Gas Si in pr spre pre pen bys dre «0 ui [5 < ec 2 dl = iz) x er —— St —— EE — — EE — ———— ee] r— ———— Em — ———— — —— — EE — —— —— r— — I —— ee — i ——— as am— mem— —— Ce — AlL1l900 503098 AN (QV) Nb 7 7] “SN - ~ 3) RP PE = wp (eo? q ) Loz NZIS DT 3 i i 63° CONGRESS, 2° SESSION BEGINNING DECEMBER 1, 1913 OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS FIRST EDITION DECEMBER, 1913 COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING :: By EDGAR E. MOUNTIJOY This publication is corrected to November 22, 1913: Office of Congressional Directory, rooms 49, 51, Maltby Building. Phone, Capitol Branch 125. NOTES. In the Senate one vacancy exists. Senator Joseph F. Johnston, of Alabama, having died August 8, 1913. No vacancies exist in the House, although since the issue of the last edition of the Directory nine changes have occurred: Hon. Lewis J. Martin, of the sixth New Jersey district, died May 5, 1913; Hon. Forrest Goodwin, of the third Maine district, died May 28, 1913; Hon. George Konig, of the third Maryland district, died May 31, 1913; Hon. Timothy D. Sullivan, of the thirteenth New York district, died August 31, 1913; Hon. William H. Wilder, of the third Massachusetts district, died September 11, 1913; Hon. Seaborn A. Roddenbery, of the second Georgia district, died September 25, 1913; Hon. H. Olin Young, of the twelfth Michigan district, resigned May 16, 1913; Hon. John W. Davis, of the first West Virginia district, resigned September 1, 1913; Hon. Francis Burton Harrison, of the twentieth New York district, resigned September 1, 1913. During the first session of the Sixty-third Congress the following commis- sions and board were created, viz: Joint Commission to Investigate Indian Affairs, Joint Commission on Indian Tuberculosis Sanitarium and Yakima In- dian Reservation Project, Commission on Industrial Relations, and Board of Mediation and Conciliation. The President’s Commission on Economy and Efficiency ceased to exist June 30, 1913. The Commerce Court was abolished, to become effective December 31, 1913. One vacancy exists in the Interstate Commerce Commission, Hon. John H. Marble having died November 21, 1913. All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest unless otherwise indicated. I + 1913 B® | vow ONO — OUND ONO on —r— — NN —aNN — NN By | Sow DANO © I~ mon =) > NNO©O => NON — = — NM [a] ~N = — = ol = ——q = —r—am 7,0 JE — ONO = oO 3 NOOMNMO ) — > <— own Q | noomo Et —NN || = - =) —® > () —— = —a® = | ~<— © AD | —onuNo o 4 MnO = J Fm — ANN rr — ANN N ry=iON ANN 5 ONON ~<— o NOONO N NOONO = — ANN [do] —— = — Qn — NN = —r— = pp NP) = =) fe = = QO = N~ isc con vo nian Siig nn i I IIE ve 289 Hotels, - apartment houses, and clubs, directory of... oo iia SOE 0 416 House committees, assignmentarbo. .... oo. ci has bones I HR IENG © 8 50 Aint Wis TAs) 195 clerkditor nia os tunah stamens Ca rs el REED a rua 223 mestingdayol oooh a ee ce ED TT 184 embershipief aes: Sess nn EN a Rd 185 official:stenosraphers 10. 5.00. so. satan snot don ras SE ol oh Ra 226 Ofiice: Building, Commission in Controliof the... ...... unin inn i t 0 BE oy 215 Houses! Representatives, Chaplainol.........o.. san cs DHE UR SE BR G0 es 222 Commission on Reconstruction of the Hallof the _.___.._............... 215 docamentroom: sas ian un Lunn tn a aa cl Le sr ss SRG ee 223 HH TE PR eee a Sr he ce a TA a See 223 XTI Congressional Directory. Page House of Representatives, heating and ventilating. 0... 0 i i ai i nimi 225 DEY 0] ea a tee ee BONSIT EE RE 222 office ofthe @lonk. li eed MEE HHI 222 Boorkesper oir RRND 223 Sergeant al Arms....... ol. nS RE LT 292 DERRY. ees aR EE aL 222 official reportersiof debates of. ......... lio li Fa dv E 226 Stenographersitocommitieesof.............o la. a an Lo 226 politiealiclasaifioation of Tor. ou ee LT 138 Ed EE EC SE Gs ee el ee 225 ER I I ase Sa ee en Ee a St ER Le ES Ra i 289 Hydrographic Office olthe Navy. or ee 265 Immioration, Bares of i vr. oo i a he dea ah eh hh mb Aa 281 Impeachment trials BY He Senate... . oi i fe ise i ab sh Fe et a Tes ia 158 Indian Affairs, Offlenol 0 0 Ce Ra aE a Fe Be 272 Commissioniolnvestioate. woo von gis Laintit ciate pe Sa el 216 Commissioners Board of oc out ea 288 STE ee a ete ea er SE Te te eae 334 Tuberculosis Sanitarium and Yakima Indian Reservation Project, Commission on. 216 Endtvidmalinder = nate en 471 Industrial Relations, Commisslonion. ois cs a ciate ea a 288 Er al oe a a 334 fnspector Generalol the Army = ee 258 Institution for the Peal, Colombia... al se itr se ihn Sirah dma ied 289 Instr Avfaies, Berean afr oo ee eR ine 260 TEE ES ee a Ge ee i a a ee ee ei Te 270 Ee ea a Be En a 317 International Catalogue Jcientific Literature, Regional Bureau for the United States............. 283 exchenices, Smithsonian Instiution coo anim 0 Ln ame asl § 282 Joint Commission io rs vd a EER ea se 284 Waterways Commissions. oo io. rr i ae he ee EG 284 Tnterstnte Commerce Commission: cc: oo. iis sini ii hh ae RE 285 duiiesiol i Ne an a br RR Re 329 Investigate General Parcel Post, Joint Committee to ....c...... iu... ha. pn ioe 215 Indian Afalys, Commission tos... oo... oo us Bl I Rl i de a ai a 216 Purchase of American-Grown Tobacco, Commission t0........ooeee ieee... 214 Isthmian Conall Commission. co ed ih tees A 286 Joint Commission on Government Purchase of Pneumatic Tubes. ................ccoooeeeoi oo... 214 to Investigate the Purchase of American-Grown Tobacco. ....................... 214 Commities on Priming oc ran or on Fhe ee a iE 214 Federal Ald in Construction of Post Roads. .............0..i00 ooo 215 toInvesiigate General Parcel Post... oe. oi i se oe 215 on Postage on Second-ClassMaill Matter... 3.0 ane. oi ici ii 215 Joint committees, congressional COMMISSIONS ANA. ... - -- vo d. sain isso vininnais nin oie cisions ea nd oe vm am 214 International CommMISBION oC ne a ee Ls ee Re 284 Judcei Advocale General Of ING ATINY . o-oo os os eam mma ss Seta saw sw wins aie id si dmg a a ato hein 259 en ee Ss ea 267 Ee rT CL A re se 262 bes Ol Ca 306 Justices and officials of the Court of Claims, residences of. ...... ooo inoue tines ee ienaaneas 341 Supreme Court of the United States, residences of.......... ............ 339 TE a Ee CBR, i SR ds Th Lo | i rie 343 Rabon, DepartMenbIOl. . -o. erc t00 le se renin nas mnie sw ae mE es et SS Satin AE OT eb ae i 281 LEELA LH GR eG at Re a HL ne TI DT 326 Statistics, Burean of... .. . R 281 Tezations and embassies of the United States. ........chovive iis hin vers srhms nisms ss sns date sds 349 tothe Unfled Slaten. rc eee Te em ai eo es 344 Library of Congress, Copy rignt OIee. oi iii ros san stmt Sr a want iA in ea 250 history and deserintion of. oo es a en 248 LTE LE LTT EE Sea as Se a SE a Te mC Pe eR ha 249 LE EE Re Ee i At 249 the House of Representatives..............c.c.omue. i A a El Ty nt 222 Department of Agrioulre. co i ocr so th iti mrs i ma ee Bains spe Se ae mn es om ee we wn 278 eR VINE SOE Re ne he a A aim 2 a i ans wa nae 256 Contents. I Eighthousos, BUrean of... ovo ir-tin-o ie one nnn ns aa Aes incon Memorlal Commission © i ci i a an i ai aie seem da sei bi a Rin A oN ks Manager atthe Capitol of the departmental telegraph: ::. cio... oh ia os Mensioleongressionalidistniels. oon iiac tonal sve wnat do eraninna tists npn nN ER Se Marine Bamraeksih oh. rial mvt nn en Co a ne RE Corps; headGaariersey wis ob mn nts tenia i a aniina an ant a Mediation and Conciliation, Board of ou sous zat ra a a a aes Ales ol a en a RE a A Medical Examinersiobithe Navy, Board alec c ir citi ss son i itn = Sis School and Hospital, Naval....... i EE LR Lr Na RL Meeting days of House committees......... NR eh RS SE hs ea nS Bena COMI ag. yo a Si eet seat Membership of the House CommuITiees: co a ee os Senate commlees: RS SE Members addresses. ot ce Tr i hin ae a Se Tere a a et roOTs and elo IONeR. A a e MelropoliZann police. ....... os SS see ae YS EE Ls Me Aare DIVISION OF. oo Municipal esurbiudees... co... er ee es oes so Notional Forest Reservation Commission... c.. ice coh dietitian och Sen maine aiid via aa ne ala Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. io. i dn in air sna s Sei lts awn es swan Monument Soeclety, Washinglon: - . ..... . t- uv. a fuses. nse we fitment et oo Sass Sle se ds Faleials alas I Zoologieal: Papas: ooo a Sa se a dea re Sh at Notaralization, Bareanof. io. 0 io iirc s ia intimin an se semaine Se RRR IY SEER SOs ae Te SS a Se TR eee i TR pe Se ee Examining Board... oo. tira fen Lire nantg th vibe alilnath Bs ia ae Ea a Es Sa aie General Bomndac 0 oh i a Ba Re ae Oh ee Se ere se Pe LS tA Se a a a I Set ECL Le ER Inspection and Survey for Ships, Boar@ Ofc. ics ci atau se dain ais as we in niin san via iain sus Inicilidence Oce al a eT Se I TLE aR pep eh SR PR Sa Ee ea SR LR aE Ls Fatt Nord Washing oR, a a Newspapers represented in press SOlIIEY a iT it ees Banlsuti sas Padre fs seh NE AE SR DRE ee a Se WE pens aah e se be oe ele Le bien sna SRE SE SO SCE Sas a aaa Re nl dae ais Domai Senn Office of Experiment Stations, Department of Agriculture.................................. dle An a I ee Pahl BlAings an GronnaE Re a a En deg a TALE POTS Eien ennn imei se Rial whos adele sil eas nT Official duties of executive officers, departments, and bureaus ...................................... SCY ET OF BY Re i ee Sh Si et sodas Se aR aS isd nus ne stenographiers to House committees. a i areas Oidnance and Fortification, United States Army, Board of. ...............0 iiss Originiand form of Districhgovernment. .. loll Cc Se Dad tad A Pan Amen ean ION il ea se TR si see A SEER ITE ARE SH A le Governing board ......... FY eae Se eb er ee ALN IIR Rn BR Ca Be Panhma Connl Commission 100i asi AE SiR aiid ed Boni a, aa alii) Pareelpost dombglle so manure. os RY TON OR I a te ie LR ara eas Een Sel eal ve sl ch nai el le le Aas Shella ails Sella a ab 269 265 268 213 267 267 XIV Congressional Directory. Page. Penden Ofieas ssa vest Suns nt mes en Pe en ee Ls sre oe ARE TERRE A Tai 272 Persons entitled to admission to the press gallery, Hst of... o.oo. iii. 402 Philippine Commission’ > loo BE vise lice sal Clb O00 DT Tenn AT ree aie 260 RliantiIndietry, Bardam ol... oe i a at ee ees ee ER Bt ee 275 Polio, Capitol. oon nn reek hie 226 Metropolitan... al. ls ik SE 397 COME ite eh hh te as sr I ss a ae ROE 343 Bolitical classification of CONGTORS: ir il Ls tins cer Er: Hee i Sais hers shod 138 Porto RICAN GOVOrNMONT. i oho conse shat vr ai Be Cann saw nits ss i ta a Bi 261 Rost Office Bepartment. “Cos or el mh a 263 CE Re a re 310 either onsen. oo a ea aA 225 EL i ee Sn a a 221 Postage on Second-Class Mail Matter, Joint Committee on ....................o................... 215 LE rh Ee aan 295 Postmaster General, biography of oc i ir ee 263 residential lie Senate at ee a a ad 217 United States, Dlography of. oi. i or ei de ah 253 President proitempere el the Senate 0 ro oot. di nt ae 217 Presidents and Vice Presidents and the Congresses coincident with their terms... ......_. a ae 159 Pressigallery list'of persongentitled toadmisslon 0. ............ iii 402 HeWSPAPeIATepresemtedin. . ooo ioc Lo EE Tae i Ea 398 rulesigoverning admission to. io. oo UR UR seni an sa 405 Principal floor of the Capitol, assighment of roomMS ON... oo... 0. Lib 0 ol Bi J0ina eo 233 , Qiagramel.. a ea a A EE 232 PrintingadointCommittenon: =o. ci con. iii i i na A EL Ree 214 Priniing Office, GOVEIRIMONG . v.. couethvevs coeds dicunin sions sinssntnainns son oibins i oh ey 284 EE Se ee Pe Ce he a Tam Si 329 Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument, Office of . ..............._.........._ _. 261 Rabbe eal el Ee a a RNG rae 257 Roofs, Oca al.» ooo. or a en a ee RR SEE 278 Publications, Division of, Department of Agrlenlimre. 0. i000. 0 0nd SRD EE 278 Quartermaster Corpa or... 2. a i be a 259 Reeslyership, Dominican. . i. .cii... he... nl or is nan a a 261 ReclamationBeryiees: x «tu ll Ti tren tin rs Se Be 274 Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representatives, Commissionon.................... .. .. 215 Becordereidesds: © n- ar iim a ee La El a 343 Rod: Cross Bocioty. ou vn. Laveen vot bane nis nr sai Le Sandu on pe a SORE Ol 287 Regional Bureau for the United States International Catalogue of Scientific Literature. ............ 283 Registeriofithe Preaslry. a ons cont en laa AEE EY 256 wilson on nm eS tela un RE 343 Regular and special sessionsiohCongress;lisbiol......0........... 00 BL Sain oa 154 Reportergoi debates, Houser pot it nite sD se ae i 226 ER Se I Se oe IE ee Se Se REE 226 Representatives apportioned to the several States under eachcensus......_............_...._._.. _. 153 aSSignments of, 10 COMMMILIEEN. . ... ove coat or sn nmin en nn ns st ven I SR Ls 0 195 roomgiandetolophones co... .... 0 n. c e a e 241 service of, table showing Congresses in which it has been rendered ..............__. 143 Senators and Delegates, blographiesiof....... conic. ness 3-128 list of, with home post offices and Washington addresses... 406 Reseating ploniofthe Honse, QIagramel. . oc... cc cone ec dees cee seit 238 Residences of Justices of Supreme Court of the United States .................oooviie ieee... 339 Resident Commissioners from the Philippines and Porto Rico, addresses of... ..................... 415 blographiesef...... oo oh 128 Retiro Board of The NAVY... .... so ir i on gh donna seme SB ea in en ne se ee a sas 269 Revenwe-GuiterSambienn. eel aa ellie n 257 River onAilorbor Board... cei anh dE a TN 261 Roomsiand telephones, Representatives. ..... ou. cusiciscasiiennsninsrnsnnsitest ao baat ost att 241 BONIS. ar eee a 239 Rualeszoverning admission topressigallery. reed are he a 405 Rural Credits, etc., Commission to Investigate and Study. ........ccofeeenn nonin iiaiainnennns 215 Cina en ee Al SRE ne Le Sai Se ie Sis rr a IA pe 237 Second AssistanttRostmaster General. cc 1. 263 Contents. XV : Page. Secret Service Division, Department of the Preasilry........... or vanvesasseeaa 256 Secretary of Agriedlture, blographw of... ol 274 Commeree, Dlograpliy ol. a i 279 Li) Srl dee pea Sil SR Don CS Be Ce a a 281 ERI eT Sasso si eee ot SEs le 254 the Taterior, blograpliy ol. LC a a a aT 270 Novy blograpliy-ol. oo ia a a ad a 264 Senate Dasa al a 217 Treasury, ograpliyiofaat.. f oli a rh ee 255 ar DIO ay OF IS a RE 257 tothe Prosident, DIography of. os I A Ee 253 Sensie commiticesrassiommentarto .. nl an ncn ee Ee a ae 171 clerks ond messengersiio.. 5. lt sion anna ra sa ie a 218 EE HET ATE HT GE pe na lero SES LI se Le ee 160 memborshipiol.. co. on oe I Se la 161 Senate, CHAIAIIOL: . oc ooo tide isco: Sad seals va sss wnt seme peter ta se 217 diseromoR TNE oor Of iso Se se eee ae Cre Ee 236 IrRIOEY 08s. si pase es ha ree A Sa SE EE 237 foldinadootiion cool i se i Rn ME SLE 221 hemtingamd ventilatloniol oo aa aaa RG ed 221 OficeofBeeretany ol. 0 a ie oe a a 217 Seseaniab ATMS. en ease a ae 220 Tb oi rian hae a 217 oficial reporterget debatesinl. o 1. Lo. lili a en ne a 226 poiitieabelossifientioniol.. oo lio lh Sooo La TE a Tan 138 Postofiee of. 0. 000. Soisse art sai nie Sei tor Co adi pune bu Sl SRS 0nd 221 RrestAent ol... i RR EE a fe 217 Th Te RE BR I ED ee se 217 specialigesdlonaiof. aE 158 Senators, expiration of terms of service, by Classes. .......iueunun eee eee 139 Representatives, and Delegates, biographies of. ................... 0. coi 3-128 list of, with home post offices and Washington addresses... 406 Senior roomeandielephones. -........ cc... i oan 239 SOLVICE TOONINMONN. uo... sc sine sions sd i deer rs Te IES aa 141 Sergeant at Arms of the House of Representatives... ...........cc.ceoviins sn isisiiasa i 222 Bevole blographyol co. oni eT 220 Service of Delegates, table showing Congresses in which it has been rendered... ............. 152 Representatives, table showing Congresses in which it has been rendered. . ..........._ 143 Resident Commissioners, table showing Congresses in which it has been rendered. . .. 152 continuous, of Senators, tableshowing.....0. vn oo 00 oon ane a 141 SessionviolGongressllistol. tame 0 eel os aia 154 theiSeratorapeelal Watiof-o. oni non vr 0 00 ey a cies 158 Smiihsomen Institntlon...r.. hoo RE a in ea 282 Lonel Eos RS A BEE Re Ce SESE Cel i tes Te 277 LU en AS SE ER ain ea nL he BNE ae Ss ES 286 SolicifesottheMuavy. RE RR LTA 267 Solicitors, Departmental. ...ooco....ocoviuniviiienen ASSEN ds Terntiey 263 Speakerol the Holes, OME Of... oii donne sts fona sa Sai as 222 Special sessions ofthe Senate, datesol. ici to Sol ridin a 158 Standards Bureswof. 000. nL Ee ree 280 Sore dolor one ONaTens oo a i i i ete is a 129 PDepartment.o i re NE SR ET a 254 dutiogol. on ee nl So Sa ee ie ee 297 War, and Navy Department Bullding. ii....... obi aos ia 255 ih OE SS a AE Se NE i a 139 Statistics, Bureau of, Department of Agriculture. .......... co... 278 Tabor Bareawor.. o.oo. .c0 0 Lin aaa Re 281 SteembosidingpectionBervice..... 0... 0 Loo ab aa 280 Stenographers to House Commies. .-....o.ccivvis. soi ibe isa wl ET 226 Student interpreters in China, Japan, and TUEROY oo lassi nal a Ee 367 SaperintendentofGapiiol: «0 lacs ooo WL I 226 State, War, and Navy Department BElding: san nn on Tea a Supervising Avchitestofthe Treasury. oo. 0... oo eo AT 255 Supply Committee, Generals. oc icc a 288 XVI Congressional Directory. Page. Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. - =... iiss seve sities mi cieiio ns site lsmets silage wee mr Sih 343 ONed Sates: on en oi hs ses ari RR Sa Tp Sis ees Ean 337 biographies of the justices. .......o.... cons... BCI a 337 LE A EE i I Fl 339 residences of the justices and officials coe... o.oo... 339 Surceon Goneral ob THe ATT. ©. era Baga see whe ert ba Te as ale weitte 0 WS 259 Forms of Senators, ORPIIAUION OL. osu vei minie = 05 as as se mom Abo me SEES AR Rens = =k me aah 139 Third Assistant Postmaster General... oo rm er a i as ses ins mia ee mre a Ri ns as 264 Mreasurer.of the United Sales. . «oo. ieee sire S iia miss = ems has = ms in Stare eS aT wes oe 256 enstry- IIePArEMOIE: nr irs a eS mA eB a 8 BTS a oie LE 255 qutiesiol oo a ea Eh ea ARE a Th aa 298 TrislsbyCourt ol Impeachment. =. cs eo a ee Se sre ai is sas mw ae 158 ‘Taberculosis Sanitarigm, ete., Commission onIndian ..........c.v cee crorositsmorsnonscrnosanns 216 United -Siatesattorneylsofiee. oo io a ea sa ad 342 Lh EE ee Se SR SS a aN RS I 284 Comrmerea Cami rr NL Sa Ten 341 CORE OMICS. i ar a JE SR Sie a Sa es 353 Courter CuslomE Apes. es 342 embassiesondlegationg. 2 CL vivir Sears Sr sare 349 Busine Oia. El a en 261 @eaoraphte Board sol. ee er iN ee ca 287 ET Re a ee a 333 (LE ee La RR L. 342 ¥ice President of the United States, biography of......cncoecoicencnnnnacnne caine erases 3 War Department... .......... EE i roe 257 EYE RO Ce EE I SNES Br LA RSS MA Je SL Long Los TT SE NE 303 Washington addresses of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, with home post offices............ 406 Clty post Ole... oc oe iam ame SR EN a Re dd 291 National MengmentBoolety.can rst ns ns i eee 289 NOY Yr ei ei ae ae eA nee Smt re OER SR 267 I pn Ey pe ora at Up NBR 2 0, BLL 2 st He 275 TE Ae a a Ln SC SRO TR SE 253 Yards and Docks, Bureall of. .if vi. voi siss sss msdbii didnt meats somites i wa ba ass Sait Hn ay 266 Zoological Park, National. ......ccceseieccssinss IE TE Ie LL SR Le ST Se 283 DIRECTORY BIOGRAPHICAL COMMITTEES STATE DELEGATIONS THE CAPITOL STATISTICAL LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 13823°—63-2—1sT ED—2 1 BIOGRAPHICAL. THE VICE PRESIDENT. THOMAS R. MARSHALL, Democrat, of Indianapolis, Ind., Vice President of the United States, was born in North Manchester, Wabash County, Ind., March 14, 1854; the son of Dr. Daniel M. and Martha A. Patterson Marshall; was graduated from Wabash College in 1873, which college, as well as Notre Dame University, the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, and the University of North Carolina, has conferred upon him the degree of LL. D.; began the practice of law in Columbia City, Ind., on his twenty-first birthday and continued without interruption the practice of law there until 1908, when he was elected governor of the State of Indiana; was married Octo- ber 2, 1895, to Miss Lois I. Kimsey, of Angola, Ind. He was elected Vice President in 1912. ALABAMA. (Population (1210), 2,138,093.) SENATORS. JOHN HOLLIS BANKHEAD, Democrat, of Jasper, was born in Moscow, Marion (now Lamar) County, Ala., September 13, 1842; was self-educated; is a farmer; served four years in the Confederate Army, being wounded three times; represented Marion County in the general assembly, sessions of 1865, 1866, and 1867; was a member of the State senate 1876-77, and of the house of representatives 1880-81; was warden of the Alabama Penitentiary from 1881 till 1885; was elected to the House of Rep- resentatives in the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty- fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was appointed a member of the Inland Waterways Commission March, 1907. In the Democratic primaries, 1906, Mr. Bankhead was nominated alternate Senator, receiv- ing 48,362 votes, or a majority of all the votes cast in the election; in June, 1907, he was appointed United States Senator to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. John T. Morgan, and in July, 1907, was elected by the legislature. Reelected by the legislature in January, 1911, for a full term beginning March 4, 1913, and ending March 3, 1919. JOSEPH FORNEY JOHNSTON, Democrat, of Birmingham, died August 8, 1913. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 2,138,093. JOHN W. ABERCROMBIE, Democrat, of Tuscaloosa, Ala., was born in St. Clair County, Ala., in 1866; reared on farm; attended rural schools and graduated from Oxford (Ala.) College, A. B. 1886, University of Alabama, LL. B. 18838, LL. D. 1904; received degree of LL. D. from University of South Carolina 1905, and D. C. L., from University of the South at Sewanee 1907; principal of high schools and small colleges in the South 1888-1898; member of Alabama Senate 1896-1898; State superin- tendent of education of Alabama 1898-1902; president University of Alabama 1902-1911; member Alabama textbook commission 1903-1908; chairman Alabama commission for selection of Rhodes scholars 1903-1911; organizer and president Alabama Association of Colleges 1908-1912; member board of directors National Education Association 1900-1904 and 1909-1911; president Southern Educational Association 1906-1907, and life member board of directors since 1907; member National Association of State Universities 1903-1911; president Southern Educational Council 1912-1914; member National Council of Education 1908-1912; elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 87,519 votes, to 9,589 for Asa E. Stratton, Republican, and 2,533 for J. C. Maxwell, Socialist. gti are based on information furnished or authorized by the respective Senators and Cone 3 4 Congressional Directory. ALABAMA FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, and Washington (6 counties). Population (1910), 211,856. GEORGE WASHINGTON TAYLOR, Democrat, of Demopolis, Marengo County, Ala., was born January 16, 1849, in Montgomery County, Ala.; was educated at the South Carolina University, Columbia, S. C.; is a lawyer, and was admitted to practice at Mobile, Ala., November, 1871; entered the army as a Confederate soldier at the age of 15 years in November, 1864, being then a student at the academy in Columbia, S. C.; served a few weeks with the South Carolina State troops on the coast near Savannah, and then enlisted as a private in Company D, First Regiment South Caro- lina Cavalry, and served as a courier till the end of the war; left the South Carolina University at 18, having graduated in Latin, Greek, history, and chemistry; taught school for several years, and studied law at the same time; was elected to the lower house of the General Assembly of Alabama in 1878, and served one term as a member from Choctaw County; in 1880 was elected State solicitor for the first judicial circuit of Alabama, and was reelected in 1886; declined a third term; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Escambia, Mont- gomery, Pike, and Wilcox (9 counties). Population (1910), 289,770. S. HUBERT DENT, Jr., Democrat, of Montgomery, was born at Eufaula, Ala., August 16, 1869; was graduated from the Southern University, of Greensboro, Ala., with the degree of A. B., in 1886, and in 1889 was graduated in law from the Uni- versity of Virginia; his profession has always been that of attorney at law; was married to Miss Etta Tinsley, of Louisville, Ky., June 23, 1897; has one child, William Tinsley Dent; was appointed prosecuting attorney for Montgomery County, and went into office December 1, 1902; in 1904 was reelected for a term of six years; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses without opposition. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Houston, Lee, and Russell (9 counties). Population (1910), 249,042. HENRY D. CLAYTON, Democrat, of Eulaula, was born in Barbour County, Ala., in 1857; is a lawyer; served one term in the Alabama Legislature; was chairman of the judiciary committee; was United States district attorney from 1893 to 1896; was a Democratic presidential elector in 1888 and 1892; his wife is the daughter of the late Samuel Marshall Davis, of Georgetown, Ky.; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty- sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 11,225 votes, being the entire vote cast. Is chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Calhoun, Chilton, Cleburne, Dallas, Shelby, and Talladega (6 coun- ties). Population (1910), 193,958. : FREDERICK LEONARD BLACKMON, Democrat, of Anniston, Ala., was born at Lime Branch, Polk County, Ga., on the 15th day of September, 1873. In 1883 he moved to Calhoun County, Ala., and attended the public schools at Dearmanville and Choccolocco; he also attended the State Normal College at Jacksonville, Ala., and the Douglasville College at Douglasville, Ga. While attending the Douglasville College he read law under Prof. Joe Camp, who was a lawyer and also a professor in the Douglasville College. After leaving Douglasville he took a course in the Moun- tain City Business College at Chattanooga, Tenn., and while there read law under James H. McLane. From there he went to the Alabama University and was gradu- ated from the university law department. He was admitted to the bar at Anniston, Ala., on the 20th of July, 1894, and from that time was associated with the firm of Knox, Acker, Dixon & Blackmon until elected to Congress, at which time he with- drew from the firm in order to devote his entire time to his congressional duties. He was city attorney for the city of Anniston for four years, and served in the Alabama State Senate from 1900 until elected to Congress in 1910. He was chairman of the congressional committee for the fourth Alabama congressional district, resigning this chairmanship after becoming a candidate for Congress. He was married Decem- ber 31, 1908, and has two children. Mr. Blackmon was nominated by the Democratic Party without opposition and elected to the Sixty-second Congress and was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a majority of 3,987 over his two Republican opponents. ALABAMA Biographical. 5 FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Autauga, Chambers, Clay, Coosa, Elmore, Lowndes, Macon, Ran- dolph, and Tallapoosa (9 counties). Population (1910), 235,615. JAMES THOMAS HEFLIN, Democrat, of Lafayette, was born at Louina, Ran- dolph County, Ala., April 9, 1869; was educated in the common schools of Randolph County, at the Southern University, Greensboro, Ala., and at the A. and M. College, Auburn, Ala.; studied law at Lafayette, Ala., under Judge N. D. Denson, and was admitted to the bar January 12, 1893; was married to Minnie Kate Schuessler, of Lafayette, Ala., December 18, 1895; and has one child living—J. Thomas Heflin, jr.; was elected mayor of Lafayette March 16, 1893, and reelected, holding this office two terms; was register in chancery two years, resigning in 1896 to accept the Democratic nomination from Chambers County to the legislature; was elected in 1896 and reelected to the legislature in 1898; was a member of the Democratic State executive committee from 1896 to 1902; was a delegate in the constitutional convention of Alabama in 1901; was elected secretary of state in November, 1902, for a term of four years; re- signed that office May 1, 1904; was elected, without opposition, May 10, 1904, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Charles W. Thompson, deceased, in the Fifty-eighth Congress; also elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNmTES: Fayette, Greene, Hale, Lamar, Marion, Pickens, Sumter, Tuscaloosa, and Walker (9 counties). Population (1910), 240,156. RICHMOND PEARSON HOBSON, Democrat, of Greensboro, was born at Greens- boro, Ala., August 17, 1870; was educated at the Southern University, the United States Naval Academy, the French National School of Naval Design; is a naval architect and lecturer; served in the United States Navy from 1885 to 1903; received the degree of LL. D. from Southern University June, 1906; was Democratic elector at large, Ala- bama, in 1904; married Grizelda Houston Hull May 25, 1905; is tenth in descent from Elder Brewster, of the Mayflower; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 9,156 votes, to 2,174 for Charles P. Lunsford, Republican. : SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cherokee, Cullman, Dekalb, Etowah, Franklin, Marshall, St. Clair, and Winston (8 counties). Population (1910), 197,409. JOHN LAWSON BURNETT, Democrat, of Gadsden, Etowah County, Ala., was born at Cedar Bluff, Cherokee County, Ala., January 20, 1854; was educated in the common schools of the county, at the Wesleyan Institute, Cave Springs, Ga., and Gaylesville High School, Gaylesville, Ala.; studied law at Vanderbilt University, and was admitted to the bar in Cherokee County, Ala., in 1876; was married to Miss Bessie Reeder, of Cleveland, Tenn., December 13, 1886; was elected to the lower house of the Alabama Legislature in 1884, and to the State senate in 1886; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty- first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Colbert, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and Morgan (7 counties). Population (1910), 218,342. WILLIAM RICHARDSON, Democrat, of Huntsville, Ala., was in the Confed- erate Army; was severely wounded at Battle of Chickamauga and paroled in April, 1865, in Marietta, Ga. ; was arepresentative from the county of Limestone in the General Assembly of Alabama, 1865-1867; was judge of the court of probate and county court of Madison County, Ala., from 1875 to 1886; Democratic elector for the State at large in 1888; was elected by the Alabama State Democratic convention as a delegate from the State at large to the Democratic national convention that met at St. Louis July 6, 1904; was elected to fill an unexpired term in the Fifty-sixth Congress; elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; at the primary election held April 1 to nominate a Democratic candidate he was renominated, defeating his opponent in every county of the district; was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 10,753 votes, to 245 for W. L. Conner, Socialist, and 1,160 for W. BE. Hotchkiss, Republican. NN DISTRIOT.yCouNmms, Bibb, Blount, Jefferson, and Perry (4 counties). Population (1910), OSCAR W. UNDERWOOD, Democrat, of Birmingham, was born in Louisville, Jefferson County, Ky., May 6, 1862; was educated at Rugby School, Louisville, Ky., and the University of Virginia; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty- sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 6 Congressional Directory. ARKANSAS ARIZONA. (Population (1910), 204,354.) SENATORS. HENRY FOUNTAIN ASHURST, Democrat, of Prescott, Ariz., was born at Winnemucca, Nev., September 13, 1874, second child and eldest son of William Henry and Sarah E. (Bogard) Ashurst; was taken to Arizona by his parents when he was 3 months of age and has since continuously resided in Arizona; was educated in the public schools of Flagstaff, Ariz.; was graduated from the Stockton Business College, Stock- ton, Cal.; studied law and political economy in the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor; has pursued the following occupations: Lumberjack, cowboy, clerk and cashier in store, newspaper reporter, hod carrier, and lawyer. Appointed a justice of the peace of Williams, Ariz., in July, 1896; elected a member of the House of Representatives of the Arizona Legislature in 1896, reelected in 1898; was chosen speaker of the House of Representatives of the Twenty-second Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Arizona; was elected to the Territorial senate in 1902; elected to the office of district attorney of Coconino County in 1904 and reelected in 1906; was married in 1904 to Elizabeth McEvoy Renoe; was chosen as one of the Democratic nominees for United States Senator at the direct primary held in Arizona October 24, 1911; at the general election held in December, 1912, was indorsed by the people as one of the Senators from the State of Arizona, and on March 27, 1912, was elected United States Senator by the unanimous vote of the First Legislative Assembly of the State of Arizona. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. MARCUS AURELIUS SMITH, Democrat, of Tucson, was born near Cynthiana, Ky., January 24, 1852; was educated at the Transylvania University, Lexington, Ky.; is a lawyer by profession; moved to Arizona in 1881, and the following year was elected prosecuting attorney of his district; was elected a Delegate to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, Fifty-third, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses, and on March 27, 1912, was elected United States Senator from the State of Arizona. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 204,354. CARL HAYDEN, Democrat, of Phoenix, was born at Tempe, Maricopa County, Ariz., October 2, 1877, son of Charles Trumbull Hayden, of Connecticut, and Sallie Calvert (Davis) Hayden, of Arkansas; was educated in public schools of Tempe, Normal School of Arizona at Tempe, and Leland Stanford Junior University; engaged in mercantile and flour milling business; was a delegate to Democratic national con- vention 1904; elected treasurer of Maricopa County in 1904, sheriff in 1906, reelected in 1908, and served in that office until Arizona was admitted as a State February 14, 1912; is married to Nan Downing (A. B., Stanford, 1903); on December 12, 1911, was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 11,389 votes, to 5,819 for Robert S. Fisher, Progressive, 3,110 for Thomas E. Campbell, Republican, 3,034 for A. Charles Smith, Socialist, and 193 for O. Gibson, Prohibitionist. ARKANSAS. (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, graduating 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 ARKANSAS B ogra ph veal. 7 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 K. Jones, and took his seat March 9, 1903; reelected in 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. 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 con- gressional district of Arkansas in 1900, and selected as electoral messenger; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses. He resigned from the Sixty-second Congress on January 14, 1913; was inaugurated governor of Arkansas on the 16th of January, 1913, having been elected to that posi- tion in September, 1912; and on the 28th of January, 1913, was elected Senator to succeed Senator Jeff Davis, deceased. He took his seat as Serator on March 10, 1913. His term of service will expire March 4, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNtiES: Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, St. Francis, and Woodruff (11 counties). Population (1910), 255,301. THADDEUS H. CARAWAY, Democrat, of Jonesboro, was born in Stoddard County, Mo., October 17, 1871; educated in the common schools of Tennessee, and a graduate of Dickson College, bachelor of arts, class of 1896; began the practice of law in 1900; was elected prosecuting attorney of the second judicial circuit of Arkansas in 1908, reelected in 1910; elected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. SECOND DISTRICT.—CountiES: 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy, Van Buren, and Washington (10 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; waselected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Counmigs: Crawford, Howard, Little River, Logan, Miller, Montgomery, Pike, Polk, Scott, Sebastian, and Sevier (11 counties). Population (1910), 225,774. OTIS WINGO, Democrat, of De Queen; elected to the Sixty-third Congress. 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 Vanderbilt University, receiving a degree of LL. B. Served as sec- retary of the Dawes Commission during the Cleveland administration; was elected TTT hh e= 8 Congressional Directory. CALIFORNIA 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.; has two sons, Bronson Cooper, 2 years old, and Henderson Madison, jr.; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress over Hon. Gus. Remmel, a Republican, carrying every county in the district and every voting precinct, with a few exceptions. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1910), 243,649. SAMUEL MITCHELL TAYLOR, Democrat, of Pine Bluff, Ark., was born in Tttawamba County, Miss.; his education was obtained in public and private schools; was admitted to the bar at Tupelo, Miss., 1876; in 1879 married Miss Mary Bell, of Pine Bluff, Ark.; was elected to the Legislature of Mississippi in 1879; located at Pine Bluff, Ark., in 1887, where he resumed the practice of law; after two years’ residence in Arkansas was elected prosecuting attorney of the eleventh judicial district of Arkansas without opposition, and held that office for three consecutive terms, after which he resumed the practice of his profession; in 1896 was elected tem- porary chairman of the Democratic State convention, and by this convention was elected a delegate to the Democratic national convention; in 1910, without opposition, was unanimously chosen as permanent chairman of the Democratic State convention; March, 1912, was nominated by the Democratic Party for Congress, and on November 5, 1912, was elected without opposition to the Sixty-third Congress; Hon. Joe T. Robinson having resigned his seat in Congress to become governor of Arkansas, he was elected January 15, 1913, without opposition, to fill out the unexpired term of Mr. Robinson in the Sixty- second Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Hempstead, 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 Counties, 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.; member of Arkansas General Assembly in 1895; Democratic presidential elector in 1900; State senator in 1905 and 1907; mem- ber of board of trustees of University of Arkansas from 1907 to 1911; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress over Hon. Pat McNally, Republican, of El Dorado. CALIFORNIA. (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 fol- lowed the calling of a sailor on ships engaged in the European trade. In 1855 he shipped ‘“‘before the mast” on the sailing ship Galatea, bound for San Francisco, where he arrived in the autumn of that year. Since that time he has been engaged i 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 commandery 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 August 8, 1893. In January, 1895, having made a thorough canvass before the people of his State, he was elected by the legislature on the first ballot to fill the unexpired term. In the fall election of 1896 he was a candidate CALIFORNIA B ogra phical. 9 before the people of California for reelection, and received the indorsement of the Republican county conventions that comprised a majority of the senatorial and assembly districts in the State. When the legislature convened in joint convention (January, 1897) for the purpose of electing a United States Senator, he was reelected on the first ballot. In January, 1903, he was again reelected on the first ballot for the term of six years, receiving every vote of the Republican members of the legislature. His election was made unanimous on motion of a Democratic member of the legisla- ture. 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 Demo- cratic 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, of Los Angeles, was born in Ohio County, Ind., March 29, 1847; was reared on a farm until 164 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 Legislature 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 1910 a member of the city council of the city of Los Angeles, Cal., and its president; 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 1977. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Butte, Colusa, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Marin, Mendocino, Sonoma, Sutter, and Yuba (11 counties). Population (1910), 197,812. WILLIAM KENT, Independent, of Kentfield, was born in Chicago March 29, 1864, and is the son of Albert E. and Adaline Elizabeth (Dutton) Kent. His parents moved to California in 1871 and settled in Marin County. He entered Yale in 1883, and graduated in 1887 with the degree of A. B.; M. A. (honorary), Yale, 1908. Imme- diately upon graduation he located in Chicago. In 1890 he entered into partnership with his father, under the firm name of A. E. Kent & Son. He was married to Eliza- beth Thacher, of Ojai Valley, Cal., February 26, 1890. His father died in 1901; busi- ness is dealer in lands and live stock. Was a member of the Chicago city council from 1895 to 1897; was president of the Municipal Voters’ League of Chicago 1899-1900. He was elected to the Sixty-second Congress as a Republican, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress as an independent. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTirs: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Eldorado, Lassen, Mariposa, Modoc, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne (16 counties). Population (1910), 145,958. ; 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 lead- ing law firms of northern California, and was engaged in many important suits involv- ing 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 candidate for district attorney of Lassen County in 1886. December 6, 1886, moved to Altu- ras, where he hasresided ever since, engaging in the practice of the law, the firm hav- ing 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 Lynch- ing case. This case became famous in California and the West, 21 men indicted for five separate murder charges; the trial commenced in November, 1901, and ended “in March, 1902, no conviction had, and all defendants discharged. Elected judge of the Superior Court of California in and for the county of Modoc in 1902 and reelected 10 Congressional Directory. CALIFORNIA in 1908, which position he resigned December 19, 1910. Admitted to the Supreme Court of Oregon, the United States Circuit and District Courts of California, 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 conventions, chairman committee on platform and resolutions at one time, and in 1908-1910 chair. man Democratic State central committee, resigning on becoming a candidate for Congress; was delegate to the Democratic national convention at Denver in 1908; grand master Independent Order of Odd Fellows of California 1908-9, and repre- sentative to the Sovereign Grand Lodge at Seattle; delegate to Grand Lodg e F. & A. M. of California at several sessions; was married November 21, 1889, —~ Iva G. Spencer, daughter of Judge E. V. Spencer, of Susanville, at Anaheim, in southern California; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 23,467 votes, to 10,178 for Frank M. Rutherford, Republican, and 3,818 for J. C. Williams, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Contra Costa, Napa, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Solano, and Yolo (6 counties). Population (1910), 211,496. CHARLES FORREST CURRY, Republican, of Sacramento, was born in Naper- ville, I11., March 14, 1858, and is the son of the late Charles H. M. and Emma J. (Kim- ball) Curry; graduated from the Mineral Point (Wis.) High School and from the private academy which, with the assistance of his wife and a staff of teachers, was conducted by Rev. Lyman Phelps, the Episcopal minister of that place; moved with his parents to Seattle; after spending some time in the then Territory of Washington the family removed to California, of which State his maternal grandfather was a resident and pioneer; in 1886 was elected a member of the California Assembly from the thirty-sixth district in San Francisco; in 1890 was appointed superintendent of Station B post office in San Francisco, and in 1894 resigned that position to accept the Republican nomi- nation for county clerk, to which office he was elected and served a term of four years; in 1898 received the Republican nomination for secretary of state, to which office he was elected and served three consecutive terms of four years each; in’ 1910 was an unsuccessful contender for the Republican nomination for governor; appointed build- ing and loan commissioner of California January, 1911; October 5, 1891, married Lillie A. Siperly, who died October 2, 1898; his family consists of two children, Florence A. and C. F. Curry, jr., two sisters, Mrs. A. M. Peterson and Mrs. M. R. Galvin, and two nephews, Leonard C. Curry and Emmett J. Peterson; he was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 31,060 votes, to 15,197 for Gilbert McMillan Ross, Democrat, and 6,522 for William L. Wilson, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF SAN Francisco: Twenty-first, twenty-eighth, thirtieth, thirty-first, thirty-second, ana thirty-third assembly districts. Population (1910), 208,314. 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving a plurality of 10,631 over his Demo- cratic opponent. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CIry or SAN FrANCISCO: Twenty-second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth, twenty-seventh, and twenty-ninth assembly districts. Population (1910), 208,598. JOHN I. NOLAN, Progressive Republican, of San Francisco, was born on January 14, 1874, in San Francisco, Cal.; attended the public schools of San Francisco; is an iron molder by trade; wasa member of the board of supervisors of the city and: county of San Francisco 1911; secretary of the San Francisco Labor Council 1912) and has been identified with the International Molders’ Union of North America as an officer for seven years; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 27,902 votes, to 18,516 for Stephen V. Costello, Democrat, and 6,962 for E. L. Reguin, Socialist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CountY: Alameda. Population (1910), 246,131. JOSEPH RUSSELL KNOWLAND, Republican, of Alameda, was born in that city August 5, 1873; was educated in public and private schools and in University of Pacific; is vice president of Gardiner Mill Co.; is a director of Gas Consumers’ Asso- ciation of the United States, the Kennedy Mining & Milling Co. of California, the CALIFORNIA B 10gra phica l . 11 Union Savings Bank of Oakland, the Alameda National Bank, and the Alameda Bank of Savings; married; in 1898, at the age of 25, was elected to the lower house of the California Legislature; was reelected in 1900; in 1902 was elected to the State senate, resigning in 1904, after serving one session, having in meantime received the Repub- lican nomination for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 8,985. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Fresno, Kern, Kings, Madera, Merced, Stanislaus, and Tulare (7 counties). Population (1910), 211,080. DENVER S. CHURCH, Democrat, of Fresno, Cal., was born December 11, 1866, at Folsom, Cal.; graduated from Healdsburg College, Healdsburg, Cal.; married Louise Derrick December 30, 1889; has been district attorney of Fresno County for the past six years, resigning in the midst of his second term to perform his duties in Congress; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 23,752 votes, to 22,994 for J. C. Neédham, Republican, and 7,171 for Cato, Socialist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, San Mateo, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, and Ventura (8 counties). Population (1910), 233,919. EVERIS ANSON HAYES, Republican, of San Jose, was born at Waterloo, Jefferson County, Wis., March 10, 1855; was educated in the public schools of his native State; graduated at the Waterloo High School, and entered the University of Wisconsin at Madison in 1873; graduated from both the literary and law departments of that insti- tution, receiving the degrees of B. L. and LL. B., the latter in 1879; began at once the practice of his profession at Madison; in 1883 moved to Ashland, Wis.; while engaged in the practice of law at Ashland he became interested in iron mines on the Gogebic Range, in northern Wisconsin and Michigan, and he still has interests there. Is married and has six children. In 1887 he moved 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 Herald. He was for two years an alderman 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 29,861 votes, to 20,620 for James B. Holohan, Democrat, and 8,125 for Robert Whitaker, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Sixty-first, sixty-fifth, sixty-sixth, sixty-seventh, sixty- eighth, sixty-ninth, and seventieth assembly districts. Population (1910), 230,189. CHARLES WEBSTER BELL, Progressive Republican, of Pasadena; born in Albany, N. Y., June 11, 1857; was educated in the public schools of that city and at a private school in St. Louis, Mo.; came to California in 1877, where he engaged in fruit farming, and later in the real estate business; is married and has one son; was elected and served four years as county clerk of Los Angeles County; was twice elected State senator and served during the thirty-seventh, thirty-eighth, and thirty-ninth sessions of the California Legislature; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 28,845 votes, to 14,571 for Thomas H. Kirk, Democrat, 11,125 for Ralph L. Criswell, Socialist, and 6,510 for George S. Yarnall, Prohibitionist. TENTH DISTRICT.—1L.os ANGELES COUNTY: Sixty-second, sixty-third, sixty-fourth, seventy-first, seventy-second, seventy-third, seventy-fourth, and seventy-fifth assembly districts. Population (1910), 273,942. WILLIAM DENNISON STEPHENS, Progressive Republican, of Los 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; studied law but never applied for admission to practice; for eight years was engaged in construction and operation of railroads in Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, and Louisiana; moved to Los Angeles, Cal., in 1887; from 1888 to 1909 was in wholesale and retail grocery business. He was president of Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce in 1907, director from 1902 to 1911, and member of its harbor committee 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 advisory committee for the building of the Los Angeles aqueduct, costing $25,000,000, in 1910. He is a thirty-third degree Scottish Rite Mason; was grand commander of Knights Templar of California in 1908. He is mar- ried and has one daughter. Was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 43,637 votes, to 17,890 for George Ringo, Democrat, his nearest competitor. 12 Congressional Directory. COLORADO ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Imperial, Inyo, Mono, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego (7 counties). Population (1910), 210,110. WILLIAM KETTNER, Democrat, of San Diego, was born in Ann Arbor, Mich., November 20, 1864, of German parents; at an early age was left to care for himself; lived in St. Paul, Minn., until 1884, where he attended the public schools; moved to the mines of California at 20; was connected in the advertising department with news- papers on the coast, and for 20 years has been in the general insurance business; is married; is a member of the I. O. O. F., the Order of Elks, and Knights of Pythias; is past commander Knights Templar; has been grand marshal of the Masonic Grand Lodge of California for the past five years, which position he still holds; is an honorary thirty-third degree Mason; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress from a district normally 4 to 1 Republican by a plurality of 3,400, receiving 24,822 votes, to 21,426 for S. C. Evans, Progressive, 7,009 for N. A. Richardson, Socialist, and 4,842 for Helen M. Stoddard, Prohibitionist. COLORADO. (Population (1910), 799,024.) SENATORS. CHARLES SPALDING THOMAS, Democrat, was born in Darien, Ga., Decem- ber 6, 1849; lived on plantation near Macon, Ga., until the close of the war; was then placed in school at Bridgeport, Conn.; afterwards went to Michigan and gradu- ated from the law department, Michigan University, in April, 1871; located in Denver, Colo., December 18 of that year to engage in the practice of law, and has since resided there, with the exception of 1879-1885, at Leadville; was city attorney of Denver “in 1875-76; delegate to Democratic national conventions 1880, 1896, 1900, 1904, and 1908; member Democratic national committee 1884-1896; governor of Colorado 1899- 1901; temporary chairman Democratic national convention at Kansas City in 1900; * was unanimously nominated by the State Democracy in 1912 for Senator of the United States for the term made vacant by the death of Senator Charles J. Hughes, and elected by a plurality of 45,000 over his nearest competitor and chosen by the general assembly in January following; married Emma Fletcher at Kalamazoo, Mich., Decem- ber 29, 1873, and has five children, Mrs. W. P. Malburn, of Denver, Edith, Charles S., jr., Hubert F., and George K. Thomas. His term of service will expire in 1915. JOHN F. SHAFROTH, Democrat, of Denver, Colo., was born in Fayette, Mo., June 9, 1854; was graduated from the literary department of the University of Michigan in 1875, and is a lawyer by profession; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, and Fifty-seventh Congresses; was elected governor of Colorado in 1908 over Jesse McDonald, Republican, and was reelected governor in 1910 over John B. Stephen, Republican; January 14, 1913, was elected United States Senator by a vote of 86 to 13 for Clyde Dawson, Republican, having carried the State at the November election by a plurality of 51,311 votes. ; 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 1900 and 1904, his 12 years’ service ending December, 1908; was president pro tempore of the senate one term, and was the author of 40 statutes and 5 constitu- tional 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 CONNECTICUT B rographical. 13 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 Moun- tain Alumni Association of the University of Michigan, and vice president of the State bar association, and is now vice president of the State association of the Sons of Colorado, and has been active in public life in Colorado for 30 years. He is the Colo- rado member of the Democratic national congressional campaign committee. He is married and has three children. He was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of over 50,000. EDWARD KEATING, Democrat, of Pueblo, was born near Kansas City, Kans., July 9, 1875; newspaper man; went to Colorado when 5 years old and has resided in that State since; educated in the public schools until 14 years old, when he secured employment in a newspaper office as copyholder in a proof room; worked on Denver papers as reporter, city editor, and managing editor for 20 years; city auditor of Denver 1899 to 1901; member Denver charter convention 1903; president of State board of land commissioners 1911- to 1913; president Denver Press Club 1905 to 1907; president International League of Press Clubs 1907; married Margaret Sloan Medill September 1, 1907; purchased the Pueblo Leader in 1912, and became a resident of that city; was nominated for Congressman at large on the Democratic ticket in the State-wide primaries of 1912, on a platform which declared for the removal of the tariff on sugar, and was elected by a plurality of 45,580 over his nearest opponent, Hon. Clarence P. Dodge, Progressive. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Denver, Jefferson, Lake, Larimer, Logan, Morgan, Park, Phillips, Sedgwick, Washington, Weld, and Yuma (15 counties). Population (1910), 394,503. _ GEORGE JOHN KINDEL, Democrat, of Denver, was born of German parents in Cincinnati, Ohio, March 2, 1855; education limited to parochial school and night high school; at 16 began a four years’ apprenticeship in upholstery and mattress making; in 1877 located in Denver; in 1878 established himself in the mattress and upholstery business, in which he has been engaged ever since; since 1892 has been in the courts contesting the discriminative freight and express rates; by this means was brought into politics. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNmES: Archuleta, Baca, Bent, Chaffee, Cheyenne, Clear, Creek, Conejos, ! Costilla, Crowley, Custer, Delta, Dolores, Douglas, Eagle, Elbert, E1 Paso, Fremont, Garfield, Gilpin, Grand, Gunnison, Hinsdale, Huerfano, Jackson, Kiowa, Kit Carson, La Plata, Las Animas, Lincoln, Mesa, Mineral, Moffat, Montezuma, Montrose, Otero, Ouray, Pitkin, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Blanco, Rio Grande, Routt, Saguache, San Juan, San Miguel, Summit, and Teller (47 counties). Population (1910), 404,521. HARRY HUNTER SELDOMRIDGE, Democrat, of Colorado Springs, was born. in Philadelphia, Pa., October 1, 1864; removed to Colorado Springs in February, 1878; graduated from Colorado College in 1885; was city editor of Colorado Springs Gazette from 1886 to 1888; entered the grain business in the fall of 1888, and has been engaged in the same business continuously; was elected president of the Colorado Grain Dealers’ Association in 1911 and reelected in 1912; has been actively identified with the Demo- cratic Party since 1885; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention in 1896; was elected to the State Senate of Colorado on November, 1896, and was reelected in 1900; served as member and president of charter convention of Colorado Springs, which framed the present charter under the commission form of government adopted May 11, 1909; received the honorary degree of master of arts from Colorado College in 1910; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 63,271 votes, to 40,990 for Mr. Ballreich, Republican, and 27,976 for Mr. McLain, Progressive. CONNECTICUT. (Population (1910), 1,114,756.) SENATORS. FRANK BOSWORTH BRANDEGEE, Republican, of New London; born in New London, Conn., July 8, 1864; graduated from Yale in 1885; admitted to the bar in 1888; elected a representative to the generdl assembly in 1888; for 10 years corpora- tion counsel of the city of New London; a delegate to the Republican national con- ventions of 1888, 1892, 1900, and 1904; speaker of the Connecticut House of Repre- sentatives in 1899; elected a Representative to the second session of the Fifty-seventh Congress in 1902; reelected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses; elected United States Senator May 9, 1905, and reelected January 20, 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. 14 Congressional Directory. CONNECTICUT 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 1885; member of the Connecticut Senate in 1886; was United States district attorney for Connecticut from 1892 to 1896; governor of Connecticut 1901-2; 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. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTy: Hartford. Population (1910), 250,182. AUGUSTINE LONERGAN, Democrat, of Hartford, Conn., was born in Thompson, Conn. He received his education in the schools of Rockville and Bridgeport, by private study at night, while employed days, and at Yale; admitted to the bar in 1901; practicing lawyer in Hartford; held municipal offices; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress. The Republican presidential electors received 205 more votes than the Democratic electors in the district. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Middlesex, New London, Tolland, and Windham (4 counties). Population (1910), 211,710. BRYAN FRANCIS MAHAN, Democrat, of New London, was born in New Lon- don May 1, 1856; was educated in the public schools and the Robert Bartlett High School; on graduating entered the law office of Judge Ralph Wheeler, where he studied for a time, and was graduated from the Albany Law School and admitted to the bar in 1881; in 1882-83 represented New London in the legislature; in 1903 was chosen mayor for three years, and in 1909 was again elected to that office; in 1910 was elected State senator in a strong Republican district by a majority of nearly 700; October, 1912, was elected mayor for the third time by a majority of 724; November, 1912, was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,061 votes, to 14,456 for H. S. King, Republican, and 4,548 for G. W. Davis, Progressive. He is married and has seven children—five boys and two girls. THIRD DISTRICT.—NEw HAVEN CoUNTY: Towns of Bethany, Branford, Cheshire, East Haven, Guilford, Hamden, Madison, Meriden, Milford, New Haven, North Branford, North Haven, Orange, Wallingford, and Woodbridge. Population (1910), 217,139. 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; engaged in the newspaper business for 30 years; mayor of Meriden from January, 1906, to April, 1912; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress by a plurality of 3,328. FOURTH DISTRICT.—County: Fairfield. Population (1910), 245,322. JEREMIAH DONOVAN, Democrat, was born in Ridgefield, Conn.; is 59 years of age; elected to the Sixty-third Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—LitcHFIELD CouNTY. NEW HAVEN COUNTY: Towns of Ansonia, Beacon Falls, Derby, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Prospect, Seymour, Southbury, Waterbury, and Wolcott. Population (1910), 190,403. WILLIAM KENNEDY, Democrat, of Naugatuck, was born in Naugatuck, Conn., December 19, 1854; admitted to the bar in 1879, and since has been engaged in the active practice of the law; in 1899 and 1901 was elected to the Connecticut State Senate; delegate to the following Democratic national conventions: Chicago, 1896; Kansas City, Mo., 1900; Denver, Colo., 1908; delegate at large to the Democratic national convention, Baltimore, Md., 1912; has served as a member of the board of education of Naugatuck for 12 years and attorney for the town and borough of Nauga- tuck for 20 years; was married to Mary H. Clerkin November, 1882, and has two daughters, Helen V. and Julia Z., and one son, Louis F.; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 12,073 votes, to 11,724 for Bradstreet, Republican, 4,807 for Hoadley, Progressive, 1,923 for Hull, Socialist, and 297 for Davidson, Prohibitionist. DELAWARE B ogra phacal. 15 DELAWARE. (Population (1910), 202,322.) SENATORS. HENRY ALGERNON pu PONT, Republican, of Winterthur, was born at the Eleutherean Mills, Newcastle County, Del., July 30, 1838; was educated at private schools; entered the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia in 1855, where he spent a year in the sophomore and junior classes, leaving the university to enter the United States Military Academy on July 1, 1856. He graduated at the head of his class May 6, 1861; was commissioned second lieutenant, Corps of Engineers, May 6, 1861; first lieutenant, Fifth Regiment 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 Light 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 Lynchburg 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, 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, 1865, 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 January 16, 1873, and of the post from July 28 to September 13, 1870, and July 15, 1871, to May 17, 1872. Was made brevet major, 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 Wilmington & 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 éntire Republican vote of the legislature, His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. WILLARD SAULSBURY, Democrat, of Wilmington, son of Willard Saulsbury (attorney general of Delaware, United States Senator 1859-1871, and chancellor of Delaware) and Annie Milby Ponder, his wife, was born at Georgetown, Del., April 17, 1861; married May du Pont, daughter of Victor du Pont, Esq., December 5, 1893; 16 Congressional Directory. FLORIDA educated in private schools and University of Virginia; admitted to bar 1882; asso- ciated with Victor du Pont, Esq., in practice of law at Wilmington, Del.; then senior : member of law firm of Saulsbury, Ponder & Curtis (now chancellor of Delaware); then Saulsbury, Ponder & Morris, now Saulsbury & Morris, in active practice; several times president of New Castle Bar Association, and has long been chairman of board of censors of that bar; director of the Union National Bank, Equitable Guarantee & Trust Co., and sundry business corporations; president Delaware Society Alumni, University of Virginia; vice president Delaware Anti-Tubefculosis Society; mem- ber of Sons of American Revolution, Colonial Wars; president Wilmington Club and vice president Wilmington Country Club; chairman Democratic executive com- mittee, New Castle County, 1892-1900; member of Democratic State committee 1892 to date; chairman of Democratic State committee 1900-1906; member of Demo- cratic congressional committee 1906, of Democratic national committee and its execu- tive committee 1908, of Democratic national committee and the Wilson campaign committee 1912; delegate at large to Democratic conventions at Chicago 1896 (chair- man of delegation), St. Louis 1904 (committee on resolutions), and Baltimore 1912; never held public office until elected United States Senator by unanimous Democratic vote in Delaware Legislature, January 29, 1913, but was Democratic caucus nominee for United States Senator for Delaware at sessions of 1899, 1901, 1903, 1905, 1907, and 1911, and received all Democratic (minority) votes on joint ballots. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 202,322. FRANKLIN BROCKSON, Democrat, of Clayton, was born August 6, 1865, on a farm, on which he was reared, in Blackbird Hundred, Newcastle County, Del., and has been a resident of that State all his life; is a son of the late James Brockson and Margaret Ann (Cornelius) Brockson; attended the public school in Blackbird Hundred; graduated from the Wilmington Conference Academy at Dover, Del., June 19, 1890; graduated from the law department of Washington and Lee University, at Lexington, Va., receiving the degree of LL. B. June 17, 1896; was clerk in a store, and a teacher and principal in the public schools; was admitted to the Delaware bar September 21, 1896, and is now a member of that bar; was a representative in the General Assembly of Delaware, 1908-1910, and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,481 votes, to 16,740 for George H. Hall, Republican, 5,497 for Hiram R. Burton, National Progressive, 2,825 for Louis A. Drexler, Progressive, 617 for John H. H. Kelly, Prohibitionist, and 563 for Edward Norton, Socialist. FLORIDA. (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 Jack- sonville 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 Jacksonville, 1893-1895 and 1901-1903; chairman board of public instruction, Duval County, 1900-1906; chairman Democratic State executive committee 1904-1907; was nomi- nated for United States Senator in primary election June 16, 1908, and unanimously elected by the legislature next convening. Heispresident of the Mississippi to Atlantic Inland Waterway Association and of the Southern Commercial Congress. 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; graduated at Emory College, Oxford, Ga., in 1893; studied law at Washington and Lee University, graduating in 1895; prac- ticed law at Jacksonville until his election to the Senate; chairman of the board of control of the Florida State institutions of higher education 1905-1909; 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. GEORGIA Biographical. 17 REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 752,619. CLAUDE I’ENGLE, Democrat, of Jacksonville, was born in that city in 1868; studied in the public schools of the State and is still trying to get an education; after 13 years in the mercantile business took up newspaper work in 1901; is editor of Dixie, published weekly; married Nannie Bradley, a Florida girl, in 1891, and they have five children; in the Democratic primaries of 1912 received the nomination for Congressman at large, beating five opponents and all the money the special inter- ests could use to defeat him; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by the usual Democratic majority. FIRST DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Citrus, De Soto, Hernando, Hillshoro, Lafayette, Lake, Lee, Levy, Manatee, Marion, Monroe, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, Sumter, and Taylor (16 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, where he remained 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 attor- ney for the sixth judicial circuit from 1878 to 1887; member of the Democratic con- gressional 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-fitth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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; elected to Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTties: Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Holmes, Jackson Jefferson, Leon, Liberty, Madison, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (14 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 225,089. EMMETT WILSON, Democrat, of Pensacola, was born at Belize, British Honduras, Central America, September 17, 1882, during the temporary residence of his parents there; in infancy parents located at Chipley, Fla.; educated in the public schools of - Florida and the Florida State College at Tallahassee, Fla. ; a railroad telegraph operator and stenographer; graduated May 24, 1904, law department, Stetson University, De Land, Fla., with the degree of bachelor of laws; admitted to the bar at the age of 21; practiced law at Marianna, Fla., as a partner of a senior brother, C. L. Wilson, after- wards going to Pensacola, Fla., September, 1906, to engage in the practice of law; appointed assistant United States attorney, northern district of Florida, February 1, 1907, and attorney for the same district October 7, 1907, holding the position until March, 1909; in June, 1911, appointed State’s attorney, first judicial circuit of Florida, which position he resigned January, 1913; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiv- ing 9,057 votes, to 489 for T. F. McGourin, Republican, 280 for John Thomas Porter, Progressive, and 659 for W. F. Lounsberry, Socialist. GEORGIA. (Population (1910), 2,609,121.) SENATORS. AUGUSTUS OCTAVIUS BACON, Democrat, of Macon, was born in Bryan County, Ga., October 20, 1839, the posthumous son of the Rev. Augustus O. Bacon and Mary Louisa Bacon, only daughter of Samuel Jones, all of Liberty County, Ga.; 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, receiving from the university successively the several degreesof A. B., B. L., A. M., and LL. D.; 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 Regi- ~ ment in the Army of Northern Virginia; subsequently thereto was commissioned as captain in the provisional army of the Confederate States and assigned to general stalf duty; at the close of the war resumed the study of law, and began practice in 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——3 18 Congressional Directory. GEORGIA 1866 at Macon, from which date until his election to the Senate he actively con- tinued the same, both in the State and Federal courts; was frequently a member of State Democratic conventions; was president of the State Democratic convention in 1880, and was delegate from the State at large to the Democratic national conven- tion in Chicago in 1884; in 1868 he was elected presidential elector (Seymour and Blair) on the Democratic ticket; in 1871 was elected to the Georgia House of Repre- sentatives, of which body he served as a member for 14 years; in this time, during two years he was the speaker pro tempore, and during eight years, with annual ses- sions, he was the speaker of the Georgia House of Representatives; was several times a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor of Georgia, and in the Demo- cratic State convention of 1883 he came within one vote of a nomination for governor, when the nomination was equivalent to an election. He is and for many years has been a trustee of the University of Georgia; is also one of the Regents of the Smith- sonian Institution, appointed from the Senate. He was elected by the Senate and served as President pro tempore of the Senate during a portion of the Sixty-second Congress. He also presided over the Senate during the impeachment trial of Judge Archbold, having been chosen for that duty by special order of the Senate. He was elected to the United States Senate in November, 1894, reelected in 1900, and again in 1907, having been, by a general State primary, unanimously renominated. In 1913 he was unanimously reelected in a general popular election in the State of Georgia, being the first Senator elected to the Senate of the United States by popu- lar vote under the terms of the seventeenth amendment to the Constitution. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. HOKE SMITH, Democrat, of Atlanta, was born September 2, 1855, in Newton, N. C.; was educated principally by his father, Dr. H. H. Smith, who was a professor in the University of North Carolina; read law while teaching school, and has been actively engaged in practice for 30 years; was married December 19, 1883, to Miss Birdie Cobb. He was Secretary of the Interior from March 4, 1893, to September 1, 1896. He was governor of Georgia from July, 1907, to July, 1909, and from July 1, 1911, to November 15, 1911. He was elected to the Senate July 12, 1911, and resigned as governor November 15, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Chatham, Effingham, Jenkins, Liberty, McIn- tosh, Screven, and Tattnall (10 counties). Population (1910), 219,752. CHARLES GORDON EDWARDS, Democrat, of Savannah, was born. in Tattnall County, Ga., July 2, 1878, the son of Hon. and Mrs. Thomas Jefferson Edwards, of Daisy, Ga.; educated in the county schools, Gordon Institute, Barnesville (Ga.) Agri- cultural 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; mar- ried Miss Ora Beach, daughter of the late Hon. and Mrs. W. W. Beach, of Waycross, Ga., December 17, 1902; was nominated October 11, 1906, by the Democrats and in the general election was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, and reelected to the Sixty- first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baker, Calhoun, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early, Grady, Miller, Mitchell, Tift, Thomas, and Worth (12 counties). Population (1910), 210,560. FRANK PARK, Democrat, of Sylvester, was born in Macon County, Ala., March 3, 1864; educated at Park High School, Tuskeegee, Ala., until 17 years of age’ re- moved to Georgia in 1881, and attended the University of Georgia; did not graduate, but afterwards received the degree of A. M.; located in Worth County, Ga., in 1896; elected judge of the Albany circuit in 1908 and 1912; chairman board of trustees of second congressional district agricultural college; elected to the Sixty-third Congress November 5 to fill the unexpired term of the late Seaborn A. Roddenbery. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Ben Hill, Clay, Crisp, Dooly, Lee, Macon, Quitman, Randolph, Schley, Stewart, Sumter, Taylor, Terrell, Turner, and Webster (15 counties). Population (1910), 204,740. CHARLES R. CRISP, Democrat, of Americus, Ga., was born October 19, 1870; was elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress to serve out the unexpired term of his father, the late Speaker Charles F. Crisp; from January, 1900, to March, 1911, was judge of the city court of Americus, resigning from the bench to accept the position of parlia- mentarian under Speaker Clark; was parliamentarian of the Democratic national convention at Baltimore; is married; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. GEORGIA Biographical. 19 FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carroll, Chattahoochee, Coweta, Harris, Heard, Marion, Meriwether, Muscogee, Talbot, and Troup (10 counties). Population (19109, 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 conferred 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 practice and devoted himself exclusively 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 presi- dential elector in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; and was renominated and reelected without opposition to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving all the votes cast in both the primary and the final election. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Campbell, Dekalb, Douglas, Fulton, and Rockdale (5 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 234,357. 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; was reelected in 1908 without opposition; married Miss Lucia Augusta du Vinage, of Texas, in 1905; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bibb, Butts, Clayton, Crawford, Fayette, Henry, Jasper, Jones, Monroe, Pike, Spalding, and Upson (12 counties). Population (1910), 222,024. : CHARLES LAFAYETTE BARTLETT, Democrat, of Macon, was born at Monti- cello, Jasper County, Ga., on January 31, 1853; removed from Monticello to Macon, Ga., in 1875, and has resided in Macon since then; was educated in the schools at Monticello, the University of Georgia, and the University of Virginia; graduated at the University of Georgia in August, 1870; studied law at the University of Virginia and was admitted to the bar in August, 1872; was appointed solicitor general (prosecuting attorney) for the Macon judicial court January 31, 1877, and served in that capacity until January 31, 1881; was elected to the House of Representatives of Georgia in 1882 and 1883, and again in 1884 and 1885, and to the State senate in 1888 and 1889, from the twenty-second senatorial district; was elected judge of the superior court of the Macon circuit January 1, 1893, and resigned that office May 1, 1894; was nomi- nated by the Democrats as a candidate for Congress, and was. elected to the Fifty- fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Floyd, Gordon, Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (3 counties). Population (1910), 223,543. GORDON LEE, Democrat, of Chickamauga, was born May 29, 1859, on a farm near Ringgold, Catoosa County, Ga.; received his primary education in the country schools; graduated from Emery College, Oxford, Ga., in 1880; is a farmer and manu- facturer; served as member of the house of representatives of the State legislature in 1894 and 1895, and in the senate in 1902, 1903, and 1904; was appointed by Gov. Atkinson as member of State memorial board; is a member of the National Forest Reservation Commission, created by the act of March 1, 1911; member of the Joint Committee on Federal Aid in the Construction of Post Roads; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected without opposition to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,990 votes. 20 Congressional Directory. GEORGIA © EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Clarke, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Madison, Morgan, Newton, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Putnam, Walton, and Wilkes (13 counties). Population (1910), 247,531. SAMUEL J. TRIBBLE, Democrat, of Athens, was reared in Franklin County, Ga., and is 44 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. ° NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 BELL, 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.; married Miss Mary Ella Winburn, of Gainesville, Ga., April 2, 1885; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without oppositon, receiving the combined vote of the district. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmTEs: Baldwin, Columbia, Glascock, Jeflerson, Hancock, Lincoln, McDuffie, Richmond, Taliaferro, Warren, Washington, and Wilkinson (12 counties). Population (1910), 212,722. : 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. ; ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTES: Appling, Berrien, Brooks, Camden, Charlton, Clinch, Coffee, Echols, gn Irwin, Jeff Davis, Lowndes, Pierce, Ware, and Wayne (15 counties). Population (1910), 208,462. JOHN RANDALL WALKER, Democrat, of Valdosta, Ga., was born 12 miles northeast of Blackshear, Pierce County, Ga., on February 23, 1874; attended public schools in country; was graduated from Jasper Normal College, Jasper, Fla., class 1895; received B. L. degree University of Georgia, 1898; moved to Valdosta, Ga., in 1900, where he has since practiced law; served in General Assembly of Georgia 1907-8; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress over Judge Thomas A. Parker, of Waycross, Ga., Democrat, by 24 to 12 votes in convention. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Bleckley, Dodge, Emanuel, Houston, Johnson, Laurens, Mont- gomery, Pulaski, Telfair, Toombs, Twiggs, Wheeler and Wilcox (13 counties). Population (1910), 208,463. : 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 L. Dennard, and has three children—two sons and one daughter; was elected State senator, serving one term; was elected president of the Georgia State Agricultural Society, serving four years, and president Georgia Fruit Growers’ Association eight years; was commissioner general of Georgia to the World’s Fair at St. Louis; for 20 years has been connected with the educational interests of his State, having been trustee of his home school and the Georgia Normal and Industrial College; now a trustee of the University of Georgia and a trustee of the Georgia State Agricultural College; 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, from the third district; was elected as the first Representative of the twelfth district without opposition. IDAHO Biographical. 21 IDAHO. (Population (1910), 325,594.) SENATORS. 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; reelected January 14, 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. : JAMES H. BRADY, Republican, of Pocatello, Idaho; born in Indiana County, Pa., 1862; when a child moved to Kansas; educated in public schools and Leaven- worth Normal College; taught school three years; edited a newspaper two years; then engaged in real estate business; moved to Idaho in 1895, where he has been exten- sively engaged in the development of irrigation projects and farming; honorary member of the Grand Army of the Republic, Department of Idaho; honorary member of Kansas Historical Society; trustee Whitman College, Walla Walla, Wash.; presi- dent of the Trans-Mississippi Commercial Congress; vice president National Irri- gation Congress 1904-1906; chairman advisory board, National Council Woman Voters; chairman Republican State central committee of Idaho from 1904 to 1908; delegate to Republican national convention in 1900 and also in 1908, when he was chair- man of delegation and member of committee selected by convention to notify Presi- dent of nomination; nominated by acclamation for governor and elected November 3, 1908; was elected to the United States Senate January 24, 1913, to fill the un- expired term of the late Weldon B. Heyburn. Term expires March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1510), 325,594. BURTON LEE FRENCH, Republican, of Moscow, was born near Delphi, Ind., August 1, 1875; moved with his parents, Charles A. and Mina P. (Fischer) French, to Kearney, Nebr., in 1880, and moved to Idaho in 1882; was graduated from the Uni- versity of Idaho in 1901 with the degree of A. B., and was fellow in the University of Chicago in 1901-1903, graduating with the degree of Ph. M.; married Winifred Hartley, June 28, 1904; is an attorney at law; was member of the fifth and sixth sessions of the Idaho Legislature, and in the latter session was the Republican nom- inee for speaker; was a member of the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 53,342 votes, to 30,178 for the opposing candidate receiving the largest vote. : ADDISON T. SMITH, Republican, of Twin Falls, Idaho, was born and reared on a farm near Cambridge, Ohio, and received his preliminary education in the public schools; was graduated from the Cambridge High School, the Iron City Commercial College of Pittsburgh, Pa., the law department of the George Washington University, with the degree of LL. B., and the National Law School of Washington, D. C., with the degree of LL. M.; is a meniber of the bar of the Supreme Court of Idaho, the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, and the Supreme Court of the United States; was appointed secretary to the late Senator Shoup on his election to the Senate when the State was admitted into the Union, and later occupied a similar position with the late Senator Heyburn; was register of the United States land office at Boise, Idaho; was married December 24, 1889, to Miss Mary A. Fairchild, and they have two sons living; was nominated at the primary election held July 30, 1912, over three competitors; and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 13,393, receiving 43,571 votes, ag against 30,178 for E. M. Pugmire, Democrat, 12,066 for P. Monroe Smock, Progressive, and 11,389 for E. L. Biggs, Socialist. 22 Congressional Directory. ILLINOIS ILLINOIS. (Population (1910), 5,638,591.) SENATORS. JAS. HAMILTON LEWIS, Democrat, of Chicago, was born in Virginia; is 46 years of age; reared and schooled in Georgia; attended the University of Virginia; went to the State of Washington and began the practice of law; married Miss Rose Lawton Douglas, of Georgia; was member of the upper house of the Legislature of Washington; Democratic Congressman at large for the State of Washington; was presented by the Northwestern Pacific Coast States as candidate for the Vice Presi- dency in the Democratic convention of 1900; officer Spanish-American War, serving respectively upon the staffs of Gen, Brooke in Cuba and Gen. Frederick D. Grant in Porto Rico; subsequently accredited to the commission settling the disputes between England and America on the Alaska boundary, and general disputive ques- tions during the years 1889 and 1890, the commission assembling at Washington, D. C., and London, England; moved to the city of Chicago, resuming the practice of law; was chosen corporation counsel of Chicago in 1905; candidate for governor 1908; defeated; joint author with Prof. A. H. Putney of Laws and Decisions upon Elec- tions; also Lewis & Putney on Constitutions, Statutes, and their Construction; author of The Two Great Republics, Rome and United States; late lecturer law department Northwestern University, Illinois; president and lecturer Webster College of Law, Chicago; member Geographical and Historical Society, Paris, France, and Academy of Sciences, Philadelphia; held incidental offices in general forms of trust ordinarily reposed from time to time in the ordinary citizen; unanimous nominee by the pri- mary vote at large for United States Senator (Democrat) in 1912, and elected to the United States Senate by the legislature in March, 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. LAWRENCE Y. SHERMAN, Republican, of Springfield, Ill., was born in Miami County, Ohio, November 8, 1858; raised on farm; educated in common district schools of Jasper County, Lee’s Academy, Coles County, and McKendree College, Lebanon, I11.; married Ella M. Crews 1891, who died 1893; no children; married Estelle Spitler 1908, who died 1910, leaving Virginia Sherman, an only child, now aged 4 years; occupation, lawyer; member Illinois General Assembly 1897-1905; speaker 1899-1903; lieutenant governor and president of the State senate 1905-1909; president State board of administration having control of all public charities of State at time of election to the United States Senate, March 26, 1913, for the term expiring March 3, 1915. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 5,638,591. LAWRENCE B. STRINGER, Democrat, of Lincoln, was born in New Jersey February 24, 1866; removed to Illinois when 10 years of age; is a graduate of Lincoln College of the James Millikin University with degree of A. B., and of the Chicago- Kent College of Law, and received the degree of LL. B. from Lake Forest University; is a lawyer by profession; was married in 1890 to Helen Pegram; was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives when 23 years of age and served two terms; was elected to the Illinois State Senate in 1900, being chosen minority leader of that body; was the Democratic nominee for governor of Illinois in 1904; was presiding judge of the Illinois State court of claims from 1905 to 1912 by appointment of the governor; carried every county in Illinois in the Democratic primaries of 1908 as candidate for United States Senator, being defeated, after a five months’ legislative deadlock, by the election of William Lorimer; was nominated for Congressman at large at the Democratic primaries in April of 1912 by a plurality of 60,068, and elected in November following, receiving 415,386 votes, to 313,608 for William E. Mason, Republican, and 311,311 for Lawrence P. Boyle, Progressive. WILLIAM ELZA WILLIAMS, Democrat, of Pittsfield, was born near Detroit, Pike County, I1l., May 5, 1857; was educated in the public schools and at Illinois College, Jacksonville; was a schoolmate in college of William J. Bryan and a mem- ber of the same literary society; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1880; ILLINOIS Biographical. © 23 located at Pittsfield, and has followed the practice of law exclusively; was twice elected State’s attorney, and served in that capacity from 1886 to 1892; was elected to Congress from the sixteenth Illinois district in 1898; became trial lawyer for the City Railway Co. of Chicago in 1903; quit the service of that company and resumed the general practice in 1905; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention at Denver in 1908, and seconded the nomination of Mr. Bryan on behalf of the Illi- nois delegation; has held such minor offices as alderman, member of school board, chairman Democratic county committee, secretary, etc.; married Margaret Gallaher, of Pittsfield, and has one child, a married daughter; was a Member of the Fifty-sixth Congress, and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress from the State at large by a plurality of over 100,000. FIRST DISTRICT.—CIrY oF CHICAGO: First and second wards, third ward north of Forty-third Street, and that part of the fourth ward east of Halsted 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth wards; part of the third 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; was elected to the Fifty-fifth and each succeeding Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—Cook County: Towns of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Lemont, 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. GEORGE E. GORMAN, Democrat, of Chicago; born April 13, 1873; is a lawyer by profession; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 16,285 votes, to 14,133 for William W. Wilson, Republican, 13,039 for Franklin P. Simon, Progressive, 5,123 for George H. Gibson, Socialist, and 502 for George H. Deitz, Prohibitionist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or CHICAGO: Fifth ward; part of the third ward west of Stewart Avenue; part of the fourth ward west of Halsted Street; part of the eleventh and twelfth wards south of Twenty- second Pra 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; married Miss Nellie Fleming, of Chicago; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : FIFTH DISTRICT.—CitYy 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 grammar and high school; emigrated to the United States in 1881, locating at Chicago, IIL; 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; judge and magistrate of municipal court from 1895 to 1907; chairman of the central and executive committees of the Democratic Party; member of Iroquois, Standard, and Press Clubs, Masons, Elks, Knights of Pythias, Royal League, Modern Woodmen, and other fraternal societies: was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving more votes than the combined total of those cast for all other candidates. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CooE County: Towns of Cicero, Lyons, Proviso, Riverside, and Stickney. City oF CHICAGO: Thirteenth, twentieth, and thirty-fourth wards; part of the thirty-fifth ward south of the Chicago & North Western Railway right of way. Population (1910), 283,148. JAMES McANDREWS, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; served in the Fifty-seventh and Fifty-eighth Congresses; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 94 - ; Congressional Directory. ILLINOIS SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Cook County: Towns of Barrington, Elkgrove, Hanover, Leyden, Maine, Norwood Park, Palatine, Schaumberg, and Wheeling. City or 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 & 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 a bridge builder and structural iron worker; became president of the Bridge and Structural Iron Workers’ Local Union No. 1, at Chicago, in 1898; served as president for several terms, and was elected international president of the Bridge and Structural Iron Workers’ Union in September, 1901; 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 years; previous to his election to Congress was working at the structural iron trade as inspector and foreman; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and-reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiv- ing 19,452 votes, to 18,816 for E. C. Armitage, Progressive, 15,265 for Niels Juul, Republican, and 15,043 for Otto Christensen, Socialist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—City 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; is a director of the Wendell State Bank; married 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 a member of the executive committee of that body; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—City or 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), 187,013. FRED A. BRITTEN, Republican, of Chicago, was born in that city November 18, 1871; was educated in the public schools and business college of San Francisco; has been in the general building construction business, doing work in different parts of the United States, since 1894; represented the twenty-third ward in the Chicago City Council from 1908 to 1912; is credited with being the only Republican in the United States to succeed in defeating a sitting Congressman for election to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 11,650 votes, to 10,202 votes for Lynden Evans, Democrat, 7,566 for C. O. Ludlow, Progressive, and 3,964 for Frank S. Schifflersmith, Socialist. TENTH DISTRICT.—Cook 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 Se part of the twenty-fifth ward north of Graceland Avenue. LAKE COUNTY. Population (1910), CHARLES M. THOMSON, Progressive, of Chicago, was born at Chicago February 13, 1877; was educated in the public schools and the Chicago Manual Training School; was graduated from Washington and Jefferson College in 1899 with the degree of bache- lor of arts, and received the degree of master of arts from the same college three years later; was graduated from the Northwestern University Law School in 1902 with the degree of bachelor of laws, and began the practice of his profession in the same year; is a member of the law firm of Gardner, Carton & Thomson, of Chicago; married Miss Besse Holbrook in 1905, and they have one child; was elected to the Chicago city council from the twenty-fifth ward in 1908 and 1910, and reelected in April, 1912; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 21,028 votes, to 17,325 for George E. Foss, Republican, and 15,515 for Frank L. Fowler, Democrat. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Dupage, Kane, McHenry, and Will (4 counties). Population (1910), 242,174. IRA CLIFTON COPLEY, of Aurora, was nominated and elected as a Progressive Republican in 1910; was renominated as a Progressive Republican in 1912, and elected by Progressive votes that same year; he was born in Knox County, IIl., October 25, 1864; his family removed to Aurora in 1867; graduated from West Aurora High School in 1881; prepared for college at Jennings Seminary, Aurora, and graduated 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 25,750 votes, to 14,330 for Thomas H. Riley, Democrat, 876 for William P. Lea, Prohibitionist, and 1,167 for P. H. Murray, Socialist. ILLINOIS B ogra phical. ; 25 TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Dekalb, Grundy, Kendall, Lasalle, and Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1910), 237,162. " WILLIAM HENRY HINEBAUGH, Progressive, of Ottawa, Ill., was born on a farm in Calhoun County, Mich., December 16, 1867; was educated in the school of “hard knocks,” having had some little training in the Litchfield High School and at the State Normal School at Ypsilanti, Mich.; admitted to the bar May 17, 1893, in Lasalle County, I1l.; was married December 20, 1894, to Alice E. Hoover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James M. Hoover, of Buffalo, N. Y.; was appointed assistant State’s attorney of Lasalle County in December, 1900; in December, 1902, was elected judge of the county court of Lasalle County, and has been twice reelected; was elected president of the State association of county judges of Illinois in 1908, serving two years; has been a lifelong Republican; was elected and reelected chairman of the Republican county central committee, and resigned in July, 1912, to join the Progressive Party; was nominated by that party as a candidate for the Sixty-third Congress and was elected, receiving 18,312 votes, to 16,788 for Charles Fuller, Republican, and 12,615 for Jacob Rauch, Democrat. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmEs: Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside (6 counties). Population (1910), 167,634. JOHN CHARLES McKENZIE, Republican, of Elizabeth, Ill., 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 a 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 and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTES: Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Isiand, and Warren (6 counties). Population (1910), 180,689. CLYDE H. TAVENNER, Democrat, of Cordova, Ill., was born at Cordova Feb- ruary 4, 1882, the son of John KE. and Lucinda Tavenner; when 13 years old started to work in a country newspaper office, setting type ‘‘at the case” steadily for four years; then took up editorial end of newspaper work on large city dailies; desiring to be wholly free to write his own views of questions affecting the welfare of the people, without being hampered by the particular policy of any one newspaper, he began in 1908, at the suggestion and with the help of his mother, to write a daily signed article from Washington; these letters were so independent and original in character that at first no editor would publish them; notwithstanding this he continued to write a letter every day for 1,825 days, or five years; 70 daily newspapers throughout the United States are now printing this daily Washington letter; more than 2,000 country weeklies are regularly publishing his weekly letter of Vital Washington News; in 1909 he went abroad and wrote a series of 100 letters on the tariff systems of England, France, Germany, and Italy; director of publicity for the Democratic national congressional committee in the campaigns of 1910 and 1912; married, July 11, 1912, to Miss Isabel E. Martin, Washington, D. C.; has one daughter, Isabel Lucinda; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, running 2,000 ahead of the national ticket, and receiving 17,024 votes, to 15,816 for Judge Charles J. Searle, Republican. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Fulton, Henry, Knox, and Schuyler (5 counties). Population (1910), 216,884. STEPHEN A. HOXWORTH, Democrat, of Rapatee, was born May 1, 1860, on a farm near Maquon, Knox County, Ill.; was educated in the public schools of his native town; in 1880 went to Blue Springs, Nebr., remaining there five years, during which time he was identified with the banking, grain, and implement businesses; was a member of the Nebraska State Militia; was married to Miss Emma BE. Wilson in 1885, returning the same year to his former home in Illinois, where he has since been actively engaged in farming; has a family of five children, two sons and three daughters; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 17,156 votes, to 15,173 for Charles F. Kincheloe, Progressive, 12,008 for George W. Prince, Republican, 2,642 for John C. Sjodin, Socialist, and 912 for Paul D. Ransom, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—-CouNmIES: 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 26 Congressional Directory. ILLINOIS 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; while county superintendent of schools he studied law, was admitted to the bar, and formed a partnership with Judge L. O. Eagleton for the practice of the profession under the firm name of Eagleton & Stone; was mar- ried in 1902 to Miss Genevieve C. Francis; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—-CouNTiES: Ford, Livingston, Logan, McLean, and Woodford (5 counties). Population (1910), 176,291. LOUIS FITZHENRY, Democrat, of Bloomington, was born in Bloomington, I11., June 13, 1870; was educated in the public schools of that city and attended Illinois Wesleyan University; entered journalism at an early age, and has had considerable experience both in the business and editorial departments; was admitted to the bar of Illinois in 1897, and immediately entered into active practice in the State and Federal courts; was elected city attorney of Bloomington, a strong Republican city, in 1907, and reelected in 1909; was a member of the Democratic State central committee for several years; in 1909 married Lottie B. Rankin, and they have one child, an infant daughter; is president of the Bloomington Alumni Club, Phi Delta Theta, and is a member of the leading fraternal societies and prominent in Masonic and Knights of Pythias work; was a candidate for Congress against Hon. John A. Sterling in 1910, in the district which the latter had carried by 8,000, and was defeated, but reduced his opponent’s majority to 2,300; in 1912 was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,966 votes, to 13,572 for John A. Sterling, Republican, and 9,266 for George E. Stump, Progressive. ; EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Clark, Cumberland, Edgar, Iroquois, Kankakee, and Ver- milion (6 counties). Population (1910), 219,425. . FRANK T. O'HAIR, Democrat, of Paris, was born on a farm in Edgar County, near Paris, on Mareh 12, 1870; attended the common schools in the country, and thereafter attended the College of Liberal Arts and Law School at De Pauw University, in Green- castle, Ind., for seven years; lawyer; never held any political office; married Miss Ruth Harding Huston in 1905, and they have one child, Ruth Frances; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,485 votes, to 18,707 for Joseph G. Cannon, Repub- lican, 9,511 for E. H. Royse, Progressive, 1,279 for Clay F. Gaumer, Prohibitionist, and 1,132 for John H. Walker, Socialist. : NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Champaign, Coles, Dewitt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie, Piatt, and Shelby ¢8 counties). Population (1910), 241,728. CHARLES MARTIN BORCHERS, Democrat, of Decatur, Macon County, Ill, was born at Lockville, Fairfield County, Ohio, November 18, 1869; received a common- school education and taught in the common schools of Macon County, Ill., for seven years; read law in the office of Albert G. Webber, Decatur, I11., and was admitted to practice February 23, 1897; remained in the office until February 4, 1898, when he commenced to practice for himself, and has since followed the practice of law; was married June 28, 1905, to Alice Bowman; have three children, Albert Webber Borchers, age 6, Lois F'. Borchers, age 4, and Helen G. Borchers, age 2; was elected and served as mayor of the city of Decatur from May, 1909, to May, 1911; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,166 votes, to 20,643 for William B. McKinley, Republican, 10,755 for John H. Chadwick, Progressive, 834 for C. E. Peebles, Socialist, and 791 for Thomas C. Eiler, Prohibitionist. . 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 degree of 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, JI. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 21,203 votes, to 9,478 for E. E. Brase, Republican, 7,007 for B. O. Aylesworth, Progressive, 785 for Jesse Morgan, Socialist, 4 701 for Charles Corson, Progressive. ILLINOIS : B ogra phical. 27 TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon (4 counties). Population (1910), 211,614. - JAMES M. GRAHAM, Democrat, of Springfield, is a lawyer by profession. 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 elected to the Sixty-second Congress; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 21,361 votes, to 13,556 for H. Clay Wilson, Republican, 7,286 for Robert Johns, Progressive, 2,554 for Herman Rahm, Socialist, and 849 for Lewis F. Denton, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bond, Madison, Monroe, St. Clair, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1910), 259,059. WILLIAM N. BALTZ, Democrat, of Millstadt, was born in Millstadt, Ill., Febru- ary 5, 1860; parents were Philip Baltz and Henrietta Baltz (née Rodemich); attended the public schools of Millstadt; worked on his father’s farm after he finished the course at the public schools; married Catherine Diesel August 2, 1883; cultivated his farm to the time of his election to Congress; took an active part in the Millstadt Lyceum, an institution of great educational value to the community; served on the county board of supervisors for 16 years and was its presiding officer for three years; served as president of the board of education of Millstadt for five years; always took an active part in politics and served as a member of the Democratic county central committee for many years; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 23,112 votes, to 19,438 for William A. Rodenberg, Republican, 5,608 for Utten S. Nixon, Progressive, 4,276 for William C. Pierce, Socialist, and 705 for Andrew J. Meek, Prohibitionist. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jeffers 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 Eureka College at Eureka, Ill.; began the study of medicine in the Eclectic Medical Institute at Cincinnati, Ohio, graduating in 1882, also graduating from the Hahnemann Medical College at Chicago, Ill., in 1894, and began the practice of medicine in Olney, Ill. in 1882; was member of the board of United States examining surgeons from 1885 to 1889 and from 1893 to 1897. He was elected mayor of Olney in 1895 and again in 1902. He is married. He was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 26,938 votes, to 12,837 votes for Robert B. Clark, Republican, 9,116 votes for George W. Jones, Pro- gressive, 1,411 votes for J. L. McKittrick, Socialist, and 1,109 votes for J. W. Honey, Prohibition. TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clay, Edwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Johnson, Massac, Pope, Saline, Wayne, and White (11 counties). Population (1910), 187,279. H. ROBERT FOWLER, Democrat, of Elizabethtown, Ill.; born in Pope County, I11.; graduate of the Old Normal School of Normal, I1l., and the law department of the University of Michigan, degree of LL. B.; is a lawyer with a love for personal- injury practice, never taking sides with corporations against labor; married Mary E. Griffith, daughter of James M. Griffith, a Mexican War soldier; has one child, Marion O’Robbie Fowler; has been a public servant for four years as State’s attorney of Hardin County, Ill., two years in the lower house and four years in the upper house of the Legislature of Illinois, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNmEs: Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph, Union, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1910), 217,639. y ROBERT POTTER HILL, Democrat, of Marion, was born in April, 1874, on a farm near Ewing, Franklin County, Ill., and resided there until August, 1896, when he went to the adjoining county of Williamson, where he has since resided; was edu- cated in the public school and college; in 1889 went to Ewing College during the winter term; taught in public schools of Franklin County in fall and winter of 1891-92 and 1892-93; reentered college and remained there until June, 1896, when he gradu- ated, receiving the degree of bachelor of science; commenced reading law in law office in 1901; was admitted to the bar of Illinois in June, 1904, and has practiced in Marion since that time; was elected justice of the peace in 1899; elected police magistrate 28 Congressional Directory. INDIANA of the city of Marion in 1903; in 1907 was elected city attorney of Marion, and in November, 1909, was elected to the Forty-seventh General Assembly of Illinois; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,992 votes, to 16,706 for N. B. Thistlewood, Republican, 859 for Charles F. Stalker, Prohibitionist, 2,063 for Paul H. Castle, Socialist, and 6,545 for Robert T. Cook, Progressive. INDIANA. (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, class of 1869; by profession, a lawyer, practicing at Kokomo, Ind., until 1885, since that time at Indianapolis; 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 1893-94; Democratic can- didate for governor in 1900 and 1904; Democratic candidate for Vice President in 1908; is married and has three children; was nominated 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 90 votes, as against 60 votes | - received by Albert J. Beveridge, the Republican candidate. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Gibson, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburg, and Warrick (6 counties). Population (1910), 191,516. CHARLES LIEB, Democrat, of Rockport, came from IFlehingen, Germany, where his parents lived and where he was born May 20, 1852, and has since continuously resided at Rockport, Ind.; in his youth he attended the public schools, the Rockport Collegiate Institute, and graduated, as an accountant, from Bryant & Stratton’s Business College at Louisville, Ky.; was married in 1877 to Miss Katherine Mohr and has one daughter, Mrs. Archibald C. Stevenson; has always been in business at Rock- port, having been a manufacturer of hardwood lumber, a dealer in lumber and logs, and a contractor; is president of the Farmers’ Bank at Rockport, general superin- tendent of the Rockport Fair Association, and a stockholder and director in numerous | other enterprises; has been a lifelong Democrat, and began his political career by serving several terms in the city council at Rockport; was postmaster at that place during Cleveland’s administration, and served in the Indiana General Assembly during the session of 1907, the special session of 1908, and the session of 1911, being Democratic caucus chairman of the latter body, and was a member of the legislature at the time of his election to Congress; was unanimously accorded the congressional nomination, and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20,014 votes, to 13,158 for D. H. Ortmeyer, Republican, 6,022 for H. C. Heldt, Progressive, 3,737 for W. H. Rainey, Socialist, and 910 for George E. Flannigan, Prohibitionist. INDIANA B 109ra phical. 29 SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Daviess, Greene, Knox, Martin, Morgan, Monroe, Owen, and Sul- livan (8 counties). Population (1910), 207,853. © 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 1900 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—Counties: Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Lawrence, Orange, Perry, Scott, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1910), 204,348. ; WILLIAM ELIJAH COX, Democrat, of Jasper, was born in Dubois County, Ind., September 6, 1865; is a graduate of the Lebanon University, of Lebanon, Tenn., and of the law department of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; is an attorney at law, admitted as such on the 10th 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : : : - FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bartholomew, Brown, Dearborn, Decatur, Jackson, Jefferson, Jennings, Johnson, Ohio, Ripley, and Switzerland (11 counties). Population (1910), 186,479. LINCOLN DIXON, Democrat, of North Vernon, born at Vernon, Ind., February 9, 1860; graduated at the Indiana State University in 1880; elected prosecuting at- torney in 1884; reelected in 1886, 1888, and 1890; married in 1884; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Counmms: Clay, Hendricks, Parke, Putnam, Vermilion, and Vigo (6 counties). Population (1910), 202,904. 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 Sten to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third ongress. ; SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounmiEs: Fayette, Franklin, Hancock, Henry, Rush, Shelby, Union, and Wayne (8 counties). Population (1910), 175,706. FINLY H. GRAY, Democrat, of Connersville, born July 24, 1864, in Fayette County, Ind.; common-school education; lawyer; married to Miss Alice M. Green in 1901; one child, Mary Gray, 10 years of age; elected mayor of Connersville in 1904 and 1n 1909; elected to the Sixty-second Congress in 1910, and returned to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 19,987 votes, to 11,242 for William L. Risk, Republican, 10,797 for Girsluf Jansen, Progressive, 1,378 for Mercer Brown, Prohibitionist, and 2,129 for T. T. Vanvorhis, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNtY: Marion. Population (1910), 263,661. CHARLES ALEXANDER KORBLY, 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 and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 28,901 votes, to 13,320 for Thomas R. Shipp, Republican, 18,402 for Joseph V. Zartman, Bull Moose, 5,501 for Frank J. Hayes, Socialist, and 1,387 for Albert Stanley, Prohibitionist. 30 | Congressional Directory. INDIANA EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Delaware, Jay, Madison, Randolph, and Wells (6 counties). 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, 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 1891, and has one child, Herbert J. Adair, aged 20 _ years; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1895; was elected representative to the General Assembly of Indiana in 1902; was elected president of the First National Bank of Portland in 1904, since which time he has given his attention to the banking and manufacturing business; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 23,530 votes, to 13,157 for E. C. Toner, Progressive, 8,298 for Isaac P. Watts, Republican, 2,033 for J. Walter Gibson, Prohibitionist, and 3,611 for Hunter McDonald, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Boone, Carroll, Clinton, Fountain, Hamilton, Howard, Montgomery, 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; was gradu- ated from its high school in June, 1878; graduated from Butler College 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 College, in June, 1887, received the degree of master of arts; has been engaged in the practice of law since 1886; served two terms as county attorney and one term as a member of the school board of the city of Frankfort; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Jasper, Lake, Newton, Porter, Tippecanoe, Warren, and White (8 counties). Population (1910), 208,204. ; JOHN B. PETERSON, Democrat, of Crown Point, was born in Lake County, Ind., July 4, 1851; was admitted to the bar at Crown Point, Ind., in 1870 and has continuously since that time practiced law; is president of the Commercial Bank of Crown Point, Ind., and of the First Calumet Trust & Savings Bank of East Chicago, Ind.; family consists of wife; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Blackford, Cass, Grant, Huntington, Miami, Pulaski, and Wabash (7 counties). Population (1910), 202,184. 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: Allen, Dekalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, and Whitley (6 coun- ties). 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; began the practice of law, continuing in the practice to this time. 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress. : THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Elkhart, Fulton, Kosciusko, Marshall, Laporte, St. Joseph, and Starke (7 counties). Population (1910), 258,674. HENRY A. BARNHART, Democrat, of Rochester, was born at Twelve Mile, Ind., September 11, 1858, the son of a German Baptist minister. After finishing his education he was elected county surveyor, and a year later purchased the Rochester Sentinel, of which he is still owner. He has been president of the Rochester Tele- phone Co.; president of the National Telephone Association; director of the Indiana State reformatory; and trustee of the State hospital for the insane. He was elected to fill a vacancy in the Sixtieth Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-first, Sixty- second, and Sixty-third Congresses. I0WA | | Biographical. 31 IOWA. (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 LL. D. upon him, and Cornell College, Iowa, that of LL. D.; is a lawyer by profession, and married; was a member of the House of Representatives of the Twenty-second General Assembly of Iowa; a member of the Republican national committee from 1896 to 1900, and governor of Iowa from January, 1902, until elected, November 24, 1908, to fill 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, Towa, and law school of the State University of Iowa. He was elected to the United States Senate April 12, 1911, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Jonathan P. Dolliver, and took his seat April 24, 1911; was elected January 22, 1913, for the term begin- ning March 4, 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Des Moines, Henry, Jefferson, Lee, Louisa, Van Buren, and Washington (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, when 21 years of age, he was elected mayor of his native town, and served for four terms. In 1903 he was elected a member of the Iowa Legislature, and served in the Thirtieth and Thirty-first General Assemblies; is a horticulturist, being a member of the firm of Kennedy Bros., nurserymen; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—Countims: Clinton, Towa, Jackson, Johnson, Muscatine, and Scott (6 counties). Population (1910), 200,480. IRVIN S. PEPPER, Democrat, of Muscatine, Iowa; taught school; studied law; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Blackhawk, Bremer, Buchanan, Butler, Delaware, Dubuque, Franklin, Hardin, and Wright (9 counties). Population (1910), 226,565. MAURICE CONNOLLY, Democrat, of Dubuque, was born in Dubuque, Iowa; was graduated with the degree of A. B., 1897, at Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y., received the degree of L. B. cum laude at the New York Law School 1898; admitted to the bar of Iowa in 1899, at the age of 21; took postgraduate course at Balliol College, Oxford University, England, and at the University of Heidelberg, Germany; is president of Connolly Manufacturing Co., vice president of the Dubuque Fire & Marine Insurance Co., and a director in the Towa Trust & Savings Bank and other institutions; has been president of the convention of the Carriage Builders’ National Association, the college fraternity of 4 K E, and the Towa State association, Benevo- lent Protective Order of Elks; is the first Democrat and the first native-born and youngest man to represent the ‘‘monkey-wrench” district; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress to succeed the Hon. Charles E. Pickett, Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Allamakee, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Fayette, 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 bank- Ing; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 32 Congressional Directory. 10WA 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, in Linn County, lowa; graduated from Coe College, Cedar Rapids, in 1892, receiving the degree of bachelor of sciences; graduated from the University of Michi- gan in 1893, receiving the degree of bachelor of laws; is a lawyer by profession; was married to Lucy Deacon October 4, 1894; never 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Davis, Jasper, Keokuk, Mahaska, Monroe, Poweshiek, and Wapello (7 counties). Population (1910), 174,130. SANFORD KIRKPATRICK, Democrat, of Ottumwa, Iowa; born in Madison County, Ohio, February 11, 1842; emigrated with his parents in 1849 to Wapello County, Iowa; educated in the common schools of the county, and grew up on a farm; at the age of 19 entered the Union Army, Company K, Second Iowa Infantry; served four years and four months, and participated in nearly all the principal battles of the West and South, being promoted from the ranks to the office of first lieutenant; interested in coal mines and mining, and at present is largely interested in agriculture; commencing in 1876, was engaged 10 years in merchandise business; served 27 consecutive years in the Internal-Revenue Service, four years of which he was assigned to the examination of banks and other corporations; visited 41 States and Territories, and for more than two decades has waged a war against crime and criminals; is married; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,908 votes, to 13,796 for Milton A McCord, Republican, 4,350 for John H. Patton, Progressive, and 2,006 for Engle, Socialist. ; 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 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; graduated from the Central University of Iowa 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 Iowa in 1879; was elected district judge of Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa, in 1890; married Ida E. Warren, daughter of Hon. R. B. Warren, in 158 was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third ongress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Adams, Appanoose, Clarke, Decatur, Fremont, Lucas, Page, Ringgold, Taylor, Union, and Wayne (11 counties). Population (1910), 181,885. HORACE MANN TOWNER, Republican, of Corning, was born in Illinois; pro- fession, lawyer; judge of third district of Iowa; lecturer constitutional law State University of Iowa; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Adair, Audubon, Cass, Guthrie, Harrison, Mills, Montgomery, Potta- wattamie, and Shelby (9 counties). Population (1910), 191,473. WILLIAM R. GREEN, Republican, of Audubon, Towa, was born at Colchester, Conn. ; graduated at Oberlin College, Ohio, in 1879, in the classical course. He was admitted to the bar in Illinois in 1882, and shortly afterwards began the practice of law in Towa. In 1894 he was elected one of the judges of the fifteenth judicial dis- trict of Iowa, and was reelected four times thereafter. On June 5, 1911, he was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and resigned his position as judge. He was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving more than double his former majority. TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmet, Greene, Hamilton, Han- cock, Humboldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, and Winnebago (14 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 252,035. FRANK P. WOODS, Republican, of Estherville, was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. KANSAS Biographical. 33 ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, Monona, O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury (13 counties). Population (1910), 254,944. GEORGE CROMWELL SCOTT, Republican, of Sioux City, Iowa, was born in Monroe County, N. Y., August 8, 1864; moved to Iowa in 1880; has common and high school education; was admitted to the bar December 7, 1887; moved to Le Mars, Plymouth County, Iowa, January, 1888, and engaged in the practice of law; was married June 14, 1888, to Laura Trimble, of Adel, Towa. November, 1901, formed a law partnership with William Milchrist, of Sioux City, under the firm name of Mil- christ & Scott, and removed there the following year; that partnership is still in existence. He was nominated by the Republican congressional convention July 28, 1912, to succeed the late Hon. E. H. Hubbard, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. KANSAS. (Population (1910), 1,690,949.) SENATORS. 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 Republican at Salina, Kans., which he edited for five years. In 1894 he was elected secretary 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, (Kans.) 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 Department; in 1903 purchased the Salina Daily Journal, which he still owns; in 1905 was appointed by President Roosevelt as special commissioner of the Panama Railroad, in which capacity he filed two 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. WILLIAM HOWARD THOMPSON, Democrat, of Garden City, was born in Crawfordsville, Ind., October 14, 1871; removed to Kansas in 1880, settling in Nemaha, County; he isa disciple of the new school of politics and is classed as a progressive Democrat; has been identified with Kansas for over 33 years, and has been very active in the affairs of the State from early manhood to the present time; is the author of a number of legal articles on judicial reform; was elected district judge at the age of 34 years, which position he filled until elected Senator, and is the only Democrat ever elected judge in his district; for United States Senator he received the largest popular vote ever given any Democrat in Kansas, leading the State and pational tickets, and received the largest vote in the legislature ever given any Senator from Kansas, Democrats, Republicans, and Socialists alike voting for him almost unanimously; August 29, 1894, married Miss Bertha Felt, daughter of ex-Lieut. Gov. Andrew J. Felt, and they have three children, a daughter and two sons. His term of service will expire in 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Nemaha, and Shawnee (8 counties). Population (1910), 218,683. DANIEL READ ANTHONY, Jr., Republican, of Leavenworth, was born August 22, 1870, at Leavenworth, Kans. ; attended public schools and afterwards the Michigan 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 Leaven- worth Daily Times upon the death of his father, Col. D. R. Anthony, in November, 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——4 34 Congressional Durectory. KANSAS 1904; received the nomination by the Republicans of the first district March 29, 1907, and was elected to the Sixtieth Congress; elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,981 votes, to 20,659 for J. B. Chapman, Democrat, and 768 for H. B. Conwell, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn, Miami, and Wyandotte (9 counties). Population (1910), 264,205. JOSEPH TAGGART, Democrat, of Kansas City, Kans., was born in Allamakee County, Towa, June 15, 1867; his early education was acquired in a district school; went to Kansas in 1885, and began a career as student and teacher; having acquired a university education, devoted three years to the study of law and was admitted to the bar in 1893; in 1894 removed to Kansas City, Kans.; was elected county attor- ney of Wyandotte County, Kans., in 1906, to which office he was reelected in 1908 and 1910; was married in 1908 to Miss Elsie Dorothy Mills: has daughter, Mary Ellen, aged 4 years, and son, John Frederick Mills, born June 5, 1913; at a special election held November 7, 1911, was elected to the Sixty-second Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Alexander C. Mitchell, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 25,879 votes, to 22,007 for J. L. Brady, Progressive Republican. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Montgomery, 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. | FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chase, Coffey, Greenwood, Lyon, Marion, Morris, Osage, Potta- watomie, Wabaunsee, and Woodson (10 counties). Population (1910), 158,129. DUDLEY DOOLITTLE, Democrat, of Strong City, was born at Cottonwood Falls, Chase County, Kans., June 21, 1881, and is a direct descendant of Virginia’s first colonial governor; parents are Kansas pioneers; educated in public schools and University of Kansas; also holds LL. B. degree from latter institution; private law practice exten- sive, covering many counties of the State; prosecuting attorney Chase County 1908- 1912; mayor of Strong City 1912; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 17,003 votes, to 16,481 for Fred S. Jackson, Republican, and 1,534 for S. W. Beach, Socialist, and is the first Democrat to represent the district. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CountiES: Clay, Claud, Dickinson, Geary, Marshall, Ottawa, Republic, Riley, Saline, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1910), 180,169. = ~ T GUY T. HELVERING, Democrat, of Marysville, Kans., was born in Felicity, Ohio, on January 10, 1878; with his parents moved fo Beattie, Marshall County, Kans., in 1887; was educated in the public schools of Beattie, and on May 12, 1898, enlisted in Company M, Twenty-second Kansas Volunteer Infantry, and was mustered out in November of same year; then studied at the University of Kansas, and graduated from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1906, receiving the degree LL. B., and being honored by his classmates by election to the presidency of his class; was married March 16, 1910, to Miss Tinnie L. Koester, of Marysville, daughter of the late Hon. Charles F. Koester, one of the pioneer residents of Marshall County; in 1906 was elected county attorney of Marshall County, and reelected in 1908; in 1910 was defeated for Congress by R-R. Rees, Republican, by 1,905 votes, reducing the normal Republican majority nearly two-thirds; in 1912 was elected to the Sixty-third Con- gress, receiving 19,618 votes, to 18,098 for R. R. Rees, Republican, and 1,708 for Grant Chapin, Socialist. 2 SIXTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Cheyenne, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell, Lincoln, Logan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Phillips, Rawlins, Rooks, Russell, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace (22 counties). Population (1910), 203,431. JOHN R. CONNELLY, Democrat, of Colby, Kans., was born near Mount Sterling, Brown County, Ill., February 27, 1870; moved to Thomas County, Kans., in 1888, and in 1892 homesteaded there; was educated in the common schools of Illinois and Kansas and at the Salina Normal University at Salina, Kans.; began teaching school when 19 years of age, and in 1894 was elected county superintendent of schools, and reelected in 1896; in 1897 became the owner and editor of the Colby Free Press, the only Democratic paper in Thomas County, and is still its editor and owner; was married to Miss Lillian Souders June 17, 1896, and has a family of three boys and three girls; was nominated for Congress in 1908, but was defeated by William A. KENTUCKY Biographical. 35 Reeder, Republican, by a majority of 277 in a district that had a normal Republican majority of 3,000; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, defeating I. D. Young, Republican, by a majority of 988. : SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, 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. : GEORGE A. NEELEY, Democrat, of Hutchinson (son of George M. and Eliza- beth (Stephens) Neeley), was born at Detroit, Pike County, Ill., August 1, 1879. When very young his parents moved to southwest Missouri, where he resided until 14 years of age, when he moved to Oklahoma; worked on a farm; taught school and worked his way through the high-school course; attended Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson, Tenn., and graduated from law department of Kansas State University, at Lawrence; engaged in practice of law at Hutchinson, under firm name of Neeley & Malloy; married at Mulvane, Kans., October 31, 1904, to Eva M. Hostetler; two children have been born, a son and a daughter, but son is now deceased; was candidate for Congress in 1910, but defeated; renominated by acclama- tion and elected at special election held January 11, 1912, to fill vacancy caused by death of Hon. E. H. Madison, being first Democrat ever sent from his district; reelected to Sixty-third Congress, receiving 26,1563 votes, to 21,695 for Gordon L. Finley, Republican, 2,828 for M. L.. Amos, Socialist, and 337 for H. R. Ross, Prohibitionist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Butler, Harvey McPherson, Sedgwick, and Sumner (5 counties). Population (1910), 167,529. VICTOR MURDOCK, Progressive, of Wichita, was born in Burlingame, Kans., March 18, 1871, the son of Marshall M. and Victoria Murdock. He moved to the then frontier town of Wichita early in 1872, and was educated in the common schools and in Lewis Academy, Wichita. He began the printer’s trade during vaca- tions at the age of 10 years; became a newspaper reporter at 15, and at 20 moved to Chicago and worked there as a newspaper reporter. He married Miss M. P. Allen in 1890. In 1894 he became managing editor of the Wichita Daily Eagle. He was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. KENTUCKY. (Population (1910), 2,289,905.) SENATORS. WILLIAM O’CONNELL BRADLEY, Republican, of Beechmont, a suburb of Louisville. Born near Lancaster, Ky., March 18, 1847; educated in ordinary local schools, never having attended coliege, and at the age of 14, on account of the break- ing 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; was page in lower house of Kentucky Legislature, 1861; licensed to practice law by special act legislature when 18 years old if found competent by two circuit judges, and from that time has been engaged actively in practice in State and Federal courts of Kentucky and other States, the United States Circuit Court. of Appeals, and the Supreme Court; elected county attorney Garrard County, 1870; Republican candidate Congress, 1872 and 1876, in hopelessly Democratic district; unanimously elected delegate at large to seven Republican national conventions, sec- onding nomination of Grant in 1880, defeating motion to curtail southern repre- sentation in 1884, and seconding nomination of Roosevelt in 1904; three:times elected member of Republican national committee; received 105 votes for Vice President in national convention, 1888; indorsed for President by Kentucky State convention, 1896; appointed minister to Korea, 1889, and declined; defeated for governor 1887, reducing Democratic majority of 47,000 in previous race for governor to less than 17,000; elected governor 1895 by plurality of 8,912; nominated for United States Senator and voted for four times prior to 1908, and in February, 1908, elected United States Senator, general assembly having Democratic majority of 8; appointed to institute suits against star-route contractors by President Arthur, but declined; three times elected chairman of Kentucky delegation in national conven- tions; received degree of LL. D. from Kentucky University; delivered orations at dedications Kentucky Building, Columbian Exposition, Chicago, 1893; Jefferson Statue in Louisville; Kentucky Monument, Chickamauga; Jefferson Monument, Louisville; and Kentucky State capitol, 1910. Term expires March 3, 1915. 36 Congressional Directory. KENTUCKY 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, L. 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 con- vention 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 Ken- - tucky delegation at all three conventions; made a speech seconding the nomination 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; was nominated for United States Senator by Democratic Party of Kentucky in State-wide primary July 1, 1911, to succeed Senator T. H. Paynter; was elected to the Senate by the Kentucky Legis- lature on January 9, 1912, for the term of six years beginning March 4, 1913; was elected permanent chairman of the Democratic national convention held in Balti- more, Md., which nominated Gov. Woodrow Wilson for President, and made speech notifying him of his nomination. His term of service will expire March 4, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. COUNTIES: Ballard, Caldwell, Calloway, Carlisle, Crittenden, Fulton, Graves, Rim, Livingston, Lyon, Marshall, McCracken, and Trigg (13 counties). Population (1910), 213,791. : ALBEN WILLIAM BARKLEY, Democrat, of Paducah, Ky.,was born in Graves County, Ky., November 24, 1877; educated in the county schools and in Marvin College, Clinton, Ky., graduating there in 1897, receiving A. B. degree, afterwards attending Emory College, at Oxford, Ga., and the University of Virginia law school at Charlottesville, Va.; is a lawyer by profession, having been admitted to the bar at Paducah, Ky., in 1901; was married June 23, 1903, to Miss Dorothy Brower, of Paducah, Ky., and has three children; was elected prosecuting attorney for Mc- Cracken County, Ky., in 1905 for a term of four years; at expiration of term was elected judge of the McCracken County court and served until elected to Congress; was nominated for the Sixty-third Congress over three opponents, and was elected by a majority of more than 12,000 over his Republican opponent, Mr. Charles Ferguson. SECOND DISTRICT.—Counmies: Christian, Daviess, Hancock, Henderson, Hopkins, McLean, Union, and Webster (8 counties). Population (1910), 206,121. AUGUSTUS OWSLEY STANLEY, Democrat, of Henderson, was born May 21, 1867, in the city of Shelbyville, Shelby County, Ky.; was educated at State College, Lexington, Ky., and at Center College, Danville, Ky., graduating from the latter institution in the class of 1889; entered the practice of the law in 1894, having been employed between 1889 and 1894 as school-teacher; was presidential elector in 1900, which is the only office or public position of any kind ever held by him prior to his election to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Con- gresses; was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Barren, Butler, Edmonson, Logan, Metcalfe, Muhlenberg, Simpson, Todd, and Warren (10 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.; isa lawyer by profession; was a member of the State legislature in 1886; was elected Commonwealth’s attorney for the seventh judicial district, which office he held when nominated for Congress; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNnTiES: Breckinridge, Bullitt, Grayson, 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, Ky., May 20, 1858; graduated from St. Mary’s College 1878; graduated from the Louisville Law University 1882; was elected to Kentucky House of Representatives in 1885, and reelected in 1887; was elected speaker of house of representatives that year; was appointed collector of internal revenue for the fifth Kentucky district in 1893; was chairman of the Democratic State campaign committee 1908; November 5, 1905, was elected a member of the Kentucky State Senate; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty- first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. KENTUCKY : Biographical. | 37 FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTy: Jefferson. Population (1910), 262,920. SWAGAR SHERLEY, Democrat, of Louisville, was born in Louisville, Jefferson County, Ky., November 28; 1871; educated in the public schools, graduating from the Louisville Male High School June, 1889; studied law at the University of Vir- ginia, and graduated June; 1891; was admitted to the practice of law September, 1891, at the Louisville bar; has practiced continuously in State and Federal courts; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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 1896; graduated from the Louisville Law School in 1900; 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, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 20,690 votes, to 7,255 for D. B. Wallace, Republican, 5,701 for J. G. Blackburn, Progressive, and 2,489 for M. A. Brinkman, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bourbon, Clark, Estill, Fayette, Franklin, Henry, Lee, Oldham, Owen, Powell, Scott, and Woodford (12 counties). Population (1910), 197,110. JAMES CAMPBELL CANTRILL, 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 and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by about 19,000 majority, the largest in the history of the district. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adair, Anderson, Boyle, Casey, Garrard, Jessamine, Lincoln, Madison, Mercer, Shelby, and Spencer (11 counties). Population (1910), 165,822. 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 Lincoln 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving a majority of 12,000 over J. W. Dinsmore, Progressive Republican. : NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bath, Boyd, Bracken, Breathitt, Carter, Elliott, Fleming, Greenup Harrison, Lawrence, Lewis, Mason, Menifee, Montgomery, Morgan, Nicholas, Robertson, Rowan, and Wolfe (19 counties). Population (1910), 273,343. 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, and at Kentucky University, Lexington, Ky.; was married October 28, 1893, to Miss Dora McDavid, of Rosedale, Ky.; to them has been born five sons, Forest Gerard, R. Ford, Everett, Frank, and William Earle; is a farmer and real estate dealer; was a traveling salesman for 12 years preceding his nomination for Congress; was nominated July 27, 1910, and elected to the Sixty- second Congress, receiving 19,339 votes, to 18,716 for J. B. Bennett, Republican; and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 27,415 votes, to 16,608 for Harry Bailey, Republican, and 8,903 for E. S. Hitchens, Progressive. 38 Congressional Directory. LOUISIANA TENTH DISTRICT.—CouN1IES: Floyd, Jackson, Johnson, Knott, Letcher, Magoffin, Martin, Owsley, Perry, and Pike (10 counties). Population (1910), 141,111. 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 (new George Washington) Universities for an aggregate period of eight years and was awarded the first prize in two of them; had conferred on him the degrees of bachelor of laws, master of laws, doctor of the civil law, and master of diplomacy; was a clerk in the Pension Office, a member of the Board of Pension Appeals, and disbursing and appointment clerk of the Census Office; served two terms in the Kentucky Legislature, receiving at his second term the caucus nomina- tion of his party (the minority) for speaker of the house; was twice a delegate from Kentucky to the Republican national convention; married in 1904 Katherine Gudger, daughter of J. M. Gudger, jr., Member of Congress from North Carolina; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a majority of 7,299. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bell, Clay, Clinton, Cumberland, Harlan, Knox, Laurel, Leslie, McCreary, Monroe, Pulaski, Rockeastle, Russell, Wayne, and Whitley (15 counties). Population (1910), 250,248. CALEB POWERS, Republican, of Barbourville, was born in Whitley County, Ky., February 1, 1869; attended Union College, Barbourville, Ky., State University, 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, Novem- ber, 1910, he defeated the Democratic opponent, Senator Elza Bertram, by 9,256 major- ity, again carrying 16 of the 19 counties. Had no opposition for renomination at the August primaries of 1912, but in the final election was opposed by Judge Ben V. Smith, Democrat, of Somerset, and H. H. Seavy, Bull Moose, of Corbin. Mr. Powers carried 13 of the 15 counties in the district, and ran 4,000 votes ahead of the Republican national ticket, defeating Smith by 6,771 plurality and Seavy by 9,487. Following his reelection to Congress he was married to Miss Anna Dorothy Kaufman, of Newport, Ky. LOUISIANA. (Population (1910), 1,656,388.) SENATORS. JOHN RANDOLPH THORNTON, Democrat, of Alexandria, was born in Iberville Parish, La., 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; former 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 Louisiana; 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 Louisiana to fill the unexpired term of Senator McEnery, and took his seat December 12, 1910. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. Sours Biographical. 39 JOSEPH EUGENE RANSDELL, 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 graduated from Union College, Schenectady, N. Y., in June, 1882, which institution elected him honorary chancellor and conferred upon him the degree of LL. D. on the twenty-fifth anniversary of his graduation, June, 1907; was admitted to the bar of Louisiana in June, 1883; was elected district attorney of the eighth judicial district of Louisiana in April, 1884, which office he held for twelve years; was married to Olive Irene Powell, of Lake Providence, November 15, 1885; was a member of the fifth Louisiana levee board from May, 1896, until August, 1899; represented East Carroll Parish in the State constitutional convention of 1898; was elected to the Fifty- gixth Congress in December, 1899, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. S. T. Baird, who died April 22, 1899; on his election to Congress gave up the practice of law and has devoted himself exclusively to his congressional duties and cotton planting interests; has been especially active in behalf of legislation for waterways and has been president of the National Rivers and Harbors Congress since 1905; served continuously in the lower House until the close of the Sixty-second Congress; received the nomination for United States Senator in a Democratic primary election held January 23, 1912; was elected by the legislature to succeed Hon. M. J. Foster, May 21, 1912, and took his seat on March 4, 1913. His term of service will expire on March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF NEW ORLEANS: Third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and fifteenth wards. Parishes: Plaquemines and St. Bernard. Population (1910), 203,120. ALBERT ESTOPINAL, Democrat, of Estopinal, was born in the parish of St. Bernard, La., January 30, 1845; educated in the public schools of his native parish 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 May, 1865; married Miss Eliska Legier, of New Orleans, in February, 1868; 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 1900, when he was elected lieutenant governor of the State, serving four years; member of the Louisiana constitutional convention of 1898; elected to the Sixtieth Congress to fill a vacancy; elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. SECOND DISTRICT.—City oF NEw ORLEANS: First, second, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth wards. Parishes: J efferson, St. Charles, St. James, and St. John. Population (1910), 220,557. HENRY GARLAND DUPRE, Democrat, of New Orleans, was born at Opelousas, St. Landry Parish, La., on July 28, 1873; was educated in the public schools of Opelou- sas 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 1900 to 1910; is at present a member of the firm of Dupré & Dupré; was elected to the House of Rep- resentatives 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 Rep- sentatives of the State of Louisiana for the session 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 unexpired term occasioned by the death of the Hon. Samuel L. Gilmore, and at the same election was elected to the Sixty-second Congress. He was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, defeating his opponent in the Demo- cratic primary by 3,600 votes. THIRD DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Assumption, Iberia, Lafayette, Lafourche, St. Martin, St. Mary, Terre- bonne, 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; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty- 40 Congressional Directory. LOUISIANA eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition; was elected to the United States Senate in May, 1912, for the term beginning March 4, 1915. FOURTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Claiborne, De Soto, Red River, and Web- ster (7 parishes). Population (1910), 185,041. 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 at Cumber- land University, Lebanon, Tenn.; studied law and was admitted to the bar July, 1878; January 15, 1879, married Miss Lizzie R. Murrell; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—-PARISHES: Caldwell, Catahoula, Concordia, East Carroll, Franklin, Jackson, Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, Union, and West Carroll (14 parishes). Population (1910), 204,036. WALTER ELDER, Democrat, of Monroe, La., was born in Dallas County, Tex., October 5, 1882; educated at the Baylor University; is a lawyer; married; member Louisiana State Senate 1908-1912; nominated for Congress in the Democratic pri- mary, defeating two opponents, and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. SIXTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Ascension, East Baton Rouge, East Feliciana, Iberville, Livingston, Point Coupee, St. Helena, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Washington, West Baton Rouge, and West Feliciana (12 parishes). Population (1910), 247,612. LEWIS L. MORGAN, Democrat, of Covington, was born in Mandeville, La., March 2, 1876; attended public schools and St. Eugene’s College of St. Tammany Parish, and graduated from Tulane University, law department, at New Orleans, in March, 1899; was admitted to the bar of Louisiana same year; married Miss Lenora Cefalu in June, 1903; they have two children; was member of the State Legislature of Louisiana of 1908 and served during the session of that year; resigned from State legislature to make race for district attorney in his judicial district and was elected without opposition; at the death of the lamented Robert C. Wickliffe entered the race for Congress, received the nomination, and was elected to the Sixty-second (Congress without opposition, and was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Acadia, Allen, Beauregard, Calcasieu, Cameron, Evangeline, Jeffer- son Davis, and St. Landry (8 parishes). Population (1910), 165,563. LADISLAS LAZARO, Democrat, of Washington, La., was born June 5, 1872, near Ville Platte, Evangeline Parish (then St. Landry), of the marriage of Alexandre Lazaro and Miss Marie Denise Ortego; educated in the public and private schools of St. Landry Parish and St. Isadore’s College, New Orleans; graduated in medicine in 1894 and has followed medicine as a profession; also is interested in farming; was elected president of his parish medical society, first vice president of his State medical society, and delegate from his State medical society to the International Congress on Tuberculosis held in New York; member and president of the St. Landry school board; elected to the Louisiana State Senate in 1908 and in 1912, both times without opposition; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 4,943 votes, to 713 for Otis Putman, Socialist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Avoyelles, Grant, La Salle, Natchitoches, Rapides, Sabine, Vernon, . and Winn (8 parishes). Population (1910), 196,077. JAMES BENJAMIN ASWELL, Democrat, of Natchitoches, was born in Jackson Parish, La., December 23, 1869; was reared on a cotton farm and worked his way through school while serving as hired hand and clerk in store; graduated at Peabody Normal College in 1892; received the degrees of A. B. and A. M. from the University of Nashville in 1893 and 1898; taught in country schools, high school, and did graduate work im Chicago University; specialized ir literature, pedagogy, and political science; was State institute conductor 1897-1900; president of the Louisiana Industrial Institute 1900-1894; elected twice to office of State superintendent of pub- lic education without opposition 1904-1908; elected chancellor of the University of Mississippi in 1907, but was prevented from accepting by the earnest solicitation of the Louisiana teachers; president Louisiana State Normal School 1908-1911; re- ceived the degree of LL. D. from the University of Arkansas in 1907; married Miss Ella Foster, of Mansfield, and has two children (Miss Corinne, age 17, and James B., jr., age 7); reorganized the State public-school system, and unusual progress was made during his administration; born and reared on a farm, he has always taken great interest in country life and has devoted himself to those problems; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 6,053 votes, to 1,734 for J. R. Jones, Socialist. MAINE Biographical. 41 MAINE. (Population (1910), 742,371.) SENATORS. CHARLES F. JOHNSON, Democrat, of Waterville, was born in Winslow, Me., February 14, 1859; attended the common schools of Winslow and Waterville (lassi- cal Institute; graduated from Bowdoin College in 1879, which conferred upon him the degree of LL. D. in June, 1911; taught school and read law; was admitted to the bar in 1886 and began practice in Waterville; was the Democratic candidate for gov- ernor of Maine in 1892 and 1894; was a member of the State legislature in 1905 and 1907, serving both terms on the judiciary committee; was a delegate to the Demo- cratic national convention in 1904; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed the Hon. Eugene Hale for the term beginning March 4, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. EDWIN CHICK BURLEIGH, Republican, of Augusta, was born at Linneus, Aroostook County, Me., November 27, 1843; is publisher of the Kennebec Journal, daily and weekly; was State land agent 1876-1878; State treasurer 1885-1888; gov- ernor 1889-1892; elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses; was chosen at the State primary election, on June 17, 1912, as the Republican candidate for United States Senator, and on January 15, 1913, was elected by the legislature for the term beginning March 4, 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CounNTtIES: 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, 1890-1891; clerk at Speaker’s table, United States House of Representatives, 1895-1911; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 17,635 votes, to 15,5680 for Michael T. O’Brien, Democrat, 463 for Israel Albert, Socialist, and 430 for James Perrigo, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Androscoggin, Franklin, Knox, Lincoln, Oxford, and Sagadahoc (6 counties). Population (1910), 180,968. DANIEL J. McGILLICUDDY, Democrat, of Lewiston, was born August 27, 1859, in Lewiston, Me.; is a graduate of Bowdoin College, 1881; lawyer by profession; member of Maine Legislature 1884-85; mayor of Lewiston, 1887, 1890, and 1902; i married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third ongress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Hancock, Kennebec, Somerset, Waldo. and Washington (5 counties). Population (1910), 201,027. JOHN ANDREW PETERS, Republican, of Ellsworth, Me., was born in that city August 13, 1864; graduated from Bowdoin College in 1885; was admitted to the bar in 1887; was elected representative from Ellsworth in the Maine Legislature in 1908, 1910, and 1912, being elected speaker of the house of representatives at the session of 1913; was elected to Congress September, 1913, from the third Maine congressional district to fill the vacancy ‘caused by the death of Hon. Forrest Goodwin, of Skow- hegan, receiving 15,081 votes, to 14,556 for William R. Pattangall, Democrat, 6,558 for E. M. Lawrence, Progressive, and 475 for William W. Wyer, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aroostook, Penobscot, and Piscataquis (3 countiés). Population (1910), 179,836. FRANK EDWARD GUERNSEY, Republican, of Dover, was born in Dover, Piscataquis County, Me. He received a common-school education, attended Foxcroft Academy, Eastern Maine Conference Seminary at Bucksport, Maine Wesleyan Seminary, Kents Hill, Me., and Eastman’s Business College, Pough- keepsie, N. Y.; studied law, and was admitted tothe bar at Dover in 1890. Was elected treasurer of Piscataquis County in 1896, and reelected twice, serving six ears until December 31, 1896; was a member of the Maine House of Representatives In 1897 and in 1899, and a member of the Maine Senate in 1903; was chosen a dele- gate to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1908. He is president 42 Congressional Directory. | MARYIAND of Piscataquis Savings Bank, of Dover, and is married. He was elected in 1908 to fill a vacancy in the Sixtieth Congress, caused by death of former Gov. Llewellyn Powers, elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 20,198 votes, to 16,725 for Charles W. Mullen, Democrat, and 235 for William A. Rideout, Prohibitionist. MARYLAND. (Population (1910), 1,295,346.) SENATORS. 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 maternal 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 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 Legislature, on March 24, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Hon. William Pinkney vie for the unexpired term ending March 3, 1909. His term of service will expire arch 3, 1915. WILLIAM PURNELL JACKSON, Republican, was born in Salisbury, Md., Jan- uary 11, 1868, the son of William Humphreys and Arabella Jackson. His father is the president of the Jackson Bros.” Co., was a member of the Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth Congresses, and has for years been prominent in the business, political, and social affairs of Maryland. Mr. Jackson received his education in the public schools of Wicomico County, Md., and at the Wilmington Conference Academy. His vacations were spent in mastering the details of his father’s large business, thus acquiring a thorough knowledge of every phase of the lumber business. In 1887 he became a partner of E. E. Jackson & Co., and upon the organization of the Jackson Bros.’ Co. in 1893 became the secretary-treasurer of that corporation, and has continued active in its management. He is president of the Salisbury National Bank, of the Home Gas Co., of the Jackson-Weisbach Co., extensive manufacturers of shirts, and of the board of directors of the Peninsula General Hospital; is an official of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Salisbury; has been the Maryland representative on the Repub- lican national committee since June, 1908. In 1890 he married Miss Sallie McCoombs, of Havre de Grace, Md. Two children were born from this union—Belle McCoombs, who married Richard Schoble, of Philadelphia, and William Newton, a student at Lawrenceville. Mrs. Jackson died in 1899. Mr. Jackson married Miss Katherine Shelmerdine, of Philadelphia, in 1900, from which union two children survive— Elizabeth S. and William H. Jackson, 2d. His residence is in Salisbury and his summer home at Loon Lake, N. Y. November 29, 1912, the governor of Maryland appointed him to fill the unexpired term of the late Senator Rayner in the Senate. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—Counties: Caroling, 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 MARYLAND ~~ Biographical. 43 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 LL. B. in 1894; since that time has continuously practiced his profession at Easton; was elected State’s attorney for Talbot County in 1903 for a term of four years, and was reelected in 1907; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 17,606 votes, to 2,303 for Robert B. Grier, Progressive, and 744 for Charles M. 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 Lutherville, 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, now deceased, of Luther- ville, 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 convention at St. Louis in 1904; was a delegate at large to the Democratic national convention at Den- ver, Colo., 1908, and is the member from Maryland of the Democratic national com- mittee; was elected to the Forty-sixth, Forty-seventh, and Forty-eighth Congresses; was appointed insurance commissioner of the State of Maryland in October, 1889, and resigned the position January, 1893, having been elected to the Fifty-third Con- gress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,087 votes, to 13,732 for Hon. Laban Sparks, Republican, and 640 for the Prohibition candidate. THIRD DISTRICT.—Ciry oF BALTIMORE: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and twenty-second wards, and the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and thirteenth precincts of the eighteenth ward. Population (1910), 215,914. CHARLES PEARCE COADY, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born in that city on February 22, 1868; entered the public schools at an early age and was graduated from the Baltimore City College in 1886; after graduation entered mercantile life, and while thus engaged studied law; was admitted to the bar in 1894 and has since practiced law in Baltimore City; married to Milly Stuart Kenly January 21, 1901; was elected to the Senate of Maryland in November, 1907, for a term of four years and reelected in November, 1911, for a like term; resigned to seek Democratic nomination for Congress from the third Maryland district to fill vacancy created by the death of the Hon. George Konig; was nominated at a primary election held September 8, 1913, and was elected at a general election held November 4, 1913, receiving 15,131 votes, to 8,622 for Benjamin F. Woelper, jr., Republican, and 2,877 for John H. Ferguson, Progressive. FOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF BALTIMORE: Ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, seventeenth, nineteenth, and twentieth wards, and the first, second, third, and twelfth precincts of the eighteenth ward. Population (1910), 218,416. JOHN CHARLES LINTHICUM, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born at Linthicum, 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 LL. B. in 1890; has ever 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 chairman of the city delega- tion, 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 1905 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; in 1908 was elected a presidential elector; 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, resid- 44 Congressional Directory. MASSACHUSETTS ing at 705 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, his wife having been Helen A. Perry, a daughter of the late Dr. john L. Perry, and Harriet Sadler Perry, of Saratoga Springs, N. Y.; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,075 votes, to 11,257 for Jacob F. Murbach, Republican, 595 for Charles E. Develin, and 421 for Alfred S. Day. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUnTIES: Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince Georges, and St. Mary (6 counties), and the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth precincts of the eighteenth ward, ae twenty-first, twenty-third, and twenty-fourth wards of Baltimore city. Population (1910), FRANK O. SMITH, Democrat, of Dunkirk, was born in Calvert County August 27, 1859, the son of Dr. John 8. and Ruth E. Smith, his family being one of the largest owners of real estate in the county; was educated in the private and public schools of the county, North Mount Institute, West Virginia, and Bethel Military Academy, Vir- ginia; served in the Internal-Revenue Service during the first Cleveland administra- tion, but resigned in 1889 and engaged in the canning of fruits and vegetables at Dunkirk, growing and packing the same, and in general merchandising, which he conducted for 20 years; was State tobacco inspector in 1904 and 1906; his health failing in 1909, he was compelled to give up his many enterprises; in 1911 was nomi- nated for State senator in a direct primary, and was defeated by 54 votes in a Repub- lican County; then served as chief engrossing clerk of the Maryland Senate; in May, 1912, was nominated for Congress in the direct primaries by more than 4,000 majority, and in November was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 13,085 votes, to 12,168 for Thomas Parran, Republican, being the first Democrat to represent the district for 20 years. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5 counties). Population (1910), 216,895. DAVID JOHN LEWIS, Democrat, of Cumberland, was born May 1, 1869, at Nut- tals Bank, Center County, Pa., near Osceola, Clearfield County; son of Richard I. Lewis and Catharine Watkins Lewis, who migrated from Wales; began coal mining at 9 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 occu- pation 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 %y Rev. John W. Nott, D.D. In 1893 was married to Florida M. Bohn; was elected to the Maryland Senate rn 1901; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third ongress. MASSACHUSETTS. (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 year—1876—received the degree of Ph. D. from Harvard University for his thesis on “The Land Law of the Anglo-Saxons”; profession, that of literature; has published, 1877, ‘‘Life and Letters of George Cabot”; 1881, ‘‘Short History of the English Colonies in America”; 1882, ‘‘Life of Alexander Hamilton”; 1883, ‘‘ Life of Daniel Webster”; 1885, edited the works of Alexander Hamilton in 9 volumes; published, in 1886, ‘‘Studies in History”; 1889, ‘‘Life of Washington,”” 2 volumes; 1891, “History of Boston” (in the Historic Towns Series, published by the Longmans); 1892, ‘Historical and Political Essays.”” and a volume of selections from speeches; 1895, in conjunction with Theodore Roosevelt, ‘Hero Tales from American History ”; 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”; 1913, ‘‘ Early Memories ’’ and ‘‘ One Hundred Years of Peace’; is a member of the Massachusetts Historical Society, of the Virginia Historical Society, of the American Academy of Arts and Science, of the New England Historic and Genealogical Society, and of the American Antiquarian Society, and has received the degree of doctor of laws from Williams College, Clark University, Yale University, Harvard University, and Amherst College; was permanent chairman of the Republi- can national convention which met in Philadelphia June 19, 1900; chairman of MASSACHUSETTS Biographical. 45 the committee on resolutions of the Republican national convention of 1904 at Chicago; permanent chairman of the Republican national convention 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 Legislature; was elected to the Fiftieth, Fifty-first, Fifty-second, and Fifty-third Congresses; was elected to the Senate January 17, 1893, to succeed Henry 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. 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—1900, 1901, 1902—alderman, and 2 years—1903 and 1904—mayor of the city of Newton; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth,. Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses; was elected to the Senate January 14, 1913, to succeed the Hon. Winthrop Murray Crane. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. — BERKSHIRE CouNnTY. FRANKLIN CoUuNTY: Towns of Ashfield, Buckland, Charle- mont, Colrain, Conway, Greenfield, Hawley, Heath, Leyden, Monroe, Rowe, and Shelburne. HAMP- SHIRE COUNTY: Towns of Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Huntington, Middlefield, Plainfield, Southampton, Westhampton, and Worthington. HAMPDEN County: City of Holyoke and towns of Blandford, Chester, Granville, Montgomery, Russell, Southwick, Tolland, and Westfield. Popula- tion (1910), 210,101. ; ALLEN TOWNER TREADWAY, Republican, of Stockbridge, was born in Stock- bridge, Mass., September 16, 1867; educated in public schools of Stockbridge and at Ambherst College, class of 1886; is hotel proprietor; married and has one son; thirty- third degree Mason; past district deputy and past warden Grand Lodge of Masons of Massachusetts; also member Royal Arcanum and Patrons of Husbandry; director of loan and trust company and trustee of savings bank; member Massachusetts House of Representatives 1904, serving on committee on ways and means; member Massachusetts Senate 1908-1911; in 1908 chairman of committee on taxation; also on committees on agriculture and labor; elected president of Senate in 1909 and presided over it three succeeding years, annually receiving the unanimous Repub- lican vote, and twice the unanimous Democratic indorsement; elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 12,920 votes, to 12,075 for Richard J. Morrissey, Democrat, 3,883 for Samuel P. Blagden, Progressive, and 1,308 for E. O. Buckland, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—FRANKLIN COUNTY: Towns of Bernardstoa, Deerfield, Erving, Gill, Leverett, Moatague, Northfield, Shutesbury, Sunderland, Warwick, Wendell, and Whately. HAMPSHIRE County: City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, Belchertown, Easthampton, Enfield, Granby, Hadley, Hatfield, Pelham, South Hadley, Ware, and Williamsburg. HAMPDEN COUNTY: Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Agawam, Fast Longmeadow, Hampden, Longmeadow, Ludlow, West Springfield, and Wilbraham. Population (1910), 212,037. FREDERICK HUNTINGTON GILLETT, Republican, of Springfield, was born at Westfield, Mass., October 16, 1851; graduated at Amherst College in 1874 and Har- vard Law School in 1877; was admitted to the bar in Springfield in 1877; was assistant attorney general of Massachusetts from 1879 to 1882; was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1890 and 1891; was elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,301 votes, to 10,940 for William G. McKechnie, Democrat, 5,442 for Thomas L. Hisgen, Progressive Party, and 51 for all others. THIRD DISTRICT.—FRANKLIN COUNTY: Towns of New Salem and Orange. HAMPDEN COUNTY: Towns of Brimfield, Holland, Monson, Palmer, and Wales. HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: Towns of Green- wich and Prescott. MipDLESEX COUNTY: Towns of Ashby and Townsend. WORCESTER COUNTY: City of Fitchburg; towns of Ashburnham, Athol, Barre, Boylston, Brookfield, Charlton, Clinton, . Dana, Dudley, Gardner, Hardwick, Holden, Hubbardston, Lancaster, Leicester, Leominister, Lunen- burg, New Braintree, North Brookfield, Oakham, Oxford, Paxton, Petersham, Phillipston, Princeton, Royalston, Rutland, Southbridge, Spencer, Sterling, Sturbridge, Templeton, Warren, Webster, West Boylston, West Brookfield, Westminster, and Winchendon. Population (1910), 208,767. CALVIN DeWITT PAIGE, Republican, of Southbridge, Mass., was born in that town May 20, 1848; educated in the public schools; is a cotton manufacturer, and has been for many years active in business affairs; married; has been a member of the Massachusetts Legislature; delegate to Republican national convention 1884; presi- 46 Congressional Directory. MASSACHUSETTS dential elector 1904; member governor’s council 1907 and 1908; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. William H. Wilder, receiving 11,176 votes, to 10,822 for M. Fred O’Connell, Democrat, and 5,285 for Stephen M. Marshall, Progressive. FOURTH DISTRICT.—WORCESTER COUNTY: City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Blackstone, Douglas, Grafton, Hopedale, Mendon, Milford, Millbury, Northbridge, Shrewsbury, Sutton, Upton, Uxbridge, and Westboro. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Town of Hopkinton. Population (1910), 211,245. SAMUEL E. WINSLOW, Republican, of Worcester, was born April 11, 1862; graduate of Worcester (Mass.) Classical High School 1880, Williston Seminary, East- hampton, Mass., 1881, and Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass. (A. B.), 1885; aid de camp, with rank of colonel, Massachusetts Militia, staff of Gov. Brackett, 1890; chairman Republican city committee of Worcester 1890-1892; chairman Republican State committee of Massachusetts 1893-94; delegate to Republican National Con- vention in Chicago 1908; is married; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,153 votes, to 11,216 for John A. Thayer, Democrat, 3,626 for Burton W. Potter, Progressive, and 535 for Thomas P. Abbott, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Essex County: Towns of Andover and Methuen. MIDDLESEX CouUNTy: Cities of Lowell and Woburn; towns of Acton, Ayer, Bedford, Billerica, Boxboro, Burlington, Carlisle, Chelmsford, Concord, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Hudson, Lincoln, Littleton, Maynard, Pepperell, Reading, Shirley, Stow, Tewksbury, Tyngsboro, Westford, and Wilmington. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Berlin, Bolton, Harvard, and Northboro. Population (1910), 209,483. JOHN JACOB ROGERS, Republican, of Lowell, was born in Lowell August 18, 1881; is a graduate of Harvard College (A. B. 1904), Harvard Graduate School (A. M. 1905), and Harvard Law School (LL.B. 1907); lawyer. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Essex County: Cities of Beverly, Gloucester, Haverhill, Newburyport, and Salem; towns of Amesbury, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Groveland, Hamilton, Ipswich, Manchester, Marblehead, Merrimac, Newbury, Rockport, Rowley, Salisbury, Swampscott, Topsfield, and Wen- ham, West Newbury. Population (1910), 209,261. 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 years; served during the Spanish-American War; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill a vacancy, to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty- ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 16,940 votes, to 9,726 for George A. Schofield, Democrat, and 7,326 for Arthur L.. Nason, Progressive. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—ESsEX County: Cities of Lawrence and Lynn; towns of Boxford, Lynnfield, Middleton, Nahant, North Andover, Peabody, and Saugus. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Town of North Reading. Population (1910), 209,526. MICHAEL FRANCIS PHELAN, Democrat, of Lynn, Mass., was born in that city October 22, 1875; graduate of Liynn schools, including Lynn Classical High School; Harvard, A. B. 1897 and LL. B. 1900; lawyer; married June 22, 1904, and has three children; member Massachusetts House of Representatives 1905-6; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,964 votes, to 8,952 for Frank P. Bennett, jr., Repub- lican, and 5,086 for Lynn Ranger, Progressive. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of Cambridge, Medford, and Melrose; towns of Arling- en, Lexington, Stoneham, Wakefield, Watertown, and Winchester. Population (1910), FREDERICK SIMPSON DEITRICK, Democrat, of Cambridge, was born April 9, 1875, in New Brighton, Pa.; attended the public schools of that town; was graduated from Geneva College in 1895 and from the Harvard Law School in 1898, and has since been practicing law in Boston; has served as alderman of Cambridge, also three terms in the Massachusetts House of Representatives; was three times a candidate for Con- gress and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,486 votes, to 10,909 for Frederick W. Dallinger, Republican, and 6,680 votes for Henry C. Long, Progressive. NINTH DISTRICT.—MIpDLESEX COUNTY: Cities of Everett, Malden, and Somerville. SUFFOLK County: City of Chelsea; towns of Revere and Winthrop. Population (1910), 215,927. 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,020 votes, to 8,732 for Henry Rowland, Democrat, and 7,634 for John Herbert, Progressive. MASSACHUSETTS : Biographical. Te 47 TENTH DISTRICT.—SUFFOLK COUNTY: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth wards, and first and second precincts of eleventh ward, city of Boston. Population (1910), 216,607. 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 bachelor 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. Married Mary A. Lappen, August 11, 1912. 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 and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—SUrroLK County: Tenth ward, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth precincts of eleventh ward, and twelfth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twenty-first, twenty- second, and twenty-third wards, city of Boston. Population (1910), 215,514. ANDREW JAMES PETERS, Democrat, of Jamaica Plain, Boston, was born at that place April 3, 1872; Harvard, A. B. 1895, LL. B. 1898; lawyer; was a member of the Massachusetts Legislature in 1902; of the State Senate of Massachusetts, 1904 and 1905; married; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 17,875 votes, to 8,786 for Sherwin L. Cook, Republican. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—SUFFOLK COUNTY: Thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, twentieth, and twenty-fourth wards, city of Boston. Population (1910), 211,889. 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 Council for two years, 1900 and 1901; the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1902 and 1903; and the Boston Board of Aldermen from 1904 to 1911; was married June 27, 1906; was elected to the Sixty-second and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—SUFFOLK COUNTY: Twenty-fifth ward, city of Boston. NORFOLK COUNTY: Towns of Bellingham, Brookline, Dover, Franklin, Medfield, Medway, Millis, Needham, Norfolk, Plainville, Walpole, Wellesley, and Wrentham. MIDDLESEX County: Cities of Marlboro, Newton, and Waltham; towns of Ashland, Framingham, Holliston, Natick, Sherborn, Sudbury, Wayland, and Weston. WORCESTER CouNTY: Town of Southboro. Population, (1910), 207,513. x JOHN J. MITCHELL, Democrat, of Marlboro, was born May 9, 1873; educated in the Marlboro public schools, Boston College, and Albany Law School; is a lawyer; was a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives 1903-1906; was a mem- ber of the Massachusetts Senate 1907-8; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Charles Q. Tirrell; elected to the Sixty-third Congress April 15, 1913, to succeed the Hon. John W. Weeks, receiving 13,135 votes, to 8,809 for Alfred H. Cutting, Republican, and 5,563 for Norman H. White, Progressive. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—BRIsTOL COUNTY: Town of Easton. NORFOLK COUNTY: City of Quincy; towns of Avon, Braintree, Canton, Dedham, Foxboro, Holbrook, Milton, Norwood, Randolph, Sharon, Stoughton, Westwood, and Weymouth. PrLymouTH COUNTY: City of Brockton; towns of Abington, Rockland, East Bridgewater, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. ~ SUFFOLK COUNTY: Twenty-sixth ward, city of Boston. Population (1910), 209,300. EDWARD GILMORE, Democrat, of Brockton, was born in Brockton, Plymouth County, Mass., January 4, 1867; in provision business; graduate of high school; member board of aldermen 1901-1906, serving as president; trustee of public library; member Massachusetts Legislature 1907-8, serving on committee on roads and bridges; member Democratic State committee for eight years; delegate to Democratic national conventions of 1900 and 1904; married and has five sons; elected to the Sixty- third Congress, Poostelng 11.00 votes, to 11,341 for Henry L. Kincaide, Progressive, and 9,968 for Robert O. Harris, Republican. