro tempore Apr, 27, I9II, "$s24b10°) [0 SUO01552G ii 148 Congressional Directory. SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE. Year. Date of beginning. Date of adjournment. HA AEE SNE en Briday, Mav. 4.00 i. oi, Friday, Mar. 4. 1793 0 ran Monday, Mar. 4... i... Monday, Mar. 4. A Monday, June 3... ........... Friday, June 26. L797: 5. alt Saturday, Mar. 4.............. Saturday, Mar. 4. E705. or anion Tuesday, July17...... 2. ....... Thursday, July 19. BOT. i a Wednesday, Mar. 4 .......... Thursday, Mar. 5. 0g aan Saturday, Mar. 4.......0 0.0. Tuesday, Mar. 7. HE a Friday, Mar. A. x... oie Wednesday, Mar. g. 12g. cs a Wednesday, Mar. 4 .-......... Tuesday, Mar. 17. W887. a Saturday, Mar. 4... ........... Friday, Mar. 10. RR RE ET Thursday, Mar, 4... i001. Monday, Mar. 15. 845. Tuesday Mar. 4.0. 0. oii Thursday, Mar. 20. 40... Monday, Mar. 56.5... aie. os Friday, Mar. 23. IS5T Tuesday, Mar iq Jo aah Thursday, Mar. 13. 1850 a Briday, Mar.d. oo oni. cos Monday, Apr. 11. 1857 a a Wednesday, Mar. 4........... Saturday, Mar. 14. 858. a Tuesday, June 15-......:...... Wednesday, June 16. IS50: nis Brlday, May. 40000 sino Thursday, Mar. 10. - 1360.5 ci. iin, an Tuesday, Tune 26............. Thursday, June 28. E861... Monday, Mar. 4............... Thursday, Mar. 28. E865. ha ti Wednesday, Mar. 4........... Saturday, Mar. 14. E865... aon Saturday, Mar. 4. .... rene Saturday, Mar. 11. X86. Monday, Apr. XT... a. Saturday, Apr. 20. 1860: a Monday, Apr. I2:. ..covn iis Thursday, Apr. 22. IBY a Wednesday, May 1o........... Saturday, May 27. EL BR Tuesday, Mar. 4..: ....... 5... Wednesday, Mar. 26. AR Se Friday, Mar. 5....-.. 0.0... Wednesday, Mar. 24. Et A SR Monday, Mar. 5.........5 Saturday, Mar. 17. Th a Friday, Mar, 4... vibes. Friday, May 20. Monday; Oct Yo... nk. Saturday, Oct. 29. RE pS CI Wednesday, Mar. 4.......:..; Thursday, Apr. 2. 188g Monday, Mar. 4... .......05. Tuesday, Apr. 2. 1808. io aa Saturday, Mar. 4... ... nu. Friday, Apr. 14. a Thursday, Mar, 4... 0. ios Wednesday, Mar. 10. ROOTS Monday, Mar. 4............x. Saturday, Mar. 9. nny Shel FA Thursday, Mar, 5... Lo. nl: Thursday, Mar. 19. TOO iti via ina iri Saturday, Mar, 4... ..... ... Saturday, Mar. 18. 3 a Thursday, Mar. 4 cis Saturday, Mar. 6. 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, 1804. : 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, 1005. v Presidents and Vice Presidents. 149 PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CON- GRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS. Presidents. Vice Presidents. Service. Congresses. George Washington ........ ohn Adams........... ....| Apr. 30,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1,2,3,4 John Adams. >. 0... homas Jefferson ......... Mar. 4,1797-Mar. 3, 1801 , 6. Thomas Jefferson........... Aaron Bune, Sok, cL ann Mar. 4,18o1-Mar. 3,1805 | 7,8. Thomas Jefferson........:..| George Clinton.... ........ Mar. 4,1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9, 10. James Madison ............. George Sinton (died Apr. | Mar. 4,1809-Mar. 3,1813 | II,12 20, 1812). James Madison ............. lores San (died Nov. | Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 32,1817 | 13,14. 23, 1814). James MONITOR ..on.iavvvsesvie Daniel D. Tompkins....... Mar. 4,1817-Mar. 3,1825 | 15,16, 17, 18. John Quincy Adams........ John €. Calhoun. ........... Mar. 4,1825-Mar. 3,1829 | 19,20. Andrew Jackson ............ John C. Calhoun (resigned | Mar. 4, 1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 2I, 22. Dec. 28, to become U. S. Senator). Andrew Jackson.......)..... Martin Van Buren......... Mar. 4,1833-Mar. 3,1837 | 23,24 Martin Van Buren .......... Richard M. Johnson....... Mar. 4,1837-Mar. 3,1841 | 25,26 William Henry Harrison ...| John Tyler. ............... Mar. 4,1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27. JORMRYIen. fo fn ne bh i heen vate Apr. 6,1841-Mar. 3,1845 | 27,28 James XK, Polk"... 0.000 George M, Dallas. .......... Mar. 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29,30 Zachary Taylor. .L L000, Millard Fillmore .......... Mar. 5,1849-July 9.1850 | 3I. MillatdBillmore...o. oh ho Sida dann s. E July 10,1850-Mar. 3,18s3 | 31,32. Franklin Pierce............. William B. King (died | Mar. 4,1853-Mar. 3,1857 | 33,34. Apr. 18, 1853). : James Buchanan............ John C. Breckenridge ..... Mar. 4, 1857-Mar. 3, 1861 | 35, 36 Abraham Lincoln... ........ Hannibal Hamlin.......... Mar. 4, 1861-Mar. 3, 1865 | 37,38 Abraham Yjincoln........... Andrew Johnson .......... Mar. 4, 1865-Apr. 15, 1865 | 39. Andrew Johmson. Zao. J IB Fn Lu ss Se ina Apr. 15, 1865-Mar. 3, 1869 | 39, 40 Ulysses S. Grant... ....... Schuyler Colfax ulin. Mar. 4, 1869-Mar. 3, 1873 | 41,42. Ulysses'S. Grant. ........... Henry Wilson (died Nov. | Mar. 4, 1873-Mar. 3, 1877 | 43,44 22, 1875). Rutherford B. Hayes ....... William A. Wheeler....... Mar. 4, 1877-Mar. 3, 1881 | 45,46 James A. Garfield Chester A.tArthur)......... Mar. 4, 1881-Sept.19, 1881 | 47. Chester A. ATTINE cue. oh il vets seen ova vans aon abe lit Sept. 20, 1881-Mar 3, 1885 | 47, 48 Grover Cleveland Thomas A. Hendricks | Mar. 4,1885-Mar. 3, 1889 | 49, 50 : (died Nov. 25, 18853). Benjamin Harrison......... Yevi P. Morton........ 0... Mar. 4,1889-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52 Grover Cleveland........... Adlai E. Stevenson ........ Mar. 4,1893-Mar. 3,1897 | 53, 54. William McKinley ......... Garret A. Hobart (died | Mar. 4,1897-Mar. 3,190I | 55, 56. Nov. 21, 1899). William McKinley ........ Theodore Roosevelt........ Mar. 4, 1901-Sept. 14, 1901 | 57. heodore ROGSEVEIL: hr: va [oh sine os his sivisrs wisn s25% waitin are = Sept. 14, 1901-Mar. 3,1905 | 57, 58 Theodore Roosevelt ........ Charles W. Fairbanks..... Mar 4, 1905-Mar. 3, 1909 | 59, 60 William EL Taft oil, 00 James’S.'Sherman......... Mar. 4, 19og—- 61, 62 150 Congressional Directory. COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Shelby M. Cullem, of Illinois. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Agriculture and Forestry. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. George C. Perkins, of California. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. William Iorimer, of Illinois. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina, Le Roy Percy, of Mississippi. Joseph M. Terrell, of Georgia. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Appropriations. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. George C. Perkins, of California. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Reed Smoot, of Utah. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. George Peabody Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Joseph IL. Bristow, of Kansas. : James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Canadian Relations. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Elihu Root, of New York. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. The Census. Robert M. Ia Follette, of Wisconsin. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Henry du Pont, of Delaware. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Civil Service and Retvenchment. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Reed Smoot, of Utah. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Robert I,, Owen, of Oklahoma. Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. Henry IL. Myers, of Montana. Senate Committees. : I51 Claims. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Joseph I. Bristow, of Kansas. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Wesley I,. Jones, of Washington. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. Coast and Insular Survey. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. William P. Frye, of Maine. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. John D. Works, of California. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Joseph M. Terrell, of Georgia. Coast Defenses. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Flihu Root, of New York. John D. Works, of California. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Joseph M. Terrell, of Georgia. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. Commerce. William P. Frye, of Maine. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. George C. Perkins, of California. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire, Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Le Roy Percy, of Mississippi. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Conservation of National Resources. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina, John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Cuban Relations. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. ' James A. O'Gorman, of New York. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Departments. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire, 152 Congressional Directory. District of Columbia. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. William Lorimer, of Illinois. John D. Works, of California. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Education and Labor. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. Engrossed Bills. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. E nrolled Bills. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. | Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. George C. Perkins, of California. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Expenditures in the Department of the Interior. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. William P. Frye, of Maine. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. George KE. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Expenditures in the Department of the Navy. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Expenditures in the Lost Office Department. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. William KE. Chilton, of West Virginia. Expenditures in the Department of State. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Le Roy Percy, of Mississippi. Senate Committees. 153 Expenditures in the Department of the Treasury. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. John D. Works, of California. Expenditures in the John D. Works, of California. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Tuke Lea, of Tennessee. Department of War. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Finance. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. "Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. FF. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. William J. Stone, of Missouri. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Fisheries. Wesley 1. Jones, of Washington. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. George C. Perkins, of California. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. John:R. Thornton, of Louisiana. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Foreign Relations. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. William P. Frye, of Maine. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Elihu Root, of New York. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. George Sutherland, of Utah. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Forest Reservations and George P. McLean, of Connecticut. George C. Perkins, of California. - Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. the Protection of Game. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Robert I. Taylor, of Tennessee. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Geological Survey. Robert L,. Taylor, of Tennessee. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. Immigration. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. ° Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Le Roy Percy, of Mississippi. John W. Kern, of Indiana. James A. O’Gorman, of New York. 154 Congressional Directory. Indian Affairs. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. George Sutherland, of Utah. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. George FE. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia, Henry L,.. Myers, of Montana. Indian Depredations. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. Joseph FE. Johnston, of Alabama. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. Le Roy Percy, of Mississippi. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. . Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Industrial Expositions. Elihu Root, of New York. Wesley 1. Jones, of Washington. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. John D. Works, of California. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. : Lée S. Overman, of North Carolina. Robert L. Taylor, of Tennessee. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia, Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Interoceanic Canals. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. George C. Perkins, of California. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Wesley 1. Jones, of Washington. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. Le Roy Percy, of Mississippi. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. James A. O’Gorman, of New York. Interstate Commerce. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina, Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Irrigation and Reclamation of Avid Lands. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. George Sutherland, of Utah. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Wesley I. Jones, of Washington. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. John D. Works, of California. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Henry I,. Myers, of Montana. Senate Committees. 155 Revision of the Laws of the United States (Joint). Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. George Sutherland, of Utah. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Le Roy Percy, of Mississippi. Judiciary. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. George Sutherland, of Utah. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Elihu Root, of New York. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. James A. O’Gorman, of New York. Library. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Elihu Root, of New York. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Manufactures. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. William Lorimer, of Illinois. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Albert B. Cummins, of Towa. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Joseph M. Terrell, of Georgia. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. James A. O'Gorman, of New York. Military Affairs. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. Wesley 1. Jones, of Washington. William T,orimer, of Illinois. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Robert I. Taylor, of Tennessee. George KE. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Mines and Mining. William I,orimer, of Illinois. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. George Sutherland, of Utah. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. Henry IL. Myers, of Montana. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. Robert I, Owen, of Oklahoma. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. Norris Brown, of Nebraska, Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Naval Affairs. George C. Perkins, of California. . Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Moses FE. Clapp, of Minnesota. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina John Walter Smith, of Maryland. John R. Thornton, of Iouisiana, Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. William Lorimer, of Illinois. 156 - Congressional Directory. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Pacific Railroads. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. James A. Reed, of Missouri. William P. Frye, of Maine. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Patents. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. John D. Works, of California. Pens Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. ~ 10nS. Robert I,. Taylor, of Tennessee. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Philippines. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Joseph IL. Bristow, of Kansas. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Joseph EF. Johnston, of Alabama. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Post Offices and Post Roads. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. Frank O. Briggs, of New Jersey. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. William Lorimer, of Illinois. Prin Reed Smoot, of Utah. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Harry A. Richardson, of Delaware. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. Augustus O Bacon, of Georgia. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Robert 1,. Taylor, of Tennessee. Joseph M. Terrell, of Georgia. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. ting. . John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. Private Land Claims. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. William I,orimer, of Illinois. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. Senate Committees. 157 Privileges and Elections. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. George Sutherland, of Utah. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Wesley L,. Jones, of Washington. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. William S. Kenyon, of Towa. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Thomas H. Paynter, of Kentucky. Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Luke Tea, of Tennessee. Public Buildings and Grounds. George Sutherland, of Utah. Francis H. Warren, of Wyoming. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Robert I. Taylor, of Tennessee. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Public Health and National Quarantine. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Public Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Weldon B. Heyburn, of Idaho. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Wesley IL. Jones, of Washington. Simon Guggenheim, of Colorado. John D. Works, of California. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. John D. Works, of California. Lands. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Jeff Davis, of Arkansas. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Henry I,. Myers, of Montana. Railroads. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Robert I. Taylor, of Tennessee. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. Joseph IL. Bristow, of Kansas. Boied Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Revolutionary Claims. William J. Stone, of Missouri. ~ William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Elihu Root, of New York. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Rules. W. Murray Crane, of Massachusetts. Francis FE. Warren, of Wyoming. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. 158 Congressional Directory. Standards, Weights, and Measures. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Robert J. Gamble, of South Dakota. Territories. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Henry E. Burnham, of New Hampshire. Norris Brown, of Nebraska. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. George P. McLean, of Connecticut.’ Robert I,. Owen, of Oklahoma. George FE. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Isidor Rayner, of Maryland. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products, Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Clarence W. Watson, of West Virginia. University of th Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. Murphy J. Foster, of Louisiana. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Joseph M. Terrell, of Georgia. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. George S. Nixon, of Nevada. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. e United States. William P. Frye, of Maine. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Joseph M. Dixon, of Montana. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Woman Suffrage. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama. George P. Wetmore, of Rhode Island. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Jonathan Bourne, jr., of Oregon. Senate Committee Assignments. 159 ASSIGNMENTS OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES. BACON ois ennai . Private Land Claims, chairman. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. Railroads. Rules. Standards, Weights, and Measures. BATUEY. clos ih sie cas Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress, chairman. Census. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Finance. Fisheries. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Privileges and Flections. Rules. BANKHEAD. Ju. Standards, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Coast and Insular Survey. Commerce. Conservation of National Resources. Education and Labor. Post Offices and Post Roads. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. BORAT... vx bids iints Education and Labor, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Foreign Relations. Interoceanic Canals. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Judiciary. Revolutionary Claims. Standards, Weights, and Measures. BOURNE: «i oes vil Post Offices and Post Roads, chairman, Appropriations. Commerce. Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. Railroads. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Woman Suffrage. BRADLEY IV. Liepiinig Expenditures in the Department of Justice, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. Revolutionary Claims. BRANDEGEE. .........-. Interoceanic Canals, chairman. : Indian Depredations. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Judiciary. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Patents. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. 160 Congressional Directory. BRIGGS. .... rE A ALE Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, chairman. Conservation of National Resources. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Fisheries. Geological Survey. Library. ] Military Affairs. z Post Offices and Post Roads. BRISIOW.. .......vcu.nifs Expenditures in the Post Office Department, chairman. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Claims. Interoceanic Canals. Military Affairs. Philippines. Post Offices and Post Roads. Railroads. Territories. ’ BROWN ae Patents, chairman. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Immigration. Indian Affairs. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Pacific Railroads. Pensions. Territories. BRYAN ©, cori oiiimarssa Claims. : Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands. BURNEAM........ ....0 Agriculture and Forestry, chairman. Commerce. Cuban Relations. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Fxecutive De- partments. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Pensions. Territories. BURTON: (80 Shiai on Expenditures in the Treasury Department, chairman. Canadian Relations. Commerce. Engrossed Bills. Foreign Relations. Immigration. Library. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. ' Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. CHAMBERLAIN. ....... Agriculture and Forestry. Expenditures in the Interior Department. indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. Pacific Railroads. Philippines. Public Lands. Territories, Senate Committee Assignments. 167 ConyyoN..... 70h LH «Census, Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Interoceanic Canals. Judiciary. Printing. Revolutionary Claims. CLAPP. Interstate Commerce, chairman. Cuban Relations. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Indian Affairs. Naval Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Privileges and Elections. Standards, Weights, and Measures. CLARK of Wyoming..... Judiciary, chairman. Conservation of National Resources. Finance. Public Lands. . Railroads. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. CLARKE of Arkansas.... Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments, chairman. Audit and Control the Contingent Fxpenses of the Senate. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Joint Committee on Revision of the Laws of the United States. Military Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. CRANE. ....0vcs cians Rules, chairman. Coast Defenses. Cuban Relations. Industrial Expositions. Interstate Commerce. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Health and National Quarantine. CRAWERORD,.....\ cu. --. Claims, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Indian Depredations. Interoceanic Canals. Philippines. Public Health and National Quarantine. CULBERSON........ davies Public Health and National Quarantine, chairman. Appropriations. Coast and Insular Survey. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Judiciary. Public Buildings and Grounds. BULLOM.. «oo ove davis, Foreign Relations, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Coast and Insular Survey. _ Expenditures in the War Department. Finance. Interstate Commerce. 162 Congressional Directory. CUMMINS... Civil Service and Retrenchment, sheirman, Canadian Relations. Census. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. Library. Manufactures. Rules. University of the United States. CURBIS: ©. 5... naa Coast Defenses, chairman. * Appropriations. Cuban Relations. District of Columbia. Fisheries. Indian Affairs. Indian Depredations. Pensions. University of the United States. DAVIS. aaa Mississippi River and its Tributaries, chairman. Claims. Coast and Insular Survey. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Immigration. Indian Affairs. Indian Depredations. * Private Land Claims. Public Lands. DILLINGHAM. ,- cs Privileges and Elections, chairman. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Conservation of National Resources. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Navy Department, Immigration. Judiciary. University of the United States. DIXON, oe s Lo Conservation of National Resources, chairman. Appropriations. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Indian Affairs. Indian Depredations. Military Affairs. Public Lands. University of the United States. Dy PONE... aad Military Affairs, chairman. Census. Coast Defenses. Education and Labor. Expenditures in the War Department. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Woman Suffrage. BURTCHER ...ochsaiann Commerce. Fisheries. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Philippines. Printing. Privileges and Elections. Public Health and National Quarantine. FOSTER ..... GALLINGER . GRONNA .... GUGGENHEIM HEVYBURN ... Senate Committee Assignments. 163 ER el Transportation and Sale of Meat Products, chairman. Appropriations. Canadian Relations. Coast Defenses. Enrolled Bills. Expenditures in the War Department. Interstate Commerce. Military Affairs. University of the United States. ek aa lh Commerce, chairman. Coast and Insular Survey. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Foreign Relations. Pacific Railroads. University of the United States. ST District of Columbia, chairman. Appropriations. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Finance. Printing. Rules. Sere haha Indian Affairs, chairman. : Appropriations. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. Standards, Weights, and Measures. na Railroads, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Canadian Relations. , ; Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Immigration. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Patents. Pensions. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. EA Expenditures in the Navy Department, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Conservation of National Resources. Enrolled Bills. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Immigration. Industrial Expositions. Private Land Claims. Public Health and National Quarantine. / wb AR IT a0 Philippines, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Census Conservation of National Resources. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. - Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands. en FR] Manufactures, chairman. Joint Committee on Revision of the Laws of the United States, chairman. Finance. Mines and Mining. Philippines. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands. 84259°—62-1—IST ED——1I2 4 | 1 | i A i 164 HPICHCOCK: «ov Soil. JoHNSON of Maine. ..... JouNSTON of Alabama .. TA BOYIRIIE ... ooisioiinis Congressional Directory. Foreign Relations. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Military Affairs. Philippines. Territories. Expenditures in the War Department. Finance. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Territories. University of the United States, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. District of Columbia. Indian Depredations. Interoceanic Canals. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Philippines. Privileges and Elections. Woman Suffrage. Fisheries, chairman. Claims. Conservation of National Resources. District of Columbia. Industrial Expositions. Interoceanic Canals. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Public Lands. Expenditures in the Department of State, chairman. Cuban Relations. District of Columbia. Education and Labor. Geological Survey. Patents. Printing. Privileges and Elections. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments. Finance. Immigration. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Privileges and Elections. Census, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Department of State. Finance. Indian Affairs. ® Manufactures. Agriculture and Forestry. Conservation of National Resources. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Treasury Department, Privileges and Elections. Lippitt LORIMER. . McCUMBER MCLEAN Senate Committee Assignments. MARTIN of Virginia..... MARTINE of New Jersey. MYERS 165 Expenditures “in the Department of Agriculture, chairman. Census. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Indian Depredations. Interstate Commerce. Philippines. Public Health and National Quarantine. Territories. Immigration, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Engrossed Bills. Finance. Foreign Relations. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Naval Affairs. Philippines. Mines and Mining, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. District of Columbia. Manufactures. Military Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Post Offices and Post Roads. Private Land Claims. Pensions, chairman. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Finance. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Pacific Railroads. Railroads. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Forest Reservations and the Protection of chairman. Canadian Relations. Census. . Claims. Education and Labor. Manufactures. Philippines. Territories. Appropriations. | Claims. Commerce. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Claims. Coast Defenses. Education and Labor. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Mines and Mining. Public Lands, Game, 166 NBESON ui... . - ects: NEWILANDS ... ....ovv. ods O'COBRMAN ...... coud. OI IVR veo a OVERMAN... i Congressional Directory. Public Lands, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Commerce. Judiciary. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Railroads. Rules. Territories. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia, chairman. Commerce. Conservation of National Resources. Industrial Expositions. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Library. Public Lands. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Iands, chairman. Appropriations. Coast Defenses. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Interstate Commerce. Mines and Mining. Philippines. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. Cuban Relations. Immigration. Interoceanic Canals. Judiciary. Manufactures. Canadian Relations, chairman. Claims. Commerce. District of Columbia. Industrial Expositions. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Private Land Claims. Privileges and Elections. Woman Suffrage, chairman. Appropriations. Claims. Conservation of National Resources. Fisheries. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Industrial Expositions. Judiciary. Rules. University of the United States. Pacific Railroads, chairman. Appropriations. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Indian Affairs. Indian Depredations. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Health and National Quarantine. Territories. Senate Committee Assignments. 167 PAYNIER co dedi doin s PENROSE... ici ai Cuban Relations, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. Fducation and Labor. Geological Survey. Indian Affairs. Interoceanic Canals. Naval Affairs. ‘Printing. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service, chairman. Claims. District of Columbia. Industrial Expositions. Judiciary. Philippines. Privileges and Elections. Finance, chairman. Education and Labor. 3 Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Immigration. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Railroads. Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Expenditures in the Department of State. Immigration. Indian Depredations. Interoceanic Canals. Joint Committee on Revision of the Laws of the United States. Naval Affairs, chairman, Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Commerce. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Fisheries. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Interoceanic Canals. Expenditures in the Interior Department, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Census. District of Columbia. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. ' Pensions. Indian Depredations, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Education and Labor. Expenditures in the Dgpartment of Justice. Foreign Relations. Geological Survey. Industrial Expositions. Judiciary. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. RICHARDSON ..ic.uvicnsinis SETVRLY. «vison sis STMMONS «coe ciinin ris SmrrH of Maryland ..... SmrrH of Michigan... ... Congressional Directory. Commerce. Manufactures. Pacific Railroads. Philippines. Public Buildings and Grounds. Railroads. { Pacific Islands and Porto Rico, chairman. Coast and Insular Survey. Conservation of National Resources. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Immigration. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Iands. Post Offices and Post Roads. Printing. Industrial Expositions, chairman. Canadian Relations. Coast Defenses. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. Library. Revolutionary Claims. Census. | Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Education and Labo. Foreign Relations. Library. . Pacific Railroads. Patents. Pensions. Territories. Engrossed Bills, chairman. Coast Defenses. Commerce. ; Cuban Relations. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Finance. Interoceanic Canals. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands, chairman. Appropriations. 7 Canadian Relations. Coast Defenses. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Naval Affairs. Printing. Territories, chairman. . Commerce. SmrrH of South Carolina. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Foreign Relations. Naval Affairs. Pacific Railroads. Private Land Claims. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Conservation of National Resources. Geological Survey. Immigration. Manufactures. Patents. Post Offices and Post Roads. Senate Committee Assignments. 169 SMOOL .\.. ... Jiesiiiadn '. Printing, chairman. Appropriations. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Claims. Finance. Pensions. Public Health and National Quarantine. Public Lands. : STEPHENSON . ... .. chil Enrolled Bills, chairman. Commerce. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Indian Depredations. Industrial Expositions. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Pacific Railroads. Public Buildings and Grounds. SVONE. oar le Revolutionary Claims, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Cuban Relations. Expenditures in the Department of State. Finance. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. SUTHERTIAND Lucha sss Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Foreign Relations. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Joint Committee on Revision of the Laws of the United States. Judiciary. Mines and Mining. Privileges and Elections. SWANSON... - 4.0 me Education and Labor. Industrial Expositions. Library. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. TAYIOR...... PRET vo) Geological Survey, chairman. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Industrial Expositions. Military Affairs. 3 Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Railroads. TT RRRELL as Agriculture and Forestry. Coast and Insular Survey. Coast Defenses. Manufactures. Post Offices and Post Roads. ‘University of the United States. THORNTON. =i. Census. . Fisheries. Interoceanic Canals. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Naval Affairs. . : Private Land Claims. Public Health and National Quarantine. Public Lands. 170 TINT MAN. oostevo insss TOWNSEND J... «osnivaie ins WARREN. . cians WAGON... aia, NWETMORE......cnnsisin Congressional Durectory. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians, chairman. Appropriations. Canadian Relations. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Interstate Commerce. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Coast and Insular Survey, chairman. Census. Claims. Conservation of National Resources. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Interoceanic Canals. Interstate Commerce. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. Appropriations, chairman, Agriculture and Forestry. Expenditures in the Department of State. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rules. Conservation of National Resources. Cuban Relations. Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Mines and Mining. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Public Buildings and Grounds. Railroads. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. Library, chairman. Appropriations. Geological Survey. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. University of the United States. Woman Suffrage. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Finance. Military Affairs. Public Health and National Quarantine. » University of the United States. Expenditures in the War Department, chairman. Coast and Insular Survey. Coast Defenses. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Industrial Expositions. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Patents. Public Health and National Quarantine. Public Lands. House Commattees. 171 COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE. Accounts. James T. Lloyd, of Missouri. John N. Garner, of Texas. John C. Floyd, of Arkansas. Charles V. Fornes, of New York. James P. Iatta, of Nebraska. S. A. Roddenbery, of Georgia. Charles C. Carlin, of Virginia. Agriculture. John Lamb, of Virginia. Asbury F. Lever, of South Carolina. Jack Beall, of Texas. Augustus O. Stanley, of Kentucky. Gordon Lee, of Georgia. Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., of Mississippi. J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama. James T. McDermott, of Illinois. Robert C. Wickliffe, of Iouisiana. John A. Maguire, of Nebraska. George W. Kipp, of Pennsylvania. John J. Whitacre, of Ohio. Charles A. Talcott, of New York. Thomas 1,. Rubey, of Missouri. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., of Mississippi. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. A. W. Gregg, of Texas, Charles G. Edwards, of Georgia. W. B. Francis, of Ohio. : Robert E. Lee, of Pennsylvania. Charles Bennett Smith, of New York. - James A. Hughes, of West Virginia. Frank D. Currier, of New Hampshire. William H. Draper, of New York. William W. Griest, of Pennsylvania. Gilbert N. Haugen, of Iowa. | James C. McLaughlin, of Michigan. | Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon. Joseph Howell, of Utah. Louis B. Hanna, of North Dakota. Frank Plumley, of Vermont. James S. Simmons, of New York. William H. Andrews, of New Mexico. Andrew J. Barchfeld, of Pennsylvania. Charles N. Pray, of Montana. Nicholas Longworth, of Ohio. Edwin E. Roberts, of Nevada. Appropriations. John J. Fitzgerald, of New York. Albert S. Burleson, of Texas. Swagar Sherley, of Kentucky. Charles I,. Bartlett, of Georgia. Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina. Robert N. Page, of North Carolina. E. W. Saunders, of Virginia. John G. McHenry, of Pennsylvania. George W. Rauch, of Indiana. Joseph W. Byrns, of Tennessee. Thomas Upton Sisson, of Mississippi. Fugene F. Kinkead, of New Jersey. James M. Cox, of Ohio. William P. Borland, of Missouri. Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. Henry H. Bingham, of Pennsylvania. Frederick H. Gillett, of Massachusetts. Edward L. Taylor, jr., of Ohio. George R. Malby, of New York. John W. Dwight, of New York. James W, Good, of Iowa. “~ Arséne P. Pujo, of Louisiana. 172 Congressional Directory. Carter Glass, of Virginia. Joshua F. C. Talbott, of Maryland. George W. Taylor, of Alabama. John M. Moore, of Texas. James P. Latta, of Nebraska. Charles A. Korbly, of Indiana. William G. Brown, of West Virginia. R. J. Bulkley, of Ohio. Robert I. Doughton, of North Carolina. Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi. James A. Daugherty, of Missouri. John Joseph Kindred, of New York. James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina. Banking and Currency. | Edward B. Vreeland, of New York. Henry McMorran, of Michigan. George D. McCreary, of Pennsylvania. Everis A. Hayes, of California. James McKinney, of Illinois. Frank E. Guernsey, of Maine. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. Census. William C. Houston, of Tennessee. John H. Small, of North Carolina. Thomas M. Bell, of Georgia. John M. Moore, of Texas. Harvey Helm, of Kentucky. John H. Rothermel, of Pennsylvania. Cyrus Cline, of Indiana. Thomas Gallagher, of Illinois. Joseph J. Russell, of Missouri. E. E. Holland, of Virginia. Edgar D. Crumpacker, of Indiana. James A. Hughes, of West Virginia. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. William D. Stephens, of California. Thomas S. Crago, of Pennsylvania. A. C. Mitchell, of Kansas. Claims. Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina. John A. Maguire, of Nebraska. Martin Dies, of Texas. James C. Cantrill, of Kentucky. Clement C. Dickinson, of Missouri. Jefferson M. Levy, of New York. Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi. H. Robert Fowler, of Illinois. W. B. Francis, of Ohio. Charles A. Lindbergh, of Minnesota. William H. Heald, of Delaware. Frank P. Woods, of Iowa. Luther W. Mott, of New York. A. C. Mitchell, of Kansas. John R. Farr, of Pennsylvania. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia. Daniel J. Riordan, of New York. William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio. Charles C. Carlin, of Virginia. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. George F. Burgess, of Texas. William E. Tuttle, jr., of New Jersey. Michael Donohoe, of Pennsylvania. Thomas 1,. Reilly, of Connecticut. James M. Curley, of Massachusetts. William W. Griest, of Pennsylvania. William H. Heald, of Delaware. Charles A. Lindbergh, of Minnesota. Napoleon B. Thistlewood, of Illinois. Luther W. Mott, of New York, George H. Utter, of Rhode Island. William I,. La Follette, of Washington. Rollin R. Rees, of Kansas. : Jonah K. Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers (Select, Joint). Joshua F. C. Talbott, of Maryland. [ George D. McCreary, of Pennsylvania. District of Columbia. Ben Johnson, of Kentucky. Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina. John H. Rothermel, of Pennsylvania. James A. Hamill, of New Jersey. John A. M. Adair, of Indiana. Carl C. Anderson, of Ohio. Martin Dies, of Texas. William A. Oldfield, of Arkansas. George F. O’Shaunessy, of Rhode Island. Henry George, jr., of New York. Edmund J. Stack, of Illinois. C. O. Lobeck, of Nebraska. William C. Redfield, of New York. George Konig, of Maryland. J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania. Julius Kahn, of California. William J. Cary, of Wisconsin. Cyrus A. Sulloway, of New Hampshire. Leonidas C. Dyer, of Missouri. Henry S. De Forest, of New York. Victor 1. Berger, of Wisconsin. House Co Education. Asbury F. Lever, of South Carolina: Timothy T. Ansberry, of Ohio. John N. Garner, of Texas. Richmond Pearson Hobson, of Alabama. Dudley M. Hughes, of Georgia. Edmund J. Stack, of Illinois. John A. Thayer, of Massachusetts. John Joseph Kindred, of New York. mmattees. 173 James F. Burke, of Pennsylvania. Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota. William J. Cary, of Wisconsin. John R. Farr, of Pennsylvania. Caleb Powers, of Kentucky. Theron Akin, of New York. . Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Michael F. Conry, of New York. R. Turnbull, of Virginia. Richmond Pearson Hobson, of Alabama. R. Y. Thomas, jr., of Kentucky. Charles M. Stedman, of North Carolina. Samuel J. Tribble, of Georgia. Horatio C Claypool, of Ohio. Election Timothy T. Ansberry, of Ohio. Charles G. Edwards, of Georgia. James W. Collier, of Mississippi. J. Harry Covington, of Maryland. E. E. Holland, of Virginia. Thomas G. Patten, of New York. Marlin E. Olmsted, of Pennsylvania. H. Olin Young, of Michigan. C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia. Henry G. Danforth, of New York. Stephen G. Porter, of Pennsylvania. $s No. 7. Solomon F. Prouty, of Iowa. Charles Matthews, of Pennsylvania. Frank B. Willis, of Ohio. Elections No. 2. James A. Hamill, of New Jersey. Charles A. Korbly, of Indiana. Robert F. Broussard, of Louisiana. J. Chas. Linthicum, of Maryland. Alfred G. Allen, of Ohio. H. M. Jacoway, of Arkansas. John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Robert M. Switzer, of Ohio. Sydney Anderson, of Minnesota. Elections No. 3. Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. Charles C. Carlin, of Virginia. Robert C. Wickliffe, of I,ouisiana. John J. Whitacre, of Ohio. John W. Davis, of West Virginia. W. S. Goodwin, of Arkansas. Henry A. Cooper, of Wisconsin. John C. McKenzie, of Illinois. Robert O. Harris, of Massachusetts. Enrolled Bills. Ben Cravens, of Arkansas. Steven B. Ayres, of New York. John A. Thayer, of Massachusetts. John J. Whitacre, of Ohio. Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas. Thomas Parran, of Maryland. Theron Akin, of New York. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Ralph W. Moss, of Indiana. John C. Floyd, of Arkansas. Dannitte H. Mays, of Florida. Robert I, Doughton, of North Carolina. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor. Bird S. McGuire, of Oklahoma. Martin B. Madden, of Illinois. Charles E. Patton, of Pennsylvania, John H. Rothermel, of Pennsylvania. James T. McDermott, of Illinois, James Young, of Texas. Daniel J. McGillicuddy, of Maine. Edwin W. Higgins, of Connecticut. Burton I,. French, of Idaho. Charles H. Sloan, of Nebraska. - Expenditures in the James M. Graham, of Illinois. Scott Ferris, of Oklahoma. Henry George, jr., of New York. Walter I,. Hensley, of Missouri. 174 Congressional Directory. Interior Department. | Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. | Louis B. Hanna, of North Dakota. | Theron E. Catlin, of Missouri. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Jack Beall, of Texas. Robert Bruce Macon, of Arkansas. James C. Cantrill; of Kentucky. William F. Murray, of Massachusetts. Elbert H. Hubbard, of Iowa. Paul Howland, of Ohio. Stephen G. Porter, of Pennsylvania. J Expenditures in the Navy Department. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. Isaac R. Sherwood, of Ohio. Frank FE. Doremus, of Michigan. John M. Faison, of North Carolina. William B. McKinley, of Illinois. Henry McMorran, of Michigan. Clarence B. Miller, of Minnesota. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio. Joshua W. Alexander, of Missouri. William C. Redfield, of New York. Walter I. McCoy, of New Jersey. Richard W. Austin, of Tennessee. C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia. Horace M. Towner, of Iowa. Expenditures in the State Depaviment. Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri. S. H. Dent, jr., of Alabama. S. A. Roddenbery, of Georgia. Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi. Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota. John Q. Tilson, of Connecticut. William W. Wedemeyer, of Michigan. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. William E. Cox, of Indiana. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. C. O. Lobeck, of Nebraska. J. H. Goeke, of Ohio. Ebenezer J. Hill, of Connecticut. H. Olin Young, of Michigan. Dick T. Morgan, of Oklahoma. Expenditures in the War Department. Harvey Helm, of Kentucky. Charles F. Booher, of Missouri. John A. Martin, of Colorado. Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio. Expenditures on Cyrus Cline, of Indiana. Thomas ¥. Konop, of Wisconsin. Fred I,. Blackmon, of Alabama. E. R. Bathrick, of Ohio. . Foreign William Sulzer, of New York. Henry D. Flood, of Virginia. John N. Garner, of Texas. George S. Legare, of South Carolina. William G. Sharp, of Ohio. Cyrus Cline, of Indiana. Jefferson M. Levy, of New York. James M. Curley, of Massachusetts. J. Chas. Linthicum, of Maryland. Robert E. Difenderfer, of Pennsylvania. W. S. Goodwin, of Arkansas. Charles M. Stedman, of North Carolina. Edward W. Townsend, of New Jersey. Byron P. Harrison, of Mississippi. Asher C. Hinds, of Maine. Peter M. Speer, of Pennsylvania. Stanton Warburton, of Washington. Public Buildings. E. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut. John J. Esch, of Wisconsin. James C. McLaughlin, of Michigan. Affairs. David J. Foster, of Vermont. William B. McKinley, of Illinois. Henry A. Cooper, of Wisconsin. Ira W. Wood, of New Jersey. Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri. George W. Fairchild, of New York. N. E. Kendall, of Iowa. House Commattees. 175 Immigration and Naturalization. John I,. Burnett, of Alabama. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. John M. Moore, of Texas. John A. M. Adair, of Indiana. Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. Thomas M. Bell, of Georgia. James M. Curley, of Massachusetts. William G. Brown, of West Virginia. George Konig, of Maryland. Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts. Everis A. Hayes, of California. J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania. Theron FE. Catlin, of Missouri. H. T. Helgesen, of North Dakota. Caleb Powers, of Kentucky. Indian Affairs. John H. Stephens, of Texas. James P. Latta, of Nebraska. Scott Ferris, of Oklahoma. Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma. James M. Gudger, of North Carolina. Atterson W. Rucker, of Colorado. Joseph J. Russell, of Missouri. Thomas F. Konop, of Wisconsin. Charles Bennett Smith, of New York. H. M. Jacoway, of Arkansas. J. D. Post, of Ohio Charles H. Burke, of South Dakota. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. Bird S. McGuire, of Oklahoma. Clarence B. Miller, of Minnesota. Charles E. Patton, of Pennsylvania. Fred S. Jackson, of Kansas. Stanton Warburton, of Washington. H. T. Helgesen, of North Dakota. Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. Industrial Arts and Expositions. J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama. James William Collier, of Mississippi. William A. Cullop, of Indiana. J. Harry Covington, of Maryland. Ben Cravens, of Arkansas. Robert Turnbull, of Virginia. George White, of Ohio. Edwin F. Sweet, of Michigan. John M. Hamilton, of West Virginia. Edwin S. Underhill, of New York. Insular William A. Jones, of Virginia. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. Matthew R. Denver, of Ohio. Charles V. Fornes, of New York. Harvey Helm, of Kentucky. Frank Clark, of Florida. Martin A. Morrison, of Indiana. William A. Dickson, of Mississippi. Clement Cabell Dickinson, of Missouri. James S. Davenport, of Oklahoma. Oscar Callaway, of Texas. Adam B. Littlepage, of West Virginia. William Schley Howard, of Georgia. William F., Murray, of Massachusetts. William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois. Frank P. Woods, of Iowa. Julius Kahn, of California. Charles C. Bowman, of Pennsylvania. William Kent, of California. Affairs. Marlin E. Olmsted, of Pennsylvania. Edgar D. Crumpacker, of Indiana. Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. Elbert H. Hubbard, of Iowa. Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota. Elmer A. Morse, of Wisconsin. Horace M. Towner, of Iowa. Luis M. Rivera, of Porto Rico. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. William C. Adamson, of Georgia. William Richardson, of Alabama. Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee. William R. Smith, of Texas. Robert EF. Broussard, of Louisiana. Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. Courtney Walker Hamlin, of Missouri. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. John A. Martin, of Colorado. J. Harry Covington, of Maryland. William A. Cullop, of Indiana. Samuel W. Gould, of Maine. Frank E. Doremus, of Michigan. J. H. Goeke, of Ohio. Frederick C. Stevens, of Minnesota. John J. Esch, of Wisconsin. Joseph R. Knowland, of California. ‘William M. Calder, of New York. Edward IL. Hamilton, of Michigan. Michael E. Driscoll, of New York. Eben W, Martin, of South Dakota. 176 Congressional Directory. Invalid Pensions. Cyrus A. Sulloway, of New Hampshire. Isaac R. Sherwood, of Ohio. George H. Lindsay, of New York. Carl C. Anderson, of Ohio. John A. M. Adair, of Indiana. Joseph J. Russell, of Missouri. George W. Kipp, of Pennsylvania. H. M. Jacoway, of Arkansas. Michael FE. Burke, of Wisconsin. John M. Hamilton, of West Virginia. W. J. Fields, of Kentucky. Thomas W. Bradley, of New York. Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. Napoleon B. Thistlewood, of Illinois. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. Irrigation of Arid Lands. William R. Smith, of Texas. Arséne P. Pujo, of Louisiana. : J. Edwin Ellerbe, of South Carolina. Atterson W. Rucker, of Colorado. Dudley M. Hughes, of Georgia. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. John E. Raker, of California. Charles B. Smith, of New York. Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska. William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. John E. Andrus, of New York. Edwin E. Roberts, of Nevada. Abraham W. Lafferty, of Oregon. Judiciary. Henry D. Clayton, of Alabama. Robert I,. Henry, of Texas. Edwin Y. Webb, of North Carolina. Charles C. Carlin, of Virginia. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. William C. Houston, of Tennessee. John C. Floyd, of Arkansas. " R. Y. Thomas, jr., of Kentucky. James M. Graham, of Illinois. H. Garland Dupre, of Louisiana. Martin W. Littleton, of New York. Walter I.. McCoy, of New Jersey. John W. Davis, of West Virginia. Daniel J. McGillicuddy, of Maine. William B. Wilson, of Pennsylvania. "Walter I. Hensley, of Missouri. ‘James P. Maher, of New York. Arthur B. Rouse, of Kentucky. David J. Lewis, of Maryland. William Schley Howard, of Georgia. Frank Buchanan, of Illinois. Finly H. Gray, of Indiana. John A. Sterling, of Illinois. Reuben O. Moon, of Pennsylvania. Edwin W. Higgins, of Connecticut. Paul Howland, of Ohio. Frank M. Nye, of Minnesota. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Francis H. Dodds, of Michigan. Labor. | John J. Gardner, of New Jersey. | Edward B. Vreeland, of New York. FE. H. Madison, of Kansas. Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon. J. M. C. Smith, of Michigan. Library. James I. Slayden, of Texas. Edward W. Townsend, of New Jersey. Lynden Evans, of Illinois. Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts. Charles E. Pickett, of Iowa. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Joshua W. Alexander, of Missouri. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. William B. Wilson, of Pennsylvania. Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma. Henry A. Barnhart, of Indiana. James William Collier, of Mississippi. Steven B. Ayres, of New York. John A. Thayer, of Massachusetts. Michael E. Burke, of Wisconsin. Claude U. Stone, of Illinois. James Young, of Texas. J. D. Post, of Ohio. John M. Faison, of North Carolina, William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. William E. Humphrey, of Washington. BE. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut. Asher C. Hinds, of Maine. Stephen G. Porter, of Pennsylvania. William D. Stephens, of California. Thomas Parran, of Maryland. Jonathan N. Langham, of Pennsylvanie. House Commattees. 177 Mileage. Robert E. Lee, of Pennsylvania. Thomas F. Konop, of Wisconsin. Thomas J. Scully, of New Jersey. Charles A. Kennedy, of Iowa. Abraham W. Lafferty, of Oregon. Military Affairs. James Hay, of Virginia. James L. Slayden, of Texas. George W. Gordon, of Tennessee. S. H. Dent, jr., of Alabama. John T. Watkins, of Louisiana. Michael F. Conry, of New York. Dudley M. Hughes, of Georgia. William J. Fields, of Kentucky. David J. Lewis, of Maryland. Edwin F. Sweet, of Michigan. Thomas G. Patten, of New York. I. S. Pepper, of Iowa. Lynden Evans, of Illinois. John M, Hamilton, of West Virginia. George W. Prince, of Illinois. Julius Kahn, of California. James F. Burke, of Pennsylvania. Thomas W. Bradley, of New York. Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas. john Q. Tilson, of Connecticut. Butler Ames, of Massachusetts, James Wickersham, of Alaska, Mines and Mining. Martin D. Foster, of Illinois. William B. Wilson, of Pennsylvania. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. Ralph W. Moss, of Indiana. George White, of Ohio. W. J. Fields, of Kentucky. Curtis H. Gregg, of Pennsylvania. James A. Daugherty, of Missouri. Adam B. Littlepage, of West Virginia. Joseph Howell, of Utah. Charles N. Pray, of Montana. C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia. Robert M. Switzer, of Ohio. Charles Calvin Bowman, of Pennsylvania, Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. Naval Affairs. Lemuel P. Padgett, of Tennessee. A. W. Gregg, of Texas. Joshua F. C. Talbott, of Maryland. Richmond Pearson Hobson, of Alabama. Robert Brucg Macon, of Arkansas. Albert Estopinal, of Louisiana. Daniel J. Riordan, of New York. Robert Turnbull, of Virginia. Samuel J. Tribble, of Georgia. Samuel A. Witherspoon, of Mississippi. Walter I. Hensley, of Missouri. Frank Buchanan, of Illinois. E. R. Bathrick, of Ohio. Robert E. Lee, of Pennsylvania. George Edmund Foss, of Illinois. ‘Henry C. Loudenslager, of New Jersey. Thomas S. Butler, of Pennsylvania. Ernest W. Roberts, of Massachusetts. George Alvin Loud, of Michigan. Arthur 1,. Bates, of Pennsylvania. Arthur W. Kopp, of Wisconsin, Patents. William A. Oldfield, of Arkansas. Martin A. Morrison, of Indiana. Edwin Y. Webb, of North Carolina. Frank Clark, of Florida. Joshua W. Alexander, of Missouri. R. J. Bulkley, of Ohio. Martin W. Littleton, of New York. Oscar Callaway, of Texas. Samuel A, Witherspoon, of Mississippi. Frank D. Currier, of New Hampshire. E. Stevens Henry, of Connecticut. William W. Wilson, of Illinois. Irvine I,. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. William H. Wilder, of Massachusetts. 178 ge Congressional Directory. Pensions. William Richardson, of Alabama. William A. Dickson, of Mississippi. Daniel A. Driscoll, of New York. Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina. Frank E. Wilson, of New York. Atterson W. Rucker, of Colorado. Finly H. Gray, of Indiana. George White, of Ohio. Robert E. Difenderfer, of Pesmeylvania Ira W. Wood, of New Jersey. Sam R. Sells, of Tennessee. Rollin R. Rees, of Kansas. Thomas S. Crago, of Pennsylvania. George H. Utter, of Rhode Island. Sydney Anderson, of Minnesota. Post Office and Post Roads. John A. Moon, of Tennessee. David E. Finley, of South Carolina. James T. Lloyd, of Missouri. Thomas M. Bell, of Georgia. William E. Cox, of Indiana. Frank E. Wilson, of New York. Dannitte H. Mays, of Florida. William E. Tuttle, jr., of New Jersey. Arthur B. Rouse, of Kentucky. H. Robert Fowler, of Illinois. Fred 1,. Blackmon, of Alabama. Curtis H. Gregg, of Pennsylvania. Alfred G. Allen, of Ohio. Thomas I. Reilly, of Connecticut. John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts. John J. Gardner, of New Jersey. Victor Murdock, of Kansas. Samuel W. Smith, of Michigan. Daniel F. Lafean, of Pennsylvania. Halvor Steenerson, of Minnesota. Martin B. Madden, of Illinois. Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. Printing. David E. Finley, of South Carolina. Henry A. Barnhart, of Indiana. | Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania. Public Buildings and Grounds. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. John I,. Burnett, of Alabama. Frank Clark, of Florida. James C. Cantrill, of Kentucky. S. A. Roddenbery, of Georgia. Carter Glass, of Virginia. William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio. Henry A. Barnhart, of Indiana. James M. Gudger, of North Carolina. Edwin S. Underhill, of New York. John E. Andrus, of New York. Richard W. Austin, of Tennessee. John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Burton I,. French, of Idaho. Horace M. Towner, of Iowa. Ira C. Copley, of Illinois. Jesse I,. Hartman, of Pennsylvania. Public Lands. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. James M. Graham, of Illinois. Scott Ferris, of Oklahoma. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. Jack Beall, of Texas. Albert Estopinal, of Touisiana. S. H. Dent, jr., of Alabama. John E. Raker, of California. Hannibal I,. Godwin, of North Carolina. Horatio C. Claypool, of Ohio. William F. Murray, of Massachusetts. James P. Maher, of New York. Thomas I,. Rubey, of Missouri. Henry George, jr., of New York. Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota. Sylvester C. Smith, of California. Charles N. Pray, of Montana. Dick T. Morgan, of Oklahoma. Charles E. Pickett, of Iowa. Peter M. Speer, of Pennsylvania. William H. Andrews, of New Mexico. House Committees. 179 Railways and Canals. Charles A. Korbly, of Indiana. William G. Sharp, of Ohio. Robert F. Broussard, of I,ouisiana. J. Edwin Ellerbe, of South Carolina. George W. Gordon, of Tennessee. Michael F. Conry, of New York. George F. O’Shaunessy, of Rhode Island. B. P. Harrison, of Mississippi. Reform in the Hannibal I,. Godwin, of North Carolina. David E. Finley, of South Carolina. Arséne P. Pujo, of Louisiana. Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma. Martin Dies, of Texas. John W. Boehne, of Indiana. H. Garland Dupre, of Louisiana. Charles A. Talcott, of New York. James H. Davidson, of Wisconsin. N. E. Kendall, of Towa. Charles Matthews, of Pennsylvania. William H. Wilder, of Massachusetts. William L. La Follette, of Washington. Civil Service. Frederick H. Gillett, of Massachusetts. I. D. Young, of Kansas. William Kent, of California. Solomon KF. Prouty, of Iowa. Revision of the Laws. John T. Watkins, of Louisiana. Martin A. Morrison, of Indiana. William A. Cullop, of Indiana. John E. Raker, of California. William B. Francis, of Ohio. Samuel W. Gould, of Maine. James Young, of Texas. Reuben O. Moon, of Pennsylvania. Henry G. Danforth, of New York. John C. McKenzie, of Illinois. Robert O. Harris, of Massachusetts. . Rivers and Harbors. Stephen M. Sparkman, of Florida. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. George F. Burgess, of Texas. Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi. George W. Taylor, of Alabama. J. Edwin Ellerbe, of South Carolina. . Charles G. Edwards, of Georgia. John H. Small, of North Carolina. Charles F. Booher, of Missouri. Thomas Gallagher, of Illinois. John W. Boehne, of Indiana. Daniel A. Driscoll, of New York. Michael Donohoe, of Pennsylvania. Thomas J. Scully, of New Jersey. Rules. Robert I. Henry, of Texas. Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina. Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia. Augustus O. Stanley, of Kentucky. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. Martin D. Foster, of Illinois. Matthew R. Denver, of Ohio. Terri Henry D. Flood, of Virginia. William C. Houston, of Tennessee. Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi. George S. Legare, of South Carolina. Charles F. Booher, of Missouri. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. John A. Martin, of Colorado. James S. Davenport, of Oklahoma. E. E. Holland, of Virginia. George P. Lawrence, of Massachusetts. James H. Davidson, of Wisconsin. H. Olin Young, of Michigan. William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois. William E. Humphrey, of Washington. Charles A. Kennedy, of Towa. Andrew J. Barchfeld, of Pennsylvania. John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania. William W. Wilson, of Illinois. E. H. Madison, of Kansas. Irvine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. tories. ’ William H. Draper, of New York. Frank E. Guernsey, of Maine. J. N. Langham, of Pennsylvania. William W. Wedemeyer, of Michigan. Frank B. Willis, of Ohio. I. D. Young, of Kansas. William H. Andrews, of New Mexico. James Wickersham, of Alaska. Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. Richard E. Connell, of New York. 84259°—62-1—I18T ED—I3 Jonah K. Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. 180 Congressional Directory. War Claims. Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee. A. W. Gregg, of Texas. Gordon Lee, of Georgia. R. Y. Thomas, jr., of Kentucky. James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina. Steven B. Ayres, of New York. Richard E. Connell, of New York. I. S. Pepper, of Iowa. Claude U. Stone, of Illinois. Elmer A. Morse, of Wisconsin. Frank Plumley, of Vermont. Henry G. Danforth, of New York. Charles H. Sloan, of Nebraska. J. M. C. Smith, of Michigan. Sam R. Sells, of Tennessee. Ways and Means. Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama, Choice B. Randell, of Texas. Francis Burton Harrison, of New York. William G. Brantley, of Georgia. Dorsey W. Shackleford, of Missouri. Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois. Lincoln Dixon, of Indiana. William Hughes, of New Jersey. Cordell Hull, of Tennessee. W. S. Hammond, of Minnesota. Andrew J. Peters, of Massachusetts. A. Mitchell Palmer, of Pennsylvania. Sereno KE. Payne, of New York. John Dalzell, of Pennsylvania. Samuel W. McCall, of Massachusetts. Ebenezer J. Hill, of Connecticut. James Carson Needham, of California. Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan. Nicholas Longworth, of Ohio. a me rp—— a gly S— SS a a ha House Commutiee Assignments. 181 ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES AND DELEGATES TO COMMITTEES. Cramp CLARK, Speaker. SAS ATT ai pate District of Columbia. Immigration and Naturalization. Invalid Pensions. ADAMBON viii vvsnieins Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. AIKEN of South Carolina. District of Columbia. Pensions. AKIN of New York...... Education. Enrolled Bills. ATESANDER. .... .... 0. Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Patents. ARENT Cl Elections No. 2. Post Office and Post Roads. AVIBB rant «os hy ve coils Military Affairs. ANDERSON of Ohio...... District of Columbia, Invalid Pensions. ANDERSON of Minnesota. Elections No. 2. Pensions. ANDREWS... oc ovis ware Agriculture. Public Lands. Territories. ANDRUS... ovina, Public Buildings and Grounds. Irrigation of Arid Lands. ANSBERRY ...... 0. Flections No. 1, chairman. Fducation. ANTHONY «ovine in Military Affairs. Enrolled Bills. IBSTHBRODE sas nme Expenditures in the Post Office Department, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Public Buildings and Grounds. AUSTIN: o.oo aan as Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Public Buildings and Grounds. Avpmat 2 Le ah Enrolled Bills. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. BARCHEBRID .....coaoias Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Rivers and Harbors. BARNEART . ..cvvonseen: Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Printing. Public Buildings and Grounds. BARTHOIDY . .ivvvviviienn Foreign Affairs. BARPEBIN, .,voviesvrrrne Appropriations. BARES. i oi anes Naval Affairs. BABHRICK. .. vis abana Expenditures on Public Buildings. Naval Affairs. BrAYY, of Texas......... Expenditures in the Department of Justice, chairman, Agriculture. Public Lands. 182 Congressional Directory. BELLI, of Georgia ........ Census. Immigration and Naturalization. Post Office and Post Roads. BEremm: vii) AL District of Columbia. BINGHAM... .. ... ai. Appropriations. BLACKMON. a. i ai Expenditures on Public Buildings. Post Office and Post Roads. ROBIN oi eis is ire id Reform in the Civil Service. ; Rivers and Harbors. BDOOHRR. oii Expenditures in the War Department. Rivers and Harbors. BORLAND... ts scstein ot - Appropriations. BowMAR:, Lu AL 0A Industrial Arts and Expositions. Mines and Mining. BRADLEY... iniikess Invalid Pensions. : Military Affairs. BRANTLEY Wo .t. ivi Ways and Means. BROUSSARD. vos ia ais ein Elections No. 2. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Railways and Canals. BROWN. .... . 0s rs Banking and Currency. Immigration and Naturalization. BUCHANAN... cou. Labor. Naval Affairs. BULREEY... nl oho) Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the War Department. Patents. BURGESS ............... Coinage, Weights, and Measures. . Rivers and Harbors. BURKE of Pennsylvania . Education. Military Affairs. BURKE of South Dakota . Indian Affairs. BURKE of Wisconsin .... Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BURLESON. ... i... coins Appropriations. BUBRNBIT. .. <.voieiois Immigration and Naturalization, chairman. Public Buildings and Grounds. BULTER vi viii Naval Affairs. BYRNES of South Caro- Banking and Currency. lina. War Claims. BYRNS of Tennessee. .... Appropriations. CATDER .... iain Interstate and Foreign Commerce. CNT AWAY 0 Insular Affairs. Patents. . CAMBRON o.oo ‘Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Post Office and Post Roads. Territories. CAMPSELY, ............. Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. CANDILER ...........-.. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, chairman, Agriculture. CamNoON. Appropriations. ——— House Commatiee Assignments. 183 CANIBILE, . cine snare Claims. : Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Public Buildings and Grounds. CARIN coins Accounts. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 3. Judiciary. CARTIR. ivr iie ahs Indian Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Reform in the Civil Service. CARN Coes. dae District of Columbia. Education. CATLIN ©. vias Expenditures in the Interior Department, Immigration and Naturalization. CLARK of Missouri..... : Crank of Florida ....... Insular Affairs. Patents. Public Buildings and Grounds. CLAYPOOL... .. ... ..... Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Public Lands. CYAVION oobi Judiciary, chairman. PCIINT i es Expenditures on Public Buildings, chairman. Census. . Foreign Affairs. COLLIER oot. ao Flections No. 1. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. CONNBLL. Jo 50h ov vie Territories. War Claims. CONRY .......:...000 Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Military Affairs. Railways and Canals. COOPER i. iv nnd Elections No. 3. Foreign Affairs. COPERY .......vininciin. Public Buildings and Grounds. COVINGTON. . oli vs Elections No. 1. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Cox of Indiana... ..... Expenditures in the Treasury Department, chairman. Post Office and Post Roads. Cox of Ohio. ........ in. Appropriations. ERAGE voi sans Census. Pensions. CRAVENS............... Enrolled Bills, chairman. Industrial Arts and Expositions. CRUMPACKEERR ........... Census. Insular Affairs. Colror-.. .......... «... Industrial Arts and Expositions. Interstate and Foreign Commerce, Revision of the Laws. CoRuEy i... nswe Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Foreign Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization. CURRIER... Ln Accounts, Patents. 184 PATZELY, Voli vivian ov DANFORTH ........ oo DAUGHERTY : ovine vse DAVENPORT... icin DAVIDSON... oasis Davis of Minnesota .... Davis of West Virginia. . DENVER. . . «sf cxstnvise tors 2% | DICKINSON. -cvviv ctvnin aia D1ckSON of Mississippi. . DOUGHTON: wv... ca ciaois DRADER cicada vi arore Driscor1,, DANIEL A... DRriscorr, MICHAEL E.. Congressional Directory. Rules, Ways and Means. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Revision of the Laws. War Claims. Banking and Currency. Mines and Mining. Insular Affairs. Territories. Railways and Canals. Rivers and Harbors. Expenditures in the State Department. Insular Affairs. Elections No. 3. Judiciary. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the State Department. Military Affairs. Public Lands. Insular Affairs. Rules. Claims. Insular Affairs. Insular Affairs. Pensions. Claims. District of Columbia. Reform in the Civil Service. Foreign Affairs. Pensions. Ways and Means. Judiciary. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Rivers and Harbors. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Accounts. Territories. Pensions. Rivers and Harbors. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Judiciary. Reform in the Civil Service. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Elections No. I. Rivers and Harbors. House Commattee Assignments. PATRCHITLD ioc aeieininion RAISON. i haa BrTZGHRATD,. . oc rvcenrn ¥roopof Virginia....... Provp of Arkansas. ..... BORDRNIEY ..iocvciniamiio. HORINES or. a aie os FosTER of Vermont... .. RBosrERrR of Illinois. ....... GCAITAGHER .... GARDNER of Massachu- setts. GARDNER of New Jersey. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Railways and Canals. Rivers and Harbors. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Naval Affairs. Public IL,ands. ILibrary. Military Affairs. Foreign Affairs. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Claims. Education. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Indian Affairs. Public Lands. Invalid Pensions. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Printing, chairman. Post Office and Post Roads. Reform in the Civil Service. Appropriations, chairman. Territories, chairman. Foreign Affairs. Accounts. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Judiciary. Printing. Ways and Means. Accounts. Insular Affairs. Naval Affairs. Foreign Affairs. Mines and Mining, chairman. Rules. Claims. Post Office and Post Roads. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Claims. Revision of the Laws. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Public Buildings and Grounds. Insular Affairs. Invalid Pensions. . Census. Rivers and Harbors. Immigration and Naturalization. Library. Labor. Post Office and Post Roads. 185 | 186 GARNER nascar, GARRET oo GopwiIiN of North Caro- lina. GREGG of Pennsylvania. . GREGG of Texas. ....... GRIESE. a. is vias GCUDGER . ciniims iv bb , GUERNSEY! i... ish HAVMILE,. hd HamirroN of Michigan . HAMILTON of West Vir- ginia. Congressional Directory. Accounts. Education. Foreign Affairs. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Insular Affairs. Rules. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Public Lands. Appropriations. Reform in the Civil Service. Banking and Currency. Public Buildings and Grounds. Reform in the Civil Service, chairman. Public Lands. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Elections No. 3, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Appropriations. . Elections No. 3. Foreign Affairs. Military Affairs. Railways and Canals. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Revision of the Laws. Expenditures in the Interior Department, chairman, Judiciary. Public Lands. Tabor. Pensions. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. Post Office and Post Roads. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Naval Affairs. War Claims. Accounts. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Indian Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Banking and Currency. Territories. Elections No. 2, chairman. District of Columbia. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Invalid Pensions. Military Affairs. House Commattee Assignments. 187 RAMEN... Expenditures in the State Department, chairman. : Interstate and Foreign Commerce. HAMMOND... ...... 5. Ways and Means. FIANNA. ole) aa Agriculture. Expenditures in the Interior Department. HARDWICK ........ Sh was Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Rules. FARRIS 00 as oh Elections No. 3. Revision of the Laws. Bmw a Expenditures ir: the Navy Department, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Territories. HARRISON of Mississippi. Foreign Affairs. Railways and Canals. HARRISON of New York. Ways and Means. HARDMAN vienna Public Buildings and Grounds. HAUGEN. oceania dais Agriculture. HAWIEY on Agriculture. Labor. LU a SN Military Affairs, chairman. HAYES oo iat ini, Banking and Currency. Immigration and Naturalization. HBALD ima. conn Claims; ; Coinage, Weights, and Measures. BIRPRING. eas Industrial Arts and Expositions, chairman, Agriculture. HEVGHESEN.. .. Immigration and Naturalization. Indian Affairs. Bers... ....... 0 a Expenditures in the War Department, chairman. Census. Insular Affairs. HENRY of Connecticut .. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Patents. HENRY of Texas........ Rules, chairman. Judiciary. HENSLEY oii vonnesvvis Expenditures in the Interior Department. Labor. Naval Affairs. HRGEING. sn Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Judiciary. ia i Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Ways and Means. INDE... ose Expenditures in the War Department. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. HOBSON ...... .c.0 wins Education. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Naval Affairs. BOLILAND «..... cues ices Census. Elections No. 1. Territories. HOUSTON... .. oo. es Census, chairman. Judiciary. Territories. 188 HOWARD seo sess a sss ee HOWELL, HowILAND HUBBARD HucHES of Georgia HucHES of New Jersey. . HucHES of West Virginia. HumpHREY of Washing- ton. HuMpHREYS of Missis- sippi. JacESON............ JACOWAY POPUPS RPO TR TRC J JC IC TE TO Th © esses ese reese ses JounsoN of Kentucky... JornsoN of South Caro- lina. KAT ANTANAOLE ...... 00%. “es se eee see ee KENDALL KENNEDY KINDRED KINKAID of Nebraska... KINKEAD of New Jersey. Congressional Directory. Insular Affairs. Labor. Agriculture. Mines and Mining. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Judiciary. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Insular Affairs. Education. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. Ways and Means. Accounts. Census. Ways and Means. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Rivers and Harbors. Rivers and Harbors. Territories. Indian Affairs. Elections No. 2. Indian Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Ways and Means. District of Columbia, chairman. Appropriations. Insular Affairs, chairman. District of Columbia. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Military Affairs. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Territories. Foreign Affairs. Railways and Canals. Mileage. Rivers and Harbors. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Reform in the Civil Service. Banking and Currency. Education. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Appropriations. Agriculture. Invalid Pensions. Ways and Means. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. District of Columbia. Immigration and Naturalization. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Indian Affairs. Mileage. House Commattee Assignments. IROBR «hiss, in detains Naval Affaivs. WORBEY. ei vss Railways and Canals, chairman. Banking and Currency. Elections No. 2. LATEAN, .. oi. ie, Post Office and Post Roads. TAREBRUY,. alien. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Mileage. La BOLL ETTR Lid 0, Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Railways and Canals. AN Statin ah vies Agriculture, chairman. LANGHAM 2 AHIR 0, Invalid Pensions. : : Territories. LANGLEY....... Census. Invalid Pensions. IY Cr MEO CE ial Accounts. Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. AWRBNGE . :. foals Rivers and Harbors. LEE of Georgia ......... Agriculture. War Claims. LEE of Pennsylvania .... Mileage, chairman. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Naval Affairs. LEGARE ..... 005 ves Foreign Affairs. Territories. BN ROOT. as Sat Patents. Rules. LBVER hhh sisi Education, chairman. Agriculture. LBYY ol. ea Claims. Foreign Affairs. LBWIS .......0..... oun Labor. Military Affairs. LINDBERG. -l .. cainvns Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. LINDSAY hres inne Invalid Pensions. LINTHICUM... .. .. . shiwiists Elections No. 2. Foreign Affairs. LYEEUEPAGE .. vi. hiss Insular Affairs. Mines and Mining. TIPLETON. oven vivees Judiciary. Patents. LEOYD ool nines, Accounts, chairman. Post Office and Post Roads. TOBECK .../ Soil uh, District of Columbia, Expenditures in the Treasury Department. IONGWORTHE ......-...., Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Ways and Means. OUD cceieve evans von Naval Affairs, 190 McGILLICUDDY. ....... AC MCGUIRE MCHENRY MEKENZIR.. ..5. sais MCERINI BY... 0... 0 MCKINNEY ....ao ene : McLAUGHIIN........... McCMORRA MARTIN of Nove cen. DI I I South Dakota. MARTIN of Colorado.... DE EE SY EE Rr Er Congressional Darectory. Naval Affairs. Ways and Means. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. Disposition of Useless Papers. Agriculture. : Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor. Judiciary. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor. Indian Affairs. Appropriations. Elections No. 3. Revision of the I,aws. Expenditures in the Ndvy Department. Foreign Affairs. Banking and Currency. Agriculture. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Naval Affairs. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Iabor, Post Office and Post Roads. Labor. Rules. Agriculture, Claims, Labor. Public Lands. Appropriations. Chairman of the Conference Minority. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Expenditures in the War Department. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Territories. Flections No. 1. Railways and Canals. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Post Office and Post Roads. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Indian Affairs. Census. Claims. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Public Lands. House Committee Assignments. 191 MooN of Tennessee.. ... Post Office and Post Roads, chairman. Moon of Pennsylvania... Judiciary. Revision of the Laws. MOORE of Pennsylvania. District of Columbia. Immigration and Naturalization. Moore of Texas........ Banking and Currency. Census. Immigration and Naturalization. Moneaw.... 5 na. . Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Public Lands. MORRISON. iit: veers Insular Affairs. Patents. Revision of the Laws. MORSE of Wisconsin .... Insular Affairs. War Claims. Moss of Indiana ........ Expendituresin the Department of Agriculture, chairman. Mines and Mining. TE En a ee fe Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. MURDOCK... ..orrrvr:- Post Office and Post Roads. MURRAY i. i sa vd Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Insular Affairs. Public Lands. NEEDIAM ...o ni Ways and Means. NELSON. vos sinsess Elections No. 2. Public Buildings and Grounds. ) NOBBID i...» sao Judiciary. NTR ee Judiciary. OL DDIRLD tiie airs Patents, chairman. District of Columbia. QI MSTED, or wan ahs, Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Insular Affairs. O’SHAUNESSY ..\..vvivrves District of Columbia. Railways and Canals. PADCI IT. ssa. wii Naval Affairs, chairman, DAGE u,v nese Appropriations. PATMER. -. nro en nl Ways and Means. PABRAN. ors sl] Enrolled Bills. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. ParrEN of New York. ... Elections No. I. Military Affairs. PATTON of Pennsylvania. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor. Indian Affairs. PaAyNg.. a en, Ways and Means. BREEDER 000 Sy Military Affairs. War Claims. PRIRRS Le Ways and Means. PICHEETD la Library. Public Lands. PUUMEEY cians Agriculture. War Claims. 192 PORTER... ... Py PRINCE .... Prourty .... RANDELT, of * 0 eRe lw etek et enn ue or siiviiai et elie ial ei uate Texas... RANSDELTI, of Louisiana . RIVERA .... ROBERTS - of Massachu- setts. CHC A SNe SS rel ROBERTS of Nevada Er, ROBINSON. . Congressional Directory. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Indian Affairs. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Claims, chairman. Rules. Education. Immigration and Naturalization. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Military Affairs. Klections No. I. Reform in the Civil Service. Banking and Currency, chairman. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Reform in the Civil Service. Ways and Means. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Public Lands. Revision of the Laws. Ways and Means. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Rivers and Harbors. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Pensions. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Post Office and Post Roads. Pensions, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Naval Affairs. Insular Affairs. Naval Affairs. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Public Lands, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries, Accounts. Expenditures in the State Department. Public Buildings and Grounds. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Rivers and Harbors. ———— House Committee Assignments. 193 RUCKER of Colorado .... RUCKER of Missouri .... RUSS wit hain SABAMT Ln oan SHEPPARD ...........0« STEBERY ©... ooo SHERWOOD... ol. i, Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor, chairman. Census. District of Columbia. Labor. Post Office and Post Roads. Agriculture, Public Lands. Indian Affairs. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Pensions. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress, chairman. Judiciary. Census. Indian Affairs. Invalid Pensions. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Immigration and Naturalization. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Appropriations. Mileage. Rivers and Harbors. Pensions. War Claims. Ways and Means. Foreign Affairs. Railways and Canals. Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Appropriations. Invalid Pensions, chairman. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Agriculture. War Claims, chairman. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Appropriations, Library, chairman. Military Affairs. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Mines and Mining, Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. War Claims. Census. Rivers and Harbors. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Indian Affairs. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Labor. War Claims. 104 SMITH, SAMUEL W..... SMITH of California. . .. Sarre of Texas. ....... STEENERSON .......... STEPHENS of Mississippi. STEPHENS of Texas .... STEPHENS of California. . STERLING ot ian. STEVENS of Minnesota. . . SWITZER snes hi TarBoTT of Maryland... Tar,cort of New York .. TAVIOR of Alabama .... TAvI,0R of Colorado .... Avior of Ohio... TRAYRR THISTLEWOOD =...» Congresstonal Directory. Post Office and Post Roads. Public Lands. Irrigation of Arid Lands, chairman, Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rivers and Harbors, chairman. Expenditures in the War Department. Public Lands. District of Columbia. Education. Agriculture. Rules. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Foreign Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Banking and Currency. Claims. Expenditures in the State Department. Indian Affairs, chairman. Census. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Judiciary. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. District of Columbia. Invalid Pensions. Foreign Affairs, chairman. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Military Affairs. Elections No. 2. ‘Mines and Mining. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers, chairman. Banking and Currency. Naval Affairs. Agriculture. Reform in the Civil Service. Banking and Currency. Rivers and Harbors. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Appropriations. Education. Enrolled Bills. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Invalid Pensions. TOWNSEND... .... .. TRIBE od Cand ands, TURNBULL... weiss CTR RL RR TINDERIIILL, » . HON fey VOLSYEAD. ........ VREBLAND . =... . LS WARBURTON WICKERSHAM .... WICKTIIFER, . vain WILDER... «ecco House Committee Assignments. 195 Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. : Judiciary. War Claims. Expenditures in the State Department. Military Affairs. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Insular Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Foreign Affairs. Library. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Naval Affairs. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Naval Affairs. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Post Office and Post Roads. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Ways and Means, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Pensions. Education. Public Lands. Banking and Currency. Labor. Expenditures in the War Department. Indian Affairs. Revision of the Laws, chairman. Military Affairs. Judiciary. Patents. Expenditures in the State Department. Territories. Post Office and Post Roads. Agriculture. Flections No. 3. Enrolled Bills. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Mines and Mining. Pensions. Military Affairs. Territories. Agriculture. Elections No. 3. Patents. Railways and Canals. - 84259°—62-1—1ST ED——14 196 WILLIS. i ast ese es sen Wilson of Illinois . ..... WiLsonN of New York. .. WirLsoN of Pennsylvania . WITHERSPOON. . Woop of New Jersey. . Woopsof Iowa! . iu.. iu. YounaG of Kansas YOUNG of Michigan ..... YOUNG of Texas Congressional Directory. Elections No. I. Territories. Patents. Rules. Pensions. Post Office and Post Roads. Labor, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Patents. Foreign Affairs. Pensions. Claims. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Reform in the Civil Service. Territories. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Rivers and Harbors. ‘Expenditures in the Department of Commerce and Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Revision of the Laws. Meeting Days of Committees. 197 MEETING DAYS OF COMMITTEES. (Committees not given below have no regular meeting days, but meet upon the call of the chairmen.) SENATE. Agriculture and Foresiry, [L000 2 ob 0 ods SUR C00 EL IRI Tuesday. Clade... 5. Sin Sosa iin Mites te i antild F008 Tuesday. COMBOS yt oni ribbed ate Bait drs a ihr re A Ae, Thursday District of Columbia. oc 00 od, fl Baluands STi ladies Friday Expenditures in the Interior Department................. Monday. PINBNCE. . «cali rh rea Rr PO Le LS CN Fai Tuesday. Foreign Relations: =. i ror) Saul Lond Jn plea Wednesday. Indian Affairs oo U0 AG A Sa GLUE LS Jip i Lan Thursday. Interstate: Commerce ihn. Wea innn dil ein iin Friday Judiciary. ©... 0... he. vais i aa ps sled, SAGEM Monday. Militory Affatve, 4) Jv te a TT i Sr ad pe Thursday. Naval Alas... i i an wad i i ge Wednesday. Patel... cum See yh eis fein be Ulin ah, Ti hat] i Briday Pensions... co. bo rn fri Ea BL REL ais 2 AI Monday “Privilegesand Elections... Sloss d0 Teo iN = 08 da gdull o Sl Saturday. Public Buildings and Grounds........... arly Celie Friday. Public. Lands. ©. coins arnt Spl Baad se Ra 3S, Wednesday. HOUSE Aceounts hI 2N ca ol JERE EL. SHOU ent Tuesday. Agriculture lon Ll 2 0sRE0aR6 1 Ro SUE oat ry fs Ts Wednesday. Alcoholic Liguoe Traffic. . sail Li wasn, sr alias Thursday. Banking and Curremey 22 ibn... Anaiiyl), Jy DIL pli hi re Wednesday. Coinage, Weights, and: Measures... (oon sidan Thursday. District of Columbia. ............. sue pibediad afl, anky Wednesday. Education. ............ a0s)e Jo deny Saitinait 8 anni] Tuesday. Immigration and Naturalization. .......i.c.v... ivaiviess Tuesday. Indian Affaive. [L200 GOLGI SRC S22 Bi h ) Friday. Interstate amd Forelgn Commerce. ........c.ivivussnines Tuesday and Friday. Invalid Pensions ol. CaUT0 Bs Rr nL Laas Monday. Irrigation of Arid Lands... ... 0.00000. EAI PoE Monday. Judiciary. “LUO PB ABERE ERE i SE IE Wednesday and Friday. Yabrayy FAS STL I8, (QBN 2 00 Sia Sidi alld po ANN, Monday. Merchant Marine and Fisheries... out oiobd 00, 0, Thursday. NVILitary AHAITS oui sar cion os b5 pth bie aint oh viel wis wsinsits Tuesday and Thursday. Mines and Minmg ... 0 es a Ta nn Monday. Naval Affairs... swf lions tl ous Jaoningof easton Tuesday and Friday. Vidi pitted beast ddaheen mesa Ruined tba .. Wednesday. Post Officeand Post Roads 7.0... 0.0 0 00 «L310 8 5 .Tuesday and Friday. Private Land Clalmis 0.00. cont lie mile idl Thursday. Public Buildings and Grotmds. . ...c.nues: csneni sirnset sings Friday. Public Lands ... 05 ah nT RRR RE AR Wednesday. War Clogs. or; 50 055 spel vrss a soe t Fiano Sole a us vate vis Saturday. 198 Congressional Directory. JOINT CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND COMMITTEES. NATIONAL MONETARY. (Room 310, Senate Office Building.) Chairman.—Nelson W. Aldrich, 2107 Massachusetts Avenue. Vice Chairman.—Edward B. Vreeland, Bepiesehiative $ from New York, The Dewey. Julius C. Burrows, 1406 Massachusetts Avenue. Fugene Hale, 1001 Sixteenth Street. Philander C. Knox, Secretary of State, 1527 K Street, Henry M. Teller, Central City, Colo., The Cairo. Hernando D. Money, Gulfport, Miss. Joseph W. Bailey, Senator from Texas, 2620 Connecticut Avenue, Theodore E. Burton, Senator from Ohio, The Rochambeau. Frank P. Flint, Los Angeles, Cal. James P. Taliaferro, Jacksonville, Fla. John W. Weeks, Representative from Massachusetts, 1526 New Hampshire Avenue. Robert W. Bonynge, Denver, Colo., The Cairo. Lemuel P. Padgett, Representative from Tennessee, The Dewey. George F. Burgess, Representative from Texas, The Normandie. Arsene P. Pujo, Representative from Louisiana, The Shoreham. George W. Prince, Representative from Illinois, 3113 Thirteenth Street. James Mclachlan, Pasadena, Cal. Assistant to the Commission.—A. Piatt Andrew, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1725 H Street. Secretary.—Arthur B. Shelton, 1712 R Street. Disbursing officer.—Richard B. Nixon, 1336 Fairmont Street. Librarvian.—William Adams Slade, 124 Third Street NE. PRINTING INVESTIGATION. (Capitol Building, Senate Gallery floor, west side. Phone, branch 70.) Chairman.—Reed Smoot, Senator from Utah, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. Carroll S. Page, Senator from Vermont, The Cochran. Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida, 1455 Massachusetts Avenue, David E. Finley, Representative from South Carolina, The National. Henry A. Barnhart, Representative from Indiana, Congress Hall. Benjamin K. Focht, Representative from Pennsylvania, The Champlain, Secretary.—George H. Carter, The Ventosa. Assistant Secretary.—William R. Bradford, 604 M Street. COMMISSION ON ENLARGING THE CAPITOL GROUNDS. Chairman.—James S. Sherman, Vice President of the United States, 1401 Sixteenth Street. Joseph G. Cannon, Representative from Illinois, 1014 Vermont Avenue. Elliott Woods, Superintendent of the United States Capitol Building and Grounds, Stoneleigh Court. CONSERVATION OF NAVIGABLE STREAMS. Chairman.—Jacob H. Gallinger, Senator from New Hampshire, The Normandie. Vice Chairman.