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—BRrISTOL CoUNTY: Cities of Fall River and Taunton; towns of Attleboro, Berkley, Dighton, Freetown, Mansfield, North Attleboro, Norton, Raynham, Rehoboth, Seekonk, Son, Swansea, and Westport. PrLyMourH COUNTY: Town of Lakeville. Population (1910), WILLIAM STEDMAN GREENE, Republican, of Fall River, was born in Tremont, Tazewell County, I11., April 28, 1841; removed to Fall River with his parents in 1844; was educated in the public schools of that city, and was a clerk in the insurance busi- ness from 1858 to 1865; commenced business as auctioneer, real estate and insurance agent in 1866; was elected member of common council in 1876, 1877, 1878, and 1879, and was president of the body the latter three years; elected mayor in 1880; also alternate delegate to Republican national convention which nominated President Garfield; was 48 Congressional Directory. MICHIGAN reelected mayor in 1881, but resigned the same year, being appointed postmaster by President Garfield ; in 1886 was again elected mayor; was a candidate in 1887 and 1888, but was defeated; in July, 1888, was appointed by 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-fitth Congress, also elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 11,148 votes, to 8,951 for John W. Coughlin, Democrat, and 4,143 for Alvin G. Weeks, Progressive. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—BARNSTABLE CoUNTY: Towns of Barnstable, Bourne, Brewster, Chatham, Dennis, Eastham, Falmouth, Harwich, Mashpee, Orleans, Provincetown, Sandwich, Truro, Wellfleet, and Yarmouth. BRISTOL County: City of New Bedford; towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, and Fairhaven. PrymourH County: Towns of Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury alifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Marion, Marshfield, Mattapoisett, Middieboro, Norwell, Pem- broke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rochester, Scituate, and Wareham. NORroLK COUNTY: Town of Cohasset. DUKES AND NANTUCKET COUNTIES. Population (1910), 206,486. THOMAS C. THACHER, Democrat, of Yarmouth, Cape Cod, was born in Yarmouth July 20, 1858; graduated from Adams Academy, Quincy, in 1878, and Harvard College in 1882; was engaged for 26 years in the wool business, from which he retired in 1908; married; president of the Barnstable County Agricultural Society; was the Demo- cratic nominee in the fourteenth district for the Sixty-second Congress, being defeated by Robert O. Harris by 67 votes; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 10,461 votes, to 8,186 for William J. Bullock, Republican, 6,540 for Thomas Thompson, Progressive, and 826 for Joseph Palme, Socialist. 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, and entered upon the general practice of his profession, which was continued until his election as United States Senator; was honored with the degree of master of arts by Dartmouth College in June, 1901; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, 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. He was reelected January 16, 1913, to succeed himself, and his term expires March 3, 1919. 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, receiving a majority of 41,000 over Senator Burrows, and elected by the Michigan Legislature January 18, 1911, receiving 115 votes, to 14 for John T. Winship, Democrat. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 2,810,173. PATRICK H. KELLEY, Republican, of Lansing, was born in Cass County, Mich., October 7, 1867; educated in the district and village schools, Northern Indiana Nor- mal School, and the Michigan State Normal College; graduated from law department MICHIGAN B rographical. 49 of the University of Michigan in 1900; is a lawyer; member Michigan State board of cducation 1901-1905, State superintendent of public instruction 1905-1907, and lieu- tenant governor 1907-1911; married and has three children, two girls and a boy; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 185,657 ‘votes, to 174,451 for William H. Hill, Progressive, 152,188 for Edward Fensdorf, Democrat, 19,789 for Milan F. Martin, Socialist, 8,624 for Fred W. Corbett, Prohibitionist, and 1,041 scattering. FIRST DISTRICT.—City or. DETROIT: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, thirteenth, fifteenth, and seventeenth wards. Population (1910), 354,731. FRANK E. DOREMUS, Democrat, of Detroit, was born in Venango County, Pa., August 31, 1865; a lawyer by profession; served in the Legislature of Michigan 1891-92; has been assistant corporation counsel and also controller of the city of Detroit; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,573 votes, to 16,801 for James H. Pound, Progressive, and 16,687 for Ezra P. Beechler, Republican. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw. WAYNE COUNTY: Townships of Brownstone, Canton. Ecorse, Huron, Monguagon, Northville, Plymouth, Romulus, . Sumpter, Taylor, and Van Buren, and Wyandotte City. Population (1910), 215,090. SAMUEL WILLARD BEAKES, Democrat, of Ann Arbor, was born January 11, 1861, at Burlingham, Sullivan County, N. Y.; was educated in Wallkill Academy, Mid- dletown, N.Y ., and in the literary and law departments of the University of Michigan, graduating in 1883; was private secretary to Judge Thomas M. Cooley; practiced law for a short time in Westerville, Ohio, where he was editor and publisher of the Wes- terville Review; for two years was editor and publisher of the Adrian (Mich.) Daily Record, and for more than 20 years of the Ann Arbor Argus; was postmaster of Ann Arbor under Cleveland, and served two terms as mayor of Ann Arbor, four terms as city treasurer, and four terms as city assessor; was married, July 7, 1886, to Annie S. Beakes, of Ann Arbor; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress after a 10-day cam- paign, receiving 16,761 votes, to 16,650 for William W. Wedemeyer, Republican, 13,660 for Hubert P. Probert, Progressive, and 814 for John P. Foster, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties). Pop- ulation (1910), 202,842. J. M. C. SMITH, Republican; resides at Charlotte, Mich.; in early life learned painter and mason trade; was educated in Charlotte High School and the University of Michigan; is a lawyer by profession, president of the First National Bank of Char- lotte, and is interested in farming; has been prosecuting attorney, alderman, and member of the constitutional convention of 1908; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6 counties). Population (1910), 195,382. EDWARD L. HAMILTON, Republican, of Niles; admitted to the bar in 1884; elected to the Fifty-fifth and each succeeding Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNtIES: Tonia, Kent, and Ottawa (3 counties). Population (1910), 237,996. CARL E. MAPES, Republican, of Grand Rapids, was born on a farm in Eaton County, Mich., December 26, 1874; was graduated from Olivet College in 1896 and from the law department of the University of Michigan in 1899; has practiced law at Grand Rapids since graduation; served one term in the Michigan House of Represent- atives and two terms in the Senate; married August 14, 1907, to Julia Pike, of Grand Rapids, and has three children; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. 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; reelected to each succeeding Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTtiEs: Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, and St. Clair, and Grosse Pointe, Gratiot, and Hamtramck Townships of Wayne County. Population (1910), 192,269. LOUIS C. CRAMTON, Republican, of Lapeer, Mich.; born in Hadley Township, Lapeer County, Mich., December 2, 1875; graduate Lapeer High School 1893; took Paviiy! course in literary department, University of Michigan, and graduated from aw department of that university 1899; practiced law until 1905, and has since that 13823°—63-2—1sT ED 5 50 Congressional Directory. MICHIGAN time published the Lapeer County Clarion; married, 1903, to Miss Fame Kay, of Detroit; was three terms law clerk of Michigan State Senate; deputy commissioner of railroads of Michigan 1907; secretary of Michigan Railroad Commission 1907-8; representative in State legislature 1909-10; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,089 votes, to 12,588 for Loren A. Sherman, National Progressive, and 11,998 for John J. Bell, Democrat. - nen nal Coun Clinton, Saginaw, Shiawassee, and Tuscola (4 counties). Population 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Benzie, Lake, Leelanau, Manistee, Mason, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (9 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 Univer- sity of Michigan, graduating from the latter in 1883; has been prosecuting attorney 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; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alcona, Alpena, Arenac, Bay, Cheboygan, Crawford, Emmet, Glad- win, Tosco, Midland, Montmorency, Ogemaw, Oscoda, Otsego, and Presque Isle (15 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 208,574. ROY ORCHARD WOODRUFF, National Progressive, of Bay City, Mich.; born at Baton Rapids, Mich., March 14, 1876; educated at high school at Eaton Rapids; worked at printing business from age of 15 to 23; enlisted as a corporal of Company G, Thirty-third Michigan Volunteer Infantry, for the Spanish War, serving until mustered out with the regiment, and was in action at Aguadores, Cuba, on July 1, 1898; entered dental department of the Detroit College of Medicine 1n 1899, graduating in 1902, and entered upon practice of profession in Bay City; was married to Vera May, eldest daughter of Hon. and Mrs. De Vere Hall, of Bay City, in 1906; was nominated and elected mayor of Bay City in April, 1911, for a period of two years; elected to the Sixty-third Congress on the National Progressive ticket in 1912. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTMES: Antrim, Charlevoix, Clare, Grand Traverse, Gratiot, Isabella, Kalkaska, Mecosta, Missaukee, Montcalm, Osceola, and Roscommon (12 counties). Population (1910), 210,123. FRANCIS O. LINDQUIST, Republican, of Greenville, was born at Marinette, Wis., September 27, 1869; his parents were Scandinavians; education was limited to the third grade in the common schools; worked at day labor during earlier life; is now in the mail-order clothing and manufacturing business; is president of the Canada Mills Co., of New York, and Greenville and Muskegon, Mich.; never before held political office; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,303 votes, to 9,361 for Archie McCall, Democrat, and 9,231 for John W. Patchen, Progressive. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alger, Baraga, Chippewa, Delta, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Luce, Mackinac, Marquette, Menominee, Ontonagon, and Schoolcraft (15 counties). Population (1910), 325,628. WILLIAM J. MacDONALD, Progressive, of Calumet, was born November 17, 1874, in Grant County, Wis. ; is a lawyer; married; served as prosecuting attorney of Keweenaw County four years and four years as prosecuting attorney of Houghton County; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress on the National Progressive ticket, receiving 18,433 votes, to 18,190 for H. Olin Young, Republican, 10,322 for John Power, Democrat, and 1,077 for William O. Tresize, Prohibitionist. MINNESOTA Biographical. 51 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 1901, 1907, and 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. 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 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 Sosuney 28, 1901; and reelected in 1905 and 1911. His term of service will expire arch 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 2,075,708. JAMES MANAHAN, Republican, of Minneapolis, was born in Chatfield, Minn., March 12, 1866; attended district schools of Olmsted County; graduated from Winona Normal School in 1886; taught for two years; attended the law schools of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin and the University of Minnesota, graduating from the latter institution in 1889, and commenced practice in St. Paul; married Mary Z. Kelly in 1893; moved to Lincoln, Nebr., in 1895 and practiced law there 10 years, returning to practice in Minneapolis in 1905; has never before held public office; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 154,308 votes, to 69,652 for C. J. Buell, Demo- crat, 30,092 for J. S. Ingals, Public Ownership, and 2,414 for W. H. Calderwood, Prohibitionist. 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, 1882; 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 ar; 1s married and has two children; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving a majority of 14,087 votes over his Democratic opponent. 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 52 Congressional Directory. MINNESOTA THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNMES: 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, I1l.; 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 prac- ticed 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 10 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; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. ; oun DIVIRIC) DoT Chisago, Ramsey, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1910), FREDERICK CLEMENT STEVENS, Republican, of St. Paul, was born in Boston, Mass., January 1, 1861; attended the common schools of Rockland, Me.; was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1881; from law school of the State University of Towa in 1884; admitted to the bar in 1884; was elected to the Legislature of Minne- sota in 1888 and 1890, and to the Fifty-fifth and following Congresses. FIFTH DISTRICT.—County: Hennepin. Population (1910), 333,480. GEORGE R. SMITH, Republican, of Minneapolis, was born in St. Cloud, Stearns County, Minn., May 28, 1864; graduate of the University of Minnesota, class of 1893; admitted to the bar the same year and entered upon practice of law in Minneapolis; in the session of 1903 he served in the Minnesota State Legislature from the thirty- eighth district; in 1906 was elected judge of the probate court, Hennepin County, Minn., and was reelected twice without opposition; was married January 9, 1895, to Margaret A. Horan, and has two daughters; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Bigstone, Chippewa, Grant, Kandiyohi, Lac qui Parle, Lincoln, Lyon, Pope, Redwood, Renville, Stavens, Swift, Traverse, and Yellow Medicine (14 counties). Population (1910), 190,930. ANDREW J. VOLSTEAD, Republican, of Granite Falls, native of Minnesota; occupation lawyer; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Aitkin, Anoka, Carlton, Cook, Isanti, Itasca, Kanabec, Koochiching, Lake, Mille Lacs, 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 Minnesota in 1895, and from the law depart- ment of the same institution in 1900; 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20,523 votes, to 12,494 for John Jenswold, jr., Democrat, and 7,398 for Morris Kaplan, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNmIES: Becker, Beltrami, Clay, Clearwater, Kittson, Mahnomen, Marshall, Norman, Otter Tail, Pennington, Polk, Red Lake, Roseau, and Wilkin (14 counties). Population (1910), 225,767. HALVOR STEENERSON, Republican, of Cookston, was born in Dane County, Wis.; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,481 votes, to 11,190 for M. A. Brattland, Public Ownership candidate. MISSISSIPPI B ogra phical. 53 MISSISSIPPL (Population (1910), 1,797,114.) SENATORS. JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS, 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 Virginia, 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 Democratic 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 opposition 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 1, 1907, Mr. Williams was chosen at a primary election to be the candidate of the Democratic Party for the United States Senate, and on January 23, 1908, elected by the legislature to succeed Hon. H. D. Money, and took his seat April 4, 1911. Was a delegate to Baltimore convention which nominated Woodrow Wilson. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. JAMES K. VARDAMAN, Democrat, of Jackson, Miss., was born in Jackson County, Tex., on July 26, 1861; his parents moved from Holmes County, Miss., to Texas in 1858; his father joined the Confederate Army and served four years; after the war the family returned to Mississippi and settled in Yalabusha County in 1868; young Vardaman was reared on the farm; at the age of 20 removed to Carrollton, Miss., and began the study of law in the office of Helm & Somerville; was admitted to the bar in the fall of 1881 and began the practice of law at Winona, Miss. ; in connection with his law practice he edited the Winona Advance, a paper established by Senator H. D. Money; was married in Winona, Miss., to Mrs. Anna E. Robinson, May 31, 1884, and has a family of three sons and two daughters; in the winter of 1884 removed from Winona to Greenwood, Miss., where he practiced law and became the owner and editor of the Greenwood Enterprise; from his majority has been active in politics; was one of the first men in the South to take up the cause of W. J. Bryan, and has been an ardent, earnest supporter of the distinguished Nebraskan from that time to the present; was elected to the legislature from Leflore County in 1889, and reelected in 1891; was candidate for speaker in 1892, but was defeated; was elected speaker in 1894; was Democratic presidential elector from the State at large in 1892; was also presidential elector in 1896; was a candidate for governor in 1895 and was defeated; in 1896 established the Greenwood Commonwealth and was its editor until elected governor in 1903; volunteered as a private for the Spanish-American War in 1898 and was elected captain of a company organized at Water Valley, his old home, but on account of bitter antagonism to the then governor, A. J. McLaurin, whose official conduct Mr. Vardaman had criticized in his newspaper, Gov. McLaurin refused to commission him; the company became so incensed at this treatment that it threatened to withdraw from the regiment, but in a speech to the company he urged them to do their duty, remain true to the flag, and elect one of their members captain and go to the front; he then withdrew, and a few days thereafter was offered the senior captaincy of the Fifth United States Volunteers, organized at Columbus, Miss., which place he accepted, and as soon as the regiment was organized went with it to Santiago de Cuba, where he remained until May, 1899; not long after the regi- ment’s arrival at Cuba he was promoted to the rank of major; returning to Mississippi In 1899 he entered the contest for governor and was again defeated, the nomination going to A. H. Longino, the result of the work of the old convention system then in vogue; four years later Mr. Vardaman was nominated and elected governor, the first nomination under the primary system, defeating his three opponents by a large majority; in 1907 was a candidate for the United States Senate, but was defeated by 54 Congressional Drrectory. MISSISSIPPI Hon. John Sharp Williams by a majority of 640 votes; in 1910 the death of Senator A.J. McLaurin caused a vacancy, and he was again a candidate before the legislature, but was defeated by a combination which hasbecome notorious asthe ‘ ‘secret caucus’; he appealed his case to the people, and in a contest remarkable for its bitterness, on August 1, 1911, defeated the secret-caucus choice, Leroy Percy, by 60,000 votes in a total vote of 133,000. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alcorn, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes Monroe, Noxubee, Oktibbeha, Pren- tiss, and Tishomingo (9 counties). Population (1910), 205,637. EZEKIEL SAMUEL CANDLER, Jr., Democrat, of Corinth, was born in Bellville, Hamilton County, Fla., January 18, 1862, but moved with his parents to Tishomingo County, Miss., when 8 years old, and grew to manhood in that county; is the oldest son of Ezekiel Samuel Candler, sr., and Julia Beville Candler, who are natives of Georgia; is a 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 Tuka Male Academy, at Iuka, Miss. ; attended the law department of the Univer- sity 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 previously had his disabilities of minority removed by the chancery court, so as to enable him to practice his profession, he at once commenced the practice of law with his father at Iuka under the firm name of Candler & Candler, which partnership still exists; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Tishomingo County in 1884, when 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 Tuka and also one at Corinth; was nominated by the Democratic State convention in 1888 by acclamation, when 26 years old, for presidential elector for the first congressional district, and was elected by the largest majority received by any district presidential elector at that election in the State, and voted for Cleveland and Thurman; was for 10 years a member 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 repre- sented 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 unainimously releected 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition in the general election, receiving 7,951 votes; had opposition in the primary, but carried every county in his district. 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 common- 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? reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. THIRD DISTRICT. —CoUNTIES: Bolivar, Caohoma, Holmes, Tssaquena, 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. Hum- phreys, 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 com- MISSISSIPPI B 10gra phacal. 55 mand of Brig. Gen. Adelbert Ames, United States Army, who succeeded him as mili- tary governor; his mother was Mildred Hickman Maury, of Tennessee; he was educated at the University of Mississippi, in the class of 1885, but left before graduation, having completed the junior year; he engaged in mercantile pursuits, first as a clerk, after- wards 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 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 Mississippi 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Clay, Grenada, Mont- gomery, Pontotoc, Webster, and Yalabusha (11 counties). Population (1910), 216,615. THOMAS UPTON SISSON, Democrat, 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 Clarksville, Tenn., taking the degree of A. B. in 1889; 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 married June 5, 1901, to Miss Mamie Purnell, and has four children. He was elected to the State senate from the twenty-sixth senatorial district, embracing the counties of Mont- gomery and Carroll, being nominated as a Democrat without opposition; was Demo- cartic 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 and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Clarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott, Smith, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1910), 217,223. SAMUEL 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 Latin 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 that of Congressman; was married on the 17th day of June, 1880, to Miss Sue E. May, of Versailles, Ky.; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress without opposition, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Countiks: Covington, Forrest, George, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Jefferson Davis, Jones, Lawrence, Marion, Lamar, Pearl River, Perry, Simpson, and Wayne (16 coun- ties). Population (1910), 244,949. BYRON PATTON HARRISON, Democrat, of Gulfport, Harrison County, Miss., was born in Crystal Springs, Copiah County, Miss., August 29, 1881. He was edu- cated in the public schools of Crystal Springs, Miss., and the Louisiana State Uni- versity at Baton Rouge, La. He married Mary Edwina McInnis, of Leakesville, Greene County, Miss., in January, 1905, and has three children. He is a member of the S. 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 elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 56 Congressional Directory. MISSOURI SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Jefferson, Lincoln, Pike, and Wilkinson (9 counties). Population (1910), 218,894. PERCY EDWARDS QUIN, Democrat, of McComb City, was born October 30, 1872, the son of Henry G. Quin, a Baptist minister and farmer, and Virginia Davis Quin, both native-born Mississippians, and was reared on a farm in Amite County, Miss.; was graduated at Gillsburg Collegiate Institute, in Amite County, Miss., in 1890, and from Mississippi College, at Clinton, Miss., in 1893; taught school in McComb City, Miss., for the sessions of 1893-94, and began the practice of law in McComb City, Pike County, Miss., in 1894, where he has since practiced his profession; is a member of the Baptist Church; served as a representative of Pike County in the Mississippi State Legislature in 1890-1892; in 1912 was a candidate for Congress against William A. Dixon, winning seven out of the nine counties, and losing the eighth by only 6 votes, the majority in the primary election being 1,153; in the general election in November he had no opponent, and received 5,494 votes. On October 1, 1913, he married Miss Aylett Buckner Conner, of Natchez, Miss. 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 and Sixty-third Congresses. MISSOURI. (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 1900-1904; married Sarah Louise Winston April 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 delegate at large from Missouri to the Democratic national convention at Baltimore in 1912, and pre- sented Champ Clark’s name for the nomination for the Presidency; was appointed a member of the Democratic national campaign committee, and served as chairman of the senatorial and foreign bureaus; was nominated by the Democrats for United States Senator November 8, 1910, in a State-wide primary election; elected to the United States Senate to succeed Maj. William Warner, Republican, for a term be- ginning March 4, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. MISSOURI Biographical. 57 REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT. —COUNTIES: Adair, Clark, Knox, Lewis, Macon, Marion, Putnam, Schuyler, Scot- land, and Shelby (10 counties). Population (1910), 174, 971. JAMES TIGHLMAN LLOYD, Democrat, of Shelbyville, was born at Canton, Lewis County, Mo., August 28, 1857; eraduated 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 heme, 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; elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Carroll, Chariton, Grundy, Linn, Livingston, Monroe, Randolph, 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 tea ching district schools, during which time he continued the study of law; was admitted to the bar in 187 6; in 1886-was elected prosecuting attorney of Chariton County, which office he held for three consecutive terms and Tntil 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—Counties: 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; attended the public schools there for three years, later the public schools at Canton, Lewis County, Mo.; having finished the public schools, entered Christian University at Canton, Mo., in September, he graduated in hi une, 1872, receiving the degree of A. B. , and the degree of A. M. J une, 1907; studied law, ‘and admitted to the bar in 1875 at Gallatin, Mo. where has resided continuously since June, 1873; was elected public administrator of Daviess County in 1876, and reelected in 1880; in April, 1882, was elected 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 reelected in 1884 and 1886, serving in the thirty-second, thirty-third, and thirty-fourth general assemblies; was chair. man of the committee on appropriations in the thirty- “third and speaker of the house in the thirty-fourth assembly; has served two terms as mayor of Gallatin; was a member of the board of managers of State Asylum for the Insane at St. J oseph for a number of years, having been. appointed by Gov. (now Senator) William J. Stone; was judge of the seventh judicial circuit of Missouri from January, 1901, until Feb- ruary 1, 1907; has always been a Democrat and active in the politics of the State; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20 482 votes, to 10,992 for J. H. Morroway, Republican, and 6,698 for W. Sam Wightman, Progressive. FOURTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Andrew, Atchison, Buchanan, Holt, Nodaway, and Platte (6 coun- ties). Population (1910), 179,707. CHARLES F. BOOHER, Democrat, of Savannah, was born in East Groveland, Livingston County, N.Y. Held the office of prosecuting attorney six years; was presi- dential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1880; mayor of Savannah six years; is mar- ried 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the 'Sixty- -third Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Counrty: 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 Jaw in the office of Pratt- McCrary-Ferry & Hagerman; entered the law department of the 58 Congressional Directory. MISSOURI 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; was reelected each year for 14 years until he resigned to go to Congress; 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 textbook on the Law of Wills and 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 corporations; 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 33,397 votes, to 21,863 for Charles A. Sumner, Progressive, 5,759 for Isaac B. Kimbrell, Re- potiion 1,626 for Charles F. Steckhahn, Socialist, 364 for Orange Judd Hill, rohibitionist, and 167 for Carl Oberheu, Socialist-Labor. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNmiES: Bates, Cass, Cedar, Dade, Henry, Johnson, and St. Clair (7 counties). 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 residential 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. Was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Greene, Hickory, Howard, Lafayette, Pettis, Polk, and Saline (8 counties). Population (1910), 218,182. COURTNEY WALKER HAMLIN, Democrat, of Springfield, was born at Brevard, N. C., October 27, 1858; is a lawyer and married; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third “Congress by 7,424 plurality. 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—CounNTies: Audrain, Callaway, Franklin, Gasconade, Lincoln, Montgomery, Pike, Ralls, St. Charles, and Warren (10 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, the youngest college president in America; worked as a hired farm hand, clerked in a country store, edited a country newspaper, practiced law; moved to Missouri in 1875; city attorney of Louisiana and Bowling Green; deputy prose- cuting attorney and prosecuting attorney; presidential elector; delegate to Denver Trans-Mississippi Congress; member of the Missouri Legislature 1889-90; author of the Missouri antitrust statute and the Missouri Australian ballot law; permanent chairman of the Democratic national convention, St. Louis, 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; elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty- second Congresses; reelected to Sixty-third Congress by a majority of 4,992 and a plurality of 5,498; the unanimous nominee of the Democrats in Congress for the Speakership of the Sixty-first Congress; unanimously nominated for Speaker in the Sixty-second Congress and elected; led in the Baltimore Democratic national convention of 1912 for the presidential nomination on 29 ballots, receiving a clear majority on 9; was nominated Speaker of the House of the Sixty-third Congress in the Democratic caucus March 5; elected April 7, 1913. MISSOURI Biographical. 59 TENTH DISTRICT.—City oF St. Louls: 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 BARTHOLDT, 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 Fiity-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty- ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 33,242 votes, to 31,227 for Maurice O’Connor, Democrat, 16,417 for A. Siebert, Progressive, 7,154 for G. A. Hoehn, Socialist, and 438 for J. Poelling, Socialist-Labor. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry oF ST. Louis: Precincts one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, and twelve of the second ward; third, fourth, eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth wards; precincts one to seven and ten to fifteen, inclusive, of the twenty-second ward; twenty-sixth ward; and precincts eight to twenty-three, inclusive, of the twenty-seventh ward. Population (1910), 203,667. WILLIAM L. IGOE, Democrat, of St. Louis, was born in that city October 19, 1879, and is the son of the late Michael J. Igoe and Margaret Heffernan Igoe, both of whom were natives of Ireland; educated in public and parochial schools of St. Louis, and in 1902 graduated from the law department of Washington University, receiving degree of LL. B.; is a member of the law firm of Igoe & Carroll; member of St. Louis House of Delegates 1909-1913, resigning in March, 1913; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,653 votes, to 12,448 for Catlin, “Republican, 4,812 for Ward, Progressive, 1,932 for Mueller, Socialist, and 135 for Scheidel, Socialist-Labor. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or St. Louis: Fifth, sixth, seventh, sixteenth, and 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 the city of St. Louis, was born on a farm in Warren County, Mo., June 11, 1871. His parents were James Coleman Dyer and Martha Emily (Camp) Dyer, both having come to Missouri in its early history with their parents from the States of Virginia and Kentucky, respec- tively; was educated in the public schools, Central Wesleyan College, at Warrenton, Mo., and the law department of the Washington University, city of St. Louis; is a lawyer, and served as assistant circuit attorney of the city of St. Louis; served in the Spanish War, and was a colonel on the staff of Gov. Herbert S. Hadley, of Missouri; ismarried and has two children; waselected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress over Michael J. Gill, Democrat, Wilson H. Cotton, Pro- gressive, William F. Crouch, Socialist, and Carl F. Meier, Socialist Labor. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—Countits: Bollinger, Carter, Iron, Jefferson, Madison, Perry, Reynolds, St. Francois, Ste. Genevieve, Washington, and Wayne (11 counties). Population (1910), 167,188. WALTER LEWIS HENSLEY, Democrat, of Farmington; is married; is a lawyer; elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Butler, Cape Girardeau, Christian, Douglas, Dunklin, Howell, Mississippi, New Madrid, Oregon, Ozark, Pemiscot, Ripley, Scott, Stoddard, Stone, and Taney (16 counties). Population (1910), 296,316. JOSEPH JAMES RUSSELL, Democrat, of Charleston, was born in Mississippi County, Mo., on a farm, August 23, 1854, and was educated in the public schools and in the Charleston Academy; graduated from law school, Missouri State University, in 1880, with degree LL. B.; was county school commissionerin 1878-79; elected prosecut- ing attorney in 1880 and 1882; in 1884 was a Cleveland elector for his district; 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 advo- cate general on Gov. A. M. Dockery’s staff; was permanent chairman of Democratic State convention in 1910; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 26,081 votes, to 25,066 for George R. Curry, Republican, and 4,957 for Alfred F. Bumpas, Socialist. 60 Congressional Directory. MONTANA FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barry, Barton, Jasper, Lawrence, McDonald, Newton, and Vernon (7 counties). Population (1910), 226,374. ; PERL D. DECKER, Democrat, of Joplin, was born in Athens County, Ohio, in 1875; was educated in the common schools of Kansas; received a classical education at Park College, Parkville, Mo., where he graduated in 1897; graduated from the law school of Kansas University in 1899; is a resident of Joplin, Mo., where he has been practicing law for the last 14 years; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20,921 votes, to 12,850 for I. V. McPherson, Republican, and 7,797 for H. H. Gregg, Progressive. 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 Lebanon, 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; married Miss Fannie J. Horner, of Columbia, Mo.; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,908 votes, to 10,811 for James P. O’Bannon, Republican, and 3,697 for Columbus Bradford, Progressive. MONTANA (Population (1910), 376,053.) SENATORS. HENRY L. MYERS, Democrat, of Hamilton, was born October 9, 1862, in Cooper County, Mo.; son of Henry and Maria (Adams) Myers. His father was a native of Jefferson County, Va.; his mother’s family was from Bourbon County, Ky. He was educated in private schools in Missouri; taught school and studied law; was licensed to practice law in his native State. 1n 1893 he moved to Hamilton, Mont., and there engaged in the practice of his profession, the law; has since resided there, where he has served as prosecuting attorney, State senator, and district judge; was serving his second term in the last-named position when, on March 2, 1911, he was elected United States Senator for the term beginning March 4, 1911, to succeed Hon. Thomas H. Carter, Republican. In 1896 he married Miss Nora, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Doran, of Hamilton, Mont.; has one child, Mary Annetta Myers, aged 13 years. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. THOMAS J. WALSH, Democrat, was born at Two Rivers, Wis., June 12, 1859; received early education in the public schools, from which he graduated; taught as principal of several high schools, and while so engaged was awarded a life certificate on an examination covering all the branches included in the usual college course; in 1884 took his degree of B. I. from the University of Wisconsin; began the practice of his profession at Redfield, S. Dak., associated with his brother, Henry Comer Walsh; opened an office at Helena, Mont., in 1890, and in 1907 associated with himself Col. C. B. Nolan, former attorney general of the State; ran for Congress in 1906, but the Roosevelt tide carried his opponent to victory; was candidate for United States Sen- ator in 1910 against Senator Thomas H. Carter; through his efforts a Democratic legis- lature was elected, but a deadlock ensued, which ended on the last night of the session in the election of Henry L. Myers; was again a candidate in 1912, being unanimously nominated at the State convention as the candidate of his party; received the highest number of votes cast for any candidate at the following election, his vote being 28,421 to 18,450 for Judge Henry C. Smith, Republican, and 22,161 for Hon. Joseph M. Dixon, Progressive. The legislature of 1913 ratified the choice of the people, every member of both branches, irrespective of party, voting for him. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. NEBRASKA | B ogra phical. 61 REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 376,053. JOHN M. EVANS, Democrat, of Missoula, was born at Sedalia, Mo., January 7, 1863; was educated at the United States Military Academy and the University of Missouri, graduating from the latter in 1887; has practiced law in Missoula, Mont., since 1888; was police judge of the city from 1889 to 1894, and register of the United States land office at Missoula from 1894 to 1898; was largely instrumental in establishing com- mission government in his home city, and was chosen the first commission mayor in his State; in 1889 married Helena G. Hastings, of Columbia, Mo., and they have two children, Beverly Price, age 21, and Philip Cabell, age 3; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress, defeating his Republican opponent, Charles N. Pray, by 995 votes. TOM STOUT, Democrat, of Lewistown; born in New London, Mo., May 20, 1879; educated at Warrensburg (Mo.) State Normal School and Missouri State Univer- sity; taught school two years and then moved to Montana, locating at Lewistown in 1902; was married in 1905 to Lela Wunderlin, of Lewistown, and has three children; engaged in the newspaper business, being editor and publisher of the Fergus County Democrat; member of the State Senate of Montana in 1910; elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 25,891 votes, to 23,505 for Charles N. Pray, Republican, and 16,644 for Thomas M. Everett, Progressive. NEBRASKA. (Population (1910), 1,192,214. SENATORS. 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, 5,098 for T. 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. GEORGE W. NORRIS, Republican, of McCook, Nebr., was born 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 circumstances; was com- pelled to work out among the neighboring farmers by the day and month during the summer and attended district school during the winter; afterwards taught school and earned the money to defray expenses for a higher education; attended Baldwin Uni- versity, 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; removed to Nebraska in 1885; was three times prosecuting attorney, twice by appointment and once by election, refusing a second nomination for the posi- tion; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; received the Republican nomination for United States Senator at a State-wide pri- mary in 1912, and was afterwards indorsed by the Progressive Party; at the Novem- ber, 1912, general election received a majority of the popular-preference vote for the bffice in a State-wide contest, receiving 126,022 votes, to 111,946 for Ashton C. Shallen- berger, Democratic and Populist nominee; was elected United States Senator by a unanimous vote of the Nebraska Legislature on January 22, 1913. His term of office will expire March 3, 1919. 62 Congressional Directory. NEBRASKA REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 17,416 votes, to 15,706 for Paul F. Clark, Republican and Progressive, 868 for C. R. Oyler, Socialist, and 481 for N. A. Carraker, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1910), 190,558. C. 0. LOBECK, Democrat, of Omaha, was born at Andover, Ill., April 6, 1852. Received a common-school education at Andover, later at high school, Geneseo, I11., and one year at German Wallace College, Berea, Ohio, and later a term at Dyhren- furth Commercial College, Chicago. As a boy clerked in a general store during vacations; at 17 years of age commenced regular work as salesman in general store at Dayton, Iowa. From 1875 to 1892 was a commercial traveler 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 elected to the Sixty- second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 16,075 votes, to 15,662 for H. H. Baldridge, Republican-Progressive, and 2,146 for J. N. Carter, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Antelope, Boone, Burt, Cedar, Colfax, Cuming, Dakota, Dixon, Dodge, Knox, Madison, Merrick, Nance, Pierce, Platte, Stanton, Thurston, and Wayne (18 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 233,178. DAN V. STEPHENS, Democrat, of Fremont, was born in Indiana November 4, 1868, educated at Valparaiso College; settled in Nebraska in 1887; studied law, taught school, and served two terms as county superintendent of schools; author of two books on education; has been engaged in the manufacturing and publishing business and in farming for many years; is married and has one child; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis in 1904, and dele- gate at large and chairman of Nebraska delegation to the Democratic national conven- tion at Denver in 1908; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. James P. Latta; was reelected to the Sixty-third Con- gress, receiving 26,229 votes, to 21,663 for J. C. Cook, Republican and Progressive. 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, 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—Ethel, age 22; Frank Blaine, age 20; Charles Porter, age 19; and William McKinley, age 14. Was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a majority of 4,015 over C. M. Skiles, Democrat. NEVADA Biographical. 63 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. SILAS REYNOLDS BARTON, Republican, of Grand Island, Nebr., was born at New London, Iowa, May 21, 1872; moved with his parents to Hamilton County, Nebr., in 1873, where they took up a homestead; graduated from the Aurora High School and attended the Peru (Nebr.) State Normal; engaged in farming and teaching school until 1898, when he was appointed deputy county treasurer of Hamilton County, from which position he resigned in 1901 to assume the duties of grand recorder of the Ancient Order of United Workmen of Nebraska; was president for two terms of the Grand Record- ers’ Association of the United States; wasa member of the supreme lodge finance com- mittee to audit the accounts of the order; was a member of the committee of 15 torevise the rates of the order at a meeting held at Montreal, Canada; resigned as grand recorder of the A. O. U. W. upon his election to the office of auditor of the State, serving in this capacity from 1909 to 1913; during his two terms as auditor and insurance commis- sioner he was a member of the national executive committee of insurance commis- sioners; was nominated by direct primary as a candidate for Congress in April, 1912, over four competitors, receiving 6,109 votes of a total of 11,389; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 18,818 votes, to 17,522 for R. D. Sutherland, Democrat, 1,421 for W. C. Elliott, Socialist, and 610 for George W. Porter, Prohibition. 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, Lincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Morrill, Rock, Scotts Bluffs, Sheridan, Sher- man, Sioux, Thomas, Valley, an Wheeler (35 counties). Population (1910), 237,788. MOSES P. KINKAID, Republican, of O’Neill, was born in West Virginia; a resident of the State of Nebraska since 1881; lawyer by profession; graduate of the law 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, Sixty- first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiv- ing a plurality of 6,236 votes over W. J. Taylor, Democrat and People’s Independent candidate. NEVADA. (Population (1910), 81,875.) : SENATORS. FRANCIS GRIFFITH NEWLANDS, 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 Com- mittees on Irrigation, Foreign Affairs, Banking and Currency, and Ways and Means; was elected to the United States Senate to suceed 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 competitors. The legis- lature, 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. KEY PITTMAN, Democrat, of Tonopah, Nev.; born in Vicksburg, Miss., Septem- ber 19, 1872; son of William Buckner Pittman and Catherine (Key) Pittman; educated by private tutors and at the Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn.; commenced practice of law at Seattle, Wash., in 1892; was in the Northwest Territory and Alaska from 1897 until the fall of 1901; was one of the committee that formulated the “‘consent” form of government for Nome; was first prosecuting attorney at Nome, Alaska; went to Tonopah, Nev., in January, 1902; never ran for any office except that of United States Senator, but was appointed by the governor of the State as represent- ative to the St. Louis Exposition, the Lewis and Clarke Exposition, and the Irriga- tion Congress, and by the supreme court of the State as its representative to the inter- national congress of jurists and lawyers that met in St. Louis during the exposition. 64 Congressional Directory. NEW HAMPSHIRE REPRESENTATIVE. S AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 81,875. E. E. ROBERTS, Republican, of Carson City, 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; is married and has one daughter, Miss Hazel Roberts; was chairman of the Nevada delegation to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1912; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. NEW HAMPSHIRE. (Population (1910), 430,572.) SENATORS. JACOB H. GALLINGER, Republican, of Concord, is of German ancestry on his father’s side, his great grandfather, Michael Gallinger, having emigrated from Ger- many in 1754, first settling in New York State, from whence he removed to Canada in 1781; his mother (Catherine Cook) was of American stock; was born on a farm in Cornwall, Ontario, Canada, March 28, 1837, being one of 12 children; received a common-school and academic education; was a printer in early life; studied medi- cine and was graduated in 1858; followed the profession of medicine and surgery until he entered Congress; is on the board of trustees of Columbia Hospital for Women, and a member of the board of visitors to Providence Hospital; was a member of the House of Representatives of New 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 Washing- ton 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 chair- man 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 Reservation Commission, and vice chairman of the National Waterways Commission; served as President pro tempore of the Senate during a portion of the Sixty-second Congress; 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 without opposition in 1897, 1903, and 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. HENRY FRENCH HOLLIS, Democrat, of Concord, was born in Concord August 30, 1869; preliminary education at Concord High School, and with private tutor at Concord, Mass.; graduated A. B., magna cum laude, from Harvard University 1892; admitted to New Hampshire bar March, 1893; member of the school board of Concord 1896-1899; candidate for Congress 1900; candidate for governor 1902 and 1904; prac- ticed law in Concord since 1893; first Democratic Senator elected from New Hamp- shire since 1852; elected March 13 on the forty-second ballot. His term will expire March 3, 1919. 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. EUGENE ELLIOTT REED, Democrat, of Manchester, where he has always re- sided, was born April 23, 1866, and educated in the public schools; for several years was engaged in business with his brothers in one of the oldest established con- tracting firms in Manchester; later was employed in the traffic department as dis- patcher of the Boston & Maine Railroad; married in 1893 to Miss Cora Louette Fox, and i Nid NEW JERSEY Biographical. 65 has a son, Royden Eugene, 18 years old; in 1899 was elected alderman from ward 10 and served four years; in 1902 was elected mayor of the city and successively reelected four times, notwithstanding the city was strongly Republican; was elected national committeeman in 1908 and 1912; attended Denverand Baltimore conventionsasdelegate at large; in 1906 was elected national congressional committeeman and reelected in 1912; was nominated for Congress in 1910 against Hon. Cyrus A. Sulloway, who had represented the district for 16 years, and failed of election by less than 800 votes, although receiving a large plurality in Manchester; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 1,525, receiving 18,888 votes, to 17,363 for Cyrus A. Sulloway, Republican, 4,307 for Samuel O. Titus, Progressive, 856 for Michael B. Roth, Socialist, and 207 for Jason H. Bliss, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HitLsBoro CoUNTY: City of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deering, Francestown, Greenfield, Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, Lyndeboro, 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, Dun- barton, Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salisbury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wilmot. Population (1910), 212,000. RAYMOND BARTLETT STEVENS, Democrat, of Landaff, was born at Bing- hamton, N. Y., June 18, 1874; educated at Harvard College and Harvard Law School; is a farmer; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. NEW JERSEY. (Population (1910), 2,537,167.) SENATORS. 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 E. C. Stokes, 38,818 for Charles N. Fowler, and 36,240 for Franklin Murphy, Republicans, Frank McDermit, the other Democratic candidate, receiving 15,575 votes. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; received a majority of the vote cast in the primary for United States Senator, and was elected by the legislature January 28, 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). Population (1910),206,396. + WILLIAM J. BROWNING, Republican, of Camden, was born in that city on April 11, 1850, and has resided there continuously; engaged in mercantile business from his seventeenth year; served four years as member of the board of education and four years as member of city council; was postmaster of Camden from June, 1889, to June, 1894; appointed Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives of the United States in December, 1895, and served until April, 1911; elected to the Sixty-second Congress on November 7, 1911, to fill the vacancy coused by the death of Hon. H. C. Loudens- lager; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,472 votes, to 13,170 for D. Stewart Craven, Democrat; 5,893 for Frank B. Jess, Progressive (Roosevelt); 1,017 for George D. Chenoweth, Progressive; 1,830 for William P. Shourds, Socialist; and 537 for Joseph L. Surtees, National Prohibition. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Atlantic, Burlington, Cape May, and Cumberland (4 counties). Population (1910), 213,357. . J. THOMPSON BAKER, Democrat, of Wildwood, Cape May County, N. J., was born in Union County, Pa.; is descended on both sides from colonial pioneers in central Pennsylvania; was educated at Bucknell University, from which he received the degree of master of arts; studied law and practiced his profession for over 30 years; “is a member of the Pennsylvania Bar Association and the American Bar Association; is married ; had one son, who died in youth, and has four daughters; was president of 13823°—63-2—1sT ED—6 | | | 66 Congressional Durectory. NEW JERSEY the Union National Bank of Lewisburg, Pa., 12 years; is president of the Wildwood Title & Trust Co.; with his brothers he founded the city of Wildwood and the borough of Wildwood Crest in New Jersey; was the first mayor of the consolidated city of Wild- wood; was a delegate to the Baltimore convention; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, carrying every one of the four counties composing the district, which has been normally Republican by 10,000 for many years, and receiving 16,130 votes, to 12,330 for John J. Gardiner, Republican, 806 for Lewis L. Eavenson, Prohibitionist, 7.384 for Francis D. Potter, Progressive, and 794 for G. A. McKean, Socialist. THUD DiSTRIGY- Convo Middlesex, Monmouth, and Ocean (3 counties). Population (1919), THOMAS J. SCULLY, Democrat, of South 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 1998; was mayor of South Amboy 1909-10; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Hunterdon, Mercer, and Somerset (3 counties). Population (1910), ALLAN B. WALSH, Democrat, of Trenton, was born in that city August 29, 1874; received his early education in one of the parochial schools of Trenton and after- wards attended the public schools; on leaving school entered the employ of the Tren- ton Light & Power Co.; from this firm, after a short time, he passed to a position in the electrical testing department of the John A. Roebling’s Sons Co., of Trenton, N. J., becoming superintendent of this department; began his political life in 1910 as Demo- crat assemblyman from Mercer County in the ee of New Jersey, the first Democrat elected to the assembly from Mercer County in 17 years, and was reelected; ‘entered politics as a vigorous advocate of employers’ liability, direct primaries, com- mission form of government and corrupt practices acts; introduced bills during his first term embodying these principles, which were enacted into laws during his second term; the commission government bill of New Jersey bears his name; was chairman of the joint committee in charge of the inauguration of Mr. Wilson as governor of New Jersey, and was later sent by him as one of the delegates from New Jersey to a national conference on employers’ liability, held in Philadelphia under the auspices of the Academy of Political and Social Science; at the end of his second term in the legisla- ture was appointed secretary to the Mercer County board of taxation and filled this position until his election to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 13,222 votes, to 8,607 for Blackman, Republican, 6,685 for Gill, Progressive, 5563 for Gilbert, Socialist, 285 for Lunger, Prohibitionist, and 57 for Yardley, Socialist-Labor. He has the distinc- tion of representing the home district of President Wilson, and also of being the first Democratic Congressman from Mercer County in 57 years. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Morris and Union (2 counties). Population (1910), 214,901. 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 business; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bergen, Sussex, and Warren, and townships of Pompton and West Milford in Passaic County. Population (1910), 213,981. ARCHIBALD ©. HART, Democrat, of Hackensack, was born February 27, 1873, in Lennoxville, Province of Quebec, Canada. He is a veteran of the Twenty-third Regiment, New York Volunteer Infantry, and Second New Jersey Volunteer Infan- try, and a veteran of the Spanish-American War, where he served in the latter regiment; is married; is president of the First National Bank of Lodi, N. J., and a director in several other financial institutions, and is largely interested in real estate; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention in 1908; was a Member of the Sixty-second Congress as the successor of Hon. William Hughes; succeeded Judge Lewis J. Martin in the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 8,705 votes, to 2,960 for S. W. McClave, and 2,408 for Herbert Bailey. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Passaic, except the townships of Pompton and West Milford. Popu- lation (1910), 209,891. ROBERT GUNN BREMNER, Democrat, of Passaic, was born December 17, 1874, in Caithuess, Scotland; while young his parents removed to Canada, where he attended school; before reaching his majority came to the United States; in 1895 was a reporter in Paterson, N. J.; enlisted in the Spanish-American War; took control of the Passaic ~ NEW JERSEY Biographical. 67 Daily Herald in 1902 and is still its editor and publisher; never ran for office until he was practically unanimously nominated for the Sixty-third Congress, and was elected by 3,330 majority in a strong Republican district. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—EsSEX CouNTy: Eighth, eleventh, and fifteenth wards of city of Newark; towns of Bloomfield and Nutley and Belleville Township. UDSON COUNTY: City of Bayonne and seventh yo Jersey City; towns of Harrison and Kearney; borough of East Newark. Population (1910), EUGENE F. KINKEAD, Democrat, of Jersey City, was born March 27, 1876; was graduated from Seton Hall‘€ollege, South Orange, N. J., in 1895, with degree of A. B.; granted degree of LL. D. by St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, N. J.; elected alderman in Jersey City, 1898, serving as president of the board; married Miss Anna O’Neill, of New York City, September 29, 1909; is in the advertising business, being president of the Jersey Railways Advertising Co.; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. NINTH DISTRICT.—EsSEX County: Cities of East Orange and Orange, and the third, sixth, and seventh wards; sixth, eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth districts of the second ward; ninth, tenth, - and twelfth districts of the fourth ward; thirteenth district of the ninth ward; first to eleventh dis- tricts, inclusive, of the thirteenth ward; first, second, third, fifth, sixth to thirteenth districts, inclu- sive, of the fourteenth ward; first to fifth, inclusive, and ninth districts of the fifteenth ward. Popu- lation (1910), 213,027. WALTER IRVING McCOY, Democrat, of Bast Orange, was born at Troy, N. Y., 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 LI. 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—ESsEX CoUNTY: Second, fourth, fifth, ninth, tenth, twelfth, and sixteenth wards of the city of Newark; towns of Irvington, Montelair, and West Orange; boroughs of Caldwell, Essex, Fells, Glen Ridge, North Caldwell, Roseland, Verona, and West Caldwell; townships of Caldwell, Cedar Grove, Livingston, Milburn, and South Orange; and the village of South Orange. Population (1910), 206,693. EDWARD W. TOWNSEND, Democrat, of Montclair, son of Horace Gilbert and Ann Eliza (Thornton) Townsend, was born in Cleveland, Ohio; married, in San Francisco, Annie, daughter of Judge Delos and Myra (Clarke) Lake; is the author of a number of novels and books of short stories; elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 10,854 votes, to 7,847 for W. F. Morgan, Progressive, 7,111 for W. I. L. Adams, Republican, 1,514 for T. C. Cairns, Socialist, and 105 for G. L. Gould, Prohibitionist. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—HuDsoN County: City of Hoboken and second ward of Jersey City; towns of Guttenberg, West Hoboken, West New York, and Union; borough of Secaucus; and the townships of North Bergen and Weehawken. Population (1910), 199,612. JOHN J. EAGAN, Democrat, of Weehawken, was born in Hoboken, N. J., January 22, 1872; is the founder and president of the Eagan Schools of Business of Hoboken, Union Hill,and Hackensack, N.J.,and of the Eagan Schools of Business in New York City; was collector of taxes of the town of Union, N. J., from 1896 to 1899; in 1897 married Miss Susan Hasbrouck, of Rosendale, N.Y. and has one daughter, Helene Has- brouck, born in 1902: was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,208 votes, to 7,018 for Harlan Besson, Republican-Progressive, 1,429 for Reilly, Socialist, 96 for Sweeney, Socialist-Labor, and 74 for Sillcox, Prohibition. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—HUupSON COUNTY: First, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth wards of Jersey City. Population (1910), 223,138. : 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 subse- quent year that of A. M.; completed the regular course of lectures in the New York Law 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 Assembly, 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 63 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK NEW MEXICO. (Population (1910), 327,301.) SENATORS. THOMAS B. CATRON, Republican, of Santa Fe, was born in Tafayette County, Mo.; was educated in the public schools in that State and graduated from the uni- versity in the State of Missouri, receiving the degree of A. B.; is a lawyer, and has practiced his profession in the "Territory and State of New Mexico since 1867; has served several terms in the New Mexico Legislature; was attorney general of New Mexico for three and a half years; United States attorney for six and a half years; was elected and served in the Fifty-fourth Congress as Delegate from New Mexico, and elected Senator of the United States on the 27th day of March, 1912, and drew _ the term which will expire March 4, 1917. ALBERT BACON FALL, Republican, of Three Rivers, was born November 26, 1861, at Frankfort, Ky.; educated in country schools, principally self-taught; taught school and read law when 18 to 20 years of age; pr acticed law 1889— 1904, and from 1904 ade a specialty of Mexican law; worked on farm, cattle ranch, and asa miner; became i in mines, lumber, lands, and railroads; now engaged i in farming and stock raising in New Mexico and in mining in Mexico; member New Mexico Legislature several times and member of constitutional conv ention; associate justice of the Su- preme Court of New Mexico and twice attorney general of the Territory; captain Company H, First Territorial Volunteer Infantry. 1898-99 (Spanish- American War); married; elected to United States Senate by New Mexico Legislature March 27, 1912, and drew term expiring March 4, 1913; reelected June, 1912, and credentials not being signed by governor was again reelected on January 22, 1913, for the term end- ing March 3, 1919, REPRESENTATIVE. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 327,301. HARVEY BUTLER FLRGUSSON, Democrat, of Albuquerque, was born on a cotton plantation in Pickens County, Ala. , September 9, 1848. He entered Wash- ington and Lee University in September, 1869; graduated in the academic depart- ment with the degree of M. A. in 1873; remained a year as resident master, and graduated in the law department in 1874 under John Randolph Tucker; taught for the ensuing two years in the Shenandoah Valley Academy at Winchester, Va.; practiced law in Wheeling, W. Va., from 1876 until 1882; located in Albuquerque i in 1882 to practice law; was “special United States attorney in 1893-94, under appoint- ment of Attorney General Olney, to prosecute two presidents of national banks in New Mexico, charged with violation of United States statutes; and since has resided in Albuquerque, N. Mex., engaged in the practice of law; became a member of the Democratic national committee for New Mexico in 1894, and was succeeded by Hon. A. A. Jones as national committeeman in 1908; was elected as Delegate in Con- gress from the Territory of New Mexico in 1896 and served a term in the Fifty-fifth Congress; was renominated for Congress and defeated in 1898; was nominated for Congress and defeated in 1902; and was nominated and elected 2s a Representative in Congress from the State of New Mexico at the first State election in November, 1911; was renominated as Representative in 1912, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 22,139 votes, to 17,900 for Nathan Jaffa, Republican, 5,883 for M. C. de Baca, Progressive, and 2,644 for A. Eggun, Socialist, a plurality of 4,239 votes. NEW YORK. (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 i 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 NEW YORK : Biographical. 69 has been in active practice in the city of New York; was appointed by President Arthur, in March, 1883, as United States attorney for the southern district of New York, and served until July, 1885; was delegate at large to the State constitutional convention of 1894 and chairman of the judiciary committee; was a member of the Alaskan Boundary Tribunal, 1903; was appointed Secretary of War August 1, 1899; retired January 31, 1904; was appointed Secretary of State July 7, 1905, resigning that office January 27, 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 Arbi- tration at The Hague, 1910; appointed member of the Permanent Court of Arbitra- tion at The Hague, 1910; temporary chairman Republican national convention at Chicago, 1904; delegate at large Republican national convention at Chicago, 1912, and was elected temporary chairman and permanent chairman of the convention. His term of office will expire March 3, 1915. : JAMES A. O’GORMAN, Democrat, of New York City, born in New York City May 5, 1860; educated in the public schools, the College of the City of New York, and New York University, graduating with LL. B. in 1882 ; received the degree of doctor of laws from Villa Nova College, Fordham University, New York University, and Georgetown University; 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 March 31, 1911. His term will expire March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—NASSAU AND SUFFOLK COUNTIES. QUEENS COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at boundary line of Nassau and Queens Counties at Central Avenue, along Central Avenue west to Farmers Avenue, north to junction of Long Island Railroad and Old Country Road, to Fulton Street, west to Bergen Avenue, north to Hillside Avenue, east to Grand Avenue, north to boundary line between third and fourth wards, west to Flushing Creek (the boundary line between second and third wards), north to Strong’s Causeway, east along Strong’s Causeway and boundary line between the second and fourth assembly districts of Queens County, said line being through Ireland Mill Road to Lawrence Avenue, to Bradford Avenue, to Main Street, to Lincoln Street, to Union Avenue, to ‘Whitestone Road, to Eighteenth Street, to the Boulevard, to Long Island Sound; along Long Island Sound and Little Neck Bay to boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties to Central Avenue, the point of beginning. Population (1910), 207,443. LATHROP BROWN, Democrat, of St. James, Long Island, was born in New York City February 26, 1883; graduated from Groton School, Massachusetts, in 1900, and from Harvard (A. B.) in 1903; secured business training with the Douglas Robinson, Charles S. Brown Co.; April 5, 1911, married Miss Helen Hooper, of Boston, and has two daughters; served five years in Squadron A, National Guard of New York; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 16,828 votes, to 11,853 for Frederick C. Hicks, Republican, and 11,060 for W. Bourke Cockran, Progressive. SECOND DISTRICT.—QUEENS CouNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at Central Avenue on boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties, southerly along said line to the Atlantic Ocean, along Atlantic Ocean to Rockaway Inlet and boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties, north- east and north to Atlantic Avenue, east to Morris Avenue, south to Rockaway Road, southeast to Bergen Landing Road, northeast to Van Wyck Avenue, north to Newtown Road, northwest to bound- ary line between second and third wards of the Borough of Queens, west along said boundary line and boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties, northwest along said boundary line to Newtown Creek, northwest to East River, along East River and Long Island Sound through Powells Cove to point where boulevard intersects Powells Cove, south along boulevard to Eighteenth Street, east to Whitestone Avenue, southwest to Union Avenue, to Lincoln Street, to Main Street, to Bradford Avenue, to Lawrence Avenue, southwest along Lawrence Avenue along the boundary line between second and third wards of the Borough of Queens, the same being the Ireland Mill Road to Strong’s Causeway, along Strong’s Causeway to Flushing Creek, along Flushing Creek and said boundary line south to boundary between third and fourth wards of the Borough of Queens, east along said boundary line to Grand Avenue, south to Hillside Avenue, west to Berg&€n Avenue, south to Fulton Street, east to Old Country Road, southeast to Farmers Avenue, south to Central Avenue, and south- east to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 221,206. DENIS O'LEARY, Democrat, of Douglaston, Queens County, N. Y.; born January 22, 1863, at Manhasset, Queens County, N. Y.; educated at public schools; graduate of law school University of The City of New York, May, 1890, degree of LL. B.; lawyer by profession; married April 17, 1895, to Miss Ellen G. Quinn, of Lakeville, N. Y., and has two children; elected to the Sixty-third Congress. 70 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK THIRD DISTRICT.—KinGgs CouNTy: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at East River and India Street, east to Franklin Street, south to Noble Street, east to Manhattan Avenue, south to Norman Avenue, east to Leonard Street, south to Driggs Avenue, west to Union Avenue, south to Ten Eyck Street, east to Bushwick Avenue, south to Montrose Avenue, east to Bushwick Place, south to Boerum Street, west to Bushwick Avenue, south to Moore Street, west to Morrell Street, south to Flushing Avenue, east to Central Avenue, south to Cedar Street, west to Myrtle Avenue, east to De Kalb Avenue, west to Bushwick Avenue, north to De Kalb Avenue, west to Broadway, south to Weirfield Street, east to Bushwick Avenue, north to Linden Street, east to Irving Avenue, south to Palmetto Street, east to line dividing Borough of Brooklyn from Borough of Queens, along said line to East River, and along East River to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 212,840. FRANK E. WILSON, M. D., Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born at Roxbury, N. Y., December 22, 1857; was educated in the public schools and Poughkeepsie Military Academy; graduated from the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia in 1882; practiced medicine in Pleasant Valley, Dutchess County, N. Y., until 1888; removed in 1888 to Brooklyn, N. Y., where he now resides at 1242 Bushwick Avenue, and where he has since been actively engaged in the practice of medicine; he is senior physician to the Bushwick Hospital and visiting physician to the Swedish Hospital, both of Brooklyn, N. Y., and is a director and member of the board of governors of the Bushwick Hospital; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTH DISTRICT.—KinGgs County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at East River and India Street, east to Franklin Street, south to Noble Street, east to Manhattan Avenue, south to Norman Avenue, east to Leonard Street, south to Driggs Avenue, west to Union Avenue, south to Ten Eyck Street, east to Bushwick Avenue, south to Montrose Avenue, east to Bushwick Place, south to Boerum Street, west to Bushwick Avenue, south to Moore Street, west to Morrell Street, south to Flushing Avenue, east to Central Avenue, south to Cedar Street, west to Myrtle Avenue, east to De Kalb Avenue, west to Bushwick Avenue, north to De Kalb Avenue, west to Broadway, south to Greene Avenue, west to Throop Avenue, north to Flushing Avenue, west to Harrison Avenue, north to Division Avenue and Broadway, west to South Sixth Street, to Berry Street, west to Broadway, to East River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 205,593. HARRY HOWARD DALE, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in New York City December 3, 1868; moved to Brooklyn with his parents in 1870, and has lived in the Williamsburg section ever since; was educated in the public schools of Brooklyn; attended the New York Law School; is a lawyer by profession, having been admitted to practice on the 14th day of May, 1891; is married and has one child; was elected a mem- ber of the Assembly of the State of New York for five terms, and 1911-12 acted as attor- ney for the comptroller of the State of New York in transfer tax proceedings affecting the county of Kings; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 9,059 votes, to 5,139 for Samuel Greenblatt, Progressive, and 3,674 for William Lieberman, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT.—Kinas County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at East River and Broadway, east along Broadway to Berry Street, north to South Sixth Street, east to Broadway, along Broadway to the junction of Division Avenue and Harrison Avenue, south to Flushing Avenue, east to Throop Avenue, south to Lafayette Avenue, west to Bedford Avenue, north to De Kalb Avenue, west to Kent Avenue, north to Willoughby Avenue, west to Waverly Avenue, south to Atlantic Ave- nue, east to Franklin Avenue, south to St. John’s Place, west to Underhill Avenue, north to Sterling Place, west to Sixth Avenue, north to Flatbush Avenue, northwest to Hanson Place, east to South Oxford Street, north to De Kalb Avenue, east to Washington Park, north to Myrtle Avenue, west to Navy Street, north to Johnson Street, west to Duffield Street, north to Tillary Street, west to Fulton Street, northwest to Liberty Street, north to Concord Street, west to Fulton Streef, north to East River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 197,344. 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 hig 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 Cox- gress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—Kinags County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at intersection of Greene Avenue and Patchen Avenue, south to Fulton Street, west to New York Avenue, south to St. John’s Place, east to Kingston Avenue, south to Malbone Street, west to New York Avenue, south to Clarkson Avenue, east to Bast Thirty-seventh Street, south to Church Avenue, west to Nostrand Avenue, south to Snyder Avenue, west to Rogers Avenue, south to Beverly Road, east to East Thirty- first Street, south to Foster Avenue, west to Ocean Parkway, south to Twenty-second Avenue, south- west to Fifty-eighth Street, northwest to Thirteenth Avenue, northeast to Forty-first Street, southeast to Fourteenth Avenue, northeast to Church Avenue, east to Ocean Parkway, north to Prospect Ave- nue, to Eighth Avenue, northeast to Fifteenth Street, northwest to Fifth Avenue, northeast to Gar- field Place, southeast to Sixth Avenue, northeast to Sterling Place, southeast to Underhill Avenue, southwest to St. John’s Place, southeast to Franklin Avenue, northeast to Atlantic Avenue, west to Waverly Avenue, north to Willoughby Avenue, east to Kent Avenue, south to De Kalb Avenue, east to Bedford Avenue, south to Lafayette Avenue, east to Throop Aventie, south to Greene Avenue, and east to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 214,661. _ WILLIAM M. CALDER, Republican, of Brooklyn, was born in Brooklyn, N. Y., in the district which he represents, on March 3, 1869, and has resided there all of his é NEW YORK Biographical. 71 life. He received his education in the public schools of Brooklyn and Cooper Insti- tute of the city of New York. He is a builder; was appointed building commissioner 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; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions at Chicago in 1908 and 1912;1s married; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 21,721 votes, to 13,340 for Robert H. Roy, Democrat, and 9,304 for Jesse Fuller, jr., Progressive. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—KinGs County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at East River and Fulton Street, south to Concord Street, east to Liberty Street, south to Tillary Street, east to Duffield Street, south to Johnson Street, east to Navy Street, south to Myrtle Avenue, east to Washington Park, south to De Kalb Avenue, west to South Oxford Street, south to Hanson Place, west to Flatbush Avenue, southeast to Sixth Avenue, south to Garfield Place, west to Fifth Avenue, south to Fifteenth Street, west to Second Avenue, north to Ninth Street, west to Smith Street, north to Huntington Street, west to Court Street, north to Nelson Street, west to Clinton Street, south to Huntington Street, west to Henry Street, south to Mill Street, west to Columbia Street, south to Halleck Street, east to Columbia Street, south to Gowanus Bay, north to Buttermilk Channel, to East River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 204,731. 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 conventions at Kansas City in 1900, and at Baltimore in 1912; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty- eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 16,172 votes, to 5,019 for John E. Brady, Repub- lican, and 5,433 for Michael A. Fitzgerald, Independence League and Progressive. EIGHTH DISTRICT.— Kings County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginningat Columbia Streetand Gowanus Bay, north to Halleck Street, west to Columbia Street, 1 orth to Mill Street, east to Henry Street, north to Huntington Street, east to Clinton Street, north to Nelson Street, east to Court Street, south to Huntington Street, east to Smith Street, south to Ninth Street, east to Second Avenue, south to Fifteenth Street, east to Eighth Avenue, south to Prospect Avenue, southeast to Ocean Parkway, south.to Church Avenue, west to Fourteenth Avenue, southwest to Forty-first Street, northwest to Thirteenth Avenue, southwest to Fifty-eighth Street, southeast to Twenty-second Avenue, northeast to Avenue J, east to Coney Island Avenue, south to Avenue L, east to East Twenty-fifth Street, south to Avenue O, east to Flatlands Avenue, northeast to Nostrand Avenue, south to Gerritsen. Avenue, southeast to Avenue S, east to Gerritsen Mill Pond, to Gerritsen Creek, to Sheepshead Bay, to Atlantic Ocean, to Gravesend Bay, to the Narrows, to the Upper Bay, to Gowanus Bay, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 212,264. . DANIEL J. GRIFFIN, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was born in Brooklyn March 26, 1880; was educated in the public schools, St. Laurent College, Canada, St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, where he received the degree of A. B., and the New York Law School; was admitted to the bar in November, 1902; was commissioner of licenses for the Borough of Brooklyn, and in charge of the administration and guardianship depart- ments of the surrogate’s court of the County of Kings; was elected to Congress by a vote of 17,403 to 8,867 for Albert H. Banshaff, Progressive, 6,027 for Ernest P. Seelman, Republican, 1,078 for T. Lackemacher, Socialist, and 108 for F. C. Foster, Prohibitionist. NINTH DISTRICT.—KiNas CouNTy: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at intersection of line dividing the Borough of Brooklyn from the Borough of Queens and the center line of Palmetto Street southwest along Palmetto Street to Irving Avenue, northwest to Linden Street, southwest to Bushwick Avenue, southeast to Weirfield Street, southwest to Broadway, northwest to Greene Ave- nue, west to Patchen Avenue, south to Fulton Street, east to Rockaway, north to Broadway, south- east to Moffat Street, northeast to Bushwick Avenue, southeast to Stewart Street, southwest to Broad- way, southeast to Fulton Street, east to Logan Street, south to Glenmore Avenue, west to Warwick Street, south to Pitkin Avenue, west to Hendrix Street, south to Belmont Avenue, west to Powell Street, south to Avenue D, southwest to East Ninety-sixth Street, northwest to Church Avenue, southwest and west to East Forty-ninth Street, south to Snyder Avenue, west to Schenectady Ave- nue, south to Canarsie Lane, west to Clove Road, north to Beverly Road, west to East Thirty-first Street, south to Foster Avenue, west to Ocean Parkway, south to Twenty-second Avenue, southwest to Avenue J, east to Coney Island Avenue, south to Avenue L, east to Kast Twenty-fifth Street, south to Avenue O, east to Flatlands Avenue, northeast to Nostrand Avenue, south to Gerritsen Avenue, southeast to Avenue S, northeast to Gerritsen Mill Pond, southeast to Gerritsen Creek, to Sheepshead Bay, to line dividing the Borough of Brooklyn from the Borough of Queens, in Rockaway Inlet; thence along said boundary line to point where said line is intersected by center line of Atlantic Avenue, east along Atlantic Avenue to Morris Avenue in the county of Queens, south to Rockaway Road, southeast to the road to Bergens Landing, northeast to Van Wyck Avenue, north to New- town Road, northwest to boundary line of second and fourth wards of Queens County, west to line dividing the Borough of Queens from the Borough of Brooklyn, and west along said line, thence north- west to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 214,913. JAMES H. O'BRIEN, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in Jamaica, Long Island, N.Y. on July 15,1860; was educated in the public schools and graduated from Brown's Business College, in Brooklyn; began work as a machinist, became an engineer, and / 72 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK opened an establishment in New York City in the scale and overhead-tramway busi- ness, which he still owns and conducts; is extensively known among men in the coal, beef, and ice trades all over Greater New York; is an active member of the Knights of Columbus, Catholic Benevolent Legion, Lodge No. 22, Benevolent Protec- tive Order of Elks, Nassau Building & Loan Association, and Allied Board of Trade, and a member of St. Malachy’s Church; is married and has seven children; in 1911 was elected to represent the tenth senatorial district, which was largely Republican, by a vote of 14,578 to 11,819, and served on the committees on commerce and navi- gation, insurance, forest, fish and game, labor and industry, and as chairman of the committee on agriculture; was chairman of the New York food-investigating com- mission; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress in a strong Republican district, receiving 12,456 votes, to 8,473 for O. W. Swift, Republican, and 6,931 for J. T. Ken- nedy, National Progressive. TENTH DISTRICT.—KINGS COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at New York Avenue and Fulton Street, east to Rockaway Avenue, north to Broadway, southeast to Moffat Street, north- east to Bushwick Avenue, southeast to Stewart Street, southwest to Broadway, southeast to Fulton Street, east to Logan Street, south to Glenmore Avenue, west to Warwick Street, south to Pitkin Avenue, west to Hendrix Street, south to Belmont Avenue, west to Powell Street, south to Avenue D, southwest to East Ninety-sixth Street, northwest to Church Avenue, southwest and west to East Forty-ninth Street, south to Snyder Avenue, west to Schenectady Avenue, south to Canarsie Lane, west to Clove Road, north to Beverly Road, west to Rogers Avenue, north to Snyder Avenue, east to Nostrand Avenue, north to Church Avenue, east to East Thirty-seventh Street, north to Clarkson Avenue, west to New York Avenue, north to Malbone Street, east to Kingston Avenue, north to St. Jonny Place, west to New York Avenue, and north to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 207,465. HERMAN A. METZ, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was born in the city of New York on October 19, 1867; attended private and public schools, high school, and studied chemistry at Cooper Union Evening School; received degree of doctor of sciences from Union College, Schenectady, N.Y, in 1911; president of H. A. Metz & Co., importers of dyestuffs and chemicals; president Ettrick Mills, Worcester, Mass., manufacturers of carpets and rugs; president Consolidated Color & Chemical Co., Newark, N. J., chemicals and dyestuffs; was a member of the board of education of Brooklyn and of the city of New York; commissioner of the State board of charities of the State of New York; comptroller of the city of New York from 1906 to 1910; commissary and captain in the Fourteenth Infantry, New York State National Guard; married in 1891; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 7,459 votes, to 5,889 for Jacob L. Holtzman, National Progressive, 5,174 for Reuben L. Haskell, Repub- lican and Independence League, 1,785 for Barnett Wolff, Socialist, 35 for Millard Davidson, Prohibitionist, and 15 for John O. Nelson, Independent Workingman’s. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Richmond County, Governors Island, Bedloes Island, and Ellis Island. NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at Christopher Street and North River, northeast to Bleecker Street, southeast to Carmine Street, northeast to Sixth Avenue, north to West Third Street, east to Sullivan Street, south to Canal Street, east to Division Street, southwest to Market Street, southeast to the East River, southwest to the North River, and northwest to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 214,760. 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 1904, 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 member of the special insurance investigating committee. Mr. Riordan was elected to the Fifty-sixth Con- gress, to the Fifty-ninth Congress to serve out the unexpired term of Timothy D. Sul- livan, resigned, to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. ears TWELFTH DISTRICT.—.NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at the East River and Market Street, northwest to Division Street, northeast to Essex Street, north to Stanton Street, northeast to Pitt Street, north to East Fourth Street, east to the East River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 218,428. 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 NEW YORK | Biographical. 3 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 va- rious 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 1908, a delegate to the Democratic national convention; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at West Third and Sullivan Streets, east to Lafayette Street, north to East Fourth Street, east to Avenue C, south to Stanton Street, west to Essex Street, south to Division Street, to Canal Street, west to Sullivan Street, and north to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 210,852. GEORGE W. LOFT, Democrat, of New York City, was born in that city February 6, 1865; educated in the public schools; is a manufacturer of candy; Democratic elec- tor 1912; married; indorsed for Congress by the Democratic Party and the Inde- pendence League; elected to the Sixty-third Congress to fill the unexpired term of the late Hon. Timothy D. Sullivan, receiving 4,595 votes, to 1,688 for Hyman, Repub- lican, 1,510 for Tozzi, Progressive, and 187 for Abelbaum, Home Rule. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at West Fourteenth Street and the North River, east to the East River, to East Fourth Street, west to Lafayette Street, south to Great Jones Street, west to Sixth Avenue, south to Carmine Street, to Bleecker Street, northwest to Christopher Street, southwest to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 210,289. . 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 abolition 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 Jackson, 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 and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CoUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at the North River and West Thirty-sixth Street, east to Ninth Avenue, north to West Thirty-seventh Street, east to Third Avenue, south to East Thirty-sixth street, east to the East River, to East Four- teenth Street, west to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 213,514. MICHAEL F. 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 mar- ried and has three children; served two years as assistant corporation counsel of the city of New York; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CoUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at West Fifty-fourth Street and the North River, east to Ninth Avenue, to West Fifty-ninth Street, east to Fourth Avenue, south to East Fifty-second Street, east to the East River, to East Thirty-sixth Street, west to Third Avenue, north to East Thirty-seventh Street, west to Ninth Avenue, south to West Thirty-sixth Street, west to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 208,400. PETER J. DOOLING, Democrat, of New York City, was born in 1857, was educated in the public schools of the city of New York, and upon graduation entered the real estate business, in which he is still engaged; is married and the father of six children; early in life actively took part in public affairs; has held many and varied offices both appointive and elective in the city and State of New York; was State senator from the sixteenth senatorial district of New York and county clerk of the city and county of New York; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,036 votes, to 5,929 for Francis C. Dale, Republican, and 5,019 for Timothy Healy, Bull Moose. 74 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEw York CouNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at West Seventy-seventh Street and the North River, east to Central Park west, south to West Seventy- sixth Street, across Central Park to Fifth Avenue and East Seventy-sixth Street, east to Avenue A, south to East Seventy-fifth Street, east to the East River, to East Fifty-second Street, west to Park Avenue, north to East Fifty-ninth Street, west to Ninth Avenue, south to West Fifty-fourth Street, west to the North River, and to the point of beginning, and including Blackwells Island. Population (1910), 219,772. : JOHN F. CAREW, Democrat, of New York City; born at Williamsburgh, Brook- lyn, N. Y., April 16, 1876; is the son of Michael H. Carew and Ellen T. Carew; was educated in the public schools of Brooklyn and New York City, at the College of the City of New York, Columbia College, School of Arts, New York (A. B. 1893), and Columbia University Law School, New York (LL. B. 1896); was admitted to the New York bar in 1897; has since continuously practiced law in New York City; was mar- ried in 1903 to Mary O’Brien, and has three sons, John Carew, James Carew, and Thomas F. Magner Carew, and one daughter, Mary O’Brien Carew; was a member of the New York Assembly in 1904; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a majority of all the votes cast, receiving 12,350 votes, to 5,516 for Bates, National Progressive, 4,891 for Miles, Republican, 1,074 for Wall, Socialist, and 20 for Stark, Prohibitionist. BIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CouNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at West Eighty-sixth Street and the North River, east to Central Park west, north to West Ninety-ninth Street, and across Central Park to East Ninety-ninth Street, to the Fast River, to East Seventy-fifth Street, west to Avenue A, north to East Seventy-sixth Street, west and across Central Park to West Seventy-sixth Street, and Central Park west, north to West Seventy-seventh Street, to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 206,947. THOMAS GEDNEY PATTEN, Democrat, of New York, was born in New York City September 12, 1861; was educated at Mount Pleasant Academy, Ossining, N. Y., and Columbia College; 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 dis- trict of New York, and was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress from the eighteenth congressional district. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW York County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at the North River and the west end of West One hundred and twenty-fifth Street, east across Riverside Park to West One hundred and twenty-fifth Street, to Fifth Avenue, south and across Mount Morris Park to Fifth Avenue, to East One hundred and sixteenth Street, east to Madison Avenue, south to East One hundred and tenth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, south to Fast Ninety-ninth Street, west across Central Park to West Ninety-ninth Street and Central Park west, south to West Eighty-sixth Street, west to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 212,235. WALTER M. CHANDLER, Progressive, of New York City, was born in Mississippi; was educated at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, and at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; was a student, during two years, of history and jurisprudence at the Universities of Berlin and Heidelberg, Germany; has practiced law in New York City since 1900; is the author of The Trial of Jesus from a Lawyer’s Standpoint, in two volumes; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 6,883 votes over his Republican opponent, Alexander Brough, and by a plurality of 303 votes over his Democrat opponent, Franklin Leonard, jr. TWENTIETH DISTRICT..NEW YORE County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at Fifth Avenue and East One hundred and twentieth Street, to Park Avenue, south to East One hundred and eighteenth Street, east to Second Avenue, south to East One hundred and seventeenth Street, east to the East River, to East Ninety-ninth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One hundred and tenth Street, east to Madison Avenue, north to East One hundred and sixteenth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One hundred and twentieth Street, and to the point of beginning, and including Wards and Randalls Islands. Population (1910), 204,498. JACOB AARON CANTOR, Democrat, of New York City, was born in that city December 6, 1854; educated in the public schools and high school; reporter on New York World for years; graduated from the law school of the University of the City of New York with the degree of LL. B., and has ever since practiced the pro- fession of the law; was elected to the New York Assembly in 1884, 1885, and 1886, and served on the judiciary committee; elected to the senate in 1887 and served continuously in that body until the close of 1898; during the whole time was Demo- cratic leader, and in 1893 and 1894 was president of the senate; in 1901 was elected president of the borough of Manhattan on the nonpartisan municipal ticket and then declined a renomination; since then was chairman of the committee on high- ways and parks of the city improvement commission and was appointed by the late Mayor Gaynor chairman of the commission on congestion of population; was nominated by the regular Democratic organization for Congress and indorsed by the Independence League; elected to the Sixty-third Congress to fill the unexpired term of Hon. Francis Burton Harrison, who was appointed Governor General of the Philippine Islands, receiving 5,337 votes, to 3,206 for Isaac A. Hourwich, Pro- gressive, 2,991 for Louis H. Guterman, Republican, and 1,210 for Edward F. Cas- sidy, Socialist. PR NEW YORK B 10gra phical. 75 8 i | k + TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.-NEW YORK County: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at West, One hundred and forty-first Street and the North River, east to Seventh Avenue south to West One hundred and thirty-sixth Street, east to the Harlem River, to East One hundre and thirty-eighth Street in the Borough of the Bronx; along East One hundred and thirty-eighth Street to Third Avenue, to East One hundred and thirty-ninth Street, to St. Anns Avenue, to East One hundred and thirty-eighth Street, to the East River, along the East River, Bronx Kills, and Harlem River to East One hundred and seventeenth Street, Borough of Manhattan; along East One hundred and seventeenth Street to Second Avenue, north to East One hundred and eighteenth Street, west to Park Avenue, north to East One hundred and twentieth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north across Mount Morris Park to Fifth Avenue, to One hundred and twenty-ffth Street, west across River- side Park to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 209,700. HENRY GEORGE, Jr., Democrat, of New York, was born in Sacramento, Cal., No- vembes 2, 1862. He was educated in the public schools and entered a printing office at the age of 16. Subsequent to 1881 he was steadily engaged in newspaper and maga- zine work. He was a special newspaper correspondentin Japanin 1906. On thesudden 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 as the candidate of the Jeffersonian Party for mayor. 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” (1905); and the ‘Romance of John Bainbridge” (1906). He was elected to the Sixty-second Congress from the seventeenth congressional district, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress from the twenty-first district. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—North Brothers Island, South Brothers Island, and Rikers Island. NEW YORK CoUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at West One hundred and fifty- third Street and the North River, east to the Harlem River, to Central Bridge, to East One hundred and sixty-first Street, to Grand Boulevard, north to East One hundred and sixty-seventh Street, east to Morris Avenue, north to East One hundred and sixty-eighth Street, east to Webster Avenue, south to East One hundred and sixty-seventh Street, east to Third Avenue, southeast to Franklin Avenue, northeast to East One hundred and sixty-sixth Street, southeast to Boston Road, south along Boston Road and Cauldwell Avenue to East One hundred and fifty-eighth Street, east to Westchester Avenue, northeast to Prospect Avenue, south to East One hundred and forty-ninth Street, southeast to the East River, to East One hundred and thirty- eighth Street, west to St. Anns Avenue, north to East One hundred and thirty-ninth Street, west to Third Avenue, southwest to East One hundred and thirty- eighth Street, west to the Harlem River, to East One hundred and thirty-sixth Street, Borough of Manhattan; west along One hundred and thirty-sixth Street to Seventh Avenue, north to West One mgr and forty-first Street, west to the North River, to the point of beginning.” Population (1910), 213,436. HENRY BRUCKNER, Democrat, of New York City, was born June 17, 1871, in the district which he represents; was educated in the public schools and high schools in New York City; in 1901 was elected a member of the New York State Legislature; in 1902-1905 was commissioner of public works for the Borough of the Bronx, New York City; is president of Bruckner Bros. (Inc.), manufacturers, and a director in the Bronx Mortgage Co. and the American Metal Cap Co.; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,886 votes, to 9,462 for Irving M. Crane, Progressive, and 6,098 for Rufus P. Johnson, Republican. TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CoUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning af the North River and the line between the city of New York and the city of Yonkers, along the city ling to the Bronx River, to Pelham Avenue, to Southern Boulevard, to Freeman Avenue, to Prospect Avenue, to Westchester Avenue, to East One hundred and fifty-eighth Street, to Cauldwell Avenue, to East One hundred and sixty-sixth Street, to Franklin Avenue, to Third Avenue, to East Ona hundred and sixty-seventh Street, to Webster Avenue, to East One hundred and sixty-eighth Street, to Morris Avenue, to East One hundred and sixty-seventh Street, to Grand Boulevard, to East One hundred and sixty-first Street, to Central Bridge, to the Harlem River, to West One hundred and fifty- third Street, Borough of Manhattan; along West One hundred and fifty-third Street to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 213,034. JOSEPH A. GOULDEN, Democrat, of Fordham, Borough of the Bronx, New York City, was born in Pennsylvania; elected to and served in the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses, announcing his intention to retire when nominated for the latter; retired for one term; was unanimously designated at a convention and confirmed at the primaries in 1912, and elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,320 votes, to 13,150 for Edward J. Raldiras, Progressive, 8,779 for Peter Wynne, Republican and Independence League, 2,351 for Poulitsch, Socialist, and 64 for Freece, Prohibitionist. 76 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—City, Hunters, Harta, Twin, Middle Reef, and Rat Islands; the Bluezes and Chimney Sweep; and beginning at the intersection of the Bronx River and the boundary line between the city of New York and the city of Yonkers, west tc the Hudson River, north to the boundary lines of the city of Yonkers and the town of Greenburg, east to the point where the said boundary line meets the boundary lines between the towns of Greenburg, Scarsdale, and Eastchester, southeast along the boundary line between the towns of Scarsdale and Eastchester, south along the boundary line between the town of Eastchester and the city of New Rochelle to the boundary line of the city of Mount Vernon and the town of Pelham, to Long Island Sound, to the East River, toc East One hundred and forty-ninth Street, in the Borough of the Bronx; northwest along East One hundred and forty-ninth Street to Prospect Avenue, north to Freeman Avenue, northeast to Southern Boulevard, north to Pel- ham Avenue, east to the Bronx River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1910). 212,676. WOODSON RATCLIFFE OGLESBY, Democrat, of Yonkers, was born in Shelby County, Ky., February 9, 1869; was educated in the public schools, at Kentucky Wesleyan College, and the Illinois Wesleyan University; is a lawyer; married ; member New York Assembly 1906; served as a private in the Seventy-first Regiment New York Volunteers in the Spanish-American War, 1898; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 17,795 votes to 11,975, for Alfred E. Smith, Bull Moose, and 8,227 for Barton S. Kingman, Republican. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTmiES: Rockland and Westchester, except the cities of Mount Vernon and Yonkers and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1910), 209,786. BENJAMIN IRVING TAYLOR, Democrat, of Harrison, Westchester County, N. Y., was born in New York City December 21, 1877; attended public schools of Monsey, Rockland County, N. Y., and Rye, N. Y., until 15 years of age; graduated from high school of New Rochelle, N. Y.; entered Columbia Law School in 1896, graduating (LL. B.) in 1899; admitted to the bar of the State of New York in 1899; hag since practiced law in Port Chester, Westchester County N. Y.; is married and has three children; was elected supervisor of Harrison, Westchester County, in 1905, and held the office until elected to Congress; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,121 votes, to 10,178 for James Husted, Republican, and 6,571 for John C. Bucher, Progressive. a DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Dutchess, Orange, and Putnam (3 counties). Population EDMUND PLATT, Republican, of Poughkeepsie, was born February 2, 1865, in Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; studied at Riverview Academy; took the Eastman business course and learned the printers’ trade before entering Harvard University, from which he was graduated in the class of 1888; after graduation taught school and studied law two years, then spent a year in Superior, Wis., as editorial writer for the Superior Evening Telegram; returning to Poughkeepsie in 1891 he has been since engaged in the publication of the Poughkeepsie Eagle, which has been in the possession of his family since 1828; on the death of his father, Hon. John I. Platt, in 1907, he succeeded to the editorship; has been a member of several city administrative boards and a trustee of a number of public institutions, but has never held other public office; is the author of a history of Poughkeepsie and of shorter historical papers and lectures; was married June 23, 1892, to Adele Innis, of Poughkeepsie, and has one daughter; during his campaign, on October 30, 1912, Hon. R. E. Connell, Democratic nominee for reelection, died very suddenly and Mayor John K. Sague, of Poughkeepsie, was nominated in his place; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20,618 votes, to 20,191 for John K. Sague, Democrat, 4,418 for A. B. Gray, Progressive, 511 for Mitchell Downing, Prohibitionist, 483 for H. Shefer, Socialist, and 118 for Luther Brooks, Independence League. TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmES: Columbia, Greene, Schoharie, Sullivan, and Ulster (5 counties). Population (1910), 223,304. GEORGE McCLELLAN, Democrat, of Chatham, Columbia County, N. Y., was born in Schodack, Rensselaer County, N. Y., October 10, 1856; was educated in the public schools and academies of Spencertown and Chatham, N. Y.; was grad- uated from Albany Law School, LL. B., 1880; has since practiced his profession at Chatham, N. Y.; was married in 1882 to Elizabeth Shufelt, who died in 1894, and has three children, one daughter and two sons; was police justice of Chatham two terms and until the office was abolished by legislative enactment; president of Columbia County Agriculture Society for 10 years; in 1907 was elected surrogate of Columbia, County for the term of six years; waselected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 23,743 votes, to 19,125 for Charles B. Ward, Republican, 4,779 for Horatio Seymour Manning, a 453 for Eugene Daurner, Socialist, and 1,061 for Platt N. Chase, Prohi- itionist. HR —— a NEW YORK Biographical. 6} -TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—ALBANY COUNTY. RENSSELAER COUNTY: First, second, third, fourth, =e seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth wards of the city of Troy. Population (1910), 221,711. PETER GANSEVOORT TEN EYCK, Democrat, of Albany, N. Y., was born in the town of Bethlehem, Albany County, N. Y., November 7, 1873; attended the country school at Normansville, later the public schools of the city of Albany, and finally was prepared in the Albany Boys’ Academy for entrance in 1892 to the Rensse- laer Polytechnic Institute at Troy, where he studied civil engineering; followed his profession for 15 years, during which time he was signal engineer of the New York Central lines and later chief engineer and vice president and general manager of the Federal Railway Signal Co.; served seven years in the Third Signal Corps, Third Brigade, National Guard of New York; was married April 15, 1903; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 25,197 votes, to 23,076 Republican, 4,918 Progressive (Democrat), 404 Independent Democrat, 787 Socialist, and 215 Prohibitionist. TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Rensselaer, except the first, second, third, fourth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth wards of the city of Troy; Saratoga, Warren, and Washington. Population (1910), 216,149. JAMES S. PARKER, Republican, of Salem, was born at Great Barrington, Mass., June 3, 1867; prepared for college in the public schools of his native town and com- pleted his education at Cornell University; in 1888 removed to Salem, Washington County, N. Y., where he has since made his home; after finishing his course at Cornell taught for several years at the St. Paul School, Concord, N. H.; for the last 15 years has been engaged in farming at Salem, N. Y.; June 21, 1899, married Marion, daughter of John M. and Frances Schriver Williams; represented Washington County in the assembly in 1904, 1905, 1908-1912, serving on all the important committees of the assembly and being an important factor in securing the passage of the public service commission law of New York, among his constructive work being the passage of his amendments in 1910 to the public-service law; last year of his service was chairman of the committee on railroads, acting chairman of the committee on internal affairs, and a member of the committees on ways and means and rules; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 22,348 votes, to 18,180 for Milton K. Huppuck, Democrat, and 8,163 for Frederick E. Draper, jr., Progressive. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—Countits: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, and Schenectady (4 counties). Population (1910), 194,709. SAMUEL WALLIN, Republican, of Amsterdam, was born in Easton, Pa., July 31, 1856; in 1864, with his parents, he moved to Amsterdam; was educated in the public schools and academy of that city and then occupied a position in a carpet mill, familiarizing himself with all branches of the business; is now and has been since 1886 a member of the firm of McCleary, Wallin & Crouse, of Amsterdam, exten- sive carpet and rug manufacturers, and is also connected with the firms of W. & J. Sloan, of New York, and Shuttleworth Bros., of Amsterdam; early in his career Mr. Wallin married Margaret, daughter of Alexander Faulds, of Amsterdam, a sturdy Scotch family; has served as alderman and mayor of his city and has devoted con- siderable attention to the study of municipalities and their methods; is a director of the Amsterdam Board of Trade and the Farmers’ National Bank; second vice presi- dent of the Amsterdam Savings Bank, trustee of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, and president of the Rockton Realty Co., a local enterprise; is also a member of the Masonic and Pythian orders, the Antlers Country Club, the Elks and the Fort Johnson Clubs, of Amsterdam, and the Union League Club, of New York; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 313 over R. C. L. Reynolds, Democrat, 4,726 over G. R. Lunn, Socialist, and 9,473 over E. E. Hale, Progressive. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CounNTtiES: Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and St. Lawrence (4 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 216,410. EDWIN A. MERRITT, Jr., Republican, of Potsdam, St. Lawrence County, N. Y., was born at Pierrepont, St. Lawrence County, N. Y., July 25, 1860; graduated at Potsdam Normal School in the class of 1879, and at Yale College in the class of 1884, receiving the degree of B. A.; is an attorney at law, doing business under the firm name of Merritt & Ingram, and is also a manufacturer; was deputy consul general at London in 1885; supervisor of the town of Potsdam, St. Lawrence County, N. Y., continuously from 1896 to 1903; was elected to the New York State Assembly, repre- senting the second assembly district of St. Lawrence County, N. Y., in 1902, and served in that body continuously for 11 years till 1912; became the Republican leader of the assembly in 1908, and served as such continuously till 1912; when he was elected speaker of the assembly, which position he held at the time of his election to Con- gon; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third ongress. 78 Congressional Directory. NEW YORK THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Jefferson, Lewis, Madison, and Oswego (4 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 216,184. LUTHER WRIGHT MOTT, Republican, of Oswego, was born in Oswego Novem- ber 30, 1874; was educated at the Oswego High School and Harvard College; since that time he has been in the banking business at Oswego, and was president of the New York State Bankers’ Association in 1910 and 1911; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a largely increased plurality. THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—Counmizs: Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties). Population (1910), 210,513. CHARLES A. TALCOTT, Democrat, of Utica, N. Y.; 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, 1888 to 1892; trustee of the Utica Public Library 1893 to December, 1901; mayor of the city of Utica January, 1902, to January, 1906; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Broome, Chenango, Delaware and Otsego (4 counties). Population (1910), 207,175. GEORGE WINTHROP FAIRCHILD, Republican, of Oneonta; is married; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,072 votes, to 20,251 for James J. Byard, jr., Demccrat, and 5,572 for Jared C. Estelow, Progressive. TH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Cortland and Onondaga (2 counties). Population (1910), ,547. JOHN RICHARD CLANCY, Democrat, of Syracuse, was born in that city March 8, 1859; was educated in the common schools and the local high school; was married in 1886 to Elenora V. Kopp, of Cincinnati, Ohio; for years has been associated with important civic and charitable undertakings; is secretary of St. Joseph’s Hospital Aid Society; president of the Central Hospital Council; vice president of the New York State College of Forestry at Syracuse University; a vice president of the American Forestry Association; founder and secretary of the Central New York -Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals; and a trustee of the Onondaga County Savings Bank; is a manufacturer of hardware specialties; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 18,009 votes, to 17,874 for Michael E. Driscoll, Republican, 11,626 for Giles H. Stilwell, National Progressive, 2,414 for Sanders, Socialist, and 1,009 for Richards, Prohibitionist. THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.——CouNmEs: Cayuga, Ontario, Seneca, Wayne, and Yates (5 counties). Population (1910), 215,185. : SERENO ELISHA PAYNE, Republican, of Auburn, was born at Hamilton, N. Y., June 26, 1843; graduated from the University of Rochester in 1864; was admitted to the bar in 1866, and has since practiced law at Auburn; was city clerk of Auburn, 1868-1871; was supervisor of Auburn, 1871-72; was district attorney of Cayuga County, 1873-1879; was president of the board of education at Auburn, 1879-1882; has received the degree of LL. D. from Colgate University, also from the University of Rochester; has been twice chairman of the Republican State convention of New York; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions in 1892, "1896, 1900, 1904, 1908, and 1912, 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, and Tompkins (5 counties). Population (1910), 211,299. EDWIN STEWART UNDERHILL, Democrat, of Bath, was born at Bath, N. Y., October 7, 1861. His parents were Hon. 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 Leader. He was married October 9, 1884, to Minerva Elizabeth, NEW YORK Biographical. 79 only daughter of William W. Allen and Helen M. Gansevoort; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, the first member of the Democratic Party since 1882, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MoNROE COUNTY: The first, second, third, and fourth assembly districts. Population (1910), 220,355. : THOMAS B. DUNN, Republican, of Rochester, was born in Providence, R. I., March 16, 1853; removed to Rochester in 1858; educated in the public schools; was for two years president of the chamber of commerce, and is now one of the trustees; is a trustee of the Rochester Orphan Asylum; was chief commissioner of the New York State commission to the Jamestown Ter-Centennial Exposition, Jamestown, Va., in 1907; is a thirty-second degree Mason, and is connected with numerous organizations and clubs in Rochester and New York City; married, in 1889, to Florence L. Robinson; State senator in 1906, serving on the committees on affairs of cities, railroads, banks, trades and manufactures, and public health; State treasurer in 1908; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,776 votes, to 14,440 for George P. Decker, Democrat, and 11,202 for A. Emerson Babcock, Progressive. THIRTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Genesee, Livingston, Orleans, Wyoming, and the fifth assembly district of Monroe.- Population (1910), 202,389. 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FORTIETH DISTRICT.—Nmnacara County. ERIE County: The city of Tonawanda; the twentieth, twenty-first, twenty-second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, and twenty-fifth wards of the city of Buffalo, and the towns of Grand Island and Tonawanda. Population (1910), 209,587. ROBERT H. GITTINS, Democrat, of Niagara Falls, N. Y., was born in Oswego, N. Y., December 14, 1869, the eldest of a family of six, and the son of a Civil War veteran; left school at an early age and for 13 years was employed in commercial life in connection with the lumber, grain, and coal trades; in 1897 entered the law depart- ment of the University of Michigan, graduating as an LL. B. in 1900, and in that year was admitted to the practice of law in the States of Michigan and New York; since 1901 has been engaged in the practice of law at the city of Niagara Falls, N. Y; was married in June, 1908, and resides at 548 Fifth Street in said city; in the fall of 1910 was elected to the New York State Senate, in which body he served until January 1, 1913, being a member of the following committees: finance, cities, codes, taxation and retrenchment, affairs of villages, and chairman of the committee on public education; was a delegate from the fortieth New York district to the Demo- cratic national convention held at Baltimore in June, 1912; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 15,935 votes, to 14,471 for James S. Simmons, Republican, 9,890 for. Frank C. Ferguson, Progressive, 1,236 for James F. Ryan, Socialist, and 639 for W. Van R. Blighton, Prohibitionist. FORTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ERIE CoUNTY: The sixth, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, six- teenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twenty-sixth, and twenty-seventh wards of the city of Buffalo, and the towns of Alden, Amherst, Cheektowaga, Clarence, Elma, Lancaster, Marilla, and Newstead. Population (1910), 207,335. CHARLES BENNETT SMITH, Democrat, of Buffalo, was born in Erie County, N. Y., on September 14, 1870; after attending the district schools, went to the Arcade Academy, where he completed the full course and was graduated; in 1890 became a reporter on the Buffalo Courier, of which later in life he was made editor in chief; at the age of 24 was appointed managing editor of the Buffalo Times, 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 publication, and was at the same time one of the associate editors of the Albany Argus; while editor in chief of the Buffalo Courier, from which he resigned to take up his duties as Member of Congress in 1910, he was appointed a member of the Buffalo board of school exam- iners, and was chairman of the board at the time of his election to Congress, in No- vember, 1910; he is the owner and editor of the Niagara Falls Journal; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by nearly 6,000 votes more than those received by Hon. George Davis, Republican. 80 Congressional Directory. NORTH CAROLINA FORTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ErIie County: The city of Lackawanna; the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, and eleventh wards of the city of Buffalo; and the towns of Aurora, Boston, Brant, Colden, Collins, Concord, Fast Hamburg, Eden, Evans, Hamburg, Holland, North Collins, Sardinia, Wales, and West Seneca. Population (1910), 204,099. DANIEL A. DRISCOLL, Democrat, of Buffalo, was born in the city of Buffalo, N. Y., March 6, 1875; never held public office prior to his election to Congress; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress. FORTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 212,457. CHARLES M. HAMILTON, Republican, of Ripley, N. Y., was born in that city January 23, 1874; was educated at the Ripley High School, the Fredonia Normal School, and the Pennsylvania Military College; is a farmer and oil producer; April 6, 1904, married Miss Bertha Chess Lamberton, of Franklin, Pa.; elected to the New York Assembly in 1906; reelected in 1907 and 1908, serving on the following com- mittees: railroads, public health, commerce and navigation, and military affairs (chairman); in the fall of 1908 was elected State senator, serving on the following com- mittees: forest, fish, and game (chairman), railroads, internal affairs, military affairs, and Indian affairs; reelected in 1910 (being also nominated by the Independence League), and was appointed on the committees on railroads, forest, fish, and game, and commerce and navigation; in 191} was appointed by the lieutenant governor to represent the senate on the New York State Factory Commission; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving a plurality of 4,867 over Manton M. Wyvell, Democrat, and 5,637 over Samuel A. Carlson, Progressive. NORTH CAROLINA. (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 pro- fession of law since then; in 1886 was elected a member of the Fiftieth Congress from the second congressional district of North Carolina; in 1893 was appointed collector of internal revenue for the fourth collection district of North Carolina, and served in that office during the term of Mr. Cleveland; in the campaigns of 1892, 1898, 1900, 1902, 1904, and 1906 was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of the State; received the degree of LL. D. from Trinity College, North Carolina, June, 1901; was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. Marion Butler, Popu- list, for the term beginning March 4, 1901, and reelected in 1907 and 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. 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 years later; 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 of law in his native town in 1880; has had a leading practice; was five times a mem- ber of the legislature, sessions of 1883, 1885, 1887, 1893, and 1899; was the choice of the Democratic caucus for speaker in 1887, and was defeated by one vote through a combination of Independents and Republicans; was the unanimous choice of his party and elected speaker of the house of representatives, session of 1893; was presi- dent 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 Populists; was president of the Democratic State convention in 1900 and 1911; 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 daugh- ter 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. NORTH CAROLINA B tographical. 81 =, REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde, Main, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1910), 193,250. JOHN HUMPHREY SMALL, Democrat, of Washington, was born in Washington, N. C.; was educated in the schools of Washington and at Trinity College, North : Carolina; is a lawyer in active practice; left college in 1876 and taught school from 1876 to 1880; was licensed to practice law. in January, 1881; was elected reading clerk of the State senate in 1881; was elected superintendent of public instruction of Beaufort County in the latter part of 1881; was elected and continued to serve as solicitor of the inferior court of Beaufort County from 1882 to 1885; was proprietor and editor of the Washington Gazette from 1883 to 1886; was attorney of the board of commissioners of Beaufort County from 1888 to 1896; was a member of the city council from May, 1887, to May, 1890, and for one year during that period was mayor of Washington; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of the first congressional district in 1888; was chairman of the Democratic executive committee of Beaufort County from 1889 to 1898; was the Democratic presidential elector in the first congressional district in 1896; has been for several years and is now chair- man of the public-school committee of Washington; was elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eichth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CountiES: Bertie, Edgecombe, 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 medi- cine at University of Virginia and received M. D. diploma; then attended postgraduate 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 So- ciety; 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 questions; is a member of the county Democratic executive committee, and has been a member of the State Democratic executive committee; was a member of the North Carolina Jamestown Exposition Commission; was married to Miss Eliza F. De Vane, of Clinton, N. C., in December, 1887, who, with their six children, is now living; was nominated at the Democratic convention of the third North Carolina congressional district in July, 1910, and was elected to the Sixty-second Congress; relected to the Sixty-third Congress. : ; FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chatham, Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Vance, and Wake (6 counties). Population (1910), 205,109. EDWARD WILLIAM POU, Democrat, of Smithfield, was born at Tuskegee, Ala., September 9, 1863; was educated at the University of North Carolina; was chairman of the executive committee of his county in 1886; 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 Con- gress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a majority of 10,416 votes over J. F. Mitchell, Republican. ; FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Alamance, Caswell, Durham, Forsyth, Granville, Guilford, Orange, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry (11 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 ai the Donaldson 13823°—63-2—18T ED—7 82 Congressional Directory. NORTH CAROLINA 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 university in 1859 he was chosen by the Philanthropic Society as one of its orators for the occa- sion. 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) Regiment. 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 Wil- mington. In 1867 he moved to Wilmington, where he practiced law for many years. He was a member of the firm of Wright & Stedman. In 1880 he was chosen as a dele- gate to the Democratic national convention which nominated Gen. Winfield S. Han- cock. He was elected lieutenant governor in November, 1884, and assumed the duties of his office in January, 1885, filling the position for four years until the expi- ration of the term. When nominated for lieutenant governor he resigned the attor- neyship which he held for several railways 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 ver small majority. In 1898 he moved to Greensboro and formed a copartnership be A. Wayland Cooke, under the firm name of Stedman & Cooke. Since residing in Greensboro he has served as president of the North Carolina Bar Association. 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 president. 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 and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. Before the commencement of his duties as a Member of Con- gress 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 mem- ber of the State Democratic executive committee from 1904 to 1906; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 13,028 votes, to 181 for Thomas A. Norment, Republican. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anson, Davidson, Davie, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Ran- dolph, Richmond, Scotland, Union, Wilkes, and Yadkin (13 counties). Population (1910), 255,130. 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 manu- facture of lumber; was treasurer of the Asheboro & Aberdeen Railroad Co. from 1890 to 1902; moved to Montgomery County in 1897; elected from that county to the legislature of 1901; married in 1888 to Miss Flora Shaw, of Moore County, and has four children; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan, Stanly, and Watauga (9 counties). Population (1910), 190,531. ROBERT I.. DOUGHTON, Democrat, Laurel Springs, N. C., was born at Laurel Springs, N. C., November 7, 1863; was educated in the public schools and at Laurel Springs and Sparta High Schools; is a farmer and stock raiser; was appointed a mem- ber of the board of agriculture in 1903; elected to the State senate from the thirty- fifth district of North Carolina in 1908; served as director of the State prison from i to 1911; elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third ongress. NORTH DAKOTA Biographical. 83 NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Avery, Burke, Catawba, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Madison, Meck- lenburg, Mitchell, and Yancey (10 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. L. 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 1900, 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 17,072 votes, to 2,228 for David Paul, Republican, and 7,869 for John Smith, Independent Republican. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson, Y howl, Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania (13 counties). Population (1910), JAMES M. GUDGER, Jr., Democrat, of Asheville, N. C.; educated at Emory and Henry, Virginia; a lawyer by profession; married Miss Katie M. Hawkins, of Hendersonville; elected to the State senate in 1900; was solicitor of the fifteenth district; elected to the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, and again elected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses. NORTH DAKOTA. (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, gradu- ating in 1880; removed to Wahpeton, N. Dak., in 1881, where he has since practiced his profession; was a member of the Territorial legislature in 1885 and 1887; 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 election 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 Lakota, was born at Elkader, Clayton County, Towa, December 10, 1858; at the age of 2 years his parents moved to Houston County, Minn., where he was brought up on a farm and educated at the public shools, finish- ing at the Caledonia Academy; taught school for two years at Wilmington, Minn.; moved to South Dakota in 1879, where he was engaged in farming and teaching; in 1880 moved to Buxton, Traill County, Dakota Territory, engaging in the mer- cantile business; moved to Lakota, Nelson County, in the winter of 1887; is a 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, Six- tieth, and Sixty-first Congresses. On the death of the late Senator M. N. Johnsen he became a candidate for the unexpired term. Submitting his candidacy to the {oops he received the Republican nomination by a majority of 12,500 votes over is opponent, Judge Edward Engerud. He was elected by the legislature in Janu- ary, 1911, and took his seat in the Senate February 2, 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. . 84 Congressional Directory. NORTH DAKOTA REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cass, Cavalier, Grand Forks, Nelson, Pembina, Ramsey, Ransom, Rich- land, Sargent, Steele, Towner, Traill, and Walsh (13 counties). Population (1910), 205,391. HENRY T. HELGESEN, Republican, of Milton, was born on a farm near Decorah, Winneshiek County, Iowa; received his education in the public schools and the Normal Institute and Business College of Decorah; after graduating entered the mercantile business in Decorah, continuing there until 1887, when he moved to the Territory of Dakota, locating at Milton, Cavalier County, engaging in the hardware, furniture, and lumber business, retiring in 1906 and devoting his time to his farm lands; he was married in 1880 to Bessie H. Nelson, of Decorah, and has a family of three boys and four girls; became actively interested in local and State politics soon after locating in Dakota, and was the first commissioner of agriculture and labor of the new State of North Dakota, and was reelected to the same office in 1890; has served 10 years as member of the university board of regents; nearly 20 years ago he began a fight for cleaner politics in the State, and early became a leader in the progressive movement; in the primaries of 1908 was the progressive Republican candi- date for Congress, but lost the nomination by a narrow margin; in 1910 again entered the field, secured the Republican nomination for Congress, and easily won in the fall election by a vote of 50,424 as against 25,015 for his Democratic opponent. In 1911 the State legislature divided the State into congressional districts and he entered the 1912 primaries as a candidate for reelection from the first district and secured his nomination on the Republican ticket without opposition, and was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by an overwhelming majority. : SECOND DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Barnes, Benson, Bottineau, Burleigh, Dickey, Eddy, Emmons, Foster, Griggs, Kidder, Lamoure, Logan, McHenry, McIntosh, Pierce, Rolette, Sheridan, Stutsman, and Wells (19 counties). Population (1910), 202,287. GEORGE M. YOUNG, Republican, of Valley City, N. Dak., was born December 11, 1870, in Huron County, Ontario, the son of Richard Young, whose parents came from Ireland, and Jane (Eaton) Young, whose parents came from St. Lawrence County, N. Y.; moved when a boy to St. Charles, Mich.; attended public schools there and graduated from University of Minnesota; removed to Casselton, N. Dak., in 1890, and to Valley City, N. Dak., in 1894; married Augusta L. Freeman, St. Charles, Mich., and has one child, Katherine Adams, 3 years old; elected State rep- resentative 1900 and 1902, State senator 1904; president pro tem of State senate 1907; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 16,912 votes, to 7,426 for J. A. Minckler, Democrat, and 1,922 for J. A. Yoder, Socialist. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Billings, Bowman, Burke, Divide, Dunn, Golden Valley, Het- tinger, McKenzie, McLean, Mercer, Morton, Mountrail, Oliver, Renville, Stark, Ward, and Williams (18 counties). Population (1910), 169,378. PATRICK DANIEL NORTON, Republican, of Hettinger, was born at Ishpeming, Marquette County, Mich., May 17, 1876; moved to Ramsey County, N. Dak., with his parents in 1883; educated in the common schools and State University of North Dakota; graduated from University of North Dakota in 1897 with degree of B. A; studied law at the State University and was admitted to practice in 1903; is engaged in the active practice of law and isalso interested in banking, real estate business, and live-stock raising; has been elected to the following offices: county superintendent of schools, chief clerk of the house of representatives, State’s attorney, and secretary of state; since taking part in political affairs has been recognized as one of the most active leaders of the progressive Republican movement in North Dakota; was nomi- nated at the State-wide primary in June, 1910, as the candidate of the progressive Republican organization for secretary of state, and was elected in November of that year by a plurality of more than 30,000; in the primaries in June, 1912, he won the Republican nomination for Congress after a most exciting campaign, in which four other Republican candidates participated; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving a majority of votes over his Democratic and Socialist opponents. omIO Biographical. 85 OHIO. (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; a ‘‘ Life of John Sherman” in the ‘‘ Amer- ican Statesmen Series,” published in 1906; and of ‘‘Corporations and the State,” published in 1911; 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-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty- ninth, and Sixtieth Congresses; for 13 years was a member and for 10 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 nomi- nation for the Presidency at the Chicago convention in 1908; member of the National Monetary Commission; president of the American Peace Society; 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 Elizabeth (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 Prince- ton and degree of B. I. at the Cincinnati Law School, LL. D. Mount Union-Scio College 1913; located at Canton, Ohio, in the practice of law in 1886; married in 1892 Miss Mary Helen Bockius; elected and served as city solicitor from 1887 to 1891; elected prosecuting attorney of Stark County in 1896, serving three years; a member of the honorary tax commission of Ohio, appointed by Gov. Andrew L. Harris in 1906; chair- man 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; 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. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 4,767,121. ROBERT CROSSER, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio, was born June 7, 1874, at Holytown, Lanarkshire, Scotland, and moved to Cleveland with his parents in Sep- tember, 1881; attended the public schools at Salineville, Ohio, graduating from the high school in 1893; entered Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, in September, 1893, and graduated in June, 1897, with the degree of A. B.; entered the law school of Columbia University in October, 1897, remaining part of a year, and the Cincinnati Law School in October, 1898, graduating from the latter in June, 1901, with the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar of Ohio in June, 1901, and entered upon the practice of law in Cleveland in September, 1901; was a member of the State house of representatives 1911-12, and was the author of the municipal initiative and referendum bill passed by the legislature in 1911; was elected a member of the fourth constitutional conven- tion of Ohio, which convened at Columbus on January 9, 1912, and adjourned August 26, 1912, serving as chairman of the initiative and referendum committee and was the author of the initiative and referendum amendment; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress by a plurality of 125,956, the vote being: Crosser, 423,311; Langdon, 297,355; Thomas, 91,201; Stanton, 11,862; Walton, 192,799. FIRST DISTRICT.—HAMOTON CouUNrY: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, thirteenth, eighteenth, and twenty-fifth. wards; precincts G, H, I, and part of F of twenty- sixth ward; tenth ward, except precincts L, M, and R; townships of Anderson, Columbia, and Symmes; village of Elmwood; city of Norwood. Population (1910), 234,422. STANLEY E. BOWDLE, Democrat, of Cincinnati, was born September 4, 1868; educated in the public schools; served as an apprentice in the machine shops of the 86 Congressional Directory. OHIO Cramp Shipbuilding Co., at Philadelphia; immediately thereafter took a course at ‘the Cincinnati Law School, graduated, and commenced the practice of law in his twenty-first year; at the age of 28 ill health compelled him to reside for four years in the West, and he spent much time in Mexico and the Southwest generally; returned to Cincinnati, where he has since practiced law; was a member of the Ohio constitutional convention in 1912, and assisted in forming the new State constitution, two amend- ments, one allowing court and counsel to comment freely on the failure of the accused to testify, and the other allowing the State to enact laws controlling the introduction and use of medical expert testimony, being his own; has lectured on revealed religion and philosophy generally; married Lillian Crane Scott, and they have one child, a daughter; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,330 votes, to 22,229 for Nicholas Longworth, Republican; 5,771 for Millard F. Andrew, Progressive, and 2,853 for Lawrence A. Zitt, Socialist. SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMILTON COUNTY: Precincts I, M, and R of the tenth ward; all of the twelfth ward except precincts A and Uj; precincts A, B, C, D, E, K, and L of the twenty-sixth ward; and the eleventh, fourteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-first, twenty- second, twenty-third, and twenty-fourth wards of the city of Cincinnati; the townships of Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Green, Harrison, Miami, Springfield, Sycamore, and Whitewater; and precincts of St. Bernard, Millcreek Township. Population (1910), 216,310. ALFRED G. ALLEN, Democrat, of Cincinnati, was born on a farm near Wilming- ton, 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 engaged in the. practice of the law in the city of Cincinnati, under the firm name of Harper & Allen. He served two years as councilman at large and two years as a member of the board of sinking-fund trustees of the city of Cincinnati. On December 10, 1901, married Miss Clara B. Forbes, of St. Louis, Mo., and has two children; was elected to the Sixty- second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 26,066 votes, to 21,113 for Otto J. Renner, Republican, and 4,940 for William B. Hay, Progressive. THIBD DISTRICT. -Conwmns: Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1910), WARREN GARD, Democrat, of Hamilton, Butler County, Ohio, was born in Hamilton, Ohio, on July 2, 1873; educated in the public schools of that city and graduated from the Cincinnati Law School in 1894, and has since been engaged in the practice of law; is married; was prosecuting attorney of Butler County, Ohio, and judge of the court of common pleas of the first subdivision of the second judicial dis- trict of Ohio; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 26,236 votes, to 15,399 for B. B. Buckley, Republican, 12,774 for Rev. Guy Frederick Strickland, Socialist, and 6,976 for E. G. Pease, progressive Republican. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, and Shelby (5 counties). Popula- tion (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 L. Johnson for governor in 1903; was delegate at large to the Democratic national convention 1912; was married to Catherine N. Nichols in September, 1907; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 21,512 votes, to 10,267 for John L. Cable, Republican, 4,493 for W. E. Rudy, Progressive, and 2,132 for Scott Wilkins, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CountiES: Defiance, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (6 coun- ties). 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and re- elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20,091 votes, to 10,177 for Edward Staley, Republican, and 1,121 for George W. Kirk, Socialist. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Brown, Clermont, Clinton, Greene, Highland, and Warren (6 coun- ties). Population (1910), 161,004. : SIMEON D. FESS, Republican, of Yellow Springs, Ohio, was born in Allen County, Ohio, near Lima, December 11, 1861; after his father’s death, he went OHIO Biographical. 87 to live with his sister; attended country school, and at the age of 20 entered the Ohio Northern University at Ada, Ohio, from which he graduated in 1889; was chosen to the chair of American history in his alma mater and later studied law, taking the degree of LL. B.; after admission to the bar became manager of the college of law in the university, after which he was made vice president of the university; in 1902 was called by President Harper to the University of Chicago, where he remained until 1906, when he accepted the presidency of Antioch College, which he now holds; in 1903 became editor of the World’s Events, which he held until 1907; is the author of the following publications: An Outline Study of Physiology, Outlines of United States History, History of American Political Theory, and Civics of Ohio; in 1890 was married to Miss Eva Thomas, a teacher of Latin in the Ohio Northern University and an alumnus of that university; his family consists of H. Lehr, T. Lowell, Charles Sumner, and Lois, a niece; in 1910 was chosen as Greene County’s delegate in the Ohio constitutional convention, of which body he was vice president; was chairman of the education committee and the author of the amendment creating the department of State superintendent of public instruction; headed the voluntary committee of 10 that framed the present initiative and referendum amendment; the present taxation amendment is due to his forcing its reconsideration after it had been defeated in the convention; stood for the progressive changes made in the constitution both in the con- vention and before the people in the subsequent election; in 1912 was nominated for the Sixty-third Congress on the Republican ticket by a plurality of 800 over four com- petitors, and was elected by a majority of 790 in a district that had given the Dem- ocratic candidate in 1910 a majority of 2,952 votes. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounNTIES: Clark, Fayette, Madison, Miami, and Pickaway (5 counties). Pop- ulation (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 prac- tice 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, cov- ering 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 L., 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 Representa- tive to Congress upon the Democratic ticket from the seventh congressional district of the State of Ohio; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Countits: Champaign, Delaware, Hancock, Hardin, Logan, and Union (6 coun- ties). 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 educa- tion in the common schools of Delaware County, at the Galena High School in 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 ad- mitted 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 admission 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 Sev- enty-fifth General Assemblies of Ohio, having been elected from Hardin County as a Republican; was elected to the Sixty-second and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 83 Congressional Directory. oHIO NINTH DISTRICT.—Counrties: Fulton, Lucas, Ottawa, and Wood (4 counties). Population (1910), | 285,332. ISAAC R. SHERWOOD, Democrat, of Toledo, was born in Stanford, Dutchess County, N. Y., August 13, 1835; was educated at Hudson River Institute, Claverack, N.Y., at Antioch College, Ohio, and at Poughkeepsie 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 Secretary of War; served 4 years and in 42 battles; | commanded his regiment in all the battles of the Atlanta campaign, and after the bat- tles 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, Atlanta, Franklin, and Nashville; was elected probate judge in 1860; secre- tary of state in 1868, reelected in 1870; elected to the Forty-third, Sixtieth, Sixty- first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiv- ing 26,528 votes, to 17,490 for Holland C. Webster, Republican, and 5,769 for Thomas | C. Devine, Socialist. ; | | | | | | | TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties). Population (1910) 184,965. ROBERT MAUCK SWITZER, Republican, of Gallipolis, 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 has always 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 C. 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 had been continuously engaged in the practice of law at Gallipolis, Ohio; he was married in December, 1896, to Miss Alice M. Simmons, of Pittsburgh, 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 and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTES: Athens, Fairfield, Hocking, Meigs, Perry, Ross, and Vinton (7 counties). Population (1910), 224,804. HORATIO C. CLAYPOOL, 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 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; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by an increased majority. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNty: Franklin. Population (1910), 221,567. | CLEMENT BRUMBAUGH, Democrat, of Columbus, Ohio, son of Samuel D. and Elizabeth (Darner) Brumbaugh, was born on a farm near Greenville, Ohio, Feb- ruary 28, 1863; left an orphan at an early age by the death of his father, his youth was spent as a farm hand and attending the district school; later taught school in the winter and worked on the farm in the summer; after becoming of legal age, by teach- I ing, working, and tutoring began to work out his educational career; graduated in scientific course with B. S. degree at National Normal University, Lebanon, Ohio, | 1887; from 1887 to 1891 founded and conducted the Van Buren Academy; took = special course in ancient languages at the Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, from 1891 to 1893; fall of 1893 entered the senior year, classical course, Har- vard University, Cambridge, Mass., and graduated with A. B. degree from Harvard | June, 1894; taught the following year in Washington, D. C.; was superintendent of schools of his native city, Greenville, Ohio, from 1896 to 1900; member and minority leader of Ohio Legislature from 1900 to 1904; was an alternate at large for the State | of Ohio to the Democratic national convention at Kansas City, 1900; June, 1900, admitted to the practice of the law by the Supreme Court of Ohio, having taken the law course in connection with the college courses; engaged in the practice of law at Columbus, Ohio; while holding the position of deputy superintendent of { » ol p omo © Biographical. 89 insurance. for the State of Ohio was nominated for Congress by the Democratic Party at a Democratic primary of the twelfth Ohio congressional district held May 21, 1912, the district having a normal Republican majority of about 5,000; on account of previous progressive record in the Ohio Legislature was indorsed by the Pro- gressive Party of the congressional district; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 24,340 votes, to 14,682 for Hon. Edward L. Taylor, jr., Republican, 7,095 for Jacob L.. Bachman, Socialist, and 450 for John R. Schmidt, Labor-Socialist, being the only Democratic nominee for Congress in Ohio receiving the indorsement of the Progressive Party for Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Crawford, Erie, Marion, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wyandot (6 counties). Population (1910), 204,686. JOHN A. KEY, Democrat, of Marion, was born at Marion, Ohio, December 30, 1871; educated in the public schools of Marion; learned the printer’s trade and became a practical journeyman; was a city letter carrier from 1897 to 1903; elected county recorder of Marion County in 1903, and reelected in 1906; private secretary of the late Hon. Carl C. Anderson for four years; in 1906 married Cora M. Edwards, and has one son and one daughter; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 26,402 votes, to 13,021 for Miles McLaughlin, Republican, 6,779 for Benjamin Sheidler, Pro- gressive, and 38,272 for Thomas Maxwell, Socialist. : FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmEs: 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 Loraine County; after his term of office expired he engaged in the manufacture of pig iron and chemicals, and during the succeeding 20 years, until his retirement, the business continued to develop, until it became the largest of its kind in the country; in 1895 he married Miss Hallie M. Clough, and has five chil- dren; 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 by a plurality of 1,726 to the Sixty-first Congress, to the Sixty- second Congress by a plurality of 6,823, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 11,381. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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, 1898-1901; is married, and has resided in Marietta since 1902; was elected to the legislature and represented Washington County, Ohio, from 1905 to 1908; at present engaged in the production of crude petroleum and natural gas; was elected to the Sixty-second and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Belmont, Carroll, Harrison, Jefferson, and Monroe (5 counties). Population (1910), 201,360. WILLIAM BATES FRANCIS, Democrat, of Martins Ferry, was born at Upde- graff, Jefferson County, Ohio, of German and Irish parentage; married Miss Julia Ii. Mitchell, of Mount Pleasant, Ohio, and has one child (a daughter, Clara J., just graduated from Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania); was admitted to practice law in 1889; practicesinall 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 Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 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 a busi-, - Wingo; attended a local school at Walthall, Miss., and graduated from the law | department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., 1892; moved to Texas in 1 1896 and to Oklahoma in 1901; married Nina Kay December 27, 1900; served one 90 Congressional Directory. OKLAHOMA ness college. He began the publication of the Johnstown Independent when he was 17 years old and has since continued to publish it; he was for three years secre- tary of the National Editorial Association of the United States; for the past 15 years has been interested in banking. He was married to Jennie B. Willison December 24, 1889; has no children. He was postmaster of his town during the second Cleve- land administration, but never entered politics until 1905, when he was elected to the State legislature; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress, defeating Judge Smyser, Republican, for reelection by 485 plurality; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress by 7,173 plurality, to the Sixty-second Congress by 10,934 plurality, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by 19,752 plurality. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Columbiana, Mahoning, and Stark (3 counties). Population (1910), 815,757. JOHN J. WHITACRE, Democrat, of Canton, was born December 28, 1860; is married; was elected to the Sixty-second and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashtabula, Geauga, Portage, Summit, and Trumbull (5 coun- ties). Population (1910), 265,543. ELLSWORTH R. BATHRICK, Democrat, of Akron, was born on a farm in Oak- land County, Mich., January 6, 1863; attended country schools in White Lake and Bloomfield Townships and the high school at Pontiac, Mich.; married May L. Clark, of Akron, Ohio, in 1889; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress November 8, 1910, being the first Democrat to represent the district; never held public office before; was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Lake, Medina, all of Cuyahoga County outside of the city of Cleveland, and the first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth wards, and parts of the eighteenth and nineteenth wards of Cleveland. Population (1910), 315,980. WILLIAM GORDON, Democrat, of Cleveland, was born on a farm near Oak Harbor, Ohio, December 15, 1862; educated in public schools, Toledo Business College, and - University of Michigan; taught district school three winters; admitted to the bar in 1893; in 1894 was elected prosecuting attorney of Ottawa County, and reelected in 1897, serving six years in that position; from 1890 to 1896 served as a member of the board of county school examiners of Ottawa County; in 1896 served as a delegate from the ninth district of Ohio to the Democratic national convention; in 1903 and 1904 served as a member of the Democratic State central committee from the ninth congres- gional district; is married and has two children; was the Democratic candidate for Congress in the twentieth district of Ohio in 1910 and was defeated, receiving 20,500 votes, to 20,680 for Paul Howland, Republican; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 24,448 votes, to 18,205 ior Frank Woods, Progressive, 12,742 for Paul Howland, Republican, and 5,260 for John G. Willert, Socialist. TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF CLEVELAND: Ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, four- teenth, fifteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, twentieth, twenty-first, twenty-second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, twenty-fifth, and twenty-sixth wards, and parts of the eighteenth and nineteenth wards. 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; engaged in the practice of law; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20,742 votes, to 13,760 for A. R. Hatton, Progressive, 8,811 for Fred L. Taft, Republican, and 5,059 for Fred C. Ruppel, Socialist. OKLAHOMA (Population (1910), 1,657,155.) A 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 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 OKLAHOMA Biographical. 91 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 Muscogee, was born February 2, 1856, at Lynchburg, Va., of Scotch-Irish and Indian ancestry; son of Robert L.. Owen, president of the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad, and of Narcissa Chisholm, of the Cherokee Nation; was educated in Lynchburg, Va., Baltimore, Md., and at Wash- ington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.; married Daisey Deane Hester, daughter of Capt. George B. Hester, December 31, 1889; has served as teacher, editor, lawyer, banker, and businéss man; was a member of the Democratic national committee from 1892 to 1896; was member of subcommittee that drew the Democratic national platform in 1896, etc.; vice chairman of the Democratic campaign committee in Oklahoma in 1906; member Democratic congressional campaign committee; is an Episcopalian; Mason, 32°; Mystic Shrine; Knight Templar; AT 2; @ B K; Elk; Moose; M. W. A, etc. Clubs: University, Chevy Chase, Columbia, etc. University degrees: M. A., LL. D. 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 candi- date for the Senatorship, by about 10,000; elected United States Senator by the unani- mous vote of the Democrats of the Legislature of Oklahoma December 11, 1907, and ' took his seat December 16, 1907. He was renominated by a Democratic primary August 6, 1912, by 35,600 majority, and was reelected by popular vote November 5, 1912, by a plurality of 42,989 votes, exceeding the plurality of the national ticket by 14,619 votes. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. : REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 1,657,155. WILLIAM H. MURRAY (Alfalfa Bill), Democrat, of Tishomingo, Okla., was born November 21, 1869, near Collinsville, Grayson County, Tex.; his mother died when he was 2 years old; ran away from his father at 12 years of age; has since “punched” cattle, chopped cordwood, worked in brickyard, been a farm laborer, reporter for and edited newspapers, taught school, practiced law, and is now an extensive planter and proprietary farmer; was educated in the common schools and in College Hill Institute, a private college in Texas; took a scientific course in agriculture and horticulture; married, in 1899, Miss Alice Hearrell, niece of Gov. D. H. Johnston, of the Chickasaw Nation, and they have five children—Massena Bancroft, Johnston, William Henry, jr., Jean, and Burbank; was admitted to the bar in Texas, and licensed to practice law in all the Federal, State, and Chickasaw Indian tribal courts of Oklahoma, and in the United States Supreme Court; was chairman of the Chicka- saw coal commission in 1904-5; vice president of the Sequoyah constitutional con- vention; president of the Oklahoma constitutional convention, and proposer of many of its provisions, to the extent of being called in Oklahoma the ‘‘Father of the Con- stitution’; was speaker of the house of representatives, first Oklahoma Legislature; delegate at large to the Democratic national convention at Denver in 1908 and at Baltimore in 1912, and supported the Bryan-Wilson forces; was nominated for the Sixty-third Congress in the State-wide primary, and without making a canvass led the ticket; led the congressional ticket in the general election in November, 1912, against Republican and Socialist opponents; has always been a supporter of the Bryan wing of the Democratic Party, and is a Mason, A. A. Scottish Rite 32°. JOSEPH B. THOMPSON, Democrat, of Pauls Valley, Okla., was born April 29, 1871, on a farm in Grayson County, Tex.; was educated in public schools of Texas, and graduated at Savoy College, a private institution, in Fannin County, Tex., in 1890; is a practicing attorney; was admitted to the bar before District Judge T. J. ‘Brown (now chief justice of the Supreme Court of Texas) at Sherman, Tex., after an examination in open court, in 1892; immediately removed to Ardmore, in the then Indian Territory, where he resided for one year; was appointed United States com- missioner in September, 1893, for the United States court in the Indian Territory, and located at Purcell; held this office for four years and resigned on the 7th of October, 1897; immediately removed from Purcell to Pauls Valley, where he has continuously practiced law; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention at Kansas City in 1900, and the Democratic national convention at St. Louis in 1904, from the Indian Territory; was a delegate at large from the State of Oklahoma to the Democratic 92 Congressional Directory. OKLAHOMA national convention at Denver in 1908; was a member of the Democratic Territorial executive committee of the Indian Territory from 1896 to 1904; was elected chairman of the Democratic State committee of the State of Oklahoma on the convening of the constitutional convention to prepare a constitution for the State, on November 20, 1906; was reelected to the same position in August, 1908, and served until August, 1910; was elected a member of the State Senate of Oklahoma at the general election in November, 1910, for a term of four years; was one of the three nominees of the Democratic Party out of a list of 28 candidates for Congressman at large from the State of Oklahoma in 1912, and was elected a Member of Congress at large from the State of Oklahoma at the general election held in November, 1912; resigned as a member of the State senate at the close of the regular session on March 17, 1913, to take his seat in Congress; was married to Miss Mary Miller at Rutherfordton, N. C., on September 5, 1894, and his family consists of two children, Joseph B. Thompson, jr., and James M. Thompson; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 131,000 votes, to 99,000 cast for his opponent; has always been a progressive Democrat and an ardent supporter of William J. Bryan. : CLAUDE WEAVER, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, was born at Gainesville, Cooke County, Tex., March 19, 1867, the son of W. T. G. Weaver and Nannie Wilkin Fletcher. W. T. G. Weaver was a captain in the Confederate Army, district attorney, district judge, member of the Texas constitutional convention, and famous in that State as a poet, orator, lawyer, and jurist; he died in early manhood, 1876. Claude Weaver attended the public schools of Gainesville, Tex., and graduated from the law school of the Texas University 1887; in 1891 married Leila Ada Reinhardt, of Terrell, Kaufman County, Tex.; five children bless their union, four daughters, Floy, Amelia, Barbara, and Lucy Dougherty, and one son, Claude Weaver, jr.; in 1895 moved from Gaines- ville to Pauls Valley, in the old Chickasaw Nation, Indian Territory, and practiced law there for many years; in 1908 located at Oklahoma City, the capital and metropolis of the State; has been a leader in the fight for constitutional prohibition of the liquor traffic in Oklahoma, and in the movement for the commission form of city govern- ment, being one of the authors of the Oklahoma City charter; has never before held public office; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress from the State at large, receiving 121,186 votes, to 86,092 for Emory E. Brownlee, Republican, and 40,703 for J. Luther Langston, Socialist, a plurality of 35,094. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNmEs: Garfield, Grant, Kay, Kingfisher, Lincoln, Logan, Noble, Osage, Paw- nee, and Payne (10 counties). Population (1910), 240,266. BIRD SEGLE McGUIRE, Republican, of Pawnee, was born at Belleville, Ill., in 1865, 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, which is now a part of Oklahoma, being engaged a greater portion of the time in the cattle business; he then 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; in the fall of 1890 was elected county attorney of Chautauqua County, Kans., and served four years, or two consecutive terms; at the expiration of the last term, the spring of 1895, moved to Pawnee County, Okla., and practiced law; in 1897 was appointed assistant United States attorney for Oklahoma Territory, in which capacity he served until after his nomination for Congress as Delegate from the Territory of Oklahoma; served as such in the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress September 17, 1907, his term beginning upon the admission of Oklahoma as a State; was elected to the Sixty-first and reelected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Con- gresses. 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 89, still resides on the old farm homestead; he received his primary education in the country schools of his neighborhood; gradu: ated 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. 8.; 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 hé graduated from the Central Law School of Indianapolis, Ind., and was a member of the lower house OKLAHOMA : Biographical. 93 of the Indiana Legislature in the session of 1880-81; was appointed register of the United States land office at Woodward, Okla., by President Roosevelt 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 married Miss Clemmer Deupree, of Bloomfield, Towa; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 24,678 votes, to 23,773 for John J. Carney, Democrat, and 7,453 for P. D. McKenzie, 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. W. Bruce, Conway, Ark., and was admitted to the bar of Faulkner County February 14, 1890; in October of that year he moved to Indian Territory, locating at Muskogee, and in 1893 moved to Vinita, where he has since resided, and 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; was elected to the Sixtieth Congress September 17, 1907, and reelected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses, receiving 27,184 votes, to 20,884 for R. T. Daniel, Republican, and 6,463 for Lewis B. Irwin, 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 life was 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 Ard- more, continuing there as clerk, bookkeeper, and cotton man until January, 13893; 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; married Gertrude Wilson December 29, 1891, who died in January, 1901; married Mrs. Cecile Jones January 8, 1911; was secretary of first Democratic State committee for proposed State of Oklahoma; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to Sixty-third Congress, receiving 23,987 votes, to 11,421 for E. N. Wright, Republican, and 11,321 for F. W. Holt, Socialist. 5 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, Tillman, and Washita (18 counties). = Population (1910), 386,000. SCOTT FERRIS, Democrat, of Lawton, was born November 3, 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 by approximately 18,000 plurality over the Republican candi- date, who received 11,000 votes; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by 18,000 plu- rality; no Progressive candidate in the field. 94 Congressional Directory. OREGON OREGON. (Population (1910), 672,765.) SENATORS. 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. In the 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 A. B. and in the latter the degree of B. L.. After graduation he returned home, where he remained for a short time, leaving there to take up his residence in Oregon, arriving there Decem- ber 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; seven children have been born of this marriage, six of whom are living, three of them being married. In 1880 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 Tillamook, and served for a term of two years; in 1891 was appointed attorney general 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 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 servile will expire March 3, 1915. HARRY LANE, Democrat, of Oregon. Term expires March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Coos, Curry, Douglas, Jackson, Josephine, Lane, Lincoln, Linn, Marion, Polk, Tillamook, Washington, and Yamhill (17 counties). Population (1910), 303,634. 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., A.B. and LL. B.,and A. M. in cursu and LL. D. in honore; was regularly ad- mitted to the barin Oregon and to the district and circuit courts of the United States; engaged in educational work in several institutions, including the Willamette Uni- versity, 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 in- stitution having about $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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 26,925 votes, to 15,410 for R. G. Smith, Democrat, 8,679 for John W. Campbell, Progressive, 7,181 for W. S. Richards, Socialist, and 4,335 for O. A. Stillman, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Crook, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Hood River, Klamath, Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and Wheeler (16 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 142,870. NICHOLAS J. SINNOTT, Republican, of The Dalles; born in that city Decem- ber 6, 1870; educated in the public schools and at the Wasco Independent Academy, The Dalles; received degree of A. B., Notre Dame University, Indiana, in 1892; is a lawyer; is married; member of Oregon State Senate 1909 and 1911; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,121 votes, to 8,322 for James H. Graham, Democrat, 3,037 for C. H. Abercrombie, Socialist, and 1,800 for George L. Cleaver, Prohibitionist. a Ra TY a PENNSYLVANIA B 10gra phical. 95 THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTY: Multnomah. Population (1910), 226,261. WALTER LAFFERTY, Progressive Republican, of Portland, at present supporting the platform and organization in Congress of the Progressive Party because in his judgment it comes much nearer to representing the sentiments and aspirations of the rank and file of the Republican Party than does the platform enunciated by the last so- called Republican national convention; was admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of Missouri on examination June 5, 1896, five days before he was 21, and practiced law at Montgomery, Mo., until December, 1904, during which time he served three years with the rank of captain in the Missouri National Guard and one term as prosecuting attorney; December, 1904, was appointed special agent of the General Land Office, and after brief preliminary instruction at Washington, D. C., was sent to Oregon, arriving at Portland March 20, 1905, where he has since resided; as special agent he took up the cause of the homesteaders, reporting that it was not the settler who was - robbing the Government but the railroad companies and scrip applicants, and recommending more liberal treatment to settlers; resigned as special agent October 1, 1906, and reentered the private practice of law; as prosecuting attorney in Missouri he secured the first convictions ever had in that State for the offense of communicating quotations by wire for the purpose of gambling in grain, stocks, and provisions, putting more money in the treasury in fines than his salary amounted to, and under a law which had remained unenforced upon the statute books of that State for 40 years; in Oregon his principal case has been the prosecution which he started in 1907 against the Oregon & California Railroad Co., being the first suit ever brought to enforce the terms of the act of Congress which 40 years ago granted to that company nearly one-third of the lands in western Oregon, but upon the express provision that every acre of the lands should be sold by the company to actual settlersonly, in quantities not, greater than one quarter section to any one settler, and for prices not exceeding $2.50 per acre, which case is now pending in the United States court at Portland, and involves 2,300,000 acres of unsold lands still held by the company unaffected by the claims of any innocent purchasers, the Government having already realized $1,000,000 on a compromise concluded in 1913 with those who bought portions of the granted lands contrary to law prior to the institution of the suit, the compromise having been made by authority of the act of August 20, 1912, which was introduced by Mr. Laiferty, and if the 2,300,000 acres of unsold lands still held by the company shall be sold to settlers as sought by the prosecution started by Mr. Lafferty, or forfeited to the United States, as asked in the Government suit filed one year later, and then opened to settlement (and not put into a forest reserve in either such case homes of 160 acres each for 15,000 families will thereby be provided in the most beautiful and picturesque portion of western Oregon; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : PENNSYLVANIA. (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 Mac Veagh and George Tucker Bispham, and was admitted to the bar in 1883; practiced his pro- fession in Philadelphia for several years; was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives from the eighth Philadelphia district in 1884; was elected to the Pennsylvania State Senate from the sixth Philadelphia district in 1886, reelected in 1890, and again in 1894; was elected president pro tempore of the senate in 1889, and reelected in 1891; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1900, 1904, and 1908; was chairman of the Republican State committee in 1903-1905; was elected a member of the Republican national committee from Pennsylvania in 1904, and reelected in 1908; was elected to the United States Senate, to succeed J. Donald Cameron, for the term beginning March 4, 1897; reelected in 1903 and 1909. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. GEORGE T. OLIVER, Republican, of Pittsburgh, was born in Ireland during a visit of his parents, January 26, 1848; was graduated from Bethany College, West Vir- ginia, in 1868; admitted to the Allegheny County (Pa.) bar in 1871, and in active prac- tice 10 years. In 1881 engaged in manufacturing, becoming vice president and subse- quently president of the Oliver Wire Co., with which he remained until 1899, when S56 Congressional Directory. PENNSYLVANIA 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 president until he disposed of his manufacturing interests in 1901. Since 1900 engaged in the newspaper business as principal owner of the Pittsburgh Gazette-Times and Pittsburgh Chronicle- Telegraph. President of the Pittsburgh Central Board of Education 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. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 7,655,111. FRED E. LEWIS, Progressive, of Allentown, was born in that city February 8, 1865, the son of Samuel B. Lewis, and is a member of one of the oldest and most prominent families of Lehigh County; he was educated in the public schools, a New England military institute, and Muhlenberg College, after which he took up the study of law in the offices of Hon. Robert E. Wright and was admitted to the bar.in 1888; in 1896 was elected mayor, and his record was such that he was again elected in 1902; he organized the Lehigh Telephone Co., since absorbed by the Consolidated Telephone Cos. of Pennsylvania; established the Merchants’ National Bank of that city and was its president for over seven years; was president of the Allentown Board of Trade; is a member of many social organizations, as well as of a number of protective and beneficial societies; is especially popular with the working classes, and on several occasions was instrumental in bringing about a settlement of serious labor dissensions, notably the Lehigh Valley Traction Co. and Pioneer Silk Mill strikes; April 16, 1892, married Miss Juliet M. Hammersly, daughter of Capt. James B. Hammersly, and they have two children, a boy and a girl; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. JOHN M. MORIN, Republican, of Pittsburgh, was born in Philadelphia, April 18, 1868, and removed to Pittsburgh with his parents when 4 years old; he is a son of the late Martin Joseph Morin and Mrs. Rose Joyce Morin, of county Mayo, Ireland, attended the common schools, and at an early age went to work in a glass factory and later secured employment in the iron and steel mills; during thisemployment attended night school and afterwards took a course in a business college. In 1890 removed to Missoula, Mont., to accept a position with the D. J. Hennessy Mercantile Co., return- ing to Pittsburgh in 1893, where he has since resided; has always taken an active interest in the affairs of union labor and the members of the trades, and for a number of years previous to his appointment as director of public safety was a member of the Central Trades Council of Pittsburgh; in 1897 married Miss Eleanor C. Hickey, of Pitts- burgh, and is the father of eight children, John M., Harry S., Rose, Elizabeth, Mar- tin+J., William Magee, Mary, and Margaret Morin; has been all-around athlete and takes a lively interest in all athletic affairs, in Pennsylvania being best known as a sculler; while in Montana helped organize and served as a director of the Montana State Baseball League; was manager-captain and played with the Missoula team in 1891-1893; has been a member of the Central Turnverein since his youth, and 10 years ago became a life member of the Pittsburgh Press Club; is a member of a number of rominent clubs and fraternal organizations, the Academy of Science and Art of Poh, and is president of the State Aerie, Fraternal Order of Eagles, Pennsyl- vania. He is a director in the Washington Trust Co., Pittsburgh Hospital, and Rosalia Foundling Asylum and Maternity Hospital, all of Pittsburgh; since attaining his majority has been active in Republican politics in his home and State,and has been a delegate to every Republican State convention in Pennsylvania from 1905 to 1912, inclusive; was elected and represented the old fourteenth (now fourth) ward in Pitts- burgh common council from 1904 to 1906; April 5, 1909, wasappointed director of the department of public safety in Pittsburgh, which office he held until February 1, 1913, when he resigned to take up his duties in Congress; was nominated for Repre- sentative at large in the Republican State convention, and was indorsed by the Bull Moose, Roosevelt-Progressive, and Washington Parties; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress by a majority of 260,975, receiving 618,537 votes, to 357,562 for George B. Shaw, Democrat, 21,573 for Howard A. Sheppard, Keystone, and 20,465 for Henary S. Gill, Prohibitionist. ARTHUR RINGWALT RUPLEY, Progressive, of Carlisle; native of Cumberland County; received his education in the common schools and the Cumberland Valley State Normal School; is an alumnus of Dickinson School of Law; a lawyer; admitted to the bar in 1891 and to practice in the superior and supreme courts of Pennsylvania PENNSYLVANIA B rographical. ; 9 at a later date; district attorney of Cumberland County from 1895 to 1899; has been county and city solicitor; is married and has a family of three children, one son and two daughters; was nominated by the Republican State convention as a Represent- ative at large on an advanced progressive platform, and afterwards by the Washing- ton, Bull Moose, and Roosevelt-Progressive Parties, and was elected to the Sixty- third Congres, receiving a total of 606,709 votes, to 343,163 for the Democratic candidate. ; : ANDERSON HOWEL WALTERS, Republican, of Johnstown; editor and publisher of the Johnstown Tribune; married to Jessie Octavia Woodruff; nominated by Repub- lican State convention, indorsed by Washington, Bull Moose, and Roosevelt-Progres- sive Parties, and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 251,147. FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF PHILADELPHIA: First, seventh, twenty-sixth, thirtieth, thirty-sixth, and thirty-ninth wards. Population (1910), 274,960. WILLIAM SCOTT VARE, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in the first - district of Pennsylvania December 24, 1867; educated in the public schools; entered mercantile life at the age of 15; elected to select council from the first ward February 15, 1898; same year appointed mercantile appraiser and elected by his associates presi- dent of the body; reelected to select council February, 1901; elected recorder of deeds November 5, 1901, resigning from select council; reelected recorder of deeds in 1904, and chosen for a third term in 1907, being the only occupant of the office so honored; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1908 and 1912; unsuccessful candidate for the mayoralty of Philadelphia at the Republican primary of September, 1911, receiving, however, nearly 85,000 votes. As a citizen and public official, has been particularly solicitous in behalf of the public-school system of Phila- delphia, securing for the first congressional district the first sectional high and manual- training school established in the city; as recorder of deeds was instrumental in having the Legislature of Pennsylvania authorize and Gov. Tener appoint a commission to investigate and suggest a more modern system in order to expedite and cheapen the cost of recording deeds and to insure titles of property, his administration of the office being publicly commended by the secretary of the civil-service commission, as well as all the leading trust companies and real-estate brokers; was married to Ida Morris in Philadelphia July 29, 1897, and has three daughters; elected to the Sixty-second Congress from the first district of Pennsylvania to fill the unexpired term of Gen. Henry H. Bingham; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 25,205 votes, to 10,492 for John H. Hall, Democrat, Keystone, and Progressive. SECOND DISTRICT.—CIrY oF PHILADELPHIA: Eighth, ninth, tenth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, twentieth, and thirty-seventh wards. Population (1910), 193,447. : GEORGE SCOTT GRAHAM, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in that city September 13, 1850; was educated in the public schools and by private tutors; graduate of University of Pennsylvania (LL. B.) and Lafayette College, Pa. (LL. D.); is married; member of select councils of Philadelphia 1877-1880; district attorney of Philadel- phia 1871-1898; professor of criminal law and procedure in the law school of the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania for 11 years; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiv- ing 14,887 votes, to 7,527 for Schlipf, Democrat, and 5,654 for Lambert, Bull Moose. THIRD DISTRICT.—Cr1y 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 1, 1905, to become president City Trust, Safe Deposit & Surety Co. of Philadelphia; appointed by the court June 24, 1905, receiver of the company; elected president National Republican League, at Chicago, in 1902, and reelected at Indianapolis in 1904; president Atlantic Deeper Waterways Asso- ciation, Philadelphia, 1907; Baltimore, 1908; Norfolk, 1909; Providence, 1910; Rich- mond, 1911; New London, 1912; elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress for the unexpired term, and reelected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——8 98 Congressional Directory. PENNSYLVANIA FOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF PHILADELPHIA: Twenty-eighth, twenty-ninth, thirty-second, thirty- eighth, and forty-seventh wards. Population (1910), 198,693. : GEORGE WASHINGTON EDMONDS, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born at Pottsville, Pa., February 22, 1864; educated in the public schools and the Central High School; graduate (Ph. G.) of Philadelphia College of Pharmacy; is in the coal business; member of the common councils of Philadelphia 1896-1902; is married; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, being indorsed by the Republican, Key- stone, Lincoln, and Washington Parties, and received 21,733 votes, to 8,482 for Thomas T. Nelson, Democrat, 1,410 for C. De Kyne, Socialist, and 97 for H. C. Russell, So- cialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CiTy oF PHILADELPHIA: Twenty-third, twenty-fifth, thirty-first, thirty-third, thirty- fifth, forty-first, forty-third, and forty-fiftth 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 mem- ber of the Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce; is married and has 10 children, 5 boys and 5 girls; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 21,971 votes, to 15,181 for Henry S. Borneman, Re- publican, 2,559 for John Whitehead, Socialist, and 132 for E. A. Moore, 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. J. WASHINGTON LOGUE, Democrat, of Philadelphia, was born in that city Feb- ruary 22, 1863; was educated at La Salle College; was admitted to the bar in 1888 and since that time has been engaged in active practice; has been prominent in civic and social reform work in Philadelphia; married the daughter of James W. Barry, and has four children, two sons and two daughters; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,091 votes, to 19,642 for Frederic S. Drake, Washington, and 19,291 for Harry A. Mackey, Republican, Lincoln, and Roosevelt Progressive. : SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTES: 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; was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving on the Republican ticket 14,944 votes, on the Bull Moose ticket 3,081 votes, on the Roosevelt Progressive ticket 1,251 votes, in all 19,275 votes, to 12,225 for Eugene C. Bonniwell, Keystone and Democrat, 611 for Walter N. Lodge, Socialist, 378 for Edwin P. Sellew, Prohibitionist, and 7,648 for Frederick A. Howard, Washington Party. EIGHTH DISTRICT. -CoUNTIES: Bucks and Montgomery (2 counties). Population (1910), 246,120. ROBERT E. DIFENDERFER, Democrat, of Jenkintown, 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 1900, 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 18,230 votes, to 15,840 for Oscar O. Bean, Repub- lican, 12,605 for Thomas K. Ober, Washington Party, and 1,081 for J. C. Hogan, Socialist, giving a plurality of 2,390. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Lancaster. Population (1910), 167,029. WILLIAM WALTON GRIEST, Republican, of Lancaster, 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 the Pennsylvania Public School Memorial Association; engaged in newspaper work; PENNSYLVANIA B rographical. 99 was chief clerk in the county commissioners’ office from 1887 to 1899; was elected delegate to the Republican national conventions in 1896, 1900, 1904, 1908, and 1912; 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 Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Lackawanna. Population (1910), 259,570. JOHN R. FARR, Republican and Washington (Roosevelt) Party tickets, of Scranton, Pa., was born in Scranton, Pa.; educated in public schools, School of the Lackawanna, Scranton, Pa., Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., and Lafayette College, Easton, Pa.; mewsboy, printer, publisher; now in real estate business; married, and has four daughters and one son; served four years on Scranton school board and five terms in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1891-1899); speaker session of 1899; author of free school book, compulsory education, and eight- hour laws, and founder of West Side Hospital, Scranton, Pa.; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 10,326 votes on the Washington (Roosevelt) Party ticket, and 4,613 on the Republican ticket— total, 14,939 votes, to 12,777 for M. A. McGinley, Democrat. ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Luzerne. Population (1910), 343,186. JOHN J. CASEY, Democrat, of Wilkes-Barre, was born May 26, 1875, in Wilkes- Barre Township, Luzerne County, Pa.; attended the public and St. Mary’s parochial schools; commenced working in the coal breaker in 1883; is married and has a family of eight children; has taken an active part in trades-union affairs from early manhood; was elected a member of the House of Representatives of Pennsylvania in 1906, and introduced and succeeded in having passed during the session of the legislature in 1907 the present employers’ liability law; was nominated for the office of secretary of internal affairs by the Keystone Party of Pennsylvania in 1910; at the time of his election to the Sixty-third Congress was an international officer of the journeymen plumbers, gas fitters, steamfitters, and steamfitters’ helpers of the United States and Canada, receiving 15,343 votes, to 10,597 for Clarence Coughlin, Washington Party, 9,864 for C. C. Bowman, Republican, Progressive, and Prohibitionist, and 2,119 for Charles Quinn, Socialist. TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNty: Schuylkill. Population (1910), 207,894. ROBERT E. LEE, Democrat, of Pottsville; was elected to the Sixty-second Con- gress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTies: 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, and since then to all the State and Federal courts, including the Supreme Court of the United States; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bradford, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (4 counties). Population (1910), 137,017. WILLIAM D. B. AINEY, Republican, of Montrose, was born in New Milford, Pa., April 8, 1864; educated in the public schools, State normal school at Mansfield, and Lehigh University; is a lawyer by profession; admitted to the bar in 1887, and has been in active practice since that date; served by election as district attorney two terms (six years) in Susquehanna County; in 1888 married Emma E. Lyons; Novem- ber 7, 1911, was elected to the Sixty-second Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. George W. Kipp; was one of the American delegates to the Inter- national Parliamentary Union for International Peace held in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1912; was unanimously renominated by the Republican Party, indorsed by the Washington (Progressive) and Keystone Parties, and was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,747 votes, to 8,384 for Joel G. Hill, Democrat. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Counmiks: Clinton, Lycoming, Potter, and Tioga (4 counties). Population (1910), 184,916. EDGAR RAYMOND KIESS, Republican, of Williamsport, was born in Warrens- ville, Lycoming County, Pa., August 26, 1875; educated in the public schools and the Lycoming County Normal School, graduating from same with highest honors in 1892; taught in the public schools for two years; engaged in business in Hughesville in 1894 and still retains business interests there; in 1898 became interested in the 100 Congressional Directory. PENNSYLVANIA development of Eagles Mere as a popular summer resort, and is now president of the Eagles Mere Land Co., owners of the beautiful Lake of the Eagles, and is treasurer and manager of the Eagles Mere Co., owning the Forest Inn and Eagles Mere Park; is a member of the Union League and other prominent Pennsylvania associations; has always taken an active interest in politics and served three terms (1904 to 1910) as member of assembly from Lycoming County, elected as a Republican in a strong Democratic district; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,211 votes, to 13,643 for William B. Wilson, Democrat, 2,282 for Aaron Noll, Socialist, and 814 for David Salmon, Prohibitionist. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, and Sullivan (4 counties). Population (1910), 186,048. JOHN V. LESHER, Democrat, of Sunbury, was born in Union County, Pa., July 27, 1866; educated in rural schools, Bloomsburg State Normal School, and Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa., from which he was graduated in 1897; read law ‘with Hon. Simon P. Wolverton, being admitted to the bar July 2, 1900, and to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania January 5, 1903; is engaged in the practice of law and agriculture; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,209 votes, to 12,783 votes for I. Clinton Kline, Republican and Washington. SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Sny- der, and Union (8 counties). Population (1910), 207,765. FRANK L. DERSHEM, Democrat, of Lewisburg, was born in White Deer Town- ship, Union County, Pa., March 5, 1865; educated in the common schools and Palm’s National Business College, Philadelphia; worked at farming and clerked in a general store before attending business college; was postmaster at Kelly Point, Pa., from 1888 to 1890; manager of a general store for almost three years; later assistant bookkeeper; was a traveling salesman in the wholesale hardware business for 19 years; is a member of the board of trustees of Albright College, Myerstown, Pa.; married February 26, 1891, to Minnie Ada Stahl; served two terms in the Pennsylvania House of Repre- sentatives; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,073 votes, to 10,978 for Benjamin K. Focht, Republican, 9,442 for Frank B. Clayton, Washington, 1,377 for William G. Bowers, Socialist, and 337 for W. C. Bratton, Prohibitionist. EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Cumberland, Dauphin, and Lebanon (3 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 250,196. AARON SHENK KREIDER, Republican, of Annville, was born in South Ann- ville Township, Lebanon County, on June 26, 1863; received his education in the public schools, Lebanon Valley College, and Allentown Business College; married Elizabeth B. Horst on April 23, 1885, and has 10 children, 7 boys and 3 girls; engaged actively in business on reaching his majority, establishing Lawn, on the Cornwall & Lebanon Railroad, and engaged in the grain and coal business; is now actively engaged in the shoe-manufacturing business, operating plants at Annville, Palmyra, Elizabethtown, and Middletown, and is widely known in the shoe trade, having served as a member of the executive committee, as treasurer, and is now president of the National Boot & Shoe Manufacturers’ Association of the United States; is a trustee and vice president of the board of trustees of Lebanon Valley College; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 14,485 votes, to 14,082 votes for David I. Kaufman, Democrat and Keystone, 13,504 for Henry C. Deming, Washington, 802 for E. H. Molly, Prohibition, and 1,988 for J. Milton Ibach, Socialist. pan DISTRICT.—CounNTtiEs: Bedford, Blair, and Cambria (3 counties). Population (1910), WARREN WORTH BAILEY, Democrat, of Johnstown, was born in Hendricks County, Ind., January 8, 1855, of Kentucky stock; his parents located in Edgar County, Ill., in 1863, remaining there until 1877, when they returned to Indiana; attended country and village schools until about 15, when he entered a railroad office to learn telegraphy, at which he continued until about 20, when he entered the office of the Kansas (111.), News to learn the printing trade; in 1877 he engaged in the publishing business at Carlisle, Ind., in partnership with his brother, the late Edward Homer Bailey, later purchasing a paper at Vincennes, which they published until 1887, when they removed to Chicago; in that city he was on the staff of the Daily News for nearly six years, removing to Johnstown, Pa., in 1893, to take over the Daily Democrat, of which he has since been editor and publisher; was married in 1894 to Miss Georgia, Coffin, of Chicago, two children being born to the union; has always taken a keen interest in public affairs, but never before held office; was a delegate at large from Pennsylvania at the Baltimore convention; in 1883 read Henry George’s Progress and Poverty, and since then has been a tireless advocate of the single-tax philosophy, his paper, the Vincennes News, being the first single-tax paper in the United States; was aE SSE Re TLS CS mE B 10gra phical. 101 personally acquainted with Henry George and the late Rev. Dr. Edward McGlynn, as well as with many other leaders in the new political economy; was for five years president of the Chicago Single Tax Club; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 938, the district never before having been represented by a Democrat. TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams and York (2 counties). Population (1910), 170,724. ANDREW R. BRODBECK, Democrat, of Hanover, was born April 11, 1860, at Jefferson, York County, Pa.; educated in public and academic schools; reared and worked upon the farm; after the death of his father, at 13 years of age he became an errand boy for his uncle in a country store and hotel and did light work on the farm; at 18 his mother died, leaving him an orphan with a brother 6 years old to care for; taught in the public schools from 1878 to 1880; at the age of 19 he engaged in the fertilizer business as a retailer and later as a manufacturer, and became iden- tified with other industrial enterprises; in 1895, at the age of 35, was nominated for sheriff of his native county and elected by a majority of 2,254; represented his county in State conventions and served on the State central committee; was alternate delegate to the Democratic national convention at Kansas City, Mo., in 1900; is a director of the Hanover Saving Fund Society, treasurer of the Hanover Printing Co., and a director of Ursinus College, Collegeville, Pa., and of Hood (Woman's) College, Frederick, Md.; is married to Ellen R. Thoman, and has three daughters; in 1910 received the Democratic nomination for Congress, but was defeated at the general election; was renominated in 1912 and elected to the Sixty-third Congress by 2,231 plurality, receiving 16,514 votes, to 14,283 for Daniel F'. Lafean, Republican and Bull Moose, 3,186 for Robert O. Bair, Washington, 1,498 for George W. Bacon, Socialist, and 404 for Henry H. Trumpheller, Prohibitionist. : TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Cameron, Center, Clearfield, and McKean (4 counties). - Pop- ulation (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 education in the common schools of his native place and later attended Dickinson Seminary at Williamsport, Pa.; was married in 1883 to Mary R. Beggs, of Ebensburg, Pa.; started in business as a dry-goods merchant, but later branched out in various lines of business; is now identified with many of the most important business ventures of the community in which he resides. His father, John Patton, served in the Thirty- seventh and Fiftieth Congresses from Pennsylvania, and his brother, John Patton, jr., represented Michigan in the United States Senate, 1894-95; subject of this sketch was elected to the Sixty-second Congress and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT —CouNTES: Butler and Westmoreland (2 counties). Population (1910), 303,993. ABRAHAM L. KEISTER, Republican, of Scottdale, Westmoreland County, Pa., was born in Fayette County, Pa., September 10, 1852; was educated in the public schools of his native county and at Otterbein University, Westerville, Ohio; was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of Ohio and practiced law for a short time at Columbus, Ohio; has been engaged in the manufacture of coke in Fayette County, Pa., since 1882, and became interested in the banking business at Scott- dale, Pa., in 1889; served more than 20 years on the Scottdale school board; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. : ya DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Fayette, Greene, and Somerset (3 counties). Population WOODA NICHOLAS CARR, Democrat, of Uniontown, was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., February 6, 1871, the son of John D. and Amanda (Cook) Carr; attended the public schools and Madison College and was graduated at Monongahela, College 1891; in 1892 became editor of the Uniontown News and later of the Uniontown Democrat; was admitted to the Fayette County bar in 1895 and later to the State and Federal courts; in 1908 formed a law partnership with his brother, W. Russell Carr, under firm name of Carr & Carr; Democratic county chairman of Fayette County 1901-1903; mar- ried Julia M. Kisinger in 1903 and has one son, John D. Carr, 3d; received the inanimous nomination of his party and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,211 votes, to 7,836 for Thomas S. Crago, Republican, 7,588 for Harvey M. Berkley, Washington-Progressive, 2,928 for Charles L. Gans, Socialist, and 942 for Bert S. Forsythe, Prohibitionist. i § i f i ! i 102 Congressional Directory. PENNSYLVANIA TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Beaver, Lawrence, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1910), 292,065. HENRY WILLSON TEMPLE, Progressive, of Washington, Pa., was born at Belle Center, Ohio, March 31, 1864; wasgraduated (A. B.) from Geneva College 1883, and from the Covenanter Theological Seminary at Allegheny 1887; was pastor of churchesat Baxter, Leechburg, and Washington, Pa.; April 14, 1892, married Miss Lucy Parr, of Leechburg, and has four sons and one daughter; became adjunct professor of political science in 1898, and professor of history and political science in 1905, in Washington and Jefferson College, where he remained until March, 1913; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving a plurality of 698 over the Republican candidate and 2,910 over the Democratic candidate. TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crawford and Erie (2 counties). Population (1910), 177, 082. MILTON W. SHREVE, Republican, of Erie, was born in Venango County, Pa.; received his preparatory education at Edinboro State Normal School; attended Allegheny College two years and Bucknell University two years; was graduated from the latter institution in 1884 with the degree of Ph. D., afterwards receiving the degree of A. M., and subsequently studied law and was admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of the United States and other Federal courts; his practice of late years has-been in business and corporate channels; he is a director in the People’s Bank of Erie and several manufacturing corporations; was elected district attorney of Erie County in 1899, serving three years; in 1906 was elected a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives without any material opposition, the Democrats making no nomination against him; was reelected in 1908 and 1910, during the legislative session serving as chairman of the judiciary general committee, and in December, 1911, succeeded to the speakership left vacant by the death of Hon. John F. Cox, of Pittsburgh; is a member of the Society of the War of 1812; was appointed a member of the Perry’s Victory Centennial Commission by Gov. Edwin S. Stuart and reappointed by Gov. John K. Tener; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, defeating his Democratic opponent, Turner W. Shacklett, by 2,632 votes. TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: 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 admission to the bar in 1893 formed a partnership with Hon. John B. Storm, which continued 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 Pennsylvania and of the United States courts; director in the Scranton Trust Co., Stroudsburg National Bank, and a number of other financial and industrial institutions; was delegate at large from Pennsylvania in the Democratic national convention at Balti- more in 1912; member of the Democratic national committee for the State of Penn- sylvania; is now chairman of the executive campaign committee of the Democratic national committee; married Roberta Bartlett Dixon, daughter of Hon. Robert B. Dixon, of Easton, Md., in 1898, and has one daughter, Mary Dixon Palmer; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 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 Har- rison; served six years as assistant United States attorney for the western district of Pennsylvania; 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 & Creps, at Indiana, Pa.; on August 12, 1891, married Clara Cam- eron, of Indiana, Pa., and has two daughters, Louise and Elizabeth; was elected to the Six ty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by 7,666 plurality. : BA rene PENNSYLVANIA B tographical. 103 TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Elk, Forest, Mercer, Venango, and Warren (5 counties). Population (1910), 218,937. WILLIS J. HULINGS, Washington Party (Progressive), of Oil City, Pa.; born in Clarion County, Pa., July 1, 1850; educated as civil engineer; admitted to practice law in courts of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, and Arizona; engaged in mining and petroleum business; elected as a Republican to the Pennsylvania House of Repre- sentatives 1881-1887 and to the Senate of Pennsylvania 1907-1911; member National Guard of Pennsylvania 1876-1912, serving in the various grades from private to briga- dier general; volunteered as colonel Sixteenth Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry in War with Spain; promoted brigadier gemeral, United States Volunteers, for meritori- ous conduct in action August, 1898; married Emma Simpson, of Brooklyn, April 28, 1874; have eight sons and three daughters; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, re- celving 10,363 votes, to 9,741 for John P. Hines, Democrat, 7,136 for P. M. Speer, Republican, 1,692 for J. W. Neilly, Prohibitionist, and 4,097 for J. R. McKeown, Socialist. 3 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 Pitts- burgh (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, Edge- worth, Emsworth, Etna, Glenfield, Haysville, Leetsdale, Millvale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sharpsburg, Spring Garden, Springdale, Tarentum, and West View; and the townships of Aleppo, East 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 Pittsburgh, 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, L. 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 L. K. & S. G. Porter, Pittsburgh, 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; in 1910 was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and in 1912 was renomi- nated by the Republican Party, indorsed by the Washington (Progressive) Party, and was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,925 votes, to 5,509 for Joseph Gallagher, Democrat, 3,899 for George T. McConnell, Socialist, 425 for Robert J. Smith, Prohibitionist, and 226 for Charles F. Chubb, Keystone. THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: Seventh, eighth, twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth wards of the city of Pittsburgh, the city of McKeesport, boroughs of Braddock, East McKeesport, East Pittsburgh, Edgewood, Elizabeth, North Braddock, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Port Vue, Rankin, Swiss- vale, Turtle Creek, Veronag Versailles, Wilkinsburg, and Wilmerding; townships of Braddock, Eliza- beth, Forward, Lincoln, North Versailles, Patton, Penn, Plum, South Versailles, Sterrett, Versailles, and Wilkins. Population (1910), 278,397. _ MELVILLE CLYDE KELLY, Progressive, of Braddock, was born August 4, 1883, in Bloomfield, Ohio; newspaper publisher in Braddock, Pa.; was elected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 17,230 votes, to 6,708 for D. K. Feree, Democrat, 7,570 for F. H. Merrick, Socialist *and 82 for J. A. Brought, Industrialist. THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—City oF PrrrsBURGH: First, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and fifteenth wards. Population (1910), 204,489. JAMES FRANCIS BURKE, Republican, of Pittsburgh, was born in Petroleum Center, Venango County, Pa., October 21, 1867; educated in public schools, and in 1892 graduated from the University of Michigan with the degree of LL. B.; has prac- ticed law at Pittsburgh 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 basis of representation; is a member of the leading clubs and commercial organiza- tions of Pittsburgh; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. | | | | te a omer 104 Congressional Directory. RHODE ISLAND THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: Sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth wards of the city of Pittsburgh; Boroughs of Bridgeville, Coraopolis, Crafton, Carnegie, Clairton, Carrick, Dormont, Dravosburg, Duquesne, Greentree, Homestead, Hays, Heidelberg, Ingram, Knoxville, Munhall, Mount Oliver, McKees Rocks, Oakdale, St. Clair, Thornburg, Whita- ker, Wilson, West Homestead, and West Elizabeth; townships of Baldwin, Bethel, Crescent, Char- tiers, Collier, Findley, Jefferson, Kennedy, Lower St. Clair, Mifflin, Moon, Mount Lebanon, North Fayette, Neville, Robinson, Scott, Snowden, South Fayette, Stowe, Union, and Upper St. Clair. Population (1910), 299,565. ~ DR. ANDREW JACKSON BARCHFELD, Republican, of Pittsburgh, was born . in Pittsburgh, Pa., May 18, 1863; was educated in the public schools and Pittsburgh Central High School; graduated from Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, in the class of 1884; has been a lifelong Republicah, and became interested in politics upon attaining his majority; was elected a school director in 1885; a member of the com- mon council of Pittsburgh in 1886 and 1887; was a delegate to the Republican State conventions of 1886, 1894, and 1901; was for many years a member of the Republican State committee; was the nominee of his party in 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 gubernatorial campaigns on the stump throughout western Pennsylvania; is prominent in his profession, being a member of the Pittsburgh South Side Medical Society, Allegheny County Medical Society, Pennsylvania State Medical Society, and National Medical Association; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. RHODE ISLAND. (Population (1910), 542,610.) SENATORS. 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 1878, 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 has been a director in the Mechanics National Bank, of Providence, in several of the mill mutual insurance companies, and 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. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. LEBARON BRADFORD COLT, Republican, of Bristol, was born in Dedham, Mass., on June 25, 1846; his early education and college preparatory training were ob- tained in Hartford, Conn., and at Williston Seminary; in 1868 he was graduated from Yale, and immediately entered Columbia College Law School; following hisgraduation from that institution he devoted a year to European travel, and on returning to the United States began the practice of law in Chicago, remaining thus engaged until - 1875, when he transferred his residence to Bristol, R. 1., and entered upon the practice of his profession in Providence; received the degree of A. M. from Brown University in 1881, the degree of LL. D. from Columbia in 1904, and the degree of LL. D. from Yale in 1905; from 1879 to 1881 was a member of the General Assembly of Rhode Island; in March, 1881, President Garfield appointed him United States district judge _for Rhode Island, and in July, 1884, President Arthur appointed him United States circuit judge for the first judicial circuit, which office he continued to hold until, on January 21, 1913, he was elected to the United States Senate to succeed Hon. George Peabody Wetmore. His term of office will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bristol and Newport; the first, second, third, fourth, fifteenth, seven- teenth, eighteenth, twenty-first, twenty-second, twenty-third, twenty-fourth, and twenty-fifth representative districts of the city of Providence, and East Providence town in Providence County. Population (1910), 180,870. 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 o"— a EA A IIE Be So i’ | SOUTH CAROLINA : Biographical. 105 in 1906 assistant corporation counsel, New York City, which position he resigned, going 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, re- ceiving 13,057 votes, t09,663 for William Paine Sheffield, Republican, 3,044 for John E. Bolan, Progressive, and 214 for Samuel B. Prentice, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Kent and Washington; the city of Cranston, the seventh, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, sixteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth representative dis- tricts of the city of Providence, and the towns of Foster, Johnston, North Providence, and Scituate of Providence County. Population (1910), 179,093. PETER G. GERRY, Democrat, of Warwick Neck, was born in New York City September 18,1879; Harvard, S. B. 1901; lawyer; married; elected to representative council of Newport in 1911; delegate to Democratic national convention 1912; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 10,728 votes, to 10,335 for Zenas W. Bliss, Republican, 3,642 for Claude €. Ball, Progressive, and 289 for William G. Lawton, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT.—The cities and towns of Burrillville, Central Falls, Cumberland, Glocester, Lincoln, North Smithfield, Pawtucket, Smithfield, and Woonsocket, and the fifth sixth, eighth, and ninth representative districts of the city of Providence in Providence County. Population (1910), 182,647. AMBROSE KENNEDY, Republican, of Woonsocket, R. I., was born in Black- stone, Mass., December 1, 1875; received his education in the public schools of Blackstone, St. Hyacinthe’s College, Province of Quebec, Canada, and Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass.; graduate, A. B. 1897, A. M. 1900; graduate of Boston University Law School, 1906, LL. B., J. B.; attorney at law; principal Blackstone High School 1898-1904, and superintendent of schools; aid-de-camp on the personal staff of Gov. Aram J. Pothier 1909-1913, with rank of colonel; member of Rhode Island House of Representatives 1911-1913, and speaker of the house 1912; married September 1, 1909; two children; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 11,718 votes, to 9,841 for Leonidas F. X. Ratty, Democrat, 2,158 for Edwin F. Tuttle, Progressive, and 199 for Ernest 1. Merry, Prohibitionist. SOUTH CAROLINA (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 edu- cational 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 exciting and heated canvass he received the nomination in the Democratic convention by a vote of 270 to 50 for his opponent, and was elected in November following; this was his first political office, and he was reelected in 1892 by an overwhelming vote; his term as governor was signalized by the passage of the dispensary law for the con- trol of the liquor traffic by the State and by the establishment of another college, the Winthrop Normal and Industrial College for Women, at Rock Hill, an institution which bids fair to lead all similar schools in the South; entered the race for the Sen- ate against 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, to 21 for Butler; was reelected in 1901 and 1907 without, opposition and in 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. : 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 106 Congressional Directory. SOUTH CAROLINA 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’ Protective Association; after the Sully ‘‘hreak,”” when cotton dropped from 17 to 64 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. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton, and Dorchester (5 coun- ties). Population (1910), 197,550. RICHARD SMITH WHALEY, Democrat, of Charleston, was born at Charles von, Charleston County, S. C.; July 15, 1874; studied at the Episcopal High School, Alexandria, Va., and University of Virginia, from which last institution he gradu- ated in 1897 with the degree of B. L.; has practiced law in Charleston since 1897; was elected member of State house of representatives in 1900, and reelected five consecutive times, serving as chairman of the judiciary committee four years; was elected speaker of the house of representatives in 1907, and unanimously reelected in 1909; refused to stand for election in 1910, and was reelected in 1912 and elected speaker pro tem.; was elected presiding officer of State Democratic convention in 1910 and city Democratic convention in 1911, and served as a delegate to the Balti- more vonvention in 1912; was elected unanimously to the Sixty-third Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. George S. Legare. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNtiEs: Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Beaufort, Edgefield, Hampton, Jasper, and Saluda (8 counties). Population (1910), 199,307. JAMES FRANCIS BYRNES, Democrat,*of Aiken, S. C., was born in Charles- ton, 8S. C., May 3, 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. In 1906 married Miss Maude Busch, of Aiken, S. C. In 1910 was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and in 1912 was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—Countits: Abbeville, Anderson, Greenwood, Newberry, Oconee, and Pickens (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 10 years; was an official court stenographer in South Carolina for 19 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 Regiment South Carolina Volunteer 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 and Sixty-third Congresses without opposition. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Greenville, Laurens, Spartanburg, and Union (4 counties). Popu- lation (1910), 223,303. : JOSEPH TRAVIS JOHNSON, Democrat, of Spartanburg, was born at Brewerton, Laurens County, S. C., February 28, 1858; was graduated from Erskine College July 2, 1879; admitted to the practice of the law in all the courts of South Carolina May 30, 1883; was married to Sarah Anderson July 30, 1890; never held office until elected to Congress; elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SOUTH DAKOTA Biographical. 107 FIFTH DISTRICT —CouUNTIES: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and York (7 counties). Population (1910), 212,809. DAVID EDWARD FINLEY, Democrat, of Yorkville, was born in Arkansas Febru- ary 28, 1861; is a lawyer; member of the General Assembly of South Carolina—House 1890-91, Senate 1892-1896; elected to the Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Marion, Marlboro, and Williamsburg (8 counties). Population (1910), 232,989. J. WILLARD RAGSDALE, Democrat, of Florence, was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. s 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, irom 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SOUTH DAKOTA. (Population (1910), 583,888.) SENATORS. COE I. CRAWFORD, Republican, 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 Towa in 1882; located for the practice of law at Independence, Iowa, and after one year in practice went to Pierre, Dakota Territory, where he continued in the practice of law 13 years; was State’s 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 1896 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 & North Western 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 Alired B. Kittredge, and was elected by the legislature, which was over- whelmingly Republican. His term of service will expire March 3, 1915. THOMAS STERLING, Republican, of Vermilion, S. Dak., was born on a farm near Amanda, Fairfield County, Ohio, February 21, 1851; removed with parents to McLean County, Ill., in 1854; graduated at the Illinois Wesleyan University in 1875; was superintendent of schools at Bement, Ill, for two succeeding years; studied law at Springfield, Ill., and was admitted to the bar in 1878; was city attorney of Spring- field 1880-81; removed to Spink County, S. Dak., in 1882; was district attorney of Spink County 1886-1888; was member of constitutional convention of 1889 and also of the senate of the first State legislature in 1890; was engaged in the practice of law at Redfield, in Spink County, until October, 1901, when he was made dean of the college of law of the State University at Vermilion, which position he held until September, 1911; was elected to the United States Senate January 22, 1913, to succeed Robert J. Gamble. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. 108 Congressional Directory. TENNESSEE REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aurora, Bon Homme, Brule, Buffalo, Charles Mix, Clay, Davison, Douglas, Hanson, Hutchinson, J erauld, Lake, Lincoln, Miner, Moody, Minnehaha, McCook, Sanborn, Turner, Union, and Yankton (21 counties). Population (1910), 213,812. CHARLES HALL DILLON, Republican, of Yankton, S. Dak., was born near Jasper, Ind.; graduate of the Indiana State University in the literary and law depart- ments; attorney at law; married; served in the State senate for four successive terms; vice president board of trustees of Yankton College for the last 15 years; elected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Beadle, Brookings, Brown, Campbell, Clark, Codington, Day, Deuel, Edmunds, Faulk, Grant, Hamlin, H#nd, Hughes, Hyde, Kingsbury, Marshall, McPherson, Potter, Roberts, Spink, Sully, and Walworth (23 counties). Population (1910), 229,460. CHARLES HENRY BURKE, Republican, of Pierre, was born on a farm in Genesee County, N. Y., April 1, 1861; was educated in the public schools of Batavia, N. Y.; moved to Dakota Territory in 1882; 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 cne 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 Congress and reelected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bennett, Butte, Corson, Custer, Dewey, Fall River, Gregory, Harding, Lawrence, Lyman, Meade, Mellette, Pennington, Perkins, Shannon, Stanley, Todd, Tripp, Washa- bau rh, Washington, and Ziebach (21 counties). Population (1910), 140,616. EBEN WEVER MARTIN, Republican, of Deadwood, was born at Maquoketa, Jackson County, Iowa, April 12, 1855, and came of English, Irish, and Scotch ancestry; was graduated from Cornell College in 1879, with the degree of B. A., and three years later received the degree of A. M. from his alma mater; Cornell College has also con- ferred upon him the degree of LL. D.; attended the law school of the University 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 Dead- wood, and has since practiced law continuously in the various State and Federal courts of that region; married Jessie A. Miner, daughter of George N. Miner, of Cedar Falls, Iowa, June 13, 1883; they have five children, three boys and two girls, all living; was a member of the Territorial Legislature of Dakota in 1884 and 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 Towa Commandery of the Loyal Legion, the latter by inheritance 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, to the Sixtieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. William H. Parker, to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TENNESSEE. (Population (1910), 2,184,789.) SENATORS. 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; is a thirty-second degree Mason; married Miss Mary Louise Warner on November 1, 1906; was elected to the United States Senate on January 23, 1911, on the eleventh ballot, but it was the first ballot upon which his name was presented, receiving 68 votes, 66 being nec- essary to elect. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. JOHN KNIGHT SHIELDS, Democrat, of Knoxville, was born August 15, 1858, at Clinchdale, near Bean Station, Grainger County, Tenn., the son of James T. and Elizabeth Simpson Shields, of Irish descent; was educated at home by private tutors; was married June, 1883, to Miss Mary Fulkerson, who lived only four months, TENNESSEE Biographical. 109 and was again married December 7, 1912, to Mrs. Jeanette Swepson Dodson Cowan; commenced studying law at the age of 17 in his father’s office; admitted to the bar in 1879 and practiced with his father until 1893; chancellor of the twelfth chancery division 1893 and 1894; practiced law with Hon. R. E. L. Mountcastle, with offices at Morristown, Tenn., from 1894 to 1902; associate justice of Supreme Court of Ten- nessee from 1902 to 1910; reelected in 1910 and made chief justice, which office he held when elected to the United States Senate, January 23, 1913; was delegate from his congressional district to the Democratic national convention at Chicago in 1896, and from the State at large to the Democratic national convention at St. Louis in 1904. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hancock, Hawkins, John- son, 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 and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Hamblen, Jefferson, Knox, Loudon, Roane, Scott, and Union (10 counties). Population (1910), 252,338. RICHARD WILSON AUSTIN, Republican, of Knoxville; 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 Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,778 votes, to 7,046 for W. H. Buttram, Republican, 6,690 for J. C. J. Williams, Democrat, and 275 for Mz. Miller, Socialist. : THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bledsoe, Bradley, Franklin, Grundy, Hamilton, James, Marion, McMinn, Meigs, Monroe, Polk, Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (15 counties). Popu- lation (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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 18,560 votes, to 6,180 for Hon. C. S. Stewart, Repub- lican, 2,168 for Hon. John Eastman, Progressive, and 290 for Hon. Shively, Socialist. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clay, Cumberland, Fentress, Jackson, Macon, Morgan, Overton, nal Putnam, Rhea, Smith, Sumner, Trousdale, and Wilson (14 counties). Population (1910), CORDELL HULL, Democrat, of Carthage, was born October 2, 1871, in Overton (now 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 a member of the lower house of the Tennessee Legislature two terms; served in the Fourth Regiment Tennessee Volunteer Infantry during the Spanish-American War, with the rank of captain; later was first appointed by the governor, and afterwards elected, judge of the fifth judicial circuit of Tennessee, which position was resigned during his race for Congress; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Bedford, Cannon, Coffee, Dekalb, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, and Ruth- erford (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 1902; 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 Sistieil, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third ongress. . 110 Congressional Directory. TENNESSEE SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cheatham, Davidson, Montgomery, Robertson, and Stewart (5 coun- ties). Population (1910), 234,016. ’ JOSEPH W. BYRNS, Democrat, of Nashville, was born near Cedar Hill, Robert- gon County, Tenn., and lived on a farm until early manhood; attended schools of his native county; was graduated from the law department of Vanderbilt University, Nashville, and is a lawyer by profession; was married to Miss Julia Woodard, of Nash- ville, 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,341 votes, to 2,860 for James A. Althauser, Repub- lican, and 498 for L. D. Wiles, Socialist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Dickson, Giles, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Lawrence, Lewis, Maury, Wayne, and Williamson (10 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, 8. C., graduating in 1876 with the degree of A. B.; began the study of law in September, 1876, in a law office, and was licensed to practice in March, 1877, but did not begin active practice until January, 1879, and since continued therein at Columbia; on November 11, 1880, was married to Miss Ida B. Latta, of Columbia; was one of the Democratic presidential electors in 1884; in 1898 was elected to the State senate and served during the term; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty- eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. : . EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Hardin, Henderson, Henry, McNairy, Madison, and Perry (10 counties). Population (1910), 180,119. THETUS WILLRETTE SIMS, Democrat, of Linden, 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; 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 Cleve- land and Stevenson ticket in 1892; was elected to the Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,502 votes, to 8,406 for J. W. Ross, Republican, 2,120 for Clyde Grissam, Progressive, and 158 for B. W. Parker, Socialist. NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTES: 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 1901 to Miss Elizabeth Harris Burns of McKenzie, Tenn.; was appointed master in chancery September 14, 1900, and served until January 24, 1905; was elected to the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. or Fayette, Hardeman, Shelby, and Tipton (4 counties). Population KENNETH DOUGLAS McKELLAR, Democrat, of Memphis; born in Rich- mond, Dallas County, Ala.; B. A., M. A., and LL. B., University of Alabama; lawyer; presidential elector, 1904; delegate to Democratic national convention, 1908; elected November 9, 1911, to fill the unexpired term of Gen. fears W. Gordon, deceased, in the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 12,916 votes, to 777 for Pardue, Socialist. a TEXAS Biographical. 111 TEXAS. (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 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, Uni- versity of Virginia, in 1877; was elected attorney general of Texas in 1890 and 1892; was elected governor of Texas in 1894 and 1896; was a delegate at large to the Demo- cratic national conventions at Chicago in 1896 and at St. Louis in 1904, and was chair- man 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. : MORRIS SHEPPARD, Democrat, of Texarkana, was born May 28, 1875, at Wheat- ville, Morris County, Tex.; was graduated from the University of Texas, academic department 1895, law department 1897, and from Yale Law School 1898; 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, at Norfolk in May, 1907, and at Rochester, N. Y., in June, . 1911; began the practice of law at Pittsburg, Tex., in 1898, and moved to Texarkana in 1899, where he continued to follow his profession; was elected in October, 1902, to the Fifty-seventh Congress to fill out the unexpired term of his father, the Hon. John L. Sheppard, deceased; also elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty- first, and Sixty-second Congresses; was nominated for United States Senator to suc- ceed Senator Joseph W. Bailey at the Democratic primaries on July 27, 1912, and elected by the legislature January 29, 1913, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Senator Bailey, whose term would have expired March 3, 1913; and was also elected on the same day for the full term beginning March 4, 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 3,896,542. DANIEL E. GARRETT, Democrat, of Houston, was born April 28, 1869, in Robert- son County, Tenn.; was educated in the common schools of his native county; is a lawyer by profession; was married to Miss Ida Jones, of Tennessee, on December 7, 1893; was elected to the House of Representatives in Tennessee in 1892 and reelected in 1894; was elected a member of the State Senate of Tennessee in 1902 and reelected in 1904, serving four years in each branch of the legislature; removed to Texas in 1905 and was elected to the Sixty-third Congress from the State at large in November, 1912. HATTON W. SUMNERS, Democrat, of Dallas, Tex., was born on a farm in Lin- coln County, Tenn., May 30, 1875, the son of Capt. W. A. and Anna Walker Sumners; removed to Dallas County, Tex., 18 years later; was admitted to practice law in 1897; was elected prosecuting attorney of Dallas County in 1900, serving two terms; during this service was twice elected president of the district and county attorneys’ asso- ciation of Texas; since his last election as prosecuting attorney has not been a can- didate for any office until his candidacy for the Sixty-third Congress; in the interim, in addition to the practice of his profession, has given considerable time to the refor- mation of the criminal laws of Texas and, under the employment of Farm and Ranch, an agricultural paper, has appeared at various times before the railroad commission of Texas, before committees of the legislature of that State, and before Congress in behalf of the agricultural interests; in the last Democratic primary election, with 2 to be nominated and 22 candidates, he received the highest vote by approximately 7,000; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. 112 Congressional Directory. TEXAS FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Bowie, Camp, Cass, Delta, Franklin, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion, Morris, Red River, and Titus (11 counties). Population (1910), 239,341. z > HORACE WORTH VAUGHAN, Democrat, of Texarkana, Bowie County, Tex., was born December 2, 1867, in Marion County, Tex.; was educated in the common schools of Linden, Cass County, Tex.; admitted to practice law in 1885; removed to Texarkana in 1886; married Miss Pearl Lockett in 1888; appointed city attorney of Texarkana, Tex., in 1890 by Hon. R. L. Henry, then mayor, and was reelected three times; elected county attorney of Bowie County in 1898 and reelected in 1900, 1902, and 1904; elected district attorney of the fifth judicial district of Texas in 1906 and reelected in 1908; elected to the State senate in 1910; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving more than 13,000 votes, one of his opponents receiving less than 1,700 and the other less than 600. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Angelina, Cherokee, Hardin, Harrison, Jasper, Jefferson, Nacog- doches, Newton, Orange, Panola, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (14 counties). Popula- tion (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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: 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; was married January 20, 1892, to Miss Allie L. Nash, of Kaufman, Tex.; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and re- elected to the Sixty-third Congress, defeating his opponent in the primary by 9,427 votes. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, and Rains (5 counties). Popula- tion (1910), 214,721. SAM RAYBURN, Democrat, of Bonham, Tex., was born January 6, 1882, in Roane County, Tenn.; is a graduate of the East Texas Normal College, holding B. 8. degree; studied law in the University of Texas; is a lawyer by profession; served six years as a member of the Texas Legislature, the last two years as speaker of the house of repre- sentatives; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 13,900 votes, to 1,340 for Obenchain, Socialist, and 240 for Barlow, Republican. FIFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Bosque, Dallas, Ellis, Hill, and Rockwall (5 counties). Population (1910), 263,222. : JACK BEALL, Democrat, of Waxahachie, was born in Ellis County, Tex., October 25, 1866; graduated from the law department of the University of Texas in 1890; served in the House of Representatives of the Texas Legislature from 1892 to 1894, and in the Senate of the State of Texas from 1894 to 1898; was elected to the Fifty- eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Brazos, Freestone, Limestone, Milam, Navarro, and Robertson (6 coun- ties). Population (1910), 185,401. RUFUS HARDY, Democrat, of Corsicana, Tex.; born in Monroe County, Miss., December 16, 1855; educated at private schools in Texas, at the old Cathright school (Somerville Institute), Mississippi, and the University of Georgia; member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity; married in 1881; admitted to the bar in 1875; elected county attorney of Navarro County in 1880, and reelected in 1882; elected district attorney for the thirteenth judicial district, composed of Freestone, Limestone, and Navarro Counties, in 1884, and reelected in 1886; elected district judge of same dis- trict in 1888 and reelected in 1892; retired from the bench in 1896; elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. er A Pi = | TEXAS Biographical. 113 EIGHTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Austin, Fort Bend, Grimes, Harris, Leon, Madison, Montgomery, Walker, and Waller (9 counties). Population (1910), 243,544. JOE HENRY EAGLE, Democrat, of Houston, was born January 23, 1870, at Tomp- kingville, Ky., where he finished at high school in 1883, and obtained a first-grade teacher’s certificate in 1884; graduated at Burritt College, Spencer, Tenn., in 1887; moved to Texas in 1887 and taught school for six years, studying law at night and during vacations; admitted to the bar as a lawyer in 1893; moved to Houston in 1895 and continuously pursued his profession until 1910, when he retired from his profession to enter private business; is the owner of a realty company and also of a manufacturing company; was married to Miss Mary Hamman, of Houston, in 1900, and they have three children; was nominated as the candidate of the Democratic Party for Congress in its primary on July 27, 1912, by a majority of 2,509 votes, and elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 13,762 votes, to 1,658 for Jeff N. Miller, Republican, and 1,111 for J. E. Curd, Socialist. ; NINTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Aransas, Bazoria, Calhoun, Colorado, Dewitt, Fayette, Goliad, Gon- zales, Jackson, Karnes, Lavaca, Matagorda, Refugio, Victoria, and Wharton (15 counties). Popula- tion (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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Bastrop, Burleson, Caldwell, Hays, Lee, Travis, Washington, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1910), 220,327. JAMES P. BUCHANAN, Democrat, of Brenham, was elected to the Sixty-third Congress April 5, 1913, to succeed the Hon. Albert S. Burleson. 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 and Sixty-third Congresses without opposition, TWELFTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Comanche, Erath, 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. His parents moved from Rusk County to Comanche County, Tex., in 1877. He was educated in the public schools and the State University of Texas; took degree from the Univer- sity of Texas June, 1900; was married to Miss Stella Couch (B. A. from the University of Texas) on December 29, 1904; nominated county attorney in April, 1900, and elected in November of that year; nominated in the July primaries, 1910, and elected to the Sixty-second Congress; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 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. Randal., Rokerts, Sherman, Swisher, Throckmorton, Wheeler, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, and Young (48 counties). Population (1910), 338,333. . JOHN HALL STEPHENS, Democrat, of Vernon, was born in 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, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED—9 114 Congressional Directory. | UTAH FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bexar, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Coleman, Comal, Gillespie, Kendall, Xerr, Lampasas, Llano, McCulloch, Mason, Mins, and San Saba (15 counties). Population (1910), 264,277. JAMES L. 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- third, with practically no opposition. FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Atascosa, Bandera, Bee, Brooks, Cameron, Dimmit, Duval, Frio, Guadalupe, Hidalgo, Jim Wells, Kinney, Lasalle, Live Oak Maverick, McMullen, Medina, Nueces, San Patricio, Starr, Terrell, Uvalde, Valverde, Webb, Willacy, Wilson, Zapata, and Zavalla (28 counties). Population (1910), 252,906. JOHN NANCE GARNER, Democrat, of Uvalde, was born in Red River County, Tex., November 22, 1868; served as a 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress without opposition. SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Andrews, Borden, Brewster, Callahan, Cochran, Coke, Concho, Crane, Crockett, Crosby, Culberson, Dawson, Eastland, Ector, Edwards, El Paso, Fisher, Gaines, Garza, Glasscock, Haskell, Hockley, Howard, Irion, Jeff Davis, J ones, Kent, Kimble, King, Loving, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Menard, Midland, Mitchell, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Reeves Runnels, Schleicher, Scurry, Shackelford, Stephens, Sterling, Stonewall, Sutton, Taylor, Terry, Tom Green, Upton, Ward, ‘Winkler, and Yoakum (57 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 Kennedy; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. UTAH. (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 I. 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 educa- tion; 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 con- tinuously since that date; received honorary degree of doctor of laws from Columbia University, of New York; was State senator from the sixth (Utah) senatorial district in the first State legislature; was delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1900, 1904, 1908, and 1912; was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; declined renom- ination to the Fifty-eighth; was elected to the United States Senate by the Utah Legis- lature for the term beginning March 4, 1905, and was reelected in 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. VERMONT Biographical. ; 115 £ : REPRESENTATIVES. 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; was formerly mayor of Wellsville, 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. JACOB JOHNSON, Republican, of Spring City, Utah, was born November 1, 1847, near the city of Alborg, in the Kingdom of Denmark; came to the United States. in 1854; was admitted to citizenship in the district court of the sixth judicial district of the State of California November 2, 1868; educated in the common and private schools of California; married in 1873; admitted to the bar in 1877, and has been en- gaged since in the active practice of law when not on the bench; is also engaged in agriculture and mining; was appointed a United States commissioner for the State of Utah in 1881 and served 12 years; appointed probate judge for Sanpete County by Presidents Cleveland and Harrison and served two terms of two years each; served two terms as United States assistant district attorney for the Territory of Utah; elected county attorney for Sanpete County in 1892 and 1894; elected to the Legislature of the Territory of Utah in 1893; elected judge of the seventh judicial district of the State of Utah in 1896 and served nine years; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 42,5650 votes, to 37,445 for Mathonihah Thomas, Democrat, 22,653 for Stephen H. Love, Progressive, and 187 for Harry S. Joseph, Independent. 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 1890. Octo- ber 18, 1900, was elected United States Senator from Vermont to fill a vacancy caused by the death of Justin 8S. 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 is that of dealer in raw calfskins; is president of the Lamoille County Savings Bank & Trust Co. and of the Lamoille County National Bank, both of Hyde Park; is a director of the Swanton Savings Bank & Trust Co., of Swanton, Vt., and of several lumber and other corporations; is LL. D. of Norwich University. He represented 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 1890—and during the last four years was its chairman; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions in 1880 and 1912, the latter year chairman of the delegation; savings-bank examiner 1884 to 1888; governor of the State 1890 to 1892; was elected to the United States Senate October 21, 1908, to fill 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 To 0g, Domo members of the legislature. His term of service will expire arch 3, > REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Addison, Bennington, Chittenden, Franklin, Grand Isle, Lamoille, and Rutland (7 counties). Population (1910), 178,186. FRANK LESTER GREENE, Republican, of St. Albans, was born in St. Albans, Franklin County, Vt., February 10, 1870; left public school at the age of 13, because of family reverses, and became errand boy in the audit office of the Central Vermont 116 Congressional Directory. VIRGINIA Railway; studied shorthand in leisure hours, and a year later became stenographer in the general freight department, being subsequently promoted chief clerk, and holding that position when he entered the newspaper business as reporter for the St. Albans Daily Messenger in 1891; became assistant editor in 1892 and editor in 1899; honorary degree of master of arts conferred by Norwich University in 1908; served in the Vermont National Guard from October 4, 1888, to 1900, rising from private to captain; recruited Company B, First Infantry, Vermont Volunteers, War with Spain, and was mustered into United States service as its captain, serving for a time as adjutant general, Third Brigade, First Division, Third Army Corps; at the close of the war was commissioned colonel and aid-de-camp on the staff of the governor of Vermont; is married and has three children; was delegate at large to the Republican national convention of 1908; served on various State commissions as . appointee of the governor, one being commission to prepare and propose amendments to State constitution, but never sought or held an elective office until elected to the Sixty-second Congress to serve the unexpired term of the late David J. Foster, July 30, 1912; was reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,469 votes, to 9,154 for Patrick M. Meldon, Democrat, 797 for George L. Story, Prohibitionist, 454 for John Spargo, Socialist, and 17 scattering. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounNtiES: 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 Universiry 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 Washington 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 Vermont 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 LL. D., Norwich University, and of LL. D., 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 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 chair- man of the Vermont Republican convention in 1886; in 1884 was sent by the Repub- lican national committee 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 its president. He was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, receiving 13,316 votes, to 8,269 for O. C. Sawyer, Democrat, 532 for Elmore Phillips, Prohibitionist, and 762 for H. E. Ordway, Socialist. VIRGINIA. (Population (1910), 2,061,612.) SENATORS. THOMAS STAPLES MARTIN, Democrat, of Albemarle County (post office, 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; was educated at the Virginia Military Institute, where he was a cadet from March 1, 1864, to April 9, 1865, and at the University of Virginia, where he was a student in the academic schools for two sessions, from October 1, 1865, to June 29, 1866, and from October 1, 1866, to June 29, 1867; a considerable part of the time while he was a cadet at the Virginia Military Institute was spent in the military service of the Confederate States with the battalion of cadets of the institute; soon after leaving the University of Virginia he commenced the study of law by a course of private reading at home, and was licensed to practice law in the fall of 1869, since which time he has devoted ar VIRGINIA ~~ Biographical. 117 himself closely to that profession; for a number of years has been a member of the board of visitors of the Miller Manual Labor School, of Albemarle County, and 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, 1905, and again in 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. CLAUDE AUGUSTUS SWANSON, Democrat, of Chatham, Va., was born at Swansonville, Pittsylvania County, Va.; 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 arrange- ments to enter college after that time; matriculated at Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va., and remained there three sessions, graduating with the degree of A. B.; studied law at the University of Virginia, graduating with the degree of B. L.; 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 in Congress and was inaugurated February 1, 1906, and served as governor of Virginia until February 1, 1910; on August 1,-1910, he was appointed by Gov. William Hodges Mann to flll 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 General Assembly of Virginia, which elected him to fill the unexpired term beginning March 4, 1911, and ending March 3, 1917. REPRESENTATIVES. FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Accomac, Caroline, Elizabeth City, Essex, Gloucester, King and Queens, Lancaster, Mathews, Middlesex, Northampton, Northumberland, Richmond, Spotsylvania, Warwick, Westmoreland, and York. CImies: Fredericksburg, Hampton, and Newport News. Population (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, Sixty-first, and Sixty- second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Isle of Wight, Nansemond, Norfolk, Princess Anne, and Southamp- ton. Crries: Norfolk, Portsmouth, and Suffolk. 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, and 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 10,061 votes, to 1,121 for Nathaniel T. Green, Pro- gressive. THIRD DISTRICT.—CounmiEs: Charles City, Chesterfield, Goochland, Hanover, Henrico, James City, King William, and New Kent. Crries: Richmond and Williamsburg. Population (1910), 223,621. ANDREW JACKSON MONTAGUE, Democrat, of Richmond City, was born in Campbell County, Va., October 3, 1862; received a public and private school educa- tion; then entered Richmond College and graduated in several of its academic schools In 1882; taught for two years; studied law at the University of Virginia, graduating therefrom with the degree of B. L. in June, 1885, and began the practice of law in October of that year in Danville, Va.; appointed by President Cleveland United States attorney for the western district of Virginia 1893; attorney general of Virginia for four years commencing January 1, 1898; governor of Virginia for four years and one month, beginning January 1, 1902; delegate at large to Democratic national convention In 1905; American delegate to Third Conference of American Republicsat Rio de Janeiro 1n 1906; and delegate to Third International Conference on Maritime Law at Brussels in 1909 and 1910; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress. 118 Congressional Directory. © VIRGINIA FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Amelia, Brunswick, Dinwiddie, Greenesville, Lunenburg, Mecklen- burg, Nottoway, Powhatan, Prince Edward, Prince George, Surry, and Sussex. City: Petersburg. Population (1910), 186,213. WALTER ALLEN WATSON, Democrat, of Jennings Ordinary, the son of Mere- dith and Josephine (Robertson) Watson, was born November 25, 1867, at his father’s plantation in Nottoway County, Va., where he still resides; educated at “old field schools, Hampden Sidney College, and University of Virginia; taught school two years, and at intervals worked on farm; has practiced law 10 years, and was judge in the circuit courts (fourth judicial circuit of Virginia) eight years, when he resigned to stand for Congress; has been Commonwealth attorney, State senator, and member of the Virginia constitutional convention 1901-2; married Constance Tinsley, of Rich- mond, Va., in 1905; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 7,847 votes, to 269 for Herzig, Socialist. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNmES: Carroll, Charlotte, Franklin, Grayson, Halifax, Henry, Patrick, and Pittsylvania. City: Danville. Town: North Danville. Population (1910), 228,664. 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 Uni- versity 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 of Virginia 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, was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNmES: Bedford, Campbell, Floyd, Montgomery, and Roanoke. CITIES: Lynchburg, Radford, and Roanoke. Population (1910), 172,145. CARTER GLASS, Democrat, of Lynchburg, was born in that city; 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 convention in 1901-2; eight years member of board of visitors University of Virginia; resigned from Virginia State senate to contest for vacancy in the Fifty-seventh Congress; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by 6,000 majority over Progressive and Socialist candidates. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Albemarle, Clarke, Frederick, Greene, Madison, Page, Rappa- hannock, Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren. .Crmgs: Charlottesville and Winchester. Popu- lation (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, pint 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Con- gresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 10,015 votes, to 3,539 for George N. Eavman, Republican, and 446 for Mr. Garrison, Socialist; was elected chairman of the Democratic caucus of the House of Representatives in the Fifty- sixth, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Congresses. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alexandria, Culpeper, Fairfax, Fauquier, King George, Loudoun, Louisa, Orange, Prince William, and Stafford. Crry: Alexandria. Population (1910), 159,799. 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 L. Howard, Republican; reelected to the Sixty-first Congress over J. W. Gregg, Republican, to the Sixty-second Congress without opposition, and to the Sixty-third Congress over Frank T. Evans, National Progressive, and Milton Fling, Socialist. ~ WASHINGTON B logra phical. . 11 9 NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: 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 1901 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; again unanimously elected State chairman for four years from March 12, 1912; was elected to the Sixty-first and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. TENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Alleghany, Amherst, Appomattox, Augusta, Bath, Botetourt, Buck- ingham, 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 University of Virginia; is a lawyer and was attorney for the Commonwealth for Appomattox County; served in both branches of the General Assembly of Virginia; while a member of the State senate he introduced and secured the passage of the law providing for a constitutional convention to re- adjust the franchise provisions of the then existing constitution of Virginia; was a member of the succeeding constitutional convention; is a member of the board of visitors of the University of Virginia; was elected to the Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress; was the author of the resolution admitting Arizona and New Mexico to statehood. WASHINGTON. (Population (1910), 1,141,990.) SENATORS. WESLEY L. 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, Progressive, of Spokane, was bern 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 that time until nominated for Congress in the newly created third district at the primary election September 8, 1908, as a Progressive Republican; was elected to the Sixty-first Congress. In the primary September 13, 1910, to show reference for United States Senator, as the candidate of the Progressive Repub- 1cans, 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 Leigh R. Freeman; was elected United States Senator by the Washington Legislature January 18, 1911, by a vote of ye 8 11, and took his seat April 17, 1911. His term of service will expire March ; 1917, REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 1,141,990. JAMES WESLEY BRYAN, Progressive, of Seattle, was born at Lake Charles, La., March 11, 1874; graduated with A. B. degree at Baylor University, at Waco, Tex., in 1895; graduated at Yale University in 1897 with B. A. degree; received law instruc- tion in connection with senior work at Yale; after one year’s additional reading and 120 . Congressional Directory. WASHINGTON study of law in private office was admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of Louis- iana in 1898; volunteered at first call for service in Spanish-American War, but was barred because of defective eyesight; was married to Miss Lorena Kearse, of Lake Charles, La., in 1899, and they have three children, all of whom are living; after prac- ticing law at Lake Charles, La., for six years, located at Bremerton, Wash., the home of the Puget Sound Navy Yard, in 1905; was elected city attorney of Bremerton in 1907; elected to the State senate as a progressive Republican in 1908; reelected city attorney of Bremerton in 1911; elected to the Sixty-third Congress as a Progressive, receiving 90,348 votes, to 87, 613 for H. B. Dewey, Republican, 73, 133 for E. O. “Connor, Democrat, and 39,772 for M. E. Giles, Socialist. Moved from Bremerton to Seattle in February, 1913; owns and publishes Navy Yard American, a weekly newspaper at Puget Sound naval station, Bremerton, Wash. J. A. FALCONER, Progressive, of Everett, was born in 1869 in Ontario and at the age of 4 years moved to Saugatuck, Mich.; moved to Washburn, Wis., at age of 18 years; was employed by the Bigelow Lumber Co., and attended Beloit Academy and College four years; moved to Everett, Wash., in 1894, and has since been engaged in the manufacture of shingles and buying and selling timberlands; in 1896 married Mabel L. Thomson, daughter of Rev. Alexander Thomson, now of Saugatuck, Mich.; they have one daughter, Jean, age 14, and three sons, Harold, age 16, Donald, age 12, and Robert, age 10; was for eight years in the State legislature; speaker of house of representatives in 1907— 8; chairman of appropriations and revenue and taxation committees of the senate, respectively, i in sessions of 1909 and 1911; one of the authors of the Washington workmen's compensation law, and introduced the same in the senate; was two terms mayor of Everett; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress in 1912, receiving 95,049 votes, to 87,613 for H. B. Dewey, Republican, 73,133 for O. E. Conner, Democrat, 39,772 for M. Giles, Socialist, and 8,185 for N. Thompson, Prohibi- tionist. 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 ad- mitted 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 Congresses from the State at large, to the Sixty-first Congress from the newly constituted first district, elected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses from that district. SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Chehalis, Clallam, Clarke, Cowlitz, Jefferson, Klickitat, Lewis, an Pacific, Pierce, Skamania, Thurston, and Wahkiakum 13’ counties). Population (1910), ALBERT JOHNSON, Republican, of Hoquiam, was born in Springfield, Ill., March 5, 1869, his parents being Charles W. and Anna E. (Ogden) Johnson; re- ceived a high-school education: began the printer’s trade at the age of 14; held reportorial and editorial positions on the St. Joseph Herald, St. Louis Globe-Demo- crat, and New Haven Register; was night editor on the Washington (D. C.) Post during the War with Spain, and became editor of the Tacoma Daily News in the fall of 1898; in 1906 became news editor of the Seattle Times; two years later purchased the Daily Washingtonian at Hoquiam, of which he is still the publisher; active mem- ber of the International Typographical Union; married and has one daughter; member of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, of the Sons of the American Revolution, and other patriotic societies; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 25, 497 votes, to 24,214 for Hon. S. Warburton, Progressive, 16,790 for Col. James A’ Munday, Democrat, and 11,999 for Leslie E. Aller, Socialist. Recently this district, which is almost three times as large as the State of Massachusetts, has been reduced in size by taking out the counties of Clallam, Jefferson, and Klickitat, and at the next election will be known as the third district. THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Asotin, Benton, Chelan, Columbia, Douglas, Ferry, Franklin, Garfield, Grant, Kittitas, Lincoln Okanogan, Pend Oreille, Spokane, Stevens, Walla Walla, Whit man, and Yakima (19. 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 and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 3,901 over Roscoe M. Drumheller, Democrat, aad 5,383 over I. M. Goodwin, Progressive. ——— - —— WEST VIRGINIA : B ogra phica L 121 WEST VIRGINIA. (Population (1910), 1,221,119.) SENATORS. WILLIAM EDWIN CHILTON, Democrat, of Charleston, was born in Kanawha March 17, 1858; began the practice of law in 1882 in Charleston; was appointed pros- ecuting 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 prosecuting 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 chairman of the Democratic State executive committee during the campaign of 1892, and was appointed secretary of state by Gov. MacCorkle to serve from March 4, 1893, to March 4, 1897; was elected to the United States Senate 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. Pols, 1 for Nathan Goff, and 1 for Joseph H. Gaines. His term of service will expire arch 3, 1917. NATHAN GOFF, Republican, of Clarksburg, was born at Clarksburg, Va. (now W. Va.), February 9, 1843; was educated at the Northwestern Virginia Academy, Georgetown College, and the University of the City of New York; was admitted to the bar in 1865; in 1867 was elected a member of the West Virginia Legislature; in 1868 was appointed United States attorney for the district of West Virginia, to which position he was reappointed in 1872, 1876, and 1880; resigned the district attorney- ship in January, 1881, when he was appointed Secretary of the Navy by President Hayes; in March, 1881, President Garfield reappointed him district attorney for West Virginia, which position he again resigned in July, 1882; enlisted in the Union Army in June, 1861, in the Third Regiment Virginia Volunteer Infantry; served as lieuten- ant and adjutant of Company G, and as major of the Fourth Virginia Volunteer Cav- alry; was Republican candidate for Congress in 1870 and 1874 in the first West Virginia district; was candidate of the Republican Party for governor of West Virginia in 1876, and was defeated by Hon. H. M. Mathews; was elected to the Forty-eighth, Forty- ninth, and Fiftieth Congresses; in 1888 was elected governor on face of the returns, but the legislature, which was Democratic, seated his opponent; was appointed United States circuit judge in 1892 for the fourth judicial circuit, including the States of West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, and was married in 1867 to Miss Laura KE. Despard, of Clarksburg, and has two sons; was elected United States Senator by the legislature February 21, 1913. His term of service will expire March 3, 1919. REPRESENTATIVES. AT LARGE.—Population (1910), 1,221,119. HOWARD SUTHERLAND, Republican, of Elkins, was born September 8, 1865, near Kirkwood, St. Louis County, Mo., the son of John Webster Sutherland and Julia P. Reavis. His father graduated, class of 1853, at Jefferson College, Canons- burg, Pa., and served in the Missouri State Senate, besides holding other positions of trust. The son was educated in the public schools of St. Louis County and city, afterwards graduating with A. B. degree from Westminster College, Fulton, Mo., class of 1889; edited a daily and weekly Republican newspaper at Fulton imme- diately after graduation; went to Washington in March, 1890, as clerk at $1,000 in Census Office; was promoted through intervening grades and became chief of popu- lation division in February, 1891; also studied law at Columbia University; resigned and in March, 1893, moved to West Virginia in connection with the Davis-Elkins coal and railroad interests; continued in their employ for 10 years in coal and rail- road business, becoming general land agent and in charge of their large landed interests; upon sale of West Virginia Central Railroad to the Gould interests went into coal and timber land business on his own account, handling large tracts, which is still his principal business; was married in 1889 to Miss Effie Harris, of Fulton, Mo.; 10 children have been born to them, of whom 6 are living, 5 daughters and 1 son; the eldest daughter, Miss Natalie, is a student at Vassar College, and the son, Richard, a student at Yale College. He is a Presbyterian, and a member of Knights of Pythias, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Ancient Order of United Workmen, and Royal Arcanum, and is a Knight Templar, thirty-second degree Mason, Mystic Shriner, and Pd 122 Congressional Directory. WEST VIRGINIA a member of B 6 IT college fraternity; has always devoted a large part of his time to the public interests; has been an officer since its organization of the West Virginia Board of Trade; elected State senator from the thirteenth senatorial district, 1908-1912, serving as member of finance committee; was chairman of West Virginia good roads commission which framed the first laws for permanent improvement of West Virginia roads; nominated as Congressman at large by Republican State-wide primary June 4, 1912, by a majority of 36,774, and was indorsed by the Progressives; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a plurality of 18,471, receiving 133,049 votes, to 114,578 for Ben H. Hiner, Democrat, 15,291 for W. A. Peters, Socialist, and 4,326 for Squire Halstead, Prohibitionist. FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Brooke, Hancock, Harrison, Lewis, Marion, Marshall, Ohio, and Wetzel (8 counties). Population (1910), 244,834. i M. M. NEELY, Democrat, of Fairmont, was born on November 9, 1874, at Grove, Doddridge County, W. Va.; parents, Alfred Neely and Mary (Morris) Neely; served in the West Virginia Volunteer Infantry through the Spanish-American War; was graduated from the academic and law departments of West Virginia University; was admitted to the Marion County bar in 1902, and since that time has been continuously engaged in the practice of the law at Fairmont; was married October 21, 1903, to Miss Alberta Claire Ramage, of Fairmont; they have one son, Alfred R. Neely; was mayor of Fairmont 1908-1910; clerk of the House of Delegates of West Virginia 1911-1913; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress October 14, 1913, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. John W. Davis, who was appointed Solicitor General of the United States, receiving 14,093 votes, to 11,044 for Julian G. Hearne, Republican, 3,717 for George A. Laughlin, Progressive, 2,066 for Walter B. Hilton, Socialist, and 1,912 for J. H. Holt, Prohibitionist. SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Mineral, Monongalia, Morgan, Pendleton, Preston, Randolph, Taylor, and Tucker (14 counties). 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 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; was admitted to the bar and engaged in the practice of law; was a cousin of the late Senator J. P. Dolliver, of Iowa, and they were roommates in college. He early became engaged in the banking business and has followed it continuously in connection with the prac- tice 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 thorough- bred 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, but was defeated by Judge Alston Gordon Dayton; he ran as presidential elector in 1908; 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., who died September 1, 1912; his daughter, Jessie T. Brown, 1s his only child; was elected to the Sixty-second Congress, and reelected to the Sixty- third Congress. THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Kanawha, Monroe, Nicholas, Pocahontas, Summers, Upshur, and Webster (10 counties). Population (1910), 258,649. SAMUEL BRASHEAR AVIS, Republican, of Charleston, was born at Harrison- burg, Rockingham County, Va., February 19, 1872; was educated in the public schools, Staunton Military Academy, Staunton, Va., and at Washington and Lee University, from which last-named institution he graduated in 1893 with degree of B. L.; began the practice of law in 1893 and is now the senior member of the law firm of Avis & Donnally, Charleston, W. Va.; in 1898, during the Spanish-American War, was commissioned senior captain of Company A, Second West Virginia Volunteer Infantry, in which he served until his regiment was mustered out of service in 1899; was married December 6, 1899, to Miss Florence M. Atkinson, daughter of ex-Gov. G. W. Atkinson, of West Virginia; was assistant United States attorney for the southern district of West Virginia, and for three consecutive terms (January 1, 1900, to De- WISCONSIN Brographical. 123 cember 31, 1912, inclusive) prosecuting attorney of Kanawha County, W. Va.; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving a plurality of 1,468 votes over Hon. Adam B. Littlepage, Democrat. FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Braxton, Calhoun, Doddridge, Gilmer, Jackson, Pleasants, Ritchie, Roane, Tyler, Wirt, and Wood (11 counties). Population (1910), 190,039. HUNTER HOLMES MOSS, Jr., Republican, of Parkersburg, Wood County, was born in that city May 26, 1874; graduated in the public schools of hisnative town, and then, in order to procure a business education, spent a year and a halfasa clerk in the First National Bank of Parkersburg; afterwards went to the West Virginia University, at Morgantown, where he took a special academic course, and then took the law course in that institution, obtaining the degree of bachelor of law; after graduation returned to Parkersburg and entered into the practice of law; was nominated by the Republic- ans of his county and elected prosecuting attorney at the age of 26; was nominated by the Republicans for judge of the fourth judicial circuit of West Virginia, and elected by a large majority; served on the bench eight years, and before the expi- ration of his term was nominated by the same party as a candidate for the Sixty- third Congress, and, notwithstanding his Democratic opponent had been elected two years prior to that time by a majority of over 2,000 votes, he was elected by 1,099 majority, receiving 20,445 votes, to 19,346 for John M. Hamilton, Democrat; in 1902 was married to Miss Anna Ambler, of Parkersburg, and they have three children; while he has always been a Republican, and, in fact, made Republican speeches on the hustings before he was of age, and is still a member of the Republican Party, he has always been progressive in his ideas and tendencies, and so he received the full indorsement of the Progressive Party in the election of 1912. FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Cabell, Lincoln, Logan, 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; in 1885 married Miss Belle Vinson, daughter of the late Col. S. S. Vinson; has two daughters, Eloise Hughes Smith and Tudell Vinson Hughes; 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 interests having drifted to the adjoining State of West Virginia necessitated the removal of his residence to that State. The sixth senatorial district sent him to the West Virginia Legislature by a large majority, the first Republican senator to represent it, in the term of 1894-1898; has always been an active and 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 dis- trict (the majority being 3,784), and to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty- first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. WISCONSIN. (Pcpulation (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. 124 Congressional Directory. WISCONSIN 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.—CoUNTIES: Kenosha, Racine, Rock, Walworth, and Waukesha (5 counties). Pop- ulation (1910), 212,605. HENRY ALLEN COOPER, Republican, of Racine, was born in Walworth County, Wis., September 8, 1850; graduated in 1873 from the Northwestern Uni- versity and in 1875 from Union College of Law (the law school of the University of Chicago and of Northwestern University), and in the same year was admitted to the bar; was member of firms of Brownson & Cooper, Cooper & Kearney, and Cooper, Sim- mons, Nelson & Walker, and was engaged in active practice of the law until his election to Congress; elected district attorney of Racine County November, 1880; was twice reelected without opposition; elected district delegate to Republican national con- vention 1884; elected State senator in 1886 and was author of law which first estab- lished the Australian ballot system in Wisconsin; elected at primary election delegate at large to Republican national convention 1908; defeated for election to the Fifty- second Congress; elected to the Fifty-third, Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty- seventh, Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses. SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Columbia, Dodge, Jefferson, Osaukee, Sheboygan, and Washington (6 counties). Population (1910), 208,666. MICHAEL E. BURKE, Democrat, of Beaver Dam, Wis., 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; worked as a hired farm hand for the farmers in that town in the summer time from the age of 13 to 26; commenced the study of law in the law department of the University of Wisconsin in 1886; was admitted to the bar in 1888, and followed the practice of his profession continuously at his native city and vicinity until he entered Congress; in 1890 and 1892 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 was elected to the Senate of the State of Wisconsin, in which body he served for one term of four years; in 1893 was elected city attorney of Beaver Dam, and was reelected for 15 consecutive annual terms thereafter to such position; married to Miss Emma Sontag, of Winne- conne, Wis., in 1898; was serving his second consecutive term as mayor of his native city when first elected to Congress; 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, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress as a Democrat, receiving 20,665 votes, to 14,698 for Henry J. Grell, Republican, 1,512 for Edward Deuss, Socialist, and 538 for William E. Mack, Prohibitionist. THIRD DISTRICT.—Countits: Crawford, Dane, Grant, Green, Iowa, Lafayette, and Richland (7 counties). Population (1910), 215,752. JOHN MANDT NELSON, Republican, of Madison, was born in the town of Burke, Dane County, Wis., October 10, 1870; received a collegiate education, gradu- ating 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 in September, 1906, to fill a vacancy, to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 22,388 votes, to 18,219 for A. H. Long, Democrat, 1,219 for C. H. Berryman, Prohibitionist, and 496 for W. E. Middleton, Socialist. WISCONSIN Biographical. 425 FOURTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUKEE County: Third, fourth, fifth, eighth, eleventh, twelfth, fourteenth, sixteenth, seventeenth, twenty-third, and twenty-fourth wards of the city of Milwaukee; cities of Cudahy, South Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, and West Allis; towns of Franklin, Greenfield, Lake, Oak Creek, and Wauwatosa; and village of West Milwaukee. Population (1910), 205,766. 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 11 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 telegraph operator, and at 19 took the younger children from the asylum and gave them a home; was married in 1889; 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 at the first trial of the Wisconsin primary election law, and elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 15,779 votes, to 11,730 for W. R. Gaylord, Social Democrat, and 6,175 for Dr. John F. Beffel. FIFTH DISTRICT.—MILWAUKEE COUNTY: First, second, sixth, seventh, ninth, tenth, thirteenth, fif- teenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-first, twenty-second, and twenty-fifth wards of the city of Milwaukee; towns of Granville and Milwaukee; and villages of East Milwaukee, North Mil- waukee, and Whitefish Bay. Population (1910), 227,421. WILLIAM H. STAFFORD, Republican, of Milwaukee; was educated in the public schools; is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School; is a lawyer; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress by a fusion of Republicans and Democrats in opposition to the Socialist candidate. SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIiES: Calumet, Fond du Lac, Green Lake, Manitowoc, Marquette, and Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1910), 201,637. MICHAEL K. REILLY, Democrat, of Fond du Lac, was born at town of Empire, Fond du Lac County, Wis.; early life spent on a farm; graduate of Oshkosh Normal (1889); University of Wisconsin, College of Letters (1894), and College of Law (1895); was district attorney of Fond du Lac County two years, and city attorney Fond du Lac five years; senior member of law firm o! Reilly, Fellenz & Reilly, Fond du Lac, Wis.; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 16,742 votes, to 15,505 for James H. Davidson, Republican, 1,650 for Martin Georgeson, Social Democrat, and 505 for Frank L. Smith, Prohibitionist. SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counrties: Adams, Clark, Jackson, Juneau, La Crosse, Monroe, Sauk, and Vernon (8 counties). Population (1910), 209,184. 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.; 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 Uni- versity, 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, afterwards known 2s 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 afterwards 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 20,060 votes, to10,795 for William N. Coffland, Democrat, 901 for B. S. Hawley, Prohibitionist, and 826 for C. A. Noetzelman, Socialist. EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Marathon, Portage, Shawano, Waupaca, Waushara, and Wood (6 counties). Population (1910), 200,134. EDWARD EVERTS BROWNE, Republican, of Waupaca, was born in that city February 16, 1868; graduated from the Waupaca High School, from the University of Wisconsin in 1890, and from the law school of the University of Wisconsin in 1892, since which time he has been actively engaged in the practice of the law; is married and has four children; was elected prosecuting attorney of Waupaca County for three terms and State senator for two terms; was appointed regent of the State Uni- versity of Wisconsin, which position he held until he accepted a seat in the State senate; received the Republican nomination for the Sixty-third Congress Septem- ber 5, 1912, without opposition, and at the general election carried all the counties 126 Congressional Directory. WYOMING in his district but one, receiving 17,094 votes, to 12,265 for A. J. Plowman, Democrat, 1,256 for Curtis A. Boorman, Social Democrat, and 687 for A. R. Ruckman, Prohi- bitionist. NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Brown, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Langlade, Marinette, Oconto, and Outagamie (9 counties). Population (1910), 225,389. 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 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 LL. B. in 1904; was admitted to the bar in Wisconsin in the fall of that . year and has since been in active practice at Kewaunee, 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 over Congressman Kiister- mann, the Republican State ticket carrying the district at the same time by about 5,000 plurality. The Republican legislature in 1911 redistricted the State, and by so doing added to the old ninth district three Republican counties, making the district safely Republican by 8,000. Nevertheless, Mr. Konop was reelected to the Sixty- third Congress, defeating Congressman Elmer A. Morse by 704 plurality. TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barron, Buffalo, Chippewa, Dunn, Eau Claire, Pepin, Pierce, St. Croix, and Trempealeau (9 counties). Population (1910), 213,698. 1 JAMES A. FREAR, Republican, of Hudson, was born in, that city October 24, 1861; moved to Washington, D. C., with his parents in 1879; graduated from the National Law University in 1884; returned to Hudson, and was elected city attorney for several terms; appointed district attorney for St. Croix County in 1896 and elected for three terms thereafter; elected to the Wisconsin Assembly in 1902 and to the State senate in 1904; chairman of the Wisconsin legislative insurance investigation held in 1906; elected secretary of state 1906, 1908, and 1910; elected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,915 votes, to 8,794 for Charles Donahue, Democrat, 868 for Bev- erley White, Prohibitionist, and 1,031 for Albert Slaughter, Social Democrat. "ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Ashland, Bayfield, Burnett, Douglas, Iron, Lincoln, Oneida, Polk, Price, Rusk, Sawyer, Taylor, Vilas, and Washburn (14 counties). Population (1910), 213,608. 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 Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. WYOMING. (Population (1910), 145,965.) SENATORS. 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 Iowa State University; admitted to the bar in 1874, and taught school and prac- ticed 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 member of the constitutional convention of Wyoming; was a delegate to the Republican national conventions of 1888, 1900, 1904, 1908, and 1912; was appointed associate justice of the Territory of Wyoming in 1890, 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 legis- lature to elect in 1892-93, and was reelected in 1899, 1905, and 1911. His term of service will expire March 3, 1917. HAWAII Biographical. 127 FRANCIS EMROY WARREN, Republican, of Cheyenne, was born mn Hinsdale, Mass., June 20, 1844; was educated in common schools and academy; 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 member of the council and also mayor of the city of Cheyenne, and served three terms as treasurer of Wyoming; was member of the Wyoming delegation to the 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, 1908, and 1912; was chairman of the Republican Territorial central committee, and chairman of Repub- lican State central committee of Wyoming in 1896; was appointed governor of Wyo- ming by President Arthur in February, 1885, and served until November, 1886; was again appointed governor of Wyoming by President Harrison in March, 1889, and served until the Territory was admitted as a State, when he was elected the first governor of the State; was elected to the United States Senate November 18, 1890, took his seat December 1, 1890, and served until the expiration of his term, March 3, 2 i reelected in 1895, 1901, 1907, and 1913. His term of service will expire arch 3, 1919. : 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 Iowa 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; served as Assistant Commissioner of the General Land Office fromi November 15, 1897, to March 3, 1899; married Ida Harris, of Laramie, Wyo., May, 1899; was elected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty- eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress, receiving 19,130 votes, to 14,720 for Thomas P. Fahey, Democrat, 4,828 for Charles F'. Winter, Progressive, 2,230 for Mr. Carlson, Socialist, and 206 for Mr. Laughlin, Prohibitionist. TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. ALASKA. (Population (1910), 64,356.) JAMES WICKERSHAM, 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; reelected to the Sixty-second Congress, and to the Sixty-third Congress August 13, 1912. HAWAIL Population (1910), 191,909. J. KUHIO KALANTANAOLE, 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 employed 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 King- dom of Hawaii, and nephew of Queen Kapiolani, consort of Kalakaua; 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, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-third Congress. 128 Congressional Directory. PORTO RICO RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS. PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. MANUEL L. 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 Letran, obtaining the degrees of bachelor of arts and expert land surveyor; studied law in the University of St. Thomas, and 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 commanding 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 delegate 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. On November 21, 1912, he was reelected for a term of four years by the unanimous vote of the Philippine Legislature. MANUEL EARNSHAW, born November 19, 1862, in Cavite, P. I., son of Daniel Earnshaw and Gavina Noguera; educated in the Ateneo de Manila, Government nautical school, Spanish navy department (Cavite, P. 1.), and engineering works of Wilks & Earnshaw, Manila; marine engineer since 1884; managing engineer of D. Earnshaw & Co. and manager of port works 1885; engineer, Government mint, 1887; manager, Wilks & Boyle, 1888; managing engineer, Allan Boyle & Co., 1891; joined Boyle & Co. as partner, forming firm of Boyle & Earnshaw, 1892, acting as managing engineer to 1901; proprietor of same firm 1901, later in 1901 forming firm of Manuel Earnshaw & Co.; incorporated firm of Manuel Earnshaw & Co. (Ltd.); reorganized with the new name of The Earnshaws Slipways & Engineering Co., of which he is president; director and president El Hogar Filipino; director of Manila Improve- ment Co.; has traveled extensively over Europe, United States, Australia, Japan, China, and Canada; founder and former president of Sociedad de Tiro al Blanco; president Club Filipino; member of Polo and Cosmopolitan Gun Clubs (Manila) and the Country Club (Baguio); married February 4, 1888, to Maria Villar Ubaldo in Manila; elected as Resident Commissioner by the Philippine Legislature to the Con- gress of the United States November 21, 1912, for the term March 4, 1913, te March 3, 1917. PORTO RICO. (Population (1910), 1,118,012.) LUIS 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 He 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 Liberal 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 seli- 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 Com- missioner to Washington by about 105,000 votes, as against about 58,000 {or his opponent. Mr. Rivera is married and has one son, who is studying in Georgetown College. STATE DELEGATIONS. {Democrats in roman; Republicans in #falics; Progressive Republicans in italics with *; Progressives in SMALL CAPS; Independent in CAPS.] ALABAMA. SENATORS. John H. Bankhead. rr et— REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 10.] At Large—John W. Abercrombie. x. George W. Taylor. 4. Fred. L. Blackmon. 7. John L. Burnett. 2. S. Hubert Dent, jr. 5. J. Thomas Heflin. 8. William Richardson. 3. Henry D. Clayton. 6. Richmond P. Hobson. | 9. Oscar W. Underwood. ARIZONA. SENATORS. ; Henry F. Ashurst. Marcus A. Smith. REPRESENTATIVE. [Democrat, 1.1 At Large—Carl Hayden. ARKANSAS. SENATORS. : James P. Clarke. Joe T. Robinson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 7.] 1. Thaddeus H. Caraway. | 4. Otis Wingo. 6. Samuel M. Taylor. 2. William A. Oldfield. 5. H. M. Jacoway. 7. William S. Goodwin. 3. John C. Floyd. CALIFORNIA. SENATORS. George C. Perkins. John D. Works. REPRESENTATIVES. : [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 4; Progressive Republicans, 3; Independent, 1.] 1. WILLIAM KENT. 5. John I. Nolan.* 9. Charles W. Bell. * 2. John E. Raker. 6. Joseph R. Knowland. 10. William D. Stephens.* 3. Charles F. Curry. 7. Denver S. Church. 11. William Kettner. 4. Julius Kahn. 8. Everis A. Hayes. | COLORADO. SENATORS. Charles S. Thomas. John F. Shafroth. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 4.] At Large—Edward T. Taylor, Edward Keating. 1. George J. Kindel. | 2. H. H. Seldomridge. CONNECTICUT. SENATORS. Frank B. Brandegee. George P. McLean. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 5.] 1. Augustine Lonergan. 3. Thomas L. Reilly. 5. William Kennedy. 2. Bryan F. Mahan. 4. Jeremiah Donovan. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——10 129 130 Congressional Directory. DELAWARE. SENATORS. Henry A. du Pont. REPRESENTATIVE. [ Democrat, 1.] Willard Saulsbury. At Large—Franklin Brockson. FLORIDA. SENATORS. Duncan U. Fletcher. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 4.] Nathan P. Bryan. At Large—Claude L’Engle. 1. Stephen M. Sparkman. | 2. Frank Clark. GEORGIA. SENATORS. Augustus O. Bacon. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 12.] 1. Charles G. Edwards. 5. William S. Howard. 2. Frank Park. 6. Charles L. Bartlett. 3. Charles R. Crisp. 7. Gordon Lee. 4. William C. Adamson. 8. Samuel J. Tribble. IDAHO. SENATORS. William E. Borah. : REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] [ 3. Emmett Wilson. Hoke Smith. 9. Thomas M. Bell. 10. Thomas W. Hardwick. 11. John R. Walker. 12. Dudley M. Hughes. James H. Brady. At Large—Burton L. French, Addison T'. Smith, ILLINOIS. SENATORS. J. Hamilton Lewis. REPRESENTATIVES. Lawrence Y. Sherman. [Democrats, 20; Republicans, 4; Progressive Republican, 1; Progressives, 2.] At Large—Lawrence B. Stringer, William E. Williams. 1. Martin B. Madden. 10. Cras. M. THOMSON. 2. James R. Mann. 11. Ira C. Copley .* 3. George E. Gorman. 12. Wu. H. HINEBAUGH. 4. James T. McDermott. 13. John C. McKenzie. 5. Adolph J. Sabath. 14. Clyde H. Tavenner. 6. James McAndrews. 15. Stephen A. Hoxworth. 7. Frank Buchanan. 16. Claudius U. Stone. 8. Thomas Gallagher. 17. Louis FitzHenry. 9. Fred A. Britten. INDIANA. SENATORS. Benjamin F. Shively. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 13.] 6. Finly H. Gray. 7. Charles A. Xorbly. 8. John A. M. Adair. 9. Martin A. Morrison. Charles Lieb. William A. Cullop. . William E. Cox. Lincoln Dixon. . Ralph W. Moss. CU LODO = 18. Frank T. O’Hair. 19. Charles M. Borchers. 20. Henry T. Rainey. 21. James M. Graham. 22. William N. Baltz. 23. Martin D. Foster. | 24. H. Robert Fowler. 25. Robert P. Hill. John W. Kern. 10. John B. Peterson. 11. George W. Rauch. 12. Cyrus Cline. 13. Henry A. Barnhart. DD p= LOB 00 DN CoD > 00 DN = DN jt State Delegations. 131 IOWA. SENATORS. Albert B. Cummins. William S. Kenyon. REPRESENTATIVES. 5 [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 8.] . Charles A. Kennedy. 5. James W. Good. 9. William R. Green. 1.8. Pepper. 6. Sanford Kirkpatrick. 10. Frank P. Woods. . Maurice Connolly. 7. 8. F. Prouty. 11. George C. Scott. . Gilbert N. Haugen. 8. Horace M. Towner. KANSAS. SENATORS, Joseph L. Bristow. William H. Thompson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 5; Republicans, 2; Progressive, 1.] . Daniel R. Anthony, jr. 4. . Joseph Taggart. 5. . Philip P. Campbell. 6. William O. Bradley. Dudley Doolittle. Guy T. Helvering John R. Connelly. KENTUCKY. # SENATORS. 7. George A. Neeley. 8. Victor MURDOCK. Ollie M. James. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 9; Republicans, 2.] . Alben W. Barkley. 5. . Augustus O. Stanley. 6. . Robert Y. Thomas, jr. 7. . Ben Johnson. 8. John R. Thornton. . Albert Estopinal. . H. Garland Dupré. . Robert F. Broussard. SS Ot Charles F. J ohnson. . Walter Elder. . Lewis L. Morgan. 9. W. J. Fields. 10. John W. Langley. 11. Caleb Powers. Swagar Sherley. Arthur B. Rouse. J. Campbell Cantrill. Harvey Helm. LOUISIANA. SENATORS. Joseph E. Ransdell. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 8.] 8. James B. Aswell. . John T. Watkins. | 7. Ladislas Lazaro. MAINE. SENATORS. Edwin C. Burleigh. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 1; Republicans, 3.] . Asher C. Hinds. 3 . Daniel J. McGillicuddy. John Walter Smith. . J. Harry Covington. 3. . J. Fred. C. Talbott. 4. John A. Peters. 4. Frank E. Guernsey. MARYLAND. SENATORS. William P. Jackson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 6.] Charles P. Coady. J. Charles Linthicum. 5. Frank O. Smith, 6. David J. Lewis. 1. Frank E. Doremus. 5. Carl E. Mapes. 2 Samuel W. Beakes. 6. Samuel W. Smith. 8. J. M. C. Smith. 7. Louis C. Cramton. 4. Edward L. Hamilton. | 8. Joseph W. Fordney. MINNESOTA. SENATORS. Knute Nelson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrat, 1; Republicans, 9.] At Large— James Manahan. 1. Sydney Anderson. 4. Frederick C. Stevens. 2. Winfield S. Hammond. | 5. George R. Smith. 3. Charles R. Daves. 6. Charles A. Lindbergh. MISSISSIPPI. SENATORS. John Sharp Williams. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 8.] 1 Ezekiel S. Candler, jr. 4. Thomas U. Sisson. 2. Hubert D. Stephens. 5. S. A. Witherspoon. 3. Benj. G. Humphreys. 6. B. P. Harrison. 132 Congressional Directory. MASSACHUSETTS. SENATORS. Henry Cabot Lodge. John W. Weeks. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 8; Republicans, 8.] 1. Allen T. Treadway. 7-M. F. Phelan. 12. James M. Curley. 2. Frederick H. Gillett. 8. Frederick S. Deitrick. | 13. John J. Mitchell. 3. Calvin D. Paige. 9. Ernest W. Roberts. 14. Edward Gilmore. 4. Samuel E. Winslow. 10. William F. Murray. 15. William S. Greene. 5. John J. Rogers. 11. Andrew J. Peters. 16. Thomas C. Thacher. 6. Augustus P. Gardner. MICHIGAN. SENATORS. William Alden Smith. Charles E. Townsend. REPRESENTATIVES. Democrats, 2; Republicans, 9; Progressives, 2.] At Large—Patrick H. Kelley. 9. James C. McLaughlin. 10. Roy O. WOODRUFF. 11. Francis O. Lindquist. 12. Wictniam J. MACDONALD. Moses E. Clapp. 7. Andrew J. Volstead. 8. Clarence B. Miller. 9. Halvor Steenerson. James K. Vardaman. 7. Percy E. Quin. 8. James W. Collier. State Delegations. 133 MISSOURI SENATORS. 5 William J. Stone. James A. Reed. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 14; Republicans, 2.] [Republican, 1.] 1. James T. Lloyd. 7. Courtney W. Hamlin. | 12. L. C. Dyer. 2. William W. Rucker. 8. Dorsey W. Shackle- | 13. Walter L.. Hensley. 3. Joshua W. Alexander. ford. 14. Joseph J. Russell. 4. Charles F'. Booher. 9. Champ Clark. ° 15. Perl D. Decker. 5. William P. Borland. 10. Richard Bartholdt. 16. Thomas L. Rubey. 6. Clement C. Dickinson. | 11. William L. Igoe. MONTANA. SENATORS. Henry L. Myers. Thomas J. Walsh. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 2.] At Large—John M. Evans, Tom Stout. NEBRASKA. SENATORS. Gilbert M. Hitchcock. George W. Norris. REPRESENTATIVES. 2 [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 3.] 1. John A. Maguire. 3. Dan V. Stephens. 5. Silas R. Barton. 2. C. O. Lobeck. 4. Charles H. Sloan. 6. Moses P. Kinkaid. NEVADA. SENATORS. Francis G. Newlands. Key Pittman. REPRESENTATIVE, At Large—E. E. Roberts. NEW HAMPSHIRE. SENATORS. : : Jacob H. Gallinger. Henry F. Hollis. REPRESENTATIVES. | [Democrats, 2.] | 1. Eugene E. Reed. 2. Raymond B. Stevens. i NEW JERSEY. SENATORS. James E. Martine. William Hughes. : | REPRESENTATIVES. | - Democrats, 11; Republican, 1.] I 1. William J. Browning. 5. Wm. E. Tuttle, jr. 9. Walter I. McCoy. 2. J. Thompson Baker. 6. Archibald C. Hart. 10. Edward W. Townsend. | 3. Thomas J. Scully. 7. Robert G. Bremner. 11. John J. Eagan. 4. Allan B. Walsh, 8 . Eugene IF. Kinkead. | 12. James A. Hamill. 134 Congressional Directory. NEW MEXICO. SENATORS. Thomas B. Catron. Albert B. Fall. REPRESENTATIVE. [Democrat 1.] At Large—H. B. Fergusson. NEW YORK. SENATORS. Elihv. Root. James A. O'Gorman. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 31; Republicans, 11; Progressive, 1.] 1. Lathrop Brown. 16. Peter J. Dooling. 30. Samuel Wallin. 2. Denis O’Leary. 17. John F. Carew. : 31. BE. A. Merrit, jr. 3. Frank E. Wilson. 18. Thomas G. Patten. 32. Luther W. Mott. 4. Harry H. Dale. 19. WarLTer M. CEANDLER. | 33. Charles A. Talcott. 5. James P. Maher. 20. Jacob A. Cantor. 34. George W. Fairchild. 6. William M. Calder. 21. Henry George, jr. 35. John R. Clancy. 7. John J. Fitzgerald. 22. Henry Bruckner. 36. Sereno E. Payne. 8. Daniel J. Griffin. 23. Joseph A. Goulden. 37. Edwin S. Underhill. 9. James H. O’Brien. 24. Woodson R. Oglesby. | 38. Thomas B. Dunn. 10. Herman A. Metz. 25. Benjamin I. Taylor. 39. Henry G. Danforth. 11. Daniel J. Riordan. 26. Edmund Plait. 40. Robert H. Gittins. 12. Henry M. Goldfogle. | 27. George McClellan. 41. Charles B. Smith. 13. George W. Loft. 28. Peter G. Ten Eyck. 42. Daniel A. Driscoll. 14. Jefferson M. Levy. 29. James S. Parker. kL 43. Charles M. Hamilton. 15. Michael F. Conry. NORTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. F. M. Simmons. Lee S. Overman. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 10.] 1. John H. Small. 5. Charles M. Stedman. 8. Robert L. Doughton. 2. Claude Kitchin. 6. Hannibal L. Godwin. 9. Edwin Y. Webb. 3. John M. Faison. 7. Robert N. Page. 10. James M. Gudger, jr. 4. Edward W. Pou. NORTH DAKOTA. SENATORS. ; Porter J. McCumber. Asle J. Gronna. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 3.] 1. Henry T. Helgesen. | 2. George M. Young. | 3. Patrick D. Norton. State Delegations. 185 OHIO. SENATORS. Theodore E. Burton. Atlee Pomerene. : REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 19; Republicans, 3.] At Large—Robert Crosser. 1. Stanley E. Bowdle. 8. Frank B. Wills. 15. George White. 2. Alfred G. Allen. 9. Isaac R. Sherwood. 16. W. B. Francis. 3. Warren Gard. 10. Robert M. Switzer. 17. William A. Ashbrook. 4. J. H. Goeke. 11. Horatio C. Claypool. 18. John J. Whitacre. 5. Timothy T. Ansberry. | 12. Clement Brumbaugh. | 19. E. R. Bathrick. 6. Simeon D. Fess. 13. John A. Key. 20. William Gordon. 7. James D. Post. 14. William G. Sharp. 21. Robert J. Bulkley. OKLAHOMA. SENATORS. Thomas P. Gore. Robert L. Owen. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 6; Republicans, 2.] At Large—William H. Murray, Joseph B. Thompson, Claude Weaver. 1. Bird McGuire. 3. James S. Davenport. 5. Scott Ferris. 2. Dick T. Morgan. 4. Charles D. Carter. OREGON. SENATORS. George E. Chamberlain. Harry Lane. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2; Progressive Republican, 1.] 1. Willis C. Hawley. | 2. Nicholas J. Sinnott. | 3. A. W. Lafferty. * PENNSYLVANIA. SENATORS. Boies Penrose. George T. Oliver. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 20; Republicans, 18; Progressive Republicans, 1; Progressives, 5.] At Large—FrED E. Lewis, John M. Morin, ARTHUR R. RUPLEY, Anderson H. Walters. 1. William S. Vare. 12. Robert E. Lee. 23. Wooda N. Carr. 2. George S. Graham. 13. John H. Rothermel. 24. Hexry W. TEMPLE. 3. J. Hampton Moore. | 14. W. D. B. Ainey. 25. Milton W. Shreve. 4. George W. Edmonds. | 15. Edgar R. Kiess. 26. A. Mitchell Palmer. 5. Michael Donohoe. 16. John V. Lesher. 27. Jonathan N. Langham. 6. J. Washington Logue.| 17. Frank L. Dershem. 28. Wiis J. HuLings. 7. Thomas S. Butler. 18. Aaron S. Kreider. 29. Stephen G. Porter. 8. Robt. E. Difenderfer.| 19. Warren W. Bailey. 30. M. Crype KELLY. 9. William W. Griest. 20. Andrew R. Brodbeck. | 31. James Francis Burke. 10. John R. Farr. * 21. Charles E. Patton. 32. Andrew J. Barchfeld. 11. John J. Casey. 22. Abraham L. Keister. 136 Congressional Directory. RHODE ISLAND. SENATORS. | Henry F. Lippitt. LeBaron B. Colt. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 1.] 1. Geo. F. O’Shaunessy. | 2. Peter G. Gerry. | 3. Ambrose Kennedy. : SOUTH CAROLINA. SENATORS. Benjamin R. Tillman. Ellison D. Smith. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 7.] ; 1. Richard S. Whaley. 4. Joseph T. Johnson. 6. J. Willard Ragsdale. 2. James F. Byrnes. 5. David E. Finley. 7. Asbury F. Lever. 3. Wyatt Aiken. SOUTH DAKOTA. L SENATORS. Coe I. Crawford. Thomas Sterling. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 3.] 1. Charles H. Dillon. [| 2. Charles H. Burke. | 3. Eben W. Martin. TENNESSEE. SENATORS. Luke Lea. John K. Shields. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 8; Republicans, 2.] 1. Sam R. Sells. 5. William C. Houston. 8. Thetus W. Sims. h 2. Richard W. Austin. 6. Joseph W. Byrns. 9. Finis J. Garrett. 4 3. John A. Moon. 7. Lemuel P. Padgett. 10. Kenneth D. McKellar. 4, Cordell Hull. TEXAS. SENATORS. Charles A. Culberson. Morris Sheppard. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 18.] At Large—Daniel E. Garrett, Hatton W. Sumners. 1. Horace W. Vaughan. 7. A. W. Gregg. 12. Oscar Callaway. 2. Martin Dies. 8. Joe H. Eagle. 13. John H. Stephens. 3. James Young. 9. George F. Burgess. 14. James L. Slayden. 4. Sam Rayburn. 10. James P. Buchanan. 15. John N. Garner. 5. Jack Beall. 11. Robert L. Henry. - 16. William R. Smith. 6. Rufus Hardy. UTAH. SENATORS. Reed Smoot. George Sutherland. REPRESENTATIVES [Republicans, 2.] At Large— Joseph Howell, Jacob Johnson. HOO BD Ha CO BND = State Delegations. 137 VERMONT. SENATORS. William P. Dillingham. Carroll S. Page. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 2.] 1. Frank L. Greene. 2. Frank Plumley. VIRGINIA. SENATORS. Thomas S. Martin. Claude A. Swanson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 9; Republicans, 1.] . William A. Jones. 5. Edward W. Saunders. 8. Charles C. Carlin. E. E. Holland. 6. Carter Glass. 9. C. Bascom Slemp. . Andrew J. Montague. 7. James Hay. 10. Henry D. Flood. . Walter A. Watson. WASHINGTON. SENATORS. Wesley L. Jones. Mires POINDEXTER. REPRESENTATIVES. [Republicans, 3; Progressives, 2.] At Large—James W. Bryan, J. A. FALCONER. . William E. Humphrey. | 2. Albert Johnson. | 3. William L. La Follette. WEST VIRGINIA. SENATORS. William E. Chilton. Nathan Goff. : REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 2; Republicans, 4.] At Large— Howard Sutherland. . M. M. Neely. | 3. Samuel B. Avis. 5. James A. Hughes. . William G. Brown, jr. | 4. Hunter H. Moss, jr. WISCONSIN. SENATORS. Robert M. La Follette. Isaac Stephenson. REPRESENTATIVES. [Democrats, 3; Republicans, 8.] . Henry A. Cooper. 5. William H. Stafford. 9. Thomas F. Konop. . Michael E. Burke. 6. Michael K. Reilly. 10. James A. Frear. . John M. Nelson. 7. John J. Esch. 11. Irvine L. Lenroot. . William J. Cary. 8. Edward E. Browne. WYOMING. SENATORS. : Clarence D. Clark. Francis EE. Warren. REPRESENTATIVE. [Republican, 1.] At Large— Frank W. Mondell. ALASKA. JAMES WICKERSHAM. 138 Congressional Directory. HAWAII J. Kalanianaole. PHILIPPINES. Manuel L. Quezon. Manuel Earnshaw. PORTO RICO. Luis Muiioz Rivera. CLASSIFICATION. SENATE. HOUSE. Pemoerats. 2000.0 8 Lael 50. (Democrats .U............ 58.08 5 231 Bepublicans |... Ll LU. 02 44. Republicans. ......co0nuidn ni 124 Progressive... .... .... ke. 5 1 | Progressive Republicans ........... 6 Ae Se GC Hl HL | Prosvensiven.... ... ..f. 13 -——:| "Independent ...................... 1 Botal........ 5. convveoinaaie 96 Botal..... ..conin. Lunde. 433 STATISTICAL. EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS. Crass III.— SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1915. (Thirty-two Senators in this class.*) Name. Residence. Beadley, William ©... .. ou R | Louisville, Ky. Brady Jawes dl 0. ik ia ts, R | Pocatello, Idaho. Brandegee, Prank Bono oo) it Lan R | New London, Conn. Bristow, Joseple Y.-L. 0 Ln coo R | Salina, Kans. Burton, Fheadoredlr cid can ior oat R | Cleveland, Ohio. Chamberlain, George B-- 2... on 00 D | Portland, Oreg. Clarkes Jamies Pro 0. oh oo pve RET D | Little Rock, Ark. Crawiord Coe Vi... a LTE, R | Huron, S. Dak. Comming Albert Bo 7 20-0 oo coals, R | Des Moines, Iowa. Dillincham William Pt on R | Montpelier, Vt. Fletcher Duncan Uv. 5. nu PALS aia D | Jacksonville, Fla. Gallinger, Jacob I 0 ooh hs an R | Concord, N. H. Gore, Phomia'P 2 Tov Ldb ns ines clin D | Lawton, OKla. Sromua Ade J... TATE R | Lakota, N. Dak. domes, Wesley Too. coo, on Loo dT oa R | North Yakima, Wash. Newlonds, Praneis Go. .00 U8 Sor ol Gi D | Reno, Nev. Overman Tea ®. vais i ins D | Salisbury, N. C. Penrose Bolen. v0 Ua R | Philadelphia, Pa. Perleing Cearea C20 ..... 0 os aia R | Oakland, Cal. Boot, Bla... gli da R | New York City. Sherman, Lawrence'Y. . coors oir R | Springfield, Ill. Shively Benjamin P._.2 u...0. 2. 0... 0 D | South Bend, Ind. Smitha Bison Dc... oi D | Florence, S. C. Smith Hake. o.oo. ois arte D | Atlanta, Ga. Smith, Johme Waller... .cx.. o.... o00 050 D | Snow Hill, Md. Smith MasensA- "= > oo LOA D | Tucson, Ariz. Smoot, Reeds. oie R | Provo City, Utah. Stephenson, Ime... -- o.oo... oie as R | Marinette, Wis. Stome, William J. -. — co... 0000 a D | Jefferson City, Mo. Thomas, Charles'S. _......................... D | Denver, Colo. Themrpton Johw B.2 o.oo. D | Alexandria, La. * One vacancy in Alabama. Crass I.—-SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1917. (Thirty-two Senators in this class.) Ashurst, Henry F Bryan, Nathan P..cloal., dr abs Catron, Thomas B.ooian lo dt. i tidiiae Chilton, William B10. 21.0. Clapp, Moses B:..... oer i a ins Oar, Clarence Do. cova ld Lion Culberson, Charles An. coc... io iio iiieinnninn du Pont, Hen. A. cociiia 0 he. ue iicniunisnns Hitcheoek, GHbert Muotir 0 i eens enininns dackson WilllomP Cll by iF Johnson, Clhmrlea Bivevabt oo dl bon cnninnnnaiin Prescott, Ariz. Jacksonville, Fla. Santa Fe, N. Mex. Charleston, W. Va. St. Paul, Minn. Evanston, Wyo. Dallas, Tex. Winterthur, Del. Omaha, Nebr. Salisbury, Md. Waterville, Me. 139 140 Congressional Directory. Crass I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1917—Continued. Name Residence. Rom Jon W. oocuisinor vuivogai dis ho hd ond tn sive in Indianapolis, Ind. Ia Follette Robart Ml... or oi Madison, Wis. Yea, Tike, ome oe Nashville, Tenn, Bippitt, Henney BL... ie a Providence, R. I. Yodge, Henry Cobol... .. li. i, Nahant, Mass. McCumber, Porter I. ......... o.oo oiiiivins nis Wahpeton, N. Dak. McLean, George P....... SECT har Sa St Ei Simsbury, Conn. Martine dames B=... oC. iro Plainfield, N. J. Myers Henry Lo... cn einai Hamilton, Mont. O'Gorman, Jamey A... co. 5 pen... i0h a ELITR New York City. Oliver George Ti... .; car -- hei inn btaninns Pittsburgh, Pa. Page Croll 8. .ci -o inion idi ins = = sien = = a aan Hyde Park, Vt. Pittman. Rey oc ei Ls hd Tonopah, Nev. Poindexter, Miles... o.oo. roc i ioiLils Spokane, Wash. t Domverene, Atlee. ce. cs-civin code nni’s Soh iv iann nr sns Canton, Ohio. eed, James A c-... eet tevin nnn a Kansas City, Mo. Sutherland @Qeorge. or... 5 0... a aL Salt Lake City, Utah. Swanson, Clande A-.............. ... .. ........... Chatham, Va. Townsend, Charles E........... CPE RE Sa Jackson, Mich. Villiamg Jom Bharp....-... x... . ccc nah Ll . Yazoo, Miss. Werke Jom PD... eas Los Angeles, Cal. Crass II.—.SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1919. (Thirty-two Senators in this class.) Bacon, Augustus ©... ... 00... 0. nul Bankhead, John BE or ee Borah, Wit Burleigh, Bawin @. Coli, TeBaron B.. .. ..-... .........;... 0.00 mall Abert Brot tr oe rn Goll, Nathan wane 0 a Bolly Memy I 7110 0 oo me Hughes, Willan ol James Bie Me: L002 Lon nL ln oo Kenyon, William 8 RRL A OR Se, Lane, Harry Ee BRL HR CR Re gt Lewis, FS nilon. i nee Martin, Thomas 8. .......... ..coeesid 45 Gousnienis Nelson, TT Ree ee Ee Nori, George W... oc. oni nds 8 on Subts T00 Owen, Robert 1... .... iii Ransdell, Joseph EB. -.......ii aii of imarpuin: swson Robinsons, Joel ........... oo Laan Saglsbury, Willard... ... ea Shabvoth, John acu it aes Sheppard, Morel. caves ct 0 en Shields Joh WK. ..oc. coo laine Swameng, BM. oC. al Smith William Aldon. .co...i.. oe soinr ncn mnien Sterling, Thomas. ...ovevi. vi icoaacnns PEED Thompson, William H....... .4............. cae. Tillman, Benjamin B.Li....icneiicvnsnnsnmmensns Vordomaon, James... ..oi.. 0... oan annnanins Walsh, Thomas d.. cnc inkh.c tein viiiosunmnnannn : Worren, Branels Bot. 0. ch. dd. ceo ise vnninnsmnnnn Weeks, John W..... rr ee Macon, Ga. Fayette, Ala. Boise, Idaho. Augusta, Me. Bristol, R. I. Three Rivers, N. Mex. Clarksburg, W. Va. Concord, N. H. Paterson, N. J. Marion, Ky. Fort Dodge, Towa. Portland, Oreg. Chicago, TH. Charlottesville, Va. Alexandria, Minn. McCook, Nebr. Muskogee, Okla. Lake Providence, La. Little Rock, Ark. Dover, Del. Denver, Colo. Texarkana, Tex. Knoxville, Tenn. Raleigh, N. C. Gran Rapids, Mich. Vermilion, S. Dak. Garden City, Kans. Trenton, S. C. Jackson, Miss. Helena, Mont. Cheyenne, Wyo. West Newton, Mass. Mar. 4, 1893. Continuous Service of Senators. 141 CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS. : Beginning ne Name. State. of present = service. ~ L | Gullinger, Jacob H..... cucu uc... New Hampshire. ...... Mar. 4,1891 2 Lodge; Henry Cabot....... coo oil. Massachusetts. .......... Mar. 4,1893 34 Perking George Co... issn dia di... Caltlorpin.....c..58 0, July 26,1893 24 Clark, Clarence D...........onadiidL, Wyoning..........- 5 ...] Jan.2t23,1805 *Narren, Francis B........ oasis. Wyoming. ..c.. «=. =. - Map. 05d 01805 Bacon: Augustus O........ ou aro Georgia... h.ohnu Mar. 4,189 Bi Martin, Thomas 8... eisai Virginio: Copa. 4a Mar. 4,1895 Nelson, Bote... oo... satan Minnosols..... aot Mar. 4,189 Tillman, Benjamin B.... cou 000... South Caroline... ouiis Mar. 4,189 6 Penrose, Bolea..............c 5 .....0 Ponmeylvania. 02. 00 0 Mar, 4 P1807 y Culberson, Charles A. ......c00.0 0. 4 TIE Se Mar. 4,1899 McCumber, Porter I... .. oo. isu North Dakota... L300 Mar. 4,1899 8S { Dillingham William Pood vol... Vormont. .......... 500 p10 18,1900 94 Clapp, Moses B. ...... 5... 8. oi... Minnesota... ..... 5% Jan. 23,1901 OL Swmmeng,, BM... o_o North Caroling. ........ Mar. 4,1901 Corlkeidames Po... cams... Arlommass asians Mar. 4,1903 Newlands, Francie G.........c.i..... Nevadn... oc i300 Mar. 4,1903 1 ROvermam, Tee S...............000. 0. North Caroling. ........ Mar. 41903 Smoot; Reed......... ...... oi... Tah... . Mar. 4,1903 Stone, William J............. 8 00. Missouri... nha das Mar. 4,1903 12 i Polletie, Robert M......... choi... Wisconsin.......c...c. Mar. 4,1905 Sutherland, George... .:c0i ucla. ol {EEE DERG st Mar. 4,1905 13: Brandegee, Frank Bo... ool oii. Connecticut...........& May 10, 1905 1b du Pont, Henry A. ...... 00.0005. Delaware... i. June 13,1906 15 | Smith, William Alden....... ool... Michigan... ........= 4: Feb. 6,1907 16. Borah, William B.......... uo... 0 Toho. re Mar. 4,1907 17 | Stephenson, Issac... ......c 0.0... Wisconsin. = wei. May 17,1907 18. Bankhead, John H............. 0.00 J Alabama... ..0 0a June 18,1907 19 {go Thomas P....... .....5u0e. 0.0 Oklahoma... ....... 28 Dec. 11,1907 Owen Bebert L...........cuoa indi... Oklshomy........ 0.0. Dec. 11,1907 20. Smith, Johm™Waller. ..........u.0% Maorviond............ 5 Mar. 25,1908 0. Page. Carroll 8... iT od Norn. oie 0 Oct 20,7003 22: Cumming, Albert B......o0h. aaa Tows. oi aan Nov. 24,1908 Bradley, Willam O.........0....0... Kentucky... Loo Mar. 4, 1909 Dristow, Joseph L.......... oni. Xanme. o.oo. Loi ia Mar. 4,1909 Burton, Theodore E.........:.00.0%.. Ohlone Max. 4,1909 Chamberlain, George B............... Oregon. . Mar. 4,1909 Smith Bison D.. ................ ° South Caroling. ........ Mar. 4,1909 24 Oliver, George P.................... Ponngylvania. .......... Mar. 17,1908 25 | Swanson, Claude A.................... Vivoinag io oni Aug. 1,1910 261 Thorton, John B...s....... 7... co Dowisiong.. ..... .... Dec. 12,1910 27 (Gonna Ade... ....... 5... 0 North Dakotas. .........f Feb. -2,1011 #Mr. Warren also served as a United States Senator from the State of Wyoming from Dee. 1, 1890, to 14 2 Congressional Directory. CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued. 37 38 39 Beginning Name. State. of present : service. fByyom, NathanP- lio 00ie 000 LL, Woridn = "ool Mar. 4,1911 Chilton, William E. . ....... Ther ie West Virginia. ......... Mar. 4,1911 Yeo hue... .....cc.vivi iia cansin. Tennessee.............. Mar. 4,1911 Yippist, Henry PF... ..oC oni. Rhode Island........... Mar. 4,1911 Hitchcock, Gilbert Mi. .--........... Nebragla.....o.000.... Mar. 4,1911 Johnson, Charles ¥... . .... ........... Maine............05 00 Mar. 4,1911 Ben John W................c0000s.. Indiang.......ciisuiis Mar. 4,1911 Mclean, George P................. Conmectient........0..0 Mar. 4,1911 Martine, James BE. ..iob od cal a New Jersey......:...... Mar. 4,1911 Myers, Heury L......coovaibneaii. Montaua. .. 00 in Mar. 4,1911 Poindexter, Miles. ........ouuiilai.. Washington... ...... 05 Mar. 4,1911 Pomerene, Atlee. ........o00 ce... docs canal inom Mar. 4,1911 Reed, James A............ 00 iil. Missouri... loaf 30 Mar. 4,1911 Townsend, Charles E..........000.. Michigan. ......0 aut Mar. 4,1911 Williams, John Sharp. . ....Ja 0... Mississippi. ..-c-ue-. Mar. 4,1911 Works. Jom D...... ...... Live 0iae. California... .......0. ol Mar. 4,1911 Q)Gorman, James A. >... aia. Now. York... .o-.ciiio = Mar. 31,1911 Kenyon, William 8. . ....c. 00... Jowas. .:.. iat te Apr. 12,1011 Smithe Hoke: .............o.omm LL Georgia. . ....... 000d, Dec. 4,1911 Ashurst, Honey FP. ....c.oac dha... Afigonns... oi SOLER Mar. 27,1912 Catron, Thomas B... .......co 00... New Mexico. .......... Mar. 27,1912 Pall, Albert B. _........ 0. sudo... New Mexico. .......... Mar. 27,1912 Smith; Maweng A... ious iL. Avigoma.. Lo. L 0l Mar. 27,1912 Jackson, Willlam PP... ....svoamsin Moryland............ vi Nov.i29 1912 Thomas, Charles 8... .....cu sail... Colorado... ... ios d0t Jan. 15,1913 Brady, James BH. . ... odie ae. Idaho... coin 98 Jan. 24,1913 Lisi ROY ean EE Le Nevada: . ............0 Jan. 20,1913 Sheppard, Morris.........ooveidi. POX ie sein nine wali Jan. 29,1013 Burleigh, Edwin C. . .............. Maine........ 000i, Mar. 4,1913 Colt, Tebaron B............. 5.00... Rhode Island........... Mar. 4,1913 Goll, Nathan... -....... sionals, West Virginia. ......... Mar. 4,1913 Hughes, William. ............000.... New Jersey............. Mar. 4,1913 James, Ollie M....... .... 0. 2h Kentucky... i... 00 Mar. 4,1913 Yonge Howey: 0.00... ido: Oregon... ico ienosiee olde Mar. 4,1913 Notris, George W......... ou svi don Nebmska......... 00. Mar. 4,1913 Ranasdell, Joseph E.........c.0....... louisiana. ....... 0... Mar. 4,1913 Robingon, Joe TL. ..c. oo. unwaidiii, Avkonmg. oe. Mar. 4,1913 Saulsbury, Willard... ...cociloli Delaware. ......... 205 Mar. 4,1913 Shadrothy Jom FP... ood... Colovado. .. .co.o0ln iL’, Mar. 4,1913 Shields, Jom XT... .... oon. [Tennessee .......... 0. Mar. 4,1913 Stegling, Thomas. . ...........05 0... South Dakota. ......... Mar. 4,1913 Thompson, Wiliam H.... 0.0.00... Ronse. ....... 00000. Mar. 4,1913 Navdomon, James BK . ..... 0.0... Mississippi.......ee-.-- Mar. 4,1913 Walsh, Thomas d...............00.. Montana. ........-. 5.1. Mar. 4,1913 Weeks, Jom W..............50. 0000 Massachusetts. ......... Mar. 4,1913 Hollis Henry F......000...0ouii... New Hampshire. . . .... Mar. 13,1913 Lewis, J. Hamilton... 00a. nels... ... hai Mar. 26,1913 Faking YoawrenceY...cvuv.. ia... Ilnois...- ive Mar. 26,1913 Service of Representatives. 143 CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH BEGINNING OF PRESENT SERVICE. [* Vacancy; f at large; i served as Delegate.] % Beginning Name. State. | Dist. Congresses. of present service. 15 terms—not con- imuous. Payne, 8. B...........; N.Y..| 36 | 48th, 49th, 51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, | Mar. 4, 1889 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. 12 terms—continuous. Jones, WW. A..... 00. Va. 1 | 52d, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, | Mar. 4, 1891 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. 11 terms—continuous. Bartholdt, Richard. ...| Mo. 10 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Cooper, HH. A. ........| Wig. 1 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. : Gillett ¥. H.......... Mass 2 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1893 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. 10 terms—continuous. Bartlett, C. L......... Ga. 6 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4,1895 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Sparkman, 8S. M...... Fla 1 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4,1895 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Underwood, O. W..... Ala.. 9 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1895 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. 10 terms—not con- nuous. (Clark, Champ......... Mo. 9 | 53d, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1897 : 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Talbott, J. Fred. C..... Md. 2 | 46th,47th,48th, 53d, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1903 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. 9 terms—continuous. Adamson, W. C....... Ga. 4 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Broussard, B. PF... .... Tasic:: 3 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Butler, TL. 8... ....... [iPa..... 7 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Clayton, HD... ...... Ala 3 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Greene, W.S.......... Mass. .| 15 | *55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, «59th, | May 31, 1898 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Hamilton, E. L....._..| Mich ..| 4.| 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. || Speaker of the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses. 144 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Beginning Name. State. | Dist. Congresses. of present service. 9 terms—continuous— continued. Hay James... ...... ¥a.. 7 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Hewry, BL... Tex 11 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Yioyd, 3.0. ........: Mo.. 1 | *bbth, 66th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | June 1, 1897 : 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Maa J. BR... 111. 2 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Moon, J. A... ..... Tenn 3 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Sime, T.W.......000. Tenn 8 | 55th, 56th, "57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Slayden, J. 1...........}- Tex 14 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Smith, 8. W.......... Mich 6 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. Stephens, J. H.........| Tex.. 13 | 55th, 56th,57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4,1897 61st, 62d, 63d. Stevens, F. C..........| Minn 4 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4,1897 61st, 62d, 63d. Payior, GO. W.. .......| Ala. 1 85h, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, Mar. 4,1897 61st, 62d, 63d. 9 terms—not continuous. Mondell, F. W......... Wyo...| () | 54th,56th,57th,58th,59th,60th, | Mar. 4,1899 61st, 62d, 63d 8 terms—continuous. Burnett, J. L.......5.. Al... 7 | 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4,1899 62d, 63d. Feel, J.J... oo Wis... 7 | 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4,1899 : 62d, 6 3d. Yivley, D.E.... S.C...| 5 56th, Sig 58th,59th,60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1899 62d, 6 3d. Fitzgerald, J. J-....... N.Y ..[ 756th, Ri 58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4,1899 62d, 6 3d. Fordney, J. W........ Mich 8 | 56th, Arig 58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4,1899 62d, 63d. Haugen, G.-N.. i... Towa 4 | 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 ; : 62d, 6 3d. Richardson, William. ..| Ala 8 | *56th, 5 th,58th,59th,60th,61st, | Aug. 6,1900 62d, 6 3d. Roberts, BE. W......... Mass 9 | 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4,1899 62d, 63d. Rucker, W. W........ Mo. 2 | 56th, 57th,58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4, 1899 62d, 63d. ' Shackleford, D.. W....| Mo. 8 | *56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th,61st, | Aug. 29, 1899 62d, 63d. Small, J. H........... N.C 1 | 56th, 57th, 58th,59th,60th,61st, | Mar. 4,1899 62d, 63d. 7 terms—continuous. Burgess, G. F.........| Tex 9 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th,61st,62d, | Mar. 4,1901 63d. Candler, B. 8., Jr. . Miss 1 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, | Mar. 4,1901 : 63d. : Service of Representatives. 145 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Beginning Name. State. | Dist. Congresses. of present service. 7 terms—continuous— continued. Flood; Ho D......... .. Va. 10 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, | Mar. 4, 1901 63d. Gardner, A. P......... Mass... 6 | *57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d,| Nov. 4,1902 63d. Ginss, Corfey......... 5. Va. 6 | *57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Nov. 4,1902 © 62d, 63d. Goldfogle, H. M....... N.Y ..| 12 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1901 62d, 63d. Hughes, J. A........5. W.Va..| 5 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1901 : 62d, 63d. Johngon, iT ...... 0 S.C... 4 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1901 ; 62d, 63d. Kitchin, Claude... . .. N.C.. 2 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1901 62d, 63d. Lever, AB... .....00 8.0.5 7 | *57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Nov. 5,1901 62d, 63d. Padgett. 1. P......... Tenn ..| 7 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1901 62d, 63d. Pou, E. W.............| N.C... 4 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, Slst, | Mar. 4,1901 62d, 63d. 7 terms—mnot continuous. Burke, C.H......... S. Dak 2 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 61st, | Mar. 4, 1909 62d, 63d. Kohn, Julius... ......5] Cal... 4 | 56th, 57th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1905 62d, 63d. Martin, EW... ..... S. Dak 3 | 57th, 58th, 59th, *60th, 61st, | June 27, 1908 62d, 63d. 6 terms—continuous. Aiken, Wyatt. ........ S.C...| 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4, 1903 Beall Jack. ......... Tex... 5 | 8th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Campbell: P. P........ Kans 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Davie, CoB... Minn 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Garner, J. N...........| Tex. 15 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4, 1903 Gregg, A.W... ..... .. Tex . 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Hardwick, T.W. ..... Ga....| 10 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Heflin, 3.0... Ala. 5 | *58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| May 19, 1904 Howell, Joseph........ Utah (1) | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar 4, 1903 Humphrey, W. E._.... Wash 1 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Humphreys, B. G.....| Miss. 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Kinkaid M. P......... Nebr 6 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Knowland, J. R....... Cal. 6 | *58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Nov. 8,1904 Murdock, Victor. . . .... Kans 8 | *58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| May 26, 1903 Page, R.N............ N.C 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Rainey, H.T.......... RS 20 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.] Mar. 4,1903 Sherley, Swagar....... Ky.. 5 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Smith, W.B__. ...... Tex.. 16 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4, 1903 Sonley, AO... Ky. 2 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4.1903 Steenerson, Halvor. ...| Minn 9 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Nolstead A. J......... Minn 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Webb, E.Y............ N.C...| 9 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 \ 6 terms—mnot continuous. Riordan, D. J ......... N.Y... 11 | 56th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.! Nov. 6,1906 13823°—63-2—1sT ED—11 146 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Beginning Name. State. | Dist. Congresses. of present service. 5 terms—continuous. Barchfeld, A. J....... Ph... 32 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. . ...| Mar. 4,1905 Bell ® Mu. Tid a 9 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 41905 Butte, J.P... Pa.’ 31 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. . ...| Mar. 4,1905 Calder, W.M..........| N.Y...| 6 | 59th 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1905 Clark, Freonk.......... Bla: 2 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d .....| Mar. 4,1905 Dixon, Lincoln... ... {Ind 4 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1905 Pwd 3 C..... . . Ark 3 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d . ....| Mar. 4, 1905 Garrett, P,. J. Jol. 4 Tenn 9 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1905 Ewes 8 A... Cal. 8 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1905 Houston, W. 0.0.0... Tenn 5 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. . ... Mar. 4, 1905 Lee, Gordon. ......... Ga 7 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1905 Madden, M. B......... i £ FELL 1 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d". . ...| Mar. 4,1905 Moore, J. Hampton....| Pa..... 3 | *59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ...| Nov. 6,1906 Nelson, I. M.. ..0.0... Wis. 3 | *59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. . ..| Sept. 4, 1906 Saunders, E. W........ Va. 5 | *¥59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ...| Nov. 6,1906 Wotking, J.T... 0. {UR 4 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1905 § terms—not continuous. Booher, C.P.. 00. 4 Mo....| 4 | 50th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1907 French, Burton L...... Idaho..| 1 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 62d, 63d ..... Mar. 4,1911 Goulden, Joseph A.....| N. Y..| 23 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 63d... .| Mar. 4,1913 Hamlin, C. W.......... Mo....| 7 |58th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ....| Mar. 4,1907 Sherwood, I. R.......| Ohio...| 9 | 43d, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d. ..... Mar. 4,1907 Stafiord, W. H.......... Wis....| 5 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 63d..... Mar. 4,1913 Wilson, Frank E . ..... N. Y..| 3 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 62d, 63d... .. Mar. 4,1911 4 terms—continuous. Adair, J. A.M. ....... Ind....}] 8 {60th 61st,.62d,63d......05... Mar. 4,1907 Alexander, J. W......| Mo....!” 3 160th Gist 62d. 63d........-.. Mar. 4,1907 Ansberey;T. To... -Ohle...|' “5 c00th 61st, 62d _63d........... Mar. 4,1907 Anthony, 1B, Riqr. Rang ..{" 1 {%60th, 61st, 62d, 634.......... May 23, 1907 Ashbrook, W. A....... Ohio..." 17 [°60th,’61st, 624,634. .......... Mar. 4,1907 * Barnhart, B.A 2.000 Ind CUE 13 [0%60th, 6st, 62d, 63d... ..... . Apr. 8,1908 Carlin, CQ...) ..5% Va... 3 %00th Gist 62d. 634.......... Nov. 5,1907 Carter. C.D. 0.000 Okla...0' 41 60th 61st. 624, 654............ Nov. 16,1907 Cory WF... Wis....l 4° 60th 61si,.62d,653d.......... Mar. 4,1907 Cox W.B,....7.. Ind....! .~3 {60th 61st, 624,634... .......... Mar. 4,1907 Edwards, C.G....... Ga. 1 60th) Gls, 624,684... ........L Mar. 4,1907 Estopinal, Albert...... Ta:....07 +1 (*60th 61st, 62d. 63d. ......0". Mar. 9,1908 Fairchild; G. W:....-. NV” 34° 1-00th, Gist, 624,63d....... J; Mar. 4,1907 Perris, Seo. 2.0 Qlelo...[° 500th, 61st. 624,634........... Nov. 16,1907 Poster, MD... 0.5 HE. 251 .60th, 61st, 62d, 63d..........% Mar. 4,1907 Godwin, H.-L... ... N.C 6:/ 60th, 61st, 624,634... ......%: Mar. 4,1907 Guernsey, F. E........| Me 4 | *60th, 61st, 62d, 63d..... Ep July 29,1908 Halll TA... N.J 12] 00th, 61st 624. 63d...» Mar. 4,1907 Hammond, W. S....... Minn 2 160th 61st, 62d,65d........... Mar. 4,1907 Hardy, Bufus..)......" Tex....l" -‘6'4-60th 6lst, 624,634. .......... Mar. 4,1907 Hawley, WO... 0. Oreg.. 11 60th Glst. 624,634. ........-. Mar. 4,1907 Helm, Harvey. ....... Ky. 8°1-60th, 61st, 624,463d..........4 Mar. 4,1907 Flobson,'B. PP... >. Ala.. 61: 60th, 61st, 624,634. .......... Mar. 4,1907 Hull, Cordell"... 0 Tenn 4:0: 60th, 61st, 624d, 634d........... Mar. 4,1907 Johnson, Ben. ........ Ky.. 4 | 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d........... Mar. 4,1907 Kennedy, C. A........ Iowa...’ 11 60th, 61st, 624d, 63d...00000.. Mar. 4,1907 Service of Representatives. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. 147 Beginning Name. State. Congresses. of present service. 4 terms—continuous— continued. Tangley, J. W......... Ky. 60h: 61st, 62d, 63d:...... x. Mar. 4,1907 Lindbergh, C. A......| Minn 60th; G1si,162d, 63d. .........: Mar. 4,1907 McDermott, J. T--..... 1m... 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d:4 0 30s Mar. 4,1907 MeGuire, Bird . ...... -| Okla 158th, 159th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d Nov. 16, 1907 McLaughlin, J. C...... Mich 60th, 61st, 62d, IER Sa Mar. 4,1907 Peters AJ .......... Mass 60th, 61st, 62d, 68d... Mar. 4,1907 Rauch, RW... Ind. 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d........... Mar. 4,1907 Rothermel, J. 5. Pa.. 60th, 01st, 62d, 63d........... Mar. 4,1907 Sabath, Agia Hi. 60th, 61st,162d, 63d... .......... Mar. 4,1907 Slemp, C. Bascom..... Va. *60th, 61st, 624,634... ....... Oct. 14,1907 4 terms—mnot continuous. Gudger, James M... ..| N. C 58h, 59th, 624, 63d........... Mar. 4,1911 3 terms—continuous. Austin, Bichard W....[ Tenn..| .2 (i61s4,62d,63d.....5....... 5. Mar. 4,1909 Borland, William P....{ Mo....[ BY{6Gls,:624. 03d. ...0. = .i.......% Mar. 4,1909 Byrns, J oseph Wo... Tonn..|. . 6 }:01s6,9624068d. . cso. cone nnnnn Mar. 4,1909 Cantrill, James C...... Ry... 7 [s60st:562d 163d... .ocail i... dal Mar. 4,1909 Cline, Cyrus. ......... Ind....| 12 |6lee;62d, 763d. ....cc0 anna Mar. 4,1909 Collier, James W....... Miss. ..[ 8B (0080620500 coach oii Mar. 4,1909 Conry, Michael F. .. .. N.Y..| 151:61st,:62d4,63d......7% ......5. Mar. 41909 Oovington, J: Harry. ...[ Md....] . 1 |i61s6,:62d4,65d.......1.......5. Mar. 4,1909 Cullop, William A. .... Ind....[ -2 1 6lst:624,63d......5% -......... 55 Mar. 54,1909 Dent, 8. Hubert, jr....| Ala... 2-1ii60at,562d,163d. cook i... Ls Mar. 4,1909 Dickinson, eC... ..; Mo....| G1 %61st. 62d, 63d.....00 devas mans Feb. 17,1910 Dies, Marin. ........ Tox... 21:61; 624560d. oth... aaune. Mar. 4,1909 Driscoll, Daniel A..... N.Y..| 421:6lst;62d,63d................./ Mar. 4,1909 Dupré, H. Garland. ...| La..... 2 1 261et62d, 60d... 5k seins Nov. 8,1910 Gallagher, Thomas. .... In... Solel, 62d 008d oo Mar. 4,1909 Good, James W._..... Towa 5 1-61st, 62d, 63d..............co Mar. 4,1909 Graham, James M...... Ti... OL liGiet, 02d 068d. rosll La Mar. 4,1909 Griest, William W.....| Pa..... 9 Gls, 62d,100d... 3 Mar. 4,1909 Hughes, Dudley M. ...| Ga. 12 I=61st,62d 68d... .eidit ooo nn Mar. 4,1909 Kinkead, Eugene F...| N.J S6let 02d 65d... sk eas Mar. 4,1909 Korbly, Charles A...... Ind. 7 Gls 624 008d... inl os Mar. 4,1909 Langham, John N..... Poi.. 27 (61st, 62d,:63d coal oon Mar. 41909 Lenroot, Irvine Li... .. Wis... AL els 62d 165d... dh Mar. 4,1909 Maguire, John A....... Nebr 1 |:61st,62d,:63d....55...........] Mar. 4;1909 Miller, Clarence B. . . .| Minn S160e1,002d. 63d... uh ae Mar. 4,1909 Morgan, Dick T....... Okla 2 61st, 62d, 63d: i... oo. LL... Mar. 4.1909 Morrison, Martin A ....| Ind.. 9 -6Ist,62d,63d.....c00 0. Mar. 4,1909 Moss, Ralph Wt Ind. 5 i60e0,62d, 68d. nga. Mar. 4,1909 Oldfield, William A....| Ark. 2 ij 6lst, 62d, 63d......o0 i. . ... .... ‘Mar. 4.1909 Palmer, ‘A. Mitchell. | Pa... . 26 1:61s4,562d,:63d...... sie... ail Mar. 4,1909 Plumley, Frank, ...... Vi. 2 4:61et,62d 63d. ...50 0 ha Mar. 4,1909 Sharp, William G ..... Ohio 14 | 61st, 62d, 63d.................| Mar. 4,1909 Sisson, Thomas U...... Miss. 4 heGlatne2daesd. oni Lo Mar. 4,1909 Taylor, Edward T..... Colo...]. (1) {i61st,62d,:65d...00.. J... oui. Mar, 54,1909 Thomas, R.'Y., jr...... Ry... 34i61st562d,65d 09 ii o.oo Mar 4 1909 Woods, Frank P.......| Iowa. 10 3u6198,62d, 63d vette eo... Mar 4 1909 148 Congressional Directory. SERVICE oF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Beginning Name. State. | Dist. Congresses. of present service. 3 terms—not continu- ous. Davenport, James S....| Okla.. 3460th, 62d, 634... 5... oof Mar. 4101 Fergusson, H. B....... NoM... (py lio5th 62d, 63d. ai. Jaw 81019 Levy, Jefferson M..... N. Y..| 14 | 56th, 62d, ad. TH ay 4,1911 McAndrews, James....| Tll..... 6 57th, 58th, 63d. hdiias Mar. 4,1913 Russell, Joseph J...... Mo....| 14 60th, 62d, sd: io i ae 4,1911 2 terms—continuous. Ainey, W.D. B........ Paii.. 14462d.568d 2... oe tlds ae Dec. 4,1911 Allen, Alired G........ Ohdo...{¢ Ziad 68d... 20. Si ON Mar. 4,1911 Anderson, Sydney..... Minn... Yi62d, 68d... cnn 0a. Mar. 4,1911 Bathrick, E.R........ Ohio... 19.1634, 63d. .3. =... 00008 Mar. 4,1911 Blackmon, Fred L..... Al. 47624 68d. on aa Mar. 4,1911 Brown, Wm. G., jr..... Wa Val: 20620,°68Q 50. alot, inna dh Mar. 4,1911 Browning, Wm. J...... Ned 2 i6208d on vn onl Dec. 4,1911 Buchanan, Frank... ... IM... 740620.684............. EN Mar. 4,1911 Bulkley, Robert J..... Ohio...| 21 | 62d, 63d .| Mar. 4,1911 Burke, Michael E...... Wis... 2:1 62d, 63d. .| Mar. 4,1911 Byrnes, James F'....... SC... [5200000880 5. a Mar. 4,1911 Callaway, Oscar....... Tex ...::1211 694 63d .... .| Mar. 4,1911 Claypool, Horatio C....| Ohio...| 11 | 62d, 63d.... .| Mar. 4,1911 Copley, Ima €.......... n....b-1162d, 62d .< .| Mar. 4,1911 Curley, James M....... Mags... 52020694 163d... noe iat oun Mar. 4,1911 Danforth, Henry G..... N.Y... 39:62. 634... .. cosa Mar. 4,1911 Difenderfer, R. E...... Pa....; Badr 63d. Mar. 4,1911 Donohoe, Michael...... Paris; BE62d 68d a a a Mar. 4,1911 Doremus, Frank E.. ... Mich LEe2di68d a BE ps Mar. 4,1911 Doughton; RB. L....... N.C 8 | 62d, 63d. .| Mar. 4,1911 Byer, 1. Coll. ........ Mo . Baad 8d... Mar. 4,1911 Faison, John M........ N.C... 3 | 62d, 63d. -| Mar. 4,1911 Parr, John R........... Pa... 10 | 62d, 63d. -| Mar. 4,1911 Yields, Wid. .......... Kyi. pio962d,068d =... in Ls nds Mar. 4,1911 Fowler, H. Robert..... Cie Tay Sr EL A BER BSE Mar. 4,1911 Francis, W.iB.......... Ohio... 16 | 62d, 63d. .| Mar. 4,1911 George, Henry, jr...... N.Y. ...-21 1 62d,:63d .| Mar. 4,1911 Goeke! J.H........... Ohio...{ 41624680... cei. ..0. Mar. 4,1911 Goodwin, wW.S....... Ave... Vor ead asd. Loi a OR Mar. 4,1911 Gray, Finly Heol Ind....}=6:0624. 63d 5. ..: -| Mar. 4,1911 Green, Wm.\R........-- Towa .. Qi 6d 08d ca de de Dec. 4,1911 Greene, Frank L........ BYE SR] SO LIE Re Re I SL May 21,1912 Harrison, B. P......... Miss... 6 1624,/68Q.. .. 3000. 0 ask Mar. 4,1911 Hayden, €arl ......... Avie... [00 62d,068d co i nn Feb. 19,1912 Helgesen, H. T........ N. Dak 10624. 68d... 0. cot... Mar. 4,1911 Hensley, Walter L..... Mo....| 13 |:'62d; 63d... .| Mar. 4,1911 Hinds, Asher C........| Me... 1 | 62d, 63d. .-op Mar. 4 1011 Holland, B.E ......... Ya... 2 | 62d, 63d. .| Mar. 4,1911 Howard, William S....| Ga .. 5V6odi68d. cc. Mar. 4,1911 Jacoway, H. M........ Ark . Bi6adi00ds. ST Mar. 4,1911 Kent, William ........ Cal. . 1 | 62d, 63d .| Mar. 4,1911 Konop, Thomas F...... Wis.. 0:15624,:60d. ona Mar. 4,1911 La Follette, William...| Wash Sead 88d. ii ou Mar. 4,1911 Lafierty, AW. ....... Oreg...0- 53 5604, 0680. . 1. Ho. i. Mar. 4,1911 Lee, Robert E......... Py... 126 63d a ban aL Mar. 4.1911 Lewis, David J... .- Md. .: 662d; 60d... i Mar. 4, 1911 Linthicum, J. Chas....| Md.. CE Ree BOT Mar. 4,1911 Lobeck, €o.... Nebr... 21624, 654......... cc. iauuied Mar. 4,1911 Service of Representatives. 149 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. : Beginning Name. State. Congresses. of present service. 2 terms—continuous— continued. McCoy, Walter I. ..... N.J..: 6245630... iain 4,1911 McGillicuddy, D. J....| Me.... 02d,68d 5... 0 fevers 4,1911 McKellar, K.D....... Tenn. . 62d,68d. .. iii iaiat . 4,1911 McKenzie, John C..... Te. 624,634 5. oak aso I 4,1911 Maher, James P....... N.Y. 624,65d obs n a 4,1911 Merritt, Edwin A., jr..| N.Y... 024,634... oases vy 5,1912 Morgan, Lewis Li....... Lao. 62d568d LE aan June 11,1912 Mott, Luther W. ...... NY. gapend Loan 4, 1911 Murray, William F..... Mass. . 624,034 5 oa . 4,1911 Neeley, George A...... Kans. . 824,630. iE . 20,1912 O’Shaunessy, George F.| R. I... 62d,:63d id 4,1911 Patten, Thomas G..... N-Y.: 828620 x. da aaa] 4,1911 Patton, Charles EB. ....( Pa..... 628563d uote 4,1911 Pepper. 1.8. ......... Towa 624,030. Lis il 4,1911 Porter, Stephen G..... Pa. ue 62d,63d 1. LL Bl LTE 4,1911 Post, James D........ Ohio... CoQ GSA ks hn ts 4,1911 Powers, Caleb.......... VV. oe 62d:634 a. cai isd 4,1911 Prouty, BF. 0. .... Towa. . 624,034 5. Lanna 4,1911 Raker, John B......... Cal.... 62d 62d un. nl ia 4,1911 Reilly, Thomas L. ....| Conn. . 624,634. alr vo ss 4,1911 Roberts, BE. E......... Nev... B2403d hom 4,1911 Rubey, Thomas L..... Mo. ... En a I ee 4,1911 Rouse, Arthur B. ..... By is 0205083 1%. a a 4,1911 Scott, George C........ Towa. . An SR et SE ae 4,1912 Scully, Thomas J...... NJ. 020,684 5 sod sia 4,1911 Sells. Sam BL... ..... Tenn. . LR SRE EE 4,1911 Sloan, Charles H....... Nebr. . G2=63d 2 al a 4,1911 Smith, Charles B...... N.Y. 62d 60d a 4,1911 Smith I. M.C........ Mich. aaesd a iT 4,1911 Stedman, Charles M...| N. C... 02d 68d... . 4,1911 Stephens, Dan V....... Nebr. . 8244684 CL. REEL a . 4,1911 Stephens, Hubert D...| Miss... ER En 4,1911 Stephens, William D. .| Cal.... 624,568... ... 00 ead 4,1911 Stone, Claudius U..... a 02d,83d 0 ug ane 4,1911 Switzer, Robert M..... Ohio... LT TE SE 4,1911 Taggart, Joseph. ...... Kans. . A CE TORR Ca RI . 4,1911 Talcott, Charles A... ... N.Y... G28005d oi ao an .: 4,1911 Taylor, Samuel M. .... Ark... 624,634 5... i. oad LSA 15,1918 Towner, Horace M. . . .| Towa. . 82462]. aad 4,1911 Townsend, E. W....... NJ... 624,684... all a 4,1911 Tribble, Samuel J......| Ga. ... 624063d.L oo) 4,1911 Tuttle}, Wm. L. jr. ...| N. J... 024; 684 0 cla 4,1911 Underhill, Edwin S...| N.Y.. 62d;63d 5.50 4,1911 Vare, William S....... Pa... > 024,834 ih... aad . 23,1912 Whitacre, John J.......| Ohio 6280834. en a 4,1911 White, George. ....... Ohio 6245634 5% inal an ty 4,1911 Willis, Frank B........ Ohio 624.834... a 4,1911 - Witherspoon, S. A.._... Miss Co Rae Se 4.1911 Young, James... ...... Tex 624,63d .... aes 4,1911 2 terms—nol continuous. Crisp, Charles R....... Ga. BUR. asia 4, 1913 Hart, Archibald C..... N.J 262d. 705d. . tts 5, 1913 Mitchell, John J....... Mass ole 260d... aa +115,:1913 Williams, William E...| Ill. 36th 63d =. nde aiens 4,1913 150 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Beginning Name. State. |-Dist. Congresses. of present service. 1 term. Abercrombie, John W..| Ala 163d... 3... oh Mar. 4,1913 Aswell, James B....... La..... C8 CASE ETE SE SR LE © Mar. 4,1913 Avie, Samuel B........ (W.Va. 3 {683dos...0...0... oll een 3.03 Mar. 4,1913 Bailey, Warren W...... Paced 10.003Q5 0. 0000. coal naa Mar. 4,1913 Baker, J. Thompson...| N.J.. IE DIETS NG Fes Mar. 4,1913 Baltz, William N ...... ..... Lr ELE Re DRT aE SE Mar. 4,1913 Barkley, A W......... Ky... Lp6sdesn. Las... 0.0L .n..t Mar. 4,1913 Barton; SilasB.........| Nebr..] 5 }63dice.. buen iilonnenad Mar. 4,1913 Beakes, Samuel W..... Mich. S h6SdEcy. on... Lh ees Mar. 4,1913 Bell, CharlesW........ Cal. 910d 0. 0. ult... Ho Mar. 4,1913 Borchers, CharlesM....| Ill..... 39 hi63d co. Lema Mar. 4,1913 Bowdle, Stanley E. . . .. Ohio... 1 [368du00.c 4... ....0. 0 J ewvi Mar. 4,1913 Bremner, BobertG..... N.J...] 71063d..... 00 ....00. 8. .o..a5z Mar. 4,1913 Britten, Fred A........ W...0 9pn6d.c5.. 00. ..on. pil... 02. Mar. 4,1913 Drockson, Franklin ....[ Del....} (3) [63dica..v... oo iouieninncnnans Mar. 4,1913 Brodbeck Andrew B..| Pa.....[ 20(03d.i....0ne.nnnc situ... it. Mar. 4,1913 Brown, Lathrop. ...... NY... 263d... ond. Mar. 4,1913 Browne, Edward E....| Wis... 8 63deoa 0... eA. en Mar. 4,1913 Bruckner, Henry.......| N.Y ..[ 22 163duia...r......omutiveinn. Mar. 4,1913 Brumbaugh. Clement... Ohlo...] 12063d.c5......... Los. oav.l. Mar. 4,1913 Bryan,James W.._.... Wosh..[ CD 63d. =... oned)nnnnnis Mar. 4,1913 Buchanan; James P....i Tex...| 10.p88d. 0... vedi iuuennas. Apr. 5,1913 Cantor, Jacob A....... NoY.... 20 53630. t ul... soli unns nis Sept. 1, 1913 Caraway, Thaddeus H .{ Ark....0 1 163d.co...n.......00.L......0 Mar. 4,1913 Carew John E..........I| N. Y..; 17. :68d.cu...i...... 0000 ues. Mar. 4,1913 Carr, Wooda N......... Pr... ED LAT se i Be Mar. 4,1913 Casey, Johnid........... Pa... HE TO CR IEE nie Mar. 4,1913 Chomdler, Walter M....| N. Y...! 19 [63d..0.........c000 0. i Mar. 4,1913 Church, Denver S...... Cal....0 7 168Qbie. dX... CL. eiaih Mar. 4,1913 ClmeyrJomiR. ........I N. Y...| 350684. ....0...... di euiuunns Mar. 4,1913 Coady, Charles P...... Md... 3 pRB eS, Sasa May 31, 1913 Connelly, Jom R.......[ Kans..| 6 103d..... 5. ......dul....... 0% Mar. 4,1913 Connolly, Maurice... .. Towa . 8 03d... Mar. 4,1913 Cramton, Louis C...... Mich . 7 Bde... na en Mar. 4,1913 Crosser, Robert. ......... Ohio... (3) {83d.0.-. eons oii nnnnndss Mar. 4,1913 Curry, Charles F........| Cal... S183d. 0.0. ....0di. Mar. 4,1913 Dale Oorryl......... | N.Y...1 4163d............00000. cutis. Mar. 4,1913 Decker, Parl D.......... Mo....] 15]68d.cc...o........0i.cnnins Mar. 4,1913 Deitrick, Frederick S..| Mass. Spadina... a A Mar. 4,1913 Dershem, Frank L..... Pri... 17 483dete cn... at. Mar. 4,1913 Dillon, Chagles HL.......[ 8S. Dak.l 1 (63d... 4. .... 0.0 ie. Mar. 4,1913 Ponovan, Jereminh....| Conn..] 4 168d.ci...........5000. ....41 Mar. 4,1913 Pooling, Pater J....... IN. Y...] 61 683d cnc... 0... 00 Mar. 4,1913 Doolittle, Dudley....... Kans. AP63d Sa 2 CLL Mar. 4,1913 Dunn, Thomas B...... N.Y... 33568dama tf oan Mar. 4,1913 Exon Johmd..........| NJ... 13 068d... adit. nie Mar. 4,1913 Eagle, Joe H..._....... Tex S084. oh Es Mar. 4,1913 Edmonds, George W...| Pa... LLB an. i... Ea Mar. 4,1913 Elder, Walter... ....... La... B08dLn. mh Mar. 4,1913 EvansidohmM..... ... Mont..| (1) [68d-cs i. vind hein Mar. 4,1913 Talconer, J. A......... Wash. 0 (1103 on... 0 co hoon Mar. 4,1913 Fess, Simeon D........ Ohio 6103 on. io ol RGIS, Mar 4,191¢ FitzHenry, Louis ..... Bl... V7 +080. 20d... iri es Mar. 4,1913 Frear, James A........ Wis. . Wlgsdioha. 0. ami Mar. 4,1913 Gard, Warren .......... Ohio.. bag En RG RES Sl On Bere Mar. 4,1913 Garrett, Daniel E...... Tex Cyposd. ann. in. ile. Mar. 4,1913 Gerry, Peter G......... R.L. 3108 RE CR LB el Mar. 4,1913 Service of Representatives. 151 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Beginning Name. State. | Dist. Congresses. of present service. 1 term—continued. Gilmore, Edward... ... Mose... 11 68dca.. 50... hkl. nial Mar. 4,1913 Gittins, Robert H..... N.-Y.of 40 (63dci.. .i...... couidlicncin oho bls Mar. 4,1913 Gordon, William. ...... Ohle...{ 2204-6380. . 00. 3 18.0 a oa Mar. 4,1913 Gorman, George E.. ... Init RR et ie i Mar. 4,1913 Graham, George S..... Pa.....[ 216840515. 50.500 degli: Mar. 4,1913 Grifin, D.J.-...... = N-Y.& alegdn a 10 om 20] Mar. 4,1913 Homilion, Charles M...| N.Y... 48 [68dio. . 5... fi 00.0 gad Mar. 4,1913 Helvering, Guy T..... Roms...i : 5 [08855 ..5.0.1, ccncdl i. 4s 00s Mar. 4,1913 Hill, Robert P......... I... me Se a SRR, Mar. 4,1913 Hinebaugh, William H.| Ill... 12 (6300. ti hn.i cen Ei en Sie Mar. 4,1913 Hoxworth, Stephen A. _| Ill... 15.1.68du0. oC. 5. coi Mar. 4,1913 Hulings, Willis]... Po..: 28 (B30. cat nH Mar. 4,1913 Jeo, W.Li............ Mo... W-103d0. 0... ueicl. Siank Mar. 4,1913 J ohnson, Albert....... Wash CER REISS ER ROR SL Ba TE Mar. 4,1913 Johnson, Jacob........ Utah 0 11 RECIR on S B Tp LE 3 Mar. 4,1913 Keating, Edward...... Colo. ..l CG) 1638s 2s. cmembins ani Mar. 4,1913 Keister, Abraham I....| Pa.. CARE SE Ie BE © RY TR RE Mar. 4,1913 Kelley, Patrick H..... Mich... (1) [:00des.c oo fo dutta oss Mar. 4,1913 Kelly, M. Clyde....... Pa.....] 30 [63d sons. dit it es Mar. 4,1913 Kennedy, Ambrose....| R. I 8 1638.0. hr aE Mar. 4,1913 Kennedy, William... Conn..| 5 J 6836.2. i. on oll fain Mar. 4,1913 Kettner, William. ..... Cal.. 1 168d. hes. adi anil Es Mar. 4,1913 Key, Jom A... ....... Ohlo...[ 15 [634-0 oF. 0. take Mar. 4,1913 Kiess, Edgar R........ Po... A501 038 28s, te cas Mar. 4,1913 Kinde, George ER Colo. . he Tae CR BE SR ati Mar. 4,1913 Kirkpatrick, Sanford...| Iowa... 6 | 63d. .| Mar. 4,1913 Kreider, Aaron S...... Pa.:. AB L08dk. Lato adie ot ei Mar. 4,1913 Lazaro, Ladislas....... La.... 710800. citer. odie sets Mar. 4,1913 1’Engle, Claude.......| Fla. (D) 168d. 5. a mth iP Mar. 4,1913 Lesher, John V........ Pai. [63d gE Mar. 4,1913 Lewis, Fred E......... Plies CE 1688s. 48. iit a0 Mar. 4,1913 Lieb, Charles.......... Ind.. 1 j68degs oda a a al Mar. 4,1913 Tindquist, Francis QO ..] Mich...! 131 63d.5. 5... bof iss Mar. 4,1913 Loft, George W........ N.Y... a3 [F080 oc. .ii ates ddaains Aug. 31, 1913 Logue, J. Washington...| Pa.... CRE EG Re I ES SS Mar. 4,1913 Yonerean, Augustine... Conn..l "1 [63den oii. diilii he un Mar. 4,1913 Mahan, Bryan F....... Conn... 2 165d. i... ...00. 50. cab bus Mar. 4,1913 Manahan, James....... Minn... (0) 168d. = LL. ation. on Mar. 4,1913 Mapes, Carl B......... Mich...v SU 68dus:ir. oo ones). ooises Mar. 4,1913 McClellan, George. .... N.Y... 27 160.0 cies a Mar. 4,1913 MacDonald, William J.) Mich. .1. 12. 263d. 00...0 die ivi vusncins May 16,1913 Metz, Herman A.. NX... 101 68d oo dated asa Mar. 4,1913 Montague, Andrews IVa. Soo6ad.. th Mar. 4,1913 Morin, Jobn........... Poco Gi) 108i obov ovoid coven Mar. 4,1913 Moss, Hunter H. wd. YW. Va. |e 163d. Nas Mar. 4,1913 Murray, w.H........ Oldaeol (1 08ducrc 0 br co oet ip Mar. 4,1913 Neely, M.M.......... WaVal AL1%68d.. oc. nad. aaa, Sept. 1,1913 Nolan, John I... ...... Cal... apic S668d. os sah aati Mar. 4,1913 N orton, Patrick D.....| N.Dak B:p6ades oc com sadness Mar. 4,1913 . O’Brien, James H. .... N.Y. 963d... boa ae Mar. 4,1913 Oglesby, Woodson B...' N.Y... 241 68d............. 00. sk Mar. 4,1913 O’ Hair, Frank T....... Woah 13 658d: 00 on Bushido Mar. 4,1913 0’ Leary, Benis-. ..... N.Y... 25634... Hg. 0h.. .....} Mar. 4,1913 Paige, Calvin D....... Moss, of S0%68d 0... coo. 0. Hun til Sept. 1 1913 Park, Framk ........... Ga... CEB RRR SE IRL Ee Sept.25, 1913 Parker, James 8....... N.Y 20.468d. ci a Mar. 4 1913 Peters, John A... Meso! s0%5d i Sa. May 25, 1913 152 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Beginning Name. State. | Dist. Congresses. of present service. 1 term—continued. Peterson, John B...... Ind.c..p 20. 068d Lh eo o8il a2 Mar. 4,1913 Phelan, Michael FP... Mass. .|-- -7-]868@.<.. [5 iol i vvvvmilid Mar. 4,1913 Platt, Edmund... ..-.. N.Y} 20-680. , oa lVi ee a0 Mar. 4,1913 Quin, Pal E.. Miss... 27 (08@ect nn. dl aa BE Mar. 4,1913 Ragsdale, J Willard. LBC. Boa eh iets Bs Mar. 4,1913 Rayburn, Sam.. FE SE GE BE Se ES IE SE Mar. 4,1913 Reed, Eugene L NaH. 368d... ad asus Mar. 4,1913 Reilly, Michael K..... Wisto.of -6-0368d 2k. 5 Ldn io Mar. 4,1913 Rogers, John J. ....... Mass ..}-- Bl 68del.. Ls. caniidativhvrvnaen Mar. 4,1913 Rupley, Arthur R..... Pond (3)-4:68400. Lh ooaaa lil ELITE Mar. 4,1913 Seldomridge, He Hl B.Colo. al 02-30008000. L 60, Jo il LL A EES Mar. 4,1913 Shreve, Milton W. Pact 28 0 0B abe EL ah Mar. 4,1913 Sinnott, Nicholas J. . -| Oreg cd 2B Lr se eden Mar. 4,1913 Smith, Addison T. .... Idaho.-l 2163d:.. 80love Mar 4 1913 Smith, Frank 0... ... Md... 463d... 0 hii a Mar 4, 1913 Smith, George R.. Minn. | =5468d-v.. nll Mar 4, 1913 Stevens, R.B... ..... N-H..\ 240634... era 0 Mar 4 1913 Stout, Homo. = Mont. | CD A68dus il. Oi... 5 Mar. 4,1913 Stringer, Yawrence B..[ TU... -(F) +60dut. 2h ioc cdi aiaan Mar, 4,1913 Somners, Hatton W. .. Tex....| (5) [56880 . oo. oon vii co 08G Mar. 4,1913 Sutherland; Howard... W.Va. | (1) 163d... 0... unl Lo. 000 Mar 4 1913 Tavenner, Clyde H..... (EI ed i BIE ea La Ree Mar 4 1913 Paylor, Benjamin I... | N.Y... - 26 68d.-. iu. anil eosin. Mar 4 1913 Temple, Henry W.... .| Pa.....0 24 | 68d.0. ol. cid nna Mar 4 1913 Ten Eyck, Peter G..... N-N...| 25 568d. =.) 0 Mar. 4,1913 Thacher, Thomas C...:] Mass... 16 168d... 0... 000 iil l Mar. 4,1913 Thompson, Joseph B...| Okla CP a-68d. Lit at nk Mar. 4,1913 Thomson, Charles M...| Ill. . A060. nna i es Le a Mar. 4,1913 Treadway, Allen T. ...| Mass SER a SER I ST El aE SR Mar. 4,1913 Vaughan, Horace W...| Tex... 1-83d.....0. noundinioniniiios Mar. 4,1913 Walker, John R....... Ga. $y DR RO Eee Ie as es Mar. 4,1913 Wallin, Samuel........| N.Y REL SEEN by Cdl et Mar. 4,1913 Walsh, Allan B. ...... N.J SEL en MaRS CIRIR 001 Mar. 4,1913 Walters, Anderson H. .| Pa..... EAN Rl Ee I i ge i Mar. 4,1913 Watson, Walter A. .... Va... 4063d.....0......00. L800 Mar. 4,1913 Weaver, Claude. ...... Okln,...| (FY 68d... in BE BRE Mar. 4,1913 Whaley, Richard S....| 8S. C.. L080 e HI ea Jan. 31,1913 Wilson, Emmett. ..... Fla... REE RE el JER) Re Mar. 4,1913 Wingo, Otis... ...... ..... Ark. dele. Le LL Mar 4 1913 Winslow, Samuel E. . .| Mass 4068 i Re ea Mar 4 1913 Woodruff, Roy O...... Mich 063d... LE LE Mar 4 1913 Young, George M...... N.Dak 263d a Eel.) Mar. 4,1913 TERRITORIAL DELE- GATES. Kalanianaole, Jonah... H. I...|..... 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d.| Mar. 4,1903 Wickersham, James. . Alaska |... .. 61st, 62d, 88d. EL Mar. 4,1909 RESIDENT COMMIS- SIONERS. Rivera, Luis M........ Po B..iliei a 624.630... Fe Mar. 4,1911 Quezon, Manuel L.......[ Pl. |... 61st, 633, 653d. 2h... 0 Nov. 15, 1909 Earnshaw, Manuel... [Pol.. |... Mar. 4,1913 Service of Representatives. REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH APPORTIONMENT. 153 — is So ~ ~ ~ - - ~ ~ wn - 1 -~ 1 213 |4d | [2 48 (2:-|8 14! (2 18 |& (8 Hg | = a 4 4 4 4 Belang ra [Saif Tg Sg As g al 85 855 8s FE Bol Bol 18 SO .lag= = 1S) =} (SX) Co Qo 9c | Vato FO DVI 0 | ED States. 5-3 | OR 2 = IT 2 I |g SI ETS a a= 8" EY - 6a - ott - “ z= 9% a= oa SE 28 24 22 |B 2 IE H aqs8 [8 2 |E.1E | (ERE |E® = Oo re 4) ort p= D i] [53 ~ SH. 18 |e d8 Hi .12 (f2 & 8 | 8 Alam. ee ae 1 3 5 7 v7 6 8 8 9 9 10 ART Ree ee, SH Iii! LE RRR FBR BRS Nan Shen OR SSM leeelel nl EDR Lui Red ane Be TR 3 NH Ee Cae Si LS Lead Beste a BT nde 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 El nl naa Seas Reinet MORIA OR Heise Reb iiied IDE i hae 2 2 3 4 6 7 8 11 Ot i Tani] Pree lL] ESS He ee EL Bae ET ay 1 il 2 3 4 Connecticut......... 5 7 7 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 Latah 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 4 9 8 8 7 1 BS £70 VR 12 ated Ea LAE a BS 1 1 1 2 3 7 9] 14] 19] 20] 221 25 27 7 10 Hof=11 Ag {- 13-13. 13 13 Ft 2 2 6 ii i 1 ee i i 11 Pal pel EE 1 3 7 8 8 8 13 10 10 URL | ET a 11 1 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 8 Mane: Co. a Re i a Sadan 7 7 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 4 Maryland -.......... 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 Massachusetts...-... 8 14 17 13 13 12 10 11710: AE 12 #134 14 16 Michigan. ... cicada. dai acinle sn dla Sd me at, 1 3 4 6 Ore diV-12:0 12 13 Tee 1 Dae CEE rene RU Whee So be SA] ETRE ao ie eel 2 2 3 5 7 9 10 MissisSippl.c. o.oo rl eee. 1 1 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 8 BE vey SRE Ne se EA TE! fn Ea 0] Wao ECR 1 2 5 74 9 v-13 4: 1415] 16 16 1 TT n ir pe nro BLES nin Ves] Eoangioenl Eine) En] Earn LTE ET Mo Le 1 1 1 2 IB ee SR en SRE Ea Sie bei, BERREe ld ost i Denied Leto 1 1 1 3 6 6 6 ea rr IR SR pd pie PI Bestel phan) Salon 1 1 1 15 i 1 New Hampshire. ... 3 4 3 6 6 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 New Jersey......... 4 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 7 8| 10 12 DIET eR ee De Meee hn [eid eR) i TR ant! beet It Be ea el Biel Im Rs re SR Re i) New, York.......... 6 10 17 27 34 40 34 33] 311 33) 341 34 “37 43 North Carolina...... 5 10 12 13 13 13 9 8 7 8 9 91 10 10 HIRE BU Srp Bev Leia pes 70 Wheto ie SR Ee Me El am ai ie Hi S0 JUPRE Lii 1 1 2 3 Ohio... co a ds al 1 6 14 19 21 217 19] 203 21: 21 21 22 LE 1 a La EL Eo i HC Ne En I ER 5 8 Oregon. =. :- iit. 1 1 2 2 3 Pennsylvania 27] 28{ 30] 32 36 Rhode Island 2 9 2 2 3 South Carolina 5 7 7 7 7 HEE NR re rE a el PIR RE Ed pee Dn wines] ein 2 2 2 3 Tennessee. .-=>==---- 10| 10| 10] 10 10 ORAS on een mas 6-1 114-13: 16 18 LE repre ne Sr BER be AS PR Lg eal son! RON eit een ie LF i oR 1 1 2 Nemmont.... a0. 3 3 2 2 2 2 Virginia: ois 5n x 10 19 22 23 22 21 15 13 | 11 OL 100-104 10 10 Washinoton =o. anvils mass dea inher gaan ian a sles 1 2 3 5 EE In RE Rena FR EI en Brisas) RRR ele Hal ERT DR ee DEIR] ti 3 4 4 5 6 WISCONSIN. ...cs oan deci fori snl mma sme seein ore es ws 2 3 6 8 9:1 10:11 11 TD Pa ARR LS Ce 1 1 1 1 Potals es vsosis 65 | 106 | 142 | 186 | 213 | 242 | 232 | 237 | 243 | 293 | 332 | 357 | 391 | 435 The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated and is in- cluded in the above table: First—Tennessee, 1. 1; Louisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, 1. Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Sixth—California, 2; Florida, 1; Eighth—Illinois, 1; Towa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Second—Ohio, 1. Seventh-—Massachusetts, 1; Minnesota Towa, 1; Kentucky, 1; Minnesota, 1; Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1; Ohio, 1; P Third—Alabama 2; Oregon, 1. ennsylvania, 1; Rhode Island, 1; , Ly Iliinois,.1; Indiana, Vermont, 1. Ninth—Alabama, 1; Colorado, 1; Florida, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; New Hampshire, 1; New York, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Tennessee, 1; Vermont, 1. H P, ) bl 3 bl South Dakota, 2; Washington, 1; Wyoming, 1. Tenth— Eleventh—Utah, 1. I daho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota, 1; Twelith—Oklahoma, 5. SESSIONS OF CONGRESS. Congress. Sor ae aed lo 1 President pro tempore of the Senate. Speaker of the House of Representatives. Plrst. rR. nd ae 1 2 Mar. 4,1789 | Sept. 29,1789 Frederick A. Muhlenberg, of Pennsylvania. 2 | Jan. 4,1790 | Aug. 12,1790 3 | Dec. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 Second). Shan ene 1 | Oct. 24,1791 | May 8,1792 197 | Richard Henry Lee, of Virginia.............. Jonathan Trumbull, of Connecticut. 2 | Nov. 5,1792 | Mar. 2,1793 119 | John Langdon, of New Hampshire........... Bhivd orc tam is ws ole i 1 | Dec. 2,1793 | June 9,1794 190 | Ralph Izard, of South Caroling............... Frederick A. Muhlenberg, of Pennsylvania. 2 | Nov. 3,1794 | Mar. 3,1795 121 | Henry Tazewell, Of Virgins... ove sinters Pomrth, ©. pts coin 0 1 | Dec. 7,1795 | June 1,1796 1 lj gd HI ET I ihe pr NEE Ee RRR Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. Samuel Livermore, of New Hampshire....... 2 | Dec. 5,1796 | Mar. 3,1797 89 | William Bingham, of Pennsylvania.......... Do. Fifth. pvanis, i a 1 | May 15,1797 | July 10,1797 57 | William Bradford, of Rhode Island........... 2 | Nov. 18,1797 | July 16,1798 246 | Jacob Read, of ZonthiCaToling. cre vonve George Dent, of Maryland. Theodore Sedgwick of Massachusetts. ....... 3 | Dec. 3,1798 | Mar. 3,1799 91 | John Laurence, of New York................. George Dent, of Maryland, pro tempore. James Ross, of ‘Pennsylvania a Ses ap a SL Sixth... oad nie Se 1 | Dec. 2,1799 | May 14,1800 164 | Samuel Livermor e, of New Hampshire. ...... Theodore Sedgwick, of Massachusetts. Uriah Tracy, of Connecticut... --...coten on nen 2 | Nov. 17,1800 | Mar. 3,1801 107 | John E. Howard, of Maryland... ..0.oi iio James Hillhouse, of Connecticut. ............. Seventh... .. di cig gs ti ion) 1 | Dec. 17,1801 | May 3,1802 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of Georgia... oo out Nathaniel Macon, of North Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1802 | Mar. 3,1803 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont............. Eighth, & Fd mel oC 1 | Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27,1804 163 | John Brown, of Kentucky RAL SL ES A Do. Jesse Franklin, of North Caroling... - 200. 2 | Nov. 5,1804 | Mar. 3,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of Tennessee. .............. Ninth. a olism on 1 | Dec. 2.1805 | Apr. 21,1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Maryland... ................ Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1806 | Mar. 3,1807 Le Quo ions dg serbia mi sours Menthil i md Rit blo 1 | Oct. 16,1807 | Apr. 25,1808 wall. dol oa TA RR lh 2 | Nov. 7,1808 | Mar. 3,1809 117 | Stephen R. Bradley, of Vermont............. Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts. John Milledge, of Georgia... .......c..C uh : Eleventh, >... bil Sd = 1! May 22,1809 | June 28,1809 38 | Andrew Gregg, of Pennsylvania.............. Do. 2 | Nov. 27,1809 | May 1,1810 156 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina. ............ 3 | Dec. 3,1810 | Mar. 3,1811 91 | John Pope, of Boney ; Pwelith. 80 Ll a rd 1 | Nov. 4,1811 | July 6,1812 245 | William H. Crawford, of Georgia............. Henry Clay, of Kentucky. 2 | Nov. 2,1812 | Mar. 3,1813 122 |v A en Se TL aE ER IT Thirteenth. 0 C0 woe 1 | May 24,1813 | Aug. 2,1813 Pl aT OR Ee ET AE Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1813 | Apr. 18,1814 134 | Joseph B. Varnum, of Massachusetts......... . 3 | Sept. 19,1814 | Mar. 3,1815 166 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina............. ¢ Lan gdon Cheeves, of South Carolina. Fourteenth, uns bos andi Ly 1 | Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29,1816 d Henry Clay, of Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 2,1816 | Mar. 3,1817 Fifteentii. loin, LoL sel 1 | Dec. 1,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 Do. 2 | Nov. 16,1818 | Mar. 3,1819 108 | James Barbour, of Virginia... .....c.......... Sixteenth. Josue livingston 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15,1820 162 | John Gaillard, of South Carolina............. Do. 2 | Nov. 18,1820 | Mar. 3,1821 £0 NEE Cy i LB To Ty 5 John W. Taylor, of New York. Seventeenth... ...o.h cd lo 1 | Dec. 3,1821 | May 8§,1822 1575. 