— Willis C. Hawley, Representative from Oregon, The Woodley. John Walter Smith, Senator from Maryland, 330 Roland Avenue, Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. Gordon Lee, Representative from Georgia, The Cochran. COMMISSION ON THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG. Chairman.—George I. Oliver, Senator from Pennsylvania, 2230 Massachusetts Avenue. Vice Chairman.— Weldon B. Heyburn, Senator from Idaho, Stoneleigh Court. Isidor Rayner, Senator from Maryland, 1320 Eighteenth Street. Daniel F. Lafean, Representative from Pennsylvania, The Occidental. John Lamb, Representative from Virginia, The National. Secretary.—Morgan HE. Gable, New Ebbitt. ° Joint Commuassions and Commatiees. 199 COMMISSION TO INVESTIGATE THE MATTER OF EMPLOYERS’ LIA- BILITY AND WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION. Chaivman.—George Sutherland, Senator from Utah, The Highlands. George E. Chamberlain, Senator from Oregon, 1749 Q Street. William G. Brantley, Representative from Georgia, The Ontario. Reuben O. Moon, Representative from Pennsylvania. W. C. Brown, president New York Central Railroad Co. D. L. Cease, editor The Railroad Trainman. Secretary.—Iauncelot Packer. JOINT COMMITTEE, ALASKAN INVESTIGATION. Chairman.—EKnute Nelson, Senator from Minnesota, 649 East Capitol Street. Reed Smoot, Senator from Utah, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. George S. Nixon, Senator from Nevada, Woodley Lane. F. M. Simmons, Senator from North Carolina, New Ebbitt. John H. Bankhead, Senator from Alabama, Riggs House. John J. Fitzgerald, Representative from New York, The Albany. Swagar Sherley, Representative from Kentucky, The Woodward. Joseph T. Robinson, Representative from Arkansas, 1601 Nineteenth Street. Edward I,. Hamilton, Representative from Michigan, The Dewey. James W. Good, Representative from Iowa, 1831 Belmont Road. JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING. (Capitol Building, Senate Gallery floor, west side. Phone, branch 70.) . Chairman.—Reed Smoot, Senator from Utah, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. Carroll S. Page, Senator from Vermont, The Cochran. Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida, 1455 Massachusetts Avenue. David E. Finley, Representative from South Carolina, The National. Henry A. Barnhart, Representative from Indiana, Congress Hall. Benjamin K. Focht, Representative from Pennsylvania, The Champlain. Clerk.—George H. Carter, The Ventosa. COMMISSION IN CONTROL OF THE HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. Chairman.—Champ Clark, Speaker of the House of Representatives, 1509 Sixteenth Street. John J. Fitzgerald, Representative from New York, The Albany. Joseph G. Cannon, Representative from Illinois, 1014 Vermont Avenue. Superintendent of Building .—Elliott Woods, Stoneleigh Court. COMMISSION ON RECONSTRUCTION OF THE HALL OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. ’ Chairman. —Champ Clark, Speaker of the House of Representatives, 1509 Sixteenth Street. Joseph G. Cannon, Representative from Illinois, 1014 Vermont Avenue. Samuel W. McCall, Representative from Massachusetts, Cosmos Club, James R. Mann, Representative from Illinois, The Highlands. John J. Fitzgerald, Representative from New York, The Albany. William M. Howard, The Richmond. Swagar Sherley, Representative from Kentucky, The Woodward. | | | Nl i | | | i] y | | 200 Congressional Directory. OFFICERS OF THE SENATE (Phone, Main 3120.) PRESIDENT. President of the Senate.—JAMES S. SHERMAN, 1401 Sixteenth Street. ; Secretary to the President of the Senate.—H. E. Devendorf, gog Fast Capitol Street. Messenger to the President of the Senate.—S. T. Waterbury, 140 A Street NE. PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE. President pro tempore of the Senate. tt. CHAPLAIN. Chaplain of the Senate.—Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, D. D., 1616 Riggs Place. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. CHARLES GOODWIN BENNETT, Secretary of the Senate, New Willard, was born and has always resided in the old Bennett homestead in Brooklyn, N. Y.; admitted to the bar; LI. B., University of New York; director, 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 For- eign 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, 1745 Eighteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Henry H. Gilfry, The Congressional. Financial Clerk.—Richard B. Nixon, 1336 Fairmont Street. Minute and Journal Clevk.—Alfred C. Parkinson, 9 B Street. Enrolling Clerk.—Benjamin S. Platt, 1226 Euclid Street. Superintendent of Document Room.—George H. Boyd, 1129 Fourteenth Street. Executive Clervk.—Clarence Johnson, The Driscoll. Principal Clerk.—Claude M. Curtiss, 49 D Street SE. Reading Clevk.—John C. Crockett, Silver Spring, Md. Assistant Financial Clerk.—Peter M. Wilson, 1901 Q Street. Chief Bookkeeper.—Eugene Colwell, 60g Eighth Street NE. Statistical Clerk.—Benjamin Durfee. Keeper of Stationery.—Charles N. Richards, 101 Massachusetts Avenue. Librarian.—Edward C. Goodwin, 1865 Kalorama Road. First Assistant in Document Room.—Bryant FE. Avery, 213 North Capitol Street. Assistants in Document Room.—W. Grant Lieuallen, 3008 Seventeenth Street NE.; W. E. Burns, 504 Third Street SE. Assistant Librarians.—James M. Baker, 3141 Highland Place; Jacob C. Donaldson, The Saratoga. Assistant Keeper of Stationery.—T. W. B. Duckwall, 2134 F Street. Clerks.—E. 1,. Givens, 13812 Nineteenth Street; Bayard C. Ryder, 625 East Capitol Street; W. W. Horne, 1802 Vernon Street; Charles R. Nixon, 1338 New York Avenue; D. R. Roberts, 538 Columbia Road; Rodney Sacket, The Belgrade; Abra- ham G. McClintock, 1227 Nineteenth Street; Ansel Wold, The Van Dyke; William M. Stuart, 1110 I, Street; H. T. Coggeshall, 1518 Newton Street; Burton Roberts, 716 North Carolina Avenue SE. ; J. A. Djureen, 33 B Street; Charles F. Roberts, 716 North Carolina Avenue SE.; Victor P. Showers, Y. M. C. A. Building. Messengers.—R. R. Dutton, 30 Eighth Street NE.; J. C. Jorgensen, 502 First Street SE.; Herschel Shaw, 3217 Georgia Avenue; T. J. Enright, 236 New Jersey Ave- nue; W. J. Lyle, 204 New York Avenue. Officers of the Senate. 201 CLERKS AND MESSENGERS TO COMMITTEES. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress.—Clerk, W. B. Jaynes, - 23 First Street NE.; messenger, Lizzie S. Jaynes, 23 First Street NE. Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, Reed Paige Clark, 1424 Eleventh Street; assistant clerk, Edward I. Littlefield, 223 A Street NE.; messenger, Charles D. Barnard, 115 B Street NE. Appropriations.—Clerk, Joseph A. Breckons, 1814 G Street; assistant clerks, I. M. Wells, 1338 New York Avenue; Kennedy F. Rea, go6 East Capitol Street; Charles E. Lane, 1708 P Street; messenger, Ray Colwell, 60g Eighth Street NE. Audit and Control Contingent Expenses.—Clerk, Frank KE. Evans, 15 Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; messenger, Hervey S. Moore, 1700 Fifteenth Street. Canadian Relations.—Clerk, Mortimer T. Cowperthwaite, 1606 Seventeenth Street; messenger, George W. Bond, Laurel, Md. : Census.—Clerk, John J. Hannan, 1906 H Street; messenger, Nellie H. Dunn, 1864 Wyoming Avenue. Civil Service and Retvenchment.—Clerk, John Briar, The Driscoll; messenger, Anna B. Cummins. ; Claims.—Clerk, John I. Erickson, 1204 C Street NE. ; assistant clerks, J. S. Crawford, Julian W. Blount, The Massachusetts; messenger, Harry B. Straight, 1200 C Street NE. ! Coast and Insular Survey.—Clerk, Frederick J. Beaman, The Calumet; messenger, Coast Defenses.—Clerk, Theresa P. Curtis, 1742 S Street; assistant clerk, W. W. Smith, Y. M. C. A. Building. ; Commerce.—Clerk, Woodbury Pulsifer, The Brunswick; assistant clerk, Frederick B. Sands, The Hamilton; messenger, R. S. Oakes, 25 Iowa: Circle. Conference of Minority.—Clerk, I,. H. Martin, The Century Club; assistant clerk, R. C. Kilmartin, 205 Sixth Street NE. Conservation of National Resources.—Clerk, Miles Taylor, 1007 Otis Place; messen- ger, Charles H. Croy, The Warrington. Corporations Organized in District of Columbia.—Clerk, Millard F. Hudson, 29g M Street; messenger, ——— : Cuban Relations.—Clerk, Wm. S. Bean, The Dewey; assistant clerk, Blond G. Sey- mour, 1445 Massachusetts Avenue. Disposition of Useless Papers in Executive Departments.—Clerk, C. I. Watkins; messenger, James P. Clarke, jr. District of Columbia.—Clerk, John H. Walker, 1334 Girard Street; assistant clerk, Francis B. Lloyd, 124 Twelfth Street NE.; messenger, Clinton R. Thompson, The Savoy. Education and Labor.—Clerk, Earl Venable, Blenheim Court; assistant clerk, Cora M. Rubin, The Luxor. Engrossed Bills.—Clerk, A. D. Watts, The National, messenger, S. A. Ashe, 1512 Park Road. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Lewis S. Patrick, The Shoreham; assistant clerk, Gwendo- lyn K. Wolfe, The Shoreham. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service.—Clerk, T. P. Paynter; messen- ger, C. C. Wilson. Expenditures in Departments— Agriculture.—Clerk, Malcolm E. Rideout, jr., 1511 I, Street; messenger, James E. Dooley, 326 FE Street NE. Interior.—Clerk, Bert E. Hilborn, 614 Fast Capitol Street; messenger, Mary L. Shriner, The Nottingham. Justice.—Clerk, James M. Chilton, 220 East Capitol Street; assistant clerk, Rella M. Lane, Congress Hall; messenger, Luther J. Willis, 213 North Capitol Street. Nayy.—Clerk, Otto C. Strom, 229 North Capitol Street; messenger, : Post Office.—Clerk, Fay N. Seaton, The Ventosa; messenger, Cleo C. Hardy, The Brunswick. ‘ State.—Clerk, Clarence E. Dawson, Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; messenger, Garrett B. Dolliver, ¥Y. M. C. A. Building. 7Treasury.—Clerk, C. R. Alburn, The Gainesboro; messenger, William M. Burton, Y. M. C. A. Building. : War.—Clerk, E. A. Dickson, Congress Hall; messenger, Elizabeth Deards. Finance.—Clerk, J. H. O’Brien, 224 C Street; assistant clerk, W. B. Stewart, 1509 Thirteenth Street; messenger, F. J. Haig, Riverdale, Md. Fisheries.—Clerk, J. H. Davis, 1328 Farragut Street; assistant clerk, F. R. Jeffrey, 1433 Rhode Island Avenue; messenger, Rita J. Pool, The Valois. 202 Congressional Directory. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians.—Clerk, J. Broadus Knight; messenger, B. R Tillman, jr. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, ; assistant clerk, Garfield Charles, 1314 Fourteenth Street; messenger, Charles J. Pickett, 606 U Street. Forest Reservations and Protection of Game.—Clerk, Wm. H. Sault, 302 Maryland Avenue NE.; messenger, Olin B. Kilbourn, 304 Eleventh Street SW. Geological Survey.—Clerk, Laps D. McCord, Brentwood, Md.; messenger, Loretta E. O'Connell, 1213 Rhode Island Avenue. Immigration.—Clerk, Edward T. Clark; assistant clerk, Chas. F. Redmond; mes- senger, John B. Dufault, Indian Ajfairs.—Clerk, Leonard Underwood, The Fulford; assistant clerk, E. P. Bowyer, 23 First Street NE. Indian Depredations.—Clerk, Geo. A. Foos, Baltimore, Md.; messenger, — Industrial Expositions.—Clerk, Phillips B. Robinson, 1219 Connecticut Avenue; messenger, Carl H. Osborn, 23 First Street NE. Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, John B. Kelley, 216 Maryland Avenue NE.; assistant clerk, William Gardiner, 467 Pennsylvania Avenue. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, Lee F. Warner, 1700 Fifteenth Street; assistant clerk, Gertrude B. Spaulding, The Belgrade; messenger, ara Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands.—Clerk, ———— ; messenger, Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands.—Clerk, D. V. Jones, 1118 Rhode Island Avenue; messenger, Moselle Jones, 1118 Rhode Island Avenue. ) Judiciary.—Clerk, Edmund J. Wells, 1 C Street SE.; assistant clerks, Eugene Davis, The Portner; Charles P. Blyth, The Burlington; messenger, F. A. Cashin. Library.—Clerk, Henry Ambler Vale, 2250 Cathedral Avenue; messenger, James A. Abbott, Burton Hotel. Manufactures.—Clerk, Addison T. Smith, 312 Maryland Avenue NE.; assistant clerk, Ellen C. Talbot, 1761 Columbia Road; messenger, Hugh F. Smith, 312 Maryland Avenue NE. Military Affairs.—Clerk, John Tweedale, 1725 P Street; assistant clerks, E. B. Shurter, The Metropolitan; E. O. Leech, 2637 Garfield Street; messenger, B. G. Tockerman, 202 Indiana Avenue. Mines and Mining. —Clerk, Chas. E. Ward, Y. M. C. A. Building; messenger, John | : H. Layne, 111 Fifth Street SE. Mississippi River and Tribularies.—Clerk, H. W. Stewart, The De Soto; messenger, ILynah Davis. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Frank H. Sawyer, 1134 Twelfth Street; assistant clerk, | L. C. Drapeau. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.—Clerk, W. D. Denney; assistant clerk, J. O. Jones; messenger, Howard Rash. Pacific Railroads.—Clerk, James W. Beller, 1726 Lamont Street; messenger, Harold » Er Vermilye, 1360 Harvard Street. Patents.—Clerk, Anna I,. Howland, The Dewey; messenger, W. M. Cook, Pensions.—Clerk, Robert W. Farrar, 1338 Parkwood Place; assistant clerks, W. 1.. Van Horn, 5 B Street; Theo. Schlenker, 218 North Capitol Street; Margaret Pat- terson; O. M. Jones, 124 C Street NE.; messenger, Katharine F. Wagner. Philippines.—Clerk, William F. McClelland, The Laclede; assistant clerk, J. F. Belford; messenger, Hall Kinsey, 224 Delaware Avenue NE. Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, A. W. Prescott, 119 Twelfth Street NE; assist- ant clerks, FE. Florence Ramsay, The Dupont; Carolyn B. Sperry, The Dupont; Robert Hite Turner, The Brunswick; messenger, Julia McCulloch, 138 B Street NE. Printing.—Clerk, Harold R. Smoot, 2627 Adams Mill Road; assistant clerk, E. R. \ Callister, The Ventosa; messenger, Nicholas G. Morgan, The Ventosa. ’ Private Land Claims.—Clerk, John T. Boifeuillet, The Fredonia; assistant clerk, O. H. B. Bloodworth, jr., 404 New Jersey Avenue SE. Privileges and Elections.—Clerk, F. H. Pease, The Champlain; assistant clerk, C. A. Webb, 514 Fast Capitol Street; messenger, John P. Atkinson, 209 Tenth Street SH. i Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, George M. Hanson, 1437 Rhode Island Ave- Il nue; assistant clerk, Horace H. Smith, The Lenox; messenger, Mary G. Kearney, i 3401 Thirty-fourth Place, Cleveland Park. Public Health and National Quarantine.—Clerk, Chesley W. Jurney, 23 First Street NE.; assistant clerk, A. J. Clopton, 629 Maryland Avenue NE. Public Lands.—Clerk, Cleveland H. Hicks, 102 B Street NE. ; assistant clerk, Peter M. Rigg, 147 North Carolina Avenue SE. Officers of the Senate. 203 Railroads.—Clerk, Dixie F. Gore, 1735 Lanier Place; messenger, J. Roy Thompson, 153 A Street NE. Revolutionary Claims.—Clerk, W. R. Hollister, 3712 Patterson Street, Chevy Chase; messenger, S. O. Hargus, 2515 Fourteenth Street. Rules.—Clerk, Fred. I. Fishback, go7 S Street; assistant clerk, Ralph B. Marean, Pinehurst, Chevy Chase, Md.; messenger, ; Standards, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, Cecil A. Beasley, Lincoln Hotel; messen- ger, Fred Fite, 116 Maryland Avenue NE. Tervitories.—Clerk, Martin C. Huggett, The Farragut; assistant clerk, Wm. M. Mc- Kinstry, 1318 Fifteenth Street, messenger, . ; Transportation and Sale of Meat Products.—Clerk, Paul J. Christian, jr., go8 Four- teenth Street; messenger, Benj. S. Dormon. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. —Clerk, C. M. Galloway; messenger, I,yda M. Galloway. University of the United States.—Clerk, Thos. B. Stallings, 640 Rock Creek Church Road; messenger, Mabel B. Hayes, 102 Fifth Street NE. Woman Suffrage.—Clerk, Chas. H. Martin, The Burlington; messenger, John D. Brown, The National. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS. DANIEL MOORE RANSDELL, 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 Doorvkeeper.—C. A. Loeffler, 1444 Newton Street. Acting Assistant Doorkeeper.— Thos. W. Keller, 3406 Thirteenth Street. Messenger on floor of Senate.—]. B. McClure, 616 East Capitol Street. Messenger on floor of Senate.—Adelbert D. Sumner, The Iuxor. Storekeeper.—John J. McGrain, 2220 First Street. Clerk.—A. M. Farden. POST OFFICE. Postmaster of the Senate.—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.—Herbert B. Fuller. Assistant.—Walter F. Collins, 223 Ninth Street SE. Foreman.—H. H. Brewer, 21 B Street. HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief Engineer.—E. C. Stubbs, Silver Spring, Md. Assistants.—F. E. Dodson, 1654 Monroe Street; A. S. Worsley, 320 North Carolina Avenue; R. H. Gay, 1725 Newton Street; John Edwards, 106 FE Street. 204 Congressional Directory. | OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE. (Phone, Main 3120.) SPEAKER. The Speaker.—CrAMP CLARK, 1509 Sixteenth Street. Secretary to the Speaker.—Wallace D. Bassford, 130 Twelfth Street NE. Clerk at the Speaker's Tuble.—Charles Crisp, The Driscoll. Speaker's Clerk.—Clarence A. Cannon, 212 B Street SE. Messenger at Speaker's Table. — Warren G. Hatcher, 212 B Street SE. Messenger.—Henry Neal, 1229 T Street. CHAPLAIN. Chaplain of the House.—Rev. Henry N. Couden, D. D., 1312 Columbia Road. OFFICE OF THE CLERK. Clerk of the House.—South Trimble, 1644 Columbia Road. Stenographer to Clerk.—P. J. Goode, 717 A Street SE. Chief Clevk.—Jerry C. South, 2029 Hillyer Place. : Assistant. —H. 1. Overstreet. | Journal Clerk.—William C. Hughes, The Chalfonte. Reading Clervks.—Patrick J. Haltigan; H. Martin Williams, The Driscoll. Tally Clerk.—Winthrop C. Jones, 110 East Capitol Street. Printing and Bull Clevk.—M. E. Matlack, The Luxor. Assistant. — Disbursing Clerk.—C. S. Hoyt, Congress Hall. Assistant.—Sebe Newman, 115 Fast Capitol Street. File Clevike.— Assistant.—1,. H. Ludwig, 131 A Street NE. Enrolling Clerke.—D. K. Hempstead. First Assistant.—Willis H. Wing, 50 I Street. Additional Envolling Clerk.— Printing and Document Clevk.— Distributing Clerk.—W. H. Overhue, The Congressional. Document and Bill Clevk.—Grant Jarvis, 621 Nineteenth Street. Index Clerk.—Frank H. Tompkins. Stationery Clerk. — Assistant.—M. B. Woolsey, 136 Fast Capitol Street. Notification Clerk.—F. H. Wakefield, New Varnum. Bookkeeper.—W. H. Kennedy. Locksmith.—FE, P. Crandall, 223 First Street NE. Clevks.—]. B. Best, 1726 Kilbourne Place; A. P. Crockett, The Wallace; Charles B. Brockway, New Varnum; J. Louis Sowers, 300 Second Street NE. Assistant in Disbursing Office. —Charles O. Dugan, 1227 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant in Stationery Room.—Thos. C. McCune, The Ventosa. Assistant in Clerk’s Office.—Aaron Russell, 1217 S Street. Messenger to Chief Clerk.—G, W. Quarles, CLERK’S DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent.—M. M. Cassy 1113 K Street. Document Clerk.—Harry V. Roe, 634 D Street SE. Assistant.—Dio W. Dunham, The Duddington. Special Employee.—W. P. Scott, 207 A Street NE. LIBRARY. Librarian.—John J. Boobar, 3321 Wisconsin. Avenue. Assistants. —George W. Sabine, The Royalton; R. F. Bishop, 1117 Eighth Street. Assistant in Library.—]. F. Brownlow, 323 East Capitol Street. Officers of the House. 205 OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT-AT-ARMS. Sergeant at Avms.—U. Stokes Jackson, Congress Hall. Deputy. —Edwin S. Pierce, 1412 Chapin Street. Cashier.—W. H. Estey, 3013 Eleventh Street. Financial Clevk.—Edward Reichard, 1313 Delafield Place. Assistant Financial Clerk.—C. E. Morley, 142 A Street NE. Bookkeeper.—Horace D. Norton, 225 New Jersey Avenue. Assistant Bookkeeper.—Frank M. Warden, 1318 I, Street. Deputy Sergeants at Arms in Charge of Pairs.—]. C. Weir, The Octavia; Josiah H. Shinn, 624 Rock Creek Road. Pair Clerk.—]. H. Hollingsworth, 417 Fourth Street NE. Stenographer.—John R. Smith, 142 A Street NE. Laborer.—James F. Payne, 1521 Pierce Street. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER. Doorkeeper of the House.—]J. J. Sinnott, 3527 Thirteenth Street. Department Messenger.—Benjamin Vail, 1110 Fast Capitol Street. Assistant.—C. W. Coombs, 216 Maryland Avenue NE. Special Employees.—John T. Chancey, 465 M Street; James J. O'Byrne. Special Messengers.—George Jenison, The Driscoll; Bert W. Kennedy, The Vendome. Chief Page.—1. H. McMichael, 2223 F Street. Superintendent of the Press Gallery.—Charles H. Mann, 627 A Street NE. Messengers.—]. W. Brown, 221 First Street NE.; Roscoe Conklin; William I. Early, The Vendome; E. B. Harrigan, Capitol Heights, Md.; William I. Hemen- way, 216 North Capitol Street; Henry B. Herbert, 220 C Street; John W. Hubbard, 212 New Jersey Avenue; Allan A. Irvine, 246 Delaware Avenue NE.; Thomas J. Kelly, 428 M Street; S. R. Ogden, 1905 I Street; H. J. Schropp, 807 Sixth Street; Levi E. Short, 222 Indiana Avenue; W. H. Shriver, The Burton; Jesse G. Smith, 103 Maryland Avenue NE.; H. B. Warren; IL. H. Wiley, 18 Grant Place. Messengers on the Soldiers’ Roll.—1,. B. Cousins, The Vendome; E. L. Currier, 126 Kentucky Avenue SE.; John E. Cushman, 214 A Street SE.; Joseph C. Lee, 326 Fourth Street SE.; Elijah Lewis, 213 New Jersey Avenue; Hugh Lewis, 321 A Street NE.; James I. McConnell, go5 Fast Capitol Street; Burr Maxwell; John R. Oursler, The Roland; Fernando Page, 51 D Street SE.; William H. Rich; John Rome; James H. Shouse, 227 New Jersey Avenue; John A. Travis, 1008 East Capi- tol Street. = FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—A. J. Kleberg. Clerks.—Chas. W. Hotchin, go5 B Street NE.; John W. Herndon, Alexandria, Va.; ‘George C. Randall, 812 D Street NE.; John P. Straight, 336 Eleventh Street NE. Foreman.—]. M. McKee, 2123 K Street. : DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent.—Robert B. Gordon, 1905 N Street. Assistant Superintendent.—W. R. Rodenberger, 1352 Otis Place. Special Employee.—]Joel Grayson, near Vienna, Va. Indexer.— Assistant Clevk.—M. J. Hanley, 501 New Jersey Avenue. : Attendants. — Assistant Attendants.—Sidney S. Peck, 1212 Fuclid Street; Henry S. Cannon, 1327 A Street SE. Clerk (detailed from Government Printing Office).—F. V. DeCoster, 120 Third Street SE. Assistants. —]. O. Cowan, 304 A Street SE.; W. A. Schlobohm, go2 Fast Capitol Street; G. W. Holyoke, 226 Fast Capitol Street. 206 Congressional Directory. CLERKS TO COMMITTEES. Accounts.—William Tyler Page, Friendship Heights, Md. ; assistant, J. R. Blackwood. Agriculture.—H. M. Tyler, 452 House Office Building; assistant, Charles A. Gibson, 452 House Office Building. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.—Miss Zoe Beall, 1130 Columbia Road. Appropriations.—James C. Courts, 1837 Kalorama Road; assistants, Marcellus C. Sheild, jr., The Alwyn; William A. Ryan. Banking and Currency.—C. F. Buckmaster, 1312 1, Street; assistant, A. M. McDer- mott, 626 A Street NE. Census.—William A. Cathcart, 138 North Carolina Avenue SE. Claims.—]J. R. Collie, 214 North Capitol Street; assistant, A. M. Noble, 215 North Capitol Street. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—E. 'T. Shurley. Conference of Minority.—Florence A. Donnelley; assistant, Edwin Smith. . Disposition of Useless Executive Papers.—Walter B. Warner. District of Columbia.—Lewis M. Miller, 322 East Capitol Street; assistant, Kath- arine B. Dickie, 1124 Vermont Avenue. Education.—B. J. Wingard, 218 North Capitol Street. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress.—John S. Horan, 308 Fast Capitol Street. Elections Neo. 1.—Frank Miller, 222 Third Street. Elections No. 2.—Albert P. Myers, 3602 New Hampshire Avenue. Elections No. 3.—Margaret V. Geagan, 212 B Street SE. Enrolled Bills. —William G. Biederman, 1317 M Street. Expenditures in De airs Agriculture.—E. S. Glavis. Interior.—John F. McCarron. Navy.—N. Thornton Hynson, 1335 N Street. Post Office.—Ernest Cornell, 222 Third Street. State.—Samuel C. Neale, The Gainesboro. Treasury.—Charles S. Greenwood, 1418 A Street NE. Expenditures on Public Buildings.—Z. R. Elston, 111 Fifth Street SE. Foreign Affairs.—Frank S. Cisna, 412 Third Street; assistant, David Mackoff, 312 Second Street. Immigration and Naturalization.— Tracy Lay. Indian Affairs.—James V. Townsend, New Varnum; assistant, Paul N. Humphrey. Industrial Arts and Expositions.—J. S. Mullins. Insular Affairs.—Herbert 1,. Smith, 1764 Corcoran Street. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Willis J. Davis, 404 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistants, J. R. Robison; G. R. Williams. Invalid Pensions.—George F. Parrish; assistant, HE. H. King; principal examiner, detailed from Pension Office, Herman Gauss, 221 Fifth Street SE. Irrigation of Arid Lands.—T. B. Clark, 2641 Garfield Street. Judiciary.—]. J. Speight; assistant, Joseph A. Boyd. Labor.—Agnes H. Wilson, 413 New Jersey Avenue SE. Library.—Chester Harrison, The Albemarle. Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—A. D. Crockett, 209 New Jersey Avenue: Military Affairs.—Edward W. Carpenter, 1412 Fifteenth Street; assistant, James R. . Baker, 606 A Street SE. Mines and Mining. — Naval Affairs.—Elisha S. Theall, 1721 Twenty-first Street. Patents.—Clarence E. Kay, 31 B Street. Pensions.—C. 1,, Watts, 227 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistant, May Carroll, The Congressional; principal examiner, detailed from Pension Office, Joseph M. McCoy, 328 F Street NE. Post Office and Post Roads.—]Jo. J. Ivins. Printing.—David E. Finley, jr., The Portner. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Frank P. Lockhart, The Burlington. Public Lands.—H. G. Miller; assistant, Ross Williams. Railways and Canals.— Reform in the Civil Service.—Louis B. Hale, The Metropolitan. Mascellaneous Officials. 207 Revision of the Laws.—W. K. Watkins. Rivers and Harbors.—Frank D. Fletcher, 1464 Rhode Island Avenue; assistant, Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road. Rules.—Clerk, W. Everhart Clark, 2641 Garfield Street. Territories—F. C. Moon. War Claims.—H. E. Graper; assistant, Elizabeth Brownlow; clerk to continue digest of claims, J. B. Holloway, 18 Third Street SE. Ways and Means.—Daniel C. Roper, 816 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; assistants, Joseph N. Benners, 1019 P Street; William W. Evans, 1340 Newton Street. POST OFFICE. (Office opens g a. m., closes 9.45 p. m.) Postmaster.—William M. Dunbar, 129 Maryland Avenue NE. Assistant.— Mail Contractor.—Fred. S. Young, 204 E Street. OFFICE AT HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. Registry and Money Order Clevk.— Mail Clerks.—David J Berger, 728 Third Street SE.; W. E. Ryan, 105 Maryland Avenue NE.; Geo. F. Sample, 415 G Street. Drager Clerk. “John J. Sullivan, 701 Q Street. - BRANCH OFFICE AT CAPITOL. Clerk.—Daniel Christian, 603 Seventh Street NE. OFFICE AT CITY POST OFFICE. Day force, Clerk in Charge.—Robert J. Duncan, 327 North Carolina Avenue SE.; assistant, William F. Sawn, 417 G Street. Night force, Clevk in Charge.—E. J. Hunter, 236 New Jersey Avenue; assistant, D..]J. Evans, 717 A Street SE, DELIVERY MESSENGERS. Edgar Ellis, The Halliday, B. H. Rogers; W. P. Johnson, 111 B Street SE.; Thomas M. Holt, 136 D Street SE.; W. .M. Stevens, 111 B Street SE.; Fred Nesbit, 238 North Capitol Street; Thomas W. Smith, Y. M. C. A. Building; C. O. Young, 204 BE Street; Henry D. Fruit, 209 C Street; W..D. Peeley, 425 I Street; R. L. Mackenzie, 1321 N Street; Glen McCambridge, 3453 Holmead Place; J. A. Lumbard, 206 F Street; Lamont Allan, The Rochambeaun; Claude Durfee, 3501 Fourteenth Street. Heavy Mail Wagon.—David G. Williams, 1464 Girard Street; O. K. Bergett, The Halliday. ret Webster, 1127 C Street SE. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS AT OFFICE BUILDING. Arrive: 9-9.30-10.30 a. m. and I2.30-2.30-4.30 p. 1. Depart: 7.45-9.15-11.15 a. m. and I.15-3.30-4.55-8.15-10.25 p. m. HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief Engineer.—H. W. Taylor, 100 Fifth Street NE. Assistant Engineers.—B. H. Morse, 2138 G Street; E. B. Burke, 514 FE Street; John S. Logan, 918 Hast Capitol Street. Elevator Conductors,—Leonard B. Cook, 485 Maryland Avenue SW.; John K. Dun- can, 320 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Flmer Stanley, 130 Sixth Street NE.; George W. Winters, 3337 Seventeenth Street; Robert B. Kiningham, 2024 G Street: Harry Walter, 350 Raleigh Street, Congress Heights; George Rae, 1330 U Street; Price Hemler, 10 Florida Avenue; Joseph Sparks, 623 Maryland Avenue SW.; B. B. McMahan, 501 C Street NE. 208 Congressional Directory. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES. SENATE. Theodore F. Shuey, The Brighton. Daniel B. Lloyd, The Santa Rosa. Edward V. Murphy, 2511 Pennsylvania | James W. Murphy, 1788 Lanier Place. Avenue. Assistant.—Fugene C. Moxley, 1150 Milton W. Blumenberg, The Arlington. Seventeenth Street. Henry J. Gensler, 2019 Kalorama Road. HOUSE. Fred Irland, 1845 Ontario Place. Samuel H. Gray, 1400 I, Street. Reuel Small, The Hamilton. John D. Cremer, 112 C Street SE. Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place. | Assistant.—John J. Cameron, 223 B George C. Lafferty, Metropolitan Club. Street. OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES. M. R. Blumenberg, 21 First Street NE. F. H. Barto, Florence Court. A. J. Speir, 1325 Eleventh Street. CONGRESSIONAL, RECORD. (Office in Statuary Hall.) Clerk in charge at the Capitol.—W. A. Smith, The Olympia. Indexer.—1,. W. Strayer, 1812 Newton Street. SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CAPITOL. (Office in basement of Capitol.) Supervintendent.—Elliott Woods, Stoneleigh Court. Chief Clerk.—George H. Williams, 1723 P Street. Chief Electrical Engineer.—Christian P. Gliem, 642 Fast Capitol Street. Clerk.—John Welch, 116 Eleventh Street SE. Foreman.—David Lynn, Hyattsville, Md. SENATE OFFICE BUILDING. Custodian.—A. FE. Werner, The Park. CAPITOL POLICE. Captain.—J. P. Megrew, The Roland. Lieutenanits.—John Hammond, 413 B Street NE.; John O’Connell, 149 A Street NE.; M. V. Hanlon, 225 B Street NE. Special Officers.—F. N. Webber, sr., 526 Third Street; B. F. Breitensteine, Mades Hotel. Clerk.—Will P. Hall, 417 Second Street. DEPARTMENTAL TELEGRAPH. Senate Manager.—Charles F. Newsom, Senate post office. House Managers.—Joseph M. Thompson, North Capitol and C Streets; J. J. Con- stantine, 1133 Sixth Street. WEATHER BUREAU MAP STATIONS. Clerks in charge at the Capitol: Senate.—]John H. Jones, 1217 New Jersey Avenue. House,—John C. Stewart, 2813 Thirteenth Street. THE CAPIIOL. The Capitol is situated in latitude 38° 537 20.4 / 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, Va. 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 occupied for legislative purposes January 4, 1859. DIMENSIONS OF THE BUILDING. The entire length of the building from north to south is 751 feet 4 inches, and its greatest dimension from east to west 350 feet. The area covered by the building is 153,112 square feet. 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 So feet 3 inches in width and 36 feet in height. The galleries will accommodate 1,000 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 18509, occupied as the Senate Chamber. Previous to that time the court occupied the room immediately beneath, now used as a law library. 209 HOUSE wp hh 2 0 8 g 2 B= fT Bg aspera 41} Brg I ot Be rin a sh Li ; : BASEMENT AND TERRACE : 17 SENATE O1c 'A4019241(] 10U0LSS2.4DUO07) ay IS1—I-29—,6Schg Cr BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF CAPITOL. HOUSE WING. MAIN BUILDING. | SENATE WING. Terrace. Basement. Terrace. Room. Room. Room. 1. Dynamo rooms. 21,31. House Committee on Expenditures in the 1,3. Superintendent’s storeroom. 2. Index clerk. Department of State. 2,4,6. Police headquarters. 5. Storeroom for paintings. a7 8, 10, 12, 14. Plumber’s shop. 29. House Committee on Expenditures in the De- partment of Commerce and Labor. 3. Dynamo rooms 25. House Committee on Printing. 5. Dynamo rooms. 4,6. Office, A. P. Gardner. 9, II. Secretary’s file rooms. ,9, II, 13,15, I7. Dynamo rooms. ; 13. Doorkeeper’s room. 7% 15 18425: 17. DF fo 21, 23,25. Superintendent's office. 3 3 8, 10. Storerooms for paintings. ; 15, I7. Janitor’s rooms. i; : 29. Superintendent’s storeroom. 2 oul 12. Janitor’s storeroom. 16. Waste-paper room. J : 31. Senator Newlands’s rooms. ; P ? 14. Tile room. 20. Men’s toilet. 16. Women’s toilet. 33, 34. Secretary's file rooms. : > 18. Map room. . 36. Men's toilet. S 19, 21. Dynamo room. ; 0) 20. Men’s toilet. a 3 22, 24, 26, 28. Machine shop. 35,47. Elevators. NS 23. Committee on Printing. 37. Employees’ barber shop. = 39,32, 34, 36. Carpenter shop. 39,41. Engineers’ room. 43. Kitchen. Basement. 33. Engineer’s office, 35, 39. Elevators, 37. Kitchen. 41. 43. nN — = RS. a CSET TT 23 7 23 ; =f 5. § fatale: 22 his bepress os eee LY » = RB WE SA ole 29 gg 30 ju 20 i 31 } IF = 70 5 Ed 28 re LJ 2 3 4 e © 2 EEEENN | 3 we AB 72 70 {77 69 | 68 107 73 77 74 Te = | 37s 80 8 ~ ha i oes = Re .- 0 i ee oe . v a0 ® . GROUND FLOOR 82] 23 [segs . ; . gg Ld . y 33 fe3 EERE L1010040(] 101018 $2460) cic HOUSE WING. Room. 1. Committee on Invalid Pensions. 2. 2 Jeommittee on the Post Office and Post Roads. 4. Stationery room. 5. Minority room. 6. 7. (Official Reporters of Debates. 8. >lspeaer of House. 11. Annex office, Post Office. 12. : Joes of Sergeant at Arms. 3s 14. 4 3 4 Jeommittee on Elections No. 2. 33. 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 76 24. Minority room. 25,28. KElevators. 27. Janitor’s office. 31. Barber shop. Jeommittee on Accounts, GROUND FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 68,79. Senate Committee on the Library. 69. Senate Committee on Education and Labor. 70. House Committee on Labor. : 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. Office, John W. Dwight. 78. Captain of police. 80. Senate Committee on Revolutionary Claims. 81. Electricians’ storeroom. _ 82. Storeroom Supreme Court. 83. Senate bathroom. 2 84, 85. The Supreme Court—consultation room. - 87. Congressional Law Library. 88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Su- preme Court room. 89,90, 91, [Office of Doorkeeper of the House. 92, 97, IOI. La 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. Lieutenant’s room. 77, 107. Senate Committee on Census. SENATE WING. Room. 35,67. Committee on Rules. 36,37. Committee on Appropriations. 38. : 39, 40. Committee on the Judiciary. 41. Committee on Patents. 42,43,46. Committee on Interstate Commerce. 44, 45, 47, 48. Restaurant. 49. Writing room. » so. Committee on the Philippines. 51, 60. Elevators. 52, Committee on Enrolled Bills. 53. Post Office. 55,56; 57. Committee on Finance. 58, 59, 65. Stationery room. 61, 62. Committee on Public Lands. 63. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, 66. Men's toilet. 68. Women’s toilet. ‘ond ay J. fiz af p64 sgosy § “ed @ 8 es ili Fe TE ] 3. #3 nl LY ll “uy PRINCIPAL FLOOR Senate Chambery biz "£4010240(T DUO0LSS24DUO)) HOUSE WING. Room. 2. Committee on Appropriations. . J. G. Cannon. 3 4 5 6. Closets. 7 8.* Members’ retiring rooms. 9 10. Committee on Ways and Means. Cloakrooms. 15. Committee on Ways and Means. 16. Library. 17, 18. Elevators. 19. Speaker. 20. PRINCIPAL FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE WING. Room. Room. 41. House document room. 21. Office of the Secretary. 42. Engrossing and enrolling clerks of the House. 22. Executive clerk. 43. House Committee on Enrolled Bills. 23. Financial clerk. 44. Office of the Clerk of the House of Representa- 24. Chief Clerk. tives. 25. Engrossing and enrolling clerks. 45,46. Office of the Clerk of the Supreme Court. Sujng = : 47. Robing room of the Judges of the Supreme Court. 26,27. Commitice on Military Affairs. 48. Withdrawing room of the Supreme Court. 28. Closets. 49. Office of the Marshal of the Supreme Court. 29, 30. Cloakrooms. 50, 5I. Senate Committee on Pensions. 40. Room of the President. 53, 54. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. a1. The Senators’ reception room. . Senate C itt d Bills. : 5 85 nate Commitee on aingioised mille 32. Room of the Vice President. 56,57. Senate Committee on Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. 58,59. House Committee on Naval Affairs. 33%, 35. Elevators. 60,66. House Committee on Banking and Currency. 36. Official Reporters of Debates. 61. House Committee on Reform in the Civil Service. 37. Public reception room. 62,65. House Committee on Expenditures in the War 38. Committee on the District of Columbia, Depasiment. 39. Office of the Sergeant at Arms. 63. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Chamber. 64. Clerk of House. 33, 34. Committee on Post Offices and Post-Roads, 101400) 24 J, Siz - Hall of Representatives. GALLERY FLOOR, Senate ‘Chamber. 91c ‘A40100.40(] 1DUOLSS24DUO)) GALLERY FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. HOUSE WING. Room. : J committee on Foreign Affairs. 2, 3. Journal Clerk. 4. File room. 5. Committee on Railways and Canals. 6. 7s 8.} Press gallery. 9. 10. II. i Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. 13. Ladies’ retiring room. 14. Elevator. 15. Elevator, : MAIN BUILDING. Room.- 27. Senate Library. 28. Senate Iibrary—ILibrarian’s room. 29. Senate Committee on Five Civilized Tribes of In- dians. 30. Senate Committee on Private Land Claims. 3 32. Senate document room. 33. ‘| 34. Superintendent of the Senate document room. 35. House Library. 6. . } House document room. 37. 38. Clerk’s office. 40. Senate document room. 41. 2 42%. 43. For use of the Justices of the Supreme Court. 48. Printing Investigation Commission and Joint Com- mittee on Printing. 49.\ House Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury 5o.f Department. 52, 56, 57. House Committee on Rules. 53.\House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Meas- 54.f ures, SENATE WING. Room. 14. Committee on Manufactures. 15. Committee on Indian Affairs. 6. 17. Committee on Printing. 18. Committee on Commerce. 19. * 20. 21. Press gallery. 22. Women’s retiring room. 23. Committee on Immigration. 24. Conference room of the Minority. 25. Committee on Privileges and Elections, 26. Committee on Interoceanic Canals. 27. Elevator, ‘10140 9Y J Liz 213 Congressional Directory. a 3 i SOUTHERN LOBBY SENATORS’ LOBBY COAT ROOM FRlORED w=y BS) fda at Sec., Secretary. C. C,, Chief Clerk. L. C., Legislative Clerk. DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE. _ R. C,; Reading Clerk. D., Assistant Doorkeeper, J. C., Journal Clerk. R. P., Official Reporters. Press Reporters. ~8., Sergeant at Arms. JAMES S. SHERMAN, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate. . Bacon, Augustus O., Georgia. . Bailey, Joseph Ww Texas. . Bankhead, John H., Alabama. . Borah, William E., Idaho. . Bourne, Jonathan, jr., Oregon. . Bradley, William O., Kentucky. . Brandegee, Frank B., Connecticut. . Briggs, Frank O., New Jersey. . Bristow, Joseph I,., Kansas. . Brown, Norris, Nebraska. . Bryan, Nathan P., Florida. . Burnham, Henry E., New Hampshire. . Burton, Theodore E., Ohio. . Chamberlain, George E., Oregon. . Chilton, Willian: E., West Virginia. . Clapp, Moses E., Minnesota. . Clark, Clarence D., Wyoming. . Clarke, James P., Arkansas. . Crane, W. Murray, Massachusetts. . Crawford, Coe I, South Dakota. . Culberson, Charles A., Texas. . Cullom, Shelby M., Illinois. . Cummins, Albert B., Iowa. . Curtis, Charles, Kansas. . Davis, Jeff, Arkansas. . Dillingham, William P., Vermont. . Dixon, Joseph M., Montana. . du Pont, Henry A., Delaware. . Fletcher, Duncan U., Florida. . Foster, Murphy J., Louisiana. . Frye, William P., Maine. (Democrats in 7Zalic. Republicans in roman.) . Gallinger, Jacob H., New Hampshire. . Gamble, Robert J., South Dakota. . Gove, Thomas P., Oklahoma. . Gronna, Asle J., North Dakota. . Guggenheim, Simon, Colorado. . Heyburn, Weldon B., Idaho. . Hitchcock, Gilbert M., Nebraska. . Johnson, Charles F., Maine. . Johnston, joseph F., Alabama. . Jones, Wesley L., Washington. . Kenyon; William S., Towa. . Kern, John W., Indiana. . La Follette, Robert M., Wisconsin. . Lea, Luke, Tennessee. . Lippitt, Henry F., Rhode Island. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Massachusetts. . Lorimer, William, Illinois. . McCumber, Porter J., North Dakota. . McLean, George P., Connecticut. . Martin, Thomas S., Virginia. . Martine, James E., New Jersey. . Myers, Henry L., Montana. . Nelson, Knute, Minnesota. . Newlands, Francis G., Nevada. . Nixon, George S., Nevada. . O'Gorman, James A., New York. . Oliver, George T., Pennsylvania. . Querman, Lee S., North Carolina. . Qwen, Robert L., Oklahoma. . Page, Carroll S., Vermont. . Paynter, Thomas H., Kentucky . Penrose, Boies, Pennsylvania. . Percy, Le Roy, Mississippi. . Perkins, George C., California. . Poindexter, Miles, Washington. . Pomerene, Atlee, Ohio. . Rayner, Isidor, Maryland. . Reed, James A., Missouri. . Richardson, Harry A., Delaware. Root, Elihu, New York. . Shively, Benjamin F., Indiana. . Simmons, F. McL., North Carolina. . Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina. . Smith, John Walter, Maryland. . Smith, William Alden, Michigan. . Smoot, Reed, Utah. . Stephenson, Isaac, Wisconsin. . Stone, William J., Missouri. . Sutherland, George, Utah. . Swanson, Claude A., Virginia. . Taylor, Robert L., Tennessee, . Terrell, Joseph M., Georgia. . Thornton, John R., Iouisiana. . Tillman, Benjamin R., South Carolina. . Townsend, Charles E., Michigan.’ . Warren, Francis ¥., Wyoming. . Watson, Clarence W., West Virginia. . Wetmore, George Peabody, Rhode Island. . Williams, John Sharp, Mississippi. . Works, John D., California. . Vacant. . Vacant. nd) ay, 10 & 612 220 Congressional Directory. ¥00Q NNILSVY I % ] % CLERK : i 7% 272222227. / 2 oN N °) ~N | 3 Eo 3] [alas N oH m MEI | N 5 SP S835 \ Gy i \ 2izls i N © iit Ek \. ] ¥00(] NMILS3 ; hr Lid DIIsmsmy Hs | N I “A YH, 7777777 22222 % CHAMP CLARK, DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. Republicans in roman; Democrats in 7Zalic; Socialist in SMALL CAPS. Speaker. 292 Akin, T. 314 Ames, Butler. 270 Anderson, S. 262 Andrews, 'W. H. 261 Andrus, 3. EB. 358 Anthony, D. R.jr. 201 Austin, R. W. 243 Ayres, sh 373 Barchfeld, A. J. 295 Barnhart, H. A. 247 Bartholdt, R. 210 Bartlett, C. L. 291 Bates, A. L. 384 BERGER, V. I. 215 Bingham, H. H. 325 Borland, W. P. 339 Bowman, C. C. 322 Bradley, rw 368 Burke, C. H. 257 Burke, J. FR, ITY Burleson, 25S. 340 Butler, T. S. 229 Calder, W. M. 353 Cameron, R. H. 305 Campbell, P. P. 274 Cannon, J. G. 308 Cary, W. J. 374 Catlin, T. E, 356 Connell, R. E. 334 Cooper, H. A. 385 Copley, I. C. 316 Crago, T. S. 255 Crumpacker, E.D. 399 Curley, J. M. 202 Currier, F. D. 275 Dalzell, J. 252 Danforth, H. G. 359 Daugherty, J. A. 335 Davidson, J. H. 378 Davis, C. R. 319 De Forest, H. S. 233 Dodds, F. H. 318 Draper, W. H. 253 Driscoll, M. E. 203 Dwight, J. W 362 Dyer, 1,. C 249 Esch, J. J. 397 Evans, L. 238 Fairchild, G. W. 269 Farr, J. R. 387 Focht, B. K. WEST SIDE. 228 Fordney, J. W 337 Foss, G. E. 223 Foster, D. 7. 377 French, B. I. 342 Fuller, Cc. KE. 343 Gardner, A.P. 220 Gardner, J: 'y 214 Gillett, FI H 333 Good, 3 vo 213 Greene, W. S. 217 Griest, Ww. W. 239 Guernsey, E. EB. 307 Hamilton, E. L,. 234 Hanna, I,. B. 313 Harris, R. O. 360 Harrison, F. B. 259 Hartman, J. L. 331 Haugen, G. N. 351 Hawley, W.C. 320 Hayes, E. A. 315 Heald, W. H. 328 Helgesen, H. T. 227 Henry, E. S. 264 Higgins, FE. W. 221 Hill; E. J. 336 Hinds, A. C. 256 Howell, Joseph. 254 Howland, Paul. 298 Hubbard, E. H. 218 Hughes, J. A 1 Hughes, W. 206 Humphrey, W.H. 349 Jackson, FE. S. 209 Johnson, B. 304 Kahn, Julius. 376 Kalanianaole, 1.3 355 Kendall, N. E. 300 Kennedy, C.A. 241 Kent, W, 222 Kinkaid, M. P. 293 Kitchin, C. 276 Knowland, JR. 396 Konig, G. 382 Kopp, A. W. 279 Lafean, D. F. 242 Lafferty. A.W. 303 La Follette, W. 1,. 260 Langham, 3 N. 207 Langley, J. W. 372 Lawrence, G. P. 288 Legarda, B. 296 Lenroot, I. L,. 391 Lever, A. F. 324 Lewis, D. J. 329 Lindbergh, C. A. 398 Littlepage, A. B. 267 Littleton, M. WW. 361 Lloyd, J. T. 290 Longworth, N. 289 Loud, G. A. 283 McCall, S. W. 263 McCreary, G. D. 371 McGuire, B. S. 237 McKenzie, J. C. 236 McKinley, W. B. 235 McKinney, J. 341 McLaughlin, J.C. 345 McMorran, H. 309 Madden, M. B. 269 Madison, E. H. 273 Malby, GR |246 Mann, J. R. 250 Martin, E.W. 225 Martin, JA. 288 Matthews, C. 267 Miller, C. B. 271 Mitchell, A. C. 330 Mondell, FE. W. 290 Moon, R. O. 216 Moore, J. H. 278 Morgan, D. T. 248 Morse, KE. A. 346 Mott, I,. W. 277 Murdock, V. 306 Needham, J.C. 327 Nelson, J. M. 365 Norris, G. W. 323 Nye, F. M. 204 Olmsted, M. E. 244 0’ Shaunessy,G. z, 350 Parran, 286 Patton, Cc. H. 251 Payne, S. FE. 332 Pickett, C. E. 240 Plumley, F 219 Porter, S. G. 338 Powers, C. 352 Pray, C. N. 348 Prince, G. W. 299 Prouty, S. F. 395 Quezon, M. IL. 231 Loudenslager,H.C. 265 Rees, R. R. 245 Reilly, A on 394 Rivera, I. M. 37G Roberts, BE. BE, 344 Roberts, E.W. 280 Rodenberg, W. A. 400 Rucker, W. W. 354 Sells, S. R. 224 Shackleford, D. W. 317 Simmons, J. S. 375 Slemp, C. B. 366 Sloan, C. H. 347 Smith, J. M. C. 285 Smith, S. C. 393 Smith, S. W. 226 Sparkman, S. M. 287 Speer, P. M. 383 Steenerson, H. 281 Stephens, W. D, 230 Sterling, J. A 364 Stevens, EF. C. 268 Stone, C. U. 208 Sulloway, C. A. 266 Sulzer, W. 282 Switzer, R. M. 301 Taylor, 5 1.5, Jn 312 Thistlewood, 'N.B. 212 Tilson, J. Q. 302 Towner, H. M. 357 Townsend, EW. oY Utter, CG. H. 363 Volstead, A. J. 232 Vreeland, E. B. 381 Warburton, S. 258 Weeks, J. W. 380 Wickersham, y. 386 Wilder, W. FR 310 Willis, 'F. B. 326 Wilson, Ww. B. 272 Wilson, WwW. W. 392 Wood, iw 297 Woods, F.P. 311 Young, H. O. 370 Young, I. D. 205 Jedsmeyer, W.wW. 21 Adair, J. A. M. 97 Adamson, W. C. 124 Aiken, W. 103 Alexander, J. W. 102 Allen, A. G. 46 Anderson, C. C. 6 Ansberry, 7. 7T. 143 Ashbrook, W. A. 151 Bathrick, E.R. 128 Beall, J. 117 Bell, Fav 37 Blackmon, Fred L. 180 Boehne, I w. 92 Booker, CZ 71 Brantley, W. G. 157 Broussard, R. F. 75 Brown, W. G. 83 Buchanan, F. 40 Bulkley, R. J. 132 Burgess, G. F. 119 Burke, M. E. 115 Burnett, J. L. 24 Byrnes, J. F. 28 Byrns, J. W. 127 Callaway, O. 158 Candler, E. S., 77. 187 Cantril, Ele 194 Carlin, ay) 8 Carter, C. D. 7 Clark, F. 73 Claypool, H.C 32 Clayton, H. D. 135 Cline, a 116 Collier, ] W. 45 Conry, M. F. 47 Covington, J. H. 17 Cox, /. MM. 62 Cox, W. E. 56 Cravens, B. 138 Cullop, W. A. 118 Davenport, J. S. 53 Davis, J. W. 38 Dent, S. Hg. 196 Denver, MR. 49 Dickinson, C. C. 122 Dickson, W. A. 107 Dies, M. 112 Dixon, L. 182 Donohoe, M. 137 Dovemus, F. E. 183 Difender fer, R. E. EAST SIDE. 78 Doughiton, R. L. 2 Driscoll, D. A. 150 Dupre, H. G. 11 Edwards, C. G. 10 Ellerbe, J. E. 154 Estopinal, A. 77 Faison, J. M. 89 Ferris, .S. 165 Fields, W. J. * 9 Finley, D. E. 34 PL Lk 7 VE 105 Flood, H. D 43 Floyd, ZL C. 181 Fornes, C. V. 63 Foster, M. D. 98 Fowler, H. R. 20 Francis, W. B. 148 Gallagher, T. 101 Garner, J. N. 114 Garrett, F. J. 141 George, H., jr. 184 Glass, C. 58 Godwin, H. L. 171 Goeke, J. H. 189 Goldfogle, H. M. 140 Goodwin, W. S. 190 Gordon. G. W. 72 Gould, S. W. 147 Graham, J. M. 161 Gray, F. H. 69 Gregg, A. W. 85 Gregg, C. H. 167 Gudger, J. M. 193 Hamill, J. A. 81 Hamilton, J. M. 74 Hamlin, C. W. 26 Hardwick, T. W. 139 Hardy, Rufus. 70 Harrison, B. P. 129 Hay, James. 39 Heflin, J. T. 163 Helm, H. si Henry, BR. L. 179 Hensley, W. L. 130 Hobson, R. P. 170 Holland, E. E. 153 Houston, W. C. 68 Howard, IW. S. 108 Hughes, D. M. 76 Hull, C. 136 Hammond, W. .S. 13 Lrymphreys, B. G. 33 Jacoway, H. M. 96 James, O. M. 15 Johnson, J. T. 50 Jones, W. A. 106 Kindred, J. J. 23 Ki inkead, E. F. 95 Kipp, G. W. 16 Latta, 7 P. 67 Lee, a3 125 Lee, 2.7, 5 Legare, G. S. 84 Levy, J. M. 86 Lindsay, G. H. 61 Linthicum, J. C. 133 Lobeck, C. 0. 88 McCoy, Ww. I 176 McDermott, J. T. 22 McGillicuddy, D. fe 142 McHenry, J. G. 65 Macon, R. B. 51 Maguire, J. A. 82 Maher, J. P. 177 Mays, D. H. 134 Moon, J. A. 100 Moore, J. M. 164 Morrison, M. A. 79 Moss, R. W. 44 Murray, Ww. F. 197 Oldfield, W. A. 174 Padgelt, L. P. 52 Page, R. IV. 93 Palmer, A. M. 87 Patten, 7. G. 169 Pepper, I. S. 155 Peters, A. J. 195 Post, J. D. 192 Rainey, H. T. 126 Raker, J. E. 99 Randell, C. B. oI Ransdell, J. E. 152 Rauch, or 35 Redfield, w..C. 149 Richardson, W. 123 Riordan, D. J. 4 Robinson, J. T. 66 Roddenbery, S. A. 64 Rothevmel, J. H. 188 Rouse, A. B. 178 Rubey, T. L. 14 Rucker, A. W. 144 Russell, J. J. 166 Sabath, A. J. 25 Saunders, E. W. 294 Scully, 7. J. 113 Sharp, W. G. 120 Sheppard, M. 41 .Sherley, S. 12 Sherwood, I. R. qo Sims, T. W. 162 Sisson, 7. U. 191 Slayden, J. L. 48 Small, I MH. 36 Smith, C.D, 185 Smith, W.R. 145 Stack, E. J. 29 Stanley, A. O. 104 Stedman, C. M. 27 Stephens, H. D. 19 Stephens, J. H. 175 Sweet, E. F. 3 Talbott, J. F.C. 55 Talcott, CoA 18 Zaylor, E. T. 42 Taylor, G. W. 60 Thayer, J. A. 110 Zhomas, R. Y., jr. 121 Tribble, ST 186 Turnbull, R. 94 Tuttle, W. E., jr. 111 Underhill, E. S, 30 Underwood, O. W. 59 Watkins, J. T. 173. ebb, KE. Y. 156 Whitacre, J. J. 54 White, G. 160 Wickliffe, R. C. 172 Wilson, F. E. 168 Witherspoon, S.A. 131 Young, J. 321 Vacant. 389 Vacant. 7002400) 29] Ice 222 Congressional Darectory. MEMBERS’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES. SENATORS. [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol Exchange—Main 3120.] CAPITOL. Gren YALD- SENATORS. COMMITTEE, : Tele- Tele- T,ocation. phone. Room. phore. BACON +7" Private Land Claims........ Gallery floor, back of Docu- 79 217 8o1 ment room. BAILEY... wi. Additional © FC Accommeda dl. 20. Cu HL ae ely 246 194 tions for the Library of Congress. BANKHEAD ...| Standard’ Weights! "and {5 co i a colin. ani. veivn 332 197 Measures. . BORAH ........ Fducation and Labor ....... Old building, basement, 49 230 819 west side. BOURNE....... Post Officesand Post Roads.| Senate floor, southeast cor- 34 233 173 ner. BRADLEY ..... Rxpenditures Department J or lis hie ns nee ee ime 133 192 of Justice. BRANDEGEE ..| Interoceanic Canals......... Gallery floor, northeast cor- 20 425 813 : ner. BRIGGS. ....... Contingent BXPORSEE. .. 1h [10. sities vise sent sedis leis va ss 4e 139 878 BRISTOW ...... Brpenditures,! Post OMCe |. c7. 0 Srvns sah hs srs wsinsteatal lees soe 304 193 Department. BROWN..." ., :< I Patents... iL SAD UE Ground floor, north side.. ... 32 433 166 BRYAN a A pi ARC Co TH eri BSR EN hil re Tl) el Ck 341 97 BURNHAM..... Agriculture and Forestry...| Ground floor, northeast cor- 101 423 829 ner. BURTON =..- = - Expenditures, BHeaSOry Loon oh 5 nn DE Hers ean 3h sd 327 861 Department, CIAMBERL ATR. ie, entail a a I i a Fa ena re un 240 162 CHILTON + «+e 5 telat sn sah sis sdetsls bie, See a ne a AE SERS ER eos SE I Sg 227 175 CLAPP....... »-] Interstate.Commerce'....... Ground floor, south side..... i th 2x Rd FER ni CLARK (Wyo. Judiciary. . 50h dal, Ground floor, northwest cor- 135 226 862 ner, : CLAREE (ATE.)| Disposition of tUISeless Paci], ic. viv va cuits at on ce oo'ute snide Gauls oe si 203 826 pers in the Executive Departments. CRANE. ....7a Rules. ak haath vanes, Ground floor, southwest cor- EO ner. CRAWFORD +s CIAIMNS oo. iin ana e E des vdieo dil te are oat vis 2 dad 426 842 CULBERSON:..|\PublieHealthand National | . ... . oi 0 oa ei avi aaoly. ood 315 96 Quarantine. CuLLoMm....... Foreign Relations .......... Old Library space, Senate Erk PIE, < HEN floor, northwest corner. CUMMINS .... :Civil Service and Retrenchie [i vi. vi. iiss sisis sls sive ss sa an slot) od ate len 204 848 ment. CURTIS... 55 5 Coast Defenses ”........... Tov) pre Se ml WRC deb inl Geo TAT AT 172 DAVIS. . 5s MississippliRivep ta. 2-02 oo Isl noni s acer Sa sh mi a 331 185 DILLINGHAM .| Privileges and Elections... .| Gallery floor, east side....... 42 340 832 DIXON ......- Conservation: of National |. i 429 94 Resources. DUBONT. . 5x Military, Affairs. 0.0.0. 0s Senate floor, northwest cor- 131 415 98 ner. A Hm En oT RR I RL ru ie ER EA a IR De i TE SM ma 345 164 FOSTER ....... Transportation and Sale of | Old Library space, Senate 62 337 176 Meat Products. floor. PRYE, cu..o. vats COMIMECTCE, i vu i%nsle ora sinalbisls Gallery floor, northwest cor- AZ L eiviuifule loony s seine ner. GALLINGER...| District of Columbia........ Senate floor, east side.... ... 113 405 195 GAMBLE ...... Indian Affairs... 00 a Gallery floor, west side...... 100 441 89 GORE... v.20 Railroads. 0 os belo iis eA any as GIS 309 812 GRONNA ...... Expenditures; Navy /De- 1. .0. nied Un en a nels ws 5 343 124 partment. GUGGENHEIM.| Philippines ................. Ground floor, east side....... 111 232 845 HEVRURN..-..[ Manufactures. ...........- Gallery floor, southwest cor- 43 329 184 ner. ELE EE nln a Sm UN A GN a CR BC Re Ba ER RX LE Bn CS 442 167 JOERSON MEN. 81. rect ot ss i i ra i 348 171 Jour NsTON University ‘of ther United [= .. 0 a ri ea nih sons se vss 307 199 (Ala.) States. JONES’... ivuivrs Fisheries. vo ns 8 isin Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 223 SENATORS’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES—Continued. CAPITOL. OF Henson: SENATORS. COMMITTEE. es Tele- Tele- Location. phote. Room. phone. KENYON ...... Bpendius, Pepastment lio. iti desios silusients) sates rsinky 443 823 TRIRIN: totvinrseis etal] stimelstornrapateserataiusaint wien ote stuseturesvinlatwt wi lwintalatet wiih ata ai viatel ota as ar Miele diate 39 taf oFa fail nei»: rar aiet » 247 821 TA ROLLETTE. Census .................-. 0 Old building, basement, 36 427 828 northwest corner. BEA. A... fh BT TT or ss Re Ne FC PF pany 439 804 LIPPITE vec cues Expenditures, Department |... veel chile Sean soya nese si sislnils 428 844 of Agriculture. LODGE ........ Immigration... cose device. Gallery floor, southeast cor- 31 303 865 ner. LORIMER...... Mittesiand VANIngG . 0 dein Sn basins ia and. 245 810 MCCUMBER .. .[-Pensions . uv uviviveseive vo Old Library space, Senate II 448 8o3 : ~ floor, north side. MCLEAN ...... Porest Reservallons.. eo... ulus undo ciifulb Sr 8 SEC JET 3s. 404 835 MARTIN (Va.).| Minority Conference........| Gallery floor, east side....... 37 221 191 IVE ACRATATEIN TEU: oi ataies ois visite div msit ates arms in ipa nt atv sven d stint at aralv iste ines we wabnin sets wine Lo 47s wisi sis 408 836 (NN. IVDVITRE Fes iv oof oc ciard vw ds evi sie bur usaisiuin atavere wie fo ra Arar abana wi ab AE EA AE I Rl 244 879 NELSON ....... Public Lands............ ...| Ground floor, southeast cor- Ee Bl PRL | EE DI ner. NEWLANDS Corporations Organized in | Old building, subbasement, 59 330 9I the District of Columbia..| north side. NIZON......... Tetlgatlon ii eice. ihrer shivais] sustains nan pelsiveihisenieminaiete stone sms os wiswieists 421 99 DUS ORIIAIN. ++ 15 5s us 5 moana sinnssis iam amsaseieim tive elebsile ot ad mu view Si aes wie we ww do Side Sule) saleable » 229 174. OLIVER ....... Canadian Relntlons. sv. eam ied Bastin sieeve sesso snercaives 213 189 OVERMAN Woman SuErage. cl. iim fms slévvs adil. BULL a snag uss ised, 211 188 OWEN... ...-.- PaciBaRaMIOnAS. cs vaine fe ena avisinn ssi sa sain iotishlmndat ten Sfarietides + 339 190 PAGE.....-.... Cuban Relations... Lado iuidlriiiliivisibhwismieniumienise sinmiew ssininaif sins snivie 407 814 PAYNTER ..... Examine Several Branches. (vo. «ih vis wiviewsiamianaiinmakensit)s meses 346 139 Civil Service. PENROSE. ..... BIRGTIICE «iv wes tor wisvaisiare sstivsatos ».| Ground floor, north side..... 10 325 183 PERCY. 20. oo sviivr on san aerrsviensineionnmenivemiololotis ed sv shibeints nis wivia miosis wm eintommersis] vs ns vinie 406 837 PERKINS...... Naval: Allain. i oiii ci mina felons se sean simeuins mises atsmieiiseo) ses sn sae 321 165 POINDEXTER. .|- Expenditures, INErior de i. .. cu. ves siaminanivisneitonmesmmeisfsio » oto vie 430 806 partment. POMERENI. |. 5. &.cdraiivs vosinm amen vas va da vvan me Soha a oil « abl BRAGS SEL 241 847 RAYNER ...... Indian: Depredations....... l-.c.vid hn ee CALL JSTUIARE os 207 808 Syn nie gal SEs OE TR st SR ML gt Ue Sn EE sem NR 208 168 RICHARDSON. .| Pacific Is1ands and POLO |... uve eesnvuusnunsnseessosneessleenennnn 225 180 Rico. ROOT: +. 5 i ole Industiial Expositions i. il. sieeve int aise bless ar 5 431 182 SYIEVITEY ifs vas ssa ko wv asiercsalot ters irctaturemelirarusy tan iim ol wie dioios beams tmon wat rw sino nie oe wit ew aga diss w wie 347 177 SIMMONS. ..... Engrossed Bills, i... vesivuivien Old Library space, Senate 66 223 79 floor, west side. SMITH (MA.). | Trespassers. on = Xd HATA ve ov civuivansivniiv ewan vanes eisinin]ns een eee 437 151 Lands. SMITE MAC, CERI OTTER: rn on Satria hraaiiarie Io sist marae a 0 maken wmseisia imran ws lie w Se ele wim sia oe 411 123 SMITH (S.C. ).| Transportation Routes oi |... vcs cuineiismmimiimiceion sininnive eats einins sie 410 178 Seaboard. ; SMOOT . ...-... PolnbINGs. or denies eas sates Gallery floor, west side...... 70 215 825 STEPHENSON. .| Enrolled Bills ..............| Ground floor, north side..... 33 231 822 STONE... o'r evs Revolutionary. Claims: .....]. o.oo senile r anes oo oe 205 187 SUTHERLAND .| Public Buildings and |..........c.coooiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiennas, 209 140 Grounds. SWANSON, &. <0 tel I i ute water sailed [inte hte utd ye bat arbi a elas wine tubin itiarers iia do f+ s Co etree 206 855 TAYLOR. vuoi GeologICaAlSUIVEY. iii uti sas ed bis maivaiiee wine wrens ieiiieile sv ee/ete s 333 8o TERRI AG 5 =e) + se rs whi Toeasateias saat a al) aL wel Bra ais Cselebii ura meters oasipte ern winiato me 432 805 THORNTON... oli tis bia lots asia iia ate ihre ss Te) £70 aie a cs Bra ure ina let wiiu rin mn wth guise raf ears Ny 447 802 TILLMAN. .... Five Civilized Tribes of In- | Gallery floor, back of Docu- 30 417 815 dians. ment room. ; TOWNSEND: ...|: Coast and Insular Survey. wi cove vosniivranesionsnisscsin)s oe ono 228 846 WARREN. ..... Appropriations... ........ Ground floor, west side ...... 15 440 843 IVA TTSONCNE, | salsa as 3 ieweamsisiv sams saved emer tiles seen s vie melons hissinme selon ss esr als 4. o's 5 a0 242 816 WETMORE"... TADIATY iia vain sinter Ol building basement west 29 250 47 side. VIL ETAME L400 ah sles den air erreisbenviatitesin iva win nin winse res bthig es saints ihe Jalal, 217 186 WORKS ...... Expendliiures, War Depasi- |: er bicininisisivitaieasnisiinicniainivniole vais vaio 323 101 ment. 224 Congressional Directory, REPRESENTATIVES. [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol Exchange—Main 3120.] > HOUSE OFFICE a QSPUTOL: BUILDING. GATE, OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT CoOMMIS- Tele Tele SIONER. . Location. phone. Room. phone. ts IDATR. of. 500k io ofr Sno 7a whorl ii E SR aa 523 ADAMSON ..... Interstate and Foreign | Gallery:floor, east corridor..| : 221 |........|........ Commerce. AEREN (S.C) .[. «iv. n hint, senile. SoS 432 ARINUN. YY fo oobi os Siva, con dlabiis dont 567 ALEXANDER ..| Merchant Marine and Fish- 578 eries. . RET EN | nn cre eh deb Alloa min vm v 2 AMES. ......... |. Le, Soa | AN DERISION [o-oe levis its dialsiniimi sm imein/nininiesd oon 535 (Minn). ANDERSON [oct suinsecnscvu vain nivninaivshny 462 | (Ohio) | Ee RL ER a 668 li NPRUSIE. |. LL i a 362 i ANSBERRY ....| Elections No. 1 592 PEND HONY «co fnivn enone ts cmininiioh loins tin ntotoi: Vins : 575 | + ASHBROOK....| Expenditures in the Post 589 i Office Department. fi AUSTIN. Jove eis ss danlonlion bas wir ne 566 | ANVERS . . fei ale bio bs rata e mieto 645 i IBARCHPELD. .. | sa rd ends ae 716 i IBARNIIART. .. [00 «1 viva lm A Git G0, 620 i BARTHOBDIT. : -- 0 ici au hibits vas 515 i IBARTLETIE. . «ul ioc oieleTutoutalslelc wimminiaie winiiin mie wine 623 | BATES... vcs. le crite ssieiaiinleininmimimioiais iow nin mie issn min 522 il BANERICK J. on [ois inteivisisis it iniv oslo dinieiatuisiats dintaintala line 439 BEALL (Tex.) .| Expenditures in the De- 583 I partment of Justice. Carr dd Sh Ve RN Tn LR RR 679 BERGER... fe dvesicnsion idiekeinitisiayoietet intoieret nie 543 BINGHAM... cline caie sided, stoisle ios helene 431 BLACKMON. + bss eisie sis sais atitaioin a vigieinivisinismmie 440 | BOEHNE, 18 ov fo an alah a Sisdine dibiom dn iwinte 628 | BOOHER -. « . - [sie vivo RLSE CAEHN TALE 610 BORLAND «vot ofr dee soci able aie aras oiIbe IY 651 | BOVIMAN GL. © Lf dedi seiisimiia in avian abr vimsnie 357 BRADLEY... Lf annie a iia 626 i BRANTLEEN. fin aii co sitadnin 693 PP ROUSSARIY «vf. oo vie iain si opr wis dase eaiie de 688 | he Re LT 666 I BUCHANAN. ..L|- 0 ia sires dead bin dte 2000 354 BULRLEY Lol cma daw dl tie in coil 367 ! BURGESS; le ond i dn ana bn mantis 548 BOR TABRUS [on Ln chat neta ate 600 Dak.). i BORER (Ba.) ..l..oiviiinn ne Ee Gl 495 | BUREEIIWHS. Yo). 0 dats sins wins dh 737 RT 625 | EE Er Dee Ee Ae a NS 488 BUBLER Sibi asa oh CH Ba i ah 508 | BYRNES(S. Chon. a A 511 Bynwal Benn oo nh rain 387 | BATLDERL CL... 3d. finan Sa 0 356 CALTAWINY [Li ii ai aha ivi 375 BAMERON. .. [Jain edn Lass Janis 717 CAMPBELL...) Lan a ais 594 CANDLER .-... Alcoholic Liquor Traffic.... 402 CANNONERS is hd Toth cio atiiolel olepdimi wis vie 229 CANTRITT,. ls di Ein sala Sanita 596 | A RIN l,l, are hs aha ata e oe la rata ate 681 LE A Ee J 569 CART i Re ea aa 662 CATLIN... i admits, Seine a re a The 720 CLARK ra a 457 CRABB EMO.) lt. ar sie snide stalain elute 206 CLAYPOOL... lo. ih id ihrem mw aie s 473 CLAYTON. vox.» Judiciary.................... 680 CLINE «io: viesiss Expenditures on Public 580 Buildings, i | | { (Hf iil | il Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 225 REPRESENTATIVES’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES—Continued. REPRESENTA- CAPITOL. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. TIVE, DELE- GATE, OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT CoMMIS- : Tele- Tele- SIONER. Location. phone. | ROOM | shone. COTAIER LS. (0h sr emia ce ers a Sr ie a SH SR oh At alent etulatiater 5 a alesein ates drratese 0 176 479 CONNELL --- - of» isis oes slente adios divalasinafersnte nid sioima isialatsie iv were foisrbfele toll Heielituiohe 342 647 CONRY, Bit: fers ndeasds sions lees staf AR nh iter saiaiois ta srs alae inte Tk we aie inie 326 639 BOOPER .. iv off ce or svisianiais site v's ata 0 Sala i Sty Ha uTutatoth Slob stuiaaaile is vinta wale vie wie w si staz] inia tere eta 209 507 COPIEY "o-criseial) os + vs inloiris slate viv alain ss oie foiith arelotutl lars slstel atulats ular Mitsu ala fo ata Tataate tesa nia oR UsTatstn nie id 454 370 COVINGTON ...|...u0nenns Er DE ERS Try EERE: 421 713 Cox (Ind.) ....| Expenditures in the Treas- | Old Library space, Gallery 7 | EER Safe I TE Cox (Ohio).... CRAGO Jf. cv CRAVENS ..... CULLOP CURLEY ....... DANFORTH ... DAUGHERTY .. DAVENPORT .. DAVIDSON .... DAVIS id Davis (W.Va. DE FOREST... . DIFENDERFER Dixon (Ind.). DopDS: .......4 DOREMUS DRrRiscoLL, DANIEL A. DRISCOLL, MICHAEL E. DUPRE -...'.... KESTOPINAL.... EvVANS.......: FAIRCHILD ... PLOOD. oa» ROSS... Sh... FOSTER (I1l.).. FOSTER (Vt.).. FOWLER -...... PRANGIS ...... FRENGH....... PULLER ......: GEORGE, Jt ... GILLETT --...: CLASS. ovens GopwIN (N. C-). .| Printin ury Department. Appropriations .... ........ Territories... ... i ciniegivs Reform in the Civil Service. floor. Ground floor, main corridor. House floor, west corridor... Old Library space, House floor. 248 563 437 733 122 425 157 454 114 421 447 738 237 529 324 638 365 659 128 428 403 703 497 392 203 503 130 442 247 546 273 | 559 355 652 405 704 458 372 477 366 428 728 354 669 i Sid 660 396 395 633 701 584 684 616 674 621 554 572 309 706 631 607 132 443 204 504 485 385 226 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES—Continued. REPRESENTA- CAPITOL. Hause Opps TIVE, DELE- GATE, OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- : Tele- Tele- SIONER. Location. phone. Room. phone COEERIR QUIT» Juels beret sos ore muisiros tain sm fin sit i ie Fon ws. ofp ah ANSLotas eter ao sy mini on 57 A 155 358 GOLDFOGLE Rijoctions SL A SA he ES SE RR Re Sa eh 363 657 Te i ea a Se on SE EA oe HS A) 259 538 A EE er a A 182 482 (Ark.). CORDON «= He isiarcd ie liv s/s os motu clots nisin sie ’s win his ots artim isis ainitin siti sin nis, aires isin visi w vr hn pois Ie mas 239 530 GOULD oso vik visi) dott wn leben, ov Bla] ole JEG oui elute Grothe wud drole wears lei faiuciore etn « 187 485 GRAHAM. ..... Fxpenditures' in the Inte- [.neoih..... cous ss alssiseistveeisnt|ciiisates » 296 591 rior Department. GRAY Lins... GREENE ...... GREGG (Pa.) .. GREGG (Tex.). CRIEST iv...» GUDGER....... GUERNSEY.... HAMILL SS... ... HAMILTON (Mich.). HAMILTON (W.Va.). HAMLIN ...... Expenditures in the State | Basement, main building 278 is cova Nr ven an, : Department. DRIAL RT AR BE SE A See BI ARE I ea a A 267 557 EE Te JA LS 0 BE 167 459 HARDWICK ...| Coinage, Weights and | Old Library space, Gallery El EE Measures. floor. HARDY... .. .| Expenditurés in ithe Navy [.....ceeroeions saisionisisivien iste sisls'saioninies 119 413 Department. ins OR RR EB a Re Ls rh SU ISS, 166 475 EIA RIRISON |... srs isiniscismini cmnbipiicioine simi ns Joinmis RR Eh Re eI SN RE 136 445 (Miss.) LE EO AE a Be RN RR I ESE 139 434 (N.Y.) ET ARIMA sas Ltrs 7:70 lass ole 1816 0 via thin le Tom Tu shernie malate foiininge io griaielt s Fis 5 aiwie lo iho S78 0% nls fiw ao Vo nik i wiinie 336 644 ENT OENE. ar Cs livia ly wae ne SWE a wd a ee 491 388 SR TE EE CT GR Se ees Ban SER AEE FH Pe 467 360 Hav. .i..oi.. Military Aang. Ll itll citar siti Tie sina sm nals fio win 204 451 498 ETAVES S80 ou ieie of coieiniaiieciaisisiointainiolvisimaieie nivin iain oiaiv]sinsieisinininie sip oe s.elnisie nia s sia sain ais stele vieievier 417 711 EEEATLID iv cieieins t)eis'eleieiotvisic aivintvin vis iniainis wiviale wis nielai sis fais suie slaiainsoie ss Sisisin's alaslaiainle isin simian ivi Lioiain) viaieie a 218 521 HEFLIN ....... Industrial Ante and Expos: |. res cieioess suche coisivesaisismie foes oeisin 272 574 sitions. HE EGESEN ./. sh c/o eis cirri, oie nlribivats voi aminimien ys cial sinisioinssinins sities nwo Sui0iw rs vivtieinly foi vive vrs 506 397 Herm: oe... Expenditures in the War ols Jisary space, House D5. {eas unite roth « Department. i ENR CE OTIN, Woo.lss oiriereirisimsime re mior io dials rs nina onsibiabeln frre niisioorais 5 oratelo som tHE oie muh opioid hoi wiaieivints 4 269 558 HENRY (Tex.).| RULES... ...civuenisimivoinaomeee os Library space, Gallery 308 I aaa or hE re Ne a Ne I EL pe EW SRR ir ne 8 LR BS 442 342 HIGGINS 496 391 Huy... i... .. 202 502 HiNDS.o-..... 492 492 HossoN 344 635 HOLLAND: co Lil snes ie a Ty STs Fn a MOINES a cid ions an steno na Be Ens 184 483 HOUSTON...... CCS oT TH deft Coal va ae win ebm gt ww BR MIE RT fats Was » 152 441 ENO ARIDS. «oo sietersioreiisioiisisminitioie She mitt alps soa avuiy/osole rosa niwtiainossioi wis Lola oiasmivibreim nAuRR oS 0 fe ie 330 641 RN A A I GR SM I AE IR A Se Ue Se A aR a 493 389 LIOWI AND... fico cicis veri iciv idl ainuisinteiinierein ein mls smisieiaivin ris iokommiiniowin vie iRinatonisie iwi Colman golianiosnintn’e 351 650 LE Ln pea A a I Ln J EN ML a er 180 481 IEGHESHG A, ) i. sai voi leiwibiaioininis wisieloisierdia vse hbeis is Tosa aim tromioin isinieldininis ious s1esnpen ition yrinimm 131 430 nnn In A I NR TO A RO Es I Rr SER et i CR 302 602 Va.). ROUGH SIN, Jo Mire re tii naiiresdiisasiatviaad vivins wats Datu scores iniabelie bis twrainmioisoss sessiobn home Sow My sino Son wk 238 542 En en ER RR SS CR Te ANC J NE Sh BA SS i i 389 685 MIP IR EY fo. 0 oasis etoile iraaiinionsitis nin a ai inin o4eT05 3a iisee is ese A etn ebm oe swe we ees Ym 0 161 255 (Wash.). ENR URI VISE. tole ile Sheietnleies minimis dnivima rms fia oer ore wins Sieh ale mnis jo a soseke isiasn wi fe fee a oe fa 6 maid 3 345 636 (Miss.) A CRS ONE sries sp 3 eiwrel sinlsiute isos roihwimiursiuiensilvitpmiere win) «feito sss sialbioerdiesvsssorayeimieissnis iaio inisinsarermis [si Miaiwin ian 0 104 404 AC ON AN. a ola 0% seis ide wish mates rsharimin me a Hin arsiol alates a eimesd oo eels IO Loli sus Kale Sg aio macs mim din 374 678 ANTES CIR 3. 5 LUT 5 id sinh vata Saks vinialaksipsmiak ale safe bia ds LA TA 9 eA Amc tole sit sa e887 4 30 487 386 JouNSON (Ky. ) District of Columbia. oi. ls fda rea hs sitar siti hai soiais 377a 664 Jor reo A CR Cm er ES Ca Se See Sm Es J 205 505 ORES ii... Insta AT aI al a Res isa raseis spe SAE OA tows Fa 125 416 AEE IE AE RA LR a EC Bh se ET oll ER nl sr Sr SM SE Ca ni 408 718 AL A NTIAN A rs a ati I ia Aleta aa War we wim walk la ae AO AT Ba oho orb po ein am 283 595 OLE. N Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 227 REPRESENTATIVES’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES—Continued. REPRESENTA- TIVE, DELE- GATE, OR RESI- DENT CoMMIS- SIONER. CHAIRMANSHIP. CAPITOL. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. I, ocation. Room. Tele- phone. YRwDATY I Ll a a ih (Nebr.) KINKEAD (N. Kipp ......-... RITtCHIN ..-... KNOWLAND... KONIG ..%00 2. YAFEAN.. += TAME 05... LANGHAM .... LANGLEY ..... T ATTA oe. LAWRENCE ... LEWIS Sh. LINDSAY ...... LINTHICUM .. LITTLEPAGE.. IITTLETON ...{. LLOYD . 000.0, TOBECK of ive'vs’s Toon. in. 5. MCCREARY ... MCDERMOTT. . McGILLI- CUDDY. MCGUIRE “(Okla.) MCHENRY .... MCKENZIE. ... MCKINLEY... . MCKINNEY ... MCLAUGHLIN. MCMORRAN. .. MACON... .... MANN... MARTIN(Colo.) MARTIN (S. Dak.). MATTHEWS... MITCHELL .... MONDELL..... Moon (Pa.)... Moon (Tenn.) MOORE (Pa.). Accounts MOORE (Tex.). 84259°—62-1—1ST ED——16 249 547 480 382 306 606 410 719 216 520 329 627 285 597 402 702 465 359 470 377 478 381 210 518 az [Ney 391 687 473 364 255 550 147 438 364 673 212 509 411 707 es 6 257 SST EE RS Er { i 228 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES— Continued. HOUSE OFFICE REPRESENTA- CAPITOL. SE a TIVE, DELE- GATE, OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- 4 { Tele- SIONER. Location. ” Room. phone. VOR CAIN ih =a suisa in Tbs Bn ss far i folate lolol 21 15 wis wn a ws winiaiinte Wr meme Sia Gaia wwe 490 500 MIORRISON Te » ie /« |= 2 sc uivia iets sin/o sinfeinloisie sieisin sins mnininhv sis ss va slnisieien ia siasisin su nmspse waaes 420 723 Te A I FTI I ne sn oe 433 731 Moss (Ind.)...| Expenditures in the Agri- | Ground floor, main building.| 253 [....ccutfienennn. _ cultural Department. RL A BR Sr Se a i AAT Ie 462 374 MURDOCK sis2 = «(1s isis iret sin iointeins ti siein a oie ninimilin als 3 2 tinie 0 ia 3 pin Lainiaie sis njoitinie ais sisinsinioie 339 632 MURRAY. .. -. <|s .clodierisallisiiisieto seis sitinlotaisiein | win salsa a’ tls niniasle’s «sla shin o/sinen siainiis 229 537 INEEDITAN. -« [ss sisithsicienion visiviiinleispaiersisin ni suinis's no|sies vies ss shine sin sunisioniss se sseesns 386 698 NELSON. rics «ir [375 cinip iiss lo vin oininiaiaiornioisin ins mv vision | 8 5s £2 Bois nluin asic uma s sive iow siaininis nie 276 576 NORRIS aiziels =» [sss i2ivios os tials vio sininin sinre ninioieis tinivim ss isis iss 09 8 3 alaio/s iss sens enivssvaivevesis 214 519 INE i len «+ [i rsisis sinicsinin/nis sie wininis nein al siuinieinei nls lo Fin iminin't nln le sisi int niu nl wis sila u winnie s 350 667 QISHAUNESSY. lec 0.00 00 0 coeieniniciseiojesivinivinisnns nafs sn seins sion vavsssienvesesiossassss 228 536 OLDFIELD «| PALES. «i cov iiivieie nin, soreio sisininivhe so ns /n0 8 minis qr 395 690 OLMSTED sro co ff iiss oie ooh ei slesfodila rato viisiniale x siuiwit iy vivid + wis'y vis vas I I i» 105 405 PADGETT Old 1ibrary space, House [| 217}. cu selene floor. aT ee ET rire 429 729 PALMER Riis + |t: 00s: 5s niin an smenssesss lisse esses senssassesssss np 143 436 PARRAN. eons eleeesesiirnnnniennsesncnnasanae]eessresecesnnaainreannesnan.. 314 618 BATTEN.) ds ssiren rive msibineie smn sioeiisesioysizs = 3 23 s/s a s viens enes seine ainsinsialsisnnnies 231 526 PATTON (PA.) «|: cereerereneenneeeareneeosasaaalesesssseseeenneanenusoanananans 242 544 PAYNE ..cruv.- 612 PORTER RAINEY (Tex.) RANSDELL (La.) RavucH ....x..- (Nev.). ROBINSON..... RODDENBERY . RODENBERG .. ROTHERMEL.. RUCKER(Colo.) RUCKER (Mo.) SABATH .:+..-- SHACKLEFORD SHARP ...50... SHEPPARD .... SHERLEY.-..... Expendituresin the Depart- ment of Commerce and Labor. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Public Buildings and Grounds. SHERWOOD... . SIMMONS... tse sess es srs arse srs sescsess Ground floor, west corridor. . tse ss ‘esses starrer ever er reser 494 493 213 510 2 sas pi 177 465 223 649 476 380 488 400 124 426 156 470 347 648 499 393 200 497 295 590 388 699 349 266 571 127 417 206 516 369 661 234 540 232 539 168 476 294 700 484 384 277 562 399 532 446 350 Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 229 REPRESENTATIVES’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES—Continued. HOUSE OFFICE REPRESENTA- CAPITOL. BUILDING. TIVE, DELE- GATE,OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP, " DENT COMMIS- SIONER. Location. de Room, iy SIMS. Lie Lax 282 581 SISSON... 5a. 138 446 SLAYDEN .. 278 577 SEEMP =. - rx: 290 599 SLOAN ih. Lu 460 373 SMALL: . Jiisss 385 683 SMITH (Cal.).. 384 697 SMITH, J. M. C. 501 394 (Mich.). SMITH, SAML. 393 689 W. (Mich.). SMITH (N.Y.). : 332 642 Sarre (Tex. ) >: Icrigationiof rAridi Lands. . Jobo codt. Ldn cain ends i 289 586 SPAR BANG «3 | RIVETS ANA TIATDOTS ssw. 4s foils wise nieiswits obs wioistomn’ Linkes are itiastole std abate & 245 533 SIE onli spotel Votel ot cise apareivio isk lat Sis Tvan.v isyso¥ectns Shek s a's o's wis & uhoimieislas sa ba ait e ite gael 5 sos st 250 564 Ee eR ed ER PE Be eel i ERT IR RR he SE A SS LR Ne PRES RIOR AT Re 172 477 Ol Eh CE Rl i SS ri Bl Lag be SEER Re LE Se 390 686 STEDMAN HE intra ints -foshia ole eisinthid viotatecasiolofe Jo vais v'srivines bu feioss sie viwta mie srs ivfeie sls in feisinis sie oie 432 343 STEEN ERSON 2, Jol. ites cep als iotsasioneiss divivuisiaialyidiok si wists 's bahia stain siesev wieipanid s Seresmiocs ain sive. hin iitarace ss 117 412 SANE PHI Rat AS en het eS Dard A ae FACIL i SO Sa Sb LE pa PA 380 695 (Cal.). : SLE PEERS. Hovis stalin 3 ow siviios isis simivrsmyll nore { siete is shart vw atege spmeiinetos ore doiobe s Fh Sra e 5 aie mye 134 444 (Miss.). STEPHEN Ss | Indian Affairs .............. Ground floor, main corridor. 2B rs dial (Lex.). SUBREING th e3 1 Ha bas saint Stout & Coiminibelns Sorreo lin system nim A iets to siok 1s» Wp ates slo sotnmes 107 406 SED IE UVAT NaS, tvs giaiainiainre sivuiinie sisi stole tetor 8 Jiimorsiasn spot de slob s fs Regn es. v 2 eli alee sraca fn sia=eie 4.07% 383 682 (Minn.) SHONEL Ae dH die Vy wn BR al OL Sh RIPE 2 LE Sv bi Hs I 436 345 SULLOWANY : vs als siarsin repay sy FIRE LTR CRN Ta A hon | LE REE CSA CO GI TP Be LL 201 501 SULZER:: = « + Foreign Affairs. ....-. hes Gallery floor, west corridor. . B30 Pe sienas! SX EY a TO A Ee AS LS a MA BT ES AA EE TB SER LR 8 438 346 SWEBZER AL. JL. ri hd Ba eB ode dd i SATE SE RAR SST 241 531 PARBOTR (MA) alt SE. oral didn Bes vain thir for mon ol fo luboper iol a lei vite A epee sib dy ete 207 506 DAL CORTE Ye doi rite cuir inte tein cuore: fies 56a ime, Sih Aha’s spay Beri acs bape a fodipugs' Sh Fars webiste 474 379 WAVIOR TAI cr ar de pl grea ri Saber pA ABU EMER SE had a Rio 142 448 THADE LRORRE ov Ll a Lh we fa a A LU Trl Jr, vi 265 556 (Colo.). BAVLORCONION cc oo) ines sivas sre ttiab vive wget Birarsaieists Bam a ais « eieti isin mth sem a ror ea 415 710 THAYER oc te] e. rei Ss Col iA dl, A 2 A AS Lae Rein dls, NA id 360 672 FHISTEEWOOD C.00L Sit d. a Mat gaody Simm a or angen ny. satin io on 179 466 BEOMAS LL «sili afebeistile Sty deleivi eins Febintein ioe sys whs ah ies ots Hata tora's ivr 4 bow mins B34 bs foarte ido 443 736 Ee rE SS SN JE SE tA rl mE LR Eo Bo 303 603 POWNERL. vi. +r a1 pene senda rns en Terman tey SE AL TRE Cho ity, ot pO eC 113 410 TOWNSEND! Ww. Jd. J. 0 S000 20 Sh ilo NR RR Sh wn dhl hr a 457 355 TRIBBEB LW. i sada beim tds de Rope allinn io dads - dia wete os, wyt mello spams ord 463 358 URN BUTT. bi 4 or indie eI a bn oR a ass oI £14 3 VRS 5 T= Vs Sr ob SASL» Moh ¥ See he pais 164, 474 5 RE Ere br Sante RIE es SE Le AR RS SC SINR La LL IR 0 4341. C34 TNDERHEILE A cond, a, Ld bd 0S Sarat 3 a arn ssa, J ov riaL sal sn 357 653 UNDERWOOD: |; Waysand MEAs: . use valeranns « ; sib «ooh bah » » ae jorstes iuiorafe + 219 321 615 WATER oye 4500-2 ne her ate ale oleate dials s wisin sonia Susie sp shel gieso eo ole uheraitut aration a tun, pppoe oi 185 469 VOLSTEAD «+... Le ah nor old od yal cas Si ade ianis it SHEE] wen tds 398 694 VREBLANDY LC Li cai. de Ee SS RRR SE end ale SAS] a OR 6 Td | 507 398 WARBOREON 3). 0 (i032 oles viviniisivinles mre $iois ys eiet sp Piva w ulebes SME eysss sist « spew lorors o's Bi shy pe sistem ove 253 549 WATKINS ..... Revision Of tHe Tams... Clo oor iso hse 5 hth sabe tid ens 109 407 VAI se eS i a en Ben Sheet Bad Bn Sk i ST ES a I LL 103 403 WEDEMENER J... Stihl CL on NS a 0 D0 5 RRL Bh as 362 656 WEEE Se re Re eR vd oe rar es a TR is l00 Tos aren iui Bok a suites § “Bm ote bo fohers #5 Jord cieredtosas 312 617 I L,Y reins 340 646 rE Pl ree le i Mea a EL LR A La BRI 165 458 WICK ERSEUANM 1. fle cathe deis divas vans diture infiies suicidal Lh hamid nia, SUN TES 169 460 WICKLIFFE .. WILDER. . i... WILLIS... .... - WiLsonN (I1l.).. WILSON (N.Y.) WiLsonN (Pa.) . WITHERSPOON Woop (N. J.).. Woops (Iowa) Young (Kans) 175 464 I Lien) AR A A re ee Re fra IT TR TB a FB ER HL 425 715 Young (Pex). fon tio l0n Er SL LR A RS Ee, 186 484. 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 (1) by regular appropriations by Congress; (2) by deposits under the copyright law; (3) by gifts and exchanges; (4) by the exchanges of the Smithsonian Institution, the library of which (40,000 volumes) was, in 1866, deposited in the Library of Congress with the stipulation that future accessions should follow it. Sixty sets of Government publications are at the disposal of the Librarian of Con- gress for exchange, through the Smithsonian, with foreign Governments, and this number may be increased up to 100. Other special accessions have been: The Peter Force collection (22,529 volumes, 37,000 pamphlets) purchased, 1867, cost $100,000; the Count de Rochambeau collection (manuscript) purchased, 1883, cost $20,000; the one collection (24,484 volumes, numerous pamphlets), gift in 1882 of Dr. Joseph M. oner. 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 (her will (1909) stipulated that the income of a fund of $20,000 be applied to purchase of additional engravings); 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 pos- session of the Library, subject to the life interest of Mrs. Bradley. The accessions to the Manuscripts Division give it superiority over anyother 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 Colo- nial documentary history, the records of the Virginia Co., 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. Here, also, are over 65,000 folios of transcripts of documents relating to American colonial history in the public archives of Great Britain. 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, 1,002 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 John Boyd Thacher Collection of Incunabula, embracing 928 volumes, repre- senting issues of 500 European presses prior to 1500, has been deposited in the Library by Mrs. Thacher for purposes of exhibit and consultation by investigators so long as the material remains in the possession of the Library. 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, 1910) about 1,793,158 printed books and pamphlets (including the law library of 138,059 volumes, which, while a division of the Library of Congress, still remains at the Capitol), 118,165 maps and charts, 517,806 pieces of music, and 320,251 photographs, prints, engravings, and lithographs. Of the printed hooks, probably one-sixth are duplicates not in use, 230 Library of Congress. 231 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 Congress approved 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 I,. Smith- meyer and Paul J. Pelz. By the act of October 2, 1888, before the foundations were laid, Thomas L. Casey, Chief of Engineers of the Army, was placed in charge of the construction of the building, and the architectural details were worked out by Paul J. Pelz and Edward P. Casey. Upon the death of Gen. Casey, in March, 1896, the entire charge of the construction devolved upon Bernard R. Green, Gen. Casey’s assistant, and under his superintendence the building was completed in February, 1897; opened to the public November, 1897. The building occupies 33 acres upon a site 10 acres in extent at a distance of 1,270 feet east of the Capitol, and is the largest and most magnificent library building in the world. In the decorations, some 40 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. The southeast interior court has been built over as a book stack, with capacity for 940,000 octavo volumes of books on 22 miles of shelves, and 84,000 volumes of newspapers on a similar length of shelves—22 miles. : The Library is maintained by annual appropriations by Congress for various pur- poses, including the purchase of books. For the year 1910-11 these amounted to $638,745 (not including allotment for printing and binding, $202,000), as follows: $461,745 for services and contingent expenses (including the Copyright Office, and including also the care of the building); $10,000 toward anew book stack; $rog,500 for books and periodicals (including $1,500 for new books for Supreme Court); $32,500 for fuel, supplies, and miscellaneous purposes; $25,000 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 within 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, 246 employees; Copyright Office, 84; distribu- tion of catalogue cards, 25; disbursement service and care of building and grounds, 327. Totial, 482, 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 Library of Congress, e. g., Hubbard collection of engravings, 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 be reached or 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 g to 4.30. It is under the immediate charge of the Register of Copyrights, who, by the act of March 4, 1909, is authorized, ‘under the direction and supervision of the Librarian ot Con- gress,’’ to perform all the duties relating to copyrights. Copyright registration was 232 Congressional Durectory. 4 transferred to the Librarian of Congress by the act of July 8, 1870. Of most articles copyrighted two copies, and of some one copy, must be deposited to perfect copyright. Books, maps, musical compositions, photographs, periodicals, and other articles so i deposited numbered, during the calendar year 1910, 200,188 articles. Copyright fees I applied and paid into the Treasury for the calendar year 1910 amounted to $105,714.55. A Hours.—On week days (except legal holidays) the Library Building, Main Reading 1 Room, Periodical Reading Room, and Law Library are open from 9 a. m. to 10 p. m.; 1 other parts of the Library, from 9 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. LIBRARIANS SINCE THE INCEPTION OF THE LIBRARY. 1800-1814.—THE CLERK OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES (for the time being). 1815-1829.—GEORGE, WATTERSTON. 1829-1861.—JOHN S. MEEHAN. g 1861-1864.—JOHN G. STEPHENSON. 1 1864-1897 (June 30).—AINSWORTH R. SPOFFORD. i . 18g7-January 17, 1899.—JOHN RUSSELL YOUNG. 1899 (April 5). —HERBERT PUTNAM. LIBRARY STAFF. GENERAI, ADMINISTRATION. Librarian of Congress.—Herbert Putnam, 1315 Connecticut Avenue. Chief Assistant Libvavian.—Appleton P. C. Griffin, 3 Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief Clerk.—Allen R. Boyd, 814 Connecticut Avenue. Secretary.—Jessica I. Farnum, 1604 Newton Street. DIVISIONS. Sugerteicidom of Reading Room.—W. W. Bishop, Montgomery Avenue, Kensing- iw ton, Md. Chief Assistants in Reading Room.—John G. Morrison, 1230 Irving Street; Hugh A. Morrison, 2302 First Street. In Charge of Room for the Blind.—Ftta Josselyn Giffin, The Mendota. Chiefs of Division: Bibliography.—H. H. B. Meyer, 2608 Tunlaw Road. Binding. — Arthur R. Kimball, 1827 Kalorama Road. Catalogue.—Charles H. Hastings, 3600 Ordway Street. Documents.—James David Thompson, The Kalorama. Mail and Delivery.—S. M. Croft, 316 Tenth Street NE. Manuscripts.—Gaillard Hunt, 1711 De Sales Street. 5 Maps and Charts.—P. Lee Phillips, 1707 H Street. 4 Music.—Oscar G.I. Sonneck, 3030 Macomb Street, Cleveland Park. Order.—Frederick W. Ashley, 132 S Street. i Periodical. —Charles Martel, in charge, 127 Sixth Street SE. | Prints.—Arthur J. Parsons, 1704 Eighteenth Street. Law Librarian.—Edwin M. Borchardt, 116 C Street NE. A? COPYRIGHT OFFICE. I : Register.—Thorvald Solberg, 198 F Street SE. BUILDING AND GROUNDS. Superintendent.—Bernard R. Green, 1738 N Street. Chief Clerk.—John Q. Sheehy, 1635 First Street. Chief Engineer.—Charles B. Titlow, 1204 Monroe Street. Electrician.—Henry Whitehead, Laurel, Md. Captain of the Watch.—]. V. Wiirdemann, 124 Massachusetts Avenue NE. BY APPENDIX [B\@) EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS OFFICIAL DUTIES (Executive Departments) JUDICIARY DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR SERVICE MISCELLANEOUS INSTITUTIONS DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES MAPS OF CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS INDIVIDUAL INDEX 233. HY) EXECUTIVE [B\© THE WHITE HOUSE. (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets. Phone, Main 6.) WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT, President, was born September 15, 1857, at Cin- cinnati, Ohio, a son of Alphonso and Louise M. (Torrey) Taft. He was married at Cincinnati, June 19, 1886, to Helen Herron, daughter of John W. Herron, of Cincin- ! nati; they have three children—two sons and one daughter. He was educated in the { public schools of Cincinnati, including Woodward High School, where he graduated j | in 1874; at Yale University, graduating (1878) with degree B. A., being second, or salutatorian, in his class, and elected class orator. The same year he matriculated | at the Cincinnati College of Law, graduating in 1880 with degree B. L., dividing first prize; was admitted to the bar of the supreme court of Ohio in May, 1880, becoming a law reporter of the Cincinnati Times, and subsequently of the Cincinnati | Commercial. January, 1881, was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney, resigning in March, 1882, to become collector of internal revenue for the first district of Ohio. ‘Resigned the following year to enter practice of the law and continued in practice until 1887, holding meantime, from January, 1885, the office of assistant county solicitor of Hamilton County. In March, 1887, Gov. Foraker appointed him judge of the superior court of Cincinnati to succeed Judson Harmon, resigned, and the following iH year he was elected to succeed himself for five years. Resigned, February, 1890, to accept appointment as Solicitor General of the United States at hands of President 3 Harrison, being, in March, 1892, appointed a judge of the United States court for the sixth judicial circuit and ex officio member of circuit court of appeals. In 1896 he : became professor and dean of the law department of the University of Cincinnati, resigning both the judgeship and deanship in March, 1900, to accept appointment } by President McKinley as president of the United States Philippine Commission. 1 On July 4, 1901, President McKinley appointed him first civil governor of the Philip- pine Islands. In November, 1901, turned over the office of governor to Vice Governor Wright, on account of illness, and returned to the United States to testify at congres- sional hearings on the Philippines. In 1902 visited Rome at the direction of Presi- dent Roosevelt to confer with Pope I,eo XIII regarding the purchase of ‘so-called ““ Friars’ lands’’ in the Philippines; reached a general basis for agreement with a com- mittee of cardinals, and returned to the Philippines August, 1902, to resume office of civil governor. January, 1904, returned to United States to become Secretary of War in President Roosevelt’s Cabinet, being appointed February 1. November- December, 1904, visited Panama to confer with Panamanian authorities relative to the government of the Canal Zone. In the summer of 1go5 visited Philippine Islands on a tour of inspection, accompanied by a party of Senators and Representatives. September-October, 1906, visited Cuba in an endeavor to arrange peace, acting for short time as provisional governor. In 1g9o7 visited Panama, Cuba, and Porto Rico to attend to various pending matters and look into conditions, and in fall of 1907 visited Philippine Islands for purpose of inaugurating the Philippine Assembly. June, 1908, was nominated by Republican national convention at Chicago for the Presidency, and elected, receiving 321 electoral votes to 162 for William J. Bryan. January-February, 1909, visited Canal Zone with a board of engineers. Received degree of LI. D. from Yale University, 1893; University of Pennsylvania, 1902; Harvard University, 1905; Miami University, 1905; University of Iowa, 1907; Wes- leyan University, 1909. Has been President of the American Red Cross since 1905, and is a member of American Bar Association, National Geographic Society, Metro-: politan, University, Chevy Chase, and Cosmos clubs of Washington, and University Club of New York City, and others. CHARLES DEWEY HILLES, Secretary to the President (2119 Connecticut Avenue), was born in Belmont County, Ohio, June 23, 1867, a son of Samuel Hilles i and Elisabeth Lee Hilles; was graduated from the Barnesville High School in 1885, and entered an Academy at Oxford, Md.; appointed secretary to the superintendent | of the Boys’ Industrial School at Lancaster, Ohio, in 1888; was city editor of the 235 236 aan ongressional Directory. Lancaster Gazette from 18go until 1892; was appointed financial officer of the Boys’ Industrial School by Gov. McKinley in 1892, and served as such until appointed superintendent by Gov. Nash in 1900; resigned in 19o2 to become superintendent of the New York Juvenile Asylum; was appointed Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in April, 1909; appointed Secretary to the President April 4, 1911; married Dollie Bell Whiley, of Lancaster, Ohio, in 1896. THE PRESIDENT’S COMMISSION ON ECONOMY AND EFFICIENCY, Chairman.—Frederick A. Cleveland, Cosmos Club. Commaissioner.— William F. Willoughby, 1633 Newton Street. p Secretary.—Merritt O. Chance, The Plaza. : WHITE HOUSE RULES. The following rules have been arranged for the conduct of business at the Executive Offices during the spring and summer of 1911: The Cabinet will meet on Tuesdays and Fridays from 11 a. m. until 1 p. m. Senators and Representatives having constituents whom they desire merely to present to the President will be received from Io to 10.30 a. m., excepting on Cabi- net days. Senators and Representatives having business to transact will be received from 10.30 a. m. to 12 m., excepting on Cabinet days. Inview of the pressure of the appoint- ments at the Executive Offices during the congressional session it would greatly facilitate matters if the Senators and Members could telephone for an appointment before calling, as many will have first made appointments in this way, and those calling without are therefore necessarily delayed in seeing the President. Visitors having business with the President will be admitted from 12 m. to 1 p. m. daily, excepting Cabinet days, by appointments previously fixed. The East Room will be open daily, Sundays excepted, for the inspection of visitors, between the hours of 10a. m. and 2 p. m. : CHARLES D. HILLES, Secretary to the President. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 4510.) PHILANDER CHASE KNOX, of Pittsburg, Pa., Secretary of State (1527 K Street), was born in Brownsville, 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 attor- ney 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 Hon. 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 Gov. Pennypacker June 10, to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Hon. M. S. Quay, and took his seat December 6; was elected by the legislature in January, 1905, for the term ending March 3, 1911; resigned as Senator March 4, 1909, to accept the position of Secretary of State, and was nomi- nated, confirmed, and commissioned March 5. The Assistant Secvetary.—Huntington Wilson, 1608 K Street. Second Assistant Secrelary.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth Street. Third Assistant Secvetary.—Chandler Hale, 1535 IL Street. Director of the Consular Service. —Wilbur J. Carr, The Ontario. Counselor for the Department of State.—Chandler P. Anderson, Metropolitan Club. Solicitor.—Joshua Reuben Clark, jr., 1746 Columbia Road. Assistant Solicitors.—Frederick Van Dyne, 12 Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Preston D. Richards, VY. M. C. A. Building; Edward Henry Hart, The Brighton. Solicitor in International Arbitrations.—James Brown Scott, 1956 Calvert Street. Chief Clerk.—William McNeir, 1472 Newton Street, a Executive Departments. 257 Chiefs of Bureau: Accounts and Disbursing Clerk.— Thomas Morrison, 1443 S Street. Appointments.—Miles M. Shand, 3114 Sixteenth Street. Citizenship.—Richard W. Flournoy, it., 1731 H Street. Consular.—Herbert C. Hengstler, 2816 Twenty-seventh Street. Diplomatic.—Sydney Y. Smith, 3107 Mount Pleasant Street. Indexes and Archives.—John R. Buck, 1646 Irving Street. Rolls and Library.—John A. Tonner, The Magnolia. Trade, Relations.—John Ball Osborne, 2116 Connecticut Avenue. Chiefs of Division: Far Eastern Affaivs.—Ransford S. Miller, 1423 Chapin Street. Information.—Philip H. Patchin, The Cordova. Latin American Affairs.—H. Percival Dodge, 1758 N Street. Near Eastern Affarrs.—Evan E. Young, 1755 Park Road. Translators.—John S. Martin, jr., 1731 F Street; Wilfred Stevens, Wesley Heights. Private Secretary to the Secretary of State.—Charles F. Wilson, The Don Carlos. Law Clerk.—Henry L,. Bryan, 604 East Capitol Street. DISPATCH AGENTS. I. P. Roosa, 2 Rector Street, New York. WwW. 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 Stales.—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 of the United States Commission.—W. W. Keblinger, 715 Fourteenth Street. Secretary of the Mexican Commission.—Seiior Don Manuel W. Velarde. STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPARTMENT BUILDING. (Superintendent’s room, No. 148, first floor, north wing.) Supevintendent.—ILieut. U. S. Grant, 3d, United States Army, 1102 Sixteenth Street. Clerk.—W. E. Chapman, 716 Nineteenth Street. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 6400.) FRANKLIN MACVEAGH, of Chicago, Ill, Secretary of the Treasury (2829 Sixteenth Street), was born on a farm in Chester County, Pa.; graduated at Yale in - 1862; at Columbia Law School, New York, in 1864; abandoned practice of law because of ill health and went to Chicago, establishing in the wholesale grocery business; became president of Citizens’ Association in 1874, which inaugurated many impor- tant municipal reforms; was nominated by the Democrats of Illinois, in 1894, for United States Senator and made a canvass of the State, but was defeated in the legis- lature; president of the Bureau of Charities and Municipal Art League; member of the executive committee, National Civic Federation; vice president of the American Civic Association, 1905. Appointed Secretary of the Treasury, March 5, 1909. Assistant Secretary in Charge Customs.—James F. Curtis, 1718 H Street. Assistant Secretary in Charge Fiscal Buveaus.—A. Piatt Andrew, 1725 H Street. Assistant Secretary in Charge Public Buildings and Miscellaneous.— Robert O. Bailey, 1736 G Street. Chief Clevk.—James 1, Wilmeth, 618 Kenyon Street. Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Treasury.—Francis W. Taylor. Chiefs of Division. Appointments.—Charles Lyman, The Knickerbocker. Bookkeeping and Warrants.—Charles H. Miller, The Columbia. Customs.—Charles P. Montgomery, 2825 Thirteenth Street. Loans and Currvency.—A. T'. Huntington, 1412 Massachusetts Avenue, Mail and Files,—S. M. Gaines, 1257 Hamlin Street, Brookland. 238 Congresstonal Directory. Chiefs of Division—Continued. Printing and Stationery.—F. F. Weston, 4320 Eighth Street. Public Moneys.—E. B. Daskam, 1433 R Street. Special Agents.— Disbursing Clevk.—S. R. Jacobs, 1725 U Street. SUPERVISING ARCHITECT'S OFFICE. (Treasury Department Building.) Supervising Architect.—James K. Taylor, The Highlands. Executive Officer.—Charles E. Kemper, The Clifton. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. (Fourteenth and B Streets SW.) Director.—Joseph E. Ralph, 1246 Newton Street NE. Assistant Divector.—Frank E. Ferguson, 1239 Kenyon Street. SECRET-SERVICE DIVISION. (I'reasury 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. I. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant.—Oliver M. Maxam, 1749 Park Road. COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller.—Robert J. Tracewell, 1746 Q Street. Assistant.—1,. P. Mitchell, 2503 Fourteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—C. M. Foree, The Rockingham. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Register.— William T. Vernon, 1224 U Street. Assistant Register.—Cyrus Field Adams, 934 S Street. * AUDITOR FOR THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT. (Treasury Department Building.) Auditor.—W. E. Andrews, 1225 Fairmont Street. Deputy. — : AUDI'OR FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT. (Winder Building, Seventeenth and F Streets.) Auditor.—Elton A. Gongwer, 1320 Riggs Street. Deputy. —Edward P. Seeds, 204 Tenth Street NE. AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. (Union Building, G Street between Sixth and Seventh Streets.) Auditor.— Howard C. Shober, 3351 Eighteenth Street. Deputy.—James B. Belt, The National. AUDITOR FOR THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. (Union Building, G Street between Sixth and Seventh Streets.) Auditor.—Ralph W. Tyler, 928 T Street. Deputy.—Byron J. Price, 1209 K Street. AUDI'OR FOR THE STATE AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS. (Small Building, corner Fourteenth and G Streets.) Auditor.—Frank H. Davis, The Cumberland. Deputy.—George W. Esterly, 1355 Otis Place. Executive Departments. 239 AUDITOR FOR THE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. (Post Office Department Building and Union Building. Phone, Main 5360.) Auwuditor.—Charles A. Kram, Chevy Chase, Md. Deputy.—Charles H. Keating, The Woodley. TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. (Treasury Department Building.) Treasuver.—Iee McClung, The Connecticut. Assistant Treasurer.—Gideon C. Bantz, 1628 S Street. Deputy Assistant Treasurer.— : Cashier.—E. R. True, 2016 Wyoming Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Willard F. Warner, The Concord. National Bank Redemption Agency. Supevintendent.—Thomas HE. Rogers, The Columbia. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller.—Lawrence O. Murray, gor Twentieth Street. Deputy.—Thomas P. Kane, 1931 Calvert Street. Deputy. —Willis J. Fowler, Hammond Court. Chief Clevk.—George T. May, 2117 Quarry Road. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. (Treasury Department Building.) Commissioner.—Royal E. Cabell, The Kenesaw. Deputy.—Robert Williams, jr., 3106 Mount Pleasant Street. Deputy.—James C. Wheeler, 3433 Fourteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Frank G. Butts, 2123 Fifteenth Street. DIRECTOR OF THE, MINT. (Treasury Department Building.) Director of the Mint.—George E. Roberts, The Ontario. Examiner.—R. BE. 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. ; Assistant Surgeons Generval.—A. H. Glennan, Chevy Chase, Md.; W. J. Pettus, 1722 Connecticut Avenue; I. E. Cofer, Metropolitan Club; J. W. Kerr, 1410 Girard Street; J. D. Long, The Kenesaw; J. W. Trask, 300 R Street NE. Assistant Surgeon.—Paul Preble, 509 Rock Creek Church Road. Chief Clerk.—D. S. Masterson, 338 Maryland Avenue NE. Hygienic Laboratory. (T'wenty-fifth and H Streets.) Director.—Passed Asst. Surg. John F. Anderson, 1414 Girard Street. Assistant Divector.—Passed Asst. Surg. Edward Francis, The Beverly. REVENUE-CUTTER SERVICE. (Treasury Department Building.) Commandant.—Capt. Commandant Worth G. Ross, The Woodley. Assistant Chief.—Henry S. Merrill, Franklin Park, Va. Lieuts. Frederick C. Billard, 2445 Eighteenth Street; Leonard T. Cutter, The Oakland; Frank I. Austin, The Cairo. Engineer in Chief.—Charles A. McAllister, Dumbarton Court. Constructor John Q. Walton, 4325 Kansas Avenue. Lieut. of Engineers Hermann Kotzschmar, 924 Fourteenth Street. CUSTOMHOUSE. (1221 Thirty-first Street. Phone, West 243.) Collector of the Port,—Whitefield McKinlay, Fourteenth and U Streets SE, 240 Congressional Directory. DEPARTMENT OF WAR. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 2570.) JACOB McGAVOCK DICKINSON, of Nashville, Tenn., Secretary of War (1810 Connecticut Avenue), was born January 30, 1851, in Columbus, Miss.; was graduated from the University of Nashville and studied law at Columbia College, New York, in Paris, and at the University of Leipzig; LL. D., Columbia University of New York and University of Illinois; was Assistant Attorney General of the United States from February 13, 1895, to March 8, 1897; in 1903 appeared as counsel for the United States before the Alaskan Boundary Tribunal in London; took oath of office as Secretary of War March 12, 1909. 2 Assistant Secretary of War.—Robert Shaw Oliver, 1767 Q Street. Assistant and Chief Clerk.—John C. Scofield, 1614 P Street. Private Secretary to Secretary of War.—Walter R. Pedigo, go7 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Clerk to Assistant Secvetary.—Robert E. Parker, The Portner. Clevk to the Assistant and Chief Clevk.—John B. Randolph, Hammond Court. Disbursing Clevk.—Sydney HE. Smith, 3037 O Street. Appointment Clerk.— William D. Searle, 1131 Twelfth Street. Chaefs of Division. Correspondence.—John T. 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. Telegraph.—Charles O. Pierson, 1774 U Street. GENERAL, STAFF CORPS. Chief.—Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, Fort Myer, Va. Secretary.— Capt. William S. Graves, The Northumberland. Assistants to Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. William H. Carter, 2125 Bancroft Place; Brig. Gens. Arthur Murray, 1616 Rhode Island Avenue; Robert K. Evans, 1715 I Street; Erasmus M. Weaver, The Farragut. Lieut. Cols. Edwin St. J. Greble, 2015 O Street; Hunter Liggett, The Rochambeau. Majs. Daniel H. Boughton, The Champlain; Paul F. Straub, 1912 Sunderland Place; Guy Carleton, The Kenesaw; Henry T. Allen, The Connecticut; Henry C. Hodges, jr.; John E. McMahon. Capts. Peter C. Harris, 1865 California Street; Joseph D. Leitch, The Northumber- land; Henry G. Learnard, The Woodley; Jesse McI. Carter, 1836 Calvert Street; P. D. Lochridge, The Damariscotta; Charles D. Rhodes, The Dresden; Frank S. Cocheu, The Dupont; Benjamin I. Simmons, The Ontario; Johnson Hagood, 1908 I street; Fox Conner, 1821 Nineteenth Street; Monroe C. Kerth, Florence Court; Matthew E. Hanna, 1719 Eighteenth Street; Malin Craig, The Dresden; George H. Jamerson; Howard L. Laubach. Chief Clevk.—N. Hershler, Cleveland Park. COAST ARTILLERY DIVISION. (War Department Building.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. Erasmus M. Weaver, The Farragut. Assistants.—Lieut. Col. C. J. Bailey, 1827 Phelps Place; Majs. Andrew Hero, jr., 1916 Sunderland Place; William R. Smith; Capts. R. HE. Callan, The Benedick; P. P. Bishop, 1712 H Street; Edward Carpenter, 2013 O Street; Stanley D. Embick, 1703 De Sales Street. Chief Clerk.—Leon Chapuis, 2131 I, Street. DIVISION OF MILITIA AFFAIRS. (1744 G Street.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. Robert K. Evans, 1715 I Street. Assistants. —Capts. P. D. Lochridge, General Staff, The Damariscotta; William J. Snow, Sixth Field Artillery, 1408 Twenty-first Street; Monroe C. Kerth, General Staff Corps, Florence Court; Henry D. Thomason, Medical Corps, 1715 Eighteenth Street. Chief Clerk,—Francis H, Randolph, Woodside, Md, Executive Departments. 241 OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL. (War Department Building.) The Adjutant General. —Maj. Gen. F. C. Ainsworth, The Concord. Assistants.—Brig. Gen. William P. Hall, 2018 R Street. Cols. Henry P. McCain, 1856 Mintwood Place; J. T. Kerr, The Westmoreland. Lo, Cols. Benjamin Alvord, The Ontario; Charles McClure, The Westmore- land. Chief Clerk.—Jacob Frech, 143 Eleventh Street NE. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Inspector General.—Brig. Gen. E. A. Garlington, 1827 Jefferson Place. Assistants.—Majs. L. S. McCormick, The Ontario; A. W. Brewster, 1825 Jefferson Place. Chief Clevk.—John D. Parker, 952 Rhode Island Avenue. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Judge Advocate General. —Brig. Gen. Enoch H. Crowder, 732 Seventeenth Street. Assistants.—Lieut. Cols. George M. Dunn, 1745 Rhode Island Avenue; John Biddle Porter, 1732 I Street. Maj. Henry M. Morrow, The Brighton. Capt. Charles R. Howland, The Cairo. Chief Clerk and Solicitor. —I.ewis W. Call, 1448 Newton Street. OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Quartermaster General. —Brig. Gen. James B. Aleshire, 2343 S Street. Assistants.—Col. George Ruhlen, 1755 Euclid Street. Lieut. Cols. John T. Knight, 1938 Calvert Street; David S. Stanley, 1810 Nine- teenth Street. Majs. William E. Horton, The Farragut; B. Frank Cheatham, 1714 I Street; Archibald W. Butt, 1901 I Street. Capts. Elmer W. Clark, The Brighton; Edward T. Hartmann, The Westmoreland; Casper H. Conrad, jr.,, Army and Navy Club; Alexander E. Williams, 1754 Columbia Road; John R. R. Hannay, 2019 Nineteenth Street; Charles F. Hum- phrey, jr., The Northumberland; Frank B. Edwards, 1754 Q Street; Richard C. Marshall, jr., 1920 I Street. Chief Clerk.—Henry D. Saxton, 1922 Calvert Street. Office Depot Quartermaster. (Seventeenth and F Streets. Phones, Main 1306, 1307, and 1308.) Depot Quartermaster.—Capt. Harry 1. Pettus, The Westmoreland. OFFICE OF THE COMMISSARY GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Commissary General.—Brig. Gen. Henry G. Sharpe, 1713 M Street. Assistants.—Maj. Henry G. Cole, 1910 S Street; Capts. H. O. Williams, The High- lands; 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. George H. Torney, Stoneleigh Court. Assistants.—Lieut. Cols. Jefferson R. Kean, 1913 S Street; Henry P. Birmingham, 1721 Q Street; Majs. Merritte W. Ireland, 1927 S Street; Francis A. Winter, 2229 California Street; Charles Lynch, Chesterbrook, Va.; Capt. Albert G. Love, 1765 T Street. : Chief Clerk.—John Wilson, The Revere. Army Medical Museum and Library. (Seventh and B Streets SW.) In Charge.—1Lieut. Col. Walter D. McCaw, 1915 S Street. Curator of Museum and in Charge of Laboratory.—Maj. Frederick F. Russell, 1928 Biltmore Street. Assistant Curator of Museum and Assistant in Laboratory.—Capt. Charles F, Craig, 1930 Biltmore Street, ; 242 Congressional Directory. Army Medical School. (721 Thirteenth Street.) President.—Col. Louis A. LaGarde, 2624 Woodley Place. Secretary.—Maj. Carl R. Darnall, 18i6 Lamont Street. Office of Attending Surgeon. (1720 H Street. Phone, Main 8o.) Attending Surgeon.—Maj. Guy L. Edie, 2025 Kalorama Avenue. Assistants. —Capt. Matthew A. De Laney, The Buckingham; Capt. William T. Davis, The Benedick. OFFICE OF THE PAYMASTER GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Paymaster Geneval.—Brig. Gen. Charles H. Whipple, The Connecticut. Assistant. —Lieut. Col. George ¥. Downey, 2129 Bancroft Place. Chief Clerk.—Royall O. Kloeber, 3409 Mount Pleasant Street. Office of Post Paymaster. (Lemon Building.) Post Paymaster.—Col. George R. Smith, The Parkwood. Majs. Pierre C. Stevens, 1836 Jefferson Place; Franklin O. Johnson, 1807 Belmont Road; William F. Blauvelt, The Dresden. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS. (War Department Building.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. W. H. Bixby, 2013 Kalorama Road. Assistanits.—Lieut. Col. Edward Burr, 1833 Jefferson Place. Majs. James B. Cavanaugh, The Brighton; William B. Ladue, 1413 Twenty-first Street. Capts. Edward N. Johnston, 1639 Park Road; Robert R. Ralston, The Cordova. First Lieut. Charles K. Rockwell, The Dresden. Chief Clerk.—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.—ILieut. Cols. Jno. T. Thompson, The Westmoreland; W. S. Peirce, The Cecil. Majs. J. H. Rice, 1722 S Street; Edward P. O’Hern, 1925 S Street; J. C. Nicholls, 1817 Belmont Road. Capts. L. T. Hillman, The Ontario; G. H. Stewart, The Ontario; B. O. Mahaffey, The Mansfield. Chief Clerk.—John J. Cook, 925 M Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAI, OFFICER. (War Department Building.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. James Allen; Army and Navy Club. Assistants.—Majs. George O. Squier, The Highlands; Charles McK. Saltzman, The Mendota. Capt. Reynolds J. Burt, The Albemarle. Lieut. Dawson Olmstead, 918 Fighteenth Street. Disbursing Officer.—Capt. Arthur S. Cowan, The Dresden. Chief Clerk.—Herbert S. Flynn, The Maury. BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS. (War Department Building.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. Clarence R. Edwards. Asststants.—Col. Frank McIntyre, 1841 Kalorama Road; Maj. George H. Shelton, 1414 Twenty-first Street. Capt. Graham I. Johnson, The Benedick. Law Officer.—Paul Charlton, 1712 H Street. Chief Clerk.—A. D., Wilcox, 2610 University Place. 1 | Executive Departments. : 243 BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS. (Colorado Building. Phone, Main 3464.) President. —Col. Wm. T. Rossell, 14 Lenox Place, New Brighton, S. I., N. Y. Lieut. Cols. William C. Langfitt, Q Street, near Twenty-eighth Street; Harry Tay- lor, 158 Williams Street, New London, Conn.; H. C. Newcomer, 5816 Rippey Street, Pittsburg, Pa. Maj. William J. Barden, Weslinzion Barracks. | Assistant to the Board.—Col. D. W. Lockwood, United States Army, retired, The j Portner. Assistant Engineer.—Alexander H. Weber, Clivy Chase, Md. Chief Clerk.—Alfred H. Ritter, Takoma. OFFICE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS AND WASHINGTON MONUMENT. (Lemon Building. Phone, Main 1537.) In Charge.—Col. Spencer Cosby, 1752 Q Street. Chief Clerk.—E. F. Concklin, 520 Thirteenth Street. Landscape Architect.—George E. Burnap, The Massachusetts. Custodian of Monument.—J. A. Olsen, The Iowa. UNITED STATES ENGINEER OFFICE. (920 Seventeenth Street. Phone, Main 7906.) | In Charge.—Lieut. Col. W. C. Langfitt, Q Street, near Twenty-eighth Street. Assistant.—Capt. Warren T. Hannum, The Kenesaw. Chief Clerk.—Pickering Dodge, Falls Church, Va. BOARD OF ORDNANCE AND FORTIFICATION. (502 Union Trust Building, Fifteenth and H Streets.) President.—Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, Fort Myer, Va. i | Brig. Gens. William Crozier, 2339 Massachusetts Avenue; Arthur Murray, 1616 i | : Rhode Island Avenue; W. i. Bixby, 2013 Kalorama Road; Erasmus M. Weaver, The Farragut. Lieut. Col. E. St. J. Greble, 2015 O Street. I William Warner, civilian member, Kansas City, Mo. “ Recorder.—Capt. Robert R. Ralston, The Cordova. . | Secretary.—Grahame H. Powell, 3454 Newark Street. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. (K Street, between Vermont Avenue and Fifteenth Street. Phone, Main 196.) GEORGE WOODWARD WICKERSHAM, of New York City, Attorney General (1312 Sixteenth Street), was born in Pittsburg, Pa. , on September 19, 1858; graduated from the law department of the University of Pennsylvania in 1880, receiving the | degree of LL. B.; in 1901 that university conferred upon him the honorary degree of a master of arts. Previous to graduation he had been admitted to the Philadelphia | bar and practiced there until 1882, when he removed to New York City, and in 1883 i entered the old-established law firm of Strong & Cadwalader; was admitted, four years later, to partnership in the firm, which connection he terminated upon becom- ing Attorney General, to which position he was appointed March 5, 1909. Solicitor General.—Frederick W. Lehmann, Stoneleigh Court. | Assistant to the Attorney General. — Assistant Attorneys General.—John Q. Thompson, The Brunswick; Wm. R. Harr, 1304 Kenyon Street; Winfred T. Denison, 1922 Sunderland Place; James A. Fow- ler, The Burlington. Assistant Attorney General for Interior Department.—Oscar Lawler, The High- lands (office in Interior Department). Assistant {lores General for Post Office Department.—Russell P. Goodwin, The Portlan Assistant Attorney General, Customs Division.—D. Pronk Lloyd, 641 Washington Street, New York, N. VY. Chief Clerk.—Orin I Field, Kensington, Md. 84259°—62-1—18T ED——I7 244 Congressional Directory. Private Secretary to the Attorney General.—Frank Cole, The Belgrade. Disbursing Clerk.—James H. Mackey, 3524 Thirteenth Street. Appointment Clervk.—Charles B. Sornborger, go8 Sheridan Street. Attorney in Charge of Pardons.—Jas. A. Finch, Grant Road. Attorney in Charge of Titles.—Reeves T. Strickland, Kensington, Md. Chief of Division of Accounts.—John J. Glover, 1505 R Street. Superintendent of Prisons.—Robt. V. La Dow, The Ontario. Chief Examiner.—Stanley W. Finch, 24 Channing Street. Public Lands Division.—Frnest Knaebel, attorney in charge, 3707 Morrison Street. Attorneys.—M. C. Burch, The Massachusetts; Oliver E. Pagan, 1965 Biltmore Street; F. De C. Faust, The Portner; Wm. J. Hughes, 2256 Cathedral Avenue; John W. Trainer, 1830 S Street; Robt. A. Howard, The Cecil; F. W. Collins, 1820 Newton Street; P. M. Ashford, 1836 Park Road; Chas. F. Kincheloe, Bethesda, Md.; Geo. M. Anderson, Rockville, Md.; Malcolm A. Coles, 1311 K Street; Wm. F. Norris, The Marlborough; Glenn E. Husted, 1761 Columbia Road; Arthur J. McCabe, 3469 Fourteenth Street; Matt I. Blake, 1420 Fifteenth Street; Loring . C. Christie, 18081 Street; George T. Stormont, 308 R Street NE. Assistant Attorneys.—Clark McKercher, 3532 Thirteenth Street; William W. Scott, 1800 Lamont Street; S. S. Ashbaugh, 2957 Newark Street; F. E. Hutchins, 1632 Riggs Place; David D. Caldwell, 3342 Mount Pleasant Street; Sinclair B. Sheibley, The Rochambeau; J. Harwood Graves, 1736 G Street; Wm. H. Lamar, Rockville, Md.; Geo. E. Boren, 1314 I, Street; Chas. F. Jones, The Dewey; Chas. W. Logan, 2633 Adams Mill Road; Harry S. Ridgely, 1452 Newton Street; Peicy M. Cox, Hyattsville, Md. Special Assistant Attorneys. —Willis N. Mills, The Monticello; Henry C. Lewis, The Marlborough; Henry C. Gauss, 1403 Webster Street; Edwin P. Grosvenor, The Marlborough; Barton Corneau, The Benedick; Henry E. Colton, 1421 K Street; Frank Hall, The Burlington; Wm. S. Gregg, 1450 Clifton Street; Wrisley Brown, The Romaine; Chas. S. Easterling, 1223 Euclid Street; Timothy J. Butler, 3323 Highteenth Street; Blackburn Esterline, 1426 K Street. Special Agent.—V. N. Roadstrum, The Shoreham. DEPARTMENTAL SOLICITORS. State. Solicitor.—]. Reuben Clark, jr., 1746 Columbia Road. Treasury. Solicitor.— William T. Thompson, 1223 Fairmont Street. Assistant.—Felix A. Reeve, 1626 Nineteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Charles E. Vrooman, 1123 Euclid Street. Internal Revenue. Solicitor.— Fletcher Maddox, Florence Court. Commerce and Labor. Solicitor.—Charles Earl, 2244 Cathedral Avenue. Chief and Law Clevk.—Edward T. Quigley, The Holland. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth Streets. Phone, Main 5360.) FRANK HARRIS HITCHCOCK, of Newton, Mass., Postmaster General (‘The Connecticut), was born in Amherst, Ohio, October 5, 1867; has resided in Mas- sachusetts from early boyhood; was graduated from Harvard University in 1891; studied law and was admitted to the bar; served as assistant secretary of the Repub- lican national committee in the campaign of 1904; was First Assistant Postmaster General from 1905 to 1908; was chosen chairman of the Republican national com- mittee in July, 1908, and conducted the presidential campaign of that year; was appointed Postmaster General by President Taft March 5, 1909. Chief Clerk.—Theodore 1,. Weed, 1628 Riggs Place. Assistant.—Arthur 1,. Davis, The Majestic. ain (| AO NU LL ii rs rH ii Executive Departments. 245 Private Secretary to Postmaster Generval.—George W. Reik, 2852 Twenty-ighth Street. Assistant Attorney General.—Russell P. Goodwin, The Portland. Assistant Attorneys.—Paul V. Keyser, 1315 Clifton Street; Edwin A. Niess, 61 Rhode Island Avenue. Purchasing Agent.—John A. Holmes, 803 Taylor Street; chief clerk, W. L. K. Barrett, 626 North Tremont Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Chief Inspector.—Robert S. Sharp, The Toronto; chief clerk, John W. Johnston, 231 Twelfth Street NE. Appointment Clerk.—George S. Paull, 2236 Decatur Place. Disbursing Clerk.—William M. Mooney, 1433 T Street. OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. First Assistant Postmaster General.—Charles P. Savana 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, The Home. Salaries and Allowances.—Ervin H. Thorp, 3021 Macomb Street; assistant, Charles F. Trotter, Cherrydale, Va. City Delivery.— William R. Spilman, 324 Fifth Street SE.; assistant, David W. Duncan, 115 Fifth Street NE. OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Second Assistant Postmaster General.—Joseph Stewart, 1812 Lamont Street. Chief Clerk.—John W. Hollyday, 2812 Thirteenth Street. Superintendents and Chiefs of Division: Railway Mail Service.—General Superintendent, Theodore Ingalls, The Oakland; assistant, George F. Stone, 3023 Macomb Street; chief clerk, Aleyne A. Fisher, 1757 Euclid Street. Foreign Mails.—Basil Miles, 1718 H Street; chief clerk, Robert I. Maddox, The Brunswick. Railway Adjustments.—Charles H. Picpide, The Ontario; assistant, George KE. Bandel, 3475 Holmead Place. Inspection. —Frank A. Hornaday, 1310 North Carolina Avenue NE. Equipment.—Thomas P. Graham, 2410 Eighteenth Street. Miscellaneous Transportation.— OFFICE, OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Thivd Assistant Postmaster Generval.—James J. Britt, 1312 Twelfth Street. Chief Clerk.— Superintendents of Division: Finance.—Harry H. Thompson, 2443 Ontario Place; assistant, Charles H. Fullaway, 1872 Newton Street. Stamps.— William C. Fitch, 1300 Massachusetts Avenue. Money Orders.—Edward F. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island Avenue; chief clerk, F. H. Rainey; 2105 O Street. Registered Mails.—C. Howard Buckler, 409 Sixth Street SE. Classification.— Special Counsel.— y Redemption. —Edward McCauley, 1719 Rhode Island Avenue. Postal Card Agent.—M. W. P. Zantzinger, 1440 Meridian Place. Stamped Envelope Agent.—William W. Barre, Dayton, Ohio. OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Fourth Assistant Postmaster Geneval.—P. V. De Graw, 210 Maryland Avenue NE. Chief Clerk.—George 1,. Wood, Walbrook, Baltimore, Md. Superintendents of ine Rural Delivery.—George G. Thomson, 3551 Mount Pleasant Street; assistant, FE. P. Rhoderick, 924 Westminster Street. Supplies.—James B. Cook, Kensington, Md.; assistant, Dead Letters.—James R. Young, 100I New Hampshire Avenue; chief clerk ,Charles N. Dalzell, Chevy Chase, Md. Topography. '_Topographer, Maj. Adolph von Haake, Hammond Court: assistant topographer, William B. Todd, 1243 Irving Street. 246 3 Congressional Directory. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 2790.) GEORGE von LENGERKE MEYER, of Hamilton, Mass., Secretary of the Navy (1301 Sixteenth 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 Co., Boston, Amoskeag Manufacturing Co., Manchester, N. H., and United Electric Securities Co., 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 committee- man, 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, holding that post until { March 6, 1909, when he took oath of office as Secretary of the Navy. Assistant Secretary.—Beekman Winthrop, 1520 New Hampshire Avenue. | Aid for Operations.—Rear Admiral Richard Wainwright, 1262 New Hampshire Avenue. | Aid for Personnel.—Rear Admiral William P. Potter, Stoneleigh Court. Aid for Material.—Capt. Frank F. Fletcher, 1441 Massachusetts Avenue. Aid for Inspections.—Rear Admiral Aaron Ward, The Arlington. Aid to the Secretary of the Navy.—Commander Philip Andrews, The Westmore- . land. Chief Clevk.—F. S. Curtis, The Savoy. | Private Secretary to the Secretary of the Navy.—Chas. E. Taylor, 1533 I Street. Confidential Clerk to the Secretary of the Navy.—E. F. Slanker, 1410 Harvard Street. | Private Secretary to the Assistant Secvetary of the Navy.—C. H. McCarthy, The I Iroquois. | Disbursing Clerk.—M. L. Croxall, 1822 New Hampshire Avenue. Correspondence.— Chas. T. Ogle, 528 First Street SE. Appointments.—Ralph T. Bartlett, 430 Massachusetts Avenue. Superintendent, Library and Naval War Records Office. —Charles W. Stewart, 1211 [| Kenyon Street. OFFICE OF THE ADMIRAI OF THE NAVY. | (Mills Building, corner Pennsylvania Avenue and Seventeenth Street.) | I Admiral of the Navy.—George Dewey, 1601 K Street. I Aid. —1ieut. Commander Henry V. Butler, 2024 Hillyer Place. il Secretary.— Lieut. Leonard G. Hoffman, 1303 Fairmont Street. | \ Office of Naval Intelligence. | (Mills Building.) Il | Chief.—Capt. Templin M. Potts, 1604 K Street. i Lieut. Commanders Humes H. Whittlesey, 1812 H Street; Powers Symington, 1712 H street; John V. Klemann, 2016 Hillyer Place. | Iieuts. Horace P. McIntosh, The Oakland; William N. Jeffers, 1412 Twentieth Street. J Maj. Dion Williams, United States Marine Corps, 1727 P Street. [| Clevk.—Harry W. Smith, 214 Tenth Street NE. : BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. ] (Mills Building, fifth floor.) | | Chief.—Civil Engineer R. C. Hollyday, 2117 Connecticut Avenue. ) : Chief Clerk.—Wm. M. Smith, 1819 F Street. | Civil Engineers, Leonard M. Cox, 1829 Jefferson Place; P. L. Reed, 2717 Ontario Road; W. H. Allen, The Ontario; Jos. S. Shultz, 1279 Twenty-first Street; i C. A. Carlson, 1878 Ontario Place. Assistant Civil Engineer, Ralph Whitman, 1306 Rhode Island Avenue. | : BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Second floor, east wing.) I Chief.—Rear Admiral Reginald F. Nicholson, 1814 Jefferson Place. [| Assistant to Bureauw.—Capt. Henry B. Wilson, 1416 Twenty-first Street. ! Assistants.—Commanders Thomas Washington, 2232 Q Street; Henry A. Wiley, 1337 Twenty-first Street; William K. Harrison, 2015 Kalorama Road. | Iieut, Commander Walton R. Sexton, The Benedick. | Executive Departments. 247 Chief Clevk.—G. Earle Yancey, 5602 Thirty-ninth Street. Clerk to the Naval Academy.—Ieonard Draper, 2036 F Street. Hydrographic Office. (Mills Building.) Hydrographer.—Capt. John J. Knapp, 1616 Twenty-second Street. Assistant.—Lieut. Commander Wm. L. Littlefield, 2126 Leroy Place. Hydrographic Engineer.—G. W. Littlehales, 2132 Leroy Place. Clerk.—H. 1,. Ballentine, 1822 Calvert Street. Naval Observatory. (Georgetown Heights. Phone, West 290.) Superintendent.—Commodore T. E. D. W. Veeder, at the Observatory. Profs. Milton Updegraff, 1719 Thirty-fifth Street; F. B. Littell, 2507 Wisconsin Avenue; Asaph Hall, at the Observatory; G. K. Calhoun, The Benedick. Director of the Nautical Almanac.—Prof. W.S. Eichelberger, 2503 Wisconsin Avenue. Superintendent of Compasses.—Lieut. Commander J. H. Sypher, 2049 Newark 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, 734 Twelfth Street; H. G. Hodgkins, Bethesda, Md. : Assistant (Nautical Instrument Department). —E. A. Boeger, 3106 P Street. Librarian.—W. D. Horigan, 3028 Wisconsin Avenue. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. (Third floor, east wing.) Chief.—Rear Admiral N. KE. Mason, 1973 Biltmore Street. Assistant Chicf.—Commander E. FE. Capehart, 2003 O Street. Assistants.—Capt. A. M. Knight, 34 Maryland Avenue, Annapolis, Md.; Prof. P. R. Alger, 5 Maryland Avenue, Annapolis, Md.; Commander A. L. Norton, 2228 Cathedral Avenue. Lieut. Commanders O. P. Jackson, The Connecticut; F. B. Upham, The Highlands; R. W. McNeely, The Highlands; R. D. Hasbrouck, Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md. : Lieuts. W. L. Pryor, The Northumberland; B. A. Long, 1909 N Street. Chief Clevk.—E. S. Brandt, 1518 Corcoran Street. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. (First floor, east wing.) Chief.—Chief Constructor Richard Morgan Watt, 1823 Jefferson Place. Capt. Wm. F. Halsey, retired, The Marlborough. Naval Constructors David W. Taylor, Navy Yard; D. C. Nutting, 1206 Kenyon Street; S. F. Smith, The Marlborough; R. H. Robinson, 1322 Nineteenth Street; W. G. Du Bose, The Toronto; Henry Williams, 2264 Cathedral Avenue; William McEntee, 1832 Jefferson Place; I,. B. McBride, The Parker. Assistant Naval Constructors G. S. Radford, 1615 Irving Street; James I. Ackerson. Chief Clerk.—Michael D. Schaefer, 117 Fourth Street NE. BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING. (Third floor, east wing.) Chief.—Rear Admiral Hutch I. Cone, 2122 Leroy Place. Assistant.—Capt. Robert S. Griffin, 2003 Kalorama Road. Commanders Charles W. Dyson, 1814 Belmont Road; Louis A. Kaiser, 2128 Leroy Place; Samuel S. Robison, The Ontario; Urban T. Holmes, 1705 Twenty-first Street; William W. White, 1744 Q Street. ; Lieut. Commanders John K. Robison, 1619 Twenty-first Street; Roscoe C. Moody, 1908 Biltmore Street; David W. Todd, 1454 Belmont Street; John Halligan, jr., The Louisiana. : Lieuts. Samuel I. M. Major, The Rochambeau; Charles E. Courtney, The Far- ragut; Henry I, Wyman, 1921 Nineteenth Street; Nathaniel H. Wright, The Benedick; Walter G. Diman, The Dunsmere. Acting Chief Clevk.—Augustus C. Wrenn, 234 Tenth Street NE. 248 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. (First floor, east wing and eighth floor, Mills Building.) Chief.—Paymaster Gen. T. J. Cowie, The Highlands. Assistant to Buveauw.—Pay Director George W. Simpson, The Rochambeau, Assistants.—Paymasters T. W. Leutze, The Highlands; D. M. Addison, The Brigh- ton; J. D. Robnett, 1724 Q Street; F. G. Pyne, 1624 Twenty-first Street; J. S. Higgins, 1213 Connecticut Avenue; S. KE. Barber, The Highlands. Passed Asst. Paymaster R. W. Schumann, The Benedick. Asst. Paymaster F. FE. McMillen, 1824 I,amont Street. Civilian Assistant.—P. A. Tucker, 1408 1, Street. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. (Mills Building.) Chief.—Surg. Gen. C. F. Stokes, The Highlands. Assistant.—Surg. W. C. Braisted, The Rochambeau. Surgs. A. W. Dunbar, 3112 Mount Pleasant Street; T. W. Richords, 1911 N Street; J.-C. Pryor, 1779 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief Clerk.—W. S. Gibson, 2736 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. OFFICE, OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. (First floor, south wing.) : Judge Advocate General.—Capt. Robert I. Russell, 1811 R Street. Commander Walter O. Hulme (retired), Florence Court; Commander Benjamin W. Wells (retired), The Westmoreland; Lieut. Commander Emmet R. Pollock, The Dresden. Capt. Arthur E. Harding, United States Marine Corps, Metropolitan Club. Lieut. Robert Henderson, 1601 Twenty-third Street. First Lieuts. Jesse F. Dyer, ‘United States Marine Corps, The Berlin; Arthur P. Crist, United States Marine Corps, The Brighton. OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR. Solicitor.— Law Clerks.—Pickens Neagle, 1332 Belmont Street; Hdgar H. May, 17 Quarry Road; Harold H. Martin, The Chevy Chase. NAVY YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, Iincoln 1360.) Commandant and Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Capt. F. E. Beatty. Chief Clerk.—F. H. Bronaugh, 332 South Carolina Avenue SE. Assistant Superintendent Naval Gun Factory, Captain of the Yard, Engineer Officer, Navigation Officer, and Head of Department of Yards and Docks.—Commander H.'P. Jones. Inspector of Orvdnance.—1Lieut. Commander A. I,. Willard. Ordnance Duty.—Iieut. Commander G. I, Smith; Lieuts. J. H. Tomb, H. B. Soule, C. T. Hutchins, jr., R. Wainwright, jr., RB. P. Craft, F. J. Cleary, C. BE. Brillhart, B. McCandless, John Downes, jr. General Storvekeeper.—Paymaster J. H. Merriam. Assistant.—Passed Asst. Paymaster F. P. Williams. Paymaster of the Yard.—Pay Director John Ross Martin. Medical Officer. —Surg. 1. W. Spratling. Chaplain.—G. Livingston Bayard. In Commiand of Seamen’s Quarters.—Lieut. Commander A. Althouse. Commanding Marines.-—Capt. R. C. Berkeley, United States Marine Corps. U. S. S. Sylph.—1Lieut. C. R. Train. Executive Officer, Seamen’s Quarters.—Chief Gunner W. G. Moore. NAVY PAY OFFICE. (Union Trust Building, ) Purchasing Officer.—Pay Director John N. Speel, 1516 K Street. Chief Clerk.—F. V. Walker, 1526 Corcoran Street. — Executive Departments. 249 DISBURSING OFFICE. (Onion Trust Building.) Disbursing Officer.—Pay Director I. Hunt, United States Navy, 1709 Rhode Island Avenue, ALLOTMENT OFFICE. (Union Trust Building.) Allotment Officer. —Pay Director Lawrence Heap, United States Navy, 1734 K Street. NAVAL, MEDICATI, SCHOOL. (Twenty-third and FE Streets.) Medical Director H. G. Beyer, 1725 H Street. Surgs. E. M. Shipp, The Benedick; R. Spear, The Brighton; C. N. Fiske, 1710 M Street; C. St. J. Butler, 1333 Harvard Street. Passed Asst. Surgs. H. Butts, Government Hospital for Insane; P. E. Garrison. NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOI, HOSPITAL. (Foot of Twenty-fourth Street.) Medical Director I. G. Heneberger. Surgs. E. M. Shipp, The Benedick; W. B. Grove; R. Spear, The Brighton; H. A. Dunn. Asst. Surg. M. E. Higgins, 613 Twenty-second Street. ATTENDANCE ON OFFICERS. Surg. G. F. Freeman, 1738 Q Street. Passed Asst. Surg. A. D. McLean, The Gordon. NAVAL DISPENSARY. (Mills Building.) Passed Asst. Surg. J. L. Neilson, 1708 Kilbourne Place. GENERAL BOARD. (Mills Building.) President.—Admiral of the Navy George Dewey, 1601 K Street. Rear Admirals Raymond P. Rodgers, president of Naval War College, Newport, R. I.; Richard Wainwright, 1262 New Hampshire Avenue. Capts. Bradley A. Fiske, Stoneleigh Court; Frank F. Fletcher, 1441 Massachusetts Avenue; Templin M. Potts, 1604 K Street; John H. Gibbons, 1901 R Street. Commander W. J. Maxwell, 1716 I Street. Secretary. —Commander Spencer S. Wood, 1618 T'wenty-second Street. On duty in connection with the Board. Commanders John A. Hoogewerff, 2000 R Street; W, D. MacDougall, 2024 O Street. Lieut. Commanders Ridley McLean, The Rochambeau; Henry V. Butler, aid to the Admiral of the Navy, 2024 Hillyer Place. Lieut. Zachariah H. Madison, The Westmoreland. BOARD OF INSPECTION AND SURVEY FOR SHIPS. President. — Capt. Thomas Snowden, The Westmoreland. Commanders Wm. Strother Smith, The Westmoreland; Roger Welles, The Gordon. Naval Constructor Robert Stocker, The Highlands. Recorder.—Commander Charles F. Hughes, The Ontario. NAVAI EXAMINING BOARD. (Navy Yard.) President. —Rear Admiral Giles B. Harber, The Brighton. Rear Admiral Kossuth Niles, The Burlington. Capts. Wythe M. Parks, 1800 Wyoming Avenue; William B. Caperton, The Dresden. _ Recorder.—Charles B. Cheyney, 1620 Twenty-ninth Street. 250 ' Congressional Directory. NAVAL RETIRING BOARD. (Navy Yard.) President.—Rear Admiral Giles B. Harber, The Brighton. Rear Admiral Kossuth Niles, The Burlington. : Capt. William B. Caperton, The Dresden. Medical Directors John C. Boyd, 1621 Twenty-second Street; Frank Anderson, 1628 Nineteenth Street. Recorder. —Charles B. Cheyney, 1620 Twenty-ninth Street. BOARD OF MEDICAL, EXAMINERS. (Navy Yard.) President.—Medical Director Daniel N. Bertolette, The Bachelor. Medical Directors Frank Anderson, 1628 Nineteenth Street; William R. Du Bose, 1812 H Street. Recorder. —Charles B. Cheyney, 1620 Twenty-ninth Street. { "HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS. ” (Mills Building. Phone, Main 4600.) Commandant’s Office. Commandant.—Maj. Gen. William P. Biddle, The Highlands. Aids de Camp.—Capts. Dickinson P. Hall, The Cordova; William G. Fay, 1921 Nine- teenth Street. On special duty.—Capt. Charles H. I,yman, The Versailles. Chief Clerk.—Herman E. Kittredge, 1439 R Street. Adjutant and Inspector's Department. Officer in Charge.—Lieut. Col. Henry C. Haines, assistant adjutant and inspector, 1722 Lamont Street. Assistant. —Maj. David D. Porter, assistant adjutant and inspector, 1819 Nineteenth Street. Chief Clerk. Charles A. Ketcham, Laurel, Md. Quartermaster's Department. Officer in Charge.—Lieut. Col. Charles I, McCawley, assistant quartermaster, 1610 New Hampshire Avenue. Assistants. —Maj. William B. Lemly, assistant quartermaster, The Albany; Capt. Hugh I,. Matthews, assistant quartermaster, The Brighton. Chief Clevk.—William W. Trail, Harpers Ferry, W. Va. Paymaster's Department. Officer in Charge.—Col. George Richards, paymaster, The Mendota. Assistants. —Maj. William G. Powell, assistant paymaster, 2150 Florida Avenue; Maj. Harold C. Reisinger, assistant paymaster, The Highlands. Chief Clevk.—Yeon 1, Dye, Garrett Park, Md. MARINE BARRACKS. (Eighth Street SKE. Phone, Lincoln 1230.) Commanding.—Col. James E. Mahoney. Capts. Louis M. Gulick, William H. Clifford, Harry R. Lay, Douglas C. McDougal. First Lieuts. Arthur B. Owens, Clayton B. Vogel, Reginald F. Ludlow, William I,. Burchfield. SL ——————— Te ae Executive Departments. 251 DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. (Corner of Seventh and F Streets. Phone, Main 6280.) WALTER LOWRIE FISHER, of Chicago, Ill., Secretary of the Interior (The Highlands), was born in Wheeling, Va. (now West! Virginia), July 4, 1862, son of Daniel W. and Amanda D. Fisher; student at Marietta (Ohio) College, 1878-79, Hanover (Ind.) College, 1879-1883; was graduated in 1883 from Hanover College, of which his father was president for nearly 30 years; admitted to the bar in 1888, and since then in practice at Chicago; member of the firm of Matz, Fisher & Boy- den. Special assessment attorney, Chicago, 1888-89; member of the executive com- mittee, Municipal Voters’ League (secretary, 19o1-1906; president, 1906); special trac- tion counsel for the city of Chicago from 1go6 to 1911; president Conservation League of America; vice president National Conservation Association; vice president National Municipal League. Took the oath of office as Secretary of the Interior on March 13, 1911. First Assistant Secrvetary.—Frank Pierce, The Rochambeau. Assistant Secvelary.—Carmi A. Thompson, 1821 Adams Mill Road. Chief Clerk.—Clement S. Ucker, 60 Bryant Street. Assistant to the Secretary.—Don M. Carr, 1840 California Street. Chief Law Officer, Reclamation Service.—Philip P. Wells, 1744 N Street. Assistant Attorney General.—Oscar Lawler, The Highlands. First Assistant Attorney.—Francis W. Clements, 1460 Irving Street. Private Secretary to the Secretary.—Ashmun N. Brown, The Congressional. Chiefs of Division: Disbursing .—George W., Evans, 918 Nineteenth Street. Mails, Files, and Archives.—William O. Deatrick, Arlington, Va. ‘ Publications.—Iaurence EF. Schmeckebier, 1444 Belmont Street. Supplies.—Amos Hadley, 1330 Harvard Street. Board of Pension Appeals.—Chief John A. Lacy, 1334 Thirty-first Street. Captain of the Walch.—Walter F. Halleck, 635 Maryland Avenue NE. GENERAIL ILLAND OFFICE. (Old Post Office Department Building. Phone, Main 6280.) Commissioner.—Fred Dennett, The Burlington. Assistant Commissioner.—Samuel V. Proudfit, 2550 Fourteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Frank Bond, 3127 Newark Street. Chief Law Clerk.—James W. Witten, 2518 Thirteenth Street. Chief of Field Sevvice.— James M. Sheridan, 1316 Kenyon Street. Law Clerks.—John McPhaul, 1223 Irving Street NE.; William B. Pugh, Kenilworth Street, North Chevy Chase, Md. Law Examiners.—Dale K. Parrott, 1339 Massachusetts Avenue SE.; Daniel A. Mill- rick, 105 Second Street NE. Receiving Clerk.—Julius H. Hammond, 1623 R Street. .Recorder.—Henry W. Sanford, 1205 Sixth Street. Chiefs of Division: Accounts.—Irvin Rittenhouse, 1118 Monroe Street. Contest.—John P. McDowell, 3412 Fourteenth Street. Desert and Indian Lands, State Selections, efc.—George B. Driesbock, 8o2 D Street NE. : Drafting. —Ithamar P. Berthrong, 3409 Ashley Terrace. Field Service.—John D. Yelverton, 802 Twenty-first Street. Government Contest.—Wm. J. McGee, 1810 Lamont Street. Homestead, Timber, and Stone.—Anthony F. Rice, 644 G Street NE. Mail and Files.—Harry 1,. Kays, East Falls Church, Va. Mineral.—William J. Howard, 815 Taylor Street. Posting and Tract Records.—James W. Byler, 2904 T'wenty-fifth Street NE. Public Surveys.—Charles 1,. Du Bois, 1835 Monroe Street. : Railroad Grants and Rights of Way.—Frederick R. Dudley, Falls Church, Va. Reclamation, Lien Selections, and Special Entries.—John W. Keener, 120 Mary- land Avenue NE. 252 Congressional Darectory. PATENT OFFICE. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 6280.) Commaissioner.—Edward B. Moore, 1869 Columbia Road. Hirst Assistant Commissioner.—Cornelius C. Billings, The Westmoreland. Assistant Commissioner.—Frederick A. Tennant, The Portner. Chief Clerk.—William F. Woolard, 3615 Newark Street. ; Examiners in Chief.—Thomas G. Steward, 1336 Monroe Street; Frank C. Skin- ner, 3425 Holmead Place; Fairfax Bayard, 1733 Columbia Road. Financial Clerk.—Frank D. Sloat, 1214 I, Street. Law Examiners.—Webster S. Ruckman, 3414 Mount Pleasant Street; Robert F. Whitehead, 1521 Twenty-eighth Street. Classification Examiner.—Fugene D. Sewall, 2106 F Street. Interferences Examiner.—Henry E. Stauffer, 1744 T' Street.’ Principal Examiners: Acoustics, Horology, Recorders, efc.—James T. Newton, 1625 R Street. Artesian and Oil Wells, Stone Working.—G. R. Ide, 644 D Street NE. Buckles, Buttons, Clasps, and Sign Exhibiting.—George P. Tucker, 802 Massa- chusetts Avenue NE. Builders’ Hardware, Locks, Latches, etc.—A. George Wilkinson, 1526 K Street. Carriages and Wagons.—Thomas H. Mitchell, 1327 Girard Street. Chemistyy.—Albert M. Lewers, 718 East Capitol Street. Electricity, A.—Wm. A. Kinnan, 1110 Fairmont Street. Electricity, B.—A. P. Shaw, 2574 University Place. Electricity, C.—Arthur F. Kinnan, Hammond Court. Electric Railways and Signaling.—Charles H. Lane, Glen Carlyn, Va. : Firearms, Ordnance, Marine, and Aerial Navigation.—]. H. Colwell, 1433 T Street. : Furniture.—Walter Johnson, 109 First Street NE. Harvesters, Music, and Bookbinding.—John F. MacNab, 1204 G Street NE, Heating Apparatus.—Millard J. Moore, 111 Tennessee Avenue NE. Hoisting and Handling Materials.—Benjamin W. Pond, 1887 Newton Street. Industrial Chemistry.—George S. Ely, 300 First Street SE. Internal Combustion Engines.—Andrew R. Benson, 712 Tenth Street. Leather-working Machinery and Products.—Edward H. Eakle, 1108 East Capitol Street. : Machine Elements.—Herbert Wright, Kensington, Md. Masonry and Fireproof Buildings.—William A. Cowles, 2626 Woodley Place. Metallurgy and Electric Heaters.—Wm. J. Rich, 1468 Clifton Street. Metal Working.—G. A. Nixon, Florence Court. Mills, Thrashing, and Butchering.—James H. Lightfoot, Takoma Park, Md. Optics, Toys, and Velocipedes.—Iineas D. Underwood, 2852 Ontario Road. Faper Manufactures, Printing, and Type-bar Machines.—FE. S. Henry, 1320 Columbia Road. Photography and Instruments of Precision.—George 1,. Morton, ‘The Ontario. Plastics, Glass and Coating.—C. C. Stauffer, 1513 Twenty-eighth Street. Pumps and Hydraulic Motors.—Fred M. Tryon, 1225 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Railway Draft Appliances and Resilient Wheels.—John I. Brown, 220 A Street SE. Railways and Railway Rolling Stock.—George R. Simpson, 111 Twelfth Street SE. Receptacles and Check Controlled Apparatus.—Addis D. Merritt, 3327 Seventeenth Street. Refrigeration, Packaging, and Dispensing Liquids.—Jay F. Bancroft, I'he Bruns- wick. Sanitary Engineering and Surgery.—I1. P. Disney, 128 Tennessee Avenue NE, Sewing Machines and Apparel. —John J. Darby, 1336 Vermont Avenue. Sheet Metal and Wire Working.—Louis W. Maxson, Kensington, Md. Steam Engineering.—Otto C. Gsantner, Twenty-fourth and Franklin Streets NE. Textiles.—Arthur H. Giles, 1853 Mintwood Place. Tillage.—Frank A. Ioeffler, 3410 Thirteenth Street. 1obacco, Presses, and Ventilation.—G. S. Rafter, 3105 Sixteenth Street. Trade-Marks and Designs.—]J. H. Carnes, 222 A Street SE. Typewriters, Fluid Burners, and Illumination.—Milnor R. Sullivan, The Nor- mandie. Washing, Brushing, Abrading.—C. G. Gould, 1619 Thirteenth Street. Water Distribution.—Arthur W. Cowles, 1751 Columbia Road. Wood Working .—Ballard N. Morris, Kensington, Md. mm e—— Executive Departments. 253 Chiefs of Division: Assignment.—Willis B. Magruder, Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md. Publications.—Alex. Mosher, 2945 Newark Street. Draftsman.—Alexander Scott, 1201 Kenyon Street. Issue and Gazelte.—W. W. Mortimer, 1755 Columbia Road. Photolithographs.—Finis D. Morris, 63 S Street. Mail. —A. 1,. Pope, 627 East Capitol Street. Librarian.—Howard 1,. Prince, The Portner. BUREAU OF PENSIONS. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square. - Phone, Main 4491.) Commissioner.—James L. Davenport, 1823 Wyoming Avenue. First Deputy. —Ieander Stillwell, 110 East Capitol Street. Second Deputy.—1 everett M. Kelley, The Cecil. Chief Clerk.—Charles C. Stouffer, 1207 Kenyon Street. Law Clerk.—Stephen A. Cuddy, The Maury." Board of Review, Chief.—Thomas W. Dalton, 427 Massachusetts Avenue. Chiefs of Division: Army and Navy.—Latimer B. Stine, 2320 First Street. Certificate.—Herbert R. C. Shaw, The Hawarden. Civil War.—Frank A. Warfield, 1537 T Street. Finance. —A. H. Thompson, go4 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Medical.—Charles ¥. Whitney, Silver Spring, Md. Record. —Gilbert C. Kniffin, Takoma. ’ Removal.—Jos. A. Scott, go2 Maryland Avenue NE. Special Examination.—Alvin 1,. Craig, 2206 Rirst Street. Admitted Files.—In charge: Tory Olesen, 644 FE Street NE. Supervintendent’s Division.—Charles S. Jones, 707 Seventh Street NE. PENSION AGENCY. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square. 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. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, Main 44971.) Commissioner.—Robert G. Valentine, 1727 Nineteenth Street. Assistant.—F. H. Abbott, The Cavendish. Second Assistant Commissioner.—Charles F. Hauke, 605 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Chief Supervisor.—E. P. Holcombe, Denver, Colo. Law Clerk.—F, B. Meritt, 42 Seaton Place. Chiefs of Division: Education.—Josiah H. Dortch, 1510 Park Road. Finance.—Hamilton Dimick, 1315 Clifton Street. Land.—John Francis, jr., 1326 Euclid Street. Methods.—W. W. Shipe, Ballston, Va. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. (Old Post-Office Department Building. Phone, Main 6280.) Commissioner.—Elmer E. Brown, The Buckingham. Chief Clerk.—Lewis A. Kalbach, 662 F Street NE. Chiefs of Division. Higher Education.—Kendric C. Babcock, The Brunswick. School Administration.—Harlan Updegraff, 1324 Monroe Street. Statistical. —Alexander Summers, 1000 Eighth Street. Corvespondence.—ILovick Pierce, 1322 Eleventh Street. Editorial —Milo B. Hillegas, 153 Adams Street. Library.—John D. Wolcott, 1418 Euclid Street. Alaska. —William T. Lopp, The Lincoln. GEOLOGICAL, SURVEY. (Hooe Building, 1330 F Street. Phone, Main 3116.) Director.-—~George Otis Smith, 2137 Bancroft Place. Chief Clerk.—Henry C. Rizer, 2568 University Place. 254 Congressional Directory. Geologic Branch: Chief Geologist.—C. Willard Hayes, 3432 Ashley Terrace. Mining and Mineral Resources. —E. W. Parker, 2252 Cathedral Avenue. Alaskan Mineral Resources.—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, Century Club. Central Division.—W. H. Herron, 1706 Oregon Avenue. Rocky Mountain Division.—Sledge Tatum, 2318 Nineteenth Street. Pacific Division.—T. G. Gerdine, 1813 Adams Mill Road. Water Resources Branch: Chief Hydrographer.—M. O. Leighton, 1759 Lanier Place. Administrative Branch: Disbursements and Accounts.—JohnD. McChesney, Cathedral Avenue and Twenty- ninth Street. Executive Division.—Harry Lamport Hill. 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.) Divector.—Frederick H. Newell, 1909 S Street. Chief Engineer.— Arthur P. Davis, 2212 First Street. Supervising Engineer in Chargeof Legal Malters.—Morris Bien, 1130 Lamont Street. Chief Clevk.— Edwin G. Paul, College Park, Md. Statistician.—Clarence J. Blanchard, The Earlington. BUREAU OF MINES. (Eighth and G Streets. Phone, Main 6280.) Director.—J. A. Holmes, 1749 P Street. Chief Clerk.—Van. H. Manning, Hammond Court. Chiefs of Division: Editorial. —S. Sanford, 834 Thirteenth Street. Accounts.—F. E. McCalip, The Lincoln. Correspondence and Recovds.—W. 1,. Aylesworth, 117 Kentucky Avenue SE. Publications.—J. 1.. Cochrane, 1416 Fifteenth Street. Government Coal Inspection.—G. S. Pope, 1321 East Capitol Street. 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 Towa, 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 Towa Agricultural College at Ames; was appointed Secretary of Agriculture by President McKinley in 1897 and 1901; by President Roosevelt in 1905; and by President Taft in 1909. Assistant Secretary.—Willet M. Hays, Drummond (Bethesda P. O.), Md. Chief Clevk.—C. C. Clark, 1441 Girard Street. Solicitor.—George P. McCabe, 3440 Fourteenth 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. — George W. Knorr, 1712 Seventeenth Street. Chief of Supply Division.—Cyrus B. Lower, 3719 New Hampshire Avenue. Chief Engineer and Captain of the Watch.—Lewis Jones, 42 R Street NE. - — . Chief.—A. D. Melvin, 1751 Park Road. Executive Departments. 255 WEATHER BUREAU. (Corner, Twenty-fourth and M Streets. Phone, West 1640.) Chief.— Willis 1.. Moore, The Richmond. Assistant Chief.—Henry E. Williams, 1822 U Street. Chief Clerk.—Daniel J. Carroll, 1356 Meridian Street. In Charge of— Forecast Division.—Edward H. Bowie, District Forecaster, 2826 Twenty-seventh Street. Instrument Division.—Prof. Charles F. Marvin, 1404 Girard Street. Marine Division.—Henry 1,. Heiskell, Marine Meteorologist, The Northumber- land. River and Flood Service.—Prof. Harry C. Frankenfield, 1735 New Hamsphire Avenue. Chiefs of Division: Climatological.—Preston C. Day, 1730 Eighth Street. Publications.—John P. Church, 201 Third Street NE. Supplies.—Robert Seyboth, 21 V Street NE. Telegraph.—Jesse H. Robinson, 1607 S Street. Librarian.—Charles F. Talman, 1166 Nineteenth Street. In Charge of Forecast Districts.—Prof. Henry J. Cox, Chicago, Ill.; Prof. Alexander G. McAdie, San Francisco, Cal.; district forecasters, Edward A. Beals, Portland, Oreg.; Isaac M. Cline, New Orleans, La.; Frederick H. Brandenburg, Denver, Colo. Inspectors.—Norman B. Conger, Detroit, Mich.; Henry B. Hersey, Milwaukee, Wis. Research Staff, Mount Weather, Virginia. Executive Officer in Charge.—Prof. Alfred J. Henry. In Charge of— Physical Laboratory.—Prof. William J. Humphreys. Solar Radiation Wovk.—Prof. Herbert H. Kimball. Upper Air Research.—William R. Blair. Editor of Mount Weather Bulletin.—Prof. Cleveland Abbe. BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY. Assistant.—A. M. Farrington, 1436 Chapin Street. Chief Clerk.—Charles C. Carroll, 29 Fifth Street NE. Chiefs of Division: Animal Husbandry.—George M. Rommel, 2622 Garfield Street. Biochemic.—M. Dorset, The Iowa. Dairy.-—B. H. Rawl, 107 Maryland Avenue NE. Inspection.—Rice P. Steddom, 1714 Thirteenth Street. Pathological —John R. Mohler, 2317 First Street Quarantine.—Richard W. Hickman, 2329 First Street. Zoology.—B. H. Ransom, 1735 New Hampshire Avenue. Editor.—James M. Pickens, 1831 California Street. Superintendent of Experiment Station.—F,. C. Schroeder, Bethesda, Md. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. Pathologist and Physiologist, and Chief of Bureau.—Beverly T. Galloway. Pomologist and Acting Chief of Bureau.—William A. Taylor, 55 Q Street NE. Technologist and Acting Assistant Chief of Bureau.—Nathan A. Cobb, Falls Church, Va. Chief Clerk.—James E. Jones, 614 D Street NE. Editor.—J. E. Rockwell, 31 S Street. Records.—W. P. Cox, 1312 Fairmont Street. In Charge of— : : Agricultural Technology and Fiber Investigations.—Nathan A. Cobb, Falls Church, Va.; Lyster H. Dewey, 4612 Ninth Street. Alkali and Drought Resistant Plant Breeding Investigations.—Thomas H. Kearney, 3401 Thirty-fourth Place. him Experimental Farm and Horticultural Investigations.—I1,. C. Corbett, akoma. 256 C ongressional Durectory. In Charge gof—Continued. Corn Investigations.—Charles P. Hartley, 3420 Center Street. Crop Acclimatization and Adaptation Investigations. —O. F. Cook, Tanham, Md. Crop Physiology and Breeding Investigations.—Walter T. Swingle, in the field. Drug Plant, Poisonous Plant, and Zea Culture Investigations.—Rodney H. True, Glendale, Md. Dry Land Agriculture Investigations.—E. C. Chilcott, Fairfax, Va. Experimental Gardens and Grounds.—Edward M. Byrnes, 58 M Street. Farm Management Investigations.—William J. Spillman, The Cavendish. Farmers’ Cooperative Demonstration Work.—Bradford Knapp, 1215 Crittenden Street. Grain Investigations.—Mark A. Carleton, 1743 Kilbourne Place. Grain Standardization.—J]. W. T. Duvel, The Glen, Quarry Road. Pathological Investigations: Investigations of Diseases of Cotton, Truck Crops, and Beet Sugar.—W. A. Orton, Takoma. Investigations of Diseases of Fruits.—Merton B. Waite, 1506 Columbia Road. Laboratory of Forest Pathology.—Haven Metcalf, 1223 Vermont Avenue. Laboratory of Plant Pathology.—Erwin F. Smith, 1460 Belmont Street. Pathological Collections.—Flora W. Patterson, The Decatur. Physical Investigations.—IL,yman J. Briggs, 3208 Newark Street. Pomological Collections.—Gustavus B. Brackett, 1010 I Street. Pomological Field Investigations.—A. V. Stubenrauch, 1833 Newton Street, Seed Laboratory.—¥Edgar Brown, Lanham, Md. Seeds, Purchase and Distribution of: Forage Crop Investigations.—Charles V. Piper, 1495 Newton Street. Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction.—David Fairchild, 1331 Connecticut Avenue. Seed Distribution.—Directed by the Chief of Bureau; assistant, L,eon M. Esta- brook, 1026 Seventeenth Street; executive clerk, Oliver F. Jones, Vienna, Va. Soil Bacteriology and Water Purification Investigations.—Karl F. Kellerman, "1489 Newton Street. Taxonomic and Range Investigations.—Frederick V. Coville, 1836 California Street. Tobacco Investigations.—W. W. Garner, 1436 W Street. Western Agricultural Extension.—Carl S. Scofield, Lanham, Md. FOREST SERVICE. (Atlantic Building, 928-930 F Street. Phone, Main 6910.) Forester and Chief.—Henry S. Graves, The Brighton. Associate Forester.—Albert F. Potter, 1307 P Street. Editor. —Herbert A. Smith, 1240 Nineteenth Street. Publication.—Findley Burns, 1426 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Dendrologist.—George B. Sudworth, 3768 Patterson Street. In Charge of— Operation.—Asst. Foresters James B. Adams, 2135 P Street; Clyde Ieavitt, The Colonade. Geography.—Fred G. Plummer, 1320 I Street. Maintenance.—George A. Bentley, The Balfour. Stlviculture.—Asst. Forester Wm. T. Cox, 46 Rhode Island Avenue. State Cooperation.—]. G. Peters, 7 East Mount Royal Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Silvics.—Raphael Zon, 1674 Irving Street. Grazing.—Associate Forester Albert F. Potter, 1307 P Street* Asst. Forester IL,. P. Kneipp, The Knickerbocker. Products.—Asst. Forester William I,. Hall, Cosmos Club. Laboratory.—McGarvey Cline, director, Madison, Wis. Wood Utilization.—H. S. Sackett, Fisher Building, Chicago, Ill. Washington Office.—O. T. Swan, 3605 Norton Place. : BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY. Chemist and Chief of Burean.—Harvey W. Wiley, 1848 Biltmore Street. Associate Chemist.—F. 1,. Dunlap, Takoma Park, Md. Assistant Chief of the Bureau and Chief of the Division of Foods.—W. D. Bigelow, 1734 Lamont Street. : Chief Clerk.—F. B. Linton, Takoma Park, Md. Edifor.—A. 1,. Pierce, 1328 Eleventh Street. nN E— eT ee ee e———— — Executive Departments. ; 257 Librarian.—A. E. Draper, 1337 Twelfth Street. Chief Food and Drug Inspector.— Walter G. Campbell, 1415 Chapin Street. Chiefs of Division— Drugs.—1. F. Kebler, 1322 Park Road. Miscellanecous.—]. K. Haywood, 3114 Thirteenth Street. Chiefs of Laboratories— Food Inspection.—1,. M. Tolman, 1408 Emerson Street. Food Technology.—E. M. Chace, 411 G Street. . Oil, Fat, and Wax.—H. S. Bailey, 1705 Thirty-fifth Street. Drug Inspection.—G. W. Hoover, 1322 Vermont Avenue. Synthetic Products.—W. O. Emery, 2232 Cathedral Avenue. Pharmacological. —Wm. Salant, 1647 Lamont Street. Water.—W. W. Skinner, Kensington, Md. Cattle Food and Grain.—G. 1,. Bidwell, acting, 1245 Evarts Street NE. Insecticide and Fungicide.—C. C. McDonnell, 2129 Eighteenth Street. Contracts.—P. H. Walker, 2950 Newark Street. Dairy.—G. E. Patrick, The Sherman. Food Research.—M. BE. Pennington, St. David’s, Philadelphia, Pa. Leather and Paper.—F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md. Microchemical.—B. J. Howard, 1212 Decatur Street. Physical Chemistry.—C. S. Hudson, The Victoria. Sugar.—A. H. Bryan, The Lehigh. In Charge of Sections— : Animal Physiological Chemistry.—F. C. Weber, Bethesda, Md. Bacteriological Chemistry.—G. W. Stiles, jr., 4820 Iowa Avenue. Enological Chemislvry.—W. B. Alwood, Charlottesville, Va. Nitrogen.—T. C. Trescot, near Ballston, Va. Plant Physiological Chemistry.—J. A, LeClerc, Takoma Park, Md. BUREAU OF SOILS. Soil Physicist and Chief of Buveauw.—Milton Whitney, Takoma Park, Md. Chief Clevk.—A. G. Rice, Livingstone Heights, ‘Va. Physical and Chemical Investigations.—Frank K. Cameron, 3207 Nineteenth Street. Fertility Investigations.—Oswald Schreiner, 2125 Fifteenth Street. Soil Survey.—Curtis F. Marbut, 3555 Eleventh Street. Soil Water Investigations.—W J McGee, Cosmos Club. Use of Soils.—Jay A. Bonsteel, 2807 Quarry Road. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY. Entomologist and Chief.—1,. O. Howard, 2026 Hillyer Place. Assistant Entomologist and Acting Chief in absence of Chief.—C. 1. Marlatt, 1521 Sixteenth Street. Executive Assistant.—R. S. Clifton, Jessup, Md. Chief Clerk.—W. F. Tastet, 134 Seaton Place. In Charge of— . Truck Crop and Stoved Product Insect Investigations.—F. H. Chittenden, 1323 Vermont Avenue. Forest Insect Investigations.—A. D. Hopkins, Cosmos Club. Southern Field Crop Insect Investigations.—W. D. Hunter, Dallas, Tex. Cereal and Forage Insect Investigations.—F. M. Webster, Kensington, Md. Deciduous Fruit Insect Investigations.—A. 1. Quaintance, 1807 Phelps Place. Bee Culture.—E. F. Phillips, Somerset Heights, Md. Preventing Spread of Moths, Field Work.—D. M. Rogers, 6 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. : Editorial Work.—Rolla P. Currie, 632 Keefer Place. BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL SURVEY. Biologist and Chief.—H. W. Henshaw, The Ontario. Assistant Chief (in charge of Game Presevvation).—T. S. Palmer, 1939 Biltmore Street. Assistants in Charge of— Economic Investigations.—A. K. Fisher, The Plymouth. Biological Investigations.—Vernon Bailey, 1834 Kalorama Road. . 258 Congressional Directory. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. Chief of Division and Disbursing Clerk.—A. Zappone, 2222 First Street. Assistant Chief of Division (in charge of Weather Buveau Accounts).—E. B. Cal- vert, Livingstone Heights, Va. Chief, Office of Accounts (Forest Service).—M. E. Fagan, The Denver. Cashier and Chief Clerk.—W. J. Nevius, 88 R Street. Auditing Section.—FE,. D. Yerby, 2512 Cliffbourne Place. Miscellaneous Section.—W. R. Fuchs, 2514 Wisconsin Avenue. Bookkeeping Section.—F. W. Legge, 445 G Street. Transportation Section.—E. E. Forbes, 1211 Girard Street. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. ° Editor and Chief.—Joseph A. Arnold, 134 Sixth Street NE. Editor and Assistant Chief.—B. D. Stallings, 948 S Street. Chief Clevk.—A. 1. Mudd, 1925 Fifteenth Street. Assistants in Charge of— Document Section.—Francis J. P. Cleary, 45 Randolph Place. Indexing.—C. H. Greathouse, Fort Myer Heights, Va. Lllustrations.—1L. S. Williams, 2304 First Street. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. Statistician and Chie¢f.— Victor H. Olmsted, Clarendon, Va. Associate Statistician.—Nat C. Murray, 1635 Monroe Street. Assistant Statistician.—Samuel A. Jones, 2594 Wisconsin Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Orville N. Fansler, Alta Vista (Bethesda P. O.), Md. Chiefs of Division: Domestic Crop Reports.—Fred. J. Blair, 1443 Belmont Street. Production and Distribution.—George K. Holmes, 1323 Irving Street. Editorial and Library.—Charles M. Daugherty, 1437 Rhode Island Avenue. LIBRARY. Librarian.—Claribel R. Barnett, 2750 Fourteenth Street. Assistant Librarvian.—Emma B. Hawks, 941 S Street. OFFICE, OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. Director.—A. C. Trus, 1604 Seventeenth Street. Assistant, and Editor of Experiment Station Record.—FE. W. Allen, 1923 Biltmore Street. Chiefs of— Editorial Division.—W. H. Beal, 1852 Park Road. Division of Insular Stations.—Walter H. Evans, Cleveland Park, Nutrition Investigations.—C. F. Langworthy, 1604 Seventeenth Street. Irrigation Investigations.—S. Fortier, 2310 Nineteenth Street. Drainage Investigations.—C. G. Elliott, 3934 Fourteenth Street. 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. Guam Experiment Station.—J. B. Thompson, Guam. Agricultural Education.—D. J. Crosby, Lanham, Md. Farmers’ Institute Specialist.—John Hamilton, 1303 Clifton Street. Chief Clerk.—Mrs. C. E. Johnston, The Henrietta. OFFICE OF PUBLIC ROADS. Director.—ILogan Waller Page, 2223 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Divector.—Paul D. Sargent, 1118 Rhode Island Avenue. Chief Engineer.— Vernon M. Peirce, The Beacon. Chemaist.—Prevost Hubbard, The Monticello. Assistant Engineer.—Charles H. Hoyt, 1002 N Street. Assistant in Road Management.—M. O. Eldridge, 1615 I'lorida Avenue. Testing Engineer.—Albert T. Goldbeck, 1626 S Street. Assistant Chemist.—Charles S. Reeve, 1468 Chapin Street. Petrographer.—Edwin C. E. Lord, The Sheridan. Editorial Clerk and Librarian.—William W. Sniffin, 329 Shepherd Street. Chief Clerk.—W. Carl Wyatt, 36 Randolph Place. Executive Departments. 259 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR. (513-515 Fourteenth Street. Phone, Main 5060.) CHARLES NAGEL, of St. Louis, Mo., Secretary of Commerce and Labor (1731 K Street), was born August 9, 1849, in Colorado County, Tex. He left his home in 1863 as a result of the Civil War, accompanying his father to old Mexico, and from there, by way of New York, to St. Louis. He graduated from the St. Louis High School in 1868; from the St. Louis Law School in 1872; attended the University of Berlin 1872-73; admitted to bar 1873. In 1876 he married Fannie Brandeis, of Louisville, who died in 1889, one daughter surviving her. In 1895 he married Anne Shepley, and they have four children. He was a member of the Missouri Legislature from 1881 to 1883; president of the St. Louis City Council from 1893 to 1897; mem- ber of the St. Louis Law School faculty since 1886; board of trustees of Washington University; board of directors of St. Louis Museum of Fine Arts. Made national committeeman from Missouri in 1908. Has taken an active part in politics for the last 20 years by participating in conventions and speaking during campaigns, and has from time to time delivered addresses before bar associations and similar organizations upon various topics of public interest. Took oath of office as Secretary of Commerce and Labor March 6, 1909. Assistant Secretary.—Benjamin S. Cable, 2211 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Robert M. Pindell, ir. 1116 Monroe Street. Disbursing Clerk. Private Secretary to the Secretary. — Herbert A. Stevens, The St. Lawrence. Private Secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Donald S. "Edmonds, 1239 Irving Street. Chiefs of Division: Appointments.—George W. Leadley, The Van Cortlandt. Publications.—George C. Havenner, Minnesota Avenue and Fighteenth Street. Supplies.—Wilbur W. Fowler, 3604 New Hampshire Avenue. BUREAU OF CORPORATIONS. (513-515 Fourteenth Street.) Commissioner.—Herbert Knox Smith, The Highlands. Deputy.—Iuther Conant, jr., The Portsmouth. Chief Clerk.—Warren R. Choate, 1810 Newton Street. BUREAU OF MANUFACTURES. (Adams Building, 1335 F Street.) Chief.—Albertus H. Baldwin, The Cecil. Assistant Chief.—David A. Skinner, 1477 Newton Street. Chief Consular Division.—Charles S. Donaldson, Berwyn, Md. Tariff Expert.—Frank R. Rutter, 1442 Belmont Street. BUREAU OF LABOR. (Department Annex, 462-464 Louisiana Avenue.) Commissioner.—Charles P. Neill, 3556 Macomb Street. Chief Statistician.—G. W. W. Hanger, 2344 Massachusetts Avenue. BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES. (Department Annex, 462-464 Louisiana Avenue.) Commissioner.—George R. Putnam, The Brighton. Deputy Commissioner.— Arthur V. Conover, 1725 H Street. Chief Constructing Engineer.—John S. Conway, The Montana. Superintendent of Naval Construction.—George Warrington, 3311 Sixteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Thaddeus S. Clark, 1614 P Street. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. (B Street, between First and Second Streets. Phone, Main 4210.) Director.—E. Dana Durand, 2614 Woodley Place. . Assistant Divector.—Dr. Roland P. Falkner, The Ontario. Chief Clerk.—Voler V. Viles, 328 Maryland Avenue NE. 84259°—62-1—I18T ¥D—-18 260 ~~ Congressional Directory. \ Appointment Clevk.—Clifford Hastings, Franklin Park, Va. Disbursing Clerk.—George Johannes, 120 Rhode Island Avenue. Chief Statisticians. : Agriculture.—Le Grand Powers, 3355 Eighteenth Street. . Manufactures. —William M. Steuart, 3725 Morrison Street. Pl Population.—William C. Hunt, The Kensington. Vital Statistics.—Cressy 1. Wilbur, 1374 Harvard Street. Revision and Results.—Joseph A. Hill, 1325 N Street. Geographer.—Charles S. Sloane, 1733 T Street. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. (New Jersey Avenue, near B Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1872 and 1873.) Superintendent.—Otfo H. Tittmann, 2014 Hillyer Place. Assistant Superintendent.—Frank Walley Perkins, 1723 De Sales Street. Assistant in Charge of the Office.—Andrew Braid, The Columbia. Inspector of Hydrography and Topography.—John J. Gilbert, The Iroquois. Disbursing Agent.—Scott Nesbit, The Luxor. FEditor.—Isaac Winston, The Portner. Chiefs of Division: Chart.—Alonzo T. Mosman, The Portner. Computing .— William Bowie, 2020 Fifteenth Street. Drawing and Engraving.—Dallas B. Wainwright, 1821 Kalorama Road. Instrument.—FErnest G. Fischer, The Ethelhurst. Library and Archives.—Ralph M. Brown, 1324 Monroe Street. Terrestrial Magnetism.—R. 1,. Faris, 66 U Street. 7idal.—1Leland P. Shidy, 1617 Marion Street. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. (Adams Building, 1335 F Street.) Chief of Bureau.—Oscar P. Austin, 3301 Newark Street. Chief Clevk.—Gustavus A. Weber, 1501 Vermont Avenue. STEAMBOAT-INSPECTION SERVICE. LR (Department Annex, 462-464 Louisiana Avenue.) Supervising Inspector Generval.—George Uhler, 1433 Fuclid Street. Chief Clerk.—Dickerson N. Hoover, jr., 411 Seward Square. BUREAU OF FISHERIES. (Office, corner Sixth and B Streets SW. Phone, Main 5240.) Commissioner.—George M. Bowers, The Champlain. Deputy.—Hugh M. Smith, 1209 M Street. Chief Clerk.—1. H. Dunlap, 1728 Q Street. g Assistants in Charge of Division: . Inquiry Respecting Food Fishes.—B. W. Evermann, 1425 Clifton Street. Fish Culture.—Robert S. Johnson, 1300 Kenyon Street. Statistics and Methods.—A. B. Alexander, 404 Sixth Street SE. Architect and Engineer.—Hector von Bayer, 2418 Fourteenth Street. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Department Annex, 462-464 T,ouisiana Avenue.) Commissioner.—Eugene Tyler Chamberlain, The Ethelhurst. Deputy.—Arthur J. Tyrer, The Albemarle. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION. (513-515 Fourteenth Street.) Commissioner General.—Daniel J. Keefe, 2620 Garfield Street. Assistant.—F. H. Larned, 2614 Garfield Street. Commissioners of Immigration.— William Williams, Ellis Island, New York Harbor; George B. Billings, Tong Wharf, Boston, Mass.; John J. S. Rodgers, Delaware Insurance Building, Philadelphia, Pa.; Louis T. Weis, Stewart Building, Balti- more, Md.; John H. Clark, Montreal, Province of Quebec; Graham I,. Rice, San Juan, P. R.; S. E. Redfern, Maison Blanche Building, New Orleans, La.; Ellis De Bruler, Seattle, Wash. Executive Departments. 261 Division of Naturalization. (Adams Building, 1333 F Street.) Chief.—Richard K. Campbell, 1977 Biltmore Street. Assistant Chief.—Raymond F. Crist, 1774 Willard Street. Division of Information. (513-515 Fourteenth Street.) Chief.—T. V. Powderly, 502 Quincy Street. Assistant Chief.—]. L. McGrew, The Nebraska. BUREAU OF STANDARDS. (Pierce Mill Road. Phone, Cleveland 300.) Director.—S. W. Stratton, The Farragut. Physicist. —Edward B. Rosa, The Ontario. Chemist.-——W. F. Hillebrand, 3023 Newark Street. Associate Physicists.—L. A. Fischer, The Wellington; C. W. Waidner, 1744 Riggs Place; F. A. Wolff, 1744 Riggs Place. Engineer- Physicist. —James E. Howard, 2123 California Avenue. Engineer-Chemist.—Samuel S. Voorhees, 3456 Newark Street. Associate Chemist.—C. BE. Waters, Blenheim Court. Secretary.—Henry D. Hubbard, The Wilmington. Chief Engineer.—C. F. Sponsler, 1644 Park Road. \ BX) MISCELLANEOUS [59 SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. (The Mall. Phone, Main 1811.) Presiding Officer ex officio.— William H. Taft, President of the United States. Chancellor.—James S. Sherman, Vice President of the United States. Members of the Institution.—William H. Taft, President of the United States; James S. Sherman, Vice President of the United States; Edward D. White, Chief Justice of the United States; Philander C. Knox, Secretary of State; Franklin MacVeagh, Secretary of the Treasury; Jacob M. Dickinson, Secretary of War; George W. Wickersham, Attorney General; Frank H. Hitchcock, Postmaster General; George von I. Meyer, Secretary of the Navy; Walter I, Fisher, Sec- retary of the Interior; James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture; Charles Nagel, Secretary of Commerce and Labor. : Regents of the Institution.—James S. Sherman, Vice President of the United States, chancellor; Edward D. White, Chief Justice 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); Alex- ander Graham Bell, citizen of Washington, D. C.; George Gray, citizen of Dela- ware (Wilmington); Charles F. Choate, jr., citizen of Massachusetts (Boston); John B. Henderson, jr., citizen of Washington, D. C. Executive Committee.—Alexander Graham Bell, John Dalzell, A. O. Bacon. Secretary of the Institution.—Charles D. Walcott, The Brighton. Assistant Secretary.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief Clerk.—H. W. Dorsey, Hyattsville, Md. Editor. —A. Howard Clark, Florence Court. NATIONAL MUSEUM. (Including the National Gallery of Art.) Assistant Secretary in Charge.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts Avenue. Administrative Assistant.—W. de C. Ravenel, 1611 Riggs Place. . Head Curators.—F. W. True, 1320 Fairmont Street; G. P. Merrill, 1422 Belmont Street; William H. Holmes, 1444 Belmont Street. Curators.—R. S. Bassler, A. Howard Clark, F. W. Clarke, Frederick V. Coville, W. H. Dail, B. W. Evermann, J. M. Flint, United States Navy (retired), Walter Hough, L. O. Howard, Ale§ Hrdli¢ka, Gerrit S. Miller, jr., 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 Netherlands. Registrar.—S. C. Brown, 305 New Jersey Avenue SH. ” Editor.—Marcus Benjamin, 1703 Q Street. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. (Office in Smithsonian Building. Phone, Main 1811.) Ethnologist in Charge,—F. W. Hodge, Garrett Park, Md. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES. Chief Clerk.—C. W. Shoemaker, 3115 O Street. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAI, PARK. (Adams Mill Road. Phone, Columbia 744.) Superintendent.—Frank Baker, 1788 Columbia Road. Assistant Superintendent.—A. B. Baker, 1745 Lanier Place. ASTROPHYSICAI, OBSERVATORY. Director.—C. G. Abbot, 36 Q Street NE. REGIONAL, BUREAU FOR THE UNITED STATES, INTERNATIONATI, CATALOGUE OF ; SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE. Chief Assistant.—Leonard C. Gunnell, Bush Hill, near Alexandria, Va. 262 Miscellaneous. 263 PAN AMERICAN UNION. (FORMERLY INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF AMERICAN REPUBLICS.) (Seventeenth Street and Potomac Park. Phone, Main 6638.) The Director General.—John Barrett, 1712 H Street. Assistant Director.—Francisco J. Yanes, The Oakland. Chief Statistician.— William C. Wells, Hyattsville, Md. Chiéf Clerk.—Franklin Adams, The Marlborough. Chief Translator.—Emilio M. Amores, 1531 1 Street. Special Compiler.—Albert Hale, Cherrydale, Va. Librarian (acting ).—Charles E. Babcock, Vienna, Va. Private Secvetary.—William V. Griffin, 1338 Twenty-second Street. GOVERNING BOARD. Chairman ex officio.—Philander C. Knox, Secretary of State, 1527 K Street. Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, Minister of Costa Rica, 1329 FHighteenth Street. Ignacio Calderén, Minister of Bolivia, 1633 Sixteenth Street. Dr. Romulo S. Naon, Minister of Argentina. Felipe Pardo, Minister of Peru, 2223 R Street. Luis Melidn Lafinur, Minister of Uruguay. Luis Toledo Herrarte, Minister of Guatemala. Federico Mejia, Minister of Salvador, The Portland. Luis Lazo Arriaga, Minister of Honduras, 1830 Columbia Road. H. Pauléus Sannon, Minister of Haiti, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Pedro Ezequiel Rojas, Minister of Venezuela, 1017 Sixteenth Street. Emilio C. Joubert, Minister of the Dominican Republic, The Parkwood. Francisco de P. Borda, Minister of Colombia, The Portland. Sefior di Rivero, Minister of Cuba, Sixteenth and T Streets. Rafael M. Arizaga, Minister of Ecuador, The Arlington. Dr. Salvador Castrillo, Minister of Nicaragua, Stoneleigh Court. Dr. Belisario Porras, Minister of Panama, The Portland. R. de Lima e Silva, Chargé d’ Affaires of Brazil, The Woodward. Alberto Yoacham, Chargé d’Affaires of Chile, 1104 Vermont Avenue. Sefior Manuel M. de Zamacona, Ambassador of Mexico. , Representative of Paraguay. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. (American Bank Building, 1317 F Street. Phone, Main 7460.) [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the } designates those whose daughters accompany them; the | those having other ladies accompanying them. ] Chaivman.—*+ Judson C. Clements, of Georgia, 2113 Bancroft Place. *11 Charles A. Prouty, of Vermont, The Portner. * Franklin K. Lane, of California, 1866 Wyoming Avenue. +1 Edgar E. Clark, of Towa, The Rochambeau. * || James S. Harlan, of Illinois, 1720 Rhode Island Avenue. *+ Charles C. McChord, of Kentucky, New Willard. * Balthasar H. Meyer, of Wisconsin, 3610 Lowell Street, Cleveland Park. Secretary. — CIVIL, SERVICE COMMISSION. (Offices, corner Eighth and FE Streets. Phone, Main 75.) Commissioners.—John C. Black, president, 1314 Connecticut Avenue. John A. Mcllhenny, 1833 M Street. William S. Washburn, 1223 M Street. Chief Examiner.—George R. Wales, 3411 Newark Street. Secretary.—John T. Doyle, 918 Eighteenth Street. 264 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 T. Brian, 1244 Columbia Road. Secretary.—William J. Dow, 2020 North Capitol Street. Attorney.—Frank EF. Elder, 31 Seaton-Place. Purchasing Agent.—Edward S. Moores, 467 M Street. Accountant.—B. 1L,. Vipond, 1830 Park Road. Congressional Record Clerk.—William A. Smith, The Olympia. Superintendent of Work.—John R. Berg, 1212 Delafield Place. Assistant Superintendent of Work (night).—Charles E. Young, 75 Rhode Island Avenue. Foreman of Printing and Assistant Superintendent of Work (day).—Frank C. Wallace, 135 T Street. Superintendent of Documents.—August Donath, 1409 Emerson Street. » UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD. Chairman.—Henry Gannett, Geographer, Geological Survey, 1829 Phelps Place. Secretary.—Charles S. Sloane, Geographer, Bureau of the Census. Frank Bond, Chief Clerk, General Land Office. Maj. Daniel H. Boughton, General Staff, Department of War. Andrew Braid, assistant, in charge of office, Coast and Geodetic Survey. Maj. Adolph von Haake, Topographer, Post Office Department. F. W. Hodge, Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution. Arnold B. Johnson, Superintendent, Lighthouse Inspector’s Office, Key West, Fie, Frank A. Kidd, Chief Copy Editor; Government Printing Office. William McNeir, Chief Clerk, 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. Capt. J. J. Knapp, Hydrographer, Department of the Navy. NATIONAL, BOTANIC GARDEN. (West of the Capitol Grounds.) Superintendent.—William R. Smith. Assistants. —C. ILeslie Reynolds; John Clark, Maryland Avenue and Second Street SW. : Clerk.—J. H. Cameron, Maryland Avenue and Second Street SW. NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. Branches.—Central, Dayton, Ohio; Northwestern, Milwaukee, Wis. ; Southern, Hamp- ton, Va.; Eastern, Togus, Me.; : Western, Leav enworth, Kans.; : Marion, Marion, Ind.; Pacific, Santa Monica, Cal. ; : Danville, Danville, Ti.; : 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 1916; Capt. Henry E. Palmer, second vice president, Omaha, Nebr.—term expires 1916; John M. Holley, Esq., secretary, La Crosse, Wis.—term expires 1916; Maj. William Warner, Kansas City, M o.—term expires 1912; Col. Henry H. Markham, Redondo, Cal. —term expires 1916; 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; Lieut. Oscar M. Gottschall, Dayton, Ohio—term expires 1912; Hon. Z. D. Massey, Sevierville, Tenn.—term expires 1914; Capt. Lucian S. Lambert, Galesburg, Ill.—term expires 1914. General Tyeasurer.—Maj. Moses Harris. Inspector General and Chief Surgeon.—Col. W. E. Elwell. Sap Miscellaneous. 265 SOLDIERS’ HOME. (Regular Army.) BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. (Office, Room 219, War Department, west wing. Phone, Main 2570.) Lieut. Gen. S. B. M. Young (retired), Governor of the Home. Maj. Gen. Fred C. Ainsworth, The Adjutant General. Brig. Gen. Henry G. Sharpe, Commissary General of Subsistence. Brig. Gen. James B. Aleshire, Quartermaster General. Brig. Gen. George H. Torney, Surgeon General. ¢ Brig. Gen. Wm. H. Bixby, Chief of Engineers. Brig. Gen. Enoch H. Crowder, Judge Advocate General. Secretary of the Board.—Nathaniel Hershler. OFFICERS OF THE HOME. (Residing at the Home. Phone, Columbia 750.) Governor.—Lieut. Gen. S. B. M. Young (retired). Deputy Governor.—Maj. P. W. West (retired). Secretary and Treasurer.—Capt. Hollis C. Clark (retired). Attending Surgeon.—ILieut. Col. William D. Crosby, Medical Corps. ISTHMIAN CANAI, COMMISSION. (Seventeenth and G Streets. Phone, Main 4294.) General Purchasing Officer and Chief of Office.—Capt. F. C. Boggs, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, The Westmoreland. Assistant to the Chief of Office.—A. L. Flint, Bethesda, Md. Chief Clerk, Purchasing Department.—Charles E. Dole, The Octavia. Disbursing Officer.—James G. Jester, The Kenesaw. Assistant Examiner of Accounis.—H. A. A. Smith, 1644 Monroe Street. Appointment Clevk.—Ray 1. Smith, 1319 Massachusetts Avenue SE. ON THE ISTHMUS. Commissioners: . : Col. Geo. W. Goethals, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, chairman and chief engineer, Culebra. J Lieut. Col. H. F. Hodges, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, assistant chief engineer, Culebra. Lieut. Col. D. D. Gaillard, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, division engineer of Central Division, Empire. Lieut. Col. William I. Sibert, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, division engineer of Atlantic Division, Gatun. H. H. Rousseau, United States Navy, assistant to the chief engineer, Culebra. Col. Wm. C. Gorgas, Medical Department, United States Army, head of the depart- ment of sanitation, Ancon. Maurice H. Thatcher, head of department of civil administration, Ancon. Secretary.—Joseph Bucklin Bishop, Ancon. . Chief Quartermaster.—Lieut. Col. C. A. Devol, United States Army, Culebra. Disbursing Officev.—Edward J. Williams, Empire. Examiner of Accounts. —Walter W, Warwick, Empire. COMMISSION TO THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. (Headquarters, Manila.) - President and Governor General of the Islands.—W. Cameron Forbes. Vice Governor.—Newton W. Gilbert. Dean C. Worcester, José R. de Luzuriaga, Gregorio Araneta, Rafael Palma, Juan Sumulong, Frank A. Branagan, Chas. B. Elliott. Executive Secvetary.—Frank W. Carpenter. 266 Congressional Directory. INTERNATIONAL WATERWAYS COMMISSION. (Room 606 Westory Building, 605 Fourteenth Street. Phone, Main 7343.) Chairman.—Brig. Gen. O. H. Ernst, United States Army (retired), 1321 Connecticut Avenue. George Clinton, Prudential Building, Buffalo, N. VY. Prof. E. E. Haskell, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. VY. Secretary.—W. E. Wilson, Federal Building, Buffalo, N. VY. CANADIAN MEMBERS. Chatrman.—Geo. C. Gibbons, K. C., London, Ontario. Louis Coste, Ottawa, Ontario. : Wm. J. Stewart, Ottawa, Ontario. Secretary. — AMERICAN NATIONAI RED CROSS. (Room 341, War Department Building. Phone, Main 2570, Branch 192.) President.—William H. Taft. Vice President.—Robert W. de Forest. Secretary.—Charles 1,. Magee. Treasurer.—A. Piatt Andrew. Counselor.—Frederick W. Lehmann. National Dirvector.—Ernest P. Bicknell. . CENTRAIL, COMMITTEE. Chairman.—Maj. Gen. George W. Davis, United States Army (retired). Frederick W. Lehmann, Charles Nagel, A. Piatt Andrew, Gen. Charles Bird, United States Army (retired); Mabel T. Boardman, W. W. Farnam, Robert W. de Forest, John M. Glenn, A. C. Kaufman, H. Kirke Porter, Charles D. Norton, James Tanner, Brig. Gen. George H. Torney, Judge W. W. Morrow, Huntington Wilson, Beekman Winthrop, Surg. Gen. Charles F. Stokes, United States Navy. THE TARIFF BOARD. (Treasury Department Building. Phone, Main 6400.) Chairman.—Henry C. Emery, 1712 H Street. Alvin H. Sanders, New Willard. James B. Reynolds, 1712 H Street. William M. Howard, The Richmond. Thomas W. Page, Cosmos Club. ; Executive Secvetary.—T. W. Brahany, The Northumberland. Statistician.—N. 1. Stone, 3425 Newark Street. Official Reporter.—R. B. Horton, 1401 Decatur Street. UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS APPEALS. Presiding Judge. —Robert M. Montgomery, of Michigan, 1120 Sixteenth Street. Associate Judges.—James F. Smith, of California, 3781 Oliver Street; Orion M. Barber, of Vermont, 1631 Massachusetts Avenue; Marion De Vries, of California, Stoneleigh Court; George FE. Martin, of Ohio, The Brighton. Clerk.—Arthur B. Shelton, 1712 R Street. : Marshal.—Frank H. Briggs, The Hamilton. COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF. (Kendall Green. Phone, Lincoln 225.) Patron ex officio.—William H. Taft, President of the United States. President.—Edward 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; 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.—George X. McLanahan, 2031 Q Street. Emeritus President, and Professorof Moral and Political Science, Gallaudet College. — Edward M. Gallaudet. Miscellaneous. 267 President, and Professor of Applied Mathematics and Fodisy —Percival Hall. Vice President, and Professor of Languages. —Fdward A. Fay. Emeritus Professor of Natural Science, and Lecturer on * Pedagogy. oly W. Chickering. Professor in charge Department of Articulation.—Percival Hall. Principal, Kendall School.—I yman Steed. 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. GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE. (St. Elizabeth, Nichols Avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, Lincoln 1426.) Board of Visilors.—George M. Sternberg, ex-Surgeon General, United States Army, president; Charles F. Stokes, M. D., Surgeon General, United States Navy; Brig. Gen. George H. Torney, M. D. , Surgeon General, United States Army; Walter Wyman, M. D., Surgeon General, Public Health and Marine- -Hospital Service; G. Lloyd Magruder, M.D. Scott C. Bone; Mrs. Henry G. Sharpes Rev. John M. Schick, D. D.; Miss Bessie J. Kibbey. Superintendent. "William A. White, M. D. Senior Assistant Physician. — George H. Schwinn, M. D. Assistant Physicians.—Alfred Glascock, M. D.; WwW. H. Hough, M. D. Clinical Divector.— Histopathologist.—G. R. Lafora, M. D. Woman Senior Assistant Physician. —Mary O’Malley, M. D. Junior Assistant Physicians.—M. Edith Conser, M. D.; Eva C. Reid, M. D.; Rose Alexander, M. D.; Paul E. Bowers, M. D.; : Meyer Solomon, M.D.; : Bernard Glueck, M. D.; Francis M. Barnes, M. D.; : Nicholas J. Dynan, M. D. Pathologist. —I1. W. Blackburn, M.D ; Scientific Divector.—S. 1. Franz, A. B., Ph. D. Medical Internes.—Isaac N. Kelly, M. D.; ; John H. Thorne, M. D.; ; Hyman Lave- son, M. D.; Halbert Robinson, M. D.; ; James Loughran, M. D. Acting Chief of Training School Jor Nautrses. —Josephine M. Stransky, M. D. Dentist. —A. D. Weakley, D. D. S. Dental Interne.—Charles R. Irby, D. D. S. Ophithalmologist.—Arthur H. Kimball, M. D. Veterinarian.—John P. Turner, V. M. D. Steward and Disbursing Agent. —DMonie Sanger. Purchasing Agent.—A. E. Offutt. Matron.—Mrs. H. O’Brien. Chief Clerk.—Frank M. Finotti. HOWARD UNIVERSITY. {Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, North 1660.) Patron ex officio.—Walter 1,. Fisher, Secretary of the Interior. President Board of Trustees. — Justice Job Barnard, LL. D., Supreme Court, District of Columbia. President.—Wilbur P. Thirkield, D. D., LL. D. Secretary. —George William Cook, A. M., LL. M. Treasurer.—Edward 1. Parks, A. M., D. D. Executive Committee.— President Wilbur P. Thirkield, chairman; William V. Cox, Henry M. Baker, Cuno H. Rudolph, Dr. J. H. N. Waring, Justice George W. Atkinson, Dr. John R. "Francis. Dean of Faculty of School of Theology.'—Isaac Clark, D. D. Dean of Faculty of School of Medicine.—Edward A. Balloch, A. My , M. D. Secretary and Treasurer School of Medicine.—W. C. McNeill, M. Dean of Faculty of School of Law.—B. F. Leighton, LL. D. Secretary and Treasurer School of Law. A.M. LI. M. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. —Kelly Miller, A. M. IL, D. Dean of the Teachers’ College.—1,ewis B. Moore, A. M., Ph. D. Dean of the Commercial College.—George William Cook, A.M. LI. M. Dean of the Academy.—George J. Cummings, A. M. Acting Director of fe er of Manual Arts and Applied Sciences.—Perry B. Per- eodking, A.M. , Ph. 1This department is undenominational and wholly supported by endowment and personal benefactions. N 268 Congresstonal Directory. THE COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS. (Office: I,emon Building, 1729 New York Avenue.) Chairman.—Daniel H. Burnham, of Chicago. Vice Chairman.—Francis D. Millet, of Washington, D. C. Frederick Law Olmsted, of Brookline. Thomas Hastings, of New York. Daniel C. French, of New York. Cass Gilbert, of New York. Charles Moore, of Detroit. Secretary,—Col, Spencer Cosby, United States Army. THE INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION. AMERICAN SECTION. Chairman.—Hon. Thomas H. Carter, of Montana. Hon. James A. Tawney, of Minnesota. Hon. Frank S. Streeter, of New Hampshire. Secretary.—I, White Busbey, GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES. Term se Sinves 204 Tern Capitals. : Governors. goa Sd RE Salary. STATES. ; Years. Alabama .......... Montgomery ..... Bmmett O'Neal, [5.0.05 4 | Jan., 1915... $5,000 Arkansas... ....... Tittle Rock .....". George W. Donaghey......... 2¢|< Jan., 1913 . .. 4, 000 California... ....... Sacramento...... Hiram W. Johnsen’ .~......... 4 | Jan., 1915... 10,000 Colorado ..........- Denver. ...... John Bl Shafroth. LL... 5. 2 | Jan., 1913... 5,000 Connecticut ....... Hartford". ........ Simeon FE. Baldwin........... 2: Jan, 1013:....: «4,000 Delaware... ...... {DOVET ihe sh a ile ivinls Simeon S.Pennewill.......... 4 | Jan. 1913 ...| 4,000 Plorida ys... us. Tallahassee. ....’ Albert W. Gilchrist...... ..4.. 4 | Jan., 1913"... ' 5,000 Georgi... oi oie Atlanta... c... oun Joseph M. Brown ..... Jj... .. 2 | June, 191I.. 5, 000 Idaho. ..o. 00 Bogen ballet tk James dH, Hawley ............;. 2. Jan., 1913... .l. 5,000 IMineis............ Springfield. ....... Charles 8. Deneen........... +s 4 | Jan., 1913... 12,000 Indiana... i. Jove Indianapolis .....| Thomas R. Marshall.......... 4 |" Jan.,7013"...(" 8S 000 N71 BA ny Des Moines...... BenyFR, Carroll... ......... 2 | Jan. 1913... 5,000 Wansas Lr... Topeka... i... Walter R. Stubbs i. oc i vsnioes 2] Jan., 1013... 5, 000 Kentucky .....0 0% Frankfort: J... 04 Augustus E. Willson .......... 4 | ‘Dec., 1011. .| 6,500 Touisiana ....:.... Baton Rouge..... Jared ¥. Sanders ............. 4 | May, 1912... 5,000 Made. ........... Augusta. n 0 Frederick W. Plaisted........ z’|:Jan., 1013... 3, 000 Maryland......... Annapolis........ Austin I. Crothers.....v.. 4 | Jan., 1912 ...| 4,500 Massachusetts ....| Boston ........... Hugene N. Foss...:........... T | Jan., 'ig12... 8, ooo Michigan ......... Lansing........00 Chase. Osborn... oi. .00h 2 Jan. 7913 ...|"* 5,000 Minnesota ....-.... St. Paul... clo Adolph O. Eberhart........... 2 | Jan., 1913..." 7, 000 Mississippi........| Jackson.......... Edmond IN, Noel. ....5.....e.- 4 | Jan., 1912... 4,500 Missouri. ...:i.... Jefferson City....|: Herbert S. Hadley............ 4 1" Jan., 1913’... 5, 000 Montana. ....vsun +» Helena .......- 4% Edwin:k,. Norris, ... 0000 0 4 | Jan., 1913 ...! 5,000 Nebraska .....:... Lincoln. ...-.. -.. Chester Hi Aldrich .......... 2 Jan., 1013... : 2,500 Nevadn.....;:...., Carson City +..... Tagker I,.Oddie-. .....:.....on 4 | Jan., 1915... 4,000 New Hampshire'..[ Concord... ....... Robe PIBaSS oars en 2p Jan. 7013 ...| 3, 000 New Jersey ....... ‘Premtont: Jf. A. Woodrow Wilson ............. 3 | Jan.,1914...| 10,000 New York ........ Abang. .......... John A. Dix, ...c... 00, 2 | Jan., 1913 ...| 10,000 North Carolina '....[ Raleigh... .v....% William W. Kitchin .......... 4:0. Jan., 1913... 4, 000 North Dakota... ../ Bismarck’.....:.. John Burke. Ae eS 2. 1¥Van. 1973". >! * 5 000 Ohio. ..... 4K Columbus '.’.)... Ji. Judson HATmOn =. one in 2 | Jan., 1915... I0,000 Oklahoma, .......- Guthriel......5. Lee Crucessnae. hn Aina dis 4 | Jan., 1915 ...| 4,500 Oregon... ... as: Salem, iar an Oswald West bi! 4 | Jan., 1915... 5,000 Pennsylvania ..... Harrisburg... ...: John Ylener. 7... oy cits 4 {vJan., 1915 .. .I" T0,000 Rhode Island ..... Providence... li. LAram’]. Pothier... . doulinuni I{ Jan.,1912...| 3,000 South Carolina....|.Columbin.’.. +... 1)|ICole 1. Blease ......... . aids dike zil jan. 1913... 3,000 South Dakota..... Plerre. . i. yu. Roberl'S.;Vessey...".; . ule 2 | Jan., 1913... 3, 000 ‘Tennessee... ....|. Nashville 7. 1.5 [Ben W, HOODEr +... tay veins 2 | Jan., 1913... 4,000 Texas oo... 00 Angbin oh. 2 di O)BaCelquitti. i... hat. 2 iv Jan,, 1973"... 4,000 Utah. .- oie Salt Take City ...[' William SPI vin. ver «ols sisi siveir 4 | Jan. 1913 ...| 4,000 Vermont... .3%.. Montpelier....... John Abner Mead............. 24 Oct. , I9I2 1% . 2, 500 Virginia. .... 0.0 Richmond........ William I. Mann’... .....5. 4 | Feb.,1914...| 5,000 Washington. ...... Olympia ....... Marion B. Hayl.............. 4 | Jan., 1913... 6,000 West Virginia..... Charleston... .... William E,. Glasscock ........ 4 | Mar., 1913...| 5,000 Wisconsin......... Madison. ......-.- Francis E. McGovern. ........ 2i|"Jan., 1913 ...| i: 5,000 Wyoming ......... Cheyenne... ....: Joseph M. Carey.............. 4 | Jan., 1915... 4,000 1 Vice Samuel G, Cosgrove, deceased. Mascellaneous. | 269 Governors of the Stales and Territories—Continued. States and Terri- Term Fx tories. (©) Capitals. Governors. of serv- piradion Salary. ice. term. TERRITORIES! Years. Alaska cr. ..... 00... Junean,. ....oei eich Walter BE. Clark... cine.» 4 | Oct. 71,1913. $7,000 Atizona ........... Phoenix... 5.5 Richard B. Slean:., ........... 4 | May 1,1913.| 3,000 Hawaii... ol vk. Honolulu. 5.0... [i Waltep FV. Exear i... vhs. 4 | Aug.15, 1911. 7, 000 New Mexico...... Santa Fei... nd: Willlam J. Mills... ...o... on...» 4 | Feb.28, 1914. 3,000 Porto Rico ..-: .. ... San Juan... id: George R. Colton ........ i... 4 | Dec.16, 1913. 8, 000 1 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. WASHINGTON CITY POST OFFICE. (Post Office Department Building, Pennsylvania Avenue, Eleventh and Twelfth Streets. Phone, incoming mail, Main 1747; outgoing mail, Main 1772.) Postmaster.—N. A. Merritt, Congress Hall. 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: 8 a. m. to 11.30 p. m., except Sundays and national holidays. Money should always i be sent by money order to insure safe delivery.) Money orders issued and paid as follows, Sundays and holidays excepted: At main office, 8 a. m. to 11.30 p. m. ; From 8a.m.to 6 p.m., or as long as the stations are open for the transaction of other business, at Benning Station, Brightwood Station, Congress Heights, Good Hope, Brookland Station, Takoma Park Station, Tennallytown Station, Twining Station, Stations A, B, C, FB, G, H, KX, 1, and stations 1,2,3,4, 5,6, 7, 3,9, 10, IX, 32, 13, 74.18, 16, 17, 18; 10, 20, 21, 22,123, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 20,31, 33, 3. 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 43, 46, 48, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 60, 61, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 69, and 70. A single money order may include any amount from 1 cent to $100, inclusive, but must not contain the fractional part of a cent. There is no limit as to number in the issue of money orders; any number may be sent. Domestic Money Orders. Domestic money orders issued, payable at any money-order office in the United States; also in Antigua, Bahamas, Barbados, Bermuda, British Guiana, British Hondu- ras, Canada, Canal Zone, Cuba, Dominica, Grenada, island of Guam, Hawaii, Jamaica, Leeward Islands, Mexico, Montserrat, Nevis, Newfoundland, the Philippine Islands, Porto Rico, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Shanghai (China), Trinidad and To- bago, Tutuila (Samoa), Virgin Islands, and West Indies. 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............. $0.03 | Over $30 and not exceeding $40............ $o.15 Over $2.50 and not exceeding $5........... .05 | Over $40 and not exceeding $50............ .18 Over $5 and not exceeding $10. ........... .08 | Over $50 and not exceeding $60. 20 Over $10 and not exceeding $20.......:... .10 | Over $60 and not exceeding $75. hs .25 Over $20 and not exceeding $30........... .12. | Over $75 and not exceeding $100........... .30 International Money Orders. International money orders are issued at main office, Brookland Station, and Sta- tions A, B,C, FP, CG, H, K, 1,2, and 6. Special forms of application for foreign money orders will be furnished to persons who desire them. 270 Congressional Darectory. ‘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; Danish, Swedish, and Norwegian kroner at 26% cents; French, Swiss, or Belgian franc and Italian lire at 19% cents; Netherlands florin at 40% cents; Portugal milreis at $1.08; Russian ruble at 514% cents, 1—1 ruble 943; copecks. International money orders issued payable in Africa, Algeria, Apia (Samoa), Arabia, Argentine Republic, Australia, Austria, Azores, Belgium, Beloochistan, Beirut, Bolivia, Borneo, Bosnia, British Bechuanaland, British Central Africa, British East Africa, 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, Monaco, Morocco, Mukho (Chosen), 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, Uruguay, Victoria, Wales, Western Australia, Zambesia, Zanzibar, and Zululand (South Africa). Rates of fees for money orders issued in the United States, payable in the follow- - ing countries and indirect countries when payable through the agencies of the countries named: Fees No. 1.—When payable in Apia, Austria, Belgium, Bolivia, Cape Colony, Costa Rica, Denmark, Egypt, Germany, Great Britain, Honduras, Hongkong, Hun- gary, Italy, Japan, Liberia, Luxemburg, New South Wales, New Zealand, Orange River Colony, Peru, Portugal, Queensland, Russia, Salvador, South Australia, Switzerland, Tasmania, the Transvaal, Uruguay, and Victoria— For orders from— | For orders from— fo. 01 to $0.70 [65830,0F 10 $40,000. vis sivas ieisisieis uisgabiia lain siecle $0.45 2.51 to « I5; 400TH EO S50 onl Pl MS all le OSE .50 5.01 to .20 S050 AR GOVoDE RI IE. LL aa el . 60 7.51 to .25 .70 Ji10.01 to .30 .80 15.01 to .35 +90 20.01 to . 40 1.00 Fees No. 2.—When payable in Chile, Greece, France, Netherlands (Holland), Norway, and Sweden— For orders from— For orders from— $0.01 to $10.00..... SS RE Bae : $50.01 to $60. 00 10.01 to." 20.00... A 60.01 to 70.00 20.01 to 30.00... 70.01 to 80.00 BOOT LO: dDYC0, © pissaisteisiaat hams os hiupnisse » 80.01 to go.o00 40,0180, "50, 00s vs thers stared sino 1p jeiarshe iv + inte 513 : go.cI to 100.00 The maximum amount for which a single international money order may be drawn is $ro0. : The amount payable in Mexico in Mexican currency will be at the rate of 2 pesos for every dollar, and 2 centavos for every cent. REGISTRY DIVISION. Registered Matter.—Ietters or parcels can be registered at main office at all hours of the day and night, except Sundays and holidays, when the hours are from 9 to II a. m., and at all stations during such hours as they are open. The delivery window is open daily from 8a. m. to 6 p. m., except Sundays and holidays, when the hours are from g to 11 a. m. The addition of a 10-cent special-delivery stamp, or 10 cents in ordinary postage stamps, provided the article is indorsed ‘‘special delivery,’’ will insure the immediate delivery of a registered letter or parcel. 