2% Joss SE a Le pL a a Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1822' Mar. 3,1823 92: iu ON LE I RS Sr = (Wy iS Ruo0poaan( 0U01s8240U0,) Bighieenth. .. i iets 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27,1824 Henry Clay, of Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 Ninetoetth.... ooo itisenn se ios. 1 | Dec. 5,1825 | May 22,1826 John W. Taylor, of New York. 2 | Dec. 4,1826 | Mar. 3,1827 Pwentieth..... cousin ini nas 1 | Dec. 3,1827 | May 26,1828 Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 1,1828 | Mar. 3,1829 PWOnLY-T8t. cv case cnnonannaanss 1 | Dec. 17,1829 | May 31,1830 Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1830 | Mar. 3,1831 Twenty-second...........cu.eaurs 1 | Dec. 5,1831 | July 16,1832 Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1832 | Mar. 2,1833 91 Soe Lawson White, of Tennessee........... PWenNty-Third ioe ii tia means 1 | Dec. 2,1833 | June 30,1834 211 | George Poindexter, of Mississippi... 0. Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1834 | Mar. 3,1835 93 | John Tyler, of Virginia Se ARI 6 John Bell, of Tennessee. Pwenty-fourth.............0. 0. 1 | Dec. 7,1835 | July 4,1836 211 { Willlam R. King, of Alabamg. ....-...-...... James K. Polk, of Tennessee. 2 | Dec. 5,1836 | Mar. 3,1837 HF Ra i LN PS Pwenty-Dlih. ....c ov coiadivede 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct. 16,1837 AR a Qo es a fn Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1837 | July 9,183 or Lo A CU Ra 3 | Dec. 3,1838 | Mar. 3,1839 ord QO Pwenty-sixth. .. uve ves 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 31,1840 233 doit ir. Tes Lon LaBrie ee Robert M. T. Hunter, of Virginia. on 2 | Dec. 17,1840 | Mar. 3,1841 ri SD eR OO I IE IS Twenty-soventh.............. ce. 1 | May 31,1841 | Sept. 13,1841 106 | Samuel L. Southard, of New Jersey.......... John White, of Kentucky. VS 2 | Dec. 6,1841 | Aug. 31,1842 269 | Willie P. Mangum, of North Carolina. . ...... ©» 3 | Dec. 5,1842 | Mar. 3,1843 d 8 Pwenty-elghth. ....cuovaii iii 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17,1844 John W. Jones, of Virginia. = 2 | Dec. 2,1844 | Mar. 3,1845 hn Twenty-ninth........ccoomedoies 1 | Dec. 1,1845 | Aug. 10,1846 John W. Davis, of Indiana. 2 | Dec. 17,1846 | Mar. 3,1847 i] i111 BTS A LS BI 1 | Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14,1848 Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts. ~~k 2 | Dec. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 AE A SE SR 1 | Dec. 3,1849 | Sept. 30,1850 Howell Cobb, of Georgia. D 2 | Dec. 2,1850 | Mar 85 S Phirly-8e0ond. .. icon iicivaniins 1 | Dec. 1,1851 | Aug. 31,1852 Linn Boyd, of Kentucky. = 2 | Dec. 6,1852 | Mar. 3,1853 Lewis Cass, of New Hampshire.............. v3 Thivty-fourth. ci. voi iii: 1 | Dec. 3,1855 | Aug. 18,1856 260 | Jesse D. Bright, offindigna.............. 0. Nathaniel P. Banks, of Massachusetts. . 2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30,1856 0]. doin Re 3 | Dec. 1,1856 | Mar. 3,1857 93 | James M. Mason, of Virginia. ......c.ceu..... Thomas BE. aera doen Thivty-fifth . ..oieo vn i a, 1 | Dec. 7,1857 | June 14,1858 189 | Benjamin Fitzpatrick, of Alabama........... James L. Orr, of South Carolina. 2 | Dec. 6,1858 | Mar. 3,1859 ol ER rR a 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 appears in severa sessions and in others none were chosen. Since Mar. 12, 1890, 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 * * * on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.” Up to and including May 20, 1820, 18 acts were passed providing for the meeting of Congress on other days in the year. Since that year Congress has met regularly on the first Monday in December. The first and second sessions of the First Congress were held in New York; subsequently, until the second session of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting place; since then Congress has convened in Washington. 3 Elected 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 Presi- dent, appeared Apr. 21, 1789, and took his seat as President of the Senate. 2 . 4 Elected Speaker, Yice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814. 5 Elected Speaker Nov. 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Oct. 28, 1820. 6 Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned. Gal | == mE —_——— ee — Ee a RR RRB DSSS SESSIONS OF CONGRESS Continued. on [=p] Congress. ou b Duy > A oun President pro tempore of the Senate. Speaker of the House of Representatives. Thirty-sixth. 2... oo. 00 1 | Dec. 5,1859 | June 25,1860 202 | Benjamin Fitzpatrick, of Alabama........... William Pennington, of New Jersey. 3 Jesse D. Bright; of Indiana. ...... ool) oii. 2 | Dec. 3,1860 | Mar. 3,1861 93 | Solomon Foot, OEVEITONE vo eee os ‘Phirty-seventh. i... 00. L000 1 | July 4,1861 | Aug. 6, 1861 34... Go. GLEN RN ea le Be SE ua Galusha A. Grow, of Pennsylvania. ? | Dec. 2,1861 | July 17,1862 228 fens Eman A CORR NR ANE 3 | Dec. 1,1862 | Mar. 3,1863 od ..... Er ll EE i Hn ER RN Thirty-eighth........ 0.0.00... 1 | Dec. 17,1863 | July 4,1864 200 0..... G0 oy sai i Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana. Daniel Clark, of New Hampshire ............ ? | Dec. 5,1864 | Mar. 3,1865 900. os EE A I Sa SC Thirty-ninth. i. oii: 1 | Dec. ry 1865 | July 28,1866 237 . Lafayette S. Foster, of Connecticut........... Do. 0 2 | Dec. 3 1866 | Mar. 2,1867 92 | Benjamin F. Wade, QEONTe. oo QL Fortiethe io. o- oog inne ug 1 [1 Mar. 41867 | Dec. 2, 1867 g7ei. 0. do NE Do. S 2 [2Dec. 21867 | Nov. 10,1868 345 |" dol ak S 3 | Dec. 7,1868 | Mar. 3,1869 87 Jobe i De Fg arn i Re SRR UN SEER el 3 Theodore M. Pomeroy, of New York. I Forty-first.iiv.ii.nnn iii 1 | Mar. 4,1869 | Apr. 22, 1869 37 | Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island James G. Blaine, of Maine. [) 2 | Dec. 6,1869 | July 15,1870 do 5 2 3 | Dec. 5,1870 | Mar. 3,1871 S° Forty-seeond......... 0 0 avis 1 | Mar. 4,1871 | May 27,1871 Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10,1872 S 3 | Dec. 2,1872 | Mar. 3, 1873 ~ Forty-third...o....... eet 1 | Dec. 1,1873 | June 23,1874 Do. 2 | Dec. 7,1874 | Mar. 38,1875 Oo Hones B. Anthony, of Rhode Island......... =, Forty=lourth. . couch. ol La. 1 | Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15,1876 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of Miehtgan...... ..... 00 4 Michael C. Kerr, of Indiana. a 5 Samuel 8. Cox, of New York, pro tempore. S 6 Milton Saylor, of Ohio, pro tem pore. << 2 2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 3,1877 001. Ly a Aaa Ll ORR ee an ah Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania. = Borty filth o.oo ibn 1 | Oct. 15,1877 | Dec. 3,1877 BO Ysa se paso, TE Do. < ? | Dec. 3,1877 | June 20,1878 200 | Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan............... B 3 | Dec. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 oo. 0 Borty-sixth. ... ovo valerian. 1 | Mar. 18,1879 | July 1,1879 10641 ‘Allen G. Thurman, ef Ohlo................... Do. 2 | Dec. 1,1879 | June 16,1880 Togas A Eb I Ral IN SR 3 3 | Dec. 6,1880 | Mar. 3,1881 Ba Forty-seventh........ Lo. 0008 1 | Dec. 5,1881:| Aug. 8,1882 247 David Davis, of TIHnois., .o... .eseonnes J. Warren Keifer, of Ohio. 2 | Dec. 4,1882 | Mar. 3,1883 90 | George F. Edmunds, of Vermont Forty-eighth. li oo 0 0 1 | Dec. 3,1883 | July 7,1884 218 |--. .- IER i abel 0 SA) .| John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 1,1884 | Mar. 3,1885 TE do. a Sa Forty-niwth.: i toa uss 1 | Dec.' 7,1885 | Aug. b5,1886 242 | John Sherman, of Ohi Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3,1887 88 | John J. Tuzlls, of Kansas. .......L... ei isda Filtiethil. oo. crooning 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20,1888 e; A 3 FR AR CR A RY a i Do. ? | Dec. 3,1888 | Mar. 2,1889 LL) Hy RR i SIRT ARAL LL LR Wfty-Rrst.. ina ia et 1 | Dec. 2,1880 | Oct. 1,1890 304 |..... QO. Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. ; 2 | Dee. 1,1890 | Mar. 3,1891 93 | Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska........... Fifty-second. ilove id Dee. 7 1891 | Aug. 5,1892 25% |e QOL Sil lo al Sr Sl Charles F. Crisp, of Georgia. 2 1 Dec. 5, 1892 | Mar. 3,1893 89 | Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee...........c.... Bifty-third.... ole. annul Aug. 7,1893 | Nov. 3,1833 ST 1.- sn Ree BRON Cae dai ri GIN Do. ; Dec. 4,1893 | Aug. 28,1894 268 ..... NEE se SR ERI TER Dec. 3,1894 | Mar. 2,1895 90 | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina......... Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee.....--veeeuu.-. Fifby-fourth....o ch po Dec. 2,1895 | June 11,1896 193 { William P. Frye, of Maine. .:.............i.. Thomas B. Reed, of Maine. J Dec. 17,1896 | Mar. = 3,1897 di PHty-Gith. oes Mar. 15,1897 | July 24,1897 Do. Dec. 6,1897 | July 8,1898 Dec. 5,1898 | Mar. 3,1899 ilty-sixth. oo city. diol. Dec. 4,1899 | June 7,1900 David B. Henderson, of Iowa. Dec. 3,1900 | Mar. 2,1901 Pifty=seventh...l Lol. 0 Dec. 2,1901 | July 1,1902 Do. Dec. 1,1902 | Mar. 3,1903 Pifty-eighth... 0c... 80 02 Nov. 9,1903 | Dec. 7,1903 Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois. Dec. 17,1903 Apr. 28,1904 Dec. 5,1904 ar. 3,1905 Fiftyninth.... whole... Sa io Dec. 4,1905 | June 30,1906 Do. Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 2,1907 Sixgleths [0 ine de Dec. 2,1907 | May 30,1908 Do. Dec. 17,1908 | Mar. 3,1909 Sletyfiral. i, Mar. 15,1909 | Aug. 5,1909 Do. Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910 Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911 Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22,1911 Champ Clark, of Missouri. Wh CO DD besk COD bh AD fob AD red CO AD bok 0 fob AD bd QO AD p=b AD bb CO AD bed Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | 8 Boon 9 Brandegee, 10Curtis, I! Gallinger, 12 Todge. } Dec. 2,1912 | Mar. 33,1913 9211 Bacon Jt Gallinger. ...... . ote Lele dd Bixty-third c.f cust ox Set TANS fn cot so Boils wa 25000 James P. Clarke, of Arkansas......-.vueevuuo-. Do. reg Nh | DAM 0 en SEL Ba Rte SS EL SE CS BE RUIN 1 There were recesses in this session from Saturday, Mar. 30, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 21. 2 There were recesses in this session from Monday, hj uly 27, to Monday, Sept. 21, to Friday, Oct. 6, and to Tuesday, Nov. 10. No business was transacted subsequent to July 27. 8 Elected 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, 1911. 8 Elected to serve Jan. 11-17, Mar. 11-12, Apr. 8, May 10, May 30 to June 1 and 3, June 13 to July 5, Aug. 1-10, and Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912. 9 Elected to serve May 25, 1912. : 10 Elected to serve Dec. 4-12, 1911. 11 Elected to serve Feb. 12-14, Apr. 26-27, May 7, July 6-31, Aug. 12-26, 1912. 12 Elected to serve Mar. 25-26, 1912. 18 Elected to serve Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912; Jan. 5-18 and Feb. 2-15, 1913. 14 Elected to serve Dec. 16, 1912, to Jan. 4, 1913, Jan. 19 to Feb. 1, and Feb. 16 to Mar. 3, 1913. 'ssaubuoy JO su01ssog 158 Congressional Directory. SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE. Year. Date of beginning. Date of adjournment. vl HE SES BR Se Friday, Mor. 4. ........-. Friday, Mar. 4. ULL REA EE Monday, Mar. 4........... Monday, Mar. 4. 78s. Monday, June 8........... Friday, June 26. Ee I ee Saturday, Mar. 4.......... Saturday, Mar. 4. 1798 =. En Tuesday, July 17... =... Thursday, July 19. 1800. 2... 1... a Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Thursday, Mar. 5. 1805. 5... an Tuesday, Mar. 4.7. ....:.. Thursday, Mar. 6. 1809... .. =... eal Saturday, Mar. 4.......... Tuesday, Mar. 7. 187... HERE Se Monday, Mar. 4........... Monday, Mar. 4. |e TR RR ee BO Friday, Mar, 4. .....5.55 Wednesday, Mar. 9. 828. wk ee Wednesday, Mar. 4.._..... Tuesday, Mar. 17. 887... ir. ET Saturday, Mar. 4.......... Friday, Mar. 10. Bde a Thursday Mar4d.. 000 Monday, Mar. 15. a RS SESE Tuesday, Mar. 4........... Thursday, Mar. 20. RL RR ea ne Monday, Mar. 5-.-......... Friday, Mar. 23. 188) LE Tuesday, Mar. 4........... Thursday, Mar. 13. LL A a Priday, Mar. 4... ........; Monday, Apr. 11. Ry EE OR Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Saturday, Mar. 14. AR I MEN a Tuesday, June 15. . . .....| Wednesday, June 16. a de a Priday, Mar. 4........... Thursday, Mar. 10. S60. >=. i. cll Tuesday, June 26. . . ..... Thursday, June 28. B86]. a wm Monday, Mar. 4........... Thursday, Mar. 28. (50k det SR MRS y TE Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Saturday, Mar. 14. 18685. 2... Ls. Si SE Saturday, Mar. 4.......... Saturday, Mar. 11. 1887... Monday, Apr. 1.:......... Saturday, Apr. 20. 868. 5...“ ZL...... Bh. Monday, Apr: 12.2........ Thursday, Apr. 22. i EE SR ae SL Wednesday, May 10....... Saturday, May 27. S78. 00. i ai Ca pm Tuesday, Mar. 4........... Wednesday, Mar. 26. ve Ee Friday, Mar. 5... ....... Wednesday, Mar. 24. NE RE Monday, Mar. 5........... Saturday, Mar. 17. 1881... .. od in snd Friday, Mar. 4. .........-. Friday, May 20. Monday, Oct. 10.:. -. =. .: Saturday, Oct. 29. EE ee Cl Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Thursday, Apr. 2. 1889. .........=..%... >... Monday, Mar. 4........... Tuesday, Apr. 2. 1893... ic... dies Sdiurday, Mar. 4.........: Friday, Apr. 15. UE LS se Thurgday, Mar. 4-5. :.- =: Wednesday, Mar. 10. 1 eee el CR ee Monday, Mar. 4........... Saturday, Mar. 9. A I CR el TN Thursday, Mar. 5: ........ Thursday, Mar. 19. on Tel EE Ab Saturday, Mar. 4.......... Saturday, Mar. 18. 900 rn hss Thursday, Mar. 4.......... Saturday, Mar. 6. Y013.. ooh EE Tuesday, Mar. 4........... Monday, Mar. 17. COURT OF IMPEACHMENT. The Senate has set as a Court of Impeachment in the cases of the following accused officials, with the result stated for the Doi named: WILLIAM BLOUNT, a Senator of the United States from Tennessee; charges dismissed for want of jurisdiction, he having previously resigned; Monday, December 17, 1798, to Monday, January 14, 1799. JOHN PICKERING, judge of the United Stafes 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, February 25, 1868, to Tuesday, May 26, 1868. WILLIAM W. BELKNAP, Secretary of War; acquitted; Friday, March 3, 1876, to Tuesday, August 1, 1876. ‘CHARLES SWAYNE, judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida; acquitted; Wednesday, December 14, 1904, to Monday, February 27, 1905. ROBERT W. ARCHBALD, associate judge, United States Commerce Court; removed from office; Saturday, July 13, 1912, to Monday, January 13, 1913. Presidents and Vice Presidents and Congresses. 159 PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS. Presidents. Vice Presidents. Service. Congresses. George Washington........... John Adams... ...... 0.0 Apr. 30,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1,2,3,4. John Adams........ ...| Thomas Jefferson........... Mar. 4,1797-Mar. 3,1801 | 5,6. Thomas Jefferson.....-.-..... Anror Buri. =. A. Sold ta. Mar. 4,1801-Mar. 3,1805 | 7,8. BPO. Joi oid hs at anni George Clinton « .~cceuuenun. Mar. 4,1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9,10. James Madison ...ccceveuaeenn. A Suge (died Apr. | Mar. 4,1809-Mar. 3,1813 | 11,12. Tp rt SRE RS Se my (died Nov. | Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 3,1817 | 13,14. 23,1814 James Monroe. .......-s-v---- Daniel D. Tompkins........ Mar. 4,1817-Mar. 3,1825 | 15,16,17,18. John Quincy Adams..........| John C. Calhoun............ Mar. 4 1825-Mar. 3,1829 | 19,20. Andrew Jacksol......ccee.... John C. Calhoun (resioneg Mar. 4 1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 21,22. Dec. 28, to become Senator). 10 Pee Rd Ba 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 Byler... .covccricons Mar. 4, 1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27. TET i FL is te FL er IR Se Apr. 6, 1841-Mar. 3,1845 | 27,28. James IK. Polk.....o aan. George M. Dallas............ ar. 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29,30. Zachary Taylor... ..c. iain Millard Fillmore............ Mar. 5,1849-July 9,1850 | 31. Millard THIMOTO. .. oe enot oil] cc: spn mean ssisn won smn imme July 10, 1850-Mar. 3,1853 | 31,32. Franklin Pierce... ....- 3-3. LET 3 pain (died | Maz. 4 1853-Mar. 3,1857 | 33,34. pr 5 James Buchanan. ............ John C. Breckenridge otras Mar. 4,1857-Mar. 3,1861 | 35,36. . ” Abraham Lincoln............ Hannibal Hamlin........... Mar. 4 1861-Mar. 3,1865 | 37,38. ET RL eh Andrew Johnson............ Mar. 4 1865- Apr. 15,1865 | 39. Gr ED ere a ER rh Sr OR Apr. 15, 1865-Mar. 3,1869 | 39,40. Ulysses S. Grant. Schuyler Colfax. ...ccr..---- Mar. 4 1869-Mar. 3,1873 | 41,42. De... oh mea Hy wisn (died Nov. | Mar. 4 1873-Mar. 3 1877 | 43,44. 75 Rutherford B. Hayes. ........ William A. Wheeler.........| Mar. 4,1877-Mar. 3,1881 | 45,46. James A. Garfield............ Chester A. Arthur.........-. Mar. 4 1881-Sept. 19,1881 | 47. Chester Ae. Arthur. dc. on. use ann saan unnss Sept. 20, 1881-Mar. 3,1885 | 47,48. Grover Cleveland ............. Thomas A. Hendricks | Mar. 4, 1885-Mar. 3,1889 | 49,50. (died Nov. 25, 1885). Benjamin Harrison........... Levi PoMorton. ....-i-aeese 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. 3,1901 | 55,56. Nov. 21,1899). DO. «niet or ens ween Theodore Roosevelt......... Mar. 4,1901-Sept. 14,1901 | 57. : Theodore RO0SeVell. ou oan [os se srimmininis eno wn pain mwim rain Sex t. 14, 1901-Mar. 3,1905 | 57,58. Do. ra Charles W. Fairbanks....... Mar. 4 1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59, 60. Williom J. Taft... ..-- =.= James S. Sherman (died | Mar. 4 1909-Mar. 3,1913 | 61,62. Oct. 30, 1912). ‘Woodrow Wilson............. Thomas R. Marshall. ....... Mar. 4,1913- 63. 160 Congressional Directory. COMMITTEES. MEETING DAYS OF SENATE COMMITTEES. (Committees other than those mentioned meet upon the call of the chairmen.) Azricnlture and Forestry... .. i viii svading S505 Tuesday. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. . . Friday. Claims ul tun B. . cali ps ai br ste vi shin I eR tn Tuesday. COMMBPCE: 30.0. aT Pi i Loin bere SOS 28 dastins Thursday. Disivict.of Columbia's. oo cdi ci agi ony rer Ea, Sl Friday. FInanee or. oir 2. . colts bi matiairin mm = 25 mr RE A Bp Tuesday. Eoreion Relotlong. 2h. Fo meili da. mnt Laut Wednesday. Indio Afimire co li ho a Thursday. Intersinte Commerce... .... . ..c.ii 0. 0 iil vn meas Friday. Judiciary. | Bo. ati oii nell aban Sa als Monday. Military Affinia Re Thursday. Naval Alain Wednesday. Ee SE Rel J Te 1 RE a Sern Friday. Pepslons t. 10.70 CDi Fa JRE Ilys Bani et Monday. Post Offices and Post: Bonds. .cnvicvie. - -nnmmdimnion sn mma Wednesday. Public Buildinggand Grounds. ic... . ...... 0000 Sowa. Friday. Public Lands... 0 ei serie il es Wednesday. Berrllories.. . -. . . . ia imndaa Te mealite ame aie Friday. Committees of the Senate. 161 COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. William J. Stone, of Missouri. William Hughes, of New Jersey. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. Agriculture and Forestry. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Hoke Smith, of Georgia. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. John F. Shafroth, of Colorado. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. James H. Brady, of Idaho. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Appropriations. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. John F'. Shafroth, of Colorado. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. George C. Perkins, of California. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Reed Smoot, of Utah. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. John F. Shafroth, of Colorado. James A. Reed, of Missouri. J William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. Banking and Currency. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. James A. O'Gorman, of New York. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. John F. Shafroth, of Colorado. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts. Canadian Relations. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Elihu Root, of New York. Lawrence Y. Sherman, of Illinois. The Census. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. 13823°—63—-2—1sT ED——12 Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. - 162 Congressional Directory. Civil Service and Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Retrenchment. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Reed Smoot, of Utah. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Claims. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Charles F'. Johnson, of Maine. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Nathan Goff, of West Virginia. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Coast and Insular Survey. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. John D. Works, of California. James H. Brady, of Idaho. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Coast Defenses. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Elihu Root, of New York. : Thomas B. Catron, of New Mexico. John W. Weeks, of iassachusetts. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Commerce. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. George C. Perkins, of California. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Conservation of National Resources. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. Corporations Organized in Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. James H. Brady, of Idaho. Nathan Goff, of West Virginia. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts. the District of Columbia. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Committees qf the Senate. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Departments. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Lawrence Y. Sherman, of Illinois. | Harry Lane, of Oregon. District of Columbia. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. 163 William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. John D. Works, of California. William S. Kenyon, of Towa. Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico. Lawrence Y. Sherman, of Illinois. Education and Labor. Hoke Smith, of Georgia. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. James E. Martine, of New J ersey. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. William S. Kenyon, of Towa. Engrossed Bills. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Enrolled Bills. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. | Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. William Purnell Jackson, of Maryland. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. | Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. | Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Expenditures in the Departments of Commerce and Labor. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Expenditures in the Reed Smoot, of Utah. Thomas B. Catron, of New Mexico. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico. James H. Brady, of Idaho. Interior Department. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. George Sutherland, of Utah. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. 164 Congressional Directory. Expenditures in the Navy Department. William Hughes, of New Jersey. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. - William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Lawrence Y. Sherman, of Illinois. Expenditures in the Department of State. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. William Purnell Jackson, of Maryland. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. John D. Works, of California. Expenditures in the War Department. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Finance. *F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. William J. Stone, of Missouri. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. . Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Hoke Smith, of Georgia. Charles S. Thomas, of Colorado. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. William Hughes, of New Jersey. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. 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. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Fisheries. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Thomas S. Martin, of Virginia. Harry Lane, of Oregon. John D. Works, of California. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. George C. Perkins, of California. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Foreign Relations. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. William J. Stone, or Missouri. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. James A. O’Gorman, of New York. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. - Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. 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. Commattees of the Senate. 165 Forest Reservations and the ‘Protection of Game. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts. Lawrence Y. Sherman, of Illinois. Geological Survey. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. John W. Kern, of Indiana. James A. O'Gorman, of New York. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. Immigration. | Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. | Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. Indian Affairs. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Henry L. Myers, ‘of Montana. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. Robert I.. Owen, of Oklahoma. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico. Indian Depredations. William E. Borah, of Idaho. George C. Perkins, of California. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Industrial Expositions. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Lee S. Overman, of North Cayeling, Key Pittman, of Nevada. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Elihu Root, of New York. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. John D. Works, of California. Thomas B. Catron, of New Mexico. Interoceanic Canals. James A. O'Gorman, of New York. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Charles S. Thomas, of Colorado. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. F. M. Simmons, of North Carolina. 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. 166 Congressional Directory. Interstite Commerce. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Albert B. Cummins, of Towa. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Key Pittman, of Nevada. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Charles S. Thomas, of Colorado. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. George Sutherland, of Utah. William E. Borah, of Idaho. John D. Works, of California. Thomas B. Catron, of New Mexico. Revision of the Laws of the United States (Joint). Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. James A. O'Gorman, of New York. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Hoke Smith, of Georgia. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. James A. O'Gorman, of New York. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. George Sutherland, of Utah. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. 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. : Albert B. Cummins, of Towa. Elihu Root, of New York. Library. Albert B. Cummins, of Towa. Elihu Root, of New York. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Manufactures. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. William Purnell Jackson, of Maryland. Committees of the Senate. 167 Military Affairs. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Charles S. Thomas, of Colorado. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. James P. Clarke, of Arkansas. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Francis BE. Warren, of Wyoming. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. Thomas B. Catron, of New Mexico. James H. Brady, of Idaho. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. Nathan Goff, of West Virginia. 3 Mines and Mining. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Key Pittman, of Nevada. John F. Shafroth, of Colorado. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico. William Purnell Jackson, of Maryland. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. William J. Stone, of Missouri. National Banks. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. | James H. Brady, of Idaho. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Naval Affairs. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. John R. Thornton, of Louisiana. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. James A. O’Gorman, of New York. John Walter Smith, of Maryland. George C. Perkins, of California. Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. John F. Shafroth, of Colorado. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Nathan Goff, of West Virginia. Pacific Railroads. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. William J. Stone, of Missouri. Patents. Ollie M. James, of Kentucky. ~ Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. William S. Kenyon, of Towa. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. 168 Congressional Directory. + Benjamin F. Shively, 6f Indiana. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. Charlés F. Johnson, of Maine. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. William Hughes, of New Jersey. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma. Pensions. Reed Smoot, of Utah. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Nathan Goff, of West Virginia. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Philippines. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. John F. Shafroth, of Colorado. Joseph IL. Bristow, of Kansas. Coe I. Crawford, of South Dakota. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Henry I. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. William S. Kenyon, of Iowa. John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts. Post Offices and Post Roads. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Nathan P. Bryan, of Florida. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. Hoke Smith, of Georgia. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. % Boies Penrose, of Pennsylvania. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Thomas B. Catron, of New Mexico. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. Printing. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Private Land Claims. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. William Alden Smith, of Michigan. Asle J. Gronna, of North Dakota. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Charles S. Thomas, of "Colorado. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Privileges and Elections. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. William Hughes, of New Jersey. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. George Sutherland, of Utah. Wiliiam O. Bradley, of Kentucky. William S. Kenyon, of Towa. Lawrence Y. Sherman, of Illinois. Public Buildings and Grounds. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. James E. Martine, of New Jersey. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. John W. Kern, of Indiana. Harry Lane, of Oregon. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. George Sutherland, of Utah. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Isaac Stephenson, of Wisconsin. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. William Purnell J ackson, of Maryland. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. William Purnell Jackson, of Maryland. Benjamin R. Tillman, of South Carolina. Committees of the Senate. 169 Public Health and National! Quarantine. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Dunean U. Fletcher, of Florida. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. William Hughes, of New Jersey. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Elihu Root, of New York. John D. Works, of California. James H. Brady, of Idaho. John W. Weeks, of Massachusetts. Public Lands. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. Charles S. Thomas, of Colorado. Joe T. Robinson, of Arkansas. William H. Thompson, of Kansas. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. William Hughes, of New Jersey. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. John D. Works, of California. Albert B. Fall, of New Mexico. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. | Railroads. George C. Perkins, of California. George T. Oliver, of Pennsylvania. William Purnell Jackson, of Maryland. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Nathan Goff, of Vest Virginia. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Marcus A. Smith, of Arizona. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. James Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois. Revolutionary Claims. William O. Bradley, of Kentucky. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. John W. Kern, of Indiana. James A. O'Gorman, of New York. - John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Luke Lea, of Tennessee. Augustus O. Bacon, of Georgia. Francis G. Newlands, of Nevada. William E. Chilton, of West Virginia. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Rules. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Jacob H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. Standards, Weights, and Measures. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. William Hughes, of New Jersey. Territories. Key Pittman, of Nevada. George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon. Benjamin F. Shively, of Indiana. Charles F. Johnson, of Maine. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Joseph L. Bristow, of Kansas. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Henry F. Lippitt, of Rhode Island. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Edwin C. Burleigh, of Maine. Lawrence Y. Sherman, of Illinois. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. John H. Bankhead, of Alabama. James K. Vardaman, of Mississippi. William Hughes, of New Jersey. 170 Congressional Durectory. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. Henry A. du Pont, of Delaware. Isaac Stephenson, of Wiscensin. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. F. M..Simmons, of North Carolina. John F. Shafroth, of Colorado. University of the United States. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. Clarence D. Clark, of Wyoming. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Nathan Goff, of West Virginia. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. Woman Charles S. Thomas, of Colorado. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire, Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Henry F. Hollis, of New Hampshire. Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. Suffrage. George Sutherland, of Utah. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Moses E. Clapp, of Minnesota. Thomas B. Catron, of New Mexico. Assignments of Senators to Committees. 171 ASSIGNMENTS OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES. REfpmet.... a Industrial Expositions, chairman. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Indian Affairs. Judiciary. Mines and Mining, fi Pensions. il Public Buildings and Grounds. i Woman Suffrage. BACON........cccee.o........ Foreign Relations, chairman. Corporations Organized i in the District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Judiciary. Private Land Claims. Railroads, Rules. BANKHEAD. ... vv vvvivvin ein Post Offices and Post Roads, chairman. Coast and Insular Survey. Commerce. Conservation of National Resources. fl Standards, Weights, and Measures. ! Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. BORAN......cooassss srinase Indian Depredations, chairman. ~ Education and Labor. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Foreign Relations. Interoceanic Canals. ; Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. | Judiciary. : BRAPLEY............cocien Revolutionary Claims, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. | Claims. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. Braby.......0:0.0nn. 0-0 -- Agriculture and Forestry, Coast and Insular Survey. Conservation of National Resources. Expenditures in the Departments of Commerce and | Labor. Military Affairs. National Banks. Public Health and National Quarantine. | i BRANDEGED..oanorssoa=ssnnsss Pacific Railroads, chairman. Interoceanic Canals. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. Patents. University of the United States. 172 Bristow BRYAN... Congressional Directory. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Banking and Currency. Claims. Interoceanic Canals. Military Affairs. Philippines. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories. Claims, chairman. Appropriations. Coast and Insular Survey. Industrial Expositions. Investigate Trespassers Hon Indian Lands. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Bopiman. sa Claims. BUBNON veers ot CATRON. CHANBERTAIN - .-ccenin CHILTON Coast Defenses. Fisheries. Indian Depredations. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Public Buildings and Grounds. Revolutionary Claims. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Canadian Relations. Commerce. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Foreign Relations. Immigration. Library. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. National Banks. Coast Defenses. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Industrial Expositions. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. f Post Offices and Post Roads. Woman Suffrage. a ey a Appropriations. Commerce. Public Lands. Territories. Census, chairman. Expenditures in the Departments of Commerce and Labor. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Interoceanic Canals. Judiciary. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Printing. Revolutionary Claims. Assignments of Senators to Committees. 173 CUaAvpa. oo Standards, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Crark of Wyoming Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Naval Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Privileges and Elections Woman Suffrage. Soe Geological Survey, chairman. Conservation of National Resources. Finance. Judiciary. Public Lands. University of the United States.’ Senet Commerce, chairman. CLARKE of Arkansas Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Foreign Relations. Military. Affairs. Cov: ana Civil Service and Retrenchment. eececencecconnocaen- a Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Immigration. Patents. Post Offices and Post Roads. Revision of the Laws of the United States (Joint). University of the United States. Agriculture and Forestry. Banking and Currency. Claims. Commerce. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Interoceanic Canals. Philippines. Judiciary, chairman. Appropriations. Coast and Insular Survey. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Health and National Quarantine. Mississippi River and its Tributaries, chairman. Census. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Interstate Commerce. Judiciary. Library. Manufactures. Rules. University of the United States, chairman. Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Immigration. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products, chairman. Census. Coast Defenses. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Standards, Weights, and Measures. Congressional Directory. BouiCmen. .... ow isin GALLINGER GOT. i iii dvae ido District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Departments of Commerce and Labor. Geological Survey. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Public Lands. Printing, chairman. Commerce. Fisheries. Indian Depredations. Judiciary. Military Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Philippines. Publie Health and National Quarantine. Conference of the Minority, chairman. Appropriations. Finance. Pacific Railroads. Printing. Rules. .Claims. Conservation of National Resources. Military Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Pensions. Railroads. University of the United States. GonE..... oe. Agriculture and Forestry, chairman. Canadian Relations. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture Finance. Immigration. Interstate Commerce. Patents. Pensions. GRONNA:cistude. soit we itive Agriculture and Forestry. HI CHOOCR . .- faaesaieins Conservation of National Resources. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Immigration. Indian Affairs. Industrial Expositions. Private Land Claims. - Philippines, chairman. Banking and Currency. Foreign Relations. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Military Affairs. Private Land Claims. Territories. Boris ........ a aaa Enrolled Bills, chairman. Banking and Currency. Civil Service and Retrenchment. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Immigration. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. University of the United States. Woman Suffrage. Assignments of Senators to Commalttees. 175 Huemes.. oo... bi au. Expenditures in the Navy Department, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress. Finance. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. . Public Health and National Quarantine. YN ORRON ae a Public Lands. Standards, Weights, and Measures. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Expenditures in the Department of State. Manufactures. Mines and Mining. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. Railroads. Patents, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Claims. Conservation of National Resources. District of Columbia. Enrolled Bills. Finance. Geological Survey. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. JOHNSON .....cvvicreodnnsons National Banks, chairman. JONES oc ti ices ennai KENYON. citi henson i il es Claims. Coast Defenses. Education and Labor. Finance. Fisheries. Indian Depredations. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. Territories. - Appropriations. Conservation of National Resources. District of Columbia. Fisheries. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Pacific Railroads. Territories. Woman Suffrage. District of Columbia. Education and Labor. Expenditures in the War Department. Military Affairs. Patents. Philippines. Privileges and Elections. "Privileges and Elections, chairman. District of Columbia. Geological Survey. Immigration. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Printing. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rules. 176 Congressional Directory. LA Portman... ooiviesaai =. .Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia, Census. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Finance. : Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. BANE oo... sh Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game, chair- man. Claims. Coast Defenses. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments. - Expenditures in the War Department. Fisheries. Indian Affairs. Irrigation. Philippines. Public Buildings and Grounds. i Piramal ev em Library, chairman. Appropriations. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Military Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. Rules. — WIS... assess Expenditures in the Department of State, chairman. : Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. National Banks. : Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Printing. Railroads. : | LL Re SS Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Interstate Commerce. Philippines. Territories. 1.oDGE.......eveuuus----.-... Private Land Claims, chairman. Finance. | Foreign Relations. | Immigration. Naval Affairs. : Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. McOuMBER...............- = Transportation Routes to the Seaboard, chairman. | Finance. | Foreign Relations. Indian Depredations. | Pacific Railroads. Pensions. University of the United States. MeLEAN.. ...-.... enon Banking and Currency. Census. | Education and Labor. | Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Manufactures. Philippines. 1 Territories. Le sa Assignments of Senators to Committees. 171 MARTIN of Virginia. ......... Appropriations, chairman. Claims. Commerce. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Departments of Commerce and NEON: ana NEWLANDE. oo. ccvisenvs x Norris QO CoRMAN.. oo aan OLIVER ® ce @ 0 cacecncssancancna Labor. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Fisheries. Coast Defenses, chairman. Census. Education and Labor. Industrial Expositions. National Banks. - Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings an Grounds. Public Lands, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Indian Affairs. Indian Depredations. Industrial Expositions. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. : Revolutionary Claims. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians, chairman. Banking and Currency. Commerce. Judiciary. Rules. Territories. Interstate Commerce, chairman. Conservation of National Resources. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Indian Depredations. Library. Revolutionary Claims. Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. Expenditures in the War Department. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Geological Survey. Public Lands. Railroads. Interoceanic Canals, chairman. Banking and Currency. Foreign Relations. Immigration. Judiciary. Manufactures. Naval Affairs. Rules. Appropriations. Canadian Relations. Commerce. Industrial Expositions. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Railroads. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——13 178 Congressional Directory. PP ONBORE. cian PITMAN. ...-cossasieicionisiseiin POINDEXTER ccecueoosssnisse ns Rules, chairman. Appropriations. Claims. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Industrial Expositions. Judiciary. University of the United States. Banking and Currency, chairman. Appropriations. Indian Affairs. Interoceanic Canals. Library. Public Health and National Quarantine. Territories. Womign Suffrage. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Education and Labor. Indian Affairs. Interoceanic Canals. Naval Affairs. Printing. Additional Accommodations for Library of Congress, chairman. Education and Labor. Expenditures in the Department of State. Finance. Immigration. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Railroads, chairman. Appropriations. Commerce. Fisheries. Indian Depredations. Interoceanic Canals. Naval Affairs. . Territories, chairman. Claims. . Coast and Insular Survey. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Indian Affairs. Industrial Expositions. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Mines and Mining. Pacific Railroads. Public Lands. Expenditures in the War Department, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Con- gress. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Assignments of Senators to Committees. 179 RPomereNw). Lo non Civil Service and Retrenchment, chairman. Banking and Currency. Census. District of Columbia. Foreign Relations. Indian Depredations. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. . Privileges and Elections. BANSDELY 0... oan Public Health and National Quarantine, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Canadian Relations. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Commerce. Expenditures in the Department of State. Philippines. Public Lands. Woman Suffrage. a SN oe | BERD: is el Manufactures, chairman. I Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the | Senate. i Banking and Currency. Judiciary. Pacific Railroads. Philippines. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Railroads. ROBINSON................... Expenditures in the Treasury Department, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. | Claims. ; | Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Immigration. Indian Affairs. i Interstate Commerce. Revision of the Laws of the United States (Joint). Public Lands. LT ES CR Canadian Relations. Coast Defenses. Foreign Relations. Industrial Expositions. | Judiciary. Library. Public Health and National Quarantine, SAUISBURY...obessnssnsassns Coast and Insular Survey, chairman. Conservation of National Resources. District of Columbia. | Engrossed Bills. Interstate Commerce. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Pacific Railroads. Philippines. Public Buildings and Grounds. University of the United States. BHAPROTH. .0ieavies eesessa.-.Pacific Islands and Porto Rico, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Banking and Currency. Mines and Mining. Philippines. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. 180 Congressional Directory. SHEPPARD... .. ons ie. ibis Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture, chair- man. Agriculture and Forestry. Census. Coast Defenses. Commerce. : Immigration. i Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. = SHERMAN... Canadian Relations. Disposition of Useless Papers in the Executive Depart- ments. | District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Privileges and Elections. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. SHIELDS... .-...Canadian Relations, chairman. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Commerce. ! Education and Labor. Industrial Expositions. Interoceanic Canals. Judiciary. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Standards, Weights, and Measures. | Smrvevy. 0. a Pensions, chairman. Census. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Education and Labor. Finance. | Foreign Relations. i Library. : Pacific Railroads. ’ Patents. | Territories. SIMMONS... eee Finance, chairman. Coast Defenses. i Commerce. i Engrossed Bills. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Interoceanic Canals. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. Smrre of Arizona............ Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands, chairman. Conservation of National Resources. District of Columbia. Foreign Relations. Geological Survey. Printing. Public Lands. ’ Railroads. | Smita of Georgia. ........... Education and Labor, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. ! Finance. Library. Post Offices and Post Roads. | | | —e—— he aa CSRS SEES _— Assignments of Senators to Committees. 181 SumrrH of Maryland . . ........ District of Columbia, chairman. Appropriations. Canadian Relations. Coast Defenses. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. - Naval Affairs. Smite of Michigan........... To Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service, chairman. : Commerce. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Foreign Relations. Naval Affairs. Private Land Claims. Smita of South Carolina...... Immigration, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Conservation of National Resources. Geological Survey. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Patents. Post Offices and Post Roads. Railroads. Sweor... oo. Expenditures in the Interior Department, chairman. Appropriations. Civil Service and Retrenchment. Finance. Pensions. Printing. Public Health and National Quarantine. Public Lands. NTEPEENSON....- eran To Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands, chair- man. Commerce. Enrolled Bills. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Industrial Expositions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. SveRIING La Civil Service and Retrenchment. Coast and Insular Survey. Conservation of National Resources. Mines and Mining. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Pensions. Public Lands. Stone... il oan Ne Indian Affairs, chairman. - Additional Accommodations for the Library of Con- gress. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Department of State. Finance. Foreign Relations. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Pacific Railroads. 182 Congressional Directory. SUTHERLAND. .....cc.-.......Lxpenditures in the Department of Justice, chairman. Foreign Relations. Irrigation®and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. Revision of the Laws of the United States (Joint). Woman Suffrage. - BWANSON. ou. iandsvail Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. Education and Labor. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Foreign Relations. Indian Depredations. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. BowoMAR ce. ae Woman Suffrage, chairman. Finance. 2% Ne Interoceanic Canals. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. Private Land Claims. Public Lands. PHOMBSON .. .- ov vinvnnnsss Expenditures in the Departments of Commerce and Labor, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Census. Conservation of National Resources. Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Privileges and Elections. Public Lands. BHORNTON.. thes omits Fisheries, chairman. Census. Interoceanic Canals. Manufactures. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Naval Affairs. TILLMAN . ccc couoiiisunrvei Noval Aflaive, chairman. Appropriations. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Mines and Mining. Private Land Claims. OWNSIEND oo coeomaacsans Census. Coast and Insular Survey. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service. Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. Pacific Railroads. Post Offices and Post Roads. Assignments of Senators to Commattees. 183 VARDAMAN................Conservation of National Resources, chairman. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Con- gress. Commerce. Military Affairs. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. TA EE Re BS Mines and Mining, chairman. Canadian Relations. Interoceanic Canals. Judiciary. Pensions. Philippines. Privileges and Elections. Territories. WARREN. ....-v...-.......Engrossed Bills, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Rules. Vn SE Shed eI te Banking and Currency. Coast Defenses. Conservation of National Resources. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game. Indian Depredations. Philippines. Public Health and National Quarantine. Whiavs... ....- Ea and Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, chairman. Finance. Foreign Relations. Mississippi River and its Tributaries. Public Health and National Quarantine. Railroads. Rules. University of the United States. NOBRS. isin di ee Coast and Insular Survey. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Fisheries. Industrial Expositions. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands. Public Health and National Quarantine. Public Lands. 184 Congressional Directory. | MEETING DAYS OF HOUSE COMMITTEES. { (Committees other than those mentioned meet upon the call of the chairman.) Bankineand Curveney....... 0 00d om 0 or Ean Wednesday. Bdueation. ................ .. 0. aire Tuesday. Immicration and Nadwrallaatlon..o...o0cs 0 so 000s Thursday. Indian Affairs. esr i a as Friday. Invalid Pensions... cto inoe oo. es vai ins a Monday aber i. aE i aE Friday. Yibrwy..c.. AEE Ea Monday. Military Affairs... ii dias ll aa NA Tuesday and Friday. Nawal Aflomrs.. co. oo LT Se aa rat Tuesday and Friday. Ee Re Sa he EE Wednesday. PONEIOns, or fe a TT Wednesday. | Post Officesand Post Bonds. .......0 o.oo in Tuesday and Friday. “ PublicBuildingsand Grounds. cc... cone Wednesday. Boas er i a EL ee saa saa Wednesday. Committees of the House. 185 COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE. [*Indicates Progressive.] Accounts. James T. Lloyd, of Missouri. William R. Smith, of Texas. James A. Hamill, of New Jersey. John W. Abercrombie, of Alabama. William B. Francis, of Ohio. P. G. Ten Eyck, of New York. James A. Hughes, of West Virginia. William 'W. Griest, of Pennsylvania. James S. Parker, of New York. *Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan. Agriculture. Asbury F. Lever, of South Carolina. Gordon Lee, of Georgia. Ezekiel S. Candler, jr., of Mississippi. J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama. James T. McDermott, of Illinois. John A. Maguire, of Nebraska. Thomas L. Rubey, of Missouri. James Young, of Texas. H. M. Jacoway, of Arkansas. Ralph W. Moss, of Indiana. John V. Lesher, of Pennsylvania. Michael K. R illy, of Wisconsin. Benjamin I. Taylor, of New York. Dudley Doolittle, of Kansas. Gilbert N. Haugen, of Towa. James C. McLaughlin, of Michigan. Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon. Joseph Howell, of Utah. Charles H. Sloan, of Nebraska. Henry T. Helgesen, of North Dakota. Charles E. Patton, of Pennsylvania. J. Kuhio Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. ® Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. William B. Francis, of Ohio. John L. Burnett, of Alabama. Frank Clark, of Florida. . Hannibal L. Godwin, of North Carolina. J. Washington Logue, of Pennsylvania. James H. O’Brien, of New York. Andrew J. Barchfeld, of Pennsylvania. Addison T. Smith, of Idaho. *M. Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania. Appropriations. John J. Fitzgerald, of New York. Swagar Sherley, of Kentucky. Charles L. Bartlett, of Georgia. Joseph T. Johnson, of South Carolina. Robert N. Page, of North Carolina. George W. Rauch, of Indiana. Joseph W. Byrns, of Tennessee. Thomas Upton Sisson, of Mississippi. Eugene F. Kinkead, of New Jersey. William P. Borland, of Missouri. George White, of Ohio. James McAndrews, of Illinois. Bryan F. Mahan, of Connecticut. Wooda N. Carr, of Pennsylvania. Frederick H. Gillett, of Massachusetts. James W. Good, of Towa. Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota. William M. Calder, of New York. William 8. Vare, of Pennsylvania. *William H. Hinebaugh, of Illinois. 186 Congressional Directory. Banking and Currency. Carter Glass, of Virginia. Charles A. Korbly, of Indiana. William G. Brown, of West Virginia. Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio. George A. Neeley, of Kansas. Thomas G. Patten, of New York. Claude U. Stone, of Illinois. Michael F. Phelan, of Massachusetts. Joe H. Eagle, of Texas. Otis Wingo, of Arkansas. Harry H. Seldomridge, of Colorado. Emmett Wilson, of Florida. Claude Weaver, of Oklahoma. J. Willard Ragsdale, of South Carolina. Harvey Helm, of Kentucky. William C. Houston, of Tennessee. John M. Faison, of North Carolina. John H. Rothermel, of Pennsylvania. Jeremiah ‘Donovan, of Connecticut. Harry H. Dale, of New York. Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas. Edward Gilmore, of Massachusetts. James B. Aswell, of Louisiana. William N. Baltz, of Illinois. Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina. Martin Dies, of Texas. Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi. Dudley M. Hughes, of Georgia. George McClellan, of New York. Herman A. Metz, of New York. John M. Evans, of Montana. Robert P. Hill, of Illinois. Everis A. Hayes, of California. Frank E. Guernsey, of Maine. James F'. Burke, of Pennsylvania. Frank P. Woods, of Iowa. Edmund Platt, of New York. George R. Smith, of Minnesota. Charles A. Lindbergh, of Minnesota. Census. Asher C. Hinds, of Maine. Sam R. Sells, of Tennessee. Luther W. Mott, of New York. George R. Smith, of Minnesota. George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania. Claims. Luther W. Mott, of New York. George C. Scott, of Iowa. George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania. Charles H. Dillon, of South Dakota. e | Francis O. Lindquist, of Michigan. George M. Young, of North Dakota. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia. William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio. James L. Slayden, of Texas. Jeremiah Donovan, of Connecticut. Ladislas Lazaro, of Louisiana. Franklin Brockson, of Delaware. John W. Abercrombie, of Alabama. Sanford Kirkpatrick, of Iowa. William H. Murray, of Oklahoma. Luther W. Mott, of New York. George C. Scott, of Iowa. E. E. Roberts, of Nevada. Abraham L. Keister, of Pennsylvania. Charles H. Dillon, of South Dakota. Louis C. Cramton, of Michigan. Samuel E. Winslow, of Massachusetts. Fred E. Lewis, of Pennsylvania. J. Kuhio Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. Joshua F. C. Talbott, of Maryland. | Patrick H. Kelley, of Michigan. District of Columbia. Ben Johnson, of Kentucky. Wyatt Aiken, of South Carolina. Henry George, jr., of New York. William L. Igoe, of Missouri. Thaddeus H. Caraway, of Arkansas. George E. Gorman, of Illinois. Denis O’ Leary, of New York. Eugene E. Reed, of New Hampshire. Robert G. Bremner, of New Jersey. Claude L'Engle, of Florida. Joseph B. Thompson, of Oklahoma. Robert Crosser, of Ohio. George J. Kindel, of Colorado. Horatio C. Claypool, of Ohio. William J. Cary, of Wisconsin. Solomon F'. Prouty, of Iowa. Samuel Wallin, of New York. Samuel E. Winslow, of Massachusetts. Abraham L. Keister, of Pennsylvania. Carl E. Mapes, of Michigan. Anderson H. Walters, of Pennsylvania. Committees of the House. 187 Education. Dudley M. Hughes, of Georgia. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina. John W. Abercrombie, of Alabama. J. Thompson Baker, of New Jersey. John R. Clancy, of New York. Thomas C. Thacher, of Massachusetts. Stephen A. Hoxworth, of Illinois. James F'. Burke, of Pennsylvania. Caleb Powers, of Kentucky. Horace M. Towner, of Iowa. Edmund Platt, of New York. Allen T. Treadway, of Massachusetts. Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio. ¥Arthur R. Rupley, of Pennsylvania. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Horatio C. Claypool, of Ohio. Robert F. Broussard, of Louisiana. A. W. Gregg, of Texas. Charles R. Crisp, of Georgia. Guy T. Helvering, of Kansas. Franklin Brockson, of Delaware. William D. B. Ainey, of Pennsylvania. Frank Plumley, of Vermont. Carl E. Mapes, of Michigan. Samuel E. Winslow, of Massachusetts. Fred E. Lewis, of Pennsylvania. Elections No. 1. J. D. Post, of Ohio. Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi. Charles R. Crisp, of Georgia. George McClellan, of New York. . Charles M. Borchers, of Illinois. Walter Elder, of Louisiana. Burton L. French, of Idaho. James A. Frear, of Wisconsin. *¥Walter M. Chandler, of New York. Elections No. 2. James A. Hamill, of New Jersey. Robert F. Broussard, of Louisiana. Joseph J. Russell, of Missouri. Samuel M. Taylor, of Arkansas. Stanley E. Bowdle, of Ohio. Woodson R. Oglesby, of New York. William H. Stafford, of Wisconsin. John J. Rogers, of Massachusetts. Fred E. Lewis, of Pennsylvania. Elections No. 3. Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. John J. Whitacre, of Ohio. Lewis L.. Morgan, of Louisiana. + William R. Smith, of Texas. William Kennedy, of Connecticut. Walter A. Watson, of Virginia. John C. McKenzie, of Illinois. Milton W. Shreve, of Pennsylvania. *¥Arthur R. Rupley, of Pennsylvania. Enrolled Bilis. William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio. Sanford Kirkpatrick, of Iowa. L. Lazaro, of Louisiana. Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio. William J. Browning, of New Jersey. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Robert I.. Doughton, of North Carolina. James B. Aswell, of Louisiana. John R. Clancy, of New York. Guy T. Helvering, of Kansas. Charles H. Sloan, of Nebraska. J. M. C. Smith, of Michigan. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. John H. Rothermel, of Pennsylvania. John H. Stephens, of Texas. John T. Watkins, of Louisiana. Henry Bruckner, of New York. Allan B. Walsh, of New Jersey. Bird McGuire, of Oklahoma. Charles E. Patton, of Pennsylvania. - 188 ’ Congressional Directory. Expenditures in the Interior Department. James M. Graham, of Illinois. Oscar Callaway, of Texas. Joseph A. Goulden, of New York. Dudley M. Hughes, of Georgia. Tom Stout, of Montana. Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. Charles H. Burke, of South Dakota. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Robert F. Broussard, of Louisiana. Harvey B. Fergusson, of New Mexico. Warren W. Bailey, of Pennsylvania. Clyde H. Tavenner, of Illinois. Archibald C. Hart, of New Jersey. Stephen G. Porter, of Pennsylvania. Louis C. Cramton, of Michigan. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. James P. Maher, of New York. James A. Hamill, of New Jersey. Scott Ferris, of Oklahoma. David J. Lewis, of Maryland. John J. Casey, of Pennsylvania. Halvor Steenerson, of Minnesota. *J. A. Falconer, of Washington. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. John M. Faison, of North Carolina. Herman A. Metz, of New York. Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut. John A. Key, of Ohio. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. *Charles M. Thomson, of Illinois. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Irvin S. Pepper, of Towa. James M. Gudger, jr., of North Carolina. Frank O. Smith, of Maryland. James H. O’Brien, of New York. Andrew R. Brodheck, of Pennsylvania. Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas. Henry T. Helgesen, of North Dakota. Expenditures in the State Department. Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri. Clement Brumbaugh, of Ohio. Lathrop Brown, of New York. Charles M. Borchers, of Illinois. Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon. *James W. Bryan, of Washington. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. C. O. Lobeck, of Nebraska. Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma. Horatio C. Claypool, of Ohio. Michael E. Burke, of Wisconsin. John R. Connelly, of Kansas. Dick T. Morgan, of Oklahoma. * Henry W. Temple, of Pennsylvania. Expenditures in the War Department. John A. M. Adair, of Indiana. Hannibal L. Godwin, of North Carolina. John J. Eagan, of New Jersey. Peter J. Dooling, of New York. Frank L. Dershem, of Pennsylvania. Expenditures on Thomas F. Konop, of Wisconsin. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. Jeremiah Donovan, of Connecticut. Harry H. Dale, of New York. Ernest W. Roberts, of Massachusetts. Public Buildings. John J. Esch, of Wisconsin. James C. McLaughlin, of Michigan. Commuttees : ) Foreign Henry D. Flood, of Virginia. William G. Sharp, of Ohio. Cyrus Cline, of Indiana. Jefferson M. Levy, of New York. James M. Curley, of Massachusetts. J. Charles Linthicum, of Maryland. Robert E. Difenderfer, of Pennsylvania. William S. Goodwin, of Arkansas. Charles M. Stedman, of North Carolina. Edward W. Townsend, of New Jersey. Byron P. Harrison, of Mississippi. Charles B. Smith, of New York. John Randall Walker, of Georgia. Horace W. Vaughan, of Texas. Immigration John I. Burnett, of Alabama. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. John A. M. Adair, of Indiana. Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. James L. Slayden, of Texas. William A. Oldfield, of Arkansas. John E. Raker, of California. John A. Key, of Ohio Franklin Brockson, of Delaware. Indian John I. Stephens, of Texas. Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma. James M. Gudger, jr., of North Carolina. Thomas F. Konop, of Wisconsin. James D. Post, of Ohio. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Lewis L. Morgan, of Louisiana. Dorsey W. Shackleford, of Missouri. Robert P. Hill, of Illinois. Allan B. Walsh, of New Jersey. John R. Clancy, of New York. John M. Evans, of Montana. William H. Murray, of Oklahoma. Denver S. Church, of California. of the House. 189 Affairs. Henry A. Cooper, of Wisconsin. Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri. George W. Fairchild, of New York. Stephen G. Porter, of Pennsylvania. William D. B. Ainey, of Pennsylvania. John J. Rogers, of Massachusetts. *Henry W. Temple, of Pennsylvania. ‘and Naturalization. Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts. Everis A. Hayes, of California. J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania. Edwin A. Merritt, ir. of New York. James Manahan, of Minnesota. Albert Johnson, of Washington. Affairs. Charles H. Burke, of South Dakota. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. - Bird McGuire, of Oklahoma. Clarence B. Miller, of Minnesota. Charles M. Hamilton, of New York. Patrick D. Norton, of North Dakota. *Arthur R. Rupley, of Pennsylvania. James Wickersham, of Alaska. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Edwin S. Underhill, of New York. James C. Cantrill, of Kentucky. William A. Jones, of Virginia. Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri. Joseph A. Goulden, of New York. Irvin S. Pepper, of Towa. Thomas F. Konop, of Wisconsin. William B. Francis, of Ohio. Lawrence B. Stringer, of Illinois. Richard S. Whaley, of South Carolina. Insular William A. Jones, of Virginia. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. Harvey Helm, of Kentucky. Martin A. Morrison, of Indiana. James S. Davenport, of Oklahoma. Oscar Callaway, of Texas. Henry M. Goldfogle, of New York. Joseph A. Goulden, of New York. Joseph J. Russell, of Missouri. Warren W. Bailey, of Pennsylvania. - Lawrence B. Stringer, of Illinois. - Clement Brumbaugh, of Ohio. Walter Elder, of Louisiana. J. Thompson Baker, of New Jersey. Frank P. Woods, of Towa. Julius Kahn, of California. William Kent, of California. Addison T. Smith, of Idaho. Ira C. Copley, of Illinois. Affairs. 5 Horace M. Towner, of Towa. Clarence B. Miller, of Minnesota. Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio. James A. Frear, of Wisconsin. George M. Young, of North Dakota. *J. A. Falconer, of Washington. 190 Congressional Directory. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. William C. Adamson, of Georgia. Thetus W. Sims, of Tennessee. J. Harry Covington, of Maryland. William A. Cullop, of Indiana. Frank E. Doremus, of Michigan. J. Henry Goeke, of Ohio. George IF. O’Shaunessy, of Rhode Island. Charles A. Talcott, of New York. Dan V. Stephens, of Nebraska. Raymond B. Stevens, of New Hampshire. Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Sam Rayburn, of Texas. Andrew J. Montague, of Virginia. Perl D. Decker, of Missouri. Frederick C. Stevens, of Minnesota. John J. Esch, of Wisconsin. Joseph R. Knowland, of California. Edward LL. Hamilton, of Michigan. Eben W. Martin, of South Dakota. Frank B. Willis, of Ohio. A. W. Lafferty, of Oregon. Invalid Pensions. Isaac R. Sherwood, of Ohio. John A. M. Adair, of Indiana. Joseph J. Russell, of Missouri. Michael E. Burke, of Wisconsin. John H. Stephens, of Texas. Edward W. Saunders, of Virginia. Guy T. Helvering, of Kansas. Richard S. Whaley, of South Carolina. Charles M. Borchers, of Illinois. Archibald C. Hart, of New Jersey. J. N. Langham, of Pennsylvania. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska. Louis C. Cramton, of Michigan. James S. Parker, of New York. Hunter H. Moss, jr., of West Virginia. Irrigation of Arid Lands. William R. Smith, of Texas. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. John E. Raker, of California. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Harvey B. Fergusson, of New Mexico. Tom Stout, of Montana. Stanley E. Bowdle, of Ohio. John R. Connelly, of Kansas. Moses P. Kinkaid, of Nebraska. William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. E. E. Roberts, of Nevada. Addison T. Smith, of Idaho. Jacob Johnson, of Utah. Nicholas J. Sinnott, of Oregon. Judiciary. Henry D. Clayton, of Alabama. Edwin Y. Webb, of North Carolina. Charles C. Carlin, of Virginia. John C. Floyd, of Arkansas. Robert Y. Thomas, jr., of Kentucky. H. Garland Dupré, of Louisiana. Walter I. McCoy, of New Jersey. Daniel J. McGillicuddy, of Maine. Jack Beall, of Texas. Joseph Taggart, of Kansas. Louis FitzHenry, of Illinois. John F. Carew, of New York. John B. Peterson, of Indiana. John J. Mitchell, of Massachusetts. Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota. John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Dick T. Morgan, of Oklahoma. Henry G. Danforth, of New York. L. C. Dyer, of Missouri. George S. Graham, of Pennsylvania. *Walter M. Chandler, of New York. Labor. David J. Lewis, of Maryland. James P. Maher, of New York. Finly H. Gray, of Indiana. John J. Casey, of Pennsylvania. William N. Baltz, of Illinois. Walter A. Watson, of Virginia. Edward Keating, of Colorado. Allan B. Walsh, of New Jersey. J. M. C. Smith, of Michigan. Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon. Edward E. Browne, of Wisconsin. John I. Nolan, of California. Committees of the House. 191 Library. James L. Slayden, of Texas. Thomas C. Thacher, of Massachusetts. Peter G. Ten Eyck, of New York. Richard Bartholdt, of Missouri. James F. Burke, of Pennsylvania. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Joshua W. Alexander, of Missouri. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. Michael E. Burke, of Wisconsin. John M. Faison, of North Carolina. Edward W. Saunders, of Virginia. Finly H. Gray, of Indiana. Thomas C. Thacher, of Massachusetts. Stanley KE. Bowdle, of Ohio. Peter J. Dooling, of New York. Richard S. Whaley, of South Carolina. Frank O. Smith, of Maryland. Henry Bruckner, of New York. Ladislas Lazaro, of Louisiana. Andrew R. Brodbeck, of Pennsylvania. William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. Asher C. Hinds, of Maine. Charles F. Curry, of California. James Manahan, of Minnesota. ; George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania. James S. Parker, of New York. * James W. Bryan, of Washington. Mileage. Warren Worth Bailey, of Pennsylvania. James P. Maher, of New York. Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas. Charles A. Kennedy, of Towa. Jacob Johnson, of Utah. Military Affairs. James Hay, of Virginia. S. Hubert Dent, jr., of Alabama. William J. Fields, of Kentucky. Kenneth D. McKellar, of Tennessee. William S. Howard, of Georgia. Daniel J. Griffin, of New York. Robert H. Gittins, of New York. Warren Gard, of Ohio. Frank T. O’Hair, of Illinois. Frederick S. Deitrick, of Massachusetts. Percy E. Quin, of Mississippi. Daniel E. Garrett, of Texas. Maurice Connolly, of Towa. William Gordon, of Ohio. Julius Kahn, of California. Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas. John C. McKenzie, of Illinois. Frank 1. Greene, of Vermont. John M. Morin, of Pennsylvania. Samuel B. Avis, of West Virginia. Willis J. Hulings, of Pennsylvania. James Wickersham, of Alaska. Mines and Mining. Martin D. Foster, of Illinois. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. Courtney W. Hamlin, of Missouri. James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina. Samuel M. Taylor, of Arkansas. John M. Evans, of Montana. Peter J. Dooling, of New York. John J. Casey, of Pennsylvania. Joseph Howell, of Utah. Robert M. Switzer, of Ohio. Richard W. Austin, of Tennessee. E. E. Roberts, of Nevada. Howard Sutherland, of West Virginia. James Wickersham, of Alaska. Naval Affairs. Lemuel P. Padgett, of Tennessee. Joshua F. C. Talbott, of Maryland. Richmond P. Hobson, of Alabama. Albert Estopinal, of Louisiana. Daniel J. Riordan, of New York. Samuel J. Tribble, of Georgia. Samuel A. Witherspoon, of Mississippi. Walter L.. Hensley, of Missouri. Frank Buchanan, of Illinois. E. R. Bathrick, of Ohio. Robert E. Lee, of Pennsylvania. William E. Williams, of Illinois. John J. Mitchell, of Massachusetts. Thomas S. Butler, of Pennsylvania. Ernest W. Roberts, of Massachusetts. William J. Browning, of New Jersey. John R. Farr, of Pennsylvania. Fred A. Britten, of Illinois. Patrick H. Kelley, of Michigan. William D. Stephens, of California. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. 192 Congressional Directory. Patents. William A. Oldfield, of Arkansas. Martin A. Morrison, of Indiana. Frank Clark, of Florida. Joshua W. Alexander, of Missouri. Oscar Callaway, of Texas. Herman A. Metz, of New York. Robert P. Hill, of Illinois. Woodson R. Oglesby, of New York. William Kennedy, of Connecticut. Hunter H. Moss, jr., of West Virginia. Aaron S. Kreider, of Pennsylvania. Francis O. Lindquist, of Michigan. John I. Nolan, of California. Pensions. William Richardson, of Alabama. Charles R. Crisp, of Georgia. John A. Key, of Ohio. William H. Murray, of Oklahoma. Harry H. Dale, of New York. Edward Keating, of Colorado. Sanford Kirkpatrick, of Iowa. Frank O. Smith, of Maryland. Frank L. Dershem, of Pennsylvania. Sam R. Sells, of Tennessee. Frank L. Greene, of Vermont. Edgar R. Kiess, of Pennsylvania. Samuel B. Avis, of West Virginia. Anderson H. Walters, of Pennsylvania. Post Office and Post Roads. John A. Moon, of Tennessee. David E. Finley, of South Carolina. Thomas M. Bell, of Georgia. William E. Cox, of Indiana. Frank E. Wilson, of New York. William E. Tuttle, jr., of New Jersey. Arthur B. Rouse, of Kentucky. “H. Robert Fowler, of Illinois. Fred L. Blackmon, of Alabama. Alfred G. Allen, of Ohio. Thomas L. Reilly, of Connecticut. E. E. Holland, of Virginia. Samuel W. Beakes, of Michigan. John P. Buchanan, of Texas. Samuel W. Smith, of Michigan. Halvor Steenerson, of Minnesota. Martin B. Madden, of Illinois. William H. Stafford, of Wisconsin. William W. Griest, of Pennsylvania. Ambrose Kennedy, of Rhode Island. Ira C. Copley, of Illinois. J. Kuhio Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. Printing. Henry A. Barnhart, of Indiana. Clyde H. Tavenner, of Illinois. Edgar R. Kiess, of Pennsylvania. Public Buildings and Grounds. Frank Clark, of Florida. John L. Burnett, of Alabama. James C. Cantrill, of Kentucky. William A. Ashbrook, of Ohio. James M. Gudger, jr., of North Carolina. J. Washington Logue, of Pennsylvania. Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas. Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut. George McClellan, of New York. John J. Eagan, of New Jersey. Edward Gilmore, of Massachusetts. Richard W. Austin, of Tennessee. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. J. M. C. Smith, of Michigan. Thomas B. Dunn, of New York. Silas R. Barton, of Nebraska. Aaron S. Kreider, of Pennsylvania. Charles W. Bell, of California. Committees of the House. 193 Public Lands. Scott Ferris, of Oklahoma. James M. Graham, of Illinois. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. John E. Raker, of California. Horatio C. Claypool, of Ohio: Harvey B. Fergusson, of New Mexico. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Samuel M. Taylor, of Arkansas. Lathrop Brown, of New York. Tom Stout, of Montana. Andrew R. Brodbeck, of Pennsylvania. Denver S. Church, of California. Irvine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. Burton I. French, of Idaho. William I. La Follette, of Washington. William Kent, of California. Nicholas J. Sinnott, of Oregon. Jacob Johnson, of Utah. *Charles M. Thomson, of Illinois. James Wickersham, of Alaska. Railways and Canals. Martin Dies, of Texas. J. Thompson Baker, of New Jersey. Henry Bruckner, of New York. John J. Eagan, of New Jersey. William N. Baltz, of Illinois. William Kennedy, of Connecticut. v William L. La Follette, of Washington. Francis O. Lindquist, of Michigan. John M. Morin, of Pennsylvania. Hunter H. Moss, jr., of West Virginia. Samuel Wallin, of New York. Patrick D. Norton, of North Dakota. Reform in the Civil Service. Hannibal L. Godwin, of North Carolina. Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma. Martin Dies, of Texas. C. O. Lobeck, of Nebraska. Lewis L. Morgan, of Louisiana. Stephen A. Hoxworth, of Illinois. Denver S. Church, of California. Lathrop Brown, of New York. George C. Scott, of Iowa. Martin B. Madden, of Illinois. James Manahan, of Minnesota. Silas R. Barton, of Nebraska. * James W. Bryan, of Washington. Revision of the Laws. John T. Watkins, of Louisiana. Martin A. Morrison, of Indiana. William B. Francis, of Ohio. - Robert L. Henry, of Texas. James T. Lloyd, of Missouri. J. Washington Logue, of Pennsylvania. Edwin A. Merritt, jr., of New York. Frank Plumley, of Vermont. Charles H. Dillon, of South Dakota. * Willis J. Hulings, of Pennsylvania. Rivers and Harbors. Stephen M. Sparkman, of Florida. George F. Burgess, of Texas. Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi. George W. Taylor, of Alabama. Charles G. Edwards, of Georgia. John H. Small, of North Carolina. Charles I. Booher, of Missouri. Thomas Gallagher, of Illinois. Daniel A. Driscoll, of New York. Michael Donohoe, of Pennsylvania. Thomas J. Scully, of New Jersey. William F. Murray, of Massachusetts. Charles Lieb, of Indiana. William Kettner, of California. 18823°—63-2—1sT eD——14 William E. Humphrey, of Washington. Charles A. Kennedy, of Iowa. Andrew J. Barchfeld, of Pennsylvania. James A. Hughes, of West Virginia. Robert M. Switzer, of Ohio. Caleb Powers, of Kentucky. : Allen T. Treadway, of Massachusetts. 194 Congressional Directory. Roads. Dorsey W. Shackleford, of Missouri. Edward W. Saunders, of Virginia. Henry A. Barnhart, of Indiana. James S. Davenport, of Oklahoma. James F'. Byrnes, of South Carolina. Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi. John J. Whitacre, of Ohio. Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina. John R. Connelly, of Kansas. Edward Keating, of Colorado. Clyde H. Tavenner, of Illinois. Peter G. Ten Eyck, of New York. James B. Aswell, of Louisiana. Frank L. Dershem, of Pennsylvania. C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia. Solomon Prouty, of Iowa. Thomas B. Dunn, of New York. Howard Sutherland, of West Virginia. Milton W. Shreve, of Pennsylvania. Edward E. Browne, of Wisconsin. *Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan. Rules. Robert L.. Henry, of Texas. Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina. Thomas W. Hardwick, of Georgia. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. Martin D. Foster, of Illinois. James C. Cantrill, of Kentucky. Michael F. Conry, of New York. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. Irvine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. Edwin A. Merritt, jr., of New York. *M. Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania. Territories. William C. Houston, of Tennessee. James S. Davenport, of Oklahoma. John T. Watkins, of Louisiana. Scott Ferris, of Oklahoma. Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut. James H. O’Brien, of New York. Stephen A. Hoxworth, of Illinois. Woodson R. Oglesby, of New York. Walter A. Watson, of Virginia. Clement Brumbaugh, of Ohio. Frank E. Guernsey, of Maine. J. N. Langham, of Pennsylvania. Bird McGuire, of Oklahoma. Albert Johnson, of Washington. Charles F. Curry, of California. Charles M. Hamilton, of New York. * J. A. Falconer, of Washington. J. Kuhio Kalanianaole, of Hawaii. James Wickersham, of Alaska. War Claims. A. W. Gregg, of Texas. James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina. Irvin S. Pepper, of Iowa. William C. Houston, of Tennessee. C. O. Lobeck, of Nebraska. David J. Lewis, of Maryland. Edwin S. Underhill, of New York. Walter Elder, of Louisiana. Edward Gilmore, of Massachusetts. Frank Plumley, of Vermont. Sam R. Sells, of Tennessee. C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia. Silas R. Barton, of Nebraska. Albert Johnson, of Washington. Charles W. Bell, of California. Ways and Means. Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama. Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina. Henry T. Rainey, of Illinois. Lincoln Dixon, of Indiana. Cordell Hull, of Tennessee. Winfield 8. Hammond, of Minnesota. Andrew J. Peters, of Massachusetts. A. Mitchell Palmer, of Pennsylvania. Timothy T. Ansberry, of Ohio. John N. Garner, of Texas. James W. Collier, of Mississippi. Augustus O. Stanley, of Kentucky. (Clement C. Dickinson, of Missouri. Michael F. Conry, of New York. Sereno E. Payne, of New York. Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan. Augustus P. Gardner, of Massachusetts. J. Hampton Moore, of Pennsylvania. William R. Green, of Iowa. *Victor Murdock, of Kansas. House Committee Assignments. 195 ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES AND DELEGATES TO COMMITTEES. Cramp CLARK, Speaker. ABERCROMBIE. ....oonss donne Accounts. Education. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Ln Re Se SR Expenditures in the War Department, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Invalid Pensions. ADAMEON... ....c.c.ondinnisin Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. LUE A Se i ee District of Columbia. AiNEY weeeecece-eewe----..Hlection of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Foreign Affairs. AT EANDERL. es Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. Patents. AIBN. fain dai Post Office and Post Roads. ANDERSON... ...... ...... ou. ANSBERRY .cicuxunes ing stan bivil Ways and Means. ANTHONY... oocesivnss-oaiin d Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Military Affairs. ASWBEO0R, ose Enrolled Bills, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Public Buildings and Grounds. AEWELT. 0. seas sata Roads. Census. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. NUSTIN. oid Public Buildings and Grounds. Mines and Mining. AVIS. erent L writs ans Military Affairs, Pensions. BAILEY. 0. Coen veil bein th wns Fo Mileage, chairman. Insular Affairs. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. BARTER... vcr are Insular Affairs. Education. Railways and Canals. BALTZ.. iii he Labor. Census. Railways and Canals. BARCEPRID.... otis sandal Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. BARE EY. ia Rivers and Harbors. . Interstate and Foreign Commerce. 196 Congressional Directory. Bammwame. oa BARTHOUDE. .~ cvs. avons Bama La Bamana Printing, chairman. Roads. .Library.. Foreign Affairs. Appropriations. Public Buildings and Grounds. Reform in the Civil Service. amc w. oes mon Byars. ARE Sar fe Beir of Georgia... .....euveeon BrAGRMON...... ...... ov ues BOCEER: aa BOREAND anes BoWwprn.. i: cia Brown of New York........... Brown of West Virginia...... BrowxNE of Wisconsin.......... BoowNING. . ...... lr War Claims. Naval Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Judiciary. Public Buildings and Grounds. War Claims. Post Office and Post Roads. Post Office and Post Roads. Rivers and Harbors. Invalid Pensions. Elections No. 1. Expenditures in the State Department. Appropriations. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Elections No. 2. Enrolled Bills. District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Public Lands. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Expenditures in the Department of Justice, chairman. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Elections No. 2. Public Lands. Reform in the Civil Service. Expenditures in the State Department. .Banking and Currency. Roads. Labor. Enrolled Bills. - Naval Affairs. House Committee Assignments. BRUCENER ...iaieiieini oh BrumBAUGH BRYAN... 000 a lorie BurGESS Burke of Pennsylvania Burke of South Dakota Burke of Wisconsin DUBNEIY. ae Byrxns of Tennessee. ......... CSIDED CALLAWAY CAMPBELL CaNDLER of Mississippi CANTOR . Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Railways and Canals. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Insular Affairs. Territories. Expenditures in the State Department. . Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Reform in the Civil Service. Expenditures in the State Department. Naval Affairs. Post Office and Post Roads. Banking and Currency. Rivers and Harbors. Education. Banking and Currency. Library. Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Immigration and Naturalization, chairman. Public Buildings and Grounds. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Naval Affairs. Roads. War Claims. Mines and Mining. Appropriations. Appropriations. Insular Affairs. Patents. Expenditures in the Department of the Interior. Rules. Indian Affairs. Agriculture. Rules. Public Buildings and Grounds. Industrial Arts and Expositions. District of Columbia. Judiciary. Judiciary. Appropriations, 197 « 198 Congressional Directory. | | Camrmr. o.oo Indian Alatis Reform in the Civil Service. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Casey... licensed] cua lnbor. Mines and Mining, Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Cany........ -. ...' . . District el Columbia, CHANDLER of New York. ...... Judiciary. Elections No. 1. Cowman: = oor a Public Lands. Indian Affairs. Reform in the Civil Service. CIANCY.......o iii Indian Affairs. Education. 2 Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. CiaproiTlovida.............. Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. : | Patents. : Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Crank of Missouri... .......... Crsveoon... 5. .0 0... Public Lands. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. District of Columbia. CLAYTON...................... Judiciary, chairman. El ee ee eg Foreign Affairs. LO he Ae Er Seg ee : CoLLiER.. ......... ....... Ways and Means. ConNELLY of Kansas. ......... Roads. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Invalid Pensions. | | ComNoivy of Towa............. Military Affairs. | CONRY co co sii Dos | I ays and Means. | CooPER.............ve oy. - . Foreign Affairs. | CorLEY........................Post Office and Post Roads. ’ | Industrial Arts and Expositions. COVINGTON.....ccccuuo....... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Co... Post Office and Post Roads. | CRAMTON.................'...Coinage, Weights, and Measures. | Elections No. 1. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- | ee I Ee Pensions. | sentatives in Congress. House Commatiee Assignments. 199 Crogan... oo as District of Columbia. Coron oo... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. CURLEY... ...... -... . SLauot). Foreign Affairs. CUBRY. inane Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Territories. Ue ee a a ECR Pensions. Census. Expenditures on Public Buildings, ; DANFORTH. ....-..co-c0-- ~~» J0diciary, BAVENEORT......... nevis Roads. Insular Affairs. Territories. DAVIS. 0... eae Appropriations. UT ER SR ea Interstate and Foreign Commerce. DEITRICR .. ... . .... Sos ogden Military Affairs. 1 13TL e S CONE RG SE Military Affairs. DERSHEM...o...........0n. ns Roads. Pensions. Expenditures in the War Department. DICKINSON. oes anna snih Ways and Means. PIES... ....... oo. msm dns Railways and Canals, chairman. Claims. Reform in the Civil Service. DIP ONDEREER...... ince ees a Foreign Affairs. DILLON... . coined vo danmbsmtt Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Revision of the Laws. BDERON. oo... iii ae Ways and Means. Donomom.ciin i ih: unis Rivers and Harbors. Donovan... Census. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures on Public Buildings. BOORING.-.-conso oe nana Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Mines and Mining. Expenditures in the War Department. BOOLIITIE . .... coo vvnemiinns wwe Agriculture. Doremus...... i... heen Interstate and Foreign Commerce. DOUGHTION. - .-..cvvvins wn nn sisi Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture, chair- man. Roads. Education. Durscony.........on oo. 00 Rivers and Harbors. BUNS... ea Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. 200 Congressional Directory. DUPRE... a a Judiciary. Byen............. Loadside Judiciary. RAGAN... ea Public Buildings and Grounds. Railways and Canals. Expenditures in the War Department. AGE... ol viacasaiie iis Banking and Currency. BAnNsmAW.. oo EPMONDS.. o.oo Census. Claims. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BOWARDE. —. oa Rivers and Harbors. i ales tn a ea Insular Affairs. War Claims. Elections No. 1. Bsen......-. Expenditures on Public Buildings. : Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Bevormwar..................... Naval Affairs. Byans........ oa. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Claims. Bamenno...... ...........:.. Foreign Affairs. Pawmown............. 000000 Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Census. Expenditures in the Navy Department. BATCONRER..... Insular Affairs. Territories. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Ann: Lee Naval Affairs. ERAUEEON ae Public Lands. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Beeme. o.oo 6 Public Lands, chairman. Territories. : Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Fess. o............ 500s Enrolled Bills. Education. Insular Affairs. i eS a A eR Military Affairs. Pwviev.......... Pes Post Office and Post Roads. PrezeErAIp.. 0... nonnull Appropriations, chairman. PezliENwy................... Judiciary. ¥ioop.............c.inonivi Foreign Affairs, chairman. Pyowp.. i... Judiciary. Foupney............ biog Ways and Means. House Commuttee Assignments. Rownmn.. oo ANC, CEARNER. = GARRETT of Tennessee......... GCannurr of Texas... .....c... GRoRaR. hs ae GOOD... en GoopwiIN of Arkansas ......... GORDON. -.-.. rio Mines and Mining, chairman. Rules. Post Office and Post Roads. Accounts. Revision of the Laws. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Elections No. 1. Insular Affairs. Elections No. 1. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. Military Affairs. Ways and Means. Ways and Means. Rules. Insular Affairs. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Military Affairs. District of Columbia. Naval Affairs. Appropriations. Public Buildings and Grounds. War Claims. Census. Military Affairs. Banking and Currency, chairman. Reform in the Civil Service, chairman. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Expenditures in the War Department. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Elections No. 3, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Insular Affairs. Appropriations. Foreign Affairs. Military Affairs. District of Columbia. Insular Affairs. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Expenditures in the Department of the Interior. 201 202 Congressional Directory. GraHAM of Illinois............ Expenditures in the Department of the Interior, chairman. Public Lands. GrAaHAM of Pennsylvania...... Judiciary. Guay... ...... Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Labor. Grepnoilowa................ Ways and Means. GREENE of Massachusetts... .... Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Irrigation of Arid Lands. GREENE of Vermont........... Military Affairs. Pensions. ee ER LE War Claims, chairman. a ee GI GrmeIN.. CUBED caves ine CUEOREEY. ... rurvrnes EANIIL HamrirroN of Michigan. ....... HamrrtoN of New York. ...... Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Accounts. Post Office and Post Roads. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Territories. Banking and Currency. Elections No. 2, chairman. Accounts. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Indian Affairs. Territories. Hawvry.... aa Expenditures in the State Department, chairman. Mines and Mining." Industrial Arts and Expositions. HAMMOND... .. c.ecnnen nes ich Ways and Means. BARDWIGK.. 0. shea (Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Rules. TN I GE Te i Expenditures in the Navy Department, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. I ARRISON. ... ...cvcvccinins Foreign Affairs. BART. oh. id Invalid Pensions. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. BAGEENS .. oii id Agriculture. LE Ee © Expenditures in the State Department. Agriculture. Labor. Flay. 2a, oi SPE IAS SR TIL Military Affairs, chairman. House Commitice Assignments. 203 HAYDEN... .... inno Th EA Public Lands. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Indian Affairs. HAVES. ....coar se aiaa as Banking and Currency. Immigration and Naturalization. IE RLIN nna vs saan Agriculture. HELGESEN. ©... coi. iavesins Agriculture. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Ne RE EE TE Census, chairman. Insular Affairs. HOVERING. cas sassnannsssss Invalid Pensions. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. HRB... coca catenin Rules, chairman. Revision of the Laws. HoNguwy. . ooo ie iin Naval Affairs. naa Be Patents. Claims. Indian Affairs. INDE oii deve ae dani Census. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. FINEBAUGH oc. cvnve-ienvanss Appropriations. BoBEoN...-. cso im Satan. Naval Affairs. HottAND. ......ccovciciienneee Post Office and Post Roads. HOURTON..... - ccaisnvnes-sB Territories, chairman. War Claims. Census. HOWARD... oo vvcvvernvas Military Affairs. HOWELL... voi vvrse assis Mines and Mining. Agriculture. Boxwonmm. oc. c.onvia- bin Territories. Education. Reform in the Civil Service. HucHES of Georgia...cccc..... Education, chairman. Claims. Expenditures in the Interior Department. HucHaEs of West Virginia...... Accounts. Rivers and Harbors. Hummes. o.oo. ci voeeii ois Military Affairs. Revision of the Laws. 2 Lip PEEL ER SS, Ways and Means. HumpaREY of Washington. .... Rivers and Harbors. HumpeREYS of Mississippi... .. Rivers and Harbors. J COW AT cies ines evannn Jornsox of Kentucky......... JornsoN of South Carolina. ... JoaNnsoN of Utah....... BEATING... oie his ATE A et SO Kmuiey of Michigan. ......... Kerry of Pennsylvania....... KENNEDY of Connecticut...... Renwezbyoflows............. KenNEDY of Rhode Island. .. Congressional Directory. District of Columbia. Agriculture. District of Columbia, chairman. Appropriations. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Mileage. Public Lands. Immigration and Naturalization. Territories. War Claims. Insular Affairs, chairman. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Military Affairs. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Agriculture. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Post Office and Post Roads. Territories. Roads. Labor. Pensions. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. District of Columbia. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. Naval Affairs. -Rules. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. . Patents. Railways and Canals. Elections No. 3. Mileage. Rivers and Harbors. . Post Office and Post Roads. LL TC eet eh Industrial Arts and Expositions. Public Lands. REMENER... iii Rivers and Harbors. Bey . ....... v Immigration and Naturalization. Pensions. Expenditures in the Navy Department. LR eT Ne Printing. Pensions. Boer. oo rei Kinkaip of Nebraska.......... KiNkEAD of New Jersey....... Irrigation of Arid Lands. Invalid Pensions. Appropriations. House Commattee Assignments. 205 | RIBRPAYRICE. .......conov ans Enrolled Bills. I Coinage, Weights, and Measures. I Pensions. | Kerommw.. oo... Ways and Means. BNOWLAND ....0icunionns .... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BONOP soos ane Expenditures on Public Buildings, chairman. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Indian Affairs. BORBIY.. ...... ice uieranps Banking and Currency. ROEDER... coon» Daionis. Public Buildings and Grounds. LarrERTY....... Te RRR, Interstate and Foreign Commerce. LA FOLLETTE......-..-.-......Railways and Canals. : Public Lands. RANGHAN Co. ee Invalid Pensions. Territories. ANGLEY. oc. i ioner ans Expenditures in the Navy Department. Invalid Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. LAZARG. loa Enrolled Bills. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. er oiGeorgia.......o........ Agriculture. LEE of Pennsylvania........... Naval Affairs. DENGUE... oie aman District of Columbia. LENROOT:.... -c:con. ium Public Tands. Rules. ETT Sa SS Agriculture. Yevewe.... ..............0008 Agriculture, chairman. Tow laa. Foreign Affairs. Lewis of Maryland............ Labor, chairman. : War Claims. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Lewis of Pennsylvania. . .....Election of President, Vice President, and Representa- tives in Congress. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 2. Lp RR a Rivers and Harbors. LINDBERGH aaa Banking and Currency. REE Tn oy DR Pes LORS Rl SEE SE Claims. | Patents. - Railways and Canals. | YINrRIouUM. a Foreign Affairs. 206 Congressional Directory. eave sa a Accounts, chairman. Revision of the Laws. BOUVIER: o.oo is ea Expenditures in Treasury Department, chairman. War Claims. Reform in the Civil Service. Ee i Sr ns ER Public Buildings and Grounds. Revision of the Laws. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. JONPRGAN. .... ----vesauis Public Buildings and Grounds. Territories. Expenditures in the Navy Department. MOANDREWS. .... .. « cosenemtdiohs Appropriations. . Meron AN. - ones nds Public Buildings and Grounds. Claims. Elections No. 1. MeBoy............. 0 -..-Judiciary. MoDEBMOTY. imum vasiuii: cu Agriculiure. MacDONALD......... couse. McGWLICUDDY .-. ... - ooo iis Judiciary. McGuire of Oklahoma. ....... Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Indian Affairs. Territories. Mcervan. . _ ..........5%: Military Affairs. MoReNzig. iain ni Elections No. 3. Military Affairs. MOLAUGHIIN. . .cconenn nn sis Agriculture. Expenditures on Public Buildings. MADDEN... ion inen ns Post Office and Post Roads. Reform in the Civil Service. Maguire of Nebraska. ......... Agriculture. Mise 0 Appropriations. Mamrem ....ociok 3. Sad denn Expenditures in the Department of Labor, chairman. Labor. Mileage. MaNamaN. .........cuuiii. Immigration and Naturalization. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Reform in the Civil Service. MN ea MATES... District of Columbia. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. Marmiy. ..... EERE Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Mesnrrre...oi oo iil Revision of the Laws. Immigration and Naturalization. Rules. House Commaltee Assignments. 207 Muonmnt. SHOE MI ONBINE. oe . Patents. Claims. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. .Naval Affairs. Judiciary. . Expenditures in the Interior Department. Appropriations. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Post Office and Post Roads, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Ways and Means. .. Reform in the Civil Service. Indian Affairs. Elections No. 3. Moran of Oklahoma ......... Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Judiciary. : MORIN. viii ocr a es Military Affairs. Railways and Canals. Mormon... JL cal Hl ..Insular Affairs. Patents. Revision of the Laws. Moss of Indiana............... Agriculture. Moss of West Virginia.......... Invalid Pensions. Patents. Railways and Canals. LDL a Ce mI A S Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Census. MUBDOCE....o coven Ways and Means. MURRAY of Massachusetts. id . Rivers and Harbors. MURRAY of Oklahoma. ......... Indian Affairs. Pensions. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. NeeLEY of Kansas ............ Banking and Currency. NEeeLY of West Virginia........ NEWSON. oi oa iia an Judiciary. NOIAN ..- ...ocievois R00 Labor. Patents. NORIOS. ovr inn vsissnnnoss Indian Affairs. Railways and Canals. . Territories. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Paice of Massachusetts. ...... PATER, er PatrEN of New York........... Parron of Pennsylvania...... Purensof Maine. —............ PrreERrs of Massachusetts.... .. POWERS... ai 208 | Congressional Directory. DarmsBY........... AE Territories. Patents. Elections No. 2. OAR... Military Affairs. RT a A Patents, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. OE many... District of Columbia. OS AUNESSY. ....oeevvuninnnn- Interstate and Foreign Commerce. PAPGERT.... enna Naval Affairs, chairman. : Pace of North Carolina. ...... Appropriations. . Ways and Means. Accounts. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Invalid Pensions. Banking and Currency. . Agriculture. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Ways and Means. Expenditures in the Post Office Department, chair- man. War Claims. Industrial Arts and Expositions. . Ways and Means. Judiciary. Banking and Currency. | Banking and Currency. | Education. | .. War Claims. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- | sentatives in Congress. Revision of the Laws. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. | Foreign Affairs. | Elections No. 1, chairman. Indian Affairs. (Claims, chairman. Rules. Expenditures in the Departmer.t of Commerce. Education. Rivers and Harbors. House Commattee Assignments. 209 | PROUT. ee a District of Columbia. | . Roads. i | QUEZON. : | QUIN. Military Affairs. j RaaspaArE.. . -... 0% gn Banking and Currency. : BamNmy. 0 a Ways and Means. | BaAReR....... Trrigation of Arid Lands. Public Lands. Immigration and Naturalization. | i Raven... .. Atal Te Appropriations. | RAYBURN.. 5.0 lv ua Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Beep... cto District of Columbia. | RELY of Connecticut......... Post Office and Post Roads. Reriry of Wisconsin... ....... Agriculture. | RICHARDSON....,... Foon Pensions, chairman. I RIORDAN... ee Naval Affairs. | | RoBERTS of Massachusetts..... Expenditures in the War Department. Naval Affairs. RoBerTs of Nevada. ......... Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Revers. f... igsi oan i Mines and Mining. | ROGERS... ..... iran. % Foreign Affairs. | Elections No. 2. | RormeemEern................. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce, chair- | man. | Census. i | Bouse... Post Office and Post Roads. I | Rusey lil Agriculture. j Buegen.. ........onilei os Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- | sentatives in Congress, chairman. Irrigation of Arid Lands. . I Education. | Bomeyeo oii i unl Indian" Affairs. 1 | Education. ] Elections No. 3. | RBusswrr.,. - cae Invalid Pensions. Insular Affairs. Elections No. 2. SABATH.......ccveeuuvu-....... Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, chairman. I Immigration and Naturalization. Expenditures on Public Buildings. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——15 J 210 Congressional Directory. SAUNDERS. .....cnnsivnciame +0048, Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BEORT.. .... ..ecervibaiots Reform in the Civil Service. Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. TT Se RR hi Les ae Rivers and Harbors. SELDOMBIDOE. . ou. --: «= iseids Banking and Currency. BELLS... ee RES Pensions. Census. War Claims. SHACRLEFORD. ... cicileiidns Roads, chairman. Indian Affairs. SHARD. ........ocessinssoen--nR0reign Afiairs, SHERLEY...- in iianaimess Appropriations. SHERWOOD... o.svns-iiiensiannn Invalid Pensions, chairman. SHREVE: .. crore Elections No. 3. Roads. AR a Interstate and Foreign Commerce. SINNOTE. .... isos Ah ode Irrigation of ‘Arid Lands. Public Lands. RISSON, .... nas, Appropriations. BIAVDEN. ©... ei snninss Library, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Sveaw.. ian Roads. War Claims. REOAN.:.......c- sasrcinncons Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Agriculture. OMAR... ean Rivers and Harbors. Surmm ol Idaho. .....c. oc oocn vue Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Irrigation of Arid Lands. SmrrH of Maryland............. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pensions. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Sura, Jorn M. C............. Labor. 3 Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Public Buildings and Grounds. Smite, SAMUEL W............. Post Office and Post Roads. Smite of Minnesota............ Banking and Currency. Census. Surra of New York........... Foreign Affairs. — House Committee Assignments. 211 Swirmof Texas: SPAREMAN:. — i SPAWEORD- so. iL Bele SANTEE ie sar STEDMAN. ia STE ENEREON. - .ieacecaanoan StepEENS of California. ....... STEPHENS of Mississippi........ StepHENS of Nebraska......... STEPHENS of Texas.....ccouea... StevENS of Minnesota......... Stevens of New Hampshire. .. BONE... o.oo... Donking ang Currency. BOUT... Public Lands. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Expenditures in the Interior Department. BMINGER:..... Insular Affairs. Industrial Arts and Expositions. SOUMNERS.. ore te Public Buildings and Grounds. Census. Mileage. SUTHERLAND. .......- ai. Roads. Mines and Mining. SWIPZER. .... oi ees a haat Mines and Mining. Rivers and Harbors. TaAGaaART. ... i. coe. Judiciary. Tarporr of Maryland ........... Disposition of Useless Executive Papers, chairman. Naval Affairs. Tavrcorr of New York......... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. PAVENNER. ov cesisiitoie Roads. Printing. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. "PAYIOR of Alabama...........- Rivers and Harbors. TayLOR of Arkansas........... Public Lands. Irrigation of Arid Lands, chairman. Accounts. Elections No. 3. Rivers and Harbors, chairman. Elections No. 2. Post Office and Post Roads. Ways and Means. Foreign Affairs. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Post Office and Post Roads. Naval Affairs. Roads. Claims. Elections No. 1. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Indian Affairs, chairman. Invalid Pensions. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Mines and Mining. Elections No. 2. 212 | Congressional Directory. Tayror of Colorado........... PEACIER. i a PROMAR. suis TrOMPSON of Oklahoma. ...... TaomsoN of Illinois. .........-- BowNen.. oa Insular Affairs. Education. TOWNSEND, ........c isis Foreign Affairs. Terapwy.. . . ............: Education. Rivers and Harbors. BRWBLe o.oo, Naval Affairs. BUTILE.. .. cee insionsns Post Office and Post Roads. UNDERHILL... oii nna as Industrial Arts and Expositions, chairman. War Claims. : UNDERWOOD... oernistniss Ways and Means, chairman. Nanya Appropriations. VAUGHAN... Foreign Affairs. Norges... ........ Judiciary. NN ALERER. .... nen Foreign Affairs. Wann... District of Columbia. Railways and Canals. RS OE Labor. Indian Affairs. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. WALTERS... arrpnisen District of Columbia. Pensions. - ANTEING... sen Revision of the Laws, chairman. Territories. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. WATSON... aii ees Territories. Public Lands. Mines and Mining. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Agriculture. Foreign Affairs. Roads. Library. Accounts. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Education. Library. Judiciary. District of Columbia. Public Lands. Enrolled Bills. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Labor. Elections No. 3. NWreeven........ .............. Banking and Currency. a BR Et me Le A ———————_ FS LE House Commattee Assignments. 213 Wess... i. Tai Judiciary. WHATLEY os. oto ios saan. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Invalid Pensions. Industrial Arts and Expositions. WHITACRE... nas Roads. Elections No. 3. WHITE... sioner a2 Appropriations. WICKERSEAM. Indian Affairs. Wrnaams. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. Territories. Le Naval Affairs. Wore. ....... oon i 2 0h Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Wirson of Florida... WinsoN of New York.. hates Banking and Currency. veeue-..Post Office and Post Roads. INGO... ois eet Banking and, Currency. WINSLOW. o.oo civeees Coinage, Weights, and Measures. District of Columbia. Election of President, Vice President, and Repre- sentatives in Congress. WITHERSPOON. ...... ooo Uus Naval Affairs. WoobRURR. ............. ae Roads. Accounts. Woops = iin Industrial Arts and Expositions. Banking and Currency. Youn of North Dakota........Claims. Young of Texas..... Insular Affairs. saeave wane wiELICUILUTE, 214 Congressional Directory. | CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES. COMMISSION ON ENLARGING THE CAPITOL GROUNDS. Chairman.— Joseph G. Cannon, Danville, Ill. : Elliott Woods, Superintendent of the United States Capitol Building and Grounds, Stoneleigh Court. ; NATIONAL FOREST RESERVATION COMMISSION. Chairman.—Jacob H. Gallinger, Senator from New Hampshire, 2113 O Street. 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 FOR THE EXTENSION AND COMPLETION OF THE CAPITOL BUILDING. Chairman.—George P. Wetmore, Newport, R. I. Elihu Root, Senator from New York, 1155 Sixteenth Street. Thomas S. Martin, Senator from Virginia, The Benedick. Joseph G. Cannon, Danville, Ill. William P. Hepburn, 1124 East Capitol Street. James D. Richardson, 433 Third Street. Secretary.—Henry A. Vale, 2415 Twentieth Street. LINCOLN MEMORIAL COMMISSION. Chairman.—William Howard Taft, New Haven, Conn. Shelby M. Cullom, 1413 Massachusetts Avenue. Joseph G. Cannon, Danville, Ill. George P. Wetmore, Newport, R. I. Samuel W. McCall, Winchester, Mass. Champ Clark, Speaker of the House of Representatives, 2401 Massachusetts Avenue. Thomas S. Martin, Senator from Virginia, The Benedick. Special resident commissioner.—Shelby M. Cullom, Senate Office Building. Secretary.—Henry A. Vale, 2415 Twentieth Street. * Executive and disbursing officer.—Col. William W. Harts, U. S. A., 2110 O Street. COMMISSION ON GOVERNMENT PURCHASE OF PNEUMATIC TUBES. Hoke Smith, Senator from Georgia, 2117 California Avenue. William O. Bradley, Senator from Kentucky, Falkstone Courts. Fred. L. Blackmon, Representative from Alabama, Congress Hall. Victor Murdock, Representative from Kansas, The Balfour. Joseph Stewart, Second Assistant Postmaster General, 1812 Lamont Street. COMMISSION TO INVESTIGATE PURCHASE OF AMERICAN-GROWN TOBACCO BY FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS. Chairman.—Thomas S. Martin, Senator from Virginia, The Benedick. Henry Cabot Lodge, Senator from Massachusetts, 1765 Massachusetts Avenue. Frank B. Brandegee, Senator from Connecticut, 1521 K Street. Henry D. Flood, Representative from Virginia, The Benedick. Charles M. Stedman, Representative from North Carolina, 7 C Street SE. William B. McKinley, Champaign, Ill. Secretary.—Richard Evelyn Byrd, Richmond, Va. JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING. (Capitol Building, Senate Gallery floor, northeast corner. Phone, branch 20.) Chairman.—Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida, 1455 Massachusetts Avenue. William E. Chilton, Senator from West Virginia, The Occidental. Reed Smoot, Senator from Utah, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. Henry A Barnhart, Representative from Indiana, Congress Hall. Clyde H. Tavenner, Representative from Illinois, 5401 Illinois Avenue. Edgar R. Kiess, Representative from Pennsylvania, Clerk.—George H. Carter, 2440 Twentieth Street. Inspector of paper and material (Government Printing Office).—B. D. Dyas, 1419 D Street SE. Commaissions and Committees. 215 JOINT COMMITTEE ON FEDERAL AID IN CONSTRUCTION OF POST ROADS. Chairinan.—Jonathan Bourne, jr., Portland, Oreg. Vee Ebru = Dey W. Shackleford, Representative from Missouri, Congress all. : Boies Penrose, Senator from Pennsylvania, The New Willard. Asle J. Gronna, Senator from North Dakota, The Mendota. - Claude A. Swanson, Senator from Virginia, 2136 R Street. Lee 8. Overman, Senator from North Carolina, The Cochran. Gordon Lee, Representative from Georgia, The Cochran. Daniel J. McGillicuddy, Representative from Maine, Congress Hall. Martin B. Madden, Representative from Illinois, 2818 Connecticut Avenue. . Richard W. Austin, Representative from Tennessee, The Brighton. Secretary.—A. W. Prescott, 1226 North Carolina Avenue NE. JOINT COMMITTEE TO INVESTIGATE GENERAL PARCEL POST. Chairman.—Joseph L. Bristow, Senator from Kansas, 2612 Garfield Street. Vice Chairman.—David E. Finley, Representative from South Carolina, 2020 P Street. Nathan P. Bryan, Senator from Florida, The Connecticut. Charles E. Townsend, Senator from Michigan, The Portland. David J. Lewis, Representative from Maryland. John J. Gardner, Egg Harbor City, N. J. Secretary. —Fay N. Seaton, 608 Quincy Street. JOINT COMMITTEE ON POSTAGE ON SECOND-CLASS MAIL MATTER AND COMPENSA- TION FOR TRANSPORTATION OF MAILS. Chairman .—Jonathan Bourne, jr., Portland, Oreg. Harry A. Richardson, Dover, Del. John H. Bankhead, Senator from Alabama, The New Willard. John W. Weeks, Senator from Massachusetts, 1701 T'wenty-second Street. James T. Lloyd, Representative from Missouri, The Brighton. William E. Tuttle, jr., Representative from New Jersey, The Cosmos Club. Secretary.—Robert H. Turner, The Hoffman. COMMISSION TO INVESTIGATE AND STUDY RURAL CREDITS AND AGRICULTURAL COOPERATIVE ORGANIZATIONS IN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES. (Appointed by the President, as provided for in Public Act No. 430, approved March 4, 1913.) Chairman.—Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida, 1455 Massachusetts Avenue. Thomas P. Gore, Senator from Oklahoma, 1863 Mintwood Place. Ralph W. Moss, Representative from Indiana. Col. Harvie Jordan, Atlanta, Ga. Dr. John Lee Coulter, Bureau of the Census, secretary, 1855 Calvert Street. Dr. Kenyon L. Butterfield, Amherst, Mass. Dr. Clarence J. Owens, Southern Commercial Congress, Southern Building, Washing- ton, D.C. r) COMMISSION IN CONTROL OF THE HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. Chairman.—Champ Clark, Speaker of the House of Representatives, 2401 Massachu- setts Avenue. John J. Fitzgerald, Representative from New York, Army and Navy Club. James R. Mann, Representative from Illinois, The Highlands. 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, 2401 Massachu- setts Avenue. : Richard W. Austin, Representative from Tennessee, The Brighton. Samuel W. McCall, Winchester, Mass. James R. Mann, Representative from Illinois, The Highlands. John J. Fitzgerald, Representative from New York, Army and Navy Club, Swagar Sherley, Representative from Kentucky, 1718 Rhode Island Avenue. William M. Howard, 1446 Irving Street. i i # y ea os ha 216 Congressional Directory. ] COMMISSION TO INVESTIGATE INDIAN AFFAIRS. Chairman.—Joe T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas, The Burlington. Harry Lane, Senator from Oregon, 1300 Columbia Road. | Charles E. Townsend, Senator from Michigan, The Portland. | John H. Stephens, Representative from Texas, 101 Maryland Avenue NE. Charles D. Carter, Representative from Oklahoma, 1818 Belmont Road. | Charles H. Burke, Representative from South Dakota, The Dewey. | Secretary.—R. B. Keating. OOMMISSION ON INDIAN TUBERCULOSIS SANITARIUM AND YAKIMA INDIAN RESERVATION PROJECT. Charles E. Townsend, Senator from Michigan, The Portland. John H. Stephens, Representative from Texas, 101 Maryland Avenue NE. Charles H. Burke, Representative from South Dakota, The Dewey. | Clerk.—Ross Williarns. | | | Chairman.—Joe T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas, The Burlington. THE CAPITOL. OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. (Phone, Main 3120.) PRESIDENT. President of the Senate.—Thomas R. Marshall, The Shoreham. : Secretary to the President of the Senate.—Mark Thistlethwaite, 1729 Oregon Avenue. Messenger to the President of the Senate.—Lu Slagle, 332 Maryland Avenue NE. PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE. President pro tempore of the Senate.—J. ames P. Clarke, The Cochran. CHAPLAIN. Chaplain of the Senate.—Rev. Forrest J. Prettyman, 1308 Columbia Road. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. JAMES MARION BAKER, Secretary of the Senate (3141 Highland Place), was born August 18, 1861, at Lowndesville, S. C.; was educated at the public schools and at Wofford College; studied law in New York City in 1885; engaged in business until he was appointed assistant librarian of the Senate on August 7, 1893, and served as the Democratic caucus representative while in the Senate library until his election as Secretary of the Senate of the United States on March 13, 1913. Assistant Secretary.—Henry M. Rose, 1745 Eighteenth Street. Chief Clerk.—Henry H. Gilfry. Financial clerk.—R. B. Nixon, 1336 Fairmont Street. Assistant financial clerk.—P. M. Wilson, 1901 Q Street. Chief bookkeeper.—Eugene Colwell, 402 Seventh Street NE. Principal legislative clerk.— Thomas H. Tulley, 1835 Newton Street. Minute and Journal clerk.—Harry V. Felt, 2815 Twenty-seventh Street. Assistant Journal clerk.—J. L. Aston, 1772 Columbia Road. Enrolling clerk.—Benj. S. Platt, The Portner. Ezecutive clerk.—Thomas F. Dawson, 2572 University Place. Reading clerk.—John C. Crockett, Silver Spring, Md. File clerk.—Bayard C. Ryder, 223 A Street NE. Printing clerk.—Ansel Wold, The Balfour. Statistical clerk.—Benjamin Durfee. Compiler of Navy Yearbook.—Josiah H. Shinn. Indexer of Senate documents.—Charles F. Pace, 1011 K Street. Keeper of stationery.—Chas. N. Richards, 101 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant keeper of stationery.—G. B. King, 1331 Fairmont Street. Assistant in stationery room.—R. H. Jones, The Cumberland. Labrarian.—Edward C. Goodwin, 1865 Kalorama Road. First assistant librarian.—W. G. Lieuallen, 3008 Seventeenth Street NE. Assistant librarians.—Carl C. Jones, 326 Maryland Avenue NE.; Hal Lambdin, 25 First Street NE. Superintendent of document room.—George H. Boyd, 1129 Fourteenth Street. Assistant in document room.—Ronoldo M. Cooper, The Congressional. Assistant in, document room.—Christian A. Taylor, 224 Third Street. Clerks.—Edward W. Thomas, 2518 Seventeenth Street; Oswald C. Ludwig, 116 Fourth Street NE.; Charles R. Nixon, 1338 New York Avenue; Guy Marchand, Y. M. C. A. Building; Robert T. Williams, The Parker; Frederick N. Carr, 640 Lexing- ton Place NE.; C. W. James, 4 I Street NE.; Daniel C. Roper, jr., 816 Massachu- setts Avenue NE. 217 218 Congressional Directory. CLERKS AND MESSENGERS TO COMMITTEES. Additional Accommodations for the Library of Congress.—Clerk, John H. O’Brien, 411 Second Street; messengers, Leighton C. Taylor, 207 East Capitol Street; 0. B. DeShields, Anacostia, D.C. Agriculture and Forestry. "Clerk, Dixie Gore, The Congressional; assistant clerk, J. Roy Thompson, 910 Maryland Avenue NE.; messenger, Caroline E. Gore. Appropriations.—Clerk, Kennedy F. Rea, 906 East Capitol Street; assistant clerks, L. H. Martin, The Century Club; R. C. "Kilmartin, Rockville, Md. ; +B. J. Merkling, 409 Hobart Place; Everard H. Smith, 637 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; ; messenger, Edmund Pendleton, 114 Maryland Avenue NE.; laborer, Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. —Clerk, Robert Bowman, jr., The Congressional; messengers, Hugh Street Martin, 1627 Sixteenth Street ; J. M. Burlew, 121 D Street. Banking and Currency. —Clerk, James W. Beller, 3706 Morrison Street, Chevy Chase, D. C.; assistant clerk, Mary M. Younger, 3212 Thirteenth Street; messenger, Virginia W. Lanham, Lanham, Md. Canadian Relations.—Clerk, Charles M. McCabe, The Driscoll; messengers, Kate Routt, 1308 Belmont Street; Edmund J. Drake, 118 Third Street NE. Census. —Clerk, Henry Fry, The Occidental; assistant clerk, Harry L. Tansill, 706 East Capitol Street; messenger, John W. D. Halsey, The Stanton. Cid Service and Retrenchment. — Clerk, Arthur P. Black, 1328 North Carolina Avenue NE.; messengers, Joseph C. Breitenstein, The Chalfonte; James-F. O'Rourke, 226 Bast Capitol Street. Clavms.—Clerk, W. T. Bauskett, 1375 Irving Street; assistant clerks, J. L. Kelly, The National; Elsie Young Douglas, The Sherman; messenger, Harry B. Straight, 1200 C Street NE. Coast and Insular Survey.—Clerk, Chauncey P. Holcomb, 127 A Street NE.; ; mes- sengers, J. H. Brown, 127 A Street NE.; J. M. Kienle. Coast Defenses. —Clerk, E. Jos. Aronoff, 1213 O Street; assistant clerk, Effie Koontz, 915 B Street NE.; ; messenger, J oseph Schiavone. Commerce.—Clerk, ; assistant clerk, ; messenger, Conference Minority of the Senate. —(lerk, ¢ Roy Thompson, 1334 Farragut Street; assistant clerk, Francis B. Lloyd, 121 "Eleventh Street NE. ; ; messengers, Anne T Dunn, 101 North Carolina Avenue SE.; E. M. Cogswell. Conservation of National Resources.—Clerk, "Mrs. Mary Dinkins, The Congressional; assistant clerk, James K. Vardaman, jr., The Benedick; messenger, Henry G Thomas, 1223 Harvard Street. Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia.—Clerk, John J. Hannan, 1905 H Street; messenger, Nellie H. Dunn, 1864 Wyoming Avenue; stenographer, Thomas P. Nelson, 1905 H Street. Disposition of Useless Papers wn the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Charles E. Alden, 34 Rhode Island Avenue; messenger, Blond G. Seymour, 34 Rhode Island Avenue; stenographer, Addie S. Hess. District of Columbia. — Clerk, Alban M. Wood, 324 Maryland Avenue NE.; assistant As, Clarence M. Taylor, The Octavia; messenger, Isaac S. Nutwell, Lothian, Education and Labor.—Clerk, Josiah Carter; assistant clerk, D. E. Moncrief, jr., 1822 Vernon Street; messenger, Morris K. Harralson, 907 Thirteenth Street. Engrossed Bills. —Clerk, Joseph A. Breckons, 1814 G Street; messengers, Arthur iggott; Enrolled Bills. —Clerk, Michael B. Griffin, 128 B Street NE.; assistant clerk, Louis Levy, 609 Q Street; messenger, Emma C. Clapp. Examine the Several Branches of the Civil Service—Clerk, Margaret A. Molloy; mes- sengers, W. R. Dorsey, 2325 Ashmead Place; Elmer T. Bell, 3526 Thirteenth Street. Expenditures wn Departments: Agriculture—Clerk, Frank P. Lockhart, The Burlington; messengers, Thomas B. Clark, The Congressional; Ellice Baker. Commerce and of Labor. —(lerk, Albert A. Jones, 2815 Twenty-seventh Street; messengers, S. V. Mead, 1101 "Monroe Street; W. F. Thompson. Interior. Clerk, John D. Vani Wagoner, Y.M. C. A. Building ; messengers, Shirley P. Jones, 1100 Vermont Avenue; Julian M. Thomas, Y. M. C. A. Building. Justice. ~ Clerk, Henry A. Rich, The Woodworth; assistant clerk, C. R. Bradford, 828 Otis Place; messenger, M. S. Tanner, 1502 Vermont Avenue. Navy.—Clerk, James J. O’ Byrne, 312 Second Street SE.; ; messengers, Mary L. Morton, The Wyoming; Loretta E. O’Connell, 1213 Rhode Island Avenue. Post 0 fice. —Clerk, ; messengers, Officers of the Senate. lone Expenditures in Departments—Continued. tate.—Clerk, Joseph R. Sullivan, Y. M. C. A. Building; messengers, Margaret A. O’Beirne, Howard I.. Doyle. Treasury.—Clerk, H. G. Miller, The Burlington; messengers, Jesse Miller, 1315 N Street; Harriet Flenner. War.—Clerk, Merritt Z. Dibble, Y. M. C. A. Building; messengers, Eva E. M. Finotti, 2629 Thirteenth Street; Mae Finotti, 2629 Thirteenth Street. Finance.—Clerk, Joseph F. Tayloe, 107 Maryland Avenue NE.; assistant clerks, W. W. Leinster, 107 Maryland Avenue NE.; Herbert O. Sink, 21 First Street NE.; Cortez L. Wright, 107 Maryland Avenue NE.; messenger, Lucy F. Green. Fisheries.—Clerk, Smith G. Thornton, 1517 P Street; assistant clerk, R. M. Stafford; messenger, Hilleary L. Offutt, jr., 517 Quincy Street. Five Civilized Tribes of Indians.—Clerk, Cleveland H. Hicks, The Roland; messengers, Peter M. Rigg, 334 Fourteenth Street NE.; Ivan Bowen. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, John T. Boifeuillet, The Winston; assistant clerk, Earl B. Williams, 120 Maryland Avenue NE.; messenger, James L. Fort. Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game.—Clerk, James V. Sayre, 3112 South Dakota Avenue NE.; messengers, Mrs. Julia K. Sayre, 3112 South Dakota Avenue NE.; Mrs. Mary W. Marvin, 511 Third Street SE. Geological Survey.—Clerk, E. J. Wells, 138 C Street SE. ; messengers, Marshall S. Rey- nolds, 213 North Capitol Street; Shaw T. Waterbury, 1884 Columbia Road. Immagration.—Clerk, B. J. Wingard; assistant clerk, Anna Brunson; messenger, Julia M. Phillips, 1440 M Street. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, W. R. Hollister; assistant clerk, Jessie L.. Simpson; messenger, Bertha M. Bokman. Indian Depredations.—Clerk, Earl Venable, The Marlborough; messengers, Cora Rubin, The Ventosa; Kate E. Venable, The Marlborough. Industrial Ezpositions.—Clerk, Maurice I. McKelligan, 125 C Street NE. ; messengers, M. H. Lanman, 125 Quincy Place NE.; John R. Renoe, The Farragut. Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, Frank Oliver, The Driscoll; assistant clerk, Mark A. Woodell, 1418 W Street; messenger, Thomas A. Kean, 815 Eleventh Street. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, M. F. Hudson, The Blenheim; assistant clerks, Hall McAllister, 2415 Twentieth Street; Frank M. Young, 404 Seventh Street NE.; messenger, James D. Finch. Investigate Trespassers on Indian Lands.—Clerk, Bessie G. Ivery, The Portner. Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands.—Clerk, Norris D. Parham; messengers, M. H. Bumphrey, Effie Ashley. Judiciary.—Clerk, Chesley W. Jurney, The Congressional; assistant clerks, A. J. Clopton, 928 Maryland Avenue NE.; Joe T. Dewberry, The Spencer; Eugene Davis, The Portner; messenger, Fraser C. Edwards, The Damariscotta. Library.—Clerk, Marvin Campen; assistant clerk, Emma Hicklin; messenger, J. D. Erwin. Manufactures,—Clerk, W. O. Wanzer, The Lonsdale; assistant clerk, Virginia G. Fout, The Dewey; messenger, Don M. Hunt, Y. M. C. A. Building. Military Affairs.—Clerk, Caralyn B. Shelton, The Ontario; assistant clerks, Hubert Grant, Hyattsville, Md.; Edw. O. Leech, 2831 Twenty-seventh Street; messenger, E. J. Hickey, 1805 Lawrence Street NE. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Miles Taylor, 1007 Otis Place; messengers, Imogene Howell, The.Manor House; Amy R. Piser, 1657 Lamont Street. Mississippt River and Tributaries.—Clerk, John Briar, 1208 Eighth Street; messengers, Anna B. Cummins, John Connelly, jr. National Banks.—Clerk, J. Stanley Estes, 122 Third Street NE.; messengers, Walter J. Gilpatrick, Lena M. Batchelder. Naval Affairs.—Clerk, J. Broadus Knight, 219 East Capitol Street; assistant clerks, C. Granville Wyche, 128 B Street NE. ; L. Virgil Minus; messenger, Grover Patton. Pacific Islands and Porto Rico.—Clerk, John I. Tierney, 128 B Street NE.; assistant clerk, Harry S. Hale, 132 East Capitol Street; messenger, Lutie M. Hart, 214 B Street SE. Pacific Railroads.—Clerk, W. Don Lundy, 2633 Adams Mill Road; messengers, William Gardiner, 467 Pennsylvania Avenue; R. H. Norton, 231 B Street NE. Patents.—Clerk, W. V. Richardson, 1213 Connecticut Avenue; messengers, Mrs. Mattie W. Porter, The Luxor; George H. Peters. Pensions.—Clerk, Byford E. Long, jr., The Loudoun; assistant clerks, James Garrard, The Loudoun; Harry P. Parker, 149 E Street SE.; Margaret Patterson, Aaron B. Shively; messenger, — —. ; messengers, Carrie F'. Boyer, 220 Congressional Directory. Philippines.—Clerk, W. D. Eakin, 1489 Newton Street; assistant clerk, Henry W. oaseall 1463 Rhode Island Avenue; messenger, Luther J. Willis, The New 1mston. Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, C. A. Beasley, The Lincoln; assistant clerks, Ernest V. Otts, 111 B Street SE.; Gunter O’Rear, Marvin L. Ritch; messenger, James O. Prude, jr. Printing. —Clerk, J. M. Cathcart, 1223 N Street; assistant clerk, Mable E. Hogan, 33 W Street; messenger, J. F'. Huddleston, 1627 Avenue of the Presidents. Private Land Claims.—Clerk, E. T. Clark; assistant clerk, C. F. Redmond; messenger, 4... Dulaull Privileges and Elections.—Clerk, Claude G. Bowers; assistant clerk, Nona G. Shea; messenger, J. C. Foley. : Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, George P. Mundy; assistant clerk, Frank M. Bradbury, The Vendome; messenger, Archibald Oden, jr., The Vendome. Public Health and National Quarantine.—Clerk, John S. Y. Fauntleroy, The Cham- Lo assistant clerk, J. T. Johnson, The Luxor; messenger, J. M. Rault, 1324 Street. Public Lands.—Clerk, Charles W. Draper, Y. M. C. A. Building; assistant clerk, Grace Behymer; messenger, Mary T. McLaughlin, 136 A Street NE. Railroads. —Clerk, L. C. Drapeau; messengers, R. S. Pendexter, 415 Fourth Street SE.; E. H. Wilson. Revolutionary Claims.—Clerk, Ephraim W. Lillard, 211 East Capitol Street; mes- senger, Rella M. Lane, Falkstone Courts; stenographer, Ephraim Stout Lillard, 211 East Capitol Street. - Rules.—Clerk, Charles H. Martin, 107 Maryland Avenue NE.; assistant clerk, O. F. Crowson; messenger, John D. Brown, 107 Maryland Avenue NE. Standards, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, Gertrude B. Spaulding, The Calumet; messengers, R. J. McNeil, 309 Third Street SE.; F. A. Johnson, 3433 Holmead Place. Territories.—Clerk, Philip C. Fisler, 1629 Irving Street; assistant clerk, R. T. Baker, The Bachelor; messenger, Arthur C. Frost, The Dunsmere. Transportation and Sale of Meat Products.—Clerk, E. B. Shurter, The Metropolitan; messengers, B. G. Lockerman; W. R. Ersfeld, 1477 Newton Street. Transportation Routes to the Seabord.—Clerk, Robert W. Farrar, 1338 Parkwood Place; messengers, Katharine F. Wagner, 1432 R Street; Theo. Schlenker. University of the United States.—Clerk, Charles A. Webb, 1305 East Capitol Street; Jone Herbert R. Pierce, The Champlain; J. P. Atkinson, 209 Tenth treet : Woman Suffrage.—Clerk, George B. Lang, 1505 Eighth Street; messengers, J. Ray Adams, 1009 Fifth Street SE.; Bartow H. Hall. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS. CHARLES P. HIGGINS, Sergeant at Arms, United States Senate (The Winston), was born in St. Louis, Mo., in 1858, and was educated in the parish and public schools of St. Louis; messenger boy for the Pacific & Atlantic Telegraph Co., of which An- drew Carnegie was the president; became a telegraph operator in the service of the Atlantic & Pacific, American Union, and Western Union companies; for five years manager of the Western Union office in the Merchants’ Exchange, St. Louis; super- intendent of the fire and police telegraph of that city; appointed chairman of the board of election commissioners in 1894 by Gov. Stone, excise commissioner in 1897 by Gov. Stephens; has been delegate to the Democratic State conventions for years; was a delegate to the Democratic national convention in 1896 and in 1908, and in 1912 was an alternate at large to the Baltimore convention; is married and has two children. Assistant Sergeant at Arms.—John T. Wayland, The Winston. Assistant doorkeeper.—Thomas W. Keller, 3406 Thirteenth Street. Acting assistant doorkeeper.—C. A. Loeffler, 1444 Newton Street. Messengers on floor of Senate.—Edwin A. Halsey, The Stanton; Joseph E. O’Toole, 407 B Street NE. Storekeeper.—John J. McGrain, 128 W Street. ES Ni + r— i we Officers of the Senate. 221 POST OFFICE. Postmaster of the Senate.—John P. Murphy, The Vendome. Chief Clerk.—William E. Burke, 221 First 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 from Senate post office, Capitol, 6, 9.30, and 10.30 a. m., 12 m., 1.55, 4.30, and 6 p. m., and upon adjournment. Senate Office Building mails close 30 minutes earlier. FOLDING ROOM. Foreman.—H. H. Brewer, 21 B Street. Assistant foreman.—J. W. Deards, 310 Seventh Street NE. HEATING AND VENTILATING. Chief engineer.—E. C. Stubbs, Silver Springs, Md. (Phone, Kensington, Md., 78-5.) Assistant chief engineers.—F. E. Dodson, 1654 Monroe Street; R. H. Gray, 1725 Newton Sed A. S. Worsley, 204 A Street SE.; John Edwards, 44 Rhode Island Ave- . nue NE. i i | | f fi 299 Congressional Directory. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE. (Phone, Main 3120.) SPEAKER. The Speaker.—CuAMP CLARK, 2401 Massachusetts Avenue. Secretary to the Speaker. — Wallace Bassford, 144 Kentucky Avenue SE. Clerk at the Speaker's table. —Bennett C. Clark, 2401 Massachusetts Avenue. Speaker’s clerk.—Clarence A. Cannon, 200 A Street SE. Messenger at Speaker’s table.—Warren G. Hatcher, 228 A Street SE. Messenger. —Henry Neal, 407 Florida Avenue. CHAPLAIN. Chaplain of the House.—Rev. Henry N. Couden, D. D., 2006 Columbia Road. OFFICE OF THE CLERK. Clerk of the House.—South Trimble, 3536 Thirteenth Street. Stenographer to Clerk.—Lillie M. Reesch, 64 P Street. Chief Clerk.—Jerry C. South, 1831 Thirteenth Street. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Thomas E. Frank, Warrenton, Va. Journal clerk.—Edward A. Glenn, 507 Stanton Place NE. Stenographer to Journal clerk.—J. Garrett Whiteside, Falkstone Courts. Reading clerks.—Patrick J. Haltigan, 1813 Kalorama Road; H. Martin Williams, Riverdale, Md. Tally clerk—A. R. Canfield, 416 H Street NE. Chief bill clerk.—L. J. Hall, 1227 Eleventh Street. Assistant bill clerks.—H. G. Benners, 111 B Street SE.; Laurence M. Overstreet; C. Van Cleve, 113 First Street N E.; Will Lesher, 520 E Street NE. Disbursing clerk. —Samuel J. Foley, 121 Maryland Avenue NE. Assistant disbursing clerk.—Sebe Newman, The Melton. File clerk.—Peter Dooley, 111 Maryland Avenue NE. Assistant file clerk.—Oliver H. Henry, The Loch Raven. Enrolling clerk.—D. K. Hempstead, 319 B Street SE. Assistant enrolling clerk.—Arthur C. Johnson, 901 Twentieth Street. Stationery clerk.—G. J. Paul, 411 B Street SE. Bookkeeper. —Will T. Gordon, 1374 Kenyon Street. Locksmith.—E. P, Crandall, 322 A Street SE. Clerks.—R. H. Ring, The Roland; E. G. Sherrill, 338 Maryland Avenue NE.; W. F, Smith, 219 Yo Capitol Str eet; Warren E. Dick, 1914 H Street. Assistant in disbursing office. —William J. Higgins, 64 M Street. - Assistant in stationery room.— essenger to Chief Clerk.—Luther W. Jones, 123 Maryland Avenue NE. LIBRARY. Librarian.—H. C. McCarthy, 1219 L Street. Assistant librarians.—Albert M. Carpenter, 326 Maryland Avenue NE.; George W. Sabine, The Royalton. Assistant in library. —XKirk Prather, The New Varnum. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS. Sergeant at Arms.—Robert B. Gordon, 214 A Street SE. Deputy Sergeant at Arms.—Charles B. "Willis, The Luxor. Cashier.—Robert T. Bonham, The Stafford. Financial clerk.—Carleton Houston, The Stafford. Bookkeeper.—William D. Nicholas, 1200 East Capitol Street. Messenger. —Clyde Filley, 1646 U Street SE. Deputy Sergeant at Arms an charge of pairs.—H. W. Ketron, The Suffolk. Stenographer.—Jennie Linn, 61 I Street. Laborer —Charles Fox, 609 Elliott Street NE. Pair clerks to the minority. —John H. Hollingsworth, 417 Fourth Street NE.; William Tyler Page. : P———— Officers of the House. 223 OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER. Doorkeeper of the House.—Joseph J. Sinnott, 3527 Thirteenth Street. Assistant department messenger.—C. W. Coombs, 216 Maryland Avenue NE. Special employees.—John T. Chancey, 465 M Street; A. P. Hinton, 1715 First Street; Joseph G. Rodgers, 2924 Macomb Street. Special messengers.—George Jenison, 220 B Street SE.; Bert W. Kennedy, The Ven- dome; Frank W. Collier, 149 A Street NE. Chief pages.—William E. Small, jr., The Ventosa; William E. Padden, 17 Third Street NE. Superintendent of the press gallery.—William J. Donaldson, jr., The Cecil. Messengers.—James Clark, 101 B Street SE.; L. Creekmur, 412 Second Street NE.; C. W. McAliley, 209 First Street NE.; J. L. Howell, 445 New Jersey Avenue SE.; W. B. Burns, 214 Second Street SE.; J. M. Smith, 209 First Street NE.; John O. Snyder, 2829 Eleventh Street; H. A. Goodlett, 113 C Street SE.; B. L. Heartsill, The Iroquois; William V. Gormley, 312 Second Street SE.; J. N. Marsh, 101 B Street SK.; Levi Short, The Milburn; J. J. Spencer, 16 Fourth Street SE.; Carl Hamlin, 408 A Street SE.; W. E. Kenney, 318 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Messengers on the soldiers’ roll.—L. B. Cousins, The Vendome; E. L. Currier, 126 Kentucky Avenue SE.; John E. Cushman; Joseph C. Lee, 114 Carroll Street SE. ; S. A. Murdock, 222 A Street SE.; Hugh Lewis; James I. McConnell, 905 East Capitol Street; Burr Maxwell, 412 First Street SE. ; John R. Oursler, 1341 Monroe Street; Lucius H. Emmons, 639 I Street NE.; William H. Rich; John Rome, 315 First Street SE.; James H. Shouse, 400 A Street SE.; John A. Travis, 1008 East Capitol Street. . FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—A. J. Kleherg, 300 East Capitol Street. Clerks.—W. H. Winants, 1113 Avenue of the Presidents; W. M. Clark, 216 Maryland Avenue NE.; J. R. Isom, 1006 Massachusetts Avenue. Foreman.—J. M. McKee, 2123 K Street. DOCUMENT ROOM. Superiniendent.—William M. Whelan, The Darlington. Assistant superintendent.—W. Y. Humphreys, 612 A Street SE. Special employee.—Joel Grayson, Vienna, Va. Indexer.—H. T. Hudson. Assistant clerk.—Eugene A. Hearin. Assistant attendants.—John W. Canary, 423 New Jersey Avenue SE.; H. L. Spicer, 606 North Carolina Avenue SE.; Jerry C. Massey, 31 B Street; S. S. Peck, 140 Thirteenth Street SE.; S. A. Murray, 118 Third Street NE.; Harry L. Cross, 231 Second Street SE. Clerk (detailed from Government Printing Office).—F. V. De Coster, 228 A Street SE. CLERKS TO COMMITTEES. CE R. Lloyd, 200 A Street SE.; assistant, J. R. Blackwood, 200 A treet : Agriculture.—H. M. Tyler, 452 House Office Building; assistant, Charles A. Gibson, 452 House Office Building. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic—Roscoe V. Lake, 2033 Park Road. Appropriations.—James C. Courts, 1837 Kalorama Road; assistants, Marcellus C. a 2428 Twentieth Street; William A. Ryan, 1815 Belmont Road; Harold . Quinn, Banking and Currency.—Charles D. Hamner, 100 C Street SE.; assistant, Jessie Thom- son; 817 New Jersey Avenue. Census.—George L. Willis, 107 Second Street NE. Claims. —James R. Collie, 346 House Office Building; assistant, George R. Pou, 21 First Street NE. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—E. T. Shurley. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers.— Walter B. Warner, 207 House Office Building. Conference of Minority.—Florence A. Donnelley, The Oakland; assistant, Amy V. Radcliffe, 914 East Capitol Street. District of Columbia.—J. Rogers Gore, The Brunswick; assistant clerk, Samuel W. Eskew, The Champlain. . oot Congressional Directory. Education.—James L. Fort, 427 New Jersey Avenue SE. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress.—G. H. Applegate. Elections No. 1.—Frank Miller. Elections No. 2.—George V. Malone, 21 First Street NE. Elections No. 3.—B. Hartman. Enrolled Bills. —Ernest Cornell, The Roland Expenditures in Departments: Agriculfure.—John E. Brown. Commerce.— Interior.—John F. McCarron, 138 East Capitol Street. Justice.— Labor.— Navy.—Ben L. Prince, Fontanet Court. Post Officc.—M. F. Cronin, 17 Third Street NE. State.—Samuel C. Neale, 200 A Street SE. Treasury.—James H. Hanley, The Dudley. War.—Edward C. Wrede, 314 East Capitol Street. Expenditures on Public Buildings.—Joseph H. Ray, 280 House Office Building. Foreign Affairs.—Robert Catlett, 120 C Street SE.; assistant, B. F. Oden, The Rochelle. Immigration and Naturalization.—Phi W. Burnett, Congress Hall. Indian Affairs.—J. V. Townsend, The Congressional; assistant, Paul N. Humphrey, The Roland. Industrial Arts and Ezpositions.—John H. Gilmore, The Corning. Insular Affairs.—Herbert L. Smith, 1709 Corcoran Street. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Willis J. Davis, 327 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistants, J. B. Robison, The Roland; P. C. Whitaker, The Roland. Invalid pensions.—George F. Parrish; assistants, M. C. Van Fleet, 1119 K Street; Carl A. Brandes, 215 First Street NE. Irrigation of Arid Lands.—Breedlove Smith, 2106 R Street. Judictary.—J. J. Speight. Labor.—Charles T. Clayton, 206 D Street; messenger, Harold C. Kennard, 110 East Capitol Street. Inbrary.—Chester Harrison, The Concord. Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—J. C. Bay, 514 Seward Square SE. Mileage.—F. E. Paul, 1707 North Capitol Street. Military Affairs—Edward W. Carpenter, 451 House Office Building; assistant, James R. Baker, 553 Fourteenth Street SE. Mines and Mining.— Naval Affairs.—Elisha S. Theall, The Woodward; assistant, William L. Padgett, The "Clifton. Patents.—Clarence E. Kay, Falkstone Courts; assistant, Elsie I. Hunt, 1353 Euclid Street. : Pensions.—C. L. Watts, 227 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistant, Wallace Hill, 1736 G Street; principal examiner, detailed from Pension Bureau, William McKinley Cobb, 3157 Mount Pleasant Street. Post Office and Post Roads.—Jo J. Ivins, 612 New Jersey Avenue; assistant, Charles E. Bruce, Cherrydale, Va. Printing.—Louis B. Noble, The Willson; assistant, Antony A. Wolfe, 510 Second Street. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Edward Clark, Congress Hall; Mrs. Beverley Buch- anan, 3432 Ashley Terrace, Cleveland Park. : Public Lands.—D. Cameron Campbell, 119 Massachusetts Avenue; assistant, Anne Ferris, The Luxor. Railways and Canals.— Reform in the Civil Service.—Walton K. Bethune. . Revision of the Laws. —W. K. Watkins, 109 House Office Building. Rivers and Harbors.—William C. Brooker, 1810 G Street; assistant, Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road. Roads.—John C. Shackleford, 300 First Street SE. Rules.—W. Everhart Clark, 1122 Vermont Avenue. Territories.—W. A. Cathcart, 246 House Office Building. War Claims. —W. R. Gregg, The Cairo; assistant, J. N. Davis, 708 Nineteenth Street; clerk to continue digest of claims, J. B. Holloway, 20 Third Street SK. : Ways and Means.—Neyle Colquitt, The Dewey; assistants, Mrs. Marian E. Martin, The Mansfield ; John E. Walker, The Mansfield. RR SA NE § ie (EL - Officers of the House. 225 POST OFFICE. (Office hours—Daily, 9 a. m. to 10 p. m.; Sunday, 9 a. m. to 12 m.) Postmaster.— William M. Dunbar, The Loudoun. Assistant.—Finis E. Scott, 322 Maryland Avenue NE. OFFICE AT HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. Registry, stamp, and money-order clerk.—Virginia Lee Douglass, 1712 Seventeenth Street; assistant, C. R. Jennings, 222 Third Street. Mail clerks —James A. Duffy, 1352 “Otis Place; Paul D. Connor, 408 Third Street. Night clerk.—G. A. Z. Harris, Prince Karl. BRANCH OFFICE AT CAPITOL. Jere Constantine, 128 C Street NE. : OFFICE AT MALTBY BUILDING. Clerk.—N. P. Clyburn, 229 B Street NE.; assistant, Louis Haag, 121 Maryland Avenue NE. OFFICE AT CITY POST OFFICE. Day force.—Clerk in charge, Eugene Simmons, 1319 Massachusetts Avenue; assistant, Robert Butler, 717 A Street SE. Night force. — Clerk in charge, Paul K. Hackett, 508 Tenth Street: assistant, F. W. Ewing, 1451 Chapin Street. MISCELLANEOUS. Delivery and collection messengers.—W. E. Patterson, 612 East Capitol Street; F. M. Foley, 231 Second Street SE.; W. R. Beum, 717 A Street SE.; Harry T. Wool- dridge, The Luxor; Roy Crowder, 222 Third Street; John Miller, 222 Third Street; Clay B. Ivins, 621 Fourth Street; George Lee, 641 Maryland Avenue NE.; W. G. O'Dwyer, W. i: Vickroy, J. R. Egner; ML Keefe, 719 A Street SE. ; P. S. Ryan, 231 Second Street SE.; M. J. Murphy, 222 Third Street; Walter R. Nelson, Thomas A. Keefe, J. D. Maffett. Heavy mail wagon.—J. C. V. Smith, 449 Massachusetts Avenue; Harold G. Sowders, Y. M. C. A. Building. Mail contractor.—Fred S. Young. ) Janitor.—Richard Brogsdale, 1209 C Street SE. Mails.—Arrive 8.30, 10.30 a. m.; 12.30, 2.30, 4.30 p. m.; depart 9.15, 11.15 a. m.; 1.15, 3.30, 4.35, 6.30, 8.20, 10 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, 510 Second Street; John S. Logan, 918 East Capitol Street; J. W. Shely, 702 Second Street. Elevator conductors.—T. P. Tremere, 115 C Street SE.; Frank Plank, 120 Third Street SE.; P. L. Hemler, 311 Fourth Street SE.; I. C. Henry, 224 First Street SE.; G. Callaway, 200 A Street SE.; J. P. Brown, S. Callaway, H. Womack, J. Sparks, H. Newman. Elevator machinist. —John P. Nason, 408 A Street NE. Electrician.—Charles R. Torbert, 505 G Street SW. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——16 "Mg F 226 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES. SENATE. Theodore F. Shuey, 2127 California Street. | James W. Murphy, 1788 Lanier Place. Edward V. Murphy, 2511 Pennsylvania | Percy E. Budlong, 1727 First Street. Avenue. Assistant.—Eugene C. Moxley, 1150 Sev- Henry J. Gensler, The Concord. enteenth Street. Daniel B. Lloyd, The Lonsdale. HOUSE. Fred Irland, 1131 Columhia Road. Samuel H. Gray, 1611 Irving Street. Reuel Small, The Beacon. John D. Cremer, 112 C Street SE. Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place. Assistant.—John J. Cameron, 505 Third George C. Lafferty, Metropolitan Club. Street. ~ OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES. R. Blumenberg, The Highlands. R. J. Speir, 411 Second Street SE. . H. Barto, 3321 T'wentieth Street. H. B. Weaver, Congress Hall. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. (Office in Statuary Hall.) Clerk in charge at the Capitol.—W. A. Smith, 3817 Jocelyn Street, Chevy Chase . Heights, D. C. Indexer.—Ralph Smith, The Balfour. (Room 134, Senate Office Building; phone 830.) SUPERINTENDENT OF THE CAPITOL. (Office in basement of Capitol.) Superintendent.—Elliott Woods, Stoneleigh Court. Chief clerk.—George H. Williams, 1723 P Street. Chief electrical engineer. — Christian P. Gliem, 642 East Capitol Street. Accountant.—John Welch, 116 Eleventh Street SE. Civil engineer.—David Lynn, Hyattsville, Md. SENATE OFFICE BUILDING. Custodian.—A. E. Werner. HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. Custodian.—William R. Woolley, The Bartholdt. CAPITOL POLICE. Captain.—D. L. Frawley, 1314 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, North 48.) Lieutenants.—W. L. Shinners, The Vendome; W. P. Stephan, The Vendome; T. L. Kinney, 310 D Street SE. Special officers.—J. R. Perry, 220 C Street; G. W. Quarles, 113 C Street SE. Clerk.—George L. Kelly, 62 M Street. DEPARTMENTAL TELEGRAPH. Senate manager— Homer Smith, 918 F Street NE. _—— eg r——— TRIER TE. 4 THE CAPITOL BUILDING. The Capitol is situated in latitude 38° 53’ 20.4’ north and longitude 77° 00/ 35.7” west from Greenwich. It fronts east and stands on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the Potomac. ORIGINAL BUILDING. The southeast corner stone of the original building was laid on the 18th of Sep- tember, 1793, by President Washington, with Masonic ceremonies. It is constructed of sandstone from quarries on Aquia Creek, Va. The original designs were prepared 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 passageway connected them. On the 24th of August, 1814, the interior of both wings was destroyed by fire, set by the British. The damage to the building was immediately repaired. In 1818 the central portion of the building was commenced, under the architectural superin- tendence 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. The House extension was first occupied for legisla- tive purposes December 16, 1857, and the Senate, January 4, 1859. The value of the Capitol Building and Grounds, October 14, 1911, is as follows: Building, $15,000,000; grounds, $10,400,000; total, $25,400,000. 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 12,985 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 80 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 1859, occupied as the Senate Chamber. Previous to that time the court occupied the room immediately beneath, now used as a law library. OFFICE BUILDINGS. The value of the Senate and House Office Buildings and Grounds is as follows: Senate Building, $3,732,078; grounds, $746,111; total, $4,478,189. House Building, $3,342,011; grounds, $743,452; total, $4,085,463. 227 HOUSE ? eli SENATE 18,16 , 14 i gk “42 B16 lalate ih 1 - 20 . flat Eo we pg deo le Le 1 Ll © WE 0 NO Cl ; oe — 7515.13 0.9.7 E143 ’ = SERGE Er a Ol a Gl ed) gy ‘BASEMENT AND TERRACE 866 *fid0302.42( 1PU0LSS2LHUO)) HOUSE WING: TERRACE. Room. @ 1. Dynamo room. 2. Index clerk. 3. Dynamo room. 5. Dynamo room. 4,6. Office of Hon. A. P. Gardner. 7,9,11,13,15,17. Dynamo rooms. 12. Janitor’s storeroom. 14. Tile room. 16. Women’s toilet. 18. Map room. 19,21. Dynamo rooms. 20. Men’s toilet. 22,24,26,28. Machine shop. 30,32, 34,36. Carpenter shop. BASEMENT. 33. Engineer’s office. 35,39. Elevators. 37. Kitchen. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE SIDE. Room. 21,23,25. Superintendent’s office. 29. Superintendent’s file room. 31. Committee on Corporations Organized in the Dis- trict of Columbia. : HOUSE SIDE. 21,31. House Committee on Expenditures in the De- partment of State. 23,25. House Committee on Printing. 27. Office of Hon. Thomas M. Bell, majority whip. 29. Office of Hon. Charles H. Burke, minority whip. BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL. SENATE WING. TERRACE. Room. 1,3. Superintendent’s storeroom. 2,4,6. Police headquarters. 5. Superintendent’s drafting room. 8,10,12,14. Plumber’s shop. 9,11. Secretary’s file rooms. 13. Captain of police . 15,17. Janitor’s rooms. 16. Waste-paper room. 20. Men’s toilet. 33,34. Secretary’s file rooms. 36. Men’s toilet. BASEMENT. 35,47. Elevators. 37. Employees’ barber shop. 39,41. Engineers’ room. 43. Kitchen. “Bugppng 10nd) 666 La dw i spfeurvosnecce i . ° SR \ RAY 6 & ch ee ? ce a » A} ° og AJ 4 h «» = AN ZRABR NZ SN EN { Pelt die a 2& — 3 87 9 i === wn di 20 0, 102 70 ll El 703 3 Vos §/0° 7 = rr” AA 28 { ? © 72 73 4 GROUND FLOOR es 8/ Yhap 701 - 82 | § 83 [84385 ve a 2 bs wis Si : - le’ ele arts ty 35 8 36 / : 39 Bm 37 835 57 A 4 40 42 196] 65 a 58) 59 gs 086 *fid030242(] 1PU0ISSIUIUO)) HOUSE WING. Room. 1. Committee on Invalid Pensions. 2 3 committee on the Post Office and Post Roads. 4. Messengers’ and pages’ cloakroom. 5. Minority room. 6. 7. (Official Reporters of Debates. 8. . 10.) 11. Annex office, Post Office. Speaker of House. 12. i Jotice of Sergeant at Arms. 14. o3 | Commitee on Elections No. 2. 15. Barber shop. 16, 26. Clerk’s document rooms. 17. Office of Hon. Lincoln Dixon. 18. Box room. 19. Closets. 20, 21, 30, 32, 34. Restaurant. 18, 22. Committee on Indian Affairs. 23. Committee on Accounts. 24. Minority room. 25, 28. Elevators. 27. Janitor’s office. 29. Private dining room. 31. Public restaurant. GROUND FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 68. Senate Committee on the Library. 69. Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills. 70. House Committee on Labor. 71. House Joint Committee on Revision of Laws. 72. House Committee on Reform in the Civil Service. 74. House Committee on Expenditures in the Agricul- tural Department. 75. House Committee on Enrolled Bills. 76. Office of Hon. Victor Murdock, Progressive leader. 78. Senate Committee on Contingent Expenses. 80. Senate Committee on Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia. 81. Electricians’ storeroom. 82. Storeroom Supreme Court. 83. Senate bathroom. 84, 85, 86. The Supreme Court—consultation room. 87. Congressional Law Library. 88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Supreme Court room. 89, 90, 91, (Office of Doorkeeper of the House. 92, 97, 101. | Office of superintendent of folding room. 93. Employees’ barber shop. 94. House Committee on Enrolled Bills. 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 of police. 77,107. Senate Committee on Census. SENATE WING. Room. 35, 67. Committee on Rules. 36, 37, 38. Committee on Appropriations. 39, 40. Committee on the Judiciary. 41. Committee on Patents. 42, 46. Commission to Investigate and Study Rural Cred- its and Agricultural Cooperative Organizations in European Countries. Y 44, 45, 47, 48, 61, 62. Restaurant. 49. Pages’ room. 50. Committee on the Philippines. 51, 60. Elevators. 52. Committee on Education and Labor. 53. Post Office. 55, 56, 57. Committee on Finance. 58, 59, 65. Stationery Room. 63. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry. 66. Men’s toilet. 68. Women’s toilet. ‘burppng 10ndn) TEG 16 rR 3 il oo Ea 3 ¢ 5 iii og 0 o or folios), “8 PRINCIPAL®FLOOR 3% Ea *fid03024Y(T 1PU01852.46U0)) A —— HOUSE WING. Room. "\Committee on Appropriations. . Closets. .JMembers’ retiring rooms. a = a — S . Committee on Ways and Means. ry Pose ; Cloakrooms. SG rt aos ® . Committee on Ways and Means. 16. Library. 17, 18. Elevators. 19 : Speaker. 20. PRINCIPAL FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 40, 41. Ho se document room. 42. Engrossing and enrolling clerks of the House. 43. House Committee on Enrolled Bills. 44. Office of the Clerk of the House of Representatives. 45, 46. Office of the clerk of the Supreme Court. 47. Robing room of the Judges of the Supreme Court. 48. Withdrawing room of the Supreme Court. 49. Office of the marshal of the Supreme Court. 50,51. Senate Committee on Pensions. 53, 54. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. 55. Senate Committee on Private Land Claims. 56. Senate Committee on Geological Survey. 58, 59. House Committee on Naval Affairs. 60, 61. House Committee on Banking and Currency. 62, 65. House Committee on Expenditures in the War Department. 63. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Chamber. 64. Clerk of the House. SENATE WING. Room. 21. Office of the Secretary. 22. Executive clerk. 23. Financial clerk. 24. Chief Clerk. 25. Engrossing and enrolling clerks. 26, 27. Committee on Military Affairs. 28. Closets. 29, 30. Cloakrooms. 40. Room of the President. 31. The Senators’ reception room. 32. Room of the Vice President. 33, 34. Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. 33%, 35. Elevators. 36. Official Reporters of Debates. 37. Public reception room. 38. Committee on the District of Columbia. 39. Office of the Sergeant at Arms. ‘burppng jondny 666 [294 0 . 01882.46U0 Hall of , epresentatives. Senate ‘Chamber. : 4 ¥ : i il k : § "fil 02.40(] JOU GALLERY FLOOR. HOUSE WING. Room. ; committee on Foreign Affairs. 3. Journal clerk. 4. File room. 5. Committee on Railways and Canals. 6. 7. 8. Press gallery. 9. 10. 13. Ladies’ retiring room 14. Elevator. 15. Elevator. 1 5 Jcommittee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. GALLERY FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 27. Senate library. 28,29. Senate library—Librarian’s room. 30. Senate Subcommittee on Foreign Relations. 31. 32. ;Senate document room. 33. 34. Superintendent of the Senate document room. 35. House Library. 37. 39. House Committee on Enrolled Bills. Jouse document room. 40. Senate document room. 41. Senate Committee to Investigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands. 42. Senate Committee on Engrossed Bills. 43. shi Justice Pitney’s chambers. 45. 46.) Senate Committee on Additional Accommodations for - the Library of Congress. 48. Senate Committee on Pacific Railroads. 49. 50. House Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury Department. 53.1 House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Meas- 52 noe Committee on Rules. | ures. SENATE WING. Room. 14. Committee on Manufactures. 1o Jeommittee on Indian Affairs. 17. Committee on Public Lands. 18. committee on Commerce. 20. 21. tPress gallery. 28. . 22. Women’s retiring room. 23. Committee on Naval Affairs. | 24. Minority conference room. 25. Committee on Privileges and Elections. L [ oint Committee on Printing. Committee on Printing. 27. Elevator. ro co Ot ‘burping 10ndn) 236 Congressional Darectory. e 7 mE a=] © 7 COAT ROOM SOUTHERN LOBBY LOBBY SENATORS’ COAT ROOM | m | | pr ~ i 2 . . re | 400d advo £5607 NulLSYS WOOY NOILd303d THE MARBLE ROOM ROOM 0 b= = i a 7) Lu «© o Sec., Secretary. A. 8S., Assistant Secretary. C. C., Chief Clerk. L. C., Legislative Clerk. DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE. R. C., Reading Clerk. A., Acting Assistant Doorkeeper. D ., Assistant Doorkeeper. R., Official Reporters. P., Press Reporters. Sgt., Sergeant at Arms. Tromas R. MarsuALL, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate. . Ashurst, Henry F., Arizona. . Bacon, Augustus O., Georgia. . Bankhead, John H., Alabama. . Borah, William E., Idaho. . Bradley, William O., Kentucky. . Brady, James H., Idaho. . Brandegee, Frank B., Connecticut. . Bristow, Joseph L., Kansas. . Bryan, Nathan P., Florida. . Burleigh, Edwin C., Maine. . Burton, Theodore E., Ohio. . Catron, Thomas B., New Mexico. . Chamberlain, George E., Oregon. . Chilton, William E., West Virginia. . Clapp, Moses E., Minnesota. . Clark, Clarence D., Wyoming. . Clarke, James P., Arkansas. . Colt, LeBaron B., Rhode Island. . Crawford, Coe I., South Dakota. . Culberson, Charles A., Texas. . Cummins, Albert B., Iowa. . Dillingham, William P., Vermont. . du Pont, Henry A., Delaware. . Fall, Albert B., New Mexico. . Fletcher, Duncan U., Florida. . Gallinger, Jacob H., New Hampshire. . Goff, Nathan, West Virginia. . Gore, Thomas P., Oklahoma. . Gronna, Asle J., North Dakota. 1. Hitchcock, Gilbert M., Nebraska. . Hollis, Henry F., New Hampshire. . Hughes, William, New Jersey. 2. 90. 39. 81. 78. 42, . La Follette, Robert M., Wisconsin. . Lane, Harry, Oregon. . Lea, Luke, Tennessee. . Lewis, J. Hamilton, Illinois. . Lippitt, Henry F., Rhode Island. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Massachusetts. . 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. . Norris, George W., Nebraska. . O’Gorman, James A., New York. . Oliver, George T., Pennsylvania. . Overman, Lee 8., North Carolina. . Owen, Robert L., Oklahoma. . Page, Carroll S., Vermont. . Penrose, Boies, Pennsylvania. . Perkins, George C., California. . Pittman, Key, Nevada. . Poindexter, Miles, Washington. . Pomerene, Atlee, Ohio. . Ransdell, Joseph E., Louisiana. . Vacant. [os] bE Jackson, William P., Maryland. James, Ollie M.., Kentucky. Johnson, Charles F., Maine. Jones, Wesley L., Washington. Kenyon, William S., Iowa. Kern, John W., Indiana. 40. 92. 28. 14, 88. 89. . Sherman, Lawrence Y ., Illinois. 74. 34. 1 © 65. 66. 63. 15. 61. 53. 31. 76. 46. 33. 25. 62. 86. 91, 84. 60. 55. 70. 18. 29. 79. 13. 22. Reed, James A., Missouri. Robinson, Joe T., Arkansas. Root, Elihu, New York. Saulsbury, Willard, Delaware. Shafroth, John F., Colorado. Sheppard, Morris, Texas. Shields, John K., Tennessee. Shively, Benjamin F., Indiana. Simmons, F. McL., North Carolina. Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina. Smith, Hoke, Georgia. Smith, John Walter, Maryland. Smith, Marcus A., Arizona. Smith, William Alden, Michigan. Smoot, Reed, Utah. Stephenson, Isaac, Wisconsin. Sterling, Thomas, South Dakota. Stone, William J., Missouri. Sutherland, George, Utah. Swanson, Claude A., Virginia. Thomas, Charles S., Colorado. Thompson, William H., Kansas. Thornton, John R., Louisiana. Tillman, Benjamin R., South Carolina. Townsend, Charles E., Michigan. Vardaman, James K., Mississippi. Walsh, Thomas J., Montana. Warren, Francis E., Wyoming. Weeks, John W., Massachusetts. Williams, John Sharp, Mississippi. Works, John D., California. ‘appuUaq 9Yy1 fo fuopoung LEG 238 Congressional Darectory. TOTAL SEATING CAPACITY 444 VES 9 ALL OF REPRESEN TATI eer] f RE-SEATING: OF PRESENT H 1 Members’ Rooms and Telephones. MEMBERS’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES. SENATORS. (Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol Exchange—Main 3120.) 239 ML CAPITOL. SENATOR. CHAIRMANSHIP. Tele- : Tele- Room. phone. Location. phone ASHURST....... 121 374: Industrial Bxpesitions: . 20d 0 v0 8 LAER LE a, BACON ores cool wre a aioe vii Foreign Relations............ Old library space, Senate 58 floor, northwest corner. BANKHEAD. .... 332 197 | Post Officesand Post Roads..| Senate floor, southeast corner. . 34 BoRAH-.....-.-- 139 873 Indian: Depre@ations 20 Lil dr i uv wees Se beats BRADLEY....... 133 192. Hevolutiongry Claims. . ie Cl i i. ce ieee unenssne sn emma BRADY ....- 3: LE Ey Sl setae Le i Cen Be Sti I a RR I en Be i SS er! BRANDEGEE 425 Old library space, gallery 144 floor. Bristow....... 304 BRYAN. ....n ev BURLEIGH. ...... 240 BURTON. .-: =: 328 CARON: =. 125 CHAMBERLAIN. . 207 808 | Military Affairs.............. Senate floor, northwest corner. 131 CHILTON... --~ 227 175 Census tenes Old building basement, north- 36 west corner. CT APP.....0.... 413 172: Standards, Wel ght Bando i ere eeecnseses iy Measures. CLARK (Wyo.).. 226 808 | Geological Survey............ on library space, Senate 54 : 00T. CLARKE (Ark.). 203 826. |. Commerce... ......cvnennonss Gallery floor, northwest corner 121 COLT. dua 233 a ON Er er er BSE RR a CRAWFORD. .... 423 Lh ERR at dl a dunt Se snr aa i died SR SOE Re Lhe Del Bn CULBERSON..... 315 a0 a dadiciavy. Co Ground floor, northwest corner 185 CUMMINS. ...... 204 g48 i Missisnipp! River and JS | ieee seer emma Tributaries. DILLINGHAM... . 340 832 0 AER Ur 0 he Peet Seem ER Sha i bast LS tates DU PONT....... 245 95: Transporiation and Sale of YL... Grn ih sree tle ase ; Meat Products. PAIYL.....c.---- 127 LYE ea as ee el We | Mes a Beatin IE sn Le FLETCHER. ..... 337 176: | Printing... oo cus vsnn donnie Gallery floor, northeast corner. 20 GALLINGER..... 405 195 | Minority Conference......... Gallery floor, east elde..... ... 37 GOOEY... xo os 123 EC ar A 0 Gone. ion 309 812 | Agriculture and Forestry Ground floor, northeast corner 101 GRONNA....... 343 NRRL Ra rT Ra pe ei ee Reed HITCHCOCK... ... 442 167 | Philippines. . . c..uo sb oitulm Ground floor, east side........ 111 HOLLIS: oae-- - 432 805 | Enrolled Bills. ............... Old building subbasement, 49 west side. HUGHES. ......- 444 $24) Exponditares Wn the NOVY... ur. on... oh aie res sslaniaseolarlssmie § Department. JACKSON. ,..... 327 JAMES... ..... 346 JorNsoN (Me.) 317 445 JONES... i 446 KENYON....... 443 KBEBN.ivivnnvs 247 821 | Privileges and Elections... .. Gallery floor, east side........ 42 LA FOLLETTE 427 828 Corporations Organized in the | Old building basement, north 66 District of Columbia. side. EAN ee nisten-sne 342 817: Forest Reservationsand the |... co ean - Protection of Game. TBA atone 439 S04 { Library... .. coon aan 01 Tiling basement, west 29 side. LeWie. ocean 341 07 |-BExpenditures inthe Depart- |. ... ol rue. csatcccosvenams saspasssne .s ment of State. LIPPIIT. ures 228 LER de Le I He a I EE LODGE....cvv:- 225 180 | Private Land Claims......... Old library space, Senate 27 floor, west side. McCUMBER..... 333 20 | Transporiation Rontesiothe §......-. cc. cc sasensmannmann=s]ssenanion Seaboard. MCLEAN, ....-- 404 RE RR A CE Se COR ERR MARTIN (VE. ). | iooc po] ios Appropristions. ............- Ground floor, west side. ...... 15 MARTINE (N. J.) 408 8867 Coast Defenses. co sn as it a Wms sem Re wma ey Mygrs......... 244 879: :Publiclonds ........ hq. Gallery floor, west side. ......- 70 240 - Congressional Directory. SENATORS—Continued. a Capo. SENATOR. CHAIRMANSHIP. Tele- Tele- Room. phone. Location. phone NELSON. oo 307 190: Five Civilized Tribes ol In- {= ... iso ns dians. NEWLANDS..... 326 91 Intoreinlc COmMMEIE mc. sas ate sna ser a a ts NORRIS. :....... 433 BL Frere Lr Re To Bia O’GORMAN..... 246 218: TnderoceanioCannls. . ...... oc eT a Onven......... 213 Heme Ea Te LR Ce SE be een Re a net OVERMAN. ..... 211 ISS Bales one oo EEE Ground floor, southwest corner 108 OWEN. ...----... 303 865: Banking and Carreney., co... loo i. shi aa ae at Padme. ©. 311 811 | Disposition ofcUseless Papers |. mia os in the Executive Depart- ments. PENROSE... 325 183 | Additional Accommodations | Gallery floor, old library space. 104 for Library of Congress. PEREINS........ 321 65a Raflvends. o.oo a TS RE a ae PITTMAN. coo 448 S03 Tertitoriesen tl soot bn doy lard sath se sti an ani Bree te POINDEXTER. .. 430 806) Expenditures inthe WarDe- [sac coo. ... cents: partment. POMERENE..... 241 847 | Civil: Service and Refrench-~ |... cs ava de ofa tana: ment. RANSDELL. .. ... 345 164- Public Health and Nailonal- |... oo. 0. coi oo... oom aE Quarantine. REED. 2... 417 16S | Manufactures. ...... ...o.. Gallery floor, southwest corner 43 ROBINSON. ...... 331 185 | Expenditores mthe Treasury fries con bewae B00 Sn Sl SES Department. Reor i. x: 431 I Re Ee EE a Se Re SAULSBURY..... 407 814 | Coast ond INSANE SUIVeY oc. l..... . ines sw winis ves dm mm wns fmwiswin ia ss SHAFROTH. ..... 232 845 Pate Ielande ond Porio lo. iis reece ral ma res ico. SHEPPARD...... 229 174: ‘Expenditures im the Depart ~~. 1. C. .. oc al vc ol. ete ment of Agriculture. SHERMAN ...... 339 LH Ee ee a ee SR RSI era rei SHIELDS. ..-..:. 348 171). Canadian Relations... ojo. ci fab ni Sint = em tdis foes 3 oat a are mea tears SHIVELY... = -- 347 Vi tBensions: va Old Library space, Senate 11 floor, west side. SIMMONS. ...... 310 Sameer, ear. as Ground floor, north side...... 10 Smits (Ariz.)... 129 851 | Trrizntiomand Reclamation fo. 5... 2.0. nl one oti a bani os of Arid Lands. SMItH (Ga.).... 206 855 | Education and Labor. ....... Ground floor, north side....... 33 SMITH (Md.).... 437 151 | District of Columbia.......... Senate floor, east side......... 113 SMITH (Mich.).. 411 123: To. Examine the Several: li. ..c.i oii iiuninemenriimresins|oaaas a Branches of the Civil Serv- ice. SumitH (S.C .).. 410 {eal TEE Lr bee ea ab Bgl sr Se RR SR LD Rn ae MOOT... .......- 215 825 ET in: Interior Depart- Io cece ce co smmvmrse swe mmeoninn so loniaion ment. STEPHENSON... . 231 822 | Investigate Trespassers upon | Old library space, gallery 81 Indian Lands. floor, north side. STERLING....... 441 Bd EE a STR a AD EE NR Srommii ll 205 V37 ("Indian Affairs. 00 oC Ll Gallery floor, west side........ 100 SUTHERLAND. .. 209 140 "Expenditures mthe:Depari=il. t= =. oh. aes oe ment of Justice. SWANSON....... 210 800-: Public > Brildingstand|t coor ooo to sana Seen, Grounds. THOMAS... 344 809 “Woman Suffrage. ok. i to nly eT i ee era es THOMPSON. . ... 230 819 "Expenditures in the DEPart-—[. 5. iin. vides ec theme ons fasas ames ments of Commerce and Labor. THORNTON... .. 447 802.1 -Pisherleg. oo Sitio mie a IE ES RE Se SMAI ane Chee Lar i Naval Affalrs:........ co Gallery floor, southeast corner. 31 TOWNSEND. .... 409 a Co a Se eS DB SS se a | ERO VARDAMAN. .... 406 837-| Conservation of National Re- |... ool... iol craic alanis dn sources. WALSH. ... Zl 421 99 { MinesandiMining.. . -. cna file Juss. Lh R aes es WARREN....... 221 191|"Engrossed Bills. oo... co 00] Gallery floor, old library 18 space, north side. WEEKS. ........ 329 Eo CRE Sa SSR LL See CE EE na WILLIAMS. . 217 186 | Contingent Expenses... Old building basement ....... 103 WORKS. ........ 323 iE ER Ee Ee ee Ce OO St ae a Le Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 241 . REPRESENTATIVES. [Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol Exchange—Main 3120.] OFFICE MALTBY REPRESENTA- | BymLDING. | BUILDING. CAPITOL. “TIVE, DELE- ; GATE, ox RES CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- SIONER. Room. ae Room. ae Location. Te ABERCROMBIE. .| =... 59 a ADA... oc eek aod Expenditures in War | Old library space, House 257 Department. 00 ADAMSON... el a a er ss Interstateand Poreign |... o.oo oi 221 Commerce. AIREN.....- 135 A a ae ee i ser ee as a ee ATNOY.L.. 419 EE a a TL Ee de a a eT ALEXANDER....| 279 EY a BEC Merchant: Marine and |... ..ooo. oo oi Fisheries. ALLEN. .....: © 487 B80 rr ER a i Be CE eR Se a ST ANDERSON. .... 227 Ee EL a ne CE i i ANSBERRY...... 217 FB Ee Be Be WL Soa a a oe LD Se ANTHONY....... 274 ER ee Ee eR Le ea sa ee a ASHBROOK... ol. aes Enrolled Bills. ........ House floor, off Statuary 231 ASWELL... ..5. 369 BG a a re i a eT Sl aT AUSTIN... oon. 212 Le Be a Ee oe ea aes ea AVE sss 122 RE Ce Pa SE IRAE SR a ee eae Sees ATREY. a 292 988 aanaleasui Mileage: . i i i ar tee reas ape eee DARER. oni 355 a Ee ER a a Ria BALTZ. 7... 181 SVR EFES SR I hte ean La ie ee lS Se eee Ree a ae BARCHFELD..... 404 a EE i BABRLEY....... 433 I re ee ee se De ee eT a BARNEHARY., enna Peintinges Coons Ground floor, main cor- 246 riaor. BARTHOLDT..... 299 Bea Ee es as a pe BARTLET. ..... 322 I BER SE nl EE eel Re ea pee han MRS ER See SS BARTON... ol. 15 OB ea ee Se BATHRICK. ..... 149 Ee a a ee Lh BEARKES....--. 186 Se a a hE irr a en eT BEALL (Tex.)...| 392 Ee Ee a Le i Aan se SR EL Bern (Cal.)..... 316 Er Pn ee ame DE Brin (Ga.)..... 376 YE RE eR i a RS LR a ae Se Sa BLACKMON. .... 150 hha a Hae IS EE see foe RS a a BOOHER........ 310 EES ca ee EA Ea een a de eae BORCHERS... .... EE a a a EET ee BORLAND....... Tae ae BE SESE ER eR eee Eo Fort es enh oe Ea BOWIE... ol Lo 61 peed Rae EE BREMNER...... 238 1 Mi Eee Le REE ee LR Ear Sa eh re One BRITTEN... 466 EO bit Ei a er we dn Sw Parl SE RS BROCKION.... Jai os 24 00 EN NE i Rs a a BRODBECK. .... 131 LE a Fe a a ee BROUSSARD. ...| 286 LE Ee Expendituresiin De-f 0 = ooo haa partment of Justice. BrowN (N.Y.).| 475 NTE Te Pe el BES en en pena rh i as a IS BrOWN(W.Va.)| 124 CT EE Slr Ber Be a LL i PD ee Se ea BrOWNE(Wis.).| 440 nl Ee SN ee RT fe ade Sin en antennae BROWNING..... 301 LE EB BE a Se ee Sa enh BRUCKNER. .... 354 GB EA Fass ns TR a RS a en BRUMBAUGH...| 491 a eal Le eee BRYAN a sean 19 TO ai ae ee BUCHANAN(TIL)| 455 11 Se ERR ale bas So bs i Se ee Re i a ee BUCHANAN 339 B83 Se es (Tex.) BULELEY. ... ... 479 EE ES oe a Ca Se in ae BURGESS. ...... 251 EE RE Fe A Te i re BR rn es Ra or ave BURKE (Pa.)...| 500 A Ee Br a a a a eRe Bn BURKE (S.Dak.)| 291 EP I ee Te et SR Sone ei i ee ET ST BURKE (Wis.).. 445 3 mE rn ET ae hr a te Ee Es eer Ph BURNETT. oi... 483 Li RE Se Ga Immigrationand Nat-1. coc i vm Sal ah ass uralization. BUTLER. ....... 211 es ae a ea BYRNES (S. C.). 215 Be I rr i a ER a Re a a ty BYRNS (Tenn.).| 489 Er a a ER ae Ee ee CALDER. re 459 LE NES RE EE Pa Se RN aha Ba ais CALLAWAY... .. 441 a a Er Ra eR CAMPBELL. ..... 281 LE ERE es eR ee Ep a a CANDLER... -... 102 40 a a aR rR SE rr ae lee CANTOR. 47 7 Me PR RE LER a CANTRILL....... 284 CL Er Ble J Se i SE RAS RR Et Se Re Sa CARAWAY.. ... 356 i RR a a es a ee CAREW ......... 336 EEE Erie re hg LE ee Neat a Lee SR AR i SE TR i CARTIN 2... 00a Se na ei SR Ra aT aS me CARR. = 5.70. 242 LL ree A EO I ma See ta ee Des mn eR Se od ema CARTER. ....... 214 ET Ie I Be Ee a a eS Lent SR ra i Pea 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——17 242 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. OFFICE MALTBY REPRESENTA- | BymLpiNG. | BUILDING. CarrroL. TIVE, DELE- GATE, ox RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- Tele- Tele- : i Tele- SIONER. Room phone. Room. phone. Location. phone. CART edie silos 371 Carb ear eee Cr Enea ee coke el Le des lt Sees ea CASEY. 1 0... nies 34 Yh Rr RS She Se SE IE i Le DS ES CHANDLER.... 258 EE Lp ee Lt Ilse al Te La CHURCH. 5a - - 482 RR CRRA I J EO Ee I Re rl UE rE he SR Se T5008 CLANCY. -ns--- ERE Raa Ca Re i ne ee RAE CLARK (Fla.)...| 277 B62 aa Public Bulldingsiond |... cocoons nnn red Grounds. HE a Ee EE SS Cr LI El 206 CLAYPOOL. ....-- 162 I ee NL ep AE SN LR Le Rn © Sr er CR Te CLAYTON. «+... 381 1 Es SS Judiciary sooo acade edie dae AE Cre... ah 447 FELTED By for Sonal Eh BERR ee LE nl eG a ME eR So ER COADY vein: a foams iiass vans 2,4 yo SIR a A ete Sr ES BE PSR Che TE SRR Ee i a CoLutER.....-.- 176 a El I aE fe Ea a BOE Si ro Aa a EE 0 ee CONNELLY |. 43 7 RR A SO ON LS A et Eo (Kans.) CONNOLLY 110 2008 2 ole me EE a Le a rn A Ra (Iowa) CoNRY:c-wiiinn 326 I ee Se RN org Tet 2 I A Pied See CSTR oi 1 ley Ua 1S I ES COOPER . 209 FL CARRE i De I Ese er] BE Se FA repel ie ne BD COPLEY... -. ==> 314 BUS an) a i ar Sil Sane dea ee ER EH RR i ee eet COVINGTON. . -.. 421 AA RE er DR er SR iD Ee le Sr ne i ES RPE ORE SE na 294 a rs i ra 0 CRAMTON. . ..-.- 477 S80 Sembe snsi en cr SL Ste en RE BR Sn ee RIP... ivinnnss 429 Fp IE Oe Sen LL REAR fe TR Rn Se hs SRE RR rn a CROSSE. ie. lisa saan 7 A Ee RT et Re ee En IGS LS 0 TE CuLiop..... 306 BOB atin a IS is a ne a Ye aim mite abn dm 4 TR CURLEY. .~----- 235 A GG SO STR aR a ei Eel Mp ADIL BL RR Peele | SR CURRY... 410 Fe a a Ll i rr IES Sas ea Dare. ni 261 Ce Se [ri BE er EE DANFORTH. .... 224 Le an Cr fe I ee ani DAVENPORT....| 133 Ee Re A Ee SC Re a AE DAVIS. oinan 361 OS a fs a a ie a eb a wm fb A te A ee ein eee ei a DECKER. .....«~ 428 i.) Tl peat] BPE Ssh FER SS i TE Gi Dee sen SER DEITRICE. .. ~~ 472 CY Be BE LE ea ys peta on v2 es Es DENT oe 139 ABA las ma sa ff RE Serra ee RS TE ue me a Sm ed IIR 5 DERSHEM. ..... 130 AA a a A en SR SR Sa Fd sw i ene ER Bl Se er a DICKINSON Des... DIFENDERFER. . DION. ooo Dixon. DONOHUE. ..... DONOVAN...... DOOLING. ...--.. DOOLITTLE DOREMUS. ..... POUGHTON.. ... Driscoit...--- FITZGERALD. ... FirzHENRY..... Expenditures in the Department of Agri- culture. ings. / : _— R— Re Members’ Rooms and Telephones. * REPRESENTATIVES— Continued. 243 OFFICE MALTBY REPRESENTA- | BympiNG. | BUILDING. Carros, TIVE, DELE~- GATE, OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS : SIONER. Room. a Room. — Location. Ld FOWLER... .... 311 me bE LE a a aE ne = i] PRANCIS.......: 366 VL SE ra Sam itd Inde Re ERs SER HS Ant eB ne Le ED REAR. ona 505 898 foo foresees eae sree es SR a Se an iE NE FreNcH....-..- 319 LL Be a ae Ls SO) GALLAGHER....[ 268 ER Ee AEE dy oo SLE GARD: = 222 {i ER Ee Se ni Cob po EEE Re Pel Ee ge eo AR SE GARDNER oop dre Sade er sealers han viunnan sh Bib 0 na Se Lis an al 309 GARNER. ....... 337 I i aE CE ene Be Sr Re Hl GARRETT 307 (Lh Rat + pews a brim e e p b Fae [RE RR CAR SSE (Tenn.) GARRETT (Tex.)| 248 CR] id PE] LEBEL Ano ct DR SL BEE EE Ca GrORGE. =: i: 132 Bh Gueny.. oc: 264 B70 co RI AGE Ae Ss aa oe SR TE Sr Sh hale me Ae GILLETT... 201 CLR NE a br Be ee ee a SE GILMORE. ...... 174 TE DEAT Cie ed eso i NR Sp tl hee tn i Bee SOR GUETINE... 1 318 G20: 1 ona lisssi se sa hr IE a Ewa, hn et LAR EE el BR Se eet ba Banking and Cur- | Old library space, House 218 rency. floor. BODWIN. seis cool soe fh connt fron simmers nor Reform in the Civil FL) RR NN Se SR CI 236 Service. GOEEE ono. 155 BBS: 10 vo ri eR ve da Se a ee eo ei Ae GOLDFOGLE.. 363 O87 Joos, Rleotiong No: 3. . ici fois Sn adda on anon LE ma 230 Bl le cde Re Ss A NS GOODWIN ...... 364 7h emp tl ERS Sl ee Cie Sor MES HE pl RI LR SRE a eh GORDON. cafe Land i 8 75 I Se SOPs Sen RE PL Be a i A di Sk GORMAN... 189 8 an ap] Leki bd etn Ss a lan Lo IC SR See an I GOULDEN....... 359 1 ES ERE fe [eT ese CE PS Ee Le Se ee Se se Ts GRAHAM (II1.)..| 296 Sole Expenditares in De-.... o.oo cil conics, partment of the Tn~-|... 200. ooo. d Rr Lo] terior. A NR SS A ee Te Se Ae ae GRAHAM (Pa.).. 456 A El I a ES a mn Rh, SL LS, © nr RAY... 368 B78 rr He a np RN ad a ad ty. GREEN (Iowa)..| 236 EE a a ES te Lm EN A a AT Sh GREENE (Mass.) 288 Fe el a EC EN DE LR See i ae GREENE (Vt.)..| 180 Ei SA Are fas Sa Iida GREGG. noi 282 Ee Ea War Claims... couldnt SRE Gaal E all ier GmEsy.. 273 B00 SS NR Nr rh ar Aa GRIFFIN. . ee 330 a EE IE arte BE ep rs BR ol, GR ER GUDEER::.-:... 386 LT Lo a me Se I Li Ty GUERNSEY. .... 491 i) IS a ee ee pe CL ah Sh Cae a A A i En ere a Se Re a Elections No. 2....... Frond floor, east corri- 227 or. HAMILTON 208 B17. coo Sr BR DR Sas ren es A Hen Se (Mich.) HAMILYON. loo 48 FOZ iri Sis oda dn wa lth a state we ne mPa ar SR RN NY.) LE LE Ee Ea Expenditures in State | Basement, main build- 278 Department. ing. HAMMOND...... 267 SBT {cin Slovan ibonunusnmoti dese shane 6 hss NR Hr 2 Ee Sl Se HARDWICR ©. ono vss eaniilisnns alia ion i Coinage, Weights, and | Old library space, gal- 234 : Measures. lery floor. HARDY ona 119 rab AER E ee Expendituresin Navy. |... 000. ook on alia. Department. HARRISON .-... HENRY. eos oR oma ase Rules. iosilacas Old library space, gal- 308 lery floor. HENSLEY... -. 442 2 CAE IRS RS Lo Se re pe SER hem a rd ed OL... kl 325 6254: LL ARE ah REREAD ae HDs... . 0... 492 CL HERR REE ER en ee a en HINEBAUGH....| 360 re RCE RR Seed EE el DSA a Sede aT Cee Sl RU Sey HOBSON.......- 344 LL Pa EE ME Dn SA DO SC A SSR Oa am ae HOLLAND...» 184 Eg ora Ln es pani Se mse SORA © HoustoN........ 246 FR rn SH REN be Terrliorieont. .. sos vale sv iin. Stn fis chen BRIE AINE HOWARD....... 409 LE ire OE os SORE RC CI Tac) 0 3 HowELL.......| 210 Er a een EAS EE A Ce as EE a a Foie Ld Hoxworrn.....bo aoa 62 786 244 v Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. REPRESENTA | Rompe. | Bombe. CAPITOL. TIVE, DELE- GATE, ox RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- Tele- Tele- Tele- SIONER. Room. phone. Room. phone. Location. phone. ¢ HUGHESIH(Ga) or val re ah Tdueation............. orang floor, main cor- 240 Lh riaor. HugHEs (W. 302 HEE aaa ES Se SE DE a nae Va.). HuriiNnGgs....--- 422 7 a antl US Ee ee re Se a DT a SEE Tee HULL... i= 389 SR a Ee Th SR hl i SE Pala ana aS HUMPHREY {......-).-.--. 5 Thue ams es ad Eee Lr Boa ie Dee ee (Wash.). HUMPHREYS 396 (1 sheer eae Seal ee ee a ee a Ae re ee (Miss. OOF caiaasions vn 160 A is a ens Lr Co ae Oe a JACOWAY....... 387 i Te Le a) JonnsoN (Ky.).| 377 OY I Se District olColumbin fo ren i JoBNSON (S. C.) 205 a a ors JounsoN (Utah)| 493 CLUB Pe Re EN BR RY SE JOHNSON 397 i a a Ce a i (Wash.) JONES.........- 125 CEL Re Re Insular Affairs........ EATER anw.........: 408 Ce oh a a KALANIANAOLE 283 UAE EER IS SR SE) fo Er a a KEATING. .....- 182 rie ee Sa ER eR SR CE I Ea KRISTIE. rene 120 2 a pe Le Se CE RSA SE ee Ln KELLEY (Mich.)| 464 SB rE ES Ee KELLY (Pa.).... 129 SE ie a Yas a ee La a EEL KENNEDY 448 LE han nla en or Aes (Conn.). KENNEDY 225 I A ss Is (Towa). KENNEDY 173 To a RE SS i (R.1.) TOTONIT cin ola ai ook 449 ls le rl Lr a Eh on a Ae rn ae KETTNER.. «v0. 237 LEE RS ie TR MS a a SR a ee EY os 171 RE a a a Re BM aE Ra Se Kimss.......... 488 Ge a ee Sr le a A CET KINDEL -cnve-siis--imminle nn cin 76 VE SR er Se SE ee LEE ER LE Se RKINEKEAID 333 EE Ra EE A a a EEE Rr ey ea LT (Nebr.). KINKEAD 233 a es at ore Sa . (N-J.). KIRKPATRICK. . . 106 a A RS ee a LE KITCHIN......-- 431 HT Cae Be Cae IE SR aS er nel el ae rt hen ae AN te KNOWLAND... 382 088 i i hee re a Ye AR i SE Se El Te XONOP....i---- 280 O80 ExvpendituresonPub- |... oo. ow. ta ihm de lic Buildings. RORBEY 0 BI et ee a Se ra Se a rane SE ee RR EIDE AT B08 i san hs aa arith a fare rab eb CA SS SE SM SRR TARPERTY 0 a dB8al 3000 | Ll a i ee ds Rena Se ee a a ee A IS a HL Rr Fo iD Po gh (OPE [BG 0m gr Ua Sa ont oh oo eatin 7 LE LANGHAM... | AE Eh a a ri ieee ee SRE a SR BANGIEY. aie 280 B07 ial dg dd ms ih i ian i id ma se mn om Sell ne Ca a ee LR ey LR ER EE BS RR a PE LE Se een PR Len (Ga.).. ....0 26 T28 mara alia oa ha He Re BERD.) SO 612s en. ee Rs i hee, he a EE ERR Sl LO Se Eee i Rl pa ats wat Rin wih ims A PILE an arse EE eed BER Be ee UI oe aia es a ay LESHER........ fe Sh ier LEVER .cou----- Agriculture. .......... Er Ren eR a Ea RE DE ee ET Ts ne Se ee rn Se ee EE Lewis (Md.)... Ground floor, main build- 235 ing. Lewis(Pa.)....} 13 Lyne Se ee te ae ae RR TR as ei Le TS TL ES 331 a al Se LIne seis BERR as 1 hs a LINDBERGH....| 373 El or SR] Bl bf RI 2 oy a MCR 0.2 1 Ld LINDQUIST... j= esuiss]rsmuiams 2 EE in Be Lr Sp Eee Sd Ln LINTHICUM. .... 105 LE en on RE IN Re ER Re a Rr DR Pl Le IRR i Ri Accounts... vec us Ground floor, west corri- 242 or. : BOBECE. .-.. octane ons Expenditures in | Old library space, gallery 274 Treasury Depart- floor. : ment. a EL rm a a al i CS TE pe SRR SN Locum... ....... 365 al el SE ee Sg ER Le I SE Ree Rk LONERGAN..... 443 Ts a I ATE eT male Pe Tn MCANDREWS. ..}-.... |< sus. 53 a ee MCCLELLAN ....| 172 Ad] ee Eee SR BR eee a Lee a McCoy ......... 413 yi La let a Se SS TEE McDERMOTT. ..! 323 or MEE a el Pee eleanor CsCl re ee % Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 245 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. OFFICE MALTBY REPRESENTA- | BUILDING. | BUILDING. CAPITOL. TIVE, DELE- GATE, ox RESI- | CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- : | Tele- Tele- : Tele- SIONER. Room. |p, iy Room. phone. Location. phone MACDONALD... |i a cafe ees ee NS I a Be TE RB MCGILLICUDDY . 188 YE Pease Er eos Se a I HORS Ee SR RE Te MCGUIRE... -- 308 rE eee A PR RR el TR Se a Meinl se a Sa MCKELLAR..... 166 A a ll Cr ae ee i) SR RR hm re PRES I McKENZIE. .... 269 i PO es Re BS Rs i Pe BE hl EE CS MCLAUGHLIN... 216 ci REE PRAT Pete re sen i he ve ibe Ls SRR EC Se he MADDEN. ....-. 402 71 De Raia) Emer TAC pen IB SELES Dales DR BD MAGUIRE... .... 470 Fi Se LOE es SN Se Ss ie mea gu br Be Cag LASS Be TE Magan... 436 LE Ei Pe tee en on Sn Se i Sn Ab [ees oa se Ei oT MAwER.. ....... 478 Lh HE RP Ta Expenditures in Pe- |... 0 oo partment of Labor. MANAHAN...... 469 UR BS esa RESIS ben dee Ril piis aime pep BSI DERE ees Se an EE I re LN ml Fo ~ B 241 MATES... 435 Vi PER IES Eat Cp SS ee I pps ate hed BE ee SR Ge Se BEE MARTIN (S. 391 ER I Tr Ee a Ce i a Si i Dak.). MERRITT. 374 LV A Ate etl DED Sn a eel Soule FES meee Lo oR Se anaes ie er METZ. ns 256 Lis 8 Ete ee ominous LU SSI OE Sse i rai beige clan eR De SR me Si Ee Moin. ......= 309 Eat ean nl SNES Cerne Samar eRe BEL pais TRS ee MITCHELL. lee se tf encscqnfrm nnn 78 EE ER Se rR ee ay WORE SIN) SSRI SWE CE eT MONDELL...---- 202 TA PR br Le Ben TTT Ce ee Sn ies ples inane lan ee ns ls MONTAGUE..... 341 LE Ee ES a Sl In Coa ele Merge Lem Lele RE ages LIES MOON sry a rr er sn Post Office and Post | Ground floor, west corri- 247 Roads. or. Moor... ....-- 425 i a rE A SR a MorGaN (La.)..| 414 Tn a ae a EE RE Se Ae MORGAN (Okla.y| 490 7) VE Pte IRON BER Ce a Ina ite BR gn LL Lh mide eT De MORIN. ....---- 167 LE Ce Ee a ee SE RO CE a BOR TO RR NER Se ee Le MORRISON. ....- 403 Fil Ie Rn EE Be a A bee te a Se Moss (Ind.)....| 499 EE a aa eS Sl 253 Moss (W. Va.)..| 468 ER i i aR ee a SE MOTE: 461 lob et ri a ees Se Ee Sree eT RA rr I eer | SORE ETE ih0 bl re rd Peed Eanes Se IC Ben yet BS ci SR Se Se nt Se BESS IS en RR 305 MURRAY (Mass.)| 229 BT i a Ee bee a ie ee Beare SATE 5 ne Rn rt ret I MuBRaAY (OX. =)... 3 7750) Bf Ee ORO et re Pm ee Lg La de Ie NEELEY (Kans.)| 420 I rr RR ee i rer sae SE NEmET(W- Val... ali Ds i re en ee at ne a NELSON... ------ 276 LE pte nr LE A Res a Nl i Ce Se eR CR NOLAN... ---...- 424 7 Ds Sn RE BR Ss eet Setar en Sate 4 LET Se Ba] ses Ise Be SE NORTON..--.->--- 158 ATL lr a ee SE Sl as SL O’BRIFN...---- 312 EL Ea BEG 2 Ohi ss Seam a 1 8 Sl eT J a RL hE OGLESBY ...---- 454 {vd of Nh it ae aT Tee a Le J USSR RE alg Se SLE eT OH Am... 170 LA RE EE Set Be Bet Se IS A SR ed OLDFIELD... .. -- 395 Ban Patents. od aN nS O’LEARY. --.-.. 334 (170 0 pe dl By ee I LSE Ea nl Bee an See Ae ND TR a O’SHAUNESSY. . 228 A I ee a ee em i SS TE ah La EE he BTA SE Sd BR MRR Naval Affairs......... oid library space, House 217 oor. PAGE(N. C.)...| 204 HY Eel Sra a EE el he ST PAIGE Mans.) tl i rile er Shale se [een SAN ae mnie in fm eee ne ir id eS Rh no PATMER 2.0. 143 CE a ee ed ee Ee a Re IE Et PARE aie n nia ere me Gl a ee ed re Ye SE i Se BARRED... al aes as 58 ii ein aie See re ARR eA eR Sa PArrEN(N-Y.).| 231 7 SEN Lela See Ep A BE SS I RO Lao Ta Patron (Pa.)...| 473 BBE ee Eee EE Sp See Se Se bo EC A a a Ee Le el I ees. Se Ss Ne es 229 PUPPOR 293 FH eg Eh SE Expendituresin Post |. ...00- Ladi EO AC, Office Department. PETERS (Me.). .. PETERS (Mass.). PETERSON. ..... PHELAN. ....... Pram... .... BRLUMIEY. ...-.. PORTER... .- POST: aa: Pov. cian POWERS. .....- PROUT... QUEZON....---- QUIN. ovina RAGSDALE...... RAINEY.....-..- RARER. ...ccnovn RAUCH: -.....:: RAYBURN....... REED... ...... 246 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. OFFICE MALTBY REPRESENTA- | Bumping. | Bump. CAPITOL. TIVE, DELE- GATE, os RES CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- : Tele- Tele- id Tele- SIONER. Room. phone. Roorn. phone Location. phone RELLY (Conn.).| 177 ABB do il i a nie ls aE aS Ce A Rh REILLY (Wis.)..| 439 TRAX ma i tn as a en we a AEE Re a AT A RICHARDSON... . 221 ane ee ale LAREN Tensions. oo. Cu hl aR RIORDAN... ..... 476 0 i a eS SR a Bhat a at so BAH RIVERA......--- 255 Foi ee DR EN Ra CSL Sake a Se NOES sl Sl OR Ry Ce ROBERTS(Mass) 126 "ir ANSE ee eal ny oem anol NI OW SS RC A TS LE RoBERTS (Nev.)| 156 NAERS Re ple Se So Se ee BR Le IRR ROGERS......-- 498 oY eR ST |e er ol men aa AE Le be nS La Sa ROTHERMEL ...| 29 BOO: [eel ein Expenditures im the [coils iii or ifeautita. Department of Com- merce. Rouse. :....... 388 ee SB Le BO rr a She reel Sa RUBLY. i. 444 A la al a A I a I i al np Be RP pe a Ate Rucker... ...... 127 1 LE i Election of President, |. a on... o00 oo ovwieslies S020 Vice President, and Representatives in Congress. RUPLEY ....-.-.: 157 EE ol Rs Sip Re LS a SR oll Le yo 0 RUSSELL =... -- 206 CL SE Tee Re a ee Teh ehh Co a RRA TRL SABATH,........ 507 898i Alecholie Liquor foi. iiiicidva maori bon Traffic. SAUNDERS...... 234 BAD at ral San ee RE A bo Ss rb Re AR i Kote a Scorn ri 240 LR Re Le LE re LS SI en ren aE LL SCULLY... .- 232 I AR SC RR SE CL LE BG Sea Je STE ee ee SE LR SELDOMRIDGE 372 OTT deal i Sana El EE SR a RE SERIE. 168 Eee ER 0 SR Bh Ss SHACKLEFORD 153 408 tooo) Roadg. isan a eee A SHARP, .......-- 484 a pt i Si, Lo lc Se UE SRL SE SaEriey....... 399 Se ta aim ty ol Past SS nt SHERWOOD evs w= wv nis)ers sin ms) ninis at tfuwaran Invalid Pensions.... Ory floor, west cor- 245 ridor. SHREVE......-- 254 SIMS. ....:.cun- 107 SINNOTT. oes» 494 Sisson: -....... 138 SLAYDEN....... 278 SIEMP i. 290 SUOAR saan 220 SMALL: ........ 298 SmitH (Idaho)..| 474 SmitH (Md.).... 104 SmirH, J. M. C. 501 (Mich.) SMITH, SAMUEL 393 089.0 le al ERE hE Te i Seale en ere W. (Mich.) SMITH (Minn.).| 460 re Ren ven Re RL a CR ORE SS le SD a SyirE (N.Y.)--[ 332 OAR aa] EE EIR ie i ee te eA a Smite (Tex.)...| 289 Lh ee Tevieation sof Arid loon ch ea ands. SPARKMAN..... 245 OL SRE SS RIVers aA TorDOrS. ...[.c iit dasain iis maf edie SPATTORD wwii calnannsin 22 J EEE CR RE a a ei DE Se eR STANLEY. ...... 390 TAT Ee et DR RR Lo Be ES I Rae SR elt Dl a STEDMAN....... 432 a Se RR EE ne TAN ei Be Se heen BL STEENERSON. .. 117 RE Ba eS a nC Ped A hs C0 Ee 1 EE a Bn A BE SR STEPHE NS 380 AEE PE DR De A RE a Day Be lia les Ce Ren he (Cal.). STEPHENS 134 LE eng et Lr Tare ee BR SB EAB LL (Miss.). STEPHENS 465 10 Er A DEI Bee ES RE RE an DRE Se BL UL Ts (Nebr.). SNTPIIEEN 8... a. ceesioile conifer svras Indian Affairs........ Ground floor, main cor- 248 Tex.). ridor. STEVENS 383 oo EEG EE Ee OES EL SIS BT Es pe, Cl TER BH LE inn.) STEVENS 250 Fe eee FL a i a TR Ae Si Re (N. H) STONE: ox 412 Ee i SER al LS en SRT Sl Le AA RN a MON Sat Cy STOUT. on 115 1 Vd ES SE Re Br TR er De STRINGER... ...- 165 HT ee I ER OD a OSE BE SE SUMNERS: .... | cies lecrenes 39 yi | ol Nee OC IE PEN Rha El TEA Te SNe RE Ee eT SUTHERLAND...| 358 VA Pl RR LCR mi mes BER see Ph min pe LS SR Us pltlaameee ae TE Switzer... --- 241 Le a Ca Ep UE SR nied bl Le D Seeeie, ¢1 a TAGGART......: 348 LL Ee lee tle aren De SC BE le RS i SNe [6 Sa TALBOTT (Md.).| 207 08. al Disposition.of Useless |..:.h oh... 08... ihc o Executive Papers. Tarcorr(N.Y.).] 329 7 ME SR VE EAE Re A Oe SE Ce Ce SER 5 "TAVENNER..... 313 EE Ee TR RR RE pI CC Be RA Or Se Ma eR LET #3 Members Rooms and Telephones. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. 247 OFFICE MALTBY REPRESENTA- | BymLDING. | BUILDING. TIVE, DELE- GATE, ox RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMIS- : Tele- Tele- SIONER. Room. phone. Room. phone TAYLOR (Ala.)..| 142 ASE en iro ne a RI TAYLOR (Ark.).] 362 1 AT EE ea CN Ce ER LR RI Re TAYLOR (Colo.).| 265 SETA Sr Ret TE TE a Eo TAYLOR (N.Y) 352 ITH SE Sd bee ol pe Saba Da BEMPLES od A ol 14 EES ER Re wr CE RIL EE ae I Ten Evex..... 430 BD a eR EN Ee THACHER ¢....: 163 rate RS Te THOMAS... ...... 257 sie a SE san setae Dido moniiaaein: Lor THOMPSON |... as 13 TBA a LE rine (Okla.) THoMSoN(IN.)............... 29 OD i rae es Er TOWNER... ...- 113 CT ta hea i ee Bc bese i TOWNSEND..... 457 RR i ai) bro CE aa iE AERO de at DT TREADWAY..... 353 ERE EE Re Le SS ER mh a TRIBBLY.......- 463 EER I I OR Ieee Sa a BULTLE. cx - 415 ASR Re ea Se aie UNDERHILL..... 272 LZ pata hE Sse Industrial Arts and Expositions. UNDERWOOD...| 321 BUS lea cncatiotis us Ways and Means...... Wangs, ooo ‘WICKERSHAM... WILLIAMS. ..... WHLIS. ... ...-. WiLsoN (Fla.).. ‘WiLsoN (N. Y). WINGO. ........ WITHERSPOON. . WOODRUFF..... CAPITOL. ; Tele- Location. phone hrs ie a SN CH 219 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 18562, partially replenished by an appropriation of $75,000; increased (1) by regular appropriations by Congress; (2) by deposits under the copy- right 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. One hundred sets of Government publications are at the disposal of the Librarian of Congress for exchange, through the Smithsonian, with foreign Governments, and from this source are received about 12,000 volumes annually. 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, 1913) about 2,128,255 printed books and pamphlets (including the law library of 158,117 volumes, which, while a division of the Library of Congress, still remains at the Capitol), 135,223 maps and charts, 625,098 pieces of music, and 360,494 photographs, prints, engravings, and lithographs. It includes various special collections eminent in their respective fields. The collection of manuscripts, touching every period of American history, includes the papers of nine of the Presidents and the records of the Continental Congress, with numerous other important groups—political, military, naval, and commercial. 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 IL. 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 3% 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 430,255 square feet, or nearly 10 acres. : The book stacks, including the new stack built over the southeast interior court, contain a total of about 100 miles of shelving, with capacity for 3,540,009 octavo volumes of books and 84,000 volumes of newspapers. The Library is maintained by annual appropriations by Congress for various pur- poses, including the purchase of books. For the year 1913-14 these amounted to $606,085 (not including allotment for printing and binding, $200,000), as follows: $484,085 for services and contingent expenses (including the Copyright Office, and including also the care of the building); $98,000 for books and periodicals; $14,000 for fuel, supplies, and miscellaneous purposes; $10,000 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. 248 ta od Library of Congress. 249 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, 254 employees; Copyright Office, 91; distribution of catalogue cards, 40; disbursement service and care of building and grounds, 128. Total, 513. 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 Officc.—The Copyright Office is a distinct division of the Library of Congress and 1s located on the ground floor, south side; open 9 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 of Con’ gress, ’ to perform all the duties relating to copyrights. Copyright registration was 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 deposited, numbered, during the fiscal year 1912-13, 215,595 articles. Copyright fees applied and paid into the Treasury for the fiscal year 1912-13 amounted to $114,980.60. Hours.—On week days (except legal holidays) the library building, main reading room, periodical reading room, and law library are open from 9 a.m. to 10 p. m.; 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, music division, and maps division, are open from 2 to 10 p. m., the Librari- an’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. 1861-1864.—John G. Stephenson. 1864-1897 (June 30).—Ainsworth R. Spofford. 1897-Jan. 17, 1899.—John Russell Young. 1899 (Apr. 5).—Herbert Putnam. LIBRARY STAFF. GENERAL ADMINISTRATION. Librarian of Congress.—Herbert Putnam, The Woodward. fl Assistant Librarian.—Appleton P.C. Griffin, 3556 Macomb Street, Cleveland ark. Chief clerk.—Allen R. Boyd, 2107 O Street. Secretary.—Jessica L. Farnum, 1604 Newton Street. | 250 Congressional Directory. DIVISIONS. Spain of reading room.—Wm. W. Bishop, Montgomery Avenue, Kensing- ton, ; Chief assistants in reading room.—John G. Morrison, 1230 Irving Street; Hugh A. Mor- rigson, 2302 First Street. In charge of reading room for the blind.—Mzrs. Gertrude T. Rider, The Portner. In charge of Representatives’ reading room.—Lawrence Washington, 216 A Street SE. Chiefs of division: Bibliography.—H. H. B. Meyer, 2608 Tunlaw Road. Binding.—Arthur R. Kimball, 1825 Kalorama Road. Card section.—Charles H. Hastings, 3600 Ordway Street. Catalogue.—Charles Martel, 300 South Carolina Avenue SE. Documents.—Henry J. Harris, The Ontario. Mail and delivery.—S. M. Croft, 316 Tenth Street NE. Manuscripts. —Gaillard Hunt, 1711 De Sales Street. Maps and charts.—P. Lee Phillips, 1707 H Street. Music.—Oscar G. T. Sonneck, 3030 Macomb Street, Cleveland Park. Order —Frederick W. Ashley, 3932 Morrison Street. Periodical —William Adams Slade, 156 A Street NE. Prints.—Arthur J. Parsons, 1704 Eighteenth Street. Law Uibrarian.—J. David Thompson, The Ontario. COPYRIGHT OFFICE. Register.—Thorvald Solberg, 198 F' Street SE. Assistant register.—HErnest Bruncken, 1724 Kilbourne Place. BUILDING AND GROUNDS. Superintendent.—Bernard R. Green, 1738 N Street. Chaef clerk:.—Wade H. Rabbitt, 2028 P Street. Chief engineer. —Charles B. Titlow, 1204 Monroe Street. Electrician.—Damon VV. Harding, 1344 East Capitol Street. Captain of the watch.—J. V. Wiirdemann, 821 Randolph Street. a a EEE APPENDIX EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS MISCELLANEOUS INSTITUTIONS OFFICIAL DUTIES (Executive Departments) JUDICIARY DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR SERVICE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES APARTMENT HOUSES, CLUBS, HOTELS MAPS OF CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS INDIVIDUAL INDEX 251 TE EXECUTIVE. THE WHITE HOUSE. (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets. Phone, Main 6.) WOODROW WILSON, President, was born at Staunton, Va., December 28, 1856, and is a son of the Rev. Joseph R. Wilson and Jessie Woodrow Wilson, the former a distinguished scholar and clergyman of the Presbyterian Church of the South. His father was a native of Ohio and his mother of Scotland, and his ancestry on both sides is Scotch-Irish. His boyhood days were spent in Augusta, Ga., at Columbia, S. C., and Wilmington, N. C., where he prepared for college with private tutors and at the schools of these places. His real educator, however, was his father, a scholar of high order, for some years professor of the Columbia (S. C.) Theological Seminary, and who closed his career as professor in the Southwestern Theological Seminary, at Clarks- ville, Tenn. In 1874 he entered Davidson College, North Carolina, remained one year, and in the fall of 1875 went to Princeton College, from which he was graduated in the class of 1879. Following his graduation he entered the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., as a law student, and was graduated in 1881. For two years he practiced law at Atlanta, Ga. In 1883 to 1885 did graduate work at the Johns Hop- king University, Baltimore, Md., in political economy and history; 1885 to 1888, professor of history and political economy at Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania; 1888 to 1890, professor in the same branches of science at Wesleyan University. In June, 1890, he was elected professor of jurisprudence and political economy at Princeton University. In 1895 the department was divided and he was assigned to the chair of jurisprudence. In 1897 he was promoted to the McCormick professorship of jurispru- dence and politics. In 1902 he was elected president of the university, resigning both that office and his professorship in October, 1910, immediately after his nomina- tion for governor of New Jersey, to which office he was elected November 8, 1910, by a plurality of 49,056 votes. He was married June 24, 1885, to Miss Ellen Louise Axsen, of a distinguished family of Savannah, Ga. They have three daughters, Misses Margaret Woodrow Wilson, Jessie Woodrow Wilson, and Eleanor Randolph Wilson. He is the author of the following works: Congressional Government, in 1885; The State-Elements of Historical and Practical Politics, in 1889; Division and Reunion, in 1893; An Old Master, and Other Political Essays, in 1893; Mere Literature and Other Essays, in 1896; Life of George Washington, in 1896; History of the American People, in 1902; and Constitutional Government in the United States, in 1908. JOSEPH P. TUMULTY, Secretary to the President (2311 Calvert Street) was born in Jersey City May 5, 1879, and is a son of ex-Assemblyman Philip Tumulty; attended St. Bridget’s parochial school in Jersey City, and subsequently entered St. Peter’s College, Jersey City, from which he was graduated in 1899 with the degree of B. A.; studied law in the offices of Bedle, McGee & Bedle, and Gilbert Collins, ex- justice supreme court, and was admitted to the bar of New Jersey in 1902; in 1904 entered into partnership with George E. Cutley, under the name of Tumulty & Cutley; is married and has six children, four girls and two boys; is connected with many political and social organizations; was a member of the New Jersey House of Assembly 1907-1910; in 1910 was appointed private secretary to Gov. Wilson, and in 1912 clerk of the Supreme Court of New Jersey; served as secretary to Gov. Wilson until he resigned to become President without compensation from the State. Executive clerk.—Rudolph Forster, 3204 Seventeenth Street. Chief clerk.—Thomas W. Brahany, The Northumberland. 253 254 Congressional Duirectory. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 4510.) WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, of Lincoln, Nebr., Secretary of State (Calumet Place), was born March 19, 1860, at Salem, I1l., a son of Silas Lillard and Mariah * Elizabeth (Jennings) Bryan; he was married October 1, 1884, to Mary Baird, daughter of John and Lovina Baird, of Perry, Il1.; they have three children, Mrs. R. B. Owen, of Eltham, Kent, England, William Jennings Bryan, jr., of Tucson, Ariz., and Mrs. Richard Hargreaves, of Lincoln, Nebr.; he was educated at Whipple Academy and Illinois College, Jacksonville, Ill.; at graduation was elected class orator and, having the highest rank in scholarship during the four years’ course, delivered the vale- dictory; in the autumn of 1881 entered the Union College of Law at Chicago, spend- ing his out-of-school hours in the office of ex-Senator Lyman Trumbull; began the practice of his profession in Jacksonville, Ill., July 4, 1883; removed to Lincoln, Nebr., October 1, 1887, and formed a law partnership with Hon. A. R. Talbot; he was the Democratic nominee for Congress in 1890, and although the district was normally Republican by a large majority, was elected by a plurality of over 7,000; was reelected by a plurality of 140 in a new district (the State having been reapportioned in 1891), which that year gave the Republican State ticket a plurality of 6,500; during his two terms in Congress he served upon the Ways and Means Committee, assisted in the preparation of the Wilson bill, and was a member of the subcommittee which drafted the income-tax portion of the bill; he was unanimously nominated by the Nebraska Democratic State convention in 1894 as its candidate for United States Senator; at the election Nebraska shared in the general landslide and chose a large Republican majority in the legislature, which elected Mr. Thurston to the Senate; on September 1, 1894, he became chief of the editorial staff of the Omaha World-Herald, and gave a portion of his time to this work until the national convention of 1896; was nominated for the Presidency by the Democratic National Convention of 1896 and also by the Populist and Silver Republican conventions of that year; after a hotly contested cam- paign, was defeated by Mr. McKinley; at the outbreak of the War with Spain he ten- dered his services ‘to the President; subsequently, at the request of Gov. Holcomb, of Nebraska, he raised a regiment and was commissioned as colonel of the Third Nebraska Infantry; served therewith until the signing of the treaty of peace; was renominated for the Presidency by acclamation in the Democratic convention of 1900 (his nomination being again indorsed by the Populists and Silver Republicans), and was again de- feated; established The Commoner, a weekly paper devoted to political science, political economy, and sociology, and still continues its publication; in 1905, with his wife and two younger children, made a tour of the world ; was nominated for the Presi- dency by the Democratic national convention for the third time in 1908 and for the third time he met defeat; after election he resumed his lecturing and editorial work, devoting himself, as before, to the advocacy of the reforms which to him seemed desirable; was nominated as Secretary of State by President Wilson and confirmed and commissioned March 5, 1913. Counselor for the Department of State.—John Bassett Moore, The Albany. Solicitor.—Joseph W. Folk, The New Willard. The Assistant Secretary.—John E. Osborne, The Connecticut. Second Assistant Secretary. —Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth Street. Third Assistant Secretary. —Dudley F. Malone, The Shoreham. Director of the Consular Service.—Wilbur J. Carr, The Ontario. Chief clerk.—Ben G. Davis, 110 Oak Avenue, Takoma Park. Foreign trade advisers.—Robert F. Rose, Falkstone Courts; William B. Fleming, 918 Eighteenth Street. : Chief of Bureau, of— Accounts and disbursing clerk.—William McNeir, 3362 Eighteenth Street. Appointments.—Miles M. Shand, 3206 Seventeenth Street. Citizenship.—Richard W. Flournoy, jr., Bethesda, Md. Consular.—Herbert C. Hengstler, 2816 Twenty-seventh Street. Diplomatic.—Sydney Y. Smith, The Octavia. Indexes and Archives.—John R. Buck, 1318 Emerson Street. Rolls and Library.—John A. Tonner, The Ethelhurst. Chief of Division of— : Far Eastern Affairs.—Ransford S. Miller, 2138 California Street. Information.—John H. James, The Balfour. Latin American Affairs.—Boaz W. Long, The Cecil. Near Eastern Affairs.—Albert H. Putney, 1416 K Street. Translators.—John S. Martin, jr., 1731 F Street; Wilfred Stevens, Wesley Heights. li Executive Departments. 255 Assistant solicitors.—Frederick Van Dyne, 12 Kirke Street, Chevy Chase; Lester H. Woolsey, 3353 Runnymede Street, Chevy Chase; Edwin N. Borchard, 116 C Street NE. Private secretary to the Secretary of State.—Manton M. Wyvell, 3347 Eighteenth Street. Law clerk.—Henry L. Bryan, 604 East Capitol Street. DISPATCH AGENTS. I. P. Roosa, 2 Rector Street, New York. W. A. Cooper, Post Office Building, San Francisco. : R. Newton Crane, No. 4 Trafalgar Square, London, England. Michael A. Tito, Post Office Building, New Orleans. STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPARTMENT BUILDING. (Superintendent’s room, No. 148, first floor, north wing.) Superintendent.—Capt. Thomas H. Emerson, United States Army. Chef clerk.—W. E. Chapman, 714 Nineteenth Street. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 6400.) WILLIAM GIBBS McADOO, of New York, N. Y., Secretary of the Treasury, was born near Marietta, Ga., October 31, 1863; son of William G. McAdoo, M. A. LL. D., who was a judge, soldier in the Mexican and Civil Wars, district attorney general of Tennessee, and adjunct professor of English and history in the University of Tennessee; removed from Georgia to Tennessee; studied at the University of Tennessee; admitted to the bar at the age of 21; practiced law in Chattanooga until 1892, when he removed to New York and continued the practice of his profession; conceived the Hudson River tunnel system; organized the company which built it and was its president from 1902 to 1913; was a delegate to the Baltimore convention in 1912; was vice chairman of the Democratic national committee and acting chair- man during the greater part of the campaign of 1912; married Sarah Houston Flem- ing, of Chattanooga, Tenn., and is the father of six children—three sons and three daughters; was appointed Secretary of the Treasury March 5 and took the oath of office March 6, 1913. Assistant Secretary in charge customs.—Charles S. Hamlin, 1229 Nineteenth Street. Assistant Secretary in charge fiscal bureaus.—John Skelton Williams, 1712 H Street. Assistant Secretary in charge public buildings and mascellaneous.—Byron R. Newton, 2610 Garfield Street. Chaef clerk.—James L. Wilmeth, 618 Kenyon Street. Private secretary to the Secretary of the Treasury.—George R. Cooksey, 323 E Street SI. Chief of Division of— Appointments.—James E. Harper, Chevy Chase, Md. Bookkeeping and Warrants.—Charles H. Miller, The Columbia. Customs.—F. M. Halstead, 1423 Madison Street. Loans and Currency.—A. T. Huntington, 1347 Monroe Street. Mail and Files.—S. M. Gaines, 1257 Hamlin Street, Brookland. Printing and Stationery.—F. F. Weston, 4320 Eighth Street. Public Moneys.—E. B. Daskam, 1433 R Street. Special Agent.—Joseph W. Wheatley, Florence Court west. Disbursing clerk.—Sydney R. Jacobs, 1473 Harvard Street. SUPERVISING ARCHITECT'S OFFICE. (Treasury Department Building.) Supervising Architect.—Oscar Wenderoth, 2036 O Street. Executive officer.—James A. Wetmore, 1336 Oak Street. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. (Fourteenth and B Streets SW.) Director.—Joseph E. Ralph, 1246 Newton Street NE. Assistant Director.—Frank E. Ferguson, 1239 Kenyon Street. 256 Congressional Directory. SECRET-SERVICE DIVISION. (Treasury Department Building.) Chief —William J. Flynn, Speedway Inn. Assistant chief —W. H. Moran, 1935 Biltmore Street. ~~ LIFE-SAVING SERVICE. (Treasury Department Building.) General Superintendent.—S. I. Kimball, 1316 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant Superintendent.—Oliver M. Maxam, 1749 Park Road. Inspector life-saving stations.—Senior Capt. D. P. Foley, The Cairo. COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller.—George E. Downey, 1732 Sixteenth Street. Assistant Comptroller.— Walter W. Warwick, 1539 I Street. Chief clerk.—C. M. Foree, The Rockingham. Chief law clerk.—Maj. J. D. Terrill, 1334 Vermont Avenue. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. (Treasury Department Building.) Register.—Gabe E. Parker, 4412 Fourteenth Street. Assistant Register.— AUDITORS FOR DEPARTMENTS. Treasury (Treasury Department Building). —W. E. Andrews, 1225 Fairmont Street. War (Winder Building, Seventeenth and F' Streets).—James L. Baity, The Brighton. Interior (Union Building, G Street between Sixth and Seventh Streets).—Robert W. Woolley, Fairfax, Va. Navy (Union Building, G Street between Sixth and Seventh Streets).— Edward L. Luckow, The New Winston. State and other Departments (Small Building, corner Fourteenth and G Streets).— Edward D. Hearne, 1313 K Street. Post Office (Post Office Department Building; phone, Main 5360).—Charles A. Kram, Chevy Chase, Md. TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. (Treasury Department Building.) Treasurer —John Burke, Falkstone Courts. 5 Assistant Treasurer.— - Deputy Assistant Treasurer.—George Fort, 2817 Q Street. Cashier.—James A. Sample, Florence Court. Chief clerk.—Willard F. Warner, The Concord. NATIONAL BANK REDEMPTION AGENCY. Superintendent. —Edwin W. Wilson, 1819 Riggs Place. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller. — Deputy Comptroller.—Thomas P. Kane, 1931 Calvert Street. Deputy Comptroller —Willis J. Fowler, Hammond Court. Chief clerk.—Charles A. Stewart, East Falls Church, Va. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. (Treasury Department Building.) Commissioner.— William H. Osborn, The Farragut. Deputy Commissioner.—Robert Williams, jr., 3114 Mount Pleasant Street. Deputy Commissioner.—George E. Fletcher, 1333 Park Road. Deputy Commiassioner.—Luther F. Speer, 722 North Carolina Avenue SE. Chief clerk.—Daniel J. Gantt, 3532 Eleventh Street. Executive Departments. 257 DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. (Treasury Department Building.) | | | Director.—George E. Roberts, The Ontario. Examiner. —Jasper N. Baker, 3562 Macomb Street. " BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH. (Surgeon General’s Office, 3 B Street SE.) Surgeon General.—Rupert Blue, The Benedick. Assistant Surgeons General.—A. H. Glennan, University Club; W. G. Stimpson, The Gordon; L. E. Cofer, 1719 Connecticut Avenue; J. W. Kerr, 2806 Twenty-seventh | Street; W. C. Rucker, The Dresden; J. W. Trask, 300 R Street NE. Assistant surgeon.—Richard A. Kearney, The Benedick. Chief clerk.—D. S. Masterson, 1115 Massachusetts Avenue. HYGIENIC LABORATORY. (Twenty-fifth and E Streets.) Director. —Passed Asst. Surg. John F. Anderson, 1822 Kalorama Road. Assistant Director.—Passed Asst. Surg. Edward Francis, The Beverly. REVENUE-CUTTER SERVICE. (Treasury Department Building.) Commandant.—Capt. Commandant Ellsworth P. Bertholf, The Woodward. Assistant chief —G. H. Slaybaugh, 1502 R Street. Senior Capt. Howard Emery, 2415 Twentieth Street. Capt. Preston H. Uberroth, The Grafton. Lieuts. C. W. Cairnes, 2112 Wyoming Avenue; Bernard H. Camden, 1869 Wyoming Avenue; William Williams, The Cairo. Engineer in chief —Charles A. McAllister, The Ontario. Constructors John Q. Walton, 4325 Kansas Avenue; F. A. Hunnewell, The Dupont. Lime. of Engineers Urban Harvey, The Ethelhurst; Jesse W. Glover, The Dud- ington. CUSTOMHOUSE. (1221 Thirty-first Street ; phone, West 243.) - Deputy collector tn charge.—John D. C. Koogle, 1825 Kilbourne Place. | DEPARTMENT OF WAR. (Seveateenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue Phone, Main 2570.) LINDLEY MILLER GARRISON, of Jersey City, N. J., Secretary of War (1830 Connecticut Avenue), was born in Camden, N. J., November 28, 1864; B. L. University of Pennsylvania 1886; admitted to the bar 1886; practiced in Philadelphia until 1888; admitted to the bar of New Jersey in 1888; practiced until June 15, 1904; became vice chancellor of New Jersey on that day and served until the 5th day of March, 1913, resigning the office to become Secretary of War; took oath of office as Secretary of War March 5, 1913. Assistant Secretary of War.—Henry S. Breckinridge, 2139 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant and chief clerk.—John C. Scofield, 1614 P Street. Private secretary to Secretary of War.—Walter R. Pedigo, 1840 Biltmore Street. Clerk to Assistant Secretary.—Robert E. Parker, The Portner. Assistant chief clerk.—John B. Randolph, Hammond Court. Disbursing clerk.—Sydney E. Smith, 3037 O Street. Appointment clerk.—William D. Searle, 1131 Twelfth Street. Chaef of Division of— Correspondence.—John T. Dillon, 807 Eighteenth Street. Record. —Frank M. Hoadley, 2303 First Street. Requisition and Accounts.—George R. Taylor, Falls Church, Va. Supply.—Albert G. Drane, 1802 Kilbourne Place. Telegraph.— William A. King, 3020 Dent Place. 13823°—63—2—1st Ep——18 258 Congressional Directory. GENERAL STAFF CORPS. Chief.—Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant to Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. William W. Wotherspoon, The Dupont. Cols. John Biddle, 1616 Rhode Island Avenue; Edwin St. J. Greble, 2015 O Street. Lieut. Cols. John E. McMahon, The Westmoreland; Henry C. Hodges, jr., 1719 Eichteenth Street; Frederick S. Foltz, 1748 P Street; Henry T. Allen, 1323 New Hampshire Avenue. Majs. Daniel B. Devore, 1627 Avenue of the Presidents; Daniel W. Ketcham, The Benedick; Benjamin A. Poore, The Dresden; Edward N. Jones, jr., 1727 Q Street; William D. Connor, 2114 Bancroft Place; Munroe McFarland, The Toronto; Harry R. Lee, 1941 Calvert Street; Charles Crawford, The Dresden; Samuel G. Jones, The Westmoreland. Capts. Howard L. Laubach, 2514 Ontario Road; Thomas I.. Smith, 2805 Ontario Road; S.J. Bayard Schindel, 1747 Eighteenth Street; Powell Clayton, jr., 1210 Eighteenth Street; William Mitchell, 2238 Q Street; Henry C. Smither, 5305 Connecticut Avenue; Frank R. McCoy, 1718 H Street; Robert O. Van Horn, The Ontario; William T. Merry, 1627 Avenue of the Presidents; William H. Raymond, 2219 California Avenue; James P. Robinson, Army and Navy Club; Douglas MacArthur, 1841 Avenue of the Presidents. Chaef clerk.—N. Hershler. COAST ARTILLERY DIVISION. (War Department Building.) Chief —Brig. Gen. Erasmus M. Weaver, The Farragut. Assistants.—Majs. Clint C. Hearn, 1819 I Street; George Blakely, Army and Navy Club; Wilhlam R. Smith, 1861 Mintwood Place; William Chamberlaine, The Wyoming; William E. Cole, 1721 Q Street. Chief clerk. —Otto Abramsky, 1735 T Street. DIVISION OF MILITIA AFFAIRS. (1701 Pennsylvania Avenue.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. Albert L. Mills, 1523 K Street. Assistants.—Lieut. Col. Harry C. Hale, 2141 Wyoming Avenue. Majs. Evan M. Johnson, jr., Infantry, The Marlborough; William J. Snow, Field Artillery, 1408 Twenty-first Street; Harry L. Gilchrist, Medical Corps, The Beacon; Marcellus G. Spinks, Coast Artillery Corps, The Beacon; Curtis W. Otwell, Corps of Engineers, Army and Navy Club; Charles A. Hedekin, Fifteenth Cavalry, 2234 Q Street. : Capt. William M. Fassett, Signal Corps, The Beacon. First Lieut. Townsend Whelen, Infantry, 2139 Wyoming Avenue. Chief clerk.—R. E. Fraile, The Lenman. OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL. (War Department Building.) The Adjutant General.—Brig. Gen. George Andrews, 1831 Jefferson Place. Assistants.—Cols. Henry O. S. Heistand, 1532 Avenue of the Presidents; J. T. Kerr, The Westmoreland. Lieut. Cols. Eugene F. Ladd, 2119 Bancroft Place; Alfred Hasbrouck, Stoneleigh Court; Peyton C. March, 2129 Le Roy Place. Maj. Francis J. Koester, 1808 Kalorama Road. Chief clerk.—Alonzo W. Shunk, 1120 East Capitol Street. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Inspector General. —Brig. Gen. E. A. Garlington,1827 Jefferson Place. Assistants.—Lieut. Col. D. C. Shanks, The Dresden. Majs. LeRoy S. Lyon, The Netherlands; W. P. Jackson, 1724 Twentieth Street. Chief clerk.—John D. Parker, The Henrietta. Executive Departments. 259 QFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Judge Advocate General.—Brig. Gen. Enoch H. Crowder, 732 Seventeenth Street. Assistants.—Majs. Blanton Winship, 1722 H Street; Edward A. Kreger, The Dresden; Samuel T. Ansell, 1740 S Street; Herbert A. White, 2219 California Street. Capt. Wesley W. K. Hamilton, The Marlborough. Chief clerk and solicitor.—Lewis W. Call, Garrett Park, Md. Law clerks.—Edwin H. Peery, 1455 Chapin Street; J. I. Defandorf, Garrett Park, Md. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF, QUARTERMASTER CORPS. (War Department Building.) Chief, Quartermaster Corps.—Maj. Gen. James B. Aleshire, 2343 S Street. Assistants.—Brig. Gens. Henry G. Sharpe, 1713 M Street; Carroll A. Devol, 2021 Kalorama Road. Cols. John L. Clem, The Woodward; Harry L. Rogers, The Woodward; David L. Brainard, 1737 H Street. Lieut. Cols. Chauncey B. Baker, 1912 Sunderland Place; Richmond McA. Scho- field, 2807 Ontario Road. : Majs. Robert G. Paxton, 1722 H Street; James A. Logan, 1718 H Street. Capts. Edward T. Hartmann, The Westmoreland; William B. Cochran, 2816 Cathe- dral Avenue; Theodore A. Baldwin, jr., 2139 R Street; Robert B. McBride, 2832 Twenty-seventh Street; Frank T. Hines, The Toronto. Chief clerk.—Charles P. Daly, The Truxton. OFFICE OF DEPOT QUARTERMASTER. (Seventeenth and F Streets. Phones, Main 1306, 1307, and 1308.) Depot quartermaster. —Lieut. Col. James B. Houston, 2119 S Street. Assistants.—Majs. James Canby, The Brighton; James E. Normoyle, The Dresden. Capt. Harry F. Dalton, The Cairo. OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL. (War Department Building.) Surgeon General.—Brig. Gen. George H. Torney, Stoneleigh Court. Assistants. —Col. Charles M. Gandy, 1915 S Street. Lieut. Col. Henry D. Snyder, The Marlborough. Maj. William J. 1. Lyster, The Lonsdale. Capt. Albert G. Love, 3156 Eighteenth Street. Chief clerk.—John Wilson, The Revere. ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM AND LIBRARY. (Seventh and B Streets SW.) In charge.—Col. Walter D. McCaw, Army and Navy Club. Librarian.—Lieut. Col. Champe C. McCulloch, jr., 1913 S Street. Curator of museum and in charge of laboratory.—Maj. Eugene R. Whitmore, 2349 Ash- mead Place. ARMY MEDICAL SCHOOL. (721 Thirteenth Street.) Commandant.—Col. Charles Richard, 1860 Mintwood Place. Adjutant.—Maj. Reuben B. Miller, 1930 Biltmore Street. OFFICE OF ATTENDING SURGEON. (1720 H Street. Phone, Main 80.) Attending surgeon.—Maj. Deane C. Howard, the Marlborough. Assistants.—Maj. Raymond F. Metcalfe, 1927 S Street. Capt. Edward M. Talbott, 1627 Sixteenth Street. 260 Congressional Directory. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS. (War Department Building.) Chief.—Brig. Gen. Dan C. Kingman, The Grafton. Assistants.—Col. Edward Burr, 917 Eighteenth Street. Lieut. Col. Harry Taylor, 1826 I Street. Majs. Edgar Jadwin, 2219 California Avenue; James A. Woodruff, 1406 Twenty- first Street; William Kelly, 1824 Jefferson Place. Capt. 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, 1735 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistants. —Lieut. Col. John T. Thompson, The Westmoreland. Majs. Thales Li. Ames, 1843 Kalorama Road; Edward P. O’Hern, 1925 S Sint] L. T. Hillman, The Ontario. Capts. Lucian B, Moody, 2448 Twentieth Street; John Lund, The Westmoreland; Norman F. Ramsey, Florence Court; James L. Walsh, The Sherman. Chief clerk.—John J. Cook, 925 M Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER. (War Department Building.) Chief —Brig. Gen. George P. Scriven, 2009 N Street. Assistants. —Lieut. Col. Samuel Reber, 732 Seventeenth Street. Maj. Edgar Russel, The Highlands. Capts. Charles S. "Wallace, 3108 Eighteenth Street; Edwin A. Hickman, 2436 Twentieth Street. Disbursing officer —Maj. Walter L. Clarke, The Olympia. Chief clerk.—Herbert S. Flynn, 2415 Twentieth Street. BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS. (War Department Building.) Chief —DBrig. Gen. Frank McIntyre, 1841 Kalorama Road. Assistants.—Col. Charles C. Walcutt, jr., 1869 Wyoming Avenue. Maj. Irvin L. Hunt, 1735 S Street. Law officer.—Felix Frankfurter, 1727 Nineteenth Street. Chief clerk.—L. V. Carmack, The Plaza. PHILIPPINE COMMISSION. (Headquarters, Manila.) Governor General and president of the commission. —Francis Burton Harrison. Vice governor. — Secretary of the interior.— Secretary of commerce and police.— Secretary of finance and justice.—Victorino Mapa. Secretary of public instruction.— Members.—Jaime C. de Veyre, Vicente lustre, Vicente Singson, Rafael Palma. Executive secretary.—Frank W. Carpenter. Executive Departments. 261 PORTO RICO GOVERNMENT. (Headquarters, San Juan.) Governor.—Arthur Yager. Executive council: Secretary.—M. Drew Carrel. Treasurer.—Allan H. Richardson. Attorney general. —Wolcott H. Pitkin, jr. Auditor.—Jesse W. Bonner. Commissioner of the interior.—John A. Wilson. Commissioner of education.—Edward M. Bainter. Director of labor, charities, and correction.—M. Camufias. Members.—José C. Barbosa, Martin Travieso, jr., Luis Sanchez Morales (president of council), Tulio Larrinaga. DOMINICAN RECEIVERSHIP. (Headauarters, Santo Domingo.) General receiver of customs.— Walker W. Vick. Deputy general receiver.—John T. Vance, jr. BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS. (Southern Building. Phone, Main 3464.) President.—Col. William M. Black, Governors Island, N. Y. Cols. Frederic V. Abbot, Army and Navy Club, New York City; Lansing H. Beach, Tudor Hall, University Parkway and Wyman Park, Baltimore, Md. Lieut. Cols. William C. Langfitt, The Highlands; Harry Taylor, 1826 I Street; Henry CO. Newcomer, The Mendota; E. Eveleth Winslow, Bolling Avenue and Edge- water Drive, Edgewater, Norfolk, Va. Assistant engineer. —Alexander H. Weber, 2219 California Street. Chief clerk.—Alfred H. Ritter, 1205 Crittenden Street. - OFFICE CF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS AND WASHINGTON MONUMENT. (Lemon Building. Phone, Main 1460.) In charge.—Col. William W. Harts, 2110 O Street. Assistant and chief clerk.—E. F. Concklin, 520 Thirteenth Street. Superintendent. —F. F. Gillen, The Towa. Landscape architect. —George F. Burnap, 1711 H Street. Custodian of Monument.—J. A. Olsen, The Iowa. UNITED STATES ENGINEER OFFICE. (Phone, Main 7142-3.) In charge.—Lieut. Col. W. CO. Langfitt, The Highlands. Assistant. —Capt. Jarvis J. Bain, Wootten Avenue, Friendship Heights, Md. Chicf clerk.—Pickering Dodge, 1733 Oregon Avenue. BOARD OF ORDNANCE AND FORTIFICATION. (502 Union Trust Building, Fifteenth and H Streets.) President.—Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood, Fort Myer, Va. Brig. Gens. Dan C. Kingman, The Grafton; Erasmus M. Weaver, The Farragut; William Crozier, 1735 Massachussetts Avenue. Col. E. St. J. Greble, 2015 O Street. Maj. William Chamberlaine, The Wyoming. Francis M. Cockrell, civilian member, The Grafton. Recorder. —Capt. Robert R. Ralston, The Cordova. Secretary.—Grahame H. Powell, 3454 Newark Street. 262 Congressional Directory. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. (XK Street, between Vermont Avenue and Fifteenth Street. Phone, Main 196.) JAMES CLARK McREYNOLDS, of Nashville, Tenn., Attorney General (The Shoreham), was born in Elkton, Ky., February 3, 1862; son of Dr. John O. and Ellen (Reeves) M.; B. 8S. Vanderbilt University 1882; graduate of University of Virginia 0 law department 1884; unmarried; practiced at Nashville, Tenn., many years; pro- ! fessor law school Vanderbilt University 1900-1903; Assistant Attorney General of the United States 1903-1907; thereafter removed to New York to engage in private prac- tice; was long specially retained by the Government in matters relating to enforcement of antitrust laws, particularly in proceedings against the Tobacco Trust and the com- bination of the anthracite coal railroads, etc. ; | Solicitor General.—John William Davis, 1509 Avenue of the Presidents. Assistant to the Attorney General. —George Carroll Todd, 1824 Lamont Street. Assistant Attorneys General. —Winired T. Denison, 1727 Nineteenth Street; Ernest Knaebel, 3707 Morrison Street; Jesse C. Adkins, Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Samuel Huston Thompson, jr., 2347 Ashmead Street; Samuel J. Graham, 1312 Connecticut Avenue; William Wallace, jr., care of Department of Justice. Assistant Attorney General for Interior Department.—Preston C. West, The Kenesaw. (Office in Interior Department.) As gory General for Post Office Department.—William H. Lamar, Rock- } ville, : ! Assistant Attorney General, customs dwvision.—William IL. Wemple, 641 Washington Street, New York, N. Y. Chaef clerk.—Orin J. Field, Kensington, Md. Private secretary to the Attorney General. —John T. Suter, 1642 Monroe Street. Disbursing clerk.—James H. Mackey, 3524 Thirteenth Street. Appointment clerk.—Charles B. Sornborger, 908 Sheridan Street. Attorney in charge of pardons.—James A. Finch, Grant Road. Attorney in charge of titles.—Morgan H. Beach, R. F. D., Montrose, Md. Chief of division of accounts.—John J. Glover, 1505 R Street. Superintendent of prisons.—Robert V. La Dow, 1716 H Street. Cut. of the Dron of inwvestigation.—A. Bruce Bielaski, 12 Raymond Street, Chevy hase, : Attorneys.—George M. Anderson, Rockville, Md.; Burt W. Andrews, 3477 Holmead | Place; Philip M. Ashford, 1836 Park Road; Matt L. Blake, 1437 Rhode Island | Avenue; George E. Boren, 1314 L Street; David D. Caldwell, 3342 Mount Pleas- ant Street; Franklin W. Collins, 1820 Newton Street; Percy M. Cox, 60 Bryant Street; Charles C. Daniels, care of Department of Justice; William W. Dyar, Takoma Park; Henry L. Gilbert, 2825 Twenty-eighth Street; Austin Harvey- | cutter, The Columbia; William J. Hughes, 22566 Cathedral Avenue; Charles F. | Jones, The Dewey; Karl W. Kirchwey, 1814 K Street; C. 8S. Lawrence, The / Damariscotta; Arthur J. McCabe, 3469 Fourteenth Street; W. F. Norris, 1627 Sixteenth Street; Oliver E. Pagan, 1965 Biltmore Street; W. S. Ryan, care of Department of Justice; George T. Stormont, 223 S Street NE.; John W. Trainer, | a 1830 S Street; Stephen W. Williams, 222 Oak Avenue, Takoma Park. Assistant attorneys.—Samuel S. Ashbaugh, 2957 Newark Street; David Babt, The Lincoln; Louis G. Bissell, care of Department of Justice; Marvin H. Farrington, 3033 Sixteenth Street; James Harwood Graves, The Rochambeau; William C. Herron, 1901 I Street; William W. Lemmond, 1495 Newton Street; Francis H. McAdoo, The Dresden; Charles E. McNabb, 1423 R Street; C. E. Peddicord, Falkstone Courts; Walter H. Pumphrey, 1425 Belmont Street; Harry S. Ridgely, 1452 Newton Street; Sinclair B. Sheibley, 1940 Biltmore Street; George H. Thorne, 214 B Street SE.; Franklin G. Wixson, The Iroquois. ed Special assistant attorneys.—Wrisley Brown, The Romaine; W. T. Chantland, Virginia Highlands, Va.; Lincoln R. Clark, 1437 Q Street; Malcolm A. Coles, care of Frank Upman, Maplewood, Va.; Blackburn Esterline, 820 Connecticut Avenue; Henry C. Gauss, 1403 Webster Street; Thurlow M. Gordon, The Dupont; William S. Gregg, 1450 Clifton Street; T. W. Gregory, 1709 H Street; Edwin P. Gros- venor, The Marlborough; James W. Orr, The Bellevue; B. J. Ramage, The Ontario. adi _~ : Executive Departments. 263 = DEPARTMENTAL SOLICITORS. tage. : Solicitor —Joseph W. Folk, The New Willard. Treasury: Solicitor —William T. Thompson, The Savoy. Assistant.—Felix A. Reeve, 1626 Nineteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Charles E. Vrooman, 1123 Euclid Street. Internal Revenue: Solicitor —Ellis C. Johnson, The Royalton. Commerce: Solicitor —Albert Lee Thurman, The St. Regis. 1 Assistant solicitor. —Edward T. Quigley, The Holland. abor: Solicitor.—John B. Densmore, 1440 R Street. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. (Pennsylvania Avenue between Eleventh and Twelfth Streets. Phone, Main 5360.) ALBERT SIDNEY BURLESON, of Austin, Tex., Postmaster General (1901 F Street), 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 in 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, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses; appointed Postmaster General March 4, 1913, and confirmed March 5, 1913. Chief clerk.—Merritt O. Chance, Falkstone Courts. Assistant chief clerk.—Malcolm Kerlin, 1449 Fairmont Street. Private secretary to Postmaster General. —Ruskin McArdle, The Brunswick. Assistant Attorney General. —William H. Lamar, Rockville, Md. Assistant attorneys.—De Leon Carlton, 1248 Girard Street; Edwin A. Niess, 61 Rhode Island Avenue. Purchasing agent.—James A. Edgerton, 1439 Park Road; chief clerk, W. L. K. Barrett, 626 North Fremont Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Chief tnspector.—Joe P. Johnston, The New Varnum; chief clerk, John W. Johnston, 231 Twelfth Street NE. Appointment clerk.—George S. Paull, Falls Church, Va. Disbursing clerk.—William M. Mooney, 1433 T Street. OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. First Assistant Postmaster General.—Daniel C. Roper, 816 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Chief clerk.—Charles F. Trotter, 2439 Eighteenth Street. Superintendents of division: Postmasters’ appointments.—Goodwin D. Ellsworth, 1248 Girard Street; assistants, man E. Sullivan, Friendship Heights, Md.; Lorel N. Morgan, 1475 Columbia, oad. Salaries and allowances.—John C. Koons, 2634 Garfield Street; assistant, David W. Duncan, 1303 Clifton Street. City delwery.—William R. Spilman, 324 Fifth Street SE.; assistant, Charles R. Hodges, 306 Randolph Street NE. OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Second Assistant Postmaster General.—Joseph Stewart, 1812 Lamont Street. Chief clerk.—Aleyne A. Fisher, 1757 Euclid Street. Superintendents of division: Railway mail service.—General superintendent, Alexander H. Stephens, Falkstone Courts; assistant, George IF. Stone, 3023 Macomb Street; chief clerk, Edward W. Chatterton, 1731 Park Road. Forergn mails.—Robert L. Maddox, The Brunswick. Rarlway adjustments.—Charles H. McBride, The Ontario; assistant, George E. Bandel, 4735 Thirteenth Street. : Miscellaneous transportation.—John McNitt, jr., Berwyn, Md. 264 Congressional Directory. | OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Third Assistant Postmaster General.—Alexander M. Dockery, The Raleigh. Chief clerk.—William J. Barrows, 622 Fourteenth Street NE. Superintendents of division: inance.—William E. Buffington, 1317 Harvard Street. Stamps.—William C. Fitch, 1300 Massachusetts Avenue. Money orders.—Charles E. Matthews, 1517 Lamont Street; chief clerk, Francis 1. 4 Rainey, 2105 O Street. Registered mails.—C. Howard Buckler, 1022 B Street SE. Classification. — William C. Wood, 2902 Fourteenth Street. Postal savings: Director.—Carter B. Keene, 2637 Garfield Street. Assistant director.—Charles H. Fullaway, The Ontario. | Chiefs of division: | Accounts.—Elmont B. Hazard, Westover Street, Clarendon, Va.; assistant, | Martin R. Bourne, 2627 Adams Mill Road. | Depositories.—Harry H. Thompson, 2443 Ontario Road; assistant, Claude W. | Calvin, 1440 Rhode Island Avenue. | Stamped envelope agent.—William W. Barre, Dayton, Ohio. OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. —James I. Blakslee, The Woodward. ’ Chief clerk.—William J. Satterfield, 1345 Oak Street. Superintendents of division: : Rural mails.—George 1. Wood, 3149 Mount Pleasant Street; assistant, Edgar R. Ryan, 44 Bryant Street; chief clerk, Robert H. Prender, 145 Carroll Street SE. il - Supplies—James B. Cook, Kensington, Md.; assistant, Frederick H. Austin, 1116 olumbia Road. 3 Dead letters.—Marvin M. McLean, Brookland, D. C.; chief clerk, Charles N. Dalzell, Chevy Chase, Md. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 2790.) JOSEPHUS DANIELS, of Raleigh, N. C., Secretary of the Navy (Single Oak, Woodley Lane), was born in Washington, N. C., May 18, 1862; son of Josephus and Mary (Cleves) Daniels; in his early days the family moved to Wilson, N. C.; received an academic education in Wilson (N. C.) Collegiate Institute; a newspaper man by profession; his field of journalism began when, between the ages of 15 and 16, he started a little paper in Wilson called The Cornucopia, of which he was the amateur cditor; at the age of 18 was the editor of the Wilson (N. C.) Advance, a weekly paper; vif admitted to the bar in 1885, but did not practice law; became editor Raleigh (N. C.) ! State Chronicle in 1885; married Addie W., daughter of Maj. W. H. Bagley, May 2, 1888, and has four sons; State printer for North Carolina 1887-1893; chief clerk, f | Department of the Interior, 1893-1895; ex-president North Carolina Editorial Associa- i | tion; trustee University of North Carolina and member of the executive committee of 1 | the board of trustees; in 1894 he consolidated the State Chronicle and the North Caro- linian with the News and Observer, and has since been its editor; this paper has the 4 - largest circulation in the State; has always been devoted jointly to newspaper work ¢ and the success of the Democratic Party; has been the North Carolina member of the ¥ Democratic national committee for 20 years, his membership on that committee con- tinuing for a longer period than that of any member from any other State except one; in the campaign of 1908 was chairman of the literary bureau, with headquarters in Chicago; in the campaign of 1912 was chairman of the press committee which provided for the newspaper pools at the Baltimore convention, and was chairman of the pub- licity committee of the last campaign, with headquarters in New York; nominated, confirmed, and commissioned Secretary of the Navy March 5, 1913. Assistant Secretary.—Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1733 N Street. Ad for operations.—Rear Admiral B. A. Fiske, Stoneleigh Court. Aid for personnel.—Capt. W. F. Fullam, Navy Department. Aid for material. —Capt. Albert G. Winterhalter, The Wyoming. Aid for inspections.—Capt. A. F. Fechteler, 1910 Biltmore Street. Director of navy yards.—Capt. Benjamin C. Bryan, 1753 Q Street. A 2 ee i LH I, NN tM A Executive Departments. 265 Aid to the Secretary of the Navy.—Lieut. Commander N. L. Jones, 1525 New Hamp- shire Avenue. Chief clerk.—F. S. Curtis, The Savoy. Private secretary to the Secretary of the Navy.—Howard A. Banks, 2020 G Street. Confidential clerk to the Secretary of the Navy.—Frank Smith, 1820 I Street. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—L. McH. Howe, The Avondale. Disbursing clerk.—M. L. Croxall, 3001 P Street. Superintendent, Library and Naval War Records Office.—Charles W. Stewart, 1211 Kenyon Street. j Correspondence.—Charles T. Ogle, 528 First Street SE. Appowmntments.—Ralph T. Bartlett, 430 Massachusetts Avenue. OFFICE OF THE ADMIRAL OF THE NAVY. (Mills Building.) Admiral of the Navy.—George Dewey, 1601 K Street. Aid.—Lieut. Commander Leonard R. Sargent, 1845 R Street. Secretary. —Lieut. Leonard G. Hoffman, 1303 Fairmont Street. OFFICE OF NAVAL INTELLIGENCE. (Mills Building.) Director.—Capt. Thomas S. Rodgers, The Bachelor. Capt. Henry F. Bryan, 1731 Euclid Street. Lieut. Commanders Austin Kautz, 2008 R Street; Adolphus E. Watson, The Wyoming; William F. Bricker, The Benedick. Maj. John H. Russell, United States Marine Corps, 1703 De Sales Street. Lieuts. G. M. Baum, The Westmoreland; Thomas Withers, The Coronado. Clerk.—Harry W. Smith, 214 Tenth Street NE. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (State, War, and Navy Department Building, second floor, east wing.) Chief. —Rear Admiral Victor Blue, The Wyoming. Assistant to bureau.—Commander Carlo B. Brittain, The Westmoreland. Chief clerk.—G. Earle Yancey, 5602 Thirty-ninth Street. Assistants.—Capt. Washington I. Chambers, 1834 I Street. Commanders John R. Y. Blakely, The Benedick; Martin E. Trench, The Wood- ward. Lieut. Commander Joseph K. Taussig, The Westmoreland. Lieut. Ralph A. Koch, 2901 Sixteenth Street. Clerk to the Naval Academy.—Leonard Draper, 2036 F Street. HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE. (Mills Building.) Hydrographer.—Capt. George F. Cooper, The Westmoreland. Assistant.—Lieut. Commander F. E. Ridgely, 2136 Leroy Place. Hydrographic engineer.—G. W. Littlehales, 2132 Leroy Place. Chief clerk; —H. L. Ballentine, 1836 Calvert Street. NAVAL OBSERVATORY. (Georgetown Heights. Phone, West 1634.) Superintendent.—Capt. Joseph L. Jayne, The Observatory. Profs. Milton Updegraff, 1719 Thirty-fifth Street; F. B. Littell, 2507 Wisconsin " Avenue; Asaph Hall, at the observatory. Director of the Nautical Almanac.—Prof. W. S. Eichelberger, 2503 Wisconsin Avenue. Head of department of compasses and other nautical and surveying instruments.—Com- mander E. T. Pollock, 1800 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant.—Lieut. Commander C. T. Owens, 1711 S Street. Assistant astronomers.—George A. Hill, at the observatory; John C. Hammond, 2529 Hall Place; Herbert R. Morgan, 3619 Observatory Place. Assistants ( Nautical Almanac Office). —James Robertson, 4111 Fessenden Place; W. M. Hamilton, 2307 Washington Circle. Assistant (nautical instrument department).—H. G. Hodgkins, Bethesda, Md. Librarian.—W. D. Horigan, 3028 Wisconsin Avenue. Clerk.—J. E. Dickey, 131 U Street. 266 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. (Mills Building, fifth floor.) Chief.—Civil Engineer H. R. Stanford, United States Navy, The Dresden. Chief clerk.—William M. Smith, 1819 I Street. : Civil Engineers P. L. Reed, 2717 Ontario Road; A. L. Parsons, The Dresden; J. V. Rockwell, 3110 Eighteenth Street; C. A. Carlson, 1878 Ontario Place; E. R. Gayler, Army and Navy Club. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. (State, War, and Navy Department Building, third floor, east wing.) Chief —Rear Admiral Joseph Strauss, The Dresden. ) Assistant chief —Commander F. H. Clark, The Westmoreland. Assistants. —Capt. J. H. Glennon, The Oakland. Professor of Mathematics S. J. Brown, The Benedick. Commander A. L. Norton (retired), 2228 Cathedral Avenue. Lieut. Commanders J. R. Defrees, The Woodward; L.. M. Overstreet, 1737 H Street; Claude C. Bloch, 2229 California Street; G.T. Pettengill, 2013 O Street. Lieuts. M. H. Simons, jr., 1844 Columbia Road; H. F. Leary, 1716 Q Street; A.C. Pickens, 1725 H Street. Lieut. (Junior Grade) W. F. Newton, 1625 R Street. Chief clerk.—E. S. Brandt, 1518 Corcoran Street. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. (State, War, and Navy Department Building, first floor, east wing.) Chief —Chief Constructor Richard Morgan Watt, 1823 Jefferson Place. Naval Constructors David W. Taylor, Navy Yard; J. D. Beuret, The Westmore- land; W. P. Robert, 1822 Jefferson Place; W. G. Du Bose, 1909 S Street; L. B. McBride, 1831 Belmont Road; G. S. Radford, 1615 Irving Street; James L. Ack- erson, 1831 Belmont Road; E. S. Land, 1831 Belmont Road. Asst. Hid Constructors H. S. Howard, The Highlands; J. O. Gawne, The High- lands. Chief clerk. —Michael D. Schaefer, 518 A Street SE. HEE BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING. (State, War, and Navy Department Building, third floor, east wing.) Chief —Engineer in Chief Robert S. Griffin, 2003 Kalorama Road. | Assistant. —Commander S. S. Robison, The Ontario. : Capt. Gustav Kaemmerling, Army and Navy Club. Commanders Urban T. Holmes, 1702 Q Street; Ernest L. Bennett, The Farragut. Lieut. Commanders A. J. Hepburn, 1826 Wyoming Avenue; William H. Reynolds, 2230 Q Street; David F. Boyd, Army and Navy Club; Henry C. Dinger, The Montana; Herbert G. Sparrow, The Ontario. Tieuts. Roscoe C. Davis, 2819 Twenty-eighth Street; Ormond L. Cox, 2430 Twentieth Street; Robert L. Irvine, The Cordova; George B. Wright, 1884 Columbia Road; Clarence N. Hinkamp, Army and Navy Club. Chief clerk.—Augustus C. Wrenn, 234 Tenth Street NE. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. (State, War, and Navy Department Building, first floor, east wing, and Mills Building, eighth floor.) Chief —Paymaster Gen. T. J. Cowie, The Highlands. Assistant to bureau.—Pay Insp. J. Johnston Cheatham, 2168 Florida Avenue. Assistants —Paymasters D. V. Chadwick, 3719 Livingston Street, Chevy Chase; E. C. Tobey, The St. Regis; V. 8. Jackson, 18 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; J. D. Robnett, 1738 Q Street; F. G. Pyne, 3720 Northampton Street; D. W. Nesbit, The Cairo; J. S. Higgins, 1725 H Street; W. C. Fite, The Montana; B. M. Dob- son, The Portsmouth. Passed Asst. Paymaster L. W. Jennings, jr., The Montana. Civilian assistant. —Clyde Reed, 1030 Park Road. CH , lk ib de etc Executive Departments. 267 BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. (Mills Building.) Chief —Surg. Gen. C. I. Stokes, The Highlands. Assistant. —Surg. T. W. Richards, 1207 Nineteenth Street. Surgs. F. E. McCullough, 1730 Twenty-first Street; R. C. Holcomb, 2244 Cathedral Avenue; E. M. Blackwell, 1752 Kilbourne Place. Passed Asst. Surgs. L. W. Johnson, The Woodward; G. A. Riker, The Benedick. Chaef clerk —Dr. W. S. Gibson, 2736 St. Paul Street, Baltimore, Md. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. (State, War, and Navy Department Building, first floor, south wing.) Judge Advocate General —Capt. Ridley McLean, United States Navy, The Benedick. Capt. Arthur E. Harding, United States Marine Corps, Army and Navy Club. Lieuts. (United States Navy) Frank B. Freyer, 1929 S Street; Walter B. Woodson, The Dupont; Charles M. Austin, The St. Regis. First Lieut. Edwin N. McClellan, United States Marine Corps, The Rochambeau. Lieut. (Junior Grade) Leslie E. Bratton, The Parkwood. Law clerk.—George Melling, 1342 Meridian Place. : OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR. Solicitor —Graham Egerton, The Donald. Law clerks.—Pickens Neagle, 1858 Park Road; Edgar H. May, 1500 Columbia Road; Harold H. Martin, Norwood, Bethesda, Md. NAVY YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1360.) Commandant and Superintendent Naval Gun Factory—Capt. H. P. Jones, United States Navy. Chief clerk.—F. H. Bronaugh, 332 South Carolina Avenue SE. Assistant Superintendent Naval Gun Factory, captain of the yard, engineer officer, naviga- on officer, and public works officer —Commander Chester Wells, United States avy. . Inspector of ordnance.—Lieut. Commander D. E. Theleen, United States Navy. Ordnance duty.—Lieut. Commander F. L. Pinney; Lieuts. D. A. Weaver, F. J. Cleary, H. Delano, J. B. Rhodes; Lieuts. (Junior Grade) F. Russell, R. P. Emrich, R. C. Giffen, R. S. Galloway. General storekeeper.—Pay Insp. E. W. Bonnaffon, United States Navy. Commissary officer —Passed Asst. Paymaster W. G. Neill, United States Navy. Paymaster of the yard —Paymaster R. H. Woods, United States Navy. Accounting officer. —Paymaster F. P. Sackett, United States Navy. Medical officer of the yard. —Medical Insp. G. T. Smith, United States Navy. Chaplain.—G. Livingston Bayard. In command of seamen’s quarters.—Lieut. E. E. Spafford, United States Navy. Commanding marines.—Maj. M. J. Shaw, United States Marine Corps. U.S. 8. Sylph.—Lieut. C. R. P. Rodgers, United States Navy. Duty, seamen’s quarters. —Gunner Maxwell Case, United States Navy. NAVY PAY OFFICE. (Woodward Building.) Purchasing pay officer —Pay Insp. Z. W. Reynolds, The Brighton. Chief clerk. —George S. Crawford, 1920 Avenue of the Presidents. DISBURSING OFFICE. (Woodward Building.) Disbursing officer.—Pay Director C. S. Williams, 1314 Connecticut Avenue. ALLOTMENT OFFICE. (Union Trust Building.) Allotment officer —Pay Director S. L.. Heap, 1734 K Street. 268 Congressional Directory. NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL. (Twenty-third and E Streets.) Medical Director J. D. Gatewood, 1829 Nineteenth Street. Medical Insps. E. R. Stitt, 1708 R Street; E. S. Bogert, The Grafton. Surgs. S. G. Evans, 2017 Q Street; Raymond Spear, The Brighton; E. J. Grow, 1644 Columbia Road; R. C. Holcomb, 2244 Cathedral Avenue. : Passed Asst. Surgs. A. B. Clifford, 2444 Twentieth Street; P. E. Garrison, Lyon- pond, Va.; George B. Crow, Falkstone Courts; G. F. Clark, The Northumber- land. Acting Asst. Dental Surg. W. N. Cogan, The Sherman. NAVAL HOSPITAL. (Foot of Twenty-fourth Street.) Medical Director J. D. Gatewood, 1829 Nineteenth: Street. Surgs. A. W. Dunbar, Naval Hospital; Raymond Spear, The Brighton; E. J. Grow, 1€44 Columbia Road; R. E. Ledbetter, Naval Hospital. Passed Asst. Surgs. A. B. Clifford, 2444 Twentieth Street; R. A. Warner, Naval Hospital. ATTENDANCE ON OFFICERS. Surg. 1°. L. Pleadwell, The Brighton. Passed Asst. Surg. A. D. McLean, The Toronto. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF MEDICAL OFFICERS. (Naval Medical School.) Medical Insps. E. R. Stitt, 1708 R Street; E. S. Bogert, The Grafton. Passed Asst. Surgs. A. B. Clifford, 2444 Twentieth Street; R. A. Warner, Naval Hos- pital. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF DENTAL OFFICERS. (Naval Medical School.) Sure. R. C. Holcomb, 2244 Cathedral Avenue. Passed Asst. Surgs. A. B. Clifford, 2444 Twentieth Street; R. A. Warner, Naval Hos- pital. Acting Asst. Dental Surgs. E. A. Bryant, The Burlington; W. N. Cogan, The Sher- man. NAVAL DISPENSARY. (730 Seventeenth Street.) Medical Insp. R. M. Kennedy, The Woodward. Passed Asst. Surg. C. T. Grayson, The Montana. Acting Asst. Dental Surg. W. N. Cogan, The Sherman. GENERAL BOARD. (Mills Building.) Dresident.—Admiral of the Navy George Dewey, 1601 K Street. Rear Admirals C. E. Vreeland, The Westmoreland; W. H. H. Southerland, 1921 N Street; A.M. Knight, president Naval War College, Newport, R. I.; B. A. Fiske, Stoneleigh Court. Capts. A. G. Winterhalter, The Wyoming; T. S. Rodgers, The Bachelor; H. S. Knapp, The Marlborough; John Hood, The Dresden; W. R. Shoemaker, 2007 Kalorama Road. Secretary. — Commander E. H. Campbell, 1909 N Street. Chief clerk.—J. Jarvis Butler, Bradley Road, Maywood, Va. DUTY IN CONNECTION WITH THE BOARD. Rear Admiral Thomas B. Howard, Stoneleigh Court. Commanders R. H. Jackson, 2141 Wyoming Avenue; W. S. Crosley, 2141 Wyoming Avenue. Lieut. Commanders A. MacArthur, 1854 Kalorama Road; L. R. Sargent, aid to the Admiral of the Navy, 1845 R Street; Paul Foley, 2320 Nineteenth Street. a —————— | i Executive Departments. 269 BOARD OF INSPECTION AND SURVEY FOR SHIPS. President.—Capt. Henry B. Wilson. Members.—Capts. Emil Theiss, 1741 Q Street; A. S. Halstead, Army and Navy Club; Naval Constructor George H. Rock, The Wyoming. Recorder. —Commander Thomas J. Senn, 1808 Belmont Road. Chief clerk.—E. W. Collamore, 58 Q Street NE. BOARD OF INSPECTION FOR SHORE STATIONS. President.—Rear Admiral John R. Edwards, 1218 New Hampshire Avenue. Members.—Naval Constructor Albert W. Stahl, The Netherlands; Capt. George R. Evans, 1824 Biltmore Street. Chief clerk.—E. W. Collamore, 58 Q Street NE. GENERAL INSPECTOR. Pay Corps.—Pay Insp. Thomas S. Jewett, Army and Navy Club; Pay Clerk G. W. Masterton, The Lonsdale. ; NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD. (Navy Yard.) President.—Rear Admiral Thomas B. Howard, Stoneleigh Court. Capts. Walter McLean, 2109 O Street; Harold P. Norton, 1704 Nineteenth Street. Recorder.—John C. Brennan, 75 U Street. NAVAL RETIRING BOARD. (Navy Yard.) President.—Rear Admiral Thomas B. Howard, Stoneleigh Court. Capts. Walter McLean, 2109 O Street; Harold P. Norton, 1704 Nineteenth Street. Medical Directors Edward H. Green, The Northumberland; Francis S. Nash, 1723 Q Street. Recorder.—John C. Brennan, 75 U Street. BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS. (Navy Yard.) President.—Medical Director Frank Anderson, 1628 Nineteenth Street. Medical Directors William R. Du Bose, 1850 Kalorama Road; Francis S. Nash, 1723 Q Street. Recorder.—John C. Brennan, 75 U Street. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS. (Mills Building. Phone, Main 4600.) COMMANDANT’S OFFICE. Gompnidint =M Gen. William P. Biddle, Commandant’s house, Eighth and G treets SE. Aids de camp.—Capts. Dickinson P. Hall, The Cordova: William G. Fay, The Bel- mont. On special duty.—Lieut. Col. Eli K. Cole, The Woqdward. Chief clerk.—Herman E. Kittredge, 1439 R Street. ADJUTANT AND INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT. Officer on derge—Lul. Charles H. Lauchheimer, adjutant and inspector, The Far- ragut. Assistant. —Maj . Albert S. McLemore, assistant adjutant and inspector, 3755 North- ampton Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Chief clerk.—Charles A. Ketcham, Hyattsville, Md. 270 Congressional Durectory. QUARTERMASTER’S DEPARTMENT. Jd wn charge.—Col. Charles L. McCawley, quartermaster, 1610 New Hampshire venue. : Assistants. —Lieut. Col. William B. Lemly, assistant quartermaster, 1025 Vermont Avenue; Capt. Percy F. Archer, assistant quartermaster, 1816 S Street. Chief clerk.—William W. Trail, 1712 Pennsylvania Avenue. PAYMASTER’S DEPARTMENT. Officer in charge.—Col. George Richards, paymaster, 8 Melrose Street, Chevy Chage, Md. Assistants.—Capts. Davis 5. Wills, assistant paymaster, The Cordova; Russell B. Putnam, assistant paymaster, Lyonhurst, Va. Chief clerk.—George P. Doane, 1012 Fifteenth Street. MARINE BARRACKS. ~ (Eighth Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1230.) Commanding.—Col. Lincoln Karmany. Capts. Thomas M. Clinton, Thomas C. Turner. First Lieut. Harold F. Wirgman. Second Lieut. Roy D. Lowell. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. (Corner of Seventh and F Streets. Phone, Main 6280.) FRANKLIN KNIGHT LANE, of San Francisco, Cal., Secretary of the Interior (1866 Wyoming Avenue), was born near Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada, July 15, 1864; son of Dr. C. S. and C. W. H. Lane; removed to California during childhood; educated at the University of California 1886; married Anne Wintermute, of Tacoma, Wash., April 11, 1893; engaged in newspaper work in college days and later was reporter, New York correspondent for western papers, and part owner and editor of the Tacoma Daily News; admitted to the bar in California in 1889; corpora- tion counsel for city of San Francisco three terms, 1897-1902; candidate for governor of California 1902; party vote of Legislature of California for United States Senator 1903; member Interstate Commerce Commission since December, 1905; formerly member permanent international railway commission, representing United States Government; took oath of office as Secretary of the Interior March 5, 1913. First Assistant Secretary.—Andrieus A. Jones, The Wyoming. Assistant Secretary.—Lewis C. Laylin, The Portland. Chief clerk.—James I. Parker, 3517 Fourteenth Street. Assistant to the Secretary.—Adolph C. Miller, 1801 C Street. Assistant Attorney General.—Preston C. West, The Kenesaw. First Assistant Attorney.—Francis W. Clements, 1460 Irving Street. Private secretary to the Secretary.—Herbert A. Meyer, 1416 Harvard Street. Confidential clerk to the Secretary.—E. C. Kemper, The Cavendish. Chaef of Dwvision of— Disbursing.—George W. Evans, 918 Nineteenth Street. Mails, Files, and Archives.—William O. Deatrick, Arlington, Va. Publications.—Laurence F. Schmeckebier, 1444 Belmont Street. Supplies.—Amos Hadley, 1330 Harvard Street. Pension Appeals Section.—John A. Lacy, 1334 Thirty-first Street. Captain of the watch.—Wade H. Ozburn, 131 Quincy Place NE. GENERAL LAND OFFICE. (Old Post Office Department Building. Phone, Main 6280.) Commissioner.—Clay Tallman, 1654 Irving Street. Assistant Commissioner.—Charles M. Bruce, The Albany. Chief clerk.—Frank Bond, 3127 Newark Street. Chief law clerk.—James W. Witten, 2518 Thirteenth Street. ; Law clerks.—John McPhaul, 1223 Irving Street NE.; William B. Pugh, Kensington, Md. ; Law examiners.—Dale K. Parrott, 1211 Kearney Street NE.; Daniel A. Millrick, 1126 Eighth Street; Charles A. Obenchain, 1415 Twenty-ninth Street; Samuel V. Proudfitt, 2550 Fourteenth Street. A ——— | | | Hzxecutrve Departments. 271 Recewing clerk.—Julius H. Hammond, 1408 Fifteenth Street. Recorder.—Lucius Q. C. Lamar, 1733 Seventeenth Street. Chiefs of division: Accounts.—Frederic Newburgh, 1421 Columbia Road. Contest.—John P. McDowell, 618 Lexington Place NE. Desert and Indian lands, State selections, etc.—George B. Driesbock, 318 New York Avenue. 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, 138 Tennessee Avenue NE. Mail and files.—Harry L. Kays, East Falls Church, Va. Mineral. —William J. Howard, 815 Taylor Street. Posting and tract records.—James W. Byler, 2904 Twenty-fifth Street NE. Public surveys.—Charles L.. Du Bois, 1835 Monroe Street. Railroad grants and rights of way.—Frederick R. Dudley, Falls Church, Va. Reclamation, lieu selections, and special entries.—John W. Keener, 1314 Emerson Street. PATENT OFFICE. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 6280.) Commassioner.— Thomas Ewing, 1607 H Street. First Assistant Commassioner.—R. T. Frazier, 3016 Thirteenth Street. Assistant Commassioner.—James T. Newton, 1625 R Street. Chief clerk.—William F. Woolard, 3615 Newark Street, Cleveland Park. Examiners vn chief.—Thomas G. Steward, 2934 Macomb Street; Frank C. Skinner, 3425 Holmead Place; Fairfax Bayard, 1325 Irving Street. Financial clerk.—Frank D. Sloat, 1214 L Street. Law examiners.—Webster S. Ruckman, 3414 Mount Pleasant Street; Robert F. Whitehead, 1521 Twenty-eighth Street. * Classification examiner.—Eugene D. Sewall, 2106 F' Street. Interferences examiner.—Henry E. Stauffer, 1744 T Street. Principal examiners: Acoustics, horology, recorders, etc.— Artesian and oil wells, stone working, etc.—G. R. Ide, 644 D Street NE. Buckles, buttons, clasps, and sign exhibiting.—Addis D. Merritt, 3307 Seventeenth Street. Builders’ hardware, locks, latches, etc.—A. George Wilkinson, 1526 K Street. Carriages and wagons.— Thomas H. Mitchell, The Royal. Chemastry.—Albert M. Lewers, 718 East Capitol Street, Electricity, A.—Wm. A. Kinnan, 1114 Fairmont Street. Electricity, B.—A. P. Shaw, 2574 University Place. Electricity, C.—Herbert Lewis, 4401 Eighth Street. Electric ratlways and signeling.—Charles H. Lane, Glencarlyn, Va. Iirearms, ordnance, marine and aerial navigation.—J. 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 chemisiry.—George S. Ely, The Earlington. Internal-combustion engines.—Andrew R. Benson, 1316 I Street. Leather-working machinery and products.—H. C. Armstrong, Kensington, Md. 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, 1723 Church Street. Mills, thrashing, and butchering.—James H. Lightfoot, Takoma Park, Md. Optics, toys, and velocipedes.—Iineas D. Underwood, The Harford. 20 i printing, and type-bar machines.—E. S. Henry, 1320 Columbia oad. Photography and instruments of precision.—George L. Morton, The Ontario. Plastics, glass, and coating.—George P. Tucker, 802 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Pumps and hydraulic motors.—Fred -M. Tryon, 1225 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Raslway draft appliances and resilient wheels.—John I. Brown, 220 A Street SE. Railways and railway rolling stock.—George R. Simpson, 123 Twelfth Street SE. Bernini: and check-controlled apparatus.—Eustace S. Glascock, 3564 Eleventh treet. 272 Congressional Directory. Principal examiners—Continued. Refrigeration, packaging, and dispensing liquids.—Jay F. Bancroft, The Lambert. Sanitary engineering and surgery.—I. 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. Loefller, 3410 Thirteenth Street. Tobacco, presses, and ventilation.—G. S. Rafter, 3105 Sixteenth Street. Trade-marks and designs.—J. H. Carnes, 1227 Thirty-first Street. Typewriters, fluid burners, and illumination.—Milnor R. Sullivan, The Dewey. Washing, brushing, abrading.—C. G. Gould, 3218 Nineteenth Street. Water distribution.—Arthur W. Cowles, 1751 Columbia Road. Wood working.—Ballard N. Morris, Beltsville, Md. Private secretary to the Commissioner.—Kendrick Scofield, The Seville. Confidential clerk to the Commaissioner.— William Osborn, 1430 Rhode Island Avenue. 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 Gazette.—W. W. Mortimer, 2627 Adams Mill Road. Manuscript and photolithographs.—Finis D. Morris, 63 S Street. Mails and Files.—A. L. Pope, 627 East Capitol Street. Librarian.—Howard L. Prince, The Portner. BUREAU OF PENSIONS. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, Main 6280.) Commassioner.—Gaylord M. Saltzgaber, The Argyle. Deputy Commissioner. —Edward C. Tieman, 33 B Street. Disbursing clerk.—Guy O. Taylor, The Alabama. Chief clerk.—F. D. Byington, Silver Spring, Md. . Assistant chief clerk.—Charles M. Yeates, 3167 Eighteenth street. Medical referee.—Thomas Featherstonhaugh, 114 Maryland Avenue NE. Law clerk.—T. Fletcher Dennis, 1615 Florida Avenue. Board of review, chief.—A. A. Aspinwall, The Concord. Chaefs of division: Army and Navy.—Samuel G. Rogers, 1229 Kenyon Street. Certificate. —Edward E. Munsey, 1119 Monroe Street. Civil War.—John F. Keenan, Brentwood, Md. Finance.—Walter N. Campbell, 1409 Newton Street. Law.—Wallace Streater, 3160 Eighteenth Street. Record.—Noah W. Halley, 521 Fourth Street. Special examination.—John W. Hall, Glen Echo, Md. Stationery.—Thomas R. Raines, 1730 M Street. Admitted files.—William D. Dodds, 1318 Girard Street. Superintendent of building.—Charles S. Jones, 707 Seventh Street NE. OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, Main 6280.) Commassioner.—Cato Sells, The Imperial. Assistant Commassioner.—E. B. Meritt, 42 Seaton Street. Second Assistant Commissioner.—Charles F. Hauke, 605 Massachusetts Avenue NI. Law clerk.— Chief supervisor—E. P. Holcombe, Washington, D. C. > Board of Review: James F. Allen, Rockville, Md. Josiah H. Dortch, 1510 Park Road. Chiefs of divisions: Education.—John Francis, jr., 1326 Euclid Street. Finance.—Hamilton Dimick, 1814 Monroe Street. Land. —W. R. Layne, The Ontario. BUREAU OF EDUCATION. (01d Post Office Department Building. Phone, Main 6280.) Commissioner.—Philander P. Claxton, Conduit Road and Ashby Street. Chief clerk.—Lewis A. Kalbach, 662 E Street NE. | | | | | | | Executive Departments. 273 Chiefs of division: Higher education.— - School adminasiration.—Walter S. Deffenbaugh, 2111 Conduit Road. School hygiene and sanitation.—Fletcher B. Dresslar (special agent), Nashville, Tenn. Statistical.—Alexander Summers, 1225 1 Street. Correspondence.—Lovick Pierce, 1210 O Street. Editorial.—James C. Boykin, Woodside, Md. Library.—John D. Wolcott, 1418 Euclid Street. Alaska.—William T. Lopp, Seattle, Wash.; William Hamilton (acting), 3710 Pat- terson Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Negro education.—Thomas Jesse Jones, 3462 McComb Street. Kindergarten education.—Miss Bessie Locke, New York City; Miss Almira M. Win- chester (acting), 1727 Lamont Street. Home education.—Mrs. Hannah K. Schoff, Philadelphia, Pa.; Miss Ellen C. Lom- bard (acting), 21 First Street NE. Specialists in rural education.—Arthur C. Monahan, 132 Bryant Street; Harold W. Foght, Kirksville, Mo.; John C. Muerman, Salt Lake City, Utah; Jasper L. McBrien. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. (Hooe Building, 1330 F Street. Phone, Main 3116.) Director.—George Otis Smith, 2137 Bancroft Place. - Administrative geologist.—George H. Ashley, 2814 Adams Mill Road. Chief clerk.—Henry C. Rizer, 1464 Belmont Street. Geologic branch.—David White, chief geologist, 2812 Adams Mill Road. Geology division.—David White. Eastern areal geology.—Arthur Keith, 2110 Twentieth Street. Western areal geology.—F. L. Ransome, 1455 Belmont Street. Metalliferous deposits.—F. L. Ransome. Nonmetalliferous deposits.—H. S. Gale, 3802 Jocelyn Street. Coastal plain investigations.—T. W. Vaughan, 1721 Riggs Place. Western mineral fuels.—M. R. Campbell, The Mendota. Eastern mineral fuels.—David White. Glacial geology.—W. C. Alden, 124 Bryant Street. Paleontology and stratigraphy.—T. W. Stanton, 54 S Street. Mineral resources a W. Parker, 2252 Cathedral Avenue. Metallic resources.—H. D. McCaskey, The Kenesaw. Nonmetallic resources.—E. W. Parker. Alaskan mineral resources division.—A. H. Brooks, 3100 Newark Street. Chemical and physical research division.—G. F. Becker, 1700 Rhode Island Avenue. Chemistry —F. W. Clarke, 1612 Riggs Street. Physics.—C. E. Van Orstrand, 1607 Thirty-first Street. Topographic branch.—R. B. Marshall, chief geographer, 3157 Eighteenth Street. Atlantic dvviston.—Frank Sutton, Century Club. Central divisiton.—W. H. Herron, 1706 Oregon Avenue. Rocky Mountain division.—Sledge Tatum, 2318 Nineteenth Street. Pacific division.—George R. Davis, Sacramento, Cal. Northwestern division.—T. G. Gerdine, 1850 Monroe Street. Water resources branch.—N. C. Grover, chief hydraulic engineer, 1460 Belmont Street. Surface waters division.—J. C. Hoyt, 1446 Belmont Street. Water utilization division.—N. C. Grover. Underground waters division.—O. E. Meinzer, 2355 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Land classification board.—W. C. Mendenhall, chief, Cosmos Club. Coal.—C. E. Lesher, 4519 Georgia Avenue. Phosphate.—A. R. Schultz, 3034 Newark Street. Metalliferous.—A. R. Schultz. Oil.—M. W. Ball, 1007 Thirteenth Street. Power.—Herman Stabler, Bethesda, Md. Irrgation.—W. B. Heroy, 3030 Newark Street. Administrative branch: Disbursing office.—J. D. McChesney, Cathedral Avenue and Twenty-ninth Street. Accounts division.—Ben S. Favorite, Takoma Park. Executive division.—Guy E. Mitchell, 1421 Buchanan Street. Labrary.—Miss J. L. V. McCord, 1600 Q Street. 13823°—63—2—1sT ED——19 274 Congressional Directory. Publication branch: Editor—G. M. Wood, 1368 Kenyon Street. Distribution of documents.—James P. Benfer, 3009 Seventeenth Street NE. Chief engraver.—S. J. Kubel, 1000 East Capitol Street. \ RECLAMATION SERVICE. (Eighth and E Streets. Phone, Main 3797. Director.—Frederick H. Newell, 1829 Phelps Place. Chief engineer.—Arthur P. Davis, 2212 First Street. Chief counsel.—Will R. King, 2212 First Street. Comptroller.—W. A. Ryan, 5311 Connecticut Avenue. Supervisor of irrigation.—Ignatius D. O'Donnell, 105 Clark Avenue, Billings, Mont. Supervising engineer in charge of legal matters.—Morris Bien, 1130 Lamont Street. Chief clerk.—Edwin G. Paul, College Park, Md. Statistician.—Clarence J. Blanchard, The Earlington. BUREAU OF MINES. (710 E Street. Phone, Main 6280.) Director.—J. A. Holmes, 2717 Quarry Road. Assistant to director and chief clerk.—Van H. Manning, Hammond Court. Bien of mineral technology.—Charles L. Parsons, 3414 Newark Street, Cleveland ark. Chiefs of sections : Editorial —S. Sanford, 1311 K Street. Correspondence and records.—W. L. Aylesworth, 117 Kentucky Avenue SE. Publications.—J. L. 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.) DAVID FRANKLIN HOUSTON, of St. Louis, Mo., Secretary of Agriculture, was born in Monroe, Union County, N. C., February 17, 1866; son of William Henry and Cornelia Anne (Stevens) Houston; A. B., South Carolina College 1887; A. M., Harvard 1892; (LL. D., Tulane 1903, University of Wisconsin 1906, Yale 1913); married Helen Beall, of Austin, Tex., December 11, 1895; tutor in ancient languages South Caro- lina College and graduate student 1887-88; superintendent of city schools Spartan- burg, S. C., 1888-1891; graduate student political science, Harvard 1891-1894; adjunct professor 1894-1897, associate professor 1897-1900, professor political science 1900-1902, and dean of faculty 1899-1902. University of Texas; president Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas 1902-1905; president University of Texas 1905- 1908; chancellor Washington University, St. Louis, since September 24, 1908; member Southern Educational Board; trustee John F. Slater Fund; member Rocke- feller Sanitary Commission; fellow Texas State Historical Society; member American Economic Association; president Harvard Graduate Club 1893-94; author: A Critical Study of Nullification in South Carolina, etc. Took the oath of office as Secretary of Agriculture on March 6, 1913. Assistant Secretary.—Beverly T. Galloway, Takoma Park. Chief clerk.—R. M. Reese, 1519 Twenty-eighth Street. Solicitor.—Francis G. Caffey, The Benedick. Appointment clerk.—R. W. Roberts, 1646 Monroe Street. Private secretary to Secretary of Agriculture.—W. F. Callander, 4129 Ninth Street. Brio secretary to Assistant Secretary of Agriculture—Floyd R. Harrison, The Am- erst. . Chief of supply division.—Cyrus B. Lower, 3719 New Hampshire Avenue.- Chief engineer.—Lewis Jones, 42 R Street NE. Special agent on exhibits.—F. Lamson-Scribner, 6900 Fifth Street, Takoma Park. Chief of office of informaiion.—G. W. Wharton, 3825 Woodley Road. In charge of office of markets.—Charles J. Brand, The Earlington. Executive Departments. 275 WEATHER BUREAU. (Corner Twenty-fourth and M Streets. Phone, West 1640.) Chief. —Charles F. Marvin, 1501 Emerson Street. Assistant Chief. —Henry E. Williams, 1317 Rhode Island Avenue. Crs Yer on executive assistant.—Charles C. Clark, 21 West Irving Street, Chevy ase, Md. ; Forecasting.—Prof. Harry C. Frankenfield, 1735 New Hampshire Avenue. Edward H. Bowie, district forecaster, 2826 Twenty-seventh Street. In charge of— Division of observations and reports and river and flood division.—Prof. Alfred J. Henry, 1322 Columbia Road. Accounts division.—Edgar B. Calvert, Livingstone Heights, Va. Climatological division.—Preston C. Day, 1241 Euclid Street. Printing division.—Robert Seyboth, 21 V Street NE. Labrary.—Prof. Charles FF. Talman, 1166 Nineteenth Street. Chiefs of division: Instrument.—Delos T. Maring, 116 R Street NE. Supplies.—Benjamin A. Blundon, 2103 First Street. Telegraph.—Theodore T. Moore, 55 R Street. In charge of forecast districis.—Prof. Henry J. Cox, Chicago, Ill.; Edward A. Beals, Portland, Oreg.; Isaac M. Cline, New Orleans, La.; Frederick H. Brandenburg, Denver, Colo.; George H. Willson, San Francisco, Cal. Staff of the Mount Weather ( Va.) Research Observatory: Research director and executive officer.—Prof. William R. Blair. Consulting physicist. —Prof. William J. Humphreys. Editor of bulletin.—Prof. Cleveland Abbe. In charge of solar radiation work.—Prof. Herbert H. Kimball. BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY. Chief. —A. D. Melvin, 1734 Park Road. Assistant.—A. M. Farrington, 1436 Chapin Street. Chief clerk.—Charles C. Carroll, 6801 Sixth Street, Takoma Park. Chiefs of division: Animal husbandry. —George M. Rommel, 2622 Garfield Street. Biochemic.—M. Dorset, The Iowa. Dairy.—B. H. Rawl, The Ontario. Field inspection.—R. A. Ramsay, 1333 Belmont Street. Meat inspection.—R. 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.—E. C. Schroeder, Bethesda, Md. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. Pathologist and physiologist, and chief of bureau.— William A. Taylor, 55 Q Street NE Horticulturist and assistant chief of bureau.—L. C. Corbett, Takoma Park. Chief clerk.—James E. Jones, 1362 Otis Place. Publications.—Julius E. Rockwell, 31 S Street. Records.—W. P. Cox, 1306 Girard Street. In charge of— Agricultural technology, cotton standardization, and fiber investigations.—Nathan A. Cobb, Falls Church, Va.; in charge of fiber investigations, Lyster H. Dewey, 4612 Ninth Street. Alkali and drought resistant plant investigations.—Thomas H. Kearney, 3401 Thirty-fourth Place, Cleveland Park. Arlington experimental farm.—Earl C. Butterfield, Rossyln, Va. Beariniogy and nutrition investigations.—Karl F. Kellerman, 1523 Buchanan treet. Biophysical investigations.—Lyman J. Briggs, 3208 Newark Street, Cleveland Park. Cereal investigations.—Mark A. Carleton, 6826 Fifth Street, Takoma Park. Congressional seed distribution.—Russell A. Oakley, 1840-1846 U Street; execu- tive assistant, O. F. Jones, 4021 Marlborough Place. 276 Congressional Directory. In charge of— Corn investigations.—Charles P. Hartley, 3420 Center Street. Crop acclimatization and adaptation investigations.—Orator F. Cook, Lanham, Md. Crop physiology and breeding investigations.—Walter T. Swingle, Lanham, Md. Drug plant, porsonous plant, physiological and fermeniation investigations.—Rod- a . True, Glendale, Md.; Warner W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street, Takoma, ark. Dry land agriculture investigations.—Ellery CO. Chilcott, 17656 Euclid Street. Experimental gardens and grounds.—Edward M. Byrnes, 49 Seaton Street. Farm management investigations.—William J. Spillman, The Cavendish. Farmers’ cooperative demonstration work.—Bradford Knapp, 1215 Crittenden Street. Forage crop wnvestigations.—Charles V. Piper, 1499 Irving Street. Foreign seed and plant introduction.—David Fairchild, 1331 Connecticut Avenue. Grain standardization.—J. W. T. Duvel, 3822 Livingston Street. Horticultural and pomological investigations.—A. V. Stubenrauch. Pathological investigations: Laboratory of plant pathology.—FErwin F. Smith, 1474 Belmont Street. Pathological collections and inspection work.—Flora, W. Patterson, The Beacon. Laboratory of forest pathology.—Haven W. Metcalf, 1223 Vermont Avenue. Fruit disease investigations.—Merton B. Waite, 1447 Euclid Street. Cotton and truck crop disease and sugar-plant investigations.—W. A. Orton, Takoma Park. Seed-testing laboratory.—Edgar Brown, Lanham, Md. : Taxonomic and range inveshigations.—Frederick V. Coville, 1836 California Street. Tobacco investigations.—Wightman W. Garner, 1367 Parkwood Place. Western irrigation agriculture.—Carl S. Scofield, Lanham, Md. FOREST SERVICE. (Atlantic Building, 928-930 F Street. Phone, Main 6910.) Forester and Chief. —Henry S. Graves, 2118 Le Roy Place. Associate Forester.—Albert EF. Potter, 1307 P Street. Editor—Herbert A. Smith, 1528 P Street. Publication.—Findley Burns, 1426 Park Avenue, Baltimore, Md. Dendrologist.—George B. Sudworth, 3768 Patterson Street. In charge of— Operation.—Asst. Forester James B. Adams, The Decatur; Forest Insp. D. D. Bron- son, 1440 M Street. Geography.—C. A. Kolb (acting), 1808 Lamont Street. Maintenance.—George A. Bentley, 1301 Fairmont Street. Silviculture.—Asst. Forester W. B. Greeley, 625 Dahlia Street, Takoma Park; Forest Insp. Earle H. Clapp, 7133 Seventh Street, Takoma Park; Forest Insp. R. Y. Stuart, The Ontario. State cooperation.—J. G. Peters, 1723 Corcoran Street. Silvies.—Raphael Zon, 522 Butternut Street, Takoma Park. Grazing. —Associate Forester Albert F'. Potter, 1307 P Street; Asst. Forester L. F. Kneipp, 1515 Park Road. Lands.—Asst. Forester James B. Adams, The Decatur. Water power.—Chief Engineer O. C. Merrill, 12 West Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Mad. Claims and occupancy. —Charles H. Squire, 1349 Parkwood Place. Land classification.—Franklin W. Reed, 2822 Twenty-seventh Street. Products.—Asst. Forester W. B. Greeley, 625 Dahlia Street, Takoma Park. Laboratory.—Howard Weiss, director, Madison, Wis. Office of industrial investigations.—O. T. Swan, The Earlington. Acquisition of lands for the protection of the watersheds of navigable sireams.— Asst. Forester William L. Hall, 917 Sixteenth Street; Forest Insp. Karl W. Woodward, 1519 Park Road; Forest Insp. W. W. Ashe, 1512 Park Road. BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY. Chief.—Carl L. Alsberg, 3443 Fourteenth Street. Supervising clerk.—F. B. Linton, Takoma Park, Md. Chief Clerk.—Harrison F. Fitts, 733 Taylor Street. Editor.—G. O. Savage, 640 D Street NE. Executive Departments. 271 Librarian.—A. E. Draper, 1474 Harvard Street. Chief food and drug inspector.—Walter G. Campbell, R. F. D. No. 4, Washington, D. C. Chiefs of division : Food inspection.—L. M. Tolman, 1408 Emerson Street. Drugs.—L. F. Kebler, 1322 Park Road. Miscellaneous.—J. K. ‘Haywood, The Hoyt. Carbohydrate investigations.—C, S. hg Hyattsville, Md. Chiefs of laboratories : Animal physiological. —F. C. Weber, Bethesda, Md. Cattle food and grain.—G. L. Bidwell, 1245 Evarts Street NE. Contracts.—P. H. Walker, 2950 Newark Street. Dairy.—G. E. Patrick, The Sherman. Drug ispection.—G. W. Hoover, 1322 Vermont Avenue. Emnological.—W. B. Alwood, Charlottesville, Va. Essential oils.—E. K. Nelson, Takoma Park, Md. Food research.—M. E. Pennington, St. David’s, Philadelphia, Pa. Food technology.—E. M. Chace, 6905 Fifth Street, Takoma Park. Insecticide and fungicide.—C. C. McDonnell, 2633 ‘Garfield Street. Leather and paper.—F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md. Microchemical.—B. J. Howard, 1212 Decatur Street. Nitrogen.—T. C. Trescot, R. F. D. No. 1, Ballston, Va. Oil, fat, and wax.—H. S. Bailey, 805 Allison Street. Organic investigations.—1. K. Phelps, 1410 M Street. Pharmacological. —William Salant, 3429 Thirty-fourth Place, Cleveland Park. Plant chemustry.—J. A. LeClerc, Takoma, Park, Md. Sugar inspection.—A. H. Bryan, 3427 Thirty-fourth Place, Cleveland Park. Synthetic products.—W. O. Emery, 2232 Cathedral Avenue. Water.—W. W. Skinner, Kensington, Md. BUREAU OF SOILS. Soil physicist and chief.—Milton Whitney, Takoma Park, Md. Chief clerk.—A. G. Rice, Livingstone Heights, Va. Soil chemistry.—Frank K. Cameron, 3207 Nineteenth Street. Soil fertility.—Oswald Schreiner, 2125 Fifteenth Street. Soil survey.—Curtis F. Marbut, 3555 Eleventh Street. Use of soil.—Jay A. Bonsteel, 2801 Eighteenth Street. Soil water.—R. O. E. Davis, 1422 Webster Street. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY. Entomologist and chief.—L. O. Howard, 2026 Hillyer Place. Assistant entomologist and acting chief in absence of chief.—C. L. Marlatt, 1521 Sixteenth Street. Executive assistant.—R. S. Clifton, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief clerk.—W. F. Tastet, 134 Seaton Place. In charge of— ry crop and stored product insect investigations.—F. H. Chittenden, 1323 Vermont venue. Forest insect investigations.—A. D. Hopkins, Cosmos Club. Southern field crop wnsect investigations.—W. D. Hunter, Cosmos Club. Cereal and forage insect investigations.—F. M. Webster, Kensington, Md. Deciduous fruit insect investigations.—A. L. Quaintance, 1807 Phelps Place. Bee culture.—E. F. Phillips, Somerset Heights, Md. Preventing spread of moths, field park, _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 preservation).—T. S. Palmer, 1939 Biltmore Street. Assistants in charge of > Economic tnvestigations.—A. K. Fisher, The Plymouth. Biological investigations.—E. W. Nelson, The Northumberland. Chief clerk.—A. B. Morrison, The Marlborough. 2178 Congressional Directory. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. Chief of division and disbursing clerk.—A. Zappone, 2222 First Street. Cashier and chief clerk.—W. J. Nevius, 2706 Twelfth Street NE. Auditing section.—E. 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, The Babcock. Chief clerk.—A. I. 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. Tllustrations.—A.. B. Boettcher, The Alabama. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. Statistician and chief.—Leon M. Estabrook, 1026 Seventeenth Street. Technical statistician.—Nat C. Murray, 1646 Irving Street. Assistant statistician.—Samuel A. Jones, 25694 Wisconsin Avenue. Chief clerk.—Frank G. Kelsey, 1417 Webster Street. Chefs of division: : Crop forecasts.—Fred J. Blair, 1443 Belmont Street. Crop estimates.—S. A. Jones. Statistical scientists: Frank Andrews, Kensington, Md.; George K. Holmes, 1323 Irving Street; Charles M. Daugherty, 1437 Rhode Island Avenue. LIBRARY. Librarian.—Claribel R. Barnett, 1410 Girard Street. Assistant librarian.—Emma B. Hawks, 1010 N Street. OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. Director—A. C. True, 1604 Seventeenth Street. Assistant director.—E. 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.—S. H. McCrory, 1833 Newton Street. In charge of— Alaska Experiment Stations.—C. C. Georgeson, Sitka. Hawaiv Experiment Station.—E. V. Wilcox, Honolulu. Porto Rico Experiment Station.—David W. May, Mayaguez. Guam Experiment Station.—J. B. Thompson, Guam. Agricultural education.—C. H. Lane, Hyattsville, Md. Farmers’ institute specialist.—John Hamilton, 1315 Clifton Street. Chief clerk.—Mrs. OC. E. Johnston, The Columbia. OFFICE OF PUBLIC ROADS. Director.—Logan Waller Page, 2223 Massachusetts Avenue. Chief engineer. —Vernon M. Peirce, 3504 Thirteenth Street. Chief of economics.—Laurence I. Hewes, R. F. D. No. 2, Alexandria, Va. Assistant in road management.—M. O. Eldridge, 1945 Calvert Street. Mechanical engineer —Edmund B. McCormick, West Falls Church, Va. Chemist.—Charles S. Reeve, 2109 Eighteenth Street. Petrographer.—Edwin C. E. Lord, Florence Court. Editorial clerk and librarian.— William W. Sniffin, 2625 Garfield Street. Chief clerk.—W. Carl Wyatt, 36 Randolph Place. Executive Departments. 279 DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 5060.) WILLIAM COX REDFIELD, of Brooklyn, Secretary of Commerce (The High- lands), was born June 18, 1858, at Albany, N. Y.; was married at Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1885, to Elise M. Fuller, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; they have two children, Humphrey F. Redfield, now at Amherst College, and a daughter, Mrs. Charles K. Drury, of Mon- treal; in 1867 his parents moved to Pittsfield, Mass., in which city he received his education in the grammar and high schools; in 1877 moved to New York City, thence to Brooklyn in 1883; after five years with R. Hoe & Co., printing-press manufacturers, he engaged in the manufacture of iron and steel forgings, tools, etc., from 1885 to 1905; during the administration of Hon. Seth Low as mayor of New York City in 1902 and 1903 was commissioner of public works for the Borough of Brooklyn; in 1910 was elected to the Sixty-second Congress to represent the fifth New York district; from 1907 until his appointment as Secretary of Commerce was vice president and a director of the American Blower Co., Detroit, manufacturers of engines, heating, ventilating, drying, and cooling apparatus, having charge of the export and marine departments of the business; from 1905 to 1913 was a director of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of New York; was also president of the American Manufacturers’ Export Asso- ciation and is still president of the National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education; in addition to a continued stay for business in Europe during 1900 and a business trip there in 1907 he made a business journey around the world in 1910-11 to study industrial conditions generally, returning in May, 1911, his itinerary taking him to Hawaii, Japan, the Philippines, Hongkong, Java, Singapore, Burma, India, France, England, and Holland; he is the author of a book published in October, 1912, entitled ‘‘The New Industrial Day,” from the press of the Century Co.; was appointed Secretary of Commerce March 4, 1913. Assistant Secretary.—Edwin F. Sweet, 1706 Avenue of the Presidents. Chief clerk.—George C. Havenner, Minnesota Avenue and Eighteenth Street SE. Disbursing clerk.—George Johannes, 120 Rhode Island Avenue. Private secretary to the Secretary.—U. Grant Smith, 3118 Eighteenth Street. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary.—Robert H. Clancy, Young Men’s Christian Association. Cleef of Division of— Spot. Bone W. Leadley, The Van Cortlandt. Publications.—Dan C. Vaughan, 1706 Jackson Street NE. Supplies. —Wilbur W. Fowler, 3604 New Hampshire Avenue. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. (B Street, between First and Second Streets. Phone, Main 4210.) Director.— William J. Harris, 2141 Wyoming Avenue. Chief clerk.—W. L. Austin, 3516 Eleventh Street. Chief statisticians: Finance and municipal statistics.—Le Grand Powers, 3355 Eighteenth Street. Manufactures. —William M. Steuart, 3725 Morrison Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Population.—William C. Hunt, 1347 Otis Place. Vital statistics.—Cressy L. Wilbur, 1374 Harvard Street. Geographer.—Charles S. Sloane, 1733 T Street. BUREAU OF CORPORATIONS. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Commissioner. —Joseph BE. Davies, 2117 LeRoy Place. Deputy —Francis Walker, 2415 Twentieth Street. Chief clerk.—Warren R. Choate, 1810 Newton Street. LY BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Chief. —Albertus H. Baldwin, The Cecil. Assistant Chief (division of statistics).—Oscar P. Austin, 3301 Newark Street. Assistant Chief.—E. A. Brand, Manassas, Va. Chief clerk—Nicholas Eckhardt, jr., 44 Q Street NE. Chief consular division.—Charles S. Donaldson, 1324 L Street. Chief division of foreign taryjfs.—Frank R. Rutter, 1442 Belmont Street. 280 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF STANDARDS. (Pierce Mill Road. Phone, Cleveland 300.) | Director.—S. W. Stratton, The Farragut. | Chief physicist.—Edward B. Rosa, 3110 Newark Street. | Chief chemist.—W. F. Hillebrand, 3023 Newark Street. Physicists.—L. A. Fischer, The Wellington; C. W. Waidner, 1744 Riggs Place. Associate physicists.—F. A. Wolff, 1744 Riggs Place; G. K. Burgess, The Mintwood. ; Engineer-physicist.—James E. Howard, The Woodward. i Engineer-chemist.—Samuel S. Voorhees, 3456 Newark Street. i Associate chemist.—C. E. Waters, 3700 Patterson Street. Secretary.—Henry D. Hubbard, 112 Quincy Street. Superintendent of mechanical plant.—Franklin S. Durston, 250 Quackenbush Street. BUREAU OF FISHERIES. (Office corner Sixth and B Streets SW. Phone, Main 5240.) Commissioner.—Hugh M. Smith, 1209 M Street. | Deputy.—E. Lester Jones, 2131 Bancroft Place. | Assistants in charge of division: Office.—I1. H. Dunlap, 1728 Q Street. E | Inquiry respecting food fishes.—H. F. Moore, The Concord. Fish culture.—Robert S. Johnson, 3216 Nineteenth Street. Statistics and methods.—A. B. Alexander, 404 Sixth Street SE. Chief division of Alaska fisheries.—B. W. Evermann, 1425 Clifton Street. | Architect and engineer.—Hector von Bayer, 2418 Fourteenth Street. | Accountant.—Charles W. Scudder, 3035 Fifteenth Street. | BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Commissioner.—George R. Putnam, 2124 Le Roy Place. | Deputy Commissioner.—John S. Conway, The Wyoming. Chaef Capi engineer.—H. B. Bowerman, 15 West Twenty-ninth Street, Balti- more, Md. Superintendent of naval construction.—George Warrington, 3311 Avenue of the Presi- dents. Chief clerk.—Thaddeus S. Clark, 1614 P Street. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. (New Jersey Avenue, near B Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1872 and 1873.) Superintendent.—Otto H. Tittmann, 2014 Hillyer Place. Assistant Superintendent.—Frank Walley Perkins, The Farragut. Assistant in charge of the officc—Andrew Braid, The Columbia. Inspector of hydrography and topography.—John J. Gilbert, The Iroquois. Inspector of geodetic work and chief of computing division.— William Bowie, 2120 P Street. Inspector of magnetic work and chief of division of terrestrial magnetism. —R. L. Faris, 66 U Street. Disbursing agent.—James M. Griffin, 3014 Dent Place. Editor—W. B. Chilton, 2015 I Street. Chaefs of division: Chart —James B. Baylor, The Albany. Chart construction.—Dallas B. Wainwright, 1821 Kalorama Road. Instrument. —Ernest G. Fischer, The Ethelhurst. Library and archives.—Ralph M. Brown, 1324 Monroe Street. Tidal.—Leland P. Shidy, 1617 Marion Street. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Commissioner. —Eugene Tyler Chamberlain, The Ethelhurst. Deputy. —Arthur J. Tyrer, The Albemarle. STEAMBOAT-INSPECTION SERVICE. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Supervising Inspector General. —George Uhler, 1433 Euclid Street. Chef clerk.—Dickerson N. Hoover, jr., 411 Seward Square SE. SE ees a Executive Departments. 281 DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. (513-515 Fourteenth Street. Phone, Main 8474.) - WILLIAM BAUCHOP WILSON, of Blossburg, Pa., Secretary of Labor (1600 T Street), was born at Blantyre, Scotland, April 2, 1862; came to this country with his parents In 1870 and settled at Arnot, Tioga County, Pa. In March, 1871, he began working in the coal mines; in November, 1873, became half member of the Mine Workers’ Union; has taken an active part in.trade-union affairs from early manhood; was international secretary-treasurer of the United Mine Workers of America from 1900 to 1908, having been elected each year without opposition; is engaged in farming at Blossburg; is married and has nine children; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty- first, and Sixty-second Congresses from the fifteenth congressional district of Pennsyl- vania; chairman Committee on Labor, House of Representatives, Sixty-second Con- gress. Took the oath of office as Secretary of Labor March 5, 1913. Assistant Secretary.—ILouis F. Post, 2513 Twelfth Street. Solicitor.—John B. Densmore, 1440 R Street. Private secretary to Secretary.—Hugh L. Kerwin, 638 A Street SE. Chief clerk.—Robert Watson, 40 New York Avenue NE. Confidential clerk to Secretary.—Edward S. McGraw, 1300 Massachusetts Avenue. Disbursing clerk.—George G. Box, 130 Rhode Island Avenue. Private secretary to Assistant Secretary.—Herbert A. Stevens. Chaef, Division of Publications and Supplies.—Samuel J. Gompers, 718 L Street NE. Appointment clerk.—Robert C. Starr, 4323 Eighth Street, BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION. (513-515 Fourteenth Street.) Commissioner General of Immigration.—Anthony Caminetti, 1444 S Street. Assistant Commissioner General.—F. H. Larned, 1712 H Street. Commussioners of tmmagration.—George B. Billings, Long Wharf, Boston, Mass. ; John J. S. Rodgers, Gloucester, N. J.; Bertram N. Stump, Stewart Building, Balti- more, Md.; John H. Clark, Montreal, Province of Quebec; Lawson E. Evans, San Juan, P. R.; S. E. Redfern, New Orleans, La.; Ellis DeBruler, Seattle, Wash.; Samuel W. Backus, Angel Island, San Francisco, Cal. DIVISION OF INFORMATION. (513-515 Fourteenth Street.) Chief.—T. V. Powderly, 502 Quincy Street. Assistant chief. —J. 1.. McGrew, 1855 Newton Street. BUREAU OF NATURALIZATION. (513-515 Fourteenth Street.) Commissioner of Naturalization.—Richard K. Campbell, 1977 Biltmore Street. Deputy Commissioner of Naturalization.—Raymond F. Crist, 1720 Willard Street. Chief naturalization examiners.—James Farrell, 721 Old South Building, Boston, Mass. ; C. O’C. Cowley, 5 Beekman Street, New York, N. Y.; Jerome C. Shear, Federal Building, Philadelphia, Pa.; Oran T. Moore, Department of Labor, Washing- ton, D. C.; William M. Ragsdale, Federal Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Merton A. Sturges, Federal Building, Chicago, I1l.; Robert S. Coleman, Federal Building, St. Paul, Minn.; M. R. Bevington, customhouse, St. Louis, Mo.; John Speed Smith, Federal Building, Seattle, Wash.; George S. Crutchfield, Federal Building, San Sranches, Cal.; William S. Graham, 446 Railway Exchange Building, Den- ver, Colo. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS. (Department of Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Commissioner of Labor Statistics.—Royal S. Meeker, The Northumberland. Chief statistician. —Ethelbert Stewart, 24 Channing Street. CHILDREN’S BUREAU. (513-515 Fourteenth Street.) Chief. —Julia C. Lathrop, The Ontario. Assistant chief. —Lewis Meriam, Kensington, Md. Statistical expert.—Miss Helen L. Sumner, 2924 Newark Street. ’ MISCELLANEOUS. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. (The Mall. Phone, Main 1811.) Members of the Institution.— Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States; Thomas R. Marshall, Vice President of the United States; Edward D. White, Chief Justice of the United States; William Jennings Bryan, Secretary of State; William Gibbs McAdoo, Secretary of the Treasury; Lindley M. Garrison, Secretary of War; James C. McReynolds, Attorney General; Albert S. Burleson, Postmaster General; Josephus Daniels, Secretary of the Navy; Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior; David F. Houston, Secretary of Agriculture; William C. Red- field, Secretary of Commerce; William B. Wilson, Secretary of Labor. Regents of the Institution.—Edward D. White, Chief Justice of the United States, chancellor; Thomas R. Marshall, Vice President of the United States; Henry Cabot Lodge, Member of the Senate; Augustus O. Bacon, Member of the Senate; William J. Stone, Member of the Senate; Scott Ferris, Member of the House of Representatives; Irvin S. Pepper, Member of the House of Representatives; John Dalzell, former Member of the House of Representatives (term as Regent expires December 24, 1913); Andrew D. White, citizen of New York (Ithaca); Alexander Graham Bell, citizen of Washington, D. C.; George Gray, citizen of Delaware (Wilmington); Charles F. Choate, jr., citizen of Massachusetts (Boston); John B. Henderson, jr., citizen of Washington, D. C.; Charles W. Fairbanks, citizen of Indiana (Indianapolis). Chancellor.—Edward D. White, Chief Justice of the United States. Executive committee.—A. O. Bacon, Alexander Graham Bell, John Dalzell. Secretary of the Instituiton.—Charles D. Walcott, 1743 Twenty-second Street. Assistant secretaries.—Richard Rathbun, 1622 Massachusetts Avenue; Frederick W. True, 1320 Fairmont Street. 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. Adminastrative assistant.—W. de C. Ravenel, 1611 Riggs Place. Head curators.—Leonhard Stejneger, Thirteenth and Monroe Streets, Brookland; 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. Dall, B. W. Evermann, Chester G. Gilbert, Walter Hough, L. O. Howard, Ales Hrdli¢ka, F. L. Lewton, G. C. Maynard, Gerrit S. Miller, jr., Richard Rathbun, Robert Ridgway. Associate curators.—J. C. Crawford, David White. Chief of correspondence.—R. I. Geare, 1011 Otis Place. Disbursing agent.—W. Irving Adams, The Argyle. Registrar.—S. C. Brown, 305 New Jersey Avenue SE. Fditor.—Marcus Benjamin, 1703 Q Street. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. (Office in Smithsonian Building.) Fthnologist in charge.—F. W. Hodge, 2312 Nineteenth Street. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES. Assistant secretary in charge.—Frederick W. True, 1320 Fairmont Street. Chief clerk.—C. W. Shoemaker, 3115 O Street. 2%2 Mascellaneous. 283 NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK. (Adams Mill Road. Phone, Columbia 744.) Superintendent.—Frank Baker, 1788 Columbia Road. Assistant superintendent.—A. B. Baker, 1745 Lanier Place. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY. Director.—C. G. Abbot, 2203 K Street. REGIONAL BUREAU FOR THE UNITED STATES, INTERNATIONAL CATALOGUE OF SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE. Assistant in charge.—Leonard C. Gunnell, 1518 Twenty-eighth Street. PAN AMERICAN UNION. (FORMERLY INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS.) (Seventeenth Street and Potomac Park. Phone, Main 6638.) Director General.—John Barrett, Metropolitan Club. Assistant Director.—Francisco J. Yénes, The Oakland. Chief statistician.—William C. Wells, Hyattsville, Md. Chief clerk and editor.—Franklin Adams, The Marlborough. Chief translator.—Emilio M. Amores, 1531 I Street. Assistant Spanish translator.—José M. Coronado, 2202 Fourteenth Street. Portuguese translator.—E. Belfort Saraiva de Magalhees, 1829 F Street. Special compilers.—Albert Hale, Cherrydale, Va.; C. E. Albes, 1336 Fairmont Street. Librarian (acting).—Charles E. Babcock, Vienna, Va. Chief accountant.— Virginia H. Wood, 2207 K Street. Private secretary to the Director General. —William V. Griffin, 1338 Twenty-second Street. Chief of mail room.—William J. Kolb, 718 Gresham Place. GOVERNING BOARD. Chairman ex offictco.—William Jennings Bryan, Secretary of State, Calumet Place. Domicio da Gama, ambassador of Brazil, 1013 Avenue of the Presidents. Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, minister of Costa Rica, 1329 Eighteenth Street. Ignacio Calder6n, minister of Bolivia, 1633 Avenue of the Presidents. Dr. P. Ezequiel Rojas, minister of Venezuela, 1017 Avenue of the Presidents. Dans S. Naén, minister of the Argentine Republic, 1600 New Hampshire venue, . Dr. Carlos M. de Pena, minister of Uruguay, 1734 N Street. Eduardo Suérez Mujica, minister of Chile, The Portland. Joaquin Méndez, minister of Guatemala, 1750 Massachusetts Avenue. Dr. Francisco J. Peynado, minister of the Dominican Republic, 2120 LeRoy Place. Federico Alfonso Pezet, minister of Peru, 2223 R Street. Julio Betancourt, minister of Colombia, 1319 K Street. Dr. Alberto Membrefio, minister of Honduras, Hotel Gordon. Dr. Héctor Veldzquez, minister of Paraguay, 2017 Massachusetts Avenue. Dr. Eusebio A. Morales, minister of Panama, The Portland. Emiliano Chamorro, minister of Nicaragua, Stoneleigh Court. Dr. Gonzalo S. Cérdova, minister of Ecuador, 31 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Ulrick Duvivier, minister of Haiti, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Dr. Francisco Duefias, minister of Salvador, The Portland. A. Algara R. de Terreros, chargé d’affaires of Mexico, 1413 I Street. Manuel de la Vega-Calderén, chargé d’affaires of Cuba, The Burlington. 284 Congressional Directory. INTERNATIONAL WATERWAYS COMMISSION. Chairman.—Brig. Gen. O. H. Ernst, United States Army (retired), 1321 Connecticut Avenue. George Clinton, Prudential Building, Buffalo, N. Y. Prof. E. E. Haskell, Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y. Secretary.—W. E. Wilson, Federal Building, Buffalo, N. Y. CANADIAN MEMBERS. Chairman .—Sir George C. Gibbons, K. C., London, Ontario. Louis Coste, Ottawa, Ontario. William J. Stewart, Ottawa, Ontario. ‘Secretary. —Thomas Coté, Ottawa, Ontario. THE INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION. (Southern Building, Fifteenth and H Streets. Phone, Main 3764.) Created by treaty with Great Britain, and having jurisdiction over all cases involving the use or obstruc- tion or diversion of waters forming the international boundary or crossing the boundary between the United States and Canada. In addition, under Article IX ofthe treaty, any questions or matters of differ- ence arising between the high contracting parties involving the rights, obligations, or interests of the United States or of the Dominion of Canada, either in relation to each other or to their respective inhabi- tants, may be referred to the commission for report thereon, by either Government or by the joint action of the two Governments. Under Article X of the treaty similar matters of difference between the two Governments may be referred to the commission for determination by the joint action of the two Gove ernments. UNITED STATES SECTION. Chairman.—Hon. James A. Tawney, Winona, Minn. Hon. George Turner, Spokane, Wash. Hon. Obadiah Gardner, Rockland, Me. Secretary.—L White Busbey, Washington, D. C. CANADIAN SECTION. Chairman.—Th. Chase-Casgrain, K. C., Montreal, Quebec. Henry A. Powell, K. C., St. John, New Brunswick. Charles A. Magrath, Ottawa, Ontario. Secretary. —Lawrence J. Burpee, Ottawa, Ontario. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. (Corner North Capitol and G Streets. Phone, Main 6840.) Public Printer —Cornelius Ford, 1110 East Capitol Street. Deputy Public Printer.—Henry T. Brian, 1244 Columbia Road. Chief clerk.—William J. Dow, 2020 North Capitol Street. Private secretary.—Joseph P. O’Lone, 144 Thirteenth Street SE. Purchasing agent.—Edward S. Moores, 467 M Street. Accountant.—Benjamin L. Vipond, 223 B Street NE. Congressional Record clerk.—William A. Smith, 3817 Jocelyn Street, Chevy Chase Heights, D. C. Acting superintendent of work.—Daniel V. Chisholm, 17 Sixth Street SE. Assistant superintendent of work (night).—Charles E. Young, 75 Rhode Island Avenue. Foreman of printing and assistant superintendent of work (day).—T. Frank Morgan, The Atlantic. Superintendent of documents.—Frank C. Wallace, 135 T Street. AE ke I ARC DER eT or UNITED STATES BOTANIC GARDEN. (West of the Capitol Grounds. Phone, Main 3120, Branch 256.) Acting superintendent.—John Clark, Maryland Avenue and Second Street SW. Clerk.—C. V. Stiefel, 137 Thomas Street. | | Mauscellaneous. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. (1317-1319 F Street. Phone, Main 7460.) Chairman.—* 1 Edgar E. Clark, The Connecticut. Commassioners: *4ftJudson C. Clements, 2113 Bancroft Place. *11 Charles A. Prouty, The Portner. *| || James S. Harlan, 1720 Rhode Island Avenue. * 1 Charles C. McChord, The New Willard. * Balthasar H. Meyer, Highlands Manor, Wisconsin Avenue. Secretary. —* George B. McGinty, 3921 Fourteenth Street. Assistant secretary.—* Alfred Holmead, 1104 Maryland Avenue SW. Chief clerk and purchasing agent.—W. J. L. Sisler, Fontanet Court. Solicitor.—Patrick J. Farrell, 1424 Clifton Street. Assistant solicitor.—Charles W. Needham, 1527 Corcoran Street. Disbursing clerk.—George F. Graham, 1352 Perry Street. Chief examiner.—George N. Brown, 214 Thirteenth Street NE. 285 Attorneys and examiners.—G. P. Boyle, The Ashley; G. N. Brown, 214 Thirteenth Street NE.; W. N. Brown, The Argyle; U. Butler, 1383 Quincy Street; J. W. Carmalt, Florence Court; W. A. Disque, Y. M. C. A.; P. J. Doherty, The Rochester; R. T. Eddy, Y. M. C. A.; A. H. Elder, 1310 L Street; F. H. Esch, 28 West Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; L. J. Flynn, 1734 I Street; E. L. Gaddess, 2623 Connecticut Avenue; E. E. Gann, The Wyoming; C. F. Gerry, 1353 Columbia Road; G. S. Gibson, 301 Carlisle Court; A. G. Gutheim, 3433 Oakwood Terrace; E. H. Hart, The Brighton; E. B. Henderson, 1405 Delafield Place; J. H. Howell, The Baltimore; O. B. Kent, The Carolina; M. C. List, 1511 L Street; R. T. McKenna, University Club; A. R. Mackley, 16 S Street; J. T. Marchand, The Cairo; C. R. Marshall, 3513 Center Street; R. V. Pitt, 4222 Eighth Street; W. Prouty, 1816 Lamont Street; A. B. Pugh, 1802 R Street; R. D. Rynder, The Wagar; W. E. Settle, jr., 1645 K Street; J. E. Smith, 1246 Irving Street; H. Thurtell, 1217 Delafield Place; R. F. Walter, 118 Willow Avenue, Takoma Park, D. C. Chiefs of divisions: Appointments.—J. B. Switzer, 4420 Georgia Avenue. Carriers’ accounts. —F. W. Sweney, 641 Lexington Place. Claims.—J. H. Dorman, jr., 1213 Connecticut Avenue. Correspondence.—J. H. Fishback, The Kenesaw. Dockets.—F. C. Stratton, 1018 East Capitol Street. Indices.—H. Talbott, 1337 Twelfth Street. Inquiry. —S. H. Smith, 3764 Patterson Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Library.—L. S. Boyd, 604 Harvard Street. Locomotive-boiler inspection.—Frank McManamy, The Stag. Mails and files.—L. E. Schellberg, The Balfour. Printing.—M. Wood, 1368 Kenyon Street. Safety appliances.—H. W. Belnap, 100 W Street. Statistics. —W. J. Meyers, 1526 P Street. Stenography.—J. J. McAuliffe, 137 C Street SE. Supplies.—W. J. L. Sisler, Fontanet Court. Tariffs—J. M. Jones, 225 Florida Avenue. Valuation.—H. M. Jones, Chattanooga, Tenn.; W. D. Pence, Chicago, Ill; R. A. Thompson, San Francisco, Cal.; F. E. Wendt, The Brunswick; J. S. Worley, Kancas City, Mo. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. (Offices, 1724 F Street. Phone, Main 75.) Commuissioners.—John A. McIlhenny, president, 2030 Avenue of the Presidents. Charles M. Galloway, The Woodley. Hermon W. Craven, 1839 Ontario Place. Chief examiner —George R. Wales, 3609 Norton Place. Secretary.—John T. Doyle, 1309 N Street. 286 Congressional Directory. ISTHMIAN CANAL COMMISSION. (Seventeenth and G Streets. Phone, Main 4294.) General purchasing officer and chief of officc.—Maj. 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, 3126 Mount Pleasant Street. Assistant examiner of accounts.—Benjamin F. Harrah, 1653 Newton Street. Appointment clerk.—Ray L. Smith, 1319 Massachusetts Avenue SE. ON THE ISTHMUS. Commissioners: Col. George W. Goethals, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, chairman and chief engineer, Culebra. a i 1 F. Hodges, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, assistant chief engineer, ulebra. Lieut. Col. D. D. Gaillard, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, division engi- neer. Lieut. Col. William L. Sibert, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, division engineer of Atlantic Division, Gatun. iv i H. H. Rousseau, United States Navy, assistant to the chief engineer, ulebra. Col. William C. Gorgas, Medical Department, United States Army, head of the department of sanitation, Ancon. ; Richard L. Metcalfe, head of department of civil administration, Ancon. Secretary. —Joseph Bucklin Bishop, Ancon. Chief quartermaster.—Capt. R. E. Wood, United States Army, Culebra. Disbursing officer.—John H. McLean, Empire. Examiner of accounts.—H. A. A. Smith, Empire. NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. Branches.—Central, Dayton, Ohio; Northwestern, Milwaukee, Wis.; Southern, Hampton, Va.; Eastern, Togus, Me.; Western, Leavenworth, Kans.; Marion, Marion, Ind.; Pacific, Santa Monica, Cal.; Danville, Danville, Il1l.; 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 officios, Washington, D. C.; Maj. James W. Wadsworth, president, 346 Broadway (New York Life Building), New York, N. Y.—term expires 1916; Lieut. Franklin Murphy, first vice president, Newark, N. J.—term expired 1912; Col. Henry H. Markham, second vice president, Pasadena, Cal.—term expires 1916; John M. Holley, Esq., secretary, La Crosse, Wis.—term expires 1916; Maj. William Warner,! Kansas City, Mo.—term expired 1912; Col. Edwin P. Hammond, La Fayette, Ind.—term expires 1914; Gen. Joseph S. Smith, Bangor, Me.—term expires 1914; Lieut. Oscar M. Gottschall,! Dayton, Ohio—term expired 1912; Hon. Z. D. Massey, Sevierville, Tenn.—term expires 1914; Capt. Lucian S. Lambert, Galesburg, Ill.—term expires 1914. General treasurer —Maj. Moses Harris. Inspector general and chief surgeon.—Col. James E. Miller. 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. James B. Aleshire, Chief, Quartermaster Corps. Brig. Gen. Henry G. Sharpe, Assistant, Quartermaster Corps. Brig. Gen. George H. Torney, Surgeon General. Brig. Gen. Dan C. Kingman, Chief of Engineers. Brig. Gen. Enoch H. Crowder, Judge Advocate General. Brig. Gen. George Andrews, The Adjutant General. Secretary of the board.—Nathaniel Hershler. 1 Holds over until successor is appointed. Muscellaneous. 287 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.—Col, William T. Wood (retired). Attending surgeon.—Lieut. Col. William D. Crosby, Medical Corps. UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD. Chasrman.—Henry Gannett, geographer, United States Geological Survey, Depart- ment of the Interior. Secretary.—Charles S. Sloane, geographer, Bureau of the Census, Department of Com- . merce and. Labor. Frank Bond, chief clerk, General Land Office, Department of the Interior. Andrew Braid, assistant, in charge of office, Coast and Geodetic Survey, Depart- ment of Commerce and Labor. Capt. George F. Cooper, hydrographer, Department of the Navy. David M. Hildreth, topographer, Post Office Department. Frederick W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge, Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution. Lieut. Col. John E. McMahon, General Staff, Department of War. William McNeir, Chief of Bureau of Accounts, Department of State. C. Hart Merriam, Department of Agriculture. John 8. Mills, editor of publications and assistant chief of division, Department of the Treasury. George R. Putnam, commissioner, Bureau of Lighthouses, Department of Com- merce. Charles W. Stewart, superintendent, Library and Naval War Records Office, Depart- ment of the Navy. ; James E. Payne, chief of proof section, Government Printing Office. THE COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS. (Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460, Branch 5.) Chasrman.—Daniel C. French, of New York City. Vice chairman.—Frederick Law Olmsted, of Brookline, Mass. Thomas Hastings, of New York City. Cass Gilbert, of New York City. Charles Moore, of Detroit, Mich. Edwin H. Blashfield, of New York City. Peirce Anderson, of Chicago, Ill. Secretary.—Col. Spencer Cosby, United States Army. AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS. (Room 341, War Department Building. Phone, Main 2570, Branch 192.) President.—Woodrow Wilson. Vice President.—Robert W. de Forest. Secretary.—Charles L.. Magee. Treasurer.—John Skelton Williams. Counselor.— Wm. Marshall Bullitt. National director.— Ernest P. Bicknell. CENTRAL COMMITTEE.! Chairman.—Maj. Gen. George W. Davis, United States Army (retired). Charles Nagel, John Skelton Williams, 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, John Bassett Moore, Beekman Winthrop, Surg. Gen. Charles F'. Stokes, United States Navy. 1 One vacancy. 288 Congressional Directory. GENERAL SUPPLY COMMITTEE. (Phone, Main 6400, Branches 43 and 70.) Superintendent of supplies.—O. H. Briggs, 622 C Street NE. W. A. Fitzsimmons (representing State Department), 3578 Thirteenth Street. Charles Boyd (representing Treasury Department), 1215 F Street NE. A. G. Drane (representing War Department), 1802 Kilbourne Place. C. R. Sherwood (representing Department of Justice), 21 Bryant Street. F. H. Austin (representing Post Office Department), 1116 Columbia Road. W. J. Turkenton (representing Navy Department), 1513 Thirty-third Street. Cyrus Root (representing Interior Department), Laurel, Md. J. E. Jones (representing Department of Agriculture), 1362 Otis Place. H. C. Allen (representing Department of Commerce), 1460 Monroe Street. J. L. McGrew (representing Department of Labor), 1855 Newton Street. BOARD OF INDIAN COMMISSIONERS.! (710 E Street. Phone, Main 6280, Branch 73.) Chairman.—George Vaux, jr., Philadelphia, Pa. Merrill E. Gates, Washington, D. C. William D. Walker, Buffalo, N. Y. Warren K. Moorehead, Andover, Mass. Samuel A. Eliot, Boston, Mass. Frank Knox, Manchester, N. H. Edward E. Ayer, Chicago, T11. William H. Ketcham, Washington, D. C. Daniel Smiley, Mohonk Lake, N. Y. Secretary.—F. H. Abbott, 1312 Euclid Street. BOARD OF MEDIATION AND CONCILIATION.? (Southern Building, Fifteenth and H Streets. Phone, Main 1170.) Commissioner of Mediation.—William L. Chambers, 1431 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistant Commassioner of Mediation.—G. W. W. Hanger, 2344 Massachusetts Avenue. Board of Mediation and Conciliation,— Chairman.—Martin A. Knapp, Stoneleigh Court. William L. Chambers, 1431 Rhode Island Avenue. Secretary.—G. W. W. Hanger, 2344 Massachusetts Avenue. COMMISSION ON INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS.? (Southern Building. Phone, Main 1170.) Chairman.—Frank P. Walsh, Missouri. John R. Commons, Wisconsin. Mrs. J. Borden Harriman, New York. Frederic A. Delano; Illinois. Harris Weinstock, California. S. Thruston Ballard, Kentucky. John B. Lennon, Illinois. James O’Connell, District of Columbia. Austin B. Garretson, Iowa. Managing expert. —W. Tett Lauck, Virginia. Executive secretary.—R. P. Ritter, "Missouri. 1 Reports to the Secretary of the Interior, but is not a bureau or division of that department. See p. 334. 2 For character of official duties see p. 334. Miscellaneous. 289 ‘WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY. Hon. Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States, president ex officio. The governors of the several States, vice presidents ex officio. , first vice president. Hon. William A. Maury, second vice president, 1769 Massachusetts Avenue. A. B. Browne, treasurer, 1856 Wyoming Avenue. Frederick L. Harvey, secretary, 2146 Florida Avenue. Admiral George Dewey, United States Navy; Brig. Gen. John M. Wilson, United States Army (retired); Charles C. Glover; Surg. Gen. Francis M. Gunnell, United States Navy (retired); Charles D. Wolcott; Edward M. Gallaudet; R. Ross Perry; Henry B. I. Macfarland; Rt. Rev. Alfred Harding, D. D.; Theodore W. Noyes; Thomas Nelson Page; Herbert Putnam; William Corcoran Eustis; Frederick B. McGuire. COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF. (Kendall Green. Phone, Lincoln 2450.) Patron ex officio.— Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States. President.—Percival Hall, Kendall Green. : Directors.—George C. Perkins, Senator from California; Thetus W. Sims, Represent- ative from Tennessee; William E. Humphrey, Representative from Washington State; Edward M. Gallaudet, citizen of Connecticut; 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 professor of moral and political science, Gallaudet College.— Edward M. Gallaudet. President, and professor of applied mathematics and pedagogy.—Percival Hall. Vice president and professor of languages. —Edward A. Fay. Emeritus professor of natural science and lecturer on pedagogy.—John W. Chickering. Professor in charge department of articulation and normal training. —Percival Hall. - Principal, Kendall School.—Lyman Steed. Supervisor of domestic department and disbursing officer.—Louis L. Hooper. Visitors admitted on Thursdays from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL FOR THE INSANE. (St. Elizabeth, Nichols Avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, Lincoln 1426.) Board of visitors.—George M. Sternberg, ex-Surgeon General, United States Army, president; Charles I. Stokes, M. D., Surgeon General, United States Navy; Brig. Gen. George H. Torney, M. D., Surgeon General, United States Army; Mrs. Henry G. Sharpe; Miss Bessie J. Kibbey; Walter S. Harban, M. D.; John W. Yerkes; Rupert Blue, M. D., Surgeon General Public Health Service. Superintendent.—William A. White, M. D. First assistant physician.—George H. Schwinn, M. D. Senior assistant physicians.—Alfred Glascock, M. D.; John A. Pfeiffer, M. D. Assistant physician.—W. H. Hough, M. D. Clinical director. — Histopathologist.— Woman senior assistant physician.—Mary O’Malley, M. D. Junior assistant physicians.—Grace De Witt, M. D.; Hagop Davidian, M. D.; Frank H. Dixon, M. D.; Dennis J. Murphy, M. D.; Arrah B. Evarts, M. D.; James C. Hassall. Pathologist.— Scientific director.—S. I. Franz, A. B., Ph. D. Medical internes.—John E. Lind, M. D.; John P. H. Murphy, M. D.; Edith A. Mac- Dowell; D. G. O’Neil, M. D.; George H. Reeve, M. D.; Francis M. Shockley, M. D.; Louis Wender, M. D. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——20 290 Congressional Directory. Chief of training school for nurses.—Cornelia Allen. Dentist.—A. D. Weakley, D. D. S. Dental interne.— William J. Lanahan, D. S. Ophthalmologist. —Arthur H. Kimball, M. D. Veterinarian.—John P. Turner, V. M. D. Steward and disbursing agent.—Monie Sanger. Purchasing agent.—A. E. Offutt. Matron.—Mrs. H. O’Brien. Chaef clerk.—Frank M. Finotti. HOWARD UNIVERSITY. (Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, North 1660.) Patron ex officco.—Franklin K. Lane, Secretary of the Interior. President board of trustees.—Ex-Chief Justice Stanton J. Peelle, LIL.. D., United States Court of Claims. President.—Stephen M. Newman, A. M., D. D. Secretary. —George William Cook, A. M., LL. M. Treasurer.—Edward L. Parks, A. M., D. D. Executive commitice.—President Stephen M. Newman, chairman; William V. Cox, Cuno H. Rudolph, Dr. J. H. N. Waring, Justice George W. Atkinson, Andrew F. Hillyer, Justice Thomas H. Anderson, LL. D. Dean of faculty of school of theology.'—Isaac Clark, D. D. Dean of faculty of school of medicine.—Edward A. Balloch, A. M., M. D. Dean of faculty of school of law.—B. F. Leighton, LL. D. Secretary and treasurer school of medicine.—W. C. McNeill, M. D. Secretary and treasurer school of law.—James F. Bundy, A. M., LL. M. Dean of the college of arts and sciences.—Kelly Miller, A. M. Dean of the teachers’ college.—Lewis B. Moore, A. M., Ph. D. Dean of the commercial college.—George William Cook, A. M., LL. M. Dean of the academy.—George J. Cummings, A. M il of the school of manual arts and applied sciences.—Perry B. Perkins, A. M., Director of conservatory of music.—Lulu V. Childers, Mus. B. 1 This department is undenominational and wholly supported by endowment and personal benefactions. WASHINGTON CITY POST OFFICE. (Post Office Department Building, Pennsylvania Avenue, Eleventh and Twelfth Streets. Phone, ncom- ing mail, Main 1747; outgoing mail, Main 1772.) Postmaster.—N. A. Merritt, 1228 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant.—L. J. Robinson, 4321 Georgia Avenue. MAIN OFFICE. General-delivery window is open from 6 a. m. Mondays until midnight Saturdays. Stamps can be purchased there in small quantities during that period between 11 p.m. and 7 a. m. Money-order and registered-letter business transacted at all the stations 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. (Officehours: 8 a. m. to 11.30 p. m., except Sundays and national holidays. Money shoud always 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 8 a. m. to 6 p. m., or as long as the stations are open for the transaction of other business, at Benning Station, Brightwood Station, Brookland Station, Cherry- dale Rural Station, Congress Heights, Good Hope, Randle Highlands Station, Takoma Park Station, Tennallytown Station, Stations A, B, C, F, G, H, K, L, and stations 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,.12, 13, 14,15, 16,17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24,,25,.26,.27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72,73, and 74. 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. Money orders drawn payable at Wash- ington, D. C., may be cashed at stations on identification. : 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 Hon- duras, Canada, Canal Zone, Cuba, Dominica, Grenada, island of Guam, Hawaii, Jamaica, Leeward Islands, Martinique, Mexico, Montserrat, Nevis, Newfoundland, the Philippine Islands, Porto Rico, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Shanghai (China), Trinidad and Tobago, 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.......... .... $0. 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............ .. . 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, F, G, H, K, and 64. Special forms of application for foreign money orders will be furnished to persons who desire them. : The value of the British pound sterling in United States money is fixed by conven- tion at $4.87; the Austrian crown at 20% 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 escudo and centavo at $1.08; Russian ruble at 514% cents, $1=1 ruble 94:32; copecks. 291 292 Congressional Directory. International money orders issued payable in Algeria, Apia (Samoa), Argentine Republic, Australia, Austria, Azores, Belgium, Beloochistan, Beirut, Bolivia, Borneo, Bosnia, British Bechuanaland, British Central Africa, British East Africa, Bulgaria, Cape Colony, Caroline Islands, Ceylon, Chile, China, Congo Free States, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Crete, Cyprus, Denmark, Dutch East Indies, Egypt, Falkland Islands, Faroe Islands, Fiji Islands, Finland, Formosa, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Great Britain and Ireland and Scotland, Greece, Heligoland, Herzegovina, Holland, Republic of Honduras, Hongkong, Hungary, Iceland, British India, Italy, Jaffa, Japan, Jask (Persia), Java, Jerusalem, Korea, Liberia, Luxemburg, Madeira Islands, Malacca, Malta, Manchuria, Mauritius, Monaco (Principality of), Montenegro, Morocco, Natal, 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, Tasmania, Transvaal, Tripoli, Tunis, Turkey, Turks Island, Uruguay, Victoria, Wales, Western Australia, Zam- besia, Zanzibar, and Zululand (South Africa). Rates of fees for money orders issued in the United States, payable in the following Qompiries 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, Natal and Zululand, 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— SO Ee. 82 00. a a. $0.10 830.010 $40: 00.2 os a es $0.45 LS B00. ri 400100830: 00. in Fas cara sia a 5 Ll ED TR RCI Ta RT ak SE asa 20 50.6: 1000.00 cin a es a 60 ETRE WT | SE Se Si See Ee 25 COOL 10 70:00 oc on Te 70 10 deeds 00. 30 TOL 0T 10 S00: ae 80 15:00 to 20.00 coe. sie ao 35 80.010: 90.00:: we a ae 90 E030. 00:5. 5s nian a Te a 40 00:01:10: 100.00. ot sits veo se or ates 1.00 Fees No. 2—When payable in Chile; France, Greece, Netherlands (Holland), Norway, and Sweden— For orders from— For orders from— 0:01 10 SI0:00.. 0. hin nisi ih $0.10: |. 2850.0 10:860-00.. 0s o. a E E $0. 60 JOOL E020: 00.00- ve sic ii aa a .20 60:00:00. 70.00. coh ini ree en .70 90.01: 00 80.00. ==. oes avs nee wn .30 20003080: 00. cr ee Ee a Res .80 S00 40.00. .0 Ces i ee .40 80010. N50... oa ee .90 400110: 00.00. aie i esi ea amv n .50 00:08 1000.00. c= o.oo 1.00 The maximum amount for which a single international money order may be drawn is $100. 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. All mailable matter properly prepared, except domestic matter of the fourth class, may be registered at the main office from 12.01 a. m. Mondays until midnight Satur- days. On holidays the hours are from 10 a. m. to 11a. m. The delivery window is open daily except Sundays from 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. On holidays the hours are from 10 a. m. to 11 a. m. . Matter may be registered at all stations during such hours as they are open. Station No. 21 is located in the House Office Building. The registry fee is 10 cents for each separate letter or parcel, in addition to the postage, either foreign or domestic, both postage and registry fee to be fully prepaid. The addition of a special-delivery stamp, or 10 cents in ordinary postage stamps, provided the article is indorsed ‘‘special delivery,”’ will insure the immediate deliv- ery, during special-delivery hours, of a registered article upon its arrival at the delivery office. When an acknowledgment of delivery is desired, the envelope or wrapper of the registered article should be indorsed on the address side by the sender, ‘‘ Receipt desired’ or with words of similar import. The sender of registered mail may restrict its delivery to the addressee by indorsing thereon, “Deliver to addressee only,”” except when addressed to certain public officials. The addressee may restrict delivery by filing at the delivery office direc- tions in writing, stating to whom delivery should be made. : Registered mail not so restricted as to delivery may be delivered to any responsible person to whom the addressee’s ordinary mail is customarily delivered. Muscellaneous. 293 All valuable letters and printed matter, as well as those the delivery of which is of importance 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 first-class mail matter, $25 on third-class mail, 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 when properly prepared. Matter included in the domestic parcel post can not be registered. 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, Republic of Panama, and Mexico, upon the prepayment, by postage stamps affixed, of the registry fee. Letters may be registered to any post office in the world upon the prepayment of 10 cents in addition to the regular postage. DOMESTIC PARCEL POST. Unsealed matter of the fourth class (parcel post), which embraces all mailable merchandise not exceeding in size 72 inches in length and girth combined, and not exceeding 20 pounds in weight to the first and second zones and 11 pounds to all other zones, bearing the name and address of the sender, and prepared for mailing in such manner that the contents can be easily examined, is mailable at the main office and its branches and contract stations (except as noted hereafter) during the hours of business of the office or station, and at the rates of postage provided for in the following table: : (The rate of postage on fourth-class matter weighing not more than 4 ounces is 1 cent for each ounce or fraction of an ounce regardless of distance, and on such matter in excess of 4 ounces in weight the rate is by the pound, as follows, the postage in all cases to be prepaid by postage stamps affixed:) Ts 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Zone. Distance. | ,,und. [pounds. [pounds. pounds. [pounds. pounds. pounds, First: Miles. . Yoealrate.. Lo tiscali dnl $0.05 | $0.06 | $0.06 | $0.07 | $0.07 | $0.08 $0. 08 ZONOTale. ..... ol nan 50 .05 .06 .07 .08 .09 .10 of Second... a a ee 50-150 .05 06 .07 08 09 10 11 dM LER SE Re 150-300 .07 12 1. 22 27 32 37 BOUL... oo sie ans a a NE 300-600 .08 14 .20 26 32 38 44 LE a er ee nen a 600-1, 000 .09 .16 .23 .30 .37 .44 +51 Sixth ro es mee 1, 000-1, 400 .10 .19 .28 .37 . 46 . 55 .64 Seventhic os oi ities, 1, 400-1, 800 28 21 .31 .41 .51 .61 71 hth. Allover 1,800 a2 .24 .36 .48 .60 2 .84 . . 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Zone. Distance. pounds. pounds. pounds. pounds. (pounds. pounds. pounds. First: Miles. oeal rate i. i 0 lS Ee $0.09 | $0.09 | $0.10 | $0.10 | $0.11 | $0.11 $0.12 ZONOTALO .. cian iivuninss- 50 .12 .13 .14 .15 .16 +17 .18 Beeona. 5 rns 50-150 .12 13 14 .15 16 17 18 Phinda 150-300 .42 47 52 FL 7 ee a ESR Sa ine Pouothio coe inl) 300-600 50 56 62 OBE Ja art Bifth.o. oo. hos. ads odiiam 600-1, 000 58 65 72 DE EE Sh IRR LE 2 on Sih a ae 1, 000-1, 400 3 .82 .91 1.00... ada coir mr Seventh... oc. . 0 os, 1,400-1, 800 .81 .91 1.01 1S ee BERL a Bagh oo Lo RUdeni sd Alloverl, 800 . 96 1.08 1.20 Pi PISA Be ER Sg SS Ba ; 15 16 17 18 19 20 Zone Distance pounds. | pounds. pounds. | pounds. | pounds. | pounds. First: Miles. FE: Yoealrate. oc Sl iva ine $0.12 $0.13 $0.13 $0. 14 $0.14 $0.15 LE a Ein Sr 50 ph 2 <2 22 Second rr en Te a 50-150 .19 20 21 22 23 24 Third. con sii nai ait 10-300: ices it mental asa sa et a ae TT IR A oe 300-0005). von new wa nnaade haan Ln ea Bh OH AE Cl Es ee a Sixth. i. ss 1000-1.400: 0a fe eniaiaai desing ain all. Seventh... ona niia inns 15400-1800: ooo bases loans sits brn aan va ana Bighth. 005 vet es suse AROVer L800: ri isin vn ssdsiid asian lira dain. 294 Congressional Directory. The rate of postage for seeds, bulbs, scions, etc. (for propagation), is 1 cent for each 2 ounces or fraction thereof. A mailable parcel on which the postage is fully prepaid may be insured against loss in an amount not exceeding $25 on payment of a fee of 5 cents, and $50 on pay- ment of a fee of 10 cents. A return receipt will be furnished if desired. Parcels for Canada, Cuba, Mexico, and Panama can not be insured but may be registered. Parcels for the Philippine Islands and the Canal Zone may be insured, but indem- nity is allowed only when the loss occurs in the service of the United States. In view of the provision for the insurance of fourth-class mail matter and the furnishing of receipts for such mail when insured, the necessity for registration is removed, and therefore fourth-class matter shall not be admitted to the registered mails (except for Canada, Cuba, Mexico, and Panama). The sender of a mailable parcel on which the postage is fully prepaid may have the price of the article and the charges thereon collected from the addressee on pay- ment of a fee of 10 cents in postage stamps affixed, provided the amount to be collected does not exceed $100. Such a parcel will be insured against loss, without additional charge, in an amount equivalent to its actual value, but not to exceed $50. The sender of a collect-on-delivery (C. O. D.) parcel will be given a receipt showing the office and date of mailing, the number of the parcel, and the amount due him. A C. O. D. parcel will be accepted for mailing only at a money-order office and when addressed to a monéy-order office. Money-order offices are designated in the Parcel-Post Guide by an asterisk (*) or a dagger (1). The postmaster at the mailing office will be held responsible for the postage required for the return of a parcel addressed to a nonmoney- order office. The 0 O. D. feature does not apply to Canada, Cuba, Mexico, Panama, the Canal Zone, and the Philippine Islands. FOREIGN PARCEL POST. Admissible matter.—Packages of mailable merchandise may be sent, in unsealed packages, by ‘parcel post’ to the following-named countries: Australia. Dutch Guiana. Martinique. Austria. Ecuador. Mexico. Bahamas. France. Netherlands. Barbados. Germany. Newfoundland. Belgium. Great Britain and Ireland. New Zealand. Bermuda. Guadeloupe. ~ Nicaragua. Bolivia. Guatemala. Norway. Brazil. Haiti. Panama. British Guiana Honduras (British). Peru. Chile. Honduras (Republic of). Salvador. Colombia. Hongkong.! : Sweden. Costa Rica. Hungary. Trinidad (including Tobago). Curagao. Italy. Uruguay. Danish West Indies. Jamaica. Venezuela. Denmark. Japan.? Windward Islands. Dominican Republic. Leeward Islands. Postage rates.—Postage must be prepaid in full by stamps affixed at the rate of 12 cents a pound or fraction of a pound. Registry fee, 10 cents, in addition to postage. Registration.—The sender of a parcel addressed to any of the countries named in the table at the head of this section, except Barbados, Curagao, Dutch Guiana, France, Great Britain and Ireland, Guadeloupe, Martinique, the Netherlands, and Uruguay, may have the same registered by paying a registry fee of 10 cents, and will receive the “return receipt,” without special charge therefor, when envelope or wrapper is marked ““ Return receipt demanded.”’ Place of mailing.—Matter intended for parcel post must be taken to the post office for inspection and there deposited in the mails. It must not be deposited in a letter box. Letters prohibited.—A letter or communication of the nature of personal corre- spondence must not accompany, be written on, or inclosed with any parcel. If such be found, the letter will be placed in the mails, if separable; and if the communication be inseparably attached the whole parcel will be rejected. 1 Parcel-post packages addressed for delivery in the cities in China named in United States Postal Guide are mailable at the postage rate and subject to the conditions applicable to parcel-post packages for de- livery at Hongkong. 2 Parcel-post packages addressed for delivery at any post office in Formosa or Chosen (Korea) and the places in China and Manchuria named in United States Postal Guide are mailable at the postage rate and subject to the conditions applicable to parcel-post packages addressed for delivery in Japan. a Muscellaneous. 295 Dimensions.—To all countries named packages are limited to 3} feet in length and to 6 feet in length and girth combined, except that packages for Colombia and - Mexico are limited to 2 feet in length and 4 feet in girth. Weight. —Packages to certain post offices in Mexico must not exceed 4 pounds 6 ounces in weight, but those for all other countries named may weigh up to but not exceeding 11 pounds. : Value.—The limit of value is $560 on packages for Ecuador, but on those for the other countries named there is no limit of value. Further information concerning parcel post may be obtained at the main office or branches. 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. 2 CITY DELIVERY AND COLLECTION (MAIN OFFICE). (Postage on local letters or other first-class matter, 2 cents for every ounce or fraction thereof.) Delivery by carriers on business routes, 7 and 9.30 a. m.; 12.20, 2, and 3 p. m. Delivery by carriers on residence routes, 7 and 11.15 a. m.; 2.30 p. m. Delivery by carrier to Post Office Department, 9 a. m.; 12.30 and 3 p. m. Delivery by carriers to hotels, 7 and 10 a. m.; 12.30, 4, 7.30, and 10.30 p. m. Collections on business routes commence at 6.30, 7.50, 9.10, 10.30, and 11.10 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, 9, and 11.15 a. m.; 1.30, 3.30, 5.45, 6.45, and 10.30 p. m. Sundays, 7.45 p. m. Holidays: Residence section, 9.30 a. m.; 4.30 and 11 p. m. Business section, 10.15 a. m.; 4.30 and 11 p. m. 296 Congressional Directory. GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES. Term ig ana er 22 Capitals. Governors. oi Seve Epson STATES. Years Alabama... ....... Montgomery...... Emmet O’Neal............ 4 | Jan., 1915 Arizona... cil Phoenix... .;..... George W, P. Hunt... ..... 2 | Feb., 1914 Arkansas. ........ Little Roek.......| I. M. Fatrelll............. 2 | Jan., 1915 California.......... Sacramento. ...... Hiram W. Johnson........ 4 | Jan., 1915 Colorado. ....------. Denver. .--... Elias M. Ammons......... 2 | Jan., 1915 Connecticut........ Hartford. =... -.. Simeon E. Baldwin........ 2 | Jan., 1915 Delaware Dover. ii. lin Charles RB. Miller... ......... 4 | Jan., 1917 Florida Tallahassee. .....: Park M. Trammell......... 4 | Jan., 1917 Georgia Athnta.o. .. John Marshall Slaton ...... 2 | June, 1915 Idaho.. Boise’, ooo x 0s John'M, Haines. ........:.. 2 | Jan., 1915 Illinois Springfield Edward F. Dunne......... 4 | Jan., 1917 Indiana Indianapolis. ..... Samuel M. Ralston........ 4 | Jan., 1917 Iowan. oo hoor Des Moines. ...... George W. Clarke. ......... 2 | Jan., 1915 oneas Lo... Topeka ..l odo) George H. Hodges. ........ 2 | Jan., 1915 5,000 Kentucky....o..-- Frankiort......... James B. McCreary........ 4 | Dec., 1915 6, 500 Louisiana... ..... 2. Baton Rouge.....| Lather BE. Hall... ......... 4 ay, 1916 5,000 Maines 20 oot Augusta. coool William T. Haines......... 2 | Jan., 1915 3,000 Maryland.......... Annapolis.......... Phillips L. Goldsborough. . 4 | Jan., 1916 4,500 Massachusetts. ..... oston=. so cons Eugene N. Foss. .........5 1 | Jan., 1914 8,000 Michigamn.......... ansing. = CC Woodbridge N. Ferris...... 2 | Jan., 1915 5,000 Minnesota... ...-.. St.Paul. o.oo. Adolph O. Eberhart. ...... 2 | Jan., 1915 7,000 Mississippi..... rh dackson:.. Lo iob Bark Brewer. Doni ll 4 | Jan., 1916 5,000 Missouri.........xx Jefferson City..... Elliott: W. Major........... 4 | Jan., 1917 5,000 Montana............ elenase ono Samuel V. Stewart......... 4 | Jan., 1917 | 5,000 Nebragka.........: Yineoln... .....:. John H. Morehead. ........ - 2] Jan., 1915 2,500 Nevada............ Carson City....... Tasker 1. Oddie........... 4 | Jan., 1915 4,000 New Hampshire. . .| Concord.......... Samuel D. Felker.......... 2 | Jan., 1915 3,000 New Jersey........ Trenton.........- Jeon R. Taylor! .......... 3 | Jan., 1914 | 10,000 New Mexico....... Sante Pe vio: William C. McDonald... ... 4 | Jan., 1917 5,000 New York......... AlDOY.oiaceion. Martin HI. Glynn2......... 2 | Jan., 1915 North Carolina Raleigh. ...t x= { TockeCrajg. 0. = 00 4 | Jan., 1917 North Dakota Bismarck. ...c iL. B.Hapna. .. oo ilk 2 | Jan., 1915 Ohio. -....... = Commbus..» ..... 2 | Jan., 1915 Oklahoma Oklahoma City... LeeCruce........-.._._.... 4 | Jan., 1915 4,500 Oregon Salem. Tense Oswald West... oo 4 | Jan., 1915 5,000 Pennsylvania. ..... Harrisburg... JohmK.Tener............. 4 | Jan., 1915 | 10,000 Rhode Island...... Providence....... Aram J. Pothier........... 2 | Jan., 1915 3,000 South Carolina..... Columbia-.-.. Cole’ L..Blease....--....:%. 2 | Jan., 1915 3,500 South Dakota...... Rlorve.. i Frank M. Byrne. ........ = 2 | Jan., 1915 3,000 Tennessee. ......... Nashville......... Ben W. Hooper-..-........ 2 | Jan., 1915 4,000 exXa8... ..........> Austin... O.B.Colquitt............. 2 | Jan., 1915 4,000 Utah... Salt Lake City....] William Spry.....-..-..... 4 | Jan., 1917 6,000 Vermont........... Montpelier........ Allen M. Fletcher.......... 2 | Oct., 1914 2,500 Virginia o.oo... Richmend........ William H. Mann.......... 4 | Feb., 1914 5,000 Washington. ...... Olympio........ | Brnestdister. . ...... =. 4 | Jan., 1917 6,000 West Virginia. ..... Charleston. ....... Henry D. Hatfield......... 4 | Mar., 1917 5,000 Wisconsin. ........ Madison... Zoos Francis E. McGovern...... 2 | Jan., 1915 5,000 Wyoming... ........ Cheyenne......... Joseph M. Carey ........... ‘4 | Jan., 1915 4, TERRITORIES.3 Alagke. oo. Juneaw.. i. Lu John F. A. Strong--......-. dle Hawall...cc....0.. Honolulu... ...... LoA Pinkham oc -......- dle nia Porto Rico. i... .- SanJuan.:.......| Arthur Yager.............. dle ianes 1 Acting governor. 2 Took oath of office Oct. 17, 1913. 3 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. 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 passports, 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 Constitution, and proclamations declaring the admission of new States into the Union. COUNSELOR. The Counselor becomes the Acting Secretary of State in the absence of the Secre- tary. He is charged with the supervision of such matters and the preparation of such correspondence as may be assigned to him by the Secretary. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE. Under the organization of the department the Assistant Secretary, Second Assist- ant Secretary, and Third Assistant Secretary are charged with the supervision of all correspondence with the diplomatic and consular officers, and are intrusted with the preparation of the correspondence upon any questions arising in the course of the public business that may be assigned to them by the Secretary. 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 admin- istrative 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, Hong- kong, French Indo-China, Siam, Straits Settlements, Borneo, East Indies, India, and in general the Far East. DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS. Diplomatic and consular correspondence, on matters other than those of an admin- istrative 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. 297 298 Congressional Directory. DIVISION OF WESTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. Diplomatic and consular correspondence, on matters other than those of an admin- istrative character, in relation to Great Britain (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and British colonies not elsewhere enumerated), Portugal, Spain, France, Morocco, Bel- gium, the Kongo, Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, the Netherlands, Luxemburg, Denmark, and Liberia. CONSULAR BUREAU. Consular correspondence and miscellaneous correspondence relating thereto. BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS. Custody of the great seal and applications for office, and the preparations of commis- sions, 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 authentications; 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 arcnives. 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 docu- ments; care of papers relating to international commissions. DIVISION OF INFORMATION. The preparation and distribution to the foreign service of diplomatic, commercial and other correspondence and 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 direc- tion 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 2nd rendering public accounts and of making returns; grants warrants for all moneys drawn from the Treasury in pursuance of appropriations made by law, and for the payment of moneys into the Treasury; and annually submits to Congress estimates of the probable revenues and disbursements of the Government. He also Official Dutres. 299 controls the construction and maintenance of public buildings; the coinage and printing of money; the administration of the Life-Saving, Revenue-Cutter, and the Public Health branches of the public service, and furnishes generally such informa- tion as may be required by either branch of Congress on all matters pertaining to the foregoing. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of customs is assigned the general supervision of the Division of Customs and of all matters pertaining to the customs service. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of fiscal bureaus is assigned the general super- vision of all matters relating to the following bureaus, offices, and ns 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 War- rants; Bureau of Internal Revenue; the Division of Printing and Stationery; the Division of Mail and Files; and the office of the disbursing clerk. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of miscellaneous divisions of the Treasury Department, is assigned the general supervision of matters relating to the following bureaus and divisions: Public Health Service, Supervising Architect, the selection of sites for public buildings, Revenue-Cutter Service, Life-Saving Service, Appoint- ments, and the Bond Division. 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 annexes; the expenditure of appropriations for contingent expenses; the disbursement of appro- priations made for Government exhibits at various expositions; the supervision and general administration of purchases under the general supply committee; 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. Subject to the direction and approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, the duties performed by the Supervising Architect embrace the following: Securing cessions from States of jurisdiction over sites and the payment for the same; preparation of drawings, estimates, specifications, etc., for, and the superintendence of the work of, constructing, rebuilding, extending or repairing public buildings; the care, main- tenance, and repair of public buildings, the direction of the operating force in public buildings, and the supply of furniture, carpets, lighting fixtures, mechanical equip- ment, safes, and miscellaneous supplies for use of custodians’ and engineers’ forces in the care of public buildings. COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY. The Comptroller of the Treasury, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treas- ury, prescribes the forms of keeping and rendering all public accounts except those relating to postal revenues and the expenditures therefrom. He is charged with the duty of revising accounts upon appeal from settlements made by the auditors. Upon the application of disbursing officers, the head of any executive department, or other independent establishment not under any of the executive departments, the comp- troller is required to render his advance decision upon any question involving a pay- ment to be made by them or under them, which decision, when rendered, 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 300 Congressional Directory. under the Post Office Department. He superintends the preservation by the auditors of all accounts which have been finally adjusted by them, together with the vouchers and certificates relating to the same. He 1s 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 interests 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 settlement. 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 settles all accounts of the Department of the Treasury, including all accounts relating to the customs service, the public debt, internal revenue, Treasurer and assistant treasurers, mints and assay offices, Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Revenue-Cutter Service, Life-Saving ‘Service, Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service, public buildings, and Secret Service. AUDITOR FOR THE WAR DEPARTMENT. The Auditor for the War Department receives and settles all accounts of the Depart- ment of War, including all accounts relating to the military establishment, armories and arsenals, national cemeteries, fortifications, public buildings and grounds under the Chief of Engineers, rivers and harbors, the Military Academy, and the Isthmian, Canal Commission. : AUDITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. The Auditor for the Interior Department receives and settles all accounts of the Department of the Interior, including all accounts relating to the protection, survey, 7 sale of public lands and the reclamation of arid public lands, the Geological Survey, Bureau of Mines, Army and Navy pensions, Indian affairs, Howard Univer- sity, the Government Hospital for the Insane, the Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb, the Patent Office, the Capitol and grounds, and the Hot Springs Reserva- tion. AUDITOR FOR THE NAVY DEPARTMENT. The Auditor for the Navy Department receives and settles all accounts of the Department of the Navy, including all accounts relating to the Naval Establishment, Marine Corps, and the Naval Academy. . AUDITOR FOR THE STATE AND OTHER DEPARTMENTS. The Auditor for the State and other Departments receives and settles all accounts of the Departments of State, Justice, Agriculture, Commerce, and Labor, including all accounts relating to the Diplomatic and Consular Service, the judiciary, the United States courts, judgments of the United States courts and of the Court of Claims relating to accounts settled in his office, together with the accounts of the 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 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 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 Department; and certifies the balances arising thereon to the Postmaster General for accounts of the postal revenue and expenditures there- from, 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 expenditures from the appropriation for continuing the establishment, maintenance, and extension of the postal savings depositories. He registers, charges, and countersigns the warrants upon the Treasury issued in liquidation of indebtedness; superintends the collecting of debts due the United States for the service of the Post Office Department and all penalties imposed; directs suits and all legal proceedings in civil actions; and takes all legal measures to enforce the payment of money due the | i | f i} | | | . Official Duties. 301 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 409, Revised Statutes. He is required to submit to the Secretary of the Treasury quarterly statements of postal receipts and expendi- tures and to report to the Postmaster General the financial condition of the Post Office Department at the close of each fiscal year. 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, and in the national-bank depositories; is redemption agent for national-bank notes; is trustee for bonds held to secure national-bank circulation and public deposits in national banks, and bonds held to secure postal savings in banks; is custodian 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; is treasurer of the board of trustees of the Postal Savings System; and is ex officio commissioner of the sinking fund of the District of Lela REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. The Register of the Treasury signs all bonds of the United States, the bonds of the District of Columbia, the Philippine Islands, the city of Manila, the city of Cebu, and the Porto Rican gold loan, and keeps records showing the daily outstanding balances thereof. He examines, counts, and prepares for destruction the upper halves of all redeemed paper money, except national-bank notes, received from banks through the office of the Treasurer of the United States for redemption, all paid interest coupons, and all other United States securities redeemed; also, from the Treasurer of the United States, all paid interest checks. 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 the 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. An annual report is prepared by the Director, giving the operations of the mint service for the fiscal year, printed in the Finance Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, and giving the statistics of the production of the precious metals in the United States and the world for the calendar year. 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 subor- dinate officers; the preparation and distribution of stamps, instructions, regulations, forms, blanks, hydrometers, stationery, etc. 302 Congressional Directory. ’ PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE. The act approved August 14, 1912, changed the name of the Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service to the Public Health Service, and considerably increased its powers and functions. The bureau of the service at Washington comprises seven divisions, each under a commissioned officer. The operations of these divisions are coordinated, and are under the immediate supervision 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 Labora- 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 10 days in any one fiscal ear. The Surgeon General is required by law to call a conference of all State and erritorial boards of health or quarantine authorities each year, the District of Colum- bia 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 enforce- ment of the act of 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 investigations 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 and the sanitation of interstate carriers. 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 bulle- tins, bulletins of the Hygienic Laboratory and Yellow Fever Institute, and the trans- actions of the annual conferences with State health authorities. The medical evi- dences of disability in claims for benefits against the Life-Saving Service are reviewed. 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. Official Dutzes. 308 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, embracing United States notes, bonds, and certificates, national-bank notes, internal-revenue, postage, and cus- tom stamps, Treasury drafts and checks, disbursing officers’ checks, licenses, commis- sions, patent and pension certificates, and portraits authorized 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 there- for 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 account- ing officers of the Treasury Department; to examine the property returns of the keepers of the several stations, and see that all public property thereto belonging is properly accounted for; to acquaint 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 encroachment 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 statistics of marine disasters, as contemplated by the act of June 20, 1874, and to submit to the Secretary of the Treas- ury, 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 concerning 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 purchases 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 battle-field 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 aban- donment 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 establishment; recruiting service, discharges, commutation of rations, courts-martial, and other questions relating to enlisted men, including clemency cases and matters relating to prisoners at military prisons and penitentiaries. : 304 Congressional Directory. 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 survey, 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 con- nection with the settlement of disbursing officers’ accounts that donot relate to the dif- ferent staff corps of the Army. He hasgeneral supervision of mattersrelating 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. GENERAL STAFF. The General Staff Corps was organized under the provisions of act of Congress approved February 14, 1903. Its principal duties are to prepare plans for the national defense and for the mobilization of the military forces in time of war; to investigate and report upon all questions affecting the efficiency of the Army and its state of preparation for military operations; to render professional aid and assistance to the Secretary of War and to general officers and other superior commanders and to act as their agents in informing and coordinating the action of all the different officers who are subject to the supervision of the Chief of Staff, and to perform such other military duties not otherwise assigned by law as may be from time to time prescribed by the President. The Chief of Staff, under direction of the President, or of the Secretary of War, under the direction of the President, has supervision of all troops of the line, 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, Medical and Ordnance Departments, the Quartermaster Corps, 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 formerly 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 designated by the President. : DIVISION OF MILITIA AFFAIRS. The Division of Militia Affairs is vested with the transaction of business pertaining to the organized and unorganized militia of the United States, its jurisdiction embrac- ing all administrative duties involving the armament, equipment, discipline, training, education, and organization of the militia; the conduct of camps of instruction and participation in the field exercises and maneuvers of the Regular Army; the mobili- zation 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 exist- ing laws, regulations, orders, or practice, come within the jurisdiction 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 commumicating 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 Official Dudes. 305 militia; of preparing the annual returns of the militia required by law to be submitted to Congress; of managing the recruiting service; and of recording and issuing orders from the War Department remitting or mitigating sentences of general prisoners who have been discharged from the military service. The Adjutant General is vested by law with the charge, under the Secretary of War, ‘‘of the military and hospital records of the Volunteer Armies and the pension and other business of the War Department connected therewith; and of the publication and distribution of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion. He also has charge of the historical records and business of the permanent military establishment, including all pension, pay, bounty, and other business pertaining to or based upon the military or medical histories of former officers or enlisted men. The archives of the Adjutant General’s office include all military records of the Revolutionary War; the records of all organizations, officers, and enlisted men that have been ir 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 identification cards; the records of the Provost Marshal General’s Bureau; the records of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned ILands; 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 departments 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 chief of the Quartermaster’s Corps, aided by assistants, provides transportation for the Army; also clothing and equipage, horses, mules, and wagons, vessels, forage, stationery, clothing and equipage for the militia; purchases subsistence supplies for issue as rations to troops, civil employees, etc.; subsistence of masters, officers, and crews of vessels of the Army transport service; meals for recruiting parties and applicants for enlistment, etc.; authorizes issue of soap, candles, etc.; supply of sub- sistence articles for authorized sales; supply of coffee roasters and cookirg apparatus in the field; bake ovens ard apparatus pertaining thereto; constructs necessary buildings, wharves, roads, and bridges at military posts and repairs the same; fur- nishes water, heating and lighting apparatus; fuel for heating public buildings, operating vessels, etc.; pay of clerks, laborers, etc.; pay of officers and enlisted men of the Army, including Staff Corps and staff departments; pay of Porto Rico Regi- ment of Infantry and Philippine Scouts; pay of retired officers and retired enlisted men; commutation of quarters for commissioned officers, etc.; pay of dental surgeons, acting dental surgeons, contract surgeons, pay clerks; interest on soldiers’ deposits, etc. The Surgeon General is the adviser of the War Departmert upon all medical and sanitary affairs of the Army. He has administrative control of the Medical Depart- ment; the disbursement of its appropriations; the designation of the stations of medical officers and dental officers, and the issuing of all orders and ipstructions 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, pur- chase, and distribution of the medical supplies of the Army. The Army Medical Museum, the library of the Surgeon General's Office, medical supply depots, and the general hospitals are under his direct control. The Chief of Engineers commands the Corps of Engineers, which is charged with all duties relating to construction and repair of fortifications, whether permanent or temporary; with all works of defense: with all military roads and bridges, and with such surveys as may be required for these objects, or the movement of armies in the field. It is also charged with the river and harbor improvements, with mili- tary and geographical explorations and surveys, with the survey of the lakes, and with any other engineer work specially assigned to the corps by acts of Congress or orders of the Secretary of War. The Chief of Ordpance commands the Ordnance Department, the duties of which consist in providing, preserving, distributing, and accounting for every description of artillery, small arms, and all the munitions of war which may be required for the fortresses of the country, the armies in the field, and for the whole body of the militia of the Union. In these dutiesare comprised that of determining the general principles of construction and of prescribing in detail the models and forms of all military weapons employed in war. They comprise also the duty of prescribing the regula- tions for the proof and inspection of all these weapons, for maintaining uniformity and economy in their fabrication, for insuring their good quality, and for their preservation and distribution. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED—21 306 : Congressional Directory. 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 paper generally. The Chief Signal Officeris charged with the supervision of all miiitary signal duties, and of books, papers, and devices connected therewith, including telegraph and tele- phone 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 he Bureau of Insular Affairs, under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War, is assigned all matters pertaining to civil government in the island possessions of the United States subject to the jurisdiction of the War Department, the Philippine Islands 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 makes a comp- troller’s review of the receipts and expenditures of the Philippine and Porto Rican governments; attends to the purchase and shipment of supplies for those govern- ments; has charge of appointments of persons in the United States to the Philippine civil service and arranges their transportation. It gathers statistics of insular imports and exports, shipping and immigration, and issues semiannual summaries of the same. Under the convention of February 8, 1907, and the general regulations of the Presi- dent of the United States issued thereunder, the bureau has immediate supervision and control of the Dominican receivership for the collection of customs revenues and payment of the interest and principal of the adjusted bonded indebtedness of the Dominican Republic, and in some respects acts as the agent in the United States of the receivership. 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. Itisfurther 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 examinations, surveys, or projects for the improvement of rivers and harbors. In its investigations 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 disiricts in the States and Territories; and he provides special counsel for the United States whenever required by any department of the Government. TT Official Dutues. 307 SOLICITOR GENERAL. The Solicitor General assists the Attorney General in the performance of his general duties, and by special provision of law, in case of a vacancy in the office of the Attorney General, or of his absence or disability, exercises all those duties. Under the direc- tion 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 conduct and argu- ment of cases therein by the Assistant Attorneys General. He also, with the approval of the Attorney General, prepares opinions rendered to the President and the heads of the executive departments, and confers with and directs the law officers of the Gov- ernment throughow® the country in the performance of their duties. When the Attorney General so directs, any case in which the United States is interested, in any court of the United States, may be conducted and argued by the Solicitor General; and he may be sent by the Attorney General to attend to the interests of the United States in any State court, or elsewhere. THE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL. The Assistant to the Attorney General has special charge of all suits and other matters arising under the Federal antitrust and interstate-commerce laws, and pei- forms 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. Five 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 Place. The Assistant Attorney General in charge of the interests of the Government in all matters of reappraisement and classification of imported goods in litigation before the several boards of United States General Appraisers and the Court of Customs Appeals is located at 641 Washington Street, New York. The Assistant Attorneys General and the solicitors for the several executive de- partments, 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, the Solicitor of the Department of Commerce, and the Solicitor for the Department of 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. 308 Congressional Directory. 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 frauas 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 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 ap- prove 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 INTERNAL 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 THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE. The solicitor is the chief law officer of that department. His duties are to act as legal adviser for the Secretary of Commerce 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 connection with matters arising in the administrative work of the Department of Commerce as ay be desired by the head of the department or required of him by the Attorney eneral. SOLICITOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. The solicitor is the chief law officer of that department. His duties are to act as legal adviser for the Secretary of Labor and the chiefs of the various bureaus of said department; to prepare and examine all contracts and bonds entered into or required by said department; and to render such legal services in connection with matters arising in the administrative work of the Department of Labor as may be desired by the head of the department or 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. 2 45 a az ~ Yn Official Duties. 309 DISBURSING CLERK. The disbursing clerk disburses funds from more than 50 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. The superintendent of prisons has charge, under the direction of the Attorney General, of all matters relating to United States prisons and prisoners, including the support of such prisoners in both State and Federal penitentiaries, in reform schools, and in county jails. He has supervision over the construction work in progress at United States penal institutions. The superintendent of prisons is president of the boards of parole for the United States penitentiaries and president of the boards of parole for United States prisoners in each State or county institution used for the confinement of United States prisoners. 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 De- partment of Justice and matter relating to that department for the Official Register of the United States. ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF PARDONS. The attorney in charge of pardons takes charge of all applications for Executive clemency, except those in Army and Navy cases, these being referred to the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, respectively; of the briefing of the cases and the correspondence in relation to them. 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 relating to the above matters. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS. The Division of Accounts examines accounts payable from judiciary appropriations, including accounts of United States marshals, attorneys, clerks, and commissioners; conducts the correspondence relating thereto; authorizes certain court expenses; supervises the advancing of funds to United States marshals; prepares certain data for the annual report; and compiles the estimates of appropriations. CHIEF OF THE DIVISION OF INVESTIGATION. The chief of the Division of Investigation has general supervision of the examina- tion 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 prosecution 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. 310 Congressional Directory. 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 i Assistant Postmasters General and the purchasing agent, who are presidential ap- 4 pointees. With the exception 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 the execu- tive head of the Postal Savings System and ex officio chairman of the board of trus- tees of that system. | POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk of the Post Office Department is charged with the general super- intendence and assignment of the clerical and subclerical 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 SDOROpn for the departmental service; the preparation of contracts for the publication of the Official Guide, compilation of h matter therefor, and supervision of its publication and distribution; consideration and signing of requisitions upon the Public Printer for the printing and binding required in the postal service and the department; miscellaneous business correspond- ence 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; | and the performance of such other duties as may be required by the Postmaster General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL 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 ques- tions 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 Se and submission (with advice) to the Postmaster General of all claims of postmasters for losses by fire, burglary, or other unavoidable casualty, and of all certifications by the Auditor for the Post Office Department of cases of proposed compromise of lia- bilities to the United States, and of the remission of fines, penalties, and forfeitures under the statutes; the keeping and preparation of all correspondence with the Department of Justice relating to prosecutions and suits affecting or arising out of the postal service; and with the consideration of applications for pardon for crimes ] committed against the postal laws which may be referred to the department; with | the preparation and submission (with advice) to the Postmaster General of all appeals to him from the heads of the offices of the department depending upon questions of law; with the determining of questions as to the delivery of mail the ownership of which is in dispute; with the hearing and consideration of cases relating 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, p scurrilous, or defamatory matter; with determining the legal acceptability of securi- « | ties offered by banks to secure postal savings deposits; with the examining and, when | i necessary, drafting of all contracts of the department; and with such other like duties as may from time to time be required by the Postmaster General. PURCHASING AGENT. 