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 $50, 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. Mascellaneous. 271 Private and official matter is accepted for registration at the post offices of the Senate and House of Representatives. Franked matter may be registered to any post office in the United States, Canada, Cuba, and Mexico, upon the prepayment, by postage stamps affixed, of the registry fee of 10 cents. Letters may be registered to any post office in the world upon the prepayment of Australia. Austria. Bahamas. Barbados. Parcels can not be registered. Belgium. Bermuda. Bolivia. British Guiana. Chile. Colombia. Costa Rica. Danish West Indies. (St. Croix, St. John, St. Thomas.) Denmark. Dutch Guiana. Parcels can not be registered. 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. Including the following cities in China: Amoy, Canton, Chefoo, Foochow, Hoihow, Han- kow, Kowloon, Liu Kung Tau, Ningpo, Shanghai, Swatow, Tientsin, Wei . Hai Wei. _ Hungary. Italy. Including: 1. Italian offices in the Ottoman Empire: Bengazi (North Africa), Durezzo (Al- bania), Galata (Constan- tinople), Jerusalem (Pal- estine), Canea (Crete), Pera (Constantinople), Salonica (Roumelia), 10 cents in addition to the regular postage. PARCELS POST CONVENTIONS, Scutari (Asia Minor), Smyrna (Asia Minor), Stamboul (Constantino- ple), Tripoli-in-Barbary, Valona (Albania). 2. The Italian Colony in Erythrea; Ady Caje, Ady Ugri, Agordat, Asmara, Assab, Keren, Nefasit, Massaua, Saganeiti. 3. Italian Protectorate of Benadir; Brava, Giumbo Merka, Mogadiscio. Jamaica. Including the Turks and Caicos Is- lands. Japan. = Including For- mosa, Karafuto (Japa- nese Saghalien),and Cho- sen; Amoy, Changsha, Chefoo, Chingkiang, Foochow, Hangchow, Hankow, Kingiang, Nan- king, Newchwang, Pe- king, Shanghai, Shang- haikwan, Shasi, Soo- chow, Swatow, Tientsin, Tongku, Wuku (in China); Antoken (An- tung), Bujun (Fushun), Choshun (Chang- chun), Dairen (Tairen, Talien, formerly Dalney), Daisekkio (Tashi-chiao), Daitoko (Tatungkou), Furenten He ond : Gaihei (Kaiping), Giu- katon (Newchatun), Gwaboten (Wafantein), Hishiko (Pitzuwo), Hon- keiko (Penhasiku), Ho- ten (Mukden), Howojio (Fenghuangcheng), Kaigen (Kaiyuen),Kaijio (Haichaeng), Kinshu (Chinchow), Koshurei (Kungchuling), Riojun (Port Arthur), Rioyo (Liaoyang), Riujuton (Liushutun), Senkinsai (Chienchinsai), Shihei- gai (Supingchien), Shin- minfu (Shingmingfu), Shoto (Changtu),Sokako (Tsaohokow), Sokaton (Suchiatun), Tetsurei (Tiehling), Yendai (Yen- tai), Yugakujio (Hsiung- yocheng), in Manchuria. Leeward Islands. Includ- ing Antigua with Bar- buda and Redonda, St. Kitts, Nevis, with An-. quilla, Dominica, Mont- serrat, and Virgin Is- lands. Mexico. Netherlands. Parcels can not be registered. Newfoundland. Includ- ing Labrador. From October to June Parcels Post packages are not forwarded from New- foundland to Labrador. New Zealand. Including Fanning Island. Nicaragua. Norway. Peru. Salvador. Sweden. Trinidad. bago.) Uruguay.” Parcels can not be registered. Venezuela. Windward Islands. In- cluding Grenada, 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; rate of 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, Newfoundland, 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. 272 Congressional Directory. CIV 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 business routes, 7 and 9.30 a. m.; 12.30, 2.10, and 3.30 p. m. Delivery by carriers on residence routes, 7 a. m., 11.30 a. m. and 3.30 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, 7.30, and 10.30 p. mL. Collections on business routes commence at 6.30, 7.50, 9.10, 10.30, and II.I0 a. m.; 12:20,:12.55, 2,.2.45, 3.30, 4.10,:4.50,.5.30, 6.10, 6.50,.7.30,'9, and 11.30 p.m, Collections on residence routes commence at 7.10, 9.I0,and II.IO a. m.; I.45, 3.30, 5, 7, and 10.45 p. m. Sundays, 4.30 and 11 p. m. Holidays, 9.30 a. m., 4.30 and 11 p. m. DEPARTURE OF THROUGH PASSENGER TRAINS. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. (Phone, Main 189.) For Wilmington, Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa, and Florida points— 4.20 a. m, daily. : For Charleston, Augusta, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa, Port Tampa (for Cuba), and 4 Florida points, and St. Augustine and Knights Key, Fla. (for Havana)—4.10 p. m. daily. : For Wilmington, Charleston, Augusta, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa, St. Peters- burg, Fort Myers, and all Florida points—g.40 p. m. daily. BAI/ITMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. (Phone, Main 1591.) For Chicago and Northwest—og.10 a. m.; 1.32 and 5.30 p. m. For Cincinnati, St. Louis, Louisville, and Indianapolis—9g.10 a. m.; 4.10 p. m.; 12.10 night. ] For Pittsburg—9.10 a. m.; 1.32 and 9.10 p. m. and 12.37 night. For Wheeling—9g.10 a. m.; 5.30 p.m. (and Columbus). : For Philadelphia, New York, and the Hast—12.15, 2.52, 7,9, and II a.m.; I, 3, 5, and 8 p. m. (to Philadelphia only). For Atlantic City—7 (week days only), 9, and 1I a. m.; 1 and 3 p. m. daily. To Baltimore ‘‘every hour on the hour’ week days from 7 a. m. to 10 p. m. both ways. CHESAPEAKE & OHIO RAILWAY. (Phones, Main 1066 and 2206.) For Virginia Hot Springs—2 and 11.70 p. m.; Cincinnati, Louisville, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Chicago, and the West and Southwest—2, 6.30, and 11.10 p. m. daily. NORFOLK & WESTERN RAILWAY. (Phone, Main 758.) For Roanoke, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Nashville, and Memphis—4.10 a. m. For Roanoke, Bristol, and local stations—qg a. m. 1 For Roanoke, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Nashville, Birmingham, Jackson, Vicks- burg, Shreveport, and New Orleans and Texas points via New Orleans and Shreve- port—r10.10 p. m. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD LINES. (Phone, Main 5350.) For New York—7, 8, 9, 10, and 11 a. m.; 12.30, 3, 4, 4.30, 7.05, 9 p. m.; 12.10 and 12.30 night. On Sundays, 7, 9 (dining car), 11 (dining car), and 11.55 a. m.; 3, 4, 4.30, 7.05, 9 p. m.; 12.10 and 12.30 night. For Boston—9.45 a. m. week days, and 5.35 p. m. daily. For Pittsburg—7.45, 9.10, I0, and 11.55 a. m.; 3.40, 6.45, 7.55, and 10.45 p. m. daily. 2 Por Chicago and the West—r10 and 11.55 a. m.; 3.40, 6.45, 7.55, and 10.45 p. m. aily. For Cincinnati, St. Louis, and the West—10 and 11.55 a. m.; (Limited, 3.40), 6.45, and 7.55 p. m. daily. : : For Cleveland—r1o0 and 11.55 a. m.; 6.45, 7.55, and 10.45 p. m, daily. \’ Departure of Through Passenger Trains. 273°. For Buffalo (via Emporium Junction)—7.45 a. m.; 7 and 10.45 p. m. daily. For Buffalo, Rochester, and Northern Central Railway points—7.45 a. m. week days; 7.55 and 10.45 p. m. daily. SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. (Phone, Main 440.) For Raleigh, Pinehurst, Camden, Columbia, Savannah, and Florida points—r0.05 a. m. and 6.35 p. m. For Raleigh, Athens, Atlanta, Birmingham, Montgomery, Memphis, and New Orleans—10.05 a. m. and 8.15 p. m. SOUTHERN RAILWAY, (Phone, Main 1212.) For Atlanta, Birmingham, Montgomery, Mobile, and New Orleans—g a. m. and 10.45 p. m. a and Birmingham—4.15 p. m. For Columbia, Aiken, Augusta, Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville, and all Florida points—6.20 p. m. : For Knoxville, Chattanooga, Birmingham, and New Orleans—9 a. m. and 10.10 p. m. For Chattanooga and Memphis—4.10 a. m. For Asheville and Hendersonville—g a. m. and 10.45 p. m. 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 consular officers, and are intrusted with the preparation of the correspondence upon any ques- tions arising in the course of the public business that may be assigned to them by the Secretary. : DIRECTOR OF THE CONSULAR SERVICE. The Director of the Consular Service is charged with the general supervision of the consular service and such other duties as may be assigned to him from time to time by the Secretary. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk has general supervision of the clerks and employees and of depart- mental matters; charge of the property of the department. : : DIPLOMATIC BUREAU. Diplomatic correspondence and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. DIVISION OF LATIN AMERICAN AFFAIRS, Diplomatic and consular correspondence, on matters other than those of an administrative character, in relation to Mexico, Central America, Panama, South America, and the West Indies. DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS. , Diplomatic and consular correspondence, on matters other than those of an admin- istrative character, in relation to Japan, China, and leased territories, Siberia, Hongkong, French Indo-China, Siam, Straits Settlements, Borneo, Hast Indies, India, and in general the Far East. 2 DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS. Diplomatic and consular correspondence, on matters other than those of an ad- ministrative character, in relation to Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia, Roumania, Servia, Bulgaria, Montenegro, Turkey, Greece, Italy, Abyssinia, Persia, Egypt, and colonies belonging to countries of this series. DIVISION OF WESTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. Diplomatic and consular correspondence, on matters other than those of an ad- ministrative character, in relation to Great Britain (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and British colonies not elsewhere enumerated), Portugal, Spain, France, Morocco, Belgium, the Kongo, Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands, Luxemburg, Denmark, and Liberia. 274 4 Offictal Duties. = 275 CONSULAR BUREAU. Consular correspondence and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. 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. BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS. Custody of the great seal and applications for office, and the preparation of com- missions, exequaturs, warrants of extradition, Departmental Register, diplomatic and consular lists, and consular bonds; correspondence and other matters regarding entrance examinations for the foreign service. BUREAU OF CITIZENSHIP. Examination of applications for passports, issuance of passports and authentica- tions; receiving and filing duplicates of evidence, registration, etc., under act of March 2, 1907, in reference to expatriation of citizens and their protection abroad, keeping of necessary records thereunder; conduct of correspondence in relation to the foregoing. BUREAU OF INDEXES AND ARCHIVES. Recording and indexing the general correspondence of the department; charge of the archives. : ; BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS. Custody and disbursement of appropriations and indemnity funds, and correspond- ence relating thereto. 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. DIVISION OF INFORMATION. The preparation and distribution to the foreign service of diplomatic, commercial, and other correspondenceand documents important to their information upon foreign relations; editing ‘‘ Foreign Relations’’ of the United States. 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 subnfits 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. 84259°—62-1—I1ST ED——IQ 276 | Congressional Directory. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of customs is assigned the general super- vision of all matters pertaining to the customs service, including the Division of Customs and the Division of Special Agents. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of fiscal bureaus is assigned the general supervision of all matters relating to the following bureaus, offices, and divisions: The Bureau of the Mint; the Bureau of Engraving and Printing; the Office of the Treasurer of the United States; the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency; the Office of the Comptroller of the Treasury; the Auditors of the several Departments; the Register of the Treasury; 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; the Division of Mail and Files; and the disbursing clerk. ; To the Assistant Secretary in charge of public buildings and miscellaneous is assigned the general supervision of all matters relating to the following bureaus, offices, and divisions: The Office of the Supervising Architect; the Bureau of Internal Revenue; the Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service; the: Life-Saving Service; and the Revenue-Cutter Service. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk is the chief executive officer of the Secretary, and, under the direc- tion of the Secretary and assistant secretaries, is charged with the enforcement of departmental regulations, general in their nature; is by law superintendent of the Treasury Building, and in addition superintends the Winder, Cox, and Butler Build- ings; has direct charge of horses, wagons, etc., belonging to the department; the direction of engineers, machinists, watchmen, firemen, laborers, and other employees connected with the maintenance and protection of the Treasury Building and an- nexes; the expenditure of appropriations for contingent expenses; the disburse- ment of appropriations made for government exhibits at various expositions; the custody of the records, files, and library of the Secretary’s office; the custody of all sites for proposed public buildings in Washington; the checking of all mail relating to the personnel of the Treasury Department; the handling of requests for certified copies of official papers and the charge of all business of the Secretary’s office unassigned. : 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: Fhe selection of sités 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 courthouses, customhouses, 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 keeping in repair all buildings under the control of the Treasury Department; keeping in a proper state of efficiency and capacity all heating apparatus and hoisting systems in these buildings; is charged with sup- plying to public buildings under the control of the Treasury Department outside the District of Columbia furniture and lighting fixtures, and repairing and replacing same. He also controls the supply of vaults, safes, etc., the assistant custodian and janitor forces, and the supply of fuel, lights, and water for said 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 Offictal Duties. 277 | 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 A 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 Hngineers, rivers and harbors, the Military Academy, the Isthmian Canal Commission, and to all other business within the jurisdiction of | the Department of War. | 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, Bureau of Mines, Army and Navy pensions, Indian affairs, Howard Uni- _ versity, the Government Hospital for the Insane, the Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, the Patent Office, the Capitol and grounds, the Hot Springs Reser- vation, and all other business within the jurisdiction 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, including the Office of the Secretary of the Navy, and all offices and bureaus under his direction, and examines and settles all claims arising in or relating to the Navy Department. AUDFIOR 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 of the 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 boards, 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 receives and examines 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 and foreign administrations; all accounts relating to the transportation of mails, and to all other business within the jurisdiction of the Post Office Depart- ment, and certifies the balances arising thereon to the Postmaster General for ~~ 278 Congressional Directory. accounts of the postal revenue and expenditures therefrom, and to the Secretary of the Treasury for other accounts. He also receives and examines reports and accounts of postmasters operating postal savings banks, and accounts for expendi- tures from the appropriation for the establishment, maintenance, and extension of the postal-savings system. He registers, charges, and countersigns the warrants upon the Treasury issued in liquidation of indebtedness; superintends the collect- ing of debts due the United States for the service of the Post Office Depart- ment and all penalties imposed; directs suits and all legal proceedings in civil actions, and takes all legal measures to enforce the payment of money due the United States for the service of the Post Office Department, and for this purpose has direct official relations with the Solicitor of the Treasury, Department of Justice. He receives and accepts, with the written consent of the Postmaster General, offers of compromise under sections 295 and 405, Revised Statutes. 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, 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. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. The Register of the Treasury signs and issues all bonds of the United States, including the Panama Canal loan and the Porto Rican gold loan, the District of Columbia loan, the sundry loans of the Philippine Islands and the city of Manila, and transmits to the Treasurer of the United States schedules showing the name of every individual, corporation, etc., holding registered bonds and entitled to receive interest thereon. He receives, examines, and registers coupon bonds exchanged for registered bonds or redeemed, and registered bonds transferred and finally redeemed. He receives, examines, arranges, and registers the upper halves of all redeemed United States notes, gold certificates, silver certificates, and Treasury notes; frac- tional currency notes, detached interest coupons, interest checks on registered bonds, and all other United States securities redeemed 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. - Also all customs, internal-revenue, and postage stamps condemned for imperfections and destroyed. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. The Comptroller of the Currency, under the general direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, has supervision of the national banks; the organization and exami- nation of national banks; the preparation, issue, and redemption of their circulation; and the-abstracting and consolidation of their reports of condition. 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 customhouse 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. Official Duties. 279 A COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL, 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 act approved July 1, 1902, ‘‘An act to increase the efficiency and change the name of the United States Marine-Hospital Service,’’ provides for a Bureau of Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service at Washington, comprised of seven divisions. The operations of these divisions are coordinated and are under the immediate super- vision of the Surgeon General. : Through the Division of Scientific Research and Sanitation are conducted the scientific investigations of the Service and the operations of the Hygienic Iabora- tory at Washington, established for the investigation of contagious and infectious diseases and matters relating to the public health. The advisory board of the Hygienic Laboratory consists of eight scientists eminent in laboratory work in its relation to public health, detailed from other departments of the Government and appointed from endowed institutions. The board may be called into conference with the Surgeon General at any time, the meetings not to exceed ten days in any one fiscal year. The Surgeon General is required by law to call a conference of all State and Territorial boards of health or quarantine authorities each year, the Dis- trict of Columbia included, and special conferences when called for by not less than five of said authorities, and he is also authorized to call additional conferences when, in his opinion, the interests of public health demand it. He is charged with the enforcement of the actof July 1, 1902, ‘‘ An 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.” He has supervision of special inves- tigations upon leprosy, conducted in Hawaii under the act of July 1, 1905. ; Through the Division of Foreign and Insular Quarantine and Immigration the Surgeon General enforces the national quarantine laws and prepares the regula- tions relating thereto. He has control of 44 Federal quarantine stations in the United States and others in the Philippines, Hawaii, and Porto Rico, and supervises the medical officers detailed in the offices of the American consular officers at foreign ports to prevent the introduction of contagious or infectious diseases into the United States. Under section 17 of the act approved February 20, 1907, he has supervision over the medical officers engaged in the physical and mental examinations of all arriving aliens. Through the Division of Domestic (Interstate) Quarantine is enforced section 3 of * the act of February 15, 1893, relating to the prevention of the spread of contagious or infectious diseases from one State or Territory into another. This includes the sup- pression of epidemics. Through the Division of Sanitary Reports and Statistics there is collected informa- tion of the sanitary condition of foreign ports and places and ports and places within . the United States, including the existence of epidemics. This information with mor- bidity and mortality statistics, domestic and foreign, are published in the weekly Public Health Reports and transmitted to State and municipal health officers and other sanitarians and to collectors of customs. Through the Division of Marine Hospitals and Relief professional care is taken of sick and disabled seamen at 23 marine hospitals and 123 other relief stations. The beneficiaries include officers and crews of registered, enrolled, or licensed vessels of the United States and of the Revenue-Cutter Service and Lighthouse Service; sea- men employed on vessels of the Mississippi River Commission and of the Engineer Corps of the Army; keepers and surfmen of the Life-Saving Service. A purveying depot for the purchase and issuance of supplies is maintained at Washington. Phys- ical examinations of keepers and surfmen of the Life-Saving Service, of officers and seamen of the Revenue-Cutter Service, and the examinations for the detection of color- blindness in masters, mates, and pilots are conducted through this division. In the Division of Personnel and Accounts are kept the records of the officers and of the expenditures of the appropriations. Through the Miscellaneous Division the various Service publications are issued, including the annual reports, public health reports and reprints, public health bulletins, bulletins of the Hygienic Laboratory and Yellow Fever Institute, and the transactions of the annual conferences with State health authorities. The medical evidences of disability in claims for benefits against the Life-Saving Service are reviewed. 280 ia Congressional Daurectory. REVENUE-CUTTER SERVICE. The Captain Commandant of the Revenue-Cutter Service is Chief of the Division of Revenue-Cutter Service and has charge, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, of the organization and government of the Revenue-Cutter Service. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing designs, engraves, prints, and finishes all of the securities and other similar work of the Government printed from steel plates, embracing United States notes, bonds, and certificates, national-bank notes, internal- revenue, postage, and customs stamps, Treasury drafts and checks, disbursing officers’ checks, licenses, commissions, patent and pension certificates, and portraits author- ~ ized by law of deceased Members of Congress and other public officers. GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT OF THE LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. It is the duty of the general superintendent to supervise the organization and government of the employees of the service; to prepare and revise regulations 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; toexamine 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 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. Official Duties. 281 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. The Assistant and Chief Clerk of the War Department is the head of the Office of the Secretary of War, and as such has charge of the records and files, and supervision of the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the official mail and correspondence of that office, and is charged with the administrative action required by law to be taken in connection with the settlement of disbursing officers’ accounts that do not relate to the different staff corps of the Army. He has general supervision of mat- ters relating to civilian employees in and under the War Department; printing and binding and advertising for the War Department and the Army; appropriations for contingent expenses, stationery, rent of buildings; and the department’s telegraph and telephone service; and performs such other duties as may be required by the 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 rendef 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 Inspector General’s, Judge Advocate General’s, Quartermaster’s, Subsistence, Medical, Pay, and Ordnance Departments, the Corps of Engineers and the Signal Corps, and performs such other military duties not otherwise assigned by law as may be assigned to him by the ‘President. 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 hy the President. DIVISION OF MILITIA AFFAIRS. The Division of Militia Affairs is vested with the transaction of business pertain- ing to the organized and unorganized militia of the United States, its jurisdiction embracing all administrative duties involving the armament, equipment, discipline, training, education, and organization of the militia; the conduct of camps of instruc- tion and participation in the field exercises and maneuvers of the Regular Army; the mobilization and relations of the militia to the Regular Army in time of peace; and all matters pertaining to the militia not herein generically enumerated which do not, under existing laws, regulations, orders, or practice, come within the juris- diction of any other division or bureau of the War Department. It is the central office of record for all matters pertaining to the militia not in the military service of the United States. 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 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 282 Congressional Directory. 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 ali military roads and bridges, and with such surveys as may be required for these objects, or the movement of armies in the field. It is also charged with the river and harbor improvements, with mili- tary and geographical explorations and surveys, with the survey of the lakes, and with any other engineer work specially assigned to the corps by acts of Congress or orders of the Secretary of War. The Chief of Ordnance commands the Ordnance Department, the duties of which consist in providing, preserving, distributing, and accounting for every description of artillery, small arms, and all the munitions of war which may be required for the fortresses of the country, the armies in the field, and for the whole body of the militia of the Union. In these duties are comprised that of determining the general principles of construction and of prescribing in detail the models and forms of all military weapons employed in war. They comprise also the duty of prescribing the regulations for the proof and inspection of all these weapons, for maintaining uni- formity and economy in their fabrication, for insuring their good quality, and for their preservation and distribution. | ] Offictal Duties. 283 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 Bureau of Insular Affairs, under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War, is assigned all matters pertaining to civil government in the island posses- sions of the United States subject to the jurisdiction of the War Department, the Philippine Islands and Porto Rico being the only ones so subject at the present time. ‘The bureau is also the repository of the civil records of the government of occupation of Cuba (Jan. 1, 1899, to May 20, 1902) and had assigned to it matters pertaining to the provisional government of Cuba (Sept. 29, 1906, to Jan. 28, 1909). It prepares for publication executive documents relating to the Philippines and Porto Rico; makes a comptroller’s review of the receipts and expenditures of the Philippine Government, attends to the purchase in the United States of supplies for that Government and arranges their shipment to Manila. It has charge of appointments of persons in the United States to the Philippine civil service and their transportation. It gathers statistics of insular imports and exports, shipping and immigration, and issues quarterly summaries of the same. 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 recom- mendation 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, United States 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 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 whenever required by any department of the Government. SOLICITOR GENERAL. The Solicitor General assists the Attorney General in the performance of his gen- eral duties, and by special provision of law, in case of a vacancy in the Office of Attorney General, or of his absence or disability, exercises all those duties. Under the direction of the Attorney General, he has general charge of the business of the Government in the Supreme Court of the United States, and is assisted in the con- 284 | Congressional Durectory. duct and arguttient of cagés 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 conferswith and directs the law officers of the Government throughout the country in the performance of their duties. When the Attorney General so directs, any case in which the United States is inter- ested, in any court of the United States, may be conducted and argued by the Solicitor General; and he may be sent by the Attorney General to attend to the interests of the United States in any State court, or elsewhere. THE ASSISTANT T0 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 Attorney 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 in charge of the interests of the Government in all matters of reappraisement and classification of imported goods in litigation is located at 641 Washington Street, New York. 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 GENERAL 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 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 general 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 for 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 Official Dutres. 285 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 INTERNAI, REVENUE. A Solicitor of Internal Revenue was added to the Internal-Revenue Office corps by the act of July 13, 1866 (14 Stat., 170), but by the act of June 22, 1870 (16 Stat., 162), organizing the Department of Justice, the solicitor was formally transferred to that department. He is the law officer and legal adviser of the commissioner. The only duties of his of which mention is made by law are in connection with internal-revenue compromise cases, section 3229, Revised Statutes. SOLICITOR OF I'HE 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. : THE PUBLIC LANDS DIVISION. This division was created by the Attorney General, November 16, 1909. To it are, assigned all suits and proceedings concerning the enforcement of the public-land law, including suits or proceedings to set aside conveyances of allotted lands. 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; 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 Pub- lic 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 4o 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. 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. APPOINTMENT CLERK. The appointment clerk has charge of all matters relating to applications, recom- mendations, and appointments, including certifications by the Civil Service Com- mission: conducts correspondence pertaining thereto; prepares nominations sent to the Senate; prepares commissions 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. 286 Congressional Directory. 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. ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF TITLES. The attorney in charge of titles prepares opinions upon the title to lands belong- ing 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 relat- ing 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. CHIEF EXAMINER. The chief examiner has general supervision of the examination of the offices and records of the Federal court officials throughout the United States, and directs the work of all the examiners, special agents, and accountants of the department, whose compensation or expenses are paid from the appropriation ‘‘ Detection and prosecu- tion of crimes,” and who are employed for the purpose of collecting evidence or of making investigations or examinations of any kind for this department or the officers thereof. ; POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. POSTMASTER GENERAL. The Postmaster General is the executive head of the Federal postal service. He appoints all officers and employees of the Post Office Department except the four Assistant Postmasters General and the Purchasing Agent, who are Presidential ap- pointees. With the exteption of postmasters of the first, second, and third classes, who are likewise Presidential appointees, he appoints all postmasters and all other officers and employees of the service at large. Subject to the approval of the Presi- dent, he makes postal treaties with foreign governments. He awards and executes contracts and directs the management of the foreign mail service. He is chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Postal Savings System. 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 supervision of the preparation of estimates for the departmental and postal service; the keeping of the journals and order books; the supervision of the advertising; the supervision of expenditure of the appropriations for the departmental service; the preparation of contracts for the publication of the Official Guide, compilation of matter therefor, and super- vision of its publication and distribution; the miscellaneous business correspondence 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 ATTORNEY GENERAT, 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 Official Duties. 287 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 of all contracts of the department; and with such other like du- ties 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. 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; the establishment of railway postal car service and changes in existing service; prepares orders and instructions for the weighing of the mails on railroads; receives the returns and computes basis of pay therefrom; prepares cases for 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 prepares all correspondence relative to these matters. 288 Congressional Directory. Miscellaneous Transportation.—Has charge of the preparation of cases authorizing the transportation of mails by electric and cable cars, screen wagons, and pneumatic tubes in cities, and by mail messengers; also prepares advertisements inviting pro- posals for steamboat service, and all star service in the Territory of Alaska, and orders for awarding the contracts for such service and authorizing changes therein; prepares all correspondence relative to these matters. 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.—Is 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; pre- pares 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 deductions from the pay of railway postal clerks; the certification of the perform- ance 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. 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. He Registered Mails.—The supervision and management of the registered-mail service; the establishment and confrol 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 GENERAL. The Fourth Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions: Rural Mails.—In this division all petitions for the establishment and extension of Rural Delivery Service are received and examined, and, if accepted, prepared for investigation. Through it all orders pertaining to the extension or change of exist- ing service or establishment of new service are issued; also all orders pertaining to ‘Secretary of the Navy. Official Duties. 289 the appointment and discipline of rural letter carriers and all other correspondence: incident to these matters, including requirements with reference to rural mail boxes. ‘This division also prepares all advertisements inviting proposals for star- route service (except in the Territory of Alaska), receives proposals, prepares awards for execution of all contracts, and prepares all orders for establishment of or change: in star routes. 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 BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The duties of the Bureau of Navigation comprise the issue, record, and enforce- ment of the orders of the Secretary to the individual officers of the Navy; the training and education of line officers and of enlisted men (except of the hospital corps) at schools and stations and in vessels maintained for that purpose; the supervision and control of the Naval Academy, technical schools for line officers, the apprentice sea- man establishment, schools for the technical education of- enlisted seamen, and the Naval Home at Philadelphia, Pa.; the maintenance and repair of the Naval War College; the enlistment, assignment to duty, and discharge of all enlisted persons, and the preparation of estimates for the pay of all officers and enlisted men. It has under its direction all rendezvous and receiving ships, and provides trans- portation for all enlisted persons under its cognizance. It establishes the complements of all ships in commission. It keeps the records of service of all officers and men, and prepares an annual Navy register for publication, embodying therein data as to fleets, squadrons, and ships furnished by the aid for operations. It is charged with all matters pertaining to applications for appointments and com- missions in the Navyand with the preparation of such appointments and commissions for signature. It is charged with the preparation, revision, and enforcement of all regulations gov- erning uniform, and with the distribution of all orders and regulations of a general or circular character. : Questions of naval discipline, rewards, and punishments are submitted by this bureau for the action of the Secretary of the Navy. The records of all general courts- martial and courts of inquiry involving the personnel of the Navy, before final action, are referred to this bureau for comment as to disciplinary features. \ 290 Congressional Directory. It receives and brings to the attention of the Secretary of the Navy all applications from officers for duty or leave. It receives all reports of services performed by individual officers or men. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. The duties of the Bureau of Yards and Docks comprise all that relates to the design, construction, and maintenance of all docks (including dry docks), slips, wharves, piers, quay walls, and buildings of all kinds for whatever purpose needed within the limits of navy yards and naval stations, except the naval proving ground, the naval torpedo station, the naval training stations, the Naval War College, and the Naval Academy, but not of magazines outside of navy yards nor of buildings for which it does not estimate. It prepares the plans and makes the estimates for the above structures, after consulting with the chief of the bureau for whose use they are designed, as to their internal arrangement. It repairs and requires for furniture for all buildings in navy yards. It provides light and water for all buildings, or for whatever other purposes they may be needed in navy yards; and requires for all the gE | fuel except that which is used by other bureaus. It has charge of the construction, | repair, maintenance, and operation of power plants at navy yards and naval stations. | It has charge of the installation and maintenance of telephones within the limits of | navy yards and naval stations. It has charge of all landings, derricks, shears, cranes, sewers, dredging, railway tracks, cars, wheels, trucks, all vehicles for use in the navy yards, grading, paving, walks, shade trees, inclosure walls and fences, ditch- ing, reservoirs, cisterns, fire engines and apparatus, and requires for all material and articles necessary therefor. It provides watchmen, labor for cleaning navy yards and naval stations, except the naval proving ground, the powder factory, magazines, the naval torpedo station, the naval training stations, the Naval War College, and : | the Naval Academy, and for the protection of public property therein. It requires | for the furniture, stationery, blank books and forms, and provides the clerical force, ll messengers, and laborers necessary for the offices of the commandant, captain, and civil engineer of navy yards, and defrays the cost of the same. It provides the horses and teams required for all purposes at navy yards, the subsistence and care of the same, and the necessary teamsters. | BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. The duties of the Bureau of Ordnance comprise all that relates to the torpedo station, naval proving ground, and magazines on shore, to the manufacture of offen- sive and defensive arms and apparatus (including torpedoes), all ammunition and | war explosives. It requires for or manufactures all machinery, apparatus, equip- ment, material, and supplies required by or for use with the above. It determines the interior dimensions of revolving turrets and their requirements as regards rotation. | As the work proceeds it inspects the installation of the permanent fixtures of the armament and its accessories on board ship, and the methods of stowing, handling, | and transporting ammunition and torpedoes, all of which work must be performed | to its satisfaction. It designs, constructs, and determines the requirements of all | ammunition hoists, and the method of construction of armories and ammunition | rooms on shipboard, and, in conjunction with the Bureau of Construction and Repair, determines upon their location and that of ammunition hoists. It installs all parts of | 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, and such other mounts as require simultaneous structural work in connection with installation or removal. It confers with the Bureau of Construction and Repair | respecting the arrangements for centering the turrets and the character of the roller paths and their supports. | It has cognizance of all electrically operated ammunition hoists, rammers, and gun-elevating gear which are in turrets; of electric training and elevating gear for | gun mounts not in turrets; of electrically operated air compressors for charging torpedoes; and of all range finders and battle order and range transmitters and | . indicators. : It designs the various shops and buildings in which its work is executed at the navy yard, Washington, ID. C., so far as their internal arrangements are concerned. It designs, erects, and maintains all shops and buildings constructed for its own purposes outside the limits of navy yards and for which it may have estimated; and is charged with the preservation of the public property under its control. 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, and electric Faw Official Duties. 291 turret-turning machinery, spars, capstans, wihdlasses, deck winches, boat cranes, steering gear, and hull ventilating apparatus (except portable fans); and, after con- sultation with the Bureau of Ordnance and according to the requirements thereof as determined by that bureau, the designing, construction, and installation of independent ammunition hoists, the same to conform to the requirements of the Bureau of Ordnance as to power, speed, and control, and the installation of the per- manent fixtures of all other ammunition hoists and their appurtenances; placing and securing armor, 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 turret ammunition hoists, and such other mounts as require simulta- neous structural work in connection with installation or removal. It has charge of the docking of ships and is charged with the operating and clean- ing of dry docks. It is responsible for the care and preservation of ships in ordinary. It has cognizance of electric launches and other boats supplied with electric motive ower. ; It designs the slips and the various buildings and shops, so far as their internal arrangements are concerned, where its work is executed. It has charge of the manufacture of anchors and cables; the supplying and fitting of rope, cordage, rigging, sails, awnings, and other canvas, and flags and bunting; it supplies, to the satisfaction of the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, galley ranges, steam cookers, and other permanent galley fittings, and installs and repairs the same. It installs, to the satisfaction of the Bureau of Steam Engineering, all conduit and molding or other means for carrying electric wiring, and it supplies and installs, in consultation with the Bureau of Steam Engineering, all voice tubes and means of mechanical signal communications. BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING. The duties of the Bureau of Steam Engineering comprise all that relates to design- ing, building, fitting out, and repairing machinery, used for the propulsion of naval ships; the steam pumps, steam heaters, distilling apparatus, refrigerating apparatus, all steam connections of ships, and the steam machinery necessary for actuating the apparatus by which turrets are turned. It has cognizance of the entire system of interior communications. It is specific- ally charged with the design, supply, installation, maintenance, and repair of all means of interior and exterior electric signal communications (except range finders and battle-order and range transmitters and indicators), and of all electrical appli- ances of whatsoever nature on board naval vessels, except motors and their control- ling apparatus used to operate the machinery belonging to other bureaus. It has charge of the design, manufacture, installation, maintenance, repair, and operation of wireless telegraph outfits on board ship and of wireless telegraph outfits and stations on shore. It maintains and repairs coaling plants not at navy yards, and operates all mechanical coaling plants, whether at a navy yard or elsewhere. Such operation includes the providing of all labor and supplies connected with the handling of coal; it passes upon the operating features of all plans for the construction of such plants prepared by the Bureau of Yards and Docks; it inspects all coal for the fleet. It has supervision and control of the Engineering Experiment Station. It designs the various shops at navy yards and stations where its own work is exe- cuted, so far as their internal arrangements are concerned. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery has control of all hospitals and of the force employed there, and it has the general direction of the internal organization and administration of hospital ships; it has advisory power with respect to all questions connected with hygiene and sanitation affecting the service and, to this end, oppot- tunity for unobstructed inspection; it provides forall physical examinations; it passes upon the competency, from a professional standpoint, of all men in the Hospital Corps for enlistment and promotion by means of examinations conducted under its super- vision, or under forms prescribed by it; it has information as to the assignment and duties of all enlisted men of the Hospital Corps, with opportunity to invite the atten- tion of the department to any changes which may seem to be desirable; and has the power to appoint and remove all nurses in the Nurse Corps (female), subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Navy. The duties of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery comprise all that relates to medical supply depots, medical laboratories, naval hospitals, hospital ships, dis- 84259°—62-1—18T ED——20 292 Congressional Directory. pensaries, and technical schools for the Medical and Hospital Corps, and the Nurse Corps (female). It requires for all supplies, medicines, and instruments used in the Medical Department of the Navy. ; It approves the design of the various buildings erected within navy yards for its own purposes, so far as their internal arrangements are concerned and, after their completion, has control of the same. It designs, erects, furnishes, and maintains all the buildings constructed for its own purposes outside the limits of navy yards, for which it may have estimated; and it approves, under the special instructions of the Secretary, the purchase, sale, and transfer of all land and buildings in connection therewith, and is charged with the preservation of the public property under its control. It determines upon and requires for all the stores, stationery, blank books, forms, materials, instruments, means and appliances of every kind used in the Medical Department for its own purposes, and has control of their inspection, storage, and preparation. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. The duties of the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts comprise all that relates to the supply of funds for disbursing officers and the keeping of the money accounts of the Naval Establishment; the purchase, reception, storage, care, custody, trans- fer, shipment, and issue of all supplies, including coal and water, for the Naval Establishment, and the keeping of a proper system of accounts for the same, except supplies for the Marine Corps, and except the reception, storage, care, custody, transfer, and issue of medical supplies; the requiring for, preparing or manufacture of provisions, clothing, and small stores; and the keeping of the cost of manufac- ture at the various navy yards and stations. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. The duties of the Judge Advocate General of the Navy are as follows: To revise and report upon the legal features of and have recorded the proceedings of all courts- martial, courts of inquiry, boards of investigation, inquest, and boards for the exami- nation 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. Itis also the duty of the judge advocate general to examine and report upon all questions relating to the construction of the regulations, to rank and precedence, to 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 reso- lutions introduced in Congress relating to the personnel and referred to the Depart- ment for report, and the drafting and interpretation of statutes relating to the per- sonnel; 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, including the preparation for submission to the Attorney General of all questions relating to subjects coming under his own cognizance which the Secretary of the Navy may direct to be so referred. OFFICE OF THX SOLICITOR. The duties of the solicitor comprise and relate to examination 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 for naval vessels; contracts for public works; insurance; patents; the sufficiency of official, contract, and other bonds and guaran- ties; the sale of condemned naval vessels; proceedings in the civil courts by or against the Government or its officers; claims by or against the Government; ques- tions submitted to the Attorney General, except such as relate to questions of per- sonnel; bills and congressional resolutions and inquiries not relating to the personnel and not elsewhere assigned; the searching of titles, purchase, sale, transfer, and other questions affecting lands and buildings pertaining to the Navy; the care and Official Duties. 293 preservation of all muniments of title to land acquired for naval uses; and the cor- respondence respecting the foregoing duties; and rendering opinion upon any matter or question of law referred to him by the Secretary of the Navy. 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 detachments 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 stations. 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, Reclamation Service, the Bureau of Mines, national parks, distribution of appropriations for agricultural and mechanical colleges in the States and Territories, and the supervision of certain hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. He also exer- cises certain powers and duties in relation to the Territories of the United States. FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF 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 and the Indians. 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 Patent Office, the Pension Office, the Bureau of Education, the eleemosynary institutions of the District of Columbia, including the Government Hospital for the Insane, and various miscellaneous matters over which the departmenthas jurisdiction. CHIEF CLERK. This officer is the administrative head of the Office of the Secretary, has supervi- sion over the clerks and employees of the department, enforces the general regvla- tions of the department, is superintendent of the buildings occupied by the depart- ment, and supervises all business relating to eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia and national parks and reservations. COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS. The Commissioner of Patents is charged with the administration of the patent laws, and supervision of all matters relating to the granting of letters patent for inven- tions, and the registration of trade-marks. 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.! COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS. The Commissioner of Pensions supervises the examination and adjudication of ali claims arising under laws passed by Congress granting pensions on account of service in the Army or Navy; claims for reimbursement for the expenses of the last sickness and burial of deceased pensioners; and also claims for bounty-land warrants basea upon military or naval service rendered prior to March 3, 1855. 1 Appeals lie from his decisions to the United States Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, III hr 204 Congressional Directory. COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE. The Commissioner of the General Land Office is charged with the survey, manage- ment, and disposition of the public lands, the adjudication of conflicting claims relat- | ing thereto, the granting of railroad and other rights of way, easements, the issuance of patents for lands, and with furnishing certified copies of land patents and of rec- 1 ords, plats, and papers on file in his office. In national forests he executes all laws | relating to surveying, prospecting, locating, appropriating, entering, reconveying, or patenting of public lands, and to the granting of rights of way amounting to easements. 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. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION. The Commissioner of Education collects statistics and general information show- ing the condition and progress of education, issues an annual report in two volumes, a bulletin in several numbers annually, and miscellaneous publications; has charge of the schools for the education of native children in Alaska; supervises the reindeer industry in Alaska, and administers the endowment fund for the support of colleges - for the benefit of agriculture and mechanic arts. DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAIL SURVEY. The Director of the Geological Survey is charged under direction of the Secre- tary of the Interior with classification of the public lands and the examination of the geologic structure, mineral resources, and mineral products of the national domain. In conformity with this authorization, the Geological Survey has been engaged in making a geologic map of the United States, involving both topographic and geologic surveys, in collecting annually the statistics of mineral production, and in conducting investigations relating to surface and underground waters. i DIRECTOR OF THE RECLAMATION SERVICE. The Director of the Reclamation Service, under the personal supervision and direction of the Secretary, is charged with the survey, construction, and operation of the irrigation works in arid States, authorized by the act of June 17, 1902. DIRECTOR OF THE BUREAU OF MINES. The Director of the Bureau of Mines is charged with the investigations of the methods of mining, especially in relation to the safety of miners and the appliances best adapted to prevent accidents, the possible improvement of conditions under which mining operations are carried on, the treatment of ores and other mineral substances, the use of explosives and electricity, the prevention of accidents, and other inquiries and technological investigations pertinent to such industries. He also has charge of tests and analyses of coals, lignites, ores, and other mineral fuel substances belonging to or for the use of the United States, and has supervision over the mine inspectors for the Territories. 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 enforcement of the meat inspection and food and drugs laws under which the inspection of domestic and imported food products is carried on. He is charged with the duty of issuing rules and regula- tions for the protection, maintenance, and care of the National Forest Reserves. He also is charged with carrying into effect the laws prohibiting the transportation by interstate commerce of game killed in violation of local laws and excluding from importation certain noxious animals, and has authority to control the importation of other animals, Officral Dutzes. 295 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 all expenditures from appropriations for contingent ex- penses, 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 authority. He represents the department in all legal proceedings arising under the laws intrusted 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 and in the unclassified service. He supervises the preparation of all documents to be submitted to the Secretary of Agriculture for his signature in making appointments, transfers, promo- tions, reductions, furloughs, terminations, and removals in the force of the Depart- ment 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 supervision in the department. He has the custody and use of the department seal. SUPPLY DIVISION. It is the duty of the Chief of the Supply Division to make all purchases of sta- tionery and miscellaneous supplies and to issue the same, on requisitions, to the various bureaus and divisions of the department; to receive and send out all express and freight shipments; and to receive and dispose of, by sale or otherwise, all property turned in by the various bureaus and offices when it is of no further use to them. ; 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 gauging and reporting of rivers; the mainte- nance and operation of Weather Bureau telegraph and telephone lines, and the col- lection and transmission of marine intelligence for the benefit of commerce and nav- igation; the reporting of temperature and rainfall conditions for the corn, wheat, cotton, sugar, rice, and other interests; the conducting of investigations in climatol- ogy and evaporation; the distribution of meteorological information in the interests of agriculture and commerce, and the taking of such meteorological observations as may be necessary to establish and record the climatic conditions of the United States or as are essential for the proper execution of the foregoing duties. 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, theinspection 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 296 Congressional Durectory. 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, carries out 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, 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 its relations to agriculture. It investigates the diseases of fruit and forest trees, truck crops, and other plants, and carries on field tests and demonstrations of their control and prevention. It studies the bacteriological problems connected with plant production and also the factors of plant nutrition. It is engaged in the improvement of crops by breeding and selection and the acclimatization and adaptation of new crops and varieties. It is encouraging the production of drug-producing crops, tea, and other special crops, and is studying the general physiological problems influencing the growth of plants. It is conducting a campaign for the eradication of poisonous plants, especially in the vast stock-grazing areas of the West. It is investigating various technological problems in connection with crop production, particularly with reference to fiber and paper-producing plants and to the standardization and handling of cotton and grain. It is engaged in the study of various phases of economic botany and in the devising of methods for the improvement of forest grazing areas. It is carrying on a propaganda in the interest of good seed for the farmer and the improvement in the quality of farm seeds. It is conducting extensive work in the breeding and testing of our principal field crops, such as the small grains, corn, cotton, tobacco, forage crops, and sugar-producing plants, with special reference to the improvement of these crops. It is engaged in the operation of testing stations in the semiarid regions for the cooperative investigation of the problems encountered in crop production under the conditions existing .in those areas. The adaptation and breeding of crops is a special feature of this work, which also includes physical determinations of the factors influencing plant growth in those regions. The bureau is conducting farm-management investigations throughout the country to devise improved methods of farm management and farm practice. In the South it is carrying on farmers’ cooperative demonstration work, with special reference to the boll-weevil situation and its amelioration. It is conducting horticultural studies of garden crops and maintains an experimental farm for this and other lines of the work of the bureau. It is engaged in investigations of the marketing, transportation, and storage of fruits ‘and in the general upbuilding of the fruit industry. It maintains greenhouses and trial grounds for the work of plant propagation and improvement. It is engaged in the introduction of seeds and plants from foreign countries and in the operation of plant introduction and testing gardens to aid in the development of new plant indus- tries. It is also engaged in the congressional distribution of seeds and plants. FOREST SERVICE. . The Forest Service is charged with the administration of the National For- ests. It also gives practical advice in the conservative handling of National, State, and private forest lands, and in methods of utilizing forest products; investigates methods of forest planting, and gives practical advice to tree planters; studies com- mercially 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 treat- ment; in cooperation with the Bureau of the Census gathers statistics on forest prod- ucts; investigates the control and prevention of forest fires, and other forest prob- lems; 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. Under the food and drugs act of June 30, 1906, it inspects the conditions of manufacture, transportation, and sale of food and drug products, collects samples, and examines the same for the purpose of determining whether such articles are adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of the act. 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 8 om BE Official Duties. 297 and chemical tests are required for such products. It cooperates with chemists engaged in State food work, especially with those appointed to make analyses in collaboration with this bureau in the enforcement of the food and drugs act. It also cooperates with the chemists of the agricultural experiment stations in all matters pertaining to the relations of chemistry to agricultural interests, and with the other scientific divisions of the department in all matters relating to chemistry, and con- ducts investigations of a chemical nature for other departments 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 consular, agricultural, and commercial authorities. It records, tabulates, and coor- dinates statistics of agricultural production, distribution, and consumption, the authorized data of governments, institutes, societies, boards of trade, and individual experts; and issues monthly crop reports for the information of the public. It investigates subjects pertaining to agricultural production and consumption, demand and supply, values, transportation, the conditions affecting them, and dis- seminates through printed reports and otherwise the information collected. BUREAU OF SOILS. The Bureau of Soils investigates soils in all their relations to climate and to organic life. It makes field 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, forests 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 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 Division of Insects of the National Museum, and insects are identified for experiment stations and other public institutions and private individuals. . BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL 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 and certain provisions of the game law of Alaska. It is intrusted with the care and maintenance of the National Bird Reservations and the National Bison Range, 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 pays all accounts and claims against the department; decides questions involving the expenditure of public funds; prepares advertisements for all work and supplies not contracted for by the General Supply Committee of the Executive Departments; prepares 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 fiscal reports to Congress; and transacts all other business relating to the financial interests of the department. 298 Congressional Directory. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. The Division of Publications is the publishing house of the Department of Agricul- ture. Its force comprises editors, proof readers, compilers, indexers, abstracters, artists, draftsmen, engravers, and photographers, together with clerks and laborers engaged in the distribution of publications. The division is charged with (1) preparation and editing of manuscripts and indexing the publications of the department, including the Yearbook, annual reports, bulletins, etc.; (2) the preparation, printing, and distribution of farmers’ bulletins; (3) supervision and equitable assignment of the printing fund ($460,000); (4) the general direction of expenditures under the statutory and divisional appropriations; (5) the supervision of the printing and binding done for the department; (6) the preparation of draw- ings for illustrations, of wood engravings, and photographic work; (7) the distribu- tion of department publications and all correspondence relating thereto; (8) the preparation and distribution of official information and of advance notices of pub- lications to agricultural writers and papers. The Division of Publications is the authorized medium of all official communications between the Department of Agri- culture and the Government Printing Office. LIBRARY. The librarian has charge of the department library, purchases all books and periodicals and supervises their arrangement and cataloguing; prepares for publica- tion bibliographies of special subjects and a monthly bulletin containing current accessions to the library; also has charge of the foreign mailing lists of the depart- ment publications. OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. The Office of Experiment Stations represents the department in its relations with 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. Itseeks 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 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, 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, investigates the best methods of road making and the best kinds of road-making materials throughout the United States, and furnishes expert advice on road construction, maintenance, and administration; investigates the chemical and physical character of road materials; cooperates with schools and colleges in highway engineering instruction; reports the results of its investigations and experi- ments, and prepares and publishes bulletins and reports. 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 Lighthouse 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- Officral Dutzes. 299 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 regulation of the enforcement and execution of the act of Congress relating to the equipment of ocean steamers with apparatus and operators for wireless communication; 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; the gathering and supplying of information regarding industries and markets for the fostering of manufacturing; the administration of the act of . Congress providing for the payment of compensation to artisans or laborers of the United States injured in the course of their employment; and the formulation (in conjunction with the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Treasury) of regulations for the enforcement of the food and drugs act of 1906 and the insecticide act of 1910. 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. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF COMMERCE AND I ABOR. The Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the secre- tary or may be required by law. In the absence of the secretary he acts as head of the department. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk is charged with the expenditure of the appropriations for contin- gent expenses and rents; the answering of calls from Congress and elsewhere for copies of papers and records, and the preparation of correspondence covering a wide range of administrative subjects; the custody of the records and files of the Secre- tary’s office; the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail; the general supervision of the clerks and employees of the department; the enforcement of the general regulations of the department; the superintendency of all buildings occu- pied by the department in Washington, D. C., and the direction of all employees connected with their care, together with the care of the horses, wagons, and car- riages employed; and the discharge of all business of the Secretary’s office unas- signed. 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 Lighthouse Establishment charged with the disbursement of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relating to the advance and expenditure of 325 items of appropriations; the administrative examination required by the department of all accounts submitted by bureau disbursing officers and agents. He has charge of the issuing, recording, and accounting 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 various offices, bureaus, and services of the department, excepting the Census Bureau and the Coast and Geodetic Survey, and the general accounting of the department. APPOINTMENT DIVISION. The chief of the Appointment Division is charged by the Secretary of Commerce and Labor with the supervision of all matters relating to appointments, transfers, promo- tions, reductions, and removals, including applications for and recommendations con- cerning the same, and the correspondence connected therewith; the consideration of applications 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 its relations to the civil-service law and rules; the preparation of nomi- 300 Congressional Directory. 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 PUBLICATIONS. The chief of the Division of Publications 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 publications. All blank books and blank forms, and the printed stationery of all kinds used by the bureaus and offices of the depart- ment 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 and conducts the correspondence it entails. 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 ag 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 the reports transmitted by the commercial agents of the Department of Commerce and Labor such valuable and material information as will accomplish the objects indicated above. The bureau publishes daily the reports received from United States consuls and commercial agents of the department, also special reports on various subjects made by consuls from time to time, and the annual reports of consular officers entitled ‘Commercial Relations of the United States.” The bureau is also charged with the duty of collating and publishing in the English language the tariffs of foreign countries. 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. Offictal Dutzes. a 301 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 thé 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. : The Secretary of Commerce and Labor has delegated to the bureau, subject to his supervision, the administration of the act of May 30, 1908, granting to certain employees of the United States the right to receive from it compensation for injuries sustained in the course of their employment. Claims for compensation under the act are filed in the bureau, which is charged with their examination, the preparation of correspondence relative thereto, the investigation of doubtful claims, the issuing of blank forms, and other details connected with the administration of the law. BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES. The Bureau of Lighthouses is charged with the establishment and maintenance of lighthouses, light vessels, buoys, and other aids to navigation on the coasts and rivers of the United States, as authorized by Congress, and with the direction of the offices, depots, and tenders required in this work. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. The Bureau of the Census is charged with the duty of taking the decennial cen- suses of the United States, of making certain other statistical investigations at regular intervals of years, and of collecting such special statistics as may be author- ized by law from time to time. The Thirteenth Decennial Census (1910) proper covered the fields of population, agriculture, manufactures, and mines and quarries. In addition, in accordance with law, statistics were gathered relative to the number of each kind of live stock slaughtered for food purposes and of hides produced during the year, and regarding irrigation works throughout the United States. The act establishing the permanent census bureau requires that, after the completion of the regular decennial census, the Director of the Census shall decennially collect statistics relative to the defective, dependent, and delinquent classes; crime, includ- ing judicial statistics pertaining thereto; social statistics of cities; public indebted- ness, expenditures, and taxation; religious bodies; transportation by water, and express business; savings banks and other savings institutions, mortgage, loan, and similar institutions; and the fishing industry, in cooperation with the Bureau of Fisheries. Every five years statistics must be collected relating to street railways, electric light and power stations, and telephone and telegraph business. Annual statistics must be gathered relating to births and deaths in States and cities main- taining efficient registration systems; the financial and other statistics of cities having a population of 30,000 and over; the production and distribution of cotton, and forest products. 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 tidewater or ship navigation; deep-sea soundings, temperature, and current observations along said coasts and throughout the Gulf and Japan streams; magnetic observations and researches, and the publication of maps showing the variations of terrestrial mag- netism; gravity research; determination of heights; the determination of geographic positions by astronomic observations for latitude, longitude, and azimuth, and by triangulation, to furnish reference points for state surveys. The results obtained are published in annual reports, 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. 302 " Congressional Darectory. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. The Bureau of Statistics collects and publishes the statistics of our foreign com- merce, embracing tables showing the imports and exports, respectively, by countries and customs districts; the transit trade inward and outward by countries and by customs districts; imported commodities warehoused, withdrawn from, and remaining in warehouse; the imports of merchandise entered for consumption, showing quan- tity, value, rates of duty, and amounts of duty collected on each article or class of articles; the jnward 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. 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. The bureau also has charge of the salmon fisheries of Alaska and of the fur-seal herds and other animals on the Pribilof Islands. 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. The commissioner also investigates the operation of the laws rela- tive to navigation, and annually reports to the Secretary of Commerce and Labor such particulars as may in his judgment admit of improvement or require amendment. In addition to the above statutory duties the bureau is charged, under direction of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, with the enforcement, through collectors and surveyors of customs, of the navigation and steamboat-inspection laws and the con- sideration of action to be taken on fines, penalties, and forfeitures incurred there- under; administrative examination of accounts of collectors and surveyors of customs, covering fines, penalties, and forfeitures; services to vessels; navigation fees; amounts collected on account of deceased passengers; tonnage tax collections, refunds, ete. 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. Officral Duties. 303 The division of information under this bureau gathers from all available sources information concerning the resources, products, and physical characteristics of the States and Territories. This information is made available to admitted aliens and others seeking homes or places of settlement. DIVISION OF NATURALIZATION. By the act of June 29, 1906, Congress placed the control of all matters relating to the naturalization of aliens with the Secretary of Commerce and Labor. Under the provisions of this act jurisdiction was conferred upon approximately 3,500 United States and State courts. The duties of the Division of Naturalization are to supervise the work of the clerks of these courts in naturalization matters, to conduct all cor- respondence relating to naturalization, and, through its field officers located in various cities of the United States, to investigate the qualifications of the candidates for citi- zenship. In the archives of the division are ued duplicates of all certificates of naturalization granted since September 26, 1906, as well as the preliminary papers of all candidates for citizenship filed since that date, averaging an annual receipt of approximately 400,000 naturalization papers. 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 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 cr State governments, a reason- able fee will be charged. THE PAN AMERICAN UNION. (Formerly International Bureau of American Republics.) The Pan American Union (the new name given to the International Bureau of American Republics by the Fourth International American Conference, which met at Buenos Aires in July and August, 1910) was established under the recommenda- tion of the First International American Conference, held in the city of Washington in 1889-go for the purpose of developing and maintaining closer relations of com- merce and friendship between the twenty-one Republics of the Western Hem- isphere. It was reorganized by the Third and Fourth International American Con- ferences, held in Rio de Janeiro in 1906, and in Buenos Aires in 1910, respectively, and its scope widened by imposing many new and important duties. The Pan American Union communicates, through the diplomatic representatives of the several Governments in Washington, with the executive departments of these Governments, and it regularly furnishes such information as it possesses or can obtain on a great variety of subjects to all of the Republics and to their officials and citizens. 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 confer- ences. The Pan American Union is sustained by contributions from the American Republics in proportion to their population, and is governed by a board composed of their diplomatic representatives at Washington, and the Secretary of State of the United States, whois ex officio its chairman. It is therefore strictly an international institution and not a subordinate bureau of any one government. Its chief executive officer is the Director General, elected by this governing board. It publishes a monthly bulletin containing the latest information respecting the resources, com- merce, and general progress of the American Republics, as well as maps and geo- graphical sketches of these countries, handbooks of description, travel, and history, and special reports on trade, tariffs, improvements, concessions, new laws, etc. It also conducts a large correspondence not only with manufacturers and merchants 304 Congressional Directory. in all countries looking to the extension of Pan-American trade, but with travelers, scientists, students, and specialists, for the purpose of promoting general Pan-American intercourse. Another and practical feature of the Pan American Union is the Columbus Memorial Library, which contains 20,000 volumes relating to the Ameri- can 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 10, 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 $10,000 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 ling 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 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 appoints a secretary and clerks, whose duties are not specifically defined by the act; and also appoints attorneys, examiners, and special agents. By amendment of June 18, 1910 (‘‘Mann-Elkins law’’), a Court of Commerce was created with jurisdiction to restrain or enforce orders of the commission. This court is composed of five judges selected from the circuit court judges of the United States, and the amendment contains specific provision as to jurisdiction and procedure. Telegraph, telephone, and cable companies are made subject to the commission. The jurisdiction of the commission is increased as to through routes and joint rates, freight classification, switch connections, long and short hauls, filing or rejection of rate schedules, investigations on own motion, making reasonable rates, suspension of proposed rates, and other matters. An important section authorizes the President to appoint a special commission to investigate issuance of railroad stocks and bonds. 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 Official Duties. 305 interstate traffic shall be fitted with a power driving wheel brake and appliances for operating the train-brake system. The act directs the commission to Todge with the proper district attorneys information of such violations as may come to its knowl- edge. 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. By act of April 14, 1910, the safety appliance acts were supplemented so as to require railroads to equip their cars with sill steps, hand brakes, ladders, running boards, and grab irons, and the commission was authorized to designate the number, dimensions, location, and manner of application of appliances. 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. By act of May 6, 1910, the prior accident reports law was repealed and a new statute passed giving more power to the commission as to investigating accidents, and is more comprehensive than the former law. The act of March 4, 1907, makes it the duty of the Interstate 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 24. 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. = The act of March 3, 190g, authorizes the commission to prescribe the form of book- keeping for District of Columbia gas and electric companies. The act of February 17, 1911, confers jurisdiction upon the commission to enforce certain provisions compelling railroad companies to equip their locomotives with safe and suitable boilers and appurtenances thereto. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. The purpose of the civil-service act, as declared in its title, is ‘‘ to regulate and improve the civil service of the United States.” It provides for the appointment of three commissioners, not more than two of whom shall be adherents of the same political party, and makes it the duty of the commission to aid the President, as he may request, in preparing suitable rules for carrying the act into effect. The act requires that the rules shall provide, among other things, for open competitive examinations for testing the fitness of applicants for the classified service, the mak- ing of appointments from among those passing with highest grades, an apportion- ment of appointments in the departments at Washington among the States and Territories, a period of probation before absolute appointment, and the prohibition of the use of official authority to coerce the political action of any person or body. The act also provides for investigations touching the enforcement of the rules, and forbids, under penalty of fine or imprisonment, or both, the solicitation by any per- son in the service of the United States of contributions to be used for political purposes from persons in such service, or the collection of such contributions by any person in a Government building. CLASSIFIED SERVICE. There were 384,088 positions in the executive civil service on June 30, 1910, according to statistics based upon reports to the commission, of which 222,278 were classified subject to competitive examination under the civil-service rules; 18,150 mechanics and laborers in navy yards carried heretofore as classified are 2 306 Congressronal Directory. unclassified according to an opinion of the Attorney General of July 6, 1909. 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 positions are excepted from examination, among them being em- ployees at post offices of the third and fourth classes, exclusive of postmasters of the fourth class in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Con- ticut, 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 sur- geons, field deputy marshals, and a few employees whose duties are of an important confidential or fiduciary nature. EXAMINATIONS. Various 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 physical condition and experience of the applicant, and in some cases do not require ability to read or write. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1910, 115,644 persons were examined, of whom 87,769 passed and 43,585 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 CANAL 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. PHILIPPINE CIVII, 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 way 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 became 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. = re Official Duties. : 307 DEMAND FOR ELIGIBLES WITH CERTAIN QUALIFICATIONS. There is an increasing demand for male clerks qualified as stenographers and typewriters, veterinarians, draftsmen of the various kinds, and for civil, mechanical, and electrical engineers; superintendents of construction, computers, and aids in the Coast and Geodetic Survey; also for teachers, matrons, seamstresses, 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 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. Ld 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 details of manufacture, 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 has direct charge of the personnel of the office, is charged with the detail of all matters in connection with appointments, promotions, or transfers, and has charge of the general correspondence and the care of the files. The Attorney examines and passes upon contracts for paper, material, machinery, and equipment, and acts generally as the legal adviser of the Public Printer in matters relating to public printing and binding. The Purchasing Agent has charge of the making of the schedule of material which will be required for the public printing and binding and of the preparation of the annual proposals for paper; he secures proposals for open-market purchases and directs the drawing of the contracts for same; looks after the proper drawing of the orders for paper, material, and supplies, and the preparation of the papers necessary for the Public Printer to complete the purchases. 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 Congressional Record Clerk has charge of the Congressional Record at the Capitol, and acts as the Public Printer’s representative in furnishing information and estimates to Senators, Representatives, and Delegates. The Superintendent of Work has direct charge of all the manufacturing divisions of the office, which include the printing division, the press division, and the bind- ing division. The Assistant Superintendent of Work (night) has immediate charge of the manu- facturing divisions at night. The Foreman of Printing and Assistant Superintendent of Work (day) has direct charge of the composing and foundry sections, where the work of preparing the copy for the printer, setting the type, reading the proof, and making the electrotype and stereotype plates is done. He also assists the Superintendent of Work in the supervision of the manufacturing division during the day. 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. : 21 84259°—62-1—18T ED 308 Congressional Directory. 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 unification 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, COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES. This court was established by act of Congress February 24, 1855 (10 Stat. I., 612). It has general jurisdiction of all ‘‘claims founded upon the Constitution of the United States or any law of Congress, except for pensions, or upon any regulation of an executive department, or upon any contract, expressed or implied, with the Government of the United States, or for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort, in respect of which claims the party would be entitled to redress against the United States, either in a court of law, equity, or admiralty, if the United States were suable, except claims growing out of the late Civil War and commonly known as war claims,” and certain rejected claims. It has jurisdiction also of claims of like character which may be referred to it by any executive department, involving disputed facts or controverted questions of law, . where the amount in controversy exceeds $3,000, or where the decision will affect a class of cases or furnish a precedent for the future action of any executive depart- ment in the adjustment of a class of cases, or where any authority, right, privilege, or exemption is claimed or denied under the Constitution. In all the above-mentioned cases the court, when it finds for the claimant, may enter judgment against the United States, payable out of the Public Treasury. An appeal, only upon questions of law, lies to the Supreme Court on the part of the defendants in all cases, and on the part of the claimants when the amount in controversy exceeds $3,000. The findings of fact by the Court of Claims are final and not subject to review by the Supreme Court. By the act of March 3, 1883, chapter 116 (22 Stat. L., 485, and 1 Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 403), called the ‘‘ Bowman Act,” the head of an executive depart- ment may refer to the court any ‘‘claim or matter’ pending in his department involving controverted questions of fact or law. The court is required to find the facts and its conclusions of law and to report the same to the department for its guidance and action. The same act authorizes either House of Congress or any of its committees to refer to the court any ‘‘claim or matter’’ involving the investiga- tion and determination of facts, the court to find the facts and report the same to Congress for such action thereon as may there be determined. This act is extended by act of March 3, 1887, chapter 359 (24 Stat. L., 505, and 1 Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 559), and by the act of June 25, 1910 (36 Stat. L., 837). There is a statute of limitations which prevents parties from bringing actions on their own motion beyond six years after the cause of action accrued, but the depart- ments may refer claims at any time if they were pending therein within the six years. The only limitation under the Bowman Act is that the court shall have no jurisdiction of any claim barred before the passage of the act by any then existing provision of law. By act of January 20, 1885 (23 Stat. L., 283, and 1 Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p- 471), Congress gave to the court jurisdiction over ‘‘ claims to indemnity upon the French Government arising out of illegal captures, detentions, seizures, condemna- tions, and confiscations prior to the ratification of the convention between the United States and the French Republic concluded on the 3oth day of September, 1800.” The time of filing claims is limited to two years from the passage of the act, and all = | Offictal Duties. 