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 for sup- plies; prepares the advertisements and forms for proposals necessary to the making | / | The purchasing agent supervises the purchase of all supplies both for the Post | , of contracts for supplies; reviews the reports of the committees on awards and recom- mends to the Postmaster General such action as in his judgment should be taken thereon. ~hr =a i Official Duties. 311 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 adjustment of accounts of inspectors for salary and expenses, the preparation and issue of all cases forinvestigation, 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 post- masters, and for the change of name of post 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 miscei- laneous correspondence relating to postmasters and post offices. Salaries and allowagnces.—The annual readjustment of presidential postmasters’ salaries; the preparation of cases for allowances for clerk hire, rent, light, fuel, labor connected with cleaning post offices, laundering towels, and miscellaneous service expenses; 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; and the execution of leases. ) 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 has charge of the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: al Railway adjustments.—Has charge of the preparation of cases authorizing the trans- portation 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 and tabulates 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, periodical mail matter, and mail equipment; examines reports as to the performance of mail service by railroad companies; prepares orders for deductions for nonper- formance of service and for imposition of fines for delinquencies; prepares statements of amounts found upon administrative examination to be due the companies for transportation of the mails and for railway post-office car service, and forwards such statements to the Auditor for the Post Office Department for audit and certification for payment; and prepares all correspondence relative to these matters. Muscellaneous transporiation.—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; examines reports as to the performance of mail service by contractors and carriers on the several classes of mail routes; prepares orders for deductions for nonperformance of service and for imposition of fines for delinquencies; prepares statements of amounts found upon administrative examination to be due the various public creditors for mail service, and forwards such statements to the Auditor for the Post Office Department for audit and certification for payment; and 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; the preparation of postal conventions (except 312 Congressional Directory. those relative to the money order system) and the regulations for their execution, as well as the consideration of the questions arising under them, and with the prepa- ration of 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. Ravlway Mail Service.—Is charged with the supervision of the Railway Mail Service and railway postal clerks; prepares cases for the appointment, removal, promotion, 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 distribu- tion of mail matter in railway postal cars and post offices; conducts the weighing of mails; and attends to all correspondence relative to these matters. THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. The Third Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: Finance.—The financial operations, including the collection and deposit of postal revenues; the distribution of postal funds among the several subtreasuries so as to equalize, as far as possible, receipts and expenditures in the same section; the pay- ment by warrant of all accounts settled by the auditor; the receipt and disposition of all moneys coming directly to the department; and the keeping of books of account showing the fiscal operations of the postal and money order services and the regula- tion of box rents and key deposits. Stamps.—The supervision of the manufacture and issuance to postmasters of postage stamps, stamp books, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, postal cards, and postal savings stamps and cards by the various contractors; and the keeping of the accounts and records of these transactions. The receipt and disposition of damaged and unsalable stamped paper returned by postmasters for redemption and credit. Money orders.—The supervision and management of the money-order service, both domestic and international; the preparation of conventions for the exchange of money orders with foreign countries. Registered mails.—The supervision and management of the registered-mail service; the establishment and control of all through registry exchanges; the instruction of all postmasters in registry matters; and the consideration of all claims for limited indemnity for lost registered matter. Classification.—The general control of all business relating to the classification of domestic mail matter and the rates of postage thereon, including the determination of the admissibility of publications to the second class of mail matter and" their right to continue in that class, the general supervision of those therein, and the instruction of postmasters relative thereto; also the use of penalty envelopes, the franking privi- lege, and the limit of weight of mail matter. Postal savings.—The general supervision over postal savings depositories, the conduct of postal savings business at post offices, the correspondence and records of the department pertaining to the division of postal savings, and the administrative examination of the postal savings accounts of postmasters and other agents account- able to the Postmaster General. FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. The Fourth Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: ; 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 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. All matters pertaining to the establishment, discontinuance, and change of site of post offices of the fourth class are also within the jurisdiction of this division. Supplies.—Has custody of supplies, including canceling machines and miscella- neous items, for the postal service, and distributes the same upon proper requisition. Is charged with the preparation of matters pertaining to the furnishing of mail bags, Official Dues. 313 mail locks and keys, label cases, and mail-bag cord fasteners; the issuing of such arti- cles for the use of the service, repairing of the same, the keeping of records and accounts ertaining thereto, and the preparation of correspondence incident to these duties. as charge of the making, printing, and distribution of post-route maps, including ‘the maps of the Rural Delivery Service. 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 post- masters connected with the delivery or withholding of mail matter, and the investi- gation, 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 unde- livered 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. 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 may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy or 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 Sec- retary of the Navy. 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 upkeep and operation of the Naval Academy, of technical schools for line officers, of the apprentice- seaman establishments, of schools for the technical education of enlisted men, and of the Naval Home, at Philadelphia, Pa.; the upkeep and the payment of the operating expenses 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; the operation of the radio service and naval militia and naval districts. (2) It has under its direction all rendezvous and receiving ships, and provides transportation for all enlisted persons under its cognizance. (3) It establishes the complements of all ships in commission. (4) 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, which shall be furnished by the aid for operations. To the end that it may be able to carry out the provisions of this paragraph, all communications to or from ships in commission relating to the personnel of such ships are forwarded through this bureau, whatever their origin. (5) It is charged with all matters pertaining to applications for appointments and commissions in the Navy and with the preparation of such appointments and com- missions for signature. (6) It is charged with the preparation, revision, and enforcement of all regulations governing uniform, and with the distribution of all orders and, regulations of a general or circular character. [ 814 Congressional Directory. 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. [ (8) It receives and brings to the attention of the Secretary of the Navy all applica- tions from officers for duty or leave. [ (9) It receives all reports of services performed by individual officers or men. | (10) It is charged with the enforcement of regulations and instructions regarding naval ceremonies and naval etiquette. (11) It is charged with all matters pertaining to the naval militia and naval defense (7) Questions of naval discipline, rewards, and punishments are submitted by | | | | | | districts. | BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. / The duties of the Bureau of Yards and Docks comprise all that relates to the design and consfruction of public works, such as dry docks, marine railways, building ways, | harbor works, quay walls, piers, wharves, slips, dredging, landings, floating and sta- | | tionary cranes, power plants, coaling plants; heating, lighting, telephone, water, sewer, and railroad systems; roads, walks, and grounds; bridges, radio towers, and all buildings, for whatever purpose needed, under the Navy and Marine Corps. It provides for the general maintenance of the same except at the naval proving ground, | the naval torpedo station, the naval training stations, the Naval Academy, and the | naval magazines. It designs and makes the estimates for the public works after \ consulting as to their operating features with the bureau or office for whose use they are primarily intended. It has charge of all means of transportation, such as der- ricks, shears, locomotives, locomotive cranes, cars, motor trucks, and all vehicles, horses, teams, subsistence, and necessary operators and teamsters in the navy yards. It Provides the furniture for all buildings except at the naval magazines, hospitals, | and the Naval Academy. It provides clerks for the office of the commandant, cap- tain of the yard, and public works officer. In general, the work of the bureau is | carried out by commissioned officers of the Corps of Civil Engineers, United States Navy, whose major duties comprise the construction and maintenance of the public works of the Navy. : BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. The duties of the Bureau of Ordnance comprise all that relates to the upkeep, repair, and operation of the torpedo station, naval proving ground, and magazines on shore, to the manufacture of offensive and defensive arms and apparatus i { torpedoes and armor), all ammunition and war explosives. It requires for or manu- factures all machinery, apparatus, equipment, 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 shall be performed to its satisfaction. It designs and constructs all turret ammunition hoists, 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 all ammu- nition hoists outside of turrets. It installs all parts of the armament and its acces- sories 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. 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 EC ~~ Official Dutres. 315; turret-turning machinery, spars, capstans, windlasses, 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 simultaneous structural work in connection with installation or removal. It has charge of the docking of ships and is charged with the operating and cleaning of dry docks. It is responsible for the care and preservation of ships not in commission. It has cognizance of electric launches and other boats supplied with electric motiv2 power. It hms 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 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, buildin8, 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 specifi cally 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 executed, so far as their internal arrangements are concerned. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery: shall have charge of the upkeep and opera- tion of all hospitals and of the force employed there; it shall advise with respect to all questions connected with hygiene and sanitation affecting the service and, to this end, shall have opportunity for necessary inspection; it shall provide for physical examinations; it shall pass upon the competency from a professional standpoint of all men in the Hospital Corps for enlistment and promotion by means of examina- tions conducted under its supervision, or under forms prescribed by it; it shall have information as to the assignment and duties of all enlisted men of the Hospital Corps; it shall recommend to the Bureau of Navigation the complement of medical officers, dental officers, and Hospital Corps for hospital ships, and shall have power to appoint and remove all nurses in the Nurse Corps (female), subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Navy. - Except as otherwise provided for, the duties of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery shall include the upkeep and operation of medical supply depots, medical labora- tories, naval hospitals, dispensaries, technical schools for the Medical and Hospital 316 Congressional Directory. Corps, and the administration of the Nurse Corps (female), Dental Corps, and Medical Reserve Corps. It shall approve the design of hospital ships in so far as relates to their efficiency for the care of the sick and wounded. It shall require for all supplies, medicines, and instruments used in the Medical Department of the Navy. It shall have control of the preparation, reception, storage, care, custody, transfer, and issue of all supplies of every kind used in the Medical Department for its own purposes. 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 kecping of the money accounts of the rs Establishment; the purchase, reception, storage, care, custody, transfer, shipment, and issue of all supplies, including coal and water, for the Naval Estab- lishment, 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 manufacture 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 court-martial orders promulgating the final action of the reviewing authority in court-martial cases; to prepare the necessary orders convening courts of inquiry in cases where such courts are ordered by the Secretary of the Navy and boards for the examination of officers for promotion and retirement, and for the exami- nation of candidates for appointment as commissioned officers in the Navy other than midshipmen, and to conduct all official correspondence relating to such courts and boards. It is also the duty of the Judge Advocate General to examine and report upon all questions relating 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; disciplinary barracks and detentioners; the removal of the mark of desertion; the correction of records of service and reporting thereupon in the Regular or Volunteer Navy; certifi- cation of discharge in true name; pardons; bills and resolutions introduced in Con- gress relating to the personnel and referred to the department for report, and the drafting and interpretation of statutes relating to the personnel; references to the Comptroller of the Treasury with regard to pay and allowances of the personnel; questions involving points of law concerning the personnel; proceedings in the civil courts in all cases concerning the personnel as such; and to conduct the correspond- ence respecting the foregoing duties, including the preparation for submission to the Attorney General of all questions relating to subjects coming under his own cogni- zance which the Secretary of the Navy may direct to be so referred. OFFICE OF THE 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; insurance; patents; the sufficiency of offi- cial, contract, and other bonds and guaranties; proceedings in the civil courts by or against the Government or its officers in cases relating to material and not concerning the personnel as such; claims by or against the Government; questions submitted to the Attorney General, except such as are under the cognizance of the Judge Advo- cate General; 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 preservation of all muniments of title to land acquired for naval uses; and the correspondence respecting the foregoing duties; and rendering opinion upon any mat- ter or question of law referred to him by the Secretary or Assistant Secretary. | | | Officral Duties. 317 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 cf allowance; under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, issues orders for the movement of cfiicers 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 recruiting 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 ahi the public lands and surveys, the Indians, education, the Geological Survey, Reclamation Service, the Bureau of Mines, national parks, distribution of appropriations for agriculturaland 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 are as a rule in connection with matters concerning or coming from the General Land Office and the Indian Office. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. This officer performs such duties in connection with the matters over which the Secretary of He Interior has jurisdiction as that officer may prescribe or may be required by law. His duties as a rule are in connection with matters concerning or coming from the Patent Office, the Bureau of Mines, the Pension Office, including appeals from the decisions of the Commissioner of Pensions, the execution of con- tracts and the approval of vouchers covering expenditures of money for the eleemosy- nary institutions under the Department of the Interior in the District of Columbia, including the Government Hospital for the Insane, and various miscellaneous mat- ters over which the department has jurisdiction. ASSISTANT TO THE SECRETARY. This officer performs such duties in connection with the matters over which the Secretary of the Interior has jurisdiction as that officer may prescribe. His duties as a rule are in connection with matters concerning the eleemosynary institutions under the Department of the Interior in the District of Columbia, the Bureau of Education, the national parks, national monuments, and the Territories. He is chair- man of the Government exhibit board to arrange for participation of the United States Government in the Panama-Pacific International Exposition to be held at San Fran- cisco, Cal., in 1915. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk is the chief executive officer of the department and the adminis- trative head of the Office of the Secretary. He has supervision over the clerks and employees of the department, enforces the general regulations of the department, is superintendent of buildings, and exercises general supervision over the watch, mechanical, and labor force of the department. He also supervises the classification and compilation of all estimates of appropriations. The detailed work relating to eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia under the Department of the Interior, national parks and monuments, the office of the returns clerk, and miscel- laneous matters is done in his office. During the temporary absence of the Secre- tary and the Assistant Secretaries he may be designated by the Secretary to sign official papers and documents. 318 Congressional Directory. 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 all 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 based upon military or naval service rendered prior to March 3, 1855. 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- 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 education, lands, moneys, schools, purchase of supplies, and general welfare. COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION. The Commissioner of Education collects statistics and general information showing 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 GEOLOGICAL 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. 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 inspector for Alaska. 1 Appeals lie from his decisions to the United States Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia. Official Duties. 319 DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. The Secretary of Agriculture is charged with the work of promoting agriculture in its broadest sense. He exercises general supervision and control over the affairs of the department and formulates and establishes the general policies to be pursued by its various branches and offices. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. The Assistant Secretary of Agriculture becomes Acting Secretary in the absence of the Secretary and assists in the general supervision of the work of the department. He is also charged with certain special duties, which include direct supervision of (1) the scientific and technical investigations of the department; (2) miscellaneous clerical and minor changes in the personnel of the department; (3) the publication of results of investigations and experiments; (4) preparation of annual reports and estimates. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk has general supervision of clerks and employees; of the order of business and of the records and correspondence of the Secretary’s office; and of ex- penditures from appropriations for contingent expenses, stationery, etc. He is respon- sible for the enforcement of the general regulations of the department and is custodian of the buildings occupied by the department. SOLICITOR. The solicitor is charged by law (act of May 26, 1910) with the direction of the legal work of the department. Accordingly, he acts as legal adviser to the Secretary and the heads of the several branches of the department, conducts its legal work, and repre- sents it in all legal matters. He approves, in advance of issue, all orders and regulations promulgated by the Secretary under statutory authority. APPOINTMENT CLERK. The appointment clerk prepares all Dope connected with appointments, transfers, promotions, reductions, details, furloughs, and removals, and has charge of corre- spondence with the Civil Service Commission. He is the custodian of oaths of office, personal reports, and efficiency reports. He has the custody and use of the department seal. SUPPLY DIVISION. The chief of the supply division purchases and distributes stationery and miscella- neous supplies and disposes of property turned in by the various offices when it is of no further use to them. OFFICE OF EXHIBITS. The office of exhibits handles the correspondence of the department relative to exhibits at fairs and expositions of various kinds; cooperates with the several branches of the department in preparing exposition material; ships, installs, and cares for such exhibits; and investigates methods of displaying them. OFFICE OF INFORMATION. The office of information is established to secure the widest possible circulation for the discoveries and recommendations of the scientists and field workers of the depart- ment. It gives out to the public press facts taken from publications and also from oral statements of specialists. Material so disseminated is set forth in such form as to attract attention and lead to the adoption of the methods recommended. A Weekly News Letter to Crop Correspondents is published, and also each month during the crop season an agricultural forecast, outlining the crop prospects. OFFICE OF MARKETS. The office of markets is making a special study of market conditions, methods of grading, standardizing, packing, and shipping, and the nature of the commercial transactions by means of which farm produce gets from the farm to the consumer. 320 Congressional Directory. WEATHER BUREAU. The Weather Bureau has charge of the forecasting of the weather; the issue and display of weather forecasts, and storm, cold-wave, frost, and flood warnings; the gauging and reporting of river stages; the maintenance and operation of the United States Weather Bureau telegraph and telephone lines; the collection and transmission of marine intelligence for the benefit of commerce and navigation; the reporting of temperature and rainfall conditions for agricultural interests; and the taking of such meteorological observations as may be necessary to determine and record the climatic conditions of the United States. = BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY. The Bureau of Animal Industry has charge of the work of the department relating to the live-stock industry. In general it deals with the investigation, control, and eradication of diseases of animals, the inspection and quarantine of live stock, the inspection of meat and meat food products, and with animal husbandry and dairying. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. The Bureau of Plant Industry studies plant life in all its relations to agriculture. The scientific work of the bureau is divided into 29 distinct groups, over each of which is placed a scientifically trained officer, who reports directly to the chief and assistant chief of the bureau. The work of the bureau is conducted on the project plan, the investigations under each of the offices being arranged by group projects consisting of closely related lines of work, which group projects are further divided into projects. FOREST SERVICE. : The Forest Service administers the national forests; studies forest conditions and methods of forest utilization; investigates the mechanical and physical properties of woods and the processes employed in the manufacture of forest products; and gathers information concerning the needs of the various wood-using industries and the rela- tion of forests to the public welfare generally. BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY. The Bureau of Chemistry is concerned with analytical work and investigations under the food and drugs act, questions of agricultural chemistry of public interest, and other chemical investigations referred to it by the Government. BUREAU OF SOILS. The Bureau of Soils investigatates the relation of soils to climate and organic life; studies the texture and composition of soils in field and laboratory; maps the soils; studies the cause and means of preventing the rise of alkali in the soils of irrigated districts; and the relations of soils to seepage and drainage conditions. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY. The Bureau of Entomology studies insects; experiments with the introduction of beneficial insects; makes tests with insecticides and insecticide machinery; and identifies insects sent in by inquirers. BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL SURVEY. The work of the Bureau of Biological Survey is distributed among three divisions, dealing with the following matters: (1) Study of birds and mammals in their relation to agriculture, their food habits, etc., and recommendation of measures for the pres- ervation of beneficial species and the destruction of harmful species; (2) making biological surveys, study of geographic distribution of animals and plants, and map- ping natural life zones; (3) carrying into effect the Federal laws protecting game and regulating the importation of foreign birds and animals. Officral Dutres. 321 DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. This division has charge of the disbursement of public funds appropriated for the Department of Agriculture. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. The Division of Publications conducts all business of the department transacted with the Government Printing Office; has general supervision of all printing, includ- ing the editing, indexing, illustration, binding, and distribution of publications, and the maintenance of mailing lists. BUREAU OF STATISTICS. The Bureau of Statistics (Agricultural Forecasts) issues the monthly crop reports of the department; prepares the statistical portion of the Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture; and makes special investigations relating to agricultural forecasts and estimates for publication or in response to special inquiries. LIBRARY. The department library contains 127,000 books and pamphlets, including an exten- sive collection on agriculture, a large and representative collection on the sciences related to agriculture, and a good collection of standard reference books. Periodicals currently received number 1,950. A dictionary catalogue is kept on cards, which number about 310,000. The librarian has charge of the foreign mailing lists. - OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS. The work of the Office of Experiment Stations includes: (1) Relations with Amer- ican and foreign institutions for agricultural research, together with the supervision of expenditures of the State agricultural experiment stations in the United States; (2) the preparations of publications; (3) the management of the experiment stations in Alaska, Hawaii, Porto Rico, and Guam; (4) relations with agricultural colleges and schools, farmers’ institutes and kindred institutions at home and abroad, and the general promotion of agricultural education in the United States; (5) irrigation inves- tigations; (6) drainage investigations; and (7) nutrition investigations. In all lines of work the office cooperates with the State agricultural colleges and experiment stations. OFFICE OF PUBLIC. ROADS. The Office of Public Roads studies systems of road management and methods of road building, improvement, and maintenance; details engineers to assist local offi- cials in building model roads; ascertains the location, properties, and value of road materials; builds experimental roads to test substitutes for natural road materials; conducts a one-year postgraduate course in highway engineering; investigates the comparative effects of motor and horse traffic on roads; cooperates with colleges and stations, and with State highway officials; exhibits model showing types of roads, cul- verts, bridges, and road machines; and cooperates with the Post Office Department in carrying out the provisions of the post office appropriation act of August 24, 1912, relating to the improvement of post roads. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE. SECRETARY OF COMMERCE. The Secretary of Commerce is charged with the work of promoting the commerce of the United States and its mining, manufacturing, shipping, fishery, and transportation interests. His duties also comprise the investigation of the organization and manage- ment of corporations (excepting railrcads) engaged in interstate commerce; the admin- istration 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 con- nected therewith; the making of coastand geodetic surveys; the collecting of statistics relating to foreign and domestic commerce; the inspection” of steamboats, and the 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——22 322 Congressional Directory. enforcement of laws relating thereto for the protection of life and property; the super- vision of the fisheries as administered by the Federal Government; the supervision and control of the Alaskan fur-seal, salmon, and other fisheries; the jurisdiction 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 custody, construction, maintenance, and application of standards of weights and measurements; the gathering and supplying of informa- tion regarding industries and markets for the fostering of manufacturing; 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 pot 2 1910. He has power to call upon other departments for statistical data obtained y 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 pessessed 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. The act creating the Department of Labor, approved March 4, 1913, changed the name of the Department of Commerce and Labor to the Department of Commerce. Under the terms of this act the Bureau of Labor, Bureau of Immigration, Division of Naturalization, and Children’s Bureau were detached from the Department of Com- merce and Labor and organized as the new Department of 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. 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 general supervision of the clerks and employees of the department; the enforcement of the general regulations of the department; the superintendency of all buildings occupied by the department in the’ District of Columbia; the general supervision of all expenditures from the appropriations for contingent expenses and rents; the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail; and the discharge of all business of the Secretary’s office not otherwise assigned. DISBURSING CLERK. The disbursing clerk is charged by the Secretary of Commerce with the duty of preparing all requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations for the Department of Commerce to disbursing clerks and special disbursing agents charged with the disbursement of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relating to the advance and expenditure of all items of appropriations. 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 (except the Coast and Geodetic Survey and those services having special disbursing agents); and the general accounting of the depart- ment. APPOINTMENT DIVISION. The chief of the Appointment Division is charged by the Secretary of Commerce with the supervision of matters relating to appointments, transfers, promotions, reductions, removals, and all other changes in the personnel, including applica- tions for positions and recommendations concerning the same, and the correspond- ence connected therewith; the preparation and submission to the Secretary of all 0 Official Duties. 323 questions affecting the personnel of the department in its relations to the civil-service law and rules; the preparation of nominations sent to the Senate and of commissions and appointments of all officers and employees of the department; the preparation of official bonds; the compilation of statistics in regard to the personnel, including material for the Official Register, and the custody of oaths of office, records pertain- ing to official bonds, service records of officers and employees, correspondence and reports relating to the personnel, reports of bureau officers respecting the efficiency of employees, and records relating to leaves of absence. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. The Chief of the Division of Publications is charged by the Secretary of Commerce with the conduct of all business the department transacts with the Govern- ment Printing Office; the general supervision of printing, including the editing and preparation of copy, illustrating and binding, the distribution of publications, and the maintenance of mailing lists. 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 per- sonal 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 Washing- ton, 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 THE CENSUS. The Bureau of the Census is charged with the duty of taking the decennial censuses of the United States, of making certain other statistical investigations at regular inter- vals of years, and of collecting such special statistics as may be authorized by law from time to time. A census of manufactures is taken every five years, and the act providing for the Thirteenth Census requires a similar census of agriculture. 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, including judicial statistics pertaining thereto; social statistics of cities; public indebtedness, expend- itures, 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 maintaining 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; and the quantity of leaf tobacco on hand. BUREAU OF CORPORATIONS. The Bureau of Corporations is authorized, under the direction of the Secretary of Commerce, to investigate the organization, conduct, and management of the business of any corporation, joint-stock company, or corporate combination engaged In Interstate or foreign commerce, except common carriers subject to the Interstate-commerce act; to gather such information and data as will enable the President to make recommendation to Congress for legislation for the regulation of interstate and foreign commerce; to report the data so collected to the President from time to time as he may require, and to make public such part of said information as the President may direct. It is also the duty of the Bureau of Corporations, under the direction of the Secre- tary of Commerce, to gather, compile, publish, and supply useful information concerning corporations engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, including cor- porations engaged in insurance. 324 ~ Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE. It is the province and duty of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, under the direction of the Secretary, to foster, promote, and develop the various manu- facturing 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 com- pile from the reports of consular officers and the reports transmitted by the commercial agents of the Department of Commerce such valuable and material information as will accomplish the objects indicated above. The bureau edits and publishes the Daily Consular and Trade Reports and reports of the commercial agents of the Department of Commerce containing current information in regard to trade conditions in foreign countries, opportunities for the extension of export and domestic trade, and information of the service of the Federal Government for the promotion of commerce. It also issues many special bul- letins on various subjects of current commercial significance, a foreign trade directory, and an annual report entitled “ Commercial Relations of the United States.” It is also charged with the duty of collating and publishing in the English lan- guage the tariffs of foreign countries and furnishing information to Congress and the Executive relative to customs laws and regulations of foreign countries. The bureau also collects and publishes the statistics of our foreign commerce, embracing tables showing the imports and exports, respectively, by articles, countries, and customs districts; the transit trade inward and outward, by countries and by customs districts; imported commodities warehoused, withdrawn from, and remain- ing in warehouse; the imports of merchandise entered for consumption, showing quantity, value, rates of duty, and amounts of duty collected on each article or class of articles; the inward and outward movement of tonnage in our foreign trade and the countries whence entered and for which cleared, distinguishing the nationalities of the foreign vessels. The Statistical Abstract of the United States, which is a condensation of statistical information collected by the various branches of the Government, is compiled and published by the bureau, as is also the Statistical Abstract of Foreign Countries, which shows imports into and exports from each country of the world, stated in United States currency, weights, and measures. A monthly sailing-dates bulletin, showing sailing dates of vessels from the prin- cipal ports of the United States to the principal ports of the world, is compiled and published. . The bureau is further charged with the duty of making investigations into the various elements of cost of production at home and abroad in respect to articles subject to duty, comparative wages and cost of living, degree of control by business combina- tions, and effect on prices, when required to do so by the President or either House of Congress. BUREAU OF STANDARDS. The functions of the Bureau of Standards are as follows: The custody of the stand- ards; the comparison of the standards used in scientific investigations, engineering, 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; and other investigations as authorized by Congress. The bureau is authorized to exercise 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 institution, firm, corporation, or individual within the United States engaged in manufacturing or other pursuits requiring the use of stand- ards or standard measuring instruments. For all comparisons, calibrations, tests, or investigations, except those performed for the Government of the United States or State governments, a reasonable fee will be charged. 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, 1 i | Officral Dutves. 825 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 rela- tions; (4) the administration of the salmon fisheries of Alaska, the fur-seal herd on the Pribilof Islands, and the fur-bearing animals of Alaska. BUREAU OCF LIGHTHOUSES. The United States Lighthouse Service is charged with the establishment and maintenance of aids to navigation, and with all equipment and work incident thereto, on the sea and lake coasts of the United States, and on the rivers of the United States so far as specifically authorized by law, and on the coasts of all other territory under the jurisdiction of the United States, with the exception of the Philippine Islands and Panama. The bureau publishes Light Lists and Buoy Lists, giving information regarding all aids to navigation maintained by the Lighthouse Service; it also publishes each week, jointly with the Coast and Geodetic Survey, Notices to Mariners, giving the changes in lights, buoys, etc. 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 obdervations 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 (published jointly by Coast and Geodetic Survey and Bureau of Lighthouses), issued weekly and con- taining current information necessary for safe navigation; catalogues of charts and publications; and such other special publications as may be required to carry out the organic law governing the survey. BUREAU OF 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 isempowered to change the names of vessels and prepares annually a list of vessels of the United States. The commissioner also investigates the operation of the laws relative to navigation, and annually reports to the Secretary of Commerce 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, with the enforcement, through collectors and sur- veyors of customs and radio inspectors, of the navigation and steamboat-inspection laws, and the laws governing radio communication, and the consideration of action to be taken on fines, penalties, and forfeitures incurred under those laws; administrative examination of accounts of collectors, surveyors of customs, and shipping commis- sioners covering fines, penalties, and forfeitures; services to vessels; navigation fees; amounts collected on account of decease of passengers, tonnage-tax collections, refunds; shipment and discharge of seamen, ete. 326 Congressional Directory. 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. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. THE SECRETARY OF LABOR. The Secretary of Labor is charged with the duty of fostering, promoting, and devel- oping the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, improving their working conditions, and advancing their opportunities for profitable employment. He has power under the law to act as mediator and to appoint commissioners of conciliation in labor disputes whenever in his judgment the interests of industrial peace may require it to be done. He has authority to direct the collecting and collating of full and complete statistics of the conditions of labor and the products and distribution of the products of the same and to call upon other departments of the Government for statistical data and results obtained by them and to collate, arrange, and publish such statistical information so obtained in such manner as to him may seem wise. His duties also comprise the gathering and publication of information regarding labor interests and labor controversies in this and other countries; the supervision of 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; the supervision of the immigration of aliens, and the enforcement of the laws relating thereto, and to the exclusion of Chinese; the direction of the administration of the naturalization laws; the direction of the work of investigating all matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life and to cause to be published such results of these investigations as he may deem wise and appropriate. The law creating the Department of Labor provides that all duties performed and all power and authority possessed or exercised by the head of any executive depart- ment at the time of the passage of the said law, in and over any bureau, office, officer, board, branch, or division of the public service by said act transferred to the Depart- ment of Labor, or any business arising therefrom or pertaining thereto, or in relation to the duties performed by and authority conferred by law upon such bureau, officer, office, board, branch, or division of the public service, whether of an appellate or advisory character or otherwise, are vested in and exercised by the head of the said Department of Labor. The Secretary of Labor is also given authority and directed to investigate and report to Congress a plan of coordination of the activities, duties, and powers of the office of the Secretary of Labor with the activities, duties, and powers of the present bureaus, commissions, and departments, so far as they relate to labor and its conditions, in order to harmonize and unify such activities, duties, and powers, with a view to further legislation to further define the duties and powers of the Department of Labor and to make such special investigations and reports to the President or Congress as may be required by them or which he may deem necessary, and to report annually to Congress upon the work of the Department of Labor. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF LABOR. The Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secre- tary or may be required by law. He becomes the Acting Secretary of Labor in the absence of the Secretary. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk is charged with 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 occupied by the department in the District of Co- lumbia; the general supervision of all expenditures from the appropriations for con- tingent expenses and rents; the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail; and the discharge of all business of the Secretary’s office not otherwise assigned. Offictal Duties. 327 DISBURSING CLERK. | The disbursing clerk is charged by the Secretary of Labor with the duty of prepar- ing all requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations for the Depart- ment of Labor to disbursing clerks and special disbursing agents charged with the disbursement of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relating to the advance and expenditure of all items of appropriations. He has charge of the issu- ing, 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 depart- ment; the general accounting of the department; and the accounting for all naturaliza- tion receipts received under the provisions of the act of June 29, 1906. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS AND SUPPLIES. The chief of the Division of Publications and Supplies is charged by the Secretary of Labor with the conduct of all business the department transacts with the Gov- ernment Printing Office; the general supervision of printing, including the editing and preparation of copy, illustrating and binding, the distribution of publications, and the maintenance of mailing lists. All blank books and blank forms and the printed stationery of all kinds used by the bureaus and offices of the department in Washington and the various outside services of the department are in his cus- tody 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. Under the direction of the chief clerk he 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 ap- propriation and examines and reports on the semiannual property returns of all other bureaus and services. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION. The Bureau of Immigration is charged with the administration of the laws relating to immigration and of the Chinese-exclusion laws. It supervises all expenditures under the appropriation for ‘‘ Expenses of regulating immigration.”” 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 distribut- ing information to arriving aliens regarding desirable places of settlement, etc. 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. BUREAU OF NATURALIZATION. The act approved March 4, 1913, creating the Department of Labor, provided a Bureau of Naturalization and that the Commissioner of Naturalization, or, in his absence, the Deputy Commissioner of Naturalization, shall be the administrative officer in charge of the Bureau of Naturalization and of the administration of the naturalization laws under the immediate direction of the Secretary of Labor. Under the provisions of the act of June 29, 1906, naturalization jurisdiction was conferred upon approximately 3,500 United States and State courts. The duties of the Bureau of Naturalization are to supervise the work of these courts in naturalization matters, to conduct all correspondence relating to naturalization, and, through its field officers located in various cities of the United States, to investigate the qualifications of the candidates for citizenship and represent the Government at the hearings of petitions for naturalization. In the archives of the bureau are filed duplicates of all certifi- cates 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. - 328 Congressional Directory. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS. The Bureau of Labor Statistics is charged with the duty of acquiring and diffusing among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with labor in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word, and especially upon its relations to capital, the hours of labor, the earnings of laboring men and women, and the means of promoting their material, social, intellectual, and moral prosperity. It is especially charged to investigate the causes of and facts relating to controversies and disputes between employers and employees as they may occur, and which may happen to interfere with the welfare of the people of the several States. 1t is also authorized, by act of March 2, 1895, to publish a bulletin on the condition of labor in this and other countries, condensations of State and foreign labor reports, facts as to conditions of employment, and such other facts as may be deemed of value to the industrial interests of the United States. This bulletin is issued in a number of series, each dealing with a single subjéct or closely related group of subjects, and the bulletin is published at irregular intervals as matter becomes available for publication. By the act to provide a government for the Territory of Hawaii, as amended, it is made the duty of the bureau to collect and present in quinquennial 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 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 is vested in the bureau by the act of March 4, 1913, creating the Department of Labor. CHILDREN’S BUREAU. The act establishing the bureau provides that it shall investigate and report upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life among all classes of our people and shall especially investigate the questions of infant mortality, the birth rate, orphanage, juvenile courts, desertion, dangerous occupations, accidents, and diseases of children, employment, and legislation affecting children in the several States and Territories. The bureau is also empowered to publish the results of these Iyeoiivnuone in such manner and to such extent as may be prescribed by the Secretary of Labor. : 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 recommendation of the First Pan American Conference, held in the city of Washington in 1889-90 for the purpose of developing and maintaining closer relations of commerce and friendship between the 21 Republics of the Western Hemisphere. It was reor- ganized by the Third and Fourth Pan American Conferences, 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 regularly communicates with these Governments and furnishes to all of the Republics and to their officials and citizens such information as it possesses or can obtain on a great variety of subjects. Itisthe custodian of the archives of the Pan American Con- ferences and is especially charged with the performance of duties imposed upon it by these conferences. 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 Secre- tary of State of the United States, who is ex officio its chairman. It is therefore strictly an international institution and not a subordinate bureau of any one Govern- ment. Its chief executive officer is the Director General, elected by this governing board, each Government having one vote in his selection. It publishesan illustrated monthly bulletin containing information about the resources, commerce, and general progress of the American Republics, as well as maps and geographical sketches of these countries, handbooks of trade, travel, and description, and special reports on commerce, tariffs, improvements, concessions, new laws, etc. It also conducts a large correspondence, not only with manufacturers and merchants in all countries Official: Duties. | 329 looking to the extension of Pan American trade but with writers, travelers, scien- tists, students, and specialists, for the. purpose of promoting general Pan American intercourse. Another and practical feature of the Pan American Union is the Colum- bus Memorial Library, which contains 30,000 volumes relating to the American Republics. The library and reading room, in which are also all the leading Latin- American newspapers and magazines, are open to visitors for consultation. GOVERN MENT PRINTING OFFICE. The Public Printer has charge of and manages the Government Printing Office. Directly or through his principal officers he makes all purchases, disburses all money, appoints all officers and employees, wraps, mails, and dispatches publications for public distribution, 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 buildings and property 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 Chief Clerk has direct charge of the personnel of the office, is eharged with the detail of all matters in connection with appointments, promotions, or transfers, and has charge of the general correspondence and care of the files. The Purchasing Agent has direct charge of all purchases; prepares all schedules of material and supplies and all proposals, and receives the bids; supervises the work of drawing contracts and orders for paper, material, machinery, and supplies; and acts as the legal adviser of the Public Printer in matters relating to the public printing and binding. The Accountant has charge of the keeping of the accounts of the Public Printer with the Treasury Department, of the accounts with the several allotments of the appropriation, of the time of employees, of the property records, prepares for the signature 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. 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 imme- diate charge of the composing and foundry sections and branch printing offices. He also assists the Superintendent of Work in the supervision of the manufacturing divisions during the day. The Superintendent of Documents has general supervision over the distribution of all public documents except those printed for the use of the two Houses of Congress and for the executive departments. He is required to prepare a comprehensive index of public documents and a consolidated index of congressional documents, and is authorized to sell at cost any public document in his charge the distribution of which is not specifically directed. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. The original act to regulate commerce, approved February 4, 1887, provided for a commission consisting of five members. By various amendatory and supplementary enactments the powers of the commission have been increased and the scope of the regulating statute materially widened. Among the more important of these enact- ments are the acts of March 2, 1889; the Elkins Act, approved February 19, 1903; the Hepburn Act, approved February 29, 1906; the Mann-Elkins Act of June 18, 1910; and the act of August 24, 1912. Under the act of June 29, 1906, the commission is now composed of seven members. The act to regulate commerce applies to all common carriers engaged in the trans- portation of oil or other commodities, except water, and except natural or artificial gas, by means of pipe lines, or partly by pipe lines and partly by railroad, or partly 380 Congressional Directory. by pipe lines and partly by water, and to telegraph, telephone, and cable companies (whether wire or wireless) engaged in sending messages from one State, Territory, or District of the United States to any other State, Territory, or District of the United States, or to any foreign country, and to common carriers engaged in interstate trans- portation 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 arrange- ment for a continuous carriage or shipment); also to express companies and sleeping- car companies; and to bridges or ferries used or operated in connection with any railroad engaged in interstate transportation. The act to regulate commerce requires all rates to be reasonable and just; prohibits preferential rates for transportation service performed under like circumstances and conditions; prohibits undue or unreasonable preferences or advantages in rates or facilities and the charging of a higher rate for a shorter than for a longer haul, over the same line, in the same direction, the shorter being included within the longer haul. It is provided, however, that the commission may, in special cases, after investiga- tion, authorize carriers to charge less for longer than for shorter distances. The com- mission is authorized to require carriers to establish through routes and joint rates. The commission is also authorized to require carriers subject to the act to construct switch connections with lateral branch lines of railroads and private sidetracks. The act provides that where two or more through routes and through rates shall have been established shippers shall have the right to designate in writing via which of such through routes the property shall be transported to destination. The commission has jurisdiction, upon complaint or in a proceeding instituted upon its own initiative, and after full hearing, to determine and prescribe reasonable rates, regulations, and practices; to award reparation to injured shippers; and to require carriers to cease and desist from unjust discrimination or undue or unreason- able preferences. Carriers are required to publish and file all rates, rules, and regulations applying to interstate traffic, and are prohibited from engaging in interstate transportation unless such rates, rules, and regulations are published and filed. Severe penalties are provided in the statute for failure to observe the rates and regulations shown in the published tariffs. The commission may inquire into the management of the business of all common carriers subject to the provisions of the act to regulate commerce, and may prescribe the accounts, records, and memoranda which shall be kept by the carriers, which shall be open to examination by the commission through its authorized agents or examiners. Carriers are required to file annual reports with the commission, and such other reports as may from time to time be required. The commission appoints a secretary, assistant secretary, and clerks, whose duties are not specifically defined by the act; and also appoints attorneys, examiners, inspectors, and special agents. By the act of June 18, 1910 (Mann-Elkins law), the jurisdiction of the commission is increased as to through routes and joint rates, freight classification, switch con- nections, long and short hauls, filing or rejection of rate schedules, investigations on own motion, making reasonable rates, suspension of proposed rates, and other mat- ters. This act also authorized the President to appoint a special commission to inves- tigate questions pertaining to the issuance of railroad stocks and bonds. By act approved August 24, 1912 (sec. 11), a new paragraph’ was added to section 5 of the act to regulate commerce, by which it is made unlawful after July 1, 1914, for any common carrier subject to the act to regulate commerce to own, lease, operate, control, or have any interest in any competing carrier by water. Jurisdiction is con- ferred upon the commission to determine questions of fact as to competition, after full hearing, on the application of any railroad company or other carrier, and to extend beyond July 1, 1914, the time during which such ownership or operation of vessels plying elsewhere than through the Panama Canal may continue, when it is found to be in the interest of the public and is of advantage to the convenience and commerce of the people, and not in restraint of competition. At the same time section 6 of the act was amended by adding a new paragraph conferring upon the commission jurisdiction over transportation of property from point to point in the United States by rail and water, whether through the Panama Canal or otherwise, and not entirely within the limits of a single State, this juris- diction, under certain conditions, including power to establish physical connection between lines of the rail carrier and the dock of the water carrier by directing the rail carrier to make such connection; to establish through routes and maximum joint rates over such rail and water lines, and to determine the conditions thereof; to estab- lish proportional rates by rail to and from ports, and to determine to what traffic and Official Duties. 331 in connection with what vessels and upon what terms and conditions such rates shall apply; and to require rail carriers entering into through routing arrangements with any water carrier to extend the privileges of such arrangements to other water carriers. By the act approved March 1, 1913, amending the act to regulate commerce, the commission is directed to investigate, ascertain, and report the value of all the prop- erty owned or used by every common carrier subject to the provisions of the act. The act of February 11, 1903, provides that suits in equity brought under the act to regulate commerce, wherein the United States is complainant, may be expedited and given precedence over other suits, and that appeals from the circuit court lie only to the Supreme Court. The act of February 19, 1903, commonly called the Elkins law, prohibits rebating, allows proceedings in the courts by injunction to restrain departures from published rates, and provides that cases prosecuted under the direction of the Attorney General in the name of the commission shall be included 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 1t 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 handholds in the ends and sides of each car; and that locomotive engines used in moving interstate traffic shall be equipped with a power driving-wheel brake and appliances for operating the train-brake system. The act directs the commission to lodge 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 whatever 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 roof handholds, and the commission was authorized to designate the number, dimensions, location, and manner of application of appliances. 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 1t 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 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. 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. The urgent deficiency appropriation act, approved October 22, 1913, contains an appropriation of $25,000 to enable the commission to investigate and report in regard to block signals and appliances for the automatic control of railway trains and appli- ances or systems intended to promote the safety of railway operation, including experimental tests of such systems and appliances as shall be furnished, in completed shape, to the commission for investigation and test, free of cost to the Government, in accordance with the provisions of joint resolution approved June 30, 1906, and sundry civil appropriation act approved May 27, 1908. 332 Congressional Directory. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. The purpose of the civil-service act, as declared in its title, is ‘‘to regulate and improve the civil service of the United States.” It provides for the appointment of three commissioners, not more than two of whom shall be adherents of the same political party, and makes it the duty of the commission to aid the President, as he may request, in preparing suitable rules for carrying the act into effect. The act requires that the rules shall provide, among other things, for open competitive examinations for testing the fitness of applicants for the classified service, the mak- ing of appointments from among those passing with highest grades, an apportion- ment of appointments in the departments at Washington among the States and Territories, a period of probation before absolute appointment, and the prohibition of the use of official authority to coerce the political action of any person or body. The act also provides for investigations touching the enforcement of the rules and forbids, under penalty of fine or 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 395,460 positions in the executive civil service on June 30, 1912, according to statistics based upon reports to the commission, of which 236,061 were classified subject to competitive examination under the civil-service rules. The num- ber of classified positions was increased by about 20,000 by the classification of artisans in the navy-yard service under Executive order of December 7, 1912. 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, Indians in the Indian service, attorneys, pension examining surgeons, field deputy marshals, and a few employees whose duties are of an important confidential or fiduciary nature. By an Executive order of October 15, 1912, the President classified all fourth-class post offices not before classified, the number being 36,236. 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, 1912, 33,240 persons were appointed through examinations, including 12,807 navy-yard employees. 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 rating, 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 examination for employees of the Isthmian Canal Commission upon the Isthmus extend only to positions of clerk, bookkeeper, stenographer, typewriter, surgeon, physician, trained nurse, and draftsman. Official Dutues. 333 PHILIPPINE CIVIL SERVICE. Appointments to the insular civil service of the Philippines are made under an act passed by the Philippine Commission and rules promulgated by the governor of the islands. The municipal service of Manila is also classified and subject to the provi- sions of the act and rules, which are similar to those of the United States. The United States Civil Service Commission, under an Executive order, assists the Philippine board by conducting examinations in the United States for the Philippine service, and in all other practicable ways. These examinations are held only for positions for which competent natives can not be found, the natives being preferred for appointment. The transfer is permissible, of classified employees who have served for three years, from the Philippine service to the Federal service. CIVIL SERVICE IN PORTO RICO AND HAWAII The Federal positions in Porto Rico and Hawaii by act of Congress fall within the scope of the civil-service act and are filled in the same 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. 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. 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 Thereafter 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 Vie 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. 334 Congressional Directory. GENERAL SUPPLY COMMITTEE. The General Supply Committee was created in lieu of the board (Board of Awards) provided for in section 3709 of the Revised Statutes as amended, and is composed of officers, one from each of the executive departments, designated by the head thereof. Its duties are to make an annual schedule of required miscellaneous supplies for the use of each of said departments and other Government establishments in Washing- ton, to standardize such supplies, eliminating all unnecessary grades and varieties, and to solicit bids based upon formulas and specifications drawn up by such experts in the service of the Government as the committee may see fit to call upon, who shall render whatever assistance they may require, provided that the articles intended to be purchased in this manner shall be those in common use by or suitable to the ordinary needs of two or more such departments or establishments. Every purchase or drawing of such supplies from the contractor is immediately reported to said committee. No disbursing officer may be a member of the committee. BOARD OF INDIAN COMMISSIONERS. The Board of Indian Commissioners, created in 1869, is a body of unpaid citizens, appointed by the President, who maintain an office in Washington for the expenses of which and of travel Congress appropriates. The board is not a bureau or division of any department, but is purposely kept reasonably independent and afforded opportunities for investigation in order that it may freely express an intelligent and impartial opinion concerning Indian legislation and administration. Its legal duties are to visit and inspect branches of the Indian Service, to cooperate with the Com- missioner of Indian Affairs in the purchase and inspection of Indian supplies, and to report to the Secretary of the Interior, to whom and to the President the board acts in an advisory capacity, with respect to plans of civilizing or dealing with the Indians. BOARD OF MEDIATION AND CONCILIATION. (Created by act of Congress approved July 15, 1913.) The purpose for which the Board of Mediation and Conciliation was established is to settle by mediation, conciliation, and arbitration controversies concerning wages, hours of labor or conditions of employment that may arise between common carriers engaged in interstate transportation and their employees engaged in train operation or train service. Whenever a controversy concerning wages, hours of labor, or conditions of employ- ment arises between such railroads and such employees, interrupting or threatening to interrupt the operation of trains to the serious detriment of the public interest, upon the request of either party the Board of Mediation is required to use its best efforts, by mediation and conciliation, to bring about an agreement. If such efforts to bring about an‘amicable adjustment through mediation and conciliation are unsuc- cessful, the board endeavors to induce the parties to submit their controversy to arbitration and, if successful, makes the necessary arrangements for such arbitration. The board is an independent office, not connected with any department. COMMISSION ON INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS. (Created by act of Congress approved August 23, 1913.) The duties of the commission are to inquire into the general condition of labor in the principal industries of the United States including agriculture, especially those which are carried on in corporate forms; the existing relations between employers and employees; the effect of industrial conditions on public welfare and the rights and powers of the community to deal therewith; the conditions of sanitation and safety of employees and provisions for protecting the life, limb, and health of same; the growth of associations of employers and of wage earners, and the effect of such associations upon their relations; the extent and results of methods of collective bargaining; the methods which have been tried in any State or in foreign countries for maintaining mutually satisfactory relations between employees and employers; Official Dutres. 335 the methods for avoiding or adjusting labor disputes through peaceful and conciliatory mediation and negotiations; the scope, methods, and resources of existing bureaus of labor and ways of increasing their usefulness; the question of illegal entry of Asiatics into the United States or its insular possessions, and the methods of such admission, and report to Congress recommendations to prevent the same; and also into the underlying causes of dissatisfaction in the industrial situation and report its conclusions thereon. COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES. This court was established by act of Congress February 24, 1855 (10 Stat. L., 612). It has general jurisdiction of all ‘‘claims founded upon the Constitution of the United States or any law of Congress, except for pensions, or upon any regulations of an executive department, or upon any contract, express or implied, with the Gov- ernment 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. 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. By section 151, Judicial Code (36 Stat. L., 1135), whenever any bill, except for a pension, is pending in either House of Congress providing for the payment of a claim against the United States, legal or equitable, or for a grant, gift, or bounty to any person, the House in which such bill is pending may, for the investigation and determination of facts, refer the same to the Court of Claims, which shall proceed with the same in accordance with such rules as it may adopt and report to such House. the facts in the case and the amount, where the same can be liquidated, including any facts bearing upon the question whether there has been delay or laches in presenting such claim or applying for such grant, gift, or bounty, and any facts bearing upon the question whether the bar of any statute of limitation should be removed or which shall be claimed to excuse the claimant for not having resorted to any established legal remedy, together with such conclusions as shall be sufficient to inform Congress of the nature and character of the demand, either as a claim, legal or equitable, or as a gratuity against the United States, and the amount, if any, legally or equitably due from the United States to the claimant: Provided, however, That if it shall appear to the satisfaction of the court upon the facts established that, under existing laws or the provisions of this chapter, the subject matter of the bill is such that it has jurisdiction to render judgment or decree thereon, it shall proceed to do so, giving to either party such further opportunity for hearing as in its judg- ment justice shall require, and it shall report its proceedings therein to the House of Congress by which the same was referred to said court. 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 rench 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 30th day of September, 1800.” The time of filing claims is limited to two years from the passage of the act, and all claims not presented within that time are forever barred. The court finds the facts and the law, and reports the same in each case to Congress. I~ fm ~$~_~_,;n~hnen HHH HTH HHH He 336 Congressional Directory. 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 act of June 25, 1910, chapter 423 (36 Stat. L., 851-852), ‘‘An act to provide additional protection for owners of patents of the United States, and for other pur- ’ poses,”’ conferred a new jurisdiction. There are five judges, who sit together in the hearing of cases, the concurrence of three of whom is necessary for the decision of any case. The court meets 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 - session or not. \ 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. JOSEPH McKENNA, 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 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 legis- lature 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 Gen- eral 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 WENDELL HOLMES, of Boston, Mass., Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Boston, Mass., March 8, 1841; gradu- ated from Harvard College in 1861; July 10, 1861, commissioned first lieutenant of the Twentieth Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry; October 21, shot through the breast at Balls Bluff; March 23, 1862, commissioned captain; shot through the neck at Antietam, September 17; shot in the heel at Maryes Heights, Fredericksburg, on May 3, 1863; on January 29, 1864, appointed aid-de-camp to Brig. Gen. H. G. Wright and served with him until expiration of term of service; brevets as major, lieutenant colonel, and colonel; Harvard Law School LL. B., 1866; in 1873 published twelfth edition of Kent’s Commentaries, and from 1870 to 1873 editor of the American Law Review, in which, then and later, he published a number of articles leading up to his book entitled, The Common Law (Little, Brown & Co., 1881), first, however, delivered in the form of lectures at the Lowell Institute. An article on ‘Early Eng- lish equity,” in the English Law Quarterly Review, April, 1885; also may be men- tioned, 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, Harvard, Williams, and Berlin; D. C. L., Oxford. Corresponding fellow of the British Academy. 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- 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——23 337 338 Congressional Directory. sity of Michigan, where he graduated in 1870; he also spent one year in the law depart- ment 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 1889 he 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. Elected 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. L. 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 Univer- sity 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 Insur- ance 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 investigation 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 Colum- bia, 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 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 10th day of October, 1910. WILLIS VAN DEVANTER, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born at Marion, Ind., April 17, 1859; attended the public schools of his native town and Indiana Asbury (now De Pauw) University (LL. D., 1911); was grad- uated from the law school of the Cincinnati College in 1881; practiced 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 Wyoming, and member of the Territorial legislature; was appointed chief justice of the Territorial supreme court by President Harrison in 1889, and by election was continued 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 Department 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, Judiciary. 339 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 1, 1901, he was appointed to fill an unexpired 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. MAHLON PITNEY, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Morristown, N. J., February 5, 1858; was graduated from the college of New Jersey (now Princeton University) with the degree of A. B. in 1879; received the degree of A. M. in 1882; was admitted to practice in New Jersey as attorney at law in 1882 and licensed as counselor in 1885; was elected to Congress as a Repub- lican in 1894 and reelected in 1896 to represent the fourth congressional district of New Jersey; elected in 1898 to represent his native county of Morris in the Senate of New Jersey for a term of three years, and in 1901 served as president of that body. On February 5, 1901, he was appointed by Gov. Voorhees to be an associate justice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey for a term of seven years, to commence Novem- ber 16, 1901; served in that capacity until January 23, 1908, when he became chan- cellor of the State of New Jersey, by appointment of Gov. Fort, for a term of seven years; was appointed by President Taft on March 13, 1912, to be an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, and took the oath of office on March 18, 1912. Has received the degree of LL. D. from Princeton University and from Rutges College. 3 RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT. [The * designates those whose wives accompany CR, the 1 designates those whose daughters accompany em. | *Mr. Chief Justice White, 1717 Rhode Island Avenue. *Mr. Justice McKenna, The Connecticut. *Mr. Justice Holmes, 1720 I Street. Mr. Justice Day, 1301 Clifton Street. *++Mr. Justice Lurton, 1720 N Street. *Mr. Justice Hughes, 2100 Avenue of the Presidents. *Mr. Justice Van Devanter, 1923 Avenue of the Presidents. *Mr. Justice Lamar, 1751 New Hampshire Avenue. *Mr. Justice Pitney, 1763 R Street. RETIRED. Mr. Justice Shiras. Mr. Justice Moody. OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT. Clerk.—James D. Maher, 1709 M Street. Deputy clerk.—H. C. McKenney, The Mendota. Marshal. —J. M. Wright, Metropolitan Club. Reporter.—Charles Henry Butler, 1535 I Street. 340 Congressional Directory. CIRCUIT COURTS OF APPEALS OF THE UNITED STATES. First judicial circuit. —Mr. Justice Holmes. Districts of Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island. Circuit judges. — William L. Putnam, Portland, Me.; Frederic Dodge, Boston, Mass.; George Hutchins Bingham, ‘Concord, N. H. Second judicial circutt.—Mr. Justice Hughes. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, Rothe New York, southern New York, eastern New York, and western New Yor Circuit judges—E. Henry Lacombe, New York, N. Y.; Alfred C. Coxe, Utica, is Y.; Henry G. Ward, New York, N.Y; : Henry Wade Rogers, New Haven, onn. Third judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Pitney. Districts of New Jersey, eastern Penn- sylvania, middle Pennsylvania, western Pennsylvania, and Delaware. Circuit judges. —George Gray, Wilmington, Del.; Joseph Buffington, Pittsburgh, Pa.; John B. McPherson, Philadelphia, Pa. Fourth judicial circust.—Mr. Chief Justice White. Districts of Maryland, northern Won Virginia, southern West Virginia, eastern Virginia, western Virginia, astern North Carolina, western North Carolina, and South Carolina. Cire judges. —Jeter C. Pritchard, Asheville, N. Co; Charles A. Woods, Marion, Fifth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Lamar. Districts of sirdhord Georgia, southern Georgia, northern Florida, southern Florida, northern Alabama, “middle Ala- bama, southern Alabama, northern Mississippi, southern Mississippi, eastern Louisiana, western Louisiana, northern Texas, southern Texas, eastern Texas, and western Texas. Circuit judges—Don A. Pardee, Atlanta, Gis Andrew P. McCormick, Dallas, Tex.; David D. Shelby, New Orleans, La. Sixth judicial circurt.—Mr. Justice Day. Districts of northern Ohio, southern Ohio, eastern Michigan, western Michigan, eastern Kentucky, western Kentucky, eastern Tennessee, middle Tennessee, and western Tennessee. Circuit judges. —John W. Warrington, "Cincinnati, Ohio; Loyal E. Knappen, Grand Rapids, Mich.; Arthur C. Denison, Grand Rapids, Mich. Seventh judicial circuit. — Mr, Justice Lurton. Districts of Indiana, northern Illinois, eastern Illinois, southern Illinois, eastern Wisconsin, and western Wisconsin. Circuit judges.—(Vacancy); Francis E. Baker, Indianapolis, Ind.; William H. Seaman, Sheboygan, Wis.; Christian C. Kohlsaat, Chicago, Ill. Eighth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Van Devanter. Districts of Minnesota, northern lowa, southern Iowa, eastern Missouri, western Missouri, eastern Arkansas, western Arkansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, North Dakota, South Dakota, eastern Oklahoma, western Oklahoma, ‘Wyoming, Utah, and 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 circuit.—Mr. Justice McKenna. Districts of northern California, south- ern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, eastern Washington, western Wash- ington, Idaho, Arizona, and Territories of Alaska and Hawaii. Circuit judges. — William B. Gilbert, Portland, Oreg.; Erskine M. Ross, Los An- geles, Cal.; William W. Morrow, San Francisco, Cal. COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES. (Pennsylvania Avenue and Seventeenth Street. Phone, Main 642.) EDWARD KERNAN CAMPBELL, chief justice; born Abingdon, Va., 1858; son of Maj. James C. and Ellen D. Campbell; educated Abingdon Male Academy, Emory and Henry College, and Univérsity of Virginia; practiced law at Abingdon, Va., and Birmingham, Ala.; appointed chief justice of the Court of Claims in May, 1913, by President Wilson. CHARLES BOWEN HOWRY, judge; born Oxford, Miss., 1844; son of Judge James M. and Narcissa Bowen Howry; educated at University of Mississippi; private to first lieutenant Twenty-ninth Mississippi Infantry, Confederate States Army; severely wounded at Franklin; LL. B. University of Mississippi 1867 (LL. D. 1896): practiced at Oxford, Miss.; member of Mississippi House of Representatives 1880- Judiciary. 341 1884; trustee University of Mississippi 1882-1894; United States district attorney 1885- 1889; Assistant Attorney General (United States) ) 1893-1896; appointed by President Cleveland and confirmed judge Court of Claims in 1897. FENTON WHITLOCK BOOTH, judge; born Marshall, Ill., May 12, 1869; gradu- ated Marshall High School 1887; student De Pauw University three years; 11 8B University of Michigan 1892; member Fortieth General Assembly, Illinois; admitted to the bar in 1892 and practiced at Marshall, Ill., as a member of the firm of Golden, Scholfield & Booth; appointed judge Court of Claims March 17, 1905. SAMUEL STEBBINS BARNEY, judge; born Hartford, Wis., January 31, 1846; educated at Lombard University, Illinois; taught high school, Hartford, 1867-1870; admitted to bar in 1873; practiced at West Bend, Wis., 1873-1906; elected to the Fifty-fourth to Fifty-seventh Congresses (1895-1903), fifth Wisconsin district; appointed judge Court of Claims 1906. GEORGE WESLEY ATKINSON, judge; born Charleston, Va. (now W. Va.), June 29, 1845; A. B. Ohio Wesleyan University 1870, A. M. 1873; LL. B. Howard University, District of Columbia, 1874; Ph. D. Mount "Union College 1885; admitted to the bar in 1875; IL. D. from his alma mater and three other universities; United States marshal 1881-1885; Member Fifty-first Congress (1889-1891); governor West Virginia 1897-1901; United States district attorney 1901-1905; Ls Court of Claims since April 15, 1905. RESIDENCES OF THE JUDGES OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS. Chief Justice. —Edward K. Campbell, 2017 I Street. Judge Charles B. Howry, 1728 1 Street. Judge Fenton W. Booth, 1752 Lamont Street. Judge Samuel S. Barney, The Champlain. J udge George W. Atkinson, 1600 Thirteenth Street. Retired Chief Justices. Charles C. Nott, Princeton, N. J.; Stanton J. Peelle, Chevy Chase, Md OFFICERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS. Chief Clerk.—Archibald Hopkins, 1826 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant elerk.—John Randolph, 28 1 Street. Auditor.—Robert Johnston, 1762 Kilbourne Place. Bailiff —Edward Keegin, Hyattsville, Md. UNITED STATES COMMERCE COURT. (Southern Building, Fifteenth and H Streets. Phone, Main 1170.) MARTIN AUGUSTINE KNAPP, presiding judge, was born in Spafford, N. Y., November 6, 1843; graduated from Wesleyan University in 1868; admitted to the bar. in 1869; corporation counsel, Syracuse, N. Y., 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 com- mission from 1898, and as ex officio mediator under the Erdman Act participated in numerous negotiations for the settlement of railway-labor disputes; appointed addi- tional 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. 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 general 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, 1900-1901; governor of Porto Rico, 1901-1904; United States district judge for Montana, 1904-1910; associate judge United States Court of Customs Appeals, 1910-11; appointed additional circuit judge Ty President Taft in December, 1910; assigned to United States Commerce Court for three years, assuming office February 1. 19711. 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 1 By act of Congress approved Oct. 22, 1913, the Commerce Court is abolished on and after Dec. 31, 1913. 342 Congressional Directory. 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 mem- ber 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 ciccuit judge, and designated to serve for two years on the United States Commerce Court; redesig- nated to serve for five years from January 31, 1913. JULIAN W. MACK, associate judge, was born in San Francisco, July 19, 1866; graduated from Harvard Law School in 1887; studied at University of Berlin and Leipzig in 1887-1890; admitted to the bar in 1890; professor of law in Northwestern University 1895-1902, University of Chicago since 1902; civil service commissioner, city of Chicago, 1903; judge circuit court, Cook County, Ill., 1903-1911; assigned to juvenile court, Chicago, 1904-1907; 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; assumed the duties of that office January 31, 1911; redesignated to serve for five years from January 31, 1912. RESIDENCES OF THE JUDGES OF THE COMMERCE COURT. [The * designates those whose wives accompany ne the 1 designates those whose daughters accompany them.] *Judge Knapp, Stoneleigh Court. *tJudge Hunt, 1710 N Street. *tt1Judge Carland, 1305 Emerson Street. *Judge Mack, The Cosmos Club. OFFICERS OF THE COMMERCE COURT. Clerk.—George F. Snyder, The Portsmouth. Deputy clerk.—S. Milton Simpson, 2439 Ontario Road. Marshal.—F. Jerome Starek, 3211 Nineteenth Street. Deputy marshal.—James L. Murphy, The New Berne. UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS APPEALS. (Fifteenth Street and New York Avenue. Phone, Main 4696.) 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, The Wyoming. . Marion De Vries, of California, The Wyoming. George E. Martin, of Ohio, 1869 Wyoming Avenue. Clerk.—Arthur B. Shelton, Cypress Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Marshal.—Frank H. Briggs, The Hamilton. Assistant clerk.—Charles M. Ayer, 1529 Corcoran Street. Reporter. —Thomas H, Clark, The Burlington. UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE. (United States courthouse. Phone, Main 2854.) United States marshal.—Aulick Palmer, 1401 Belmont Street. Chief office deputy.—William B. Robison, 1803 Monroe Street. UNITED STATES ATTORNEY'S OFFICE. (United States courthouse. Phones, Main 4950, 4951.) United States attorney.—Clarence R. Wilson, 1707 Rhode Island Avenue. Assistants.—Ralph Given, 218 B Street SE.; Samuel McC. Hawken, Wisconsin Avenue extended; Reginald S. Huidekoper, 1614 Eighteenth Street; John Lewis Smith, | 1730 8 Street; Sydney E. Mudd, La Plata, Md.; T. Morris Wampler, The Max- : well. | Special assistant.—James A. Cobb, 1911 Thirteenth Street. | Judiciary. 843 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, 1725 Lamont Street. Retired justice.—Alexander B. Hagner, 1818 H Street. Awuditor.—Louis Addison Dent, 1317 Euclid Street. Clerk.—John R. Young, 1522 R Street. COURT OF APPEALS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. (Court of Appeals Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, Main 2856.) Chief justice.—Seth Shepard, 1447 Massachusetts Avenue. Associate justices.—Charles H. Robb, The Rochambeau; Josiah A. Van Orsdel, 1854 Wyoming Avenue. Clerk.—H. W. Hodges, 2208 Q Street. Assistant cterk.—Moncure Burke, 1810 Calvert Street. JUDGES OF MUNICIPAL COURT. (315 John Marshall Place. Phone, in office hours, Main 6000.) Charles S. Bundy, 1422 Irving Street. (Residence phone, Columbia 616.) Luke C. Strider, 1450 Rhode Island Avenue. (Residence phone, North 3056.) Thomas H. Callan, 908 H Street. (Residence phone, Main 6198.) Robert H. Terrell, 326 T Street. (Residence phone, North 4404.) George C. Aukam, The Monticello. (Residence phone, Columbia 903.) POLICE COURT. (Sixth and D Streets. Phone, Main 6990-6991.) Judges.—A. R. Mullowny, 1735 Oregon Avenue; James I. Pugh, 3402 Mount Pleasant Street. Clerk.—F. A. Sebring, 1209 Kenyon Street. Deputy clerk.—N. C. Harper, The Chesterfield. JUVENILE COURT. (1816 F Street. Phone, Main 2403.) Judge.—J. Wilmer Latimer, 14 Newlands Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ler, —Waldo Burnside, Hyattsville, Md. Deputy clerk.—George P. Barse, 1363 B Street SE. REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF THE PROBATE COURT. (United States courthouse. Phone, Main 2840.) Register and clerk.—James Tanner, 1610 Nineteenth Street. Deputies.—Wm. Clark Taylor, 1400 Twenty-first Street; Michael J. Griffith, 1320 W Street. RECORDER OF DEEDS. (United States Courthouse. Phone, Main 672.) Recorder of deeds.—Henry Lincoln Johnson, 1461 S Street. 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 other ladies.] ARGENTINA. (Office of the legation, 1600 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, North 6402.) *Mr. Rémulo S. Naén, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1600 New Hampshire avenue. *Mr. Eduardo Labougle, first secretary of legation, 2209 Massachusetts Avenue. (Absent. ) Mr. Eduardo Racedo, jr., second secretary of legation, 1728 Twenty-first Street. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. (Office of the embassy, 1304 Eighteenth Street. Phone, North 1120 and 1121.) *Dr. Constantin Theodor Dumba, privy councilor, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. (Absent.) : *Baron Erich Zwiedinek von Stidenhorst, counselor of embassy, 1884 Columbia Road. Commander Maximilian Burstyn, naval attaché, The Bachelor. : Konstantin von Masirevich, first secretary. (Absent.) Stephen Hedry de Hedri et de Genere Aba, second secretary. (Absent.) Baron Karl von Freudenthal, attaché. BELGIUM. (Office of the legation, 2011 Massachusetts Avenue.) *Mr. E. Havenith, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Mr. Charles Symon, secretary of legation and chargé d’affaires. Count du Monceau, attaché of legation. (Absent.) BOLIVIA. (Office of the legation, 1633 Avenue of the Presidents.) *+Sefior Don Ignacio Calderon, envoy extraordinary "and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent. ) : *Sefior Don M1. V. Ballividn, jr., secretary of legation. (Absent.) BRAZIL. (Office of the embassy, 1013 Avenue of the Presidents. Phone, Main 8546.) *Mr. D. da Gama, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. *Mr. E. L. Chermont, counselor of embassy, 2419 Massachusetts avenue. *Tjeut. Commander Radler de Aquino, naval attaché, 1627 Avenue of the Presidents. *Capt. A. J. da Fonseca, Engineer Corps, military attaché, 1916 Avenue of the Presidents. (Phone, North 4329.) Mr. J. de Ipanema Moreira, second secretary. (Absent.) Mr. J. L. de Modesto Leal, second secretary, 1737 H street. Mr. M. da Costa Barradas, commercial attaché. (Absent.) CHILE. (Office of the legation, 1329 K Street. Phone, Main 1142.) *Sefior Don Eduardo Sudrez, M., envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, The Portland. Sefior Don Felipe Aninat, first secretary of legation. (Absent.) *Sefior Don Santiago Rivas, second secretary, The Dewey. - Lieut. Edgar von Schréeders, naval attaché, Seattle, Wash. 344 Embassies and Legations to the United States. 345 CHINA. (Office of the legation, 2001 Nineteenth Street. Phone, North 138.) *Mr. Chang Yin Tang, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent.) *Mr. Chang Kang-jen, first secretary and chargé d’affaires. Mr. Liang Lean Fang, second secretary. Mr. Wu Chang, second secretary. Mr. Chung Wen-pang, second secretary. Mr. T. Yt. Leo, second secretary. Mr. Tan Yao Fen, attaché. (Absent.) Mr. Wong Kong Yot, attaché. COLOMBIA. (Office of the legation, 1319 KX Street. Phone, Main 5743.) *+Sefior Don Julio Betancourt, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Sefior Don Roberto MacDouall, first secretary of legation, 1341 L Street. COSTA RICA. (Office of the legation, 1329 Eighteenth Street. Phone, North 1191.) #*+1Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo Calvo, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary, 1329 Eighteenth Street. CUBA. (Office of the legation, The Parkwood. Phone, Main 2430 and Main 2070.) *+++Dr. Pablo Desvernine, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent.) *Sefior Don Manuel de la Vega-Calderdn, first secretary and chargé d’affaires, The Burlington. DENMARK. (Office of the legation, 1605 Twenty-second Street. Phone, North 3850.) Mr. Constantin Brun, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. (Office of the legation, Southern Building. Phone, Main 7151.) #*Sefior Dr. Don Francisco J. Peynado, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten- tiary, 2120 Le Roy Place. *Sefior Don I. A. Cernuda, secretary of legation, 1417 K Street. ECUADOR. (Office of the legation, 31 Broadway, New York City.) *ttSefior Dr. Don Gonzalo S. Cérdova, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo- tentiary. *Sefior Dr. Don S. S. Wither, S., first secretary. Sefior Don Carlos Cordovez, second secretary. *Sefior Joaquin F. Cérdova, attaché. FRANCE. (Office of the embassy, 2460 Avenue of the Presidents. Phone, Columbia 828.) *Mr. J. J. Jusserand, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. *Mr. de Peretti de la Rocca, counselor of embassy, 2005 Columbia Road. (Phone, North 5499.) *Commander Benoist d’Azy, naval attaché, 1034 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, Main 6092.) *Capt. de Bertier de Sauvigny, military attaché. (Absent.) Mr. Dejean, first secretary and commercial attaché, 7 East Forty-first Street, New York City. *Mr. L. i Laboulaye, second secretary, 1532 Twenty-second Street. (Phone, North 6606. Mr. de Sartiges, third secretary. (Absent.) 346 Congressional Directory. GERMANY. (Office of the embassy, 1435 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, North 7200, 7201.) *Count J. H. von Bernstorff, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. *Mr. Haniel von Haimhausen, counselor of embassy. (Absent.) Commander Boy-Ed, naval attaché, The Bachelor. *Maj. von Herwarth, military attaché, The Albany. *Mr. Albert Kienlin, second secretary. (Absent.) Baron Kurt von Lersner, third secretary, 1226 Avenue of the Presidents. Baron Horst von Lersner, attaché, 1226 Avenue of the Presidents. GREAT BRITAIN. (Office of the embassy, 1300 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, North 124.) *8ir Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. Mr. Colville Barclay, counselor. *Capt. Heathcoat S. Grant, naval attaché, 2304 Massachusetts Avenue. *Lieut. Col. Moreton F. Gage, military attaché, 2622 Sixteenth Street. Hon. Ernest Scott, first secretary, 1735 New Hampshire Avenue. Hon. Thomas Spring-Rice, third secretary. Mr. D. G. Osborne, third secretary. Lord Eustace Percy, third secretary. Viscount Campden, honorary attaché, The Bachelor. Mr. J. M. Wilson, honorary attaché, 1722 H Street. Mr. Ivar Campbell, honorary attaché, 1711 H Street. GREECE. (Office of the legation, The Wyoming. Phone, North 2941.) #¥Mr. L. A. Coromilas, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Dr. L. L. Caftanzoglu, first secretary. (Absent.) Mr. Alexandre C. Vouros, chargé d’affaires. GUATEMALA. (Office of the legation, 1750 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, North 2877.) *Sefior Don Joaquin Mendez, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Sefior Don Francisco Sanchez Latour, secretary of legation. HAITI. (Office of the legation, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue. Phone, North 380.) *Mr. Ulrich Duvivier, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Mr. Hubert Alexis, secretary of legation. HONDURAS. (Office of the legation, Hotel Gordon.) Dr. Alberto Membrefio, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Sefior Don R. Camilo Diaz, secretary of legation, 31 Broadway, New York City. ITALY. (Office of the embassy, 1400 New Hampshire Avenue.) *+The Marquis Cusani Confalonieri, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. *Mr. Giuseppe Catalani, counselor. Mr. G. B. Ceccato, commercial delegate. Nobile Carlo dei Conte Montagnini, attaché. JAPAN. (Office of the embassy, 1310 N Street. Phone, North 381.) *Viscount Sutemi Chinda, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1321 K Street. *Mr. K. Shidehara, counselor of embassy, The Highlands. Commander Shigetoshi Takeuchi, I. J. N., naval attaché, The Benedick. Lieut. Col. Kazutsugu Inouye, I. J. A., military attaché, The Benedick. *¥Mr. Saburo Okabé, second secretary, The Champlain. Embassies and Legations to the United States. 347 *¥Mr. Tamekichi Ohta, third secretary, The Champlain. Mr. Nobutaro Kawashima, third secretary. *Mr. Nagakagé Okabé, attaché, The Woodward. . Mr. Hiroshi Saito, attaché. . MEXICO. « (Office of the embassy, 1413 I Street. Phone, Main 5031, 5032.) *Sefior Don Manuel Calero, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Sefior Don A. Algara R.de Terreros, first secretary and chargé d’affaires, 1413 I Street. Sefior Don Ricardo Huerta, second secretary. (Absent.) Sefior Don Miguel Ferndndez de la Regata, third secretary. tLieutenant Colonel of the General Staff Don José F. Avalos, military attaché, The Balfour. NETHERLANDS. (Office of the legation, 11 Broadway, New York City.) *Jonkheer J. Loudon, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Mr. F. M. Schmolck, first secretary of legation. NICARAGUA. (Office of the legation, Stoneleigh Court.) *+Seflor Gen. Don Emiliano Chamorro, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten- tiary. Sefior Dr. Don Joaquin Cuadra Zavala, secretary of legation. NORWAY. (Office of the legation, The Wyoming. Phone, North 2941.) *Mr. H. H. Bryn, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1734 Connecticut Avenue. Mr. William Malthe Johannessen, secretary of legation, The Bachelor. Mr. Christopher F. Smith, attaché, 1729 De Sales Street. PANAMA. (Office of the legation, The Portland. Phone, North 1550.) *Sefior Dr. Don Eusebius A. Morales, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten- tiary, The Portland. tSeiior Don J. E. Lefevre, first secretary of legation and chargé d’affaires, The Port- land. *Sefior Don Nicolds Remén, attaché of legation. PARAGUAY. (Office of the legation, 2017 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, North 6173.) Mr. Hector Velazquez, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Mr. Silvano Moaqueira, attaché. PERSIA. (Office of the legation, 2139 Wyoming Avenue.) *Mirza Ali Kuli Khan, chargé d’affaires, 2139 Wyoming Avenue. PERU. (Office of the legation, 2223 R Street. Phone, North 6806.) *Mr. Frederico Alfonso Pezet, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Mr. Manuel de Freyre y Santander, first secretary of legation, The Bachelor. *Capt. Enrique V. Gomez, military attaché. Mr. Alfonso Washington Pezet, attaché. 348 Congressional Directory. PORTUGAL. (Office of the legation, Stoneleigh Court.) Viscount de Alte, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. RUSSIA. (Address of the embassy, 1517 LI. Street. Phone, North 1965.) . *Mr. George Bakhméteff, master of the Imperial Court, ambassador etrindithry and plenipotentiary, 1701 K Street. *Mr. A. Scherbatskoy, chamberlain to His Majesty the Emperor of Buss coun- selor of embassy, 1612 Rhode Island Avenue. *Capt. Vassilieff, naval attaché, 1756 Q Street. *Colonel of the General Staff Nicolai Golejewski, military attaché, 1777 Church Street. Mr. A. Lyssakovsky, gentleman in waiting to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, first secretary, 1632 Rhode Island Avenue. Mr. C. Medzikhovsky, commercial attaché, 2605 Connecticut Avenue. Mr. H. de Bach, gentleman in waiting to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, second secretary. (Absent. Mr. Boris Yonine, second secretary, Rauscher’s. Mr. Andrew Kalpashnikoff-Camac, attaché. (Absent.) SALVADOR. (Office of the legation, The Portland. Phone, North 1550.) *Sefior Dr. Don Francisco Duenas, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, The New Willard. . *Sefior Dr. Don Carlos A. Meza, secretary of legation, The Montana. SIAM. (Office of the legation, 1721 Rhode Island Avenue. Phone, North 5385.) *Prince Traidos Prabandh, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. *Mr. Edward H. Loftus, first secretary of legation, The Dresden. Nai Choate, attaché. NaiJ ajaval, attaché. 2 SPAIN. (Office of the legation, 1521 Harvard Street.) *Sefior Don Juan Riafio y Gayangos, chamberlain to His Majesty the King of Spain, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2620 Avenue of the Presidents. (Phone Columbia 5038.) Sefior Don Manuel Walls y Merino, first secretary of legation. (Absent.) *Sefior Conde de San Esteban de (Caflongo, second secretary. *Colonel of the General Staff Don Nicolas Urcullu y Cereijo, miiitary attaché. (Absent.) SWEDEN. (Office of the legation, 1820 N Street. Phone, North 5563.) *Mr. W. A. F. Ekengren, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Count Clies Bonde, secretary of legation, The Bachelor. SWITZERLAND. (Office of the legation, 2013 Hillyer Place. Phone, North 3242.) *Dr. Paul Ritter, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. (Absent.) Dr. Ernest Baumann, secretary of legation, Raucher’s. TURKEY. (Office of the embassy, 2024 Florida Avenue.) Youssouf Zia Pacha, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary. Djevad Bey, counselor. (Absent.) *Abdul Hak Hussein Bey, first secretary, The Dupont. *Ibrahim Zia Bey, second secretary. Embassies and Legations of the Unated States. 349 URUGUAY. (Office of the legation, 1734 N Street. Phone, North 824.) *++1Dr. Carlos Maria de Pena, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. Dr. Alfredo de Castro, first secretary of legation, 1737 H Street. Sefior Hugo V. de Pena, second secretary of legation. VENEZUELA. (Office of the legation, 1017 Avenue of the Presidents.) Sefior Don P. Ezequiel Rojas, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary. *Sefior Dr. Don Esteban Gil-Borges, counselor. (Absent.) EMBASSIES AND LEGATIONS OF THE UNITED STATES. ARGENTINA. John W. Garrett, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Buenos Aires. George L. Lorillard, secretary of legation. Lieut. Guy Whitlock, naval attaché. Maj. James A. Shipton, military attaché. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Frederic Courtland Penfield, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Vienna. U. Grant-Smith, secretary of embassy. Arthur Hugh Frazier, second secretary of embassy. Lieut. Commander Richard Drace White, naval attaché. Capt. Allan L. Briggs, military attaché. BELGIUM. Theodore Marburg, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Brussels. Fred Morris Dearing, secretary of legation. Lieut. Col. John S. Parke, military attaché. BOLIVIA. John D. O’Rear, envoy extraordinary and minister Ploniverentiony: La Paz. Charles E. Stang eland, secretary of legation. BRAZIL. Edwin V. Morgan, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Rio de Janeiro. J. Butler Wright, secretary of embassy. Franklin Mott Gunther, second secretary of embassy. , military ‘attaché. CHILE. Henry P: Fletcher, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Santiago. Roland B. Harvey, secretary of legation. Lieut. Commander Alfred W. J ohnson, naval attaché. Capt. Earl Biscoe, military attaché. CHINA. Paul S. Reinsch, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Peking. John Van A. MacMurray, secretary of legation. Willys R. Peck, Chinese secretary. George T. Summerlin, second secretary of legation. Raymond P. Tenney, assistant Chinese secretary. Lieut. Commander Lyman A. Cotten, naval attaché. Lieut. Commander Irving V. Gillis, attaché. Maj. Albert J. Bowley, military attaché. Capt. Thomas Holcomb, jr., attaché. First Lieut. Epaminondas T Bigler, attaché. 350 Congressional Directory. COLOMBIA. - Li ily Austin Thompson, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, ogota. - Leland Harrison, secretary of legation. COSTA RICA. Edward J. Hale, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, San Jose. M. Marshall Langhorne, secretary of legation. CUBA. William E. Gonzales, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Habana. Hugh S. Gibson, secretary of legation. Francis Travis Coxe, second secretary of legation. Col. Herbert J. Slocum, military attaché. DENMARK. ~ Maurice Francis Egan, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Copenhagen. Alexander R. Magruder, secretary of legation. Capt. Guy Cushman, military attaché. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. James M. Sullivan, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Santo Domingo. Charles B. Curtis, secretary of legation and consul general. ECUADOR. Charles S. Hartman, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Quito. William P. Cresson, secretary of legation. EGYPT. Olney Arnold, agent and consul general, Cairo. FRANCE. Myron T. Herrick, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Paris. Robert Woods Bliss, secretary of embassy. Sheldon Whitehouse, second secretary of embassy. Warren D. Robbins, third secretary of embassy. Maj. Spencer Cosby, military attaché. Commander Henry H. Hough, naval attaché. GERMAN EMPIRE. James W. Gerard, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Berlin. Joseph C. Grew, secretary of embassy. Willing Spencer, second secretary of embassy. Albert B. Ruddock, third secretary of embassy. Lieut. Commander Walter R. Gherardi, naval attaché. Maj. George T. Langhorne, military attaché. GREAT BRITAIN. Walter H. Page, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, London. Irwin B. Laughlin, secretary of embassy. Edward Bell, second secretary of embassy. Hallett Johnson, third secretary of embassy. Commander Powers Symington, naval attaché. Maj. George O. Squier, military attaché. GREECE AND MONTENEGRO. -———, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Athens. Frederic Ogden de Billier, secretary of legation. First Lieut. Sherman Miles, military attaché. a sve Embassies and Legations of the United States. 351 GUATEMALA. William Hayne Lavell, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Guatemala. Hugh R. Wilson, secretary of legation. Maj. Wallis O. Clark, military attaché. HAITI. Madison R. Smith, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Port au Prince. HONDURAS. John Ewing, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Tegucigalpa. | Perry Belden, secretary of legation. ITALY. Thomas Nelson Page, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Rome. Post Wheeler, secretary of embassy. : Alexander Benson, second secretary of embassy. Lieut. Commander Richard Drace White, naval attaché. : Lieut. Col. George M. Dunn, military attaché. JAPAN. George W. Guthrie, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Tokyo. Arthur Bailly-Blanchard, secretary of embassy. Charles Jonathan Arnell, Japanese secretary and interpreter. Ralph B. Strassburger, second secretary of embassy. Frank D. Arnold, third secretary of embassy. John K. Caldwell, assistant Japanese secretary. i Lieut. Commander Lyman Atkinson Cotten, naval attaché. h Maj. George H. R. Gosman, attaché. Capt. George M. Brooke, attaché. It First Lieut. Orlando C. Troxel, attaché. First Lieut. Charles Burnett, attaché. First Lieut. William T. Hoadley, attaché. First Lieus. Ralph S. Keyser, attaché. Lieut. (Junior Grade) George E. Lake, attaché. Lieut. (Junior Grade) Fred F. Rogers, attaché. 1 LIBERIA. George W. Buckner, minister resident and consul general, Monrovia. | Richard C. Bundy, secretary of legation. I Maj. Charles Young, military attaché. it MEXICO. Nelson 0’Shaughnessy, secretary of embassy. , second secretary of embassy. ] , third secretary of embassy. Capt. William A. Burnside, military attaché. ——— ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Mexico City. t | MOROCCO. , envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Tangier. , Secretary of legation. THE NETHERLANDS AND LUXEMBURG. Henry van Dyke, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, The Hague. James G. Bailey, secretary of legation. Lieut. Commander Walter R. Gherardi, naval attaché. NICARAGUA. - Benjamin L. Jefferson, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Managua. Arthur Mason Jones, secretary of legation. 852 Congressional Directory. NORWAY. Albert G. Schmedemann, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Christi- ania. Francis Munroe Endicott, secretary of legation. Capt. Guy Cushman, military attaché. PANAMA. William J. Price, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Panama. Cyrus F. Wicker, secretary of legation. PARAGUAY AND URUGUAY. Nicolay A. Grevstad, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Montevideo. H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld, secretary of legation. PERSIA. Charles W. Russell, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Teheran. Craig W. Wadsworth, secretary of legation and consul general. Ralph H. Bader, interpreter. PERU. Benton McMillin, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Lima. Richard E. Pennoyer, secretary of legation. PORTUGAL. Thomas H. Birch, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Lisbon. William W. Andrews, secretary of legation. ROUMANIA, SERVIA, AND BULGARIA. Charles J. Vopicka, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Bucharest. Charles Campbell, jr., secretary of legation and consul general. First Lieut. Sherman Miles, military attaché. RUSSIA. , ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, St. Petersburg. Charles S. Wilson, secretary of embassy. Frederick A. Sterling, second secretary of embassy. Fairman R. Furness, third secretary of embassy. Commander Henry H. Hough, naval attaché. Maj. Charles B. Hagadorn, military attaché. SALVADOR. William Heimke, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, San Salvador. Thomas Hinckley, secretary of legation and consul genaral. SIAM. Fred W. Carpenter, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Bangkok. Sheldon L. Crosby, secretary of legation and consul general. Leng Hui, interpreter. SPAIN. Joseph E. Willard, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, Madrid. Gustave Scholle, secretary of legation. Capt. Norton E. "Wood, military attaché. SWEDEN. Charles H. Graves, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Stockholm. Jetferson Caffery, secretary of legation. Capt. Guy Cushman, military attaché. United States Consular Officers. SWITZERLAND. Pleasant A. Stovall, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Berne. William Walker Smith, secretary of legation. Col. Frank A. Edwards, military attaché. Lieut. Felix X. Gygaz, attaché. TURKEY. Henry Morgenthau, ambassador extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, stantinople. Hoffman Philip; secretary of embassy. — , Turkish secretary. G. Cornell Tarler, second secretary of embassy. third secretary of embassy. Arthur H Leavitt, assistant Turkish secretary. Maj. John R. M. Taylor, military attaché. VENEZUELA. 353 Con- Preston McGoodwin, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Caracas. Henry F. Tennant, secretary of legation. UNITED STATES CONSULAR OFFICERS. CONSULS GENERAL AT LARGE. Name. Jurisdiction. Tame RT ee North America, including Mexico and the Bermudas. George E H. I. Mur Prism inss seniy Sais Eastern Asia, including the Straits Settlements, Australia, Oceania, and the islands of the Pacific. Charles C. Eberhardt................ South America, Central America, the West Indies, and Curagao. Alfred I.. M. Gottschalk. ............ European Russia, the Balkan States, Greece, Asia Minor, Persia, India (as far as the western frontier of the Straits Settlements), and Africa. James RB. Dunning. ...... ..... 0.0% Burope, excepting European Russia, the Balkan States, and reece. ABYSSINIA—AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Office. Officer. Rank. ABYSSINIA. AdistAbaba. _.... .0. o Ee Vice and deputy consul general. ARGENTINA. Richard M. Bartleman....! Consul general. Bliavior. ooo Vice and deputy consul general. ee Consul. Thomas B. Van Horne....| Vice and deputy consul. George C. Norman........ Agent. William Coffin............ Consul general. Frank E. Mallett......... Vice and deputy consul general. Hash Kemeny" 1.0 oor Deputy consul general. Por tit oir Rl EE lehn J. Renton oo Do. {Charles L.. Hoover........ Consul. Henry B. Albright........ Vice and deputy consul. | Samuel H, Shank ......... Consul. (“Attilio I. Clementi... ..... Vice and deputy consul. | Frank Deedmeyer........ Consul. t John L.. Bouchal... ot. Vice and deputy consul. William J. Plke........... Consul. August Oosterman........ Vice and deputy consul. Ralph €. Busser....~..... Consul. Orestes de Martini...... -..| Vice consul. Vincent Bures.. 1... Deputy consul. Charles Denby ............ Consul general. Robert W. Heingartner...| Vice and deputy consul general. 13823°—63—2—1sT ED—24 354 Congressional Directory. BELGIUM —CHINA. Office. Officer. Rank. BELGIUM. Autwerp: Le Henry W. Diederich...... Consul general. Hit sa SEER Bee Harry Tuck Sherman. .... Vice and deputy consul general. Brussels... .... ol... orn Ethelbert Watts. ......... Consul general. TOE Bae I aie Shi Charles Roy Nasmith..... Vice and deputy consul general. Ghent or ae, Henry Abert Johnson. .... Consul. Ya a SL ae ant Julius’A. Van Hee.... "x. Vice and deputy consul. lege... =. an Alexander Heingartner....| Consul. I a Victor HE. Duras......... Vice and deputy consul. BRAZIL Babin os end David BR, Bizeh.. o.oo. Consul. NO Sr st A i Edward P. W. Duder..... Vice and deputy consul, Pare. ane George H. Pickerell....... Consul. Reet SU BE a Edward C. Helden........ Vice and deputy consul. ne Re Co William R. Cox. nl .. Deputy consul. NVanoes. cocoa. oe oon a Frederic H. Sanford....... Agent. Maranhao Joaquim M. A. dos Santos. Do. Pernambuco P. Merrill Griffith... ..... Consul. rete Ee GE Enrique Bachilleres....... Vice and deputy consul. Ceara --| Antonio E. da Frota...... Agent. Rio de Janeiro i Joliusi@G. Lay. ..| Consul general. I TR Se SE RIE Pe Albro L. Burnell.... ..| Vice and deputy consul general. 1) Rl i ot SRE ER UN LOH a Th Richard P. Momsen...... Deputy consul general. En RAEN eC Samuel W. Honaker...... Do. I ee Jean Zinzen. .. ....n20 0.x Agent. Santos... Lola Jay White... Co... Consul. Bo RL I Re AN William H. Lawrence. .... Vice consul. RT le ER James W. Reeves. ........| Vice and deputy consul, Rio a doSul. oe. Gustav C. Feddersen ..... Agent. Séo Paulo William FB. Tee........... Do. Iquique. .. rite ty SL Percival Gassett.......... Consul. DG. sin aL ee Te Edward E. Muecke:. .| Vice and deputy consul. A DR RE Arthur F. Lee..... Agent. Punta Arenas Charles L.. Latham........ Consul. Coguimboe- =... Poleaiano. os Thomas Smith Boyd ..... Alfred A. Winslow........ Alfred Hamilton West.... John Thomas Morong..... H. Vernon Kerr... 50 Joseph O. Smith... .. 52>. Lester Maynard........... : Thies TB. Brissel......... ...| Marshal. ..| Consul. .| Consui general. Vice os deputy consul general. 0 Hiwisr L. Neville. . Fleming D. Cheshire. .-.. John Davis, Wilfred H. Webber. ...... George C. Hanson. ........ Crawford M. Bishop ...... Hoginal BoSmith.. o.oo: George C. Hanson. ........ Crawford M. Bishop ...... E. Carleton Baker. ....... Hoke S. Greene. ...5.:.-- J. Paul Jameson... .--:- Horace Remillard. ........ J do Holliday. .-....---: Alvin. W, Gilbert......... William P. Xent.......... George F. Bickford ....... Milton B. McIntosh....... George F. Bickford ....... Vice and deputy consul. Consul. . Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Horace J. Dickinson. ..... Marshal. Jom-K. Davis... «coo Interpreter. Julean H. Arnold......... Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Do Deputy consul. Marshal. Interpreter. Do Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Marshal. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. 0. Marshal. Interpreter. Do. .| Consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Marshal. Interpreter. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Marshal. Interpreter. Unated States Consular Officers. CHINA—ECUADOR. Office. Officer. Rank. CHINA—continued. Shanghai 0 oi a eae Amog'P. Wilder... ol.) Consul general Do. it. mi ad Clarence E. Gauss. ....... Vice and deputy consul general. DO re aA Rs Nelson T. Johnson. ....... Do. TEE Sh ea ae Si Mahlon Fay Perkins. ..... Deputy consul general. DOr aE, Aa Charles P. McKiernan .... Do. DO. tec Charles H. Williams ...... Marshal. Bo rena ieee Nelson T'. Johnson........ Interpreter. IE Rs ee Se Mahlon Fay Perkins. ..... Do. Po icon eR SRO. Charles P. McKiernan .... Do. SWatow adi Charles L. L.. Williams....| Consul. Ey Ye Samuel S. Knabenshue....| Consul general. Doin a a, Paul BR. Josselyn....... Vice and deputy consul general. a i Sr Ra Ae Crawford M. Bishop.......| Deputy consul general. D0, Ln en IR Otto E. Vongehr.......... Marshal. ee SE EO Rr Paul R. Josselyn.......... Interpreter. COLOMBIA Barranquilla... 0... .. Isaac A. Manning. ........ Consul. a Sa ee, Julius A. Freund... ...... Vice and deputy consul. Coll 5 soe mE Edward H. Mason. ....... gent. Medellins obo, osu Silage, Wright... 0. Do. Quibde 0. a SEER Louis G. Dreyfus, jr....... Do. Santa Marta... 00080 William A. Trout. ........ Do. I A Ee Er Oh Es IN Sl TE Consul general. Cartagena... 0. 0h 0 a eH Henry P. Starrett ...... .. Consul. Po. RR ay Charles W. Doherty ...... Vice and deputy consul. COSTA RICA Pori Vimow: 0... conics. Chester Donaldson........ Consul. i Ta Bie PR PIN SE Sy Henry O. REaston.......... Vice and deputy consul. San Jose er RA Samuel T.lee....c....... Consul. i RS nr LR FA F. Percy Scott............| Vice and deputy consul. Prin rR Ga John Same ...... io. Agent. CUBA | Clonfuegon. .... .. oui a BN Max J. Baer. Jose. .n 00 Consul. | Do aati sin Singhs, Buenaventura Carbo ..... Vice and deputy consul. | Coihaviens. .... eines P.B. Anderson. oo lL Agent. Saguala Grande. ........ 0... Jom. Jova..... ono. Do. Habana... o.oo James Linn Rodgers. ..... Consul general. | DO. ne RN SI Joseph A. Springer........ Vice and deputy consul general. | Cardenmagz ool pigs ni William W.Clark......... Agent. Maotangas.. ois Joa on Alfred Heydrich.......... Do. J Nueva Gerona, Isle of Pines....| Vervie P. Sutherland. .... Do. | Santiago de Cuba... ............. Ross E. Holaday .......... Consul. | Doin a ae Harry C. Morgan.......... Vice and deputy consul. | Antillacaci in. CRO TRIS George Bayliss... 0. Agent. | BATACON st na RR Augusto Soler y Monés. .. Do. | Manzanillo: oi Francis B. Berto... ...... Do. j Nuevias. ais a Dean BR." Wood..........55 Do. DENMARK AND DOMINIONS | Copenhagen...................... Edward D. Winslow...... Constil general. Dols ico sansa ima Axel'Permin. |. cio... ...| Vice and deputy consul general. St. Thomas, Wo. I. ooo. con Christopher HI. Payne.....| Consul. Ree EL Be TRE De Witt W. Perdue....... Do Fredericksted, St. Croix Island. . DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Bahia de Caraquez..:.......-.. Esmeralda... ........-.0 0c Robert I. Merwin......... Charles M.. Hathaway, jr.. José Marfa Esteva......... Teaae B. Petit... ss, Frederico Lample......... J. Enrique Leroux AREALAR red Charles Charles H. Albrecht. ..... Ramon T. Janer... oo... John Hardy... .....oou80 2 Hubert Watson........... Frederic W. Goding ...... Charles F. Baker.......... Alberto Santos... ......... George D. Hedian ......... Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Agent. Do. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Agent. Do. Congressional Directory. FRANCE AND DOMINIONS—GERMAN EMPIRE. Office. Officer. Rank. FRANCE AND DOMINIONS. EImoges.. .. oo Livni iaanin Dijon a an EL EE Sera Pn Dean B. Mason..... 0.0... Consul. René L.. J. Boisson........ Vice and deputy consul. Albert H. Elford.........5 Agent. 1 Alfred K. Moe. oat John Douglas Wise... William P. Shockley James B. Milner........0... Wm. McKone Milner...... William Whitman George H. Jackson. .. Elisée Jouard....... Frank A. Henry .......... Joseph O. Florandin...... John Ball Osborne. ....... John Preston Beecher. .... Auguste Laniéce.......... Eugene 1.. Belisle......... Jom J. Brnster ....ii. i Carl Bailey Hurst......... Clarence Carrigan......... Marin Vachon... ... Nicolas Chapuis........... Alphonse Gaulin.......... Poul. Cram. ince. oni. Carl D. Hagelin... Francis M. Mansfield...... Thomas R. Wallace....... Jacques D. Schnegg....... Walter Fl. Schulz. ....c.. William Dulany Hunter. . Harry A. Lyons. .........: Alexander M. Thackara... Ely E. Palmer Charles P. Pressly ........ Hanson C. Coxe. ........;. William Bardel........... Walter Stanford........... Joseph E. Haven. 3 Charles H. Bellamy .. REL) Alfred C. Harrison........ Benjamin Morel........... Lucien Memminger....... René C. Reitenbach....... Charles Tassencourt....... Walter P. 8S. Palmer- Samborne. Hubert G. Baugh......... Mil ler Joblin. uaa James H. Goodier. ........ Walter J. Williams, ERS James G. Carter........... Gustave Streuli........... Henry Quadflieg.......... Mason Mitchell... ........ Norman H. Macdonald. ... George Fugene Eager..... Julius Festner........nus De Witt C. Poole, jr.....-- Frederick von Versen. .... Alfred R. Thomson... ..... Harold B. Quarton........ George A. Makinson....... Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent, Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. .| Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consui. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. A Vice dnd deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul general. Viee ond deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Do. Consul. .| Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deploy consul general. Do. Agent. Unated States Consular Officers. 357 GERMAN EMPIRE—GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. GERMAN EMPIRE~-continued. Bremen: lls hon William PB. Beg... ii. 0 Consul. RE ea Se CRE a Bee Fredk. Hoyermann. ...... Vice and deputy consul. Brake, Oldenburg.............. Wilhelm Clemens. ........ Agent. Bremer! haven, Bremen. ........ Joseph FF. Buck... ii aii Do. Breslau, Pras. Herman L.Spahr......... Consul. LE RM SRS CR Qustay Wiese... uo. Vice and deputy consul. Brunswick, Brunswick. .......... Talbot J. Albert....ooi ou: Consul. Bab OR TR Julius Seckel..............| Vice and deputy consul. Chemnitz, SAXONY reece is Thomas H. Norton........ Consul. Bo EL EERE E. Kilbourne Foote....... Vice and deputy consul. hater ee A ah MAA Friedrich Emil Steger.....| Deputy consul. Cobur Saxe-Coburg-Gotha...... Jogeph I. Brittain........ Consul general. oh Ta TG William Herbert Murphy .| Vice and deputy consul general. ee iu 2, Saxe-Meiningen. . Frederick J. Dietzman. ...| Agent. Cologne, Prastln,. tA ina Aa Consul. DO se cdi RS Charles Lesimple.......... Vice and deputy consul. DOs rr se Louis Vandory..o:i. o.oo. Deputy consul. Dresden, Saxony... ............ Leo Allen Bergholz. ...... Consul general. Do... aah aie James L. A. Burrell... .«.. Vice and deputy consul general. BOC Si NR eS PauliArras.. Lo oon Deputy consul general. Erfart Prussia. =... oooh. Graham H. Kemper ...... Consul. D0: a Spa Sana] Alfred Hofman. 5 on a Vice and deputy consul. Peano on the Main, Prussia. .| Heaton W. Harris......... Consul general. FETED LS Se Ee Sd ae William Dawson, jr.......| Vice and deputy consul general. De Srna EER AE Ble Simon W. Hanauer....... Deputy consul general. Cassel, Prassin. ovis. viens Gustav C. Kothe.......... Agent. Ww ieshaden, Prassian: rasan? John B. Breuer oi 2 005 Do. Hamburg... oo Robert P. Skinner. ....... Consul general. in pr SM a E. H. L. Mummenhof....| Vice and deputy consul general. Do a Ta SE Prag R. Stewart........ Deputy consul general. CUINBVON oo. oui tisivnvis shined ew na QD i ats wtb as Agent. Kiel Prussia. .......... Son Paul H, J. Bavieri......... Do. Tarheel i Shs fans ans Wolfgang Gaedertz........ Do. HMunaver, PrusSsin. co. coins ore Albert H. Michelson. ..... Consul. IE RS Me CT Ip Ey Arthur J. Bundy..........| Vice and deputy consul. ¥en Haden Se Ree aE Milo A. Jewett. ........... Consul. ET SE SE eRe LE eee eR Vice and deputy consul. Leip Saxony... uaswa asian Nicholas R. Snyder....... Consul. DA saan aad Rudolph Fricke...........| Vice and deputy consul. hei Reuss Schleitz. . ......... Charles Neuer... cur. Agent. Magdeburg, Passi cn. iamauis Alfred W. Donegan ....... Consul. Td sai ph A Ernest I. Ives............| Vice and deputy consul. Masnicin, Badeny.ouoe noi: William C. Teichmann....| Consul. SCL RRR TT Samuel Berger............| Vice and deputy consul. Newiadtondor Har dt, Bava- | Leopold Blum............ Agent. ria. Munich, Bavaria................. T. St. John Gaffney....... Consul general. 1 A a Abraham Schlesinger......| Vice and deputy consul general. Onna Lala naghud Arthur V. W. Cotter...... Deputy consul general. Nuremberg, Bavaria............. George N. It. nk Consul. 18 i SC Ca STR NER Js Ta Ralph W. Dox. ci oual Vice and deputy consul. TEE Se ee ie Oscar Boek. om sita Deputy consul. Plasien, BARONY. Ss Robert Brent Mosher. ..... Consul. TE ee we SE RR Arthur C. Roth...........| Vice and deputy consul. Marsnonklinen, Saxony.......| W. Bruce Wallace......... Agent. Stettin, Prussia... i... o0l Henry C. A. Damm. ...... Consul. LL Se ee BmiliSchmidt -.......... Viee and deputy consul. Danzig, Prussia, oie. ua Ernst A. Claaszen......... Agent. Konigsher 2, PTUSSin vet Alexander Eckhardt. ..... Do. Swinemdiinde, Prussia.......... Wilhelm Potenberg....... Do. Stuttgart, Wurttemberg RTE RIE Edward Higgins. ......... Consul. A OR A TR Ernest Entenmann. ...... Vice and deputy consul. Peingtan, China... ............. James C. Mc¢Nally........ Consul. De. I NE John A. Bristow... .. Vice and deputy consul. 131 Fe RR a PT ey ea BREEN Ey I Ra an Interpreter. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS fens Arabia ot iin an Felix Willoughby Smith. .! Consul. raitma RR Un Ls Paul Nalin................| Vice and deputy consul. Toa, Turkey ....: iis: :...| Erich Lindenmeyer....... Agent. Auckiand, New Zealand. . de a William A. Prickitt....... Consul general. Po. Sais iia eval Leonard A. Bachelder.....| Vice consul general. Christehureh........ Jc tans Frank Graham... co... 0:0 Agent. Dunedin. choi Frederick O. Bridgeman. . Do. Wellington... o.oo ids Arthur Edward Whyte... Ba Barbados, West Indies. .......... Chester W. Martin. ....... Consul CE Hi aA James E. A. Ince. .........| Vice and deputy consul. Tn Dominiea..o. ol ann Henry A. Frampton. ..... Agent. Bt ines... Charles Gabriel ........... Do. StoVinecent.. oo... ial ns Ernest A. Richards....... Do. 358 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— continued. Belfast, Ireland. .....c.......c.n. Hunter Sharp. .....0.0. 00, Consul. Bi SE I SRR Hugh H. Watson.......... Vice and deputy consul. SH ee LE SE Edward Harvey.......... Deputy consul. Londonderry. ......-cce-smmcos Philip O'Hagan. --........ Agent. Belge, British Honduras......... William L. Avery......... Consul. i A AR John H. Biddle. ..........| Vice and deputy consul. TE ig England... ..0al.k Albert Halstead. .......... Consul. 2 SL ER A Arthur V. Blakemore. .... Vice consul. Te ON SE UT Ernest Harker. ...........| Deputy consul. Kitaerminaior ARE VT LY James Morton. soc. LL. Agent. Redafieh, oo... 00. uate William U. Brewer.... Do. Bousis gdmddne ss. bao Se SS Ei Ls Sn a Sea Consul. os 3 England ‘eae Baten (Stoke-on-Trent), Eng- ng a Pe Calgary, Alberta... ........cc....: Do Lethbridge........-------->-... Campbellton, New Brunswick . Do Pashebiae. ..........con uy amas Cape Town, Cape of Good Hope. . Do Island. Summerside... oan Luin) Coronihe, GovioW.....-. ll Wimerieler. coo. lia Cornwall, Ontario............. Bot Cayenne, French Guiana. ..... Paramaribo, Dutch Guiana. Gibraltar, Spain. ................ Do Qoanoae. Troon Halifax, Nova Scotia. ........oin Do Bridgewater... ion. oaasnusis LAVerpool......c.av.us Lunenburg Selby S. Coleman. .. Thomas L. Renton........ Roger Culver Tredwell... Richard Castle... ......- John H. Copestake........ James A. Smith Jom Stuart Hunt o.ooaix. Austin). A. Craven:i.... Samuel C. Reat.-...- H. kidgar Anderson. ...... Matthew P. Johnston..... Theodosius Botkin. ...... Francis F. Matheson...... Daniel Bisson.......... 0. William A. Haygood..... Lorin A. Lathrop-........ Albert S. Phillips ........ ‘Wesley Frost.............. Charles Lee Strickland.... Neil Sinclair. . ... cou Charles K. Moser. ........ -| Herbert K. Cruikshank. .. George B. Dawson........ ---| Vice ang deputy consul. .| Augustus E. Ingram. ..... Consul Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice consul. Agent. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Edmund Ludlow. ....... Agent. Giles BR. Taggart... io... Consul. ‘William Gibbens. ........ Vice and deputy consul. George C.:Coleio li i Consul. George M. Faulkner ...... Vice and deputy consul. Edward L. Adams........ Consul. 2 Arthur Donn Piatt. ......| Vice and deputy consul. Robert A. Tennant. ...... Agent. E. Haldeman Dennison. ..| Consul. AllbncBaxter.......u. oo. Vice and deputy consul. William P. Quann....... Agent. Howard D. Van Sant. .... Consul. BESS Ln Se SR Vice consul. Stuart J. Fuller.... ..| Consul. Hugh S. Hood... ... ...| Vice and deputy consul. Bulus Fleming... ...... Consul. Frederick P. Piatt Vice and deputy consul. Frank C. Denison......... Consul. John'R. Pollock... ol. Vice consul. Horace J. Harvey......... Consul. James B. Cartiss.......... Vice and deputy consul. Rea Panna... .......... Consul. Lester W. Collins. ........ Vice and deputy consul. Louis Henry René Didier. |. Agent. Henry L. Hirschfield. .... Do. Richard L. Sprague....... Consul. Arthur D. Hayden. ......| Vice and deputy consul. Johny N., MeCroniir 7 oo 2x Consul. . Larey Webber... ........ Vice and deputy consul. Alfred Middleton. ........ Deputy consul. James A. Tove. ou. i. Peter H. Waddell......... Evan E. Young .......... Eugene M. Lamb. ........ Horry 8S. Hill. Jo oi siitn. William H. Owen Joson'M. Mack... ........ .} Daniel J. Rudolf. ......... Agent. Do. Consul ‘general. Vice and deputy consul general, Deputy consul general. Agent. Do. Do. United States Consular Officers. 3569 GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. | Rank. Office. Officer. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— continued. Hamilton, Bermuda. ............ W. Maxwell Greene....... Consul. Vo... EH RRS William H. Allen. ......... Vice and deputy consul. Bl George iin. ican tines William H. Potter........ Agent. Hamilton, tiniis ri A James M. Shepard. .......| Consul. Een EE a Richard Butler...........| Vice and deputy consul. Galt, it ht Le es Sr James Ryerson. ......... Agent. Hobait, Tasmania.’ o0 Lisl il George M. Hanson........ Consul. J roche Transvaal. D 0 Bloemfontein, Colony. Karachi, India Orange River RE UO Port Morant. St. Anns Bay Kingston, Ontario Do DIL rn ei TA Wales St. Helens, England. .......... DOL sas sian visita is amie Aoi Fremantle, Western Australia.. Meojdon, New Brunswick NeWenstle. oeon ers Montreal, Quebec Do Hemmingford Nassau, New Providence Brisbane, Queensland . Townsville, Queensland . Newcastle-on-Tyne, England... Do West Hartlepool Miagarn Falls, Ontario po Ghana ia i'r oseph Botten Charles Ernest Webster... George E. Anderson. . Algar E. Carleton John B. Sawyer... James Chue David J. Bailey Lewis W. Haskell. James Fisher .| Edwin N. Gunsaulus..... Charles B. Henderson Arthur E. Fichardt Stuart K. Lupton........ Edward L. Rogers........ Thomas Willing Peters. .. Harry M. Doubleday. .... Charles Evan Halman Beard. BniRoY B. D. Rerrie. . .. Felix S. S. Johnson Howard s. Folger Stephen J. Young. ...... Homer M. Byington sat Charlies E. Taylor Horace Lee Washington... William Force Stead...... ‘William Pierce... .... 0... Hugh Watson. ..:.....:. Richard D. Roberts Ernest L. Phillips John L. Griffiths .| Richard Westacott....... Carl B.- Toop... 0. Herbert D. Jameson. . .... Tracy Lay Frederick Crundall. ..... José de Olivares... ....... James Oliver Laing James A. Turnbull... .... William H. Robertson. ... Johm W. Thomas... ..... Ernald S. Moseley . William C. Magelssen . . Charles Hartlett George H. Prosser. ....... Udolpho W. Burke. ...... Michael J. Hendrick. . .... Chipman A. Steeves Byron N. Call William Harrison Bradley. Patrick Gorman Martin B. Fisher. ........ Henry. D, Baker- >i 1.. Eric V. Solomon .| George B. Killmaster. .... John K. Foster Walter C. Hamm. ........ -| Hetherington Nixon Hans C. Nielsen Edwin W. Trimmer....... George Mortimer Samuel M. Taylor......... Lewis R. Decker, Thomas H. Cook......:... Charles K. Eddowes Samuel S. Partridge....... 3 Interpreter. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice ae deputy consul general. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. .| Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. | Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Denliy consul. Agent. Do. Consul ‘general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. ® Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Agent. Do. 360 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank, GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— continued. Orillia, Ontarie.................. Barry P. Dil}. coco ine: Consul. | A ETE SA 3 | Bertram A. S. Webber....| Vice and deputy consul. Midland... —--j7Ronald BF, White.:..:-.... Agent. North Bay, Nipissing. ......... Edgar C. Wakefield....... Do. Parey Sound... oii. rages Walter BR. Foot........... Do. Grams, Ontario... Avnpriov: CoC li ee Owes | Sound, Ontario............ “Pars Marine. oo isi Port Elizabeth, Cape of Good Hope. Rastondon., cic... neshoie Broseon; Ontario... esa Victoriaviile Pa at EE RG Rangoon, India Bdmundston... x. 0. =srsees 3 St. om, New Brunswick........ Baden St. Jonas, Newfoundland ........ Bay CE i Na St. Ye Quebee..... 0 0k Suabiir Cookshire.... iio. ainasiods Megantic. ........ Pa Waterloo... io nla Sierra Looe ‘West Africa....... 0 Sey J: ey RRR Ss Enon Weymouth... ..........c.- Swaases, Wales... vm. ints Louisburg. ... Louse. ciunabadi Port Hawkesbtry............; Toronto, Ontario................. DIO: ci chins mess AREA Peterborongh:...........-.. 0.5 Trinidad, WestIndies...........c Ay Tsland of Trinidad... Grenadn. cess ssvonssriav--nss John: CG. Foster. .....c-.-i Horace M. Sanford........ William B. Murphy....... North Winship .-.cee-.... Joseph B. Hunt........ es Joseph G. Stephens....... John J. Stephens.......--. Julius D. Dreher.......... Daniel H. Jackson. ....... Henry T. Wilcox. ........ Ernest A. Wakefield...... Martin R. Sackett......... James Buckly...oonivuh oon Gebhard Willrich......... Joseph F. Fitzgibbon..... John H. Gra, Maxwell K. Moorhead.... Howard B. Osborn........ Frederick M. Ryder....... Michel Ringuet, jr 3 Henry C. Hamel. ......... Luther O. Keeton... ...... Henry S. Culver..........- Lewis C. Thompson....... William W. Heard........ James S. Benedict. . ...... Henry F. Bradshaw....... Ozro:C. Gould... ...5ni.- John Donaghy...........- Charles A. Sc atoush. Charlie N. Vroom......... Fred C. Slater. ...........- George W. Shotts......... James Dawson............ David M. Brodie.......... Robert J. Thompson...... Rice K. Evans Arthur L. Wooldridge .... Henry W. Albro.......... Arthur S. Newell.......... William J. Yerby....:...: Charles Perinaux .......-- Edwin S. Cunningham... -| Caspar LeoDvefer. oii Joseph Heim... ....c.ci.c. Albert W, Swalm......... John A. Broomhead....... Frederick W. Fuller....... C. Ludlow Livingston..... William D. Rees........-. JohnP, Bray..... ==>. Elliott V. Richardson..... Charles M. Freeman....... George A. R. Rowlings.... J:ABredW. Hart, .o..-.. 5s: Henry C. V. Le Vatte..... Alexander Bain........... Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. * Vice and deputy consul. Consul. .| Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul, Consul. Vice and deputy consul." Consul. .| Vice consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. “| Consul. _| Vice and deputy consul. Agen Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. United States Consular Officers. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS-—ITALY. Office. Officer. Rank. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— continued. Turks Island, West Indies. ...... Charles Forman........... Consul. En EA CE a W. Stanley Jones......... Vice and deputy consul. Cockburn Harbor.............. Cleophas Hunt Durham...| Agent. Matthew Town, Bahamas..... John I. Sargent .......... Do. SlCay os tr So Alexis W, Harriott... ...... Do. Vancouver, British Columbia..... Robert E. Mansfield. ..... Consul general. 0, as laa G. Carlton W-oodward..... Vice and deputy consul general. Cr I Se Joseph B. Colvard......... Deputy consul generat D0 ae oy Sheen eer John S. Armstrong, jr..... Do. Nelson... ii rns oN Alter 8S. Riblet. cols Agent. White Horse, Yukon Territory.| Elmer J. White........... Do. Victoria, British Columbia. ....". Abraham E. Smith. .......| Consul. Se re RET Be Earl E. Boynton......:-.= Vice and deputy consul. Cumberland. .... ch aoa s George W. Clinton. ..... ...| Agent. Namgimo:z ooo oe. Joseph H. Pashley Do. Yritsen, OMiario. ...v de cin? Harry A. Conant...... .-| Consul. i AEE dr Daniel Chater. ...... .| Vice and deputy consul. Winnipe, Manitoba....... Frank Dillingham Consul general. a Sn es James J. McBride.........| Vice and deputy consul general. Tort William, Ontario. ........ George H. Freeman. ...... Agent. Kenors; Ontario. ov cassis Rupert H. Moore.......... Do. Yarmouth, Nova Scotia.......... Alfred J. Fleming......... Consul. Bo. hn George P. Waller, eis Vice and deputy consul. AnnapolisiReyal..............: Jacob M. Owen. .......... Agent. Dishy i aie William B. Stewart....... Do. GREECE Athens... oie adaiians William H. Gale.......... Consul general. 8 at a a Ee Bernard Melissinos........ Vice consul general. a ey Constantine M. Corafa.....| Deputy consul general. Kalamata LT Ripley Wilson............ Agent. Patras. ee Arthur B. Cooke... ....... Consul. Do en Adalbert B. C. Kuhn..... Vice consul. GUATEMALA Guatemala: .....0 0. George A. Bucklin, jr..... Consul general. DO LS dia es William Owen Vice and deputy consul general. AS rrr Ll SL es en CER Agent. Livingston. ......... 05. Edward Reed. ............ Do. - HAITI Cape Haitien.......conen........ Lemuel W. Livingston. ..| Consul. Do. aa ain int. Polydor Czaykowski. ..... Vice and deputy consul. Gonaives... co so smnnnnins J. William Woll.......... Agent. Portde Paix.......co-cnvinns CorliAbegg. wii Do. PortaulPrince................... John 'B; Terres... ..... Consul. 05s Sie Ph ae a Alexander Battiste........ Vice and deputy consul. Aux Cayes..........-.........: Adolph Strohm........... Agent. Jaemwel o.oo Louis Vital o.oo 0 Do. Jeremie. sa St. Charles Villedrouin. . . . Do. Petit Goave................... Georg: Bohne... ..... _. Do. HONDURAS Colba. co. 0 D Sy Harold D. Clum.... 05 3 Consul. Dg i a. i ee ak Leopold Eden Scott....... Vice and deputy consul. Bonaees. est hun Sandy Kirkconnell....._.. Agent. Rogian- cota. caer Oliver L. Hardgrave...... Do. le a aia Wallace C. Hutchinson... . Do. Presto Cortes... Lon Longs David J.D. Myers... 0 Consul. a ie pr cr SEL SUSE Ce Ll OE Vice and deputy consul. San SE Salad siren J.-M. Mitchell, jr... 0. Agent. Megnelgalpa .. oro ot Tr Arminius T. Haeberle... .. Consul. Dos. ee SS URRN Benjamin D. Guilbert..... Vice and deputy consul. Amapals. Te eave be Ne A Agent. Samdwanelto. o.oo nl Louis F. Valentine........ Do. ITALY Catanla...... cc... .o... Alexander W. Weddell... .| Consul. ERE Se Sa Sie Robert Y. Barkley........ Vice and deputy consul. Florence.............. 0... oo... leo J. Keenan... ..:.:... Consul. rr Ce William Wright Burt. .... Vice and deputy consul. UT re pe RL Re John Edward Jones....... Consul general. DO. rl Sosa a a ie James B. Young. ......-.- Vice and deputy consul general. 1B nen Pe ee el Angelo Boragino.......... Deputy consul general. Yeghorn .......c. aie Benjamin F. Chase....... Consul. 8 EA ae Leon Bohm de Sauvanne.| Vice and deputy consul. Carrara 00 a na Felix A. Dalmas.......... Agent. 362 Congressional Directory. ITALY—MEXICO. Office. Officer. Rank, ITALY—continued. Nathaniel B. Stewart..... Consul. Yo C: Tum. wo oisian Vice and deputy consul. William W. Handley..... Consul. Herbert C. Biar....>...... Vice and deputy consul. Max A. Miescher.......... Agent. Thomas Spencer Jerome. . Do. Hernando de Softo......... Consul. Nicholas Paterniti........ Vice and deputy consul. Chapman Coleman........ Consul. Ulysses J. Bywater........ Vice and deputy consul. ---| Vincenzo de Masellis. ..... Deputy consul. Jom. Q. Wood.......=.... Consul. Arthur E. Saunders...... Vice and deputy consul. Charles B. Perry .....---=. Consul. Piero'Glanolio. 1.0. 1. Vice and deputy consul. James Verner Long. ...... Consul. Alexander Thayer........ Vice and deputy consul. JAPAN. Dainy, Manchuria. .............. Albert W. Pontius....-... Consul. DN st uss Siete ge Teas 2 are x late Sa ae ek sae Vice and deputy consul. EE SO edi ab es ar Interpreter. Rohe... ... sn George N. West... ... Consul. A i Walter Gassett. _... 2. .-." Vice and deputy consul. a nh ER J. Preston Doughten...... Deputy consul. IEE ee Se ta $i niniots Walter Gassett........---- Interpreter. Yoklniohi. =... te. aos Willard de L. Kingsbury..| Agent. Nagasakl.....--............0... Carl-P..Deichman, =. J... Consul. Do RR A Er a ae Harold C. Huggins........ Vice and deputy consul. Sede BO i re nn mee se AICO DYOLET, George H. Scidmore....... Consul general. I Raymond S. Curtice.C...- Vice and deputy consul general. 0: hehe trate ts mn yn A Ol sete seis vias we as vi I anaul, Palwal..- ce con eves oes Tis A. Williamson. ...| Consul. | Va al ae Max D. Kirjassoff........ Vice and deputy consul. Lh PE i a a rie Interpreter. Yoloohama “c= =... ....... Thomas Sammons... ...... Consul general. BOd st hr, Yrs cd Tiasoll H. Dick... ... Vice and deputy consul general. nee Ser RL J osoph W. Ballantine. ...| Deputy consul general. 2% Bia ie Sw A RN Ee _| Interpreter. tC aN os J. Barrett... ...- Do. ints i i RR aT Edward Julian King...... Agent. KONGO Boma... ooo SAD Be Ross Hazeltine. con. Vice and deputy consul general. LIBERIA 4 Monrovia... roar Fred R. Moore...........- Consul general. er AE John Tl. Reed... ..."..... Vice consul general. MEXICO Acapulco, Guerrero. ............. Clement S. Edwards. ..... Consul. ER SRI Sea Harry K. Pangburn......| Vice and deputy consul. Agnosealiontes, Aguascalientes . .| Gaston Schmuta.......... Consul. Rais 1 SS ee ws pA pine Harold G. Bretherton.....| Vice and deputy consul. Chilahua, Chitvaphaa toil Marion Letcher........... Consul. RS i BHC Edward A. Powers. ......| Vice and deputy consul. (en ER SS i James Yl. Long... ull... Agent. . Chinn Juarez, Chihuahua ....... Thomas D. Edwards. ..... Consul. ad Guillermo Zoeller .........| Vice and deputy consul. Ciudad Porfirio Diaz, Coahuila. lo 8. Chu ee iia Consul. ree ni William P. Blocker. ......| Vice and deputy consul. Durer, Puarango........ 5 Theodore C. Hamm. ...... Consul. D0. MT MT) NR ST Ll RG Shae ak wah Vice and deputy consul. Mopia. Alas a Thomas J. Lawrence...... Agent. A TA ACN Se SE George C. Carothers....... Do. Ensenada, Lower:Californda.. iui iia oinan: oud Consul. NR ER RR Claude E. Guyant........ Vice and deputy consul. ARR Se Br Frederick R. Sawday..... Do. Frontera, BO PABCO ty sin vind snsiinitini Alphonse J. Lespinasse....| Consul. aS Edward 11. Watson.......| Vice and deputy consul. Gusddalars, TO EC0 ai es crits to ym im mi weiss 5 = a me 8 ew wm Consul. rn ee Sl William B. Davis. ........| Vice and deputy consul. Hermosillo, Sonora, .............. Louis Hostetter.........-. Consul. Of, a a A Robt. S. Van R. Gutman.| Vice and deputy consul, GUAYIRSS. eee avin nnrnnn ns Charles D. Taylor......... Agent, aa Ty ————————————— Unated States Consular Officers. 363 MEXICO—NICARAGUA. Office. Officer. Rank. MEXICO—continued. La vse Lower California. ........ Lucien N. Sullivan....... Consul. aie J.C.Ingram..............| Vice and deputy consul. Vorrauiii, Colima... .. veces Milten:B: Kirk ..oueai. ix Consul. Sie eerie i men na er) Richard M. Stadden......| Vice and deputy consul. Matamoros, Tamaulipas......... Jesse H. Johnson.......... Consul. SEE a RS Emilio J. Puig............| Vice and deputy consul. Magoiran, Sinalon. i aa William E. Alger......... Consul. EE re A. Gordon Brown.........| Vice and deputy consul. Los Sook Mn Ae ew MASE J Es OR Soe a Agent. MexicoClty. .. cc. cain Arnold Shanklin.......... Consul general. ARR es TR Henry M. Wolcott........ Vice and deputy consul general. Tr Te aS ET RC John D. Van Horn ....... Deputy consul general. TE FIT eh ie Ja John 'B.'Glenn..........5 Agent. DORACH. vv i Rh i, BL ANSE RR Do. I Eh Lo eae. SS a ie Do. Monterey, NuevoLeon........... Philip:C. Hanna... ...... Consul general. rl Si a ha as T. Ayres Robertson.......| Vice and deputy consul general. PERCE TIO Ce John C. Allen. ............| Deputy consul general. Na TT Irn rma se eaerial RE rl IE DRE aE a Consul. a Frederick Simpich ....... Vice and deputy consul. 1B re Thomas D. Bowman. ..... Do. TL a be George A. Wiswall........ Agent. Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas ...... ‘Alonzo 'B. Garrett......... Consul. Onn, ho Shelby: J. Theriot. ........ Vice and deputy consul. Progreso, Yucatan............... Wilbor 7..Gracey.. ....... Consul. AE YS re William P. Young........ Vice and deputy consul. Salling Cruz, Oaxaen. ev Seis sire tin se Consul. RRR ee Ra Warren W. Rich .........| Vice and deputy consul. ROO MORICO oss cor foes ET SR Agent. Saltillo, Coating re te aR en be Consul. Te EE (RE John BR. Silliman.........- Vice and deputy consul. San Lats Potosi, San Luis Potosi.| Wilbert L.. Bonney....... Consul. EE RRL Frank A. Dickinson.......| Vice and deputy consul. Taman, Pamgalipas........---- Clarence A. Miller......... Consul. DO ae Neill E. Pressly. .......... Vice and deputy consul. DOE Thomas H. Bevan........ Do. Ras0am. oo aiRtad Arthur GC. Payne ......... Agent. Tapsohuia, OAs, Ee rr Consul. EE Ne Charles A. Lesher.........| Vice and deputy consul. Vera Cris, VeraCruz... oo... William W. Canada....... Consul. EE at TO Ernesto Lux..............| Vice and deputy consul. MOROCCO angler. a naa Maxwell Blake............ Consul general. | pre at re he Arthur Gagsett. UV. coaace Vice and deputy consul general. 1 a CE SE ee a Michael A. El Khazen. . ..| Interpreter. Dy a RT Agent. MOSHAOL Soir sane ihn George Broome. .......... Do. NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS. Amsterdam... .iu..ooak aun FrankW. Mahin.... ...... Consul. Oe RS SE Dirk P. De Joung Ei oh | Vice and deputy consul. Batavia, Java... oneal bl Bradstreet S. Rairden..... Consul. Or ater, yi aa ee Percy W. Rairden. ....... Vice and deputy consul. Macassar, Celebes. . ............ Wiebe P. de Jong......... Agent. A RT rr I en fe Fs Se i Re Do. Somarane. oe Thomas Norton Frost..... Do. Seerabayn... a... ne Benjamin N. Powell...... Do. Curacao, West Indies. ........... Elias H. Cheney.......... Consul. ep Be pa he SB Christoffel S. Gorsira......| Vice consul. Bengire. oii. oe ies Gottlob W. Helimund....| Agent. Rotlerdam. .-...................: Soren: Listoe. _............ Consul general. Hh ER Se a See Gerhard H. Krogh........ Vice and deputy consul general. Posto oii os Martin Baker... .........: Deputy consul general. Bhshing.. oh. oaaisviinidiass Pieter FP. Aver... uc.izi.. Agent. Luxemburg, Luxemburg. ..... Desiré Derulle ............ Do. Scheveningen. .....v. nus ieln on Anders C. Nelson. ........ Do. NICARAGUA. Blnefields:............. ......... Arthur J. Clare. ainda. Consul. PO i i ase William A. Deverall ...... Vice and deputy consul. Corinto i bans i Si a se EY Be =e a elas ate wah a A Consul. Sei res Be Henry H. Leonard........| Vice and deputy consul. Vrtataith William H. De Savigny...| Agent. San Jaan del Sar...., ies. Charles Holmann. ........ Do. LYE 11 1 pean eS Ra RE Us Ra aE pee Consul. 364 Congressional Directory. NORWAY—RUSSIA. \ Office. Officer. Rank. NORWAY. Bertil M. Rasmusen. ..... Consul. Alfred O. Tittmann....... Vice and deputy consul. Thorvald K. Beyer ....... Deputy consul. Charles A. Holder......... Consul general. Haakon E. Dabr,jr....... Vice and deputy consul general. Do Martin E. Guttormsen. ...| Deputy consiil general. Christiansand . 07057 0 85 rar Borre Rosenkilde. ........ Agent. Trondljem:.. 0... 0... 0% Halldor O. Oppedal.....:. Do. Stayanger: | oolER ONT Walter A. Leonard........ Consul. Lp Be SRA Ty Frithjof C. Sigmond....... Vice and deputy consul. OMAN Magleat. ooo Lo RGN re eT ae Consul. OY tor shan sean a Mationiod Bagel. on. no Vice and deputy consul. PANAMA ? Colon, RET al BE es LSE RoR 2 James C. Kellogg... ...... Consul. he LE LEE Lindley L. Jewel..........| Vice and deputy consul. Pion: del®oro.:. =... Paul Osterhowt........... Agent. Panama. o.oo ne Alban G. Snyder.......... Consul general. DD A Danijel J. Waters.......... Vice and deputy consul general. Seniiager oo on hes Nathaniel I. Hill. Fo... Agent. PARAGUAY Asuncion... Dla n cidn Cornelius Ferris, jr........ Consul. ete ne es Maximo F. Croskey....... Vice and deputy consul. PERSIA Mabie oo 0 Gordon Paddock.......... Consul. Peheran 0000 Rib Craig W. Wadsworth. .... Consul general. I rae Se as Se! Ralph H. Bader... x Vice and deputy consul general. D0. Ee AD il a Interpreter. PERU Oanso. er EE A DN ETE Ra ee Consul general. RE ER SEE Luther XK. Zabriske.......| Vice and deputy consul general. Co (il 8 NTT GS te Harry Christiansen ....... Agent. Mollendo.... =.=: oie ea Thomas Orams. .......... Do. RE LI TP pe Charles B. G. Wilson...... Do. Salaverry. too. a John: P.. Brophy :-....- .. Do. Bomitas a Ease ee eR Consul. PORTUGAL AND DOMINIONS. Will'L. Lowrie ..~. .....i Consul general. Kenneth S. Patton........ Vice and deputy consul general. John Correia. .....u oe Agent. ] William El. Stave... ....... Do. Sao Vincent,Cape Verde Islands| J. B. Guimaraes. ......... Do. Lourenco Marquez, East Africa..| George A. Chamberlain. . .| Consul. Despina James Owen Spence.. Vice and deputy consul. St. Michaels, Azores............. Edward A. Creevey....... Consul. I RR ES SRS I, | Wm. W. Nicholls... ....... Vice and deputy consul. Bayal. oo. ar Dd | Moyses Benarus........... Agent. Teresitn. =. ov ii a | Thomsé de Castro.......... Do. ROUMANIA TE re Re Re I | Charles Campbell, jr... ... Consul general. Sl i Oe Es Cl To Wom. G. Boxshall.". - . Vice and deputy consul general. Sofia, Bulgaria. o.. 0.00.00 Acene C. Kermektehieft Agent. RUSSIA . Bathm Jiro Du Ti gle Teste A. Davis... ..... Consul. 7 Ae LO Sa LB Emeric Mattievich........ Vice consul. MoSeow. 0 John H. Snodgrass........ Consul general. BOR coh ha a Alfred W. Smith... _.... Vice and deputy consul general. Omsk. o..on mnie. Adolph F. Reinecke. ..... Agent. Odoss a Se A JohnH. Grontc......... Consul. RN SR AL David John Howells. .....| Vice and deputy consul. Boiiion Don... Ft George R. Martin. ........ Agent. Biga. nbn lane oy William TP. Doty. .....0 0 Consul. a, Te a So ER OE a ee ST Vice and deputy consul. A OT Rh Alfred Seligmann..........| Agent St has Ts a rt a Jacob KE. Conner.......... Consul. OL in ars Paul Bartlett. 0 Vice and deputy consul. RE CR ot of, H. Custis Vezey....:...... Do. Helsingfors, Finland ........... Victor Tk. i.) orn Agent. RE aE Se a R. BA. Radan........... Do. Msn United States Consular Officers. RUSSIA—TURKEY AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. RUSSIA—continuead. Viadivestok, Siberia............. A mre NV OIEAW, ito es coe bens SRG ba OE Ee SALVADOR re RE eS a SERVIA Belgrade... i D0. nr i ae ae Des SE Sa ee SIAM Bangkok... .. =. o.oo DO. ArLeooNd:.. a Jerez de la Frontera... ......... Seville Grand Conary... ol muni Valencia... .... . dicoie cios ts A Malm SWITZERLAND. Basel... co. a aa D Thomas Hinckley......... Anthony J. Perrone...... Sheldon L. Crosby........ Carl €. Hansen... 00 William J. Takes.....-.... James S. Bourke.......... Junius H. Stone.......... Do. Juan Morey y Cabanellas.. Do. Louis J. Agostini.......... Do. W. Roderick Dorsey...... Consul. Albert H. Fernandez... ... Vice and deputy consul. Frederick T. F. Dumont...| Consul. José Maria Gay.eeeucenn... Vice and deputy consul. Enrique Fraga. .........-. Agent. Enrique Mulder........... Do. Robert Frazer, jr... =. =: Consul. Thomas R. Geary......... Vice consul. Albert S. Troughton. ..... Deputy consul. Bartley I. Yost ........ a. Agent, Charles S. Winans.........| Consul. Harris N. Cookingham....| Vice and deputy consul. James Sanderson.......... Agent. William J. Alcoek......... Do. Homer Brett .....co.cn.-: Consul. César Perasa y Martin... ..| Vice and deputy consul. Peter Swanston... :....:. Agent, Claude I. Dawson. ........ Consul. James A. Chesney......... Vice and deputy consul. Henry W. Carey.......... Agent. TualsTono.....-- rs Do. Douglas Jenkins...........| Consul. Wilhelm Hartman........ Vice and deputy consul. Joseph Westerberg........ Agent. Ernest l.. Harris. ......... Per Torsten Berg: -........ Jacob M. Bagge... ..... Ernst H. Amnéus......... Philip Holland... .....=. Arnold Tuber. ..........¢. George Heimrod.......... Leo J. Frankenthal....... Francis B. Keene. ........ Louis H. Munier.......... Theodore F. Dwight..... 5 Dominic I. Murphy....... Eugene Nabel............. David ¥. Wilber......... Frank Bohr... .c.......- Jesse B. Jackson.......... Lorenzo Y. Manachy...... John T. Peristiany......-. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Agent. Consul general. Vice consul general. Deputy consul general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. 366 Congressional Directory. TURKEY AND DOMINIONS—ZANZIBAR. Office. Officer. Rank. TURKEY AND DOMINIONS—contd. Ed nn Basseral- ilo Beirut, Syria Do Chraipane. oo Arthur Garrels............ Francis L.. Romeo......... S. Pinkney Tdek......... Frederick T. Peake....... BmiliSaner.. lon... ios: James Scott Levack....... Arwid Konoff.... .. 00.0 W. Stanley Hollis. ........ Bann F. Chesbrough..... George Wissa Bey......... Gabriel Bie Ravndal...... OsearS. Helzer. .......... TewisHeek..........-...- George W.Young......... Opens S. Helger. ooo. ov i W.Young........- Alived R:Grech 7... 5. William E. D. Ward... _. "Samuel Edelman. ..._.._. Johm'D. Whiting -..=_ "| Samuel Edelman.......... Jacob Hardegg Geor ” Horton®.a.-..... Jom W. Dye... James W. Wiikinson Eh ‘Apostolos P. Hadji Chris- tofa. Alfred S. Northrap........ Li Montesanto......... Ralph J. Totten ...cc.....: Albert G. Ebert........... Thomas W. Voetter....... Cyrus N. Clark... ...-: 5.3 Bichord J. Biges, jr... Tose Blaginl . 70... oo William D. Henderson. ... John A. Ra, ‘Werner J. Leitner. ........ Herbert R. Wright........ Lodewyk J. Verhelst...... Perry. C. Hays...........-. Frank W. Vining.......:. Edward Lyell Bristow....| A Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. gent. 0. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Interpreter. Agent. Do. Do. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Student interpreter. Agent. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Depltiy consul general. 0. Marshal. Interpreter. nsul. Lh and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Deputy consul. Interpreter. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Student interpreter. Consul general. Vice and deputy consul general. Deputy consul general. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Interpreter. Agent. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Agent. Do. Do. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Consul. Vice and deputy. consul. Consul. Vice and deputy consul. Bartley F. Yost. ...... Frank Bohr. .......... Charles Lyon Chandler Ross Hazeltine .......... Charles C. Broy......... James B. Young......-- Ripley Wilson......... De Witt C. Poole, jr... Willys R. Peele... ...- Raymond P. Tenney . John XX. Davis... ...... George C. Hanson. .... Crawford M. Bishop .. J. Paul Jameson. ...... MyriS. Myers.’ ....-. George F. Bickford ... Frank W. Hadley. .... Nelson T. Johnson. . .. Mahlon Fay Perkins. . Charles P. McKiernan. Paul R. Josselyn...... United States Consular Officers. CONSULAR ASSISTANTS. Suan Sha London. Bly’ BR. Palmeriia 0-27 2 al eas amen. Louis G. Dreyfus, jr.......... i Allred B.Thomson ...... .... BE oy uae, Hose BH. Dick. 2... 0... RRR LE LR, Almeria. Charles 7. Albrecht... ..... Rp Zurich Herbert GC. Bigr.-.......... .. Voit i A Lisbon John S. Armstrong, jr. ....... Ln Washington. Nn BV Ee Ee eG as wa ‘Washington. Harold B. Quarton........... Soa Washington. Thomas Hl. Bevam............ Ena Genoa. Harry A. MeBride.._...... TRE Kalamata. MNoCBunk: ol... i Re Berlin. Charles Roy Nasmith......... INTERPRETERS. (Promoted from corps of student interpreters.) Ce Peking John A. Bristow ............. FR ar rE Peking Charles Jonathan Arnell...... RSA Canton Jom IK Caldwell... ..... aed Chefoo Harold C. Hugging. . ...... a Chefoo Raymond S. Curtice.......... ne Hankow Max D. Kirjassoff +. ......... rh a Newchwang. Arthur WH. Yenvite .... 2 SER Shanghai. Fewisifleek i. abn aia CFE At Shanghai. George W.Younz............ re Shanghai. SamnelEdelman.. . .. . ... SEI LAE Shanghai. Leland’ B. Morris... 0... ....: ats Tientsin. STUDENT INTERPRETERS. CHINA. en ie Peking [2CarliD. Meinhardt.........--. JAPAN. i eee ade Tokyo. | Eugene H. Dooman. ......... TURKEY. ea Cairo. Montefiore Judelsohn. ........ Am Constantinople. Joseph W. Ballantine......... Ralph. Bader. :--.... .._ 367 Yokohama. Santo Domingo. -.-..-Naples. Vancouver. London. Milan. Pe Brussels. Tokyo. abot Nagasaki. Seoul. Seoul. ho Jerusalem. Sad Saloniki. 368 Congressional Directory. - CONSULS IN THE UNITED STATES. ARGENTINA—AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ARGENTINA. Mobile, Alas. oon Manuel 8S. Macias -.......... Viceeonsul.:-...... San Francisco, Cal.......... Bountwell Dunlap... |= ETL te California. Apalachicola Te Willanmy W, Pooser...:..c... [05 QOL Sn Also in St. Joseph. Fernandina, Fla Tomas C. Borden. ...c- o.oo: doc tun... Pensacola, Fla......... J: 3. Harris: Plerpont. on... 1. qo lindo Brunswick, Ga........ -jeRosendoiBorras. oc. i nan dota Savannah, Ga... ......... William C. Moyrell. .........}.- dor oo ooh Georgia. Chicago, Wl..io..........o.. Alberto W. Brickwood......|..... dona oo. Indiana. New Orleans, la. ........-- Alfredfe Blanc. coo... ... |... doses rn, Portland, Me........... .... Clarence W., Small... ..... |... or Baltimore, Md: ............. James PF. Ferguson... ......[..... 0G ain a Boston, Moss... Guillermo McXKissock.......|..... ER a RO Pascagoula, Miss. .......... Juan L. Dantzler...........[..... dos 0 00 Mississippi. St.Louis; Mo... ........... Gustavo von Breeht. .......|-.-.- Gor. Sg New York City, N.Y....... Abel Pardo... .............. Consul general. . .... United States. Manuel A. Moling........... Comsglo.. oi Philadelphia, Pa. .......:.. Guillermo P, Wilson........ Viceconsul-........ Momila 0.0... .......... Jose Florentino Fernandez. .|..... dons oes on Island of Luzon. SamIuam, PR... 0 oo. SergioiBamirez. ..... ... il..:. AO Porto Rico. Port: Arthur, Tex... ....... Christopher Stephen Flana- |..... qo gan. : Newport News, Va......... Ha beslieo.. nil ooo dos ai aun Nortoll, Va. oceans Guillermo Klyver.......... |... .. qe... Norfolk and Ports- mouth. Tacoma, Wash ............. Beecher A. McKensis. ......|..... dol maa AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. Mobile, Aln...-.0.......... Office in charge of the consu- | Consul.........._... late at New Orleans. = San Francisco, Cal.......... Jose Goribar. nl io li dosh. ain Alaska, California, Ne- vada, Oregon, and Washington. Denver, Coloi.............. Hans Schwegel .............0..... dousit Sa oo Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. Pensacola, Fla... .......... Johann Baptist Cafiero...... Vice consul... Florida. Savannah, Ga... ...... .... Tudwig ©. Buseh.... 0 io Acting viceconsul...| Georgia and South Carolina. Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Federico A. Schaeter........ Consal... .......2-.0 Chieaoo TIL. ny New Orleans, La........... Baltimore, Md. ~........... Boston, Mass..............¢ StoPanl, Minn............. St-louls; Moo. .oo. a: Hugo Silvestri...... Franz Hindermann. G. Louis Hester. .... Oswald Kunhardt. . Edear Prochnik............. Chevalier Michael Straszewski. von Consul in charge of consulate general. Vicecousul......... Consul... lol. eons Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Nebraska, and the countries in Wiscon- sin not included in the jurisdiction of the vice consulate at St. Paul. Louisiana and Missis- sippi. Maryland. Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. Minnesota, North Da- kota, and South Da- kota; in Michigan the counties of Goge- bic, Ontonagon, Houghton, Xewee- naw, Iron, Baraga, Dickinson, Mar- quette, Menominee, Delta, Alger, School- craft, Luce, Macki- nac, and Chippewa; and in Wisconsin the countries of Douglas, Bayfield, Ashland, and Iron. Arkansas, Xamnsas, Missouri, and OXkla- homa. Consuls in the United States. 369 AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. I Residence. Name. | Rank. Jurisdiction. ; AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—contd. | | Buffalo, NY oni. os. Johann von Nyiri........... Deputy consular | Counties of Allegany, i agent. Broome, Cattaraugus, Cayuga, Chautau- qua, Chemung, Cortland, Erie, Gene- see, Jefferson, Liv- f ingston, Monroe, Ni- | agara, Onondaga, Ontario, Orleans, | Oswego, Schuyler, | Seneca, Steuben, Tioga, Tompkins, Wayne, Wyoming, and Yates. New York City, N. Y...... Alexander Nuber von Pere- | Consul general. ..... Connecticut, New ked. : York, and Rhode Island; in New Jer- sey, the counties of Bergen, Essex, Hud- son, Hunterdon, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset Sussex, Union, an Warren. Cinoinuadt, Ohio: 0 a Gongml a ..o0 nts Counties in Ohio other than those under the jurisdiction of the | vice consulate in Cleveland; consulate temporarily under the jurisdiction of the vice consulate in Cleveland. a Cleveland, Ohio. oc. [ Brnest-Imdwiz. cos... ADs cereal Ohio and also Michi- gan, except the coun- ties under the juris- diction of the consu- late general at Chi- cago. Philadelphia, Pa... ....... Chevalier Georg von Grivigic.|..... do. am. Counties of Adams, Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Chester, Columbia, Cumberland, Dau- phin, Delaware, Franklin, Juniata, Lackawanna,Lancas- ter, Lebanon, Le- high, Luzerne, Ly- coming, . Monroe, Montgomery, Mon- | tour, Northampton, Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia, Pike, Sehuylikill, Snyder Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wy- oming, and York, in Pennsylvania; the State of Delaware; in New Jersey, the counties of Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumber- land, Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——25 | | 370 Congressional Directory. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—BELGIUM. Residence. / Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY—contd. Pittsburgh; Paidiurell Joint Uniontown, Pais... .... Wilkes-Barre, Pa........... ManilacBol oak... San Juan, PR uli... Galveston, Bex. ul........ Proctor, VL ox oli Ll... Richmong;iVa..i........ Charleston; W.Va.......... BELGIUM. Birmingham, Ala........... Baron Lothar von Hauser... Lwdwig Vaezek............. Emil Neomanny........... .: Koavl Ziegler... oh vvvonnrnnins Joannes D. Stubbe.......... Christophorus L..D.Borchers. Geza Hoffmann... ......... A. Latady Consul cos oo. Deputy consular agent. Consular agent... .. Copsnl....0n 00 fo In charge consulate. . Vice consul......... Counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Bedford, Blair, But- ler, Cambria, Came- ron, Center, Cla- rion, Clearfield, Clin- ton, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, For- est, Fulton, Greene, Huntingdon, Indi- ana, Jefferson, Law- rence, McKean, Mer- cer, Mifflin, Potter, Somerset, Venango, Warren, Washing- ton, and Westmore- land, in Pennsylva- nia; the counties of Brooke, Hancock, Marshall, and Ohio in West Virginia. Fayette County. Counties of Bradford, Carbon, Columbia, Lackawanna, Lu- zerne, Lycoming, Schuylkill, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Wayne, and Wy- oming. Texas. Vermont. Virginia, except the counties of Bland, Buchanan, Carrol, Craig, Dickenson, Floyd, Giles, Gray- son, Lee, Montgom- ery, Pulaski, Rus- sell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washing- ton, Wise, and Wythe, and the State of North Carolina. West Virginia, except the counties of Brooke, Hancock, Marshall, and Ohio; the States of Ken- tucky and Tennes- see; the counties of Bland, Buchanan, Carroll, Craig, Dick- enson, Floyd, Giles, Grayson, Lee, Mont- gomery, Pulaski, Russell, Scott, Smyth, Tazewell, Washington, Wise, and Wythe in Vir- ginia. Counties of Bibb, Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Clay, Cle- burne, Colbert, Cull- man, Dekalb, Eto- wah, Fayette, Frank- lin, Jackson, Jefler- son, Lamar, Lauder- dale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, Marion, Marshall, Morgan, Pickens, Randolph, St. Clair, Shelby, Talladega, Tuscaloosa, Walker, and Winston. EB A Consuls wn the United States. 371 BELGIUM. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. BELGIUM—continued. Mobiles Ala 0 i isin nen ibe isssseka nn Consaly.. chs as: Counties of Autauga, Little Rock, Ark. .......... Los Angeles, Cal............ San Francisco, Cal.......... Denver; Colo tr. 2. Jacksonville, Fla. .......... Pensacola Fla =... ...... Sk Atlanta Ga... oi vo. 1... Savennah Ga... ........ Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Chicago loe-oiotir eo. Kansas City, Kans......... Touisville, By. 00... .... New Orleans, La........... Baltimore, Md.............. Boston, Mass... coi... Detroit, Mieh............... St. Louis; Mo... ......... .- Omaha, Nebr............ New York City, N. Y...... Portland, Oreg......... .-. Philadelphia, Pa......... .. EB. Vinsonhaler.............: NV. Ponet. ion] eres on Brion pi Sat dea A W.D: Howe... oi... L. 11. Le Hardy de Beaulieu. RB. RB. lange. son... Ch, Henrotin. .}............ G.Mignolet Mt 2ecoe 0 00 St.De Ridder. 0 se... L.DeWaele..-............. MaSeomin.-- co. Honorary consul. ... Constlnini is. Vice consuls... Second vice consul. . Vice consul......... Baldwin, Barbour, Bullock, Butler, Chambers, Chilton, Choctaw, Clarke, Coffee, Conecuh, Coosa Covington, Crenshaw, Dale, Dal- las, Elmore, Escam- bia, Geneva, Greene, Hale, Henry, Hous- ton, Lee, Lowndes, Macon, Marengo, Mo- bile, Monroe, Mont- gomery, Perry, Pike, Russell, Sumter, Tal-" lapoosa, Washingtoa, and Wilcox. Arkansas. Arizona and southern California. California, Idaho, Mon- tana, Nevada, Ore- gon, Utah, Washing- ton, Alaska, Arizona, ° and Hawaii. Colorado, Wyoming, and New Mexico. Georgia, except south- eastern Georgia. Southeastern Georgia. Illinois, Indiana, and owa. Kansas and Kansas City, Mo. Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee. Arkansas, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Iowa, Kan- sas, Louisiana, Min- nesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Wyoming, and New Mexico. Louisiana and Missis- sippi. Delaware and Mary- land. Massachusetts, Ver- mont, New Hamp shire, and Maine. Michigan. Missouri, except Kan- sas City. North Dakota, South Dakota, and Nebras a ka. Connecticut, New Jer- sey, New York, and Rhode Island. Oregon and Idaho. United States, except the districts of the consuls general in New Orleans and San Francisco. BELGIUM—BRAZIL. ] | 372 Congressional Directory. | Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. BELGIUM—continued. Philadelphia, Pa............ H. Hessenbruch............ Congilz.. rail fala Counties of Adams, A Bedford, Berks, © Blair, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Cen- ter, Clinton, Chester, Columbia, Cumber- 2 land, Dauphin, Dela- ware, Franklin, Ful- a ton, Huntingdon, Ju- niata, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Ly- coming, Mifflin, Mon- roe, Montgomery, Montour, Northamp- ton, Northumber- land, Perry, Pike, Potter, Philadelphia, Schuylkill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susque- J hanna, Tioga, Union, A Wayne, Wyoming, \ and York. Pittsburgh, Pa. ............ BeOoHenzl.. -. oo 00 Vice'consul......... Counties of Allegheny, : Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clearfield, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indi- ana, Jefferson, Law- rence, McKean, Mer- cer, Somerset, Ve- nango, Warren, Washington, an d | Westmoreland. Manila, P.T. amet cae EB. L.P.J Franck. ......... Consul eeaiie non. Philippine Islands. | Mayasuez, P.R............ AcBrave.: Soha Viceconsul.......... Departments of Maya- | guez and Aguadilia. Ponce, P. Bote. isons ov JoTaeet. o.oo 40. cco. Departments of Guay- ama and Ponce. “ I Habana, Caba.....c......... Ch. de Waepenaert.......... Consul general... ... Porto Rico and de- | pendencies. SanJuan, P.R......... ... J.E.Saldadia.. .. ii... Consul...........-.. Departments of Are- | cibo, Bayamon, and Humacao, and the island of Vieques. B:-D. Walter........... 5: Commercial agent. .. Charleston, S..C............ B. Rutledge... .......... 8s. Ee a North Carolina and South Carolina. Galveston, Tex. .....5...... Te Weagokusoly Laid ua doc.:.0.0 Texas and Oklahoma. Norfolk, Va.... AYP Mottu.t or Vice consul.......... Richmond, Va......:...... Fred-E.Nolting.......... Consul. c- a ln Virginia and West Vir- ginia. i Seattle, Wash. .....i:...... E. C. Neufelder............. Vice consul. ........ Washington. | Green Bay, Wis. ............ R. van Crombrugge......... Const: -oo oi Wisconsin and Minne- sota. BOLIVIA. San Diego, Cal... ...... PhilipMorse................ Consul: it San Frangisco, Cal.......... Carlos Senjinés B.......... .l1.v56 dog vs rio | Chicagos Ill... Frederick Harnwell .. .......|..... do: i. %. 93 New Orleans, Bair... cies svat nites Honorary consul. ... Baltimore; Md.............. Raymond M. Glacken.......[Consul.............. | Boston, Mass...............i Arthur P.Cushing... _...._.|..... IEEE BE Kansas City, Mo...<........ Edwin R.Heath............ Honorary consul.... [i New York City, N.Y...... Adolfo Ballivian............ Consul general. . .... Philadelphia, Pa. .......... Wilfred: H.Sehofi............ Honorary consul. . .. | Norioll;; Vo... .conints oon JohnD. leiteh:. ........:.. Viceconsul... . ..... i BRAZIL. Mobile, Ala:.c........ 5... Truman Gile McGonigal. ...| Viceconsul......... 4 Drew: Linard......... . Commercial agent. . . San Francisco, Cal.......... Archibald Barnard.......... Viceconsul......... | Eugene Gesvret............. Commercialagent. . . Fernandina, Fla............ HOLE ee ie bale Pensacola, Fla...........0.. Igngeciod.Dinz.............. Viceconsul......... he al a SE LE LR EE ER a Commercial agent. .. | Brunswick, Ga. ............ Walter B, Cook............. Vice consul... ...... | Consuls in the United States. 378 BRAZIL—COLOMBIA. Residence. Name. | Rank. Jurisdiction. BRAZIL—continued. Savannah, Ga... ok H. P.Adamg. a... >i. 5005 Viceconsul......... Chicago, TN. «20 a... Stuart R. Alexander. .......[..... Aoi vunaniiii on New Orleans, La........... Charles Dittmann........... 5 es dou. ene Yok Emmanuel Dittmann. ...... Commercial agent... Baltimore, Md-.............. Leonce Rabillon. ........... Yiceconsul.. ....... James F. Ferguson.......... Commercial agent... Boston, Mass.......uin.. 0... Jayme Mackay d’Almeida...| Viceconsul......... Pedro Mackay d’Almeida...| Commercial agent... Gulfport: Miss. ............. Gabriel Bruner Dantzler....| Viceconsul......... William Ross... ......... on Commercial agent... Pascagoula, Miss. .......... Manuel Ros... 5... .. 0% Viceconsul.i: i... .-. ; Andrew Gray... io i.uss. Commercial agent. .. St-Lomig,Mo............. Affonso de Figueiredo Sha Viceconsul......... New York City, N.Y...... Mang Jacintho Ferreirada | Consul general. ..... Cunha. Francisco Garcia Pereira | Vice consul......... edo. Philadelphia, Pa. .......... Napoleon Bonaparte Kelly. .|..... dors asenr ie h Flenry C. Sheppard ee] Commercial agent. . . Manila =B.T.0 o.oo odin] eM Polgat So. ...00.00 Congitlin vs. no... 0. San-Juan, BR... 00000 Waldemar E. Lee........... Vige'consul---...... Port-Arthar, Tex........... Christopher Stephen Flana- |... .. RE I fad Sr gan. Norfolk and Newport News, | Barton Myers...............|..... dois ok aa Va. R. Baldwin Myers.......... Commercial agent . . CHILE. ios Angeles, Cal............ Frank C. Prescott .......... Consular ovine. on San-Franeiseo, Cal... ...... Arturo Lorca Pellrross. . ....|..... AQ. snared eases Carlos E. Wessel. .._........ Viceconsul......... Savannah, Ga... ..... i 0 Roberto B. Reppard........ Consuls ar =i oF Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Jo WeWaldron. ........ . lie dO. ont doen Chicago, HL... 0c. M.-H. Bhlert...:.0...... tifa. ER New Orleans, La........... Pedro Ferngndez ...........L..... AO: cotinine nnsl Baltimore, Md.........i. .- RG. Teapold =... .. 05 metro Boston, ei Horacjo:-N.Risher....... ..i{..0 QOL bir as. ic St. Louis, IMGs EmestorCramer: ....o..0. .. fees.t doa. ari Brooklyn, N.Y... ......... TeonBonder...... 0... lt AO iets Res New York City, N. Y...... Ricardo Sénchez Cruz... .... Consul general. ..... United States. Portland, Oreg.............. Ramon Escobar ............ Consul... 2... .... Philadelphia, Pa. .......... Dudley. Bartlett............. J... Oca iad. tonne Manila, BT... AsMalvehy...... _.. 0 QOL. 30, 0 5 Ja nk Sandaan, P. B.. . ......-. IRE i See Th QO. 0 Norfolk, Va.~ loli... FAG Balley.. o. 00 Viceconsul......... Also in Newport News. Port Townsend, Wash.....| Oscar Blocker... lo; do. C0 an Tocoma, Wash............. | Luis A. Santander Ruiz Consuls cova iotcsas CHINA. San Francisco, Cal.......... RE ei Consul general. ..... < Owyang Kee Viceconsul.......... Honolulu, Hawaii. ......... {(sChen:Ching: He... ......... Const)... 