309 i claims not presented within that time are forever barred. The court finds the facts and the law, and reports the same in each case to Congress. By act of March 3, 1891, chapter 538 (26 Stat. L., 851, and Supplement to R. S., 2d ed., p. 913), the court is vested with jurisdiction of certain Indian depredation claims. : The Secretary of the Navy has referred to the court, under the act of March 3, 1887 (24 Stat. 1.., 505), all cases growing out of claims for bounty for war vessels captured or destroyed by the United States Navy during the late war with Spain, involving a ii consideration of every naval conflict that took place and the rights of all the officers | and men engaged. i By the act of April 29, 1902 (31 Stat. L., 176), Congress conferred jurisdiction upon the court of all claims against the United States arising out of the payment of customs duties to the military authorities in the island of Porto Rico upon articles imported from the several States, with authority to render judgment against the United States with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from date of payment of said duties to date of judgment, such claim to be filed within six months from the date of the passage of this act. CHAP. 423. An Act To provide additional protection for owners of patents of the United States, and for other purposes. (Approved June 25, 1910; 36 Stat. I.., 851-852.) There are five judges, who sit together in the hearing of cases, the concurrence of i three of whom is necessary for the decision of any case. il The court sits at Washington, D. C., in the old Corcoran Art Building, Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, on the first Monday in December each year and | continues into the following summer and until all cases ready for trial are disposed of. Cases may be commenced and entered at any time, whether the court be in ses- sion or not. esis JUDICIARY SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. (In Capitol Building. Phones, marshal’s office, Main 1; clerk’s office, Main 3476.) EDWARD DOUGLASS WHITE, Chief Justice 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 George- town (D. C.) College; served in the Confederate Army; was licensed to practice law by the supreme court of Louisiana in December, 1868; elected State senator in 1874; was appointed associate justice of the supreme court of Louisiana in 1878; was elected to the United States Senate as a Democrat, to succeed James B. Eustis, 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. Appointed by President Taft December 12, 1910, Chief Justice of the United States, and took the oath of office December 19, 1910. 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 Republican national convention in 1876; declined a diplomatic position as a substitute for the Attorney Géneralship, 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 II. D. from Bowdoin College and the University of Penn- sylvania; was a member of the Bering Sea tribunal of arbitration which met in Paris in 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 20 years and | is now a lecturer on constitutional law in George Washington University. i JOSEPH McKENNA, of San Francisco, Cal., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., August 10, 1843; attended St. Joseph’s College of his native city until 1855, when he removed with his parents to Benicia, Cal., where he continued his education at the public schools and the I 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 WENDELI, HOLMES, of Boston, Mass., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Boston, Mass., March 8, 1841; graduated from Harvard College in 1861; July 10, 1861, commissioned first lieutenant of the Twentieth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry; October 21, shot through the 310 i I | i il I i Supreme Court of the United States. S11 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 Iowell Institute. An article on ‘“ Early English equity,’’ in the English Law Quarterly Review, April, 1885, also may be mentioned, and later ones in the Harvard Law Review. From 1873 to 1882 he prac- ticed law in the firm of Shattuck, Holmes & Munroe; in 1882 took a professorship at the law school of Harvard College, and on December 8 of that year was commissioned a member of the supreme judicial court of Massachusetts; on August 2, 1899, he was made chief justice of the same court. He 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; D. C. L., Oxford. WILLIAM R. DAY, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 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 Univer- sity of Michigan, where he graduated in 1870; he also spent one year in the law department of that institution. In 1872 he was admitted to the Ohio bar and began the practice of law in Canton, Stark County, Ohio, where he was elected judge of the court of common pleas in 1886. In 188g9he was appointed United States district judge for the northern district of Ohio by President Harrison, which position he declined. In April, 1897, he was appointed Assistant Secretary of State by President McKinley, and in April, 1898, was made Secretary of State, which position he resigned to accept the chairmanship of the commission which negotiated the treaty of peace with Spain at the close of the Spanish-American war. In February, 1899, he was appointed United States circuit judge for the sixth judicial circuit by President McKinley. In February, 1903, he was made an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court by President Roosevelt, taking the oath of office March 2 of that year. HORACE HARMON LURTON, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in 1844, at Newport, Campbell County, Ky.; educated in the public schools, Douglas University, and Cumberland University, and served three years in the Confederate Army. Graduated in the law department of Cumberland University in 1867, and began the practice of law at Clarksville, Tenn. Appointed chancellor of the sixth chancery division of Tennessee by Gov. James D. Porter in 1874 to fill a vacancy; elected in 1876, without opposition, to the same position, resigned and returned to the bar in 1878. FElected judge of the supreme court of Tennessee September 1, 1886; elected chief justice of the supreme court of Tennessee January, 1893. In March, 1893, was appointed circuit judge for the sixth judicial circuit of the United States by President Cleveland; appointed by President Taft to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States December 20, 1909, and took his seat on the bench January 3, 1910. I. B., Cumberland University; D. C. L., University of the South. CHARLES EVANS HUGHES, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Glens Falls, N. Y., April 11, 1862; student at Colgate University and Brown University, and was graduated from the latter in 1881; studied law at Columbia Law School, 1882-1884, and held prize fellowship in that school from 1884 to 1887; admitted to the New York bar in 1884, and practiced in New York City from 1884 to 1891, and from 1893 to 1906; was professor of law at Cornell University from 1891 to 1893; was special lecturer at Cornell University from 1893 to 1895, and in the New York Law School from 1893 to 1900; was counsel to the Stevens Gas Committee of the New York Legislature in 1905, and counsel to the Armstrong Insurance Committee of the New York Legislature in 1905 and 1906; was special assistant to the United States Attorney General in the matter of the coal investiga- tion of 1906; nominated for the office of mayor of New York City by the Republican convention in 1905, but declined the nomination; elected governor of New York for two terms, from January 1, 1907, to December 31, 1908, and from January 1, 1909, to December 31, 1910; received the degree of LL. D. from Brown University in 1906, from Columbia, Knox, and Lafayette in 1907, from Union in 1908, from George Washington and Colgate in 1909, and from the University of Pennsylvania, Williams, and Harvard in 1910; appointed by President Taft to be an Associate Justice of the 312 Congressional Directory. Supreme Court of the United States, and confirmed by the Senate on the 2d day of May, 1910; resigned the office of governor of the State of New York on the 6th day of October, 1910, and took his seat on the bench on the roth day of October, 1910. WILLIS VAN DEVANTER, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born at Marion, Grant County, Ind., April 17, 1859; was educated in the public schools of his native town and at Indiana Asbury (now De Pauw) Uni- versity; was graduated from the law school of the Cincinnati College in 1881; prac- ticed his profession at Marion, Ind., until 1884, and subsequently at Cheyenne, Wyo., where he served as city attorney; a commissioner to revise the statute law of Wyom- ing, and member of the Territorial Legislature; was appointed chief justice of the Territorial supreme court by President Harrison in 1889, and by election was con- tinued as chief justice on the admission of the Territory as a State in 1890, but soon resigned to resume active practice; was chairman of the Republican State committee in 1894; was a delegate to the Republican national convention and also a member of the Republican national committee in 1896; was appointed assistant attorney general of the United States by President McKinley in 1897, being assigned to the Depart- ment of the Interior, and served in that position until 1903; was professor of equity pleading and practice 1898-1903, and of equity jurisprudence 1902-3 in Columbian (now George Washington) University; was appointed United States circuit judge, eighth circuit, by President Roosevelt in 1903; was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by President Taft, December 16, 1910, and entered upon the duties of that office January 3 following. JOSEPH RUCKER LAMAR, of Augusta, Ga., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Ruckersville, Elbert County, Ga., October 14, 1857. He attended the University of Georgia and later Bethany College, where he graduated in 1877; attended the Law School at Washington and Lee University; was admitted to the bar at Augusta, Ga., in April 1878, where he has lived ever since. In 1886 he was elected to the House of Representatives of the Georgia Legislature, and was reelected in 1888. In 1892 he was appointed by the Supreme Court of Georgia as one of the commissioners to prepare the code, which was adopted by the general assembly in 1895. On January I, 1goI, he was appointed to fill an unex- pired term as associate justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia and was elected to that position by the people at the ensuing general election. In 1905 he resigned on account of his health and resumed the practice of the law. On December 12, 1910, he was appointed by President Taft to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; confirmed on December 17, and on January 3, 1911, took the oath of office. RESIDENCES OF THE ASSOCIATE JUSTICES. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the § designates those whose daughters accompany them.] * Mr. Chief Justice White, 1717 Rhode Island Avenue. * +1 Mr. Justice Harlan, Fourteenth and Euclid Streets. * Mr. Justice McKenna, The Connecticut. * Mr. Justice Holmes, 1720 I Street. * Mr. Justice Day, 1301 Clifton Street. * Mr. Justice Lurton, 1721 I Street. * Mr. Justice Hughes, 2401 Massachusetts Avenue. * Mr. Justice Van Devanter, 1923 Sixteenth Street. * Mr. Justice Lamar, 2419 Massachusetts Avenue. RETIRED. * Mr. Justice Shiras. * Mr. Justice Brown, 1720 Sixteenth Street. Mr. Justice Moody, 1525 Fighteenth Street. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. Clerk.—James H. McKenney, 1523 Rhode Island Avenue. Deputy Clerk.—James D. Maher, 1709 M Street. Marshal. —J. M. Wright, Metropolitan Club. Reporter.—Charles Henry Butler, 1535 I Street. el AG a has Court of Clavms. 313 CIRCUIT ‘COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES. First Judicial Cirvcuil.—Mr. Justice Holmes. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. Circuit Judges.—ILe Baron B. Colt, Providence, R. I.; William I,. Putnam, Port- land, Me. Second Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Hughes. 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. V.; Alfred C. Coxe, Utica, N. Y.; Henry G. Ward, New York, N. Y.; Walter C. Noyes, New London, Conn. Third Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Lurton. Districts of New Jersey, Eastern Penn- sylvania, Middle Pennsylvania, Western Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Circuit Judges.—George Gray, Wilmington, Del.; Joseph Buffington, Pittsburg, Pa.; William M. Lanning, Trenton, N. J. Fourth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice White. Districts of Maryland, Northern West Virginia, Southern West Virginia, Fastern Virginia, Western Virginia, Eastern North Carolina, Western North Carolina, and South Carolina. Circuit Judges.—Nathan Goff, Clarksburg, W. Va.; Jeter C. Pritchard, Ashe- ville, N. C. Fifth Judicial Cirvcuit.—Mr. Justice Lamar. 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 Circnit.—Mr. Justice Harlan. Districts of Northern Ohio, Southern Ohio, Fastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Fastern Kentucky, Western Kentucky, Eastern Tennessee, Middle Tennessee, and Western Tennessee. Circuit Judges.—Henry F. Severens, Kalamazoo, Mich.; John W. Warrington, Cincinnati, Ohio; I,oyal E. Knappen, Grand Rapids, Mich. Seventh Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Day. Districts of Indiana, Northern Illinois, Fastern Illinois, Southern Illinois, Fastern Wisconsin, and Western Wisconsin. Circuit Judges.—Peter S. Grosscup, Chicago, Ill.; Francis E. Baker, Indianapolis, Ind.; William H. Seaman, Sheboygan, Wis.; Christian C. Kohlsaat, Chicago, El. Eighth Judicial Circuit.—Mr. Justice Van Devanter. Districts of Minnesota, Northern Iowa, Southern Iowa, Eastern Missouri, Western Missouri, Eastern Arkansas, Western Arkansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, Eastern Oklahoma, Western Oklahoma, Wyoming, Utah, and Territory of New Mexico. Circuit Judges.—Walter H. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn.; William C. Hook, Leaven- worth, Kans.; Elmer B. Adams, St. Louis, Mo.; Walter I. Smith, Council Bluffs, Towa. Ninth Judicial Cirvcuit.—DMr. Justice McKenna. Districts of Northern California, Southern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, Fastern Washington, 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 Champlain. Judge George W. Atkinson, 1600 Thirteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Archibald Hopkins, 1826 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant Clerk.—John Randolph, 28 I Street. Bailiff. —Fdward Keegin, 1208 S Street. 314 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES COMMERCE COURT. (Temporary offices, 1411 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 1170.) MARTIN AUGUSTINE KNAPP, presiding judge, was born in Stafford, N. Y., November 6, 1843; graduated from Wesleyan University in 1868; admitted to the bar at Syracuse, N. Y., in 1869; corporation counsel, 1877-1883; appointed to the Interstate Commerce Commission by President Harrison in 1891, reappointed by President Cleveland in 1897, and by President Roosevelt in 1902 and 1908; chairman of the commission from 1898, and as ex officio mediator under the Erdman Act par- ticipated in numerous negotiations for the settlement of railway labor disputes; appointed additional circuit judge by President Taft in December, 1910, and assigned to the United States Commerce Court for five years; assumed the duties of that office December 31, 1910; appointed mediator under amended law for two years from March 4, 1911. ROBERT WODROW ARCHBALD, associate judge, was born in Carbondale, Pa., September 10, 1848; graduated from Yale in 1871; admitted to the bar at Scran- ton, Pa., in 1873; elected additional law judge of Lackawanna County, Pa., in 1884; became president judge 1888; reelected 1894; appointed by President McKinley dis- trict judge of the newly created middle district of Pennsylvania 1gor; appointed additional circuit judge by President Taft in December, 1910, and assigned to the United States Commerce Court for four years; assumed the duties of that office Feb- ruary I, 1911. WILLIAM H. HUNT, associate judge, was born in New Orleans, La., November 5, 1857; educated at New Haven, Conn. ; lived in Montana since 1879; attorney gen- eral of Montana, 1885-1887; member Territorial legislature, 1888-89; State district judge, 1889-1894; judge of the Supreme Court of Montana, 1894-1900; secretary of Porto Rico, 1901-1904; United States district judge for Montana, 1904-1910; asso- ciate judge United States Court of Customs Appeals, 1910-11; appointed additional circuit judge by President Taft in December, 1910; assigned to United States Com- merce Court for three years, assuming office February 1, 1911. JOHN E. CARLAND, associate judge, was born in Oswego County, N. Y., in 1853; educated in the public schools; attended the law department of Ann Arbor Univer- sity; located at Bismarck, Dakota Territory, in 1877 and engaged in the practice of law; appointed attorney of the United States for Dakota Territory, 1885; appointed associate justice Supreme Court of Dakota Territory, 1888; in 1889 was elected a member of the constitutional convention which framed the constitution of North Dakota; appointed United States district judge for the district of South Dakota, 1896, held office till December 12, 1910, when appointed additional United States circuit judge, and designated to serve for two years on the United States Commerce Court. JULIAN W. MACK, associate judge, was born in San Francisco in 1866; gradu- ated from Harvard Law School in 1887 and University of Berlin and Leipzig in 1887-1890; admitted to the bar in 1890; professor of law of the Northwestern Uni- versity, 1895-1902, University of Chicago since 1902; Civil Service Commissioner, 1903; judge Circuit Court, Cook County, Ill., 1903; judge Juvenile Court, Chicago, 1904; judge Appellate Court first district of Illinois, 1909-1911; appointed additional United States circuit judge in December, 1910, and designated to serve for one year on the United States Commerce Court. RESIDENCES OF JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES COMMERCE COURT. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the § designates those whose daughters accompany them.] * Judge Knapp, Stoneleigh Court. * Judge Archbald. *t Judge Hunt, 1710 N Street. *+11 Judge Carland. * Judge Mack. OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COMMERCE COURT, Clevk.—George F. Snyder, The Champlain. Deputy Clervk.— Wilbur S. Hinman, 2700 Thirteenth Street, Marshal —F. Jerome Starek, 3211 Nineteenth Street. Deputy Marshal.—James 1,. Murphy, 1755 Kilbourne Place. Unated States Attorney’s Office. 315 COURT OF APPEALS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. (United States courthouse, Judiciary Square. Phone, Main 2856.) Chief Justice.—Seth Shepard, 1447 Massachusetts Avenue. Associate Justices.—Charles H. Robb, The Rochambeau; Josiah A. Van Orsdel, 2500 Ontario Road. Clerk.—H. W. Hodges, 2208 Q Street. Assistant Clerk.—Moncure Burke, 1810 Calvert Street. SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. (United States courthouse. 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, 1931 Sixteenth Street; Daniel Thew Wright, 2032 Sixteenth Street; Wendell P. Stafford, 1603 Irving Street. Retired Justice. —Alexander B. Hagner, 1818 H Street. Awd tor.—Iouis Addison Dent, 1304 Fairmont Street. Clerk.—John R. Young, 1522 R Street. JUDGES OF MUNICIPAL COURT. (315 John Marshall Place.) George C. Aukam, The Monticello. Charles S. Bundy, 1422 Irving Street. Thomas H. Callan, go8 H Street. Luke C. Strider, 1450 Rhode Island Avenue. Robert H. Terrell, 326 T Street. POLICE COURT. (Sixth and D Streets. Phone, Main 396.) Judges.—A. R. Mullowny, 1735 Oregon Avenue; James I. Pugh, 3402 Mount Pleasant Street. Clevk.—F. A. Sebring, 1209 Kenyon Street. Deputy Clerk.—N. C. Harper, 308 Fast 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 courthouse. Phones, Main 4950, 4951.) United States Attorney.—Clarence R. Wilson, 1707 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistants.—Charles H. Turner, 1322 Twelfth Street; James M. Proctor, Kensington, Md.; Reginald S. Huidekoper, 1614 Eighteenth Street; Ralph Given, 218 B Street SE; Stanton C. Peelle, The Concord. Special Assistants. —Jesse C. Adkins, 2321 First Street; James A. Cobb, 1911 Thir- teenth Street. 316 Congressional Darectory. UNITED STATES MARSHALS OFFICE. (United States courthouse. Phone, Main 2854.) United States Marshal.—Aulick Palmer, 1401 Belmont Street. Chief Office Deputy.—William B. Robison, The Imperial. REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF THE PROBATE COURT. (United States courthouse. Phone, Main 2840.) Register and Clerk.—James Tanner, 1733 P Street. Deputies. —Wm. Clark Taylor, 1400 Twenty-first Street; Michael J. Griffith, The Falcon, RECORDER OF DEEDS. (United States courthouse. Phone, Main 672.) Recorder of Deeds.—Henry 1incoln Johnson, 84 M Street SE. Deputy.—Robert W. Dutton, 1721 Kilbourne Place. 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 I,egation, 1230 Connecticut Avenue, Phone, North 3765.) Sefior Dr. Romulo S. Naon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. * + Sefior Jacinto L. Villegas, First Secretary and Chargé d’ Affaires. Sefior Don Eduardo Racedo, jr., Second Secretary, 2239 Q Street. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. (Office of the Embassy, 1304 Eighteenth Street. Phone, North 1120.) * Baron Hengelmiiller von Hengervar, Privy Councilor, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, 1305 Connecticut Avenue. * Chevalier von I,oewenthal-Iinau, Counselor, 1414 Twentieth Street. Commander Baron F. Preuschen von und zu Liebenstein, Naval Attaché, The Highlands. Count Felix von Brusselle-Schaubeck, First Secretary. (Absent.) Baron Demeter Hye, Second Secretary. (Absent. ) Count Elemer Pejacsevich, Attaché, Rauscher’s. Stephen Hedry de Hedri et de Genere Aba, Attaché, Rauscher’s. BELGIUM. (Office of the Legation, 1719 H Street. Phone, Main 7006.) * Count Conrad de Buisseret, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Charles Symon, Secretary of T.egation. Mr. Emile Casteur, Attaché. BOLIVIA. (Office of the Iegation, 1633 Sixteenth Street. Phone, North 1377.) * + Sefior Don Ignacio Calderon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. BRAZIL. (Office of the Embassy, 20 Lafayette Square. Phone, Main 5136.) * Mr. R. de Lima e Silva, Counselor and Chargé d’ Affaires, The Woodward. #1deut. Col. A.'V. de Pederneiras, Artillery Corps, Military Attaché. (Absent.) * Lieut. Commander D. R. Marques de Azevedo, Naval Attaché, Stoneleigh Court. Mr. Gustavo de Vianna-Kelsch, Second Secretary, Rauscher’s. Mr. J. F. de Barros Pimentel, Second Secretary, 20 Lafayette Square. Mr. F. de Barros Cavalcanti de Lacerda, Second Secretary, Rauscher’s. CHILE. (Office of the Iegation, 1104 Vermont Avenue, Phone, North 6969.) Sefior Don Alberto Yoacham, First Secretary and Chargé d’ Affairee ad interim, 1104 Vermont Avenue. Capt. Arturo Cuevas, Naval Attaché. Sefior Don Alejandro Herquinigo, Second Secretary, The Bachelor. CHINA. (Office of the Legation, 2001 Nineteenth Street. Phone, North 138.) * Mr. Chang Yin Tang, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. * Mr. Henry K. Chang. #* Mr. Yung Kwai, First Secretary, 2021 Kalorama Road. Mr. Chung Wen Pang, Second Secretary. 317 318 oe Congressional Directory. Mr. Liang Iean Fang, Second Secretary. (Absent.) Mr. Wu. Chang, Attaché. : Mr. Yuan Ko-shuan, Attaché. Mr. Tan Yao Fen, Attaché. Mr. Chiao Chung Tan, Attaché. Mr. Lu Ping Tien, Interpreter. COLOMBIA. (Office of the Legation, The Portland. Phone, North 1550.) * SQefior Don Francisco de P. Borda, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo-- tentiary. Sefior Don Roberto MacDouall, First Secretary of Legation. *Sefior Don Juan Antonio Riafio, Second Secretary. COSTA RICA. (Office of the I,egation, 1329 Kighteenth Street. Phone, North 1191.) *t1 Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary, 1329 Fighteenth street. CUBA. (Office of the Legation, The Parkwood. Phone, Main 2430.) * Sefior di Rivero, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Sixteenth and T Streets. * Sefior Don Arturo Padré y Almeida, First Secretary and Chargé d’Affaires, The Brighton. DENMARK. (Office of the I,egation, 2622 Sixteenth Street. Phone, Columbia 316.) * Count Moltke, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. (Office of the Legation, The Parkwood.) *Sefior Don Emilio C. Joubert, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Stoneleigh Court. ECUADOR. (Office of the Iegation, The Arlington. Phone, Main 2550.) Sefior Doctor Don Rafael Maria Arizaga, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Pleni- potentiary. Sefior Don Alfredo Flores y Caamafio, First Secretary. Sefior Don Carlos Cordovez, Second Secretary. Sefior Don Rafael Florencio Arizaga, Attaché. Sefior Don Daniel Cordova Toral, Attaché. FRANCE. (Office of the Embassy, 2460 Sixteenth Street. Phone, Columbia 828.) * Mr. J. J. Jusserand, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. * Mr. Lefévre-Pontalis, Counselor, The Highlands. *Iieut. Commander Benoist d’Azy, Naval Attaché, The Highlands. * Capt. de Chambrun, Artillery Corps, Military Attaché, 1629 Sixteenth Street. * Mr. de Peretti de la Rocca, First Secretary, 2005 Columbia Road. Mr. Tailhand, Third Secretary (Absent.) GERMANY. (Office of the Embassy, 1435 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, North 7200, 72CT.) *1 Count J. H. von Bernstorff, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. * Mr. Haniel von Haimhausen, Counselor of Embassy. Commander Retzmann, Naval Attaché. Maj. von Herwarth, Military Attaché, 1105 Sixteenth Street. ; Baron von Heyl zu Herrnsheim, LL. D., Second Secretary. (Absent. } Mr. A. C. Horstmann, Third Secretary, 1812 N Street. Count Pourtales, Attaché, The Portland. Baron von Hardenbroek, Attaché, The Bachelor. Mr. R. C. Coester, Attaché, Embassies and Legations to the Unated Slates. 319 GREAT BRITAIN. (Office of the Embassy, 1300 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, North 124.) * Right Hon. James Bryce, O. M., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Mr. Alfred Mitchell Innes, Counselor of Embassy, 1825 Twenty-fourth Street. Capt. C. F. G. Sowerby, R. N., Naval Attaché, 1915 N Street. * Lieut. Col. J. O. McLachlan, Military Attaché, 1915 N Street. * Mr. G. Young, M. V. O., First Secretary, 2009 Columbia Road. *Mr. H. W. Kennard, Second Secretary, 2023 Hillyer Place. ¥ Mr. Esmond Ovey, M. V. O., Second Secretary. (Absent.) Lord Eustace Percy, Attaché, 1266 New Hampshire Avenue. Mr. William G. C. Gladstone, Honorary Attaché, 1266 New Hampshire Avenne. GREECE. (Office of the Iegation, 2122 California Avenue. Phone, North 3496.) * Mr. L. A. Coromilas, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Mr. I. IL. Coftanzoglu, Chargé d’ Affaires. GUATEMATLA. (Office of the Legation, 4 Stone Street, New York City.) *Sefior Dr. Don Luis Toledo Herrarte, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo- tentiary. (Absent.) Sefior Dr. Ramon Bengoechea, Secretary of Legation and Chargé d’ Affaires, 2—4 Stone Street, New York City. HAITI. (Office of the I,egation, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Phone, North 380.) *Mr. H. Pauleus Sannon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Edgar N. Numa, Secretary of I.egation. HONDURAS. (Office of the Iegation, 1830 Columbia Road. Phone, Columbia 190.) Dr. Luis Lazo A., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Gen. Juan FE. Paredes, Envoy Fxtraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, on special mission. Dr. Guillermo Moncada, Secretary of Legation, 66 Beaver Street, New York City. | ; 3 ITALY. | (Office of the Embassy, 1.400 New Hampshire Avenue.) | *{ Marchese Cusani Confalonieri, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. Nobile Lazzaro dei Marchesi Negrotto Cambiaso, Counselor, Rauscher’s. Signor Roberto Centaro, Second Secretary, 1143 Connecticut Avenue. Signor Augusto Rosso, Attaché. * Lieut. Commander Carlo Pfister, Naval Attaché, The Brighton. Signor G. B. Ceccato, Commercial Delegate. JAPAN. (Office of the Embassy, 1310 N Street. Phone, North 381.) * Baron Yasuya Uchida, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, 1321 K Street. * Mr. Keishiro Matsui, Counselor, 2131 Bancroft Place. : Mr. Masanao Hanihara, First Secretary. (Absent.) Mr. Seiichi Takahashi, Third Secretary. * Mr. Nobumori Osaki, Third Secretary, The Champlain. Mr. Nagakagé Okabé, Attaché. Commander Tokutaro Hiraga, I. J. N., Naval Attaché, The Champlain. Lieut. Col. Kazutsugu Inouye, I. J.-A., Military Attaché, The Portland MEXICO. (Office of the Kmbassy, K Street and McPherson Square. Phone, Main 5031.) Sefior Manuel M. de Zamacona, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. * Sefior Don Carlos Pereyra, First Secretary. Sefior Don German Biille, Second Secretary. Sefior Don A. Algara R. de Terreros, Second Secretary. (Absent. ) Sefior Don Ricardo Huerta, Third Secretary. Sefior Don M. Armendériz del Castillo, Third Secretary, 320 Congressional Directory. . NETHERLANDS. (Office of the Iegation, 1901 F Street. Phone, Main 5887.) * Jonkheer J. Loudon, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Jonkheer H. M. van Weede, Secretary of Legation. Jonkheer W. H. de Beaufort, Attaché. NICARAGUA. (Office of the Legation, Stoneleigh Court. Phone, Main 2270.) * Sefior Dr. Don Salvador Castrillo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary Sefior Dr. Don Joaquin Cuadra Zavalo, Secretary. NORWAY. (Office of the Iegation, 1737 H Street. Phone, Main 4960.) * Mr. H. H. Bryn, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. I. Aubert, Secretary of Legation. Mr. Wilhelm Thorleif de Munthe de Morgenstierne, Attaché, 1737 H Street. PANAMA. (Office of the Legation, The Portland.) Dr. Belisario Porras, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. *Sefior Juan Brin, Secretary of Legation, The Woodward. Sefior José Guillermo Batalla, Attaché. PERSIA. (Office of the Legation, 1832 Sixteenth Street. Phone, North 2720.) Gen. Morteza, Khan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) * Mirza Ali Kuli, Khan, Chargé d’Affaires ad interim. : PERU. (Office of the Legation, 2223 R Street. Phone, North 5916.) * Mr. Felipe Pardo, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2223 R Street. Mr. Manuel de Freyre y Santander, First Secretary, 1737 H Street. PORTUGAL. (Office of the I egation, 2017 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, North 6981.) Viscount de Alte, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 2017 Massa- chusetts Avenue. Mr. d’Arenas de Lima, Secretary. (Absent.) RUSSIA. (Address of Embassy, 1634 I Street. Phone, Main 2714.) *f Baron Rosen, Master of the Imperial Court, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Prince Nicolas Koudacheff, Chamberlain to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, Counselor of Embassy and Chargé d’ Affaires, 824 Eighteenth Street. * Mr. Gregory Wilenkin, Financial Attaché. (Absent.) * Col. Baron de Bode, Military Attaché, 1816 N Street. * Commander Vassilieff, Naval Attaché, 2115 Bancroft Place. Mr. Constantin Nabokoff, Gentleman in Waiting to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, First Secretary, Rauscher’s. Mr. de Thal, Gentleman in Waiting to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, Second Secretary. (Absent.) ; Mr. I. Dmitrow, Second Secretary, 1634 I Street. * Mr. B. de Struve, Attaché, 1731 I Street. SALVADOR. (Legation in charge of Minister of Costa Rica, 1329 Eighteenth Street.) *1 + Sefior Don Federico Mejia, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) J. Gustavo Guerrero, Secretary of Legation. (Absent.) RI a § { RAY arm — bi Embassies and Legations to the United States. 321 SIAM. (Address of the Legation, The Arlington. Phone, Main 2550.) Phya Akharaj Varadhara, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. * Mr. Edward H. Loftus, First Secretary, The Arlington. Nai Choate, Attaché. Nai Jajaval, Student Attaché. SPAIN. (Office of the Legation, 1519 New Hampshire Avenue.) * Sefior Don Juan Riafio y Gayangos, Chamberlain to His Majesty the King of Spain, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, 1521 New Hampshire Avenue. Sefior Don Francisco de Zea Bermudez, First Secretary. (Absent.) Sefior Don Manuel Walls y Merino, Second Secretary, 1519 New Hampshire Avenue. * Lieutenant Colonel of the General Staff Don Nicolas Urcullu y Cereijo, Military Attaché, The Toronto. SWEDEN, (Office of the Tegation, 1711 H Street. Phone, Main 3736.) Count Albert Ehrensviard, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Grafton. * Mr. W. A. F. Ekengren, Counselor of Legation, 1304 Connecticut Avenue. SWITZERLAND. (Office of the I,egation, 2013 Hillyer Place. Phone, North 3242.) * Dr. Paul Ritter, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. Mr. Henri Martin, Secretary of Legation, Rauscher’s. TURKEY. (Address of the Embassy, 1711 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, North 3842.) VYoussouf Zia Pacha, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary. R. Raif Bey, Counselor of Embassy. Capt. H. Wassif Bey, Naval Attaché. * Abdul Hak Hussein Bey, First Secretary. * Ibrahim Zia Bey, Second Secretary. URUGUAY. (Office of the Legation, 1737 H Street.) #1 Dr. Luis Melian ILafinur, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) Dr. Alfredo de Castro, First Secretary and Chargé d’Affaires. VENEZUELA. (Address of Legation, 1017 Sixteenth Street. Phone, Main 7417.) Sefior Don P. Ezequiel Rojas, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary. * Sefior Dr. Don Esteban Gil-Borges, First Secretary, 1343 Monroe Street. Sefior Don Pedro Elias Aristeguieta, Attaché, ro17 Sixteenth Street. 322 Congressional Directory. EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES. ABVSSINIA, ——— ———, Minister Resident and Consul General, Adis Ababa. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Charles H. Sherrill, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Buenos Aires. 2 Robert Woods Bliss, Secretary of Legation, Buenos Aires. Commander Albert P. Niblack, Naval Attaché, Buenos Aires. Lieut. John S. Hammond, Military Attaché, Buenos Aires. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Richard C. Kerens, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Vienna. Joseph C. Grew, Secretary of Embassy, Vienna. M. Marshall Langhorne, Second Secretary of Embassy, Vienna. Commander Andrew T. Long, Naval Attaché, Rome. Maj. William H. Allaire, Military Attaché, Vienna. BELGIUM. Charles Page Bryan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Brussels. U. Grant-Smith, Secretary of I.egation, Brussels. Maj. T. Bentley Mott, Military Attaché, Paris. BOLIVIA. Horace G. Knowles, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, La Paz. , Secretary of Legation, La Paz. BRAZIL. Irving B. Dudley, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro. George B. Rives, Secretary of Embassy, Rio de Janeiro. Arthur Orr, Second Secretary of Embassy, Rio de Janeiro. Commander Albert P. Niblack, Naval Attaché, Buenos Aires. CHILE. Henry P. Fletcher, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Santiago. Seth Low Pierrepont, Secretary of Legation, Santiago. Commander Albert P. Niblack, Naval Attaché, Buenos Aires. First Lieut. Francis A. Ruggles, Military Attaché, Santiago. CHINA. William James Calhoun, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Peking. Lewis Einstein, Secretary of Legation, Peking. Charles D. Tenney, Chinese Secretary, Peking. Percival Heintzleman, Second Secretary of Legation, Peking. Willys R. Peck, Assistant Chinese Secretary, Peking. Capt. John H. Shipley, Naval Attaché, Tokyo. Capt. James H. Reeves, Military Attaché, Peking. Capt. Thomas Holcomb, jr., Attaché, Peking. First Lieut. Epaminondas I. Bigler, Attaché, Peking. COLOMBIA. , Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bogota. Arthur Hugh Frazier, Secretary of Legation, Bogota. COSTA RICA. William I,. Merry, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, San José. Gustavus L. Monroe, jr., Secretary of Legation, San José. CUBA. John B. Jackson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Habana. Charles D. White, Secretary of Legation, Habana. Norval Richardson, Second Secretary of Legation, Habana. Maj. Henry A. Barber, Military Attaché, Habana. | = Embassies and Legations of the United States. 323 DENMARK. Maurice Francis Egan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Copen- hagen. William K. Wallace, Secretary of Legation, Copenhagen. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, William W. Russell, Minister Resident and Consul General, Santo Domingo. Francis Munroe Endicott, Secretary of Legation, Santo Domingo. ECUADOR. Williams C. Fox, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Quito. Rutherfurd Bingham, Secretary of Legation, Quito. First Lieut. Constant Cordier, Military Attaché, Lima. FRANCE, Robert Bacon, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Paris. Arthur Bailly-Blanchard, Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Sheldon Whitehouse, Second Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Warren D. Robbins, Third Secretary of Embassy, Paris. Lieut. Commander Henry H. Hough, Naval Attaché, Paris. Maj. T. Bentley Mott, Military Attaché, Paris. GERMAN EMPIRE. , Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Berlin. Irwin B. Laughlin, Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. Jordan Herbert Stabler, Second Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. Perry Belden, Third Secretary of Embassy, Berlin. Lieut. Commander Frederick A. Traut, Naval Attaché, Berlin. Capt. Samuel G. Shartle, Military Attaché, Berlin. GREAT BRITAIN. Whitelaw Reid, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, London. William Phillips, Secretary of Embassy, London. Leland Harrison, Second Secretary of Embassy, London. Sheldon I. Crosby, Third Secretary of Embassy, London. Commander Edward Simpson, Naval Attaché, London. Maj. Stephen L’H. Slocum, Military Attaché, London. GREECE AND MONTENEGRO. George H. Moses, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Athens. Frederic Ogden de Billier, Secretary of Legation, Athens. GUATEMALA. R. S. Reynolds Hitt, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Guatemala. Charles Campbell, jr., Secretary of Legation, Guatemala. Maj. Wallis O. Clark, Military Attaché, Guatemala. HAITI. Henry W. Furniss, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Port au Prince, HONDURAS, Fenton R. McCreery, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Teguci- galpa. J. Butler Wright, Secretary of Legation, Tegucigalpa. ITALY. John G. A. Leishman, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Rome, Charles 5. Wilson, Secretary of Embassy, Rome. Alexander R. Magruder, Second Secretary of Embassy, Rome. Commander Andrew T. Long, Naval Attaché, Rome. Maj. J. F. Reynolds Landis, Military Attaché, Rome, 84259°—62-1—18T ED—22 5 324 Congressional Directory. JAPAN. Thomas J. O’Brien, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Tokyo. Montgomery Schuyler, jr., Secretary of Embassy, Tokyo. George T. Summerlin, Second Secretary of Embassy, Tokyo. : Charles Jonathan Arnell, Japanese Secretary and Interpreter, Tokyo. , Third Secretary of Embassy, Tokyo. John K. Caldwell, Assistant Japanese Secretary, Tokyo. Capt. John H. Shipley, Naval Attaché, Tokyo. Maj. Harry L. Hawthorne, Military Attaché, Tokyo. Capt. Harry H. Pattison, Attaché, Tokyo. First 1ieut. Nicholas W. Campanole, Attaché, Tokyo. First Lieut. William T. Hoadley, Attaché, Tokyo. Second Lieut. James G. McIlroy, Attaché, Tokyo. Second Lieut. George V. Strong, Attaché, Tokyo. Ensign George E. Lake, Attaché, Tokyo. Ensign Fred F. Rogers, Attaché, Tokyo. LIBERIA. William D. Crum, Minister Resident and Consul General, Monrovia. Richard C. Bundy, Secretary of Iegation, Monrovia. First Lieut. Benjamin O. Davis, Military Attaché, Monrovia. THE NETHERLANDS AND LUXEMBURG. Arthur M. Beaupré, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, The Hague. Paxton Hibben, Secretary of Legation, The Hague. MEXICO. Henry Lane Wilson, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Mexico. Fred Morris Dearing, Secretary of Embassy, Mexico. Nelson O'Shaughnessy, Second Secretary of Embassy, Mexico. Frank D. Arnold, Third Secretary of Embassy, Mexico. Capt. Girard Sturtevant, Military Attaché, Mexico. MOROCCO. Fred W. Carpenter, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Tangier. Cyrus F. Wicker, Secretary of Legation, Tangier. NICARAGUA, Elliott Northcott, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Managua. Franklin Mott Gunther, Secretary of Legation, Managua. NORWAY. Laurits S. Swenson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Christiania. Charles B. Curtis, Secretary of Legation; Christiania. First Lieut. William M. Colvin, Military Attaché, Stockholm. PANAMA. Thomas C. Dawson, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Panama. William W. Andrews, Secretary of Legation, Panama. PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY. Edwin V. Morgan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Montevideo. A. Campbell Turner, Secretary of Legation, Montevideo. First Lieut. John S. Hammond, Military Attaché, Montevideo. PERSIA. Charles W. Russell, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Teheran. Edward Bell, Secretary of Legation, Teheran. John Tyler, Interpreter, Teheran. PERU. H. Clay Howard, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lima, William P. Cresson, Secretary of Legation, Lima. Lieut. Constant Cordier, Military Attaché, Lima. Embassies and Legations of the United States. 325 PORTUGAL. Edwin V. Morgan, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Lisbon. George I. Lorillard, Secretary of Legation, Lisbon. ROUMANTIA, SERVIA, AND BULGARIA. John R. Carter, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bucharest. Roland B. Harvey, Secretary of Legation and Consul General, Bucharest. RUSSIA. Curtis Guild, jr., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg. George Post Wheeler, Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg. Alexander Benson, Second Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg. Frederick A. Sterling, Third Secretary of Embassy, St. Petersburg. Lieut. Commander Henry H. Hough, Naval Attaché, Paris. Capt. Nathan K. Averill, Military Attaché, St. Petersburg. SALVADOR. William Heimké, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, San Salvador, Thomas Ewing Dabney, Secretary of Legation and Consul General, San Salvador. SIAM. Hamilton King, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Bangkok. G. Cornell Tarler, Secretary of Legation and Consul General, Bangkok. Leng Hui, Interpreter, Bangkok. SPAIN. Henry Clay Ide, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Madrid. Gustave Scholle, Secretary of Legation, Madrid. SWEDEN. Charles H. Graves, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Stockholm, Henry Coleman May, Secretary of Legation, Stockholm. First Lieut. William M. Colvin, Military Attaché, Stockholm. SWITZERLAND. Henry S. Boutell, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Berne. James G. Bailey, Secretary of Legation, Berne. TURKEY. William Woodville Rockhill, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, Con- stantinople. Hoffman Philip, Secretary of Embassy, Constantinople. John H. Gregory; jr., Second Secretary of Embassy, Constantinople. William Walker Smith, Third Secretary of Embassy. A. A. Gargiulo, Interpreter, Constantinople. Egypt. Peter Augustus Jay, Agent and Consul General, Cairo. VENEZUELA. John W. Garrett, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, Caracas, Jefferson Caffery, Secretary of Legation, Caracas, 326 Congressional Directory. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS. CONSULS GENERAL AT LARGE. Name. Salary Ceorge Hl. Murphy.«... c.count i SiC hosed aaa $5, 000 For North America, including Mexico and the Bermudas. Meming DD, Cheshire: .. Lins oor irn. to heise crmmsis ms Bo sorts noite etl 5000 For eastern Asia, including the Straits Settlements, Australia, Oceania, and the islands of the Pacific. Charles C. BEberhmrdti i000 svi Jocnioaon Dill Lois SE 0 5, 000 For South America, Central America, the West Indies, and Curacao. : Alfred, WM. Gotlschall cosirtat sth 55 Sdoniif iadibide. Sinem ot aesilts 5, 000 For Furopean Russia, the Balkan States, Greece, Asia Minor, Persia, India (as far as the western frontier of the Straits Settlements), and Africa. Heaton W. Hairs, i Ee Ce a ev i os 5, 000 For Hurope, excepting Huropean Russia, the Balkan States, and Greece. ABYSSINIA—BEILGIUM. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary, ABYSSINIA. Adis Ababa... . he na Rie, .+.| Consul general........... $3, 500 0 obozointuiste nls sila. oie wis hole slate one Guy R. Love RAR Vice and deputy consul general |......... ARGENTINE REPUBLIC : Buenos Aires ............. Richard M.Bartleman| Consul general........... 4, 500 YO rar vs a Charles I,yon Chandler.| Vice and deputy cousul general |......... 10 EL Bly Baylor... Lr kins Deputy consul general’... Sf. ais, SR Ra LT Charles Lyon Chandler. .| Consularagent................. 1, 000 Rosario ........ te Henry P. Coffin..... Comsul.. icv oiiis 2, 500 pe By i PR Thomas B. Van Horne...| Viceand deputyconsul.........|......... Santa He... oir. livid George C. Norman....... AEN. vii any iuie i dele es emivinin nln] sinisiss vais AUSTRIA-HUNGARY Budapest, Hungary ...... Panl Nashi i000 .| Consul general. .... a 3, 500 an ee Frank KE. Mallett........| Vice and deputy consul general ATi EE er MR ee Hugh Kemeny...........| Deputy consul general.. UE Te rats Carlsbad, Austria. Will 1,. Lowrie ..... Consul». i. iii 3, 000 rR ene Ihe Robert C. Boesel.........| Vice and deputy consul........ aE Fiume Hungary... 0. 0%, Clarence Rice Slocom! Consul, 7. 00 10 .| 3,500 eS Re eS Attilio J. Clementi.......| Vice and deputy consul ........[......... Prague, Avglein, oo Joseph d.:Brittain. “2 {iConsul x22 0 on ih 0A 3, 500 TE TL OL PT Th A Arnold Weissberger .....| Vice and deputy consul........|......... Reichenbors, Angtria.. ... William J. Pike. .... Consul 1. Liv eniliniii, SR ea Joseph P., Burg...........| Vice and deputy consul Trieste, Austria... ..... .. George M. Hotschick Conall or a EB a TAIN Orestes de Martini....., el ICE ICONSNY an LL a Ere Sa Se Vincent Buresiiios =. 4 2.1 Deputy consul. ......ucoeinenns Vieuns, Austria. 0.0 Charles Denby...... Consul general RE A SR SN Robert W. Heingartner..| Viceand deputy consul general |......... BELGIUM Antwerp... Henry W. Diederich.| Consul general........... , 500 DO. es area Harry Tuck Sherman ...| Viceanddeputy consul general] NE Bragsele- o. 0 lU Ethelbert Watts. .... Consul general...’ .. .... , 500 el eR Sa Gregory Phelan .........| Viceanddeputy consul general ......... Dot So ek Maurice Gerbeault ...... Deputy consuligeneral.........1......... Ghent... o.oo. William P. Atwell. Consul... .......... 3, 000 BO: sh aaah Julius A. Van Hee ....... Viceand deputy consul ........I........ Ydege. .. vi. Henry Abert Johnson | Consul... 0.0... i LF 3, 000 Alexander P, Cruger..... Vice and deputy consul ,........ [asarives United States Consular Officers. 327 BRAZIL—CHINA. Office Officer. Rank. Salary. BRAZIL, Bahin.......... a= Southard P. Warner: Consul ...,.............i $4, coco DIOL sient RS IN Omar KE. Mueller........ Vice and deputy consul.........J. ol... Bara... vn George WH; Pickerelltl Consul... ..... ces 4, 000 DE et a ae SR) Julius Weinberger....... Vice and deputy-consul ....... .|..0 PO nl ae ns William RB. Cox: i. = Deputyconsul... ... oun mii nnn MAMAS us savas iv John H. Hamilton... ..... Agent. asain hansen paRi Maranhfio.. ooo Joaquim MA. dosSantosl Agent .............. oo ELL Pernambuen. ..- =... 0 BP Merrill Grithtlh.. Consul... 2... =. 4, 000 BO, vad em ds Sas Enrique Bachilleres ..... Vice and deputy consul... .... JX 050 08 Beard 20 Len eS Antonio E. da Frota..... i NE eee Ei ren PS IMRCEIO iia. so 1 Een George Simpson) AGEOEEE. toi iivie i vans auns cons brndt Nataly... oe ani Henry J. Green.......... YOON RI INS Se Se RR Late Rio de Janeiro ........... Julius G. Tay ....... Consul-zeneral........... 8, ooo 1 RT RR Si Joseph]. Slechia:.....cu. Viceand deputy consul general |......... DO cans tan vans rei Ross; Js Hazeltine...... «» Deputy consul’ gereral.........[......... RR re Ree Brank CG. Lewis. ....cvs Deputy consul general.........|.. DO. Fen he idee Ross. J..Hazeltine. .......: Conisularagent .. i... 0 nn oa, Victoria. ls Jean Zinzen ............. Aen, A SE A NS Santos Lie Jay White .. ......:. Consul, 5... ambi 4, 000 IB) Pe ER RR William H. Fawrenee ...p Viceconsull. .......0.. ane. TPO. sis mii ve as we James 'W, Reeves... .....|- Vice and deputy consul ...... un. oan. Rio Grande do Suli.e... lus Jonge Vereker.....iivain 7A Ee AR I Hn SHER ANIO ein William. RB. Tee.......h. AGC. col iis san ee ella he CHILE TQulqne Liosvins dnapsivs sion Rea-Hanna .....en0 Command. ois voids na 3, 000 Re a Ee Edward E. Muecke ...... Viceiand deputy consul .......ufi comin. Antofagastac.......... ene. DavideBladr. oo. cencil BE Agenthill. .. 0. i ier et a ESS ee LE Se Tomas; Bradley .............- TNL ee Se Punta Arenas............ John E. Rowen ..... @onsall. aa 3, 000 D0 soc s via vin ein ven o Harold Edward Stubbs. .| Vice and deputy. consul ....... Sassi Is Volpazaiso Sia SRR Alfred A. Winslow: .[i@onsulf. .:..... .. ........° 4, 500 RR Te as RG Charles FiBaker........| Vice and deputy consul... ...o jus: 0: ea Fl tail Se a nh John Thomas Morong...| Agent. ........... on Saul on... Coquimbo ......... 5 cvs Andrew err... 000 ACER Fr. a a Lr Ralcahano r= Tri athe, Joseph O. Smith... ACCENT. oh ciiventriintit ain te artes Ahi CHINA BMOT ALi, vo m0 Iu Julean’/H. Arnold iiiConsall. ............. is 4, 500 Ee eR er pr Sr Charles F. Brissel. ....... Vice and deputy consul... Ja oil on ry TR a SE Charles F. Brissel........ Marshaluor i. oi asad 1, 000 Antunge sou aa B. Carleton Baker... Consul, ,........ 57). 2, 500 EVE en Te Se ee i i Leo Allen Bergholz..| Consul genersl........... 5, 500 I aS LL Oe Ser Hamilton Butler......... Vice and deputy consul general | ......... OE Ekin Cosi nonin Sen Horace J. Dickinson oa hiMarshall. oo. 0. ho iv eas 1, 000 1B TR EN SIE Hamilton: Butler.......0. Interpreters. Sov oi aes 1, 500 Chelona rin John Fowler... ... ..: ONS. Lun ha 4, 500 10 re RR PR Ed Ce John. Viney... ..0.0. 0 Viceandideputy consul... ......] s8iiL.. DR EE eT EA William H. Tenney...... Mavshall. «cc. oo hoi aii aan 1, 000 Teinanfi,. . oan inns ea oth sash ves adn Aes Agental. tl ol i aS Cuniighing ee sil Albert W. Pontius Comsulll... .............0n5 3, 500 Rtg dE SR SRA PE Lo FR ER Le Vice’and deputy consul ...... FALL 0. Porte RE ee Samuel L. Gracey . Conga’. 01007 rar anon 4, 500 MRA rahe re tT Thomas P. Thompson...| Vice and deputy consul ........|......... DOF hiviie sive + IER IIHR Thomas P. Thompson:..| Marshall... ... ............. 0. 1, 000 Hanltow.. . vc va Robert Brent Mosher] Consul general........... 4, 500 15 Spadina sau sad gna ae ig Nelson I. Johnson....... Vice and deputy consul general RAs 10 LRA BE SAS ce DUNE Enrique Hermida ....... Marshal er. a 750 1 ARC IE LS SEE Nelson T. Johnson....... Interpreter. cia oes anv yuan 1, 500 Harbin... aa Roger S.i Greene... Consul, iL vaio. n, 4, 000 Mokden................. Fred D. Fisher. ..... Consul general, . 5... 4, 500 DO annie oe ieee PEE RE a Vice and deputy consul general {......... DO. neni Sanstiein i ads M.. GCG. Paulkner....... a Marshal tr. oo hae I, 000 Dos... BE ERR ETE ERE PP Interpreter..................... 1, 500 Banking... o.oo. 0 Wilbur: T. Graceyl...-Consttl ............ J. i cen 4, 000 DO i ene saat eh Alvin W: Gilbert:...js:xx¢ Vicesand deputy consul ..... ..0... 05... Newchwang ..... EEE William P. Kent. [i Consuls. . wiv. Ji... Joan 4, 500 LE PR TSR PN er Clarence KE. Sargent ..... Viceanddeputyconsul.........~L 500 Do REE ST Fs thet tlie Clarence KE. Sargent..... Marshals. 05 ol Ln 1, 000 i a Se a IR i eri foal Sa, Interpreter. od nL Ns eae I, 500 Shanghai Ra a ‘Amos P. Wilder. . . . . Consul general... .....,. 8, ooo ERAN RS ee an W. Roderick Dorsey..... Vice and deputy consul general |......... D0uics coron or cxtenie ban sets J. Paul Jameson.:....... Vice and deputy consul generall.... ..... 328 Congressional Directory. CHINA—DENMARK AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. CHINA—continued. Shanghai ............ 2. Frank W, Hadley........ Viceiconsul general ........... lL cid h Do oo ens win Thaddeus C. White...... Deputy consul general ......... he D0. ne John XK. i Davis..i.w5..; Deputy consul general. ........|..-. DO. Gea hmv Esson M. Gale........... Deputy-consul general... ... {een =. . Do... ‘Thaddeus. C. White... {-Marshal i. 0. ooo Lo oniis $1, 000 Do. oo caso neh Frank W. Hadley........ Interpreter... one ovr, vv 2, 000 Do on a a J. Paul Jameson... .s..... - Inferpreter. cna. occu 1, 500 Do. oie Hsson M. Gale...........| Interpreter... ..............ooooufeeen iin Swatow Charles X¥,. I, Wil- Consul... ............ 2, 500 liams. MONTSI — Samuel S. Knaben- | Consul general........... 5, 500 shue. Doct Myr] S.-Myers........-.. Vice and deputy consul general |......... 0: i oh aan Se Charles Henry Williams.| Deputy consul general.........[.... cue. re Em Shi CharlesHenry Williams! "Marshal .... io oi acsss I, 000 Doh ra Val MyrlS: Myers... ou) Interpreters... .. = isos 1,500 DO rs ho smd ee AREAS Hubert G. Baugh ........ Interpreter... ... vive. A ps pa Te COLOMBIA Barranquilla Es Cee TN AS TR Ee NE Consul ER le SR PS 3, 500 00. so a ae Albro 1, Burnell...... A Vice:and deputy consul... ail iin. Medellin. i orb aon Silas H. Wright SRE a Agent ii. ol oo asada tals Santa Marla... oc. ici ‘William x Prout... Agent... ir Ces css asl er .. Bogotd..... i... ciao ean ie aes Consul general... ... 3, 500 os Ln rik he Charles H. Small...... Viceand deputy consul general |......... Bucaramanga .. Loli Gustave Volkman ....... Foi ASRS eae Ale cr a a eek Edward H. Mason...... Agentiil, ...o..viciie Sepia tiie ETI ele re a SB [SR SR Te Fp SS ge ah A Lr Honda. io ir a JohnOwen .... i cei. Agents... coi. ion ove sib Nie eileen Cartagena... ....... ue; Charles 1... Latham. .Consul.. .. oc... ......... 2, 000 PO fs an ie William B. MacMaster ..| Vice and deputy consul.........|......... COSTA RICA Port Limon. ............. Chester Donaldson Consul ..................; 2, 500 EL A SL Re Ny Henry O. Haston ...h.. .% Vice and deputy consul... o..e..f. ....... andesé. ooo inn Samuel T, Lee. ..... Consul 1. oii ails 3, 000 Boo a as Hdgar J. Hitchcock...... Viceand deputy consul....i...[...S5a0k Punta Arenas .- hv Leon A. Marquez......... TLE) Tp SE Ee er Se BUS CUBA Cienfuegos =... ... 0.00 Max J. Baehr:. 0.0.0 Consul... ais 4, 500 Do... Er ae LT Buenaventura Carbo ....| Vice and deputy consul ........|......... Cajbarien .... i ose PB. Anderson J... 00 FY Re RA BRE PE Sr NACVIIAS ices iis Dean Ri Wood... . ual LSE A RE ee Er RR a Fn Pe Le Sagua la Grande............ JohniE. Jova......... 5" Agenbii:. i iio i env nia ven] sama Hobana... oenaiaans James Linn Rodgers. Consul generals..... .. 8, ooo DO: isa iiss srr Joseph A. Springer...... Vice and deputy consul general |. ... . DO i ve eas Henyy P. Starrett. .....o.n Deputy consul generals. on SER Cardenas... la Pedro M. Mederos....... Agent a a heii Maianzas. .. cuore nln Alfred Heydrich......... ATONE, on. ese ay rae Nueva Gerona, Isle of Pines.|’ Vervie P. Sutherland....| Agent.......... cocoon finan Santiago deCuba........ Ross E. Halidny. Consuls... 4, 500 TL i RI a Henry M. Wolcott... ...| Viceand deputy consul........|[......... Ao Nae pe el Bae STS George Bayliss NY lanks Agent. rh lr sii nr aE Baracoa rhe Arthur Field Lindley... .l2Agent voi viv ies oaiineids Manzanillo. onan Francis B. Bertot........ To eR RR Fe re i DENMARK AND DOMIN- IONS. Copenhagen re EE Ua Te SOR cones Consul general... ....... 3, 000 Savas aE EEA a Victor Juhler ............| Viceand deputy consul general |......... RTE Es Sane Axel Permin. ............[ Deputy consul’generalk......... 55. St. Thomas, Wiel ooo, Christopher HH: Payne! Consul’... ooo oo 3, 000 dyer EY Julius:-N. Lerentzen.. ....[ Viceand deputy consul........ . |» ... =... 4, 000 iy met hh a Ee eh Louis'D. Fdwards ...... | Vice and deputy consul ... .... Ju. ..0 Mi rid Saxony..| W. Bruce Wallace....... ET LR eg gu i Stettin, Prussia... ...... .. William. C.'' Teich~-{ Consul’... i... 2%siei3s 2, 500 mann. Te I Ee SR en Emil Schmidt. ... 0k Viceiand deputy consul.........[. 50... Danzig, Prussia «.vovesesss. Ernst A.Claaszen ....... BENT nse sn sti nda ah atta ve hint Konigsberg, Prussia ........ Alexander Eckhardt... Agent... ........... 080000 ewan Swinemiinde, Prussia.......| Wilhelm Potenberg...... THT re a IRR Re a La J Bugars, Wurttemberg. .{. Edward Higgins... .}|) Consul... uci nosin ih 4, 000 ee PV TE Re MT EAT Ernest Entenmann......| Vice and deputy consul ........|J....,.... Tsingior, China... James C. McNally... Consul... ......... isla 4, 000 EE AAT RE, Te CI Edgar opp.....svs. J. susfit Viceand deputy.consal ........J.. o8i. 0. Be i ana a srs Tes re ane Edgain KOPP: is sstesiisne TORCEDICIOT ooh sos sensiomnensnss 1, 000 GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. aden, Arabia: Dabs Charles. I. Moser: LN OONSHL ... viet inn: 2, 500 EN SRE George M, Gordon... ...| Vice consul ,.... 0m. L200 Fail oldies Hodeida, Purkey:.... i510 Erich Lindenmeyer ..... AGEITE ier ee ah a a A Auckland, New Zealand. .| William A. Prickitt .| Consul general .......... 4, 500 TE EE rr eR a Leonard A. Bachelder....] Vice consul general ............|.. ..... nie RENEE Frank Graham .......... Agel... vue oo ALO SRNR RESL RS, Dunedin ..... Gencsoeiaa Prederick O. Bridgemani [Agent .t.....cccnc ives frei ess Wellington... vee son C. Harcourt Turner...... Agenfvii. .. soiboieient fii metals atin Barbados, West Indies ...| Chester W. Martin. Congtles “oa ew 3, 000 A TR EE NTA James E. A. Ince ........ .|' Vice:and deputy consul.i...:. uf «il .s0esh a Dominica. ........ Henry A. Frampton ..... LL I Bt Tvs. ow WilliamPetler >... ....: Se SR RE Se St¥ianeent son, Ernest A. Richards ...... AZORES a I Sy Belfosy Ireland ES aa Hunter Sharp... Consi:. oo aay 5, 000 ERG ates at Se PamlKnabenshues..... c.f Viceconsul. J... or ois ce ee raveise De PR SS TRG Bdward. Harvey... .... 0 Depulyviconsul. ii a er see ae Tondonderry. . ... 700, Philip O’Hagan ......... Aodntion, Eat hasten al Belize, Honduras. . ., William il, Avery "Cotten. oo or Sarre 2, 500 DEE SS ie JohnH: Biddle i... + . - “Vice and deputy consul." >. iS al, Birmingham, England . Albert Halstead. .... Consul + nha 4, 500 ee Aiea ArthurV. Blakemore. ...[ Viceconsul ........ 0 ui. coegaln es Din iin coun css nus nessis Hraest. Harker... ........; Deputy.consuls. Jil. Ll unl Sa idderminster. i... James Mortons... oe - A ER ER ERR RR ee Reddifclv. ive. oi ins William U. Brewer ...... Agente ll roan cB IRN Te end Bombay, India........... Edwin 8S. Cunning- | Consul .......... RAR 4, 000 ham. Se sve ce lsln en ty Tees enn Selby. S/ Coleman........| Vice.and deputy consul........|i....5.. Bradord, England....... Augnstus EF. Ingram Consul'...............0% 3, 500 MEd a Arete Te Ss es Thomas1,.Renton...... | 'Viceand deputy consul ........[J..00 0... Eh ani we wae Richard B. Nicholls. ..... {| “Deputyiconsul....c.000 ni. ale isa a Bristol, England, uu, Homer M. Byington.{ Consul .........c..cvvuvs 2, 000 A) Eran siesiiseisees| Richard:Castle ....v... | Vice'and deputy consul «+... ail i.. 332 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. GREAT BRITAIN AND DO- MINIONS—continued. Barston, England... Edward B. Walker | Consul ...... ....... 00% $3, ooo Gy Se SS Seas ler denen CE SR Ne ian der Viceand deputy consul........0... iia ein oe Sa a fe Tne John H:iCopestake.......l. Deputy'consul’......~..3.... fh. oe Caloniis, India’iizg.; lise William H. Michael.! Consul general .......... 6, 000 rrr Sr APE LN Charles B. Perry ........| Viceanddeputyconsul general |. ....... Chis eri SER RA a John I. Brown .........0% Agent ll iii asia ia va ret ees Calgaty, Alberta... E. Scott Hotchkiss. .["Consal ©... ...... 000000 3, 000 ean bu ree SAIL bee H. ¥dgar Anderson .....| Vice and deputy consul........[......... Lenliade cee ee Se Walter R. Dobbin........ Agent iin. Co isin sever iat afresh tae. Campbellton, New Bruns- | Theodosius Botkin ..| Consul .................. 2, 000 wick. Bo. Francis! PF. Matheson. ..[ Vice const)... ia. su i cis ve sink as sir Paspebiac:... wis. ih annie Daniel Bisson.~... Agente corr ty ern a a, Cape Town, Cape of Good | Richard Guenther. ..| Consul general........... 6, 000 il See sik eb Ser A de George L. Foster . Viceand deputy consulgeneral.|......... Cardit Weoles... ......., Lorin A. Lathrop. . Consul 2... oe 2, 500 SSRs wh vat Rie & Ee Albert:S. Phillips.......| Vice and deputy consul ..c.... 0. civae. Charlptisiows, Prince Ed- | Frank Deedmeyer. CONSUL Ln ae 2, 000 ward Island. DO: ao Banas Sars Arthur George Peake ...| Vice and deputy consul ........ Summerside’. >... 05 Neil Sinclair... 20. i ar ee a Ce Re pe Earomby, Ceylon... ......... Wm. C. Magelssen Congule="n =v 3, 000 re RE RR SE i Vicerand:-deputy-consuli:c. il leina. Corks ® ncerstown), Ire- | Geo..E. Chamberlin.|; Consul .................. 2, 500 land. DO. Ti. paar eRe John S.oArmstrong, jr... Deputy:consul... ...ciiriviafoarit. vos Eimeriek. oo ois cosas Edmund Ludlow ........ Agente. re 5 Cowal, Ontario. .........: Henry:/C. A, Damm ...| ‘Consul. i... inion, 2, 000 Sane a RAE Ahk aT William Gibbens ........| Vice and deputy consul........ Se Dawson, Yukon Territory .| George C. Cole. ..... Consul... 0 ndivio Gg 5, 000 Eien ERR AN HR RE ea ATE, Vice and deputy-consul «i... |. Fis. Dublin, Ireland ATR Fdward I. Adams.ii.| Consul ...........00h0 4, 000 RRS LT EE Arthur Donn Piatt ........[: Viceand deputy consul ....... |... ..... Ss AA RASA Ra Robert A. Tennant ...... VET EE Ee CE ed Aa Dundee, Scotland. ....... B. Haldeman Denni- Consul oi... irr ores 4, 0CO son. I rN SE pt AllanBaxter ............}[ Viceand:deputy consul ...... ........-. Soa Eh ia William P. Quann....... TN A ae eh peri Sn) Sea a Dugiermiins, Scotland . Howard D. VanSant.[[Consual..i................ 3, 000 A Rh ae Se Charles: Drysdale. i... Viceconsul ...... vain olive s]esnnise ses Durbar, Natal... . ini Nathaniel B. Stewart [ Consul... iain nan 3, 500 A ERE a AS A Hugh:,S: Hood ..i:=.:i-- +. |F Viceand deputy consul... .....[. . a5. Bainburgh, Scotland... .. Rufus Fleming ..... Consul... 00. haa 3, 500 a os Sh we Frederick P. Piatt... ...| “Vice-and deputy:consul ....... 0. Sas, Fernie, British-Columbia.| Frank C. Denjson...[ Consul’... ..o....... 070 2, 000 Nv Na I EA hk John R.-Pollock =f... Vieeconsul oo Ui SEL LL oe iia om Fort Eris, Ontario’: 0%; Horace J. Harvey. 4 Consul... ..:........& 2, 000 A nh aa ee James: B. Curtiss.........| Viceandideputy:consul ....... 1... ... Georgotow, Giliana oo pra af ae Const... is ava 3, 500 CE tint Vs reir ie ww ai Robert F. Crane.........} Vice.and deputy consul...co..of co cide: Cayenne) French iGuiana... "LouvisHenryRené Didier [-AGENt ...... ch vonssivrvenr vont] vrreenia Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana. Henry I,. Hirschfeld . LE RS SU BIE IR Lh Ca a BR ese Sipraltar, Spain... LG Richard L. Sprague. . consul Lull a 2, 500 Se Ee Se A Arthur'D. Hayden.......| Viceand deputy consul........l- ccs ovs Glasgow, Scotland ........ John N. McCunn. ;...iConsulii. 0. 00.0 = 4, 500 A a A SE a SR Rn aE, Vice and deputy consulic........d.ot. ion oe ee a a ate a Alfred Middleton........ Peputy consul... no A ES Greenock =. 0 a James A. Love........... AGeNt oil a ii aie se ag et 4 RE TAR Sa Se Peter:H, Waddell.”....... Agel cot si, EES Ra Halifax, Nova Scotia..... James W. Ragsdale. .| Consul general........... 4, 500 DOS as Albert CG. Ebert, ......> + Viceand deputy consul general.|......... 11 [8 FR Se MR PME Harry S. Hill ............| Deputy consul general .........|......... Bridgewater .............. William H. Owen........ ATENE id ae area] renee JAVErPool «i. Lib i GE Jason M. Mack ..... Agentae. oh a Nn Lunenburg... cco rvesr vrs Daniel J. Rudolf.. Agents. oi ih Lait evils Picton. -.- oc. seins cmerinnes John R. Davies . IATEnt ie. Ta ee sre Ere Hog ition, Bermuda... .... W. Maxwell Greene.| Consul .................. 2, 500 hrs inn La ass ee William H. Allen........| Viceand deputy consul ........|......... St. an Take smi William H. Potter....... NR RE aD United States Consular Officers. 333 GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. [J GREAT BRITAIN AND DO- MINIONS—continued. Hewition, Ontario... =% James M | Shepard’... Consnl .................. $3, ooo brane Cire a eh Richard Butler -.........} Vice-and deputy consul......5).. ...... Braniford EIT ha in Martin’ W. McEwen il iAgent occa ivisiivis five sli davinn on Aasicin it die eee fad Erin eis James:Ryerson ...L ud Agent LL... ne ER Hobart, Tasmania ....... Henry D. Baker. .... Conall. .o Ti oso, 2, 000 LN TATA Charles’Rrnest Webster! Viceconsul.........0... Lh 0, Honglons, China... ..... George E. Anderson.| Consul general........... 8, ooo BRET i Cee Tr SARS Algar HE. Carleton .......| Viceand deputy consul general.|......... ws a Ls PARA SAE AR BA pe Ahn Interpreter... oi sa 000 1, 000 Huadorsfiold, England .. .| Frederick I. Bright. | Consul ..... cial avis 3, 000 Pe Er She David]. Bailey ....7.)...| "Vice'and deputy consul ........[...n0.... Hull Hirgland ta rare Walter C. Hammy.-. ..} Consul... 88 0a oA 2, 500 Pe Le ERT eR a a James Fisher ............] Vice and deputy consul ........[-..-..... Yiudonre: Transvaal. .| Edwin N.Gunsaulus| Consul .................. 5, 000 D0. esis rata Charles B. Henderson...| Vice and deputy consul...... .[......... Bloemfontein,Orange River | Arthur E. Fichardt...... Agenlsr soi .no iil tien ness ABR Colony. Karachi, India... ...... Stuart K. Lupton . CORSUYL oa 3, 000 Dols. cores sens nn sets Hdward L. Rogers....... Vice and deputy consul i... ole i ain. Kingston, Jamaica ....... Nicholas R. Snyder. Consnl-............. tes 4, 500 NESE rr rear William H. Orrett .......| Vice and deputy consul........ dates Mins BAY rire ak Harry M. Doubleday ...] Agent... .. oi coi vin vials manivnveis Port:Morant............o.s. Cecil’'C. Langlois... ..... Agent eerie nmol St. Anns Bay.. ro titit in Agent Vice and deputy consul ........ Consul 74 1) UT ER Rr SNR DP Sa Viceconsul il iis wee Gousal i... Vice and deputy consul ........ Consul. =... neo Vice and deputy consul ........ ABENt vi hi a United States Consular Officers. 335 GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS—GREECE. ! Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. GREAT BRITAIN AND DO- MINIONS—continued. Sheffield, England....... Clinrles N. Dandels i Consul... ovoiivanniy $3, ooo Er Sr Lie Rice’ KK, Fvans.:......... Viceand deputy consul... hh 5... 8 Spb Rn SSE Tuther J. Parry on. tr L Depatyvconsal oo... ols i a Sherbrooke Quebec... ;... Panldang. .... cx. Consul ... 0 inisanii on 3, 500 EH Lect said Shey George EB. Borlase .......| Viceand deputyconsul........[.... 0... Beohe Junetion. ove eneas. Hoel S. Beebe. ..i.h. oo. Agent... ah. ARAB ES LOT Coekshire. i... xia vis William F. Given........ Agent. ho eS IMETANLIC, aris ensigns Henry W. Albro......... 7007) LR RS Be (ER Ea Waterloo. oo... cc Arthur S. Newell ....... ACERE I Sr SUN nh ee ed Sierra Leone, West Africa.| William YE ¥erhy .... Comsul s/o... oan iin 2, 000 Eo A John R. King............;/Vice and deputy consul ........|..... 0... Sinois, Straits Settle- | James T. DuBois. ...| Consul general........... 4, 500 ments. a BE es ol hi Te David M. Figart......... Vice and deputy consul geirerals ee vats Penang ici iain seni Ofto'Schules i. nv LN Agen I a Tr A Sl Sondianpton, England... Albert W. Swalmi...I'Consal =~... 0 4, 500 SRR eh ee EE SE John A. Broomhead......| Vice and deputy consul......../... en. Tad lore a nt pre aes TAT DAs RB. Renouf. thir EE RR RT a AR Weymouth.................. Frederick W. Fuller..... Agent Savas Biji Islamds. la Consgl ....... AE r 2, 000 Byganses, Wales... ....... C. Ludlow Livingsten| Consul .................. 3, 000 She a i re lant William D. Rees. ........|- Vice and deputy consul ........[ . ..or..... syduoy, Australia. ...... | John P. Bray....cicou Consul general... ........: 5, 500 Ee nel aa Cre hn Elliott V. Richardson....| Viceand deputy consul general.| ......... syduoy, Nova Scotia. .... John:E. Kehl.i.:... Consul Raat Te Sa SA AE Ee George A. R.Rowlings ..| Vice and deputy consul PR et a as ane Alfred W. Hart... 0000. Agent. J rims ona 0) Toulsburg.....coac a nisin Henry C. V., Xe Vatte: W. HAGEL. . viv veisiiminsimensinisa ion Port Hawkesbury........... Alexander Bain.......... ATRL. §. cei inie ine SL BE TL Toronto, Ontario......... Robert S. Chilton, jr.| Consul DO. ann Ea DavidiS. Tovell........ i. Vice and deputy consul Peterborough: ...... atin Charles F. Leonard...... gen Trinidal, West Indies. . Franklin D. Hale ...| Consul A EE i i RR Spencer J. Kirton........| Vice consul Brighton, Island of Trinidad.| Arthur McCallum........ Agent Grenada‘..... iio. LL PJ Dean... nile. Agent Parks Island, West Indies.| Joseph A. Howells. ..| Consul . Tle Sl dee eR AE 'W. Stanley Jones ........| Viceand deputy consul ns Harbor x. uve: Cleophas Hunt Durham.| Agen SaltCay......c.cooeivennnnnns Alexis W. Harriott ...... Agent Vancouver, British Colum- | David F. Wilber ....| Consul general 1a. 3D 5 10) MEE © Lo i 1 G. Carlton Woodward...| Viceanddeputyconsulgeneral.|......... DO. a iain nes vive sin SAAN Alfred E. Galpin......... Peputy:consul general........ J.c=sdu0e Do. ... -= 0zro,C. Gould ............ Consularagent.. .........c.-. Hida a. INEISOM. i hess viens hres Walter S. Riblet......... Agentea. in... Ls tae White Horse, Yukon Territory | George B. Edwards...... Agent ol. a een Victoria, British Columbia | Abraham B.Smith =a Consul .......c.. coos 4, 000 POMEL ash Bat hes net Robert M. Newcomb.. .| Vice and deputy consul ........[......... Comberland:.. ho... ve. George W. Clinton ...... AgEnhlL La a sn a ee Nanalinng Lois. + ass JOSEePh-H. Paslley.. ...o. [Agente 40 i os ove a a a Windsor, Ontario... ... ... Harry A. Conant. Consul J. ................ 2, 500 DanielChater..... .....5. Vice.and deputy consul ........l. ws... Winnipog, Manitoba. . . .. John Edward Jones .| Consul general........... 4, 500 SS a RE Femse J. McBride........| Viceand deputy consul general.|.... ... Fort William, Outario...... Jarvis. ..... Janis. BEENLEL Lois se ber SRI ie Kenora, ORLETIO ro ness ey H. Moore... . cutis Agenlll. 4. iii einem bE Gales vs Port Arthur, Ontario........ Alexander J. McComber.| :Agenti............coonevnns nee foiniaiatl, Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. ..| Alfred J. Fleming... Consul .................. 2, 500 DO Hugh H. Watson ........ Vice and deputy consul. .......l . ada. Annapolis Royal............ acobM. Owen .....;....: ER SR a Barrington Passage. ....... homas'W. Roberson il Agence 4... oo th a Cok var, DIgDY i... ui farsa eres William B. Stewart...... BEERL 5. 5 aie renee sh aires GREECE Athens... ar William H. Gale. ...| Consul general........... 3, 000 a Tr Sa LR Ss Bernard Melissinos ..... Vice consul general . ERR ep DOs ve ae Constantine M. Corafa ..| Deputy consul general. . a we Patras CEO SRE Ee Ce Arthur B. Cooke ....{ Consul ..............5. . 2, 000 FERRELL PR Tar a Haworth J. Woodley... .| Vice consul... oo... cu. i ule, There lind dal Charles E. Hancock ,.... Agent....... Hs + TER ASE 336 Congressional Directory. GUATEMALA—ITALY. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. GUATEMALA. Guatemala .............. GeorgeA.Bucklin jr.| Consul general"... $3, 500 Do... nn a William Owen........... Vice and deputy consul general.|......... Champerico...... ...coomsinng Michael B. Friely......= I I Ra a ee Yivingston .... 0 otk Edward Reed. ...........; Age ain Ll an ane 0CO8.... aE SamuelWolford .... ....[ Agent... 7 ......o.. Lo oon San Jose de Guatemala ..... Robert Clarke ..":... =: Amen rr A HAITI. Cape Haitien ............c Lemuel W. living: Consul ............... a} 2, 000 ston. SE I SRT a a Vice consul. Jvlole on 20 BL 00 sot U0 Gonaives... asia vias J. William Woél. .-....... GONMIIN. Lisioss cotinsombs veeives dala dents vive Port.de Paix... ... icons Carl Abegg.......c.icls. Agent... one Ba Sa RAE PortawPrines... ..... John B. Terres...... Coasnli.. o.oo ais 3, 000 1 rE Alexander Battiste ...... Vice and deputy consul... ..... esis Aux Cayes. oo... cova Adolph Strohm ..... ..... Agente... ire rie vias ses rndie Jagmel oo... Louis Vital . Dgenta dN rl dl Jeremie. o.oo hs St. Charles Villedrouin. . ACN. til ae raat Petit Goaver 207 0 I. Xampmeyer........... SONU Ta ee re SE el Ed POC I ni HONDURAS Gotha. oon ov AllenGard...)...... AW Conenl oi in at Tn 2, 000 BDO. i ek Wm. P. English, jr....... Vice and deputy consul ........ Svies BONACCA + civ vis ou sens seraninns Sandy Kirkconnell...... Agent. es cn R BR IL RISEN Roatan... coma 20 Oliver I. Hardgrave..... Agent. ui ade a es Fela, ...ov vee Wallace C, Hutchinson.i| Agent............ch:vss iia. Bruxillo.... coins Grneet John Lo Glynn... .... 0. Agente de tr ea Prerte Cortes... ........ Claude 1. PDawson ui. "Consul .......... ....00 2, 500 a A ES IE Ge Joshua H. Watts.. ......| Vice and deputy consul........ Se San Sei Sula. aad. J. M. Mitchell, jr... Agentio. d..o.. iv ion diana Bale E Togheigalpa ET EL SEU Arminius T.Haeberle| Consul .................. 2, 500 TEAR § [2 TE Ne ey Sar Li Benjamin D. Guilbert...| Vice and deputy consul ........[......... AD BE Ten es FERED Georg Schmuck.......... Agenti lL oo con EIN EER San Juancito..... ber pared Louis F. Valentine....... Agentid id. cdninsician Na Naseam ITALY. Catania... ..... on Arthur Garrels...... Consul. .aau dl ado is 3, 000 LT Se NG GE Re TA Se N:Lyle'Robb...... SLE Vice’and deputy consul ........[-< ih... Floronee.... .....0 vv oureois leo]. Keena........ Consul vi cu a BE A BY 3, 000 LEE Rr ne na eS William Wright Burt... .| Vice and deputy consul ........0......... Qenoa oe James A. Smith ..... Consul general il 00 4, 500 DO... denna er Cad Archibald B. Dorman....| Viceanddeputy consul general|......... Do Sa SR er Ra Se eS LA Angelo Boragino........ Deputyv.consul general........ lh... 13 AE A Pe FS AT Es Archibald B. Dorman..::| Consular agent................. [G&A Leghorn Re pa RE a BE, Consul... ovo iii a 3, 000 REAR SR ERR PR Alden'March......7. ... |" Viceand deputy consul... =... .[. =. ..os Conta Eh LBA STE Felix’A, Dalmas......... Ca eee Me eb Lan hd MHlan coer Charles M. Conghy, Consul Hei 4, 000 ERE RL SA a SE Charles C. Broy .. .{z=Vice and deputy consul. .......[ +=... i eS Reed E SARA, Charles H. Fischer. . ..... Deputy-consul 7... .. 0. Lh nhs 320 PARE TI Fd SLB bri al ll Charles'C..Broy.......... Consularagent.. ........ i 7. 1, 000 Maples... >. William W. Findley. Consul 1: ot Finer 4, 000 UT8 i a Warren BE. Schutt........ Niceand deputvconsul.......[ 7. ..... LT Ce Ca Rb Roberto de Masellis ..... Peputyiconsul.. CU ERG SHR SE, DO... ni eR BG Warren HE. Schutt... ..... Consular agent... .b. i. ivice, 1, 000 Bate. cat ies Henry M. Haigh......... Agent.) nh. ATA RA STE Capri. ini ide Thomas Spencer Jerome.| Agent..............ooooiiiiiiidoeen.. Palermo ............v:5. Hernando de'Soto... A Consnl ....... 00000 00k 3, 500 BO iiivie main hentia ie Giovanni Paterniti ...... Vice and deputy consul... Fifi i Joie. Bome.. >... ska Chapman Coleman.) Consul .................. 3, 500 BOM eR Kenneth S. Patton ...... Vice and deputy consul......... A. DO ln Vincenzo de Masellis... .[: Deputy consul......o0. 0.000. cues 30 Tn AR RE NE Sd Ne A de: Kenneth S. Patton ..... Consnlaragent: =. .: 00. 0. 1, 000 Tarine). iva Saas Albertdl. Michelson i Cousnl .................. 2, 000 LE A I a ee Piero Gianolio........... Viceand deputy consuli.. lo... oo Noniea........... +... James Verner Long..(;Consul........ .......... 2, 000 DO. volevsvse srr nnn nnn Alexander Thayer..,.,..! Vice and deputy consul ,,......l....,.,; . United States Consular Officers. 337 JAPAN—MEXICO. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. JAPAN Lr Manchuria, Ar a La Consul ...... .... t=, $3, 500 SESS Ra Adolph A. Williamson. . Vice.and deputy consul... [Cd Po: Adolph A. Williamson...| Student interpreter............ 1, 000 Robeov George N. West. .... Comsul [cir vines 5, 000 Picasa ive woos vn vos bee is Walter Gassett .......... Vice and deputy consuls... Joslvaianii. Do RE i a J. Preston Doughten..... Deputyconsul....... 0.00 nn aa si ei ede ns a a Tk Walter:Gassetl cov. i. ...] INTEIPICer. . vive 1, 800 Yolkaichi Ce EL Willardde L. Kingsbury. Agent. .... 0. 0 Sh mi aa ns, Nogasani SEs ea a Carl FF. Deichman. | Consul + 5c. oui. 3, 500 re en Carleton Miller .........| Viceand deputy consul........l......... Hi A es aE fs as as Carleton Miller. 1), Interpreter. 2.2. onan 1,500 Seoul, Korea.) 710 George H. Sciduiore .{ Consul general ............. 5, 500 Do RE a Ue Sey Edwin I,. Neville. ....... Vice and deputy consul general |......... BO. oven mE HG Edwin I,. Neville........ Interpreterca- i atinivic inital: 1, 500 Tamsui, Formosa ........ Samuel C. Rea... Consul nog 3, 000 HI EI eg Sl Francis Wm. O’Conner..| Vice and deputy consul ........|......... Yokohama... .. ....... Thomas Sammons. ..| Consul general.... ...... 6, 000 Be rr Elwood G. Babbitt....... Viceand deputy consul general |......... A TT Re LO Ae) Roger Culver Tredwell..| Viceanddeputy consul general |......... RR REI Henry B. Albright ....... Peputy:consul general Vr iinhanates Do. Roger Culver Tredwell..| Consularagent................. 1, 000 A ea ST eas FElwocd G. Babbitt. ...| ‘Interpreter. J... Lor ann, 1, 800 HoRodats RL to EE Edward Julian King XT aR te Sa SC OR KONGO Boma... oaivcamdinn nil EEE Consul general... 4, 500 DOE rosea as John:iW. Dye: =... . 7%". Vice and deputy consul general |......... Se RE a John W. Dye. ..........wh Consularagent... ............. 1, 400 LIBERIA Monrovia... ......... William: D..Crum . ..| Consul general...........[.. 5 «i YR RE a John. Reed............ Vice.consul general asia) sono MEXICO AgaEioo, Guerrero... . ... Clement 8S. Edwards. Consul... o.oo. vs 2, 500 REL Re Tr a aed tne Harry X. Pangburn......|. Vice and deputy consul ....:.. I... . a. .- Agnesoaiiontos, Aguasca- | A. Donaldson Smith. Consul ....«.. ............ 2, 000 Hontes, AT Harold G. Bretherton....| Vice and deputy consul ........[......... Chilean, Chihuahua. ..| Marion Ietcher..... Consul ...... . sissies 2, 500 BD, hese Charles M. Leonard ..... Vice and deputy consul ...... ...[......5.. Raval. A ee James. Long. i 500. AGERE. vers SREB Tinlad suares, Chihuahua.| Thomas D. Edwards.| Consul .................. 2, 500 Seer ae as res ra ea Guillermo Zoeller...:; ..| Viceand deputy consul .... 5. Jooriies, Cindad Porfirio: Diaz, Co-| Tuther T. Ellsworth.| Consul ................... 2, 500 ahuila. Po a a Henry F. Stevenson.... | Vice and deputy consul........ ES Dogrngs, Durango... .... Charles M. Breeman- (Consul... ...........=. 2, 000 Te ne Walter C. Bishop........| Vice and deputy consul ..... ...[....c..... Fopia Era ve She tei Thomas J. Lawrence... (Agent... oo lo Sis feats MOFFEOIN.. vive, fs vee cate George CrCarothers... Agent © ri anaes a Ensenada JowerCelifornia George B. Schmuckerf Consul... ............ ... 2, 000 irs Ue lr r i Str aan Frederick R. Sawday....| Vice and deputy consul ........[......... Pints Tabasco.....5...- Alphonse "J. Tespl::Consul ........ 0... 3, 000 nasse. ye Re Ee Edward M. Watson......| Vice and deputy consul........|......... Guadsiajars Jalisco... Samuel B. Magill 2 Consul | co. 8 pind, di 3, 500 Lie Se William B. Davis ........| Vice and deputyconsul... >. ..l...0 50 Hormusillo Sonora... .... Louis Hostetter. .... Consul .........sisnaii 2, 000 I ar RO ARE ES GR Robt. S. Van R. Gutman. Vice and deputy consul... .....[x........ Alamos... Marion 8S. MacCarthy.. i. Agent... ....cirivneies sasniif ei Boe nat Gueymas..... . fo a ol Charles D. Taylor .. BL bh ee de eR La Pon, Lower California.| Lucien N. Sullivan. .| Consul .................. 2, 000 et na ae Willlam Silver... nai. Jo VICeIConSTl ... o.oo se sen aioa SAE Ed Manzaniiio, Colima... Ll avis io meensial-, Consul i... 00 oo 2, 000 BIR Rn Rg Lam Richard M. Sttden. Viceand deputy consul ........[...05..\. Matamoros, Tamaulipas ..| Jesse H. Johnson:.../:Congul .................; 2, 500 SR ea EE SRA Jorge Bielenberg........| Viceand deputy consul........[.. .:.-.. Mazatlan, Sinaloa... .-.. William E. Alger. Coniston eet 2, 500 35 yA en Charles B, Parker... Vice and deputy consuli=. i ik. oe. ve 338 Congressional Directory. MEXICO—NICARAGUA. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary MEXICO—continued. Mexiep, Mexico. ......... Arnold Shanklin... ..| Consul general. ........5. $6, coo OQ vicivimins + sins san seu als Claude KE. Guyant....... Vice and deputy consul general |.... .. Guanajuato... 0 Norman Rowe........... Agent or... ee ps Daxacn sors e Ezra M. Lawton......... Aen a tae ie ee ure Puebla. .c ois soni wie eit William M. Chambers...| Agent .......................... Ae: eR Monterey, Nuevo Teo Philip C..Hanna' 5 (“Consul general. .......... 3, 500 RANE SR T. Ayres Robertson......, Viceanddeputy consul general |......... Nogales, Solera... Alexander V. Dye... Consul ............. 2, 500 lait a a esa Bly Martin. ......::....3 Vice and deputy consul ... ... faves. Caranien a or Ss wings George A. Wiswall...... hain anni sein iindete nday nih Fugvo Laredo, Tamaulipas.| Alonzo B. Garrett... Consul .................. 2, 500 A rE CR James:G. Burr... .........| Vice and deputy consul’. ..con of. oni. Progreso Vacatan,. ees George B, McGoogan| Cons ........... ...... 3, 000 D0 eines ne ns ns tn tw mn William P. Young........ Vice.and deputy consul. ......[.o0 cu. Campeche... .... 0. Rafael Ramirez. ..... fr rol AGERE 20 ss eas sea tatE +) 2 Sr TT Laguna de Terminos........ Robert 8. Boyd .......... Ea Ee ad sn a Salina Cruz, Oaxaca... ... ewisW. Haskell. i Cone J. 0... 0 v5, 2, 000 UT area Rena a Warren W. Rich... .... .[-Viceand deputy consul ....... | ...-.... Puerto Mexico .........5s 5 Chauncey: M. Canada... [Agent ...... 0... Ls eeeiees Saltillo, Coahnila.... +... Thomas'W. VoetteriI Consul +... ............... 2, 000 AS I ee BONY John R. Silliman.........| Vice and deputy consul... oa ele ens San Tis Potosi, San Iuis |: Wilbert 1. Bonney: .[’'Constil .................. 2, 500 Potosi. TA rn eA SL Frank A. Dickinson..... Vice and deputy consul .........[......... Tampico, Tamaulipas. . . .. Clarence A. Miller... Consul ......... 928, 3, 000 A PR © £0) EY Neill E. Pressly .........| Vice and deputy consul........I......... Tpacals, Chiapas 1... Albert: W. Brick-+«iConsult..,......... ........ 2, 000 wood, jr POE, ves aE ne A ER Charles ArT esher ....... Vice and deputy-consul ........[......... Veracruz, Veracruz. ...... WilliamW. Canada. .| Consul ..........A0805 0 4, 500 DO: satin ess nis ps gE Ernesto ux. a. veves Viceiand deputy consul, ....... l.... 5... MOROCCO ; Tangier... 0. 0... Maxwell Blake...... Consul general... coun: - 3, 500 DOL Shh George Xl. Holt..... ....: Vice and deputy consul general |......... FD ee Se NR re IY ANA ee PIR Tr pie Interpreter.........covvvwrei ton 8oo Casa Blanca... ene Conrad FH: Toel.....-...- Na ae eRe aR Sd Le ae Mogador... ola ial, George Broome.......... Ament i sa nanny NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS. Amsterdam. ... . coco viene Prank: W. Mahin oof Consul on oii oven 5, 000 1 PAC ERR BN SE Dirk P. De Young....:..| Vice and deputy consul... alam i ino Batavia, Java. vaio snl BradstreetS. Rairden [Consul .... ......conmnwnn 3, 000 1 rE De Be Frank B. Rairden ....... Vice and deputy consul........{......... Macassar, Celebes .......... Wiebe P. de Jong........ AGERE oot vn woes ies Boi rE hih Padang, Sumatra.... .....; Johan C. Bijleveld....... PETE TN ee EC Se RE I SAMatang.. «oo. James Richard Owen. . eR EG Se I I er ea Scerabaya.. i... Les Benjamin N. Powell . AGemid.n. abies RS ann ee Curacao, West Indies! Bias H. Cheney... [Consul ........... 000... 2, 500 Ds re i ha Christoffel S. Gorsira. . aie coneul 0 at, BOMAITE iiss vas rns envi Gottlob W. Hellmund...| Agent . a Te Rotterdam... ...... 0. Soren:listoe;....... Consul general . ol Eg 5, 500 10 Tp ST EN lh Edward P. Theobald..... Vice and deputy consul general |......... PO. a5 eA Ernest Vollmer.......... Deputy consul general ................ 10 75 SL EC A Se LR T.eonardBoot..... nL Deputy consul general. ................. Blushing... Leon wis! Pieter:B. Auer. ...inli.. Tit ad A EE a LP Sr Luxemburg, Luxemburg... Ernest Derulle .......... AGEN bites ois fined one sie as Scheveningen i... .svsssis Anders C. Nelson. ue. on fs AER vin ie viewer cvdvian va vias vies vs Fev ostains NICARAGUA. Blueoflelds .........v nv Arthur J, Clare... Qoasdl =... 0. lee 3, 500 LL A A A yr ae A Eo SE a Re Ra Vicelconsul «ni vii vont RENT Cape Graciasd Dios....... Edwin W. Trimmer. .| Consul .............<.... 2, 000 a rn ep Tr ee pe William H. Seat.......%. Vieeiconsuliao vision ees @orinto occurs ea Jamies W. Johnsen ..| Consul ........ JW 0 0 | 3,000 Pos ry aot oh AHA Henry H. Leonard ...... Vice and deputy consul ........ ei... Managua :.:.;..i.c00004 Thomas P.- Moffat. ..| Consul ... iii 0}, Seis 600 a AR eb Eb os Ea I A RS rE TE Al Vice and deputy consul ........ Lah Matagalpa ........novun sues William H. De Savigny..[ Agent/.............. 300006. WALTER San Juan del Sur........ sun ‘Charles’Holmann:,. vx . AGERE rains alse asia: RES A ; United States Consular Officers. 339 NORWAY ~ROUMANIA. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary NORWAY. Borgen. L Lae sea Bertil M. Rasmusen.| Consul .........:.. 0... $2, 500 Po Rn ao a John A. Merkle... ....... Vice and deputy.consul......... [cot I RR LRN SE a Thorvald K. Beyer ...... Deputy consul.i... oie. Sol aint Christiania... 0, a ann Henry Bordewich ...| Consul general........... 3, 000 IO | ain les tarsi aw A a Haakon E. Dahr, jr...... Vice and deputy consul general |......... Christiansand........... fs Borre:Rosenkilde’ oo iibvAgent Ll Cl anda rondhjem .\. iii Claus Berg... alana Agent oo he a Ne Pe Stavanger... i in P. Emerson Taylor... Consul .... 0... oo. 2, 000 TERE SO UN C. KH. Falek ... ibid, Vice and deputy consul........ [J oo... OMAN Maskat i aah Jolin A. Ray........ Consul 6 ah ai 2, 000 11 RE en PE CEM Mahomed Fazel ......... Viceand deputy consul... fl PANAMA. Colom. J... gil vas James C.. Bellogn i. Consul ii. ohn. duvi 4, 000 AE RIE SE AC Jesse M. Hyatt...) 0.5... Vice. and deputy consulic..i.. oooh Bocas del Toro. .... a. wh Paul Osterhout........... Agent. siti sr nn ee ie Panama: oan i Alban G. Snyder....| Consul general............ 5, 500 SUE Sl A A SE CR Gr GTR Us Caspar l,.. Dreier... ..... Viceand deputy consul general.|......... Santiago’. 2 lel. Si Nathaniel I. Hill ........ Agent ol Saath CT PARAGUAY. ; Asuncion. a LLL EY Cornelius Ferris, jr. | Consul .. 0... ou nies 2, 000 DDO hts i aw nels elena Henry V.Plate.......~. Vice consul .... cadena dane feast. PERSIA. Tabriz on ov hain Gordon’ Paddock... Consul ........... an onal 3, 000 Teheran .................... John Byler... Lee Agent... .. ons nt SE PERU Callao... iia J William Fl. Robert- |: Consul general .......... 4, 500 SOo11. Dore Si rae Sn Milton B. Kirk... ... nL. Viceand deputy consul......... ERR DO SES Sa Milton B. Kirk: .... oh. Consular agent... oon bol 1, 200 Cerro de Pasco... . intra Joseph HH: Fleming i... [FAZER wins ciens vo vielyete wis maisialf iene oi ieis Mollendo.iiv hvu ovis, William Morrison. ....... Agent. on med fa Patton cia ant Charles BG. Wilson... J Agent... ih hh LLG dare Salaverry oh le in, Cecil HT. Caldicot... Agent... wou ole sabi etna efi Tauitos cou rn i a ee Copsul ri sii ein 3, 000 1 EER Pr Ga HA a De A a MR ef Viceconsul lo. a dove setae al aight ULE PORTUGAL AND DOMIN- IONS. TAshom =. oo aii ann Louis H. Aymé..... Consul general... ....[...7 3, 500 18 In YEE Rn eA SI oy James I,. A. Burrell .....[ Viceand deputy consulgeneral.|......... Funchal, Madeira........... We LE Faber.. a a oti Agent. ar a Se OPOTEDS: 0 20 is a Sewer William H. Stuye........ Agent holed saan aaa. St.” Vincent, Cape Verde'| J.B.Guimaraes........." ATenh 0 Sa SG SE a a : Islands. Lourengo Marquez, East | George A. Chamber- | Consul .................. 5, 000 Africa. lain. BE RS RE SE Me I James Owen Spence.....|' Vice and deputy consul......... 0.000, St. Michael's, Azores. .... Edward A. Creevey. | Consul ou. Loo 3, 000 JDO 5 ih Sea SA Wm. W. Nicholls... ...... Vice:and deputy consul .. /.o uli Mayall. ov Ghali Moyses, Benarus:......... Vilna) eR AN Se RR VATE Tercelra.) hanna Thomé de Castro... i... Agent i. on al Le Le ac ROUMANTA. Bucharest. ..... in Roland B. Harvey...| Consul general. i... 0. CEC eC RL PN rn fe Wm. G. Boxshall ........ Vice and deputy consul general.l..,...... 84259°—62—-1—1ST ED——23 340 Congressional Directory. RUSSIA—SWEDEN. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. RUSSIA. Batumi. a na Alexander Heingart- Consul 0... cc veivuivon $2, 500 ner. DO 5 rie feels fein en tea tet rl) FEmerio Mattievich ...... VICEEORBUL. + asin inn harness ay are MOSGOW,. =. oo said John H. Snodgrass..| Consul general........... 5, 500 Pe. tbiaBon uss nTng Gustav Eugen Hartwig. .| Viceanddeputy consulgeneral |......... Omak Ln ae Adolph F. Reinecke..... Agentinl.i len rN EER Glossn.: son ib annals John H. Grout... ... Gomsuld oe Shed 3, 500 I Ene TRO IL Alfred W. Smith. ... [Lk Vice and deputy consul ........ [LL 00h Rostoff-on-Don.............. George R. Martin........ Aent..d ee alle SAR Bion: cuss Boansdivag, William FP. -Doty....[ Consul ......... coisa 3, 000 J SE Re aOR Laurance Hill ........... Vice and deputy consulsbac...|... ....... Taba... SETA Alfred Seligman ....... Aeent o J0 RE Seseal St Petorsburg .......:... Jacob B. Commer 7a Consul. ......... 0.000. 3, 500 0a chiinisetere er AIRES (ATI H. Custis Vezey.......... Vice and deputy consul... ..... |..0u.. ot Helsingfors, Finland ....... Victor BE........- +. =... or] ARS De Be i A Ba FL Revel ll. aio nb nly Christian Rolermanfl... bh Agent ...... 0 oso sfoai liv vasa Vladivostok, Siberia... ... Lester Maynard..... Consul tn eae 3, 500 ET SL I Va Harold F. Newhard ..... Vice and deputy consul ........|...coiunn 17 rn DE DR Harold F. Newhard...... Tntespreter. 2. ll. I, 200 Warsaw... ... 0... Thomas BE. Heenan.i1.Conaul ......... .,. iil is 4, 000 157 LP SRA Se LL Witold Fuchs............ Vice and deputy consul. ... ....|.ce.uen. SALVADOR. 3 San Salvador... .... 5... Thomas Ewing Dab- | Consul general........ el vat ney. : TE rh i Te Ser li Re Harold D. Clum ....... Vice and deputy consul general |......... SERVIA Belgrade. coil... Roberts. 8. Bergh... .{ Consul ..........;o55% 3, 000 Dod. i saa Samuel Weiss. .... reeves Vice anddeputyconsul....... |... ..... Rh ie Rayko J. Novakovitch...| Deputy consul... ....... ee vn ved 2igant a SIAM Bangkok... oii G. Cornell Tarler....| Consul general... ..aid..[. 0... BOL, i na a Carl C. Hansen .......... Vice and deputy consul general |......... SPAIN AND DOMINIONS. Barcelona... ...... ews Henry H. Morgan... Consul general........... 5, 500 TYR tuloflcriiv nt i 4 ile Ais Set Harry A. McBride....... Vice and deputy consul general.|......... BIDaAO. |... ean ei sie for ole gp Agente Le Se ely fab sie * Palma de Mallorca... ......| JuanMorey-y Cabanellas.li Ament... cov. berrins. cnsnnferdenisss LATTATONA sits ssivnsinins Louis J. Agostini ........ A Jerez de la Frontera... ... PerclyalGassett. | Consul Ji. i iva vis 2, 500 Oe oh ho John P. Marks........... Viceand deputy consul. ........J......... Madrid... Charles T,. Tloover..| Consul... 0... 50.0000 vn 2, 500 Do. Jos€ Maria Gay.......... Vice and deputy consul ........|......... COTHNNA Hurique Fraga .......... Ament oon Vigo 0 a a Enrique Mulder......... Reenter OE a Malan... ......... Ui Rdward J. Norton. .JiConsul ................0. 3, 000 Bg... 20 A Re Thomas R. Geaty........ NACE COMBI. vars ot divin somiamisar so oar bok vias BIO vhs niv'a ve ad ln wna ns a Albert S. Troughton..... Depntyiconsul...... nai L ll asi LE Cd lr SS LN LR ES a Se LIOR gratis niin A RRR IARI Re 2 Seville..." ci. Charles S. Winanse.cliConenl .. 00/00, JD), 3, 000 ARR ES Harris N. Cookingham ..| yjce and deputy consul........[......... ee a James Sanderson........ Agent EU ERT A 0, Hhnelva. L0G William J. Alcock ....... ABR. et el Teneriffe, Canary Islands. William W. Kiichen.//'Consiil ...... .. cu. cs 2, 500 10 vin AEC NO COREA TRG 0 0 ME SEER Dn fo RE SE Vice and deputy consul .....cidu 0. .0. Grand Canary ..............| Peter Swanston......... IL In (rR Be PE Valeneln'. .......n. cus nn Robert Frazer, jrocodiConsal ........c. con 2, 500 ive GE re Joseph I,. Byrne........ Vice and deputy consul ........| .“....... Alieante ....... conde diva Henry WiiCarey......... Aaentiiu dL et ee re, Pendall 0. Le Tals Tone .. 0 0. ni. AGENT. re Senet easiness ais SWEDEN. Rothenburg ......... ... Stuart]. Fuller... Conall io sn na 2, 500 rR Wilhelm Hartman.......| Vice and deputy consul ........0......... Malm. Lo. denne Hugolindgren.........\ NEE eR nS Se Umated States Consular Officers. SWEDEN—TURKEY AND DOMINIONS. 341 Office. Officer. Rank, Salary. SWEDEN—continued. Stoekholm,.. ....... 0... Ernest I,. Harris ....| Consul genetal...........| $3,500 2 RI A EL TR Per Torsten Bergii...... .| Vice consul general . ACRE is wee 1.4 sates Ra Pe Sri a AR Torvald Nystrom........| Deputy consul general.........|[..... ... Sur lov! NERA earn bh Sea Hrast H. Amnéus ...... ALY ER PIRATE tue iets SWITZERLAND Basoel.ii.o. 0uini nines George Gifford. ..... Conedl .-......... 35s tide TE IO am SE SR FCN Samuel Hollinger ....... Vice and deputy consul ........|.... Borne ......... ius George Heimrod . Gone o......0 000 Cini IDO, leva a de Leo J. Frankenthal.....| Vice and deputy consul ........|.. Geneval.. .......... : Francis B. Keene... Consul’. .....o.usuas BO ih ra Louis H. Munier......... Vice and deputy consul ........|...... EVEL soins itinaionss Theodore F. Dwight . Agel ison vainss sien atee oni aleelln St. Gall. ..... e000 es Dominic I. Murphy . oe Ea DO hens frm a dd ia Hugene Nabel......... Viceand deputy consul ASIC aelis Zurlehs: ov TR Robert E. Mansfield.| Consul general...... iia 1570 Tork 00 SE OR 8 SL Arthur J. Bundy......... Viceand deputy consul general. ee sn CE OR Cart Gubler... ..- oo: Deputy consul general.........|.... FUCETNE: ois iors Seis breivinivet Julius Hartmann........ Agent’......... toe venennae ssn TURKEY AND DOMINIONS Alerpe, Syria obs Betis Jesse. B. Jackson: in {Consul ...........0vnnninne 3, 000 TR ARE a Lorenzo Y. Manachy....| Vice and deputy consul EI Aidan PPR John T. Peristiany....... Agent i nL aS REL AL ses Alosandrin, Eoypt-...... David R. Birch. ..... Congubiia. ... Lukin, 3, 500 FLIER LRAT ET GA TPR Francis I. Romeo.......[ Vice and deputy consul........|......... Botan hs res et wa Frederick Siupich.s Cofisul=t..... i. vie 2, 000 DOL aan BRE RNS James Scott I,evack . Vice'and deputy consul’... fe... ui. Bassorah.. . . 0..iae Samuel Dodds. .......- Agent. ot... oon in eas nao, Beirut, Syria... W. Stanley Hollis.” +) Consul general... ... ci: 4, 500 DOT et a ey Felix W. Smith... 2... Deputy consul general. ........ foc eet. IDAIASCHS sevens sv nie mars Nasif Meshaka .......... Os PRCA ee es aR Ser Lae Haifa tid ofa san aoa Theodore J. Struve ...... Agen ne en a [RR Tripoli . Tra Harris Lad. roshons Agent Clini ee a RY AE Cairo, Egypt. Peter Augustus Jay. .| Consul general. . ui... fii cL. A aA se Re C. Piquette Mitchel......| Viceand deputyconsul general.|......... ie IR OT ER Younis Belrose..... 0... Deputy consul general.........[.c.. ioesis DOL hi Sa deleiva ism iva Arthur H. Leavitt. ....... Student interpreter.......... = 1,000 ASSO vie in a eae George Wissa Bey....... 7 DDS Porl Bald... onion ba Harry Broadbent........ Fr Np CN SS Tiley ARN CC A EOE Frederick T.Peake...... ATEN Se aa Re Constantinople........... Gabriel Bie Ravndal.| Consul general........... 6, 000 Do. ses Oscar 8S. Helzer. 0... Viceand deputy consul general.|......... I SR CI Se Ses! William Smith-Lytle.....| Deputy consul general.........[.... 0... 1 aS Rn William Smith-Lyte..... Manshiali. oo. 0 com oat 1, 000 BOL rine cs Swale ude Arshag K.Schmavonian.| Interpreter..................... 1, 000 a pi William Smith-Iyte..... Interpreter... ios ei vn ay aes sea DOL: li ee ae saa Oscar 8, Helzer:......... Interpreter... ov hates Sa ei 1, 500 Dardanelles....i... ......... Alfred BR. Grech... ... .- Agent .................. Lalo Harpnt ooh. oo saan Wm, W. Masterson..[ Consul .................. 3, 000 1 gE ERE William E. D. Ward..... Vice and deputy consul ......... wn. Jerusalem, Syria......... William Coffin. ..... Comal oS 0. al 3, 000 1H MA RR OS RRR Lewis Heck». olan, Vice'and deputy consul... ....J. ob. | 3 RE Ra RGR John D. Whiting .......+ Deputy consul... wo than iia 1 PO A ER SI Cl TewlsHeck.... ......... Student interpreter............ 1, 000 Jaffa eons nnn Jacob Hardegg .......... Agent: on Ln So id Ee Ea Mersine.... 0... Bdwardl. Nathan. ..| Consul ............. .:.. 2, 500 Lg PY a re John'Debbas.. 5. a... Vice and deputy consul... .... | SL... Salonill .... cv George Horton. Consul noi. nn iiia a 3, 500 DOL ies ehsiaudnaiets ais John 1, Binda...... ....« Vice and deputy consul ........J... 0. 5 1D [nse sate Nl iy John'I,. Binda..... .. |" Stadeni interpreter.........i I, 000 Sivas. eT Ran ee Consul... nasa, 2, 000 13 POA SS SEM Bsa i SR Interpreter... co. uvi.ae 8oo Smyrna ae a Ee Consul geperal........ .... 3, 500 13 aE SE Se Ce i Tl HR CO Lucien Memminger ..... Vice and deputy consul general .|... ...... 5 AAR RR James W. Wilkinson ....| Deputy consul general.........[......... I IA Aan [re tA BRR] IE ln SS ERS INtEEPICLEr tiv vie it vies visbe crates 8oo BOs Sa a a Lucien Memminger .....| Consular agent................. 1, 200 Trebizond .. .......... Milo A. Jewett ...... Consul. nai, oon aii 2, 500 MO i esa es Isaiah Montesanto....... Viceiconsul....0.. Lio aciaadine nin 10 En a ee Isaiah Montesantoe...... .L-Interpreter.... ... io veied ven fin ceiniieen William Peter .....c0v0n- AGENE L.. voi ledon drs rnnsnaissineis nisi nicieitionis SAMSOUTIYL re cassis stv sinionsvans 342 Congressional Directory. TURKEY AND DOMINIONS—ZANZIBAR. Office. Officer. Rank. Salary. TURKEY AND DOMIN- IoNSs—continued. Tripoli-in-Barbary, North | John ©. Wood .......[Consul. .................. $2, 500 Africa. Ic Le hacia a see vas Arthur E. Saunders...... Vice and deputy consul. .... t.ho... ooo URUGUAY. Montevideo... .......... “} Frederic W. Goding./iConsul .............. sx 3, 500 a Frederic I,. Goding...... Vice and!deputy consul........[. 0000 VENEZUELA. La Gualva 00... 0 Isaac: A. Manning. .i[sConsul .. ....... ci iiivee ven 3, 000 10 ee i August Leefmans........| Vice and deputyconsul....... |......... Barcelona... .. Jdoevsiss testis Ignaciottl. Ballz. ..... butt AZeRlIl LL La rian feidatide ies Cagacas. ....o... occ drei sina Ba beAT HUE. Schoenfeld) Agental.. ..... 0. vee sons ries Statin. Capupanoe’.: Stn a José Blasini:..".... A es I RL TY Cludad Bolivar... 0... William 'D. Henderson. jp Agent o. bh. 8 oon. Lov rine Maracaibo... 0... Ralphs]. Jotten cr efpComsnl 4, . 0.0 2, 500 3 ER EE Werner J. Yeitner....... Vice and deputy consul........|[......... rv oH SI RL ed Se CO GB le Sn eee AZENE OLB EE CO A ARTES, Puerto Cabello. .......... Herbert BR. Wright. i Consul bo .. . 2, 000 BART SER RE a Ea Lodewyk J. Verhelst..... Vice'and deputy consul’... .. [i.e ZANZIBAR. ONZIBAT ane niet Alexandér W, Wed» |:Consul ................... 2, 500 . dell. 19a HE Se Ee eee Frank W. Vining ........ Vieeiand deputy consul.........J coh. ... United States Consular Officers. 343 CONSULAR ASSISTANTS. Richard Westacott...... London. Ross. J. Hazeltine....... Rio de Janeiro. Dean B. Mason ......... Paris. Roger Culver Tredwell . Yokohama. Maddin Summers ..... Washington. Charles C. Broy........ Milan Frederic W. Cauldwell.. Berlin. James B. Young. i .....: Berlin. John W. Dye... . oi... Boma. Ripley Wilson.......... London. Milten B. Kirk ..... 1... Callao. Warren TF. Schutt... .... Naples. Lucien Memminger. .... Smyrna. De Witt C. Poole, jr.... Washington. Archibald B. Dorman... Berlin. Ply BE. Palmer .......... Washington. Ozio C. Gould........ .. Vancouver. Louis G. Dreyfus, jr.... Berlin. Bartley ¥. Yost. ........ Paris. Bernard Manning ...... Washington. Frank Bohr ............ Berlin. Alfred R. Thomson..... Washington. Renneth'S: Patton"... .: Rome. Hasell H. Dick. .......v. Washington. Charles Lyon Chandler. Buenos Aires. STUDENT INTERPRETERS. China. Harold O. Henry...... Peking. Crawford M. Bishop... Peking. Mahlon Fay Perkins... Peking. John A. Bristow. ....... Peking. Raymond P. Tenney... Peking. Paul R.:Jesselyn.... ... Peking. Horace Remillard ..... Peking. George F. Bickford.... Peking. George C. Hanson... ... Peking. Charles P. McKiernan.. Peking. Japan. 14 Adolph A. Williamson . Dalny. Raymond S. Curtice... Tokyo. Francis R. Eldridge, jr. Tokyo. Harold C. Huggins. ... Tokyo. Joseph W. Ballantine .. Tokyo. Max D. Kirjassoff...... Tokyo. Turkey. Arthur H. Leavitt... . . Cairo. Ralph H. Bader ....... Constantinople. John. I. Binda......... Saloniki. Leland B. Morris. ..... Constantinople. Lewis Heck...... ++... Jerusalem, Frank B. Rairden ..... Constantinople. Samuel Edelman ...... Constantinople. George W. Young..... Constantinople. Ralph F. Chesbrough.. Constantinople. Donald Nicolson ...... Constantinople. 344 Congressional Directory. CONSULS IN THE UNITED STATES. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC—AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. Mobile, Alaiia ii, ...cooiniis San Prancisco, Cal...... Apalachicola, Fla ....... Pernandina, Fla ........ Pensacola, Fla.......... Brunswick,iGa.......u Savannah Ga... ........ Chicago, Il:i.n.......... Indianapolis, Ind. .... ..: New Orleans, Ia........ Portland, Me! ........ ..i.ivs Baltimore, Md .......... “Boston, Mass... \ ..... 06% Kansas City, Mo........ St. Touls, Mo. i. iv. a Prenton, N. J....0. 0. New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ Manila, 'P- 1 ............ Port Arthur, Tex........ Newport News, Va...... Norfolk, Va............- AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Mobile, Ala............. San Prancisco, Cal...... Denver, Colo............ Pensacola, Pla. ......... Savannah, Ga........... Honolulu, Hawaii....... Chicago, 111............. New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md .......... Boston, Mass... .......... St. Tous, Mo ........... Manuel S. Macias ............. SH Boutwill Dunlap. . ous corsa» «ve For California. William W. Pooser:: «. cu sre ov un Jurisdiction also in St. Joseph. Tomas C. Borden ........ ..0.... J. Harris Plerpont ... 0... hoi Bosendo: LOrras . ... .. .ooubasth 2. Andrés B. Moynelo...: vu. dod on Prancisco C.. Enright ..... 0 ... Chester Bradford .. .: ... aus eotis an For Indiana. Alfred Te Blane ann vo Clarenice W.Small. ..... oii... James ¥. Ferguson... , . Ln sii damiy Guillermo McKissock ...: vi niin... Prank D.West.. ...... Jicisls. oa For Kansas City, Mo., and Kansas City, Kans. Gustavo'vonBrecht. .. ........i.v. Juan Carlos Tornquist........ se For New Jersey. José Vicente Fernandez............ For the United States. Carlos A, Galarce .. ..... = 0 Iv] Cuillertno P. Wilson... . von.) Vicente D. Fernandez .... ........ For the Island of Luzon. Christopher Stephen Flanagan .... i DL Ee A Guillermo Klyver .... cc. iiiveve vs For Norfolk and Portsmouth. Siegfried Wissler ... co. o0v.iai Karl Ruizde Roxas .............. For Alaska, California, Nevada, Ore- gon, and Washington. Chevalier Georg von Grivicic. ..... For Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Mon- tana, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyo- ming. Johann Baptist Cafiero............ For Florida. CarleSchulte 0. ni For Georgia and South Carolina. Pederico A. Schaefer .............. Hugo Silvestri.......... Se i les ForIllinois, Indiana, Iowa, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota; temporary jurisdiction over Michi- gan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. Franz Hindermamm. 1............ For Louisiana and Mississippi. GCG. Tons Healer ............ -....... For Maryland. Arthur Donner. .......0......00.0 For Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. Ferdinand Diehm................... For Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma, Vice consul. Do. Consul general, Consul. Vice consul. Do. : Do. Do. Do. Consul. Acting consul, Consul. Vice consul. In charge of vice consulate. Consul. Consul, in charge of consulate general. Consul. ' Do. Consuls wn the United States. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. 345 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—COMN. Buffalo, N. V5 New York City, N. Y.... Cincinnati, Ohio ........ Cleveland, Ohio. ........ Hazleton, Pa......... ite Philadelphia, Pa...... es Pittsburg, Pa... Manila, PT... .....0.... San Juan, P. R Galveston, Tex Proctor, Vt Johannvon Nyiril . 000000 00000, va For the counties of Allegany, Broome, Cattaraugus, Cayuga, Chautauqua, Chemung, Cortland, Erie, Genesee, Jefferson, Iivingston, Monroe, Ni- agara, Onondaga, Ontario, Orleans, Oswego, Schuyler, Seneca, Steuben, Tioga, Tompkins, Wayne, Wyo- ming, and Yates. Alexander Nuber von Pereked . ... For Connecticut, New York, and Rhode Island. In New Jersey, the counties of Bergen, Essex, Hud- son, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somer- set, Sussex, Union, and Warren. Ome ie 6 ca sales viel eieiniein) uteri eile ieinialeiete vs ule le those under the jurisdiction of the vice consulate in Cleveland; consu- late temporarily under the jurisdic- tion of the vice consulate in Cleve- land. Brest TmdAwip oom) ia. For the counties of Ashland, Ashta- bula, Coshocton, Crawford, Cuya- hoga, Delaware, Erie, Fulton, Geauga, Hancock, Henry, Holmes, Huron, Knox, Lake, Licking, Io- rain, I,ucas, Marion, Medina, Mor- row, Ottawa, Portage, ‘Richland, Sandusky, Seneca, Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Wayne, Williams, Wood, and Wyandot. PmiliNenmann ia sian... 00. For the counties of Bradford, Carbon, Columbia, I,ackawanna, I,uzerne, Lycoming, Schuylkill, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Wayne, and Wyoming. . Karl Winter. ...... jue... rR a) For the counties of Adams, Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Chester, Columbia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware, Franklin, Juniata, Lack- awanmna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Ie- high, Luzerne, I,ycoming, Monroe, Montgomery, Montour, Northamp- ton, Northumberland, Perry, Phila- delphia, Pike, Schuylkill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and York, in Pennsylvania; the State of Del- aware; in New Jersey, the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem. Baron Paul Forster von Pusztaker. For the counties of Allegheny, Arm- strong, Beaver, Bedford, Blair, But- ler, Cambria, Cameron, Center, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, Craw- ford, Elk, Hrie, Fayette, Forest, Fulton, Greene, Huntingdon, Indi- ana, Jefferson, Lawrence, McKean, Mercer, Mifflin, Potter, Somerset, Venango, Warren, Washington, and Westmoreland in Pennsylvania; for the counties of Brooke, Hancock, Marshall, and Ohio in West Vir- ginia. Peter raf, 0) iil VA Seis Joannes PD. Stubbe; i 4 John Reymershofler............ “ For Texas. Karl Groszmann. . . .. . For Vermont. Deputy consular agent. Consul general. Consul. Deputy consular - agent. Acting consul. Vice consul. Constil. Do. Do. Hon. consular agent. - | ] Congressional Directory. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—BELGIUM. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—CON. : Richmond, Va....:..... Christophorus I,.. D. Borchers... ... Consul. Charleston, W.Va....... Milwaukee, Wis. ........ BELGIUM. Birmingham, Ala. ....... Mobile, Ala. ......... 0 Little Rock, Ark...... ra T.08 Angeles, Cal... 1:2 San Francisco, Cal...... Denver, Colo..;..5.\.. co Jacksonville, Fla........ Pensacola, Fla... ...... Atlanta, Ga...... ... 4: Savannah, Ga........... Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... Chicago, A............. Louisville, Ky.......... For Virginia, except the counties of Bland, Buchanan, Carroll, Craig, Dickenson, Floyd, Giles, Grayson, Lee, Montgomery, Pulaski, Russell, ’ Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washing- ton, Wise, and Wythe; for the State of North Carolina. : Chevalier Michael von Straszewski. For the State of West Virginia, except the counties of Brooke, Hancock, Marshall, and Ohio; for the States of Kentucky and Tennessee; forthe counties of Bland, Buchanan, Car- roll, Craig, Dickenson, Floyd, Giles, Grayson, Iee, Montgomery, Pu- laski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Taze- well, Washington, Wise, and Wythe in Virginia. For Michigan, Minnesota, and Wis- consin; temporarily under the juris- diction of the consulate general in Chicago, Ill. A. Tatady. i... Sr eR For the counties of Bibb, Blount, Cal- For the counties of Autauga, Baldwin, Barbour, Bullock, Butler,Chambers, Chilton, Choctaw, Clarke. Coffee, Conecuh, Coosa, Covington, Cren- shaw, Dale, Dallas, Elmore, Escam- bia, Geneva, Greene, Hale, Henry, Houston, Lee, Lowndes, Macon, Ma- rengo, Mobile, Monroe, Montgom- ery, Perry, Pike, Russell, Sumter, Tallapoosa, Washington, and Wil- COX. Ei Vinsonhaler. lu... ool... EN, AGRE For Arkansas. For Arizona and Southern California. DE IDB OM, or 5 0 reise a ru al, For California, Idaho, Montana, Ne- vada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Alaska, Arizona, and Hawaii. JsMignolets. oll Lil soa... For Colorado, Wyoming, and New Mexico. J. .Buttgenbach. iil 00 Lk, WD. Howe... hh 5 I) I ON For Georgia, except ‘southeastern Georgia. - L. M. Le Hardy de Beaulieu.... For southeastern Georgia. RBiTange orl Soi i. ada Ch. Henrolin. 5... c. Gavi. Di 80d . For Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa. St. De Ridder...... ic. iuiual or For Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Do. Vice consul, Consul. Do. Consuls in the United States. BELGIUM. 347 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. BEILGIUM—continued. New Orleans, La Baltimore, Md... Boston, Mass. ........... Detroit, Mich St. Louis, Mo Omaha, Nebr’, i....... 50 New York City, N. Y.... Portland, Oreg.......... Philadelphia, Pa Pittsburg, Pau... ....... ces se sae een Charleston, S.C......... Galveston, Tex. ......... Norfolk and Newport News, Va. L. De Waele i... ou vussvnsind sv For Arkansas, Colorado, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Towa, Kansas, Iouisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Wyoming, and New Mexico. A Toate an a For Delaware and Maryland. B.S. Mansfield... ......0.aub 2 For Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Théophile Francois... ..vvi+ es For Michigan. T/ Segtenot. ... ir ress rtinrtye brn For Kansas and Missouri. Ac Delanmey toc ballad, ey, For North Dakota, South Dakota, and . Nebraska. Pierre Mall 2. ous 53. Lanes hes For Connecticut, New Jersey, New "York, and Rhode Island. Coll Tabblo nis isntents For Oregon and Idaho. Paul Hagemanso iol, 20. snl ce vue For the United States, except the dis- tricts of the consuls general in New Orleans and San Francisco. HH. Hessenbrach: {50 im Leis 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, I,ackawanna, Ian- caster, I,ebanon, 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. ; LL. MOCSEE Fo. ein sisi dol siaferssis. « booiae For the counties of Allegheny, Arm- strong, Beaver, Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Craw- ford, Elk, - Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Law- rence, McKean, Mercer, Somerset, Venango, Warren, Washington, and Westmoreland. B. Soubre. ii dinvank vim elitoe ves For the Philippine Islands. : Na rn eee ee a For the departments of Mayaguez and Aguadilla. Jo diaeot Sead, SRD For the departments of Guayama and Ponce. Ch. de Waepenaert. .......con«- For Porto Rico and dependencies. LR Saldana a For the departments of Arecibo, Bayamon, and Humacao, and the island of Vieques. BiRutledge oo li in lh For North Carolina and South Caro- lina. J- Van den Broeck. init. ilo For-Texas and Oklahoma. J. P. André Mottu.... .. . PRR a Re NC ET Nt Te io Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Consul general, Consul. Do. Do. Consular agent. / Congressional Directory. BELGIUM—CHILE. Residence. | Name and jurisdiction. Rank. BELGIUM—continued. ; Ricamond, Va. ......: 0 Fred B.Nolting.......oo. 7s oor ves Consul. For Virginia and West Virginia. Seattle, Wash........... BoCiNeufelder. .. 20 aii. hes Vice consul. For Washington. Green Bay,Wis.......... R.vanCrombrugge..... na... Consul. For Wisconsin and Minnesota. BOLIVIA. San Diego, Cal... ...L on Bhilip Morse: «s uessvi « sive» sanees Do. San Francisco, Cal ...... Carlos Sanjinés F....... SETI TR Do. Chicago, 111.24, le, Prederick Harnwell™....... /.... 0. Do. New Orleans, Ta. 5 lh, oo sale oiisic ae fete vusiv mts ni hoasinialy sisinisie Honorary consul. Baltimore, Md .......... Raymond: M. Glacken., .; ci... ovns. Consul. Boston, Mass..i.....:... Arthur’ P, Cushing: o.c.. i. AL... Do. Kansas City, Mo........ BdwinR. Heath, of ose. Honorary consul. New York City, N. Y....| Manuel Vicente Ballividn, jr...... Consul general. Philadelphia, Pa........ Wilfred H..Schoff. ov. Ali. os Honorary consul. Noriollz, Va. ..........-- Jom D. Teiteh, oy. VS Vice consul. BRAZIL. Mobile; Ala icin.’ vn Tulz MM. Moraguezi. i i. J deh vue vive Vice consul. T.GoMeGonigal i... ves. oh vs Commercial agent. San Francisco, Cal ...... Archibald Bamard .-. =. a... ohn: Vice consul. Fernandina, Fla......... Percival Strother Bacon........... Do. JB. Go Halle. i dh tithe nies » Commercial agent. Pensacola, Fla......... 0. John 1. Borrasg: mb oc vue, Ju "...| Vice consul. Teoncie L. Boras: ,....... wa... Commercial agent. Brunswick, Ga......... Walter B.iCook 1. unin niicenva sobs: Vice consul. : BD Walter. 20) odoin, Divan. Commercial agent. Savannah, Ga...... . Ho PoAdams rant Vice consul. B.S. Hincks...s. ITER Commercial agent. New Orleans, Ia........ Charles Dittmann i... ... ... 28: Sere Vice consul. : Emmanuel Dittmann..........0.... Commercial agent. Calals, Me....0.....c00 William/A. Murchie ............ ... Vice consul. Baltimore, Md........... i TLeonce Babillon .....0u0 .. 0.0%. Do. Boston, Mass. . . . + Jayme Mackay d’Almeida. ........ Do. Pedro Mackay d’Almeida......... Commercial agent. Gulfport, Miss....... ws Gabriel Bruner Dantzler .......... Vice consul. William Ross. . A000 Lon ha, Commercial agent. Pascagoula, Miss. ....... bn GE TT HAI er SA Ee Eh ME Vice consul. Andrew Gray =. . .opivveiie vi vaio vvs Commercial agent. Si. Louis, Mo: .......... Affonso de Figueiredo. i"... ....... Vice consul. New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa’. .... ... San Juan, P. RL... 0.0 Norfolk and Newport News, Va. Richmond, Va .......... CHILE, 1.08 Angeles, Cal... . 4. San Francisco, Cal....... Canal Zone, Panama. ... Savanmah, Ga........... Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... Chicago, Ill... ...... ... New Orleans, La........ Manuel Jacintho Ferreira da Cunha. Francisco Garcia Pereira Ledo .... Napoleon Bonaparte Kelly. ....... Henry C. Sheppard. .............. Waldemar B. Lee .... 002.0... Barton Myers. ods coo LL R. Baldwin Myers. .p- coups bo George Annesley Barksdale ....... W. Wola Pra. coo 8 .....0...- Artaro Lorca Pellrross’....... .L 4x Antonio B. AGaCiO i. cv enisr: iis slovrs Roberto B. Reppard......it...... ... HH. Renjes....wusi. i NE ah UE Te * Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Commercial agent. Vice consul. Do. Commercial agent, Vice consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Consuls in the United States. 349 CHILE—COSTA RICA. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. CHILE—continued. Baltimore, Md... ....... RC. Leupold... a. .o-bi Smet is Consul. Boston, Mass. .ii.... ...... Horacio. N. Fisher. |. sve, ones ve Do. St. Louis, Moar. ....:..- rneslo: Cramer. our. votes sin Do. New York City, N..¥....| Ricardo Sanchez Cruz... ......... Consul general. : For the United States. Portland, Oreg. ......... Antonio RB. Vejar. ... suasrvl.. #3. Consul, John: Ried . 5006 sail. (onus... Vice consul. Philadelphia, Pa........ Dudley: Bartlett). iw... oon bei Consul. Manila, PL. 5000 0.0 A Malvelhy ooo nun aaah Do. Saw: Juan, P. REG», 0, SL OBB we sad elibagas dl Do. Norfolk, Va. iu iorl | =, A, G, Bailey... aloha sommel. ue Vice consul, With jurisdiction also in Newport News. ’ Port Townsend; Wash, ..| Oscar Klocker........... L000, Do. Tacoma, Wash.............. J- Tennant Steeh: ho. 0 aro Do. CHINA. San Francisco, Cal...... Hen Ping-cheli Coen. cies vn Consul general. Owyang lee nv ii ddd =f oe 210 +s Vice consul. Honolulu, Hawaii...... Toeng Hat: whet atone ist. ts Consul. Boston, Mass:....... ... Stephen W. Nickerson... ........ Honorary consul. New York City, NV... ..| WingshinS: Hou. oo rasrdeit ove Consul. Ene Rie al ENR ENE © Vice consul. Portland, Oreg.-.1....... . . Moy Back Hin. iif naiiit, do. Honorary consul. Philadelphia, Pa MamilagP. Lin onaii.L... Seattle, Wash... .....,... COLOMBIA. Mobile, Ala San Francisco, Cal..... .. Chicago, TIIY. =~. hu les 2 New:Orleans, Ta........ Baltimore, Md... ....... Boston, Mass. ........05 i... Gulfport; Miss......;is -.- - . - New York City, N.Y... Philadelphia, Pa Ponce, P. R San! Juaw, PERIL Js Norlolk, Va. hh... i... COSTA RICA. Mobile, Ala... Loti... San'Franciseo, Cal. ...... Chicago, TIPE, J... New Orleans, La. ....... Baltimore, Md..i.. i. ..... Boston, Mass... .......ou St. Tonis, Mo.......r. i... New York City, N. Y.... Thomas W. Barlow Chang Wen-wei Goon DAP... ... dinnath i i. fanh iv Juan Llorca Marti Escipion Canal pi] seal 0, Cr CoPhelpg > Bib a I8 00 Lens DA" Marteloan ovis Sans ssi nis William A. Riordan Jorge: Vargas Heredia. oo. oii Federico I,. Rockwood Francisco A. Guflierrez............... Manuel R. Morales M. R. Calder6én Paul E. Rapier LuiseMi i Moragues.. oo sna oo. Guillermo Figueroa Berthold Singer Lamar'C.Quintero................ With jurisdiction in the south of the United States. John Marshall Quintero........... William A. Riordan A. Hollis White..li. oo... v. bs Prast B, Bilsinger.. oo. con ons Manuel Gonzalez Zeledon G....... Juan J. Ulloa Give iinit Sosiiian oe Alejandro Monestel: i. wii... . uh Do. Consul general. Honorary consul. Consul. Do. Do. Consular agent. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Honorary vice con- sul. Consul general. Consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Honorary consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul, 350 Congressional Directory. COSTA RICA—DENMARK. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. COSTA RICA—continued. Portland, Oreg. ....o. Cragdville GC. Ames... ........0... Consul. Philadelphia, EY Wilited H. Schoff. , >. 20 oi. Do. San Juan, BiR............ Sergio Ramirez, . oi. vs seme i aii Do. Galveston, Tex......«.. i. Hemry Mosle.. fiir Do. Norfolk, Va Richmond; Va. i... CUBA. Mobile, Ala. otf... ... J.08 Angeles; «Cal../..... Washington, D.C..... Fernandina, Fla'........ Jacksonville, Bla. ....... Rey West Fla. ......... Pensacola, Fla Tampa, Fla Savannah, Ga... ...... Chicago, oy Louisville, Ky New Orleans, La Baltimore, Md Gulfport, Miss.......... Pascagoula, Miss i Rd Kansas City, Mo. ........ St. Lowi, Mo. vin «os New York City, N.Y... Cincinnati, Ohio ~ Philadelphia, Pa Aguadilla, PAR. .......... Arecibo, P. R Ponce, P. R San Juan, P. R Chattanooga, Tenn... ... Galveston, Tex Newport News, Va Norfolk, Va. Wui0.d... ... DENMARK. Mobile, Ala. ......ccn vn vs Harsy Reynier i... val With jurisdiction also in Newport News. Rafael Villafranca. i. eda... Leopoldo Dolz y Arango.......... James Pennie... tial L004... César A. Barranco y Fernandez . .. Willam B.C. Duryee’........... Julio Rodriguez Embil..... ...... Antonio Diaz y Carrasco.......... Nincent J. Vidal... .......... . .. Rafael Martinez Ibor .... For Port Tampa also. C,H, Whitingtow2# 204 (Vil... RosendoTorrgs,.. Ail Saas uy, A. B.oMovnelo'. i Haiidve Lo, Fduardo Patterson y Jauregui es Richard P. Cane J. Nelson Polhamus abl one. Oscar Ramos Ortega, Siti) José Monzén y Aguirre........... CW, Harrah, Jo 8 0000 0 Burwell Richards Manuel Tebn Ros. oi. .n ohn. With jurisdiction in Scranton and Moss Point. W. H. Booram Mariano Rocafert y Marcaida For the United States. Antonio Altamira 5. i. 50 ot... 4s Federico Nogueira y Udaeta ...... Francisco Pefia y Hernandez... ... Jocinteo Lluis. or. 2. sd With jurisdiction over Wilmington, Del, « Otto Philippi, liu) 04 J. vue Fernando Aleman y Vallee. ....... Alberto Bravo Gonzalez........... José Robleda yiConill. ii Suiiii ... .... Joseph Warren Rawlings Franeisco'P. Caballero ........... José R. Cabrera y Zunzunegui. . . .. Gaspar de la Vega y Calderén. . ... Tomie Donald 2. i ty For Alabama. Johannes Erhandt Bgggild......... For Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, and Wash- ington. Viggo Egede 'Baerresen........... For Colorado. : Carl McKenzie Oerting. (2)... .... For Florida. © 6009 9 8s + ee es es ance encese eens ans a Honorary consul. Do. Consul. Honorary consul. Vice consul. Honorary consul. Do. Consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Honorary consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Do. Honorary consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Consul general, Consul. Vice consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Honorary consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Do. Honorary consul. Vice consul. Acting consul. Vice consul. Do. Do. - Consuls wn the United States. 351 DENMARK. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. DENMARK—continued. ; Honolulu, Hawaii....... Christian Hedemann ............. Consul. Boise City, Idaho... ..... Chicage, NL............. Council Bluffs, Iowa .... Kansas City, Kans ...... Youisville, Ry. .... LL... New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md. .......... Boston, Mnss........ 5... 3 St. Toms, Mo, ....50 0. Omaha, Nebr. .............. oc Lovelocks, Nev......... Perth Amboy (N. J...... New York City, N. V.... Wilmington, N.C... 4.... Grand Forks, N.Dak .... Cleveland, Ohio. ........ Portland, Ore... .. i. ... Philadelphia, Pa... ... Manila, PT... ... 00 Humacaoe, 2. R700... Mayaguez, P.R :.......... Ponce, Po. Ri... 10 San Juan P. By... Nise (Crab Island), P. R. Charleston, SC. ih Galveston, Tex. ......... Salt Lake City, Utah.... Newport News, Va...... Norfolls, Va... .... J. &, For Hawaii. Walter 8. Bruce. 2A 00 JAE Juan For Idaho. Georg Becht... i vuiss ovis rid ens For Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Mis- souri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wis- consin, ‘and Wyoming. For Iowa. Jep Hansen Mailand 2-00000 For Kansas. Charles B..Currie. rod. (oui... For Kentucky, Tennessee, and Ohio. Thyge Soegaard. . For\ Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Holger A. Koppel afieadaad in For Maryland. Gustaf Lundberg: «wit 5ni. oo J... For Connecticut, Maine, Massachu- setts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Peter SOrensen, suai Saloons For Michigan. John C. Nelsonpnll..\ 2uudd |... For Minnesota. Anthony M. Matzon For Missouri. OHO Wolll. hr ab ie oi For Nebraska. Peter Anker Lo 00 SHURE, 1). For New Jersey. Martin Julius Charles Theodor Clan For Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Vir- ginia. Alexander Severin Heide. ......... For North Carolina. * Marinus Rasmussen .............. For North Dakota and South Dakota. Mark L,. Thomsen... .. i... 00... For Ohio. For Oregon. CHESHAnVOE riots hess dines For Pennsylvania. Robert Henry Wood RENE ©, Antonio Roig, FU, aed LoL A er BNO i ae ils ee dias Cavlos Armstrong .iewuid. ... Ju... For Porto Rico. T. GC. 1. Waymonthi:.i..iwi.iiils Bodin “ Victor Dutell an. anna. James M. Seignious iii. orodde dis. For South Carolina. Hans Guldmanm ... a... Thorvaldi@rleh.. i. a... For Utah. HB aParker ash coven son vib vat For Virginia, Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Acting consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul, Do. Consul. Vice consul. Do. 352 - Congressional Directory. DENMARK—FRANCE. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. DENMARK —continued. Seattle, Wash........... Racine, Wis. i. ou: 00.» DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Chicago, 111... ...... 0.0 Baltimore, Md. ...... Boston, Mass... ...... 0% New York City, N..V.... Wilmington, N.C....... Philadelphia, Pa ........ Acmadilla, P. RQ... 0... Arecibo, P. Rizo... ... Fajardo, P. R........ 840 Humacao,'P. Rt 00 Mayaguez, P.R.......... Ponce, BoB... .. .. 1. = San Juan, P. R..... .. A Vieques, DE... un Worfolk, Va. ...... ECUADOR. 1.08 Angeles; Cal. ....... San Francisco, Cal.. ..... Chicago, 111............. New Orleans, Ia......... Baltimore, Md7.......... Boston, Mass... ......... St. Lonis, Moi’ ......... New York City, N.V.... Cincimmati, Ohio... . ..... Philadelphia, Pa. ....u.. Manila, BP. 0......... 458% Charleston, 'S. C......... Calveston, Tex. |... .... Norfolk, Va..cr........... .. FRANCE. Birmingham, Ala........ Mobile, Ala... .%........; Nome, Alaska .......... 1.08 Angeles, Cal... ..... San Diego, Cal....c: .. ee San Francisco, Cal....... : SanjJose, Cal... .....:... Penver,'Colo .... J... ..; Pensacola, Fla'.......... Tampa, Fla, 0c... Sayannah, Ga''.......... Chicago, 1W1.............. John P. Jacobsenyi.iciwoeiiin. i a For Alaska andfjWashington. Peter Bering Nelson. oiiaiir. ..... For Wisconsin. Frederick W. Job. . ....5. 0. Fh us William A. Riordan ..co.......... Joseph Henry Emslie t........... Juan Bautista Alfonseca C......... Andrew J, Howell 3r.. 5.00. oo Rodman Wanamaker............. Simeon Rovira . sieneiiaal..... 0.5 Angel Sanz y Ambros... 000... Rambn-Weollf 0 idiot... lo... José: Janeny, SPIDER FY DL Lola Pablo Cabralat.. core. iv bo Antonio: Cabral culo) £0... i... Ernesto Moringlane ~. i ail0ll .. ... Juan Eugenio Medina y Cortés... .. For Porto Rico. José B. Castellén..c., S.J... Harry Reynon. a... ious. oo. 0. Tomas 1. Duquée.,ov. 0. inl J... Dr. D. Pedro Arcentales........... Pablo A. Andrade = 721 oe Tale Millet. rr aes Lk Carlos VV. Coelloh.. aq. incr. odes oh Cornelius VM. Smith t- -waiatt 1s Gustave Preston.ba saad... LL LLL ErnestoB. Filsinger............. de. oo Pelicisimo Lopez. i 5000... Rafael Zevallos Ch’... 20000 bho. David S. Reinberg.. . on... cd. «ih Cassius A. Green otc 2a ran. Ricardo BE. Barretto. il... ... Guillermo Oliveras Haal.......... Henry Mosle. o.oo. 3... ss es se ss se ss es shes se se ss sue sae Lowis Sentous, Jt. or oiriv «viv r os Abraham Blockman.ui. + .ieil ov... Henri Antoine Joseph Mérou. .. ... For California, Idaho, Nevada, Ore- gon, Utah, Alaska, Arizona, and Hawaii. ArBonrquini iil ed fh sant Ld os Westerby Howe . 1) thr Eroest W. Monrose... ... 3... Alexis Nicolas’... .... oan 0 Louis Emile Houssin de Saint Laurent. For Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Min- nesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebras- ka, Ohio, Wisconsin,and Wyoming, Vice consul. Do. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Honorary con. gen. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Acting consul, Consul. Do. Do. Consul general, Vice consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul general. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. \ Consuls in the United States. FRANCE—GERMAN EMPIRE. 333 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. FRANCE—continued. Louisville, Ky . Baton Rouge, La New Orleans, La Portland, Me Baltimore, Md Boston, Mass Detroit, Mich St. Paul, Minn Gulfport, Miss Kansas City, Mo St. Louis, Mo New York City, N. V.... Cincinnati, Ohio Portland, Oreg Philadelphia, Pa Manila, P. I Arecibo, P.R Arroyo-Guayama, P. R. .. Humacao, P. R Mayaguez, P. R Ponce, P.R.....- San Juan, P. R Vieques, P. R Charleston, S. C Brownsville, Tex Dallas, Tex El Paso, Tex Galveston, Tex San Antonio, Tex Norfolk, Va Seattle, Wash Tacoma, Wash. t.e:..... GERMAN EMPIRE. Mobile, Ala San Francisco, Cal Denver, Colo Pensacola, Fla Atlanta, Ga DE NPY Savannah, Ga Honolulu, Hawaii Michel Hermanme. icin. h Alexander GrotiChy, cpa. ho « Henri Francastel. oi. .00 .. . .. mi For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, ILouisiana, Mississippi, Léonce Rabillon Joseplt J. Flamand Joseph Belanger John Paoli Fmile-Stanislas Brus Louis Seguenot Etienne Marie Louis Ianel 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. Eugene C. Pocie Charles Henri Labbé Maurice Heilmann Henri FEugéne Aymé-Martin Damian Piza Louis Raphael Vincent Leccia Joseph René Pierre Daubrée For Porto Rico. Ch. Le Brun Harold Laurens Dundas Kirkham. . Jean Batiste Adoue Jean Marie Romagn Charles Joseph Zénon Marie Milon de Peillon. For Texas. Alfred Sanner Walter Herron Taylor Raymond Guillaume Emile Henri Adrien de Lobel-Mahy. For Washington. Clinton Peyre Ferry * E. Holzborn For Alabama. Franz Bopp For California and Nevada. Georg Plehn For Colorado and Utah and the Terri- tories of New Mexico and Arizona. Gerhard Rolfs For Florida. Dr. Erich Zoepffel For Alabama, North Carolina, and Tennessee, Ernst Eichhorn For Georgia. W. Pfotenhauer For Hawaii, Florida, : Georgia, South Carolina, Consular agent. Do. Consul. + Consular agent. Do. . Be Consul general. Consular agent. Do. Vice consul. Consul. In charge of consular agency. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Do. Do. Vice consul. Consular agent. Do; . Vice consul. Consular agent, Consul. Do. Do. 354 Congressional Directory. GERMAN EMPIRE. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. ¥ GERMAN EMPIRE—CON. Chicago; TL..u. on. ni Alfred Gelgsler... LL. 00 Lo Consul. For Illinois (except St.Clair, Madison, and Monroe Counties), Iowa, Michi- gan, Nebraska, and Wisconsin. New Orleans, La........ Paul Roly iia. oui Lu uh La Do. For Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. Baltimore, Md ..... .«... Carb A lideritzs. 0. Sut oad Do. For Maryland and the District of Columbia. Boston: Mass t,o onli. Wilhelm Theodor Reincke. ....... Do. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. St. Paul, Minn, ......5... Johannes Grunow |. ulin ian» Do. For Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota. St. Louis, Mel .......... Maximilian von Loehr............ Do. New York City, N. Y.... Wilmington, N.«C.... ... Cincinnati, Ohio... . .. . .. Philadelphia, Pa........ Cebu, BP. 1. 550. vias Hoilo, P..L... 28, ou. Manila, PoT0 00000. Aguadilla, P.R..... HAE Avecibo, P. RR... ........ Mayaguez, PR... Ponee, PR... 0... ~SanJuan,P.R.....o... Charleston, S.C. ......... Galveston, Tex... ... ... Newport News, Va ...... Richiiond,Va......5..... Port Townsend, Wash... Seattle, Washo: oon... Tacoma, Wash .......... For Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, Okla- homa, and St. Clair, Madison, and Monroe Counties in Illinois. Rudolf Branksen i. wieifi .vavlnns For Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Con- necticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, and the District of Columbia. Bwb Ziegler on ool oo hn For the port of New York. JamesiSprupnt.L ols BET LL For North Carolina. Josef Fettenbanr...... . .....-..... For Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia. Arthme Mudra, oi ro For Delaware and Pennsylvania. Carl Janssen. 5. 00005 SMI Jo 0 For Iloilo. Franz Karl Zitelmann'. 7... 0... Forthe Philippine Islands, the island of Guam of the I,adrones, and the Sulu Islands. OU PRIBDDT coor - vs nt rt santo san Adoll Koester tL. "0 To wt Hubett oberg. .L0 ihc voles Juline Umbach... oui hh Waldemar Hepp, vi: ue biseiihb - 2 For Porto Rico. Bil Talnze 0 Coat hed For South Carolina. Ofte Sched. 0: = B08 Loi. For Texas. Henry L. Schmelz 005. L000 000. For Norfolk, Newport News, and Portsmouth. Emil Carl Vietor .. .f.. 0. 50... For Virginia, except Norfolk, New- port News, and Portsmouth. August Duddenhausen ............ For Clallam, Island, Jefferson, and San Juan Counties, Wash. Wolf von'l Ohneysen ............. For Oregon, Washington. Idaho, Mon- tana, Wyoming, and Alaska, Otto Richter a. = vi rsh es For Adams, Asotin, Chehalis, Clarke, Columbia, Cowlitz, Franklin, Gar- field, Klickitat, Lewis, Pacific, Pierce, Skamania, Thurston, Wah- kiakum, Wallawalla, Whitman, and Yakima Counties, Wash. Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Do. In charge of vice con- sulate. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consuls wn the United States. GREAT BRITAIN. 355 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank, GREAT BRITAIN. Mobile, Alas. .......k... Nome, Alaska Tos Angeles Cal 2. +. San Diego, Cal. 7.4.0... San Francisco, Cal. ...... Denver, Colo. .......}. Washington, D.C....... Apalachicola, Fla Fernandina, Fla......... Jacksonville, Fla... 1715 Key West, Fla o. .|... Pensacola Pla 0... Port Tampa, Ela... .\. . . . Brunswick, Ga,.coibs .)-- » - Darien, Ba. cn. niin hot Savannah, Ga...» .. . Honolulu, Hawaii... .... Chicago, TU RuLoL 00. New Orleans, Ia........ Portland, Me: i. ..... .. Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass. ........... Detroit, Mich........... Duluth Ming). ..%....... St. Paul, Minn Biloxi, Miss... .....\ "x. Gulfport, Miss Kansas City, Mo... ..... St. Lows, Mo... .....1... Omaha, Nebr Buffalo, New: York City, N. V.... Fdmund Joshua Seiders Lionel Rupert Stuart Weatherly... Charles White Mortimer For the district of Los Angeles. Allen Hutchinson’... id: F000l. Walter: Risley Hearn. . 05.0. 0s... For California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. Wellesley Moore: sz boi fii 5 vo Halford Dumergue Gerrard Alfred Cribben Hugh Black'Rowlandi. li......... T. XB. Porteriil i Jo 0 PALE William Bedloe Crosby Duryeé. ... Wallses Muehfow 0... James Ward Mortis. vr. .om bit. i» Rosendo Porras. tov co vu das « s « » RoDett WIANSOM:; oes ei win fives eo +0 » Arthur Montague Brookfield For North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Ralph George Elliott Forster... ... For Hawaii. : Horace Dickinson Nugent......... For Colorado, North Dakota, South Da- kota, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Mich- igan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Wiscon- sin, and Wyoming. Philip David Walter Nutt. .'/. ..... Heury Thomas Carew-Hunt....... For Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. Lewis Edward Bernays. .. J. Chin John Bernard Keating For all the ports of entry in Maine. GUDerl Braser su dol i es seispieit oie os . For Maryland, Virginia, and West Vir- ginia. Godfrey Arthur Fisher... ........ James Guthrie. C0 eh. Frederick Peternleay............. For Maine, Massachusetts, Hampshire, and Vermont. Gordon Thompson Maclean. ...... Jolin B. Masson’. "lu. ALY. Howard G. Meredith... . ........ Henry Taylor Charles Edward Hamilton James]. Lemon. to. vat ote Te, Arthur Foderingham Tarilton.. ... Herbert Whitehead MacKirdy..... Thomas Edward Erskine. ......... For Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, Ok- lahoma, Kentucky, and Tennessee, and the city of East St. Louis, Ill. William Keane Small...... RA William Henry James Cole........ Courtenay Walter Bennett For New York, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. John Joseph Broderick.) 84259° —62-1—1ST ED——24 Vice consul, Do. Do. Do. Consul general, Consul. Vice consul. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul general, Vice consul. Proconsul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Do. Consul. Proconsul. Vice consul. Do. Consul general. Acting consul, ‘ 356 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN—GREECE. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. GREAT BRITAIN—contd. New York City, N. V... Wilmington, N: C....... Cincinnati,:Ohio . ..... J. Cleveland, Ohio. ........ Astoria, Oreg P2071, Lo. Portland, Oreg. i." ..... Philadelphia, Pa......... Cebu, P.1...0o Feit 40 Holle, P. 1. ......0...0.. Manila, PrT. .o5.....0 Arecibo, P.R........ 50 Arroyo de Guayama, P.R. Humacao,,B.B.....5: .. ... Mayaguez, P. R......... Ponce PL. R ..........0 0 San Juan, PuR cil... Providetice; R.T...L..... Charleston, S. C...... . 74 Port-Royal, 8. C...z..... Galveston, Tex... ........ Sabine Pass, Tex ........ Apia, Tutuila, Samoa . ... Newport News, Va....... Norfolk, Va... , ....:. > Richmond, Va... ....... Grays Harbor, Wash .... Port Townsend, Wash. .. Seattle, Wash. ........s ’ v Tacoma, Wash J 0 ........ GREECE. Mobile, Ala... Lien 2... San Francisco, Cal... /." James Sprunt cai oon 0s William H.. Sprant..d asi.sdd 00 « Wilk Y,. Binehi.mciidan oii... hous HB. Gresham... 0 7 Fn aii. Edward Mackay Cherry. .......... James Lavdlaw iv S00 For Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Alaska. James Ernest Laidlaw ............ Wilfred Powell... vl ho. For Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Delaware. Prancis W. Manfers. ...... coivis - Hugh Alexander Ford... ..x...-. For Pennsylvania. Fdwin Willard McCarthy......... Edwin Willard McCarthy ......... Charles Edward Eardly Childers. .. GuyiWalford. ..-..........0 iad, BricSt.'ChairPurdon....... ..-. .: .- Alfred Ernest Wileman........... . For the Philippine Islands. Gerald Hastings Phipps. .......... Clive Kingcome.l..v.a00v.. vos TorenzoOlver il... 0.0... Henry Alexander McCormick... .. Antonio: Bolg i). ha usih aebifii nl For Humacao, Naguabo, and Fajardo. Ado Steffens... oor: Somers oti Fernando Miguel Toros. ........ William Brown Churchward ...... Thomas G. I. Waymouth.......... George A. Stockwell. 1000. C0, Alexander Harkness........ Rey Henry Adolph George Kessler..... For Fort Royal and Beaufort. Charles Alexander Spencer Per- ceval. For Texas and New Mexico. Samuel Wythe Barnes ............. John BR. Adams cad. denial. For Sabine Pass and Port Arthur. Thomas Trood -. .. :. neo vines snn James Haughton...i.s.i. Soci a0, Barton Myers... . i. 4 vomit. Robert Baldwin Myers............ Arthur Ponsonby Wilmer ......... Thomas Moar Watt Copland. ...... Oscar Kllcker. fe Loti Jnl Bernard Pellyiio could. .onfvea WEL Murray SOL ine ooo Charles Ernest Lucian Agassiz. .... GeotgeSA 'Bivilre' L000 2 0 Richard. de Fontana: ......-.-.«.. Chicago, Jl. i. iiss rvs Nikolaos Salopoulos.............. Vice consul. Second vice consul. Third vice consul. Vice consul. Acting vice consul. Vice consul. Do. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Acting consul. Vice consul. Acting vice consul. Proconsul. Vice consul. Acting vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general, Acting vice consul. Proconsul. Vice consul. Do. Vice consul. Do. Do. : Proconsul, in charge of vice consulate. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Acting vice consul. Vice consul. Do. Proconsul. Vice consul. Do. Do. Do. Proconsul. Vice consul. Consuls in the United States. GREECE—HONDURAS. 357 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. GREECE—continued. Boston, Mass. ........... Anthony ¥;, Benmachi. ...........0. Consul. St. Tonis, Mo, ... ...:.: Bute, Mont ..........%. New York City, N. VY.. .. Philadelphia, Pa Nashville, Tenn. ........ Tacoma, Wash.......... GUATEMALA. Mobile, Ala... ........ San:Diego, Cal... ....... San Francisco, Cal....:. Pensacola, Pla........ .. Chicago, dl: in ........ Kansas City, Kans... 2s Louisville, Ky New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md Boston, Mass... ... Tg St. Touts; Moi iil... .. New York City, N. Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ San Juan, P. BJ......... Providence, BR. 1......5 Galveston, Tex. ........ Seattle, Wash........... ® HAITI. Mobile, Al... ccc... Savannah, Ga............ Chicago, 11... ...... ... Banger, Me........ ov Boston, Mass. . . New York City, N. Y.... Wilmington, N. C.... ... Mayaguez, P.R......... Ponce, Po Rid ain wil HONDURAS. Mobile, Ala. .q0......... Los Angeles, Cal. ....... San Diego, Caly......... San Francisco, Cal ... ... Washington, D: C....... Jacksonville, Fla........ Tampa, Fla. oreo 5 Chicago, TU... ........ Kansas City, Kans Louisville, Ky DR For Maine, New Hampshire, Ver- mont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, : and Connecticut. Hector M. Pesmazoglou For Missouri. TB Rwgeell For Montana and Utah. For Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Vir- ginia. Panteles Ch. Panagiotopoulos.. . ... Hams Heidner.............:...... Jurisdiction includes the State of Ore- gon. Luis Marti Moragues Ormond W. Follin ... .". J hes Eeline Galicia VV... 0720 on Vicente J. Vidal Julio FB. Brower... soe bs sina sivs For Illinois. Fawin BR. Heath. so aii. «Sidi. For Kansas. Shirley’ M. Cravifordic ih... 1... Manuel Morales Sdenz’.~.. 2.1... C: Morton Stewart, jo. 17000 (0 For Maryland. A. CoGarcia 0a Laat Lu L. D Kingsland. Ju. angi, For Missouri. Dr. Ramon Bengoechea. .......... Dudley Bartlett. s.iii. Loinniiii. + oun Carlos Vere 4 0 8 0 85 2 8 80 6 ee ees as sees ese eee Cuthbert Singleton.........e... 54.5, Pre. MecConvilleds. doen nuit ud B. Preston Clark Louis Durand Arthnr Trapp rel Ion A as William M. Cumming 00 000 AdolfoSteffens. it pn Paul Vincenti Charles Veére LI I SSR SS SPE SP SP Humberto Ferrari Louis M. Moraguez ii... iia es Tomas I. Duqué, i «oii sibenc ssn Marcos Martinez. ovat init sok sles Fustorgio Calderén. i... ......0 1%. Alan O, Clephane 5.0 vuiv ern. James Samuel Easterby... ....... Tomds M. Shackeliord........... CORR SRC SCT SC SCY SUI SCS RS ST SY 0 SE TO Tr J Tr SPN SP SY I EE ES In charge consulate. In charge of vice consulate. Consul general. Consul. Vice consuui., Consul. Consul. Hon. vice consul. Consul general. Hon. vice consul. Consul. Honorary consul. Do. Consul general. Honorary con. gen. Consul. Honorary con. gen. Consul general. Honorary consul. Consul. Do. Honorary consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Do. Do.. Consul general. Hon. vice consul. Vice consul, Do. Do. Consul. Consul. Vice consul, Consul. Vice consul. Honorary consul, Consul. Vice consul, \ Do. Comnsul general, Do, Do, | | 353 Congressional Directory. HONDURAS—ITALY. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. HONDURAs—continued. New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md ..ii.. .v- .. Detroit, Mich’... ........ St. 'Lonis, Mo, .......c. . ... New York City, N. Y. Cincinnati, Ohio... : . .. Philadelphia, Pa... iu Galveston, Tex.......... Seattle, Wash.......... TTALY. Birmingham, Ala ....... Mobile, Ala. .icoria- do Trinidad, Colo. ....ii. ... New Haven, Conn. ... ... Washington, D.C... .... Pensacola, Fla........... Tampa, Fla. ............ Savannah, Ga. lll... Honolulu, Hawaii ....... Chicago, 111. F200 Lo Springfield, T1..... ..... Clinton, Tad 5... noticia Louisville, Ry ........"... New Orleans, La........ Portland; Me. oii... Baltimore, Md. . Boston, Mass. :;......... - Lawrence, Mass......... Springfield, Mass. ....... Calumet, Mich. ......., Detroit, Mich. hr... Hibbing, Minn =." i>... St. Paul, Minn... ... Culiport, Miss. 0... ... Vicksburg, Miss... ... .. St. Yous, Mo..." ..... Jessa ot mip a@nA ony For Iouisiana. C. Morton Stewart; Jt.... coo. Carlos MI Grebls ini oie ov bviiis Guillermo G. Griffiths..... ....... YL: D. Kingsland. ...ouagupt sons von Guillermo Moncada. ... «i. vivv vein ee. ET En Re LR sali sielviia (oiminl oho im telinii ay Wiel iva facie ferns iaiie’ ou a win ow ale onlin nla eis sin erie. iv 8 sis eine sieieteiehe o wae sie ee Francesco Carpigiani....... Sept, Giovani Ivulich.z &...00 Jie iles vv Tigi Dell’Orto ar: 1a: dei aiimspyis «os» Chevalier Salvatore Luciano Rocca. For California, Nevada,Oregon, Wash- ington, and Alaska. Chevalier Adolfo Rossi... ......... For Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Arizona, and New Mexico. RoODerto FPerrar] i civ ait ais Gluseppe Male... 5. cis 5. 14 0 Michele RICCIOL irate ibe sib vs bai Emanuele Fronani .. 5.0... 5... Giovanni Battista Cafiero ......... Giovanni Savarese. oli 00 LL... Mosé Cafleroi fiir AiO, Jk Federico Augusto Schaefer........ Chevalier Guido Sabetta .......... For Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, Ken- tucky, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, and Missouri. Romano Lodl-Fé. taal. atat n. Arturo Granata. .............. Annibale Selaroglio.......:....... Ginseppe Cuneo: i. a sal Ferdinando Mazzint....-......... For Iouisiana, Texas, Mississippi, Ar- kansas, Alabama, Florida, and Ten- nessee. Carlo Papin... haemo dress Count Gerolamo Moroni ......... (Caspare VELVEN . of vias bis 05s ive Giovanni Schiaffino... od ceri n in Gaetano PocearQie. ....isivfospsies bic vie For Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine. Giacomo Rubee Lisa .. 7... ..... Cardiello Pietro di Antonio. ....... Attilio Castighiano i. Prancesco Pranchina =... 0 0... Nicola Berro/s SHH Magan or. Alessandro Broletti -. x... Ex Consul general. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Do. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. Do. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul general. Do. Vice consul. Consular agent. Do. In charge consulate. Consular agent. Vice consul. Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Consular agent. Do. Vice consul. Consular agent. Consuls 1m the United States. ITALY—JAPAN. 359 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. ITAL Y—continued. Butte, Mont Omaha, Nebr Newark, N. J Trenton, N. J Albany CNV LL Buffalo, No. NL ale... New York City, N. Y.... Rochester, N. ¥......... Yonkers, N. YV Cincinnati Ohio... ..... Cleveland, Ohio......... ‘McAlester, Okla Dubois, Pass... .. 0. Philadelphia, Pa Pittsburg, Pa Scranton, Pais. occ... Manila, PX. 00 0 Mayaguez, BHR... ....... Ponce, P. R San Juan, PR... kia Providence, R.T......... Charleston, S.C... ...... Memphis, Tenn... ....... Galveston, Tex. ......... Barre, Vt Noriolk, Va........ i. 52 Seatlle, Wash. .....:.... Fairmont, W.Va........ Milwaukee, Wis. ........ JAPAN. Mobile, Ala. i~ ... 0 San Francisco, Cal Denver, Colo Honolulu, Hawaii....... Chicage; Hl 2 ~0s 00.0 New Orleans, Ia........ Chevalier Bernardo Dolzadelli..... Antonio Venuto Dr. Alfredo Magnani Felice Roniga... ... amet. lio. For Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island. TLodovico Manzini.i. . i040... .. Marquis da Passano Cesare Sconfietti Adolfo Vinci With jurisdiction County. Carlo Gnocchi, i. Saf su irises tex» Nicola Cetrl. ind ormein ovis ves Giovanni Battista Tua For Oklahoma. Ciuseppe Bedericl:. -.; ons ihosn Count Luigi Aldrovandi Marescotti. For Pennsylvania, Delaware, Mary- land, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Georgia. Tuigi Provana del Sabbione....... Giuseppe ‘Gentile .. ce meiaiie is hos 2 Meriggio Serrati Giuseppe Natali in Westchester Fortunato Tiscar Francisco Reyesii.izlii.. 1%... ahaa Giacomo Antonio Caino........... For Porto Rico. Mariano Vervena isl... cies eens Giovanni Sottile Gino Piero] da dE Augusto J. Ghiglione. ..... .......... Giuseppe Caldara.. . ih canis de ons Arminio Conte Matsuzo Nagai A. 1,. Bennett SemichiUyene Lola... i... Relichi Yamasaki. ior 20000) 0. For Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, In- diana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin. John Walker Phillips Yer Tree eee Consular agent. Do. Do. Consul general, Vice consul. Do. Consular agent. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Do. In charge of vice consulate. Consular agent. Consul. Consular agent Do. Consul. Consular agent. Do. Honorary consul. Consul general. Consul. Honorary consul. Consul general. Consul. Honorary consul. 360 Congressional Directory. JAPAN—MEXICO. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. JAPAN—continued. Boston, Mass... . ao. St. Louis, Moll... .....; New York City, N. Y.... Portland, Oreg. ......... Philadelphia; Pa ........ Manila, RB. Lois... Galveston, Tex ......... Seattle, Wash........... KONGO. Baltimore, Md ....... as LIBERIA. Mobile, Ala... ........0. San Francisco, Cal ...... New Orleans, La........ Boston, Mass. .............. St. Louis, Mol... 2% or. Jersey City, N.T......... New York City, N. V.... Philadelphia, Pa. ....... Manila, P.Y.. =... ..0 00 Galveston, Tex ......... MEXICO. Mobile, Alla. Cou... 0. Clifton; Ariz)... .. 0... Douglas, Ariz......;..... Naco and Bisbee, Ariz... Nogales: Aviz........... Phoenix, Ariz... .... 0... Tucson, Ariz............. Nama, Ariz... a Calexico, Cal.....wv...... Tos'Angeles, Cal. ....... San ‘Diego, Cal........;. San Prancisco, Cal.....: J. B.Smith olumad ainsi... U. Oyama...... hanoileniiadon na J. Franklini McFadden..uua. 5... Tsunezo Sugimura... ..5. vib... : For the Philippine Islands and the Island of Guam. 3 J. H.:Langbehn i... ..0vns YR Tokichi Tanaka: :.ii. convo ini... .. James Gustavus Whiteley ......... George W. Lovejoy. 0.0 5 vis, Ray P-Saffeld 01. 20 a. I. EH. Reynolds or. ovina. For the United States. Hutchings Inge ..'.0. 0h 0 Puan, Albert W, Minick .............--- Bdward«G. Merrill eo. uve. Thomas]. Huntii o.oo... i Robert C. Moon 25.5... 0 irs i. ou Re. Stmwmers 2H iene J. R.Gibson......... SET Alfonso 1, Jimenez 0000000 00. For Alabama. Jesus Aguilar. cols anon da For Graham and Greenlee Counties. Prancisco Iz4bal Yriarte........... For the municipality of Douglas. Miguel Lopez Torres... . ccs. ov For Cochise County. Daniel B. Montes. .... :.. .. ...... For Santa Cruz County. Ricarde'S. Bravo. /. ui 000 ul, For Apache, Coconino, Gila, Mari- copa, Mohave, Navajo, Pinal, and Yavapai Counties, and the State of Utah. : Arturo M. Blias! bh. sound oo.. For Pima County. Francisco Barron... 4. .... 0.0. For Yuma County. Euorique dela Sierra. ....cio000 550 o For Imperial County. Antonio Lozano y Castro ......... For Kern, I,os Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura Counties. José 1Lozano:y Castro-........w. .. ... Joaquin Diaz Prieto..::..:...... .. For Riverside and San Diego Counties. Dr.sPlutarco Ornelasiigl .......... 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 Ios Shp and San Diego, and the State of Nevada. Gustavo levy... i ie Honorary consul. Do. Consul general. In charge consulate. Honorary consul. Vice consul. Honorary consul. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Do. Vice consul, Consul general. Consul. Vice consul, Consul. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Consul. Consul ad interim, Vice consul. Consul. Consul general. Vice consul. | Consuls in the United States. 361 | MEXICO. ! Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. MEXICO—continued. Denver, Colo-.nii. Jb ..... Adelaido José Ortiz. x) Add... Consul. ir For Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana. Pensacola, Fla. ......... AbrahamiDiaz.. 0 DLE LL. Do. For Florida and Georgia. Ignacio]. Diazil Fra. 0h 0 Vice consul. Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... CuillerMo Lanz... heii -- nv nns Consul. ! For Honolulu and dependencies. Chicago, Il... .-... Agustin Pia... 'w. =o. oe dion asst Do. 3 For Illinois, Minnesota, and Wiscon- Sin. Fernando Serrano... v..uie. vis. Vice consul. | Indianapolis, Ind ....... Russell B, Harrison'......:4.,...- Do. | ; For Indiana. | Louisville, By... ...... Horace C. Brannin .... ..o vivian Consul. 1 For Kentucky and Tennessee. | New Orleans, 1a. ....... Tomas Torres. abuse. .... 1. ol Do. | For I,ouisiana. | saananNL isd Ta hel Vice consul, Baltimore, Md.......... Juan: Prieto Quemper:Y.'.........; Consul. For Delaware, Maryland, and West ¥ Virginia. | Boston, Mass. ..........; Arturo:P. Cushing.:.o00... ....... Do. | For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and | Vermont. Prederick O. Houghton... ........| Vice consul. | Detroit, Mich... ....... Daniel BF. Altland is oh. heen... Do. | ‘For Michigan. ] Pascagoula, Miss. ....... Vicente Ros. alsa d mobail. one Do. For Mississippi. - : Kansas City, Mo. ....... Monnel Cuesta. i. ip wore ison Consul. For Kansas City, and the States of Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, and South Dakota. LE eG 0 SE VU I a Ee pC Vice consul. St: Louis, Mo. .......... Gonzalo. de A. Ferndndez......... Consul. For Arkansas, Iowa, and Missouri, ; except Kansas City. New York City, N. V....J] Cayetano Romero ....uvaes ven. Consul general. Indirect jurisdiction over Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, A Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, : Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, ILouisi- 4 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. Bsteva Ruiz........... Vice consul. Cincinnati) Ohio’. .\..... Hugo Prommmanelin 2: ff io Do. For Ohio. | Portland, Oreg’.’."... .... Prank A. Spencer... od Sol Consul. 1 For Idaho and Oregon. | Philadelphia, Pa... .... Jorge I. Canalizo’.” 7 Jo. 5,000. Do. ; For Pennsylvania, except the city of Pittsburg. Pittsburg "Pal. i... James W. Wardrop'... ok obi. 4, Vice consul. ; For Pittsburg. Manila, PY... ....L.. Evaristo Battle Hernandez ........ Consul. Mayaguez, P.R......... Federico Gatell y Garcia de Quevedo| Vice consul. Ponce, PR a aes a Seed Do. San Juan, P. Re Jo... Manuel Paniagua y Oller ......... Do. Brownsville, Tex ........ Miguel Barmaodme tue JE 0... Consul. For Cameron, Hidalgo, Nueces, Refu- | gio, and San Patricio Counties. | 362 Congressional Directory. MEXICO—NETHERLANDS. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. MEXICO—continued. Del Rio, Texi ino: i000 T.eOn GOmez:i: sun obinbahidi ton Consul. For Valverde County. Eagle Pass, Tex. ........ Franciscode P..Villasana.......... Do. El Paso, Tex. ...... 4.5 Galveston, Tex... ........ Yaredo, Tex... ..0.... Port Avthnr, Tex...}. ... Riogrande City, Tex. .... Sabine Pass, Tex....... : San Antonio, Tex....... Texas City, Tex... ... ss Newport News, Va...... Norfolk, Va LUialili. Seattle, Wash ..... Tacoma, Wash. ..... ...z MONACO. San Francisco, Cal...... New York City, N.Y... .. NETHERIANDS. Mobile, Ala... ........... Los Angeles, Cal. ....... San Francisco, Cal...... Jacksonville, Fla.-...... Pensacola, Fla.......... Savanah, Ga. .......... For Brewster, Dimmit, Edwards, Jeff Davis, Kinney, Maverick, Pecos, Terrell, Uvalde, and Zavalla Coun- ties. Tristan Garza Castillon... ......... Antonio V. Lomeli .......... hy. For El Paso, Loving, Presidio, Reeves, Ward, and Winkler Counties, and the Territory of New Mexico. Barique.-Camacho ..... L004. LL... Cesar Canseco, Sus. bh. a, For Calhoun, Brazoria, Chambers, Galveston, Harris, Jackson, and Matagorda Counties. Miguel E. Diebold. vud. bt... ... For Duval, Webb, and Zapata Coun- ties. Cnrlos Palafom ci eniinh slat vies sans Juan A, Mateos, jr. i.......... For Orange and Jefferson Counties. Albertorllieals, . Joli. oh... For Starr County, except Roma. Juan Hstyada. ... 0... .c....0. For Roma and vicinity. Wo H. Gillfland.i. cL. oan For Jefferson County. : Burigque Ornelas .; . iq... ....... Consul general. St.Louis, Mo...... «-- Milton Seropyam. iv vx «'s vores 4 » =» Vice consul. New York City, N. VV. ..l H.-H, Topakyall, oom ozs 5 2 50 2 Consul general. Dikran Khan Kelekian...... i... Consul. Philadelphia, Pa... .... Ji Haig Herant Pakradooni. ..... . ... Vice consul. Pittsburg, Pa foio.: Alphonse Rutis/; Hoe iC and, oo. Consul general. With jurisdiction over New Jersey. PERU. lLoos'Angeles, Cal... ..... Elmer FP, Mackusick......... 2 ish Consul. San Diego, Cal... .. ... Sot lg wae ana rion Vice consul. San Francisco, Cal ...... Bntique Gran... avers. oO vrs Consul. STATA DI DR esl Sed le fie GG JRE SE wt Mee oa ee Do. For Georgia and Florida. Honolulu, Hawaii. ...... Bruce Cartwright. 005i. a. Do. Chicago, T1101... W. M. I. Fiske. 2 ut idogiiil oo. Do. New Orleans, Ta... ..... Richard Barthel Fic riod ov Do. Baltimore, Md ./[........ O.G. H.E.Rehrlimhn. 0.000... Do. Boston, Mass) 75. 7... ... Bugenio'C. ‘Andres’. . ... 0.00 LL. Do. New York City, N.Y....| Eduardo Higginson ........ 30 LE Consul general. Toledo, Ohio lL . ... ri oili odin cas SEER EER NB a hs Consul. Portland, Oreg i0b. ,.... Carles Barreto... oun nang cia Do. Philadelphia, Pa’. ....... Wilfredo H. Scheff. ... 0.5L 0... Honorary consul. San Juan, P. RR... ...... Dr. Manuel J. Nufiez .;........... Consul. Consuls in the United States. PERU—RUSSIA. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. PERU—continued. | Charlestony 8.5Cu0 J.C Junidnaagdialiadnd iad amend. Laas Consul. For North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. Naoziolle, Na 2. vi BE. J. Rudgard Wigs... ....-..... Vice consul. Port Townsend.and Pu- | ¥. Albert Barflett.. .......c..... ..| Consul. get Sound, Wash. ; Tacoma, Wash... ....... Louis M. Duarte. -. 2 00. seal Do. PORTUGAL. San Francisco, Cal ...... Simo. Lopes Ferreira ...comondrie cb + - - Consul. For San Francisco and its consular district. : Dr. José de Souza Bettencourt... .. Vice consul. Washington, D.C ....... " Emmanmnele Bronani =. 5.0... Do. Pensacola, Fla .......... Jul. Bemas. Do. Brunswick, Ga.......... Rosernwlog Morrah Do. Satannah, Ga... .....L...]... an. 0G tat gl Micsorie 5 oat as + wd 4 Do. Honolulu, Hawaii... .... Antonio de Souza Canavarro ... ... Consul general. Chicage, 114. 5... 0... Aleixo de Queiroz Ribeiro... ...... Consul. For Illinois. : S. Chapman'Simmig 2. ou, Je. Vice consul. New Orleans, La. ....... MauriceGenerelly............ 5... Do. Baltimnore, Md 20. ....... Adelbert WaiMears! 00. Cha oe Do. Boston, Mass... ...:..... Viscount de Valle da Costa. ....... Consul. For Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Jayme Mackay d’Almeida......... Vice consul. For Boston. . Fall River, Mass ........ Manoel Pedro Mackay d’Almeida. . Do. For Fall River and its consular district. New Bedford, Mass. ..... Joao Carlos da Silva Pitta......... Do. Gulfport, Miss... ....... CE Rt ee PIE ST SE RO Do. New York City, N.Y.... Philadelphia, Pa........ Manila, P.1.......... 5H Som Juan, BR. ana. Providence, R: 1... ..... Newport News and Nor- folk, Va. RUSSIA. Mobile, Ala’. 0. 0... 0 San Prancisco,/Cal.’. .. ... Pensacola, Flal.......... Savannah, Ga.........1. Honolulu, Hawaii.’ ..... Chicago, TIL... ..... 1. Baltimore, Md ...... = Boston, Mass. ........-% For Gulfport and its district. Luis de Sousa Monteiro Ferreira de Castro. . For all the States except California, Maine, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington. Roberto Rumseyte. lading... J. J.:de Macedo ijriyial, aeol. i ... For Philadelphia and its district. For the Philippine Islands. José Maria Lomba. ... 0 pisei uss Dr. Esteban Garcia Cabrera. ...... Carles’ A, SPIvialil. oviovirrith de. oo For Providence and its district. James Haughtonei.uetnn.- . -. 0 -» Murray Wheeler. (1G 40 BiEL 0 Pierre’ Rojdestwensky Oily 0 Ambrose Gherind... .......... i... For California, Colorado, Idaho, Mon- tana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Wash- ington, Wyoming, Alaska, Arizona, and New Mexico. Fannin Chipley...).lodotaind i... Auguste Marques FHS UEIL 5. Baron Ernest de Schilling. ........ Ses es 804 esis es esse esse esses tessa Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Do. Do. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice consul, Do, 368 Congressional Directory. RUSSIA —SPAIN. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. RUSSIA—continued. New York City, N.Y.... Portland, Oveg..... ui». +» Philadelphia, Pa........ Manila, P.1. ac... 3 Galveston, Tex........ as SALVADOR. San Francisco, Cal....... New Orleans, La........ Boston, Mass St. Louis, MO... ..:.+-~- New York City, N.Y. SIAM. Chicago, Ill New York City, N. Y.... SPAIN. Mobile, Ala, oxi. 2h. San Francisco, Cal...... Fernandina, Fla Pensacola, Fla Tampa, Fla............. Brunswick, Ga.......... Savannah, Ga......... a Honolulu, Hawalii....... Chicago, ML: 20 iin iv New Orleans, La Portland, Me... .......... Baltimore, Md. ... Boston, Mass. ............. Gulfport, Miss. ......... St. Louis, Mo New York City, N.Y .... Philadelphia, Pa Cebu, P, I. old voor oe Iloilo, P. I ses es sss ss ee Baron Albert de Schlippenbach. . .. Viadimir Yourieff (0) 00... ..... Constantin Ragozine wiser e nie dinate tin ile a ee ela 0 wiele av aris win ial 0 nl elie 0 Bucarnacion Mejia. lili, Lo. For the United States. Tamar €. Quintero... = .cab George Andrew Lewis........ 0s Toe: I Kingsland... oo wea ions vs was Ernesto. Scheriikow. .... ooh. -» Milward Adams. . ;..:..c.sipp vo» Loring Townsend Hildreth. ....... Luis Marty Moragues............. For Alabama. Count Esteban de Salazar y Cologan. For Alaska, Arizona, California, Ha- waii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Ore- gon, Utah, Washington, and Wy- oming. Artaro Brandi. iva a Ls, Santiago Carrio Juan I. Borras .... civ cio ee Alejandrino Nistal y Casas........ For the port and municipality of Tampa. ROSCIAO BOLIAS .. ov «cannes ivisisin +> +s » Javier Esteve y Borrell..........;. For Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky. Luiz Fernandez Alvarez........... Berthold Singer il. oinnnod do. José Teixidor y Jugo. 0. 4... ... For Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, I,ouisiana, Mississippi, Mis- souri, Texas, and the Territory of New Mexico. Chauncey Red Burr For Maine. Prospero Schiaffine..... ... "..... For Maryland and the District of Columbia. 5 Pedro Mackay de Almeida Jos€'de Tdorens......ovvoivuvd, oi For Mississippi. James Arbuckle Emilio de Perera y Blesa.......... For the United States, Porto Rico, Ha- waii, and the Isthmian Canal Zone. Teodomiro Aguilar y Salas........ Horace Chester Newcomb. ........ For Pennsylvania and Delaware. Cristobal Gaveiac li J. Liisi... ... For Cebu, Leyte, Bohol, and Samar. Juan Estrada y Acebal............ For the Visayas and Calamianes Islands, Paragua, Masbate, Tablas, Sibuyan, theislands adjacent there- to except Cebu, and the Sulu Archi- pelago, EP SY Consul general. Vice consul. Acting vice consul. Vice consul. Do. Vice consul. Do. Consul general. Honorary consul. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Hon. vice consul. Consul. Hon. vice consul. Hon. vice consul. Do. Do. Do. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Hon. vice consul. Do. Consul. Consuls in the United States. SPAIN—SWEDEN. 369 | Residence. ‘Name and jurisdiction. Rank. SPAIN—continued. Manila, 2 00 4% Lo. Aguadilla, PR ......°0% Arecibo, PB. R...... 0... Humacao, P.RL.... |... Mayaguez, P.R...... Bonee, PaB.. oo... 00 Sap Juan, PR... ......, Vieques, P. R. ....}..... Charleston, S$: C......... Brownsville, Tex. ....... Galveston, Tex. ......... Norfolk, Va..........L.0 SWEDEN. Mobile, Ala... ... ius Nome, Alaska. ........qs T.08 Angeles, Cal... .. ... San Tego, Cal.“ ii... San Francisco, Cal....... Denver, Colo.............. Pensacola, Fla.......... Savannah, Ga........i.. Honolulu, Hawaii....... Chicago, Ill. ........ 0% Sioux City, Towa. .... New Orleans, Ia........ Baltimore, Md... ....... Boston, Mass. .........u. Grand Haven, Mich..... Minneapolis, Minn...... Luis Torres Acebedo.............. General jurisdiction over the Philip- pine Archipelago; special jurisdic- tion overthe 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 J. L550 sii ass For Aguadilla and its district. Angel Sanz y Ambros. ...n..: i... For Arecibo, Camuy, Ciales, Hatillo, Barceloneta, Manati, Morovis, Que- bradillas, Utuado, and Vega-Baja. Antonio. Ma. Oms yCall........... For Humacao, Ceiba, Fajardo, Lu- quillo, Naguabo, Piedras, Yabucoa, Hato Grande or San Iorenzo, and Juncos. Juan Vazquez y Lopez Amor ...... For Mayaguez, Anasco, Las Marias, . Cabo Rojo, San German, Hormi- gueros, Lajas, Sabana Grande, and Maricao. ’ Francisco Pelegri Roger .......... Florencio Suarez... J. Unni... For the District of Ponce. Pelix de Siloniz y Colarte. /....... ] For Porto Rico. Avelino Portela Roldn ............ For Vieques and its district. Antonio Gastaver 0... For South Carolina. 1 Simon Celaya inlet ooh HendrichMesgle lo. LoL 2 For Texas,except Brownsville. Arthur C/Humphreys.. ........ ice hin willie. #0 0 jello lel nile’ 0 @l elim ini ie Ve ini wii wie aie te a sin b Be Nils: Malmberg .iit. 0,0 00000 bo... William" Matson Ai 00... 0. For Alaska, Arizona,California,Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Wash- ington. Fredrik Westerberg... ui... ..... Walter Anders Peterson........... Charles McKenzie-Oerting ... .... Andrew John Ritchie. i... 0... Georg Friedrich Rodiek.......... For the Territory of Hawaii. Jo Ril indgren vei vis cu 0a For Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Mich- igan, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin, Henry S. Henscheniiil aia... Gustavus Nelson Swan............ Gustav Reinhold Westfeldt, jr.... Edward Charles Geyer............ Birgar Gustaf Adolf Rosentwist. ... Daniel Frederick Pagelson........ CA. Smith. 20200 oh SUE Loves For Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Minne- sota, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico. North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Carl Edvard Wallerstedt.......... Consul general. J Vice consul. Hon. vice consul, Do. Do. Honorary consul. Hon. vice consul. Do. Consul. Hon. vice consul. Do. Do. | Do. Do. ; Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. | Do. Do. Do. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Do. Do. Deo. . Do. Do. Consul. Vice consul. 370 Congressional Directory. SWEDEN—SWITZERLAND. Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. SWEDEN—continued. St. Paul, Minn... ... St. Louis, Mo Omaha, Nebr New York City, N. Y.... Grand Forks, N. Dak. ... Cleveland, Ohio. ...... Portland, Oreg-.........: Philadelphia, Pa......., Manila, Pde... ... Les BoNee, PoeR. . vib oti ais Galveston, Tex........ Salt Lake City, Utah . Norfolk, Va. oi! ........i Port Townsend, Wash... Seattle, Washi. .!..1..... Madison, Wis... ........ SWITZERLAND. San Francisco, Cal... Denver, Colo... .....0. ... Washington, D. C....... Chicago, Il.0t5 ..... .... New Odleans, Ta... ... St. Panl, Minw..... |... St. Louis, Mo...... 1 ... New York City,N.Y..... Cmetimati, Ohio...... : Portland, Oreg.uo.2 +... . Philadelphia, Pa.....v.: Joseph A... JackSOM eum vait whisk os «us Johan Gustaf Nelson. ............. EmricM. Stenberg’. oil... ..... Macnus,Clarholm To fo 4. For Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louis- iana, Maine, Maryland, Massachu- setts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Caro- lina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. Carl Gotthard Gylfe Anderberg ... Andrew Isidor Widlund .......... Laurentius Ludwig Malm. ........ Elof Valdemar Tidell i005 |. Marcel Alonzo VII, 00. 0 Lo. Herman, Forstooastiaiost oo. 0. Jo Max Karl Wilhelm Heine ........ Johann Friedrich von Uffel Schom- berg. For the island of Porto Rico. Bertrand Adoue || Henning Fernstrom aint... Oscar Blbcker.ii. 0. laa. ho Andrew Chilberg.ii7..2 .2020 0. Halle Steensland Antoine Borel... liao. wh. «sje sve For California and Nevada. Jean Freuler DanL Weiss icaaven sain as 563 «on din vs For Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, ~ and Utah The Legation of Switzerland in Washing- ton has charge of consular matters in the District of Columbia, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. : Arnold Holingeriwlda il. Glin 0 For Michigan, Wisconsin, Towa, and northern Illinois. Yugene Hildebrand:..oou-........- Emile Bohn... - .ouigue oJ). For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Arnold Schwyzer end STEE For Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. Jacques Th eR ; For Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, and southern Illinois. Jacques Bertschmann..si. ....... ... Lows Juned it Ui el TInoss J For New York, Maine, New Hamp- shire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. Edmund Liuthy For Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Albin C, Bigger. diiusk desidineei: For Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Alaska. Gustave Ai Walther. ivi... 0.0. For Delaware, Pennsylvania,and New Jersey. Vice consul. Do. : Do. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Do. Do. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Acting consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Consuls in the United States. SWITZERLAND—VENEZUELA. 371 Residence. Name and jurisdiction. Rank. SWITZERILAND—contd. Manila, Poy cco. in, Otte GIB, ible viitiibi 55 wit sid altieds ios Consul. Jean Preisig. ./. 1.0 «svsdauilod: Jb uj iMice consul. Galveston, Tex.......... Ulsich Maller: oo. ial. A dais Consul. For Texas and Oklahoma. TURKEY. San Francisco, Cal...... George B. Hall. oo... ini. 43 oo .| Consul general. Chicago ll... vo. neve Charles Hentobin ..... ovrpotn. fo Do. Boston, Mass... >. 0... Pranle CG. Macomber. ..c.. ose: iy uns Honorary con. gen, New York City, N. Yo. od I. RB Cefet Bay. i ers + rere fic itr pnd Consul general. Manila, Pool. recor. Nedjib Hadj Effendi... .. «oxi «coin Do. URUGUAY. Mobile; Ala. V0. on Yuis WM. ‘Moraguwes’ 0000, 000 Vice consul. : For Alabama. : 4 San Francisco, Cal...... OQ. MM. Goldaracenn. . ..o.uiv iy snmsis Consul. For California. Apalachicola, Fla....... Salomon Brash... . LiL LL | Vice consul, Jacksonville, Fla. ....... B.C. 8eotb Ni x ui in bi VihLE Do. Pensacola, Fla... ...0. Vicente J. Vidal 5 ;i...0.ouilog 0S Do. Brunswick, Ga. ......... Rosendo Boras... iailaits tis Do. For Brunswick and Darien. Savannah, Ga........... Ramon Esteve....... 240 auts Hin Consul. Chicago, 111... . ..c.. Joan Moffitt. oun. pis alobios Do. New Orleans, Ta. ... oil ev co dumm Dee rar, avonoly. 1.0a Vice consul, For Louisiana. Calais, Me... a nd a or pl RB Lge is Do. Portland, “Me >... James EB. Marrett. . . ie indies vine Consul. Baltimore, Md... .... Mariel Gil. ..... nv Consul general, For the United States. Yeonce'Rabiflon. os). J. 00 Consul. Boston, Mass. ........... Max Ottoven Klock ............ccw Vice consul, Pascagoula, Miss........ Manvel, Bas 0 A, Do. For Pascagoula, Biloxi, and Gulfport. - Albany, N.Y J. 0. ial Guillermo A. Saxton’ ...... 0.0... Do. New York City, N. ¥V... {Jos Richling ............;.... 00 Consul general. Alfredo Metz Green. .............. Consul. Henry H. Jennings... {00.00 L500 Hon. vice consul. Philadelphia, Paya, Rodman Wanamaker ............. Consul. Manila, PX. cabdiod ole sins Sea RB AB EL OLE SIN IE A E Do. Mayaguez, P.oR.. coli Jacobo Bravo y Gonzalez. ........ "Vice consul. For Mayaguez and Aguadilla Ponce, BR. uve. saves Corlos Armstrong... hi ai... wi 3 Do. For Ponce and Guayama. § San Juan, P.R.......... Carles Conte: co... mminni arith -Homnorary consul. For Bayamon, Arecibo, and Humacao. Charleston, S.C... 0. Antonio Gastaver..... £3 we ns cl Vice consul. Galveston, Pex." :5 10.0% Bariqgue Schroeder: 000 Do. Port Arthur ‘and “Sabine | Juan'R. Adams’ oo 00 iris Do. Pass, Tex. - Newport News, Va...... Brique 'C. Blackiston il... oo Do. Norfolk, Va... ......0000 Aubrey G. Bafley. ro >. Do. Richmond, "Va. 0000 George H. Bavkadale. 1... 5. Do. VENEZUELA. San Francisco, Cal...... Joseph Lander Eastland........... Consul. Chicago, Jl.vunn Alain ed LL nimnanl An TMs Tian, Jad Do. New Orleans, Ia........ Emiliano Martinez. .\. o.oo JL 000 Do. St. Louis, Mo... i. iid. James The Graeme Arbuckle... ... Honorary consul. New: York City, N.:¥oa. | Jacinto Lopez... Le 00000. Consul general. Philadelphia; Pa. ilu sdevinti dann ovimmsic mbm shia Consul. Arecibo, Po Ro... oui .% Sebastidn Bonet... boa oo, iL 250; Mayaguez, B. Ro... 0.0. Adolio Steffens: ic: DIGIA055L ALL Do. San Juan, P. Rei. vines JulioSartin devi don Hivos (46 Do. Rafael W. Camejo. i: Louie cuss . Vice consul. 84259°—62-1—1ST ED——25 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA DISTRICT GOVERNMENT. (District Building, Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street. . Phone, Main 6000.) Commissioner.—Cuno H. Rudolph, president of the board, The Dresden. Private Secvetary.—Waldo C. Hibbs, The Kanawha. Commissioner.—John A. Johnston, 2111 Massachusetts Avenue. Private Secretary.—Ralph B. Pratt, 5015 Fourteenth Street. Engineer Commissioner.—Maj. William V. Judson, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, The Brighton. Private Secretary. —F. C. Lee, The Northumberland. Chief Clerk.—Daniel E. Garges, 50 U Street. Assistants to Engineer Commissioner.—Capts. Edw. M. Markham, Corps of En- gineers, United States Army, 1503 Newton Street; Mark Brooke, Corps of Engi- neers, United States Army, 2036 O Street. Secretary to the Board.—William Tindall, The Harford. Assistant Secretary.—Wm. F. Meyers, 1319 Irving Street. DISTRICT OFFICERS. Assessor.—William P. Richards, 137 S Street. : Assistant Assessors.—].T. Petty, 3331 O Street; Chas. M. Davis, 1012 E Street. Board of Assistant Assessors of Real Estate.—S. T. Kalbfus, 1515 Twenty-eighth Street; Alexander McKenzie, 1446 Harvard Street; Matthew Trimble, 1320 Rhode Island Avenue. Board of Assistant Assessors of Personal Property.—B. F. Adams, 1219 L Street; Edmund M. Talcott, 3126 Q Street. : : Auditor.— Alonzo Tweedale, 2825 Fourteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Daniel J. Donovan, 1532 T Street. Boards: Automobile.—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, Rotk Creek Park.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia; the Chief of Engineers, United States Army. Dental Examiners.—Starr Parsons, president, 1309 I, Street; C. W. Cuthbertson, 309 Seventh Street. Education ( Thirteenth and K Streets).-—Jas. F. Oyster, president; Alexander T. Stuart, superintendent of schools, The Wyoming; H. O. Hine, secretary. Examiners Veterinary Medicine.—D. E. Buckingham, president. Excise.— Alexander McKenzie, 1446 Harvard Street; S. T. Kalbfus, 1515 Twenty- eighth Street; Matthew Trimble, 1320 Rhode Island Avenue; chief clerk, Roger Williams, 18 Third Street NE. Medical Examiners: Regular.—George C. Ober, president, 125 B Street SE. Eclectic.—E. J. Collins, 823 Eleventh Street NE. Homeopathic.—J. B. G. Custis, president, 912 Fifteenth Street. Medical Supervisors.—]. B. G. Custis, president; Geo. C. Ober, secretary. Nurses’ Examining.—Lily Kanely, president, 1723 G Street; Katharine Douglass, secretary, 320 Fast Capitol Street. Pharmacy. —Frank C. Henry, president, 703 Fifteenth Street; S. L. Hilton, secre- tary, Twenty-second and I, Streets. Plumbing .— Peter C. Schaefer, president; Richard A. O’Brien, secretary. Trustees of Industrial Home School.—Burnett C. Janney, 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, 2852 Ontario Road. Trustees of Reform School jor Girls.—]. Nota McGill, president; Elizabeth A. Whitney, superintendent. Collector of Taxes:—Chas. C. Rogers, 3026 Newark Street. Deputy.—C. W. Collins, 1220 Girard Street. Coroner.—Dr. J. Ramsey Nevitt, 1820 Calvert Street, 372 Daistrict Government. 373 Corporation Counsel.—Edw. H. Thomas, 3225 Eighteenth Street. Assistants.—Francis H. Stephens, 1714 Summit Place; William Henry White, 1729 Park Road; James Francis Smith, 1339 K Street; Gus. A. Schuldt, 317 Fourth Street SE. ; A. L. Sinclair, 1519 Lamont Street; Andrew B. Duvall, 1831 M Street. Disbursing Officer.—Louis C. Wilson, 1501 Park Road. Deputy.—C. M. Lewis, 3319 Seventeenth Street. Electrical Engineer.— Walter C. Allen, 3307 Newark Street. Engineer of Bridges.—T. C. J. Baily, jr., 531 Randolph Street. Engineer of Highways.—C. B. Hunt, 1815 M Street. Inspectors of— : Asphalt and Cements.—]. O. Hargrove, 1603 O Street. Boilers.—E. F. Vermillion, 123 Thirteenth Street NE. Buildings.—Morris Hacker, 1811 Adams Mill Road. Fuel.—Michael Bergin, 71% P Street NE. Gas and Meters.—Elmer G. Runyan, 300 R Street NE. Plumbing.—A. R. McGonegal, 750 Rock Creek Church Road. Municipal Architect.—Snowden Ashford, 1406 Twenty-first Street. Permit Clerk Engineer Department.—H. M. Woodward, Brookland. Purchasing Officer.—M. C. Hargrove, 1603 O Street. Special Assessment Clerk.—John W. Daniel, 1622 Riggs Place. Superintendents of— District Building. —Capts. Edw. M. Markham; Mark Brooke; clerk, J. M. Ward, 1201 Girard Street. Home for Aged and Infirm.—W. J. Fay, Blue Plains. Insurance..—George W. Ingham, 1470 Chapin Street. Municipal Lodging House.—A. H. Tyson, 312 Twelfth Street. Roads.—1,. R. Grabill, Takoma. Sewers.—A. EH. Phillips, 1832 Biltmore Street. Streets.—H. N. Moss, 1790 Lanier Place. Street Cleaning.—J]. W. Paxton, 1736 G Street. Trees and Parking.— Trueman Lanham, Lanham Station, Md. Tuberculosis Hospital (Fourteenth and Upshur Streets).—Dr. P. G. Smith, Water Department.—W. A. McFarland, 3719 Morrison Street. Weights, Measures, and Markets.—William C. Haskell, The Cumberland. 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 Engineers.— James Keliher, 733 North Capitol Street; Samuel R. Henry, gog Lawrence Street, Brookland; C. B. Proctor, 1221 G Street NE. Five Marshal. —Philip W. Nicholson, 1619 New Jersey Avenue. Chief Clerk.—Geo. S. Watson, 3928 Fourteenth Street. 4 HEALTH DEPARTMENT. Health Officer.—William C. Woodward, 1766 Lanier Place. Assistant Health Officer.—H. F. Sawtelle, 3001 Eleventh Street. Deputy and Chief Clervk.—Harry Clay McLean, 1373 Irving Street. Inspector in Charge of Contagious Disease Service. —William C. Fowler, 1812 First Street. Chemist.—R»1,. Lynch, 2930 Fourteenth Street. Poundmaster.—Samuel Einstein, 3406 N Street. METROPOLITAN POLICE. Major and Superintendent.—Richard Sylvester, The Northumberland. Chief, also Property, Clerk.—Edwin B. Hesse, 506 A Street SE. Police Surgeons.—Dr. Edmund Barry, Dr. W. H. R. Brandenburg, Dr. H. W. Law- son, Dr. Alfred Richards. Harbor Master.—Russell Dean, 653 East Capitol Street. Sanitary Officer.—Robert Sroufe, 523 Twelfth Street NE. Hack Inspector.—Geo. H. Dawson, 12 Quincy Street. Inspector of Pharmacy.—R. A. Sanders, 15 U Street. Detective Headgquarters.—Inspectors R. H. Boardman, 1315 R Street; F. E. Cross, 319 Ninth Street SE.; Harry L. Gessford, 1412 Irwing Street; R. B. Boyle, 2418 Pennsylvania Avenue, - general equal powers and duties. : 374 : Congressional Durectory. 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 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, PRESS GALLERIES NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED. (Phones: House Press Gallery, Main 1246; Senate Press Gallery, Main gq.) Paper represented. Name. Office. Albany Pimes-Union. . bi. ( sins United Press Associations....... ........ Grand Rapids Evening Press, Saginaw News, Jackson Citizen- Press. Manager United Press Associations ..... New York American.............. Ther 3eyere Cincinnati ‘Times-Star.... vi. veo visivms »5 5 New Orleans Times-Democrat, Phila- delphia Evening Telegraph. Chicago Tribune ......................... Asheville Gazette-NewsSi........... o. oi enti. - New York Tribune... ...owhoilodssien sy Asst. chief of staff, Associated Press.... Indianapolis OR ol BR RAR New York American-Journal, Chicago American-Examiner, San Francisco Examiner, Boston American. ArizonaRepublican, BisbeeReview, Tuc- son Star, Douglass International. New York Journal of Commerce . National News Association, Interna- tional News Service. National News Association, Interna- tional News Service. Minneapolls Journal, Seattle Times, Boston Christian Science Monitor. Des Moines Capital, Columbus News. . Denver Rocky Mountain News, Wash- ington Herald. Duluth News-Tribune, St. Paul Daily News. Manager National News Association, International News Service. Bogion Transcript, Omaha World-Her- ald. Cincinnati TIMes-Star .... 2d «io vrlosipsin Terre Haute Tribune... i... odes Bisa Baltimore Sun, Baltimore Evening Sun. St. Louis Globe-Democrat ............... National News Association, Interna- tional News Service. New, York Call. cours. om anstsiyifiers gw voi Louisville Courier-Journal, Louisville Times. Portland Journal, Boise Capital News, Newark Evening News. Milwaukee Wisconsin, Duluth Herald. . Philadelphia INQUITEL., uc: fouisviriiinsiials +s Boston Advertiser, Boston Record, Spring- field Republican. National News Association, Interna- tional News Service. Boston Globe, London Morning Post. ... New York Evening PoSt...... . cision Indianapolis Star... ..................... St. I,0118 RepUuDHCH «je «isis cls veieivioiat sialstrs si - Columbia State, Brooklyn Standard Union, Richmond Times Dispatch. Los Angeles Examiner, San Francisco Examiner. Philadelphia North American........... St. Tom Slay... oi vel iam neinde di udele es San FranciscoiChronicle..... foi uidsh New York Times, Philadelphia I,edger. New York Evening World .............. New, York Sum ....... duis suis sits sts Washington Evening Star.......... Pittsburg Leader, Norfolk Iedger Dis- patch. Indianapolis News................ SA Detroit News... .. .. ues daisies ve paolete d's Chicago) EXamMINeT. .icsiisieis oh sins sievivit sos» + St. Paul Dispatch, St. Paul Pioneer Press, Sioux City Journal. Baltimore AIMETiCall. ....... ...ceveeress Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Charleston News and Courier. New: York Tribune . i. cuits cejeiiotite vides Pittsburg Press, Kansas City Star, Kan- sas City Times. Des Moines Daily News, Lincoln Star. . Washington Evening SEAT. osnese oii Chicago Tribune ............coooeven..n.. United Press Associations. ............... 1531 Park Road. Sinan Hotel. . C. A. Building. nl Street. 1730 H Street. 1112 East Capitol Street. 311 B Street SE. 1504 Park Road. 1844 Columbia Road. Hamilton Hotel. The Oakland. 1226 Fairmont Street. 1419 Newton Street. Hotel Gordon. Langdon, D.C. .| 740 Rock Creek Church Rd. 2926 P Street. 1333 1, Street. 19 Bryant Street. 1419 Columbia Road. The Wagar. 3433 Holmead Place. 634 Eighth Street NE. 2616 Cathedral Avenue. ‘The Avalon. The Brunswick. 1336 Harvard Street. 1618 Fourteenth Street. 102 C Street SE. ‘The Westmoreland. Chevy Chase, D. C. 1433 New Jersey Avenue. The Champlain. 1326 L Street. 1519 Park Road. The Connecticut. 1409 Twentieth Street. 1427 New Jersey Avenue. 1420 Girard Street. The Cecil. 1423 R Street. 1304 Monroe Street. 1720 Fifteenth Street. 930 Sixteenth Street. 1467 Irving Street. Florence Court. Hammond Court. 2475 Eighteenth Street. 1236 Euclid Street. 44 V Street. The Brunswick. 1488 Monroe Street. The Juniata. 2308 Nineteenth Street. The Westminster. 3205 Nineteenth Street. 1777 Massachusetts Avenue. Persons Entitled to Admission to the Press Gallery. 381 MEMBERS OF THE PRESS, ETC.—Continued. Paper represented. Residence. * Praeger, Otto 2 Price; Wao Wamu ohtgvs caus * Pullman, Ernest Hazen... Pullman, Raymond W...... Richmond, Carl I... ....... Robertson, Irving E......... Robinson, Norborne........ ERvan, JohnP... .........o..% Sariwell "EARN a re * Schroeder, Reginald....... Schuette, Oswald B........- Schulz, H. W #|'Sheppard, Carl D+... .::.., XShowalter, W. J:........0LL. Shriver, .JohmSe.. .oc 0:05 Simpson, Robert........c... Smallwood, John B.......... 2Smith-Hal Fl... . i0vi.0 %] Smith, Ralphi.........5.0% * Smith, William Wolff. ..... * Snure, John * Snyder, Edgar C Splain, Maurice *|| Stadden, Corry M * Starek, Fred | Stealey, Watterson ........ Steckman, Frederick W .... #l Stevens, HW. C.......o..-.: [Stewart Orville i ......... | Stofer, Alfred J... . 2. SL Summers, CeofW.......... .. Suter, Tohwele.. ou. i. teas *]| Sweinhart, Henwy 1,...... *Thavis, 1,. William. ....... Ek ighe, MB. .q.omi thesis %| Piller, ’IheodoreH.:....... +5 Pinker, Jackson.......;..: 2kige, Fred C............... iprnesdell SJ AL ria van Benschoten, William A. *| Vernon, Leroy T Vernon, Mereer....... EL ‘Waldeck, Jacob... in... * Walker, Ernest G......... * Walker, Harry W Weimer, Frederick C Welt, Paul. sii. chews sus * Welliver, J. Cc oinelnioie 3's Winieieh *West, Hen Wilson, Robert B............ % Woolley, R.W.............. Zachary, Robert A.......... Raleigh News and Observer, Nashville Banner. Dallas News, Galveston News. .......... Brooklyn BImes. ioe sa duui geese Buffalo Evening News, Great Falls Trib- une, Helena Record. Petroit Times i. 00 iE Sone ad, Canton Evening Repository, San Anto- nio Light. Toronto Velegram' Lous S68 SLAG Boston: Globes: i ts ii h mith hie sent ste wie isie SAN RranciSCO POSE, i, seis sires siir ta sien United Press Associations New York Staats-Zeitung Chicago Imter-0cean .. i .clv: cick Joaetaasne Oklahoma City Oklahoman.............. Associated Press Richmond Journal i..hl. 0.0L 0 ad ai Baltimore American, Baltimore Amer- ican Star. Pittsburgh Gazette Times Washington Evening Star............... Baltimore Sun Atlanta Journal... 0... lL Buffalo, Evening News... .. uo: ras: me New York Globe, Des Moines Register and Leader, Washington Times. Omaha Bee, Toronto World, Winnipeg Telegram. Pittsburg Post, Pittsburg Sun, Philadel- phia Record. New Orleans Picayune Cincinuat] Enquirer... seer. nes New York Evening Mail, Pittsburg Dis- patch, Reading Fagle. Birmingham Age.Herald ... ... 00.00.00. St.Louis Republie.:. ..... 0.0 0. Lk Minneapolis Journal, Seattle ‘Times, Boston Christian Science Monitor. Baltimore Sumi. i or a se Baltimore Hvening Sun, Memphis News Scimitar, Montgomery Advertiser. Wheeling Register, Buffalo Courier, Richmond News Ieader. ChicageiRecord:Herald..... .... 00 ...., ASSOCIAteAI PIES, Liciels diss oz violins wists Topeka . State Journal, Albuquerque Journal. New York American-Journal, Chicago American-Examiner, San Francisco Examiner, Ios Angeles Examiner. Philadelphia Hvening Times...... 00 New York Press. i. vse ints desis fess Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times. . New York Times, Philadelphia Ledger. Detroit Journal, Detroit Free Press...... Chicago Dally, News. .-.. «. videonideics Ses Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Minneapolis Tribune. United Press Associations AAR SY SR Boston Herald, Boston Evening Herald. Albany BIRR URION tr rs Mobile Register, Knoxville Journal and Tribune. Columbus(Ohio) State Journal and Dis- patch, St. Paul Dispatch, St. Paul Pio- neer Press. Washingion Post... .. odie. Reuter’s Telegram Co. (Ltd.), London. Baltimore News, Washington Times. Washington Herald Washington Post. uv... .cuvusicevalin stasis Associated Press....... orn be minted EN HN London TIMES nie sn sdaisitie ss alate New York Journal of Commerce ........ Cleveland Press. onl, oi sins TLondon Evening NewS... ........ cove cones Brooklyn Daily Fagle 1338 New York Avenue. 1482 Monroe Street. Congress Heights. 434 Q Street. 515 Metropolitan Bank Building. The Berkshire. Shoreham Hotel. 1815 G Street. New Willard. The Plaza. 1517 O Street. 1936 Biltmore Street. 1819 U Street. Florence Court. The Glendower. 1338 New York Avenue, V. M.C.'A. The Brunswick. gro Fifteenth Street. The Burlington. 1331 Emerson Street. 1108 Fairmont Street. 1530 Thirtieth Street. 3002 Thirteenth Street. 816 Fifteenth Street. 1539 I Street. 2722 Thirteenth Street. 1224 Fighth Street. The Cecil. 1711 Riggs Place. 1925 G Street. 1642 Monroe Street. 1706 S Street. The Harlington. 1741 G Street. The Dresden. The Royalton. 1121 Harvard Street. 306 C Street. 2731 Ontario Road. 1708 Nineteenth Street. The Driscoll. 2509 Cliffbourne Place. 1725 Oregon Avenue. 1762 Church Street. 1844 Columbia Road. 920 Fourteenth Street., Star Building. 2230 Cathedral Avenue. Stoneleigh Court. 1117 Vermont Avenue. The Dresden. 2809 Ontario Road. 1846 U Street. 1336 I Street. Alexandria, Va. Charles H. Mann, Superintendent House Press Gallery, 627 A Street NE. James D. Preston, Superintendent Senate Press Gallery, 1366 Meridian Place. 382 Congressional Directory. RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES. I. 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 Representa- tives, and the supervision and control of the Senate Committee on Rules, shall be under the control of the Standing Committee of Correspondents. Approved: CaAMP CLARK, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. CHARLES S. ALBERT, Chairman, : ‘ JorN E. MONK, ROBERT M. GATES, RORERT SIMPSON, JouN T. SUTER, Secretary, Standing Committee of Correspondents. XO! MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES 5 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. *JAMES S. SHERMAN, Vice President, 1401 Sixteenth Street. , President pro tempore. *Rev. ULvssES G. B. PIERCE, D. D., Chaplain, 1616 Riggs Place. *CHARLES G. BENNETT, Secretary, New Willard. *|HENRY M. ROSE, Assistant Secretary, 1745 Eighteenth Street. *tDANIEL, M. RANSDELL, Sergeant at Arms, 130 B Street NE. ) : : Biog- Name. Home post office. | Washington residence. raphy. ! Page. Bacon, Angustus Q........ J... Macon, Ga. ....i:0 1799 Oregon Avenue... 16 Bailey, Joseph Wi... .... 0. Gainesville, Tex ...| 2620 Connecticut Ave . . 102 *t|||| Bankhead, John H....... Fayette, Ala. ...... Riggs House... lai 3 *Borali, William E............ Boise, Idahe. ...... Stoneleigh Court ...... 19 *Bourne, Jonathan, §r........ Portland, Oreg..... Stoneleigh Court...... 86 Bradley, William iQ:J.c.i siiion Louisville, Ky ....... Congress Hall. ...0. o.i 33 Brandegee, Frank'B ...... si. New London, Conn.| 1521 K Street.......... 12 ¥Briggs, Frank ©... v..u.. Trenton, N. J...... 2204. R Street. i.li. nit 63 ¥Bristow,. JosephiL.. i oii ie vives Salina, Kans. .... ... The Highlands... qu... 3I Brown, Norris uasii. soi vonss Kearney, Nebr. .... The Arlington. ..l.:. a: 59 *Bryan, Nathan P...cu i, sclk Jacksonville, Fla...| Congress Hall......... 15 Burnham, Henry R....¢ wu. Manchester, N. H ..| The Richmond ........ 62 Burton, Theodore E.......... Cleveland, Ohio. ...| The Rochambeau... ... 78 *tChamberlain, George E ....| Portland, Oreg..... 1749 Q Street. i.iias. 5 86 *Chilter, William E........ .. ... Charleston, W: Va..| The Dresden . .......... ITI #Clapp, Moses: B ..... 0... will St. Paul, Minn ..... 1310 Fuclid Street ..... 49 ¥||Clark, Clarence D........s . oon Evanston, Wyo ....| The Burlington........ Ty Clarke, JomesiP 200. Laie. Tittle Rocke, Ark. "The Cochran ....... 0. 6 *Crane, W. Murray..i. .. io... Dalton, Mass... .... 1507 K Street. .......... 42 *Crawiord, Coe 4........c. vs .| Huron, S. Dak..... The Kenesawi i. 037. 98 *||Culberson, Charles A. ...... Dallas, Tex |. owas 1820 Nineteenth Street. 101 |[[Cullom, Shelby M .......... Springfield, Ill... . . . 1413 Massachusetts Ave. 19 *Cummins, Albert B.......... Des Moines, Iowa ..| The Highlands........ 28 Curtis, Charles i ivi hi sik Topeka, Kans. ..... 1742S Street. o.i .huiss 30 Davis, Tellin in iliac been Little Rock; Ark... .| New Ebbitt ....ln us 6 Dillingham, William P....... Waterbury, Vt..... The Cochran. i:5du rl -3 106 #| Dixon, Joseph. M;.. i...) iii Missoula, Mont ....| 1818 Nineteenth Street. 58 du Pont, Henry 4... sik. Winterthur, Del ...| 1711 MassachusettsAve. 13 *17 Fletcher, Duncan UU... .... Jacksonville, Fla. ..| 1455 MassachusettsAve. 15 Foster, Murphy J .voe.L0 sill Franklin, 1a....... The Coclhwrami iris. Li 36 $Prye, William Plc won Lewiston, Me...... The Hamilton. q.--tv:-: 39 Gallinger, Jacob H..L i wavs Concord, N. H..... The Normandie .... ... 61 *Gamble, Robert J........... Yankton,'S. Dak. ..| The Portland .......... 98 *Gore, Thomas Pi... 0. nh Lawton, Okla... ... 1863 Mintwood Place . . 83 2iGromma; Asle J ............ Lakota, N.. Dak .;../ CongressHall......... 7 *Guggenheim, Simon ........ Denver, Colo ...... 1201 Sixteenth Street. . rr 383 / 384 Congressional Directory. THE SENATE—Continued. ; ’ Biog- Name. Home post office. Washington residence. oid 3 Page. *Heyburn, Weldon B......... Wallace, Idaho ....| Stoneleigh Court...... 19 *jHitcheoek, Gilbert M.......... Omaha, Nebr....... The Shoreham ......... 59 Johnson, Charles B (ic.4: sn Waterville, Me. .... Congress Hall. .i......: 39 *Johnston, Joseph F ..... eno Birmingham, Ala ..| The Cochran. . oven. 3 Jones, Wesley L.............. North Yakima, Wash| 325 Fast Capitol Street. 110 *Kenyon, William S......... Fort Dodge, lowa..| The Woodley ..........: - 28 RiRern Johuw W. .....0 000. Indianapolis, Ind ..| Congress Hall......... 25 *1a Follette, Robert M........ Madison, Wis. ..... 1864 Wyoming Avenue. 113 Rea; Luke. .ihvenvnies vivir Nashville, Tenn....! Y. M. C. A, Building.. 99 Lippitt, Henry B...oonnii Providence, R. I...| Stoneleigh Court...... 95 ®T.0dge, Henry Cabot ......-. Nahant, Mass... ... 1765 Massachusetts Ave 42 Lorimer, William. 202 000 Chicago, TIL. "50. Y. M. C. A. Building. . 20 #+McCumbes, Porter f......... Wahpeton, N.Dak. .| 1534 Twenty-second St. 77 *Mclean, George P.i..0 055 Simsbury, Conn. ...| 1619 R. I. Avenue..... 12 Martin, Thomas... . w..cnvaid Charlottesville, Va .| The Benedick......... 107 ¥*Martine, James E........... Plainfield, N. J ....| New Willard.......... 63 Myers, Henry Lac til Hamilton, Mont .. .{ New Bbhitt:: ...-.. LW, 58 * 1 Nelson, BKaule vc... vo» oe Alexandria, Minn. .| 649 East Capitol Street. 49 *| Newlands, Francis G. ..... RENO, Nev ivi vives Woodley, Woodley 61 | Lane. Nixon, George S.. ov vss io Reno, Nev. ...c.. Woodley Iane.....---. 61 O’Gorman, James A... ........ New York City ....] The Shoreham ......... 65 *Oliver, George T .......... Plisburg, Pa....... 2230 Massachusetts Ave 87 Overman, TeeS: Ji. 0000 Salisbury, N.C... | The Cochran... 