5 en Boston, Mass... oo... isto: sili ra ti: vast main sats | Honorary consul. ... New York City, N. Y...... Liang Lean-fang............ { Acting consul. ...... eR imi ih Bars res Een | Vice consul. Ea Porfland, Orez............. (Moy BaclcHin.. .......0.... | Honorary consul. ... Philadelvhins Pa. . er ad fo i Eh Manley Ped oo... oi... TAYE: ote ce oh Seah Consul general. ..... Seattle, Wash. ............s GOON DIP: in tae = - itsanas Honorary consul. ... COLOMBIA. Mobile, Ala... .. Juan Llorea Marti........... Consul.icdo-a cio. Tos Angeles, Cal... .. .. .: James Moorkens............ Viceconsul......... San Francisco, Cal.......... Francisco Valencia.......... Consultee: 00.0 Chicago, TH. -...... .... C.-C Phelps... i... lees de. iin New Orleans, La..........: D. A. Martelo, J... Consular agent...... Baltimore, Md.... _ .:. William A. Riordan........ Consul... aes Boston, Mass. -....... i Jorge Vargas Heredia.......[..... dost teins iil Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island. Gulfport, Miss... ........ Federico L.. Rockwood. ..... Consular agent...... St. Lonis, Mo... rn JoAYbuckle. Yo EREn Consul... 0rd New York City, N. Y...... Francisco Escobar... ........ Consul general. ..... Rafael del Castillo...........| Viceconsul = ...... Philadelphia, Pa-.........: Arturo de Brigard..........| Consul = 2550 oo... Ponce BR. Manuel R. Morales. . . d San Juan, VE Ula Se M.R.Calderon............; Seas Norfolk, Oa Ee Howard P. Wilson John DB. Telteh......=..... 374 Congressional Directory. COSTA RICA—DENMARK. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. COSTA RICA. Mobile; Ala... sss Truerman G. McGonigal....| Consul.............. ( 'Phomas BD: Nettles... =. : = Viceconsul...”:..... Los Angeles, Cal ........... Carlos Enrique Bobertz. .... Consul. I... 2... San Francisco, Cal.......... Pode Oharrio.s i... lsd Consul general. . .... Chieago, Tl. =... .. 2: :. Berthold Singer..........:;. Consul. rr. j New Orleans, La........... Lamar C. Quintero.......... Consul general. ..... In the south of the : United States. j John Marshall Quintero... .. Viceconsul.. .-....... | Baltimore, Md... ..... J... William A. Riordan........ Consgnl’ (7.0L... Boston, Mass... ......... Max Ottovon Klock. .......|..... do. xiii da. ] St. Lows, Mo... .......:.: Emst’B. Filsinger...........I..... Jol CUE Ll New York City, N. Y...... Manuel Gonzdlez Zeledon.: . . Coney) general. ..... A SER ME Se SS i CE QRSNIE CT kl Alejandro Monestel......... Vicecongul...-..... Portland, Oreg, ............. Grandville G. Ames......... Congnlo isting, oo... Philadelphia, Pa. ..... 4: Wilfred Hl. Schoffc 202. 0 0 dof =a © San Juan, P.R.. ........... Nicolds Megioinoff...._ .....[..... do. 20s 1 Galveston, Tex... .....:-:.. Henry Mosle-.-. . L304 28 Sits ne Noriolle, Va... a Harry Beyner....... cA Honorary consul. ...| Also in Newport News. Richmond, Va......... 5: Rafael Vilafranca RSE rere oy Sk dot coi. ] CUBA. Mobile, Ala..o...vec- vn nvsas J. Nelson Polhamus........ Conslls iva: wavs | Los Angeles, Cal _.......... Jomes Pennie... = Honorary consul. . | Washingion, D.C.......... A. F. Hevia y Prieto. ...... Viceconsul....-...-- i Fernandina, Fla............ John N. Partridge. ......... Honorary consul. . .. | Jacksonville, Fla............ Julio Rodriguez Embil......[..... doc... ae ] Key West, Fla. .......c Antonio Diaz y Carrasco. ...| Consul. ............. | Pensacola, Fla... ......1. Vincent J-Vidal.... 00). Honorary consul. ... i Tomps, Bla... ol. Rafael Martinez Ibor........ Consul. Fein. Also in Port Tampa. j Aflomita Ga... ono C. H. Whitington. .....- ¥.'% Honorary consul. . .. ! Brunswick, Ga. ....... :-.: Rosendo Torrgs. ©. oo. 2a] Ba doi ar. cu | Savannah, Ga..........--- ArthurJ. Howard.-....-..:-| 20 dott tacos | Chieage, W-.......... iis Tomas Estrada Palma y | Consul.............. | : Guardiola. Louisville, Ry... ......i:=:: Richard-P.Cang:.... 2-5 Honorary consul. . .. New Orleans, La. .......... José R. Cabrera y Zunzu- | Consul.............. negui. Baltimore, Md... 2... .. César A. Barranco y Fer- |..... do. Zit. oo. ] nandez. Boston, Mass. -........ iw : 0sé Monz6n y Aguirre...... Honorary consul. . .. ] Detroit, Mich... i SW. Harta ll dori. ] Gulfport, Miss. na inn J AE WeGory io: sine] ons QO. nous ieinin : Pascagoula, Miss, 10... Manuel Leén Ros. ..........]..... dost, ~via Also in Scranton and Moss Point. | Kansas City, Mo...........- Loren O."Booram.-... (E18 do. Bl as | St. Louis, Me.. ore Augusto Aguilera y Re- | Consul.............. vy queijo. : New-York City, N. Y...... Laan Dolz y Arango....| Consul general...... United States. Felipe Taboada y Ponce de | Consul..:-.......... y Leon. i Ernesto Mantilla ........... Vice consul.......... | Cincinnati, Ohio... .....%%5% Francisco Pefia y Hernandez | Honorary consul. ... 4 Philadelphia, Pa... ....... Jacinto PF Tmis. l= cn Consuls. it 8. 0... Alo over Wilmington, el. | Aguadilla, P. R.......:0% Ernesto H. Lienau y Lange. .| Honorary cousul.... | Avecibo,P. R.. 0... Fernando Alemén y Valleé..|..... CR Sa Se Mayaguez, P.R......... Alberto Bravo Gonzalez.....|:.... do. ld. 0 i. Ponce, PR ...........1 Carlos Morales Alvarado.....|-.... dol in... Sondusn, P. RR...“ io.. José Caminero y Shelton....| Consul. ............. | Chaltaneoss TR enN. ©. a eaneinans neem Honorary consul. . .. Galveston, Tex. ............ Ernesto Casaus y Almoina..| Consul.............. Newport News, Va......... Antonio Altamira y Polo...|..... dels. 15h | Notfolle, Va... i. .2 00 Gaspar de la Vega y Cal- Honorary consul. . .. | derén. | DENMARK | Mobilep lal.” o....coneens LounisDonald:s.t. .........% Vice consul.......... Alabama. | San Francisco, Cal....... ...| Johannes Erhardt Bgggild. .| Acting consul. ...... Alaska, Arizona, Cali- fornia, Idaho, "Neva- da, Oregon, and Washington. Denver, Colo... .-........- Viggo Egede Baerresen...... Vice consul: .:...... Colorado. | Pensacola, Fla.............. Carl McKenzie Oerting......|..... 0a aia vie naw Florida. Honolulu, Hawaii. ......... Christian Hedemann........ Consuls ral Hawaii. Chicago, Wl iias. Fuki. cies Georg Bech. hi... acne silanes BOL ciatact es in Colorado, Illinois, In- diana, Towa Kansas, Michigan Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, | Nebraska, North Da’ | kota, South Dakota, U tah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. | ay Consuls in the United States. 375 Humacao, P. R Mayaguez, P. R Ponce, P. Vieques, P.R....... Lc. cae Norfolk, Va...o.-........-- ECUADOR. Los Angeles, Cal............ San Francisco, Cal.......... Chicane, IW: coo ie New Orleans, Laz.ol:.. cos Baltimore, Md............. Boston, Mass. .2..... oi. St. Louis, Mo... .0.... ~- New York City, N. Y....-. Cincinnati, Ohlo..........-. Ramén Almonte............ Blas C.-8ilva........cooi Vieeconsagl.........: Consul general. ..... Vice consul... ....:-: Honorary consul general. Consul general. ..... Consul. ex Go Consul general...... Honorary consul.... DENMARK-—ECUADOR. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. DENMARK—continued. Connell: Blufls, Iowa... .---- eet LL... .... 00 Viee consul......... Kansas City, Tans... Jep Hansen Mailand........|..... do. ied J... Kancas. Yonlsville, Kyi... -- Jeeee Charles E. Currie............ Constr). ...irovriviamne's Kentucky, Tennessee, ; and Ohio. New Orleans, la........... Thyge Soegaard. ............ Acting consul....... Alabama, Arkansas, . Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Ne w Mexico, Oklahoma, ; and Texas. Baltimore. Md... ..-... =... Holger A. Koppel ceeeeceanen Vice consul.......... Maryland. Boston, Moss. ...-uvnien Gustaf Lundberg............ Congil: J 5000. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode 2 ! Island and Vermont. Detroit; Mich... 0b... on Peter Sorensen. ............. Vice consul... --| Michigan. St. Pon Minn: JohniC. Nelson... ..icuvinmssfe mmins do... ----.:-.-. Minnesota. St. Lon, Mo... o.oo PellDsen 30.0 hoe on vine of eisiem:d dO. isco. Missouri. Omaha, Nebr... .....-..... OLEWOIE oi. oa. oon we sioreis bin furor doibil. oo... Nebraska. Loveloeks, Nev............. Peter Anker. i... ....v.»--.- of oc08 doilioio........ Nevada. Berth ATI0Y, N. Jo. hones Bil bes snap mn om SIE DI do... New Jersey. New York City, N.Y....... Axel Ngrgaard ............. Consul. ............. Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, New Jer- sey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Virginia, : : and West Virginia. ‘Grand Forks, N. Dak....... Marinus Rasmussen®........ Viceconsul:......0.. North Dakota and South Dakota. Cleveland, Ohlo. ........... Mark L, Thomsen...............: doz son. teats Ohio. Portland, Oveg- -.... -. Henry Havkson......-..-...]....: ER Oregon. Philadelphia, Pa. .....-.... Christian Moe.~..............[.00... do... oe... Pennsylvania. Manlls, Pd. Robert Henry Wood........ Consul. tois. ..... Humaeao, P. Riou....... Antonio Roig. .............. Vice consul.......... Mayaguez, P. R Albert Bravo..... es do. aig Ponce, PB e cies JorgetArmstrong ......---.-.- In charge ofconsulate| Porto Rico. SanJaan, P. BR. ............ T. G. L. Waymouth......... Viceconsul..o......% Charleston, S. C James M. Seignious.........]..... dou: ood ia South Carolina. Galveston, Tex. ............ Hans Guldmaon..-.........:..... EE Se Salt Lake City, Utah....... Thervald Orlob. oul Lo thie dosti 1. Utah. Newport News, Va. ........ ELE. Parker. ........c... 00000 do. 2inind Joo) Noviolls, Va... ovis E.:O. Parkinson... ......... pus do... S280 Jo. Virginia. Senitle, Wash... .......:.. John P. Jacobsen............{322iL qo. LOEB LLL. Alaska and Washing- ton. Raeine, Wis. .......c.cinuns Peter Bering Nelson.........}-.... Aol OLN Sooo Wisconsin. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Mobile; Alalit. oo. ..... T.G. McGonigal.....0.n 08 Vice'consul.......... San Francisco, Cal.......... John Barneson ............. Honorary vice consul Chicago. 1.000... Frederick W. Job........... Viesconsul.......... Baltimore, Md.............. William A. Riordam.........I..... doc Giada Boston, Mass. .............. Manuel F. Cestero........... Consul... ox. Kontas City, Mo. ......-... BR. W. Lightburne.......... Viceconsul......... New York City, N. Y...... Francisco Dectjen .......... Consul general. ..... Henry C.Niese: ...... ... Honorary vice consul Yimin, Na@La. Thomasi¥. Weod.......... Viceconsul.......... Philadelphia, Pa........... Rodman Wanamaker. ...... Console. oni. ob Aguadilla, P. R 3 Eduardo Fronteras Viceconsul......... Arecibo, sn Honorary vice consul Pajarde,P.R........ Vice consul. Porto Rico. 376 Congressional Directory. ECUADOR—FRANCE. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ECUADOR—continued. Philadelphia, Pa. .......:-. Arturoide:Brigard...."....... Consuls oie c Ro Manila, ©. 1. .cogaq. Ricardo E. Barretto..... ...|..... do chi nt. don I I Te SN Ce ln TT SS ee 0: nba ao Norfolle Vania dee 0 Lo 00a oh Vice consnl:"...... 0. FRANCE. Birmingham, Ala........... Simon Klotz vox "ooo Consular agent...... Mobile “Ala. no oon. CY Wheeler =... [Lo dow oan Nome, Alaska ..:oo. oo... AlbertSchneider. ...........[c.0. dos stunt Los Angeles, Cal............ Louis Sentous, jr. ........... [00.0 dort nied San Diego, Cal. c............ Abraham Blockman........|..... G0; es . : San Francisco, Cal.......... Raphaél Monnet............ Consul in charge of | California, Idaho, Ne- consulate general. vada, Oregon, Utah, Alaska, Arizona, and Hawaii. Bn 088, Cal. vinevidi. sve orf soit altho saath on pe san ne ait Consular agent...... Denyer, Colo. iain. A-Bourquin... 5... eh docil.ciie. 0. Pensacoly, Fla... ..... Westerhy Howe... .......... [3 don. a. Tampa, Fla. coi snd... wrnest Wi.Monrese... .......|--..: 0. en os Savannah, Ga. ......0.-.... Alexis Nicolas) :..... 0... [iow dos iad Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Auguste Marques. .......... Honorary consul. ... Chicago, le ea 3 I Louis Emile Houssin de | Copsul.............. Colorado, North Da- Saint Laurent. : kota, South Dakota, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kansas, Ken- tucky, Michigan, ° Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska Ohio, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Louisville, Ky... _..c...... Michel Hermann. ........... Consular agent...... Baton Rouge, La........... Alexander:Grouchy ..... fv. on Tp mer A en New Orleans, La........... Marie Henri Leduc ......... Consul general in | Alabama, Arkansas, charge of consu- Florida, Georgia, late. Louisiana, Missis- sippi, Tennessee, Oklahoma, and New Mexico. Portlond, Me... .o.. 0... Ernest de Beaufort le Prohon| Consular agent...... Baltimore, Md. ............ Léonce Rabillon........... fea doc. a, Boston, Sr. Joseph J. Flamand......... [5.5 docil ik acs Detnois; Mich... ......:...... Joseph Belanger. .......... do. Sadat. oo StPamloMian. clo ol te Ts ae ea do... ouch on Gulfport, Miss. .....o0...... Jom Paoli... 0. oo... adler is dol udas. io. on Kansas City, Mao... oir Emile-Stanislas Brus........|..... pra St.Tounis,Mo............... Mare Francois Eugene Se- |..... dors guin. : New York City, N.Y....... Etienne Marie Louis Lanel..| Consul general....... North Carolina, South Carolina, Connecti- cut, Delaware, Ma- ryland, Maine, Mas- sachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Ver- mont, West Virginia, and Virginia. Cincinnati, Ohlo............ Eugene C. Pociey........... Porilond, Oreg.:....... ... Charles Henri Labbé........ Philadelphia, Pa........... Maurice Heilmann Manila, YoU. ooo. on Henri Eugene Aymé-Martin |..... Tire AY UR Sa Aveelbo, P.R.... ....... Eugene Elie Lefranc......... Consular agent...... Buomaeae, P.R......ci...0 Pilandor iva he dos. oatg. oc. Mayaguez, P.R.....4...... Pr. Andre.Orsinl.......... lait JO i ididint nase Ponce, PB... ow Louis Raphael Vincent Lec- |..... J Te cia. SansinanaiP. Bi co oo Joseph René Pierre Daubrée.| Consul.............. Porto Rico. Vieques, CET a Ch. LeBran...i.......... Consular agent...... Chadlesion, 8. CL... el on iis th eri iinaiiias QOL AE Brownsville, Tex........... Harold Laurens Dundas |..... CS PORE D Kirkham. Dallas, Pex. 0c... i... Jean Batiste Adoue.........|..... dO 8 aren mi Pago, Pex. ov... 7... Jean Marie Romagny........|..... dos... ... Galveston, Tex... .......... Paul Marie Suzor........... Consulta ii..... Texas. San Antonio, Tex.......... Alfred Saaner........... .:0% Consular agent...... Norlolle, Va. - oo... i 0. Walter Herron Taylor.......|..... TR PL EE Seaitle, Wash. ...... ... .; Raymond Guillaume Emile | Vice consul......... ‘Washington. Henri Adrien de Lobel- Mahy. | | Consuls in the United States SIT GERMAN EMPIRE. | Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. GERMAN EMPIRE. J Mobile, Ala... novi... TE. Helzhomt. i... ...... bw Consul... iil Laas Alabama. i Los Angeles, Cal............ Perry W. Weidner... 1 dos aati Imperial, Kern, Los i : Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Ber- nardino, San Diego, | San Luis Obispo . Santa Barbara, an Ventura Counties. San Francisco, Cal..>....... rons Bopp. -teiivue sales do-it California (except the counties included in - the jurisdiction of the consulate at Los An- geles) and Nevada. Denver, Colo... co... ARE SR do. loin Colorado, Utah, New Mexico, and Arizona. A docizii oo .nns ean) HloTida, AE do. .............| Alabama, Florida, Georgia, North Caro- lina, South Carolina, i i ; and Tennessee. | ¥ Savanmah, Ga... ... = Ernst.liehhorn... -... oles QO ds malih oat Georgia. ! Honolalu, Hawall ao... 0 ie iuivis inc fads wie » summit =o elisovs QO sanrinh oto os Hawaii. Chicago, Yi SSE Alfred:Gelssler....c....-....[s 0 A065 Illinois (except St. | 4 Sal Clair, Madison, and i Monroe Counties), i Iowa, Michigan, Ne- | | Pensacola, Fla.............. Gerhard Rolfs.. ..---........ : Atlamta, Ga... nl Eckhard von Schaek........ braska, and Wiscon- | : sin. } New Orleans, La. .......... PoE BoN se al) 0.0 ash Louisiana, Mississippi, | | and Texas. | Baltimore, Md......... - [Carl A Giliderite ~~. lo 0.0. 5 vets Maryland and the Dis- trict of Columbia. Boston, Mass: .. ~~... | Wilhelm Theodor Reincke. .|..... oN sehr bos Maine, Massachusetts, | New Hampshire, { and Rhode Island. | St.Paul, Minn... ............| Johannes:Granow. ........ ..|..... dO: cmt t ote Minnesota, North Da- 1 { kota, and South Da- i : kota. St. Lows, Mo... os Wilhelm Breitling... .... [ae QBasic os Arkansas, Kansas, Mis- { souri, Oklahoma, | and St. Clair, Madi- i son, and Monroe, ! | | f Counties in Illinois. New York City, N. Y...... PaalPalcke...............: Consul general...... Maine, New Hamp- shire, Vermont, Mas- sachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jer- ! sey, Maryland, Vir- | ginia, and the Dis-- | trict of Columbia. i Erich Hossenfelder ......... Consul. usin. Port of New York. | Wilmington, N.C..c........ Johann Gieschen...... ......l .... Ques caliit co oes North Carolina. So] Cincinnati, Ohio............ Osear-Mezgen... =... To Shoo do: Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Vir- ginia. Philadelphia, Pa...... Arthur Mudra... oo. x oe QOiz- anit Lo Delaware and Pennsyl- | vania. | Gebu, P. Tones nine i OL Conrad. André... ..... ...... Vieeconsul...c. .... -; Islands of Cebu, Bohol, Al | Leyte, and Samar. i Holo, Pol sa a sae ss a a do... | Tloilo. Manila PT: oS 0. (Franz Karl Zitelmann.......[ Consal. ......to..... Philippine Islands, the island of Guam, of | the Ladrones, and { | the Sulu Islands. Aguadiila, FT. Ro. coi Ernest H. Lienau........... Vice consul... ..... | Arecibo, BP. R.........0 0. Adolf Woester. 0.0 =. 0 loos A A RD, i Mayaguez, P.R... ....... Otto Ohrt i Pongs, P.R--..... oc ol 0d Julius Umbach... 0-2... |. 0: ER Sl PR Sanduan,P. B...... ._. .. Waldemar Hepp... ..-.-- = Consuls cv. oi Porto Rico. Charleston, 3.C... &:0i..... EmilIahng.. iv. oo ooien lous iT Re gn ey | South Carolina. Galveston, Tex. ............ Otto: Seheldt ct oa AO aati. nh | Texas. Newport News, Va......... Henry L. Schmelz. ......... Vice consul..........| Norfolk, Newport | News, and Ports- { mouth. Richmond, Va......... ...} Tmil Carl. Vietor. ........... Consul ott | Virginia (except Nor- | folk, Newport News, ll | and Portsmouth). | Port Townsend, Wash......| August Duddonhausen...... Vice consul.........} | Clallam, Island, Jeffer- i son, and San Juan | } Counties, Wash. ] | 378 Congressional Directory. GERMAN EMPIRE—GREAT BRITAIN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. GERMAN EMPIRE—contd. Seattle, Wash iioC ur... Wolf venrL8hneysen........[:Consal. 2.0 2... .. Oregon, Washington, Tacoma, Wash. 1&0. ..... GREAT BRITAIN. Mobile, Ala... .c-- Con Sa Nome, Alaska. 20... ..... Y.08 Angeles, Cal... ...... San Diego, Cali nbn) San Francisco, Cal.......... Denver;iColo :. ~~. ..... Washington, D.C. ...... as Fernandina, Fla. ...~. ....... Jacksonville, Bla _- 2... . Key West Floto i. Pensacola, Fla... ..... Port Tampa, Tin 0.0. ...% Brunswick, Gaz. -'"...1... Darien Gas > soe a. Savannah, Ga oo aE Gian Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Chicago, I.-C... N New Orleans, Ja... ........ Portland, Me 7 2-0 Lo Baltimore, Md. o>: ....... Boston, Mass............... Detroit; Mich... 2571... .... Duluth, Minn... 5. ........ St: Paul, Minn... ....... Biloxi] Miss... 0. .o.ou Gulipori, Miss.............- Konsas City, Mo. .........-. St. Louis, Mot. 10.0... Omaha, Nebr... 2:0. ....... BuffaloyNeYo tod... Otto Richter... ...........5 Thomas John McSweany.... Lionel Rupert Stuart Weatherley. Charles White Mortimer..... Allen Hutchinson. .......... Alexander Carnegie Ross.... Douglas Young...........-.. Halford Dumergue Gerrard. Alired Crebben .-.........-: Hugh Black Rowland....... William Bedloe Crosby Dur- yeé. Walker Mucklow............ Wold -HeTayler coi William Dodson Howe ..... James Ward Morris......... Rosendo Porras... ........5. Robert Manson............3 Arthur Montague Brook- field. John Baptist Rentiers...... Horace Dickinson Nugent... Hugh Hutchison Cassells.. . . Henry Thomas Carew-Hunt. Guy Henry Bullock ........ Ruby Warner Hopkins. .... John Bernard Keating...... Gilbert Praser............-.c Ernest-A- Boyd ............ Horace Edgar Bowle........ Frederick Peter Leay....... Prancis O'Meara. ....-.....-. John: B. Masson.....-....-.-- Howard G. Meredith........ Henry. Baylor. on. -... c... Charles Edward Hamilton... James T. L.emon...........-- Max Rowland ............:. Herbert Whitehead Mac- Kirdy. Charles Lyons Markham Pearson. William Keane Small. ...... Mathew Alexander Hall... .. William Henry James Cole. . Vice consul.......... Viceconsul...:. .... Consul general. ..... Viceconsul.......-..- Proconsul..7::..... Vicerconsal ox Idaho, Montana, Wyoming,and Alaska. Adams, Asotin, Cheha- lis, Clarke, Colum- bia, Cowlitz, Frank- lin, Garfield, Klicki- tat, Lewis, Pacific, Pier ce, Skamania, Thurston, Wahkia- kum, Walla Walla, Whitman, and Yaki- ma Counties. District of Los Angeles. California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. North Carolina, South Carolina, and Geor- gia. Hawaii. Colorado, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Michigan, Min- nesota, Nebraska, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. All the ports of entry in Maine. Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont. Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Kentucky, and Ten- nessee, and the cit; of East St. Louis, Ill. Consuls tn the United States. + GREAT BRITAIN—GREECE. 379 Residence. GREAT BRITAIN—continued. New York City, N. Y...... Wilmington, N. C........... Cincinnati, Ohie...........: Cleveland, Ohio.......-..---- Astoria, Ope. = lic. C...... Portlond; Oreg-. . .......... Philadelphia, Pa..-...i.... Holle, Blunt ts Monila, BC... avian Arecibo, PR... oa. io Arroyo de Guayama, P. R.. Bumacao, PoiB............ Mayaguez, PoR............ Pones PR. iota. Sandon PR. Providence, R. 11. ......-... Charleston S.C. 5... 0... .... Beaufort; 8-C........2.... Galveston, Tex .c.....5----- Sabine Pass, Tex........... Apia, Tutuila, Samoa... ... Newport News, Va......... Nozlolls, Var. oi. o.... 0% Riehmond,; Va.:........... Grays Harbor, Wash....... Port Townsend, Wash...... Seattle, Wash.............. Tacoma, Wash. .......c.... GREECE. Mobile, Ala... ......... San Franeiseo, Cal.......... Chicago, I11 Boston, Mass............. ... St. Louis, Mo............... Butte, Mont... .............. Omaha, Nebr... ............ New York City, N. Y Wilmington, N. C Philadelphia, Pa......:.... Nashville, Tenn. ...... .... Tacoma, Wash............. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. Courtenay Walter Bennett..| Consul general...... New York, New Jer- sey, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. Richard Lysle Noworthy....| Vice consul.......... John Joseph Broderick......|..... ot trate Ror Laurence Milner Robinson. _|..... dois taco ooo Janes SPINE. 2 ir Lote he tt OF. Santi Tis WILY, Binet.) Nits aos AO: ite, oo H, EB Gresham. ... =... 1... do. ite Edward Mackay Cherry.....|..... Aor sh ne Thomas Edward Erskine...| Consul.............. Oregon, Washington Idaho, Montana, an : Alaska. John Philip Tramt.......... Viceeonsul'. ....... Willreqd"Powell...........-.. Congal >. ior Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Delaware. Hugh Alexander Ford...... Vice consul......... Edward Waring Wilson. ....|..... Mo aa Charles Edward Eardley |..... AO: i Childers. John Talbot Ramsden |..... doz Ary) Knowles. Erie St. Cyr Purdon........|..... QO cme Alfred Ernest Wileman. . ... Consul general. ..... The Philippine Isiands. William Massy Royds....... Acting vice consul... . John N. Sidebottom. ....... Proconsul..->....... Lorenzo Oliver.............- Vice consul......... Henry Alexander McCor- |..... JO a mick. Antonio Relgs cia dost la Humacao, Naguabo, and Fajardo. Adolf: Steflens..... iz. oo do. id Fernando Miguel Toro. .....|..... ae aE George Ambrose Pogson....[ Consul.............. Thomas G. I. Waymouth...| Viceconsul......... Henry Joseph Church Du- |..... dor bois. Alexander Harkness........|..... JO James Cuthbert Roach...... Preoeconsul. 25... James M.Crofut............ Vice'consal......... Poy; Boyal and Beau- Charles Alexander Spencer | Consul.............. Texas and New Mex- Perceval. ico. Samuel Wythe Barnes. ..... Vice consul. ........ Jom BEB, Adams... 0000s CELE BE Sabine Pass and Port Arthur. Thomas Trood. ......... 1: Acting vice consul... Hugh John FitzGerald...... Viceeonsul. =. ..... Barton Myers... ar oan: ER Se Robert Baldwin Myers...... Proconsul........... Arthur Ponsonby Wilmer...| Vice consul. . Thomas Moar Watt Cop- |.--.. do. in land. Osezr- Klbeker.............5 1-aces qo ra Bernard Pally... ........; Conant sl Wel Murray. a fC doit sl John ¥. Lyon. ............ Proconsyl.....-.-... Charles Ernest Lucian Agas- | Vice consul. ........ siz. ATS ee Aran Wlsih are ea a state Consul... 0... 0. Richard de Fontana. .......)-2.-- dor. ln Nikolaos Salopoulos.........|..... do. ai Augustin Synadino......... Honorar consul | Maine, New Hamp- general. shire, Vermont, Mas- sachusetts Rhode Island, and Connecti- cut. Hector M. Pesmazoglou. .... In charge consulate. .| Missouri. Th. Stalkes. oo = oan In charge of vice | Montana and Utah. consulate. Consul... oi ou Consul general. ..... Demetre Vafiades........... Vice consul. ........ Aristotéle T'sakonas. ........ Consol... hs... Pennylvania, Mary- land, and Virginia. SE rl IER Ph Viceconsul........: Hang Heldney..:-....--...-- Consul... o.oo Oregon, Washington, and the Territory of Alaska. 380 Congressional Directory. GUATEMALA—ITALY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. GUATEMALA. Mobile, Aln...... 0.00... Frinman Gile McGonigal....| Consul.............. San Diego, Call om. ins Ormond W. Foliin.......... Honorary vice consul San Francisco, Cale. ii Juan Padilla Matute........ Consul general... ... Pensacola, Fla. ............. Vicente J. Vidal: =... ooo. Honorary vice consul Chicago, a Ea ten rn SE Consul general: ..... Illinois. Kansas City, Rang... .:...; Edwin R.:Heath... ......« Honorary consul. . Kansas. Jouisville, Ky.............. Shirley M. Crawford........|. AT Ae Se New Orleans, es Sa Manuel Morales Sdenz....... Consul general. ..... Angel Pefia rio 0% a0 Vice consul-..i....... Baltimore, Md.............. C. Morton Stewart, jr....... Hoes consul | Maryland. general. Boston,-Mass. ............. A.C Gavela. oi Comsitl: =. 2 William A. Mosman ......_.. Honorary vice consul Gulfport, Miss..-..........: Bi Riehavds,.o. ao. oi. Viceeonsal......... St. ouis, Mo. ouono a. LL.D. K ingsland . Ta Se Honorary consul | Missouri. general. New York City, N. Y...... Dr. Ramon Bengoechea..... Consul general. ..... Philadelphia, Pa... ........ Dudley Bartlett. -..........- Honorary consul... . Senidusnc PR oc 1 CorlostVere. ..:.. ii. .-z... Const]. ..cooainsnnn- Providence, re a SRE Eduardo G. Kelton... :. 17. do... .o... 0.1. Galveston, We J. MerroW. 1. taoor Honorary consul. ... Seattle, Sash. re Mee Constil. oo oon HAITI. Mobile, ila. oon James Thomas. =... ...... Const il Efe mei baa rs Boston, Mass. .............2 iB: Brestorn Clayle. 27 0 otlB caneanaoe sas New York City, N.Y ...... Youis Bazelais.:............ ian general. ..... Ernest Bastien......... ART Viceconsul......... Mayagaez, PR. a... Adolio'Steffens. ==... ol... dois Ponce, PR. ot. Blag'@. Silva. cor... do. iii Ban Juan, PR -iao or Charles Vere:.-t..... ...= Consul. ai no ro HONDURAS. Mobile, Ala. ......... xml. Licenciado Timoteo Miralda.| Consul. ............. San Diego, Cal... ........ Marcos Martinez............ Viceconsul......... San Francisco, Cal.......... Fernando Somoza Vivas....| Consul general. ..... Washington, D.C... _..... Alan O. Clephane. .......... Honorary consul. ... Jacksonville, Fla. ..._....:. James Samuel Easterby..... Viceconsul......... Mempa, Bla 0 Alfredo Lopez Galeano..... Honsrsy consul. Jonisville, Ky.............. FEdward B Coffey... . . 4 40. agers New Orleans, Le a Celeo’Dgvilla .... . .. .. Soa general...... Louisiana. Baltimore, diners C.- Morton Stewart, Ir: .. di ianl0r tm we nnan os Boston, Maw Joseph Henry Emslio....... Hongrary consul. . Kansas Cs, Mote. 2 Gabriel Madrid Hernfndez..|.....do.............. St. Louis, Mo....... Ss LD Kingsland. 0.0 00 Sian general...... New York Clty, N. Yu... R-ComiloDiazi a. fu {A Sa eRe le Ginelnnatl, Ohio: fa as Viceeonsol.. 5. ---. Galveston, Tex... ......... H.-H. Hames... 00 5a Honorary consul. . Newport News, Va......... AW. Dmeketr 0 ers AO ores eth ITALY. Los Angeles, Cal............ Giovanni Piuma............ Consular agent...... San Francisco, Cal.......... Chevalier Ferdinando Daneo| Consul.............. California, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, and Alaska. RomanoLodi Fe... ..... Vice consul, oo... Wenver,Colo-c............. Chevalier Oreste da Vella...| Consul.............. Colorado, Utah, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Oklahoma, Arizona, and New Mexico. Roberto Ferrari. i... 50.0. Vieeeconsal.......... Trinidad, (Colot. c.i.- io. Giuseppe Malo... of. Consular agent. ..... New Haven, CoN. viii Michele Riceio.............. ras LL Brats el Wilmington, Dell... a: Giuseppe.deiStelane: ii. ilo.ndos tnt Delaware, and in Penn- sylvania the counties of Berks, Chester, Delaware, Lancaster, Lebanon, and York. Washington, D.C.......... Emanuele Fronani.... ..... In charge of consulate Pensacola, Ela.«.....-...--. Chsvali Giovanni Battista | Consular agent...... afiero. Tampa, Pla. ..... 0... Baldassare Colombo.........| Acting consular agent. | Consuls wn the United States. 381 ITALY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ITALY—continued. : Savannah Ga ual 0 MoséiCaflero... - .... iiiiliy Consular agent...... Georgia. Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Federico Augusto Schaefer..| Consul.............. Chicago, we Count Guilio Bolognesi.... ..|[..... qos aa Illinois, Michigan, Springfield, TI..o ii. Clinton, Ind =. oil ol. Frontenac, Kans........... Louisville, Ky... _... Independence, Ky.......... New Orleans, La........... Lawrence, Mass....... a Springfield, Mass. .......... Detroit, Mich............... Duluth, Minn............ 5% St. Paul, Minn......... Gulfport, Miss... ..--...... Stilouis, Me. 5 0000 Butte, Mont. tio... Albuquerque, N. Mex...... Albany, N. Y Buffalo, N. Y New York City, N. Y...... Rochester, N, Y............ Yonkers, N. Y Cineinnati, Ohio............ Cleveland, Ohio............ McAlester, Okla............ Portland, Oreg... 0. ..... Altoona, Pa... Brie, Pa inl dil Philadelphia,’ Pa... .. ...... Arturo Gramats. ........L iL: Annibale Salaroglio. ........ ¢ Raffaele Purgatorio.......... Giuseppe Cuneo... .......... Luigi Seala... ox... oi a Chevalier Gualtiero Chile- sotto. Chevalier Carlo Papini...... Count Gerolamo Moroni... ._|. Vervena Gaspare............ Giovanni Schiaffino......... Chevalier Gustavo Di Rosa. . Camillo Santarelli. .......... Pietro-Drafione.....n. 00 Tommaso de Marco......... Chevalier Pietro Cardiello... Attilio Castigliano........... Vincenzo Gialloreti.......... Salvatore Pennisi........... Alessandro Broletti......... Carlo: TrICaN 0. ic -- n= en Antonio Venuto............. Dr. Alfredo Magnani........ ies TelicoRonea.. . 4.....0. 5... Covlo-Melint................. 5 adel. ata Las Cons) 20020 00 Viegconsul.iit. oo. Consular agent...... rt ee In charge of consular agency. Consular agent...... In charge of consular agency. Consular agent...... Germano Placido Baccelli... |... Michele Caboni.... .......... Nobile Chevalier Giacomo Fara Forni. Giuseppe Gentile... ......-.. Lolgi Stl oe. ooh Ging Ball... .%...... Cesare Sconfietti............ Carlo Mariotti... ........... Giovanni Battista Tua...... Carlo Vigetti oo... oo. ok Count Alfonso Sagramoso... Chevalier Giovanni Cesar: Majoni. . Nobile Carlo dei Marchesi De Constaniin di Chateau- neuf. OE hr te Consul general...... Vice consul.......... Ar: Pr PR SS Consular attaché. ... Consular agent.. .... Vice consul.......... Ohio, Kentucky, Wisconsin, Iowa,. Minnesota, Missouri, and Indiana. Louisiana, Texas, Mis- sissippi, Arkansas, Alabama, Florida, and Tennessee. Maryland. Massachusetts, Ver- mont, New Hamp- shire, and Maine. Connecticut, New Jer- sey, New York, and Rhode Island. ? Westchester County. Oklahoma. Adams, Bedford, Blair, Cambria, Center, Clearfield, Clinton, Cumberland, Frank- lin, Fulton, Hunt- ingdon, Juniata, Mif- flin, Perry, Snyder, Somerset, and Union Counties. Cameron, Clarion, Crawford Elk, Erie, Forest, McKean, Potter Venango, and Warren Coun. ties. Pennsylvania, Dela- ware, Maryland, Vir- ginia, West Virginia, North Carolina South Carolina, and Georgia, 382 Residence. ITALY—continued. Pittsburgh, Pa sions... Scranton, Pa. ...........-.. Momila P. 1 %c.b nites Mayaguez, P.R.....c....- Ponce, iPr RH... .ooi-nnn-n SanJuan, P.R..-:......... Providence, RB. 1.-.......... Charleston, 8. C............ Memphis, Tenn.....-....... Hort Worth, Tex... ........ Galveston, Tex. ............ Port. Arthur, Tex........-.. Noriolls, Va.:............... Richmond, Va. .cessseve-=- Chevalier Giuseppe Natali. . Chevalier Fortunato Tiscar.. Alessandro Bozzo Mariano Vervena.... ....... Chevalier Giovanni Sottile. . Giovanni Galella Chevalier Clemente Nicolini. Aldo Lombardo Jurisdiction. Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Fay- ette, Greene, Indi- ana, Jefferson, Law- rence, Mercer, Wash- ington, and West- moreland Counties. Bradford, Carbon, Co- lumbia, Dauphin, Lackawanna, Le- high, Luzerne, Ly- coming, Monroe, Montour, Northamp- ton, Northumber- land, Pike, Schuyl- kill, Sullivan, Sus- quehanna, Tioga, Wayne, and Wyo- ming Counties. Porto Rico. North Carolina and South Carolina. Loudoun, Fairfax, Prince William, Fau- quier, Rappahan- nock, Madison, Cul- peper, Stafford, Spot- sylvania, King George, Caroline, Westmoreland, Northumberland, Richmond, Lancas- ter, Essex, King and Queen, King Wil- liam, Middlesex, Gloucester,Mathews, New Kent, James City, Charles City, Prince George, Surry, Isle of Wight, Nanse- mond, Norfolk, Prin- cess Anne, South- ampton, Sussex, Din- widdie, Brunswick, Nottoway, Greenes- ville, Mecklenburg, Lunenburg, Prince Edward, Charlotte, Halifax, Appomat- tox, Campbell, Am- herst, Rockbridge, Bedford, Pittsylva- nia, Henry, Frank- lin, Roanoke, Craig, Alleghany, Giles, Pulaski, Montgom- ery, Floyd, Carroll, Grayson, Wythe, and Bland Counties. Louisa, Henrico, Ches- terfield, Powhatan, Goochland, Han- over, Fluvanna, Cumberland, Buck- ingham, Nelson, Al- bemarle, Greene, Orange, Augusta, Bath, Highland, Rockingham, Page, Shenandoah, War- ren, Frederick, and Clarke Counties. Consuls tn the United States. 383 ITALY—JAPAN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ITALY—continued. Seattle, Wash. ........ .... Augusto J. Ghiglione........ Consular agent. -.... : - j Paivmont, W., Va........... Chevalier Telesio Luecci.....|.--.. doz con. din Wood, Pleasants, Tay- , | ior, Ritchie, Wirt, Calhoun, Gilmer Braxton, Lewis, Doddridge, Marion, Monongalia, Wetzel, | Upshur, Randolph, Barbour, Harrison, Tyler, Preston, Min- eral, Hampshire, Morgan, Berkeley, Jefferson, Hardy, Grant, Pendleton Tucker,and Marshall Counties, Northfork, W. Va..eaac..-. Donato dei Baroni Perillo. ..|.....d0.cco0.c........| Jackson, Roane, Clay, Webster, Pocahon- tas, Greenbrier, Mon- roe, Summers, Ra- leigh. Fayette, Kana- wha, Putnam, Ma- son, Cabell, Wayne, Lincoln, Boone, Lo- gan, Mingo, McDow- ell, and Mercer Coun- ties. Milwaukee, Wis............ Arminfo Conte... oc 11 imine Mr JAPAN. Mobile, Aln... ...cocer oc nvevii William Peter Hutchison. ..| Honorary consul. ... San Francisco, Cal.......... Yasutaro Numano.......... Consul general. ..... Arizona, California, | Colorado, Nevada, i New exico, and i Utah. Denver, Colo. oom -ch--ions- A. L: Bennett ........0..0... Honorary consul. ... $ Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Hisakichi Eitaki............ Consul general...... Chicago, a Kohaehi Abe.......0.coveer- Consghl. i -oaaiaess Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, I : iowa, Kansas, Ken, [ tucky, Louisiana, § Michigan,Minnesota, | Mississippi, Missouri, i Nebraska, North Da- i : kota, Ohio, Okla- ' homa, South Da- kota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wiscon- -sin. | New Orleans, La........... John Walker Phillips....... Honorary consul. . .. | Boston, Mass.” ........J.... Erwin H. Walcott.......... wall es EA A is Si. LogigyMo..o... foe do. IB. Smith, ooo. I CT New York City, N. Y....-- Kametaro Iijima ........... Consul general. ..... Maine, New Hamp- shire, Vermont, Mas- sachusetts, hode : Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jer- sey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, West Vir- ginia, North Caro- lina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, the District of Columbia, and Porto Rico, Portland, Oreg............. Morizo Ida. 5. oon. eans Consuls... o.. Oregon, Wyoming, and . Idaho (except that part included in the | consular district of | Seattle). | | : Philadelphia, Pa........... J. Franklin McFadden.. .... Honorary consul. . .. | Menila, PX ox. oot: od Tsunezo Sugimura. ......... Vice consul..........| Philippine Islands and | the island of Guam. i Galveston, Tex, ...-x------- J.H, Taongbehn:........ .... Honorary consul. . .. | Seattle Wash... .......... Seiichi Takahashi........... Consal.........-0.5s Washington and Mon- : | tana, the counties of Boise, Bonner, Cus- | i ter, Idaho, Kootenai, | Latah, Lemhi, Nez Perce, and Shoshone inIdaho, and Alaska. | 384 Congressional Directory. LIBERIA—MEXICO. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. LIBERIA. Mebfle; Ala... George W. Lovejoy ...-.--.- Consilers soins San Francisco, Cal.......... Ray P. Saffold.....-.......-|..... doth mert no Washington, D.C.......... Ermestibyon..--..0.....---- Consul general. ..... New Orleans, La. .......... 1... BH. Beynolds i. --.....---- Viceconsul......... Boston, Mass... co. fpr earn nna Consul general... ... United States. St- Younis Mo: .- ....-.--- Hutchings Inge... ..o:--- =. Consul... i. Jersey City, N. J........... Albert W, Minick. ........-- Viecconsul.......-- New York City, N. Y......| Edward G. Merrill Consuls are. nd Philadelphia, Pa. .......... Thomas J. Hunt. .......o--(- Ea : Robert C. Moon............. Viceeconsul.....---. Manila, P.T...-%...... R. Sommers. 3. .......o: Conlon Galveston, Tex. .....------- J.B. Gibson: 3 oa a doo oa, MEXICO. Mobile, Al.....coeenanee-- Roberto Gayon.....--...... Consul. as ise: Alabama. Clifton, ATiZ......cccccecee-- Carlos Palafox. 1 7. coer rrans do. ial Graham and Greenlee Counties. Douglas, ATiZ........-.----- Miguel Lopez Torres. .......|----- 40. a The municipality of Douglas. NAGE, ATIZ. oc - coron--t == Enrique de la Sierra.........|.-.-- dos iii aia Cochise County. Nogales, Ariz... ............ Angel Aguilar... .........----: 40. be Santa Cruz County. Phoenix, Ariz... .........-- Mristan Garza Castillon. ....|.-... do. aa Apache, Coconino, Gila, Maricopa, Mohave, Navajo, Pinal, and ; ; Yavapai Counties. Tucson, ATiZ...ess---2c---- Alejandro Ainslie...........|..--- do. aan Pima County. - Yama, Ariz... ..c.oneesi-o-- ManoelBaltran ........o. 4-Le.. Ce Za 8 i al Yuma County. Calexico, Cal..........-=--- IAC ACOVOR. esr hae see at do Imperial County. ¥.03 Angeles, Cal...........- Manuel Pifia Cuevas........|-..-- do... oh... ee Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernar- dino, San Luis Obispo, Santa Bar- bara, and Ventura Counties. Manuel Beltran. ............ Vice consul. ........ San Diego, Cal............. Leln GOMBZ. ede -vun--neeles Consul. sia Riverside and San : Diego Counties. San Francisco, Cal... ...--- Antonio Leon Grajeda...... Consul general....... Indirect jurisdiction over Arizona, Cali- fornia, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Ne- vada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Direct jurisdiction over the State of California (except the consular districts of Los An- gales, San Diego, and alexico) and the er . State of Nevada. Gustavo levy. ...---------- Vice consul. .......- Denver, Colo. -- -.-=-tr----- Adelaido José Ortiz. ........ Consul: o.oo Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana. Pensacola, Fla...........--. Juan A. Mateos, jr. --......-}--.-- do. na Ignacio J. Diaz.............. Honorary vice con- Florida (except the sul. county of Hillsboro) and Georgia. Tampa, Fla.......-cn------- Leopoldo J. Castellanos. ....|...-- do... oat Hillsboro County. Honolulu, Hawaii... ...--- Guillermolanz.. ..---.----- Gonsill. ..- ==. LL and depen- encies. Chicago; M.- co. .--:-- = --- Albert Teal... .......-fe--- do... lian kass Tlinois, Minnesota, i and Wisconsin. Fernando Serrano..........- Viceconsul........- Indianapolis... -cere---->--~ Russell B. Harrison.........}...-. oT a Ea oe Th £1 Indiana. Louisville, K¥y....--.:------ Horace C. Brannin.......... Consgl.c cr -.---- Kentucky and Tennes- see. New Orleans, La. .......... Plutarco Ornelas... ........-l...-- do--c.iinic-n Louisiana. ; Jestis Carbajal y Rosas...... Viceconsul......... Baltimore, Md... .--.----- Manuel Cuesta. c= onsuloo ona. Delaware, M ar yland, and West Virginia. Boston, Mass. ....«-------- Arturo P. Cushing.......... Honorary consul. ...| Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. Asturo P. Cushing.......-.. Honveary vice con- sul. Detroit; Mich... ....------- Daniel F. Altland........-.- Viceeconsul-:......- Michigan. Pasagoula, Miss.........--. Vicente R05... . c= ---rnrsom-fooens do... 50 Mississippi. ———— Consuls in the United States. 385 MEXICO. Residence. : Name. -Rank. Jurisdiction. MEXICO—continued. Kansas City, Mo........} ...[. Eduardo Velarde........... Consuls Sous aki Kansas City, and the States of Kansas, Ne- braska, North Da- kota, Oklahoma, and South Dakota. Si-Tonis, Mo... Ferando: Bay: of oon ll iE A eS Arkansas, Iowa, Mis- souri (except Kansas City), and East St. Louis, Ill. New York City, N.Y. ..... Enrique Martinez Sobral. ...| Consul general...... Indirect jurisdiction over Alabama, Ar- kansas, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Geor- gia, Kansas, Ken- tucky, Maine, Massa- chusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Da- kota, Ohio, Pennsyl- vania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Ten- nessee, Vermont, Vir- ] ginia, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. Di- i rect, jurisdiction over : Connecticut, New i Jersey, and New York. Alfonso L. Jiménez..........] Viceconsul......... Cincinnati; Ohio... ......c Enrique Ornelas. ........... Honorary consul. ...| Ohio. Portland, Oreg. ............ Pronk A. Spencer...........} Consul. oon Cnn: Idaho and Oregon. Philadelphia, Pa... ......... Jorge:-Y,. Canalize. o.oo ois. = TE PR rh Pennsylvania (except the city of Pitts burgh). Bittsburgh, Pa... iv. Joseph 8. Carriols........... Honorary vice consul| Pittsburgh. Monila, P12... FL JosG Rosales. to Loo Honorary consul. ... . | Blayaguez, Po B....... zu: Federico Gatell y Garcia de | Vice consul......... | Quevedo. Ponce RB. Or i a a Sr rh sera Pa a eal AO ssh rsa] Saptuan P.R........ i Manuel Paniagua y Oller-...}..... qo Ele Brownsville, Tex........... Abelardo A. Trevino........ Comgabiuis ooo Cameron, Hidalgo, Neuces, Refugio, and San Patrico Coun- | ties. aie DelRio; Tex... 0a. Ricardo S. Bravo... ...... f-- 2 dois tn Valverde County. Eagle Pass Pex... .....0.. José A. Garza hijo... .o ish A ed -| Dimmit, Edwards, Kin- | ney, Maverick, Pecos, - | Terrell, Uvalde, and | Zavalla Counties. Bl Page, TeX. olin ivi. Cesar Conseen .. i. => rer re) ese ily See SR SO El Paso, Loving, and | Winkler Counties, and New Mexico. Alfredo Margéin............. Vice consul... | Galveston, Tex. 0. ooo Gonzalo de A. Fernandez. ..{ Consul.............. Calhoun, Brazoria, Chambers, Harris, Jackson, Matagorda, and Galveston Coun- ties, except the port of Texas City. Laredo, Mex oo. 0c. ois Antonio Lozano y Castro....}..... dos. fais etl Duval, Webb, and Za- pata Counties. : Tristén Garza Castillén......| Vice consul.......... Mary TeX. . iio PedroiGamats. ot... oe Congul.si no Presidio, Jeff Davis, and Brewster Coun- ; ties. Port Arthue, Tex... .- Porfirio Castell... i conienintecnes [TT EE ee Orange and Jefferson Counties. Francis G. McEwan......... Honorary vice consul Riogrande, Tex.............| Salvador Martinez de Alva..| Consul.............. Brooks and Starr Coun= : | ties (except Roma).- Roma, Tex cain. | Fernando Serranc.....-... V..... LL Eh Roma and vicinity. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED—-26 3386 Congressional Directory. MEXICO—-NETHERLANDS. Residence. - Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. | MEXICO—continued. San Antonio, Tex.......... Manuel A, Esteva..eeeeeea.. Consul general. ..... Direct jurisdiction over . Texas (except the consular districts of Brownsville, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, El Paso, Galveston, Laredo, Marfa, Port Arthur, Riogrande, Roma, and Texas City). Indirect jurisdiction over Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, . and that part of Texas comprised in the above-named consular districts. Tae Espinosa y Ron- | Vice consul.......... ero. Texas City, Tex... .......-. Federico Mendoza y Viz- | Consul.............. Texas City. caino. ; Salt Lake City, Utah....... Rafael Ll, Velarde. ...... .. .0vo.-~ da. oe a hag Newport News, Va......... Juan A. Mateos, Jv... .. 0. Honorary consul. ... i Ee HC eR eR ea LS Se en Sel Consal. =... Lo North Carolina, South . Carolina, and Vir- ginia (except the port of Newport News). Seattle, Wash. ............. Eduardo R. Rodriguez......|..... Le Washington. MONACO. San Francisco, Cal.......... Ray P.Saffold..........-...- Consul — oto New York City, N.Y ...... Ausasiedouve. oi... oo do. Stanislas d’Halewyn........ : ing of econsu- je. MONTENEGRO. (Montenegrin interests in the United States are intrusted toe the consular officers of Russia in the United States.) NETHERLANDS. Mobils, Ala... iii... Tos DORA I vivian enannit Vice consul ...a..... Alabama. ; ; Los Angeles, Cal............ 7. J Zeshandelhan..o.... ool. aaa Southern California and Arizona. San Francisco, Cal.......... H. A, van Coena Torchiana.| Consul general ...... Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon, and ‘Washington. Jacksonville, Fla........... 3. W. Bosllaard.............. Vice consul.......... Florida east of the Apalachicola River. Pensacola, Flac. covinn..... Ee ER a I ht do. a, Florida west of the Apalachicola River. Savannah, Ga.............. H.R. Jolles.. si. as Commi toi i.e. Georgia, North Caro- , lina, Seuth Carolina, and Florida east of the Apalachicola 1 River. - Honolulu, Hawsaii.......... Ho M.von Holl.............0.....do............... Hawaiian Islands. . Chicago, IW. cei. o0 R. Birkhel.. a Consul general. ..... Illinois, Michigan, Wis- consin, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, and Idaho. C. van Rijn van Alkemade..] Viceconsul.......... New Orleans, Ia........... W.J. Baommond.....c.u.... Comsaloi) oc.di.. es Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida west of the Apalachicola River. Baltimore, Md.............. BR. EB Mottin... ....c0n ean ila B09, ei ise ve fans Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. Boston, Mass........-...... Oh. Cs Dasey. fo sara CE ee a Massachusetts, Maine, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Ver- mont. Grand Rapids, Mich........ Jacop:Steketes, L000 Vice congil......-.. Michigan. Minneapolis, Minn.......... Ao Tenkoma, Lo nl a dor Minnesota. Guliport, Miss.............. FRE TB ee EE (TI Be SE Mississippi. Consuls wn the United States. NETHERLANDS -NORWAY. 387 Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. NETHERLANDS—continued. St. Lonls, Mou. ic lica G. H, Ten Broek............ Compl. coiviir enn Missouri, Towa, Kan- sas, Colorado, Arkan- / sas, Utah, New Mex- ico, Oklahoma, Ken- tucky, and Tennes- see. Now Vor CUHy NEY... i Si dea ssadainns Consul general. ..... New York, New Jer- sey, and Connecti- cut. A, vande Sande Bakhujzen.| Consnl.....ouaeenn... J. A. Schumrman. io... Vice consul.......... Cleveland, Ohio........ex-- P, Plantings. ............... BT RR NE Ohio and Indiana. Portland, Oreg.....vu. anus TX Noihen i essa nen Vice consul...... Oregon. Philadelphia, Pa. .......... SAE ST EE PT 1 fd Consul iio Pennsylvania. Mowila PT. ol PK. i Meer kamp van. Ld Ione a SEE Embder T. on: os Sora Vice consul... : Mayaguez, P.R............ Jacobo Brave. won. Aeiain dol... West coast of Porto ico. Pones, LB Rin Otto E. A. F, Wantzelius...{..... RL EI SR South coast of Porto Rico. Sanelaan oP, HB. Amid. aie Son I ET Rl Gone leas. cnn Porto Rico. Galveston, Textil, Lo 0.8 Thad... dung: OR TELE SRE EN nlyann and sub- urbs. Port Arthur, Tex... ius REY A ORE Ue LORRY RR 1 doll iid. Texas (except Galves- i ton and suburbs). Newport News, Va......... E.D. J. Luning...ccemeene- Vice consul..........; City of Newport News. Norfolk, Va....... 0 ........ Barbon Myers... o.oo ian fous Beoeeewnenas....| Virginia (except city of Newport News). Seattle, Wash ......0.......] J.0.J. Kempees. .. cau auhas iis d0.ceecnanren....{ Alaska and Washing- ton. NICARAGUA. Mobile, Ala......cccnnna.... Miguel Alvares Saballos..... Conga ia cec ices Sacramento, Cal............ Faustino Arellano...........|..... BB pda ins San Francisco, Cal.......... Adelo Vivas. ....ceee..iuiis Consul general. ..... Chicago, Ii Bingen Consul... aa Kansas City, Kans. ........ Edwin R. Heath............ Consul general. ..... New Orleans, Ia........... Clarence A. Burgheim......]..... BO. oeicaenasii Texas, Louisiana, Mis- sissippi, Alabama, and Florida. Juan José Zavala. ........... CONS. conuvusmnasnss Boston, Mass, .............. Charles Hall Adams....veuunf.. HE RR Kansas Cy, Mo. euinnn- Wills Wood colo nah... A ST St. Lewis, Mo... .......... Rodolfo José Gutierrez. ..... Consul general. ..... New York Cy, NX ...... Humberto Pasos Diaz....... Consul oc oli os José Luis Livingston. ....... Vieo'eonsul......:.: Philadelphia, Pa........... Lorenzo Guerrero Potter. ...] Consul general...... Molle Po. 0 Trinidad Eugenio Lacayo...|..... PER ER Ignacio Garcia Rojas........ Vice consui......... Norfolk, Va... iuoieunennn. Charles M, Barnett. ......... Consul." iota dassns NORWAY, Mobile, Ala... odie... IodistDonnld oi. ann. Vico GonSille.een= nn Alabama. Nome, Alaska.............. Guadbrand Jorgensen L.omen |..... Ran Rs A SS Alaska, Eureka Ca... ........... Fredrik Engebrefsen........|..... ER a Jios Angeles, Cal............ Georg Marencius Ottis......|..... CT AE San Diego, Cal... .......... John Engebrefsen...........[..... Ie MI San Francisco, Cal.......... Knud Henry Lund......... Const}... ns izinmrs California, Oregon, and Washington, and the Territory of Alaska, Honey Lumd,ir..oocoone oe. Vico constll.ice.eveo- Penver,Colo............... Viggo Egede Baerresen......|..... do. suimdia. Colorado. Fernandina, Fle... ......... Thomas Crawford Borden...|..... 0} iene nisin Rina bn Fernandina. Jacksonville, Fla. .......... Walter Mucklow.....cnceuui]iunns (RETR RE Key West Fla............- Wim John. Hamilton |..... CT Tr ee Key West. aylor. ; Pensacola, Fl.............. Eric Alexander Zelius.......|..... G0 esata as ee Florida (except the ports of Key West, Fernandina, Jack- on and Tam- ; pa). Tampa, Blo, cece. c ent Barton Hewitt Smith....... ..... ERA LA Ba Savannah, Ga..........-..0 Einar Storm Tresdahl.......|..... ha A LEAS Georgia. Honolulu, Hawaii... ..-] Aritz Anton Klamp......... Consul. J... uns Hawaii. Chiéago Mlle. . ioe. cacti Oscar Hauman Haugan.....|..... B08 sai Nasr vss Iliinois, Indiana, and Michigan. Decorah Towa, .........-5% Johannes B, Wist........... Vice consti]. .....c... Towa, New Orleans, La........... Andreas Emil Ugland....... HMOs eae Louisiana, Poviland, Me, ........ x00 Percy Firmin Keating...... "Vice consul .......... Maine. 388 Congressional Directory. NORWAY PANAMA. Residence. | Name. Rank. - Jurisdiction. NORWAY—continued. Baltimore, Md... c.......-. Arthur Frederick Side- | Vice consul......... Maryland. I botham. Boston, Mass... ............ Peter Justin Paasche........|..... doi saan Massachusetts. Detroit, Mich.......... ae Ce ae es Be do: zo 0 Michigan. St. Paul, Minn. .-........-.. Engebreth Hagbarth Hobe..| Consul.............. Minnesota, Wisconsin, Towa, North Dakota, South Dakota, Mon- tana, Wyoming, and : Idaho. Gulipert, Miss.........:.... Valdemar Aagaard.......... Viceconsul:........ Mississippi. St.Louis, Mo......... ..-.. Johan Guldbrand Bérresen.._|.---- JOS. ates i oe Missouri. Great Falls, Mont.......... Ingolf Ahrentz Hovind Stub. /|..... doco dn Omaha, Nebr...-.....-..-- A D-Undelond. .......... ioe donk lh Nebraska. Bufalo, N.Y... ........... Séren Th. M. B Kieiland...|..... doa. New York City, N. Y...... Christopher Ravn.........o. Consul general...... United States (except the Territory of Ha-~ waii)and Porto Rico. ; Ferdinand Biilow Lunde....| Vice consul......... Niagara Falls, N. ¥........ Job Morten August Stillesen.|..... do: ni een Wilmington, N.C.......... Walter Smallbones..........|..... do: Hahth ion. North Carolina. Grand Forks, N. Dak...... Halfdan Bendeke...........[..-.- REAR TEE North Dakota. Cleveland, Ohio............ OleM. Brlestad..... 0... .. Favs ra Ohio. Portland, Orez...~=--.-..-- Endre Martin Cederbergh...|-.-.. don las dei. Oregon. Philadelphia, Pa........... Christian Moe... os QO, rr Pennsylvania. Gebw, PV... .-.......... Cay Wallord.....vonoreenif ioe door liolle, P. L.......5--. .- ---| Tomo Hugh Wolseley Price._|-..--. dos icc ons Manilla, Baloo ae. Harold M. Pitt.............. Consul... i... 2 Philippine Islands. Ponce; P.R.......0.-.. Thomas Edward Lee. ...... Vice consul......... The Department of once. Swmijuan PR... -....... Alfonso Manuel Fernandez. .| Consul. ............. Island of Porto Rico. Charleston, S.C... ono. Chr. J. Taveen:. oo oii Viceconsal......... South Carolina. Yankton, S. Dak........... Sicard O. Honger:...oouaoo ives doLL. ot. Galveston, Tex... oo... John W. Boeke... i: oo Se Texas (except the har- bors of Port Arthur and Sabine Pass.) PortArthur, Tex... .. .- John Robert Adams........ Port Arthur and Sa- ; bine Pass. Salt Lake City, Utah....... AntonsH..Boxrad........... Utah. Newport: News, Va......... Henry Curtis Blackiston.... Newport News. Norfolk, Va. ciisieeeessss Aubrey Gregory Bailey..... Virginia (except the port of Newport News). Port Townsend, Wagsh...... Oscar KIOGKer. .. . ivoeiviiifece x 0. crs Counties of Chehalis, Clallam, Island, Jef- ferson, Kitsap, Ma- son, Pacific, San Juan, and Wahkia- kum. Seattle Wash. ....<..... ck Thomas Samuel Huntington |..... A0:nisiomesacnsnn Counties of Chelan Kolderup. Douglas, Ferry, King, Lincoln, Okanogan, Skagit, Snohomish, Spokane, Stevens, and What- com. : Pacoma, Wash cocessesress Ole Grantid. .. cove svsvssnnsymssse As cuaniniinssss Counties of Adams, : Asotin, Benton, Clarke, Columbia, Cowlitz, Franklin, Garfield, Kittitas, Klickitat, Lewis, Pierce, Skamania, Thurston, Walla Walla, Whitman and Yakima. Milwaukee, Wis. ........... OlalT, BON. ohio iris catenins dos. caicifaes on Wisconsin. PANAMA, Mobile, Ala.............-... Miguel C. Avilés P......... Const ..........cw Miguel Alvarez S............ Honorary vice con- sul. Julio Zambely. i... ...c....-- Consular agent...... Los Angeles, Cal............ Tomas. Duque... .. 25. Honorary consul.... San Diego, Calzone. Alexander Morrice..........|eann- ER San Francisco, Cal.......... Alejandro Bricefio.......... Consul......:--..... José EB. de Ycaza....comnesine Vice consul......... ALIonia, Qo uate. one Russell HopkinS......o...-. Consul... cones Hilp, Hawall.. canal... Reginaldo F. Guard......-:}-.... Tn Ae RR Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Augusto Marquez........... Honorary consul.... Sa Consuls tm the United States. PANAMA—-PORTUGAL. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. PANAMA—continued. Chieaee, T8.0..... onioio 0 BU BUrney: - besetting Consults dames das New Orleans, La........... Rodolio Perez ............--.. Consul general. ..... New: Orleans, .La........... Nathan Eisenmann......... Honorary vice consul Baltimore, Md-.....-. -.- -.. James. F. Ferguson.......... Viceconmsul.......... Boston, Mass. ...-.......... Arthur P. Cushing. ..... ..-- Conseco: oo... Gulfport, Miss... ..... Burwell Richard............ Honorary consul. ... Kansas City, Mo............ Loren O. Booram........... Consul... .oh.o.c.... StelonleeMor Soi cL a St aE Honorary consul. ... New York City, N. Y...... Manuel Quintero V......... Consul general...... Philadelphia, Pa........... Wiliredt HY, Scheff... -.-.-. Viceconsul.-.... 0... Ponee, PB. us. oo. MotingNVidal. .C.o-... ....-- Honorary consul. ... San Juan BP. Ro... Charles Vireo... oa i Consil.it girs ans Galveston, Tex..o.........- AA Nan Almyne. oo dom a ea Nerfolls, Vai. onl. .i.v.... John BD, Leitch..c...c nian. Honorary consul.... Puget Sound, Wash........ Harry 8. Garfield... ao. Vice consul......... PARAGUAY. Mobile, Alois. vei Elljott- KX. Rickarby......... Vieeconsul......... San Franeiseo, Cal......... Eustoijio Calderon.......... Consul: canes Wilmington, Del........... Alfredo L. Demorest........ Vice.consal......... Washington, D, C......... | oi ivi Maite a saidse Consul general. ..... Chieage, Hl. i a Aa a Sh Consul. ich:t-aneee-- Indianapolis, Ind........... Charles BE. Coffin......-... Vice consuls. -.....- Baltimore, Md.............. Guillermol.ove...-. Laz. vs ORS See Boston; Mags: co... Harold A, Meyer... ......o- Conspls Siena. Detroit, Mich. .o...... Juan Walker. 1... i. ua Viceconsul......... Kansas City, Mo........... Guillermo C. Winsborough..|..... des rs soos St-Louis, Mo.-.-........... James Ba=Brock: oo. i in doroyiaiss al Newark, XI +. 5 James A. Cog... .....-o i... har aien Bafolo aN. Vo. i eh ane Ee sree Ln TT BNC New York City, N. Y...... Felix Aueaighe...... civ... Consul general...... New York, William Wallace White. .... Consul... ira Rochester; N. V........ 2. John Maden aio iaias Vice consul. ........ Cinginnati, Ohio............ Irwin F. Westheimer....... es Or chien oui mE Philadelphia, Pa......-.... Rodman Wanamaker....... Consul general. ..... Delaware, Illinois, In- diana, Michigan, Mis- souri, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Reese M. Fleischmann...... Yiceconsul......-.. Sap Juan, PR... Manuel Fernandez Juncos...| Consul.............. Porto Rico. Richmond, Va........0.... M.D. Hese.........t.o-- Vieeconsul......... PERSIA, A St.Louis, Mo, 5.-5:0. a... Milton Seropyan............ Vice consul......... Jersey City—Hoboken, N. J.| Alphonse Rutis............. Consul general ...... New Jersey. New York City, N. Y...... BH. Neopakyan. — oo... .-.). QO ees Dikran Khan Kelekian..... Consuls. ova Philadelphia, Pa........... Haig Herant Pakradooni....| Viceconsul......... ; . PERU, Los Angeles, Cal............ Elmer F. Mackusick........ Gongule oor San Diego, Li ER I TT a Vice consul......... San. Francisco, Cal.......... Envigue:Gron.......c...--.- Congal. a.oason: Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Bruce Cartwright, jr........}..... OT ia. Chicago, Woo co. nie W. ML, Biske,............1...0. ER New Orleans, La........... Richmd. Barthel: ....oo od... CELT YP oe Baltimore, Md. ............ 0.Q.H.E, Kehrhatin.-_._.} ."_. 40. anor Boston, MESS. aero r+] Eugenio!C. Andres. ....... 1 © dostatii een St. louis, Me. 0.0 Claude H. Wetmore........ AE RE Lr aR ml New York City, NY Eduardo Higginson......... Consul general...... ‘Toledo Ohio. “=~... Charles Scott Rowley....... Congal. soos cman aos Portland, Oreg......-.... .. Carlos Borrel0. ec. oes ieee Q0ac bee ra as sein Philadelphia, Pa. ,......... Wilfredo H. Schofl.......... Honorary consul.... Manila, PoY. oi Antonio Maria Barreto...... Consul. onc .t aos SanTuon, PoR. o.oo... Dr. Manuel J. Nuifiez........ Honorary consul... Nogiolle, Va... ........... EK. J. Bodgard Wige.-...... Vice consul. ........ Port Townsend and Puget’| F. Albert Bartlett.......... Consuls. iio... Sound, Wash, Tacoma Wash ..c.......----- YodeM. Duarte... oo cal doi cian PORTUGAL. San Francisco, Cal.......... Simé#o Lopes Ferreira....... Gonsul.............. San Francisco and its : consular district. - Manoel Teixeira Freitas. .... Viceconsul.....5.:c Washinglon, D.C.........: Emmanuele Fronani........l..... eg 390 Congressional Directory. PORTUGAL—SIAM. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction: PORTUGAL—continued. Koy Wess, Fla... ...in José Guilherme Piodella.....| Vice consul ......... Pensscola, Fla... .........:: Jusnl. Borde... .......... 0... Go.ciuin a... Brunswick, Ga... ...... 0% Resendo Torres... o...... 0. do. Jin... Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Antonio de Souza Canavarro.| Consul general. ..... Chicago, rR S. Chapman Simms......... Viceconsul......... Illinois. New Orleans, Er Ze Luiz da Costa Carvalho.....|..... do. oli. .... Baltimore, Md... ......... Adelbert W., Mears..........{..... dol iid... Boston, Maw Jorge da Silveira Duarte {| Consul.............. Maine, Massachusetts, d’ Almeida. New Hampshire, and Vermont, Caniella Camara ............ Viceconsul......... Boston. Gulfport, Miss... .......... John Paply-- ooo oo ona. hie el a ER Suis and its dis- rict. New York City, N.Y ...... Carlos Rangel de Sampaio..| Consul general...... All the States exeept California, Connecti- cut, Maine, Massa- chusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, Or- egon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wash- ington, Carlos Olavo Correira | Vice@consul......... d’ Azevedo. Philadelphia, Pa... ........ J. 3. de Macedo, Jr..........- 0... doL isi i. Philadelphia and its : district. Maplin, PL... ..... Daniel R, Williams. ........ Conapd. loi. oan. Philippine Islands. San ioan, PR... José Maria Lomba..........J..... rp Se Dr. Esteban Garcia Cabrera.| Viceconsul......... Newport News and Norfolk, | James Haughton............{..... To. Ba Va. RUSSIA. RMoble Ala... .. Lo - Murray Wheeler............ Viceconsul......... San Fre angisco, Cal.......... Pierre Rojdestwensky.......| Consul general...... Ambrose Gherini........... Viceconsul......... California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Ne- vada, "Oregon, Utah, Ww ashington, Ww v0. ming, Alaska, Arizo- na, and New Mexico. Pensacola, Fla... .......... Pannin Chipley... .. 0... 000d do. 0 a Honolulu, Sawaly. ll] Auguste Marques. ..........}..... RR SRS Chicago, Ti Victor Chichkine..... ...... Comet Cas Baron Bernhard Uxkull....| Vice consul......... Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Philadelphia, Pa........... Galveston, Tex. ............ SALVADOR. San Francisco, Cal.......... New Orleans, La. .......... New York City, N. Y SERVIA, New York City, N.Y SIAM. er fill on Re, SA Joseph A. Conry Michel Oustinow Encarnacion Mejia Antonio Peralta Li José Alfaro Moran........... Michel Poupine Henry G. W. Dinkelspiel.. Milward Adams. _........... Loring Townsend Hildreth. . Consul. NE Consal general sul Con Honorary consul general. Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wis congsin, United States. Alabama, Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Mis- souri, and Texas. REA NOR Ra Consuls wn the United States. 391 SPAIN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. SPAIN. Mobile; alo. cunvninth ana Juan Llorca y Marti......... Boney vice con- | Alabama, sul. Los Angeles, Cal............ Fernando Carrere Diaz......|-.--- doit. nr : San Franeisco, Cal.......... Count Esteban de Salazar | Consul.............. Alaska, Arizona, Cali- PFernanding, Fla......-----. Pensacola, Fla... cf... on amps, Bla. .aost-aias. Brunswick, Ga............. Savanmal, Ga. a0... Honolulu, Hawaii. ......... Chicago, Tl. Fo oo. New Orleans, La........... Dortland, Me... .........: Boston, Mass. ooo i Gulfpor:, Miss... ..... i. St. Louis, Me... o.oo. New Yorx Clty, N.Y ...... Philadelphia, Pa........... Cebu, PF. ooo o.. 0 TTI Eh a OO Manils, P.¥..o.. ii... Aguadills, P. B.uo......... Hamaeae, PaR.. 0... y Cologan. Ignacio de Arana y Abreu... Thomas Farrington Sedg- wick. Berthold Singer............. Alejandro Berea y Rodrigo. . Delfin Vild: oo. oh. Chauncey Red Burr......... Pedro Mackay de Almeida. . Alberto Christ Aldecoa...... James Arbuckle...........=: Francisco Javier de Salas y Sichar. { Fernando Perez del Pulgar Vv Aguirre. Horace Chester Newcomb... Cristobal Garels............. Guillermo Leyra y Roquer.. Alberto de la Guardia Ojea.. Jugn:Casellas. oil Antonio Ma. Oms y Call.... Sul, Congylz. oo nad ats Honorary vice con- sul. rad 37 Pg lpn hr Const. oo sul. Consul general...... Vieoconsul......... Honorary vice con- sul. Arkansas, Cebu General fornia, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Ne- vada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. Port and municipality of Tampa. Georgia, North Caro- lina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Ken- tucky. Hawaii. Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and New Mexico. Maine. Mississippi. Connecticut, Indiana, Towa, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Caro- lina, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Vermont, West Vir- ginia, and Wiscon- sin. Pennsylvania and Del- aware. Leyte, Bohol, and Samar. The Visayas and Cala- mianes Islands, Par- agua, Masbate, Ta- blas, Sibuyan, the islands adjacent thereto except Cebu, and the Sulu Archi- pelago. jurisdiction over the Philippine Archipelago. Special jurisdiction over the Batanes and Babuy- nes Islands, Luzon, Mindoro, Guam, and the territory of the Philippine Archi- pelago, except the consular district of Tioilo. Aguadilla and its dis- trict. Humacao, Ceiba, Fa- jardo, Luquillo, Na- guabo, Piedras, Ya- bucoa, Hato Grande or San Lorenzo, and Juncos. 392 Congressional Directory. SPAIN—SWEDEN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. SPAIN—continued. Mayaguez, PR hn Ponee, PR roa Saminan, FP. R..c. a Vieawes, P.R.............. Charleston, 8. Coo Brownsyille, Tex........... Galveston, Tex ci: tn. Norlolle, Va... ... .... SWEDEN. Mobe Ala. coi iil Log Angeles, Cal............ San Diepe, Cal. oC... Sam Francisco, Cal.......... Denver, Colo. . oo 5. oc. £5 Pengscely, Fla. oo... Savenman, Ga... ....- i... Honolulu, Hawaii.......... Chicago Eo iho cs Sioux City, Iowa. ....... . New Orleans Ta... ... Baltimore, Md.............. Boston, Mass oro... Grand Haven, Mich........ ‘Minneapolis, Minn.......... Gmaha, Nebr... .. 5h... New York City, N.'Y...... Grand Forks, N. Dak...... Cleveland, Ohio............ Portland, Ores... --=-.--- Philadelphia, Pa. .......... Juan Vazquez y Lopez Amor. Francisco Pelegri Roger..... Florencio Suarez. ........... Emilio de Motta y Ortiz. ... José Maria Martinez y de Pons. Avelino Portela Roldn...... Charles F. Middleton........ Emilio C.- Tories 00 Hendrich Mosle........-.... Arthur'C. Humphreys. ..... Harold Green Grimley...... Gottlieb Eckdahl ........... Nils: Malmberg... .-........ William Matson. ......:-.-. Fredrik Westerberg......... Walter Anders Peterson..... Charles McKenzie-Oerting... Andrew John Riteh......... Georg Friedrich Rodiek..... IR Lindgren. cio ovo. Henry 8S. Henschen......... Gustavus Nelson Swan...... Gustav Reinhold West- feldt, jr. Paul Gerhard Luediger Hilken. Birgar Gustaf Adolf Rosen- twist. Daniel Frederick Pagelson.. C. A. Smith Car] Edvard Wallerstedt.... Joseph A. Jackson.......... Johan Gustaf Nelson........ Emric M. Stenberg.......... Magnus Clarholm.,......... Carl Gotthard Gylfe Ander- erg. a Tsidor Widlund.... Laurentius Ludwig Malm... Elof Valdemar Lidell. ...... darcel Alonzo Viti.......... Honorary consul. ... Honorary vice con- su Sul. Vice consul... ......- as Onision isin ss Mayaguez, Anasco, Las Marias, Cabo Rojo, San German, Hormi- - gueros, Lajas, Sa- bana Grande, and Maricao. District of Ponce. Porto Rico. Vieques and its dis- trict. South Carolina. Texas (except Browns- ville). Alaska, Arizona, Cali- fornia, Idabo, Ne- vada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Territory of Hawaii. Arkansas, Illinois, In diana, Michigan, Mis- souri, Ohio, and Wis- consin. Colorado, Iowa, Kan- sas, Minnesota, Mon- ‘tana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Da- kota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming. Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland Massachu- setts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Caro- lina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Vir- ginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. Consuls mn the United States. 393 SWEDEN—URUGUAY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. SWEDEN—continued. * Manilla, P. 1. cociniigasl Herman Foust: ooo nd. Consul: Zola clo. Ronee, Pl. oii cits Max Karl Wilhelm Heine...| Vice consul......... San Juan, PaR is... Johann Friedrich von Uffel | Consul.............. Island of Porto Rico. z Schomberg. Galveston, Tex... ....2.%. Louis Albert Adoue......... Viceconsal......... Salt Lake City, Utah....... Jacob Boll. oo. a tei vi., dors “Nerlolle, Vauiiailoc i... Henning Fernstrom.........}..... do i chm ns Port Townsend, Wash...... Osear Kicker... nh anh Go. li Beattie, iWash: on. o...05 Andrew Chilberg..o i. oui Clie dos ns A SWITZERLAND. San Francisco, Cal.......... Jom Tremler. cuit Consul ios... 0 California and Nevada. RT Fes SE a a Vice consul. i... Denver, Colo: ie... PaghWelss. 2. aii Consul...2 Susi Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Utah. Max Waessel: hoe... Viceconsol... i: NV aShime tamed tC nl Eh Re eaten let a ee aie ee The legation of Swit- zerland in Washing- ton has charge of consular matters in the District of Co- lumbia, Virginia, West Virginia, and : Maryland. Chicage, Wo. .ooi. oo. oo. Arnold Helinger..... ...c.. Consul... ..voie--> Michigan, Wisconsin, Towa, and northern Illinois. Eugene Hildebrand......... Vieeconsnl,...... New Orleans, La........... Emile B6hm...........008 Consaillon.civi. io. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missis- sippi, North - Caro- lina, and South Caro- lina. St. Pagal, Minn 2 5a. Alired-Rarlew., 5. afi fiase dose Minnesota, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Wyoming, and Mcen- tana. St. Louis; Moo... 10k John J. Meyer... ..... 0... auch dos cian he Missouri, Kansas, Ne- braska, and southern Illinois. New York City, N. Y...... Toms El. Toned. ...5... onlin AIR a Henri Bscher........io....% Viee consull vi 7, New York, Maine, New Hampshire, Ver- mont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. Cincinnati, Ohio............ Edmund Lilthy............ Consul ioaai.rn. Ohio, Indiana, XKen- tucky, and Tennes- see. Portland, Oveg. ... .vess.-~1 Albrecht: Streif. cori do. 40... coed. Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and Alaska. Philadelphia, Pa. oviceniss eserves saithin devsiasesnes talon jotuits dos ssiie Delaware, Pennsyl- vania, and New Jer- sey. Manin, Pd. i sae tas Otte: Gmilvic.- oo. cone tiledc in dosh. 0 os : Galveston, Tex... ...ui.. Ulrich Mller. o.oo. ooas lo oa. Alva lindo. on Texas and Oklahoma. Seattle, Wash 00... ... Somuel J. Wettrick.........|...-- RR Tacoma, Wash... oo... J. M. Thilringer.. ~.:.... Vice consul ......... TURKEY. San Francisco, Cal.......... Manrico Hall... o. oe. Honorary consul... Chicago, Jl: 2 los a Charles Henrotin............ Consul general. ..... Boston, Mass". 0... Avram Farhi Effendi. ......|..... 0. es New York City, N.Y...... Digi Bey "a ART RE Chah Mir Effendi .......... Vice consul ........- Manila Pal. nt a Sn a en eee Consul general...... URUGUAY. Mobile, Ala.-.:. vio ni. Juan Liovea Marty... .....0 Vice consul. 20 San Francisco, Cal.......... 0G. M..Goldaracena.x......-- Consiil.. 5 0. on California. Apalachicola, Fla........... Salomon Brash... 0... Vicoconsul.-...: Pensacola, Fla... —.o Vicente J. Videl.. lo i hob, iy Ser Brunswick, Ga.c.0...co oc. Raosendo Torras..... oof... c doshas his Brunswick and Darien. Savangah, Ga... ...... Lo. Ramon: Esteve. ............. Consul 2 Lda Chicago Hl 0 os JugnoMoffibt: oo cin ea iV a PL New Orleans, La........... Ratsel Marin... Lo... Yiceeonsul. -... 394 Congressional Directory. URUGUAY—VENEZUELA. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. URUGUAY—continued. » | | 5 Paluimore, Md. ...........c Leonce Rabillon. ........... Consuls ii... Boston, Mass. ......... 0: ...| Max Otto von Klock........ Nice consul... ..... Pascagoula, Miss. .......... Mammel L. Roy... Lon dm do. Sunt... Pascagoula, Biloxi, and : Gulfport. Konsag City, Mo..........-. Gabriel Madrid Hernandez .|..... da. aii... ARDY, NY. i area Guillermo A. Saxton........|..... Gordons LLL New York City, N. ¥Y...... Marlo L.Gil..............0-% Consul general. ..... Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Nevada, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, North Da~ kota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, Minne- sota, Towa, Missouri, Arkansas, Wi isconsin, Illinois, Michigan, In- diana, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Massachusetts, Con- necticut, Rhode Is- land, New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsyl- vania, W est Virginia, New Mexico, and —_———— ee —— Arizona. ? Alfredo Metz Green......... Henry H. Jennings.......... Philadelphia, Pa Rodman Wanamaker....... Maoyasuer P-B............ Jacobo Bravo y Gonzalez... Mayaguez and Agua-~ dilla. Ponce, P.R.. illo. Carlos Armstong.. .c.....0 0 Ll AB tiene Ss ens Ponce and Guayama. San Juan, P. R...0......... Manuel Mendia Morales... .. Consul... i iu. Bayamon, Arecibo, and Humacao. Manuel Gomez Lopez....... Viee consul......... Galveston, Tex... .......... Enrigune Schroeder... .......0..< LS Pe te SOE oe Port Arthur, Box... Themas Rice 0 .......... Jeoeas doe p Newport News, Va. oi .en Enrique C. Blackiston...... Rn I Nerfollr, Va. ....000........ pubes GeBalley,. del na. Seattle, West... . B. Roy Anderson........0..... doa VENEZUELA. San Francisco, Cal.......... Joseph Lander Eastland....| Consul.............. Jacksonville, Fla ........... James Y. Munoz............ Eenorary consul. ... Chicago, BL... ....... Alberto W. Brickwood...... Consnl. =. ., oii. New Orleans, La........... Vicente Pérez Leon........l..... 0s. a St. louis, Me............... James The Graeme Arbuckle] Honorary consul. ... New York City, N.Y ...... Pedro Rafael Rincones...... Consul general. ..... Antonio Duplat. ............ Vice consul Philadelphin, Pa........... Hector Pereira Alvarez .....|..... doi; su Arvectho,P.R.............. Sebastian Bonet. . .......... Consuls... .2...io0.. Mayaguez, P. RR... ...... Adolfo Steflens...........- 0.2 dO ccna Bam dusn,P.RB............. Juan Vicente Camacho......|..... doo. iat Juan Eugenio Medina....... Vieeconsul......... Tacoma, Wash. .......i.u.4 C. E. Lucian Agassiz........ Honorary consul. ... sy | | | A EN A DR NE DA NSEC DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. DISTRICT GOVERNMENT. (District Building, Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street. Phone Main 6600.) Commissioner.—Oliver P. Newman, president of the board, Florence Court. + Private secretary.— Thomas H. Claffey, The Woodward. . Commissioner. —¥Frederick L. Siddons, 1914 Biltmore Street. Private secretary.— William H. Holmes, 3301 Thirteenth Street. Engineer Commissioner.—Lieut. Col. Chester Harding, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1411 Twenty-first Street. Private secretary.—F. C. Lee, The Northumberland. Chief clerk.—Daniel E. Garges, 121 Twelfth Street NH. . Assistants to Engineer Commissioner.—Capts. Mark Brooke, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 600 Twentieth Street; Julian L. Schley, Army and Navy Club; R. G. Powell, Army and Navy Club. Secretary to the board —William Tindall, The Stafford. Assistant secretary. —William F. Meyers, 1319 Irving Street. DISTRICT OFFICERS. Assessor —William P. Richards, 137 S Street. Assistant assessors.—J. T. Petty, 3331 O Street; Charles M. Davis, 1400 K Street. Board of assistant assessors of real estate.—Edw. W. Oyster, 3924 Eighth Street; Alexander McKenzie, 1446 Harvard Street; William L. Beale, 1824 S Street. Board of assistant assessors of personal property.—B. F. Adams, 3717 Morrison Street; Edmund M. Talcott, 3235 R Street. = Auditor.—Alonzo Tweedale, Falkstone Courts. : Chief clerk.—Daniel J. Donovan, 624 Third Street. Boards: Automobile. —E. F. Vermillion, chairman; H. M. Woodward, secretary. nis ohn Joy Edson, president; George S. Wilson, secretary, 7601 Georgia venue. : Children’s Guardians.—B. Pickman Mann, president; Miss Mary Ella Moore, secretary. Control, Rock Creek Park.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia; the Chief of Engineers, United States Army. Dental examiners.—C. W. Cuthbertson, president; Paris E. Brengle, secretary. Education (Thirteenth and K Streets).—Henry P. Blair, Colorado Building, presi- dent; William M. Davidson, superintendent of schools, 3162 Seventeenth Street; H. O. Hine, secretary. : Examiners veterinary medicine.—Hurlbert Young, president. Ezxcise.—Joseph C. Sheehy, president, 3810 Jenifer Street; Robert G. Smith, 1513 Avenue of the Presidents; Henry S. Baker, 1108 Avenue.of the Presidents; clerk, Edw. J. Hart, 624 Third Street. Medical examiners: Reqular.—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.—J. B. G. Custis, president; George C. Ober, secretary. Nurses’ examining.—Lily Kanely, president, 1723 G Street; Katherine Douglass, secretary, 320 Kast Capitol Street. Pharmacy.—Augustus C. Taylor, president, Second Street and Massachusetts Avenue NE.; W. T. Kerfoot, secretary, Seventh and 1. Streets. Plumbing. —Peter C. Schaefer, president; Richard A. O’Brien, secretary. Trustees of Industrial Home School.—Bernard T. Janney, president; C. W. Skinner, superintendent. r 395 396 Congressional Directory. Boards—Continued. Trustees National Training School for Boys.—William M. Shuster, president; Samuel W. Curriden, secretary and treasurer; George A. Stirling, superintendent. Trustees Public Library (Ninth and K Streets).~—Theo. W. Noyes, president; George F. Bowerman, librarian, 2852 Ontario Road. Trustees of National Training School for Girls.—J. Nota McGill, president; Eliza- beth A. Whitney, superintendent. Collector of taxes.—Charles C. Rogers, 3118 Eighteenth Street. Deputy. —C. M. Towers, 243 Twelfth Street NE. Coroner.—Dr. J. Ramsey Nevitt, 1820 Calvert Street. Corporation counsel.—Conrad H. Syme, 3458 McComb Street. Assistants.—Francis H. Stephens, 1714 Summit Place; Roger J. Whiteford, 1108 P Street; James Francis Smith, 1339 XK Street; Gus. A. Schuldt, 317 Fourth , Street SE.; Robert L. Williams, 1428 Chapin Street; Malcolm K. Varnall, 131 B Street SE. ; Disbursing officer.—Louis C. Wilson, 1523 Park Road. Deputy. —James R. Lusby, 1305 Tenth Street. Electrical engineer.—Walter C. Allen, 3307 Newark Street. Engineer of bridges.—David E. McComb, The Portner. Engineer of highways.—C. B. Hunt, 2017 N Street. Inspeciors of— Asphalt and cements.—J. O. Hargrove, 1603 O Street. Boilers.—E. F. Vermillion, 762 Quebec Street. Buildings.—Morris Hacker, 1825 Adams Mill Road. Fuel —Michael Bergin, 711 P Street NE. Plumbing. —A. R. McGonegal, 750 Rock Creek Church Road. Municipal architect. —Snowden Ashford, 1617 Twenty-first Street. Permit clerk, Engineer Department.—H. M. Woodward, 1234 Monroe Street NE. Public utilities commission.—Executive officer, Capt. Julian L. Schley, Corps of En- gineers, U. S. A., District Building; J. G. Williams, statistician, 1700 Lamont street; H. C. Eddy, engineer, Falls Church, Va.; Elmer G. Runyan, inspector of gas and meters, 1100 East Capitol Street; B. A. Harlan, clerk, 64 Rhode Island venue, Purchasing officer —M. C. Hargrove, 1603 O Street. Special assessment clerk.—John W. Daniel, 1622 Riggs Place. Superintendents-of— District Building.—Capts. Mark Brooke, Julian L. Schley; clerk, J. M. Ward, 1123 Harvard Street. Home for aged and infirm.—W. J. Fay, Blue Plains. Insurance. — Municipal lodging house.—A. H. Tyson, 312 Twelfth Street. Playgrounds.—E. S. Martin, 1329 Harvard Street. Roads. —L. R. Grabill, Takoma. Sewers.—A. E. Phillips, 2116 Connecticut Avenue. Streets.—H. N. Moss, 1790 Lanier Place. Street cleaning. —J. W. Paxton, 1871 California Street. Trees and parking.—Trueman Lanham, Lanham Station, Md. Tuberculosis Hospital (Fourteenth and Upshur Streets) —Dr. William D. Tewksbury. Water department.—W. A. McFarland, 3719 Morrison Street. Weights, measures, and markets.—William C. Haskell, The Cumberland. Workhouse.—W. H. Whittaker, Occoquan, Va. Surveyor.—M. C. Hazen, 817 C Street SW. Veterinary surgeon.—C. B. Robinson, 222 C Street. : Washington Asylum and Jail (Nineteenth and C Streets SE.).—Louis F. Zinkhan, superintendent; visiting physician, D. Percy Hickling, 1304 Rhode Island Avenue, Water registrar. —G. W. Wallace, The Oakland. FIRE DEPARTMENT. Chief engineer. —Frank J. Wagner, 2611 Eleventh Street. Deputy. —Andrew J. Sullivan, 1506 Thirty-second Street. Battalion chief engineers.—James Keliher, 33 S Street; Samuel R. Henry, 909 Lawrence Street, Brookland; C. B. Proctor, 1221 G Street NE. Fire marshal. —Philip W. Nicholson, 136 Rhode Island Avenue. Chief clerk.—George S. Watson, 3928 Fourteenth Street. Superintendent of machinery.—Thomas M. Robinson, 407 C Sireet SE. District Government. 397 HEALTH DEPARTMENT. Health officer —William C. Woodward, 1766 Lanier Place. Assistant health officer.—John L. Norris, 2503 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Deputy and chief clerk.—Harry Clay McLean, 1373 Irving Street. Inspector in charge of contagious disease service.—William C. Fowler, 1812 First Street. Chemist.—R. L. Lynch, 3941 Fourteenth Street. Poundmaster.—E. Kuhn, 408 New Jersey Avenue SW. 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.—A. C. Lynn, 1944 Second Street. Inspector of pharmacy. —R. A. Sanders, 39 Quincy Street. Detective headquarters.—Inspectors R. H. Boardman, 1315 R Street; F. E. Cross, 319 Ninth Street SE.; Harry L. Gessford, 1351 Irving Street; R. B. Boyle, 1460 Newton Street. * ORIGIN AND FORM OF GOVERNMENT. The District of Columbia was established under the authority and direction of acts of Congress approved July 16, 1790, and March 3, 1791, which were passed to give effect to a clause in the eighth section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States, giving Congress the power— “To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever over such district (not exceeding ten miles square).as may, by cession of particular States and the accept- ance of Congress, become the seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like authority over all places purchased, by the consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings.” The local government of the District of Columbia is a municipal corporation hav- ing jurisdiction over the territory which ‘was ceded by the State of Maryland to the Congress of the United States for the permanent seat of the Government of the United States.” tea This government is administered by a board of three commissioners having in general equal powers and duties. Two of these commissioners, who must have been actual residents of the District for three years next before their appointment and have during that period claimed residence nowhere else, are appointed from civil life by the President of the United States and confirmed by the Senate of the United States for a term of three years each and until their successors are appointed and qualified. The other commissioner is detailed from time to time by the President of the United States from the Engineer Corps of the United States Army, and shall not be required to perform any other duty. This commissioner shall be selected from among the captains or officers of higher grade having served at least 15 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. 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, comiort, 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 99.) Paper represented. Name. Office. Albany Knickerbocker Press.......c........ Ernest Hazen Pullman...... 207 Southern Building. Albuquerque Herald... ...ccocuininnaanness TM. Bond... ... ice eeeis 14 I Street NX. Albuquerque Journal. ......ccoveeveenanaenn I. William Thavis..........- 514 Munsey Building. Mesondrio@ayette, Lt TI Robert 8. Barrett.......... | 506 Twelfth Street. American Press Asspeiation................. Arthaor W. Durni....c..ov-- The Brighton. Ansconds Standard... ............au-ie aan Harry J..Brown...... ..... 613 Fifteenth Street. Arizona Republican. ....ceewis shecswe ce itan Oi BaF accn- ct ions - cumn 905 Munsey Building. Arkansas Qazelie... .... cict verve ans sus John 'W, Planner... .....". 45 Pest Building. Asheville Clliven t...... o.oo ii isan George H. Manning......... 737 Gresham Street. ARO ABE PHBES i ii lide tiie cumin shad Charles T. Thompsen....... Star Building. Worth C. Harder.....s..--- Star Building. Grafton S. Wilcox. ......... Star Building. Ped Al¥mery........ 00. Star Building. E.R.Batwell......ciinnen Star Building. Carl D. Sheppard... ino Star Building. Horace Epes. ....ccncmunin-- 1 Star Building. Robert Dongen... .........- Star Building. Edwin M. Hood............ Star Building. Atlanta Constitution... ...... oc. avenaiinats John Corrigan. ....cvoon.o..! 207 Hibbs Building. Baltimore American... ...crurusesnseecsnenn Toouis Garthe...ouvennnnnn. 1410 Pennsylvania Avenue. John 8S. Shriver... 0... . 1410 Pennsylvania Avenue. Aa TERT ei mat) 1410 Pennsylvania Avenue, Baltimore American-Star. ;.....c.covaainin John 8. Shriver............. 1410 Pennsylvania Avenue, Thomas ‘0. Monk....cu..... 1410 Pennsylvania Avenue. Baltimore Evening Sun. ..cevevemeiraverenne J. Fred Besary.o.......iieen 716 Fourteenth Street. WW. B. Moto... ..d neato 716 Fourteenth Street. Everett L. Bradley ......... 716 Fourteenth Street. Baltimore News... = =. ivaameas anes J.C. Welliver__ _.._. ...... Munsey Building. : LE rE EE CU J. Fred Essary. ....couceovni 716 Fourteenth Street. : John R. Crown. ..........~- 716 Fourteenth Street. Birmingham Age-Herald......coauevunn..... C. E. Stewart 207 Hibbs Building. Birminshom News. 0... oo..0. duluanian Alfred J. Stofer............ 716 Fourteenth Street. Bisbee Review..... Charles P. Hunt. . 608 Fourteenth Street. Boise Statesman... Harry J. Brown. .... Se 613 Fifteenth Street. Boston Advergiser. oo0ih ll Nien ia John Loramce. .............] 206 ‘Corcoran Building. Boston Christian Science Monitor. .......... W.W.Sermane. ............ 901 Colorado Building. R. Eddy Mathews.......... 901 Colorado Building. Boston Evening Transeript.....c.ccuen..... William E. Brigham........ 81 Home Life Building. William Leavitt Stoddard. .| 81 Home Life Building. Berle CIONC. oon moan hn OL Jal Norborne Robinson. ........ 307 Riggs Building. Beuion Hendld Clr nee Ernest G. Walker. .......... 203 District Bank Building. Peon etorll srr ot re a John lorance_...~.........3 206 Corcoran Building. Bridgeport Post ........cuiuenveiinnaeonns.| Jobn B. Smallwood. ........ 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue. Brideeport Standard... tL aa 1. EB. Speneer.... o.oo ya tropolitan Bank uilding. Broodyn' Dally Eagle... ... i eansaui nn C.C. Brainerd. .... ae wove 608 Fourteenth Street. Robert A. Zachary.......... 608 Fourteenth Street. Brooklyn Standard Union.................. iP. Gowan... 5 422 Munsey Building. Bulla Copier. . coir vainivnm conan ..| George W. Summers. ....... 45 Post Building. Buifalo Evening News... ..c...o.ovuevaun.. William Wolff Smith....... 207 Southern Building. Ernest Hazen Pallman 207 Southern Building. Bullalo Bxuress. LL aia a aa W.W. Price. .... 0... -..| 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue. Bufialo Times. J... Ue Libis ae ne C. A. Hamilton..... .| 419 Munsey Building. Central News, Limited (London) N. O. Messenger 30 Wyatt Building. Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette. ..........o.... George W. Summers........ 45 Post Building. Charlestown (W.Va. )Mail................. Francis B. (tessner.......... The New Willard. Charleston News and Courier. .............. K. Foster Murray........c.u 1014 Munsey Building. ChantotteOhwonlele Cr ovo lr. Parker R. Anderson........ Wyatt Building. Charlotte ODBerVer i... coins iaa ins 0. B.C.Bryanl.......... Wyatt Building. Chicago Daily News. ..vueueniiiineenannan.n Leroy T. Vernon. ......u.... 51 Home Life Building. Harry B. Gauss. ............ 51 Home Life Building. Chicago Evening Posh. ........0commeunennn. Edward B. Clark........... 1013 Munsey. Building. ChiensoBxomiivtor. 2,0 CS ToghS Miller... ..... 34 Post Building. Chicago Inter Qeean. ............ 00 esi Oswald F. Schuette......... 31 Wyatt Building. Chicago Record-Herald... von onnneunennnes Summer M. Curtis. .......... 400-401 Hibbs Building, Harvey Fergusson. co... u.. 400-401 Hibbs Building. 398 Newspapers Represented in Press Gallery. 399 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. Chicago Tribune. cond sli con sin uoord J.C 0 anghlin.. . oo... 42 Wyatt Building. : . Arthur 8. Henning........- 42 Wyatt Building. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune............. Loulsimdlow.............. 303 Munsey Building. Cincinnati nguirer ii. civ. co aia eensamas Freditapek ..... ........... 1517 H Street. ; Robert F. Wilson. .z.u.....- 1517 H Street. Cincinnati Posto. ob. Jolene cain ios GilsonGardner. ....... ee 611-612 Munsey Building. Cincinnati TimesStar. oon. .ocvaeivaren Gust. Barger... 0... 16 Post Building. Cleveland Daily Iron Trade................. LW, Mofleth.. .....c.covnes 501 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. Cleveland Plain Dealer........c.cvuuennnnnn.- Ben WoAlen 0 38 Post Building. X.B.dolmsl... ... i... 705 Metropolitan Bank Bldg Cleveland Presi. co. itil oo aii tii Frederick M. Kerby......... 612 Munsey Building. Columbia (S.C) Slate... cca eu. iuans P. H. McGowan..... 422 Munsey Building. Columbus (Ohio) Dispateh.................. C. 8S. Watts..... -.-| 208 Hibbs Building. Columbus (Chio) State Journal rl CaS Walls. Lo on 208 Hibbs Building, Cologne Gazetif..oc. oii inn neasvnonnnnis George Barthelme. .......... The Nantucket. Coneord (N. Hx Monitor........... ssailad. Mrs. George F. Richards.....| Cochran Hotel. Pallas News. ci sans Oto PTReser....... ais 48 Post Building. Dallas Times Herald. /o. i... eee co 53 Raymond B. Morgan........| 41 B Street. Des Moines Register and Leader............ JohmSeure.......0..... .. . 723 Munsey Building. Detroit Free Press. i. ol... i ia William A, van Benschoten .| 402 Metropolitan Bank Bide. E-B.Jolms) ..............: 705 Metropolitan Bank Bidg. Detroit Jounal. Lol. coool. a William A. van Benschoten. .| 402 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. Detroit News... ce Sa George B. Miller............ 903 Colorado Building. 4 James LL. Wright... ........ 903 Colorado Building, Detroit News-Tribune. ............ coool. George EB. Miller. ........... 903 Colorado Building. James I. Wright..........:. 903 Colorado Building. Detroit Imes tony, irs. Or oo ru Reymond W. Pullman ..... 704 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. El Paso Dally Herald... 0... .... 0... Winfield Jones.............. District Bank Building. Ble DIEpatCh i a Sa a a JohniV..flanlen .....-...... 2715 Fourteenth Street. Exchange Telegraph Co. Ltd. (L.ondon).....| John Boyle.......cccveuue... 1418 F Street. Financial America, New York.............. NO. Messenger............. 30 Wyatt Building. Flint Journal... Souasali all. cutie ies Wells B Hwvey. ........ 93 Home Life Building. Miss Annie Bernstein. ...... 93 Home Life Building. Fort Worth Reeord. orth on o.oo 0 Walter 8. Gard........ -| 1014 Munsey Building. Galveston NeWS..... oii i. oe canoes Otto Praeger...... ..| 48 Post Building. Grand Rapids Evening Press. .............. Wels ¥. Harvey... 05 93 Home Life Building. Miss Annie Bernstein. ...... 93 Home Life Building. Grand Rapids News. ................... Co Great Falls Tribune... oi. ....... 0. 0% Greensboro News. 0. J. dbl. Ji 00 shia Greenville NOW o. civil Jeu iioaasoioiis Hiartlord Times. soos oo. oo i ER Ln Hearst's Chicago American.................. Honstomi Pest Lt Jackson Cltizen-Press.....c.... oon uuiiia. Jackson (Miss.) Daily News ................ Ronsag Oy Star... coc. ne..n tas Fansos Clty Times... c.c.cinne ooo nican oa Knoxville Journal and Tribune Knoxville Sentinel... -.... ooo oo INCOME Sar. cant, sevice bea hna, . London Morning Post London Times Ct Los Angeles Examiner Los Angeles Times. ......0 nooo Louisville Courier-Journal..... ............. Louisville Evening Post..................... Louisville Herald. ...c.o.o. on... os Louisville TIM Bed, aetuidh l oii Manchester 2] sy oader.. Lah Manchester (N. H.) Mirror Manila Cablenews-American................ Manila Dally Bulletin. ...........;.u.iie. Manitoba FreeiPress. cove. -nueoneenn cus Memphis Commercial Appeal............... Milwaukee Journal......... Minneapolis Journali......ccoeuvennencecnnns Robert M. MecWade......... Ernest Hazen Pullman...... Parker R. Anderson........ Minor Meriwether .......... H.C. Hallam... ... 0... T.%.Spencer........... ie Jesse S. Cottrell............. Andrew R. Kelley.......... Hough 8S, Miller.............. WalierB. Gard... ........ James P. Hornaday......... Morton M. Milford. ......... Percy Thomas.............. Charles D. Keller........... YW. B.0sborne ....... ai... daarencelodd ............. RenstBmery. ... ou cn Homer J. Dodge............ Nadel. aaa Wells ¥. Harvey Miss Annie Bernstein ....... Frank D. Lander, Jr..:.... H.D- Nesbitt... ............ HB. Neshitt.............& CG. A. Mosshart.... ......... Raymond B. Morgan....... A. Mawrice Low............. Arthur Willer. ...... 0. Hugh Mclsane. ............. Franeis John Dyer.......... Arthur B. Kroek............ O.K. Davie. ............... Mrs. George F. Richards. ... Earl Hamilton Smith Winfield Jones. ......... datry N. Pries.............. Ww. Ww. Jermone............. H. C. Stevens..... AN 1110 H Street. 207 Southern Building. Wyatt Building. 707 Twelfth Street. 206 Hibbs Building. 705 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 119 Second Street NE. 32 Post Building. 34 Post Building. 10i4 Munsey Building, 33 Wyatt Building. 33 Wyatt Building, Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. 93 Home Life Building, 93 Home Life Building. National Press Club. 15 Post Building. 15 Post Building. Post Building, 119 Second Street NE, Munsey Building. 41 B Street. 402 Hibbs Building. 802 Munsey Building. 35 Post Building. 405 Southern Building. 617-618 Evans Building. The Champlain. 303 Mungsey Building. 617-618 Xvans Building, 905 Many Building. Cochran Hotel. The Owasco. .| District Bank Building. 1110 H Street. 501 Metropolitan Bank Bldg, Post Building. 901 Colorado Building. 901 Colorado Building. Congressional Directory. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. Minneapelis News Minneapolis Tribune Mobile Register Montgomery Advertiser Montreal Star Muskogee Times-Democrat Nashville Banner Newark Evening News Newark Star Newark (Ohic) Advocate. ........onoviail New Brunswick Home News New Orleans Item New Orleans Picayune New Orleans States New York Evening Journal New York Evening Mail New York Evening Post New York Evening Telegram New York Evening World New York Globe New York Herald New York Times New York Tribune New York World Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch Norfolk Virginian-Pilot Oil City Derrick Oklahoma City Oklahoman Omaha Bee Passaic Herald Perth. Amboy News Philadelphia Evening Bulletin Philadelphia Evening Star Philadelphia Evening Telegraph Philadelphia Evening Times Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia North American Philadelphia Press Philadelphia Public Ledger Philadelphia Record Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph Pittsburgh Dispatch PittsbmghiEvening Sune... ................ Pittsburgh Gazette Times Pittsburgh Post Pittsburgh Press Portland (Me.) Express Portland (Oreg.) Journal... Portland Oregonian Providence Evening Bulletin Providence Journal Providence Tribune W. G. McMurchy Arthur J. Dodge Mercer Vernon Corry M. Stadden........... 5S. M. Christie J. Fred Egssary Winfield Jones Matthew F. Tighe George T. Odell Edward G. Lowry Russell M, Macl.ennan Harry L. Dunlap John Kirby : S. M. Williams John Snure Donald A. Craig Sal Brown i... 0 V. Gilmore Iden John Lorance George Garner Reginald Schroeder Elting A. Fowler............ Jerry A. Mathews Dudley Harmon L. Ames Brown George L. Edmunds R. V. Oulahan W. Sinkler Manning Hal H. Smith George Griswold Hill........ Elmer Murphy Frank R. Lamb Harry L. Dunlap Charles S. Albert Guy Mason John R. Crown K. Foster Murray Charles E. Kern 0. Owen Kuhn Edgar C. Snyder W. G. McMurchy G. A. Mosshart Donald A. Craig S. L. Brown S. M.. Christie S. M. Christie. . Frank B. Lord Charles W. Metzgar A. E. Heiss Thomas F. Log Wallace Bruce Macnamee .. Angus McSween A. O. Hayward Harry N. Price J. C. Hemphill J. A, Truesdell..........-... Maurice Splain Henry Hall L. W. Strayer Maurice Splain Robert M. Ginter Maurice Splain H. B. Nesbitt Mrs. George ¥F. Richards. ... Francis John Dyer Harry J. Brown David S. Barry David S. Barry H. C. Hallam 601 Munsey Building. 318 Metropolitan Bank. 606 Hibbs Building. : 207 Hibbs Building. 716 Fourteenth Street. 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue. Post Building. 119 Second Street NE. 904 Colorado Building. 904 Colorado Building. 419 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. Commercial Bank Building. 1216 New York Avenue. 716 Fourteenth Street. District Bank Building. Post Building. 501 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 34 Post Building. 34 Post Building. 34 Post Building. 34 Post Building. 34 Post Building. 35 Wyatt Building 802 Munsey Building. 206 Hibbs Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 723 Munsey Building. 1502 H Street. 1502 H Street. 206 Corcoran Building, 206 Corcoran Building. 320 Munsey Building. 14 Post Building. Hibbs Building. Hibbs Building. .| Hibbs Building. Hibbs Building. Hibbs Building. 14 Post Building. 14 Post Building. 14 Post Building. 505-508 Westory Building. 505-508 Westory Building. 505-508 Westory Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt iluBding. 716 Fourteenth Street. 1014 Munsey Building. 1406 G Street. Star Building. 725 Fourteenth Street. 601 Munsey Building. Munsey Building. 1502 H Street. 1502 H Street. 1216 New Y ork Avenue. 1216 New York Avenue. Munsey Building. 84 Home Life Building. 501 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 721 Munsey Building. 28 Post Building. 28 Post Building. 40 Wyatt Building. Post Building. Post Building. 14 Post Building. 14 Post Building. 48 Post Building. 47 Post Building. 38 Post Building. 48 Post Building. 47 Post Building. 48 Post Building. 15 Post Building. Cochran Hotel. 405 Southern Building. 613 Fifteenth Street. 606-608 Hibbs Building. 606-608 Hibbs Building. 206 Hibbs Building. Newspapers Represented in Press Gallery. 401 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. Raleigh News and Observer........cecceen.. Reading Eagle, oo eres Reuter’s Telegram Co. (Ltd.), London. ..... Richmond News-Leader.................... Richmond Times-Dispateh.................. Rognoke Fimes 5 Fo. oe RochestérBerald, os oo Rochester Post-Express................. a Butland Herald. o>. 0 co ns oe. + [=] j= = = o o ? jw) [e 8 © Ie) = 0 + St. Touis-Post-Dispateho. cto. 0... 0. 0.0. St-LotigRepublie it iin. St. Boule Dimes oii oh aes St. Paul News....... Sena SE SR St. Paul Digpateh. = oor 0 0 0s a St. Paul Pioneer Press es Sacramento Bee........ San Antonio-Express.. .. Lo... on ian oN Son Diego Union... i. sii es Sandusky Register: to... o.. o San Francisco Evening Post. ............... San Francisco Examiner....:................ Savannah Morning News ..... AAP Sena Savannah Press oil Se Schenectady Union-Star.................... Seattle Post-Intelligencer....... i .o. 5K... Beatle Times... ane Siotix City Journal: ir S00 oi Springfleld Illinois State Register........... Springfield: Republican... ................. Springfield Union... cio... coi, Tacoma News: nL Lo oi Sr Ian Popeka Capital ...............1 Sea Topeka State Journal... ...... cos. ..00n BoroRte World. ooo. a anh Brenton Imes: Ci a. a ae roy Limes ee it een Troy Record..... Tucson Citizen. Washington Herald Washington Post i 0 oh esse ot Washington Pimes.. 2c ah oo aay Western Newspaper Union ....ccovvueunnn.. Wheeling Register................ Wilmington Evening Journal Wilmineton (NC. Y Star... ccveieerenn sai Winnipeg Telegram. ..... EE TE a Winston-Salem Journal..................... _.| Ira M. Bond W.E. Yelverion.-.>..-..... John IK. Stauffer. .......... PamlWeir...0n... oc 00 0 z George H. Manning. ........ George B. Laughlin. ........ Charles A. Hamilton........ Harry L. Dunlap......... 0. BH. EK. C.Bryamt. 500.0. Issac Gregg. ..... co lida. D. Hastings MacAdani....-. Edward B. Clark. .......00 W..G. MeMurehy........... Jorn. Monk: Ji. onl. Austin Cunningham. ....... Francis John Dyer... ... re, EeB.Jdohms: 0 cans ior John P. Ryan... i noios ., BughMelsanet. coun). W. E.Yelverton.........0.. Charles W. Metzgar......... Joseph W. Gilbert .......... W. W,Jermane.........0... H.C. Sevensi, ol nw. Fred Davis... cL. 508 George L::0dellu aint Lomis Ludlow... icon. oR. Davis os... opus. Edgar C. Snyder............ Herman B. Walker ......... Charles A. Hamilton... .. Fred C. Kelly........ Charles P. Hunt... 050. Perry Arnold. loon Un, John BE. Nevin. iui ono. ST: Barly ciel te Seon Carl-D, Groat ioc. .i cil. CarterrFleld ioc i tio ot, + John Boyle. ..icihsnalis Henry BE. Bland. o.oo 5h N.O. Messenger..=.... 0.00. RarlGodwin......... 5... 1436 R Street. 208 Star Building. 716 Fourteenth Street. 422 Munsey Building. 737 Gresham Street. Munsey Building. 419 Munsey Building. Thirty-second and S Streets. Fourteenth and F Streets. Fourteenth and F Streets. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 23 Wyatt Building. 1013 Munsey Building. 601 Munsey Building. 208 Hibbs Building. 208 Hibbs Building. W.P. Spurgeon -.oin ll. Tra. B. Bennett. oo... nil Frank I. Whitehead......... Frederick W. Steckman..... J.C. Welliver....... To 3. John Snure.. 7. . sii. On. Theodore H. Tiller. . ns Edward B. Clark ... Ti Geo. W. Summers... Parker R. Anderson......... Fergus P. Ferris. ...0....0.. George H. Manning......... Lee Lamar Robinson....... 203 District Bank Building. 617 Evans Building. 405 Southern Building. 705 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 82 Home Life Building. 35 Post Building. 1436 R Street. Munsey Building. 84 Home Life Building. Hibbs Building. 901 Colorado Building. 901 Colorado Building. 1413 G Street. 1110 H Street. 203 District Bank Building. 35 Wyatt Building. 303 Munsey Building. 905 Munsey Building. 514 Munsey Building. 725 Fourteenth Street. 419 Metropolitan Bank Bldg.’ 419 Munsey Building. _.| 44 Home Life Building. 41 I Street NE. 608 Fourteenth Street. 201 Munsey Building. 201 Munsey Building. 201 Munsey Building. 201 Munsey Building. 201 Munsey Building. 201 Munsey Building. 201 Munsey Building. 1418 I Street. 1418 F Street. 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue. 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue. 1101 Pennsylvania Avenue. Herald Building. Herald Building. 27 Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. 1013 Munsey Building. a ...| 45 Post Building. .| Edward H. Causey.......... Star Building. Wyatt Building. 123 Carroll Street SE. 737 Gresham Street. The Champlain. 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——27 402 - Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the designates those whose daughters accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them.] Name. Paper represented. Residence. * Albert, Charles S........... * Allen, Ben Bll omnll, * Anderson, Parker B........ Anmin J. Po lions. * || Arnold, Perry ............ Barrett, Robert S............ *+ Barty, David 8... -.. - 5. Barthelme, George. .......... * Bennett, Ira E * | Bolton, Henry B......... Bond, Ira Ji Boyle, John. lu, al Bi Bradley, Everett L.......... * Br ainerd, BI * Brigham, William E........ * Brown, Harry: J... .c........ * LL Edward H........ Christie 8. WM ....caviuiib iin % | Clark, Edward B......... * Conner, Frank W.......... * Corrigan, John. oo... 0 Cottrell, Jesse S.............. * Craig, Pomald A............ Crown, John RB... 00. i. * Cunningham, Austin. _..... * Curtis, Sumner M. SEK * Davis, 0. K....... mena * Dodge, Arthur J........ 0.0 * Dodge, Homer Joo... Lo... * Dougan, Robert............ * Dunlap, Harry L...o..aat.. Barly, B.D ileal nisi msn J Edmnds, Gea George Li........ land, Henry BE | Emery, Pred A... ois Epes, Horas... vaeid. * Basary, J. Fred... oi... 0d. Fergusson, Harvey. .......... “Pield, Carter... LiL ial. * Borris, Pergus Pic. ui.l. * Flenner, John W........... [| Fowler, Elting A........... * Gard, Walters... orn... *Gardner,; Gilson... ......... * Garner, Goorg0......uvussen Garthe, Louis: . 1... .o1. * Gates, Robert M........... Gauss, Harry A * Geddes, Bend Pie. Gessner, Franeis B........... Gilbert, Fomph Wo. oe... * Ginter, Robert M............ Godwin C8. N............. * | Godwin, 1b ee | Chicago Record-Herald Charlotte Chronicle, rayon News, Wilmington (N CHS Washington Held li United Press Associations. ................ Alexandria Gagetle.. ..... 0. ..o..cueuinn. Providence Journal, Providence Evening Bulletin. Cologu Bazetlo. i. cuir sina sana smms names Washing ion Poll <. co. cena ene Grand Rapids Evening Press, Saginaw News, Jackson Citizen-Press, Flint Journal, Bay City Times. Batland Feral] oi eres. ierrsroanonnns Albuquerque Herald, Tucson Citizen, Prescott Journal Miner. Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph Company. Baltimore Evening Sun...... aaa aa Brooklyn Daily Bagle.... ....cvnneeen in. Boston Evening Transcript. .............. Portland Oregonian, Boise Statesman, Anaconda Standard, Salt Lake Deseret News. New Yorr San ord id... New York Herald, Paris Herald ......... St. Louis Post Dispatch, Charlotte Ob- server. Wilmington Evening Journal... ......_... Passaic Herald, New Brunswick Home News, Perth Amboy News. Chicago Evening Post, St. Louis Times, Western Das Union. St. Louis Glebe-Democrat................. Atlanta Constitution. ...............0..... Nashville Banner, Knoxville Sentinel, Havana Post. New York Herald, Paris Herald .......... Baliimore SUR Ic il irs anes San Antonio LXPress. .......... Sioux City Jommala. 0... io Arizona Republican, SN ANchyster (N-IE.) Leader, Topeka Capital. Minneapolis Mribumed 2 International News Service ...coveeuuans.. Assopiofed Prose: oc. 00a... New York World, New York Evening World, St. Louis Post- Dispatch. American Press Association............... Los Angeles Times, San Diego Union, Portland (Oreg.) Journal. United Press Associations.......cccevanaa. Baltimore Evening Sun, Baltimore Sun... Chicago Reeord Herald.........ccviuiua.. United Press Associations. ..........o.... Winnipeg Telegram... tL... coi-l.i. Mons Times-Democrat, Arkansas Ga- zette. New YorRStn.. oii i insinmsnn Houston Post, Fort Worth Record, Nash- ville Banner. Cineinnali- Post]... iri sms as New York Press. or hn os es Baltimore: American... .... vinnie Memphis Commercial-Appeal............. Chicago Dally News’... ... ~. 20020... United Press Associations................. Charleston (W.Va Mail. .............-. Seattle Post-Intelligencer ......ccveeeun.. Pittsburgh Gazette Times. ..........v...... United Press AsSoelations......- chan. Washington Star... 0 rai The Hawarden. The Northumberland 1324 Massachusetts Avenue. The Knickerbocker. Alexandria, Va. 1816 Jefferson Place. The Nantucket. The Ontario. 1508 Sixth Street. Thirty-second and 8 Streets. 14 I Street NE, 928 Fourteenth Street. 60 S Street. Falkstone Courts. 3122 Newark Street. V.M. CA. The Alendale. 3611 Wisconsin A venue. 1211 Euclid Street. 1216 New York Awvenue. The Hamiiton. 3415 Oakwood Terrace. 1727 S Street. 119 Second Street NE. 1200 East Capitol Street. 1515 Park Road. Fontanet Courts. 1844 Columbia Road. The Summit. 1863 Wyoming Avenue. 2007 Massachusetts Avenue. 615 Lamont Street. The Northumberland. The Brunswick. The Brighton. The Champlain. 7s North Carolina Avenue 1220 Twelfth Street. 928 Fourteenth Street. 2608 Cathedral Avenue. The Cecil. 312i Newark Street. 1435 Clifton Street. The Nottingham. 123 Carroll Street SE. The Beverly. 1837 Newton Street. The Rochambea. The Nottingham. The Northampton. The Clinton. 1403 Webster Street. 1300 Harvard Street. The New Willard. 3306 Highland Avenue. 3306 Highland Avenue. Persons Entitled to Admission to Press Gallery. 403 MEMBERS OF PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued. Name. Paper represented. Residence. * Goldberg, Jules I .........:| New York American, New York Even- ing Journal. 2Grege, Ieaae uiiai add St. Louis Post Dispatel .........caceneen. Alexandria, Va. Groat, Carl Do. in hk United Press Associations -c.eeaeevaaannn 1917 T Street. Hall, Henry... oon Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph... ....... * Hallam, H€@. alsin Hartford Courant, Providence Tribune ...| 2930 Newark Street. 74 *§ + Hamilton, Chas. A...... HBonlon JohnV .__.......... % Harder, Worth C.......... * Harmon, Dudley........... # Harvey, Wells Fo... Hayward, A. Oi... % 100888, . Bini dosdidaneans Hemphill, 1. C.J. cusamen nv. ¥| Henning, Arthur S_....... *i Hill, George Griswold. .... * Hood, Edwin M * Hornaday, James P........ # Hunt, Charles BP. ........... #| Iden, V. Gilmore.......... % Jameson, A. Moo loi nl 2 Jermane, W., W........... dons, B. B.C. *Jones, Winfield....c... enue Kuhn, OC. Owen... id..an. * amb, Frank Rolo Lauder, Frank D., jr........ | Laughlin, George B........ * Lincoln, 6G. Gould.......... Logan, Thomas F............ Lorance, Jom. co... cans Lord, Frank B.. ........ 0... Low, A. Maurice... .... uo. * Lowry, Edward @ ......... * Ludlow, Leomis. .....0. 000 *| MacAdam, D. Hastings. ... * MacLennan, Russell M._... *|'MeGowan, P. H........... %* Melsaae, Hugh. .........0 * McMurchy, W. &........... * McSween, Angus........... * McWade, Robert M......... Macnamee, Wallace Bruce... * Manning, George H........ * Manning, W. Sinkler....... # Mason, Gay... .... Lo... 0] * Mathews, Jerry A. ......... * Mathews, R. Eddy......... Meriwether, Minor. .......... *| Messenger, N. O........... Metall W.B................ * Metzgar, Chas. W.......... Milford, Morton M........... | Miller, Geo. B8.............. * Miller, Hugh S............. Rochester Post-Express, Troy Times, Buf- Times. Erie Dispaieh © ...ce cence snionine SARE Associated Press. . SEE New York Sun........ ..ge.ets itiae.. Grand Rapids Evening Press, Saginaw News, Jackson -. # Nesbitt FH. B.C. uo iil * Nevin, John E ® i C.N 30 abit YerQ 0 # Osborne, W. B..... ....... * Oulahan), RB. Vo adam dl * Park, William C = Praeger, Otto.co oon Price, Harr * Price, Ww. * Pullman, Ernest Hazen.... Pullman, Raymond W Richards, Mrs. George F...... * Robinson, Lee Lamar. ..... 0, ; Robinson, Norborne. ........ .* Ryan, John z bidet ah * Sartwell, BE. R * Schroeder, Reginald........ Schuette, Oswald F......... * Sheppard, Carl D.......... Shriver, J Li ARE Sinnott, Arthur Jive. vos Smallwood, John B * Smith, Earl lamiiion BL * Smith, Hal H * Smith, William Wolff....... Spurgeon, W. Pi. toll i x pazn. Corry M Starek, Fre FA Staufler, Joh. ci... Steckman, Frederick W...... *| Stevens, H. C. aed * Stewart, C. B Stoddard, Willian Leavitt. . | Stofer, Alfred J Strayer, L.. We. ..c.co lili Summers, Geo. W.....-.....- PE Wo NL x Thavis, L.Willlam ..... 0... * Thomas, Perey...-:o% Lo. * Thompson, Charles T...... * Tighe, M. F *|| Tiller, Theodore H........ Todd, Laurence 3 Truesdell, J. A * van Benschoten, William A. * Vernon, Leroy T Vernon, Mereer.. i * Walker, Ernest G............ : MLS Herman B......... if Watkins, Robert H. ..... atts, C. 8 Weir, Pam). =... oni au .| Cincinnati Enquirer Cleveland Daily Iron Trade St. Paul Dispatch, St. Paul Pioneer Press. Baltimore American-Star. ................ Lincoln State Journal, Dallas Times- Herald. Omaha World-Herald, Lincoln Star....... New-York: Tribune, oo. os Coe i. Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Charleston News and Courier. Pittsburgh Press, Kansas City Star, Kan- sas City Times. United Press Associations................. International News Service ............... New York Evening Mail, Springfield Union. Chicago: Tribune... soil in Jo By International News Service ............i.. New York Times, Philadelphia Ledger.... Newark Evening News. ........o.ooouan.. Dallas News, Galveston News............. Philadelphia Press, Milwaukee Journal.. Buffalo Evening News, Great Falls Trib- une, Albany Knickerbocker Press. Detroit Times Concord Monitor, Manchester (N. H) Mir- ror, Portland (Me.) Express. Louisville Evening Post, Winston-Salem Sentinel. Boston Globe. 2. vii. ani i ss ees SantiFranciseo Posto nail alia tiian, Associated Press: ui cine no Lol New York Staats-Zeitung................. Chieago Inter Ocean. oro. do i Associnton Pross. .. oie ctinaidiiny Palifmons American, Baltimore American- tar. Newark Evening News.................... Bridgeport Post Manila Cablenews-American.............. Baltimore American, New York Times.... Buffalo Evening Noun in. on New York Globe, Des Moines Register and Leader Washington Times. Omaha Bee, Toronto World... li. Hartford Times, Bridgeport Standard... .. Pittsburgh Post, Pittsburgh Sun, Phila- delphia Record. Washington Heralds. iosiooinn do an Newark (Ohio) Advoecate........ ..i..... Reading Bagle. .. [Lc ili food Washington Post, New Orleans States. . Minneapolis J ournal, Seattle Times. . Birmingham Age-Herald, Mobile Register. Boston Evening Transeript............... "| Montgomery Advertiser, Birmingham News. Pittsburgh Dispateh....... o.oo 0. Lil Wheeling Register, Buffalo Courier, Charleston (W. Va, .) Gazette. International News Service............... ia State Journal, Albuquerque Jour- nal. International News Service............... AssociatedPress... Found onl nani New York American, New York Evening Journal. Washington Times, Philadelphia Evening Times, Savannah Press. International News Service............... Philadelphia Tedger...... cf 2... ci Detroit Journal, Detroit Free Press Chicago Daily ayo; Ca as Tea Es Minneapolis Tribun Boston Herald, De atid Republican, Sacramento Bee. Newark Star, Trenton Times ............. Knoxville Journal and Tribune. .......... Columbus (Ohio) State Journal, Colum- bus Dispatch. Reuter’s Telegram Co. (Ltd.), London.... 836. Varnum Street. 1488 Monroe Street. The Juniata. 41 B Street. - - 1824 Ontario Place. 2308 Nineteenth Street. 1761 Park Road. Clarendon, Va. The Rochambeau. 1777 Massachusetts Avenue. The Farragut. 1924 Seventeenth St. 1482 Monroe Street. 1417 Park Road. Congress Heights. 707 Taylor Street. 704 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. Cochran Hotel. The Champlain. The Maury. 1426 Columbia Road. The Beacon. 1517 O Street. The Dresden. Florence Court. 1338 New York Avenue. The Northumberland. University Club. The Owasco. The Brunswick. Connecticut A venue and Ingo- mar Street. 1331 Emerson Street. 1112 Fairmont Street. 517 Florida Avenue NE. 5101 Thirteenth Street. 3002 Thirteenth Street. University Club. .| The Benedick. | 1224 Eighth Street. 2022 1 Street. 2829 T'wenty-seventh Street. 1740 Park Road. 3354 Mount Pleasant Street. 1925 G Street. The Earlington. 2506 Cliftbourne Place. 1741 G Street. 3745 Oliver Street. 1121 Harvard Street. 1734 Seventeenth Street. | 2731 Ontario Road. 1219 Connecticut Avenue. 2509 Cliffbourne Place. The Airy View. 1227 Fifteenth Street. 1440 M Street. Star Building. Persons Entitled to Admission to Press Gallery. 405 MEMBERS OF PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION —Continued. Name. Paper represented. Residence * Welliver,J.C...............| Washington Times, Baltimore News...... #+ Whitehead, Frank I....... Washington Pest loci. ede... 0 1734 I Street. Wileox, Grafton S............ ASSoCIAed Press. . © o-oo nse ga as * Willert, Arthur............ London Times. 3.0 le. tlio oo 2141 Wyoming Avenue. Williams, SoM... New York Evening World..........c..... 20-22 Wyatt Building. *] Wilson, Robert F......... Cincinnati Enquirer: ...v... . .oiii-vte. 1840 Mintwoced Place. Wrieht James L.. ....co....00 Detroit News, Detroit News-Tribune...... The Burlington. *Yelverton, W. E.....«..... Raleigh News and Observer, Savannah | 1436 R St. Morning News. Zachary, Robert A........... Brooklyn Dally Eagle...c. icone cnstaiis Alexandria, Va. House Press Gallery: William J. Donaldson, jr., superintendent, The Cecil. Senate Press Gallery: James D. Preston, superintendent, 1405 Allison Street. William J. Collins, assistant superintendent, 2211 N Street. Royal M. Tinker, messenger, 919 L Street. RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES. 1. Persons desiring admission to. the press galleries shall make application fo the Speaker, as required by Rule XXXVI of the House of Representatives, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by Rule IV 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 prosecu- tion 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 Congress, 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 journalists 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 exceeding one seat shall be assigned to each paper; and it shall be the duty of the Standing Committee, at their discretion, to report violations of the privileges of the 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: : : CaamMp CLARK, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. RicHARD V. OvLABAN, Chairman, Leroy T: VERNON, Joan CORRIGAN, GrorGE E. MILLER, Wirriam E. BricraMm, Secretary, Standing Committee of Correspondents. MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES. NAME, HOME POST OFFICE, AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; WASHINGTON RESIDENCE, the designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them.} THE SENATE. *TroMAs R. MarsmaLL, President, The Shoreham. James P. CLARKE, President pro tempore, The Cochran. *tRev. FORREST 7. PreTrYMAN, Chaplain of the Senate, 1308 Columbia Road. *JaMES MARION BAKER, Secretary, 3141 Highland Place. *|Henry M. RosE, Assistant Secretary, 1745 Eighteenth Street. CrARLES P. HicaIxs, Sergeant at Arms, The Winston. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) 406 i . ; Biog- Name. Home post office. Washington residence. raphy. Page. Ashwrst, Henry F...... 0 Prescott, Ariz...... The Jmeceme..... ..... 6 Bacon, Augustus a.. .1 Macon, Ga.......... The Netherlands........ 17 #++Bankhead, John H. Jasper, Ala. . .... ..| The New Willard....... 3 *Borah, William E........... | Boise, daha... Windsor Lodge ........ 21 Bradley, Wiliam O........... Beechmont, Ky....| Falkstone Courts........ 35 Brady, James BL... ... Pocatello, Idaho....| 2131 Massachusetts Ave. 21 Brandegee, Frank B..........| New London, Conn.| 1521 K Street. . : 13 ~ ¥Bristow, Joseph I............ Salina, Kane. ....... 2612 Garfield Street. .... 33 Bryan, Nathan PP... 0... Jacksonville, Fla...| The Connecticut........ 16 *Burleigh, Edwin C.......... Augusta, Me........ F709 FE Street... -. i. 431 Burton, Theodore E.......... Cleveland, Ohio... .| The Rochambeau....... 85 Catron, Thomas B........... Santa Fe, 'N. Mex. .| The Bachelor. ......... 68 *ttChamberlain, George E... Portland, Oreg...... 1748 Q Street... ... 94 *Chilion, William E. . ....... Charleston, W. Va..| The Occidental.........} 121 *Clapp, Moses ® U0 St Poul Minn. { TheOntario. 2 41... 51 *[[ Clark, Clarence PD. ...". Evanstown, Wyo...| The Burlington......... 126 Clarke, Tomes © L000 Little Rock, Ark. ..! The Cochran............ 6 *+Colt, JeBaron'B.., Li 2 Bristol, RB. 1.......} The Bellevue........... 104 €Crawiord, Coe IT... .... Huron, S. Dak..... Tho Poriner i 7 107 *|[Culberson, Charles A....... Dallas, Tex. ....... The Connecliont! |... 11 Rite Abert 00 Des Moines, Towa..| The Wyoming.......... 31 Dillingham, William P....... Montpelier, Vt. .... Fhe Cochran ol. .0 00 115 gu Pont, Henry A... 0. Winterthur, Del... .| 1711 Massachusetts Ave. 15 fall Abert B.. ....... 0. hi Rivers, N. | The Shoreham......... 68 : lex. : *Fletcher, Dunean U........ Jacksonville, Fla...| 1455 Massachusetts Ave. 16 Gallinger, Jacob H....... .. Concord, No H ...... 2113 O Street i. .7 20 64 RGQefl, Nothom 07. 00 Clarksburg, W. Va..| The Portland........... 121 *Sore, Thomas P......... ... Lawton, Okla. ..... 1863 Mintwood Place... 929 2+iGronng, Astle J... ..... Lakota, N. Dak..... The Mendota. ......... 83 *fHitchcock, Gilbert M...... Omaha, Nebr. ..... 1736 M Street .......... 61 Hollis, Henry I HE Pe Coneord, N. BH... .. 1945 Calvert Street...... 64 # Hughes, William... ....... Paterson, N. J... .. The Occidental . ....... 65 #|[|Jackson, Witham P."...... Salisbury, Md. .... ay New Hampshire 42 ve. dames, Ollie M. . ........ 0. Marion Ky... ... The Parkwood. ........ 36 *iohnson, Chavles PF. .. ...... Waterville, Me. .... The Cochran... ......... 41 *tJones, Wesley L............ N on Yakima, | The Cairo’ 100," 1 1 119 ash. *Kenyon, William S......... Fort Dodge, Iowa...| 1752 Park Road ........ 31 Ren John W..........v... Indianapolis, Ind...! Congress Fall 0. .c 2 *La Follette, Robert M...... Madison, Wis. ...... 3320 Sixteenth Street. 123 *jiilane Harry... ........... Por tland, Greg... .. 1300 Columbia Road. ... 94 | [Ill Lea, ini N ashville, Tenn. ---| 2236 Massachusetts Ave. 108 *Lewis, J. Hamilton... ...| Chicago, | The Shoreham. .“....... 22 Lippitt, Henry P............ Providence, B.1...1 1739 N Street ........... 104 ¥lodge, Betey C............. Nahant, Mass. .' 1765 Massachusetts Ave. 44 a a a od Ew Members’ Addresses. 407 THE SENATE—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) Name Home post office. Washington residence. Biog- ¢ raphy Page. *iMcCumber, Porter J. ...... Wahpeton, N. Dak.| 2360 Massachusetts Ave. 83 *McLean, George P........... Simsbury, Conn... .| 1520 NewHampshire Ave 14 Martin, Thomas 8... .......; Charlottesville, Va..| The Benedick.......... 116 *|[ Martine, James E.......... Plainfield, N. J..... The Burlington ......-. 65 *Mvers, Benvy 1... ..... Hamilton, Mont....| The Toronto. .......... 60 *iNelson, Knute. ...........| Alexandria, Minn. .| 649 East Capitol Street. . 51 *Newlands, Francis G........ Reno, Nev. .......| Woodley, Woodley Lane 63 Nomis, George W. o- Loco ivdnt McOoolt, Nebr cmos cos oo do ris mnls sisi sists sid 61 O'Gorman, James A......... New York, N. Y...| Army and Navy Club... 69 *Oliver, George T. i... ich .o3 Pittsburgh, Pa...... 2230 Massachusetts Ave. 95 *+fOverman, Lee S........... Salisbury, N. C..... The Cochran... ui... 3" = 80 *1Owen, Robert Lo........... Muskogee, Okla. ...} 1731 K Street-......... 91 ¥1Poge, Carroll 8.c o.oo Hyde Park, Vii oo The Cocluan....c...5 c.1,1 115 Peonroge, Boles... iol ul Philadelphi in, Pa. .of New Willard... i005: 95 [|[Perkins, George C........... Oakland, Cale os Stoneleigh Court. ...... 8 Pittman, Key... ....c0.0- 303 Tonopah, Nev..... Idaho Ave. and Macomb 63 St., Cleveland Park. * Poindexter, Miles.......... Spokane, Wash..... 1750 N Street. ......... 119 *i{{Pomerene, Atlee.........: Canton, Ohio. ...... The Highlands.....:..=. 85 *|Ransdell, Joseph E......... Lake Providence, La] The Montana. 39 *Heed, James A........ ih. Kansas City, Mo....| 1956 Biltmore Street. . 56 *]||| Robinson, Joe X10 cunmives Lonoke, Ark. ...... The Burlington ........ 7 *oot, Elihu. .......c5-9e50s New York, N. Y...| 1155 Sixteenth Street... 68 *Saulsbury, Willard. . oe dees Wilmington, Del...| 1901 R Street .......... 15 ¥Shafroth, John FF... icons Denver; Colo. ...... 1463 Irving Street. ..... 12 *f||Sheppard, Morris:ic......-- Texarkana, Tex....| 1627 Sixteenth Street...| 1il Sherman, Lawrence Y....... Springfield, I11..... The Toronio. ..ork -oont 22 *Shieids, John K.............| Knoxville, Tenn... i Avenue of the Pres- 108 idents. *Shively, Benjamin F....... South Bedd; Ind. of... 0 oad oa, 28 Simmons, BF. MCL. s Newbern, N. C..... 3612 McComb St., Cleve- 30 land Park. *1/|Smith, Ellison D.......... Florence, S. C...... The Cochramn......... i. 105 iSmith Hoke. .........,... Atlant; Ga... 0. 2117 California Avenue. . 18 Smith, John WW, ..o. ounce vs: Snow Hill, Md. .... 330 Roland Ave., Ro- 42 : land Park, Baltimore, : Md. Smith Mareng A... 0 0000 Tucson, Ariz... The Occidental......... 6 *Smith, William A............ Grand Rapids, Mich.| 1100 Avenue of the Pres- 48 ; idents. Smoot, Reed. ............ 5 Provo City, Utah...| 2521 Connecticut Ave...} 114 *1IStephenson, Isaac.........| Marinette, Wis. .... The Powhatan.-........ 124 *Sterling, Thomas... ....:.-- Redfield, S. Dak. ..| Congress Hall........... 107 *iStone, William J........-..« Jefferson City, Mo. .| The Woodley........... 56 *Sutherland, George..........; Salt Lake City, | 2119 Le Roy Place...... 114 . Tigh. *Swanson, Claude A..........; Chatham Va....... 2136 RSiveet. in, 117 A Thomas, Charles 8... ....... Denver, Colo....... The Westmoreland ..... 12 *+Thompson, William H...... Garden City, Kans. .| 2657 Woodley Road. .... 33 Thornton, John B........... -, Alexandria, La..... Tho Gordon... i... 38 *Tillman Benjamin R....... Tremion, 8.C..... The Dewey... ..... 0. 105 ~*Townsend, Charles E........ Jackson, Mich...... The Portland... .... 48 Vardoman, James K.... ..... Jackson, Miss....... The Benedick.......... 53 Yalh, ThoweseF... ~.. .. Helena, Mont. ..... The Highlands......... 60 * Warren, Francis E........ Cheyenne, Wyo. ...| 1720 Avenue of the Pres- 127 idents. *Weelis Jonn'W............. Newton, Mass....... 1701 Twenty-second St. 45 ii Willioms John S......... Benton, Miss... .... 1607 Sixteenth Street... 53 Works, Jolin D..- 5... 0 Los Angeles, Cal....| The Kenesaw........... 9 408 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. *+CrAMP CLARK, Speaker, 2401 Massachusetts Avenue. *Rev. HENnrY NoBLE CoubpeN, Chaplain, 2006 Columbia Road. *tSoura TrimsLE, Clerk, 3536 Thirteenth Street. RoBERT B. GOorDON, Sergeant at Arms, 214 A Street SE. *I|Josepr J. SinNvorT, Doorkeeper, 3527 Thirteenth Street. *WiLLiam M. DunBAR, Postmaster, The Loudoun. (For Office Reoms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) Pierre, S. Dak...... ; Name. Home post office. Washington residence. Biog- : Ae raphy Page. *+tAbercrombie, John W._..-| Tuscaloosa, Ala... ..| Falkstone Courts....... 3 *fAdair, Jom AM... 0 Portland, Ind....... Congress Hall........... 30 Adamson, William C......... Carrollton, Ga...... The Boland... 2100 19 Aiken Wyatt... 00. 00 Abbeville. 8.C. 1489 Meridian Street....| 106 FAiney William D. B_... +. Montrose, Pa........ Congress Hall........... 99 *tAlexander, Joshua W....... Gallatin, Mo. ..- Li. 1110 Rhode Island Ave.. 57 #iAllen, Alfved G..-......... Qincinnati, Ohio... The Toronto... ......... 86 *tAnderson, Sydney.......... Lanesboro, Minn. ...| The Gladstone. ........ 51 . *Ansberry, Timothy T...... - -| Defiance, ‘Ohio... .. 1535: P Street... 00. 86 . ¥|Anthony, Daniel R., jr..... Leavenworth, Kans.| 1723 S Street............ 33 *Ashbrook, William A........ Johnstown, Ohio....| Congress Hall........... 89 *tAswell, James B........._. Natchitoches, La....| The New Winston...... 40 spAustin, Richard W.... Knoxville, Tomm....| The Brightony...........] 100 Avie, Samel B........... .. Charleston, W. Va. .| The Wyoming.......... Bal 1 2 rBalley, Warren W.. Johnstown, Pa...... Congress Hall........... 100 *¥itBaker, J. Thompson... ... Wildwood, N.J..... 1728S Street. 0 65 Balty William N-,.-.. 7. Millsinge, TE 00 307M Streat 1 27 *| || Barchfeld, Andrew J... .. Pitisburgh, Pa... | The Gotham. .......... 104 *Barkley, Alben W......_._.. Poducah, Ky... Congress Hall ...... .: 36 *| Barnhart, Henry A... .._ __.. Rochester, Ind. .... Congress: Hallo. ©. 30 *||Bartholdt, Richard... .__.. St. Louis, Mo... = 1603 Euclid Street... ... 59 *Bartlett, Charles L.......... Macon, Ga... ... The Cochran... .... 19 orton, Silas Bo Grand Island, Nebr. t. .. . arn 63 *Bathrick, Ellsworth R....... Akron, Ohio........ Congress Hall. 7 > 90 *Beakes, Samuel W........... Ann Arbor, Mich. ..! The Driscoll... ......... 49 Beall, Jack. oo... Waxahachie, Tex...| The Parkwood........... 112 ®Bell Charles W............ - Pasadena, Cal...... TheCmro >. lL. T. 11 *Bell,, Thomas M..... ...-. .... Gainesville, Ga... .. 1467 Irving Street....... 20 ®iBlackmon, Fred. L......... Anniston, Ala... ... Congress Hall........ ay 4 *tBooher, Charles F....... __. Savannah, Me... 5... oa. 57 Borchers, Charles MM... Decatur, Ml... a sinnns 26 *||Borland, William P........ Kansas City, Mo.... i Avenue of the Pres- 57 idents. | *Bowdle, Stanley E........... Cincinnati, Ohio....| The Continental ....... 85 *I| ||| Bremner, Robert G....... Passaie NN. J....... New Varnum....... Gk 66 *iBritien, Fred A... ..... Chicago, 1l......... The Highlands.......... 24 Brockson, Franklin........... Clayton, Del ......:. The Driscoll... ......... 16 *t1Brodbeck, Andrew R...... Hanover, Pa. ...... The Driscoll... =... 101 *Broussard, Robert F......... New Iberia, La..... The Cochran... ....... 39 k “Brown, Lathrop.............. St. James, N. Y....; The Powhatan... ...... 69 i Brown, William G., jr....... Kingwood, W. Va...| Congress Hall........... 122 § *1iBrowne, Edward E ....... Waupaca, Wis. ..... 2803 Ontario Road ...... 125 g Browning, William d......... Camden, N. J...... 146 East Capitol Street. . 65 bi *||| Bruckner, Henry. ........ New York, N. Y....| The Continental........ 75 ] *Brumbaugh, Clement. ...... Columbus, Ohio. ...{ The Driscoll ........... 88 i *Bryan, James W............ Seattle, Wash. ..... The Dewey. ..........; 119 £ Buchanan, Frank... ......... Chicago, Ill........; TheCairo.....o..s a0 24 iq Buchanan, James P......_ ... Brenham, Tex...... 220 East Capitol S reet.| 113 i ¥Bulkley, Robert J..........- Cleveland, Ohio. ...| 1815 Twenty-fourth St.. 90 2 Burgess, George F............| Gonzales, Tex...... The Cochran... ......: 113 % ¥tBurke, Charles H............ The Dewey... :....:--- 108 3 Members’ Addresses. 409 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) Name Home post office Washingten residence Bie E : fi 2 me "raphy. Page. Burke, James WV. . ....0 ji. Pittsburgh, Pa. .... Army and Navy Club...| 103 *Burke, Michael E............ Beaver Dam, Wis...| Congress Hall........... 124 * Burnett, John Loieniinmnil Gadsden, Alar. ..... Congress Holl o.oo 5 #Butler, Thomas 8........... West Chester, Pa... The Brighton. . 98 %*Byrnes, James F............ Aiken, S.C. -ce. Congress Hall .......... 106 *Byrns, J oseph W.. 5 ...| Nashville, Tenn... | The Parkwood.......... 110 *Calder, William Mo Brooklyn, N.Y... Army and Navy Club... 70 #{| Callaway, Ogenr... 0 Comanche, Tex..... Maryland Avenue and 113 Second Street NE. *+Campbell, Philip P........ Pittsburg, Kans. ...| The Rochambeau ...... 34 *tl|Candler, Ezekiel S., jr. .... Corinth, Miss....... Congress Hall... 1 Ll, 54 *Cantor, J Woh A New. York, N.Y....! The Montana ...... -.. 3 74 #Cantrill, James O:.i:......[ Georgetown, Ky....| Congress: Hall... ..50... 37 *Caraway, Thaddeus H Jonesboro, Ark.._... ee Miarylond Avenue HE Carew, John... 7.0.00 New York, N. Y....| Congress Hall.. 74 Carlin, Charles C...... oul Alexandria, Va..... 211 N. Washington St. 118 Alexandria, Va. Carr, Wooda No... 000 oo Uniontown, Po... fl ia bhabornn ok inns .s 101 *777Carter, Charles D......... Ardmore, Okla...... 1818 Belmont Road... .. 93 Cary, Willlam J... ova s Milwaukee, Wis. ...| Congress Hall........... 125 Casey, John Jd..... .... x Wilkes-Barre, Pa. lo... ci vnmnail. susan 99 llll|[Chandler, Walter M....... New York N.Y... Congress Hal}. ..oocail os 74 *Church, Ponver 8... Fresno, Cal. 0... 1825 Q Street... 0.00. 11 *Clancy, John RB.....o0. Ses: Syracuse, N.Y...: The Winston. ...../L..7. 78 2Clark, Champ... .0 050 Bowling Green, Mo. | 2401 Massachusetts Ave. 58 24Clarke, Framk... 0h. oon Gainesville, F la.. Congress Hall... ...5. 17 #+Claypool, Horatio Cook. Chillicothe, Olio. 4 The Winston. oi... 5. 88 *Clayton, Henry Doi ooo ol Eufaula, Ala....... 1746 KX Street.... = iis 4 30hne, Cyrus. .c.0.i00: Angols, Ind... 6. Congress Hall... cio. .& 30 Coady, (hires Pont Baltimore, Md... Ls onl ooh oeeiann nitions 43 Collier, James W..-....:.....: Vicksburg, Miss. ...| The Driscoll............ 56 *Connelly, John R...o..... Colby, Bangi. .:...0 The Winston .......:. .: 34 |Connolly, Maurice... one Dubuque, Iowa..... Congress Hallz.....0 =. 31 Conry, Michael B...........0 New York, N.-Y oil iin io cnn losnnun oo 73 *Cooper, Henry A... uu Racine, Wis. ......o The Rochambeau....... 124 *||Copley, Ira Cr or Aurora, TH. od 2131 R Sweet. oi 24 2Covingion, J. Harry......... Easton, Md....::... 1823 Wyoming Avente.. 42 Cox, Wom Ea Jasper, Ind... i. 127 A Street NE........ 29 *Cramton, Towns C.L. ito Lapeer, Mich.. The Dewey.. a 49 *Crisp, ClarlesB —.... Americus, Ga..connn The New Berne. ........ 18 * *Crosser, Robert.. eae Th Cleveland, 2 theese ESCO i 85 *Cullop, Willem A... Vincennes, Ind..... Congress Hall . ......... 29 “Curley, James M......... ... Boston, Mass....... Congress Hall... ies. 47 3iCwry, Charles BP... .<... Sacramento, Cal. ... 1504 Twenty-first Street. 10 ¥Dale, Havey HW. ..ooono 0 Brooklyn, N. Y....- The Continental.......: 70 *Danforth, Howry GG. ......... Rochester, N. Y....| 1527 Eighteenth Street. . 79 *Davenport, James S........ 1 Vinita, Okla... ..... Congress Hall... co... 93 ¥Davis, Charles R............ St. Peter, Minn..... The Gordon... ...3. = 5% 2Docker, Perl D.............. Joplin, Mo... The Dunsmere.......... 60 Deitriek, Fred. 8... oc Cambridge, Mass....| The Brighton........... 46 *Dent, S. Hubert jr... Montgomery, Ala...| The Rochambeau....... 4 *Dorshem, Frank L... ....... Lewisburg, Pa. .... Congress Hall ..._... nnd] to 100 *Dickinson, Clement C....... Clinton, Mo... .«.. Congress Hall .onodaiil. 58 Dies, Martin... ovina oa Beaumont, Tox... 3002 Bunkerhill Road . 112 Difenderfer, Robert BE... i; Jenkintown, Pa..... Congress Halk ....0ca. 98 *Dillon, Cortes lt... Yankton, S. Dak...| The Dewey............ 108 i Dixon, Jinecoln. ii =. -{ North Vernon, Ind..| Congress Hall ........... 29 Donohoe, Michael..........: Philadelphia, Pa...! 209 Second Street...... 98 410 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) Name. Home post office. Washington residence. oe . Page. Donovan, Jeremiah. ......... South Norwalk,Conn| The Driscoll ........... 14 Dooling, Peter J......00. 00 New York, N.'V..... The Raleigh..... "0. . 73 J| Doolittle, Dudley. .......... Strong City, Kans. .| 3107 Avenue of the 34 ’ Presidents. ¥PDoremus, Frank E........... Detroit, Mich....... 1501 Farragut Street. . .. 49 Doughton, Robert Li.......... Laurel Springs, N. C.| The Loudoun........... 82 Driscoll, Daniel A............ Bulls) N. Wei i0eB Al oo Loh BE 80 #1 Dunn, Thomas B. . 0.000 Rochester, N. Y....| 1315 Sixteenth Street 79 [| Dupré, H. Garland......... New Orleape, Tail. ............ 0 Wo 39 Dyer, 1. OL... 000 bugs, St. Louis, Mo... ..... 1531 Park Bead. ...1.% 59 %Fagan, John J....... 00. 70,] Weehawken; N. J..} The Dewey. i: ....... 67 Xfagle Joe H....)0 0. ma 0 Houston, Tex. ..... The Raleigh. ..0 1 1 113 *Edmonds, George W. _...... Philadelphia, Parl a. eeu 2 000 98 #|| Edwards, ih a oie inh Savannah, Ga...... Congress Hall. 0... 00. 18 Elder, Walter..... i. 0. Sloe, To. iit The Dewey [ila £8 40 *Rsch, Sehn.d........... 2 5. La Crosse, Wis. ....| 116 Todd Place.. 02s *Estopinal, Albert... ..... 00. Estopinal, Ya... 0 13 First Street NE. ..... 39 ®iBvans, Jom M. LL... ... Missoula, Mont..... The Wyoming... 0.0. 61 *{| Fairchild, George W........ Oneonta, N.Y .... New Willd... = 78 Faison, John M. ............ Faison, Nao The Driscoll... 2000 81 ®Yaleoner, JAD JUL iL Gs Everett, Wash...... 2236 Cathedral Ave..... 120 RE ave, John Bog ie Scranton, Pa... .... Congress Hall; (2000 99 *11|| Fergusson, Harvey B..... Albuquerque,N.Mex 1435 Clifton Avenue. . 68 #li Ferris, Seott.... S000 00000 Lawton, Okla. ..... Congress Hall 2... 000 93 %Pess, Simeon D,.000 5 0 Yellow Springs, Ohio| 309 New Jersey Ave. SE. 86 Pields, William J.........0. Ji Olive Hill, Ky Va New Varoum 7.0.5.0 37 *trinley, David BE... 0. 1 Yorkville, 8. C..... 2020 P Stveet... Vl... 107 %Fitzgerald, John J... 0. 1.0; Brooklyn, N.Y....| Army and Navy Club .. 71 = Rlifiz Henry, Louis... ... ..L Bloomington, TW...) The Brighton I... 0... 26 Blood, Henry D..... 0. L000 Appomattox, Va....| The Benedick.......... 11 SH loyd, John Oto 0 000s Yellville, Ark...... 1424 A Street NE....... 7 #+t++Tordney, J Ch W..... Saginaw, Mich...... The Dewey: T7000 50 *|| Foster, Martin D.... ...| Olney, wu The Driscoll. 1" (7 FE 27 *¥owler, H. Robert.......... Elizabethtown, 111. .| 125 Fourth Street SE... 7 *t Francis, William B: oii Martins Ferry, Ohio. Congress Hall. ......... 89 ®iFrear, James A... .........; Hudson, Wis. ...... The Champlain ........ 126 *Mrench, Burton L000. 07. 58 Moscow, Idaho... .. 2432 Twentieth Street .. 727 Gallagher, Thomas............ Ghiease, TV cionild, ore on A 24 2Qard, Warren ...5 0d 0000 Hamilton, Ohloh snes oii ty 86 *tGardner, Augustus P....... Hamilton, Mose). 1837 TW Streep 0 0Y 46 ®Garner, Jom N.... 00 0.0 0k Uvalde, Tox 0: The Burlington......... 114 *HiGarrett, Daniel E.......... Houston, Tex. ..... The Northumberland...| 110 “*Garvett, Fintgd.............. Dresden, Tenn. .... 1931 Biltmore Street....| 110 *||George, Henry, jr........... New York, N. Y....| 1931 Biltmore Street.... 75 RGerry, Peter G........0. 0.1 Providence, R. I...| 2107 Massachusetts Ave.; 105 Gillett, Frederick H......... Springfield, Mass. . .| 1525 Eighteenth Street. . 45 Gilmore, Edward. ........... Brockton, Mass... .. 413 New Jersey Ave. SE. 47 #Gitting, Robert Ho. LD. c Niagara Falls, N.Y.| Congress Hall........... 79 #+Glags, Carter............... Lynchburg, Va..... The Baleigh =» 000 118 ¥Godwin, Hannibal. ....... Dunn, N.C. 2, .... Congress Hallit ni) 82 ®Gocke, J. Henry. 200 10 00. Wapakoneta, Ohio. .| The "Occidental .........| 86 [lI|Goldfogle, Henry M........ New York, N. Y....[/Congress Hall... ..: 72 2Good, Tames W000 0000 Cedar Rapids, Towa.| 2219 California Street... 32 lGoodwin, William 8. ....... Warren, Ark........ Qongress Hall. oil 0 JU, 8 | Gordon, William... 0... ..... Cleveland, Ohio....| Congres Hall... ..... 90 *Gorman, George E__......... Chicago; 111. 1v 00 0 1123 Lamont Street. .... 2 Goulden, Joseph A............ New York, N. Y....| The Continental........ 75 *1Graham, George S. ........ Puiladeloia, Pail hoo in 97 | *{Grahom, James M .. .. Springfield, 11. .... 1412 Massachusetts Ave. 27 Gray, Finly H:.. 20000 0 Connersville, Ind...! The Massachusetts...... 29 Members’ Addresses.” THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) 431 Name. Home post office. | Washington residence. Biog- raphy. Page. *+]|Green, William R......... Audubon, lowa..... The Gothom...u.cll i J 32 *Greene, Frank LL... .vouvvinn St Albans, ME. ius The Driscoll.c..... cui 115 ~ Greene, William S........... Fall River, Mass....| 1107 Seventeenth St.. 47 Grogs, A. W..cull. viseavia. Palestine, Tex...... The Cairo.......o. tas i12 #+0riegt, William W.......... Lancaster, Pa. ..... The Congressional. ..... 98 *||||Griffin, Daniel J........... Brooklyn, N. ¥....u The Northumberland. .. 73 *1|Gudger, James M., jr...... Asheville, N. C..... The Burlington......... 1 83 *Guernsey, Frank E.......... Dover, Me......... The Bellevue........... 41 *Hamill, James A... sis Jersey City, No J... The Plaga. .ccuiciianaas 67 *Hamilton, Charles M......... Ripley, N.Y... The Portland... -.5lw 80 *Hamilton, Edward L.......... Niles, Mich. ....... The Dewey. ........... 49 I+ Hamlin, Courtney W...... Springfield, Mo..... 408 A Street SE......... 58 Hammond, Winfield S........ St. James, Minn....| University Club........ 51 *+|| Hardwick, Thomas W..... Sandersville, Ga....} The Wyoming.......... 20 211i Hardy, Rufus... Gal Corsicana, Tex. ....| 1631 More tatts Ave.| 112 *Harrison, Byron Poo ici od. Gulfport, Miss...... The Driscoll... ... suoiiu 55 *I Hart, Archibald C.......... HackeneaClo, Nu Foi): ov vvninn cn wmnaiiannledtcn 66 Haugen, Gilbert N........... Northwood, Iowa...| The Winston........... 31 * Hawley, Willla Quo ivolh ois Salem, Oreg... .....| The Woodley......... oe 94 Hoy dames... o.oo: Madison, Va. .....: The Marlborough. ...... 118 Hayden Card oi oiinoiail Phoenix, Ariz... .. Congress Hall........... 6 *11|| Hayes, Everis A......... San Jose, Cal....... 2111 Bancroft Place..... 11 Heflin, J. Thomasuoovvad. oll Lafayette, Ala...... New Varnum .......... 5 *++Telgesen, Henry T cin Milton, N. Dak... .| Florence Court.......... 84 Son Harvey... oudegsi od Stanford, Ky....... The Driscoll. i..ouin.. 37 *Telvering, Guy Boslioh od Marysville, Kans. . .| Falkstone Courts....... 3 # Henry, RobertL.......... Wace i Tex:c oii 1825 Nineteenth Street..| 113 *Hensley, Walter L............ Farmington, Mo. ...] 12 Third Street SE...... 59 #Hil, Robert P.. il. seus. Marion, Bl.. .oile The Oelavia...eu ad). 27 Ry Hinds, Asher C............ Portland, Me....... 2504 Cliffbourne Place .. 41 *Hinebaugh, Wm. H......... Ottawa, TU... ions. The Burlington ........ 25 *Hobson, Richmond P........ Greensboro, Ala....} 2117 8 Street..... oo... 5 Holland, Edward E........... Suffolk, Vali .....d The Dewey. Lavi diy 117 ® Houston, William €...0 Lo YWoodbury, Menmuth oii iiiene co ddin nnd 109 *| | Howard, William S........ Decatur, Ga.......} 2718 Ontario Read...... 19 *tiHowell, Joseph... cool. Logan, Utah. lui 1369 Wyoming Avenue 115 Hoxworth, Stephen A_....... Rapateer JU aoinrcil convene oiatiniamynal 20 25 Li 1 | Hughes, Dudley M........ Danville, Ga. uci Congress Hall ..... 00 20 hes, James Au. ut. LL Huntington, W. Va.| The Burlington......... 123 BiH ulings, Willie Fuoco 0. og. OiL.Oity, Pai. The Dewey... oilal. x 103 Hull, Cordell... ....u00000. ol Carthage, Tenn. ...| The Cochran...... ooo 109 *Humphrey, William E....... Seattle, Wash. ..... 918 M Street. ... oul 120 *+ Humphreys, Benj. G...... Greenville, Miss....| 1312 Connecticut Ave _. b4 Igoe, William i St. Louis, Me. ....{ The Garland...... 0... 59 *Jacoway, Henderson M...... Dardanelle, Ark....| The Northumberland... 7 *Johnsen, Albert... oll oll Hoquiam, Wash. ...| Congress Hall........... 120 ®idJohnson, Ben. culo Rll Bardstown, Ky....7| 1620 8S Street........... 36 Rit chnson, Jace oonou dln Spring City, Utah. .| 1708 Kilbourne Place. . 115 ®¥Johnson, Joseph TF... ...L. Ul Spartanburg, 8. C...| 316 Maryland Ave. NE..| 106 *+ Jones, William A......o.. 0. Warsaw, Va.. | 1709 Q Street. . of 137 *Kahn, A San Francisco, Cal. | The Brunswick. . He J a 10 *|| Keating, Edward... ol 00, Pueblo, Colo........ Congress Hall........... 13 Keister, Abraham L........... Scottdale, Pai New Willard... .. unl, 101 *+ Kelle vv, Potrick Hoo «UL Lansing, Mich. ..... The Dewey. ..0.. 0). 43 Kelly M. Clyde... oi ii. ol. Braddock, Pa.. The National ...... ull 10% *Kennedy, Ambrose.......... Woonsocket, Blood nial vied aa 105 Kennedy, Charles A ......... Montrose, Iowa. .... 105 Second Street NE... 31 *+tKennedy, William. ....... Naugatuck, Conn . Congress Hall. .ooudl 14 412 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) ; er Vovidh Teves sd | Biog- Name. Home post office. Washington residence. raphy. Page. ®t Kont, William. 0.00000 Kentfield, Cal...... 1925: F Stveet......) Ji 9 Kettner, William......000.. JL. San Diego, Cal...... Congress Hall. ......... 12 - *Key, J howd hh Marion, Ohio....... 330 Maryland Ave. NE. . 89 BCdesg, Hdgar Bl... 0 Williamsport, Pa... .| University Club........ 99 2 Kindel, George J... co Denver, Colo. ...... Falkstone Courts........ 13 Kinkaid, MowesP.... on O’Neill, Nebr.. The Winston... ..1. 63 *Kinkead, Eugene F......... Jersey City, NJ ATheCalwo.. Fives 67 *Kirkpatrick, Sanford........ Ottumwa, Jowa..... 1343 Girard Street...... 32 ®t Kitchin, Claude. ...... 0... Scotland Neck, N.C.] The Driscoll ........... 81 *+| Knowland, Joseph R.......} Alameda, Cal....... 1712 H Streetl....... 0... 10 *l Konop, Thomas FF... ........ Kewaunee, Wis. . . .. 1341 Oak Street ........ 126 *Korbly, Charles A........ 00 Indianapolis, Ind. ..| 238 Maryland Ave. NE.. 29 *Rreider, Aaron 8... ilo Annville, Pa... Congress Hall... .... 0. 100 daflerty, A.W... 000 0 Portland, Oreg...... Army and Navy Club. . 95 *+1|| La Follette, William L. ..| Pullman, W ashe vn 1459 Harvard Street . 120 *t|| Langham, J onathan N...... Indiana, To The Antwerp........0.. 102 Langley, John W............ Pikeville, Ryi..i..o.} The Champlin. 0. 38 *Lazavo, Ladislas. 00 oni. 00, Washington, La..... Falkstone Courts. ....... 40 *Tee, Gordon... 0.000. 20 Chickamauga, Ga... The Cochran........... 19 Lee, Robert B. iuuiiuii cia Potteville Palioingd oo ois Lan LL PHA 99 *+L' Engle, Claude.......0 000 Jacksonville, Fla....| 5 Irving Street, Chevy 17 Chase, Md. *Lenvoot, Irvine Lo i vd cool Superior, Win. i0. The Kenesaw..ilio..... 126 Vasher, John VV. ia ouiaiis Sunbury, Py...000.. Congress Hall .......000 0, 100 “Lever, Asbury FX. ii. Lexington, S. C...... The Brighton .......o0 107 Levy, Jefferson M........... New York, N.Y... The Portland 0.0000 73 *lewis, David J... iia Cumberland, Md 0 oe al 44 #+Tewis, Brod Wooo co... Allentown Pa. ci Sl. co ma iim rh 96 ®llieh, Charles... oie 00. Rockport, Ind...... CongressiHall. i... ca 28 *T1Lindbergh, Charles AL Little Palle Minna] ois oto ooas dois al 52 *Lindquist, Francis O......... Greenville, Mich ...| 2530 Thirteenth Street. . 50 * Linthicum, J. Charles...... Baltimore, Md...... The Dresden. .....oa. il 43 24liitloyd, James T.o..00.. ool Shelbyville, Mo. ....| The Brighton........... 57 liebeck, CG. 0... ............ Omaha, Nebr....... The Dudley... Ll 0.0 62 oft, George Wot oo 00 New York, NY. NewWillard........ 0. 73 *+Logue, 1 “Washington PEERS Philadelphia, Pa... Congress Hall... c.. ... 98 Lonergan, Augustine Ra Hartford, Conn..... BLP LE Bi Lh se BT 14 McAndrews, TAME. iin Chicago, 1... borane it RL SE Ss 23 | |IMcClellan, George. ......... Chatham, N..Y..... 411 Second Street SE... 76 *MeCoy, Walter 1...0...... = East Orange, N. J...| The Wyoming.......... 67 *McDermott, James T........ Chicago, dll co. The Beacon... 000 *McGillicuddy, Daniel J...... Lewiston, Me....... Congress Hall............ 41 MN ecOuire, Bird... 0. J Pawnee, Okla...... 2219 California Street... 92 ||[McKellar, Kenneth Do... Memphis, Tenn.....| New Willard............| 110 McKenzie, John C. evant Elizabeth Hi L000 cl TheCochran......00. 25 MecL aughlin, James Cn nnnnn... Muskegon, Mich... The Dewey......0.... 50 #MacDonald, William: J... o.. Calumet, Mich. .... 1936 Biltmore Street. ... 50 #||]| | Madden, Matin B.....00 Chicago, I. v.cos 2818 Connecticut Avenue 23 Maguire, Jom A. ..oo uu. ii. Lincoln, Nebr....:: The Driscoll... con. 62 *Mahan, Beyan Bo. 0 clu. New London, Conn.| The Cochran............ 14 Maher, bomen PS Brooklyn, N. Y..... 121 Maryland Ave. NE.. 70 *tManahan, James. 0... oun Minneapolis, Minn .| The Cairo............... 51 *Mann, dames B....... .... Chicago, Ji. .... The Highlands.......... 23 Mapes, Carl BE... oi. Grand Rapids, Mich. 1626S Street. .- vee eon- 49 *t{Martin, Eben W........... Deadwood, S. Dak..| The Brunswick.......... 108 *fMerritt, Edwin A., jr....... Potsdam, NY. The Shoreham........... 7 Metz, Herman A. cou. Brooklyn, NY. if. odd vain 72 Miller; Clarence B............} Duluth, Minn. ..... The Woodward.......... 52 Miichell, Jom J............. Marlboro, Mass... .. The Driscoll... i. ov .% 47 BR i ed a Members’ Addresses. 413 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) Name. Home post office. Washington residence. Biog- raphy. : Page. *Mondell, Frank W. ......o:. Newcastle, Wyo... 2001 Park Road. .%.... RH Montague, Andrew J......... Richmond; Vn: inl. cvcrrar oni 00 117 Moon, John A....... 0... =, Chationeega, Temnc 20. =e f.. 109 *Moore, J.. Hampton. ..... 0. Philadelphia, Pa... The Raleigh............. 97 ~* Morgan, DieleT oo. olol si Woodward, Okla....| The Dewey............ 92 *Morgan, Lewis Loos ola Covington, La...... 1124 Vermont Avenue .. 40 Morin John Mo... lo Pittsburgh, Pa. i: Congress Hall........._. 96 if Morrison, Martin A...._.... Frankfort, Ind...... 906 M Street. . ; 30 Moss, Hunter Hr. cou). Parkersburg, W. Va.| 1724 Connecticut Ave. . -123 *Moss, Ralph Ws anni Center Point, Ind. .| 1234 Maryland Ave. N E. 29 *Mott, Tuther W. iC il on Oswego, N. Y......: New Willard............ 78 *HiMurdock, Vietor:vo.. i000 Wichita; Kans...... The Balfour. ..C.500... 35 *Murray, William F..._. geile, Boston, Mass....... The Driscoll. . .. i... 0 47 *Murray, William H- 20... 0. Tishomingo, Okla. .| 1464 Monroe Street ..... “91 *Neeley, George A............ Hutchinson, Kans..| New Winston......... 2 35 “Neely, MoM... Jl... Fairmont, W. Va.. Congress Hall. ....... ele 199 = Nelson, John M......... Madison, Wis. 9240 Cathedral Avenue. .| 124 *Nolamy, John Tou. ead on San Francisco, Cal. .| The Ventosa........... 10 IN orton, Patrick: D200 Hettinger, N.. Pak]... ..... ci 0 odio 84 *()’ Brien, James Ho oe nl Brooklyn, N. Y..... The Raleigh...o.....wii. 71 *10glesby, Woodson R.....:.| Yonkers, N. Y...... 2737 Cathedral Avenue. . 76 *O Hair, Franle T0000 000] Paris, Tl.C0l cou The Westmoreland ..... 26 *Oldfield, William A... .. "....| Batesville, Ark..... 1863 Mintwood Place.... 7 0’ Leary, Denis... 020 00 Douglaston, N. Y...| The Driscoll. .......... 69 O’Shaunessy, George F....... Providence, R. I.. if Vnivomiiy Club... .4.. 104 *Padgett, Lemuel P.........- Columbia, Tenn. ...| The Dewey i000 0. 110 *| Page, Robert Ne. Biscoe, Nod an 1815 Columbia Road....|" 82 Paige, Calvin. D..... 08 a0 i Southbridge, Mass. li | ........00bs Jubail 45 *Palmer, A. Mitchell... ...... Stroudsburg, Pa....| The Woodward ......... 102 Park, Frame... Joli Sylvester, Ga. il. cl einai 18 Parker, James 8.00000 Salem NOY Luli The Portland... 05 77 #| Patten, Thomm Qe New York, N.Y....| New Willard........... 74 *+i Patton, Charles E..... ....| Curwensville, Pa. ..| 2852 Ontario Road...... 101 Payne, Sereno B.... o.oo Auburn, NY i The Portland. io Lo... 78 Pepper, Irvine 8...00. 0... 00. Muscatine, Iowa....| 1412 Euclid Street... .. 31 *Peters, Andrew d.........540. Boston, Mass....... 1601 Twenty-first Street. 47 Peters, Jo-Ann Bn Ellsw orth, Meu el aR 41 *Peterson, John Boo. oo. Crown Point, Ind Congress Hall........... 30 #Phelan, Michael BF. .ii00. Lynn, Mass. ... 0.0 1336 Nineteenth Street. . 46 Platt, Edmund... 005 5 Poughkeepsie, N.¥.| The Dewey............ 76 | Plumley, Prank... .....0 00 Northiield, Vi... 100 Fifth Street NE..... 116 “Porter, Stephen a. “2% PRES |: Pittsburgh, Pa.....5 1B Street... 3 cumin 103 Post James D.....0.0 0 Wihinglen C.H.5% Congress Hall... . uo: 87 hio. ; 2{4Pou, Edward W....o...0u Smithfield, N.C....| The Shoreham......... 81 ®Powers, Caleb... ... Barbourville, Ky... 2: The Ventosp. oul. 38 *+i+Prouty, Solomon F........| Des Moines, Iowa...| 2334 Nineteenth Street.. 32 *Quin, Perey: BB. i 00000 McComb City, Miss.| The Grafton . .......... 56 %*Ragsdale, J. Willard.........| Florence, S.C. .... Army and Navy Club ..| 107 #|| Rainey, "Henry de Carrollton, Hl....... The Driscoll. coin. 26 HliRaker, John Eivo. 1} Alturas, Cal... ....| 1314 Connecticut Ave .. 9 Rauch, George W. . i Dif Marion Indo iil ou ann onl 30 Bayburn,-Sam: =. ooo oon Bonham, Tex. The Driscoll o.oo... 112 *Reed, Eugene E............. Manchester, N.H.. HeCongress Hall... coon 2 64 Reilly, Michael K............| Fond du Lac, Wis. .| Congress Hall.......... 125 *Reilly, Thomas I... 00 Meriden, Conn... .. The Driscoll. uo 14 tl|Richardson, William... ...| Huntsville, Ala. ...| The Wyoming ......... 5 *Riordan, Danfel’ J. 00... ol New York, N.Y: ..{ The Raleigh........... 72 *Roberts, B. E.......7......] Carson City, Nev... 1918 N Street. ......... 64 414 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) \ aylor, Edward T Lan BE EE EE Colo. Name. Home post office. Washington residence. Biog- raphy Page. *Roberts, Ernest W.......... Chelsea, Mass....... 1013 N Street... ..n.i is 46 *RHegers, John J. ...........: Lowell, Mass. ...... he Avenue of the Pres- 46 idents. *IRothermel, John H........ Reading, Pa. ..... The Cochran......i..... 99 #Rouse, Arthur B....cveus ont Burlington, Ky..... The Netherlands ....... 7 *¥Rubey, Thomas Li...coo..... Lebanon, Mo....... 215 A Street SE........ 60 *Rucker, William W......... Reylesvillle, Mot oid, ov. inn bh aebeh 57 Rupley, Arthur B....... 0.50 Carlisle, Pa. .oc 0. The National i000... 96 *| Russell, Joseph J........... Charleston, Mo...... Congress Hall.....n.x-.. 59 Sabath, Adolph J............ Chicago, Ii}. .....4.. Congress Holl dei 23 *Saunders, Edward W........ Rocky Mount, Va...] The Driscoll... ......... 118 #4:Scott, George C..covuine..- Sioux City, Iowa...| The Gotham... ....... 33 *IScully, Thomas J........... South Amboy, N. J.| New Willard............ 66 *Seldomridge, H. H.......... Sends Springs, | 1736 I Street. .......... 13 7010. Sells, Sam R....iiaddsivnmun Johnson City, Tenn.| 127 Maryland Ave. NE.} 109 *f+Shackleford, Dorsey W. . . .| Jefferson City, Mo..| Congress Hall........... 58 ¥Sharp, William G.....c. il Elyria, Ohio........ The (aire... .. fa. ds 89 *¥Sherley, Swagar............. Louigville, Ky......! 1718 Rhode Island Ave. 37 *+Sherwood, Isaac R........ Toledo, Ohio. ..... Congress Hall........... 88 *iShreve, Milton W._......... Brie, Pa. i. .cicdie The. Dresden........... 102 *8ime, ThotusW. ..... 00. +} Linden, Tenn. ..... 139 Wyoming Avenue.., 110 *Sinnott, Nicholas J. ........ The Dalles, Oreg . The Clifton. cc ilivit Jk 94 Sisson, Thomas U. ...oucil ii Winona, Miss. ...... The Driscoll ........ tos 55 * HiSlayden, James L........... San Antonio, Tex. .] The Coneord..... ccna 114 Slemp, C. Bascom........... Big Stone Gap, Va. .| The Burlington......... 119 *Sloan, Charles H............ Geneva, Nebr. iodo ovvpenains so eadadi 62 ®tiliSmal}l, John H........... Washington, M.0..p The Cairo... 0. ucla’ 81 *Smith, Addison T....... 7. +i Twin Falls, ‘Idaho. .| The Loudoun. ......... 21 *1Smith, Charles B............ Buffalo, N. Yori Congress Hall. .......... 79 28mith, Frank O....0 0.0 od Dunkirk, M&. i 110. East Capitol Street. 44 #1+Smith, George Bi. ... ne Minneapolis, Minn .| Fontanet Court......... 52 #+Smith, ET I RRR Charlotte, Mich. ...| Congress Hall .......... 49 *Smith, Somme Wooo ioodon Pontiac, Mich. .... The Buckingham....... 49 *Smith, William Bi. ......0000 Colorado, Tex... 2106 B Street. ......... 114 +||Sparkman, Stephen M. Ai Tampa, Fla......... Congress Hall........... 17 Stafford, Wiliam H.......... Milwaukee, Wis....| The Cochran........... 125 *++Stanley, Augustus O....... Henderson, Ky. ...| The Occidental......... 36 Stedman, Charles M......... Greensboro, N. C...| 7 OC Street SE. ......... 81 *Steenerson, Halvor. ........ Crookston, Minn. ..{ The Calro........cciill 52 *4Stephens, Dan V.......... Fremont, Nebr..... 1645 Newton Street. . . . 62 *|||Stephens, Hubert D. ..... New Albany, Miss..| 107 Maryland Ave. NE. . 54 *||Stephens, John H. ........ Vernon, Tex. ...... 101 Maryland Ave.NE.. 113 *Stephens, William D........ Los Angeles, Cal....| Congress Hall........... 11 *Stevens, Frederick C. 21S. Paul, Mion... The Cofro.... uch, 52 Stevens, Raymond Bini al Tdsbew, No Bill. ac Joon Lodi 65 *Stone, Claudius U.. Poorta, IW. ...00l 309 New Jersey Ave. SE. 25 #[[|Stout, Tom... odbleve as Lewistown, Mont. ..| Falkstone Courts........ 61 *Stringer, Lawrence B........ Lincoln, IH..... cl Congress Hall........... 2 Sumners, Hatton W.......... Dallas, Tex........ The Driscoll. coud ova 111 *tSutherland, Howard........ Elkins, W. Va....l} 1906 N Street. coc van 121 Switzer, Robert M............ Gallipolis, Ghio. . ..| The Dewey............ 88 ®Paggart, Joseph... cua... un Kansas City, Kans..| 4431 Georgia Avenue. .. 34 Talbott, 4. Fred. Cl. caaizes Lutherville, Md. oll... 0... 00 Gains 43 Talcott, Charles A......cc.0k.. Utica, N.Y .ub ju..li The Farragut.i..oci..d. 78 bi Tavenner, Clyde H..cu.... Cordova, Il........ 5401 Illinois Avenue.... 25 *71| Taylor, Benjamin foal saa Harrison, N. Y..... The Continental........ 76 Glenwood Springs, | 1303 Clifton Street . .... i2 Members Addresses. = 415 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES —Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 239-247.) Name. Home post office. Washington residence. Bog raphy. Page. *1{Taylor, George W..........| Demopolis, Ala...... 1364 Columbia Road... 4 *i Taylor, Samuel M.......... Pine Bluff, Ark..... CongressHall ........... 8 Temple, Henry W........... Washington, Pa... The | Bewey.............o 102 *Ten Eyck, Peter G-........... Albany, N.Y.. .| 1616 Eighteenth Street. . 77 *TiThacher, Thoma @.......c Yarmouth, Mass... Tol Hl Brent... 48 *i Thomas, Robert Y., A .-.| Central City, Ky...| 134 A Street NE. 36 *Thompson, Joseph B.. ..| Pauls Valley, Okla..| Congress Hall.. 91 *Thomson, Charles M......... Chicago, Ill.........| 8 East Irving “Street, 24 Chevy Chase, Md. *Towner, Horace M.......... Corning, Towa.......| The Farragut.......... 32 *tTownsend, Edward W......| Montclair, N. SEE Wyoming eit hh 67 *Treadway, Allen T.......... Stockbridge, Mass. .| The Grafton. ......... 45 *|| Tribble, Samuel J..........| Athens, Ga.........| The Cochran. . 2 20 Tuttle, William E., jr........ Westfield, N. J.....| The Cosmos Club.. 66 ¥Underhill, Edwin S......... Both, N.Y. ..ouill The 010... ns niin niss 78 *Underwood, Oscar W.. .| Birmingham, Ala...| 2000 G Street.........:. 5 *Vare, William S.. ....| Philadelphia, Pa...| New Willard............ 97 *t Vaughan, Horace W........ Texarkana, Tex..... The Driscoll. .....co0oi 1i2 *+Volstead, Andrew J.. ...| Granite Falls, Minn .| The Brighton. ......... 52 Walker, J GER... Valdosta, Ga.. J Congress Hall........... 20 ®1 Wallin, Sammwel......... Amsterdam, N. Y...| The Powhatan. ........ 7 *Walsh, Allan B............. Trenton, NE The Doriner. on, 66 *Walters, Anderson H........ J ohnstown; Pa. ....; Congress Hall........... 97 ii Wathins, John T.nu. i Minden La cone dafovinl 0. chains 40 *¥*Watson, Walter A........... J oinings Ordingry, | The Qochran............} "118 a. #*+Weaver, Claude........... 5 City, | 110 East Capitol Street . 92 kla Webb, Bdwin ¥V............ Shelby, N.C. .{ The Dewey............ 83 Whaley, Richard S.......... Charleston, S. ‘C....| The Burlington ........ 106 Whitacre, John J. ....._ ..... Canton, Ohio. .| The Occidental......... 90 *White, George ERROR Marietta, Ohio.....| 2224 R Street .......... 89 *Williams, William E.. oer) Pittsfield, Iie: oo Congress Hall.. 22 *+ Willis, Frank B........... Ada, Ohio... 0 110 Maryland Ave. N E.. 87 Wilson, Fmmett............. Pensacola, Fla... ... Congress Hall........... 17 *Wilson, Frank. E............. Brooklyn, N. Y..... Tho Baleigh. .......... 70 Wingo, Otis... ......... De Queen, Ark...... Falkstone Courts... .. 7 *Winslow, Samuel E......... Worcester, Mass. ...| Army and Navy Club . 46 *+tWitherspoon, Samuel A. ..| Meridian, Miss......| The Driscoll... ......... 55 *Woodruff, Roy O............ Bay City, Mich. . ..[ The Dewey.. : 50 Woods, Frank PP... ..... Estherville, Iowa... The Occidental ........ 32 * Young, Georga M.......... ..LV 3 1 je y City, N. | Falkstone Courts.. 84 ak. MfYoung James.............. Kaufman, TeX......|. The Toronto. ........:.. 112 DELEGATES. *Kalanianaole, J. Kuhio ..... Honolulu, Hawaii. .| The Dewey............ 127 *Wickersham, James. ........ Fairbanks, Alaska. .|- The Driscoll............ 127 RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS. Earnshaw, Manuel........... Manila, P.1... «cu 1342 Thirteenth Street..| 128 Quezon, Manuel L............ Tayabas, PY... 1342 Thirteenth Street..| 128 CUR LUE a a Se I SR SE in 128 *Rivera, Luis Munoz.......... 416 Congressional Directory. APARTMENT HOUSES, CLUBS, AND HOTELS NAMED IN THE DIRECTORY. Name Location. Telephone. Are NView oor sw Twentieth and Biltmore Streets... ...............>7.- : me Alabambocs oon Bleventhand NStyeets: o.oo... 0 vo oor Sic, North 3650. ABONY eae Seventeenthond HH Strests. .. 0... yor Main 1986. Albemarle... 0. o.oo dees ih Seventeenth and BESTS. sooo lio i sean ha North 2295. Alendale SRNR 2 New Hampshire Avenue and N Street............... North 2676. Alton. asin nr na on Hopking Plage a a Pare wen. i. on 1882:Columbia- Road: nisin ib napa oi North 3110. danherah. oo. nih sit aes vhs 1664 Columbia. BoB. 4. coscvit ite sissies Antwerp iit ea Twentieth Breet... 0. 0. sna once sitonais Avpvle orien en Seventeenth Street and Park Road.................. Columbia 5251. Army and N avy Club... 0-5. Connecticut Avenue and I Street..................... Main 8400. Vn Tare SRS EE ees [0h Ri Fighteenth and:V- Streets... ...c.... .. ....... 5. eu North 3185. Sirti RE I 601 Pennsylvania Avenue... .............. 0 _. Main 5116. Angusta. io soe ban New York and New Jersey Avenues. ................ North 3129. Avondale... ok ciisie nly En Rn Re A SR te Cg A North 3441. Bachelor... vw Sronadi Er A a el Main 4960. - Bollour: 2 00 Sel Sixteenth and U-Streets.. oe. 0 iii nea North 1017. Baltimore =... ori 1832 Biltmore Street... 0. Loh nine Rn Columbia 3854. Bancroft... oi ERA Bighieenth-and 8 Streets cro oo oil oosiail Main 4800. Beaton... ie. ser wis 1803:Calvert Breet: oo scaii hd oo ann Columbia 424. Belgrade =... soa Eighteenth Street and Florida Avenue. .............. Belevue. ---a---c. 000 Fifteenth and I Streets....... EAE RA Se a ee Si Main 2550. Benedick. i. 1808-1810 I Street : Main 4520. Bein... a. ana Iowa Cele hf arith ines tr Sita ahs Sa North 4480. Beverly... oC... aa FD Willard Street. oc Toe. a sre aa EE A I SRS aT TOS Girard-Btveet; Dor Taine. Co rn Columbia 944. Blenheim Court........LL05E] 1840-1842 California Avenue... 0... .......... 00.000 North 3123. DPANAOR.. i. i rhein 1210 MossachuBSetts- AVeRUe. - nt lacie see esata ani Brighton... 7 0 es hens 2123 California Avene, avis sss sine North 3496. Brunswick. ..... Crear Ey 1882 DL Smeet i a erin ere Main 2726. Brunswick Hotel ............ 20:6 Stretton RE Lia nek Main 6304. Buckingham. ...... soo i 020. Fifteenth Stresl. i... oral, near eins Main 3431. Burlington: =... Ta 3120 Vermont Avenue... oslo us ce apd North 72. Burton Hetel:.....::. 0. 226: North CapltolStreet. =... io oe Ene a Er Q, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth Streets... .... North 2106. California... =... .... cia RE a AE RS he ete SS Salomets. oi a. Thirdand East Capitol Streets... ...... .............. Lincoln 805. Caopligles ol oii a Fourteenth Street and Columbia Road............._. Main 4560. Cavendish... x liad. 1628 Colombia Bead oti i ai ne Columbia 3864. Geel... s.r Fifteenth and Streets. io tu. oo. Li... oi Main 1953. Century Club... .........5. SIS Vermont AVennIe. non. ae Main 389. Gmifonte 0. oo EE I EL RE ee ce bE Re LE See Sn i North 4066. Champlahy. o.oo... 00 50000 1A Stvethud. Se J Rr BS Main 5215. Chevy Chase... ... 1... 0 CheyyiChoge. o. iia b sedis on Sensis inns s Bainines Cleveland 57. Chicago: Hotels... ..... 345 PennsylvanigAvenue.. =. ....... ............. Main 2981. € Tarion aR aa NTR ATR 149 aNewton Street. a Clifthourne............. 0.0 4 1855:Calvert Street. oo. col Cs iN AE Columbia 641. CHton. J. ovis 1823 Clifton Street. =. ais hia Sa aie Columbia 220. Cocliran.. 0. [0s ais Youticenthond K Streets. 0... te Main 4284. Colonnade... co 00 IS treet a rE TE Bolumbia. oo... 0. aha Fourteenth and Girard Streets. -.. co... i. cL... Columbia 3879,3898. Commercial Club............. I a0 a ea Main 8435. Qoneord.. id oa New Hampshire and Oregon Avenues................ North 2272. Congress Hall... ..........7.. New Jersey Avenue, between B and C Streets SE....| Lincoln 2000. Congressional. ....... ECS 100 East Capitol Street... LC... . 0. 0000000 Lincoln 1997. Connecticut... ........... ov Connecticut Avenueand M Street.................... North 1783. Continental: =. oa North Capitol Street, between D and E Streets...... Main 1672. Gordovac.... 2 =n Loti a Twentieth Street and Florida Avenue............._.. North 2291. COEINE oo ai be anda 512 Thirteenth Street. . coi oslo ioc liao 000 COTONBUU cee i ces coins se cnnn IS40-1R40 VU Streets... .cii cdl coi hina iment North 3278. Cosmos Club... 0 ...... Madison Placeand Hi Street... 0. 0... .... Main 1610. Camberland............ 0 1332 Massachusetts Avenue... 0.00... lot oir North 2283. Damariseotto. oss O18 BichteentStreet i... oii oinumiorss Main 2468. Darlington: ... oi HY AS treaN Es renee es el Lincoln 350. Beeatury:. . or... 31 Florida Ayenne rl. vad: a North 1722. NAS TL A SR Sl 1419 Chapin Street... cas lr Sas AL Columbia 676. Derbyshire: ............... 176 ColumbiaiRead.. oie. L.- .h lE aE PesSeoto. wv 0.0... aa Thirteenth Street and Massachusetts Avenue ........ North 2135. Dewey... 0 i ES AS a ee le Dn Se pe SE Main 5055. Donald z..ic. 0 .0inn 1012 ThivteentlyS8tpeet. .. Ll lille il soni wiiaidhs Main 713. Don:Carlog....... Lieuieaills. 0050 Street. vu. 0c. lish a a ae Dresden... coo Connecticut Avenue and Kalorama Road ............ North 3593. Disease rs Pivstand B Streets i fr. a eee Lincoln 1860. Duddington Lanier Place, between Adams Milland Ontario Roads.| Columbia 540. Dudley............ ER eA RE Dumbarton Court 1657 Thivby-first:Street.o. . o.oo. i oo sen. West 1695. Buypsmere..... 0. Ln 2525 Fourteenth Street... or ro or Columbia 620. Dupont... lan 17177Pwentiethi Street. o.oo. aca a SSA North 2286. arlington... t...can i Sixteenth Street and Columbia Road............_..... LO a AR ee SE RR, ERE EE Tee a TE a Hthelharst. 0... 0.00005 Fifteenth and L Streets RR BE RA Re So AA Main 3721. Tverett. cn in Main 3604. A730 Street cc re ee a ST Drrectory of Apartment Houses, Clubs, and Hotels. 417- APARTMENT HOUSES, CLUBS, AND HOTELS—Continued. Falcon EVI A hee Pe Ganland Trachea 4 George Washington.......... Germania. 05. ans rn Gladstons.. cscs viivnsosne Ballidoy. Fr as as) Hamillon. oo... oars: Halord oo oo ov. Hawarden Henrietta. . Highlands. Hillside, amy oro Yrequolss = or. o.oo A Kalorama. o.oo 00 : Kanawha ......0 a Renesaw 0. 0 ian Kensington ©... ..... =... Knickerbocker..o.... 0... Vaclede =o Voc rh Tofayeftes rr na Jeamingtons. 5. at Vehigh oS oir sao Lenman. Cn ogame aa Tonsdale. "2 roo Lotos Club Ioudomm. 25 Maanolia ST RA rr Males MajestiocHotel............... Manhatian So ho 0 Marlborough... ............; Massachusetts... ol c= Metropolitan Club. .......... Metropolitan Hotel... ....... Nona ERE le EE Nottingham... 0... 0... Oaldand.................. ... 13823°—63-2—1sT ED .| Fourteenth and H Streets y Location. Telephone. i Honrloeni EO reet. cs vin sre Fourteenth and Fairmont Streets. ................... Columbia 442. Seventeenth and ¥ Streets... 1... ci cerascnsanasns Main 2651. 1129 New Hampshire Avenue. ....................... West 43-M. California Street and Phelps Place. ..........i.i...... North 4470. Fourteenth and Fairmont Streets ............ ic... Columbia 336. 2518 Seventeenth Street... co Sa ES 2i6-Marviand Avene NE. Co. Ra Lincoln £82. TL A Reet NE iS eer ain eat EY incoin T1492. Fifteenth Street and New York Avenue...........:..} Main 5533. Third and B Streets SE.. Aa UR re BL I Se IE aR a North 2279. 28 RiNthi Street NI, col To phim pete 2 Lincoln: 652. O10. Sixteenth BIteet.. 7 rr center caine Main 4610. FO VOT Tee os ies isis on ra Columbia 3484. Connecticut Avenue and De Sales Street.............] North 1370. EHP Tee Re ph a LL PS LR IRR TR North 3526. Third Street, between Pennsylvania Aye. and C C Sireet y Fourteenth and K Streets Main 3045. Thirficthiond- Q Streets. ooo oa% co Hr fo Cones “West 561. 1315 Clifton Street. ..| Columbia 290. .| North 2281. SAREE TT andes ae seniintl SRE an SR North 2397. Connecticut and California Avenues North 1240. A Chapin Sreel . r he aa Columbia 420. 1832 Belmont Breet vr a “Tr tm YS Ree si en i North 2987. Seventhand I Stveelg sun Salata Jor ey Main 560. 1330. Belmont Street. ....o.vo 0 Ta aa 1760. Colurnbis Road... <0 F7 Sool som 1c Gina aus Columbia 910. Thirteenthran@ © Streetg. 5 Jie e oo nee ox North 2294. TIO MUS reat Ph res on ae a A tad North 4146. 1816 Caloramn Hondioern nog mie 2 Saban ow we North 1514. 3916 Dumbarfon Avenuge. Sav Soh male ea Sizteenthond Irving Streets... 002000 oi ono Columbia 712. Fourteenth'and Clifton Streets"... > +. 1 = -% Columbia 3866. 1840: Mintwood Plage sche LBs I ee SRLS Columbia 580. 1223 Vermont Arvenue Ss # etiam aie Anas Le tes North 3231. 1607 SeventhiSfreet Foo EO een a North 2215. 2502 FowrteeniySireeld = ic Ir ote} an Columbia 3866. 2005 Adams Mill Road >> - 2 0 fates ea S2Quiney Place: a0 ti Se North 690. Breet... se Ee North 3740. 222 Third Street lowa Circle. oo... 08 314 Kast Capitol Street 2123 Eighteenth Street 189 T Streeh.. tr. 227 New Jersey: Avenue So oor to. aoe Third Street and Pennsylvania Avenue Eighteenth Street and Kalorama Road 1321 M Street 470 Pennsylvania Avenue 604-606 Ninth Street 1324 Monroe Street 1730 M Street 917 Ei 1412 Seventeenth and H Streets. U0 i tit. cousin. Pavan Avenue, between Sixth and Seventh treet; 308 East Capitol Street 1726 M Street 713 Nineteenth: Street © . br Lin tooo Grd Pennsylvania Avenue and Sixth Street 601 Fifteenth Street Si Randolph Plage... .. 00. 0 itd 0a oo 1860 Columbia Road New Jersey Avenue and C Street SE... ............. Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street New Hampshire Avenue and V Street 2124 P Street 28 Lincoln 1417. Main 8197. -| North 4232. Lincoln 1036. Main 1457. North 6041. North 2277. Columbia 624. Main 5480. Main 1509. Columbia 860. North 3885. Main 3142. North 3546. Main 2153. Main 7420. North 2287. Main 7500. Main 4200. North 3550. North 2261. Main 6054. Main 7000. Main 1998. North 2251. Columbia 811. North 2991. Main 5035. Lincoln 2006. Main 4420. North 3280. North 2706. North 2093. 418 Congressional Directory. APARTMENT HOUSES, CLUBS, AND HOTELS-—Continued. Name Location. Telephone. Qeeidenial.. cv neo 1411 Pennsylvanin AVENUE... .... .c.cemee rene nennes Main 6467. Octavia... ch asiicin tina onne an Columbia and Quarry Roads... .. a. . ...c.o. Columbia 516. OIyINDIN G5 to tote 55 ool ie Fourteenth and Euclid Streets. ...........ceeana..... Columbia 610. ORIOL. le cor tevin ewe ie Ontario Road and Eighteenth Street. ................ Columbia 800. Oregonian... ..c...- 3-3 .......| Eighteenth Street and Oregon Avenue............... North 3119. OSWeg0. ... 2. wa. Res eat 1228 UL BITORT i air cinit e sinie pho rg simi lie Be = vem wae Darl SR nd Yh 1807 Por Roa. se ers ma aoe ne werk Columbia 280. rd Ee OS TIEN a e 100 PER OA ros ir cam rs ole mb Side Sno n whine Columbia 260. Parkwood... ... + T7480: BITE, Jue sas isin =n iiss sare 2 sin ale wiorats dime = «mine ate Main 2430. Pebbleton.... TAT Chuteh Breet rer wordy BT LTT Pendennis _..:........5.%- Corner California Avenue and Eighteenth Street. .... Pennsylvania Club.......... BT EE essere nt sei al Ll Re J nD ee em TE a ee Ee Pennsylvania Avenue and Washington Circle. .... | West 642. Plymouth... on fon onset: 1236 Eleventh Brest. co eiecivems srivs sss a snne site North 1794. Portland. i. ...g-- =~ svnsnv Vermont Avenue and Fourteenth Street... ......... North 1550. A Re Filieenili ana. U SIreels. . i eciv-cmeiietin st rss e ss North 1421. Portsmouth. . couziees Aa 1735 New Hampshire Aventie. , ....:c co 0. feeee no ls North 3760. Powhatan... ... ..c.- Zie:: Pennsylvania Avenue and Eighteenth Street. .......| Main 8207. Prince Bard. ox... 0 ond XK Streets: olin ei Tl Main 2614. Ralelgh. wo. to. ir cere Pennsylvania Avenue and Twelfth Street... ......... Main 3810. Ronseher’Se 2.0 a. tue cine 1034 ConnecticRL AVENUE... a... otic cae renee mas Main 3103. REVEL sii Huard snes ine TEL ETEL BTYA ET Ree ee SS i SE Li North 2432. Richmonds jipiccie owns Sevenidenth and H Streets... ......c....l. ill Main 2566. BR OARORE 75. otra iid oh vin = oie = UE I BE TH RT ER oo ee esi a a Sl i “Roehambeatl- = - =a ccc v ine 315 Conmecticl AVENUE. ojo: - ci ite dares neiennne Main 3514. Rochelle... cian lol LISTE eat es fail tn itn 1s ae Ra RI North 618. ROCHeSIOr see ee LE Pe Cla Er SN Re Sr SO Main 3899. Rockingham ....o- .. o.... .. 5 Rhode Island Avenue Between Thirteenth and Four- | North 1404. teenth Streets. Roland Maryland Avenue and Second Street NE. ....._..... Lincoln 737. Royal. ..0..o- Fourteenth Street and Girard Avenue... ........... Columbia 1306—M Royalton HET EE rr oe eae aa ae Lb SO se Ge SR North 229. St. "Lawrence Hotel he Ae en a ea Ls Ll rr SEReois: California Street ........-... SantaBesy. coos. ...... 712 Seventeenth Street North 2449. TR Se eg East Capitol'and Seventh Streets. ....c.............. Se RO a 2304 Fotirteenth Streel ci... co vcibitecse oe aasn vn Columbia 780. Seville aaa. .58.t one aa 2129. Biohteenth Siveet icc oe ese Voss timan evn one- North 345. Sheridamyas. siicoel naio-ens 1523 Twenty-second Street... ......ciizomionrcnsasssn North 3172. LT TL RS SS Fifteenth and L. Streets. i... oc.oiooit: co ennai North 2285. BHetehaim. ie aaa Pifteenthand HW Sireefg oe | 5 soccer nnecaviees Main 8460. Speedway Inn............... 1703 New. York Avenue. ct... uicotiinses conernsine- Main 6873. ir A SER SE Pe Rr ee Shae a. 608 Ninth Streel. ...c.en- ecu tutes sana acannon Main 8108. ANION ti. ame hea c arama SC Siteeb NE co. -.-. Ccrilil rosie tiehiion «ve ents sais Lincoln 770. Sterling o.oo... a 1015 Calvert Street. i eee enna Columbia 697. Stoneleigh Court. ......-....- Connecticut Avenue and L Street.................... Main 2270. Stratf RRA er Fourteenth and Monroe Streets. ..:-................. Columbia 180. Summa ree 1216 Bucld Street oot ih cease sini wnin is mien o North 413. BOINeSSee. ooh a Ninsteenthand 8 Streefs.c.....-.cvv teen hnn evens. ROLOI0. cvs ones wine wees Twentieth and P Streets. ... cove Sliunc-naneenrn den North 106. 0S) ES CB. os. chk i eininie sapere of ale wie nnn nh me West 734. lan 496, Tact CopltoliStreet. cs rt bopal is men ee wns oe it Gabor to..o. Fifteenth and I Streets... occ legen lento Main 8313. eT aE 1330 Massachusetis Avenue... o.oo... oo. North 2314. Van Gortlandg:..5..-..-..-.. 1417 Belmont Street Columbia 3891. Van DyHe.t. oiaif neon 401 Third Street... coulis deietmire smn sds hice ln = - = Yendome-..c:=2% 2 vuso-n- Third Street and Pennsylvania Avenue .| Main 5245, er SR Phrst and Bo Sretls. .. oct. np mei ole sesninnsnnine Lincoln 1860. Versailles... oc .o0 0.0... 0. 2138 CAlHOTNIA AVENUC i. cn ionic Suloiete wialninm en ninininzais Vietoring Gaciair ee-naiasn Fourteenth and Clifton Streets. ..c.c.. .c..oveunena-- Columbia 1163. Virginia. donno - N20 BITERL . . -1otre = 2s cis nisi aise tint To WE 2 vim smwm mm in West 417, Wagar... oo oine aceon nc ee a RR Sr ER Rahs LT CR SRE RR 314 Thirteenth Streel- - -- ee oti Ta Biht nes sanonins Main 5405. Wiallralloss. cote oo dese 3025; BIloeniN Sire. ou. cost tots 5 mre mi ee = wes Waltons: vino t ieee iieim mini 16 EHS treet STi oo. eS sh Warrington: i. ii. - coun nuns 1807 Wyoming AVEMUE. ..\..o comic ridasismz sinners wean Wellington. ...o1s.- orenooies Sk ha Street and Park Road.....~--..-.-..... ‘Wendell Mansions. .......... 2330 Massachuselis Avene. ....c.. coc. cowesenvs snes North 5329. Westminster... ......-..... Seventeenth and Q Sf{reels. ...:.-..r-c.t 5.0... North 2296. Westmoreland... ............ 2122. California AVeNUE. .....-.coti rs dechvennnnn=nns North 4134. Wilburton.... ati. -.cnvvninens 1544 Columbia Bond l. 2. nics siinssinrnise le ss mur en rnina= Willson. nett. eevee n nnn J12 First Strect SE civ ots vsma oss ois dein ssn mins Wilmington... tt: ..... 20-4 1811 Wyoming Avenue. . ..............c.coooooonnnnn Windsor Lodge ..| 2139 Wyoming Avenue ........ Se ll at Se wa ! WnStOR DS ia ee saleia FIG Trt Street... oc s i i nama Se os can nnn hnos Main 6063, Woodley: zie ninnrnnss -| Columbia Road and Mintwood Place................. Columbia 3862. Woodward ..-. cc ........... Connecticut Avenue and Ashmead Place. ........... North 1874. Ts BL BE Tid tdi : Wyoming ii oo... 0nnee mens Columbia Road and California Street .. .. North 2941. Y M.C.A. Building........... V730:G-StTCREL 2 critic visi sin rau miswswmiren sd wammsssinass ss Main 8250. Maps of Congressional Districts. 419 ALABAMA. (One af large.) | | } 1 : LAUDERDALE i i | \ : } Limestone | nal ~e~T a a 8 MADISON ( | . | COLBERT { Tw i L | J Lh 4 i { 16 wd " LAWRENCE | FRANKLIN i MeroAn ! Rae me em f : : ; i MARION J WINSTON |, OULLMan = : { § LAMAR MARENGO wo am ¢ TALLAPOOSA] CHAMBERS CHILTON ST te | ELmors AUTAUGA | i YEAS 3 SM ; ( a anid COVINGTON ESCAMBIA | | 4 Ed Be 71 HousTON GENEVA j MOBILE BALDWIN 420 Congressional Directory. ARIZONA. : (One at large.) 7 : r i { / \ Fg cid / [ : COCONINO MOHAVE % —~ Se NAVAJO EN TY APACHE ia bem | i YAVAPAI | | 3 ple | i TS eit ui > Th H fs ond lien . cnn aman. — a, 3 — — ay LL. smn \ QILA ] i = \ LT NS i MARICOPA B os i N = l & PHOENIZY \ / | 8 ; \ \¢ \ GRAHAM \ AH \ \ . { Ts pe. COCHISE SANTA CRUZ i i a \ ; | i : CLAY BE : FULTON { ; Hyon i: ARROLL TM. abana p= 9 ranooLPH Fr | nb : eR PE fr . | Tr a 4 [pre | % : 7 ; IN tol ev'e ne HL { TR GLU \ 1zavp | seane i J oReEne i maoison a : | tawrence § ; . Jif i a + oo — WASHINGTON f NEaToR Ce 1 | oy 2 d i 3 : CRAIGHEAD | ! 3 7 h} INDEPENDENCE / ! Lis —— emt] 4 = tomo em CRAWFORD ; VAN BUREN : fuacksong TX i Jounson cesurne Loo. | POmes : } lA wR TAS aL \ § | 1) | 1 H . “od ay : Nii | 1 y i . | 3 : & i cross : ; be | conway WHITE ; i |cRITTENDEN) SEBASTIAN | N =) ) FAULKNER § WOODRUFF pom mem A W ) | i Aer T en TS i : . i) g NS # ST. FRANCIS | ] Toe ey ett / 4 r / ty] poy - : PERRY ry ed La } i ng aid Scory 4 PULASKI hi POAIRIE 3 £ ee LONOKE |} | - i i * | Little Rock J MONROE §_. 0. eof ! J i POLK ! - | HH f PHILLIPS Fl { i JEFFERSON ARKANSAS 3 sad I. : {HowaRrp! . / ih RIEL om) ¢ SEVIER : E ( 3 ! TL, Nevond Nt H I' uncon | hej ™ 4 \. CLEVELAND | i Tors D Ti rn ea Veal) i 7 7 DESHA R LITTLE RIVER ! DREW 7 | MILLER gf J . i CHICOT $ | coLumsia 1 ASHLEY . PS . ! UNION | : LAFAYETTE] i i ! i ] H ‘SYSNVIYV *$20L4382(T JPU01sSaLbu0)) fo sdopy iN pO 422 Congressional Directory. CALIFORNIA. ; TEHAMA PR oso - a > T— . — a — SAN BERNARDINO o do no RIVERSIDE J T x . 1 [} | H : i I Lo : i | sEDGW 3 | H LRT a hs wi a } ! i LOGAN I MOFFAT $ 3 JACKSON { LH FA 3 / LARIMER | WELD Ye | PHILLIPS i \ i poms om iL : i ROUTT Xn, i i | mee me a i } (WP 2 i i ! pe — PF fem — i ORGAN | : 74d ; } Tred | i i pms i GRAND BOULDER | i ! i RIO BLANCO fio hs on 8 FRSRERONN Wieatis TXT 1 go yuma iri ir Aeon = — Cm | i . ates aed i NS GILPIN i= ADAMS | wasrinaTon | . A pai ‘BEN |] in nan} i FRY rb *Ves Denver | | pos ama een i \, {CLEAR St Ya em Ss Se ene ————q } : EA o IF ARA 3 A GLE Jsummiry, CREEK Z! ARAPAHOE : i i AY pa | =o © moo wwe T ad ls i | \ A DOUGLAS ELBERT i i KIT CARSON { : PITKIN | i : a ye H . | ’ MES Pr a | ™% emp RE La ———— i ¢ 4 3 i i il i fromm ome mm me DELTA § : | | ._..i LINCOLN | i 9 [. EL PASO | | CHEYENNE frermese erxiren cherie) GUNNISON : TELLER] i | | fs Ri. iam ) | \ ; 3 § IRE : y ; \ . : $ a to ms en 0 N A a we we —— { : iia i, POI SR i MONTROSE ‘ rr mr rs eb and Cr FREMONT i : | KIOWA ! i , : } crowtey | [imi El] 9 \ i 8 = s. = 1 ~ i fom sm em rm me ee dn ae Cd atm i : mmm meme ZN, OURAY | i | T. i PUEBLO ate i H 3 : SAGUACHE % CUSTER i ! SAN MIGUEL AON HINSDALE | iN. ~~ > ! ROWERS ~~ 50 Nr i ovEeo |] f BENT oy Pl me mm cm ? ] -. ¢ a + ne i ¢ WEI, li 3 i Wnty { | i DOLORES : ~ } i EL EE Pe. | ! { SAN JUAN | MINERAL “wn, HUERFANO / : Vl em ede me ms gr =e ome gr ot } | \ J berms em bm 7 i i { | m0 GRANDE Yi ll i Lo ! 1 +4 ge [Sr HH MONTEZUMA 7 i So AEST \ COSTILLA Hl CAS ANIMAS : ACA J LA PLATA 3 i L i ; { ARCHULETA CONEJOS { y q \ i i ! i i J id k 34 i ¢ (08181 12 OM ,) ‘'Odvdo1oDd "SOUS UT U01SSaUBU)) Jo sdopr eet f |] p——— | | | TOLLAND Lo WINDHAM HARTFORD ! LITCHFIELD ! | * Hartford § A 4 5 | i; i \, : Ly =’. pili, ee \ Pa pif J rad Vo ce 0 == =v und 1 NEW LONDON MIDDLESEX t FAIRFIELD "LADILOANNOD *R4000040(] 10U01882.46U0)) $5 Maps of Congressional Districts. 425 DELAWARE. (One at large.) NEW CASTLE Id TT dy * Dover § KENT SUSSEX 426 ; Congressional Durectory. FLORIDA. (One at large.) sy : TY i ! 4 wot A Wal BR : {] . pry . ; ane Rosa WALTON 1; i i GADSDEN,! PERT i A . 12 ! i : Pp) atONCaL J LEON; S. pet lou’ \Tallahasse RFF EE SN 0 mn (CS SR SA SS i 3 \ WAKULLA] ! bm | i A \ iF Zens 3 at Nes Q¥ {= FORD CLAYY JERANKLIN.R ¥ od Sie eh 7 : LL 0 or. ALACHUA fpyTnam WOH NPALM BEACH Maps of Congressional Districts. 2 GEORGIA. 