5.5... 74 #1Owen, Robert I,.0.L.5 4.000% Muskogee, Okla ...| Stoneleigh Court...... 84 Page, Carroll 8... 0.04 Aad. Hyde Park, Vt... The Cochran. . . 20.0 106 Paynter, Thomas H . .....0.00G Frankfort, Ky ..... The Woodley... 4... 33 Penrose, Boleg.i.\.... do lil Philadelphia, Pa...| New Willard......... 3 87 Percy, Le Roy... A070. Greenville, Miss. ...| The Cochran.......... 51 Perkins, George C.... «1500 Oakland, Cal....... Stoneleigh Court... ... 7 Poindexter, Miles... .... 050% Spokane, Wash ....| CongressHall......... 110 #|| Pomerene, Atlee.’ ...%% JIL Canton; Ohio..." i. The Highlands...i.v. .. i 79 Rayner, Tsidor. iii i, 2000 Baltimore, Md... ... 1320 Eighteenth Street. 40 ¥Reed, James AL 00 000 Kansas City, M6. | The Cairo... I 55L500, 54 *|Richardson, Harry A....... Dover/ Del. ul cn New Willard... 00. Ju 14 ¥Root, Biwi aauintlison ur, New York City....| 1155 Sixteenth Street. . 65 Shively, Benjamin F......... South Bend, Ind... 117 Second Street NE. . 25 Simmons, B. M.... anil ah New Bern, N.C...) New Ebbitt.[..... J. 74 Smith, Ellison... Jul ci Florence;'8$. 10... The Normandie ....... ‘96 Smith, John Walter... 0... Snow Hill, Md..... 330 Roland Ave., Ro- 40 land Park, Balti- more, Md. *Smith, Wm. Alden. .........| Grand Rapids, Mich. 1100 Sixteenth Street.. 47 *¥Smoot, Reed iit hol Prove, Utaly . 000d 2521 Connecticut Ave. . 105 *Stephenson, Isaac... J. 0 ii Marinette, Wis. .... The Shoreham ........ TI3 *$Stone, William J... LLL 20s Jefferson City, Mo. .| 1921 S Street......... 54 *Sutherland, George......... SaltIakeCity,Utah.| The Highlands......... 105 *Swanson, Claude AlLL. Wo Chatham, Va... .... 1414 Sixteenth Street. . 107 ¥Payler, Robert Lisi nl. dis Nashville, Tenn. ...| Stoneleigh Court...... 99 *Terrell, Joseph MM... L500 Greenville, Ga... .. The Cochram.Loiw. .u 16 Thornton JohmR. 0 LLL LLL Alexandria, ILa..... The Cochran.’ 152 od 36 *t++Tillman, Benjamin R ..... Trenton; 8,/C "504, The Normandie....... « 196 Townsend, Charles E ........ Jackson, Michi AL, The Dewey... LJ 0k, 47 Warren, Francis’ EB’... A... J... Cheyenne, Wyo....| New Willard.......... 116 #*Watson, Clarence Wi... J... Fairmont, W. Va...| New Willard.......... III *++ Wetmore, George P....... Newport, RVI... 0... 1609 K Street'..v0/, 0. 95 ||Williams, John Sharp....... Cedar Grove Farm, | The Richmond. ....... 5I R.P.. D.. No. “x; Benton, Miss. Works, John DD ... ccc eiives Los Angeles, Cal...| The Kenesaw .. ...... 8 Members’ Addresses. 385 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. CuamMP CLARK, Speaker, 1509 Sixteenth Street. *Rev. HENRY NOBLE COUDEN, D. D., Chaplain, 1312 Columbia Road. *t|||[Sourr TRIMBLE, Clerk, 1644 Columbia Road. U. STOKES JACKSON, Sergeant at Arms, Congress Hall. *|||JosEPH J. SINNOTT, Doorkeeper, 3527 Thirteenth Street. WiLriam M. DUNBAR, Postmaster, 129 Maryland Avenue NE. Name Home post office Washington residence Boy 2 : * [raphy. : Page. *|Adair, John A. M......... Portland, Ind... ..... Congress Hall. ........ 27 *Adamson, William C...... Carrollton, Ga........ 120 Md. Avenue NE... 17 Aiken, Wyatt... .... Abbeville, S.C... ... Riggs House... .. BRS 97 *ALIn, Theron... ... che. 0 ARI NY a ak a tl 22 *tAlexander, Joshua W....| Gallatin, Mo......... I1T0'R. 1. Avenue...... 55 *Allen, Alfred G........... Cincinnati, Ohio ..... Congress Hall... .... 79 Ames Butler... oo... Lowell, Mase... 0 itl ans eit ta LL 44 *||l||Anderson, Carl C...... Fostoria Obie... atl ifn eh Se cs , 82 Anderson, Sidney. .......... Lanesboro, Minn. .... The Ontario... ......~ 50 Andes, John BE. 5... io. Yonkers; N.Y ....... The Arlington......... 70 *Ansberry, Timothy T..... Defiance, Ohio ...... The Rochambeau...... 8o ¥Anthony, D. RB. jr. ...>.. ILeavenworth, Kans. ..| The Shoreham ........ 31 *Ashbrook, William A.....| Johnstown, Ohio ..... Congress Hall... .-.... 83 *+Austin, Richard W ...... Rnoxville, Tenn...... The Burlington... ..... 100 *tAyres, Steven B......... New York, N.Y... ... 1620 Mass. Avenue... . 770 *i+Barchfeld, Andrew J....| Pittsburg, Pa......... New Willard... ....... 94 *Barnhart, Henry A ....... Rochester, Ing. ...... Congress Fall... 28 Bartholdt, Richard ........ St. Touls, Mo. ........ 1603 Euclid Street. .... 7 *Bartlett, Charles T,........ Macon, Ga... nu... The Cochran... .... 5... 18 *Bates, Arthur), .......... Meadville, Pa ........ The Cochran... ......o. 0h 93 pathic BRL. Akron, Ohio... ........ Congress Hall, ......... 83 Beall Tack, v.00 Waxahachie, Tex..... The Rochambeau. ..... 103 *|Bell, Thomas M......... Gainesville, Ga....... 1467 Irving Street. .... 18 *Berger, Victor I... .....\.. Milwaukee, Wis...... The Farragut ........", 114 Bingham, Hemry H......... Philadelphia, Pa... ... Metropolitan Club... ... 88 *Blackmon, Fred L,........ Anniston, Ala. ....... Congress Hall ........ 4 *+Boehne, John W.. ..... BEvangville, Ind. ...... Congress Hall ......... 26 Booher, Charles F......... Savannah, Meo. ....... 408 A Street SE... 55 *|| Borland, William P...... Kansas City, Mo...... The Catto. oi duis os 56 *||Bowman, Charles C...... Pitfston, Pa... ..... New Willard... ...... 90 |Bradley, Thomas W...... Walden, N. VV... 0. Congress Hall. .......: 71 *t+Brantley, William G . ...| Brunswick, Ga ....... The Onfario........ .. 18 *Broussard, Robert F...... New Iberia, La’. ...... Rigzs House... ...: 37 *ftBrown, William G., jr...| Kingwood, W. Va....| Congress Hall......... 111 Buchanan, Frank. ......... Chicago, Ill 4.0... .7... The Cairo. .2n ho, 21 *Bulkley, Robert] ........ Cleveland, Ohio...... The Netherlands... ... 83 Burgess, George FE. ........ Gonzales; Tex... ...... The Normandie....... 103 burke, Charles H .... ... Plerre,’S. Dak... ..... TheDewey ..... 0: 99 Burke, James B....... 00. Pittsburg, Pa. .:..... ‘The Shoreham ......... 94e *Burke, Michael E......... Beaver Dam, Wis. .... New Varnum......... 115 Burleson, Albert S$ ........ Austin, Tex... uaa Cosmos Club.........0..... 103 *Burnett, John d,.......... Gadsden, Ala. ........ CongressHall......... 5 Butler, Thomas's. .......". West Chester, Pa on Joo na le i 89 *Byrnes, James FE... .. ... Alken; S.C.o. LL Congress Hall ........... 97 Bysms, Joseph W ........ Nashville, Tenn. ... | Riggs House... ...... 100 *Calder, William M ....... Brooklyn, N. ¥V....... New Willard. .......... 66 Callaway, Oscar... ......... Comanche, Tex ....¢.[ Congress Hall......... 104 *Campbell, Philip P....... Pittsburg, Kans... .. 1726 PStreet... .. i... 3I ¥Candler, Fzekiel S., jr....| Corinth, Miss ........ Congress Hall......... 52 t||Cannon, Joseph G........ Danville, TIL... 0... 1014 Vermont Avenue. . 386 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. ; 5 Biog- Name. Home post office. Washington residence. we Page. RCantrill, James Co. ......... Georgetown, Ky ..... Congress Hall. ..... Finis 35 Carlin, Charles C-. . =... «yp Alexandria, Va....... Alexandsia, Va... vos 109 ®t} Carter, Charles D ......io-, Ardmore, Okla. ...... Congress Hall. ........ 85 *||lICary, William J........ Milwaukee, Wis... ... Congress Hall........ 9 114 Catlin, Theron B......... St.d.ouls, Mo... hi. [The Arlington... .... 57 #*Clark; Champ... 'v.. 0. Bowling Green, Mo. ..| 1509 Sixteenth Street. . 56 Alas, Prank... . 2:0. Gainesville, Fla ...... Congress Hall... +... .. i5 Claypool, Horatio C....... Chillicothe, Ohio... ... 5B Street... 00. 81 Clayton, Hemry D...... os Bulaula, Ala vier The Brighton .. i... 4 *iCline, Cyrus i. ........... Angola, Ind........: "Congress Hall......... 28 Collier, Tames Wi .v.... ..... Vicksburg, Miss; under. vii pi bude 54 Connell, Richard E........ Poughkeepsie, MN. XN J. ove vd euniiteisnhis pin 71 Contry, Michael E. .... vn New York, N.Y...... Congress Hall... ...v. 68 *Cooper, Henry A... ...... Racine, Wis. ....... .... The Richmond ......... 113 XCopley, 1ralC,....... v/v spe os Aurora, The. ion New Willard. ........« 22 Qovington, J. Hamy........ aston, WA. fo. israh athlon ahaa 41 Cox, James BL... 0... Dayton, Ohio we -tiwan Stoneleigh Court. ..... 79 ox, WillamE............ Yasper, Indo. x. ouis New Vargum,......:. 26 %Crago,/ Thoms S$... ... .. Wayneshurg, Pa. .co..of-i svn doviivs sirks diets sin vos 92 XCravens, Ben... .i0.p Port Smith, Ark... .... The Normandie ....... 6 *Crumpacker, Edgar D. .... Valparaiso, Ind ...... The Dewey i... 5 rope 27 *Cullop, William A... ..... Vincennes, Ind. ....... Congress Hall,. ....... 26 ¥Curley, James MM .. ....... Poston, Mass. ......... New Willazd.... ....... 45 Carrier, Prank D.. ...c. i. Canaan, No.1. iis oan The Dewey +... ie: vj: 62 Dalzell, John). . 5 ives me Pittsburg, Pa. co... 1605 N. Hampshire Ave. 94 *¥Panforth, Henry G.-..-.... Rochester, N.Y ...«..| The Highlands ....... 73 *¥tDaugherty, James A. .... Webb City, Mo. ...... The Paveagul .. i. on 58 *|| Davenport, James S..... Vinita, ORla... . i. Congress Hall.....;. nx 85 Davidson, JamesH . ........ Oshkosh, Wis... ..... The DeweY , . ovis cio 115 *Pavis, Charles B...... =... St. Peter, Mian. ........ The Normandie........ © 50 Davis, Joht'W ii... covisaive Clarksburg, W.Va... .[ The Portland. 5. - +. III De Forest, Henry S........ Schenectady, N. Y....| New Willard.......... 71 *PDent, Stanley H., jr...... Montgomery, Ala. .... Congress Hall.......-. 4 Denver, Matthew R........ Wilmingten, Ohio. . ..| Congress Hall......... 8o Dickinson, Clement C...... Clinton, Mo. .... 0c The ‘Driscoll... ... UE 56 Dickson, William A ....... Centerville, MISS... ii. 0x.00 ie vist isms fry on pe 54 *Dies, Martin. 3... Beaumont, Tex... fori an ab Ti tn vis 102 Difenderfer, Robert E..... Ashbourne, Pa ........ Congress Hall... .... 89 #+ Dixon, Lincoln. -....... ... North Vernon, Ind ...| Congress Hall......... 26 Dodds, Francis Boo... Mount Pleasant, Mich.| The Dewey ........... 49 7Donohoe, Michael ........ Philadelphia, Pa... ... Congress'Hall......... 89 Doremus, Frank B ........ Detroit, Mich ..........; The Brighton .......... 47 Doughton, Robert L,....... Laurel Springs, N.C. .| The Driscoll .......... 77 * Draper, William H....... TOY, Nei Yai - actin + I The Cochran. oi... . 71 Driscoll, Daniel A ....... .. Buffalo, W.. Vari crn: Congress Hall, ..;....; ”3 *Driscoll, Michael B....... Syracuse, NN. Yi.- ru THe CATO: ovis vie via 72 Pupre, H. Garland. ..... .. ‘New Orleans, La..... The Dewey's. 0. 37 Dwight, John'W. ......... Dryden, N.Y... vuins 1765 R Street. on. x 73 Silver, 1L./C ovine oy St. Yoouls, Moy. obi New Varnum ', .....:. 57 ¥| | Edwards, Charles G.....| Savannah, Ga........ Congress Hall. ........ 16 *tEllerbe, J. Edwin....... Marion, S.C ..im ing Congress Hall......... 97 Bech johm J. ow ice 0... Ia Crosse, Wis ........ Congress Hall, ....s.; R 115 %iEstopinal, Albert. ....... Bstopinal, Ta... Rigos House... . Juem > 36 *Fvans, Lynden........... Chicago, TN /5. oii ‘The Brighton. ........ 21 *||Fairchild, George W. .... Oneonta, N. ¥ ..i. .i. New Willard... ....... 731 Raison, Joh: NM... iii iv Faison, N.LC........00 The Driscoll +..uiihai- 75 ®ifl| Parr, Joh Ro, ..,.... Scranton, Pa. ni... New Willavd........ >... 90 *| Perris, Scobt .. ..oiiv an Tawton, Okla... i. The Driscoll cv.nv. cos 85 Fields, William J... ...--:.- Olive Hill, Ry... sv. 0 New Varnum......... 35 Finley, David FE. ...... «x Yorkville, S.C... ‘The National... ...... 97 Fitzgerald, Jom] ........ Brooklyn, N.Y ...... The Albany... >... ..... 67 84259° —62-1—1ST ED——26 Members’ Addresses. 387 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name Home post office Washington residence Boge . . . raphy Page. Blood, Henty. D ... one oi void Appomattox, Va...... The Benedick, 2... a. ot 109 Royd, John'C.......... .. [-Vellville Ark... .. +. 1424 A Street NE ..... 6 #4 | Focht, Benjamin X....| Lewisburg, Pa ....... The Champlain... ... 9I =FFordney, Joseph W...... Saginaw, Mich ....... ‘The Dewey ..ii 7: ais 48 liPornes, Charles V ... ..... New York, N. ¥..... The Westminster...... 68 loss George BH. .-. 0... Chiciago, I... 5. 1763 BR Street. ..c.... 22 Siioster, David J. ieee Burlington, VE... The Brunswick... ..... 106 ¥ Poster, Martin D......... Olitey; TIL... 5s hai. The Driscoll... 0.0 24 Powler, II. Robert......... Blizabethitown, TUL... oth . ous is sin risen vaminilerogs 24 #Francis, William'B.. . ..... Martins Ferry, Ohio..| CongressHall......... 82 French, Burton'l,.......... Moscow, Idaho. ...... The Alwyn .. ...c.0..n 19 ®ruller, Charles XB... ... 4; Belvidere, 111... :..... Riggs HOUSE . crn «cuiniis 22 Gallagher, Thomas. ;..... Chicago, I... ........ Congress Hall... . 21 *Gardner, Augustus P ..... Hamilton, Mass ...... 1817 H Streel viv cn 45 SiGardner, John J... 5, Bee Harbor City, N.J.[ The Dewey... .: cs sree 63 E@arner, Tolin' NN. 5.00... Uvalde, ex'......5.. The Burlington ....... 104 RGarrett, Bins]... ..c Drésden, Tenth. i ....coe The Farragul.. ov voice 101 George, Henry, Jr... -: - New York, N. Y..... 132 House Office Bldg . 70 Gillett, Rrederick H ...-. Springleld Mass. . i 0 dh rei nye 43 RiGee, Cartel... ... 52s Lynchburg, Va... ... .. The Raleigh. ....... 169 *Godwin, Hannibal I, ..... Duan, Noo Coa, Congress Hall .......... 76 Gockel Hl ame wee Wapakoneta, Ohio. ...| 1go5 N Street......... So ll|Goldfogle, Henry M..... New York, N. XY ..... Congress Hall ......;: 67 ¥Good, James W........... Cedar Rapids, Iowa. ..| 1831 Belmont Road... . 29 Goodwin, William S....... Warren “ATE Li on. CongressHall......... 7 *||||Gordon, George W ..... Memphis, Tent, iv. +. ... Congress Hall. . ... ... I0I Gould, Samuel W......... Skowhegan, Me...... Congress Hall... ....... 39 *+Graham, James M....... Springfield, Ill... ..... 230 A Street SE... ... 24 BlCray, Finly B.C... Connersville, Ind... ole. . ovologi mesos Bosotus 27 Greene, William S......... Fall River, Mass. ..... 1107 Seventeenth Street. 46 Grea AY CL Palestine, Tex. ....... The Cochran, .....:. : 103 Creme, Curtis Hor, ovens Greensburg, Pa... ...- The Dewey. ise... ator 92 *1Griest, William W....... Tancaster, Pa... ...... The Congressional .... 89 *Gudger, James M., jr... - -... Asheville, N.C....... The Burlington;.....::: 77 “Guernsey, Frank F....... Dover, Me... . cate The Arlingfon.... .». 40 *Hamill, James A. ......... Jersey City, N.Y... ..... The Plaza. ........i.. Tis 65 *Hamilton, Edward L. ..... Niles, Michi. ..........q The Dewey... ...c.t.x- 48 Hamilton, Jehan M.....-... Grantsville, W. Va. ...| The Marlborough ..... 112 Hamlin, Courtney W....... Springfield, Mo... ... 408 A Street SE....... 56 Hammond, Winfield S..... St. James, Minn ...... The Dewey . .«...muni- - 50 Hanna, TouisB......-.... Fargo, N. Dak ........ The Arlington... ...-- 78 *Hardwick, Thomas W..... Sandersville, Ga ..... CongressHall.". ....... 18 Siiiardy, Rufus. .........- Corsicana, Tex .... ... CongressHall. ........ 103 if 2 T1Harris, Robert O....-.. ¥, Bridgewater, Mass.| The Richmond........ 46 Harrison, Byron P.... op» Gulfport, Miss......... he Driscoll. rox oi 53 *Harrison, Francis B....... New York, N. V...... 1612 BK Street .....:... 70 Hartman, Jesse I... ........ Hollidaysburg, Pa ....| Congress Hall ........ 91 tHaugen, Gilbert N........ Northwood, Iowa..... Congress Hall... ......... 29 #iHawley, Willis C...... +] Salem, Oreg. ..v.ii «i The Woodley .. .i...oi. 86 lay, James... wos sss ner as Madison. Va... .....a The Baneroft ....: «co 109 SiH ayes, BEveris A'..... ... Sori: Joge, Cal. to Co 2111 Bancroft Place... . 9 Heald, William H ........... Wilmington, Del..... New Willard.......... 14 Heflin, J. Thomas, ,...s"». Lafayette, Ala... ..... Riggs House: ....... sj 5 jHelgesen, Henry. T., sc .- Milton, N. Dak....... Congress Hall. ....... 78 Helm, Harvey... ... uu.» Stanford, Ky ..u « ries The Driscoll........ 35 "Henry, BE. Stevens. ....... Rockville, Conn... .... 1421 K Street... oooh 12 Filenry, RobertL,........- Waco, Tex ro..osinivs 1825 Nineteenth Street. 104 AHensley, Walter IL. ......- Farmington, Mo...... Congress, Hall........... 57 *Higgins, Edwin W........ Norwich, Conn...:... The Portland: ........5 13 Hl, Bhenezer J... ..... ....: Norwalk, Conn ....... ‘The Cochran... ....-t-. 13 Hinds, Asher C... 0 hv... Portland, Me. ........ 2504 Cliffbourne Place. 39 388 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued, ; : Biog- Name. Home post office. Washington residence. raphy Page *Hobson, Richmond P..... Greensboro, Ala... ... ITS Street... 5. Holland, BB. 05. Sufiollz, Va... .c.o.; New Ebbitt. oo. n-ion. 108 Houston, William C .......| Woodbury, Tenn..... 428 New Jersey Ave.SE. 100 *Howard, William S....... Decatur, Ga... «rx.» Qongress Hall . ........ Ti Howell, Joseph ............ Logan, Utan op -ccn ss Y. M. C. A. Building... 105 lowland, Paul... 0. Cleveland, Ohio...... Bie 'CaIr6 vg os varias 83 *+Hubbar 4, Biber H...... Sioux City, Towa... .. The Oniatio.... ve. 30 *tHughes, Dudley M.S Danville, Ca. cova The Cochirall or coppers 17 *11li Hughes, James A. ..... Huntington, W. Va ..| Riggs House.......... 113 Hughes, William. .... vat Paterson, N. Jv .oox ene ‘The Driscoll. . come - 5 64 Hull, Cordell, ............. Carthage, Tenth. ...... 4. Riggs House... tv 100 *Humphrey, William E . Seattle, Wash. ....... The Royalton... -. -... 1I0 *Humphreys, Benjamin G.. Greenville, Miss... ... The Driscoll... 0.0.5 52 *lacksomn, Fred S10... Fureka Kans... ...... Congress Hall, ...v. 3I *1|||Jacoway, Henderson M.| Dardanelle, Ark...... The Congressional . . 7 ames, Ollie MW. 0... ..... ES ee a Dl a SA 34 TtiJohnson, Ben, 2... Bardstown, Ky....... The Cochiraly.’. ....xv vs 34 Johnson, Joseph 'T....... 5 Spartanburg, 5. C..... 13 First Street NE ....: 97 *Jones, William A. ........ Warsaw, Va. oh. 17000 Street. i... 108 Kahn, Inline. al. San Francisco, Cal ...| The Normandie ....... 9 *Kendall, Na aa, Albi Towa... . 5.0 The Ontnfio. .. or. x» 29 Kennedy, Charles A... 0... Montrose, Iowa. ...... 214 N. Capitol Street. . . 29 Rent, William [7 o.oo sini Kentfield, Cal ...... .:. The Highlands. ....... 8 > Kindred, Joly. Long Island City, N.V.| Congress Hall......... 69 Kinkaid, Moses P........5.; O’ Neill, Neb. Fo... CongressHall.. ....... 60 *Kinkead, Fugene® .. Jersey City, N.'} ov... CongressHall.......=. 64 IRipp, George W . . .... ..... Towanda, Pa... ...... Rices House. -..v.....» 90 ER tchin, Clamde =. 0.) Scotland Neck, N.C ..1 The Driscoll.......... 75 *||Knowland, Joseph R..... Alameda, Cal ......n. The Rochambeau..... 9 Honig, George 0 Baltimore, Md ira 41 {Konep, Thomas TF... ...., Kewaunee, Wis ......| 10 B Street NE........ 115 Ropp, Arthar W 20... Platteville, Wis ...... The Driscoll... .orviv. ». 114 # Xorbly, Charles’ A. ...". Indianapolis, Ind..... 238 Maryland Ave. NE. 27 La Follette, William. ...... Pullman, Wash... .. 1438 Meridian Place... 110 Yoflerty ALN io. Portland, Oreg....... Qongress Hall, ... =. 87 *lLefean, Daniel P......, YOu, Pan a The Occidental... ... 92 lamb, Jom. re a Richmond, Va....... .. Tthe National... v.n..»- 108 Langham, Jonathan N..... Indigna, Pa... a... a 201 A Street SE....... 93 angley, Jom W......... Pikeville, RY. ... on The Burlington....... 35 *latia, Tames’ P,, 5... ... Tekamah, Nebr....... The Driscoll. ono. oe 60 *1 awrence, George? ...... North Adams, Mass. ..| The Shoreham........ 43 Mee, Gordon... ei Chickamauga, Ga..... The Cochran... .- ++. 18 dee, Robert Br. ..l. aie ae Pottsville Pu oon Riggs House. ......... 90 Tegare 'Ceorge'S:. 00. 0 Charleston S.C... .... The Dewey... ....or- 97 ¥entoot, Irvine l,.... .. ... Superior, Wis...» ... The Kennesaw, ..v... 116 ever, Ashbury B..0% . 0. Texington, S;:C....". 218 N. Capitol Street. . 98 iT evy, Jefferson M ......... New Vork:N. V ...... New Willard. .......-.. 69 Yewis David 7.0... 6, Cumberland, Md..... 178 House Office Bldg. . 42 Riilandbergh, Charles A, LL ttle Palle, Winn de. ei dann sane aie 50 Ti lindsay, George H ...... Brooklyn, N,V: .. .... The Raleich.......... 66 ®l inthicom, 7. Chas ....... BA IT HIORG II Lo haters nas ooiih sian via fom 8 Peder 42 *ittlepage, Adam B...... .j:Charleston, W. Va... Congress Hall ,....... 112 *Littleton, Martin W...... Port Washington,N.VY.| The Shoreham........ 65 ®loyd, James 'D... .., %. Shelbyville, Mo... .... The Wyoming ........ 55 Hobeck, CO 0 eis Omaha, Nebr ........ 120 House Office Bldg. 59 *Tongworth, Nicholas ..... Cincinnati, Ohio ..... 1736 M Street... ... Si 79 loud, George A... ... 1... Au Sable, Mich....... He ONIATIO vir oo 48 *Loudenslager, Henry C...| Paulsboro, N.J ....... The Dewey... ........ 63 McCall, Samuel W ........ Winchester, Mass. . ... Qosmps Club... ..-..... 45 MeCoy, Walter’ I... 0... South Orange, N. J...} Cosmos Club... ....... 64 ®McCreary, George DD... .". Philadelphia, Pa...... Stoneleigh Court...... 89 Members’ Addresses. 389 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name Home post office Washington residence Bios A . * raphy. Page. *McDermott, James T'. ..... Chicago, TI. 00a The Driscoll ini. oan 20 *McGillicuddy, Daniel J...| Lewiston, Me ........ Congress Hall.'. .c 00... 39 "McGuire, Bird... 500.070. 0 Pawnee, Okla’. i... 00 The Portland nil. 84 ¥|McHenry, John G...... Benton, Pain i Lan Congress Hall, 200... 9I McKenzie, John'C. v0 05k Elizabeth, TIAL 00000... oleae 06h T0085), 22 [[IMcKinley, William B....| Champaign, Ill....... 919 Farragut Square. . . 23 McKinney, James ......... Aledo, WL; uiibngi nH The Portland... 0 22 McLaughlin, James C...... Muskegon, Mich. ..... The Dewey... isan. 48 ¥McMorran, Henry’... ... 7. Port Huron, Micly..'. | The Portland. ji:l. 48 *Macon, Robert B ......... Helena Ask 00007; Congress Hall. oi. 5, 6 Madden, Martin B......... 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DEL NORTE, : : » > SISKIYOU | MODOG : x Nils . | I Via | | 7 TR By he h yee ou— Eo) [] =z } Ll A wn #7 7s) o’\ 2 << \ de bn: EER | =. 50) | = \ ~a | i A 1 ihabile 3 SANTA CLARA SAN MATEO SAN BERNARDINO — — 397 \ JACKSON { LARIMER RIO BLANCO EA SEER sess - GARFIELD bo eens meme meme ems ome {DEN 2: Ce it 4 ARAPAHOE : WASHINGTON - 3 i i i | i. Cs 0 tn or Pe et ris 60 0 ame om 0 co’ ’ / § promo’ am 7 DELTA f fs o smn wm sou it A g | { MONTROSE = ow «oon x SAN MIGUEL Nagi ie dh sek ) oo st 3 DOLORES MONTEZUMA 7 ZL i / LA PLATA a= vm, ~ 1 HINSDALE { XN 3 N, BENIN N72 3 ! | ( SAN JUAN) PITKIN Cayo wm, GUNNISON : CHAFFEE \ or 1S me -— ence Nem oud Rg i \ , \ 1 Nd lpia Sr ssi unin ir dR SOURAV L, on sis) < SAGUACHE \ CUSTE es i . IHRE SR 1 ON | RIO GRANDE {~. : z 2 m 2 > £ ES rtm nd mo ey sees sre mns fee ~ \ COSTILLA \ ARCHULETA 7 CONEJOS { i { J 3 R == A i i { HUERFANO ru ® Cr wy Sma . | : PUEBLO | [| : KIT CARSON i mmm ar me I uncon CHEYENNE ————————— me), gp em se © =] ! i | + wenrasisym en] ! i } 3 i PROWERS ¢ : | . } te LAS ANIMAS BACA mo wmode CBE TBS AY ‘0avdaoIond *£4030240(] (DUO01SSI4DUO) Maps of Congressional Dastricis. 399 CONNECTICUT. § S— - CEE 0 SEE © Sra § CEES © Gem © Camm © Giri a ] »Z =. | ; 8 WVHONIM / z [ i is Ta [ 4 = Q | / a | ~ aNvi110lL 3 - Sad 2 i = y 22H. [] 2 - E . z “ F RN . < or : z Ld z L] a . -) | : ; x —n GEeesman SB SALSA Maps of Congressional Districts. 401 FLORIDA. TE i. pe: os =) BN ~2¥/ & Ziad i. — OY any LEDS ¢ en = 4 = ROL im / 89Q0 402 Congressional Directory. GEORG pe / : EL Ertan Y JOADE/ toosaj o FANNIN hb) JOWNS ; Stun - hi] >a 1 A 2 unio "\ [ Tweed LOR QL TL SPN { La Po a NYE rN f WALKER Lem. oF TET Nog i NEAL . a 7 bones byurrel acer ; N +r ses op ni] a Lk ge’ 0 cre LUMPKIN § 1 Lorarroocal) GORDON y iy pam on Jes gl i PIGRENS RY vt ag RANKLIN? so p= Ll DAWSON, § [} A fr immed HALL Ropes { HARTY. . Flovo CHEROKEE Jroqevia 3 8 ; BARTOW pot LL 0 sare, = a “1 i ow” or mead ml cen om 1 ond] N, , 3 : 3 Se ae JACKSON fluapisony, ELBERT POLK j H oF Na > SEN . Rll 1 ods V GWINNETT Totarkeg po omen sams irauomol N / vy fooLetronpE.f MARALSON, if ’ CR Vs Pa Va ; g “ ~ / lik Ful ; WALTON OR r : or J ToNjoEkALBY oy = 3 wikes \NOOLE . ~° PARA SN or. o ay Sletav] VEO ™ ard J CARROLL Sunoco eh A iN { : i . TALIA trod OLUMBIA, NEWTON J MORGAN amen Fee iF p 8 HENRY : No 5 RT Serhnss i 7 bi EE a i 20 ~ - RICHMOND FL Ls JASPER | puTNAM § i Lr lm, : [SPALDING | | sums. I Past HANCOCK’ . od rE als ‘ J MER? 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IK EARLY "| Baker ~~ “> foot es oi unl soe gu f ~ ivi y { CO) ake, R ; y > i { ™ | J MITCHELL ; BERRIEN {=== : i ao sok { miLLer jf corqury J 3 Ware | f=, i 18 : Ag Ne %W T ors” Rin \ quo ums dupe om ! : ‘DECATUR ary %, LOWNDES 5 \ CAMDEN ! THomas BROOKS / oo i \ | CHARLTON" J} 2 - ] N § Ecos Stee Nai 3 CHATHAM Maps of Congressional Districts. IDAHO. BONNER HR 1] KOOTENA | : LEMHI ADAMS | \ ) ey J) ~ ; \ \ \ ZL = Rewer) | ie UE, WASHINGTON ~~ \ / E i — ed soe Ae GUSTER Xe vs : FREMONT \ MAL iy | " ANYON i ™ i ai | , ~~ { i SRN 5 Fs J] | a i 3 %BOISECiTY i ™ I~ | BLAINE i hE 0a: | ' | L BONNEVILLE \ i ELMORE ty ¢ | fi seme sn oem cm mo cmmo mms is | BINGHAM i L i | hg SN 7 Ue LINCOLN = Be’ i o N BANNOCK i Se An A \ A . hi TI ~~? | H ONE Lal OWYHEE } oo: gd ¢ 3 | TWIN r | Ys { py i ras SasSSIA | ondoa rs i ! I \ . 3 : 84259°—62~1—T1ST ED—27 403 404 Congressional Directory. ILLINOIS. ® cummen ® CE———— © qE—— 0 JO DAVIESS \STEPHENSON | 3 aa | | CARROLL! 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A CHE ENNEIRAWLINSIDECATURINORTONIPHILLIPS SWITH ueweLL § eer Bp Sp nse EE ass 2 Ep al nn Ye gin; | ! { i TONE s CLOUD | " er FPOTTA-T ; ov scifi t zx ® [SHERMANI THOMAS SHERIDGRAHAM] ROOKS sao HENLE we LR : | eon OTTAWA ei ie is > Ba WYANe pn Tutt a = AREER id le Yo So Re; 1 | | ILINCOLN § Mit, 5 pes : Tarra l ~SETJOHN- IwaLLAcE LoGaN | Gove ITReeo 'ELLIS RUSSELL} -- =~ - E fm GlHANER (O 1SON | t | ; Boe LL bone = Bvorris — = we = T EE LS Wi WE =u SHAN = I0SAGE | R ST GREELEY = Cor LANE | NESS | RUSH IaaRTON Spm St pope BD pos fn “22 aE. A Ll a L Po RICE § & MARION, (CHASE ’ (COFFE (SX LINN : TT Seawner TS I WE e Dy i ® {PAWNEE | SL. ef ——t FE ir a ES - ~~ Dorney fh SX vsp-faLueonan § 151 r=auy$ Tbe gl f ' RENO HARVEY Foe : : xX _ Ley 4 P-- : Sie wens & se ——— BI LL ie A se wick! assur, ONE x pTToNasE SS 4 KIOWA era IKINGMANE- — — — ~ Joe ! ELK | sik i BICREL Wr ron lie CN i : LB. & "CHAU | MONT- i 5 NS fer {CLARK lcomANcHEBARBER! 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R] GRENAD, r a er ~ \ ~~ WEBSTER p ; r= MONT 1... | GOMERY, . OKTIBBEHA : LOWNDES ii j nocTaw ! it Lc i a ; Pu ATTALA Roxusen WINSTON ° co tore’ KEMPER LAUDERDALE os li wom sie ima J i SMITH JASPER i CLARKE " CLAIBORNE i : =n. jy copian SIMPSON i oa + Gm N JEFFERSON be i ry. ( rvs gor fo a Sn i JONES WAYNE Aa 9, 9%, i® i i OC i Ak B08 | A a ae i 7 oy oh i MH A | H l§ boa Manion uae 1© | perry | GREENE neh FL “ly } PU ; 1 GEORGE PEARL RIVER i foc smsnenel HARRISON | JACKSON ; Lh i : il 416 JASPER Ps 3 / NEWTON Y > QA ~ ¥¢DonaLpy’ Congressional Directory. MISSOURI. A. (a) Ci fe) /S . et z Fe 00 5 2 fo EN 17, Swf zn EY 2 4 ES TH, ’ 2 ) gS = fm = © ME # oth GuoHANRY NT ST.LOUIS 10-11-12 ® \ NN, = 1 = i ! | UNCOLN | h i i i \ i i VALLEY wo \, TETON | i - ~ ty FLATHEAD / i cHoUTEAY : ny © em NA I i Pine? = he. x i : p) Q SANDERS | 4 { i A, | RE © ! / ) SRG Meme —— va x po : Y dw) S : LSS — —.——— ap es C J ~ rial Kd ~~: ~ 3 ph Nid 2) yi , ; Vd . 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NEVADA. i 1 i i | i i | i 7 | ] | ELKO i HUMBOLDT 1 Pe ib [] WASHOE ! i | ! ! fase] i i ali EE i / i \ i J \ i a i \ L / ! a re ge ss rs i Te Poe [\ | EUREKA i " 1 LANDER | A 2 } + Ay Wor vid | CHURCHILL g y ¢C& i 4 | / WHITE PINE AY > 45 i i ps ; : Carson =e YON / ] ! CITY ed Pele i dks Xo Pr sme dl nN DOUGLAS | / 3 mee? N . [ ~ [] / \ NN } 7 N il io LORE SRE MINERAL SN 1 ZN [ 7 NR NYE | : H vd N SULAIEDE, ara 4 = : 7 i 1 ESMERALDA I i i . i l ! » LINCOLN | ! i | i I ! 84259°—62-1—18T ED——28 Congressional Directory. 420 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 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J a Son = oh > So - hues ON hh. 1 ak & ! 7 LAA N Wi HICKMAN £lLiaws, LAWRENCE | rh 98 4 "HHSSHNNH.L “4010040 (] (DU0LSSI4DU0)) 433 TEXAS. 434 ¢ ongressional Directory. UTAH pS en © was © om—— on - - 7 N. | a x | A | ' o¥ jeagne } 2 5 J =x. | | og 2 | ’ a my ’ | : ee PY hit sn ads So Sr fe cm + re © mo | [58 5 MMIT ul $y - ~ | | ‘ SAL¥LAKE CITY __ ——7 | : ] ISALT LAKEy==~_ ~~ ' | TOOE LE ksar” 7} | 3 \ “\. WASATCH ) \ | Co UTAH. = | UINTA I in ce mi Ld A TRA J 1. 3 \/ Nos i md i ; JUAB > 4 2 ERAS a a 12 | CARBON | . } ra { dy | Lone [SAN ph Ya A ba 1 PETE | ) [ | MILLARD j | LT EMERY Ji. gs RAND -, | _/SEVIER | \ ARTY, r” | \ . | a GE LE RS RAR OE aN 1 / forse cts ue Non dS GE \ by, ’ IRON po i = GARFIELD ¢ ‘ ae l rt uit Lone HAST Rahian SGT alle SAN JUAN | | i 5 i ' WASHINGTON i KANE vd | 2 / |] y -— Maps of Congressional Districts. VERMONT, AE r= edi he ET EY «Yu SE. SU JOM t—— / / 4 FRANKLIN ORLEANS J /{ Sr ta 7, A 2 > ’ 7%) Ne a” é [4p] | / \ 78) [} 7 \ ; 2 ~ / ad . v % 5 ) 3 A $ 7! / Q < . CHITTENDEN Rd \ . ¥ EW gl gi / 2% ADDISON RUTLAND WINDSOR N———-— badd? | | i, | : : : WINDHAM B / / > i \ % oolnhon Ha hE 84259°—62-1—IST ED——29 435 ! RUSSELL et ; \ gv, of /ScoTT TWASHINGTON CARROLL Se Ps i Pat 4. Cll fs Ui 4 pace ay ROCKINGHAM Soo LAND / , i | / ~~ AuousTA BATH !'s 5 Bae NOT WA LJ * NY LOUDOUN" ZANexANDRIA 1 AS Tobe Gg A EI) 59) Ry VZABETH CITY oft MN. J > "VINIOWIA "A 4010240(] [DUO01SS24DU0)) Maps of Congressional Districts. WASHINGTON. ® - eo tr o ® = e - IN lLOSY » 13 fr IE J 2 3 ois %, / WE ECLER i : a ® mm 2 ! = | 1 - a a t | [] (24 ~~ J “a o ] = ] * - rouzy A VE AE | EN HB Tn, 3 l% | EEE : - an an w» . ap | ." » — my (po rN Wwoobp NN. 2 ] > / Jason ; gh N\A RLEASANTS, == “UARSHALLY J I CABELL 4° “>< Ce $a ~~ 7 : J © TYLER [rie fe, &4 1 0) ’ IN 4. / 7 Pwinr | RITCHIE} inc, _LincoLn Ls ~ \ | sons Sema fl i font ON, / 1 LOGAN by & «MINGO, 1 BOONE " OE x 1 ; : p As (18 | PRC el : TAYLOR /pReSTON » RE 1 oof \ ~ — ; ( Z Ho, BARBOUR _ J | 2 \¢ FAYETTE > As z Ms | 9 1 #7 Lol ~ a 2 & g ) =~. 2 R A 2 K v x id 37 \ al \ rs Ye vik bf \ MINERAL 2 i \ A mma mm \ 0 \ = \ J 3 > . Sr— 5) Yo-ze¥ 4.3% \ NY, : { Poca gi TB ey ag! . J \ HONTAS PR ik ! ’ ~a 8 25 = ==] i Pr Ll 5 = oat \ HAMPSHIRE Ne ; : S~ - == *S\MONROE GREENBRIER a ) #4 | HARDY Pg MORGAN 1 ° \ rn wo 2 1 SO \ \ —* Wt oi J \ - = y & . 7 | Q i ~. et 3 «7 ~~ hor? — [os &, & G5) VINIDYUIA LSHM cy ‘A 40102.40(] 0UOLSS24bU0 1) 439 Maps of Congressional Districts. WISCONSIN. [%e Lt — jo : A Zz J tL, © lial f S Joe ip mend AREER Oe a ——— PRS PUP BURNETT £ LANGLADE i Ph S (&) uy ul x ; 2 Fe) = Nm ®ve =) ; Toe “Wi, ANVOAOR] === Sm iE | jo Lo -3Hs 1334NVZ0 1-1 Z.8 i i —— = NMOYE Riawnwod~~1 wor [Pun] & 1Y L-ONIHovM 2, £2 -"= LF, = ; w= 3 i Ah = 7S "= a] 1 5 th 1 ; Laks 3 i 2 = +} E = a i ov) ; ' 5 Say ! TE x : | } o A © 12 Tt = = tetyi5h A a3 8B o oS I 9 YS ae = ox RCIA EE Le Fd EI 1 iE H Soy. > 1 C2 L TT ed Ob) os I~! ' & SR NY3Tvz,, \ ,* any Zo PY = 107v44n8./ : 1} = Sy ps iD Zh . mf day Ns 3 boa ih if ; I 2 | 2 / Heya al Tay Ry Jouroptassihogl ol) cla 440 Congressional Directory. WYOMING. . Fr | : ! ) ER 1 | i 3 Yo ° H » - %. | | 1 z } 2 H * 8 S . 2 \ / @« 4 a © a A SV Se 3 um Sut © =] o ! H b 8 rT ! . 1 > ’ z ! | | 3 ’ pu | ! | i <, ( 1 i : I vm eb SS Vy oy can duapestons kp sem me) ] : ! \ ° | ’ ‘wo wm o w= : g | z | 1 lL z LY Zo 2 : : g | E Ayo) 2 1 5 [7 1.7 nt mmo BY | | | 7 i | | hemi js SE dy 2 i : 7 S i I 1 RK x . te we? Oo | ] Loran ™° moan | a . : : I | 3 \ . | . * | - symm po avs ¢ WED ° ED © 6°" \ = « [ : 2 i pr} < To. J & : £ ic 87) | i i : = rd ! @ [3 e 3 J I / (J \ ! ro | of H SERIE CRI RS, IRIN Me ed i ; i deen x Sh © mano © wn ¢ @. © Gn 6 hin 6 Cu © Gn © nn ime wm © 5 amo) w ° 3 | 2.2 . @ Bila * : i £ PORTER I = w . > | WR [] Maps of Congressional Districts. 441 A ATLASKA. be , pe rad / TP i Ey, 7 ~~ SD oy = ; . vd j3 © & 2 a A 2 ¢ i 3 ord = : pe x 17} pr - Ls = Ld se. 2 - eo me ae 0 2 > 22 0 m~ir3, » = i \ SN - ~ : STEN ? ¥ 1° dg 2 2 : : : te 4 lg ! 8 LY o KJ S % © 1 © \ o <° w Q 3 & S | 442 Congressional Directory. ARIZONA. J 4 | { / \ — / { COCONINO MOHAVE ru — i NAVAJO Ga APACHE Ny bed Lm i YAVAPAI | | i A ~~, i > f= L. Pi TT Fr—) FRETS : \ | “\ GILA i i MARICOPA F rr \ el yl i A | YUMA PHOENIX \ { | £ [em] ALA |§ 7 y PINAL : GRAHAM \ \ Sma. BOCHISE SANTA CRUZ Maps of C ongressional Dastricts. HAWAII 443 C KAHQOLAWE gtHoNdLULU OAHU 444 NEW MEXICO. Congressional Directory. f p % I ~~ 1 5 I I ] id i ? R107 7 COLFAX : SAN JUAN J IDAHINA \ yaos ¢ | | : J Din | UNIOH \. er SO TA fre: om cen em gases ~. g 1 t d i N/ > mr + me rem re mm 6 ee + me we a i pre J MORA | ; —r—ra : : by BS ! | ASANTAFE ~~ \ dan MCKINLEY | sAnDovaL i SANTA) \ i H H SAN MIGUEL H | 3 FE Ny. J ri Ys r= : ai ey MAE ' win yraieat I \: i i a 2 : \ | : i r x \ BERNALILLO jim | i QUAY re \ rm , VALENCIA Nea a i ! ; i = i | GUADALUPE i Coie | : om——— wh SSCA SO ae [LE C7 cum jo ! I ! ! {band + — . . TEL ty ie Lg i ; : | "='T1 ROOSEVELT SOCORRO ! i |, A = i LINCOLN : Nao 5 ms esa] (=o oom ns ce 6 ms 2 CHAVES I [ prbee—y | > . re . le TEP EN ! i boo H SIERRA | J : : i ‘ 4 | coi Shain + oon s ap ls min’ \ | ZF 1] EE \ to | . | ) RL i | ! or i i ol vg ore | OTERO Comm] £0DY QRANT | i | a ! y | OONA ANA | i LUNA ! i | 1 | » 1 ! | 3 / Maps of Congressional Districts. 445 PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. ees Se rhea Ss ss Eh EE TEETER MAYAGUEZ ! / o td . ,° SAN JUAN <. - \ 7 al GUAYAMA *~ . -~ —— ‘001d OLd0d ott “A40192.400(T J0U01s52.4610) INDIVIDUAL INDEX (Alphabetical list of Members of Congress with their addresses, pp. 383-391.) 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 Mount Weather Bulletife ve: duels centasiviaisias siete 255 Abbott, C. G., Dirgsios, Astrophysical Ob- servatory, 36 QS NE TL aa 262 Abbott, FE. H., Commissioner In- dian Affairs, The Cavendish.......q..: 253 Abbott, James A., Senate messenger, Bur- ON EUOLET ct nih ste « £1 Fhe hrm ders atv tire 202 Ackerson, James L., assistant naval con- structor, Bureau of Construction and BEPATY. ois otisisiie rb nei velista Bl nsisiaics sive 247 Adams, B. F., District board of assistant . assessors of personal property, 1219 I, St. 372 Adams, Cyrus Field, Assistant Register BLCASULY, OAS Bloc. vc sic gesinnissaivisrensains 238 Adams, Franklin, Pan American Union, The MaslDOrongll cei «iiss ebjaniler tients 263 Adams, James B., Forest Service, 2135 P St. 256 Adams, W. Irving, National Musetim, The Netherlands i. | fica drsisnaioe shiv ols intone 262 Addison, Asst. Paymaster D. M., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The Brighton. 248 Adee, Alvey A., Second Assistant Secre- tary of State, To19 Fifteenth St. ..c.icsr: 236 Adkins, Jesse c., United States Attorney’s Office, 2321 I Re 315 Ainsworth, Maj. Gen. F. C.: The Adjutant General, The Concord.. 241 Commissioner Soldiers’ Home ........ 265 Alburn, C. R., clerk, Senate Committee, Hponditurcs in the Treasury Depart- TEI oC te eie iin ings sisitnss ro ioral sent she = Sissvistonar as 201 Aldrich, Nelson W., chairman National Monetary Commission, 2107 Massa- CHNSCEIS AVE ir vee ssnicirirssys sisinisstnins on rie 198 Aleshire, Brig. Gen. James B.: : Quartermaster General, 2343 S St ..... 241 Commissioner Soldiers’ Home......... 205 Alexander, A. B., Bureau of Fisheries, 404 oy EIR ER ee pA RI bee 260 Alexander, Rose, M.D., Insané Hospital... 267 Alger, Prof. P. R., Bureau of Ordnance, 5 Maryland Ave., Annapolis, Malo, on 2477 Ali Kuli, Mirza "Khan, chargé d'affaires ad interim, Persian Legation A ol 320 Allan, Lamont, messenger, House Post Office, The Rochambeat.........c.v..... 207 Allen, Brig. Gen. James, Chief Signal Offi- cer, ‘Army and Navy Club. Joos ua oe 242 Allen, Civil Engineer W. H., Bureau of Vards and Docks, The ontario .......... 246 Allen, E. W., Assistant Director Experi- ment Stations, 1923 Biltmore St.......... 258 Allen, Maj. Henry T., General Staff, The Connecticut RE tn Ea A 240 Allen, Walter C., District electrical engi- neer; 3307 Newark Ste, [LL nla RL 373 Almeida, Sefior Don Arturo Pardé vy, first secretary and chargé d’affaires, ‘Cuban Tegation,; The Brighton ....... duis 318 Alte, Viscount de, Portuguese minister, 2017 Massachusetts Ave.........vcoiviuues 320 Althouse, Lieut. Commander A., in com- mand seaman’s quarters, Navy Vard.... 248 Alvord, Tieut. Col. Benjamin, Office Adju- tant General, The Ontario. . 241 Alwood, W. B., Bureau of ‘Chemistry, Charlottesville, VE oh ails veda dite Frais 257 Amores, Emilio M., Pan American Union, 1531 1 St SRR IRN ARR Rh NA FA AR Ce 263 Anderson, Chandler P., Counselor for the Department of State, Metropolitan Club. 236 Page. Anderson, Geo. M., Department of Justice, Rockville, Mid... ....iviine Sl iaiiiiot va 244 Anderson, Medical Director Frank, Naval Retiring Board and Board of Medical Examiners, 1628 Nineteenth St.......... 250 Anderson, Passed Asst. Surg. John F., Marine-Hospital Service, 1414 Girard St. 239 Anderson, Thomas H., associate justice, District Supreme Court, 1531 New Hamp- shivesve do) Yana s oa dl cos aan tok 315 Andrew, A. Piatt: Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 3725 HL SE. ..onnnnnei lien leita 237 Assistant to National Mougtary Com- TITEL YT re ASO OR Bt Lh 0 198 Treasurer, National Red Cross......... 266 Andrews, Commander Philip, aid tothe Sec- retary of the Navy, The Westmoreland... 246 Andrews, W. H., Auditor Treasury Depart- ment, 1225 Fairmont SUT endeiotebs We 238 Angell, James B., Regent, Smithsonian In- stitution, Ann Arbor, Mel. coimibiiiiials 262 Archbald, Robert W., associate judge, U.S. Commerce Court (biography) Rha 314 Aristeguieta, Sefior Don Pedro Elias, Venezuelan Iegation, 1017 Sixteenth St. 321 Arizaga, Rafael M.: Minister of Ecuador, The Arlington.. 318 Governing board, Pan American Union. 263 Arizaga, Sefior Don Rafael Florencio, Lega- tion of IBenadoriso. . Joli iui dabih + 200055) 318 Armendé4riz del Castillo, Sefior Don M., MexicaniBmbassy ....... 000 G68 319 Arnold, Joseph A., Chief Division of Pub- lications, Agricultural Department,. 134 SixthnSL NR 20 Br hh saa ain 258 Ashbaugh, S. S., Department of Justice, 2057: Newark St, ol. denen Nein 244 Aste S. A., Senate messenger, 1512 Park Ferg ht ee BN TE Sr Re RSE ds 201 Kite P. M., Department of Justice, 1836 Bark Rod.» cist Sih Laas dat, hes 244 Ashford, Snowden, municipal architect, 1406 Twenty-first TOS nl ee 373 Ashley, Frederick W., division chief, Ti brary of Congress, 132 SSE Suna 232 Atkinson, George W.: Judge, Court of Claims, 1600 Thir- teenthaSt. i. oan nn asainannnd 313 Executive committee, Howard Uni- versity seit iden ial Last lanih Tain 267 Atkinson, John P., Senate messenger, 209 Tenth St. SRLS a NE 202 Aubert, Mr. L., secretary Norwegian Iega- BEOTIL06 aii li ta els RAIS a RE Se 320 Aukam, George C., judge, municipal court, The Monticellok. fis. adda oa, 315 Austin, Lieut. Frank IL., Revenue-Cutter Service; The'Cairot., Jo, J nd ao ulnnin, . 239 Austin, Oscar P., chief Bureau of Statis- tics, Department of Commerce and Labor, 3301 Newark Sti, Jol. AGL, 260 Avery, Bryant E., Senate donument room, 213 North Capitol hy ARE CORRE I TRC A da 200 Aylesworth, W. L., Bureau of Mines, 117 Kentucky Ave SEL. us nh Sei ddd 254 Babcock, Charles B., Pan American Union, Nienna, Nadi di hin sbi sisi rmitplaniates 263 Babcock, Kendric C., division chief, Bureau of Education, The Brunswick ........... 253 Bacon, Augustus O., Regent, Smithsonian Institution, 1799 Oregon AVE... 262 448 Individual Index. Page. Bailey, H. S., Bureau of Chemistry, 1705 Dhivty-AIthSt. .... fh cae Rode odh Jounin Bailey, Joseph W., member National Mone- tary Commission, 2620 Connecticut Ave.. Bailey, Lieut. Col. C. J., assistant to Chief of Coast Artillery, 1827 Phelps Place .... Bailey, Robert O., Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1736 CG St... icv icc amen Bailey, Vernon, Bureau Biological Survey, 1834 Kalorama Road". .....0..L...0000W Baily, T. C. J., jr., District engineer of bridges, 531 Randolph St ....... ......... Baker, A. B., assistant superintendent, Zoological Park, 1745 Lanier Place ...... Baker, Frank, superintendent Zoological Park, 1783 Columbia Road......". .... 0. Baker, Henry M., executive committee, Howard University... Job obvi. L000 Baker, James M., assistant Senate libra- rian, srarHighland/Place.. vai... 000 Baker, James R., assistant clerk, House Committee, Military Affairs, 606 A St. SE. Baldridge, Lieut. Harry A., Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, The Ben- COIOIE oie al il wai viee mead AR wil HE Baldwin, Albertus H., chief Bureau of Manufactures, The Cecll....c... fc. Lk Ballentine, H. I,., Hydrographic Office, 1322 Calvert Sti. i. co camden ada nn is Balloch, Edward A., M. D., dean, Howard URIversity tol His. dee ot Jali ania Bancroft, Jay F., patent examiner, The Brunswick . soi tami Laaido Se wiv RR Bandel, George E., assistant division chief, Post Office Department, 3475 Holmead 12 PRS Bl i SR Tp ER LO Bankhead, John H., member, Joint Com- mittee, Alaskan Investigation, Riggs House. 5. . & vad. Sok. Slows eh LY Bantz, Gideon C., Assistant Treasurer of the United States, 1628 S St....L.. a... Barber, Orion M., member U. S. Court of CustomsAppeals, 1631 Massachusetts Ave. Barber, Asst. Paymaster S. E., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Navy Depart- ment, TheiHighlands. Joo... Wii Barden, Maj. William J., River and Harbor Board, Washington Barracks, D.C....... Barnard, Charles D., assistant clerk, Sen- ate Committee, Agriculture and For- estry, 1158 St NE i hivsvi.. vein oles a wisal Barnard, Job: Associate justice, Supreme Court, Dis- trict of Columbia, 1306 Rhode Island Aye. ilo... Hed bp dd ORR BA President trustees, Howard Univer- SHY. cH a RR SSG Barnes, Francis M., M. D., Insane Hos- pHAL S. fa mR Sob A EN SR Barnett, Claribel R., Librarian, Agricul- tural Department, 2750 Fourteenth St... Barney, Samuel S., judge, Court of Claims, Ehe Champlain... .cicciceitoeisioe sie sls slats Barnhart, Henry A.: Member Printing Investigation Com- mission Congress Hall .... J... 060 Member Joint Committee on Printing. Barrett, John, director general Pan Ameri- can Union; 1712 HSL... vriiapniiievivais Barrett, W. I. K., chief clerk in office pur- chasing agent, Post Office Department, 626 North Fremont Ave., Baltimore, Md. . Barros Pimentel, Mr. J. F. de, second sec- retary, Brazilian Embassy, 20 Lafayette Square . Barros Cavalcanti de Iacerda, Mr. F. de, second secretary, Brazilian Embassy, RANSCHETIS 5. laisse siden sisal eind wie d Said Barry, Dr. Edmund, police surgeon ....... Bartlett, Ralph I'., Appointment Division, Navy Department, 430 Massachusetts Barto F. H., stenographer to House com- mittees, Florence Court... ...... 0. 0udi Bassford, Wallace D., secretary to the Speaker, 130 Twelfth St. NE............. Bassler, R. S., Curator, National Mu- SEUML + .ohqerrrnone 1PPIOYTIIYIRIIIISI PII SR RY e 257 198 240 237 198 199 317 373 Page. Batalla, Sefior José Guillermo, attaché Panama l.egationt. .c. icon: eoosvsivsansnhisf, Bayard, Fairfax, examiner in chief, Patent Office; 1733 Columbia Road. cvvivevwos Bayard, G. Livingston, chaplain, Navy Yard el a a LE Beal, W. H., Office Experiment Stations, 1852 Park Road. ....... lvoe. hes Beall, Miss Zoe, clerk, House Committee, Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, 1130 Columbia Roadi i. Jo Lin and Soda naan, LiL Beaman, Frederick J., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Coast and Insular Survey, The Calumet: . hie des rit ri ie we sas ve Bean, William S., clerk, Senate Committee, Cuban Relations, The Dewey ............ Beasley, Cecil A. clerk, Senate Committee, Standards, Weights, and Measures, Iin- coln Hotel anil ind ait is nb odo. Beatty, Capt. F. E., Commandant of the Navy Yard Lo. 00 LG aa San Beaufort, Jonkheer W. H. de, Netherlands Legation i. tue A. orton nh UL oh fs Becker, G. F., division chief, Geological Survey, 1700 Rhode Island Ave........... Belford, J. F., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee; Philippiness ii itn nb tons Bell, Alexander Graham, Regent, Smith- Sonian Institution. oo it ol die. Beller, James W., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Pacific Railroads, 1726 Lamont St... Belt, James B., Deputy Auditor, Interior Department, The National .............. Beltran y Puga, Sefior Don Fernando, Mexican Water Boundary Commission. . Bengoechea, Sefior Dr. Ramon, secretary of legation and chargé d’affaires, Guate- Malan eg ation. i neh sete sisni sree Benjamin, Marcus, editor, National Mu- Senm arog St. 0. ll ie vie pie + sire Benners, Joseph N., assistant clerk, House Committee, Ways and Means, 101g P St. . Bennett, Charles Goodwin, Secretary of the Senate (biography), New Willard....... Bennett, Joseph, appointment clerk, De- partment of Agriculture, 147 Eleventh boy Ed AAR ileal OR Se hosel Benoist d’Azy, Lieut. Commander, naval attaché, French Embassy, The High- TATIAS os ale iersistintal tae ape wrest oye tale ith curiotaiinia farts Benson, Andrew R., principal examiner, Patent Office, .772:/'Penth St... 45 « ive sieinless Bentley, George A., Forest Service, The BAIT. (eile spins sin ah + Lis Alle a wesetd virial Berg, John R., Government Printing Office, 1212 Delafield Place........ 2 nr Berger, David J., House mail clerk, 728 Third: SL. SE. ois sirens aelastnits sore sists Bergett, O. K., heavy mail wagon, The Halliday ... olin. dsenesiisiep meisitesi Bergin, Michael, District fuel inspector, 71% P St Berkeley, Capt. R: C., U. 8. M. C,, com- manding marines, Navy Yard........... Bermudez, Sefior Don Francisco de Zea, secretary, Spanish Legation............. Bernstorff, Count J. H. von, German ambas- sador, 1435 Massachusetts Ave ........... Berthrong, Ithamar P., division chief, Gen- eral I,and Office, 3409 Ashley Terrace... . Bertolette, Medical Director Daniel N., president Board of Medical Examiners, The Bachelor. ......c....iiadeie sri sels sacs nls Best, J. B., Office of the Clerk of the House, 1726 Kilbourne Place... ahh yindanil Beyer, Medical Director H. G., Naval Med- ical School; 1725 FS... Lui sti iv. Maia ise Bicknell, Ernest P., director, National Red CTOBB cui vininios wintosn; lle Toit del alot Sg ule iia soba lcs fo Biddle, Maj. Gen. William P., Comman- dant U. S. M. C., The Highlands......... Bidwell, G. I., Bureau of Chemistry, 1245 BvartS SINE... iiss sv mis ininjoe Hiars Biederman, William G., clerk, House Com- mittee, Enrolled Bills, 1317 M St......... Bien, Morris, supervising engineer, Recla- mation Service, 1130 Lamont St. ....... 320 252 248 258 206 Individual Index. Page. Bigelow, W. D., assistant chief, Bureau of Chemistry, 1734 amont St... eevats 256 Billard, Lieut. Frederick C., Revenue-Cut- ter Service, 2445 Eighteenth St........... 239 Billings, Cornelius C., First Assistant Com- missioner of Patents, The Westmore- land, Cin En eS I AR A Ah 252 Bird, Gen. Charles, U. S. Army, retired, National Red Cross. .....o.on bi. 5h. aus 266 Birmingham, Lieut. Col. Henry P., Office Surgeon:General, 3720:Q'St. ...% iivaiieey 241 Bishop, Capt. P. P., assistant to Chief of CoastArtilleny, 3712 BIS... Lda alah 240 Bishop, Joseph Bucklin, secretary Isth- mian Canal Commission’ mol i 00.00 265 Bishop, R. F., assistant librarian of the House, 1117 Eighth St. inucaniniay 204 Bishop, W. W., Spinonde of reading room, Library of Congress, Kensington, J) FR Ga Aa SB OR CER STE Rh 232 Bixby, Brig. Gen. W. H.: Chief of Engineers, U. S. A., 2013 Kal- orama Road. iL 0 ond nga 242 Board of Ordnance and Fortification... 243 Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home........ 265 Black, John C., president Civil Service Commission, 1314 Connecticut Ave....... 263 Blackburn, I. W., M. D., Insane Hospital. 267 Blackwood, J. R., assistant clerk, House Commitiee; Accounts. ...L.. 000 wibiii 206 Blair, Fred. J., division chief, Bureau of Statistics, Agricultural Department, 1443 Belmont St.~ ..... 0... 1d 7 ARS RRR ENS LI 258 Blake, Matt. I,,, Department of Justice, vazo Fifteenth St. S00 LL 0eo Lio. 244 Blanchard, Clarence J., statistician, Recla- mation Service, The Earlington......... 254 Blauvelt, Maj. William F., Office of Post Paymaster, The Dresden a... n.5.~ i000 242 Bloodworth, O. H. B., jr., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Private Land Claims, 404 New Jersey Ave. SE... on odo, 202 Blount, Julian W., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Claims, The Massachusetts. 201 Blumenberg, M. R., official stenographer to House committees, 21 First St. NE.... 208 Blumenberg, Milton W., Official Reporter, Senate “The Arlinglion;.. ... ih. i sess 208 Blyth, Charles P., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Judiciary, The Burlington.. 202 Boardman, Miss Mabel T., National Red CC OBE 0 urs FTnluieteiviste wirgste vie ois s uiuin eta eis via Lolntt 266 Boardman, R. H., inspector, Metropolitan DOlee TT RS rt ie rier 373 Bode, Col. Baron de, military attaché, Rus- sian Embassy, 1816 N St. ......c reco srnese 320 Boeger, E. A., assistant, Naval Observa- OLY, 2TO6,P St... oii rican sit insvare os ile dies 5 4 2A Boggs, Capt. F.C. chief of office, Isthmian Canal Commission, The Westmoreland. 265 Boifeuillet, John T., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Private Land Claims, The Fre- AON or seis oe pipes veges is sia Por atime WIE 288 202 Bond, Frank: Chief clerk General Land Office, 3127 Newark St i. vb. fo seniiobies sires outs 251 Geographic’ Board. ..... siesivsnios o5 « suis 264 Bond, George W., Senate messenger, Lau- IL SE a al 201 Bone, Scott C., visitor, Insane Hospital.... 267 Bonsteel, Jay A., Bureau of Soils, 2807 UATE ROR oo Liivsinvins sismninile Snjefa bles sisi 257 Bonynge, Robert W., National Monetary Commission, The Cairo... i. sive git as 198 Boobar, John J., Librarian of the House, 3321 WISCONSIMAVE. . cvervie vuisn'sis sb yisk'de oie 204 Booth, Fenton W., judge, Court of Claims, 1752 1,amont St.i. ic ve usdismsinrero sisi 313 Borchardt, Edwin M., law librarian, Con- gressional Library, 116 C St. NE......... 232 Borda, Sefior Don Francisco de P.: Minister of Colombia, The Portland... 318 Governing board, Pan American Union. 263 Boren, Geo. E., Department of Justice, 1314 Shaves doe seis tiv HSvid dele Redzoeies or Ssh 244 Boughton, Maj. Daniel H.: General Staff, The Champlain......... 240 Geographic Board.....s... se iisivisiv vies sie d 264 449 Page. Bowerman, Geo. F., librarian, Public Li- brary, 2852 Ontario Road. ....v.c caer ves 372 Bowers, George M., Commissioner of Fish- eries, The Champlain... ...i.... joo Jo vies 260 Bowers, Paul E., M. D., Insane Hospital.. 267 Bowie, Edward H., division chief, Weather Bureau, 2826 Twenty-seventh St......... 255 Bowie, William, division chief, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 2020 Fifteenth St....... 260 Bowyer, Eph. P., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Indian Affairs, 23 First St. 2 INTE. ie isi nie ots, ale vi sivininin ss siniie's Sirle Hise is ioks ainlEells 202 Boyd, Allen R., chief clerk, Library of Congress, 814 Connectieut Ave........... 232 Boyd, George H., superintendent of Senate document room, 1129 Fourteenth St..... 200 Boyd, Joseph A., assistant clerk, House Committee; JTudiclary. tis tie iis donderianpss 206 Boyd, Medical Director John C., Naval Re- tiring Board, 1621 Twenty-second St.... 250 Boyle, R. B., inspector, Metropolitan police, 2413 Pennsylvania AVE... cows «sy sleisle 373 Brackett, Gustavus B., Bureau of Plant In- AuStEY, FOTO: LSE. ii ivtisieneiic vials si oinipimtanis 256 Bradford, William R., assistant secretary, Printing Investigation Commission, 604 VL Slams die initials stoveiniaishores shire shulsr< Sastimsame ais pies 198 Bradley, Charles S., secretary, Columbia Institution for the Deaf, 1722 N St....... 266 Brahany, T. W., Tariff Board, The North- mberland.... iis oil eens es fw snellrnnis i266 Braid, Andrew: Assistant in charge of office, Coast and Geodetic Survey, The Columbia..... 260 Geographic Board. o.iih Lente cee oui 264. Braisted, Surg. W. C., assistant, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, The Rocham- Sv en el Mas ha Rn Bn nL 8 aT 248 Brandenburg, Dr. W. H. R., police surgeon. 373 Brandt, E. S., chief clerk, Bureau of Ord- nance, 1518 Corcoran St... .. ov. eveicois 247 Brantley, William G., member Commis- sion to Investigate the Matter of Employ- ers’ Liability and Workmen’s Compen- gation, THe Ontario. .. J...» «sive swiss 199 Breckouns, Joseph A. clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Appropriations, 1814 G St............ 201 Brewer, H. H., foreman Senate folding YOO, 21 B Sl... sry cisisaiseisisieinsimsis tiuiniaiovisn's 203 Brewster, Maj. A. W., Office of Inspector General, 1825 Jefferson Place... ......... 241 Breitensteine, B. F., Capitol police, Mades LERTE femme A Br ep UE Ra, 208 Brian, Henry I'., Deputy Public Printer, 1244 Columbia Read. i i olen. dn 8 264. Briar, John H., clerk, Senate Committee, Civil Service and Retrenchment, The EER er re A ALR En GL 201 Briggs, Frank H., marshal, U. S. Court of Customs Appeals, The Hamilton......... 266 Briggs, Lyman J., Bureau of Plant Industry, 2208 Newark St on a ot athe 256 Brillliart, Tieut. C. E., Navy Yard... .:... 248 Brin, Sefior Juan, secretary Panama I,ega- tion, The Woodward. ........ uli o,.. 320 Britt, James J., Third Assistant Postmas- ter General, Post Office Department, 1312 Twellfh'SL OR hl Sin SN Esl 245 Brockway, Charles B., Office of the Clerk of the House, New Varnum.. .... i... . 204 Bronaugh, F. H., chief clerk, Navy Yard, 332 South Carolina Ave. SE... .... hi i 248 Brooke, Capt. Mark, assistant to District engineer commissioner, 2036 O St........ 372 Brooks, A. H., division chief, Geological Survey,.3100 Newark St... .. LL alk 254 Brown, Ashmun N., private secretary to Secretary of Interior, The Congressional 251 Brown, Edgar, Bureau of Plant Industry, Tanham, Md... .... ocala arate 256 Brown, Elmer E., Commissioner of Edu- cation; The Buckingham. ....i. joo s50n0t 253 Brown, Henry Billings, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (retired), 1720 Sixteenth AREAS, Spa SRE aa pe nli L ins 312 Brown, J. W., House messenger, 221 First FE A i 205 Brown, John D., Senate messenger, The National .....-.. sisienosisin oe aise ei orty 203 450 Page. Brown, John I., patent examiner, 220 A StS 305 New Jersey Ave. SE Brown, Weisley, Department of Justice, The ‘Romaine, .. 0 i hilo vedi. Brownlow, Xlizabeth, assistant clerk, House Committee, War Claims.......... Brownlow, J. F., assistant, House library, 323 Hast Capitol St............ coo uvaves Brusselle-Schaubeck, Count Felix von, first secretary, Austrian Embassy,Rauscher’s Bryan, A. H., Bureau of Chemistry, The Fehigh:.. 0. 00 So ao anak Bryan, Henry L., law clerk, State Depart- ment, 604 East Capitol St................ Bryce, Right Hon. James, British ambas- CG RA RRA RE I Bryn, Mr. H. H., Norwegian minister..... Buck, John R., bureau chief, State De- partment, 1646 Irving St................. Buckingham, D. E., president, District vet- erinafy' board... ..... 0h. oe Buckler, C. Howard, division superintend- ent, Post Office Department, 4o9 Sixth SS ears Y1 nr vir: cw evans tees tasty Buckmaster, C. F., clerk, House Committee, Banking and Currency, 1312 L St........ Buisseret, Count Conrad de, Belgian min- RE I i ren 7, Biille, Sefior Don German, secretary, Mex- CAN BIMDASSY «icv ox sivieiv sis vis snmnivwiisisisns sie Bundy, Charles S., judge, municipal court, 1422 Irving Sf... on. oe. oicaieior ase risniniy Bundy, James F., Howard University..... Burch, M. C., Department of Justice, The MasSachUSEtls. ol. oars! oss waion ais nua's Burchfield, Lieut. William I., Marine Bar- HACE a oir oie ca ius 5 wimimpeivie aus ale wiaioisioisas ua Burgess, George F., member National Monetary Commission, The Normandie. Burke, E. B., assistant engineer of the House, STA. 0 Otic tin si.csine si mminvsivos eps Burke, Moncure, assistant clerk, District Court of Appeals, 1810 Calvert St........ Burnap, George K., landscape architect, Office of Public Buildings and Grounds, ‘The MassachusSellS.c: co. smswriny or oes v vies Burns, Findley, Forest Service, 1426 Park Ave. Baltimore, Md... overs crowns mises Burns, W. E., Senate document room, 504 PHIEA St. SI. . atv vr ss sloinreiatersalverasios’s Burr, Lieut. Col. Edward, Assistant Chief of Engineers, U. S. A., 1833 Jefferson PLACE sa vaonnsisinin vn ves n boivn siursiivumaio ss debt Burrows, Julius C., member National Mone- tary Commission, 1406 Massachusetts Ave. Burt, Capt. Reynolds J., Office Chief Signal Officer, The Albemarle... ...«.oevsnnee Burton, Theodore E., member National Monetary Commission, The Rochambeau Burton, William M., Senate messenger, VV. MCo A, Bullding oe om she vod voimspions Busbey, I, White, secretary International Joint Commission, 2336 Massachusetts Bushnell, Eliphalet T., chief clerk, Office First Assistant Postmaster-General, 1757 Church Stns. saa al ta ae elas Bussius, Allen, chief clerk, pension agency, 1341 Emerson St. NE. .........cooivnnnnn. Butler, Charles Henry, reporter, Supreme Court, 1535 1 St.4.. LL LL ides ets Butler, Lieut. Commander Henry V.: Aid, office Admiral of the Navy, 2024 Hillyer Place... i. fivoviib py ddedon Ceneral Board... tse chifaiioninntsihios Butler, Surg. C. St.J., Naval Medical School, 1333 Harvard St.......... 0b oe doe Butler, Timothy J., Department of Justice, 3323 Bighteenth St......... ... 00... 00. Butt, Maj. Archibald W., Office Quarter- master General, 1901 I St................. Butts, Frank G., chief clerk, Office Com- missioner Internal Revenue, 2123 Fif- Teently Sb... coe Stas itvisinatatais anise als 319 315 267 Individual Index. Page. Butts, Passed Asst. Surg, H., Naval Medi- cal School, Government Hospital for In- SAME i SE LL BSR ds Byler, James, division chief, General Land Office, 2904 Twenty-fifth St. NE.......... Byrnes, Edward M., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 38 M St. ...cvciviiniivear anise, Cabell, Royal E., Commissioner of Internal Revenue, The Kennesaw. .....oeeveeneeen. Cable, Benjamin S., Assistant Secretary, Commerce and Labor, 2211 Massachusetts AVE UE RR SRN Be dR alate mdsineioit Caftanzoglu, Mr. L. L., chargé d’affaires, Greeceljegationion:. Llu. ficiieh +4 Calderon, Sefior Don Ignacio: Bolivian minister, 1633 Sixteenth St.... Governing board, Pan American Union. Caldwell, David D., Department of Justice, 3342 Mount Pleasant St .................. Calhoun, Prof. G. K., Naval Observatory, The Benedick....c. ib didi nin. Call, Lewis W., chief clerk and solicitor, Office Judge Advocate General, U, S. A., 1443 Newton St... J. 4 dustin odes saieiees Callan, Capt. R. E., assistant to Chief of Coast Artillery, I'he Benedick ........... Callan, Thomas H., judge municipal court, 008 HSE. vets vive simone ti ra Uy AR NRE, Callister, BE. R., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Printing, The Ventosa...... Calvert, Rdgar B., assistant chief, Division Accounts and Disbursements, Agricul- tural Department, Livingstone Heights, Va oc cinfs vatsoe state ia ainiolats s ofaieisin = sheiv ie sfobsietvia’s Calvo, Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo: Costa Rican minister, 1329 Eighteenth Governing board, Pan American UBIO ovis 5 +» visite lsioivisinid sinialt ain sini lapurete Cambiaso, Nobile I,azzaro dei Marchesi Negrotto, counselor, Italian Embassy, RAanSCREr)s «is vau roomie dais von a wainsisisiinaisinis Cameron, Frank K., Bureau of Soils, 3207 Nineteenth St....icueies vuvnisives as seni J Cameron, J. H., clerk National Botanic Garden, Maryland Ave. and Second St. OW iarietoiecvion v's bin sia sls 2% £ ais 7u wet riaid Bluis' v matin alris Cameron, John J., Assistant Official Re- porter, House, 223 B3t.............o0.00n Campbell, Richard K., chief Division of Naturalization, 1977 Biltmore St......... Campbell, Walter G., chief food and drug inspector, 1415 Chapin St... ............... Cannon, Clarence A., Speaker’s clerk, 212 BSL, SE he henselae ake Ses aakos = Airis A ahs ei Cannon, Henry S., assistant attendant, House document room, 1327 A St. SE. ... Cannon, Joseph G.: Member, Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds, 1014 Vermont Ave. . Member, Commission in Control of House Office Building and Commis- sion on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representatives........ Capehart, Commander KE. FE., assistant chief, Bureau of Ordnance, 2003 O St .... Caperton, Capt. William B.: moa Examining Board, The Dres- Ef cn AR A ee Renesaw =. 0, ra SDS a, vi vad Jaleo Carleton, Mark A., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 1743 Kilbourne Place............ Carlson, Civil Engineer C. A., Bureau Yards and Docks, 1878 Ontario Place. ... Carnes, J. H., patent examiner, Patent Office, 222 A'St. SB.......... FASE SR EE] Carpenter, Capt. Edw., assistant to Chief of Coast Artillery. 2013 O'St...... 00. Ladd, Carpenter, Edward W., clerk, House Com- mittee, Military Affairs, 1412 Fifteenth Lo) SESS Ie ve Lo AT SEINE Ce Le RE EG CF Carr, Don M., assistant to Secretary of the Interior, 1840 California’ St............... Carr,Wilbur J., Director of Consular Serv- ice, The Ontario... coups divs dana Fd 249 251 256 239 259 319 317 263 244 247 241 240 315 202 258 198 199 247 249 250 314 240 256 246 252 240 | 206 251 236 Individual Index. Page. Carrol, May, assistant clerk, House Com- mittee, Pensions, The Congressional.... Carroll, Charles C., chief clerk, Bureau of Animal Industry, 29 Fifth St. NE........ Carroll, Daniel J., chief clerk, Weather Bureau, 1356 Meridian St.......cc..... Bdais Carter, Capt. Jesse Mcl., General Staff, 1836 Calvent Sto. asvivining Fh Einar es NE Carter, Hon. Thomas H., chairman, Inter- national Joint Commission .............. Carter, George H.: Secretary, Printing Investigation Com- mission, The Ventosa ;. owen sure sns Clerk, Joint Committee on Printing ... Carter, Maj. Gen. William H,, assistant to Chief of Staff, War Department, 2125 BANCTOTEPIACE 2h. ove ices srinns v sipmeslabis Cashin, F. A., Senate messenger........ ee Cass, M. M., superintendent clerks docu- ment room, House, 1113 KS... caries Casteur, Mr. Emile, Belgian ILegation..... Castrillo, Sefior Dr. Don Salvador: Minister of Nicaragua, Stoneleigh COUTE ia sis vie nA ES Pls Meise Governing board Pan American Union. Castro, Dr. Alfredo de, first secretary, Bnckis FE IDAGSY, i ah Sms kre Cathcart, William A., clerk, House Com- Sites, Census, 138 North Carolina Ave. Cavanaugh, Maj. James B., assistant to She? of Engineers, U. S. A., The Brigh- EEL IRB SAE 1 a SO te Ceccato, Signor G. B., Italian Embassy... . Centaro, Signor Roberto, Italian Embassy, IIA COMIECHCIL AVE co. repre nsnre sr tacts Sha E. M., Bureau of Chemistry, 411 os A ER RR LR i IR Sr Front Chamberlain, Eugene Tyler, Commis- sioner Bureau of Navigation, Depart- ment Commerce and Labor, The Ethel- LENT i A Pr a Be Se Ind Chamberlain, George E., member Com- mission to Investigate the Matter of Em- ployers’ Liability and Workmen’s Com- pensation, LL MR Sl Chambrun, Capt. de, military attaché, French Embassy, 1629 Sixteenth St...... Chance, Merritt O., secretary President’s Commission on Economy and Efficiency, The Plaga Lo Rote nisl har sr LUM A Ry Chancey, John T., Office of Doorkeeper of the Howse, WES NSE. | Lo roid, anit co, Chang, Mr. Henry K., Chinese Legation... Chang, Mr. Yin Tang, Chinese minister... Chapman, W. E., clerk, office of superin- tendent State, War, and Navy Building, 716 Nineteemth St J... 0 vad anes Chapuis, Leon, chief clerk, Office Chief of Const Artillery, 2730 J, 'St [he oi. Charles, Garfield, assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Foreign Relations, 1314 Four- teent St. tic di vcia i jin dvins ded ni Charlton, Paul, law officer, Bureau of In- sular Affairs, 1712 H St......... 0.00000 Cheatham, Maj. B. Frank, Office Quarter- master General, 1714 I St Cheyney, Charles B.: Recorder, Naval HKxamining Board, 1630 Twenty-ninth St................ Recorder, Naval Retiring Board and Board of Medical Examiners. ....... Chiao, Mr. Chung Tan, Chinese Legation. . Chickering, John W., Columbia Institution fordhe Deaf idv cide duns tind bL Chilcott, E. C., Bureau of Plant Industry, Paipfam Va Lal nn oR GL Sa, Chilton, James M., clerk,Senate Committee on Expenditures in Department of Jus- tice; 220 Rast Capitol St......c.eunicais. alin Chittenden, F. H., Bureau of Entomology, 1323 Vermont AVe.. . Lil oh GaSe Choate, Charles F., jr., Regent, Smithso- nian Institution, Boston, Mass........... Choate, Nai, Siamese ILegation............ Choate, Warren R., chief clerk, Bureau of Corporations, 1810 Newton St............ 84259°—62-1—IST ED——30 206 255 255 240 268 198 199 ‘240 202 204 317 320 263 242 319 205 317 Christian, Daniel, House Post Office, 603 Seventh St. NE. ivs mists sineiusaivislies sins Christian, Paul J., jr., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Transportation and Sale of Meat Products, 908 Fourteenth St........ceseus. Christie, Loring C., attorney, Department of Justice, 3808 XL; St. cons + ver sivi rm is eoivsive's Church, John P., division chief, Weather Bureau, 20x. Third St. NB. i. oie arawc: os Cisna, Frank S., clerk, House Committee, Foreign Affairs, 412 Third St............. Clabaugh, Harry M., chief justice, District Supreme Court, 1842 Mintwood Place. ... Clark, A. Howard, editor, Smithsonian In- stitution, and curator, National Museum, Florence Cont. x. joi dh slaaitenles chin wad iii Clark, C. C., chief clerk, Department of Agriculture, 1441 Girard St.......0. cou Clark, Capt. Elmer W., Office Quartermas- ter General, The Brighton............... Clark, Capt. Hollis C:, retired, secretary and treasurer, Soldiers’ Home.......... Clark, Champ: Speaker of the House of Representa- tives, 1509 SixteenthSt..... oo oil Chairman Commission in Control of the House Office Building and chair- man Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Repre- sentatives oii cok Lo RULER IO Clark, Edgar KE. Interstate Commerce Commissioner, The Rochambeau....... Clark, Edward T., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Immigration. : ooo Uu JAI J Clark, Isaac, dean, Howard University... Clark, John, Botanic Garden, Maryland Ave. and Second St. SW................. Clark, Joshua Reuben, jr., Solicitor, State Department, 1746 Columbia Road........ Clark, Reed Paige, clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Agriculture and Forestry, 1424 Eleventh St. 14 foni Si i a don Thala] Clark, I’. B., clerk, House Committee, Irri- gation of Arid Lands, 2641 Garfield St... Clark, Thaddeus S., chief clerk, Light- hose Board, A614 P St. 05 Clark, W. Everhart, clerk, House Commit- tee, Rules, 2641 Garfield St............... Clarke, F, W., curator, National Mu- Ch LE rR rr EE Tr RR A Clarke, James P.. jr., Senate messenger... Cleary, Francis J. P., Division of Publica- tions, Department of Agriculture, 45 Randolplt Place. oe eae ts Clements, Francis W., first assistant attor- ney, Interior Department, 1460 Irving St. Clements, Judson C., chairman Interstate Commerce Commission, 2113 Bancroft TRIN nee eS Se aR PR Cleveland, Frederick A., chairman Presi- dent’s Commission on Economy and Efficiency, Cosmos Club ................. Clifford, Capt. William H., U. S. M. C,, Marine BATTACKS, oi eeur nr'vis pos naght oir. ivsiois Clifton, R. S., Bureau of Entomology, Jes- Sup, Md .....c.... vcs eines ee saiens Pts Cline, McGarvey, Forest Service .......... Clopton, A. J., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Public Health and National Quinine. 52g Maryland Ave. NE...:.. Cobb, James A., United States Attorney’s Office, 1911 Thirteenth St ......us socio Cobb, Nathan A., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, Falls Church, Va... ..euessmmsin sai oe Cocheu, Capt. Frank S., General Staff, The DUPODLEss « « seston vid sestapi «erm s prem ne Cochrane, J. I., Bureau of Mines, 1416 Fifteen SB. uis ii vr smminveivse ower vsias is Cochrane, Allister, Official Reporter, House, 2638 Woodley Place. ............. Cockrell, Francis M., director, Columbia Institution. for the Deaf... . iss devon sty Coester, Mr. R. C:, attaché, German HEm- DASSY, iis siv sms siivninnn vaisienion so renal ons 451 Page. 207 203 244 255 206 262 201 254 452 Individual Index. 1 Page. Cofer, I,. E., assistant, Marine-Hospital Service, Metropolitan Club.............. 239 Coggeshall, H. T., clerk, Office of Secretary of Senate, 1518 Newton St...............5 200 Cole, Frank, private secretary to Attorney General, The Belgrade ......cccoivvinnss 244 Cole, Maj. Henry G., assistant to Commis- sary 'General,’'1g70 S'St |... .... L000 a 241 Coles, Malcolm A., Department of Justice, 1h Ca TR AUS BR SE ER RR 244 Collie, J. R., clerk, House Committee, Claims, 214 North Capitol St.............. 206 Collins, C. W., deputy collector of taxes, 12200GAYArd SUI IO a Ne de 372 Collins, E. J., Board District Medical Ex- aminers, 823 Eleventh St. NE. ........... 372 Collins, F. W., Department of Justice, 1820 Newton St... ceo hn da anil JRE Hast. 244 Collins, Walter F., assistant superintend- ent, Senate document room, 223 Ninth St. ST SiS ilatiits sie bia nite lelen RE IRCA J ER Ev Ll 203 Colton, Henry E., Department of Justice, T4221 BE. Sh oie viaivictelvioi slolviviva o visio tRIIIT OR + 3 244 Colwell, Rugene, chief bookkeeper of the Senate, 60g Eighth St. NI... coer soweivd 200 Colwell, J. H., patent examiner, 1433 T St. 252 Colwell, Ray, messenger, Senate Commit- tee, Appropriations, 60g Eighth St. NK.. 201 Conant, Luther H., Deputy Commissioner of Corporations, The Portsmouth....... 259 Concklin, KE. F., chief clerk, Office Public Buildingsand Grounds,520Thirteenth St. 243 Cone, Rear Admiral Hutch I., Chief Bu- reau of Steam Engineering, 2122 Le Roy PLACE is wiaivoioin isle biuisia dinlvia leis a wats ss lunisinie o,8 247 Confalonieri, Marchese Cusani, Italian ambassador... . os vs dria seis sivaisiveie ss sists soe 319 Conklin, Roscoe, House messenger........ 205 Conner, Capt. Fox, General Staft, 1821 Nine- teenth 8S. (ois evi mnie vie dress dimes vie 2 240 Conover, Arthur V., Deputy Commissioner, Bureau of Lighthouses, 1725 H St. ...... 259 Conrad, Capt. Casper H., jr., Office of Quar- termaster General, Army and Navy Club 241 Conser, M. Edith, M. D., Insane Hospital. 267 Constantine, J. J., House manager, depart- mental telegraph, 1133 Sixth St.......... 208 Conway, John S., Bureau of Lighthouses, Che Montana. ix. «sissies vs +» $o8eisislon since 259 Cook, George William, A. M., LL. M., sec- retary Howard University. ......eoesees- 267 Cook, James B., superintendent, Division of Supplies, Post Office Department, Ken- singtof Md... i ige hten o Cmte 245 Cook, John J., chief clerk, Office Chief of Ordnance, U.S. A.,g25 M St"... ..........% 242 Cook, Leonard B., House elevator conduc- tor, 485 Maryland Ave. SW.............. 207 Cook, O. F., Bureau of Plant Industry, Lanham Md. oe oc. einses ire ss atio snes 256 Cook, W. M., Senate messenger... .. «. u... 202 Coombs, C. W., assistant House depart- ment messenger, 216 Maryland Ave. NE. 205 Corbett, I,. C., Bureau of Plant Industry, DaROMIR. ss lhe» mics pele opie» pie seins Som 255 Cordovez, Sefior Don Carlos, second secre- tary, Ecuadorean Legation.............. 318 Corneau, Barton, Department of Justice, The Benedick ...... coisas. P rsa 244 Cornelius, E. Livingstone, clerk to Ser- geant at Arms of Senate, Glen Echo HelghteyMd. Ld. eas Jos 203 Cornell, Ernest, clerk, House Committee, Expenditures Post Office Department, 222 TIA SE it a hs ed es en nde + 206 Coromilas, Mr. L. A., minister from Greece 319 Cosby, Col. Spencer: In charge, Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monu- ment, 1752 OSE 20 etd UE 243 Secretary Commission of Fine Arts.... 268 Couden, Rev. Henry N., D. D., Chaplain of the House of Representatives, 1312 Co- lumbia Road....... SE a be LL 204 Courtney, Lieut. Charles E., Bureau of Steam Engineering, The Farragut...... 2477 Courts, James C., clerk, House Committee, Appropriations, 1837 Kalorama Road.... 206 Page. Cousins, I,. B., House messenger, The Ven- domes EE EL SR esl Coville, Frederick V.: Bureau of Plant Industry, 1836 Cali- forRiaiSEa lhl dil ada iE LS Curator, National Museum ............ Cowan, Capt. Arthur S., disbursing officer, Office Chief Signal Officer, The Dresden. Cowan, J. O., House document room, 304 A SLISE. a HRI RARE Cowles, Arthur W., patent examiner, 1751 Cohmmbia Road, Ltn ad oy, Cowles, William A., patent examiner, 2626 Woodley Place... ia. .o., Ll LLL Cowie, Paymaster Gen. T. J., Chief Bu- reau of Supplies and Accounts, The Highlands ,oh i es nn ha. ae Cowperthwaite, Mortimer Thorn, clerk, Senate Committee, Canadian Relations, 1606" Seventeenth-St. . ...... vee vevreers Cox, Civil Engineer Ieonard M., Bureau of Yards and DOCKS... ess ne veer mrsomes Cox, Percy M., Department of Justice, Hyattsville Md... oh ote atea sleainieiss nic Cox, W. P., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1312 i Le eR Fehr Sr Cox, William V., executive committee, Howard University: te secre ozs sites Cox, Wm. T., Forest Service, 46 Rhode EUR hem A et in i hl Craft, Lieut. R. P., ordnance duty, Navy ATA sv fri svn x siabd ruse rare vrais Flat io mivhuiatoini Craig, Alvin I,., division chief, Pension Bureau, 2200 TIrst St... iecisivciosis. siie weiss Craig, Capt. Charles F., Army Medical Museum, 1930 Biltmore St ............... Craig, Capt.” Malin, General Staff, The DIEBAC srs ities or apes erie a bh tat faisids Crandall, E. P., locksmith" of the House, 223 Blrst St iN... ose soins sosirieiviuiaiols Hui Crawford, J. S., assistant clerk, Senate COMMUELCE, FCIAIINS cx «oe psin oivisieie vives stassitin Cremer, John D., Official Reporter, House, 122 CSE SI « reisirs ris ciel bint ob Feloninasns Crisp, Charles, clerk at Speaker’s table, Phe DIISCOlmuinsidisr - « sirfos = s bia mts = sin eiiots Crist, Lieut. Arthur P., U.S. M. C., Office of the Judge Advocate General, Navy De- partment, The. Brighton... .... oui» Crist, Raymond F., assistant chief, Division of Naturalization, 1774 Willard St ....... Crockett, A. D., clerk, House Committee, Merchant Marine and Fisheries, 209 New Croxall, M. L., disbursing clerk, Navy De- partment, 1822 New Hampshire Ave .... Croy, Charles H., Senate messenger, The Wartinglof Jessie ss dei shideive vis ries isis 1ommelals Crozier, Brig. Gen. William: Chief of Ordnance, 2339 Massachusetts AVE Lr es tl SE SL I ete is Board of Ordnance and Fortification. . Crystal, James A., postmaster of the Sen- ate, ToS FIfthiSt. NB. .LU LL Lda kre Cuddy, Stephen A., law clerk, Bureau of Pensions; The Maury. i... .L ae. 5. Cuevas, Capt. Arturo, naval attaché, Chil- ean Legation .oldib el. Jasbivi Jail, Jal Cullom, Shelby M., Regent, Smithsonian Institution, 1413 Massachusetts Ave...... Cummings, Anna B., Senate messenger... 205 256 262 201 262 201 Individual Index. Cummings, George J., dean, Howard Uni- versity ue... A SR Curriden, Samuel W., secretary and treas- urer, board of trustees National Training School for BOWS . 7s tare iter obs bhai a ats TAI Currie, Rolla P., Bureau of Butoniology, 632 Yoeeler PLACE. .... roioriers dion Currier, KE. L., House messenger, 126 Ken- tucky AVE. SE, ns, siioiia i Mn Ei Curtis, F. S., chief clerk, Navy Depart- ment, The Sayoy. cl. sail insosJan a Curtis, James F., Assistant Secretary of the Creasury, 1718S HSE. ove vv va Jui il he Curtis, Theresa P., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Coast Defenses, 1742 8S. St. .o.....0 LL. Curtiss, Claude M., principal clerk of the Senate 40 DISEISE FL aT Cushman, John E., House messenger, 214 A St. SE Custis, J. B. G., president District medical board (homeopathic), 912 Fifteenth St.. Cuthertson, C. W., District dental exam- iner, 309 Seventh St... Jon avin ih sian: Cutter, Lieut. Leonard T., Revenue-Cutter Service, Fhe Oakland.......... 37.0 000% Dall, W. 2 curator, National Museum... Dalton, Thomas W., chief board of pension review, 427 Massachusetts Ave .......... ‘Dalzell, Charles N., Post Office Depart- ment,/Chevy Chase, Md......... ..0. 0.0% Dalzell, John, Regent, Smithsonian Insti- tution, 1605 New Hampshire Ave........ Daniel, John W., District assessment clerk, 1622 Riggs Place... valu Sani oof JL) Darby, John J., patent examiner, 1336 Ver- TRONEIAVE vv rienid ive deivideieis do wusieovat isle Darnall, Maj. Carl R. secretary Army Medi- cal School, 1816 Lamont St. o......... 0. Darnall, O. E., superintendent National Fraining School for Boys:... ...v..vesivess Daskam, HK. B., division chief, Treasury Department, 1433 R-St... ..... JL L000 Daugherty, Charles M., division chief, , Bureau of Statistics, Agricultural De- partment, 1437 Rhode Island Ave........ Davenport, James I. Commissioner of Pensions, 1823 Wyoming AVel, Tol A Davis, Arthur I,., assistant chief clerk, Post Office Department, ‘The Majestic.. Davis, Arthur P., chief engineer, Reclama- tion Service, 22120 Birst Sth. vou ULL LL, Davis, Capt. William T., assistant, Office of Attending Surgeon, The Benedick...... Davis, Charles M., assistant District asses- SOY, TOT2 BASE ARAL EIB LL DSH 0 Davis, Fugene, assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Judiciary, “The Porter. .......... Davis, Frank H. , Auditor for the State and Other Departments, The Cumberland.. Davis, J. -H., clerk, Senate Committee, Fisheries, 1328 Farragut St............... Davis, Lymah, Senate messenger ......... Davis, Maj. Gen. George W. (retired), Na- ONAL Rel CIOB8 sev hes. stn ia tas » Davis, Willis J., clerk, House Committee, Interstate and Foreign Commerce, 404 New. Jersey Aver SHE. LLL. 0. silo Dawson, Clarence E., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Expenditures in State Depart- ment, Irving St., Chevy Chase, Md....... Dawson, Geo. H., District hack inspector, 12 Quincy es I Day, Preston C., division chief, Weather Bureau, 1730 Eighth Staniasia done Day, William R., Associate Justice, Su- preme Court(biography), 1301 Clifton St. Dean, Russell, District harbor master, 653 East Capitol Stull toupaait DIL Deards, Elizabeth, Senate messenger..... Deatrick, William O., division chief, In- terior Department, Arlington, Va........ De Coster, F. V., House document room, 120 Third St. SE De Forest, Robert W., vice president, Na- TIONAL REA CTOBE vv sever ne revnls sso nahin d De Graw, P. V., Fourth Assistant Postmas- ter General, 210 Maryland Ave. NE ..... De Lacy, William H., judge juvenile court, Chevy Chasel.. aia a. L000 Lahis Page. 267 De Laney, Capt. Matthew A., assistant, Office Attending Surgeon, The Bucking: IF Cs To 242 Dempsey, P. J., chief clerk, Office Chief of Engineers, 217 South Fairfax St., Alex- andria; Vasill oo U0 SONI wll 242 Denison, Winfred T., Assistant Attorney General, 1922 Sunderland Place ......... 243 Dennett, Fred, Commissioner General I,and Office, The Burlington......../.... 251 Denney, William D., clerk, Senate Com- ~ mittee, Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. . 202 Dent, Louis Addison, auditor, Supreme Court, District of Columbia, 1304 Fair- MONESE co. oe ciis esis vil niaiaie sai iets 315 Devendorf, H. E., secretary to the Vice President, yoo Bast Capitol St............ 200 Devol, Lieut. Col. C. A, chief quartermas- ter, Isthmian Canal Commission ........ 265 De Vries, Marion, member, U. S. Court of Customs Appeals, Stoneleigh Court..... 266 Dewey, George: Admiral of the Navy, 1601 K St ........ 246 President General Board, Navy De- } partment... atl idl wl hd va. 249 Dewey, Lyster H., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 4612 Ninth Ta 255 De Zamacona, Seiior Manuel M.: Mexican Ambassador.......coovuvienn 319 Governing board, Pan American Union. 263 Dickey, Christian B., assistant division superintendent, Post Office Department, sas Mount PleasantiSt «......0 odio 245 Dickie, Katharine B., assistant clerk, House Committee, District of Columbia, 1124 Vermont: Ave) J. ova Side Ba ai 206 Dickinson, Jacob McGavock: Secretary of War (biography), 1810 Connecticut Ave filo. ou. SL 240 Member, Smithsonian Institution..... 282 Dickson, H. A., clerk, Senate Committee, Expenditures in War Department, Con- gress Halli... ...0.0 eleven sais 201 Dillon, John T'., division chief, War Depart- ment; 807 Eighteenth St. 240 Diman, Lieut. Walter G., Bureau of Steam Engineering, The Dunsmere............ 247 Dimick, Hamilton, division chief, Indian Office; 1315: Clifton: St. 5. LALA DL otal 253 Disney, J. P., principal examiner, Patent Office, 128 Tennessee Ave. NE........... 252 Djureen, J. A., clerk, Office of the Secretary of Senate;33 BiSh, «ou. ab vd hE RST 200 Dmitrow, Mr. I., second secretary, Russian Bmbassy, 1634 -L St. vovuesvsasesss anatidl 320 Dodge, H. Percival, chief of division, State Department, 1758 N St................... 237 Dodge, Pickering, chief clerk, United Sinies Engineers’ Office, Falls Church, rs MRE TERS Bg pr ET ie Le a ER lh 243 Wiha F. E, assistant engineer, Senate, 1654 Monroe Yea a 203 Dole, Charles E., Isthmian Canal Commis- sloppy The Octavia. ui coalition Jil 265 Dolliver, Garrett B., Senate messenger, Y. Ma C.oALBalldingiie Ucn salon Lil 201 Donaldson, Charles S. chief, Consular Di- vision, Bureau of Manufactures, Berwyn, MA. oieeitims vom dios drab Sh dete dl i LT, 259 Donaldson, Jacob C., assistant Senate li- brarian, The Saratoga ’.......... 0... 200 Donath, August, Superintendent of Docu- ments, Government Printing Office, 1409 a I SR Ch 264 Donnelley, Florence A., clerk, House, Con- ference of MINOLItY vivo: veioutoie aster sors ole 206 Donnelly, Samuel B., Public Printer, 1424 TE Stel, JE Ed sa RES AR KLE 264 Donovan, Daniel J., chief clerk, District office; 1532 WiSt., LIEN SPE Sh AN 372 Dooley, James E., Senate messenger, 326 H St. NE a3 SAS rele cE 201 Dormon, Benj. S., Senate messenger...... 203 Dorset, Marion, division chief, Bureau of Animal Industry, The Towa ............. 255 Dorsey, H. M., chief clerk, Smithsonian Institution, Hyattsville, Md ............. 262 Dortch, Josiah H., division chief, Indian Office, 1510- Park Road... ......u. dias hy 253 454 Individual Index. Douglass, Katharine, secretary District nurses’ examining board, 320 East Capi BOLO Loh rh ve eat vi PR Re ee ee fe Dow, William J., secretary to Public Printer, 2020 North Capitol St........... Downey, Lieut. Col. George F., Office Pay- master General, 2129 Bancroft Place.. .. Downs, Lieut. John, jr., ordnance duty, Navy: Nard... osu aden densities Doyle, John T., secretary Civil Service Commission, 918 Eighteenth St........ ‘ Drapeau, IL. C., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Naval Affairs........ccinen.. Draper, A. E., Bureau of Chemistry, 1337 Bwelfh SE .Gn ail land Sudan nid dis Draper, Leonard, Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, 2036 F St............. Driesbock, George B., division chief, Gen- eral Land Office, 802 D St. NE. ..ccuauenn. Du Bois, Charles I,., division chief, General Land Office, 1835 Monroe St............. Du Bose, Medical Director William R., Board of Medical Examiners, 1812 H St.. Du Bose, Naval Constructor W. G., Bureau of Construction and Repair, The Toronto. Duckwall, I. W. B., Senate stationery TOOL, : 2134 F.8hu. ih aes os farslonroil So Teith vieivn 4 Dudley, Frederick R., General Land Office, Falls Church, Va. solve iia denen Dufault, John B., Senatemessenger....... Dugan, Charles O., House disbursing of- ficer, 1227 Connecticut Ave. i.e evs Dunbar, Surg. A. W., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, 3112 Mount Pleasant St... Dunbar, William M., Postmaster of the House, 129 Maryland Ave. NE........... Duncan, David, Post Office Department, 15 BIC SEL NE wl; ale sve weds wae Duncan, John K., elevator conductor, 320 Massachusetts Ave. NE : Duncan, Robert J., clerk, House Post Office, 327 North Carolina Ave. SE....... Dunlap, F. L., associate chemist, Bureau of Chemistry, Takoma Park, Md........... Dunlap, I. H., chief clerk, Bureau of Fish- eries 728 Q SL iri sis pwisiinid divls » ws niviivih site Dunham, Dio W., Clerk’s document room, House, The Duddington..........cc.oveen Dunn, Lieut. Col. George M., Office Judge Advocate General, War Department, 1745 Rhode Island AVE iii. bse sis & + tins is Dunn, Nellie H., Senate messenger, 1864 WYOMING AVE. « J <'diciisnivsiveiesi du sient ule os Dunn, Surg. H. A., Naval Medical School Hospital... chin caitones déeideussid sna ’y Durand, E. Dana, Director of the Census, 2614 WooAleY Place. cic. iociess vive cvisinaes nis Durfee, Benjamin, statistical clerk of the SenABe lt) Li lb ae i Durfee, Claude, messenger House Post Office, 3501 Fourteenth St...........L.... Dutton, R. R., Senate messenger, 30 Eighth St. N poration counsel, 1831 M St ........cevunn Duvel, J. W. T., Bureau of Plant Industry, TheiGlen, Quarry Road... ..cisavenress Dye, Leon L., chief clerk, paymasters Nepatitmens; Marine Corps, Garrett Park, AVC. dtd sins i sa Se dle vals hal ale « ala Se Vendo... «abuse Slate dilileioteiaieie s sists Fasterling, Chas. S., Department of Jus- tice, 1223 BuclHdiSt. .. di daiiiinll sueidaiis Eckstein, F. A., Senate Post Office, 3361 Eighteenth St... cv isiiniiisiions ody sein Page. 372 264 242 Page. Edie, Maj. Guy IL., attending surgeon, 2025: KAloraAMA AVE... Js rvs nse sentidei Hdmonds, Donald S., private secretary to Assistant Secretary of Commerce and 1,aD0r, 1230 Irving. St... .. . centeeie sixieles loieie Edson, John Joy, president District Board of QI ies. nce, fades ve smivelia i LENA Edwards, Brig. Gen. Clarence R., Chief Bu- rean of Insular Affairs... ... hehe hee Edwards, Capt. Frank B., Office Quarter- master General, 1754 Q:St. tinier. aie Edwards, John, assistant engineer, Senate, TOD. IDB. soins sini tls Binisieie ie so eet igie ee Ehrensvird, Count Albert, Swedish minis- ter, The Grafton 2 nth dvi aekai Jeti s Eichelberger, Prof. W. S., Director of Nau- tical Almanac, 2503 Wisconsin Ave.....:. Einstein, Samuel, District poundmaster, 3406 N St Ekengren, Mr. W. A. F., counselor of Swedish Legation, 1304 Connecticut Ave. Elder, Frank E., attorney, Government Printing Office, 31 Seaton Place.......... Eldridge, M. O., Office Public Roads, 1615 Florida Ave... .,... .. oss dada. oil keine Elliott, C. G., Office Experiment Stations, 3034: Hourteenth St. Lui... Ve Aiidaeall Ellis, Fdgar, messenger, House Post Office, The Halliday... ...... Ziliiices. vols Elston, Z. R., clerk, House Committee, Ex- penditures on Public Buildings, III PIfth St. SE. 4.5 le tice ieaion vars + ain Elwell, Col. W. E., National Home for Dis- abled Volunteer Soldiers... a.iis T7IZEESL. oii tr seein Tari swiss ime sie eis ls Emery, W. O., Bureau of Chemistry, 2232 Cathedral Ave. ....... 0.0. 50d iinisies ois Enright, T. J., Senate messenger, 236 New JeTSeY AVE... iil chs o wainatsioiinlnin «vies lal ainin Erickson, John I,.,clerk, Senate Committee Claims, 7204:Ci8tH NE... colie. Jdaaan Ernst, Brig. Gen. O. H., retired, chairman International Waterways Commission, 1321 Connecticut Ave. i. i. lui devas a Estabrook, IL,eon M., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 1026 Seventeenth St............ od Esterline, Blackburn, special assistant at- torney, Department of Justice, 1426 K St. Hsterly, George W., Deputy Auditor, State and Other Departments, 1355 Otis Place. Estey, W. H., cashier, Office of Sergeant at Arms of the House, 3013 Eleventh St .. Evans, Brig. Gen. Robert K., assistant to Chief of Staff and Chief Division Militia Affairs; mug d Bloc Soh didi vi inne sn eve Evans, D. J., House Post Office, 717 A St. <5 EE SRE om Se Re PE re CS ro Evans, Frank E., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Audit and Control Contingent Ex- penses, 15 Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Md. . Evans, George W., division chief, Interior Department, 918 Nineteenth St.......... Evans, Walter H., Office Experiment Sta- tions, Cleveland Park... liu anne. Hvans, William W., assistant clerk, House Committee, Ways and Means, 1340 New- £0) LIT ER PR RE LR a KEvermann, B. W.: Bureau of Fisheries, 1425 Clifton St.... Curator, National Museume............. Fagan, M. E., chief Division of Accounts, Forest Service, The Denver... ..... eek. Fairchild, David, Bureau of Plant Industry, 1331 Connecticub Ave... do. Jl adi ail Falkner, Dr. Roland P., Assistant Director, Census Bureau, The Ontario............. Fansler, Orville N., chief clerk, Bureau of Statistics, Alta Vista, Md.......c.G..o sok Farden, A. M., clerk, Office of the Sergeant At ATMS, LSCNALE. vv. iain vn cibtnia es viitite v ioe Faris, R. 1,., division chief, Ccast and Geo- detic Survey, 66 Sh. hii vei vis disliaievns Farnum, Jessica L., secretary, Library of Congress, 1604 Newton St........ovvennnn .240 Individual Index. 455 Farnum, W. W., National Red Cross...... Farrar, Robert W., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Pensions, 1338 Parkwood Place.. Farrington, Arthur M., assistant chief, Bu- reau of Animal Industry, 1436 Chapin St. Faust, F. De C., Department of Justice, NE POTENCY, tyie rs frvous df sin sir bit eiofh sop iI Oregon re Fay, Capt. William G., aid to Comman- it Marine Corps, 1921 Nineteenth St.. Fay, Edward A., Institution for Deaf and UALR SR pa RRR I ie Fay, W. J., superintendent Home for Aged and Infitm, Blue Plains. . coy sreosee svg - «ts Feeley, W. o messenger, House Post Office, 425 T a Fenton, John W., jr., assistant clerk, Sen- ate Committee, Interstate Commerce, 4316 I RO ll i Ferguson, Frank X., assistant director, Bureau Engraving and Printing, 1239 Renyon St ...........conveancinriocinasas. Field, Orin J., chief clerk, Department of Justice, Kénsington, A Finch, James A. yBEtomey | in charge of par- dons, Department of Justice, Grant UM AER BR Res i Si ie Finch, Stanley W., chief examiner, De- partment of Justice, 24 Channing Sr Finley, David E.: Member, Printing Investigation Com- mission, Lhe National... .webesiss - Member, Joint Committee on Printin Finley, David E., jr., clerk, House Commit- tee, Printing, THe POrtner. ... a ousniveaii Finotti, Frank M., chief clerk, Insane Hospital. J... arab cei eke saraty wisps Fischer, Ernest G., division chief, Coast and Geodetic Survey, The Ethelhurst... Fischer, I,. A., Bureau of Standards, The Wellington teks bis sis Sivoo v eels Rite pA v ER rLy Fishback, Fred. L,., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Rules, 907 S UREN se Fisher, AK. , Bureau of Biological Survey, The Plymouth ols Flas gris fies fades Wavtbl hove Fisher, Aleyne A., chief clerk, Railway Mail’ Service, 1757 BucHd St veeesss- oon Fisher, Walter I. Secretary of the Interior (biography), The Highlands... ..i... ooo La. Patron ex officio Howard University... Fiske, Capt. Bradley A., General Board, SLonEleigh COUT. oui. su vslosiviate sys sie =i% minis Fiske, Surg. C. N., Naval Medical School, Fitch, William C., division superintendent, Post Office Department, 1300 Massachu- SCLLS AVE ier tant rien ss » 4h sami name fof sie Fite, Fred, Senate messenger, 116 Mary- land Ave, NE seein OF © iat AE Apis Po Fitzgerald, John J., member, Commission in Control of the House Office Building and Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representatives, and member, Joint Committee, Alaskan Investigation, The Albany.....cecvuun.n. Fletcher, Capt. Frank F.: Aid for material, Navy Department, 1441 Massachusetts Ave.....coveunn.. Ceneral Board . co. oo ects cons qos Fletcher, Duncan U.: Member, Printing Investigation Com- mission, 1455 Massachusetts Ave..... Member, Joint Committee on Printing. Fletcher, Frank D., clerk, House Commit- tee, Rivers and Harbors, 1464 Rhode Is- ANA AVE 0. Sais asa ee 7 fever wea Flint, A. I,., Isthmian Canal Commission, Bethesda, Md. .... in ve vies Sbaeassnids Flint, J. M., U. S. N. (retired), curator, National MUSEUM. «v wis fs » sisisinssietem sivis voisie Flint, Frank P., member National Momne- tary Commission, Los Angeles, Cal...... Flores y Caamafio, Sefior Don Alfredo, first secretary, Ecuadorean Iegation......... Flournoy, Richard W., jr., bureau chief, State Department, 1711 HEL ie irs Flynn, Herbert S., chief clerk, Office of Chief Signal Officer, The Maury oe srr 202 198 199 251 267 249 198 199 Page. Focht, Benjamin K.: ' Member, Printing Investigation Com- mission, The Champlain............. 198 Member, Joint Committee on Printing. 199 Follett, W. W., consulting engineer, Mexi- can Water Boundary Commission....... 237 Foos, George A., clerk, Senate Committee, Indian Depredations, Baltimore, Md.. 202 Forbes, E. E., Division of Accounts and Disbursements, Department of Agricul- ture, Jour GirasdiSt. isin «0 Joaei sid. 4 258 Ford, Edgar W., assistant division super- intendent, Post Office Department, The FROME suis vain s vias ners isis nate sa pinabio throat 245 Foree, C. M., chief clerk, Office Comptroller of the Treasury, The "Rockingham eadids 238 Fortier, S., Office Experiment Stations, 2310 IIUeleenth St cost sii. miso ie vee vi 258 Foster, John W., director, Columbia Insti- tution for the Deaf, 1323 Eighteenth St.. 266 Fowler, Charles N., director, Columbia In- stitution forthe Deaf. ..... ..oeeueeeenn.. 266 Fowler, James A., Assistant Attorney General, The Burlington Se had i SATE 243 Fowler, Wallace G., Columbia Institution TOT TRO DICHE. doth «ives sonia dant 266 Fowler, Wilbur W., division chief, Depart- ment of Commerce and Labor, 3604 New HampShite AVE . vo «coe sie vie tiitierinstoriie des 259 Fowler, William C., District inspector, health department, 1812 First St ....... ang Fowler, Willis J., Deputy Comptroller of the Currency, Hammond C Court........ 0. 239 Francis, John, jr., division chief, Indian Office, 1326 Euclid Bt vidi vie dihin a ads 253 Francis, Dr. John R., executive committee, Howard University... v. cou eenie vs be sanets 267 Francis, Passed Asst. Surg. Edward, As- sistant Director, Hygienic Laboratory, Marine-Hospital Service, The Beverly .. 239 Frankenfield, Prof. Harry C., division chief, Weather Bureau, 1735 New Hampshire AVE. Latin abiting LL re it 255 Franz, S.1., A.B., Ph. D., Insane Hospital. 267 Prech, Jacob, chief clerk, Office of The Adjutant General, 143 Eleventh St. NE. 241 Freeman, Surg. G. '¥, attendance on of- ficers, Navy Department, 17388 249 Freyre y Santander, Mr. Manuel de, first secretary, Peruvian Legation, 1737H St... 320 Fruit, Henry D., messenger, House Post Office, 209 C YSERA pe i 207 Fuchs, Ww. R., Division of Accounts and Disbursements, Department of Agricul- ture, 2514 Wisconsin Ave... .... 0. ooo 258 Fullaway, Charles H., assistant division superintendent, Post Office Department, 1572 Newton Bt vee vans snes 245 Fuller, Herbert B., superintendent Senate folding ROOMY. ey a a Se Se 203 Gable, Morgan E., secretary Fiftieth Anni- versary of the Battle of Gettysburg Com- mission; New Ebbitt. or. io oo. 198 Gaillard, Iieut. Col. D. D., Isthmian Canal COMMISSION en ose RT 265 Gaines, S. M., division chief, Treasury Department, 1257 Hamlin st., Brookland. 237 Gallaudet, Edward M. , emeritus president and professor Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Kendall Green ..........eevnen 266 Gallinger, Jacob H., chairman Conserva- tion of Navigable Streams Commission, The Normandie... cri. cdgede: isos ree 198 Galloway, Beverly T., chief, Bureau of Plant INAQUSITY . . . roiishisnrin + « ai sinreivis wis 255 Galloway, C. M., clerk, Senate Committee, Transportation Routes to the Seaboard.. 203 Galloway, ILyda M., Senate messenger.. . 203 Gannett, Henry, chairman Geographic Board, 1829 Phelps Place. . --iscits se sebests si 264 Gardiner, William, assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Interoceanic Canals, 467 Pennsylvania AVBuarivvsi sian seins vede vaio 202 Garges, Daniel H., chief clerk, District engineer department,50 U St............ 372 Garlington, Brig. Gen. E. A., Inspector General, 1827 Jefierson Place. ...... .....0. 241 456 Individual Index. Page. Garner, W. W., Bureau of Plant Industry, BW SE satis iin Bn aes adr Garrison, Passed Asst. Surg. P. E., Naval MedicaliSchools Lulu Liana sori Gauss, Henry C., Department of Justice, 3403 Webster St... Ulli J i dai har Gauss, Herman, House Committee, Invalid Pensions, 221 Fifth St. SE Gay, R. H., assistant engineer, Senate, 1725 NeWEoON'St.. JU ial aR wail Geagan, Margaret V., clerk, House Com- mittee, Elections No. 3, 212 B St. SE .... Geare, R.I., National Museum, 3554 I'enth St Gensler, Henry J., Official Reporter, Sen- ate, 2019. Kalorama Road... ....0 (000 Gerdine, T. G., division chief, Geological Survey, 1813 Adams Mill Road.......... Goiotl Harry IL., inspector, Metropol- itan police yrs Irving St. lh nil). Gibbons, Capt. John H., General Board, MOOBRNSE, ov ol Ra Ae Japan, Gibson, Chas. A., assistant clerk, House Committee, Agriculture, 452 House Office Building ole. gl vd Ai nasa Gibson, W. S., chief clerk, Bureau of Medi- cine and Surgery, Navy Department ... . Giffin, Esther Josselyn, Library of Con- gress, The Mendota. ..... cu. Sook. S301 Gilbert, John J., Coast and Geodetic Sur- vey, The Troquols: ii 1 aids. cnaliimnsel. oh Gil-Borges, Sefior Dr. Don Esteban, first secretary, Venezuelan Iegation, 1343 Montoe Sti. (Lalo Laiabnb. wrlisiid dt. a Giles, Arthur H., patent examiner, 1853 Mintwood PIACe. .- iii nm: «satis bviidion.s Gilfry, Henry H., Chief Clerkof the Senate, The Congressional. .ooub is sei vennnide ss Given, Ralph, assistant United States attor- ney, 218 B St. SE Givens, H. IL., Office Secretary of Senate, 1812 NimneteenthiSt cule sve rti esate Gladstone, Mr. William G. C., honorary attaché, British Embassy, 1266 New HampshHTe AVE: ou oilys be Satials sais ok Glascock, Alfred, M. D., Insane Hospital. . Glavis, E. S., clerk, House Committee, Expenditures in Department of Agricul- Glenn, John M., National Red Cross...... Glennan, A. H., assistant, Marine-Hospital Service, Chevy Chase, Md....... fob Zo eval Gliem, Christian P., chief electrical en- gineer, Capitol, 642 Fast Capitol St. ..... Glover, John J., division chief, Department OF Justice, X505iB SU... sso ieiainniesion erie Glueck, Bernard, M. D., Insane Hospital. . Goethals, Col. Geo. W., chairman Isthmian Canal CommiSSIOn, i. iui svn siteins melsareiis Goldbeck, Albert T'., Office of Public Roads, Department of Agriculture, 1626 S St.... Gongwer, Elton A., Auditor for the War Department, 1320: RIgeS Stu. viii. covuivriome Good, James W., member, Joint Commit- tee, Alaskan Investigation, 1831 Belmont ROR ae Goode, P. J., stenographer to Clerk of the House, 717 A St, SE... ........ RA Ly Goodwin, Edward C., Senate librarian, 1865 Kalorama Road... 0. i. oii. Goodwin, Russell P., Assistant Attorney General Post Office Department, I'he Porta a A a sahil Gore, Dixie F., clerk, Senate Committee, Railroads, 1733 Lanier Place............. Gordon, Robert B., superintendent House document room, v005' NN St... oils eovetns Gorgas, Col. Wm. C., Isthmian Canal Com- Gould, Ashley M., associate justice, Dis- trict Supreme Court, 1931 Sixteenth St... Gould, C. G., patent examiner, 1619 Thir- teenthiSt. oi Grabill, L. R., superintendent of roads, Takoma ari. ao Rh Le snl sah eas Graham, Thomas P., division chief, Post Office Department, 2410 Righteenth St. . Grandfield, Charles P., Second Assistant Postmaster General, 949 S St............. 256 249 244 206 203 319 267 206 244 267 Page. Grant, Lieut. U. S., 3d, U. S. A., superin- tendent State, War, and Navy Building, 1702 Sixteenth Sr onl bt Graper, H. E., clerk, House Committee, War Claliigs ete Sh datioll ) JUS A0A 2T Graves, Capt. William $S., secretary Gen- eral Staff, The Northumberland......... Graves, Henry S., Chief Forester, The Brighton Laas sti al, iE Tein Noro nt aN Graves, J. Harwood, Department of Justice, en Bn a ar Gray, George, Regent, Smithsonian Insti- tution, Wilmington, Del... in Gray, Samuel H., Official Reporter, House, TA00 TpSErat sein els tina sin ns alate bl Pt Grayson, Joel, House document room, near Vienna, Val Sid a tle TR aa ead al Greathouse, C. H., Division of Publica- tions, Agricultural Department, Fort MyeriHeights! Va 5 GLUE Giri mis. br Greble, Lieut. Col. Edwin St. J.: General Staff 20150 8t.. 0. 1...0.... Board of Ordnance and Fortification .. Green, Bernard R., superintendent Con- gressional Iibrary Building, 1738 N St... Greenwood, Charles S., clerk, House Com- mittee, Expenditures in Treasury De- partment, 48 ASE NI Gregg, William S., Department of Justice, 3450 Clifton SE a es Griffin, Appleton P. C., Chief Assistant Librarian of Congress, 3 Kirke St., Chevy Chase VIA a sch rh Griffin, Commander R. S., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 2003 Kalorama Road....... Griffin, William V., private secretary, Pan American Union, 1338 T'wenty-second St. Griffith, Michael J., deputy register of wills? Whe Falcon, oi nn Rl 2 devs, Grosvenor, Edwin P., Department of Jus- tice, ‘The Marlborough... 5... ........}, Grove, Surg. W. B., Naval Medical School Hospital = a is, Gsanter, Otto C., patent examiner, Twenty- fourth and Franklin Sts. NE. ........... Guerrero, J. Gustavo, secretary, Salvado- rean. Legation... 5. Lous Snr Voi, Gulick, Capt. Louis M., U.S. M. C., Marine 3 EL a GR dn TS Ur Oe Gunnell, Leonard C., Bureau International Catalogue of Scientific Literature, Bush Hill, near Alexandria, Va...) ...... .... Hacker, Morris, District inspector of build- ings, 1811 Adams Mill Road.............. Hadley, Amos, division chief, Interior De- partment, 1330" Harvard’ St... .......... Haimhausen, Mr. Haniel von, counseior of German"Embasey..................... Haines, Lieut. Col. Henry C., in charge Adjutant and Inspector’s Department, U. S. Marine Corps, 1722 Lamont St...... Hale, Albert, Pan American Union, Cher- Bae a a Hale, Chandler, Third Assistant Secretary of State isos SEs a a Hale, Eugene, member, National Mone- tary Commission, 1001 Sixteenth St...... Hale, Louis B., clerk, House Committee, Reform in the Civil Service, The Metro- Dolitant, cd EEL LL a TD Hall, Brig. Gen. William P., Assistant Ad- jutant General 2018 R St"... 0. 00% Hall, Capt. Dickinson P., aid to Comman- dant, Marine Corps, The Cordova ....... Hall, Frank, Department of Justice, The Burlington, oe Hall, Percival, Columbia Institution for he Dea a iar its Hall, Prof. Asaph, Naval Observatory .... Ha i P., clerk, Capitol police, 417 Sec- 51 ERS Tbs shel rR Sas oe 237 207 2406 256 244 262 208 205 258 240 243 266 247 I dina) | Index. Page. Halleck, Walter F., captain of the watch, tierior Department, 635 Maryland Ave. Halligan, Iieut. Commander John, jr., Bi reau of Steam Engineering, 2123 Hight- eenth Sti. J. on ln Luan Vo eialiiie Halsey, Capt. Wm. F., retired, Bureau of - Construction and Repair, The Marlbor- ough. sli, Fai a. SL et, Haltigan, Patrick J., reading clerk of the House idvoa cRaiisidbe Ssolle 08, hs vos Hamilton, Edward L,., member, Joint Com- mission, Alaskan Investigation, The Dewey Hamilton, Emmet, chief clerk, Office Com- missary General, 162 Tennessee Ave. NE. Hamilton, John, Office Experiment Sta- tions; ros Clifton StL. bavi. .odh L500, Hammond, John, lieutenant, Capitol po- Hee, 413i BiSUNEL. a, ianid®l Ji 900 Hammond, John C., assistant astronomer, NavaliObservatory.. i... liad a San Hammond, Julius H., receiving clerk,Gen- eral Land Office, 1623 R St Hanger, G. W. W., chief statistician, Bureau of Labor, 2344 Massachusetts Ave. ....... Hanihara, Mr. Masanao, first secretary, Japanese Embassy... L. tin i ilo ai Hanley, M. J., House document room, 501 New Jersey Ave J iUsi 0005 miBians Sad Hanlon, M. V., lieutenant, Capitol police, 225 BY SEN. «8c ah is i aide da iis ee Hanna, Capt. Matthew E., General Staff, 719° Eighteenth: St... 20. ELC oct oo Hannan, John J., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Census, 1906 H St Hannay, Capt. John R. R., Office Quarter- master General, 2019 Nineteenth St..... Hannum, Capt. Warren T., assistant, United States Engineers’ Office, The Renesaw J. So Al ad roa ols Hanson, George M., clerk, Senate Com mittee, Public Buildings and Grounds, 1437 Rhode Island ‘Ave ..... 000 0.00 CREA Harber, Rear Admiral Giles B.: President Naval Examining Board, ‘The’ Brighton. J bo 000 nk Jos, J President Naval Retiring Board....... Hardenbroek, Baron von, German Em- bassy, The Bachelor. wh. JL, iB 0S, Lo Harding, Capt. Arthur E., U.S. M. C., Office of Judge Advocate General, Metropoli- tan Qube Ua GR ES Hardy, Cleo. C., Senate messenger, The Brupswick 2002 rl IROL 0a Hargrove, J. O., District inspector asphalt and cement, 1603 O St Hargrove, M. C., District purchasing of- ficer, 1603 O St Hargus, S. O., Senate messenger, 2515 Fourteenth St. ..... AP HTL SARE Harlan, James S., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, 1720 Rhode Island Ave... Harlan, John Marshall, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), Fourteenth and uclHdiSte). an sas a NA S00 eraliagiy Kenyon Stuns aa itive sn sna, Harrigan, E. B., House messenger, Capitol Heights, Md ooo in cic. Ladgaimet FARE Harris, Capt. Peter C., General Staff, 1865 California St co. caint is hn sitet sail: Sunnns Harris, Civil Engineer F. R., Bureau of Yards and Docks, 1120 Vermont Ave. ..... Harris, Maj. Moses, general treasurer National Soldiers’ Home ..... J... w Harrison, Chester, clerk, House Commit- tee, I ibrary, The Albemarle .. i... JL. Harrison, Commander William X., Bu- reau of Navigation, 2015 Xalorama Road’. SA AR OR BELL ER ER BS Hart, Edward Henry, Assistant Solicitor, State Department, The Brighton........ Hartley, Charles P., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 3420 Center St... Li. SE v0, 251 248 247 204 199 241 258 208 247 251 259 319 205 208 249 250 263 457 Page. Hartman, Capt. Edward T., Office Quarter- master General, The Westmoreland... . Haskell, William C., District sealer of weights and measures and inspector of markets, The Cumberland. ......... a 241 373 Hastings, Charles H., division chief, Ii-. brary of Congress, 3600 Ordway St....... Hastings, Clifford, Census Bureau, Frank- Ho Parke Vaio. vesniahis ssmasvsmsird Hasbrouck, Lieut. Commander R. D , Bu- reau of Ordnance, Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase iM Alin. nisi dladir. sx hie shies vee Hatcher, Warren G., messenger at Speak- er’s Table, 212 B St. SE Hauke, Charles F., Second Assistant Com- missioner, Indian Office, 605 Massachu- Seis AVE INE. Jv iii siivsinmniv isd Felopidinweistal Havenner, George C., division chief, De- partment Commerce and Labor, Minne- sota Ave. and Eighteenth St............. Hawks, Emma B., assistant librarian, Agri- cultural Department, 941 S St Hawley, Willis C., vice chairman Conser- vation of Navigable Streams Commis- sion, The Woodley: 4.: 0. . 5 duis ous stels sins Hayes, C. Willard, chief geologist, Geolog- ical Survey, 3432 Ashley Terrace........ Hayes, Mabel B., Senate messenger, I102 FNS NE hull Ls sien roms + v.srisseini ts Hays, Willet M., Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, Drummond, Md............ 232 Haywood, J. K., division chief, Bureau of - Chemistry, 3114 Thirteenth St........... Hazen, M. C., District surveyor, 213 Elev- Enth SESW... oi batsiisiait ion o fate Shoes Heap, Pay Director Lawrence, U. S. Navy, allotment officer, Navy Department, 1734 t Hedry de Hedri et de Genere Aba, Stephen, attaché, Austria-Hungary Em- Dassyi-RAUSCHEE Suiiviv et’ sie isisivnivaisniie vv iss Heiskell, Henry L,., division chief, Weather Bureau, The Northumberland........... Hemenway, William I., House messenger, 216: North: Capiiol St... cl. « ssishdsnis ve Hemler, Price, House elevator conductor, TO RIOTIABC AVE. . io as fein msriaal tbs viva e Hempstead, D. K., enrolling clerk of the EI OVC. Lins oooh mii of = sp minim fs sio) oie] Shot ofa wrasi ay Henderson, John B., jr., Regent, Smith- sonjan Institution... ... Li 10 «8 meuniere vires Henderson, Lieut. Robert, Office Judge Ad- vocate General, U. S. N., 1601 Twenty- Era Sl dain hi ind dp msn mimes ieisiets » Spt che Heneberger, Medical Director L. G., Naval Medical School Hospital... -...c.seesmsre Hengelmiiller von Hengervir, Baron, Austrian Ambassador, 1305 Connecticut AVE, chia i sts vt waiate sina on wie HyFetire aii tuibidioiers Hengstler, Herbert C., bureau chief, State Department, 2816 Twenty-seventh St ... Henry, E. S., patent examiner, 1320 Co- TamBDIA BOAA: a: sles rane ~abisone cans tetris Henry, Frank C., president District phar- macy board, 703 Fifteenth St ............ Heaney, Prof. Alfred J., in charge research staff, Mount Weather, Virginia.......... Henry, Samuel R., battalion chief, fire de- partment, gog Lawrence St., Brookland. . Henshaw, H. W., chief, Bureau Biological Snpvey, The Ontario... ... co. oar Herbst, Henry B., House messenger, 220 Ly alr sis oir elit es. Sle Samo Air rein diese tre Herdon, John W., House folding room, Alexandria, Va... ved laheiniiu, uo Herquinigo, Sefior Don Alejandro, Chilean T.egation, Fhe Bachelor... 5... 0. Hero, Maj. Andrew, jr., assistant to Chief of Coast Artillery, 1916 Sunderland Place .. Herrarte, Sefior Dr. Don Luis: Guatemalan Tegation. « ss ees vrvsnde Governingboard,Pan American Union. Herron, W. H., division chief, Geological Survey, 1706 Oregon-Ave. 0. SL, Hershler, N.: Chief clerk, General Staff, Cleveland Parl. Co RN CN SL NARA Secretary to Board of Commissioners, Soldiers’ Home .....: 0.0: veen alll 248 319 263 458 Page. Herwarth, Maj. von, military attaché, Ger- man Embassy, 1105 Sixteenth St ........ Hesse, Edwin B., chief clerk, Metropolitan police, 506 A St. SE Hickling, D. Percy, visiting physician, Washington Asylum, 1304 Rhodé Island Hickman, Richard W., division chief, Bu- reauof Animal Industry, 2329 First St. ... Hicks, Cleveland H., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Public Lands, 102 B St., NE...... Higgins, Asst. Paymaster J. S., Bureau of Supplies and Accouuts, 1213 Connecticut Higgins, Asst. Surg. M. E., Naval Medical School Hospital, 613 T'wenty-second St . Hilborn, Bert E., clerk, Senate Committee, Expenditures in the Department of the Interior. 614 East Capitol St............. Hiraga, Commander Tokutaro, I. J. N., naval attaché, Japanese Embassy, The Champlain...’ asin lh ii Be E Joe] Hitchcock, Frank Harris: : Postmaster General (biography), The Connectient oooh, JL 0 laa Member, Smithsonian Institution ..... Hoadley, Frank M., division chief, War Department, 2303 First St... .. . 000 Ua Hodge, F. W.: Bureau of American Ethnology, Gar- rett Park, Md Geographic Board 0.0.0 0000. Far Hodges, H. W., clerk, District Court of Ap- peals/Z208' ASE... ren. hie PRR Hodges, Lieut. Col. H. F., assistant chief engineer Isthmian Canal Commission... Hodges, Maj. Henry C., jr., General Staff, Nar DepartmeERt. er aid Hodgkins, H. G., Nautical Almanac Office, Bethesda, Md Holloway, J. B., clerk to continue digest of war claims, 18 Third St. SE Hollyday, Civil Engineer R. C., chief, Bu- reau of Yards and Docks, 2117 Connecti- LR RD RN eet Le Hollyday, John W., chief clerk, office Second Assistant Postmaster General, 2B 12 PNITeenti SE. . uu it: inivd nn ress wos Holmes, Commander Urban T'., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 1705 Twenty-first St. Holmes, George K., division chief, Bureau of Statistics, Agricultural Department, 2a lnving St... cl ase ¥ veins nie 318 373 198 318 372 373 314 319 244 262 240 262 264 315 265 240 247 246 205 203 207 246 245 247 Indwidual Index. Page. Holmes, J. A., Director, Bureau of Mines, 1749 PSL. ibn id oa Se htidandai il 5 254 Holmes, John A., purchasing agent, Post Office Department, 803 Taylor St........ 245 Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 1720 I St... 310 Holmes, William H. head curator, National Museum, 1444 Belmont St................ 262 Holt, Thomas M., messenger, House Post Office; 1368. SRL ie. Lio oh 207 Holyoke, G. W., House document room, 226 East Capitol St... .fiviimiv.. iu. 205 Hoogewerff, Commander John A., General Board, 2000 St. k msm sive sisi 78 249 Hoover, Dickerson N., jr., chief clerk Office Steamboat-Inspection Service, 411 Sew- ard Square saliihna ib. Said. lal ian 260 Hoover, G. W., Bureau of Chemistry, 1322 Vermont Aver... Lunliiim called. van 257 Hopkins, A. D., Bureau of Entomology, Cosmos Clnbu. cule siiivei. ii fodids cists 257 Hopkins, Archibald, chief clerk, Court of Claims, 1826 Massachusetts Ave. ......... 313 Horan, John S., clerk, House Committee, Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress, 308 Bast CAPIOL St. 2 iin. viwmemersehs vss rine 206 Horigan, W. D., librarian, Naval Observa- tory, 3028 Wisconsin Ave..............i.. 247 Hornaday, Frank A., division chief, Post Office Department, 1310 North Carolina AVE. INH ci oars sais n ates aR wil 245 Horne, W. W., Office Secretary of the Senate, 1802 Vernon St... .... or werinines 200 Horstmann, Mr. A, C., German Embassy, IBIS ih i a canis dd Bind es rrsonie at 318 Horton, Maj. William E., Office Quarter- master General, The Farragut.......... 241 Horton, R. B., official reporter, Tariff Board, 1401 Decatitt Sh, vues ones vuin ving sl; 200 Hotchin, Chas. W., clerk House folding TOOM., 905) BSE, NID ..i c fv © stilt vcore imuivioie von 205 Hough, W. H., M. D., Insane Hospital..... 267 Hough, Walter, curator, National Museum. 262 Howard, B. J., Bureau of Chemistry, 1212 DecatME SE . inhibins vat » dim geriisies melvin 257 Howard, James K., Bureau of Standards, 2823 CallfOTIIR AVE. vis vivid Cire rein smi mein 261 Howard, L. O.: Chief, Bureau of Entomology, 2026 HAlyer Plage... vi disk iii «vss sis 257 Curator, National Museum ............ 262 Howard, Robert A., Department of Justice, TIE CBOIL, ii fbrisioss sey. vhustaia dinle satis s omni iain 244 Howard, William J., division chief, Gen- eral Land Office, 815 Taylor St........... 251 Howard, William M.: Member, Commission on Reconstruc- tion of the Hall of the House of Rep- resentatives, The Richmond......... 199 Member, Tariff: Board. ........i.sicee ir 200 Regent, Smithsonian Institution...... 262 Howe, Lieut. Alfred G., Bureau of Nav- igation, Navy Department, ‘The Far- YATUE § sivure vatni ¥o W wml arises sverih ie be dieses omen 247 Howland, Anna I,., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Patents, The DEWEY... .c.v..oivevaors 202 Howland, Capt. Charles R., Office Judge Advocate General, War Department, The 2 ee SR ee i Rae Re Se Sh 241 Howry, Charles B., judge, Court of Claims, B28 Ot ie ta pe uv BF saree 313 Hoyt, C. 8., disbursing clerk of the House, Congress Hall....... pe aaletuia Sele Wi Savon 204 Hoyt, Charles H., Office Public Roads, 1002 5 i a eT CREB 25 Hrdlicka, Al&s, curator, Smithsonian In- SEINEION: tucson simemmie vi sleweisie Bisel od 262 Hubbard, Henry D., secretary, Bureau of Standards, The Wilmington ............. 261 Hubbard, John W., House messenger, 212 NEW JEIBCY AVE. fiom ivarmitisnisind fs = msrinmmmi's » 205 Hubbard, Prevost, chemist, Office Public Roads, The Monticello...... .uevinensnn. 258 Hudson, C. S., Bureau of Chemistry, The ELA LE Re BS Tn a 257 Hudson, M. F., clerk, Senate Committee, Corporations Organized in District of Columbia, 20 MSE... ios ineesies 201 Individual Index. Page. Huerta, Sefior Don Ricardo, Mexican Em- bassy : Huggett, Martin C., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Territories, The Farragut...... Hughes, Charles Evans, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 2401 Massa- CHUSCHIS ANG... 2005. Sines 4 verwisie s bitin wivielais vis Hughes, Commander Charles F., Board of Inspection and Survey, The Ontario..... Hughes, Wm. C., Journal clerk of the House ,; TheiChalionte in. vi veers siienissh Hughes, Wm. J., Department of Justice, 2256. Cathedral Ave’... .... oho wien vsle Huidekoper, Reginald S., assistant United States attorney, 1614 Eighteenth St...... Hulme, Commander Walter O., Office of Judge Advocate General, Navy Depart- ment, Florence Court... .. oun couermeiast) - - Humphrey, Capt. Charles F., jr., Office of Quartermaster General, The Northum- berlamdi ass « tod doe sain bs wot adi vn Humphrey, Paul N., assistant clerk, House Committee, Indian Affairs... .... sun, Hunt, C. B., District engineer of highways, 2315 MSE nih ai pisos. ca vhll, weuldnenid) des Hunt, Gaillard, division chief, Library of Congress, 1701:De Sales Bt... 0. i. veh. Hunt, Pay Director L., disbursing officer, Navy Department, 1709 Rhode Island Ave. Hunt, William C., Census Bureau, The IBENBINTRON lu. sis ols vas in me es EL SEER Hunt, William H., member, United States Commerce Court (biography), 1710 N St. Hunter, E. J., House Post Office, 236 New TeTSe ANE: on prntnmod i diitiad five» ini bis Hunter, W. D., Bureau of Entomology... . Huntington, A. T., division chief, Treasury Department, 1412 Massachusetts Ave.... Hussein Bey, Abdul Hak, first secretary, Turkish Embass Husted, Glenn E., Department of Justice, 1761 Columbia Road Hutchins, F. H., Department of Justice, 1632 Riggs Places. sii tarbuiaonis svvs Hutchins, Lieut. C. T., Navy Yard......... Hye, Baron Demeter, Austrian Embassy, Rauseherls ihc. in vain ou. coil vb ven Hynson, N. Thornton, clerk House Com- mittee, Expenditures in Navy Depart- ment, 1338 NuStivL il. anil, ida sl Ibrahim, Zia Bey, Turkish Legation.. .... Ide, G. R., patent examiner, 644 D St. NE. . Ingalls, Theodore, General Superintend- ent Railway Mail Service, The Oakland. Innes, Mr. Alfred Mitchell, counselor, British Embassy, 1825 Twenty-fourth St. Inouye, Lieut. Col. Kazutsugu, military at- taché, Japanese Embassy, The Portland. Irby, Charles R., D. D. S., Insane Hospital. Ireland; Maj. Merritte W., Office Surgeon General, i1g27 SS St 0 La dia vas Irland, Fred, Official Reporter, House, 1845 Ontario Place i: LS0iio iil Saved etter : Irvine, A.A. House messenger, 246 Dela- ware Ave. NE Ivins, Jo. J., clerk, House Committee, Post Office and Post Roads... 2.050, iwi Jacobs, S. R., disbursing clerk, Treasury Department, 272508. , 00 0 mG, Jackson, Lieut. Commander O. P., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department, The Con- necticut! ui. 28 SL BSR GL LIE Jackson, U. Stokes, Sergeant at Arms of the House, Congress Hall. fl. ll il, Jajaval, Nai, Siamese Legation............ Jamerson, Capt. George H., General Staff, War Department... Jor, cor. onl SRE Janney, Burnett C., president board of trustees of Industrial Home School ..... Jarvis, Grant, House document and bill clerk; 621 Nineteentlt St... .... LL. 04, Jaynes, Lizzie S., Senate messenger, 23 First SU NE. 0200 Sani ae Jaynes, W. B., clerk, Senate Committee, Additional Accommodations Library of Congress,'os Birst St. NE ..0v...oldodo en Jeffers, Lieut. William N., Office of Naval Intelligence, 1412 Twentieth St.......... 319 252 319 267 459 Page. Jeffrey, F. R., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Fisheries, 1433 Rhode Island Ave. Jennison, George, special House messen- ger, The Driscoll. ... Gtia confer sbi rain hie Jester, James G., Isthmian Canal Commis- sion, The Kennesaw. is rove iii «i vimeoi-vedic. Johnson, Clarence, executive clerk of the Senate, The Driscoll Johnson, Maj. Franklin O., Office Post Paymaster, 1807 Belmont Road.......... Johnson, Robert S., Bureau of Fisheries, 1300 ReNYOM Sh... i x. sesinavit vies 240 creslanles + Johnson, W. P., House Post Office, 111 BOL BE vtochs sets Sw inboeieritbndd male penn ta Johnson, Walter, First St. NE Johnston, Capt. Edward N., assistant to Chief of Engineers, U.S. A., 1639 Park Road Johnston, John A., District Commissioner, 2111 Massachusetts AVe.. .. cq vives cus sienna Johnston, John W., office chief inspector, Post Office Department, 231 Twelfth St. N Johnston, Mrs. C. E., chief clerk, Office Experiment Stations, The Henrietta... Jones, Chas. F., Department of Justice, WHE DEWEY. vv sviasne ve shh fontaine. 5 Jones, Chas. S., Bureau of Pensions, 707 SeventRaSt uuu: sn slit eis bine Jol bak va baie are Jones, Commander H. P., assistant super- intendent Naval Gun Factory........... Jones, Dwight V., clerk, Senate Committee, Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands, 1118 Rhode Island Ave........... Jones, J. O., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Pacific Islands and Porto Rico... Jones, James F¥., chief clerk, Bureau of Plant Industry, 614. D St. NE............: Jones, John H., in charge Senate Weather Bureau map station, 1217 New Jersey AVE . doin isi fe. selod sit igi ois ose site messiness tt Tis. viegs Jones, Lewis, chief engineer, Department of Agriculture, 42 R St. NE Jones, Moselle, Senate messenger, Rhode Island AVE... ......c waisess vsses 372 464 Individual Index. Page. Moore, Millard J., patent examiner, 111 ‘Tennessee Ave. NHL. dade dinineeh cave Moore, Willis I,., Chief Weather Bureau, The Richmond 4. sonst id oddaadas i. Moores, Edward i Government Print- ing Office, 467 MSE. lu so vile s Jest hli® oe oe Moran, W. H., china chief, Secret Serv- ice, 1935 BAITINOTE Bt io rvs sons wns ae ots Morgan, Herbert R., assistant astrono- mer, Naval Observatory, 3420:R St. 5... Morgan, Nicholas G., Senate messenger, THE VENtOSA. Ju lil nl 3015 be sui vee yim Morley, C. E., atom financial clerk, House, 142 A SLANTED Litas dali sia de abie Morris, Ballard N. , patent examiner, Ken- sington, 1) £3 Bgl SE pa A Rtg ab Morris, Finis D., division chief, Patent Office, Le Ta ts i A LE Gre SIRE Morrison, Hugh A., jr., assistant chief, Library of Congress, 2302 First St........ Morrison, John G., assistant chief, Li- brary of Congress, 1230 Irving St........ Morrison, Thomas, disbursing clerk, State Department, TASS SE0 iis te eA sierelons Morrow, Judge W. W., National Red Cross. Morrow, Maj. Henry M., Office of Judge Advocate General, War Department, The Brightonir a. uo: du Sree nine seis 08's deena d's Morse, B. H., assistant engineer, House, 2138 Fe} St Morteza, Khan, Gen., Persian minister... Mortimer, W. W., division chief, Patent Office, 1755 Columbia Road .............. Morton, George I,., patent examiner, The re I LUE SR SRE Mosher, Alex., division chief, Patent Office, 2945 BN Mosman, Alonzo T'., division chief, Coast and Geodetic Survey, The Portner. ..... Moss, H. N., superintendent of streets, 1790 Lanier PIACE,, si dime edits in inate seis iam orton Moxley, Eugene C., Assistant Official Re- porter, Senate, 1150 Seventeenth St...... Mudd, A. I. , chief clerk, Division Publica- tions, Agricultural Department , 1925 Fif- IL Ot a A | Mullins, J. S., clerk, House Committee, In- dustrial Arts and Expositions ........... Mullowny, A. R., judge, police court, 1735 OTe SON AVE Lt lle oe ed Murphy, Edward V., Official Reporter, Senate, 2511 Pennsylvania AVE: ooh Murphy, ‘James L., deputy marshal, United States Commerce Court, 1755 Kilbourne PIACE. «ty fis ae ol siidis id dds dd date SAK Murphy, James W., Official Reporter, Sen- ate, 1783 Lanier Place. i... L J l0RS JF IL Murray, Brig. Gen. Arthur: Assistant to Chief of Staff, 1616 Rhode Teland Ave, or or RL Uo I WL Board of Ordnance and Fortification. . Murray, Lawrence O., Comptroller of the Currency, gor Twentieth St.. Murray, Nat C., associate statistician, Bureau Statistics, Agricultural Depart- ment, 1635 Monroe SEU Sati Myers, ‘Albert P., clerk, House Committee, Elections No. 2 3602 New Hampshire Ave. Nabokoff, Mr. Constantin, first secretary, Russian Embassy, Rauscher’s........... Nagel, Charles: Secretary of Commerce and Labor (biography), 1731 K St. Member, Smithsonian Institution. .... National Red Cross... ici iiueaiciiors Naon, Dr. Romulo S.: Mirister from Argentina............... Governing board, Pan American Union Neagle, Pickens, Office of the Solicitor, Navy Department, 1332 Belmont St...... Neal, Henry, House messenger, 1229 T St.. Neale, Samuel C., clerk, House Committee, Expenditures State Department, The GAINESDOTO: oooh bl hl SALI deh Neill, Charles P., Commissioner of Labor, 3556 Macomb St... aia asides. Neilson, Passed Asst. Surg. J. I., Naval Dispensary, 1708 Kilbourne Place....... 252 255 264 240 243 Page. Nelson, Knute, chairman Joint Committee, Alaskan Investigation, 649KastCapitol St. Nesbit, Fred, messenger, House Post Office, 238 North ‘Capitol 2) OTE A lS SSE STE Nesbit, Scott, Coast and Geodetic Survey, The Luxor Ss SR A ee AR Ey JET ROS Nevitt, Dr. J. Ramsey, District coroner, 1320,Calyvent Sti cnidsatdaiinnos nade side Nevius, W. J., Division of Accounts and Disbursements, Department of Agricul- Turen SE RUSE wa hn i A Gat a Newell, Frederick H., Director Reclama- tion Service, 1909 S St. Newman, Sebe, assistant disbursing ‘clerk of the House, 115 East Capitol St. Newsom, Charles F., Senate manager, “de- partmental telegraph AR RN pe ETP TY Newton, James T., patent examiner, 1625 RSE DABS SIRI II SRE FAS Nicholls, Maj. J. C., assistant to Chief of Ordnance, U.S.A 1817 Belmont Road. . Nicholson, Rear Admiral Reginald F., chief Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, 1814 efferson:Place. nonnull bl un Nicholson, Philip W., fire marshal, 1619 New Jersey AVC.1serviniaiviern viotuisivisteivreivid inte sfaiots Niess, Edwin A., assistant attorney, Post Office Department, 61 Rhode Island Ave. Niles, Rear Admiral Kossuth: Naval Examining Board, The Burling- Naval Retiring Board... [iol odoin 000d Nixon, Charles R., Office Secretary of Sen- ate, 1328 New York Ave 70810 0H 00 Nixon, G. A., patent examiner, Florence Cort. . nde ash SOR Gh SE A ER Nixon, George S., member Joint Commit- tee, Alaskan Investigation, Woodley TARE: ives a SEE NAN, SS ARE EE Nixon, Richard B.: Financial clerk of the Senate, 1336 Bairmont Stan i tin ail £0 Lal Disbursing officer, National Monetary Commissions. to iid wal ie da ii lay Noble, A. M., assistant clerk, House Com- mittee, Claims, 215 North Capitol St..... Norris, Wm. F., Department of Justice, The Marlborough... hl btni ii al Norton, Horace D., bookkeeper, Office of Sergeant at Arms, House, 225 New Jersey Norton, Lieut. Commander A. IL., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department......... Noyes, Theo. W.: Lng Board of Trustees, Public Li- 2h asi el al sad don dh gl d Director, Columbia Institution for the Ea nas rs an a as Numa, Mr. Edgar N., secretary, Haitian Legation... eu. cousonncoins rin rs susie s Nutting, Naval Constructor D. C., Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1206 Kenyon Os is ar Ve Alias Ce Nie 5 pet tanner aces Ober, George C., president District Medical Board (regular), 210 BSt. SE ............ O’Brien, John H., clerk, Senate Committee, Finance, 224 C St O’Brien, Mrs. A., matron, Insane Hospital. O’Brien, Richard A., secretary District plumbing oarele. a O’Byrne, James J., special employee, Office if the Doorkeeper, HOUSE, iv. slors tos eiise O'Connell, Joh, lieutenant Capitol police, 149 A St. N O'Connell, Toretta E,, Senate messenger, 1213 Rhode Is1and AVe.........o.eeensnnr. Offutt, A. H., Insane Hospital ........... “ Ogden, S.R. House messenger, 1905 I St.. Ogle, Chas. oT, correspondence division, Navy Department, 528 First St. NE...... O’Hern, Maj. Edward P., assistant to Chief of Ordnance, U.S. A., 1925 BS: Sti cern. Okabé, Mr. Nagakagé, attaché, Japanese Embassy A A a ee Olesen, Tory, Pension Bureau, 644 E St. NE 199 207 260 372 258 254 204 202 205 319 253 Individual Index. Page. Oliver, George T., chairman Fiftieth An- niversary Battle of Gettysburg Commis- sion, 2230 Massachusetts Ave ............ Oliver, Robert Shaw, Assistant Secretary ol War 1767. QrSt. :.h od ioe aE Olmstead, Lieut. Dawson, assistant to Chief Signal Officer, 918 Eighteenth St......... Olmsted, Victor H., chief, Bureau Statistics, AgriculturalDepartment, Clarendon, Va. Olsen, J. A., custodian, Washington Monu- mente PheTowa ois tian irra t Lh O'Malley, Mary, M. D., Insane Hospital. . Orton, W. A., Bureau of Plant Industry, PaROMIA SL al a es Lt SE aaa Osaki, Mr. Nobumori, Japanese Embassy, The Champlalm i200 2 or 5 0s Osborn, Carl H., Senate messenger, 23 EL Eh a ee BRL SR RE Osborne, John Ball, bureau chief, State Department, 2116 Connecticut Ave...... Oursler, John R., House messenger, The Roland fi a a a a, i. se he Overhue, W. H., distributing clerk of the House, The Congressional ............... Overstreet, H. IL,., Assistant Chief Clerk, TL OMS ive leith itie ie o's ool oir es Inminieinin 0 2 ost Teety Ovey, Mr. Esmond, M. V. O., British Em- DESY LL iO A Ee et Re Owens, Lieut. Arthur B., Marine Barracks. Oyster, James F., president District Board oh Bdutation’ 2c Liat Ry 2 Ha Packer, Launcelot, secretary Commission to Investigate the Matter of Employers’ Liability and Workmen’s Compensation. Padgett, Lemuel P., member, National Monetary Commission, The Dewey ..... Pagan, Oliver KE. Department of Justice, 1965 Biltmoret St. il. Lh ee es “Page, Carroll S.: Member Printing Investigation Com- mission, The Cochran... ............ Member Joint Committee on Printing. Pegs, Fernando, House messenger, 51 D St. Lo CRE RB RE HI RS RE, Page, Logan W., Director Office Public Roads, 2223 Massachusetts Ave........... Page, Thomas W., member, Tariff Board, Cosmos Cb Loi cias: atts arab Sle ans Page, William Tyler, clerk, Hpuse Commit- tee, Accounts, Friendship Heights, Md. . Palmer, Aulick, United States marshal, 1401. Belmont St «ne he si Palmer, T. S., assistant chief, Bureau Bio- logical Survey, 1939 Biltmore St......... Pang, Mr. Chung Wen, second secretary, Chinese I egaliOn. ioc. ueitianiioisis sis winiisiais Pardo, Mr. Felipe: Peruvian minister, 2223 R St. ........... Governing board, PanAmerican Union. Parker, BE. W., division chief, Geological Survey, 2252 Cathedral Ave............... Parker, John D., chief clerk, Office of In- spector General, 952 Rhode Island Ave. . Parker, Robert E., clerk to Assistant Sec- retary of War, ‘Fhe POTNEE..... so soe: Parkinson, Alfred C., minute and jour- naliclerk of Senate, 9B St. cv. ciccots vines Parks, Capt. Wythe M., Naval Examining Board, 1800 Wyoming Ave................ Parks, Edward L., treasurer Howard Uni- versity... cust oun sere nid CTS ee Parrish, George F., clerk, House Commit- tee, Invalid Pensions... .i.. coos soe muons Parrott, Dale K., law examiner, General I.and Office, 1339 Massachusetts Ave. SE. Parsons, Arthur J., division chief, Library of Congress, 1704 Eighteenth St......... Parsons, Starr, District board of dental examiners, 1300.1, St .............. RA Patchin, Philip H., division chief, State Department, The Cordova............... Patrick, G. E., Bureau of Chemistry, The SHELIA, 1. otis risisisieis <5 bloiss ais se i ney Patrick, Lewis S., clerk, Senate Committee, Enrolled Bills, The Shoreham..,........ Patterson, Flora W., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, Che Decatur... ..... oo. 0.0... Patterson, Margaret, assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Pensions .......c.ccveeses vee 198 240 242 250 199 320 465% Page. Paul, Edwin G., chief clerk, Reclamation Service, College Park, Md................ Paull, George S., appointment clerk, Post Office Department, 2236 Decatur Place... Paxton, J. W., superintendent street clean- ING, 0736 GC Sts cevse ves onnneronsisedonie, Payne, James F., laborer, House of Repre- sentatives, 1521 Plerce St....... LL oiils Paynter, T. P., clerk, Senate Committee, Examine Several Branches Civil Service. Pease, Ferdinand H.,clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Privileges and Elections, The Cham- PIA: oi Sr a EL LL SU Peck, Sidney S., assistant attendant, House document room, 1212 Kuclid St......... 5 Pederneiras, Lieut. Col. A. V. de, military attaché, Brazilian Embassy.............. Pedigo, Walter R., private secretary to Sec- retary of War, go7 Massachusetts Ave. NE iio: saan shics sais dois nnicidian bo hii Peelle, Stanton C., assistant United States attorney,”I'he Concord...... Ju ln0ii.... Peelle, Stanton J., chief justice, Court of Claims, The Concord. dui .. i caves, oi Peirce, Lieut. Col. W. S., assistant to Chief of Ordnance, U.S. A, TheCecil....".......% Peirce, Vernon M., chief engineer, Office Public Roads, The Beacon............... Pejaesevich, Count Elemer, attaché, Aus- tria-Hungary Embassy, Rauscher’s ..... Pennington, M. E., Bureau of Chemistry, Philadelphia, Pa... ........ 0 ede LLL Percy, Lord Eustace Sutherland Campbell, attaché, British KEmbassy, 1266 New Eampshire Ave ll... Loti... LL LE Peretti de la Rocca, Mr. De, first secre- tary, French Embassy, 2005 Columbia ROB 2 bh AS TT 5 BG LONG Pereyra, Sefior Don Carlos, first secretary, Mexican Legation |... 0. cl 0h ah, Perkins, Frank Walley, Assistant Superin- tendent, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1723 De Bales St. ove, vine dian all Perkins, George C., director, Columbia In- stitution’ for the-Deaf... J. LUM Perkins, Perry B., Howard University .... Perry, Frank Sprigg, assistant United States attorney, 1760 Q St Perry, R. Ross, director, Columbia Insti- tution for the Deaf. .....covovev isons Peters, J. G., Forest Service, 7 East Mount Royal Ave., Baltimore, Md .............. Pettus, Capt. Harry L., depot quarter- master, The Westmoreland.............. Pfister, Lieut. Commander Carlo, naval attaché, Italian Embassy, The Brighton. Phillips, A. E., superintendent of sewers, 1332 Biltmoere'Stl.. oahu Loh LS, Phillips, E. F., Bureau of Entomology, Somerset Heights, Md................... Phillips, P. Lee, division chief, Library of Congress, 1707 ESE... 0. ..L. oon LL CL Pickens, James M., editor, Bureau of Ani- mal Industry, 1831 California St......... Pickett, Charles J., Senate messenger, 606 USE sms aa htate, ole MA SINGH At at 30) Pierce, A. I,., Bureau of Chemistry, 1328 EleventhiSh: stil Chr cs. Sa ne Pierce, Edwin S., Deputy Sergeant at Arms of the House, 1412 Chapin St............. Pierce, Frank, First Assistant Secretary of the Interior, The Rochambeau........ Pierce, Lovick, division chief, Bureau of Education, 1322 Eleventh St ............. Pierce, Rev. Ulysses G. B., Senate Chaplain, 1616'Riggs Place... ... 0. aL a Pierson, Charles O., division chief, War Department, 1774 U St ............ 0... Pindell, Robert M., jr., chief clerk, Depart- ment of Commerce and Labor, 1116 Mon- LL i I AE Er De rT A SR a | Piper, Charles V., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 1495 Newton St ...................... Platt, Bénjamin S., enrolling clerk of the Senate, 7226 Euclid St ........c cdc ddann 319 318 266 267 466 Individual Index. Page. Plummer, Fred G.: Forest Service, 1320 LiSt.. ivi. res menne 256 Geographic Boards. vii: co. «ve vni sain» 264 Pollock, Lieut. Commander E. R., Office of Judge Advocate General, U. S. N., The BESO is iwiinivns vt aneisinin sins Robe aves 248 Pond, Benjamin W., patent examiner, I887 Newton St v.. cai eo a¥iiatl cinta wsnios 253 Pool, Rita J., Senate messenger, The Valois. 201 Pope, A. 1,., division chief, Patent Office, 627 Hast: CapitoloShii in. il waa ork vais smi ses 253 Pope, G. S., Bureau of Mines, 1321 East Capi- LE RL I RY 254 Porras, Dr. Belisario: Minister of Panama, The Portland.... 338 Governing board, PanAmericanUnion. 263 Porter, H. Kirke, National Red Cross..... 266 Porter, Lieut. Col. John Biddle, Office Judge Advocate General, War Department, 1732 Eee SRE ae Ll 241 Porter, Maj. David D., assistant adjutant and inspector, Headquarters Marine Corps, 1819 Nineteenth St. ....... cere ns 250 ‘Potter, Albert F., assistant chief, Forest Service, 1307 P RE Be er A 256 Potter, Rear Admiral William P., Aid for Personnel, Navy Department, Stoneleigh COUEL oy cnn wis wri BRIDAL sri obs oa iaLs Pr SHI 246 Potts, Capt. Templin M.: Chief Office of Naval Intelligence, FOO IE SE. oie sietais's nine sete sy theiesiso ries b 246 General Board... «os «duels - sis eisimsins 249 Pourtalés, Count, German Embassy, The POTLIBHIT dese . » ieh ile stas on shia nria no to} en 318 Powderly, T. V., division chief, Bureau of Immigration, 502 OUiCY Stuisd « ale omioy ool 261 Powell, Grahame H., secretary, Board of Ordnance and Fortification, 3454 New- ATES 000A Sidhe ee ae 8 oie devotes shatels wade 84% 243 Powell, Maj. William G., Office of Paymas- ter, Marine Corps, 2150 Florlda Ave..... 250 Powers, Le Grand, Census Bureau, 3355 Eighteenth RE rR a A 260 Pratt, Ralph B., private secretary to Dis- trict Commissioner, 5015 Fourteenth St.. 372 Preble, Asst. Surg. Paul, Marine- Hospital Service, 509 Rock Creek Church Road... 239 Prescott, A. W., clerk, Senate Committee, Post Offices and Post Roads, 119 Twelfth SU NT iris sie sm riminion no St wailed aioke 202 Pressey, Warren E., afeisiom postmaster of the Senate, 149 NEL NB etnias irs 203 Preston, James D., Senate Press Gallery, 1366 METIAIAN Stree som ssusat nic do ress 381 Preston, R. E., SEaming, Bue of the ; Mint, 53 K BEVEL 4 ibs meses 30 rallies sreslim 239 Preuschen von und zu Lichensicia. Com- mander Baron F., naval attaché, Austrian Embassy, The Highlands oeliis wpehtici sere 317 Price, Byron J., Deputy Auditor, Navy Department, T2OGR Bl icons ois + bia viv 5a vinims 238 Prince, George W., Representative from Illinois, member, National Monetary Commission, 3113 "Thirteenth St. ......... 198 Prince, Howard L,., librarian, Patent Office, THE POINT: os ras ss mr ay 253 Proctor, C. B., battalion chief, fire depart- ment, 1221 GoSEiNI ova ceioeic cnrrsiren sents s 373 Proctor, James M., assistant United States attorney, Kensington, ta stole hee ais sine) op 315 Proudfit, Samuel V., assistant commis- sioner, General Land Office, 2550 Four- A a a SAL ae i 251 Prouty, Charles A., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, The Portner.............. 263 Pryor, Lieut. W. L., Bureau of Ordnance, , Navy Department, The Northumber- ATA a vs Rs ans mer Sf top As voles rs 247 Pryor, Surg. J. C., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, 1779 Massachusetts Ave ........ 248 Pugh, James L., judge police court, 3402 Mount Pleasant St... .;. Joa camemimpmmess 315 Pugh, William B., law clerk, General Land Office, Kenilworth St. ,Chevy Chase, RT Pe ROS Re Sa Web ae ee 251 Bon Arsene P., member, National Mone- tary Commission, The Shoreham. ........ 198 Pulsifer, Woodbury, clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Commerce, The Brunswick. . 201 Page. Putnam, George R.; Commissioner, Bureau of Lighthouses, The Brighton. 5. co.0e., Putnam, Herbert, Librarian of Congress, 1315 Connecticut AVEC fev opiwart leis deisnibes fio vs Pyne, Asst. Paymaster KE. G., Bureau of ‘Supplies and Accounts, 1624 Twenty-first Tn A. I., Bureau of Entomology, 1807 Phelps He NR Li Quarles, G. W., messenger to Chief Clerk, 4: Cn ELSE Sl aia Bee RE le Quigley, Edward T., chief and law clerk, Department of Commerce and Labor, The Holland, ott 5 i te desis Racedo, Seflor Don Eduardo, jr., Argen- tine Legation, 23000 St hia titrere Radford, Asst. Naval Constructor G. S., Bu- reau of Construction and Repair, 1615 TIVARGISL 3th Lr risrtinnh ~ ST ars tadod Shorey Rae, George W.,House elevator conductor, 1330 BT SE x eieinis wjninininiore inieis EF oon ws Sake Fe a opis Rafter, G. S., patent examiner, 3105 Six- es I Raif Bey, R., counselor, Turkish Embassy. Rainey, F. “H., division superintendent, Post Office Department, 2705: Sto Ralph, Joseph E., Director, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 1246 Newton Ot. NE reve om tsls aia = fossils + sesthr + bin Ralston, Capt. Robert R.: Assistant to Chief of Engineers, U.S.A. BT TE ROR Sail Recorder, Board of Ordnance and For- BRO Ore Ramsay, E. Florence, assistant clerk, Sen- ate Committee, Post Offices and Post Roads, The Dupont SRR en iii Cine Randall, George C., House folding room, RL Ra ie i Randolph, Francis H., chief clerk, Division of Militia Affairs, Woodside, MA hs Randolph, John, assistant clerk, Court of Claime, 28 LSE do. 5x siiiinta sobs snarin ast Randolph, John B., clerk to Assistant Secretary of War and chief clerk War Department, Hammond Court. ......... Ransdell, Daniel Moore, Sergeant at Arms (biography) aI EC aie Ta Ransom, Brayton H., division chief, Bu- reau of Animal Industry, 1735 New Hamp- ry one Rea Sestak ani alin diss Rash, Howard, Senate messenger ......... Rathbun, Richard, assistant secretary and curator, National Museum, 1622 Massa- CHUSSHE AVE os: cs, ries et nem Ravenel, W. de C., National Museum, 1611 Riggs Pack: iL a ue Rawl, Bernard H., division chief, Bureau Animal Industry, 107 Maryland Ave. NE isto Sn beh 7 os ales fd BA ar 2 Rayner, Isidor, member, Fiftieth Anni- versary Battle of Gettysburg Commission, 1320 Bighteenti St... ss assiies ve vs snie Rea, Kennedy F., clerk, Senate Committee, lai 906 Hast Capitol St ..... ond, Charles F., assistant clerk, Rn Committee, Immigration HR SFR Reed, Civil Engineer P. L., Bureauof Yards and Docks, 2717 Ontario Road........... Reeve, Charles S., Office Public Roads, 1468 Chapin Sr I end a Reeve, Felix A. Assistant Solicitor, T'reas- ury Department, 1626 Nineteenth St..... Reichard, Edward, financial clerk, Office of Sergeant at Arms, House, 1313 Delafield PIAGE lm hfs ar a sth a a ana as ns Reid, Eva C., M. D., Insane Hospital...... Reik, George W., private secretary to Post- master General, 2852 T'wenty-eighth St . Reisinger, Maj. Harold Cc. Headquarters Marine Corps, The Highlands Sharia Brads Retzmann, Commander, naval attaché, German Hmbassy SBT stale (dase ss Pe bik pi gi Reynolds, C. Leslie, Botanic Garden ...... Reynolds, James B., Tariff Board, 1712 H St. Rhoderick, E. P. , division chief, Post Office Department, 924 Westminster OF itariar Rhodes, Capt. Charles D., General Staff, The Preston or Thee ey 259 232 248 257 204, 244 317 247 207 252 321 245 238 242 243 255 202 262 262 255 198 Individual Index. Page. Riano, Sefior Don Juan Antonio, Colom- bian Legation... son Joo AB HE 318 Riafio y Gayangos, Sefior Don Juan, Span- ish minister, 1521 New Hampshire Ave.. 321 Rice, A. G., chief clerk, Bureau of Soils, 1,iv- ingstone Heights, Vor he a 257 Rice, Anthony F., division chief, General Land Office, 644 GStNE La 50 251 Rice, Maj. J. H. , assistant to Chief of Ord- nance, U. S. a, 1722/8 Ot a ea 242 Rich, Wm. Te patent examiner, 1468 Clif- POM Btu cov iviv ivi nde dousiinei cic 252 Rich, William H., House messenger....... 205 Richards, Charles N., keeper of Senate sta- tionery, ror Massachusetts Ave .......... 200 Richards, Col. George, paymaster, Marine Corps, Khe Mendota, iors avers 250 Richards, Dr. Alfred, police surgeon ea 373 Richards, Preston D., Assistant Solicitor, State Department, Y. M. C. A. Building. 236 Richards, William P., District assessor, 137 S EDIRNE 372 Rideout, Malcolm K., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Exvenditures Agricultural De- partment, 1ST L St...................... 201 Ridgely, Harry S., Department of Justice, 452 Newton'Sto ue. onus oo Zim idan on 244 Ridgway, Robert, curator, National Mu- EE ae A SE I A el rani Te, 262 Rigg, Peter M.,assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Public Lands, 147 North Carolina AVE BB: os vcooreicss Ol cialehl ne, 30 202 Rittenhouse, Irving, division chief, General Iand Office, 1118 Monroe St.............. 251 Ritter, Alfred H., chief clerk, River and Harbor Board, Takoma.................. 243 Ritter, Dr. Paul, Swiss minister .......... 321 Rivero, Sefior di: Cuban Minister, Sixteenth and T Sts.. 318 Governing board Pan American Union. 263 Rizer, Henry C., chief clerk, Geological Survey, 2568 University Place... rc. 253 Roadstrum, V. N., special agent, Depart- ment of Justice, The Shoreham. ......... 244 Robb, Charles H., associate justice, Dis- trict Court of Appeals, The Rochambeau. 315 Roberts, Burton, Office Secretary of the Senate, 716 North Carolina Ave. SE il 200 Roberts, Charles F., Office Secretary of the Senate, 716 North Carolina Ave. SE. 200 Roberts, D. R., Office Secretary of the Sen- ate, 538 Columbia Road .................. 200 Roherts, George E., Director of the Mint, THe ONMATIO . criss isn sun shies tis 239 Robertson, James, Nautical Almanac Office, 734 Pwelftlet: or a... 247 Robinson, C. B., District veterinary sur- geon,222CSt............... Lo LL 373 Robinson, Halbert, M. D., Insane Hospital. 267 Robinson, Jesse H., division chief, Weather Bureau, 1607 S Bly sw veverioe bb Ra E 255 Robinson, Joseph T'., member Joint Com- mittee, Afaskan Investigation, 1601 Nine- teentie ®t. oe 199 Robinson, Naval Constructor R. H., Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1322 Nine- teen SE amt a re 247 Robinson, Phillips B., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Industrial Expositions, 1219 Con- NeCtHERE AVE Lo. hs hres is 202 Robison, Commander Samuel S., Bureau of Steam Engineering, The Ontario..... 247 Robison, J. R., assistant clerk, House Com- mittee, Interstate and Foreign Com- EL EP eT ah 206 Robison, Lieut. Commander John K., Bu- reau of Steam Engineering, 1619 Twenty- Ee en ET Se Ee a STR SR 247 Robison, William B., chief deputy, United States Marshal's Office, The Imperial.. 316 Robnett, Assistant Paymaster J. DD. Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, 1724 Q St. 248 Rockwell, First Lieut. Charles K., assist- ant to Chief of Engineers, U. S. A. sy The A Ee I CI a 242 Rockwell, J. KE., editor, Bureau of Plant EE Te BL Re RR 255 84259°—62-1—I18T ED——31 Page. Rodenberger, W. R., assistant superintend- ent House document room, 1352 Otis Place vc Fit dite irae vis ddim di Be odin ae tele Rodgers, Rear Admiral Raymond P., Gen- eral Board 2.4 el SESE LR aR ea i Roe, Harry V., document clerk, House, Ga DIOLS. ER SERIE Rogers, B. H., messenger, House Post Office... Rogers, Chas. C., collector of taxes, 3026 Newark St Rogers, D. M., Bureau of Entomology..... Rogers, Thomas ¥., superintendent, Na- tional Bank Redemption Agency, The ColMDIR sir ov ssc mia sinicn sinieisiie 51a nx win lel vives Rojas, Sefior Don P. Ezequiel: Venezuelan minister, 1017 Sixteenth St. Governing board, Pan American Union. Rome, John, House meSSenger... ..i .ui-sv> Rommel, George M., division chief, Bureau of Animal Industry, 2622 Garfield St.. Roper, Daniel C,, clerk, House Committee, Ways and Means, 816 Massachusetts Ave. NE EE EE ET is Rosa, Edward B., Bureau of Standards, The Oar. cone toi sii. worries geass Rose, Henry M., Assistant Peerstany of the Senate, 1745 Eighteenth S Rose, J. N., National a svleia- 24 eieibfele ly Rosen, Baron, Russian ambassador....... Ross, Capt. Commandant Worth G., Chief, Revenue-Cutter Service, The Woodley. . Rosso, Signor Augusto, attaché, Italian Em- bassy Ede Sk TT TS ME Le BS Lei Le Rousseau, H. H., U. S. N., Isthmian Canal Commission... .cocovan iii Lia 3 Rubin, Cora M., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Education and Labor, The TUXOF ~c oie a RR TF RE ER hy) Ruckman, Webster S., law examiner, Patent Office, 3414 Mount Pleasant St. Rudolph, Cuno “H.: District Commissioner, The Dresden. . Executive committee, Howard Uni- versity. A LE Ruhlen, Col. George, Office Quartermaster General, 1755 Buca St ne Runyan, Elmer G., District inspector gas and meters, 300 R St. NE Russell, Aaron, Office Clerk of the House, i Bi 0 Pt Sa ren RR nia resis aie Russell, Capt. Robert I,., Judge Advocate General of the Navy, BARS an Russell, Maj. Frederick F., curator, Army Medical * nseum, 1928 Biltmore St....... Rutter; Frank, Bureau of Manufactures, 1442 CTT Rea Ryan, W. E., House mail clerk, 105 Mary- land Ave. NE SR or Bias sR Bre ES ee Ryan, William A., assistant clerk, House Committee, Appropriations She x rate Sh WI Ryder, Bayard C ., Office of Secretary of the Senate, 625 East Capitol St........... Sabine, George W., assistant librarian of the House, The Royalton RE Ln Sacket, Rodney, Office of Secretary of the Senate, The Belgrade... 8 oa. 3 assis Sackett, H.:S; “Forest Service. ......... 1... Salant, Wm., Bureau of Chemistry, 1647 Lamont St Saltzman, Maj. Charles McK., assistant to Chief Signal Officer, The Mendota....... Sample, Geo. F., House mail clerk, 415 G Eh Ra SR SORE So aR Bandss, Alvin H., Tariff Board, New Wil- ard coc TE OR ER a ER Sanders, R. A., District pharmacy inspect- or. 15:U St Sands, Frederick B., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Commerce, The Hamilton.. Sanford, Henry W., recorder, General Land Office, 1205 Sixth BE Sandford, S., division chief, Bureau of Mines, 834 ThirteenthiSt.. aeons ans Sanger, 'Monie, steward, Insane Hospital.. 205 249 204 320 241 200 256 lu 468 Indwwidual Index. Page. Sannon, Mr, H. Pauléus: Haitian minister, 1429 Rhode Island ER OP I Governingboard, Pan American Union. Sargent, Paul D., Office Public Roads, 1118 Rhode Island Ave... o..iconse- vu cw nianis Sault, William H., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Forest Reservations and Protection of Game, 302 Maryland Ave. NE.......... Sawn, William F., House Post Office, 417 G ER OE TERE Sawtelle, H. F., assistant District health officer, 300r Bleventh St... evel. soeeens Sawyer, Frank H., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Naval Affairs, 1134 Twelfth St........ Saxton, Henry D., chief clerk, Office of Quartermaster General, 1922 Calvert St.. Scales, Commander A. H.,assistant hydrog- rapher, Navy Department, 1739 Q St..... Schaefer, Michael D., chief clerk, Bureau of Construction and Repair, 117 Fourth SE NE Sr a a EE ARNE Schaefer, Peter C., president District plumbing beard-v= Jn. AGS GREE Schick, Rev. John M., visitor, Insane Hospital. Jo. oi fissile sa db isi Hl shes Schlenker, Theo., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Pensions, 218 North Capitol BBL er pan sai ss ee RE bh Schlobohm, W. A., House document room, goz Bast Capitol:Stiaii. vats. od, iliivels Schmeckebier, Laurence F., division chief, Interior Department, 1444 Belmont St.... Schreiner, Oswald, Bureau of Soils, 2125 Rifteenth SC... ce aie vans saves Schroeder, E. C., Bureau of Animal Indus- try, Bethesda, Md......... 0... c dsiesioeins Schropp, H. J., House messenger, 807 Sixth PIL LET Ae i CER Sr EIT reat Schuldt, Gus A., assistant District corpora- tion counsel, 317 Fourth St. SE Schumann, Passed Asst. Paymaster R. W., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The Benedicl or. vi vib oe Seemann sia Schwinn,George H., M.D.,Insane Hospital Scofield, Carl S., Bureau of Plant Industry, Yanham, Md. ....vocaesseeon Ry a eraltle ss Scofield, John C., assistant and chief clerk, War Department, 1614. P. St... .. ccoveer. Scott, Alexander, division chief, Patent Office, T20L KENYON St. ,. oy es ccr nase sven Scott, James Brown, solicitor in interna- tional arbitrations, State Department, 1056 Cave St. oS. i. eis esas Scott, Jos. A., division chief, Pension Bureau, go2 Maryland Ave. NE.......... Scott, W. P., special employee, Clerk’s document room, 207A St. NE............ Scott, William W., Department of Justice, Boot amont St. van Li. Searle, William D., appointment clerk, War Department, 1131 Twelfth St........ Seaton, Fay N., clerk, Senate Committee, Expenditures in Post Office Department, The Ventosa.. i. .lo nn. Lovo oleae civ Sebring, F. A., clerk, police court, 1209 Ken- Jou St... oo... Tt eis ra ae Seeds, Edward P., Deputy Auditor War Department, 204 Tenth St. NE .......... Sewall, Eugene D., patent examiner, 2100S. at se Ee Sexton, Lieut. Commander Walton R., Bureau of Navigation, Navy Depart- ment, The Benedick....... co dias, Seyboth, Robert, division chief, Weather Burean, 2 VSt NE. circa Seymour, Blond G., assistant clerk. Cuban Relations, 1445 Massachusetts Ave....... Shand, Miles M., bureau chief, State De- partment, 3114 Sixteenth St.............. Sharp, Mrs. Henry G., visitor, Insane Hos- TrriEe) EE a SA CH CR RN el Fs Sharpe, Brig. Gen. Henry G.: Commissary General, 1713 M St........ Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home ........ Sharpe, Robert S., chief inspector, Post Office Departmeut, The Toronto ... .... Shaw, A. P., patent examiner, 2574 Uni- versity Place... vrei: 319 263 258 202 207 373 202 241 247 247 372 267 202 248 267 204 241 265 Page. Shaw, Herbert R. C., division chief, Pen- sion Bureau, The Hawarden............. Shaw, Herschel, Senate messenger, 3217 GeOTZIA AVE viii vis visa sinew es iv ie mes Sheehy, John Q., chief clerk, building and grounds, Library of Congress, 1635 First St... Jie die ie ocstitalne vu vissivsmsninl Sheibley, Sinclair B., Department of Jus- tice, The Rochambeau i.cvi coe os couse Sheild, Marcellus C., jr., assistant clerk, House Committee, Appropriations, The ANWYN. ns sees avis eva sa viesne Shelton, Arthur B.: Secretary, National Monetary Commis- sion, 1712 R:St. i voice ones svcovsrn Clerk U.S. Court of Customs Appeals. . Shelton, Maj. George H., Bureau of Insular Affairs, 1414 Twenty-first St.............. Shepard, Seth, chief justice, District Court of Appeals, 1447 Massachusetts Ave...... Sherley, Swagar, member Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representatives, and member Joint Committee, Alaskan Investigation, The WOOAWRIA: ooh. cows venus cote seionion odsiwnion Sheridan, James M., Chief of Field Service, General Land Office, 1316 Kenyon St..... Sherman, James S.: Vice President (biography), 1401 Six- teenth. Sti b. shcnloe Saivaicv vn sp « vi viainints Chairman Commission on Enlarging the Capitel Grounds.............-..- Chancellor and Regent, Smithsonian Institution =. so civ wb van vs sonicnnieis Shidy, Leland P., division chief, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1617 Marion St......... Shinn, Josiah H., Deputy Sergeantat Arms in charge of pairs, 624 Rock Creek Road. Shipe, W. W., Office of Indian Affairs, Ballston, Va ui. soins disuse dssis eninie Shipp, Surg. E. M., Naval Medical School and Hospital, The Benedick............. Shiras, George, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (retired): iis cir urnsine snids vme’s Shober, Howard C., Auditor for the Inte- rior Department, 3351 Eighteenth St..... Shoemaker, W., International Ex- changes, Smithsonian Institution, 3115 O BNE AVE: oo wien bunvoion vests bide wis sad vog Shouse, James H., House messenger, 227 New Jersey AVE... vo vriines dvs tnsasnsases Showers, Victor P., clerk, Office Secretary of the Senate, Y.M.C. A. Building....... Shriner, Mary I,., Senate messenger, The Nottinghan...c eve cis inind susie. Jae ves Shriver, W. H., House messenger, The Bur- $ON iccidscanrids siete nies v sieis Swvin os visivas sie Shuey, Theodore F., Official Reporter, Sen- ate, The Brighton ...........ci. ve -vies Shultz, Civil Engineer Jos. S., Bureau of Yards and Docks, 1279 Twenty-first St... Shurley, E. T., clerk, House Committee, Coinage, Weights, and Measures........ Shurter, E. B., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Military Affairs, The Metropoli- fan ci. ei ven EE he LE ee Shuster, William M., president board of trustees National Training School for BOYS: .ciss cvs denusmrinn inns riisimriarasise ens Sibert, Lieut. Col. William I., Isthmian Canal Commission... 5. tansy se rots dvesiv Silva, R. de Lima E.: Counselor and chargé d’affaires, Bra- zilian Embassy, The Woodward ..... Governing board, Pan American Union Simmons, Capt. Benjamin ‘T'., General Staff, The Ontario;.....i. vive overs irenri Simmons, F. M., member, Joint Commit- tee, Alaskan Investigation, New Ebbitt. Simpson, George R., patent examiner, 111 Twellth SE SB ca. co ve csedcesne Sims, Thetus W., director, Columbia Insti- tutionforthe Deal . .. .. .........cconis Sinclair, A. L., assistant District corpora- tion counsel, 1519 Lamont St............. Sinnott, Jos. J., Doorkeeper of the House, a527 ThirteenthiSt........ 00. coos. 198 266 317 263 Individual Index. Page. Skinner, C. W., superintendent, Industrial Home School Skinner, David A., assistant chief, Bureau of Manufactures, 1477 Newton St... Skinner, Frank C.,examiner in chief, Pat- ent Office, 3425 Holmead Place........... Skinner, Ww. W., Bureau of Chemistry, Kensington, MA... on aE Slade, William Adams, librarian, National Monetary Commission, 124 Third St. NE. Slanker, E. F., confidential clerk to Sec- retary of the Navy, 1410 Harvard St..... Sloane, Charles S.: Census:Bureawu; ry33 TSE Sia 0oln Secretary, Geographic Board.......... Sloat, Frank D., financial clerk, Patent Office rag I, St vi Soa ia iins aE Small, Reuel, Official Reporter, House, The Hamilton: 0. Shi rah ihnwhinla Smith, A. W., cashier, Division of Accounts and Disbursements, 1375 B St. SE Smith, Addison T., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Manufactures, 312 Maryland Ave... Smith, Col. George R., Post Paymaster, The Parkwood Lain nd, Lalu Smith, Commander Wm. Strother, Board of Inspection and Survey, The West- MOTEIANA Shira iinet oeiee a shih Smith, Dr. P. G., superintendent Tubercu- losis Hospital, Fourteenth and Upshur Sts Smith, Edwin, assistant clerk, House, Conference of Minorit Smith, Erwin F., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1460 Belmont St. sot. Lith Smith, George Otis, Director Geological Survey, 2137 Bancroft Place.............. Smith, H. A. A., Isthmian Canal Commis sion, 1644 MODTOE BE. vii in iis dit Smith, Harry W., clerk, Office Naval In- telligence, 214 Tenth St. NE............. Smith, Herbert A., editor, Forest Service, rzaoNineteemth SUIS a LBA Ea Smith, Herbert Knox, Chief, Bureau of Corporations, The Highlands. ........... Smith, Herbert I,., clerk, House Commit- tee, Insular Affairs, 1764 Corcoran St.... Smith, Horace H., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Public Buildings and Grounds, The Lenox........c.u ec ve aieit Smith, Hugh F., Senate messenger, 312 Maryland Ave. NE Smith, Hugh M., Deputy Commissioner of Fisheries, 1209 MSE Seren Smith, James F., member, U.S. Court of Customs Appeals, 3781 Oliver Sti... x Smith, James Francis, assistant District corporation counsel, 1339 K St Smith, Jesse G., House messenger, 103 Maryland AVE. NEB... .ce eel divirts Smith, john R., stenographer, Office Ser- geant at Arms, 142 A St. NE Smith, John Walter, member, Conserva- tion of Navigable Streams Commission, 330 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Balti- more, Mad oir ana nai tease Smith, Lieut. Col. William R., assistant to Chief of Coast Artillery, War Depart- Stn Lieut. G. L., ordnance duty, Navy yard Smith, Naval Constructor S. F., Bureau of Construction and Repair, The Marl- DOTONE Nisa siaiaioie le mi ote irs shuisloroioivivinie Smith, Ray IL,., Isthmian Canal Commis- sion, 1319 Massachusetts Ave. SE ........ Smith, Sydney E., disbursing clerk, War Department, 3037 O St Smith, Sydney Y., bureau chief, State De- partment, 3107 Mount Pleasant St....... Smith, Thos. W., messenger, House Post Office, Y.M.C. A. Building............... Smith, W. A., clerk, in charge at Capitol of Congressional Record, The Olympia. Smith, W.W., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Coast Defenses, VY. M. C. A. Build- Smith, William R., Superintendent Bo- TAC CATR. os ines sn iiss 372 259 252 257 198 246 260 264 252 208 258 202 242 249 373 206 256 253 265 246 256 259 206 248 469 Page. Smith, Wm. M., chief clerk, Bureau Yards and Docks, 1819 LE SPE SPS etal 246 Smoot, Harold R., clerk, Senate Committee, Printing, 2627 Adams Mill Road. ........ 202 Smoot, Reed: Chairman Printing Investigation Com- mission, 2521 Connecticut Ave....... 198 Member Joint Committee Alaskan In- vestigation and Joint Committee on Pointing... oo on nner 199 Sniffin, William W., librarian, Office Pub- lic Roads, 329 Shepherd St. .............. 258 Snow, Capt. J., Division of Militia Affairs, 1408 Twenty-first oy ERT RA 240 Snowden, Capt. Thomas, Board of Inspec- tion and Survey, The Westmoreland. . 249 Snyder, George F., clerk, United States ; Commerce Court, "The Champlain pie 314 Solberg, Thorvald, register, Library of Congress, 198 F st. SH ise 232 Soleau, William I.., disbursing clerk, De- partment of Commerce and Labor, 1361 Harvard St. os Sin earns 259 Solomon, Meyer, M. D., Insane Hospital. 267 Sonneck, Oscar G.T., division chief, Li- brary of Congress, 3030 Macomb St....... 232 Sornborger, Charles B., appointment clerk, Department of Justice, 995 Sheridan St.. 244 Soule, Tieut, H.B., Navy Yard... ........ 248 South, Jerry C., Chief Clerk pi the House, 2029 Hillyer PRE ns 204 Sowerby, Capt. C. F. G., British Embassy, $C EE SR Ee Se 319 Sowers, J. Louis, Office Clerk of the House, 300 Second. St. NB... cov ion - sian sien Bo wh oie 204 Sparks, Joseph, House elevator conductor, 623 Maryland Ave. SW................... 207 Spaulding, Gertrude B., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Interstate Commerce, TheBelgrade:. i o.oo Snes seoienbions 202 Spear, Surg. Raymond, Naval Medical School. The Brighton... ....ose.vusneces 249 Speel, Pay Director John N., purchasing officer, Tow Pay Office, 1516 KeSto en 248 Spent JT. clerk, House Committee, RY vt wn wed Se meng Se Ele Sele Semidlets 206 Soe A. J., stenographer to House com- mittees, 1325 Eleventh St .......... cui 208 Sperry, Carolyn B., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Post Offices and Post Roads, The Dupont Aber sm eine ars Ae RT 202 Spillman, William J., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, The Cavendish... .cooisol oss: 256 Spilman, William R., division superin- tendent, Post Office Department, 324 Fifth St. SI irstiavn vs sevn mens viv: ies v sibs 245 Spomnsler, C. F., chief engineer, Bureau of Standards, 1644 Park Road............... 261 Spratling, RUE IL. W., medical officer, Navyi¥ard. ob... 0h, on evan 248 Squier, Ma aj. George O., assistant to Chief Signal Officer, The Highlands eRe AN 242 Sroufe, Robert, District sanitary officer, 523 Twellth St NE tens rn oid toes 373 Stafford, Wendell P., associate justice, Dis- trict Supreme Court, 1603 Irving St...... 315 Stallings, B. D., assistant chief, Division of Publications, Agricultural Department, S88. cir a ses a at 258 Stallings, Thomas B., clerk, Senate Com- mittee, University of the United States, 640 Rock Creek Church Road ..... ...... 203 Stanley, Elmer, House elevator conductor, . 130 Sixth SELENE... voila line, 207 Stanley, Lieut. Col. David S., Office Quar- termaster General, 1810 Nineteenth St.. 241 Starek, F. Jerome, marshal, United States Commerce Court, 3211 Nineteenth St... 314 Stauffer, C. C., patent examiner, 1513 Twenty-eighth LE RT TIN er A Ch 252 Stauffer, Henry K., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1744 et. 252 Steddom, Rice P., division chief, Bureau of Animal Industry, 1714 Thirteenth St.. 255 Steed, Lyman, Institution for Deaf and 38 1177 1h arse ee a RET HT SS SR 266 Stejneger, Leonhard, curator, National a CELT Be i Ee RS Se 262 470 Individual Index. Page. Stephens, Francis H., assistant District corporation counsel, 1714 Summit Place. 373 Sternberg, Geo. M., ex-Surgeon General, U. S. Army, president board of visitors, Insane Hospital... .. ... eens 267 Steuart, William M., Census Bureau, 3725 MOL SO St. yr ete 260 Stevens, Herbert A., private secretary to Secretary of Commerce and Labor, The BL LAaWICHEE ,... .. ies sancti 259 Stevens, Maj. Pierre C., Office of Post Pay- master, 1836 Jefferson Place.............. 242 Stevens, W. M., messenger, House Post Office, ITB SL. SE =. anes 207 Stevens, Wilfred, translator, State Depart- ment, Wesley Helghts.. i." co. cnve ieee. 237 Steward, Thomas G., examiner in chief, Patent Office, 1336 Monroe St............. 252 Stewart, Capt. G. H., assistant to Chief of Ordnance, U. S. Army, The Ontario..... 242 Stewart, Charles W.: Superintendent Naval War Records, RIT Renyon St... ir ee Hees 246 GeoZTAPIIC BOATA. 11. rc siais raisice nis x 264 Stewart, H. W., clerk, Senate Committee, Mississippi River and T'ributaries, The EN ell ar a ried ren 202 Stewart, John C., in charge House Weather Bureau map station, 2813 Thirteenth St. 208 Stewart, Joseph, Second Assistant Post- master General, 1812 Lamont St......... 245 Stewart, Wm. B., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Finance, 1509 Fifteenth St.. zor Stiles, G. W., jr., Bureau of Chemistry, 4820 Towa Ave. 7, i a 257 Stillwell, Leander, Deputy Pension Com- missioner, 110 East Capitol St............ 253 Stine, Latimer B., division chief, Pension Bureanl,’2320'BIest St... L000 aU 253 Stocker, Naval Constructor Robert, Board of Inspection and Survey, The High- lands idee, a eh 249 Stokes, Surg. Gen. Charles F.: Chief Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, he Fighiands, <200 1 (0 fra 18 24€ National Red Cross.......7.. i... 266 Visitor, Insane: Hospital... ..... vo... 267 Stone, George F., Assistant General Super- intendent Railway Mail Service, 3023 Macomb St i... 0. 0 op LL EIE 245 Stone, N. I, statistician Tariff Board, 3425 INEWATIE SE veers linnnsinrsans ori kihie sh « 266 Stormont, George T., attorney, Depart- ment of Justice, 308 R St. NE............ 244 Stouffer, Charles C., chief clerk, Bureau of Pensions, 1207 Kenyon St... J... io. 253 Straight, Harry B., Senate messenger, 1200 LONI LL. sas, Si Sh i 201 Straight, John P., House folding room, 36 Bleventh:Sta NE...) . Lori obi 205 Stransky, Josephine M., M. D., Insane Hospital... gored on ah asd dill 267 Stratton, S. W., Director, Bureau of Stand- ards The Farragut... oo. biol. 261 Straub, Maj. Paul F., General Staff, 1912 Sunderland Places... o.oo olan ii 00: 240 Strayer, I. W., indexer of Congressional Record, 1812 Newton St... cuue. oh iia vuis 208 Streeter, Hon. Frank S., member Interna- tional Joint Commission............. =. 268 Strickland, Reeves T., attorney in charge of titles, Department of Justice, Ken- sington, Md... a. 5. vant aaa iia 244 Strider, Luke C., judge, municipal court, 1450. Rhode Island Ave........7% ci ie 315 Strom, Otto C., clerk, Senate Committee, Expenditures in the Navy Department, 220 North Capitol St. ...... a. vviavivie 230 es 201 io ise.i v Sisko Seriasis 3 Risveisiagats vein Sinn SAR rare 320 Stuart, Alexander T., superintendent of District schools, The Wyoming. ......... 372 Stuart, William M., Office of Secretary of Senate, Io LSU... ot i. ihrem 200 Stubbs, EH. C., chief engineer, Senate, Sil- VEE Springs, Md. oie tee oys ornare 203 Stubenrauch, A. V., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 1833 Newton St ............. oe... 256 Page. Sudworth, George B., Forest Service, 3768 Patterson St., Chevy Chase. ...... i... 256 Sullivan, Andrew J., deputy chief, fire de- partment, 1506 Thirty-second St ......... 373 Sullivan, John J., House Post Office, %o1 Bins rons suit is cde tne se sits 207 Sullivan, Milnor IL., patent examiner, The Normandie. ... ..... sf esr oisies 252 Summers, Alexander, statistician, Bureau of Education, 1000 Highth St... ......... 253 Sumner, Adelbert D., Senate messenger, He T USOT. corti ones tii oi Se eee 203 Sutherland, George, member, Commission to Investigate the matter of Employers’ Liability and Workmen’s Compensa- tion, The Highlands. c is... i. casueiins 199 Sutton, Frank, division chief, Geological Survey, Century Club... ican: 254 Swan, O. T., Forest Service, 3605 Norton EE I a TN Te 256 Swingle, Walter T'., Bureau of Plant Indus- SEY tas Tiel BRT eRe hE SEE 256 Sylvester, Richard, superintendent, Metro- politan police, The Northumberland.... 373 Symington, Iieut. Commander Powers, Office of Naval Intelligence, 1712 HSt... 246 Symon, Mr. Charles, secretary, Belgian LeGOlIOM: cco vss.v isis carniins vias amar date polio 317 Sypher, Lieut. Commander J. H., superin- tendent of compasses, Naval Observa- tory, 2040. Newark St.........coccencceire 247 Taft, William Howard: President of the United States (biog- raphy), White House... i vv. s 235 President National Red Cross and pa- tron, ex officio, Columbia Institution forthe Deaf nui iincaiaiss mons 266 Presiding officer, ex officio, Smithson- jan Institution. . ... an sesaviihiaiet 262 Tailhand, Mr., French Embassy........... 318 Takahashi, Mr. Seiichi, Japanese Em- DASEY evens snnaunt ates Binsin ls nani 319 bia Read. .....abhualiaiii auld. REESE 202 Talcott, Edmund M., District board of assistant assessors of personal property, 31200 SEA, Slinlv amedaiven JH raat 372 Taliaferro, James P., member National Monetary Commission, Jacksonville, Fla. 198 Talman, Charles F., librarian, Weather Bureau, 1166 Nineteenth St .............. 255 Tan, Yao Fen, Mr., Chinese Legation...... 318 Tanner, James: : Registerof wills, 1733 PSt.....c.u ioe. 316 National Red Cross. lo... aL ane. un 266 Tastet, W. F., chief elerk, Bureau of Ento- mology, 134 Seaton ‘Place. ...i.. onl uo. 257 Tatum, Sledge, Geological Survey, 2318 Nineteenth St......coovnr losin S3lE 254 Tawney, James A., member, International Joint Commission... i i. aou il BG 268 Taylor, Chas. E., private secretary to Sec- retary of the Navy, 1533 I St ............. 246 Taylor, Francis W., private secretary to Secretary of the Treasury........... 7. ... 237 Taylor, George R., division chief, War De- partment, Ballston, Va... o.oo. 0.007 240 Taylor, H. W., chief engineer, House, 100 PIR SE NT. on Uh sont bohi il 207 Taylor, James K., Supervising Architect, Treasury Department, The Highlands.. 238 Taylor, Miles, clerk, Senate Committee, Conservation of National Resources, 1007 Otis Place... Lar a 201 Taylor, David W., Naval Constructor, Bu- reau of Construction and Repair, Navy ard ae ee es 247 Taylor, William A., Bureau of Plant In- Austry, ss OSE NE, cri vers 255 Taylor, William Clark, deputy register of wills, 1400 Twenty-first St................ 316 Teller, Henry M., National Monetary Commission, Central City, Colo., The Ce peas ala RE I Ris Cee 198 Tennant, Frederick A., Assistant Commis- sioner of Patents, The Portner........... 252 Individual Index. Page. Terrell, Robert H., judge, municipal court, Cd a a rr Terreros, Sefior Don A. Algasa R. de, sec- retary, Mexican Embassy...........uc... Thal, Mr. de, Russian Embassy............ Thatcher, Maurice H., Isthmian Canal COMMISSION. i srs res os sistas Theall, Elisha S., clerk, House Committee, Naval Affairs, 1721 Twenty-first St....... Thirkield, Rev. Wilbur P., president How- BTA UNIVErSIEY vc cxiniin ss isivaisisns ois «dein sive Thomas, Edward H., District corporation counsel, 3225 Fighteenth: St. ie. covvvninnn Thomason. Capt. Henry D., Medical Corps and Division of Militia Affairs, 1715 Fighteenth St. oir. ventana simvonis Thompson, A. H., division chief, Pension Bureau, go4 Massachusetts Ave. NE...... Thompson, Carmi A., Assistant Secretary of the Interior, 1821 Adams Mill Road... Thompson, Clinton R., Senate messenger, The Savoy. coos sonst. sik ic maiods Thompson, Harry H., division superintend- Su Post Office Department, 2443 Ontario PACE. ro. Si ain re a ve hea iE Thompson, ‘James David, division chief, Library of Congress, The Kalorama.,.... Thompson, John Q., Assistant Attorney General, The, Brunswick... sive sive s Thompson, Joseph M., House manager, de- partmental telegraph, North Capitol and CS Thompson, Lieut. Col. Jno. T., assistant to Chief of Ordnance, U. S. Army, The Westmoreland. oo colicin vor vor nn vee Thompson, William T'., Solicitor for T'reas- ury Department, 1223 Fairmont St....... Thomson, George G., division chief, Post Office Department, 3551 Mount Pleas- BRUISE, ects sens asie has one Yeas nisin Thorleif de Munthe de Morgenstierne, Mr. Wilhelm, attaché, Norwegian I,egation, Teh Ube re Ree Sas en Thorne, John H., M. D., Insane Hospital. . Thorp, E. H., division superintendent, Post Office Department, 3021 Macomb St. Thorp, Martin R., division chief, War Department, 1725 Corcoran St............ Tillman, B. R., jr., Senate messenger..... Tindall, William, secretary to Board of District Commissioners, The Hartford .. Titlow, Charles B., chief engineer, Library of Congress, 1204 Monroe St.............. Tittman, Otto H., Superintendent, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 2014 Hillyer Place. Todd, Lieut. Commander David W., Bu- reau Steam Engineering, 1454 Belmont aR EA TE I aS Todd, William B., assistant division super- intendent, Post Office Department, 1243 Irving St. Sn i saan ak, Tolman, I. M., Bureau of Chemistry, 1408 Emerson St... a0 iioih SIL A Tomb, Lieut. Jas. H., ordnance duty, Navy Nan iin nonin sh aks A Re ae Tompkins, Frank H., index clerk of the House iu vino sun HL all on iai ans Tonner, John A., division chief, State De- partment. The Magnolia... ...iviui..u. Toral, Sefior Don Daniel Cordova, attaché, Reuadorean Legation. ..onl Sia a. Torney, Brig. Gen. George H.: Surgeon General, Stoneleigh Court.... Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home........ National Red:Cross. ioc i. oabivill. Jisitor, Insane Hospital. ....... ..i0. Townsend, James V., clerk, House Com- mittee, Indian Affairs, New Varnum.... Tracewell, Robert J., Comptroller of the Treasury, 1746 Q St... 6. i. iw idl, Train, Lieut. C. R., in command of the U.S. 8. SIDI over es sm a Trainer, John W., Department of Justice, rR Sia ania Trask, J. W., assistant, Marine-Hospital Service, 300 R St. NEw. cil oii nid 245 471 Page. Trail, William W., chief clerk, Quarter- master’s Department, headquarters Ma- rine Corps, Harpers Ferry, Va........... Travis, John A., House messenger, 1008 East Capitol St... ...cunvh EERE a Trescot, T. C., Bureau of Chemistry, near Ballston; Va. i. carinii svi vives cites Trimble, Matthew, office of District as- sessor, 1320 Rhode Island Ave ........... Trimble, South, Clerk of the House, 1644 Columbia Road... .. 5.500 Si fhinedseie Trotter, Charles F., division superintend- ent, Post Office Department, Cherrydale, A ire re Ss True, A. C., Director Experiment -Sta- tions, 1604 Seventeenth St............e... True, E. R., cashier, Office Treasurer of the United States, 2016 Wyoming Ave... True, KF. W. head curator, National Museum, 1320 Bairmont SL. cv. 2. suisse sion Me donis True, Rodney H., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, Glendale, Md... ... coisa i. acini Tryon, Fred M., patent examiner, 1225 Massachusetts Ave. SE....... och. 2.000. Tucker, George P., patent examiner, 802 Massachusetts Ave. NE Tucker, P. A., Bureau of Supplies and Ac- counts, Navy Department, 1408 I, St..... Turner, Charles H., assistant United States attorney, i322’ Fwelfth:St.. . (novia Turner, John P., V. M. D., Insane Hospital. Turner, Robert Hite, assistant clerk, Sen- ate Committee, Post Offices and Post Roads; The Branswick.. ... obi ues Tweedale, Alonzo, District auditor, 2825 Rourteenth St... corcosrrsr ssc veins =n ods Tweedale, John, clerk, Senate Committee, Military Affairs, 1725 P St Tyler, H. M., clerk, House Committee, Agriculture, 452 House Office Building. . Tyler, Ralph W., Auditor Navy Depart- ment -ga8 St ai Sn ial ie. ay we Tyrer, Arthur J., Deputy Commissioner Bureau of Navigation, Department of Commerce and Labor, The Albemarle... Tyson, A. H., superintendent municipal lodging house, 312 Twelfth St............ Ucker, Clement S., chief clerk, Interior Department; 6o. Bryant: St... .. .0ak.% Uhler, George, Inspector General, Steam- boat Service, 1433 Euclid St..........o aoe Underwood, I,eonard, clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Indian Affairs, The Fulford...... Underwood, Lineas D., patent examiner, 2852 Ontario Road... .... coi Jv. sis se ius Updegraff, Harlan, division chief, Bureau of Education, 1324 Monroe St............ Updegraff, Prof. Milton, Naval Observa- tory, 1719 Thirty-AfthSt.... i... oan Upham, Commander F. B., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department, The High- lands. ius cua nse cE TAS eed AEN Urcullu y Cervijo, Iieut. Col. of the Gen- eral Staff, Don Nicholas, military attaché, Spanish Legation, The Toronto.......... Vail, Benjamin, Department messenger, 1170 Bast CapitoliSt,. oo... ho. nian Vale, Henry Ambler, clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Library, 2250 Cathedral Ave...... Valentine, Robert G., Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1727 Nineteenth St....... Van Devanter, Willis, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 1923 Six- teenth Stlivwy. suniiin an Seid SET tS Van Dyne, Frederick, Assistant Solicitor State Department, 12 Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Md Van Horn, W. L., assistant clerk, Senate Committee; Pensions; 5s B St... ....l ou Van Orsdel, Josiah A., associate justice, District Court of Appeals, 2500 Ontario YR OL a a Van Weede, Jonkheer H. M., secretary, Netherlands Legation ......... 0... Varadhara, Phya Akharaj, Siamese minis- Vassilieff, Commander, naval attaché, Rus- sian Embassy, 2115 Bancroft Place...... 250 205 257 372 204 472 Individual Index. Page. Veeder, Commodore T. E. D. W., Superin- tendent Naval Observatory.............. 247 Veitch, F. P., Bureau of Chemistry, Col- lege Park, Wdors, a a daa 257 Velarde, Sefior Don Manuel W., secretary Mexican Water Boundary Commission. 237 Venable, Earl, clerk, Senate Committee, Education and Labor, Blenheim Court.. 201 Vermillion, E. F Chairman, board of automobiles, 123 Thirteenth Bt. NE... .... cvs esiees 372 District boilerinspector..... i. oie 373 Vermilye, Harold E., Senate messenger, 150 HarvardiSt........ .oviivns. deroeinss 202 Vernon, William T., Register of the Treas- MEY, 3224 U0: St. cones NAL U0 238 Vianna-Kelsch, Mr. Gustavo de, Brazilian Embassy, RANSCHEr'S os ois iri 317 Viles, Voler V., chief clerk Bureau of Cen- sus, 328 Maryland Ave. NE. oo ooh, 259 Villegas, Sefior Jacinoto L,., first secretary, Argentine Legation. ........r..on0.. 0. 317 Vipond, B. L,., Government Printing Office, 1830 Park Road... hs Pld Bie 264 Vogel, Lieut. Clayton B., Marine Barracks. 250 Von Bayer, Hector, architect and engineer, Bureau of Fisheries, 2418 Fourteenth St.. 260 Von Haake, Maj. Adolph: Division superintendent, Post Office Department, Hammond Court ...... 245 GeographicBoard............ Li. Alu. 264 Voorhees, Samuel S., Bureau of Standards, 3456: Newark St. ol. a. a naa, 261 Vreeland, Edward B., vice chairman Na- tional Monetary Commission, The DEWEY. vv civeves:vnnitinusvnisnsrssivasies 198 Vrooman, Charles E., chief clerk, Office So- licitor of the Treasury, 1123 Euclid St . 244 Wagner, Frank J., chief fire department, Io BIghte St, oii i sit eset 373 Wagner, Katharine F., Senate messenger. 202 Waidner, C. W., Bureau of Standards, 1744 RiggsiPlace . oii. hile vena aii dries 261 Wainwright, Dallas B., division chief, Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1821 Kalorama Road. or. cL oR a Ras es 260 Wainwright, Lieut. R., ordnance duty, Navy Vard., . i... i. soienrn eis sitive 248 Wainwright, Rear Admiral Richard: Aid for operations Navy Department, 1262 New Hampshire Ave............ 246 General Board ..... J. thie, Jad 249 Waite, Merton B., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 1506 Columbia Road... ono... ovivsnes © 256 Wakefield, F. H., notification clerk of the House, New Varnum Coles en elev ihis via ve 204 Walcott, Charles D., Secretary Smithso- nian Institution and Curator, National Museum, The Brighton. [...0 ii vos 262 Wales, George R., chief examiner, Civil Service Commission, 3411 Newark St.. 263 Walker, F. V., chief clerk, Navy Pay Office, 1526:Corcoran St. ov... Lu i, Jo vas da. 248 Walker, John H,, clerk, Senate Committee, District of Columbia, 1334 Girard St...... 201 Walker, P. H., Bureau of Chemistry, 2950 Newark St... oon air. 257 Wallace, Frank C., Government Printing Office, Yas St. su i LL SIRI TO 264 Wallace, J. W., District water registrar, The Portner. fii ii raises te indis 373 Walls y Merino, Sefior Don Manuel, Span- ish Iegation, 1519 New Hampshire Ave. gat Walter, Harry, House elevator conductor, 350 Raleigh St., Congress Heights ....... 207 Walton, Constructor John Q., Revenue- Cutter Service, 4325 Kansas Ave ra ad 239 Ward, Admiral Aaron, aid for inspections, Navy Department, The Arlington CEA 246 Ward, Charles E., -clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Mines and Mining, ¥. M. C. A. Build- Ee LAT TC SS SRR SPE 202 Ward, J. M., clerk, ‘District Building...... 373 Warden, Frank M. , Assistant Doorkeeper, Office of Sergeant at Arms of the House, CE HE SR Co i BR pe pond 205 Warfield, Frank A., division chief, Pen- sion Bureau, 1537 BB tla. ide 253 Page. Waring, Dr. J. H. N., executive committee, Howard University Rl abl ais Te oe Warner, Lee F., clerk, Senate Committee, Interstate Commerce, 1700 Fifteenth St. Warner, Walter B. , clerk, House Com- mittee, Disposition of Useless Execu- tive Papers EN Ee £103 Warner, Willard F., chief clerk, Office Treasurer of the United States, The Con- CORA i ts hh ne rena Warren, H. B., House messenger.......... Warrenton, George, Bureau of Light- houses, 3311 Sixteenth St... .............. Warwick, Walter W., Isthmian Canal Com- Washburn, William S., Civil Service Com- mission, 1223 M St Washington, Commander Thomas, Bureau of Navigation, 22327 Q St. ... 0.00000 Wassif Bey, Capt. H., naval attaché, Turk- ish - Bmbassy. 5 0 ad BR AES] Waterbury, S. T., messenger to the Vice President, 140 A St. NE... ..........00L 00H Waters, C. E., Bureau of Standards, Blen- helm-Courteman Sa Sr on r Watkins, C. IL. clerk, Senate Committee, Disposition of Useless Papers in the Ex- ecutive Departments.. Watkins, W. K., clerk, House ‘Committee, Revision of the Laws a ho an aa ba wu Ae Ay saw Watson, Geo. S., chief clerk, fire depart- ment, 3928 Fourteenth AEE a RE, Watt, Chief Constructor Richard M., chief, Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1823 Jeflerson Place st. seis cs oedne nse vas- vs Watts, A. D., clerk, Senate Committee, Engrossed Bills, The National .......... Watts, C. L., clerk, House Committee, Pensions, 27 New Jersey Ave. SE....... Weakley, A. D., D.D.S., Insane Hospital. Weaver, Brig. Pal Erasmus M.: General Staff and Chief Coast Artillery Division, The ¥arragul........ .c.s.s Board of Ordnance and Fortification. . Webb, Charles A., assistant clerk, Senate Committee, Privileges and Elections, 514 East Caplio] Sti. ove criss suismsminie snes » Webber, F. N., sr., Capitol police, 526 TITAS. ri cas rion strains vis & somiviviss Weber, Alexander H., assistant engineer, Raves and Harbor Board, Chevy Chase, 2. 1 BA en net Tasman utes Weber, EF. C., Bureau of Chemistry, Be- thesda, MQ. ...co ocr sions tomes delve Weber, Gustavus A., Bureau of Statistics, Department of Commerce and Labor, 1501 Vermont AVe: vnc vsssisnsesss dures Webster, Daniel, janitor, House Post Office, 1127 C St. SE Webster, ¥. M., Bureau of Entomology, Kensington, Md... i oiivv. ivaslaviss venns Weed, Theodore L., chief clerk Post Office Department, 1628 Riggs Place.. . Weeks, John W., member, National Mone- tary ‘Commission, 1526 New Hampshire AVE ee Sven sis srs Tees Ces vise Weir, J. C., Deputy Sergeant at Arms, in charge of pairsof the House, The Octavia. Welch, John, clerk, Office of 'Superintend- ent of Capitol, 116 Eleventh St. SE. eo. Welles, Commander Roger, Board of In- spection and Survey, Hotel Gordon..... Wells, Commander Benjamin W., Office Judge Advocate General, Navy Depart- ment, The Westmoreland. ............... Wells, Edmund J., clerk, Senate Commit- tee, Judiciary, ICBLSE. iv. a Wells, I,. M., assistant clerk, Senate Com- mittee, Appropriations, 1338 New York AVC IS Lid is ee cB ae vee a Wells, Philip P., chief law oiioer. Recla- mation Service, Interior Department, TPA Shiv vis vv ininsnivimn ist zaiineesiniiviss Wells, William C., Pan American Union, Hyattsville, Md... cinsvssvisnsvinrennsere Werner, A. E., Custodian of the Senate Office Building, The Park........ ou. 239 205 201 Individual Index. 473 Page. West, Maj. P. W., retired, deputy gov- €rnoy, Soldiers: THOME oi a ntvie sv sos conte 265 Weston, F. F., chief of division, Treasury Department, 4320 Eighth St.............. 238 Wheeler, James C., Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 3433 Fourteenth St. 239 Whipple, Brig. Gen. Charles H., Paymaster General, The Connecticut... .......5. 242 White, Andrew D., Regent, Smithsonian Institution, Ithaca, Ne X. occvonevo rosie 262 White, Commander William W., Bureau 5 of Steam Engineering, 1744 Q St......... 2477 White, David, National Museum.......... 262 ‘White, Edward Douglass: Chief Justice, Supreme Court (biogra- phy), 1717 Rhode Island Ave......... 310 Member and Regent, Smithsonian In- stitulfon LL on A a hea 262 White, Wm. A., M. D., superintendent In- sane Hospital ....c.ccov.iiiiviriiii vives 267 White, William Henry, assistant District corporation counsel, 1729 Park Road ..... 373 Whitehead, Henry, electrician, Library of Congress, Laurel, MA... ah nin 232 Whitehead, Robert F., law examiner, Patent Office, 1521 Twenty-eighth St..... 252 ‘Whitman, Assistant Civil Engineer Ralph, Bureau of Yards and Docks, 1306 Rhode IS1and AVE... ties. sareraianivs sa ite Sasvaitsis 246 Whitney, Charles F., division chief, Pen- sion Bureau, Silver Spring, Md .......... 272 Whitney, Elizabeth A., superintendent Re- form School for Girls... ...... coos 372 Whitney, Milton, chief, Bureau of Soils, TakomaPark, Md. 30... 257 Whittlesey, Lieut. Commander Humes H., Office of Naval Intelligence, 1812 H St... 246 Wickersham, George Woodward: Attorney General (biography), 1312 Sixteenth 8... 000 LEE 243 Member, Smithsonian Institution..... 262 Wight, John B., director, Institution for Deaf and Dumb. covcrninsivinviaesinn 266 Wilbur, Cressy L., Census Bureau, 1374 Harvard She... cei venison aie 260 Wilcox, A. D., chief clerk, Bureau of Insu- lar Affairs, 2610 University Place........ 242 Wilenkin, Mr. Gregory, financial attaché, Russian Bmbassy ................ cco 320 Wiley, Commander Henry A., Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, 1337 Twenty heb StL... 246 Wiley, Harvey W., chief, Bureau of Chem- istry, 1848 Biltmore St. ...... ivan 256 Wiley, IL. H., House messenger, 18 Grant A Pi Loa SLR 205 Wilkie, John E., chief, Secret Service, 2233 Bighteenth Sti... i ae 238 Wilkinson, A. George, patent examiner, 1526-K St......... ER ee ae 252 Willard, Lieut. Commander, inspector of ordnance, Navy Vard.. ................. 248 . Williams, Capt. Alexander E., Office Quar- termaster General, 1754 Columbia Road. 241 Williams, Capt. H. O., Office Commissary General, The Highlands. ............ elves DAY Williams, David G., House Post Office, 1464 Girard St. cor. i ite 207 Williams, Edward J., Isthmian Canal COMMISSION... vrs iviinseva sonasnsn vrs 265 Williams, G. R., assistant clerk, House Committee, Interstate and Foregin Com- HTL RC a SE a a 206 Williams, George H., chief clerk, Office of Superintendent of Capitol, 1723 P St.... 208 Williams, H. Martin, reading clerk, House, The Driscoll... ns oir inna. is 204 Williams, Henry KE., assistant chief, Weather Bureau, 1822 U St........5.....- 255 Williams, IL. S., Division of Publications, Agricultural Department, 2304 First St.. 258 Williams, Maj. Dion, U. S. M. C., Office of Naval Intelligence, 1727 P St............ 246 Williams, Naval Constructor Henry, Bu- reau of Construction and Repair, 2264 Cathedml Ave... ...c..c. vaio ian 247 Williams, Passed Asst. Paymaster F. P., assistant general storekeeper, Navy Yard ..... is meets caivivie lets puis sire aielee slain nls 248 Page. Williams, Robert, jr., Deputy Commis- sioner of Internal Revenue, 3106 Mount Pleasant Stic. oad. l, manila. un 239 | Williams, Roger, chief clerk, District | Board of Excise, 18 Third St. NE........ 372 | Williams, Ross, assistant clerk, House | Committee, Public Lands. za... o. 0%. 00 206 Willis, Luther J., Senate messenger, 213 North Capitol Sto usin. 0.5%. 201 Willoughby, William F., member, Presi- dent’s Commission on Economy and Effi- ciency; 1633 Newton Sti... 0h 00000. 236 Wilmeth, James I1,., chief clerk, Treasury | Department, 618 Kenyon St............. 237 | Wilson, Agnes H., clerk, House Committee, i Labor, 413 New Jersey Ave. SE.......... 206 Wilson, C. C., Senate messenger........... 201 Wilson, Capt. Henry B., Bureau of Navi- gation, 1416 Twenty-first St.............. 246 Wilson, Charles F., private secretary to Secretary of State, The Don Carlos...... 237 Wilson, Clarence R., United States attor- ney, 1707 Rhode Island Ave. ............. 315 Wilson, Geo. S., secretary, District Board of Charities, 7001 Georgia Ave.......... 372 Wilson, Huntington: Assistant Secretary of State, 1608 K St. 236 National Red Crossi.. ooo ios J 266 Wilson, James: Secretary of Agriculture (biography), The Portland... iva ii iri iast tl 254 Member, Smithsonian Institution..... 262 Wilson, Jasper, private secretary to Secre- tary of Agriculture, The Portland. ....... 254 Wilson, John, chief clerk, Office Surgeon General; The Revere. err. oe: sens 241 Wilson, Louis C., District disbursing offi- cer, Tor Park Road. onc anit 373 Wilson, Peter M., assistant financial clerk of the Senate, 100r OSE... oi oi. ov. 200 Wilson, W. E., secretary International Waterways Commission, Buffalo, N. Y.. 266 Wing, Willis H., first assistant enrolling clerk of ‘the House, so I'St..<...... 204 Wingard, B. J., clerk, House Committee, Education, 218 North Capitol St ......... 206 Winter, Maj. Francis A., Office Surgeon General, 2220 California St. ......... 0... Winters, George W., House elevator con- ductor; 3337 Seventeenth St............5. 207 Winthrop, Beekman: Assistant Secretary of the Navy, 1780 Massachusetts Ave......:c....-c ones 246 National Red Cross... o-oo. sess sns 266 Winston, Isaac, editor, Coast and Geodetic Survey, The Portner....... ov vuiivvaiss 260 Wise, Medical Director John C., National Red CIOS vi. sieves sivisiow ene srs: semis 265 Witten, James W., chief law clerk, General TLand Office, 2518 Thirteenth St... ....... 25% Wolcott, John D., division chief, Bureau of Education, 7418 Buchid St... ............0 253 Wolfe, Gwendolyn X., assistant clerk, Enrolled Bills, The Shoreham... ........ 20% Wolff, F. A., Bureau of Standards, 1744 RiggsPlace oat oon sn ra 261 Wold, Ansel, Office of Secretary of Senate, The Van Dyke... cocoon iin oin ress 200 Wood, Commander Spencer S., Secretary General Board, 1618 Twenty-second St.. 249 Wood, G. M., editor, Geological Survey, MS Trving Sto. .0 hn a © 254 Wood, George L., chief clerk, Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, ‘Walbrook, Baltimore, Md............... 245 Wood, Maj. Gen. Leonard: Chief of Staff, War Department, Fort DEVEL, Va coin vie sides desis sae mtnien iia 240 President Board of Ordnance and For- tification... oda sine 243 Woods, Elliott: Superintendent of the Capitol, Stone- leigh Court... iii. lo cases 208 Member Commission on Enlarging CapitolGrounds;..........cvvaeae or: 198 Superintendent of building and mem- ber of Commission in Control of the House Office Building. ............... 199 474 Individual Index. Page. Woodward, H. M., District permit clerk, Brookland. ui, Lod clin ina sah dns Woodward, William C., District health officer, 1766 Lanier: Placei,.. iii... win Woolard, William F., chief clerk, Patent Office; 3615 Newark Sti.c..oin. oii ass Woolsey, M. B., assistant stationery clerk, House, 136 East Capitol St............... Worsley, A. S., assistant engineer, Senate, 320 North Carolina:Ave. SE....i......0.0 Wrenn, Augustus C., acting chief clerk, Bureau of Steam Engineering, 234 Tenth SUNT san a ira serail. Jas Wright, Daniel Thew, associate justice, District Supreme Court, 2032 Sixteenth St. Wright, Herbert, patent examiner, Ken- sington, Md Wright, J. M., marshal, Supreme Court, Metropolitan'Club iz. donnie. a Wright, Lieut. Nathaniel H., Bureau of Steam Engineering, The Benedick...... Wu Chang, Mr., attaché, Chinese Iega- Ly Lars RE I ee (ree Wiirdemann, J. V., captain of the watch, Congressional Library, 124 Massachusetts Ave NB... oie NT OR Wyatt, W. Carl, chief clerk, Office Public Roads, 36 Randolph Place v.. iii teavinils Wyman, Bayard, division superintendent, Posi Office Department, The Westmore- ANA oe ct ie se se ER pa 3 Wyman, Lieut. Henry I,., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 1921 Nineteenth St........ Wyman, Walter: Surgeon General, Marine-Hospital Service, Stoneleigh Court..........\. Visitor, Insane Hospital ............... Yancey, G. Earle, chief clerk, Bureau of Navigation, 5602 Thirty-ninth St........ Yanes, Francisco J., assistant director, Pan American Union, The Oakland..... .... Yasuya, Baron Uchida, Japanese ambas- SAA, T1324 K.OL ii lassi hin ln dds Yelverton, John D., division chief, General Land Office, 802 Twenty-first St......... 239 267 247 263 319 Page. Yerby, E. D., Division of Accounts and Dis- bursements, Department of Agriculture, 2512 Cliffbourne Place. ........0 A... a Yoacham, Sefior Don Alberto: First secretary, Chilean Legation, 1104 Vermont Ave..... ee rr rsie sacs ats Governing board, Pan American LL TL A i HE Ee SRR Pr Bi Young, Charles E., Government Printing Office, 75 Rhode Island Ave.............. Young, C. O., messenger, House Post Office, 208 TB on Tr hes es aaiets » Young, Evan E., division chief, State De- partment, 1755 Park Road... ............ Young, James R., division superintendent, Post Office Department, 1001 New Hamp- RE er Young, John R., clerk, District Supreme Court, 1522. R Stu al ius. divas didi Young, Mr. G., M. V. O., British Embassy, 2009 Columbia Road... 0 ah. eas Young, Lieut. Gen. S. M. B., retired, gov- ernor, Soldiers Home... List. voces ots Youssouf Zia Pacha, Turkish Embassy... Yuan Ko-shuan, Mr., Chinese Iegation.... Yung, Kwai, Mr., secretary, Chinese Lega- tion, 2021 Kalorama Road................ Zantzinger, M. W. P., Post Office Depart- ment, 1440 Meridian Place.......... ..-." Zappone, A., chief, Division of Accounts and Disbursements, Agricultural Depart- ment, 2222 First St Zavalo, Sefior Dr. Don Joaquin Cuadra, sec- retary Nicaraguan Legation............. Zayas, Seflor Don FE. Mexican Water Boundary Commission...........ccuuun.. 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