1 DADE, TL FANNIN *y Sos, -_ J EU BRIN (eae 2 union VM 2 Prd At Nia N Van Tr Jf walker do: Nico aE ) Nea i < Sitmen ‘, bins? Snare] HABER Wu 5 eon] \ SHAM / mm ven LUMPKIN | 1 TE fonaTToosAlY GORDON i 1} ee A i PIGKENS™Y } i Spare E Lm. PAWSON, J r SE FLOYD I BARTOW [§ CHEROKEE [FORSYTH{ | Va Vd rey ned, ht 4 PCLK j [} N 1 G EE foo = Coy r HARALSON, y, . 3 “Ik Wn WALTON “ey p BLINCOLN X Jj B BuaLAg T5ijocens Zon ~~ Ray x x / fi - Be 4 Y uancook showin} a 4 0% eereRson | BURRE j i } wine? = HINGTON \ % Sa < WASHING ) - ; 3) p J seems J RL Rp FSR / : i § ) HNSOM ® © screver § HARRIS | raLeoT § £ % "SIE ge A { d : \TWIGGS . J tamil TP ¥ H 3 Tor 8 TAYLOR Noga bY 7 oof § MUBCOGEE i ) \, LAURENS HN) p 7 4 § HousTON Ven, Y %5,. } or 1 g a, y 55 THATTA fMARIONE > | MACON \ \ J2! Wg HOOCHEE L 8 rel PULASKL “ Ian ST Sis %s = % AS sonLev] Ny 4 oF 4 | ] 2 LT Bo ; ; 3 . \ DOD [O25 NS: | ne oooy Ko... ¢ ah SEV oI raTTNALL ig \ g STEWART wes i ¢ | Pay RY “rum HCHATHAM j he | ster; SUMTER \ TN ¥ , ; fu. ! WILCOX =e ; ’ 4 - ay ih 6 ve aoa i ees mc mae same io] ~ or TELFAIR 3 = La / Quit) i Foe rr DAVIS) Rn ( LIBERTY MAN: 1 i 3 nf } reared | ; TT RanooLeH i Sy, ix, \ i 1 | aePuing R 2 i i ; CALWOUN ) DOUGHERTY | mali oer (dg WAYNE | 4 PIERCE N. § PEN s MITCHELL 3 -, Sd K WARE | i MILLER i of j corQuiTT d \ R / ho + ede + wm + me + en a at . Oy \ dro \ ) i mm —p—— = 3 r— . hy ; } ounce \ | oS LOWNDES $ \ | 1 . CHARLT DECATUR | GRADY | THomAs BROOKS J Fos. % oN of i 7 ¢ od 2 — | 1 H4 3 ECHOLS “oy § | i TEs } A i : i pad LY [] 428 Congressional Directory. IDAHO. (Two at large.) EES Sa soNNeR fiance dd 2 Ly : KOOTENAI f snosHonE tDAHO j | SN Py } / (NS N = \ . . i / soe \ p= CUSTER N= i \ FREMONT —I\ £2) | N 7 Nery a 7 = } i In | #BoisECTy, SH ADA | i Suan Lb BONNEVILLE { ELMORE ' ey $ i EE | BINGHAM a x | , | «cat vue sates nd \ vi \ BANNOCK 1 ! hd om LINCOLN | Lo ~~ | , A net N I ! = : h a OWYHEE i npn | / ky N : r i \ a pow bn { o i Fas? CASSIA | oneoa ===" 78 \ i | \ fo 429 Maps of Congressional Districts. ILLINOIS. (Two at large.) LI JO DAVIESS | © To < Jo rpg acre pad QCARROLLs "WHITESIDE Zl &F py. oF : BUREAU ff. _ROC¥ HENRY — by . A! 8, MERCER il 5 \ ne sore wig bid x as Bsa kl 1 >1 MARSHALL H S § knox L. | £ i & ; jv Livingston | J Ww Q 3 y ° i | WOODFOR fois 11D Lrrovafysorrny | § 1moquois fei Fol omy PP r=] } pr! go oy 18 & y S pr : FORD i | ; & FULTON _TAZEWELL McLEAN ° Maan J hancock] s p : : Pe y & 0 : : ; E / NY DEWITT CHAMPAGNE & i KN [PIATT| Fs © am 0 cote 6 com flee © nc 8] MACON | 9 re DOUGLAS I EDGAR | % eo wns 1%. : TL. %i coLes 4 et CHRISTIAN LE 1 Gy. s ws! © Bees © of > 0 IwasHingTO & i & BB —r wi) 1 4 Si A ranoorrn! PERRY ¢ Ss WHIT 3 i Irrankunjy | @, JACKSON | ALEXANDER a PULASKI 450 Congressional Directory. 5 INDIANA. : Ns Al i ‘ Sn . aronre | 2 “Ose | LA ete ELKHART KX (o) (r: cf 25 AB = : tren * smn ooh ee LAK . 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AVOYELLES gy § : WEST © fF AY ] ; go Q ~ Meinl AA i . WASHINGTON i i Semmes, af JT EELIGIANA Duelina i i tL \ (] ’ J ened i ~~. TEVAD | [VAR 7 : aa BEAUREGARD ; ALLEN {EvANORLINE 3 Sal I EAST pe 6-1 & Pe oT. LANDRY 7% Baton ¢ LS i { : A emt ): Cl j 1 + ST TAMMANY ® [i b= Fie a 5: TON j% 3 LIVINGSTON i Et JE SP 4 at an.) ygouoe,! Baton Rougs x tue { L gn : Deity % LY Pen. i ACADIA Jb SN M CALCASIEU i 04,70, 1 7 JST. MARTIN R'BERVILLE nok: 78ND § LAray, kd : VETTE 1 % 4 3 Lom 3 : ~~ i i a Liss 8 /4 IBERIA ~ CAMERON 7 [A SSUMPTION 4 Tog A ST. MARY a’ N, Ae VERMILION | fre | | of an IA Maps of Congressional Districts. 435 MAINE. ARQOSTOOK } rea 0 anes ¢ conte Sao ¢ Ca— eg Fe S— oy | i i : ] I~ i im 4 1 PISCATAQUIS J i K OMERSET PF L--- SOMER &) WN; \ PENOBSCOT | 3 2» — . 2A 3 : \ | vr i { FRANKLIN - i = \ 3 \ WASHINGTON , 1 cl - 4 \ 4 . PS ih R naNcock \ - —, J \ 2 \ 3 WALDO \ oxForp + _& KENNEBEC [ Af om, 3 < A I by apy amy T/ CUMBERLAND SH x Augusta Je | KNOX yl ay ) Sag [LINCOLN | oY \ as 9¢¥% 7 \ rr sg / ALLEGANY wAsHINGTON J x / \ ; / 6 / CARROLL / \ HarFoRD WW CIL GARRETT / / { 2 to J % ) FREDERICK ( \ oR f BALTIMORE ? j - or 3 at S ES BE 2 PE = & willl oe =I CAROLINE > , ~~ Z S a NY N . J g = =D / S = DORCHESTER Jf << ee © cn © Go w— FRANKLIN ! J Ne 3 ford BE 2 WORCESTER / : WP surroLk CL, HAMPSHIRE i ¥ 1 3 a: I 0 To | 0 3 \ AND PARTS OF 5 |3anD | 4 3H PLYMOUTH 16 BRISTOL L. "SLLISAHIDVSSVIA "SPLYSYT (pU0LssaLbuo)y Jo sdopy 438 KEWEENAW: Congressional Directory. MICHIGAN. (One at large.) i J i LUCE E | MARQUETTE PALGER ed or © i CHIPPEWA i won I 1S malty "EE i i i i 2 1S MACKINAC ~~ b. oF; : i ! a pa DELTA !§ — AT 4 Xi \ Sal Na s it S FI RY & | "o { i oi CHARLEVO! % eae 7 Q a oi I v PA i Wl ANTRIME <2 [5° 5 o [a ze i CR La \® Vt Fl : | Cra &L O” ALGONA Cut EK a PE PT all / lO... & & & & 1 . =F {ST oF | tosco S = > vo. » | & Io) © Et En $e 2p hee i 1 | STARENAC MASON LAKE § «© |oLaref 9 - ; T= Tv HURON Ne Ee 5! 0 A¥ 2 Ga fe ne = i <7 & iBA le 3 Lola iiiia Vy) 2, 2 9, Pq oO sAGiNAW i | Laplct F v 3 ER KENT N IONIA ~ | oh” &) jv * ol] BARRYEEATON Lansing & NGHAMLS KALA-: i MAZOOCALHOUNLAGKSON! o 1} - i ST. = aS gosep x Maps of Congressional Districts. 439 NS MINNESOTA. (One at large.) ’ i ht KiITTson | ROSEAU J i ro, : ; ——— : 1 { : x MARSHALL { | TS B® xe one + wes on ims on] BELTRAM) XOOCHICHING | i . | PENNINGTON } tl 1 1 i. RED LAKE 1} FC, pa Tt Hl 1 | > Le | OLK : 913 ITASCA } ST. 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PIKE 0 y N, Brin (2 JO | ; SCIOTO J vackson & 451 You ASHTABULA { Lucas : FULTON | CEE i WILLIAMS / : { 9 OTTAWA | Y 7 GEAUGA pr eam mm 0 come « won tptresiost valde | r CUYAHOGA DEFIANCE | HENRY WOOD SANDUSKY ERIE became re el LORAIN — : Bit 1. a =n sii 5 sw we i : L PORTAGE PAULDING 5 SENECA MEDINA § SUMMIT ) | =. . = MAHONING Je oe ae + ame SPSTNAM, HANCOCK eee] 3 H 14 | ans nto VAN WERT WYANDOT | CRAWFORD |ASHLANDR wavne STARR I . { | COLUMBIANA ALLEN | RICHLAND, SEE 3 [Ry PES ahs | Bs oI 3 : ay <3 ae a I. reese 7 Ree ARDIN 5 i MERCER i AUGLAIZE MARION J a HOLMES . Ts MORROW ¢ pad ‘ : | 7 ca T 4 LOGAN } | RNOX LTusARAVAS : ent sms wend ZLB. j union { COSHOCTON nC '.q DELAWARE hy DARKE CHAMPAIGN a REE Sy : | 2 LICKING | MIAMI a 3 + GUERNSEY FRANKLIN Muskingum | : * my - = K =o of 2 ° f= a B NOBLE PREBLE | d 3 I Morgan | fT R cele att tm Re or ¢ 3 WaswinaToN ¢ LY ¥ y v rere i 3 | { r : y 2 | i i t HARP | | ! 5 y v t cs N=. 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J AE, Lk - CORRE i i or} 2 OKFUSKEE | i ! pas Tapia I i | emcee ahoma City -~ i | i MCINTOSH ~ : e—i | BECKHAM | WASHITA (i 5 i i KR En pg i | | CLEVELAND! poTTA 1 § Ea] : } CADDO i : aha 2) Ei SE i TN | watomie pd L., HASKELL [= eniomd i A lh ! i Ley oer GRADY | ; Ce rt ie Vaal 3 KIOWA | MecLANT 1, I er resuaa ii ol : a ] 5 BRC (od 08 ! 1 LATIM : Harmon. 4} i i i i : i [ ER [° LEFLORE h , i 5 ne 2 itn pontoTOC fr 1 | ! i LE 2 : | uAckson [| [ ] | fool ; bee boronic - : . J : Pi ! COMANCHE |! i ¥ [3 i coal : Lm ay i TEN | stepHEns TT i - oot to sre Sse co rt i i | MURRAY i i | i 1 . -— pl rad i : Tiemann © Ly i | Sl i | PusHMATAHA | ; vie dd Fi iT lvonngToN[ |. | ATOKA | i | i i CARTER : ! i od t= 3 i r | i Nye AN TET McCURTAIN fee Be ne — —l RSH P : ny I LIARSHALL, ! CHOCTAW ct i , fLove & i CIMARRON TEXAS BEAVER i = J ' } (*o81er 9% vot) ‘'VINOHVYTIIO Hh fo) bo 8) ibe Ri0p040(F J0U01580 Maps of Congressional Drstricts. 453 OREGON. < . 3 \ 3 \ E] ] FS = od = / 3 ¢ 2 kd fom. od # i | ¥ | < < E ) ( \ ] : mpf 8 iin a aE» a mi en cr \ Pda i 2 \ ERT gl s 2s 0 A Vv Ny Bi i < NW 4 0 2 3 i 5 | b JF g 5 . . H rd Cy ! oN SAL Se Rn 8 ! : I Bw | wo bomen. © LAKE [mim meme : | CER CP me on ame wm cme d KLAMATH C—. eus o amy 0 ED oq oem Go =O w= © wm ww oo ® for i < L] H of i x . ) ! aE j 8 FLY By SRR fe at “=e NE 8 ; z i Y =% J \ 8 xs \ . 2 ! N 2 Ope / | fo — / 2 ) © “wr . + s ee ome ome Eon Py o x frees } z { 3 ue eae 3 e. ~ et 0 - ¢ { 3 I y 4 3 3 die . / z g8 7 i ro ; & z | EY oa ed fhe 0 Sy 8 g or NS] 4 [3 ; 23.4 ERIE ] { : or. A 2 5 WARREN MCKEAN CoA BRADEORD | SUSQUEHANN CRAWFORD 2 8 POVTER. | { WAYNE TE cant i5 ~14 mins a ri Si BP A 0 + ‘roREST ° = Al % ; 5 kN REE | SULLIVAN 7 | venanco } Be ELK ® 25 ‘ ™, PIKE MERCER i I e LYCOMING 3 — i ga) 2 CLINTON *( gi CLARION & & ° LN 2 LUZERNE ‘~ , 4 & 3 ) 3 e ANE WOT A ETE pw ost lie & 2 Nem rs H Qimony 2 & ol CLEARFIELD ) aftour, © v BUTLER oo ide ae oo UNION @ x, ° > 2 2 Ye a &£ pr CENTER Pr 6 ; carson x &~ 32 7 / 1” snvoer Sep : | 13 & 3 LAND < E A ' & SER: i INDIANA J ” Seen, SCHUYLKILL < os > Eg d 8, / Ney ® x %, 3 5Q71032 ) 2 SEs 8 V3 . ALLEGHENY CAMBRIA BLAIR S } QD 7S a aka N ’ & 2° °o Mo gl./ 1 eerny | 8 BERKS BUCKS WESTMORELAND ’ od 3 \ LEBANON 3 4 >in oS vf i MON ye ATW A 1 pl Harrisburg Tag, . CUMBERLAND Epp WASHINGTON < J Nel ASTER BEDFORD y CS LANCASTE CHESTER {eg 3 PAVETTE / SOMERSET © of GREENE J FRANKLIN | ADAMS YORK 7 SDE «PHILADELPHIA | T06 (-o81ey 9% Ino.) "'VINVATASNNAC ¥evy “faopou(q (puoissaubuo) RHODE ISLAND. 3 soammaamsmmn PROV IOENCE Pe © mn ce cm. E+ — (SE © EE © GE © GED © gu’ No N [= © = cm se © mn 5 0 co © Cen 6 Swe © od WASHINGTON BLOCK ISLAND OR NEW SHOREHAM Maps of Congressional Districts. 455 y \ dk T oN re ? 1) . ®, CHEROKEE | Fay i i Q ] u [3 Or 0 K FAY H A ) YonrK ] \ A * GPARTANBURC i Nod L a , ¢ \ ~ 3 I A / \ ; / 4 j A crestER LANCASTER X N / x, bid ¥ i _\ CHESTERFIELD J marLEORO A 4 h a, 2 ngs ¢ py oB of TH a ! +] \/ ’ q 3S oy / ho) J DILLON PAIRBIELD DARLINGTON 4 / a] Hl i = \s / 5 i by [4 . A ’ MARION \ a— — = ——o — nemo amelie 0 amo wm ome & \. \ tom em emo CD ; ie i i BUFFALO | JERAULD sansoRN! MINER | take | wmoooY PENNINGTON LYMAN A tye as = i | | : : i : J SE Site = sae a + ce were ov + Sa 3 we fa ~ ST i . 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So Q < : al SUMNER SECT 2 NN / \ SCOTT ¢ bh .; i as GI 5 TEA (<) A al (TROUS T° by A nd &) AMPBEL Lp i ~ Fy fym— OS BREST lneson 5, Po {union B (CpmiTR {jf cganves 3 HOUSTON! = ten ~~ Wid 0,0 8 Ton 4 / ©” 5 4 ay AP NY } Xp ; & {oq X Nashville SMITH EEN. dL RPV (OY ART #7 GREEN 1548 J 3 ——f £Y3 Ivickson Sse winsony [putnam T=) oNoF ¢ Wel a iS = o FV POR IR pene Rie Pod z 2 J Fan we v. n J DEKALB DF & . foie oR | HN § >is sa HN CUMBERLAND / : Z I~ pt 4s WILLIAMSONE Q \ 4 3 VP ROANE 7 ~~{ \ re HICKMAN / oo i SH 5 A ey 4 BW SEVIER } es = [3 ~~. y I S86 Nay SR ton & TA A Ba SE es 4 YEE 5.3 di Ld MAURY. 4 T 5 a ; g % 8 lw LEWIS \ 5 ks <<} LP ; \ vo) 49 : JF |BEDFORD} & 2 \ les! > : oy VA Oo Fes , MONROE =: rt -—f Ef | % lO MINN fs! ~ of TT - Ni hyp £ : S 5 ! { | WAYNE | < { als nN ~~.) WY yay NTT hh SHELBY [FAYETTEHARDEMANG, | 0 HARDIN § FLA GILES . sas IN ! ! | , Wr | | LincoLn Jf FRANKLIN ; MARION 3 “S{ 3 / pox ~= ¢ +) > \& og ! | i ] /) Ng . Maps of Congressional Districts. TEXAS. (Two at large.) HOWARD > BALEY | Lame | WALE i FLOYD MOTLEY] ot” Id THROCK 8 YOAKUMI TERRY | LYNN § GARZA | KENT'[ HASKELLE MORTON} i i" : — i & ipalo, QANES {DAWSON FISHER '§ JONES soe) & yZeiwro 19 | i : SE - ¥ ANDREWS | MARTIN OUVAL ZAPATAL BROOK re wise | DENTON i rt NUECES az) SYARR 4 / fone] L. coLL or Fork i ; Toocn Ba, io 1 wack WOOD };psHUR] TARRANTS DALLAS T i PARK SR} 2 rs tovan Tal ZB Harmison. i \3 ge i SMITH A { zanOT 459 po, a 5 TRINITY/ . Pe V4 “Vom MADISON! 9 -3 of { pou fren i | BURNET, : MILAM pd {WARE Fr 3 MASON | LANG WILLIAMSON R, \%, Dn RgaOnTO —a : | BURLESON “i ARON | i Re -—8 , Nuoerrlo TX eons OQ. Tn > JAY : Fi sausTivg SY nanws 3 / Rodi US CHAMBER! / ~. Ne = COLORAL ren T BEND) . = ADALUPS rd ony 88 p= BW Se EN ¢ MEDINA Sei Se ANTON, BRAZORIA { WILSON. Zz ZO J oewitt 7 ” H SN S yd JACKS {| MATAGORDA! JATASCOSANCKARNES™\, 7. i i FRO] 7 wictorimy i i ! — 460 Congressional Directory. UTAH. (Two at large.) 3 ) \ 3 {| cace | BOXELDER A ) BIT pu | Pe - 5 WEBER avs 2 pride oc © Fm g's se. 5 i mt ars — | Merman — we aun 5 = Cn ] 3 5 [RE B, suMmIT —_—] \ *Salt Lake City _.._-.= | \ SALT LAKE iY ( TOOELE 3 id ( y i ~ WASATCH ! UINTA ! UTAH [= #2 ¢ cn 3 co 0 tn + a + + i hi olds te ) 2 Lo; SN . Ne — ™ j ann s dus JUAB 2 H / = / ; CARBON / mst ] ~~. r ~J sanpere! { < | { i | / MILLARD yumgs = { / 4 EMERY $ 7 | b] GRAND / SEVIER \ : ~~ | L er ed ee ms a i coms Tm | lL co Et Jn RE 3 comme mm + =n. —— — BEAVER \ "} PTE WAYNE 3 HEPC i CO (Lrmmarts ses rtm som vs emi mm) | 4 I art hon rd GARFIELD rr ¢ 1 7 i em «ems + ene 4 ta 1 ~ 4 SAN JUAN ULE aa eS OF Sa : J I 7 WASHINGTON | KANE § i = I 4 Maps of Congressional Districts. VERMONT. 461 RUTLAND * comm ¢ enn o ORLEANS rid % : A NS A ~3 / 7 \ / J LAMOILLE 2D. svt 9) ~. CALEDONIA . J / dd WASHINGTON i Montpelier J N—e— rd /’ ORANGE WINDSOR e a WINDHAM LOUDOUN 4 . Nis ‘(FAIRFAX \ ALEXANDRIA ™N os / 4 \ 'P |e N NE ! 83 4 [J LN Cc A gd Cu; /STAFFQRD NGOCKINGHAM A 7 Coen = King GEg 2 FoRANGE 'SPOTT ‘ Ge ~~ JSYLVANIA/ YY AUGUSTA BATH ¥ JO, NN pd \ ALLEGHANY frocksmnge NELSON oY LAREN WETwo ELAND NL ? caroLive \ \ OW Ayisa Ne Vo \ NORTHUMBERLAND: A (3 no 0 Oh ; { 8 HANOVER N 2 Liansren NN fa GOOCHLANDI ~~, AN & x h 2 "VINIDYIA on Rk IN MIDS SEX ARTA ~~ VRie\, ews. i NTN AL 2 Rifmond* AEC, eh) { \ Nad V4 cl JAMES ong 9 ’ N ) AMELIA Lei teucHaNaNS g 3 ’ 3 ’ 3 i did A, a : No cs \DICKEN x vi Fateweiy < BLAND §.~ r 2) x NA PULASKI} ; » WISE il SVE gb Wa Wg : FRANKLIN J CHARLOTTE] . Sun ~. ~ ; : he RyssELL A «WYTHE A g : s >I LUNENBURG] 4 N~ 7 SUSSEX hii ] rs », SMYTH | \: Nerve I \ Hoa WIE / N, PRINCESS tee’ scorr bo \ "CARROLL \ P iy LTE if I wie fnorroLy) ARNE 7 WASHINGTON ~- PATRICK H ; , ral ; v RYeck % r : Henry | f #/MECKLENBU ji /85 TS { { *A40900.40(] J0U01SSOUBUOY) al T i 1 Ji "™. w : [ [ N HATCOM i i r BN NON a A : Lg $I 0 : i 4 fy a | IY OKANOGAN i ( 1 PEND! \? ks SKAGIT s oN 1 1. cermy \ STEVENS |OREILLE, =! A “te § . 1 A +e + Sm + ams + mn 5 m+ em 0 en I) », . \ | a ISLAND } \ \ ! . | ) : \ ( 1 CLALLAM LI { \ —\ | : 1 i 3 . SNOHOMISH " A pd [ oo \ ) ; } o id oo’ . ! : \ tid A fa) 2 ¢ 13 Te ve ie rs ew fd i / CHELAN Si We YA JN; f J i . AON, JEFFERSON Fim RTT = i tL) Fit = : ! ( oouaas i dima: nite: Ie te KITSAP \ yf \ i ¢ | LINGOLN ] SPOKANE : ING bY . I i = i / KiNG rs / PE er ; : 3 eo i MASON Sr “ "Ny 7 Ee od i : 3 = K 4 . ? . Si, ROTEL Io) CHEHALIS | A : ~~. gt a \ > 2 1 » [WA Ny 4 3 ¢ ~ Y - 2 eee 7 Olyripia ; : “al KITTITAS : GRANT i i wg a - 9 5 i) PIERCE 7. . 1 ADAMS { WHITMAN < ° : THURSTON § bY { .——t 4 | \ # smh ~ 4 , or § a. - 3 . : 2 a RN BA \. ad ! A g . i Bid 0 9 mate v aml i ACT adh ; ! LEWIS hi \ i Jatin FAN il § PaciFic | i | FRANKLIN J i 4 . 3 3 . . sey pI sie sal ie Ss mena + ss SL is YAKIMA i ( i | YN “ Vas, | i ; i 7 |_coLumeia Gili ] RL ya | JASOTIN = cowrirz | | senTon ) WALLA WALLA i I a | SKAMANIA | ! i 1} pad r } iY de i i KLICKITAT CLARKE i iN "$900.81 [PU0LsSa4bU0)) Jo sdopy €9v HANCOCK ’ 5 BROOKE | SN OHIO To FE ; ; bong id .— : McDOWELL ~ wercen : a31e] 1% ou) *VINIDYIA LSIM TV *f4030041.( ]DU018S2DUO)) Maps of Congressional Districts. 465 WISCONSIN. : | : a : BURNETT [WASHBURN: SAWYER i = —— | : i i | PRICE —= BARRON LINCOLN i it Gy TT : TAYLOR CHIPPEWA I FAD AS ee v MARATHON [] . i BROWN | 5 Lee | Soe, ee wooo {PORTAGE Vausacal OUTAGAMIE | | sade JACKSON / 73 . . i WAUSHARA we | ( roams a o, ; MONROE | JUNEAU) : : 0, . $ b i x * Madison DANE : Y'™ : + LAFAYETTE GREEN 13823°—63-2—1stT ED——31 997% VELLOWSTONE Ne, SHERIDAN NATIONAL A aa PARK BIGHORN PARK . oo 8m © wa © ws © Em CAMPBELL di L JOHNSON .. eed Res Cf’ Ne “ WASHAKIE | ! | rr 1 I at | i | i I | i WESTON ~ wy \_._HOT SPRINGS hacen — ey, fey Sati TO SE 0 smo aly Lo 2 Pp mi perma med] emo seme piece NIOBRARA. NATRONA CONVERSE A DL ARNE . L = Ae, 7; - 0 Gash @ GHD & LEIS © EMUD & Satu © hon Advi Sholom Rk liadde: tu 4 (rede je ou) "ONIWOZA AM “fiuopo(] 101018824610) LINCOLN FREMONT I pemmobmoap ==" i i H Le al als su re wine i oso] } i i b J | frome ome cm ecm dome cans cin ime 6 co © cm © 0 Yen ©? 4 1 i [ | g FLATTE | GOSHEN | : i i i 5 i i : b | i Comm 0 ew LL ov st me stm SWEETWATER pr i i Li i ] i i i 1 c= { LARAMIE i i { # Cheyenne : d 1 5 “VASVIV "SPLUSUT pouorssatbueayy fo sdopr Lov ‘IIVMVH 89% Aa40§02.41(T 10U015824610)) Maps of Congressional Dustricts. 469 PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. 0L¥ SAN JUAN ARECIBO ‘ODIY OLY¥Od J dae 4 Cd > MAYAGUEZ _~ es ~ f =. N J PONCE 7 quayama > *fit0302.40(F 10UOSSLBU0)) INDIVIDUAL INDEX. (Alphabetical list of Members of Congress with their addresses, pp. 405-415.) The following is a list of the names and addresses of persons given in the Directory who are located in Washington for official purposes, but whose names are not otherwise alphabetically arranged: Page. Abbe, Prof. Cleveland, Weather Bureau, Mount Weather, Va... oe. coissin as ts tines Abbot, C. G., Director Astrophysical Observ- BLOLY, 2208 CBE. vas cabs a mae Abbot, Col. Frederic V., Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, Army and Navy Club, New York Clly: oi. cvirmsevs.- shane Abbott, F. H., secretary Board of Indian Commissioners, 1312 Euclid St.ceveeenan.. Abdul Hak Hussein Bey, Turkish Embassy, Bho DUNNE. ahve rvsmhne sshmemasinnasses SHEE Ee eh Ackerson, Naval Constructor James L., Bu- reau of Construction and Repair, 1831 Bel- MONTROBG ces on vm ns sein iin sien Ene Soe os Adams, B. F., office of District assessor, 3717 Morton ii Lhe as Adams, Franklin, Pan Americana Union, The 2 Ee a IE I Se Adams, J. Ray, Senate Committee on Woman Sufirage, 1009 Filth St. SE... ..ov ino. Adams, James B., Forest Service, The Deca- Albes, C. E., Pan American Union, 1336 Fair- Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home. ......... Alexander, A. B., Bureau of Fisheries, 404 a RB Ti Alexis, Mr. Hubert, Haitian Legation ...... Allen, Cornelia, Government Hospital for ee NC ST Se Allen, E. W., office of Experiment Stations, 1028 Bitmere Bt... ee a Allen, H. C., General Supply Committee, 1460 Monroe St Allen, Lieut. Col. Henry T., General Staff Corps, 1323 New Hampshire Ave.......... Allen, James F:, office of Indian Affairs, Rock- VIE, MA. eae Allen, Walter C., District electrical engineer, S30 c Newark 85... A iain Alsberg, Carl L., Chief, Bureau of Chemistry, St Tourteenth 8b... o.oo oii 8 Alte, Viscount de, Portuguese minister...... Alwood, W. B., Bureau of Chemistry, Char- FobhevillE, Vaal, oi, i nes at sar Sd a Ames, Maj. Thales L., Office of Chief of Ord- nance, Army, 1843 Kalorama Road........ Amores, Emilio M., Pan American Union, LB EL Ge Anderson, Medical Director Frank, Board of Medical Examiners, Navy, 1628 Nineteenth 275 283 261 395 259 286 280 346 Page, Anderson, Passed Asst. Surg. John Tr. Director Hygienic Laboratory, 1822 Kalo- TRIE UE Br SRR EE SE Andersen, Peirce, Commission of Fine Arts, BEET TI | ER Ce RR Tr CBR Anderson, Thomas H.: Associate justice, District Supreme Court, 1531 New Hampshire Ave............. Howard University... oo... oa. Andrews, Burt W., attorney, Department of Justice, 3477 Holmead Place... ............ Andrews, Frank, Bureau of Statistics, De- partment of Agriculture, Kensington, partment, 1225 Fairmont St............... Aninat, Sefior Don Felipe, Chilean Lega- HOR ase Aronoff, I. Jos., Senate Committee on Coast Defentes, 213 G8. iio vn canines Seniezms oc Ashbaugh, Samuel S., assistant attorney, De- partment of Justice, 2957 Newark St....... Ay Cpl W., Forest Service, 1512 Park TL ie NER ee I ST Ashford, Philip M., attorney, Department of Justice, 1336 Park Roafl........eaueinnviee. Ashford, Snowden, municipal architect, 1617 Bwenty-RBE SE. aaa Ashley, Effie, Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands, Senate...... Ashley, Frederick W., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 3932 Morrison St........... Ashley, George H., Geological Survey, 2814 AGams MIT Road. S,oaice: dian ernsds uous Aspinwall, A. A., Bureau of Pensions, The ContOrd oo. vriin mr ann ws sass sa hei Sud Aston, J. L., assistant Journal clerk, Senate, 1772 Comba Boal. ccccueecieinniain. vans Atkinson, George W.: Judge, Court of Claims, (biography), 1660 ThivteemEh Sb, Cece ie ar es Howard University. oo eveuiiionsni sun Atkinson. J. P., Senate Committee on Uni- Yoully of the United States, 209 Tenth Aukam, George C., judge municipal court, Te Se Re li Austin, Lieut. Charles M. ; Office of Judge Ad- vocate General, Navy, The St. Regis... ... Austin, Frederick H.: General Supply Committee, 1116 Coluin- bia Bonds. irl saa Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster BONOrAL. ies reese ons soba sarees Austin, Oscar P., Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce, 3301 Newark St......... 472 Congressional Directory. Austin, Richard W.: Member Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representa-~ tives, The Brighton. =.=... i... Member Joint Committee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads......... Austin, W. L., Bureau of the Census, 3516 BOVOnIn BE or. cc t har Avalos, Lieut. Col. Don José F., Mexican Embass The Balfour. cou uisnsssrnnansss Ayer, Charles M. ., assistant clerk, United States Court of Customs Appeals, 1529 Cor- a BE EE ENTE Ayer, Edward E., Board of Indian Commis- sioners; Chicago, Read daa semrril inl Aylesworth, W. L., Bureau of Mines, 117 Ken- tucky Ave. SE Babcock, Charles E., Pan American Union, inne, Va... eee a Babt, David, assistant attorney, Department of Justice, The LiNeoIn.. ...... uu. eneeuss Bach, Mr. H. de, Russian Embassy. ........ Backus, Samuel W., commissioner of immi- gration, Angel Island, San Francisco, Cal.. Bacon, Augustus O.: Executive hgeitte, Smithsonian Insti- 1 Ty 1 EG Pes Sl SRE Oa SOR RL Bailey, II. S., Bureau of Chemistry, 805 Alli- EO SA ree a rk Bain, Capt. Jarvis J., United States Engi- neer Office, "Wootten Ave., Friendship Helghts Md. oe 2h nt Bainter, Edward M., commissioner of educa- Lio, POLLO RICO. ; ois ms iea se scimn sain essai Baity, James L., Auditor for War Depart- ment, The Brighton a Er ET Baker, AB. , National Zoological Park, 1745 Lan Plots. rz ot Baker, Lieut. Col. Chauncey B., Office of Chief, Quartermaster Corps, Army, 1912 SUnACTIENA PIE - eo rs rsaen rs ts Baker, Ellice, Committee on Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture, Senate. . Baker, Frank, superintendent National Zoological Park, 1788 Columbia Road... .. Baker, Henry S., ‘District excise board, 1108 Avenue of the Presidents............... Baker, James M., Secretary of the Senate (biogr aphy), 3141 Highland Place.......... Baker, James R., House Committee on Mili- tary "Affairs, 533 Fourteenth St. SE........ Baker, Jasper N , office of ‘Director of the Mint, 3562 Macomb SC... co lll Baker, R. T., Senate Committee on the T Territories, FO BACOIOT: sic ce sence Bakhméteff, Mr. George, Russian ambassa- SR Baldwin, Albertus H., chief, Bureau of For- eign and Domestic C ommerce, The Cecil.. Baldwin, Capt. Theodore A. er Office of ony ‘Quartermaster Corps, Army, 2139 I EL ER GS Sa ls ci FRU Ball, M. W., Geological Survey, 1007 Thir- EE TER ae Ba RR Rs se a ad Ballard, S. Thruston, Commission on Indus- tril Relations. vueen----cuereccrevosrnsnss Ballentine, H. L., Hydrographic Office, 1836 al ed Ballivign, Sefior Don Ml. V., jr., Bolivian A RR Te I Le ey Balloch, Edward A., A. M., M. D., Howard Univer I Lb OR ee A : Bancroft, Jay F., principal examiner Patent Office, MSL AMBOTE. aio vreinr Bandel, 'George E., office of Second Assistant Postmaster General, 4735 Thirteenth St.. Bankhead, John H., member Joint Committee on Postage on Second-Class Mail Matterand Compensation for Transportation of Mails, the New Willard... .. 0 me. oh, Banks, Howard A., private secretary to Secre- tary of the Navy, 2020 G St Barber, Orion M., judge, U. S. Court of Cus- toms Appeals, The Wyoming. o.oo. ; Barclay, Mr. Colville, British Embassy...... Barnard, Job, associate justice, District Supreme Court, 1306 Rhode Island Ave. Barnett, Claribel R., librarian, Department of Agriculture, IO GITA Ble eres Page. 215 215 Page. Barney, Samuel S., judge, Court of Claims (biography), The Champlain Sh Cetin Barnhart, Henry A., Joint Committee on Printing, Congress $n Barre, William W., office of Third Assistant. Postmaster General, Dayton, Ohio........ Barrett, John, Director General Pan Ameri- can Union, Metropolitan Chal ins ns Barrett, W. T K., chief clerk to purchasing agent, Post Office Department, 626 N. Fre- mont Ave., Baltimore, Md................ Barrows, William J 7 office of Third Assistant NE General, 622 Fourteenth St. i Pe EE a es pon it Bartlett, Ralph T., Appointments Division, Navy ‘Department, 430 Massachusetts Ave. Barto, F. H., official stenographer to House committees, 3321 Twentieth-St............ Bassford, Wallace, secretary to the Speaker, 144 Kentucky Ave.-SE................ 0 Bassler, R.-S., National Museum........:.... Batchelder, Lena M., Committee on National Banks, Sonalo.: oe. ea Baum, Lieut. G. M., Office of Naval Intelli- gence, The Westmoreland: -. :2eu.eenn.... Baumann, Dr. Ernest, Swiss Legation, [rm we Pel SaaaRiL Belly, edu Bi Bauskett, W. T., Senate Committee on Claims, 175 eving Bt cols. Bay, J. C., House Committee on Merchant Ma- rine and Fisheries, 514 Seward Square SE. Bayard, Fairfax, examiner in chief, Patent Office, 1325 Irving eA EI A A Bay ard, G. Livingston, Navy Yard and Sta- tion, Washington, LL A Re Pe A RAT Baylor, James B., Coast and Geodetic Sur- vey, The Albany pa a ED Beach, Col. Ys H., Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, Tudor Hall, Balti- more -Md coaar rea ee nr Beach, Morgan H., attorney in charge of titles, Department of Justice, R. F. D,, Montrose, LY et A ET aS Sa Beal, W. H., Office of Experiment Stations, 1852 Park Road AE i pe Se Beale, William L., office of District assessor, a lI EN MG Jams Beals, Edward A., Weather Bureau, Port- land, pe he a ade Bemiiele SORNE Taek Beasley, C. A. Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads, The Lincoln..:... Becker, G. F., Geological Survey, 1700 Rhode Island AVE i a Behymer, Grace, Senate Committee on Public IVIL Led BR a a El aia er ale Bell, Alexander Graham: Executive Committee, Smithsonian In- RET rhn ee ee OT Sl Ue Regent of Smithsonian Institution, Wash- eto B.C. ee dss Bell, Elmer T., Senate Committee to Ex= amine the Several Branches of the Civil Service, 3526 Thirteenth St........coc..... Belnap, i W., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 100 Wet. a A Beller, James W., Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, 3706 Morrison St., Chevy Chase, D.C Benfer, James P., Geological Survey, 3009 Seventeenth: ST NRT... co hoor ooo. Benjamin, Marcus, National Museum, 1703 Bs os o assistant bill clerk, House, 111 B St. S Bennett, I Ernest L., Bureau of Steam’ Engineering, The Farragut Rr Benoist d’Azy, French Embassy, 1034 Con- necticUl AVE Ts srs Ri rieeee isan Benson, Andrew - R. i Dincipa) examiner, Patent Office, 1316 618 Bentley, George Ae Foret Service, 1301 Ba PION SL sin a a ea a Bergin, Michael, District inspector of fuel, ERNE Bernstorff, Count J. H. von, German ambas- 214 264 283 346 Po et Individual Index. Page. Bertholf, Capt. Commandant Ellsworth P. Commandant Revenue-Cutier Service, The Woodward nim a donmiinn. oo niin Berthrong, Ithamar P., division chief, Gen- eral Land Office, 3409 Ashley Terrace. .... Bo de Sauvigny, Capt. de, French Em- SE ARR a ER RL ge rs A MR a Re Boat Sefior Don bi ulio: Colombian minister, 1319 en Governing board, Pan American Union, Bethune, Walton K., House Committee on Reto inthe Civil Service ........ i... Beure, Naval Constructor J. D., Bureau of Construction and Repair, The 'Westmore- ET Re rs CEE Ee ce A LU en 3 Bevington, M. R., Bureau of Naturalization, Federal Building, St.-Louis-"Mo....... Bicknell, Ernest P., director American Na- tonal Bed Cross. to. oir iil ties Biddle, Col. John, General Staff Corps, 1616 REodoIsIanad AVe. . oo vusir soins anton Biddle, Maj. Gen. William P., Commandant Marine Gorges Eighth and G Sts. SE..... Bidwell, G. Bureau of Chemistry, 1245 BvartsSt NE: oe Bielaski, A. Bruce, Chief of Division of In- vestigation, Department of Justice, 12 Ray- mond St., Chevy Chase, Md............... Bien, Morris, Reclamation Service, 1130 ent SE, aan Billings, George B., commissioner of immi- gration, Long Wharf, Boston, Mass....... Bird, Gen. Charles (retired), American Na- tioraliRed Cross... 0 oo 0h Bishop, Joseph Bucklin, Isthmian Canal Commission, Aneon......... 5. iia, ae Bishop, William W., superintendent ofrecading room, Congressional Library, Montgomery Ave., Kensington, M Bissell, Louis G., assistant attorney, Depart- ment of Justice, 1760 Columbia Road...... Black, Arthur P., Senate Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment, 1328 North Carelina Ave. NB. oo omin sl. Black, Col. William M., president Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, Gov- erporsiisland INC V2 oun] aah ann Blackmon, Fred. L., member Joint Com- mission on Government Purchase of Pneu- matic Tubes, Congress Hall................ - Blackwell, Surg. E. M., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, 1752 Kilbourne Place........ Blackwood, J. R., House Committee on Accounts, MOAB es Blair, Fred. J., Bureau of Statistics, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 1443 Belmont St.. Blair, Henry P., District Board of Education, Colorado uilding EEO Sr eA Blair, Prof. William R., Weather Bureau, Mount: Weather, Va... J... 0 i. Blake, Matt L., attorney, Department of Justice, 1437 Rhode Island Ave............ Blakely, Maj. George, Coast Artillery Divi- sion, Army and Navy Cub... .....5..... Blakely, Commander John R. Y., Bureau of Navigation, Navy, The Benedick...... Blakslee, James I., Fourth Assistant Post- master General, The Woodward..:........ Blanchard, Clarence J., Reclamation Serv- ice, The Earlington PR Ler RLS ER Sal Blashfield, Edwin H., Commission of Fine Arts, New York City... ian Bloch, "Lieut. RA Ee Claude C., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, 2229 California St..... Blue, Surg. Gen. Rupert: Bozrd of Visitors, Government Hospital for Tap) FI ee Ua I LE die Blue, Rear Admiral Victor, Chief Bureau of Navigation, Navy, The Wyoming..... Blumenberg, M. R., official stenographer to House committees, The Highlands. ....... Blundon, Benjamin A., Weather Bureau, 2103 BHSE Sb. devises na wanes Fe PRE 257 271 345 345 283 224 225 266 281 287 258 269 217 218 Boggs, 1 EB. foal chief of office of Isthmian Canal Commission, The Westmoreland... Boifeuillet, John T., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, The Winston........... Bokman, Bertha M,, Senate Committee on INANE ATI err cess rr ert o do5n Bond, Frank: Chief clerk, General Land Office, 3127 Newark St United States Geographic Board........ Bonham, Robert T., cashier office of Ser- geant at Arms, House, The Stafford. ...... Bonnaffon, Pay Insp. E. W, , Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D.C Bonner, Jesse W. , auditor, Porto Rico.....- Bonsteel, Jay A., Bureau of Soils, 2801 Eight- COMA DE its rare ah Booth, Fenton W., judge, Court of Claims (biography), 1750 Laiiont Bt vei. os neass Borchard, Edwin N., Assistant Solicitor, De- partment of State, Heese NE. 0 Boren, George E. , attorney, Department of FUSE, BILL Bt.r oe reer Bourne, Jonathan, jr.: Chairman Joint Committee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, Portland, Oreg... ov. crinrinia vain oie smu Chairman Joint Committee on Postage on Second-Class Mail Matter and Com- pensation for Transportation of Mails. . Bourne, Martin R., office of Third Assist- enh Joma General, 2627 Adams Mill Ee Ee Se Bowen, Ivan, Senate Committee on Five Civilized Tribes of Indians. ............... Bowerman, George F., District board of trus- tees, Public Library, 2852 Ontario Road. . Bowerman, =. B. , Blireau of Lighthouses, 15 W. Twenty-ninth St., Baltimore, Md. ..... Bowers, Claude G., Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections, The Cliffbourne. . Bowie, Edward H., Weather Bureau, 2826 Twenty-seventh Pi Bowie, William, Coast and Geodetic Survey, as oe SR se a eae Bowman, Robert, jr., Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, The Congressional............. Box, George G., disbursing clerk, Depart- ment of Labor, 130 Rhode Island Ave..... Boyd, Allen R., chief clerk, Congressional Library, 2107 O St Boyd, Charles, General Supply Committee, 1215 F St. NE Boye Lieut. Commander David F., Bureau 1 Steam Engineering, Army and Navy Bon George H., superintendent of Senate document room, 1129 Fourteenth St....... Boyd, L. S., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 604 Harvard Si oe Boy-Ed, Commander, German embassy, The Bachelors... Jo ii. Shilo s in sniiees Boyer, Carrie F.; Senate Committee to In- vestigate Trespassers on Indian Lands.... Boykin, James C., Bureau of Education, Woodside, Md i. oti siniste Heavies Boyle, G. P., Interstate Commerce Commis- Sion, The Ashley... ......c oot is imine verbs Boyle, Inspector R. B., Metropolitan police, VIO NCRHOR EE. ase ovo haat Bradbury, Frank M., Senate Committee on Pus Buildings and Grounds, The Ven- Bradford, C. R., Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Department of Justice, 828 Otis Place. RR aR LC SE SES 473 Page. Boardman, Mabel T., American National Red Ores. i rs ree Boardman, Inspector R. H., police, IBISR Bt... lL er, Boettcher, A. B., Division of Publications, Department of ‘Agriculture, The Alabama. Bogert, Medical Insp. E. S.: Board for Examination of Medical Offi- 287 397 215 280 281 474 Page. Bradley, Charles J Columbia Institution for the Déaf, PERI eB Ee Th 289 Bradley, William a , member Joint Commis- sion on Government Purchase of Pneumatic Tubes, Falkstone Courts. ........couuuuann 214 Brahany, Thomas W., chief clerk, hie House, The Northumberland... ......... 253 Braid, Andrew: Coast and Geodetic Survey, The Colum- ies St se sR ml 280 Untod States Geographic Beard. ....... 287 Brainard, Col. David L., office of chief, Quartermaster Corps, Army, 1737 H St.. 259 Brand, Charles J., in charge of office of mar- kets, Department of Agriculture, The Earl- ngion hee de eR 274 Brand, E. A., Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commerce, Monassas, V@ ece.uevnnoannn 279 Brandegee, Frank B., member Joint Com- i mission to Investigate Purchase of Amer- ¢ ican-grown Tobacco by Foreign Govern- nents, I32R BT. . canted lads 214 Brandenburg, Frederick H., Weather Bu- ! reau, DIOTIVED, ColD. - « gve orange sinniasom 275 Brandenburg, Dr. W. H. R. , office of Metro- politamiPoline. ilu. aR saa 397 Brandes, Carl A., House Committee on Inva- lid Pensions, 245 First St. NE. vonsrvn oe 224 Brandt, E. S., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, Tab eae Lr be sol 266 Bratton, Lieut. (Junior Grade) Leslie E., i Offiee of Juars Advocate General, Navy, LTR EE eT RE CR SP 267 Breckinridge, Henry S., Assistant Seeretary of War, 3139 Wyoming ANDI om wanin 257 Breckons, J. A., Senate Committee on En- + grossed Bills, ETE a ene 218 Breitenstein, Joseph C. , Senate Committee on , Civil Service and Retrenchment, The Chal- AONIe ca Ste Sk SH sn sha hy 218 Brengle, Paris E., District board of dental SXAIIAGTIRN el. nL Sl eh eA aa 395 Brennan, John C.: Naval Examining Board, 75 U St....... 269 Naval Retiring Board... .......coououueen 269 Board of Medical Examiners, 75 U St... 269 Brewer, H. H., foreman Senate folding room, CAEL CEE A RE TO LR Br EER 221 Brian, Henry T., Deputy Public Printer, 1244 COlRTRbIA BORE. «vcore mentation oo3 284 Briar, John, Senate Committee on Missiniopl River and T ributaries, 1208 Eighth St. 219 Bricker, Lieut. Commander William ¥, Office of Naval A The Benedick. 265 Briggs, Frank H., marshal, Court of Customs Appeals, The a i. i wl Si 342 Briggs, Lyman J., Bureau of Plant Industry, 3308 Newark St, Cleveland Park. ........ 275 Briggs, 0. H., Superintendent ‘of supplies, General Supply Committee, 622 C St. NE.. 288 Bristow, Joseph L., chairman Joint Commit- tee to Investigate General Parcel Post, 2612 Corfield St... iu atid Se ea 215 Brittain, Commander Carlo B., Bureau of Navigation, Navy, The Westmoreland. . 265 Brogsdale, Richard, House post offlce, 1209 C Ch 225 Bronaugh, ¥. H., Navy Yard and Station, WW ashington, D. x, 332 South Carolina Ave. roe a i a Le Be ke 267 Bronson,D. D., Forest Service, 1440 M St... 276 Brooke, Capt. Mark: Assistant to District Engineer Commis- sioner, 600 Twentieth St... ............ 395 : Superintendent of District Building... 396 " Brooker, William C., House Committee on Rivers and Harbors, 1810 G St FRI Le 224 Brooks, A. H., Geological Survey, 3100 Pr Newarle Bi... oie smntibdniinlic 273 . Brown, Edgar, Bureau of Plant Industry, eanham, Md... ec... reams ana 276 ~ Brown, George N., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 214 Thirteenth St. NE............ 285 Brown, J. Senate Somme on Coast and Insular Survey,i27 A St. NE......... 218 | Brown, J. P., House elevator conductor ise 225 | Brown, John D. , Senate Committee on Rules, E107 Maryland Ave, NE. r..ensewees {iis 220 Congressional Directory. Page. Brown, John E., House Committee on Ex- penditures in Department of Agriculture. . Brown, John I., principal examiner, Patent Office, ar eB ee RB RT Brown, Ralph M., Coast and Geodetic Survey, i324 Monroe St Sehr Society, 1855 a yi ASIA Sy Bruce, Charles ’E. , House Committee on the Eh Office and Post Roads, Cherrydale, Bruce, Charles M., Assistant Commissioner, General Land Office, The Albany. ........ Brun, Mr. Constantin, "Danish minister... .. Brancken, Ernest, Copyright Office, Congres- sional Library, {724 Kilbourne Place... ... Brunson, Anna, Senate Committee on Immi- gration Sie a a am i Bryan, A. H. Bureau of Chemistry, 8427 Thirty-$our th Place, Cleveland Park Bryan, gi Dee C., Director of Navy EE Bryan, Henry EF Ei clerk, State Depart- ol ci Bryan, ‘Nathan P.. a Joint Committeo to Investigate General Parcel Posh, The Commedia alii cvnavi am anh Bryan, William J.: Secretary of State (biography), Calumet Chairman ex officio Governing Board, Pan American Undon.. oo. canviiiianniannn Member of Smithsonian Institution. ..... Bryant, E. A., Acting Asst. Dental Surg. Board for Examination of Dental Diem, he BaTlBEion.. ve ise a al a Bryn, Mr. H. H., Norwegian minister, 1734 COBTOTHCHE AV. - wenmnreen nen saines Buchanan, Mrs. Beverley, House Committee on Public Buildings ‘and Grounds, 3432 Ashley Terrace Cleveland Park.......... Buck, John R. bureau chief, State Depart- ment, 1318 EMOrson $6... ....ccuewsenns Buckler, C. Howard, Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, 1022 B St. SE Budlong, Percy E., Oificial Reporter, Senate, Tra Cr I EEE Sn (LR a Buffington, William E., Gffice of Third A ssist- go Postmaster General, 1317 Harvard Bullitt, William Marshall, counselor Ameri- gan National Red CTOSS. . «nv. newirnnen amen Bumphrey, M. H., Senate ‘Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands, AS ChapIm BY. Li. co i i Bundy, Charles S., judge, Municipal Court, 22 ArwinE SL... adn ai a LR Bundy, James F., A, M., LL. M., Howard RL rn RT CR SE SN EE a Se Burgess, G. K., Bureau of Standards, The Mintwood Burke, Charles H.: Member Commission on Indian Tuber- culosis Sanitarium, ete., The Dewey. . Member Commission to Investigate In- Mon Aang.) nei shee sentra Burke, E. B., assistant engineer, House, 510 Sot BES.» vo Re eh SR ie ni ae aw Burke, John, Treasurer of the United & States, FAIRSEORE COULLS. «eo oe name enn tosssnnsns Burke, Moncure, assistant clerk, District Court of Appeals, 1810 Calvert St Burke, William E., Senate post office, 221 Ee lt SE Burleson, Albert S Pama Sonoral (biography), 1901 70 345 263 282 : Individual Index. Page. Burlew, J. M., Committee to Audit and Con- trol the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, La RR A a RT Burnap, George E., Office of Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument, Burnett, Phi W., House Committee on Immi- gration and Naturalization, Congress Hall. Burns, Findley, Forest Service, 1426 Park Ave. Baltimore, Md... au uuii.. Burns, WB. office of Dp of House, 214 Sag 5 “es ewesvsseacdrsoabeansna 917 Eighteenth AEs a ele mS RR BALE Burstyn, a Maximilian, Austro- Hungarian Embassy, The Bachelor ....... Busbey, L. White, International Joint Com- mission, Washington, D. Cc Butler, Charles Henry, reporter, Supreme Court, EEE RE A SS Butler, ¥% Jarvis, General Board, Navy, Brad- ley Road, Maywood, OT Sr a Robert, House post office, 717 A St. Butterfield, ari Bureau of Plant Indus- try, Rossiyn, V Butterfield, Dr. Ho L., member Com- mission to Investigate and Study Rural Credits, etc., Amherst, Mass. .............. Byington, Tr. D., Bureau of Pansions, Silver Spring Ma er re Byler, James W., division chief, General Land Office, 2904 Twenty-fifth St. NE..... Byrd, Richard Evelyn, secretary Joint Com- | mission to Investigate Purchase of Ameri- can-Grown Tobacco by Foreign Govern- ments Richmond, Va... ...l. ool. a Byrnes, "Edward M. , Bureau of Plant Indus- ry, 20:8eaton St. voli nes cinta Caffey, Francis G., Solicitor, Department of Agriculture, THE BenedieR. ...- + r0esnesne Caftanzoglu, Dr. L. L., Greek Legation. .... Cairnes, Lieut. C. es Revenue-Cutter Serve ice, 2112 Wyoming RYO. vie in, sues Calderon, Sefior Don Ignacio: Bolivian minister, 1633 Avenue of the Presidents... .camraen Sissies wis Governing beard, Pan American Union. Caldwell, David D. , attorney, Department of J ustice, Be Mount og BE. aun. Call, Lewis W., Office of Jud ge Advocate Gen- eral, Army, Garrett Fork, Ma, ov. aes Callan, Thomas H. ., judge, "Municipal Court, CE A a ee es, Callander, W. F., private secretary to Secre- tary of Agriculture, 4129 Ninth St Callaway, Gg. House elevator conductor, 200 ATEN ceils benrrt ohh: on arenes Callaway, S., House elevator conductor..... Calvert, Edgar B., Weather Bureau, Living- stone "Heights, TH as oe ees Calvin, Claude w., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, 1440 Rhode Island Ave. Calvo, Sefior Don Joaquin Bernardo: Costa Rican minister, 1329 Eighteenth St. Governing board, Pan American Union. Camden, Lieut. Bernard H. , Revenue-Cutter Service, 1869 Wyoming A si Cameron, Frank K., Bureau of Soils, 3207 Nt Oh. oes cee. ss or oe Cameron, John J., Sam Official Reporter, House, "505 Third S Caminetti, ay Commissioner General of Emigration, 444 8 Bi. ddin ovens Campbell, D. Cameron, House C Committee on the Public Lands, 119 Massachusetts Ave. . Campbell, Commander E. H., General Board, NOVY, FOO N BY ocean ninani hs cnsanes Campbell, ward Ko. chief justice, Court of Claims (biography), OT TB esis Congusl, Mr. Ivar, British Embassy, 1711 ceeesesescccenneccnceo nessun ERobanante 218 261 224 276 223 343 260 274 346 344 225 225 283 475 Page. Campbell, M. R., Geological Survey, The Mh SD ava sands Cana a = ae ea Ea Cs Waiter N., Bureau of Pensions, TA00 NOTEOTE Ts case eine dea san it as ne Campden, Viscount, British Embassy, The BR CTONOT ce ox svi va os wa nhs se rs Ered Campen, Marvin, Senate Committee on the TADIGRT so avis sa SASS al SS ei IT Comes M., director of labor, ete., Porto 30D cs ous oie gue vs ueis Seti a TA GEA eS aE Canary, John W., House document room, 423 New Jersey AVS SE ool iri i es Canby, Maj. James, Office of Depot Quar- termaster, The Brighton........canvuuruan Canfield, A. R. , tally clerk of the House, 416 H St. Np a Joseph G.: Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds, Danville, BY. i... Member Lincoln Memorial Commission. . Member Joint Commission for the Exten- sion and Completion of the Capitol Bailing. ai seis ers ah a phy aT Carland, John E., associate judge, United States Commerce Court (biography), 1305 BBO Sl: oh han Aa pa Pakoma PaZl. ccscsvcas cnoovemssnion sino» Carlson, Civil Engineer C. A., Bureau of Yards and Docks, 1878 Ontario Place. ..... Carlton, De Leon, assistant Soe Post Office Department, 1248 Girard St Carmack, L. V., Bureau of Insular Affairs, The Plas... o oie Fit Lo au its a Carmalt, J. W., Interstate Commercé Com- ‘mission, Florence Cotltbi a .oi Jesse van sean Carnes, J. H., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1227 Thirty-arst A I LL Carpenter, Albert M., Ayal librarian of House, 326 Maryland Ave. N Carpenter, Edward W., House LA on Military Afar... 0 von sani ig svat Carpenter, Frank W., executive secretary Philippine Commission, Manila, P.¥...... Carr, Frederick N., office of Secretary of Sen- ate, 640 Lexington Place NE Carr, Wilbur J., Director Consular Service, State Department, The Oniario. ious. a. Carrell, M. Drew, secretary Porto Rico...... Carr oll, Charles C., Bureau of Animal Indus- try, 6801 Sixth St., Takoma Park......... Carter, Charles D., member Commission to Investigate Indian Afiairs, 1818 Belmont 2 EO Se RE Carter, George H., clerk Joint Cominittee on Printing, 2440 Twentieth 8b... near vs Carter, Maj. Jesse Mcl., General Staff Corps, Army and Navy Ci Wiss covusaudisites uihen Carter, Josiah, Senate Committee on Educa- HOT ATH LAIOL: oe snare ora aiss sos oe ro] Case, Gunner Maxwell, avy Yard and Sta- tion, Washington, D. C...eai-casmerintons Castro, Dr. Alfredo de, Sn Legation, 1737.00 BL coos sale pe eas sn sian ws We emiss Catalani, Mr. Giuseppe, Italian Embassy... Cathcart, James M., Senate Committee on Printing 12% NBL resis ve ge Catheart, W. A., House Committee on the OTEIUOTION sme. coe oi cn NaRs ie Sew sb esriens Catlett, Robert, House Committee on Foreign Affairs, 120 C oe t. SE Ceccato, Mr. G. B 7 Lian Tmbassy....a... Cernuda, Sefior Don I. / ., Dominican Lega- HON ITER Sl uwsiiomssns soaps: Sonasos Chace, E. M., Bureau of Chemistry, 6905 Fifth St., Takoma Park. ...........0senens Chadwick, 'Paymaster D. V., Bureau of Sup- plies and Accounts, 3719 "Livingston St., UhoVy BRAS... «vmx h- sdunmsinsiions S5stsuk Chamberlain, Eugene Tyler, Commissioner of Navigation, Department of Commerce, The Ethel. ol. C5. ve. cnneee sunide camara’ - ehemes mana 273 214 214 267 349 224 346 266 280 476 Congressional Directory. Chamberlaine, Maj. William: Board of Ordnance and Fortification, The- Wyoming. ....:......u5 Coast Artillery Division Chambers, Capt. Washington I., Bureau of Navigation, Navy, 1834 80... o.oo. Chambers, William Commissioner Board of Mediation and Conciliation, 1431 Rhode Isondea vernon co a Chamorro, Seflor Gen. Don Emiliano: Nicaraguan minister, Stoneleigh Court. . Governing board, Pan American Union. Chance, Merritt O. , chief clerk Post Office De- partment, Falksfone Counts. zs .0.va0sm-t Chancey, John T., office of Doorkeeper of House, 480 MST... iit dress seas Chang, Kang-jen, Chinese Legation......... Chang Yin Tang, Mr., Chinese minister....... Chantland, W. T. , special assistant attorney, Department of J ustice, Virginia High’ Yonds, Va. oul namin Siren od Chapman, W. E., State, War, and. Navy Department, ‘Building, 714 Ninéteenth St... Chatterton, Edward W., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General, 1731 Park Roar ee Re EL RE VI Cheatham, Pay Insp. J. Johnston, Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, 2168 Florida Ave. . Chermont, E. Brazilian Embassy, 2419 Massachusetts Avo i a Chickering, Prof. J. W., Columbia Institu- HonfortheDeal. i... ii aioli Chilcott, Ellery C., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, TOS ERoNAd RE... iti Childers, Lulu V., Mus. B., Howard Uni- WISIN oo oe tens es ion an Bodie Chilton, W. B., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 2018-8. . r R i CSR Chilton, William E., member Joint Commit- tee on Printing, The Occidental. . .......... Chisholm, Daniel V., Government Printing Office, [FP SIth St BE... s Chittenden, F. H., Bureau of Entomology, B32 VTRONE A VO. eee vem ensrrns Choate, Charles F., jr., Regent of Smithson- ian, Boston, Mass: oie Des anon Choate, Warren R., Bureau of Corporation, IO NEWIOn BE. eae Chung Wen-pang, Mr., Chinese legation...... Clabaugh, Harry M., chief justice, District Supreme Court, 1843 Mintwood Place..... .. Cliies Bonde, Count, Swedish legation, The Baghelont orl woe ee saosin ol, Claffey, Thomas H. Priva secretary to Dis- trict Commissioner, The Woodward ...... Clancy, Robert H., private secretary to Assist- ant Secretary of Commerce, Y. M. C. A. Building. lll) amin doi a Clapp, Earle H., Forest Service, 7133 Seventh St., Takoma he Clapp, Emma C., Clark, A. Howard: Editor Smithsonian Institution, Florence Cort... sis National Museum Clark, Bennett C., clerk at Speaker’s table, Congress I Br AL ee, Clark, Charles C., Weather Bureau, 21 West Irving St. , Chevy Chase, M Clark, Champ: Speaker of the House of Repr esentatives, 2401 Massachusetts Ave............... Member Lincoln Memorial Commission. Chairman of Commission in control of House Office Building. ................ Chairman Commission on Reconstrue- tion of the Hall of the House of Repre- sentatives. oil nr iol Clark, E. T., Senate Committee on Private Land Claims Snr MU CE CE ad Clark, Edgar E., Chairman Interstate Com- merce Commission, The Connecticut. ...... Clark, Edward, House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, Congress Hall. . Clark, Commander F. H., Bureau of Ord- nance, Navy, The Westmoreland. ......... Clark, Passed Asst. Surg. G. F., Naval Medi- cal School, The Nor thumberland es wana Page. 279 345 Page. . Clark, Isaac, D. D., Howard University..... 290 Clark, Jormies, § Office of Doorkeeper of House, 101 B UAL DA eee eon Se 223 gir, John, U. S. Hons Garden, Maryland Ave.and Second St. SW. ....cooreeunrnntn 284 Clark, John H., commissioner of immigra- tion, Montreal, Province of Quebee......... 281 Clark, "Lincoln R. , special assistant attorney, Department of J ustice,1437°Q StL... 0... 262 Clark, Josadens Ses Bureau of Lighthouses, WIPE a esa an 280 Clark, Thomas B., Senate Committee on Ex- I enditures in Department of Agriculture, heCongressional. ..... co.cc mipemeersne 218 Clark, Thomas H., reporter, U. S. Court of Customs Appeals, The Burlington FIL 342 Clark, W. Everhart, House Committee on Rules, 1122 Vermont Ave ................. 224 Clark, W. M., House folding room, 216 Maryland AVENE. ih 223 Clarke, F. W.: Geological Survey, 1612 Riggs St.-c..... 273 National Museum... ... 00 C2 dan. 282 Clarke, James P., President pro tempore of IHORONMG. orl il een a 217 Clarke, Maj. Walter L., Office of Chief Signal Officer, Army, The ol mpia.......o... 0. 260 Claxton, Philander P., Commissioner of Edu- cation, Conduit Road and Ash by: St... 272 Clayton, Charles T., House Committee on Labor, 206: DBL... ot a Sia. 224 Clayton, Capt. Powell, General Staff Corps, 1210 Eighteenth St Sli vist bi siitnt orn 258 Cleary, Lieut. F. J., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. LEG a 267 Cleary, Francis J. P. , Division of Publications, Detain of Agriculture, 45 Randolph i ET rn Ts 278 Clem, Col. John L., Office of Chief, Quarter- - master Corps, Army, The Woodward «2250 Clements, Francis W. , first assistant attorney, Interior Department, 1460 Irving St.. 270 Clements, Judson C., Interstate Commerce Commission, 2113 Bancroft Place. ......... 285 Clifford, Passed Asst. Surg. A. B.: : Board for ay of Dental Officers, 2444 Twentieth Bt .......cccvivenn.n.- 268 Board for Examination of Medical Offi- COPS sans said wdaiviein men vies sisawaciosts 268 Naval Hospital. oo... ciara sini 268 Naval Medical School....ceocs-est nner. 268 Clifton, R. S., Bureau of Entomology, Chevy Chase, Ma oie. st. ud aden inher iit 277 Cline, Isaac M., Weather Bureau, New Or- LL Ed I ER Rp 275 Clinton, George, International ‘Waterways Commission, Prudential Building, Buffalo, bh NE RR In A AT be 284 Clinton, Capt. Thomas M., Marine Barracks. 270 Clopton, A. J., Senate Committee on Judici- ary, 928 Maryland Ave. NB... 0... 219 Clysam, N. P., House post office, 229 B St. a A SE ie LR Et To 2 Cobb, James A., Office United States Attor- ney, 101) TRIFEOnth St. ero iensecii s 342 Cobb, Nathan A., Bureau of Plant Industry, Falls Church, No ss cr 275 Cobb, William’ McKinley, House Committee on Pensions, 3157 Mount Pleasant St...... 224 Cochran, Capt. William B., Office of Chief, Quartermaster Corps, Army, 2816 Cathedral Ae a A CE SC SS 259 Cochrane, Allister, Official Reporter, House, : 2638 Woodley Place... lio. Soni. 226 Cochrane, J. L., Bureau of Mines, 1416 Fif- teemi Bh: iain tant 274 Cockrell, Francis M.: ; Board of Ordnance and Fortification, The : Gallon. oi seis seen nme tie aie 261 Director Columbia Institution for the Deal, a sre Soi 289 Cofer, L. 5 Assistant Surgeon General, Bu- reat of the Public Health, 1719 Connecticut TR in eT Le Sele fh ee 257 Cogan, Acting Asst. Dental Surg. W. N.: Board for Examination of Dental Offi- cers, The:Sherman-........ 5 .chns. 268 Naval Dispensary... c:--.iieciaees. 268 Naval Medical School 268 Individual Index. Page. Cogswell, E. M., Conference Minority of the Senate... tia A A Nn a, Cole, Lieut. Col. Eli K., Office of Commandant, Marine Corps, The Woodward. ............ Cole, Maj. William E., Coast Artillery Divi- sion, 172L QB. Lovie is aaa Coleman, Robert S., Bureau of Naturaliza- tion, Federal Building, St. Paul, Minn. ... Coles, "Malcolm A. , Special assistant peiorney, Department of Justice, Maplewood, Va. Collamore, E. W.: Board % Inspection and Survey for Ships, Board of Inspection for Shore Stations. . Collie, James R., House Committee on Claims. Collier, Frank w., office of Doorkeeper of House, YOASENB... on Collins, E. J., District board of medical exam- iners, 823 Eleventh St. NE Collins, Franklin W., attorney, Department of Justice, 1820 Newton St Collins, William J., Senate press gallery, 1165 NIneloonti Bt: oo. a or aioe Colquitt; Neyle, House Committee on Ways and Means, The Dewey 0 Go Cai ii Colwell, Eugene, iss bookkeeper, Senate, 402 Seventh St. N Colwell, J. H., principi examiner, Patent Office, 1433 T 8 Commons, John iN Commission on Indus- CONN an Binsin pital Concklin, E. F., Office of Public Buildingsand Grounds and Washington Monument, 520 Thirteenth-Str 0-2 7 ch as Confalonieri, The Marquis Cusani, Italian am- bassador: Soviet ero nL sh aT Connelly, John, jr., Senate Committee on Mis- sissippi River and Tributaries. ............ Sqgnor, Paul D., House post cffice, 408 Third Connor, Maj. William D., General Staff Corps, 2114 Bancroft Place rh se cecesmcececcncuncaccenaoaso0 snes nn on mn John S., Bureau of Lighthouses, The LT ee RS Re en RE LL 2 Cook, George William, A. M., LL. M., How- ard Dniversify =: 8 =o ti ge a Cook, James B., office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, Kensington, Md...... Cook, John J., office of Chief of Ordnance, Army, 925 M St Cook, Orator F., Bureau of Plant Industry, Lanham, Md. os rr a Se Cooksey, Geor ge R., private secretary to Sec- retary of Treasury, 323 E St. SE €oombs, C. W., office of Doorkeeper of House, 216 Maryland Aye, NIG: ~F ime Jose Cooper, Capt. George F.: Hydrographer, “Phe Westmoreland... .... United States Geographic Board....._.. Cooper, Ronoldo M., document room, Senate, TheCongressional.... cc... or ot tao. Soopers W. A., dispatch agent, State Depart- Cah L. C., Bureau of Plant Industry, TOROMY, PoE cones cetera re Cordova, Sefior Don Gonzalo S.: Ecuadorian minister, 31 Broadway, N.Y. Governing Board Pan American Union. . Cordova, Sefior Joaquin F., Ecuadorian Le- OT ere mss tae aL Cordovez, Sefior Don Carlos, Ecuadorian Le- n Cornell, Ernest, House Committee on En- rolled Bills, The Roland. .... cra Coronado, Jose: M., Pan ‘American Union, 2 Fourteenth St... wo A oF Cosby, Col. Spencer, Commission of Fine Arts. Costa Barradas, Mr. M. da, Brazilian Em- eR EARS RR Tain ro Couden, Rev. Henry N., D. D., Chaplain of House of Representatives, 2006 Columbia RO a ne Courts, James C., House Committee on Ap- propriations, 1837 Kalorama Road......... 218 477 Page. Cousins, L. B., office of Doorkeeper of Ifouse, TROVORAOIAD. + ssi ota re Coulter, Dr. John Lee, member and secretary “Corhmission to Investigate and Study Rural Credits, ete., 1855 Calvert St............... Coville, Frederick V.: Boron of Plant Industry, 1836 California Cowie, Paymaster. Gen. T. J., Chief Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The Highlands. . .. Cowles, Arthur W., principal examiner, Pat- ent Office, 1751 Columbia Road............ Cowles, William A., principal examiner, Pat- ent Office, 2626 Woodley Place. . Cowley, C. O’C., Bureau of Naturalization, 5 Beekman St., New York, N. Y Cox, Prof. Henry 3 ER Weather Bureau, Chi- ago, Wun. coon Ahi Ba Jn Cox, Lieut. Ormond L., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 2430 Twentieth St. ......._ ... Cox, Percy M., attorney, Department of Jus- ties, 60-Bryanb Sti... coh aa Cox, W. P., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1306 Cox, William V., Howard University........ Crandall, -E. P., office of Clerk of the House, Crane, R. Newton, dispatch agent, State De- partment... ST aN 2 ee Craven, Hermon W., Civil Service Commis- sioner, 1839 Ontario Place... . 00000 Crawford, Maj. Charles, General Staff Corps, Tho Dresden... ih. lis Crawford; George S., Navy Pay Office, 1920 Avenue of ire Presidents AE] Ta SAE Creekmur, v. Z olin of Doorkeeper of IIouse, 112 Socond SL. NE: nveiees in Cremer, John D., Official Reporter, House, oC BE. a aE Crist, Raymond F., Deputy Commissioner of N aturalization, 1720 Willard St Crockett, John C., reading clerk, Senate, Sil- ver Spring MdA. Sov oa ee Croft, S. M., division chief, Congressional Library, 316 Tenth St. NE Cronin, M. F'., House Committee on Expendi- tures i in Post Office. Department, 17 Third LR Crosby, Lieut. Col. William D., Soldiers’ Home... i elven Ont so SUNSET DIL SE Crosley, Commander W. S., duty in connec- tion with General Board, Navy, 2141 Wyo- ming Ave. GL iin Seiiel aaiio Cross, Inspector F. E., Metropolitan police, S19°Ninth St. SB. ooo aa Sins Cross, Harry L., House document room, 231 Second BEGW Su asa ToT Crow, Passed Asst. Surg. George B., Naval Medical School, Falkstone Courts. ......... Crowder, Brig. Gen. Enoch Ii: Judge Advocate General, Army, Seventeenth'St ..... J ..o..c 00 Matas O. F., Senate Committee onRules. Croxall, ™M. L., , disbursing clerk, Navy De- partment, 3001 P St Crozier, Brig. Gen. William: Board of Ordnance and Fortification, TE LR Ee YS LC A I Chief of Ordnance, Army ............... Crutehfield, George 8, Bureau of Naturali- axon, Federal Building, San Francisco, a: Shelby M.: Member Lincoln Memorial Commission, 1413 Massachusetts Ave.....0o. oo... Special resident commissioner, Lincoln Memorial Commission, Senate Office Building. = ln Ce La JRE Cummings, George J., A. M., Howard Uni- VOrsly RR SIRE Cummins, Anna B., Senate Committee on Mississippi River and Tributaries.......... 215 276 282 275 290 259 286 225 220 265 260 261 > 478 Page. Curriden, Samuel W., District board of trus- tees, National Training School for Boys... Currie, Rolla P., Bureau of Entomology, 632 Kesler Plage Ll |. co hii aig assy Currier, E. L., Office of Doorkeeper of House, 126 Kentucky Ave. SE Curtis, ¥. 8., chief clerk, Navy Department, ROR ANOY IL iil dais etn atin om hi Rt Cushman, John E., office of Doorkesper of H Custis, J. B. G.: District board of medical examiners, 912 Fifteenth Bloor aloe an ont amide. District board of medical supervisors... . Cuthbertson, C. W., Distriet board of dental CXAMENerS ct. Vl h esata. Ll Le Dall, W. H., National Museum.............. Dalton, Capt. Harry F., Office of Depot ‘Quartermaster, The Cairo. ...........1L. Daly, Charles P., Office of Chief, Quartermas- ter Corps, Army, The Truxton............ Dalzell, Charles N., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, Chevy Chase, Md.... Dalzell, John: Regent of Smithsonian Institution...... Executive committee Smithsonian Insti- TEED 1 ER SEEM Ly Ls Gr SS Daniel, John W., District special assessment clerk; 1622 Riggs Plage. ii. ooo a0il Joi Daniels, Charles C., attorney, Department of Justice, care of Department of Justice ..... Daniels, Josephus: Secretary of the Navy (biography), Single Ok, Wepdley Lane... ..........i.. Member of Smithsonian Institution...... Darby, John J., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1336 Vermont A Ve. ive. nna nie s sisisn Daskam, E. B., division chief, Treasury De- partment, 1433 R St Daugherty, Charles M., Bureau of Statistics, Department of Agriculture, 1437 Rhode Island AVe.cinnh. yd LS osama » Davis, Ben G., chief clerk State Department, 110 Oak Ave., Takoma Park.............. Davis, Charles M., assistant District assessor, VERDI Beto. oo. ool an Ge Davis, Eugene, Senate Committee on Judi- clary, The Portner....... con. ce snita svn Davis, George R., Geological Survey, Sacra- mente, Cal... ov loos, isthe. woh dnihicun Davis, Maj. Gen, George W. (retired), Amer- ican National Red Cross.........c.coue.... Davis, J. N., House Committee on War Claims, 708 Nineteenth S%..........o...o. Davis, John William, Solicitor General, De- partment of Justice, 1509 Avenue of the PTeslAeNI . . Jessa dt isin un she dumm Tb Davis, R. 0. E., Bureau of Soils, 1422 Web- El ES SE a I oA Davis, Lieut. Roscoe C., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 2819 Twenty-eighth St...... Davis, Willis J., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce, 327 New Jersey AVE BE i lil vee inner ie Bh we dis Dawson, Thomas F., executive clerk, Senate, 2572 University Plage; seb ian vidonn ues Day, Preston C., Weather Bureau, 1241 Eu- ed Bhan EL EE se Day, William R., Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 1301 Clifton 8t......... Dean, Russell, District harbor master, 653 East Copltol Bt... ove iii. als itam sy inpinn Deards, J. W., Senate folding room, 310 Sev- enth St. NE Deatrick, William O., division chief, Interior Department, Arlington, Va................ De Bruler, Ellis, commissioner of immigration, Seattle, Wash... i-cnon Jodtivaiede . vam De Coster, F. V., House document room, 228 A SUB ss vssmvinsvsssssesinn ns vimmsemvzsisee 395 395 395 282 Congressional Directory. Page. Defandorf, J. F., Office of Judge Advocate General, Army, Garrett Park, Md......... Deffenbaugh, Walter S., Bureau of Educa- tion, 2111 Conduit Read......... A De Forest, Robert W., vice president Ameri- con Najlonal Red Cross... coeiiaaioeac Defrees, Lieut. Commander J. R., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, The Woodward......... Dejean, Mr., French Embassy, 7 Hast Forty- frst 8, New. York. ... ..covnve so ioininenen Delano, Frederic A., Commission on In- dustrial Relations. ......ccocicinn: Jolovenn Densmore, John B., Solicitor Department of Labor, 1440 RB. St Dent, Louis Addison, auditor, District Su- preme Cours, 1317 Euclid St. ......c...o... DeShields, C. B., Senate Committee on Addi- tional Accommodations for the Library of Congress, Anacostia, D.C... .....couvee.. Desvernine, Dr. Pablo, Cuban Minister. .... Devol, Brig. Gen. Carroll A., office of Chief Quafermngier Corps, Army, 2021 Kalorama Road ...... CL A Devore, Maj. Daniel B., General Staff Corps, 1627 Avenue of the Presidents ............ De Vries, Marion Judge, U. S. Court of Cus- toms Appeals, The YOMING. corr eeennan Dewberry, Joe T., Senate Committee on Ju- diciary, The Spenter....cssse-wiservanesene Dewey, George: Admiral of the Navy, 1601 K St.......... ‘Washington National Monument Society. President General Board, Navy......... Dewey, Lyster H., Bureau of Plant Industry, A612 NET NBE. ... mows me miviolln in wins bwin ein ou De Witt, Grace, M. D., Government Hospital for INSane. .acsemssenasnnnn ET Diaz, Sefior Don R. Camilo, Honduran Smamsmsassnessedaananann Dillon, John T., division chief, War Depart- ment, 807 Eighteenth St... ..-...ooo....... Dimick, Hamilton, Office of Indian Affairs, 181d Monroe St... ... Hii. nis mms Dinger, Lieut. Commander Henry C., Bureau of Steam Egineering, The Montana. ....... Dinkins, Mrs. Mary, Senate Committee on Conservation of National Resources, The Congressional... .... .coe nines Juimiommmmemerae Disney, I. P., principal examiner, Patent Office, 128 Tennessee Ave. NE............. Disque, W. A., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, Y. M. C. / Dixon, Frank H., Government Hospital for ERE Rt ee a Re RR a Djevad Bey, Turkish embassy .....eecmeeens Doane, George P., Paymaster’s Department, Marine Corps, 1012 Fifteenth St............ Dobson, Paymaster B. M., Bureau of Sup- plies and Accounts, The Portsmouth. .... Dockery, Alexander M., Third Assistant Postmaster General, The Raleigh... ..._. Dodds, William D., Bureau of Pensions. 1318 (Ek CE SE en Ca eR Re Dodge, Pickering, United States Engineer Office, 1733 Oregon Ave.......-cuvnenennn- Dodson, F. E., assistant engineer, Senate, 1051 Onr0n Bho... srgorocen-rosrozren 2 Doherty, P.J., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, The RoCHESIOT...-ovvmemvnms vm zanres Dole, Charles E., Isthmian Canal Commission , The Delavan. ots innn oo dn sniieanin =i Donaldson, Charles S., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, 1324 L St...veuvenn.- Indwidual Index. Page. Donaldson, William J., jr., superintendent .- House press gallery, The Cecil. .......... 22 Donnelley, Florence A., Conference Minority, House, The Oakland Donovan, Daniel J., chief clerk, District au- Gitor, The Cecil, 624 Third 8¢.............. Dooley, Peter, file clerk House, 111 Maryland AR SR DR Ss a i a ai natal Dorman, J. H., jr., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 1213 Connecticut Ave........ .... Dorset, M., Bureau of Animal Industry, The I Dorsey, H. W., chief clerk Smithsonian In- stitution, Hyattsville, Md Dorsey, W. R., Senate Committee to Exam- ine the Several Branches of the Civil Service, By Ashmead Plaga... 0.0. 00. eevsien Dortch, Josiah H., Office of Indian Affairs, IO PB ROR. rnin said sae Douglas, Elsie Y., Senate Committee on Claims, The Sherman......cvcoocurveecs ven Douglass, Katherine, District nurses’ exam- ining board, 320 East Capitol St........... Douglass, Virginia Lee, House post office, 1712 Seventeenth 86... conn nsvsmmenn Dow, William J., Government Printing Office, 2020 North Capitol St Downey, George E., Comptroller of the Treas- ury, 1732 Sixteenth. St. .....cvnenevennsu. Doyle, Howard L., Senate Committee on Expenditures in State Department ....... Doyle, John 7T., Civil Service Commission, pv BN Pe I a ta ee a Se inn Drake, Edmund J., Senate Committee on Canadian Relations, 118 Third St. NE.... Drane, Albert G.: Division chief, War Department, 1802 Bidbourhe Place... ... 0... covnucsnciio- General Supply Committee ............. Drapes, L. C., Senate Committee on Rail- SOA, ie ie ey Draper, A. E., Bureau of Chemistry, 1474 Harvard St Draper, Charles W., Senate Committee on Public Lands, Y. M. C. A. Building....... Draper, Leonard, Bureau of Navigation, Navy, 008 ES, a ns Dresslar, Fletcher B., Bureau of Education, Nashville, Ten... .. a Driesbock, George B., division chief, General Land Office, 318 New York Ave........... Driscoll, Henry W., Senate Committee on the Philippines, 1463 Rhode Island Ave. .. Du Bois, Charles L., division chief, General Land Office, 1835 Monroe St..........u.... Du Bose, Naval Constructor W. G., Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1909 S' St...... DuBose, Medical Director William R., Board ul Medical Examiners, Navy, 1850 Kalorama J EAR PU sa Se Rp Se Dudley, Frederick R., division chief, General Land Office, Falls Church, Va............ Duenas, Sefior Dr. Don Francisco: Salvadorean minister, The New Willard Governing board, Pan American Union. Dufault, J. B., Senate Committee on Private Ton@Clodme. Lei diva vate seth. Duffy, James A., House post office, 1362 OE P00. i nsnn vanes mie Boo Th Dumba, Dr. Constantin Theodor, Austro- Hungarian Ambassador. ....eeeueuncueenn- Dunbar, Surg. A. W., Naval Hospital... ... Dunbar, William M., Postmaster of the House, he TL ORAOTIT Jl. na se emevids suwies Sues Duncan, David W., Office of First Assistant Postmaster General, 1303 Clifton St ....... Dunlap, I. H., Bureau of Fisheries, 1728 Q St. Dunn, Anne T., Conference Minority of the Senate, 101 North Carolina Ave. SE........ Dunn, Nellie H., Senate Committee on Cor- porations organized in the District of Co- Tumbia, 1864 Wyoming Ave. .o..ceeeucua-. Durfee, Benjamin, statistical clerk, Senate... Durston, Franklin S., Bureau of Standards, 250 Quackenbush St... ..... 0... ee. - Dutton, Robert W., office recorder of deeds, P20 RKIDOIINe PIO0E!. viv vcw smut s mini Duvel, J. W. T., Bureau of Plant Industry, 3822 Livingston St 23, 405 223 © 395 222 285 275 282 218 272 479 Page. Duvivier, Mr. Ulrich: Haitian minister, 1429 Rhode Island A ve. Governing board, Pan American Union. Dyar, William W., attorney, Department of Justice, Taloma Park rc een Dyas, B. D., inspector of paper, etc., Joint Committee on Printing, 1419 D St. SE .. Eakin, W. D., Senate Committee on the Philippines, 1489 Newton St.............. Eckhardt, Nicholas, jr., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, 44 Q St. NE... _. Eckstein, F. A., Senate post office, 3361 Wight- CO A idan ee Eddy, H. C., District public utilities com- mission, Falls Church, Va................. Eddy, R. T., Interstate Commerce Commis- SO, MLC A aR dee ae ag Edgerton, James A., purchasing agent, Post Office Department, 1439 Park Road. ...... Edson, John Jey, District Board of Charities. Edwards, Fraser C., Senate Committee on Judiciary, The Damariscotta, ............. Edwards, John, assistant engineer, Senate, 44 Bhode Islnd Ave. NE... ................ Edwards, Rear Admiral John R., president Board of Inspection for Shore Stations, 1218 New Bamodhite Ave... eoic. cries os ree Egerton, Graham, Solicitor for the Navy De- partment, The Donald... ......ve.svocaneee Egner, J. R., House post office.............. Eichelberger, Prof. W. 8:, Naval Observatory, 2303 Wisconsin AVe......... .seceiveegivenses Eldridge, M. O., Office of Public Roads, 1945 A a DRS eR RE se a Eliot, Samuel A., Board of Indian Commis- gloners, Boston, Mass... 00... .... Ellsworth, Goodwin D., Office of First Assist- ant Postmaster General, 1248 Girard St.... Ely, George S., principal examiner, Patent Office, The Batlinglone. cc ..cev preemie Emerson, Capt. Thomas H., U. S. Army, superintendent State, War, and Navy De- poriment Building. ... 0. ieee a. Emery, Senior Capt. Howard, Revenue-Cut- ter Service, 2415 Twentieth St........_.... Emery, W. O., Bureau of Chemistry, 2232 Cothedral Ave. ccs sido mins vines see Emmons, Lucius H., Office of Doorkeeper of House, 38 I SI NIE. J... Emrich, Lieut. (Junior Grade) R. P., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. C..". Erich Zwiedinek von Stidenhorst, Baron, Suifo Bunyan Embassy, 1384 Columbis, OBA, Col seit Snip red lene 2 ip Bo Rear se Ernst, Brig. Gen. O. H. (retired), chairman International Waterways Commission, 1321 Connientienb AVe. ine. coe at snr ms Ersfeld, W. R., Senate Committee on Trans- ortation and Sale of Meat Products, 1477 Eskew, Samuel W., House Committee on Dis- trict of Columbia, The Champlain. ........ Estabrook, Leon M., Bureau of Statistics, De- pariment of Agriculture, 1026 Seventeenth fai re a Fe ee Se es me Ses Esterline, Blackburn, special assistant attor- Dey, Department of Justice, 820 Connecticut Evang, Capt. George R., Board of Inspection for Shore Stations, 1824 Biltmore St....... Evans, George W., division chief, Interior Department, 928 Nineteenth St Evang, Lawson E., commissioner of immi- gration, San Juan, P. R Evans, Surg. S. G., Naval Medical School, S017 QBs vo uits ov Sriioine = Shs mie So sivia melaaten Evans, Walter H., Office of Experiment Sta- "1003, Clovond Park. ...oeecds seesrrsaonnss 346 283 262 214 220 279 221 396 285 263 395 219 221 269 267 225 265 348 4380 Evarts, Arrah B., M. D., Government Hos- piakiorImsane ooo or Evermann, B. W.: Bureau of Fisheries, 1425 Clifton St..... National Mm er a Shi ii in of Patents, LU Le eel te Sl eal Ti Fairbanks, Charles W., Regent of Smithson- ian Institution, Indianapolis, mdi Fairchild, David, Bureau of Plant Industry, 1331 Soil A Lt Bee rai W. W., American National Red EAA RE Re i Re Se SE SRT AL Farnum, Jessica L., secretary, Congressional Library, T6004 NoWton Bt. or Farrar, Robert W., Senate Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard, 1338: Parkwood Plage... .. ....... cians Farrell, James, Bureau of Naturalization, 712 01d South Building, Boston, Mass. ....... Farrell, Patrick J. Interstate Commerce Comission, 1 lifton St os. Farrington, , Bureau of Animal Indus- try, 1436 Chapin’ FE Am Ho Farrington, Marvin H., assistant attorney, Department of J ustice, 3033 Sixteenth St. . Fassett, Capt. William M., Division of Militia Affairs, he Beacon... tr oceanic os Fauntleroy, John S. Y., Senate Committee on Public Health and National Quarantine, The Champlain... ......0 0 lo Loa Favorite, Ben S., Geological Survey, Takoma A I RSI Fay, Prof. Edward A., Columbia Institution for GE neers in ees dnd ale Fay, W. J., superintendent Home for Aged and Infirm, Blue Plaing. oi Fay, Capt. William G., aid to Commandant Marine Corps, The BING. Featherstonhaugh, Thomas, Bureau of Pen- sions, 114 Maryland Ave. NE Fechteler, Capt. ‘A. F., aid for inspections, Navy Department, 1910 Biltmore St.. Felt, Harry V., minute and journal clerk, Senate, 2815 T'wenty-seventh St. .......... Ferguson, Frank E., Assistant Director Bu- reau bo Engraving ‘and Printing, 1239 Ken- En Ea PO Fe PL Be SN Ferris, Anne, House Committee on the Public Pio. Orin J., Chiet Clerk, Department of Justice, Kensington, Ma a mE Filley, Clyde, office of Sergeant at Arms of House, 1646 US. BE... Finch, James A. , attorney in charge of par- dons, Department of Justice, Grant Road. Finch, James D., Senate Committee on Inter- ea Finley, David E., vice chairman Joint Com- mittee to Investigate General Parcel Post, ST Ld Er ee es A fa eS SC LR Gd Finotti, Eva E. M., Senate Committee on Expenditures in War Degpartmert, 2629 Bhivteenth St. Ee Finotti, Frank M., Government Hospital for rE A LR SL LM ap Finotti, Mae, Senate Committee on Expendi- tures in War Department, 2629 Thirteenth ay The Plymouth A ee Fischer, Ernest G., Coast and Geodetic Sur- vey, The Ethelhurst.... oc... no 0000 Fischer, L.. A., Bureau of Standards, The Wellingtons... x oo ee Fisher, Aleyne A., Office of Second Assistant Postmaster General, 1757 Euclid St.-.. 22: Fiske, Rear Admiral B.A: Aid for Operations, Navy Department, Stoneleigh Court. oi General Board; Navy...........c-uern. Page. 289 276 Congressional Directory. Page. Fisler, Philip C., Senate Committee on Terri- tories, 1620. Trving 8-0. Coo. Ll. Fitch, William C., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, 1300 Massachusetts Ave Fite, ani W. C., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The Montana... Fitts, Harrison ¥., Bureau of Chemistry, 733 Taylor aN PRE A pr 276 Fitzgerald, John J.: Member of Commission in Control of Hou Office Building, Army and Navy a ESE OR Ba Member Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representa-~ a 215 Fitzsimmons, W. A., General Supply Com- mittee, 357% Thirteenth St................. Fleming, William B., foreign trade adviser, State Department, 918 Eighteenth St..... 254 Flenner, Harriet, Senate Committee on Ex penditures in Treasury Department. ..... 219 Fletcher, Duncan U Chairman Joint Committee on Printing, 1455 Massachusetts Ave................ Chairman Commission to Investigate and Study Rural Credits, ete.......... Fletcher, George E., Office Commissioner of Internal Revenue, "1333 Park Road... .. ~~. 256 Flint, A. L., Isthmian Canal Commission, Bethesda, Md Ey 286 Flood, Henry D., member of Joint Commis- sion’ to Investigate Purchase of -American- Grown Tobacco by Foreign Governments, The Bentediek. o.oo 214 Flournoy, Richard W., j1., bureau chief, State Department, Bethesda, vs 54 Flynn, Herbert S. , Office of Chief Signal Offi- cer, Army, 2415 Twentieth St ............. 260 Flynn, L. J., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1734 pr ATR Be 285 Flynn, William J., Chief Secret-Service Divi- sion, Speedway eee 256 Foght, Harold W., Bureau of Education, Kirksville, A an a 273 Foley, Senior Capt. D. P., General Life-Sav- ing'Service, The Cairo... ........ ...... 256 Foley, F. M., House post office, 231 Second rea 225 Foley, J . C., Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections, 638 East Capitol St Foley, Lieut. Commander Paul, duty in con- nection with General Board, Navy, 2320 Nineteenth Sr ee 268 Foley, Samuel J., disbursing clerk, House, 121 Maryland Ave. NE Folk, Joseph W., Solicitor Department of State, The New Willard... ............. 254, 263 Foltz, Lieut. Col. Frederick S., General Staff Corps, Ey ee ei Ean Fonseca, Capt. A. J. da, Brazilian Embassy, 1916 Avenue of the Presidents. ............ 344 Forbes, E. E., Division of Accounts and Dis- bursements, PU Girard St... aes 278 Ford, Cornelius, Public Printer, 1110 East Capitol % A I Ce ae Ee 284 Foree, C. Office of Comptroller of the EE The Rockingham... .....,... 256 Forster, Rudolph, executive clerk, White House, 3204 Seventeenth St................ 253 Fort, George, Deputy Assistant United States Treasurer, Ss Th mm Abe Ae 256 Fort, James L. , House Committee on Educa- tion, 427 New J erfsey Ave: SB... 224 Fortier, S., Office Experiment Stations, 2310 Nineteenth 8b... 278 Foster, John W., director Columbia Institu- Hon Tor the Deal ori ora as 289 Fout, Virginia G., Senate Committee on Manufactures, The Peway . . ieee 219 Fowler, W ilbur W., division chief Depart- ment of Commerce, 3604 New Hampshire 78 PT A Towns. William C., District health depart- ment, SE Re as 397 Fowler, Willis J., Office Comptroller of the Currency, Hammond Court ............... 256 Fox, Charles, office of Sergeant at Arms of House, 000 Elliott St: NE. ..... oo .hes, 222 Indwidual Index. Fraile, R. E., Division of Militia Affairs, The Lemmon. i roi CN a Francis, Passed Asst. Surg.- Edward, Assist- ant Director Hygiene Laboratory, The Beverly. «co i a i ei da Francis, John, jr., Office of Indian Affairs, 1326 Euclid St Frank, Thomas E., assistant Chief Clerk of House; Warrenton, Via =. tow oiatiiy Frankenfield, Prof. Harry C., Weather Bu- reau, 1735 New Hampshire Ave............ Frankfurter, Felix, Bureau of Insular Affairs, 1727-Nineteenth 86-05. 00 0 00 Franz, S.I1., A. B., Ph. D., Government Hos- pital for Insome:> iL ol oh hia Frawley, D. L., captain, Capitol police, 1314 Connecticut Ave. ........ 0. Co 00 nh. Frazier, R. T., First Assistant Commissioner of Patents, 3016 Thirteenth St............. French, Daniel C., chairman Commission of Fine Arts, New York Cll. eo damwanan git Freyer, Lieut. Frank B., Office of Judge Advo- cate General, Navy, 1929 S St Frost, Arthur C., Senate Committee on Terri- tories, The Dunsmere..................=.. Fry, Henry, Senate Committee on the Census, Phe Qecidenial.. rss tos eras Fullam, Capt. W. F., aid for personnel, Navy Department. 0 Sb oa a Fullaway, Charles H., Office of Third Assist- ant Postmaster General, The Ontario... ... Fuchs, W. R., Division of Accounts and Dis- bursements, 2514 Wisconsin Ave........... Gaddess, E. L., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 2623 Connecticut Ave. ............ Gage, Lieut. Col. Moreton F¥., British em- bassy, 2622 Sixteenth St.....0........... = Gaillard, Lieut. Col. D. D., Isthmian Canal Commissioner, Empire.................... Gaines, S. M., division chief, Treasury De- partment, 1257 Hamlin St., Brookland.... Gale, H. S., Geological Survey, 3802 Jocelyn St. Gallaudet, Prof. Edward M.: Columbia Institution for the Deaf ....... Washington National Monument Society. Gallinger, Jacob I., chairman National Forest Reservation Commission, 2113 O St Galloway, Beverly T., Assistant Secretary Department of Agriculture, Takoma Park. Galloway, Charles M., Civil Service Commis- sioner; TheWoodley ....ol co iui. Galloway, Lieut. (junior grade) R. S., navy yard and station, Washington, D. C Gama, Mr. Domicio da: Brazilian ambassador, 1013 Avenue of the Presidents’... iar le Governing board, Pan American Union. Gandy, Col. Charles M., Office of Surgeon General, Avy, 1915-881... oo... . Gann, E. E., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion; The Wyoming oi... nol. isis Gannett, Henry, chairman United States Geographic Board... Locsin Gantt, Daniel J., office of Commissioner of In- ternal Revenue, 3532 Eleventh St......... Gardiner, William, - Senate Committee on Pacific Railroads, 467 Pennsylvania Ave.. Gardner, John J., member Joint Committee to Investigate General Parcel Post, Egg Harbor City, N. J Gardner, Obadiah, International Joint Com- mission, Rockland, Me... i.....- 0. Garges, Daniel E., chief clerk, District Engi- neer Commissioner, 121 Twelfth St. NE... Garlington, Brig. Gen. E. A., Inspector General, 1827 Jefferson Place... .......... Garner, Wightman W., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1367 Parkwood Place............ Garrard, James, Senate Committee on Pen- sions, The: Loudoun... ... Aw isi cana is Garretson, Austin B., Commission on Indus- trial Relations... i. ai on Garrison, Lindley M.: Secretary of War (biography), 1830 Con- neetient-Ave. te tT rl a, Member of Smithsonian Institution.... Garrison, Passed Asst. Surg. P. E., Naval Medjcal School, Lyonhurst, Va........... 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——32 Page. 220 257 282 Page. Gates, Merrill E., Board of Indian Commis- sioners, Washington, DD. C.evidan. iil 288. Gatewood, Medical Director J. D.: Naval Hospital, 1829 Nineteenth St..... 268. Naval Medieal School................... 268 Gauss, Henry C., special assistant attorney, Department of Justice, 1403 Webster St... 262 Gawne, Asst. Naval Constructor J. O., Bureau of Construction and Repair, The High- land... orion SIND R SINT 266- Gay, R. H., assistant engineer, Senate, 1725 Newton 8b. cin Ls EOE 221. Gayler, E. R., Bureau of Yards and Docks, Army and:-Navy Club... 0000 0 226 Geare, R. I., National Museum, 1011 Otis Placa: oo. CRe Shahy Uh tn Br 282 Gensler, Henry J., Official Reporter, Senate, The Coneard, .. 0 ers sie iS 226 Georgeson, C. C., office of Experiment Sta- Hons 8a so ae eR a 278. Gerdine, T. G., Geological Survey, 1850 Mon- Toh atl Ln a een 273". Gerry, C. F., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1353 Columbia Read. ......0...._ .... 285 Gessford, Inspector Harry L., Metropolitan ° police, 11 Irving SF... 5 2 oo ol, 397 Gibson, Charles A., House Committee on Aghienliopet 2 Sih Lo oli nls 223 Gibson, G. S., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 301 Carlisle Court... ...... ...... 28%: Gibson, Dr. W. S., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, 2736 St. Paul St., Baltimore, Md. 267" Giffen, Lieut. (junior grade) R. C., navy yard and station, Washington, D. C....... 267° Gilbert, Cass, Commission of Fine Arts, New Youledity-ooars eri Soo ah, 287 Gilbert, Chester G., National Museum ...... 282" Gilbert, Henry L., attorney, Department of Justice, 2825 Twenty-eighth St............ 262 Gilbert, John J., Coast and Geodetic Survey, : Ne Og OlR, re i eee 286° Gil-Borges, Sefior Dr. Don Esteban, Vene- zoelanlegation. ou. nie inn 349" Gilchrist, Maj. Harry L., Division of Militia Affairs, "The Beason... ice. aiieo... 258: Giles, Arthur H., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1853 Mintwood Place............... 272: Gilfry, Henry H., Chief Clerk, Senate..... AT Gillen, F. F., office of Public Buildings an Grounds and Washington Monument, The OW res ae ahs ai ale fen ca a 26% Gilmore, John H., House Committee on In- dustrial Arts and Expositions, The Corn- 5 Dt ei sri ee 224 Gilpatrick, Walter J., Senate Committee on Notional Banleg:=. 00 0, ox. Lo, 219" Given, Ralph, office United States attorney, ELAR Er UR re i Sn 342 Glascock, Alfred, M. D., Government Hos- pitaller Insane... 0. Cob ari Lal 289: Glascock, Eustace S., principal examiner, Patent Office, 3564 Eleventh St... ......... 271. Glenn, Edward A., Journal clerk of House, 507 Stanton Place N.C... i aia .. rs 222. Glenn, John M., American National Red oR pe Re Ss om SN 287 Glennan, A. H., Assistant Surgeon General, Bureau of the Public Health, University CUD ss et rea Se 257 Glennon, Capt. J. H., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, The Oakland .....c... uo 266" Gliem, Christian P., office of Superintendent of the Capitol, 642 East Capitol St......... 226+ Glover, Charles C., Washington National Monument Society. isi: chive snseemese- 2589: Glover, Lieut. Jesse W., Revenue-Cutter Service, The Duddingion...ceee-e aaa 257 Glover, John J., Chief of Division of Accounts, Department of Justice, 1505 R St.......... 268 Goethals, Col. George W., chairman Isthmian Canal Commission, Culebra................ 288 Golejewski, Nicolai, Russian Embassy, 1777 Chmreh 86: Ci rn a 348. Gomez, Capt. Enrique V., Peruvian Legation. 347 Gompers, Samuel J., division chief, Depart- ment of Labor, 7i8 L. St. NE. ............ 28% Goodlett, H. A., office of Doorkeeper of House 48 QS gl 228 481 482 Page. Goodwin, Edward C., Senate librarian, 1865 Kalorama Road... 0 0 fee ali us Gordon, Robert B., Sergeant at Arms of House, 204 A SE. 8.0: oi. oii. tee Gorden, Thurlow M., special assistant attor- ney, Department of Justice, The Dupont. . Gordon ill T., bookkeeper of the House, YEE Tr BL LR EO EN Gore, Caroline E., Senate Committee on Agri- + senltureand Forestry... .. io... oon Gore, Dixie, Senate Committee on Agricul- ture and Forestr , The Congressional...... Gore, J. Rogers, House Committee on Dis- trict of Columbia, The Brunswick. ........ Gore, Thomas P., member Commission to In- vestigate and Study Rural Credits, ete., 1363 Mintwood Place... .:. in. iinsmsii- = Gorgas, Col. William C., Isthmian Canal Com- YISSION, ANCOIE. .. .2. tne a i Bes nay ie sai Gormley, William V., office of Doorkeeper of House, 312 Second St. SB. .......... .L... Gould, Ashley M., associate justice, District Supreme Court, 1931 Sixteenth St......... Gould, C. G., principal examiner, Patent Of- fice, 3218 Nineteenth St.................... Grabill, I. R., District superintendent of roads, Talon. co coe. Lil nai Graham, George F., Interstate Commerce Comnzission, 1352 Perry St... i. oon. Ju. Graham, Samuel J., Assistant Attorney Gen- eral, 1312 Connecticut Ave...........0...... Graham, William S., Bureau of Naturaliza- tion, 446 Railway Exchange Building, Den- REY BRIO St enn a ee a Grant, Capt. Heathcoat S., British Embassy, a Grant, Hubert, Senate Committee on Military Affairs, Hyattsville, Md Graves, Henry S., Chief Forest Service, 2118 dL RO a Graves, James Harwood, assistant attorney, Department of Justice, The Rochambeat. . Gray, George, Regent of Smithsonian Institu- tion, Wilmmgton, Del... uc... itt aus Gray, Samuel H., Official Reporter, House, GUL Fr RL AE enn re Tae Grayson, Passed Asst. Surg. C. T., Naval Dis- pensary, The Montana.................... Graysen, Joel, House document room, Vi- HHL ne Ce en RR Greathouse, C. H., Division of Publications, Department of Agriculture, Fort Myer ET ee I SE ee Greble, Col. Edwin St. J.: Boyd of Ordnance and Fortification, 2015 SN GER a A BL General Staff Corps Greeley, W. B., Forest Service, 625 Dahlia St., OI PO ia le aids hoi in sini Green, Medical Director Edward H., Naval Retiring Board, The Northumberland-.__. Green, Lucy ¥., Senate Committee on Fi- LT De le A a Gregg, W. R., House Committee on War Claims, The Calre...... ..c vara onsnion nia Gregg, William S., special assistant attorney, Department of Justice, 1450 Clifton St... . Gregory, T. W., special assistant attorney, Department ofJ ustice, 1709 H St.......... Griffin, Appleton P. C., Chief Assistant Li- brarian of Congress, 3556 Macomb St., Cleve- IL ee RR Ne Griffin, James M., Coast and Geodetic Survey, Sts Dent Planes... x... il as as Griffin, Michael B., Senate Committee on En- rolled Bills, 128 B St. NE.................. Griffin, Robert S., Engineer in Chief, 2003 loro Boal... eens esi sag Gronna, Asle J., member Joint Committee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, The Mendota... .... 0... a: es taveilosns 217 222 262 222 218 261 258 250 Congressional Directory. Page. Grosvenor, Edwin P., special assistant attor- ney, Department of Justice, The Marl- byirie RC SS 262 Grover, N. C., Geological Survey, 1460 Bel- ONE Si. os i ees 273 Grow, Gait Th 3.3 Naval Hospital, 1644 Columbia Road ... 268 Naval Medical SChOOI. ..u-.ooonvnn. on. 268 Gsantner, Otto C., principal examiner, Patent Office, Twenty-fourth and Franklin Sts. i a ri 272 Gunnell, Surg. Gen. Francis M. (retired), Washington National Monument Society.. 289 Gunnell, Leonard C., assistant in charge of Regional Bureau for United States, Inter- national Catalogue of Scientific Literature, 1518 Twenty-eighth St........ccc..on a. 282 Gutheim, A. G., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 3433 Oakwood FOrTare...... lin.b 285 Haag, Louis, House post office, 121 Maryland Ae, NE i atl ee id 225 Hacker, Morris, District inspector of build- ings, 1825 Adams Mill Road................ 396 15th Paul K., House post office, 508 Tenth Me RP PR sa 25 Hadley, Amos, division chief, Interior De- partment, 1330 Harvard St... .....cocceuua. 270 Hagner, Alexander B., retired justice, District Supreme Court, ISIS H St... ..... i... 343 Haimhausen, Mr. Haniel von, German em- BODY x ns sheliendr sls ae Ed sh sw do ole oR aha 346 Hale, Albert, Pan American Union, Cherry- 00, Ve es ina as tiie HL be we 283 Hale, Harry S., Senate Committee on Pacific Islands and Porto Rico, 132 East Capitol St. 219 Hale, Lieut. Col. Harry C., Division of Militia Affairs, 2141 Wyoming Ave. en ensnennnnn.. 258 Hall, Prof. Asaph, Naval Observatory....... 265 Hall, Bartow H., Senate Committee on Wom- an Suffrage. ool dont sa si i. oy 220 Hall, Capt. Dickinson P., aid to Commandant Marine Corps, The Cordova................ 269 Hall, John W., Bureau of Pensions, Glen Bebo, MA, ci sire riiiviingl dbaul 272 Halli, L. J., chief bill clerk, House, 1227 Elev- OED fe rn Sd a ak 222 Hall, Percival, president Columbia Institu- tion for the Deaf, Kendall Green........... 289 Hall, William L., Forest Service, 917 Six- a a ee Ee 276 alley, Noah W., Bureau of Pensions, 521 FourtlSt. co ol Gna aii ae hae 272 Halsey, Edwin A, office of Sergeant at Arms of Senate, The Stamton. . 0 va 220 Halsey, John W. D., Senate Committee on the Census, The Stanton. ..... ........... 218 Halstead, Capt. A. S., Board of Inspection and Survey for Ships, Army and Navy maa 269 Halstead, ¥. M., division chief, Treasury Department, 1423 Madison St........._.... 255 Haltigan, Patrick J., Reading Clerk of the House, 1813 Kalorama Road. .............. 222 Hamilton, John, Office of Experiment Sta- tions, 1215 Clifton 8. oui oil sidan ba 278 Hamilton, Capt. Wesley W. K., Office of Judge Advocate General, Army, The Marl- rg a 259 Hamilton, W, M., Naval Observatory, 2307 Washington Cirele.:........ 0. oi ied 265 Hamilton, William, Bureau of Education, 3710 Pafterson St., Chevy Chase, D. C..... 273 Hamlin, Carl, office of Doorkeeper of House, AER 293 Hamlin, Charles 8., Assistant Secretary, Treasury Department, 1229 Nineteenth St. 255 Hammond, John C., Naval Observatory, 2320 Hall Place... i..c.oonii., ns ond 265 Hammond, Julius H., receiving clerk, Gen- eral Land Office, 1408 Fifteenth St... ...... 271 Hammer, Charles D., House Committee on Banking and Currency, 100 C St. SE_..... 223 Hanger, G. W.W., secretary and assistant commissioner Board of Mediation and Con- ciliation, 2344 Massachusetts Ave.......... 288 Hanley, James H., House Committee on Ex- penditures in Treasury Department, The Pudiey........ FPA Eo be ee PRE ENE 224 J p f i \ Indwidual I nde Page. Hannan, John J., Senate, Committee on Cor- porations Organized in the District of Columbia, 1905. EH. 85... . . . ca vscsvaninanninn Harban, Walter S., M. D., board of visitors, Government Hospital Re Insane: Lou Harding, Rt. Rev. Allred, D. D., Washing- ton National Monument "Society .. aa Harding, Capt. Arthur E., Office of Judge Co General, Navy, "Army and Navy Harding Lieut. Col. Chester, District Engi- neer Commissioner, 1411 Twenty-first St. . Harding, Damon Ww, , office of Building and Grounds, Congressional Library, 1344 East Capitol BE. oot osnihh sumed sisi aavi sno is Hargrove, J. O., District inspector of asphalt and cements, 1603 O St Hargrove, M. C., District purchasing officer, 1603 O St Harlan, B. A., District public utilities com- mission, 64 Rhade Island Ave. io dnl ; Harlan, James S., Interstate Commerce Com- missioner, 1720 Rhode Island Ave.......... Harper, James E., division chief, Treasury Department, Chevy Chase, M a Harper, N. C. , deputy clerk, police court, The CHoatbrfiell oe fortis ial Das ous Harrah, Benjamin F., Isthmian Canal Com- mission, 1658 NeWIon St. coo vinidirs tan Harralson, Morris X., Senate Committee on Education and Labor, 907 Thirteenth St.. Harriman, Mrs. J. Borden, Commission on INAUSITIAl ROBINS. ovr errs iss xvas Harris, G. A. Z., House post office, The PRI RATE oes oma Harris, Henry J., division chief, Congressional Library, The Pee sn I Tae Harris, Maj. Moses, general treasurer National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. .... Harris, William J., Director of the Census, 2141 Wyoming AW iain Harrison, Chester, House Committee on the Library, THE CONEOTd. « iv» + omar anal Harrison, Floyd R., private secretary to Assistant Secretary of Agrieulture, The AROSE Jul nal elon see bien Harrison, Francis B., president Philippine Commission, Manila, P. I mescmarae manna. Hart, Edw. 3. District excise board, 624 Tian rE Sh Le SACRE Bh yp SL Hart, E. H. Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, The Brighton os laniainl 30 Lae Hart, Lutie M., Senate Committee on Paeific Islands and Porto Rico, 214 B St. SE...... Hartley, Charles P., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, SO CmIBE BY. vs. ii Hartinen, B., House Committee on Elections cE Re Re Te RL LY RR Hartmann, Capt. Edward T., Office of Chief, Quar termaster © JOTDS, Army, The West~ More. oie. so. inal as ha Harts, Col. William W.: In charge Office of Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument, R00 Bhs salsa ii A ae Member Lincoln Memorial Commission. Harvey, Frederick L., secretary Washington National Monument Society, 2146 Florida Harvey, Lieut. Urban, Revenue-Cutter Serv- ice, The BEROIHGIE,. os tener ails Harveycutter, Austin, attorney, Department of Justice, Fhe Columbif. « . vous 'vononess an Hasbrouck, Lieut. Col. Alfred, Office of The Adjutant General Stoneleigh Court... ..-. Haskell, Prof. E. x. International Water- Ways Commission, Cornell University, Bthaen, NM. XY oor na ni ais Haskell, ‘William C., District superintendent of weights, measures, and markets, The aT SR Hassall, James C., Government Hospital for essai Ot ue Sen Hastings, Charles H., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 3600 Ordway S6.....o.u Hastings, Thomas, Commission of Fine Arts, New York City EE RT Hs BE JR AE ST 218 483 Page. Hatcher, Warren iL messenger at Speaker's table, oC A Hauke, Charles Be gi of Indian Affairs, 605 Massachusetts Ave. NE. _............. Havenith, Mr. E., Belgian minister.......... Havenner, George C. ychief clerk, Department of Commerce, Minnesota Ave. and Eight- eenth BE BB uc cinins, cain ibaa. Hawken, Samuel McC., office United States attorney, Wisconsin Ave. extended... .... Hawks, Emma B., assistant librarian, De- partment of Agriculture, ION St. wl Hawley, Willis C., vice chairman National Forest Reservation Commission, The WoOodIET. sis dawns deniiheins von bid am adas ola HoyRes J. X., Bureau of Chemistry, The 0 Hy, Elment B., Office of Third Assist- ant Postmaster General, Westover St., Clarenden,” Va... vavidi canadian ail, Hazen, M. C., District surveyor, 817 C St. SW Heap, Pay Director S. L., Slicimens officer, Navy Department, 1734 Ee eel. Hearin, Eugene A., House a, roo. Hearn, "Maj. Clint C. , Coast Artillery Division, 1819 I St Hearne, Edward D., Auditor for State and other "Departments, 1313 X St Heartsill, B. L., office of Docrkeeper of House, The Troquois. ERLE ST er RE Hedekin, Maj. Charis A., Division of Militia Alas, 2284 Q Bll oui Ji sviiiciedesings Hedry de Hedri iy de Genere Aba, Stephen, Austro-Hungarian Embassy ..cceee. oo... Heistand, Col. Henry OC. S., office of The Ad- juiens General, 1532 Avenue of the Presi- ONES Al ets sumisinis usin eee ea oie a Hemtler, P. L., House elevater conductor, 311 F Li St. SE PRL sri E. B., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 1405 Déipsed Plage. 7. 0 sia Henderson, John B. , Regent of Smith- sonian Institution, ‘Waihingion, lS] Hengstler, Herbert C., bureau chief, State Department, 2816 Twenty-seventh BC Henry, Prof. Alfred J., Weather Bureau, 1322 Columbia Road Henry, E. S: principal examiner, Patent Office, 1320 Columbia Road Henry, I. C., House elevator conductor, 224. Peer at Ni me esa De Henry, Oliver H., assistant file clerk, House, THE Loo ROVON oo. ci oe i Henry, Samuet R., District fire Seprement 909 Lawrence St., Brookland, D.C... ...... Henshaw, BH. W., Chief Bureat: of Biological Survey, Fhe OTAATIO. renee aise in ured Hepburn, Lieut. Commander A. J., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 1826 W yoming Ave.. Hepburn, W illiam P. , member Joint Commis- sion for the Extension and Completion of the Capitol Building, 1124 East Capitol Bl i ed tn a as en Heroy, W. B. Geological Survey, 3030 New- ark St Herron, W. H., Geological Survey, 1706 Ore- BOTEANVE. i i i eel San sen rae Herron, William C., assistant attorney, De- par tment of Justice, 1901 I St Hershler, Nathaniel: General Bia Corps. tae de sin vit dat UL Secretary Board of Commissioners, Sol- giersi Home. Juin iile Ld Yael et Herwarth, Maj. von, German Embassy, The Alban; Hess, Addie S., Senate Committee on Dispo- sition of Useless Paps, ell... i Hoe ravi B., Metropolitan police, 506 A t. 8 Hewes, Laurence I., Office of Public Roads, . DD. No.2, Alexandria, ST RRA tS Hickey, Edward Tes Senate’ Committee on Military Affairs, 1805 Lawrence St. NE... Hicklin, Emma, ‘Senate Committee on the Library Jp CS SO ERLE SLE Lhe 222 272 344 484 Page. Hickling, D. Percy, visiting physician, Wash- ington Asylum and Jail, 1304 Rhode Island Hickman, Capt. Edwin A., Office of Chief Sig- nal Officer, 2436 Twentieth RR eR Hickman, Richard W., Bureau of Animal Industry, 2390 Piet BE Hicks, Cleveland H., Senate Committee on Five Civilized Tribes of Indians, The Ro- and sR ak ee Eee ss Higgins, Charles P., Sergeant at Arms of Senate (biography), The Winston... ..... Higgins, Paymaster J. S., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, 1725 AMS Hidreth, David M., United States Geographic Board, 131 TWollth 86. NE. ove es Hill, George A., Naval Observatory......... Hill, Wallace, House Committee on Pensions, 17862@ Bb. oo i eRe oA Ln Hillebrand, W. F., Bureau of Standards, SZ NoWaTE Bh. oh Hillman, Maj. L. T., Office of Chief of Ord- nance, ‘Army, TROODIATIO. 2 ive viernes Hillyer, ' Andrew F. , Howard University. . Hine, H. 0., District board of education . Hines, Capt, Frank T., office of Chief, Quar- termaster Corps, Army, The Toronto. ..... Hinkamp, Lieut. Clarence N., Bureau of ‘Steam Enpinsening, Army and N: avy Club: Hinton, A. P., Office of Doorkeeper of House, VISThst 8 oi Hiroshi Saito, Mr., Japanese Embassy...... Hoadley, Frank M. , division chief, War De- partment, 2303 PHSO8E, oo ire: Hodge, Frederick W.: In charge Bureau of American Ethology, 2312 Nineteenth 80.2.0... 0.0 United States Geographic Board.......: Hodges, Charles R., Office First Assistant Postmaster General, 306 Randolph St. NE. Hodges, Col. H. F., Isthmian Canal Commis- gioner, Culebra... i. ora in 0h Hodges, H. W., iin District Court of Ap- Pedls, 208 QBL. ch. bv ie aol ai Hodges, Lieut. Sl Henry C., jr., General Staff Corps, 1719 Eighteenth St_......_.... ~ Hodgkins, i. G., Naval Observatory, Bethesdn, Md... 0 boli oss isis Hoffman, Lieut. Leonard G., secretary to Admiral of the Navy, 1303 Fairmont St.. Hogan, Mable, Senate Committee on Pr inting, SEMEL. ea Holcomb, Surg. R. C.: Board for Examination of Dental Officers, 2244 Cathedral Aves... .......o0 uia.. Bureau of Medicine and Surgery....... Naval Medical School -..... 000 L000 Holcomb, Chauncey P., Senate Committee on Coast and Insular Survey, 127 A St. NE Holcombe, E. P., Office of Indian Affairs, Washington, D. Ca sii Hollingsworth, John H., pair clerk to minority, Office of Sergeant at Arms, House, 417 Fourth St. NE Hollister, W. R., Senate Committee on In- EE Ee Ee Te Cl CS a ir Holloway, J. B., clerk to continue digest of “laims, House Committee on War Claims, Holmead, Alfred, assistant secretary Inter- state Commerce Commission, 1104 Mary- land Ave. SW Holmes, George K., Bureau of Statistics, Department of Agriculture, 1323 Irving St. . Holmes, J. A., Director Bureau of Mines, 27 17 Quarry Bonde io he Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 1720 1:80... Holmes, Commander Urban T., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 1702 Q glo Holmes, William H. private secretary to Dis- trict Commissioner, 3301 Thirteenth St. . " Holmes, William H., ' National Museum, 1444 / Seg "Hood, Capt. John, General Board, Navy, CU es Ss 396 260 275 287 265 Congressional Directory. Page. Hooper, Louis L., Columbia Institution for THE DUE i ay hr ar Hoover, Dickerson N., jr., Steamboat-Inspec- tion Service, 411 Seward Square SE........ Hoover, G. W., Bureau of Chemistry, 1322 Tan, AVEL, = nl Hopkins, A ORO. oss aie La Hopkins, Archibald, chief clerk, Court of Claims, 1826 Massachusetts Ave... ........ Horigan, W. D., Naval Observatory, 3028 WHOM AYE. ie a Hough, W. H., M forthe Insane: ts fr aur niin nk Hough, Walter, National Museum........... Houston, Carleton, financial clerk of House, Compas Sasa aE ro Houston, David F.: Secretary of Agriculture (biography), The Powhaiah... .... ~.. ino. ous Houston, Lieut. Col. James B., office of De- pot Quartermaster, 2119 S St Howard, B. J., Bureau of Chemistry, 1212 Deeagtar St. 2.0 Sand cE aa GE Howard, Maj. Deane C., attending surgeon, Army, The Marlborough TE a ae Howard, Asst. Naval Constructor H. S., Bu- foan of Construction and Repair, The High- ands CoC eg Te RST BE Howard, James E., Bureau of Standards, The Woodward ou uni is san Sh Howard, L. O.: Chief Bureau of Entomology, 2026 Hillyer National Museawm.- - oo... 00 oon. Howard, Rear Admiral Thomas B.: President Naval Examining Board, Stoneleigh Court... oh. President Naval Retiring Board. ........ be in connection with General Board, rr CL Br Nes ER nS Be Howard, William J., division chief, General Land Office; 815 Taylor St.....0o oo ois Howard, William M., member Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representatives, 1446 Irving St.......... Howe, L. McH., private secretary to Assistant Secretary of the Navy, The Avondale ..... Howell, Imogene, Senate Committee on Mines and Mining, The Manor House ..... Howell, J. H., Interstate Commerce Commis- gion, Hho BOltImore.. «co ciriite on Howell, J. L., office of Doorherper of House, 445 New J ersey Ave. S Howry, Charles B., judge, Court of Claims (hiography), 1728 8. odbc as Hoyt, Joely a; Geological Survey, 1446 Bel- Hrdli¢ka, Ale§, National Museum........... Hubbard, Henry D., Bureau of Standards, 112 Quincy Ste abe. ovals ins Huddleston, J. F., Senate Committee on Printing 1627 Avenue of the Presidents. . Hudson, C. S., Bureau of Chemistry, Hyatts- ville, Ma rE Hudson, H. T., House document room...... Hudson, M. ¥., Senate Committee on Inter- state Commerce, The Blenheim... ..... Huerta, Sefior Don Ricardo, Mexican Em- PASS... rt cn en eR aR am Hughes, Charles Evans, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 2100 Sixteenth Hughes, William J., attorney, Department of Justice, 2256 Cathedral Ave. ............. Huidekoper, Reginald S., office United States attorney, 1614 Righteenth Sead Humphrey, Paul N., House Committee on Indian Affairs, Tho Boland. oo ioe. iin Humphrey, William E., director Columbia Tnstitution for the deaf. ........cueweneenss. Humphreys, W. Y., assistant Sporiniendent House document Yoom, 612 A St. Humphreys, Prof. William Js oir Bureau, Mount Weather, Va................ Hunnewell, Constructor F. A., Revenue- Cutter Service, The Dupont ..... Cc rnesenis ‘289 280 277 277 277 282 269 269 268 273 282 280 277 Individual Index. Page. ah C. a Distriet engineer of highways, Hunt, hi M., Senate Committee on Man- ufactures, YM. C. A: Building........... Hunt, Elsie I., House Committee on Patents, rE aa Re Hunt, Gaillard, division fat, Congressional Library, 1711 De Sales S Hunt, Maj. Irvin L., Butea of Insular Affairs, ere shale eR las Hunt, William C., Bureau of the Census, 1347 OPE. ire Hunt, William H., associate judge, United States Commerce Court (biography), 1710 S Hunter, W. D., Bureau of Entomology, Cos- MORO. os rts or in Huntington, A. T., division chief, Treasury Department, 1347 Monroe St... ovoveereer . ay Zia Bey, Turkish Embassy Ide, G.R 644 D St dpnenn Moreira, A. J. de, Brazilian Em- DEY rer eT he ee Than Fred, Official Reporter, House, 1131 COMPO ver tints ta Irvine, Lieut. Robert L., Bureau of Steam Engineering, PRECOTAOVE «re Isom, J. R., House folding recom, 1006 Mas- SAChUREIRAYE. eer it Ivery, Bessie G., Senate Committee to Inves- tigate Trespassers upon Indian Lands, The oer, es A Yrineinal examiner, Patent Office, N Ton, Jo J., House Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads, 612 New Jersey Ave. Jackson, Commander R. TH. , duty in connec- tion with General Board, Navy, 2141 Wyo- ming Ave Jackson, Maj. W. P., office of Inspector Gen- eral, ot Twentieth ot Lo Jackson, Paymaster V. S., Bureau of Sup- Des and Accounts, 18 Grafton St. , Chevy hase, Md Jacobs, ‘Sydney R., disbursing clerk, Treas- ury Department, 1473 Harvard St......... Jadwin, Maj. Edgar, Office of Chief of Engi- neers, ’2210 Califormin Ave. ................ Jonny ¢ W., office Secretary of Senate, 4 T James, John H., division chief, State Depart- ment, The BAO. aad or i Janney, Bernard T., District board of trustees Industrial Home S¢hool. «...vooeoeenen. Jayne, Capt. Joseph L., Superintendent Naval Observatory, the Observatory Se, Jenison, So office of Doorkeeper of House, 220 B S Jennings, C.R. t , House post office, 222 Third Jennings, Passed Asst. Paymaster L. W., jr., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The Mon- ong ee aE a aL i Eda Jester, James G., Isthmian Canal Commission, 3126’ Mount Pleasant St... ................. Jewett, Pay Insp. Thomas S., general inspec- 3 , Pay Corps, Navy, Army and Navy Johannes, George, disbursing clerk, Depart- ment of Commerce, 120 Rhode Island Ave. Johannessen, Mr. William Malthe , Norwegian Legation, he Bachelor... ree Johnson, Arthur C. , assistant enrolling clerk, House, O01 Twentioth Bt... oor. eos J ohnson, Ellis C., solicitor internal revenue, The Royalton ST a a en La Johnson, Maj. Evan M.,jr., Division of Militia Affairs, The Marlborough.................. Johnson, ’Y. A., Senate Committee on Stand- as Weights, and Measures, 3433 Holmead Johnson, J. T.; Senate Committee on Public Health and National Quarantine, The EE A a 396 219 224 250 260 279 341 277 255 348 226 220 Page. Johnson, Passed Asst. Surg. IL. W., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, The Woodward. 267 Johnson, Robert S. , Bureau of Fisheries, 3216 NINOS Bb, oe eeite irs ne itr 280 Johnson, Walter, Winona examiner, Patent Office, 109 Pid St. NE 271 J ohnston, Mrs. C. E., Office of Experiment Stations, The COlADI. vs fees vs ina 278 Johnston, Toe P., chief inspector, Post Office Department, The New Varnum. .......... 263 Johnston, J ohn W. , chief clerk to chief inspec- tor, Post Office ‘Department, 231 Twelfth Bt NE. i: i oii iavniesioriiioiitiaanes 263 Johnston, Robert, auditor, Court of Claims, 1762 Kilbourne Place... ................... 341 Jones, Albert A., Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Departments of Com- merce and Labor, 2815 Twenty-seventh St. 218 Jones, Andrieus A., First Assisvant Secretary of the Interior, The Wyoning. oii 270 Jones, Carl C., assistant librarian, Senate, 1326 Maryland Xe NE... 217 Jones, Charles F., attorney, Department of . Justice, THO DEWEY. serve earns insenness 262 Jones, Charles S., Bureau of Pensions, 707 Bovomhgt NB. oY 272 Jones, E. Lester, Deputy Commissioner of Fisheries, 2131 Bancroft Place............. 280 Jones, Maj. Edward N., jr., General Staff Corps, War Qa. hh aie Abra 258 Jones, H. M., Interstate Commerce Commiis- sion, Chattanooga, Tenn.................. 285 Jones, Capt. H. P., Commandant and Super- intendent Naval Gun Faectory............. 267 Jones, J. M., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, DM PoridadAve.. in. 285 Jones, James E.: . Bureau of Plant Industry, 1362 Otis Place. 275 General Supply Commiiteg... ..: i. ues 288 Jones, Lewis, chief Spain, Department of Agricolture, ZR St. NE _.....0 0 oo... 274 Jones, Lieut. a L., aid to Secre- tary of the Navy, 1525 New Hampshire AVL ad a ne PEE Le TT 265 Jones, Luther W., office of Clerk of the House, 123 Maryland Ave. NBL... eaail.L a 222 Jones, O. F., Bureau of Plant Industry, 4021 Mar borough Place ic. iain. nn 275 Jones, R. H., assistant in stationery room, Senate, The Cumberland. . .......oeeounns 217 Jones, Samuel A. , Bureau of Statistics, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 2594 Wisconsin Ave.. 278 Jones, Maj. Samuel G., General Staff Corps, The Westmoreland. ........eeeenneensnnses 258. Jones, Shirley P., Senate Committee on Ex- pendituresi in Interior Department, 1100 Ver- MONTANE: J i a a ra noe 218 Jones, Thomas Jesse, Bureau of Education, CEM eae ee 273 Jordan, Col. Harvie, member Commission to Investigate and Study Rural Credits, ete., Atlanta fGa0. wh a. RH RR ET 215 Jurney, Chesley W., Senate Committee on Judiciary The Congressional. .............. 219 Jusserand J. J., French ambassador.... 345 a Capt. Gustav, Bureau of Steam Engineering, Army and Navy Clab: ox. 266 Roan Lewis A., Bureau of Education, 662 Be WE. Ly oT 272 Kalpashnikofi-Camac; Mr. Andrew, Russian LE RR Em Pe al 348 Kane, on P., office Comptroller of the Currency, 1931 Calvert St... ...0... .... 256 Kanely, Lily, ie nurses’ examining board, 723 G8. curiae i ae 395 Karl von LAME Baron, Austro-Hun- garian Embassy oii RL 344 Karmany, Col. Lincoln, commanding Marine LE Te RR ee Se ee Re 270 Kaufman, A. C., American National Red Sr SEE I Se RC Le 287 Kautz, Lieut. Commander Austin, Office of Naval Intelli ence, 2008: R 8h. il oes 265 Kay, Clarence , House Committee on Pat- ents, ER Courts... os Sirol 224 Kays, "Harry L., division chief, General Land Office, East Falls ChUICh, VAueeeeesseeses 271 485 486 Congressional Directory. | Page. Kazutsugy, Lieut. Col. Inouye, Japanese Em- bossy, The Benediok. ..... «x ineneonss-ssss 346 Kean, Thomas A., Senate Committee on In- teroceanic Canals, 815 Eleventh St......... 219 Kearney, Richard A,, assistant surgeon, Bu- reau of the Public Health, The Benedick.. 257 Kearney, Thomas H., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 3401 Thirty-fourth Place, Cleveland PRs visa is sirhivamians Sanit 35 sain bn spin 275 Keating, R. B., secretary Commission to In- vestigate Indian AffalrS.......vcnvmsennenn 216 Kebler, L.. F., Bureau of Chemistry, 1322 Park ROR, re anions os is SE 277 Keefe, M. J., House post office, 719 A St. SE. 225 Keefe, Thomas A., House post office ........ 225 Keegin, Edward, bailiff, Court of Claims, Hyattaville Md. ooo count. ata tbc mipnnsotes 341 Keenan, John F., Bureau of Pensions, Brent- WoO MA oo nen in ee eg 272 Keene, Carter B., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, 2637 Garfield St...... 264 Keener, John W., division chief, General Land Office, 1314 Emerson St.....-- 2 .nuk elle 271 Keith, Arthur, Geological Survey, 2110 Twez- GS ae Seen OR CRU 273 Keliher, James, District fire department, 1506 CC TRITtY-Seeond Bl. oo cx roca d - mma sien Shan 396 Keller, Thomas W., Assistant Doorkeeper of Senate, 3406 Thirteenth 86. ..cvin..usnnaees 220 Kellerman, Karl F., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, 1523 Buchanan St................. 275 Kelly, George L., Capitol police, 62 M St.... 226 Kelly, J. L., Senate Committee on Claims, The Notional. . wre. i casei hs son -sme bres 218 Kelly, Maj. William, Office of Chief of Engi- neers, 1824 Jefferson Place....ccevenvane--n 260 Kelsey, Frank G., Bureau of Statisties, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 1417 Webster St...... 278 Kemper, E. C., confidential clerk to Seeretary of the Interior, The Cavendish. ........... 270 Kennard, Harold C., House Committee on Labor, 110 East Capitol Sti.evaeeneene.... 224 Kennedy, Bert W., office of Doorkeeper of House, The Vendome... on -cneranzes 223 Kennedy, Medical Insp. R, M., Naval Dis- pensary, The Woodward. . ........cc east 268 Kenney, W. E., office of Doorkeeper of House, 318 Pennsylvania Ave. SE... ...c.nvane-s 223 Kent, QO. B., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, The COTOUDA, vit fonts ail an 285 Kerfoot, W. T., District pharmacy board, SOVOTHR BE YeBU8. + vnenrrissvrroinnrnzere 395 Kerlin, Malcomb, assistant chief clerk, Post Office Department, 1449 Fairmont St...... 263 Kerr, Col. J. T., Office of The Adjutant Gen- eral, The Westmoreland ...................- 258 Kerr, J. W., Assistant Surgeon General, Bu- reau of the Public Health, 2806 Twenty- oT AR Se eR Ty 257 Kerwin, Hugh L., private secretary to Secre- tary of Labor,638 A St. SE... .veeneineaes 281 Ketcham, Charles A., office of adjutant and inspector's department, Marine Corps, TITatieville, Md tice. vortoniiindsonsvos ons 269 Ketcham, Maj. Daniel W., General Staff Corps, The Benediok. on... put oasis 258 Ketcham, William H., Beard of Indian Com- missioners, Washington, D.C... .......... 288 Ketron, H. W., deputy in charge of pairs, office of Sergeant at Arms, House, The SR EO RRR 222 Kibbey, Miss Bessie J., board of visitors, Gov- ernment Hospital for Insane... ........... 289 Kienle, J. M., Senate Committee on Coast and Insular LRA CR NRA [nl 218 Kienlin, Mr. Albert, German Embassy..... 346 Kiess, Edgar R., member Joint Committee on PrN ort eais tino catenin ns ctiran rd Sa ® 214 Kilmartin, R. C., Senate Committee on Ap- propriations, Rockville, Md..............: 218 Kimball, Arthur H., M. D., Government Hospital for Insane... vvii ide ase 290 Kimball, Arthur R., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 1825 Kalorama Road..... - 250 Kimball, Prof. Herbert H., Weather Bureau, Moun{ Weather, ¥a...... coi. niiinash in 275 Kimball, 8. I., Superintendent General Life- Saving Service, 1316 Rhode Island Ave.... 256 King, G. B., assistant keeper stationery, Sen- Page. ate, 1331 Falrment Bt... .. aa 217 King, Will R., Reclamation Service, 2212 Il Bs nl tania ns bt ates a BE wm ta RIOR 274 King, William A.., division chief, War Depart- ment, 3020 Dent Plage... .... vs. ssnmenr it 207 Kingman, Brig. Gen. Dan C.: Board of Ordnance and Fortification, The Grallom i. ccoavirsvnismrvisnnone ss 261 Chic ol Engineers. cv. vvericei-- oir sors 260 . Chief of Engineers, Soldiers Home. ...... 286 Kinnan, William A., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1114 Fairmont St..... Aha 271 Kinney, T. L., Capitol police, 310 D St. SE. 226 Kirchwey, Karl W., attorney, Department of Justice, ISIE BL. 1. cms noir Ske wnt 262 Kittredge, Herman E., Office of Commandant Marine Corps, 1430 BB SE... . i. - ven rn ois 269 Kleberg, A. I., superintendent House folding room, 300 East Capitol St......coeneannn-n 223 Knaebel, Ernest, Assistant Attorney General, SIF Morrison Bh... Et inn 262 Tons Bradford, Bureau of Plant Industry, mL Crittenden Bho 276 na apt. H. S., General Boar av Er oronih EL ii 268 Knapp, Martin A.; Presiding judge, United States Commerce Court (biography), Stoneleigh Court... 341 Chairman Board of Mediation and Con- CEHALION. (coo rraiinrt ois anita vas vpmnm ats ix 288 Kneipp, L.. F., Forest Service, 1515 Park Road. 276 Knight, Rear Admiral A. M., General Board, Navy, Newporh, BR. L...ouencineenonaii.c 268 Knight, J. Broadus, Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, 219 East Capitol 8t......... 219 Knox, Frank, Board of Indian Commission- erg, Manchester N. H.., ........coviaivene 288 Koch, Ljeut. Ralph A., Bureau of Naviga- tion, Navy, 2901 Sixteenth St............. 265 Koester, Maj. Francis J., office of The Adjutant General, 1808 Kalorama Road. ............ 258 Kolb, C, A., Forest Service, 1808 Lamont St.. 276 Kolb, William J., Pan American Union, 718 Gresham Plage. ~... ,...... co. Sor sh 283 Konstantin von Masirevich, Austro-Hun- grlan BmMbassy. ores: teh so simsmssncsdesy 344 Koogle, John D. C., deputy collector of port, 1825 Kilbourne Plage... .ccwenssiiearar vas 257 Koons, John C., Office of First Assistant Post- master General, 3634 Garfield St.......... 263 Koontz, Effie, Senate Committee on Coast Defenses, 905 B St. NE... ovasvanrzanss te 218 Kram, Charles A., Auditor for Post Office Department, Chevy Chase, Md. ........... 256 Kroger, Maj. Edward A., office of Judge Advocate General, Army, The Dresden.... 259 Kuhel, 8S. J., Geological Survey, 1008 East CADROL BE. eines cs inns cdivnes wpisld ties 274 Kuhn, E., District health department, 408 New Jersey Ave. 8W.. ooo... 397 Labougle, Eduardo, Argentine Legation, 2209 Maseachusetlis AVE... ..ccvaricvmiee ve sinaan 344 Laboulaye, Mr. 1. de, French Embassy, 1532 Twenty-820ong St.....cnernrarsrannansis 345 Lacy, John A., division chief, Interior Depart- ment, 1334 Thirty-first St... .c0ceeaena. a 270 Ladd, Lieut. Col. Eugene ¥., Office of The Adjutant General, 2119 Bancroft Place.... 258 La Dow, Robert V., superintendent of prisons, Department of Justice, 1716 H St.......... 262 Lafferty, George C., Official Reporter, House, Metropolitan Club, . ame cnivas esate cca pein 226 Lake, Roscoe V., Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, House, 2033 Park Road. ..ccsescrerarinve vier ia 223 Lamar, Joseph Rucker, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 1751 New Hampshite AVC... ue Ge rnvvrs inciting 339 Lamar, Lucius Q. C., recorder, General Land ffice, 1733 Seventeenth St...............« 271 Lamar, William H., Assistant Attorney Gen- eral for Post Office Department, Rockville, 7 SR a ee TR SAN as Sa 62, 263 Lambdin, Hal, assistant librarian, Senate, pL 8 AD ER eT I 17 Lamson-Scribner, F., special agent on ex- hibits, Department of Agriculture, 6900 Fifth 8t., Takoma. Park... ....c.c.vuuv-.- Individual Index. Page. Tanahan, William J., D. S., Government Hospital for Insane. ........ ........ cceewd Land, E. 8., naval constructor, Bureau of Constriiction and Repair, 1831 Belmont LTE ERR EE Re IE LE EP Lane, C. H., Office of Experimental Stations, Hyattsville, Ma... ois aati Lane, Charles H. ., principal examiner, Patent Office, Glen Carlyn, I SE Lane, Franklin, Ke Secretar y of the Interior (biography), 1866 Wyoming FUT ee Patron ex officio Howard University. ... Lane, Harry, member Commission to Inves- tigate Indian Affairs, 1300 Columbia Road. - Lane, Rella M., Senate Committee on Revo- lutionary Claims, Falkstone Courts........ Lang, George B., Senate Committee on ‘Woman i 1505 Bighth 8t........... Langfitt, Lieut. Col. William C.: Board of Engineers for Rivers and Har- bors, The Hishlonds,. 0 rin, I charge of United States Engineer Of- Langworthy, C. F., Office of Experiment Sta- tions, 1604 Seventeenth St................. Lanham, Trueman, District superintendent of trees and parking, Lanham Station, Md. Lanham, Virginia W., Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, Lanham, Md...... Lanman, “Maurice H., Senate Committee on Industrial Expositions, 1256 Quincy Place Coral] F. H., Assistant Commissioner Gen- eral of Immigration, EB ER i ER EE Lathrop, Julia C., chief, Children’s Bureau, The Ontario .. Jl) is of SSH LS Latimer, J. Wilmer, judge, juvenile court, 14 Newlands St., Chevy Chase, Md.......... Latour, Seftor Don Francisco Sanchez, Guate- malan Teegationw oo. io old SGU US Laubach, Capt. Howard L., General Staff Corps, 5514 Ontario Road . oennneeeanen enn. Lauchheimer, Col. Charles H., in charge of Adjutant and Inspector’s Department, Ma~ rine Corps, The Farragut... oa. .ouunn Lauck, W. Jett, managing expert Commis- sion on Industrial Relations ....veveneane. Lawrence, C. S: attorney, Department of Justice, "PhO DATNATISCOLtR: venonsnn neon Lawson, Dr. H. W., office of Metropolitan po- Te a TR Seg I UDR LCR SCOR SR Laylin, Lewis C., Assistant Secretary of the Interior, The Portland. ....0od os anu. Layne, W. R., Office of Indian Affairs, The Leadley, George W., division chief, Depart- ment of Commerce, The Van Cortlandt... . Leary, Lieut. H. F., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, 1710 Q Breet... cn . - 5 sunms tit caimans Le Clerc, J. A., Bureau of Chemistry, Takoma ET Le A TST A ey Ledbetter, Surg. R. ¥.., Naval Hospital...... Lee, ¥. G., private secretary to District Engi- neer Commissioner, The Northumberland. . Lee, Conse, House post ofliss, 641 Maryland Ave. NE Lee, Gordon: Member Joint Committee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, The Borhran i rE i aia Member National Forest Reservation Commission. us ne Lee, Maj. Harry R., General Staff Corps, 1941 Calvert RE Sp ER Lee, Joseph C., office of Doorkeeper of House, 114 Carroll St. SE Leech, Edw. O., Senate Committee on Mili- tary Affairs, 2831 Twenty-seventh St...... Lefevre, Sefior Don J. E., Panaman Legation, The ortlnd or Legge, F. W., Division of Accounts and Dis- bur sements, ELIE RE le Sa tel, Sai Leighton, B. ILD. , Howard University. Leinster, W, W., Senate Committee on ¥i- nance, "107 Maryland AVE. NB. omrrrmars 290 266 278 290 487 Page. Lemly, Lieut. Col. William B., Quartermas- ter’s Department, Marine Corps, 1025 Ver- OTE BTC ro 1s AT was ra abd ame ino ta Lemmond, William W., assistant attorney, Department of Justice, ’ 1495 Newton St. . Lennon, John B. , Commission on Industrial AR Re OL Leo, Mr. T. Yt., Chinese Legation.......... Lesher, C.K. Geological Survey, 4519 Geor- gia AY rn a A a x doshet, il, assistant bill clerk, House, 520 ENE Cain a Te Levy, Louis, Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills, 609 Q St Lewers, Albert M., principal Samia, Pat- ent, Office, 718 East Capitol S Lewis, David J., member Joint Y oniithes to Investigate General Parcel Post. . ......... Lewis, Herbert, principal examiner, Patent Office, 4401 Eight 1 TET eS Sa Lewis, Hugh, office of Doorkeeper of House. . Lewton, ¥. 1., National Musenm.... ..-- ... Liang Tean Fan, Mr., Chinese Legation. AEsen Lieuallen, W. i i assistant librarian, Senate, 3008 Seventeenth St. NE Lighitoot James H., principal examiner, Patent Office, Takoma Park, Md Lillard, Ephraim S., Senate ’Committee on Revolutionary Claims, 211 East Capitol St. . Lillard, Ephraim W., Senate Committee on Rev olutionary Claims, 211 East Capitol St. . Lind, John E., M. D., Government Hospital or TE rs ih re Linn, Jennie, office of Sergeant at Arms of House, 611 St Linton, F. Die Park, M Lisit. % Interstate Commerce Commission, Littell, Prof. F. B., Naval Observatory, 2507 WISIODHR ATE. ors certs ne on sr an Littiehales, G. W., Hydrographic Office, 2132 Ly a ET A RR ei Ee Lloyd, Daniel B., Official Reporter, Senate, The lonsdile, Lo aia neve ag, Lloyd, Francis B. Sma funy of the Senate, 121 Eleventh St. N Lloyd, James T., member kon Committee on Postage on Second-Class Mail Matter and Compensation for Transportation of Mails, The Brighton. i ool irae to Sans] Lloyd, Samuel R., House Committee on Ac-~ counts, 288 A St. SE Locke, Miss Bessie, Bureau of Education, NeW YX Orkin simian Ss noniae ee asin Lockerman, B. iS .s Senate Committee on Transportation and Sale of Meat Products. Lockhart, Frank P., Senate Committee on Expendituresi in the Department of Agricul- ture, The Burlington... ciesieen cece Lodge, Henry Cabot: Member Joint Commission to Investigate Purchase of American-Grown Tobacco by Foreign Governments, 1765 Massa- eS AVE Ae Regent of Smithsonian Institution. ...... Loeffler, C. A., Acting Assistant Doorkeeper of Senate, 1444 Newton St ...c.ueeeneenoan. Loefiler, Frank A. principal examiner, Pat- ent Office, 3410 Thirteenth St............... Loftus, Mr. Edward H., Siamese Legation, Phe Dresden. it ns a an ta Logan, Maj. James A., Office of 5 Quar- termaster Corps, Army, 1718 HS Logan, John S., assistant engineer, Seouse, 918 Hast Capitol REI Bak Ba Lombard, Miss Ellen C., Bureau of Educa- tion, WEE BE NE. ee Long, "Boaz W., division chief, State Depart- ment, The Cec 1 eet a LAT Long, Byford FE. jr., Senate Commitiee on Pensions, The Loudoun ee SR I Lopp, William T., Bureau of Education, Sesto, Wash Lord, Edwin C. E., Office of Public Roads, Plorence Cotrt. reer TLoudon, Jonkheer J., Netherlands minister. . Voie of Chemistry, Takoma 2 347 488 Congressional Directory. Love, Capt. Albert G., Office of Surgeon Gen- eral, Army, 3156 Eighteenth EE a Wi Lowell, Second Lieut. Roy D., Marine Bar- racks Et ER Or IN RR i ian Lower, Cyrus B., Chief of Supply Division, Department of Agriculture, 3719 New Hompshire Ave... an a cian Luckow, Edward L., Auditor for Navy De- partment, The New WilStOm «...c........ Ludwig, Oswald C., office of Secretary of the Senate, 116 Fourth St. NE Lund, Capt. John, Office of Chief of Ordnance, Army The Westmoreland... .............. Lundy, W-. Don, Senate Committee on Pacific Railroads, 2633 Adams Mill Road........... Lurton, Horace Harmon, Associate Justice, Supr éme Court (biography), 1720'S... - Lusby, James R. deputy District disbursing officer, 1305 FoR SL or so Lynch RB 1 , District health department, 3941 FPorrteeAth Bt. ol Lynn, A. C., District sanitary officer, 1944 Been BE Lynn, David, Office of Superintendent of the Capitol, Hyattsville, Md Tu Lyon, Maj. LeRoy S., Office of Inspector ‘General, The Netherlands................. Lyster, Maj. William J. L., Office of Surgeon General, Army, The Tonadnle. .. oo Lyssakovsky, Mr. A., Russian Embassy, 1632 Bhode IHORA AYE «oo ors McAdoo, Francis H., assistant attorney, De- partment of J ustice, The Dresden... McAdoo, William G.: Secretary of the Treasury (biography)... Member of Smithsonian Institution...... MecAliley, C. W., office of Doorkeeper of House, 209 Piel SE NE McAllister, Charles A., engineer in chief, Rev- enue-Cufter Service, "The Ontario.......... McAllister, Hall, Senate Committee on Inter- state Commerce, 2415 Twentieth St. ........ McArdle, Ruskin, private secretary to Post- master Sunenl, The Brunswiek........... McAuliffe, J. J., Interstate Commerce Com- TT 1137 C St, McBride, Charles H. > thes of Second Assist- ant Postmaster General, The Ontario..... MeBride, Naval Constructor L. B. , Bureau of Constritction and Repair, 1831 Belmont Moods, Capt. Robert B., Office of Chief Quartermaster Corps, Army, 2832 Twenty- on ee ee hn ei McBrien, Jasper L., Bureau of Education. . McCabe, "Arthur J. "attorney, Department of Tustice, 3460 Fourteenth Stu............... McCabe, Charles M., Senate Committee on Canadian Relations, The Driscoll. =... i... MeCall, Samuel W.: Member Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representa- tives, Winchestor ‘Mass. .....-..-:-.-- Member Lincoln Memorial Commission. McCarron, John F., House Committee on Expenditures in Interior Department, 138 East Canilol St. . cose se vmis ss vii eae ns sins MoOuihy, H. C., librarian of the House, 1219 McCaskey, H. D., Geological Survey, The RI ONICSAW csi srs ex ms wins = wen min Simintaniniotuis's McCaw, Col. Walter D., in charge Army Medical Museum and Library, Army and NIVY Clas. evar sme ndimnnn apn non vines He Col. Charles L., in charge Quar- termaster’s Department, Marine Corps, 1610 New Hampshire Ave... .c.covre-in.. McChesney, J. D., Geological Survey, Cathe- dral Ave.and Twenty-ninth S McChord, Charles C., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, New Willard... ............- * McClellan, First Lieut. Edwin N., U. S. Ma- rine Corps, office of Judge Advocate Gen- eral, The Rochambeau.............-...... McComb, David E., District engineer of bridges, The POTIner . ooo = sine ose ee McConnell, James 1., office of Doorkeeper of House, 905 East Capitol Bf eee sre, Page. 338 255 282 215 214 Page. McCord, Miss J. L. V., Geological Survey, 1600 Q rer a TE McCormick, Edmund B., Office of Public Roads, West Falls Church, Na McCoy, Capt. Frank R. , General Staff Corps, - McCrory, S. H., Office of Experiment Sta- tions, 1833 Nowton 86... McCulloch, Lieut. Col. Champe C., jr., Army Medical Museum and Library, 1913'S St... MecCullough, Surg. F. E., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, i Twenty-first St... MeDonnell, C. C., Bureau of Chemistry, 2633 Garfield AEs A McDowell, John P., division chief, General Land Office, 618 Lexington Place NE...... McFarland, Maj., Munroe, General Staff Corps, PPE TOTONED. «oe raeosren in iene McFarland, W. A., District superintendent of water department, 3719 Morrison St.... McGann, Joseph H., House Commities on Rivers and Harbors, 1345 Park Road...... McGee, Wm. J., division chief, General Land Office, 1810 YT oOut EE res can MeGill, a Nota, District board of trustees National Training School for Girlseeceo---- MeGillicuddy, Daniel J., member Joint Com- mittee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, Congress Hall .oo..veeneno.... McGinty, Geor ge B., secretary Interstate Sommers Commission, 3921 Fourteenth MeGonegal, A. R., District inspector of plumbing, 750 Rock Creek Church Road. . Modom, John J., storekeeper of Senate, 128 McGraw, Edward S., confidential clerk to Secretary of Labor, 1300 Massachusetts A ve. McGrew, J. L.: Assistant Chief Division of Information, Department of Labor, 1855 Newton St. General Supply Committe. . coor McGuire, Frederick B., Washington National Monument Solely... lit dae al McTlhenny, John A., president Civil Service Commission, 2030 A. venue of the Presidents. McIntyre, Brig. Gen. Frank, Chief of Bureau of Insular Affairs, 1841 Kalorama Road. . McKee, J. M. , House folding room, 2123 K St. MecKelligon, Maurice 1., Senate Committee on Industrial Expositions, 125 CSE. NE...... McKenna, Joseph, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biograph ), The Connecticut... .... McKenna, R. T., pis terstate Commerce Com- mission, University Cab: ich ce McKenney, H. C., deputy clerk, Supreme Court, The Mendota. ovr i McKenzie, Alexander, office of District as- sessor, 1446 Harvard Bh... ie. ili McKinley, William B., member Joint Com- mission to Investigate Purchase of Ameri- can-Grown Tobacco by Foreign Govern- ments, Champaign, TH, or oo is MecLanahan, George X., Shia Institu- tion for the Deaf, E9031 QS McLaughlin, Mary dA AY Committee on Public Lands, 136 A St. NE McLean, Passed Asst. Surg. A. D., attend- ance on officers, Navy, The Toronto....... McLean, Harry Clay, District health depart- ment, 1373 Irving St aie aa McLean, John H., Isthmian Canal Commis- sion, Wmpile. eid ea vv iinir mmm ie a pid McLean, Marvin M., Office of Fourth As- sistant Postmaster Gener al, Brookland, D.C McLean, Capt. Ridley, Judge Advocate Gen- eral, Navy, The Bonedick. ...........-...- McLean, Capt. Walterz Naval Examining Board, 2109 O St..... Naval Betivine Board. eecev-oo- eer ions McLemore, Maj. Albert 8a Office of Adjutant and Inspector’s Department, Marine Corps, 3755 Northampton St. , Chevy Chase, D. c. McMahon, Lieut. Col. John B.} General Staff Corps, The Westmoreland. United States Geographic Board... 264 267 2€9 269 269 258 287 | | | Individual Index. Page. McManamy Frank, Yrisitate Commerce Commission, The Stag... .. civil iiiviin. McNabb, Charles E., assistant attorney, De- partment of Justice, 1423 R St McNeil, R. J., Senate Committee on Stand- ah Weights, and Measures, 309 Third St. MoNail, W. C., M. D., Howard University. . MecNeir, ‘William: Bureau chief, State Department, 3362 Eighteenth BE rin ar United States Geographic Board ........ McNitt, John, jr., office of Second Assistant Postmaster ‘General, Berwyn, Md. ........ McPhaul, John, law clerk, General Land Of- fice, 1293 Irving BLNE.. oo. anil anid McReynolds, James C.: Attorney General (biogr aphy), The Shore- MacArthur, Lieut. Commander A. ns in connection with General Board, N. avy, 1854 KaloramaiRead. aan Dad oad MacArthur, Capt. Douglas, General Staff Corps, 1841 Avenue of the Presidents...... Mac Douall, Sefior Don Roberto, Colombian Legation, 1341 L St MacDowell, Edith A., Government Hospital LINEA. erie es Macfarland, Henry B. E., Washington Na- tional Monument Society hae Mack, Julian W., associate judge, United States Commerce Court TY, The CosmosiClub: visita a hae Mackey, James H., disbursing clerk, Depart- ment of J ustice, 3524 Thirteenth St. Mackley, A. R., ‘Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 16 S St MacNab, John F. Tuli examiner, Patent Office, "1204 G S%. Madden, Martin B., ART on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, 2818 Connecticut Ave.............. Maddox, Robert L., office of Second Assistant “Postmaster General, The Brunswick....... Maffett, J. D., House post office. oivici ne Magalhfes, E. Belfort Sarvaiva de, Pan Amer- ican Union, 820 BB. os na Magee, Charles L. ., Secretary American Na- oR Red CToR8.: ors es rs Magruder, Willis B., division chief, Patent Office, Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md.. Maher, James D., clerk, Supreme Court, TIO M Bt hoes rans asa ti ane ans Malone, Dudley F., Third Assistant Secre- tary of State, The Shoreham. ............. Malone, George V., House Committee on Elections No. 2 I First St. NE oo... ... Mann, B. Pickman, District Board of Chil- Ie eRe Mann, James R.: Member Commission in Control of House Office Building, The Highlands...._.. Member Commission on Reconstruction of the Fall of the House of Representa- {FE ar ne LU RL Le orm Van H., Bureau of Mines, Ham- mond Cent es Marbut, Curtis F., Bureau of Soils, 3555 Elev- SRS Lo. i eh a ante de March, Lieut. Col. Peyton C., office of The Adjutant General, 2129 Le Roy Place..... Marchand, Guy, office of Secretary of the Senate, Y. M. 0. A. Building ak ahi ve Marchand, J.T. Feats Commerce Com- Marlatt, C. L., Bureau of Entomology, 1521 Sixtecnth St. RE a SN Sy Marsh 101 3 Gs Me 8 E- Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 3513 Center I an A RES Marshall,” R. B., Geological Survey, 3157 Eighteenth EEE STS ce Marshall, Thomas R.: President of the Senate, The Shoreham. . Regent of Smithsonian Institution. ..... Member Smithsonian Institution........ 285 262 263 489 Page. Martel, Charles, division chief, Donerson) Library, 300 South Carolina Ave. SE. ..... Martin, Charles H., Senate Coreen on Rules, 107 Maryland Ave, NB. i. Martin, E. 8., District superintendent of play- grounds, BO Bavard 8... ceieriieens. Martin, George E., judge, U. 8S. Court of Cus- toms "Appeals, 1869 Wyoming Ave inns Martin, Harold H., office of Solicitor for Navy Department, N orwood, Bethesda, Md . Martin, Hugh’ ss Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, 1627 Sixteenth St.................. Martin, John S. jr., translator, State Depart- ment, 1731 F 8 Martin, L. H., Senate Committee on Appro- priations, Century Club. .................. Martin, Mrs. Marian E. , House Committee on Ways and Means, The Mansfield. ......... Martin, Thomas S.: Chairman Joint Commission to Investi- gate Purchase of American-Grown To- bacco by Foreign Governments, The Benedick ci. ti. i ae ease Member Joint Commission for the Exten- sion and Completion of the Capitol Bolling... eb cre sah b ote Member ks Memorial Commission. . Marvin, Charles F., Chief of Weather Bureau, 1500 BIOTIN BE lo cena Fens ao Marvin, Mrs. Mary W., Senate Committee on Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game, 511 Third StS... tae Hi son, P. S., Bureau of the Public Health, 1115 MASSACHUSELES AVE... no eernenneennns Masterton, Pay Clerk G. W., Pay Corps, Navy, The Lonsdale... ov ciirs ns oc Matthews, Charles ¥., office of Third Assist- ant Postmaster General, 1517 Lamont St. . Maury, William A., W ashington National Monument Society, 1769 Massachusetts Ave. Maxam, Oliver M., General Life-Saving Serv- ice, VID PTR BORA ves on sete rnane Maxson, Louis W., principal examiner, Patent Office, Kensington, Maxwell, Burr, office of Doorkeeper of House, PIs SL BY, oo ta reheat May, David W.,Office of Experiment Stations, Mayaguez RR RE LLL Ew SR May, Edgar H., Office of Solicitor for the Navy Department, "1500 Columbia Road ......... Maynard, G. ¢., National Museum... ........ Mead, S.'V., Senate Committee on Expendi- tures in the Departments of Commerce and Tabor, 40h: Monroe St... co. ool Medzikhovsky, Mr. C., Russian Embassy, 2605 CONNOCLICHE AVE. v wneoenee ame eenn Meeker, Royal S., Commissioner of Labor Statistics, The Northumberland TE Meinzer, O. E., Geological Survey, 2355 Bhodelslond Ave. NE. oor Melling, George, Office of Judge Advocate General, Navy, 1342 Meridian Place....... Melvin, A. D., Chief Bureau of Animal Indus- try, 1734 Por Boad. i Membrefio, Dr. Alberto: Honduran minister, The Gordon ........ Governing board, Pan American Union. . Mendenhall, Geological Survey, Cosmos Glnb. to Mendez, Sefior Don Joaquin: Qusiomalon minister, 1750 Massachusetts EE Ee an Se a ES en at TO Governing board, Pan American Union . Meriam, Lewis, Children’s Bureau, Kensing- top Md. a a sae ie cea ea Meritt, E. B., Assistant Commissioner of In- dian’ Affairs, 42 Seaton St Merkling, F. %., Senate Committee on Ap- propriations, 409 Hobart Place. ........... Moh, C. Hart, United States Geographic Board. curtis ecsol S80 antiai adn ies snares Merrill, G. P., National Museum, 1422 Bel- mont St Merrill, O. C., Forest Service, 12 West Kirk St., Chevy "Chase, Md 250 220 396 Bt 267 218 254 218 224 214 214 214 219 264 289 Ca 490 Merritt, Addis D., principal examiner, Patent Office, 3307 Seventeenth St. ............... Merritt, N. A., postmaster, Washington, D.C., 1228 CONNEEEICUE AVE. ovo oecneransnns Merry, Capt. William T., General Staff Corps, © 1627 Avenue of the Presidents. ............ Metcalf, Haven W., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1273 VOrmomth AVoL. .0. Joie s ion a dinaian tn Metcalfe, Maj. Raymond F., office of attend- ing surgeon, 1927 8 St Metcalfe, Richard L., Isthmian Canal Com- ; missioner, ANCOR. ocurred ae enn Meyer, Balthasar M., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, Highlands Manor, Wiscon- sin Ave..... eo im ee Ta Ar a Bw 3 wn Meyer, H. H. B., division chief, Congressional Library, 2608 Tanlaw BO ie sean Meyer, Herbert A., private secretary to Secre- tary of the Interior, 1416 Howard St....... Meyers, W. J., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1526 P st Meyers, William F., assistant secretary, Dis- triet Board, 1319 frying St... .. Lo. ob. Meza, Sefior Dr. Don Carlos A., Salvadorean : Legation, The Montana ................. Miller, Adolph @. iy to the Secretary of the Interior, 1801 F Miller, Charles division chief, Treasury Department, The Columbia. . ............. nl Frank, House Committee on Elections 1 Miller, Gerrit S., jr., National Museum ...... Miller, H. G., Senate Committee on Expendi- tures in Treasury Department, The Bur- { TEE A EE Re I SN fe ral Miller, Col. James E., National Home for +" Disabled Volunteer Soldiers... .iooc ins Miller, Jesse, Senate Committee on Expendi- & tures in Treasury Departraent, 1315 N St.. Miller, John, House post office, 222 Third St. Miller, Kelly, A. M., Howard University... Miller, Ransford S., division chief, State De- b artment, 2138 California St. o.oo... on Miler, Maj. Reuben B. , Army Medical School, { 1930 BtmMOre Bt... Lio mT 0 Millrick, Daniel A., law examiner, General + Land Office, 1126 Righth SY Gea, a ¥ Milis, Brig. Gen. Albert L. ., Chief Division of Mita Als ISB ESE... .o..onn i oess- Mills, John S., United States Geographic a ah esi * Minus, L. Virgil, Senate Committee on Naval PAROISSE di Li i he eeeata a _ Mitchell, Guy E., Geological Survey, 1421 { Buehoman SE. |. ress Mitchell, Thomas H., principal examiner, B Patent Office, The Royal aed As hd Mitchell, Capt. William, General Staff Corps, §. 2238 Q Sa A I Mirza Ali Kuli Khan, chargé d’affaires, Persia, 2139 Womins Ave —... - Modesto, Leal, J. L. de, Brazilian Embassy, 1737 H St Mohler, John R., Bureau of Animal Industry, 7 2317 First St Molloy, Margaret A., Senate Committee to Toxamine the Several Branches of the Civil A I RE GS BN Monahan, Arthur C., Bureau of Education, 132 Br yant RET es Se GE Monceau, Count du, Belgian Legation. ...... | Moncrief, D. Edwin, jr., Senate Committee on Education and Labor, 1822 Vernon St..... Mohisomey) Robert M., presiding judge 1 U. S. Court of Customs "Appeals, 1120 Six- Sih AE OTE Cn SE CE ES Moody, Capt. Lucian B., Office of Chief of Ordnance, Army, 2448 Twentieth St... .... Moody, William Henry, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (retired) RE I el Mooney, William M., disbursing clerk, Post Office "Depar tment, ’1433 T St Moore, Charles, Commission of Fine Arts, Detroit, Ml tl ii Moore, H. F., Bureau of Fisheries, The Con- 0 nla mmm mf ie a mm Tm mom mmm mm fo Page. 271 291 258 276 259 282 287 Congressional Directory. Page. Moore, John Bassett: : Counselor, Department of State, The Al- hamper ial olin Lb ai ak 254 American National Red Cross........... 287 Moore, Lewis B., A. M., Ph. D., Howard IIversiby Jl Gris sais deri ik ut 290 Moore, Mary Ella, District Board of Chil- drexw’s Guardians. cul... LL nL HLS 395 Moore, Millard J., principal examiner, Patent Office, 111 Tennessee Ave. NE. ........... 271 Moore, Oran T., Bureau of Naturalization, Washington, LHD an ps ee 281 Mos Theodore Eh Weather Bureau, 55 Swann oh SO Sn aan k 275 Moorehead, Warren K., Board of Indian Com- missioners, Andover, Mass. an a 288 Moores, Edward S., ‘Government Printing Office, 467 MBL. hn adv a anases 284 Morales, Sefior Dr. Don Eusebius A.: Panaman minister, The Portland....... 347 Governing board, Pan American Union. 283 Moran, W. H., assistant chief, Secret-Service Division, 1935 Biltmore Street............. 256 Morgan, Herbert R., Naval Observatory, 3619 Observatory Place, i. Llu i 0nd iid us 265 Morgan, Lorel N., Office First Assistant Post- master General, 1475 Columbia Road. ..... 263 Morgan, T. Frank, Government Printing Office, CLL ee va 284 Morris, Ballard N. , principal examiner, Pat- ent Office, Beltsville, Md. oii ns Be 272 Morris, Finis D., division chief, Patent Office, G2 BRE. Tai iy eta nat 272 Morrison, A. B., Bureau of Biological Survey, The Marlbrough RE I a 277 Morrison, Hugh A., assistant, reading room, Congressional Library, 2202 First 86... ..o0 250 Morrison, John G., assistant, reading room, Congressional Library, 1230 Trying Sto ld 250 Morrow, Judge W. W., American National Red Cross lol LL sia cian oo 287 Morse, B. H., assistant engineer, House, 2138 RE Nl Se 225 Mortimer, W. W., division chief, Patent Office, 2627 Adams Mill Road.............. 272 Morton, George L., principal examiner, Pat- ent Office, The Ontario... 0.00 aii sid 271 Morton, Mary L., Senate Committee on Ex- pendiures’ in Navy Department, The Wyo- : ay Lm RE Sas Oh SE Ppl 218 Ma, Alex., division chief, Patent Office, hr ame Bo ele Sn ae, 272 Mosqueira, Mr. Silvano, Paraguayan legation. 347 Moss, H. N. ,Distriet superintendent of streets, LTO Lanier PIage. «oo ovnet fonviann 396 Moss, Ralph W., member Commission to Investigate and ‘Study Rural Credits, ete... 215 Moxley, Eugene C., Assistant Official Report- er, Senate, 1150 Seventeenth St............ 226 Mudd, A. 1. Division of Publications, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 1925 Fifteenth St... .. 278 Mudd, Sydney Lit , office United States attor- ney, "La Plat CT RRL a Ss a 342 Muerman, John C., Bureau of Education, Salt Lake City, Olah, 0. aaa 273 Mujica, Eduardo Sudrez: Chilean minister, The Portland. .(.....5 344 Governing board, Pan American Union. 283 Mullowny, A. R., judge, police court, 1735 QIegan AVO.. oii ceeds ia ei ae 343 Mundy, George P., Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds. ............ 220 Munsey, Edward E., Bureau of Pensions, Ig Monroe 81... LL eo is 272 Murdock, S. A., office of Doorkeeper of House, BDA ML BE ir ite ge ra 223 Murdeck, Vietor, member of Joint Commis- sion on ‘Government Purchase of Pneumatic Tubes, The Balfour. o.oo svvaih oes 214 Murphy, Dennis J., M. D. : Government Hos- pited-for Tneane. ou Co Jel dls pai Ln oo 289 Murphy, Edward V., Oficial Reporter, Sen- ate, 9511 Pennsylvania fC I ESS SRR 226 Murphy, James L., deputy marshal, United States Commerce’ Court, The New Berne.. 342 Murphys James W., Offieial Reporter, Senate, 1788 LATIET PlaCOuss.nnseeenrnes ov erases 226 ER Individual Index. Page, Murphy, John P., postmaster of the Senate, The Vendome, ;. a. .or2e4 ne Sn so Murphy, John P. H., M. D., Government Hospital or INSANe. Lo. cveuriviipasernress Muay, M. J., House post office, 222 Third Nagel, Charles, American National Red Cross Nai Choate, Siamese Legation........cou. un Nai Jajaval, Siamese Legation............... Naén, Mr. Rémulo S.: Aeponiing minister, 1600 New Hampshire VO deve II HEN Governing board, Pan American Union. . Nash, Medical Director Francis S.; Boag of Medical Examiners, Navy, 1723 QS Naval Retiring Board .......oliasadsnae- Nason, John P., RE Neagle, Pickens, office of Solicitor for the Navy Department, 1858 Park Road. ...... Neal, Henry, messenger to Speaker, 407 Flori~ Needham, Charles W., Interstate Commerce Commission, 1527 Coreoran St... ........... Neill, Passed Asst. Paymaster W. G., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. C..... Nelson, E. K., Bureau of Chemistry, Takoma Parle BIA. oc iis. cli caar sires Nelson, E. W., Bureau of Biological Survey, The Northumberland... cco vas iis n sue Nelson, Thomas P., Senate Committee on Corporations Organized in the District of Columbia, 18053 H S6.......anu.... rene Nelson, Walter R., House post office........ Nesbit, Paymaster D. W., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, The Cairo. .....eununsaasssn Nevitt, Dr. J. R., District coroner, 1820 Calvert Nevius, W. J., Division of Accounts and Dis- bursements, 2706 Twelfth St. NE........... Newburgh, Frederic, division chief, General Land Office, 1421 Columbia Road... ........ Newcomer. Lieut. Col. Henry C., Beard of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, The ST I Ere RN ma el Newell, Frederick H., Director of Reclama- tion Service, 1829 Phelps Plage, ...0... Newman, H., House elevator conductor. .... Newman, Oliver P., District Commissioner, Plorence Court. ci ay Nicholson, Philip W., District fire depart- ment, 136 Rhode Island Ave............... Niess, Edwin A., assistant attorney, Post Office Devartment, 61 Rhode Island Ave.-. Nixon, Charles R., office of Secretary of the Senate, 1338 New York Ave................ ixom, "G. A., principal examiner, Patent Office, 123 Chaveh St. (1... iain Nexon, B., financial clerk, Senate, 1336 Fairmont 8... oo Mair Nobile, Carlo dei Conte Montagnini, Tialian LA SRT ER ae aE sR Ie Noble, Louis B., House Committee on Print- Ing, The Willlson............0 0G 0iod.hss Nobutaro Kawashima, Mr., Japanese Em- AES seen sensscnennesscecegassenssccssssne 221 491 Page. Normoyie, Maj. James E,, Office of Depot Quartermaster, The Dresden. . ....couen.n. 259 Norris, John L., assistant District health officer, 2503 Rhode Island Ave. NE...... 397 Norris, W. F., attorney, Department of Jus- tice, 1627 BixteentSE.. ovis 262 Norton, Commander A. L. (retired), Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, 2228 Cathedral Ave.... 266 Norton, Charles D., American National Red Birr SSE R Ee, RR ER 287 Norton, Capt. Harold P.: Naval Examining Board, 1704 Nineteenth SES ea EL SR EIS SR SR 269 Naval Retiring Board «..o.cuveciinrans 269 Norton, R. H., Senate Committee on Pacific Railroads, 231 B St. NE ....coniinier.ioen 219 Nott, Charles C., retired chief justice, Court of Claims, Princeton, N. J....i..avnviaden 341 Noyes, Theodore W.,: Divector, Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Washington, D.C... ccovavnais. 289 District board of trustees, Public Library. = 386 Washington National Monument Society 289 Nutwell, Isaac S., Senate Committee on Dis- trict of Columbia, Lothian, Md............ 218 Oakley, Russell A., Bureau of Plant Indus- Ly, RIS RE tend: 275 O’Beirne, Margaret A., Senate Committee on Expenditures in State Department .... 219 Obenchain, Charles A, law examiner, General Land Office, 1415 Twenty-ninth St......... 270 Ober, George C.: District board of medical supervisors, AR SR DE ee SR I LEE 395 District board of medical examiners, 125 A RN Bg SL I A 395 O’Brien, Mrs. H., Government Hospital for TSANG, 50s cv saniy sands anes She we sa anda Pais 290 O’Brien, John H., Senate Committee on Addi- tional Accommodations for the Library of Congress, 411 Second 86... ...... cc... 218 O’Brien, Richard A., District plumbing board oor neininianl nlanl salad BG 395 O’Byrne, James J., Senate Committee on Expenditures in the Navy Department, 312 8ccond SE. 88. oo LL naiaiiaas) 218 O’Connell, James, Commission on Industrial Relations... oil, is nai av 283 O’Connell, Loretta E., Senate Committee on Expenditures in the Navy Department, 1213 Rhode Island Ave... .. i ..inil 218 Oden, Archibald, jr., Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, The Ven- IR a Se La CL TR BE LARIAT 220 Oden, B. F., House Committee on Foreign Affairs, The Rochelle ....n i... ios 224 O’Donnell, Ignatius D., Reclamation Serv- ice, 105 Clark Ave., Billings, Mont........ 274 O'Dwyer, W. G., House post office.......... 225 Offutt, A. E., Government Hospital for In- I Te SR ETS LL TE A 290 Offutt, Hilleary IL... ir., Senate Committee on Fisheries, 517 Quincey St.......o.h ais 219 Ogle, Charles T., Correspondence Division, Navy Department, 528 First St. SE. ....... 265 O’Hern, Maj. Edward P., office of Chief of Ordnanee, Army, 1995888... ciiuvaiana 260 Oliver, Frank, Senate Commitiee on Inter- oceanic Canals, The Driscoll ........cu..... 219 Olmsted, Frederick Law, Commission of Fine Aris, Brookline, Mass ooo. Slo ool) as 287 O’Lone, Joseph P., Government Printing Office, 144 Thirteenth 8. SE. ............. 284 Olsen, J. A., Office of Public Buildings and Grounds and Washington Monument, The TOW. anil tsa nab oat dole 261 O’Malley, Mary, M. D., Government Hos- pital forTasane. 0.0 Li aad 289 O’Neil, D. G., M. D., Government Hospital forEmeane li Loa anh slay 289 O’Rear, Gunter, Senate Committee on Post Officecsand Post Reads. . ..............c.0. 220 O’Rourke, James F., Senate Committee on Civil Service and Retrenchment, 226 East a NT aT Se 28 Orr, James W., special assistant attorney, Department of justice, The Bellevue... ... 262 Orton, W. A., Bureau of Piant Indusiry, koma Polk wer eernsanconn wn nim ie = PA(] 492 Page. Osborn, William, confidential clerk to Com- Wiigener of Patents, 1430 Rhode Island AVE rl, hy ei i I Osborn, William H., Commissioner of In- ternal Revenue, The Farragut ............ Osborne, D. G., British Embassy ........... Secretary of Owens, Lieut. Commander C. T., Naval Observatory, 1711 88t............ REE Owens, Dr. Clarence J., member Commission : to Investigate and Study Rural Credits, * ete., Southern Building, Washington, D.C. Oyster, Edw. W., office of District assessor, LE nee, Ozburn, Wade H., captain of the watch, In- terior Department, 131 Quincy Place NE... Pace, Charles F., indexer Senate documents, Ee CE i ee a Padden, William E., office of Doorkeeper of House, 17. Third St. NE. ....... Zi. Zia Padgett, William I., House Committee on Naval Afiairs, The Clifton................. Pagan, Oliver E., attorney, Department of Justice, 1965 Biltmore:St................... Page, Logan Waller, Director of Public Roads, 2223 Massachusetts Ave...........0.....000 Page, Thomas Nelson, Washington National Monument Societys... 0 oi Ll Page, William Tyler, pair clerk to minority, office of Sergeant at Arms, House.......... Palmer, Aulick, United States marshal, 1401 BelmonbiSt. ooo ala o Palmer, T. S., Bureau of Biological Survey, 130 Bitmere Sh. oo inl LL sean Parham, Norris D., Senate Committee on Ir- rigation and Reclamation of Arid Lands., The Portsmouth... onside. Parker, BE. W., Geological Survey, 2252 Cathe- qrab Aver. gr Dn TR Parker, Gabe E., Register of the Treasury, HMI12 Fourteenth Sto... iho asian Parker, Harry P., Senate Committee on Pen- vgions, BOM QE QF coon an, es Parker, James I., chief clerk, Interior Depart- ment, 3517 Fourteenth Stoo... ow... Parker, John D., office of Inspector General, Phe Henriella o.. oii Jasin Jiao bls Parker, Robert E., clerk to Assistant Secre- tary.of War, The Portner...i........cconll Parks, Edward L., A. M., D. D., Howard Oniversity. Los, aoa siid Fast diinis. Parrish, Geo. F., House Committee on Inva- HA Pension: fo Sate vebanis Se int Newark St., Cleveland Park.............. Patrick, G. B. , Bureau of Chemistry, The Sherman. oli nines cen Patterson, Flora W., Bureau of Plant Indus- fev, The Beacon: .. sii. oii Patterson, Margaret, Senate Committee on Pensions. JL. i. cath a SR Patterson, W. E., House post office, 612 East Cpt St. Patton, Grover, Senate Committee on Naval Cu Ee Ae SER A eR nat Paul, Edwin G., Reclamation Service, Col- 3020 Pork, Md. .ccnnininihvive ima vainiies 272 256 346 254 220 262 222 Congressional Directory. Page. Paul, F. E., House Committee on Mileage, 1707 North Capitel St..........cco... 0... Poi G.J., stationery clerk, House, 411 B St. Paull, George S., appointment clerk, Post Office Department, Falls Church, Va...... Paxton, J. W., District superintendent of street cleaning, 1871 California St.......... Paxton, Maj. Robert G., office of Chief, Quartermaster Corps, Army, 1722 H St... Payne, James E., United States Geographic Board, 2730 Twenty-second St. NE. ....... Peck, S. S., House document room, 140 Thirteenth St, SH co Satis sa Peddicord, C. E., assistant attorney, De- partment of Justice, Falkstone Courts. ... Pedigo, Walter R., private secretary to Sec- retary of War, 1840 Biltmore St............ Peelle, Stanton J.: ~~ Retired Chief Justice, Court of Claims, Chevy Chase Md. oie war President board of trustees, Howard Uniyosy. SL SE Peery, Edwin H., Office of Judge Advocate General, Army, 1455 Chapin St............ Peirce, Vernon M., office of Public Roads, 8504 Thirteenth Sn... iv oon. or Lo] Pena, Dr. Carlos Maria de: Uruguayan minister, 1734 N St ..... .... Governing board, Pan American Union. Pena, Sefior Hugo V. de, Uruguayan legation, Pence, W. D., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, Chicago, TN. o cl. 0 tic Pendexter, R. & Senate Committee on Rail- roads, 415 Fourth St. SE. .........v..cn.. Pendleton, Edmund, Senate Committee on Appropriations, 114 Maryland Ave. NE. .. Pennington, M. B., Bureau of Chemistry, St. David’s, Philadelphia, Pa... .o....0..... Penrose, Boies, member Joint Committee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, New Willard. Sl ati EY Pepper, Irvin S., Regent of Smithsonian In- SIREN. on TEER iE eR Perkins, Frank Walley, Coast and Geodetic Survey, TheWarmaent..... 0. co. 0. Perkins, George C., director Columbia Insti- tutionforthe Deal... 0... =... Sachin Perkins, Perry B., A. M., Ph. D., Howard EnEversily Coit Shs i aa Perry, J. R,, Perry, R. Ross: Washington National Monument Society Director Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Washington, D. C..-.......c..0. Peters, George H., Senate Committee on OTS rar es boss amas os sale = Eras Peters, J. G., Forest Service, 1723 Corcoran St. Pettengill, Lieut. Commander G. T., Bureau . of Ordnance, Navy, 2013 O St............. Petty, J. T., assistant District assessor, 3331 Uh A Re I i Peynado, Sefior Dr. Don Francisco J.: Dominican minister, 2120 Leroy Place. . Governing board, Pan American Union. Pezet, Mr. Alfonso Washington, Peruvian 10Bati00 i. ov oasvesw siemmin-o on ota Re ra Ae Pezet, Mr. Frederico Alfonso: Peruvian minister, 2223 R St.....c....-. Governing board, Pan American Union. . Pfeiffer, John A., M. D., Government Hos- Malfoy Yusanmel: Jicoooon iin n Phelps, I. K., Bureau of Chemistry, 1410 M St. Philips, A. E., District superintendent of sewers, 2116 Connecticut Ave.............. Phillips, E. F., Bureau of Entomology, Somerset Heights, Md..o.oia. iis iol Phillips, Julia M., Senate Committee on Im- migration, 1440 MBL aan hillips, P. Lee, division chief, Congressional Library, 1707 ERs Res Pickens, Lieut. A. C., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy A725 FL BE. on ol aes aa Tes Pickens, James M., Bureau of Animal Indus- ry, 1831. California 8b... ccc. vor cmnniinn 223 215 282 346 345 250 289 290 226 289 269 219 276 266 395 345 283 347 347 283 289 277 RR Lhe J Indwidual Index. Page. Pierce, Herbert R., Senate Committee on Univ ersity of the United States, The Cham-- plain... can t Piggott, Arthur Senate Committee on En- grossed BIS oo ce i ta ae has Pinney, Lieut. Commander F. L., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. Cites Piper, Charles V., Bureau of Plant Industry, 1499 na LE AE RESO ei (PC Cs Piser, Amy R., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining, 1657 Lamont 8t............. Pitkin, Wolcott H. ., jr., attorney general, POO RID cies is see so ed ren Pitney, Mahlon, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), 1763: R Steno hiv Pitt, R.V., Interstate Commerce Commission, IIE. a ieee Plank, Frank, House elevator conductor, 120 Code eastern iin Platt, Benj. S., enrolling clerk, Senate, The BOTROT rit Toe iios a ~ Pleadwell, Surg. F'. L., attendance on officers, he Brighton. .... de cienss vamasiina ns Pollock, Commander E. T., Naval Observa- tory, 1800 Wyoming Ave........ccc....... Pond, Benjamin W., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1887 Newton St.............. Poore, Maj. Benjamin A., General Staff Corps, BHO DTORaen Pope, A. 1., division chief, Patent Office, 627 Bast Shani Ee BY enn sei ee Ve Poa S., Bureau of Mines, 1321 East Capi- Rr twin vin, ww ie iwi we Tuto ge To wan hehe So 10) SF 4 37 STR LR ES 19 Por, H. Kirke, American National Red BCR os i ee shee oh St Se Porter, Mrs. Mattie W., Senate Committee on Patents, IE LAE0r ons no Post, Louis F., Assistant Secretary of Labor, II BRALIREE. Potter, Albert F., Forest Service, 1307 I> 3t. Pou, George RB., House Committee on Claims, 21 First St. NE Ee Powderly, T. V., Chief Division of Informa- tion, Depar tment of Labor, 502 Quincy St. Powell, Grahame H., Board of Ordnance and Fortification, 3454 Newark St. .&........... Powell, R. G., ‘assistant to District Engineer Commissioner, Army and Navy Club..... Powers, Le Grand, Bureau of the Census, LT la eR ™ pier. irk, House library, The New Var- Por, Robert H., Office of Fourth Assist- ant Postmaster General, 145 Carroll St. SE. Prescott, A. W., secretary Joint Committee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, 1226 North Caroling Ave. co. i 0... 5.0 Preston, James D., superintendent Senate press galler vy, 1405 ATLSOR St. ones Prettyman, Rev. Forrest J., Chaplain of the Senate, 1308 Columbia Road. . ............. Prince, Ben L., Committee on Expenditures Cour the Navy “Department, House Fontanet ourts. a ee Pa pre SE A ES ate Proctor, C. B., District fire department, 1221 EE rh Tr ea ee Proudfit, Samuel V 2550 Fourteenth Si SE ie en Set IR Prouty, Charles A., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, The Portner. ............... Prouty, W., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1Sl6 LamontiSt i oi oo oo nnn Prude, James O., jr., Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads ....o...een... Pugh, A. B., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1802 Blt: to an a Pugh, James L., judge, police court, 3402 Mount Pleasant... ie earns Pugh, William B., law clerk, General Land Office, Kensington, LG EE En IR ee Pumphrey, ‘Walter H., assistant attorney, Department of Justice, '1425 Belmont St. . ... 220 273 218 267 276 219 261 339 285 219 281 276 343 270 262 Putnam, George R.: a of “Lighthouses, 2124 LeRoy Place co seal Jo bin. United States Geographic Board. ........ Putnam, Herbert: Librarian of Congress, The Woodward .. ‘Washington National Monument Society. Putnam, Capt. Russell B., Paymaster’s De- partment, Marine Corps, Lyonhurst, Na... Putney, Albert H., division chief, State De- partment, 1416 pres ae an Pyne, Paymaster F. G., Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, 3720 Nor thampton St........ Quaintance, A. L., Bureau of Entomology, 1807 Phelps PIs ress ded so is Quarles, G. W., BL 113 C St. SE. Quigley, Edward T ssistant Solicitor for Department of Commerce, The Holland. . Quinn, Harold F., House Committee on Appropriations... iis ie a Rabbitt, Wade H., office of Building and Grounds, Congressional Library, 2028 P St. Racedo, Mr. Eduardo, jr., Argentine Legation, 1728 Twenty-first od FER lee LE CY Radcliffe, Amy V., conference of minority, House, ‘914 Kast Capitol Shoal dann, Radford, Naval Constructor G. S., Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1615 Irving St. Radler de Aquino, Lieut. ‘Commander, Bra- fonts» Embassy, 1627 Avenue of the Presi- PITT Mo ER a er SE Ce UR Rafter, principal examiner, Patent Office, Frog SORA rR Ragsdale, William M., Bureau of Naturaliza- - tion, Federal Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.. Hangs, Thomas R., Bureau of Pensions, 1730 Rainey, Francis H., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, NO050O:8E. . oi hi.. Ralph, Joseph E., Director Bureau of En- govas and Printing, 1246 Newton St. Ns ss ie oe i de sh ma iat Ralston, Capt. Robert R.: Office of Chief of Engineers, The Cordova. Board of Ordnance and Fortification, The Cordova... oe. ooniiini. nth ous Ramage, B. J., special assistant attorney, Department of J uastice, The 'Oniario....... Ramsay, R. A., pen ‘of Animal Industry, 1300 enyon § EE Re EE Ramsey, Capt. AEE F., Office of Chief of Ordnance, Army, Florence Court. ........ Randolph, John, assistant clerk, Court of Claims, 5818 Randolph, John B., assistant chief clerk, War Department, "Hammond Court...... Ransom, B. H., Bureau of Animal Industry, 1735 New Hamsphire AVE, as Ransome, F. L., Geological Survey, 1455 Bel- TORE BE it siren en tesonerhractianss Rathburn, Richard: In charge National Museum, 1622 Massa- chusetts Ave..........cnccocononnen.-. “tho National Museu... oii ses ws soni Rault, J. M., Senate Committee on Public Health and National Quarantine, 1324 Q St. Ravenel Wis de C., National Museum, 1611 Riggs Se ERE en i TEC i EE Rawl, B. H Ray, Joseph H., House Comune on Ex- penditures on Public Buildin, Raymond, Capt. William H., Corps, 2219 California Ave...........c..o Rea, Kennedy F., Senate Committee on Appropriations, 906 East Capitol St........ Reber, Lieut. Col. Samuel, Office of Chief Signal Officer, 732 Seventeenth St ........ Redfern, S. E. , commissioner of immigration, Maison Blanche Building, New Orleans, La. Redfield, William C.: Secretary of Commerce (biography), The Highlands... io loci oes Member of Smithsonian Institution. ..... 493 Page. 277 226 223 282 282 282 494 Page. Redmond, C. F., Senate Committee on Private Land Claims... ........0uilian. Reed, Clyde, Bureau of Supplies and Ac- eounis, 1030 Paxk Road... 00. dian Reed, Franklin W ., Forest Service, 2822 Twen- ty-seventhvSE. 05. co nani Th Tai Reed, Civil Engineer P. L., Bureau of Yards and Docks, 27i7 Ontario Road............ pital lordmsane; ll, . oo ilu pl El Regata, Sefior Don Miguel Fernandez de la, Mexican BBIDRSSY.... «ceive w= ais ob ante Sah Remon, Sefior Don Nicolds, Panaman Lega- Renoe, John R., Senate Committee on Indus- trial Expositions, The Farragut........... Reynolds, Marshall 8., Senate Committee on the Geological Survey, 213 North Capitol St. Reynolds, Lieut. Commander William H., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 2230 Q St... Reynolds, Pay Inspec. Z. 'W., Navy Pay Office, he Brighfon. (.... 0. sheesh aids Rhodes, Lieut. J. B., Navy Yard and Sta- ‘tion, Washington, DC. Riafio y Gayangos, Seflor Don Juan, Spanish minister, 2620 Avenue of the Presidents... Rice, A. G., Bureau of Soils, Livingstone Holahie, Vi ou clit oie ve nina ae nie Rice, Anthony F., division chief, General Land Office, 138 Tennessee Ave. NE...... Rich, Henry A., Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Department of Justice, The Woedworth . oo. aii illo Zn dl Rich, William H., office of Doorkeeper of nL ear er SERRE Rich, William J., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1468 Clifton St. . ..... 0 Loi dul. Richard, Col. Charles, Commandant Army Medical School, 1860 Mintwood Place...... Richards, Dr. Alfred, office of Metropolitan THI METAR Su ENG LE Nhe Richards, Chas. N., keeper of stationery, Senate, 101 Massachusetts Ave... ......... Richards, Col, George, Paymaster’s Depart- ment, Marine Corps, 8 Melrose St., Chevy 4ion-of Mails, Dever, Del............0.00.. Richardson, James D., member Joint Com- mission for the Extension and Completion of the Capitol Building, 433 Third St..... Richardson, W, V., Senate Committee on Patents, 1213 Connecticut Ave............. Rider, Mrs. Gertrude T., in charge of Reading Room for the Blind, Congressional Library, Phe Rerirer i. dnl i a ia, Ritch, Marvin L., Senate Committee on Post “Offices and Post Roads. ........c. entail. Ritter, Alfred H., Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, 1205 Crittenden St... Ritter, Dr. Paul, Swiss ministér....ceeece. we 220 266 276 266 222 274 278 263 289 347 347 219 219 266 267 267 348 277 271 218 223 271 259 397 27 270 267 395 261 215 214 219 250 265 262 282 219 267 222 220 261 348 Congressional Directory. Page. Ritter, R. P., executive secretary, Commis- sion on Industrial Relations ._............ Rivas, Seiior Don Santiago, Chilean Legation, Tho Dewey ..cco-aseennns Pima ule ws ae wie Rizer, Henry C., Geological Survey, 1464 Bel- MONEISL i ES ae de Robb, Charles H., associate justice, District Court of Appeals, The Rochambeau....... Robert, Naval Constructor W. P., Bureau of Stnntion and Repair, 1822 Jefferson TUOR oo Sm emi ola sm ot AR EASA Roberts, George E., Director of the Mint, The Ontario... cers aR Fra th Roberts, R. W., appointment clerk, Depart- ment of Agriculture, 1646 Monroe St....... Robertson, James, Naval Observatory, 4111 EossendeR Paes. ioe vs vss cava iibe veda da Robinson, C. B., District veterinary surgeon, CRE cv mw mists miseries woe mid HS A ia SEs Robinson, Capt. James P., General Stafi Corps, Army and Navy Club.osecennnen... Robinson, Joe T.: Chairman Commission on Indian Tuber- orion Sanitarium, ete., The Burling- TA LE Chairman Commission to Investigate Indion Aflalis... 0: co avers I in 2 Rockwell, First Lieut. Charles K., office of Chief of Engineers, The Dresden........... Rockwell, Julius E., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 81 8 St Rockwell, Civil Engineer J. V., Bureau of Yards and Docks, 3110 Eighteenth St..... Rodgers, Lieut. C. R. P., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, B.C................ Rodgers, John J. 8., commissioner of immi- gration, Gloacesier, N. J... ...-c-ccers--0n Rodgers, Joseph G., office of Doorkeeper of House, 2924 Macomb St.....cocnvernnnenn. Rodgers, Capt. Thomas S.: Director, Office of Naval Intelligence, Pe EB OONBIOr, ca tioin snes een =a General Board, Navy Rogers, Charles C., District collector of taxes, 21183 Bichteenth St....c.. cine ooiin ss meienn ws Rogers, D. M., Bureau of Entomology, 6 Beacon St., Boston, Mass..........ccni-nsn Rogers, Col. Harry L., Office of Chief Quar- termaster Corps, Army, The Woodward. . Rogers, Samuel G., Bureau of Pensions, 1229 Kenyon St Rojas, Seiior Don P. Ezequiel: Venezuelan minister, 1017 Avenue of the Presidents... ..covones fess nmmie nse ayn Governing board, Pan American Union. . Rome, John, Office of Doorkeeper of House, 315 First 81. NE Rommel, George M., Bureau of Animal Indus- ry, 2022GarReld Sb... Ga sid Ss Roosa, I. P., dispatch agent, State Depart- TIL LE CS OL i SR Bs Te Roosevelt, Franklin D., Assistant Secretary ofthe Navy, 1733 NSE... ooo... i. Root, Cyrus, General Supply Committee, Laurel, Mi 2 Root, ¥lihu, member Joint Commission for the Extension and Completion of the Capi- tol Building, 1155 Sixteenth St............ Roper, Daniel C., First Assistant Postmaster General, 816 Massachusetts Ave. NE Roper, Daniel C., jr., office Secretary oi Senate, 816 Massachusetts Ave. NE...... momo emewsesmeemeno Remsen oe va. 244 273 343 266 257 274 265 396 258 266 Individual Index. Page. Rosa, Edward B., Bureau of Standards, 3110 cANCWATIE BT. 0 inn ss ainsi aris nae sth Rose, Henry M., Assistant Secretary of the Senate, 1745 Eighteenth St.....ccevee..... Rose, Robert F., foreign trade adviser, State Department. Falkstone Courts............ Rousseau, Civil Engineer H. H., Isthmian Canal Commission, one. Routt, Kate; Senate Committee on Cana- dian’ Relations, 1308 Belmont St........... Rubin, Cora, Senate Committee on Indian Depredations, The Vontosd .. cn .oerisecesss Rucker, W. on Assistant Surgeon General, Bureau of hg Public Health, The Dresden . Ruckman, Webster S., law examiner, Patent Office, 3414 Mount Pleasant St............. Rudolph, Cune H., Howard University..... Runyan, Elmer a, District pants utilities commission, 1100 Bast Capltel St... ....; Russel, Maj. "BEdg gar, Office of Chief Signal Officer Army, The Hichlands. oo: Russell, Lieut. (Junior Grade) F', Navy Yard and Station ‘Washington, 0 Russell, Maj. John FI., ‘Office De Naval Intel- ligence, 103 De Ban BE. ses en Rutter, Frank R., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, 1442 Belmont St. .... Ryan, Edgar R., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, 44 Bryant St... ...... Bsn, P. S., House post office, 231 Second St. Ryan, W. A.. Reclamation Service, 5311 Con- NEO AVE iia as Sater Ryan, William A., House Committee on Ap- propriations, 1815 Belmont Road. ....... Ryan, W. 8., attorney, Department of Jus- fay ol of Department of Jusiice ........ Ryder, Bayard C., file clerk, Senate, 223 A St. Rynder, R. D., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, The Wagar AE RE Ce Sabine, George W assistant librarian of House, The ER Ee SE Saburo Okabé, Mzr., Japanese Embassy, The Champlain... oo. a re dae Sackett, Paymaster F. P., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D.C Salant, William, Bureau of Chemistry, 3429 Thirt y-fourth Place, Cleveland Park...... Saltzgaber, Gaylord ™., Commissioner of Pensions, ATE Da Sample, James A., “Office Treasurer of the United States, Florence Court ............ Sanders, R. A., District inspector of phar- macy, 39 Quincy Be ec aie rsh waite ssf aie mh San Hsteban de Cafiongo, Sefior Conde de, Spanish Legation. veneesse vesavapsesssioes Sanford, S., Bureau of Mines, LE Safer, "Mone, Government Hos spital for In- Sani Mr. Manuel de Freyre y, Peru- vian Legation, The Dachelor.............. Sar =e Lieut. Commander Leonard R.: Aid to Admiral of the Navy, 1845 R St... Duty in connection with General Board, NAVY ona sins os mri ids + See rire fn 5 Sartiges, Mr. De, French Embassy cecccass- Satt erfield, William T., Office of Fourth Assist- ant Postmaster General, 1345 Qak St....... Sas . O., Bureau of Chemistry, 640 D Sayre, James V., Senate Committee on For- est Reservations and the Protection of Game, 3112 South Dakota Ave. NE....... Sayre, Mrs. Julia K., Senate Committee on Forest Reservations and the Protection of Game, 3112 South Dakota Ave. NE....... Schaefer, Michael D., Bureau of Construction and Repair, SISASEER =. ein Schaefer, Peter C., District plumbing board. . Schiavone, Jose ph, Senate Committee on Coast Dalonion. . 1... rr ds Schellberg, L. E Interstate Commerce Com- mission, The Balfour. oo. coi cada are Scherba tkskoy, Mr. A., Russien Embassy, 1612 Rhode Tond AVa. cons: oer tens Schindel, Capt. S. J. Bayard, General Staff Corps, i747 Highteenth SE... ccacnni-nnsense 280 217 254 286 266 395 495 Page. Schlenker, Theo., Senate Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard. . Schley, Capt. Julian I.: Assistant to District Engineer Commis- sioner, Army and Navy Club.......... Superintendent of District Building. .... District public utilities commission. ... . . Schmeckebier, Laurence F., division chief, Interior Department, 1444 Belmont ig Schmolck, Mr. F. M. Netherlands Legation. . Schofield, Lieut. Col. Richmond McA. Office of Chief Quartermaster Corps, Army, 2807 Oniario Bond. a Schoff, Mrs. Hannah K., Bureau of Educa- tion, Philadelphia, BR a Schreiner, Oswald, Bureau of Soils, 2125 Fif- TRENT a ca A Schroeder, E. C., Bureau of Animal Industry, Bethesda, Md Schuldt, Gus. A., assistant District eorpora- tion counsel, 317 Fourth St. SE Bouin, A. R., Geological Survey, 3034 New- TE A CR I PRE Tv. 2 Schwinn, George H., M. D., Government Hospital for the THEOTG. . tocrdeg toes Scofield, Carl S., Bureau of Plant Industry, Lanham, LF Sr J Seofield, John C., chief clerk, War Depart- ment, "1614 P St Scofield, Kendrick, private secretary to Com- missioner of Patents, The Seville. ......... Scott, Alexander, division e¢hief, Patent Off ice, 1201 Kenyon Bf sae Scott, Hon. Ernest, British Embassy, 1735 New Hampshire Ave... ...cidasn.ouiiaca- Scott, Finis B., Assistant Postmaster of House, 322 Maryland Ave. NE Seriven, Brig. Gen. George P., Chief Signal Officer, Army, 2008 N St... ...........l-- Scudder, Charles W., Bureau of Fisheries, 2h Rite Bb. Searle, William D., appointment clerk, War Department ABT TWORIREL. ,o. oarennn- Seaton, Fay N., secretary Joint Committee to a General Parcel Post, 608 Quincy Sells, Cato, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, The Imperial wnmeidipn ss Sain es os SD i Senn, Commander Thomas J., Board of In- spection and Survey for Ships, 1808 Bel- TATE oR PET Lm AR eS RT Settle, W. E..jr., Nowe Commerce Com- mission, 1645 Sewall, Eugene >. Elio examiner, Patent i Qin 2106 F St. ak mour, Blond G., Senate Committee on Disposition of Useless Papers in Executive Departments, 34 Rhode Island Ave. ....... Shackleford, Dorsey W., vice chairman Joint Committee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, Congress Ball... gi Schackleford, John C., House Committee on Roads, 300 ‘First St. ow aaa Shand, Miles M. , bureau ehtef, State Depart- ment, 3206 Seventeenth rR a ERS RR Shanks, Lieut. Col. D. C., Office of Inspector General, The bik) CAPR Lo Sa Sharpe, Brig. Gen. Henry G.: Office of Chief Quartermaster Corps, Army, PRISM SH. ee. ea Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home. ......... Sharpe, Mrs. Henry G., Board of Visitors, Government Hospital for the Insane. . ... Shaw, A. P., principal examiner, Patent Office, 2574 University Ploeg. sou. ode c Shaw, Maj. M. J., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D.C Shea, Nona G., Senate Committee on Privi- leges and Elections, 1817 Vernon St........ Shear, Jerome C. , Bureau of Naturalization, Federal Building, Philadelphia, Pa........ Sheehy, Joseph C., District excise board, i a EN pS a csesenassecassecnesasun en 220 496 Sheibley, Sinclair B., assistant attorney, De- partment of J ustice, 1940 Biltmore St...... Sheild, Marcellus C., House Committee on Appropriations, 2498 Twentieth St........ Shelton, Arthur B., clerk, U. S. Court of Cus- Hi "Appeals, Cypress St., itl Chase, Military Affairs, Tho Ontario... coessr nes Shely, J.'W. Sealing and venilisiing, House, 702 SoconAeSl re teres ah wine ame aE Shepard, a Sarit justice, District Court of Appe: als, 1447 Massachusetts Ave. .......... Sherley, Swagar, member Commission on Reconstruction of the Hall of the House of Representatives, 1718 Rhode Island Ave . Sherrill, E. G., office of Clerk of the House, S38 Maryland Ave NT ries Sherwood, C. R., General Supply Committee, 21 Bryant oe Shidehara, Mr. K., Japanese Embassy, The Hiehlomded s.r asin aad Shidy, Leland P., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1637 Marlon St.° atu odd aiaioni cod Shigetoshi, Takeuchi, Commander, Japanese Embassy, The Lo ES EL is a ge Ee Shinners, W. L., Capito! police, The Vendome Shiras, George, Associate Justice, Supreme Court-(retived). i. oo 0. 0b Shively, Aaron B., Senate Committee on Pen- TE Ce SR GR NR ld ri a Shockley, Francis M., M. D., Government Hospiialfor Insane... ....ccovneevvesanena-- Shoemaker, C. W., office of International Ex- has ‘Smithsonian Institution, 3115 O Shoemaker, Capt. W. R., General Board, Navy, 2007 Kalorama Road. .............. Short, Levi, Office of Doorkeeper of House, Phe MUDOIT, ccs rte tania ie Shouse, James H., office of Doorkeeper of House, 400A: StS 0c. vr nL lia Shuey, Theodore F., Official Reporter, Senate, 2127 California St. oo. Shunk, Alonzo W., office of The Adjutant General, 1120 East Capitol St..eeeann.... Shurley, E. T., House Committee on Coinage, Weights, and Measures « -................. Shutter, E. B., Senate Committee on Trans- portation and Sale of Meat Products, The MOLrONOONY. ie ss eu in wa ae aS Shuster, William M., District board of trus- tees, National Training School for Boys.. .. Sibert, Lieut. Col. William L., Isthmian Canal Commissioner, Gatun............... Siddons, Frederick L., District: Commis- sioner, 1914 Biltmore BE ed Simmons, Eugene, House post office, 1319 Massachusetts Aver 4 oe Simons, Lieut. M. H., jr., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, 1844 Columbia Road ............... Simpson, George R., principal examiner, Patent Office, 123 Twelfth St. SE.......... Simpson, J essie L., Senate Committee on In- dian Amps ie aA I A re wR ST Simpson, S. Milton, deputy clerk Commerce Court, 9439 ONOTIO RO vee. vere se ini Sims, Thetus W., director Columbia Institu- tion for the Eola hl Sink, Herbert O., Senate Committee on Fi- nance;-2L First. St. NB...... 0... oe. .0ais Sinnott, J. J., Doorkeeper of the House, 3527 Thabteenth St. Scr ln sii aa Sisler, W. J. L., chief clerk and purchasing agent, Interstate Commerce Commission, Fontanel Cotrl sic rire vanins nn iin. se Skinner, C. W., District board of trustees, In- dustrial Home School. 2... ....... ico iis. Skinner, Frank C., examiner in chief, Patent Office, 3425 Holmead Place................ Skinner, W. W., Bureau of Chemistry, Ken- singtoa, Md... a Slade, William Adams, division chief, Con- gressional Library, BASE NE.. oo Slagle, Lu, messenger to President of the Senate, 332 Maryland Ave. NE............ Page. 262 223 342 219 225 217 226 Congressional Directory. Page. Slaybaugh, G. H., Revenue-Cutter Service, EE ET A Sa a as 257 Sloane, Charles S.: - Bureau of the Census, 1733 RSE. is 279 Say United States Geographic Rf Fan GR Sr a LE SE 287 Sloat, FrankD, financial clerk, Patent Office, ANAT BE or, rod may) Le Se 271 Small, Reuel, Official Reporter, House, The Boni, a 226 Small, William E., jr., office of Doorkeeper of House The Venloss. .......ccvesenen-r: 223 Smiley, Daniel, Board of Indian Commis- sioners, Mohonk Lake, N.Y ......._...... 288 Smith, Breedlove, House Committee on Irri- gation of Arid Lands, M08 R St. vi 224 Smith, Mr. Christopher’ F., Norwegian Lega- tion, 1720 De Bal Bhs vuns.ner soins 347 Smith, Erwin F., Bureau of Plant Industry, A Bamont 8 276 Smith, Everard H., Senate Committee on Appropriations, 637 Massachusetts Ave. a Cas SE Hn EE TR AT I 218 Smith, Frank, confdeniing clerk to Secretary of Navy, BOTs. 265 Smith, Medical G. T., navy yard and station, Washington, D. go aes 267 Smith, George Otis, Director Geological Sur- vey, 2137 Baneroft Place Lt .. ... .. ..... 273 Smith, H. A. A., Isthmian Canal Commis- sion, Bmplre. rr rs 286 Smith, Harry W., office of Naval Intelligence, 214 Tenth ST NR cre oer or ees 265 Smith, Herbert A., Forest Service, 1528 P St. 276 Smith, Herbert L., House Committee on In- sular Affairs, 1709 Corcoran St............. 224 Smith, Hoke, member Joint Commission on Government Purchase of Pneumatic Tubes, 2117.Callformin Ave. arr oe 214 Smith, Homer, fe ema departmental telegraph, EP SL-NE. 226 Smith, Tiugh M., rh tate of Fisheries, Nr 280 Smith J. CV. House post office, 449 Massa- chusetts Si VERE iodine dy COREE Sd a adhe 200 i 225 Smith, J. E., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1246 Trving bs i Re re CO RL 285 Smith, J. M., office of Doorkeeper of House, 209 First BENT 223 Smith, James F: J udge, U. S. Court of Customs Appeals, bE ELL ES ee aC Ee 342 Assistant - District corporation counsel, B00 Ok sn ss Ee 396 Smith, John L., office United States attorney, TBAB re 342 Smith, John Speed, Bureau of Naturaliza- tion, Federal Building, Seattle, Wash... .. 281 Smith, John Walter, member National Forest Reservation Commission, 330 Roland Ave., Roland Park, Baltimore, Md. oa tas 214 Smith, Ralph, indexer of Congressional Rec- ord, The Ballon. oo aso ns 226 Smith, Ray L,, Isthmian Canal Commission, 1319 Massachusetts Ave. SE ..c..ooneoonn.. 286 Smith, Robert G., District Excise Board, 1513 Avenue of the Presidents. ................ 395 Smith, S. , Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 3764 EERE St., Chevy Chase, D.C. 285 Smith) Sydney E. disbursing clerk, War De- partment AVE ES A RA Ra 257 Smith, Sydney Y., bureau chief, State De- partment, The Ootavis.. oer tra 254 Smith, Capt. Thomas IL., General Staff Cor Ds, 2805 ONtArio ROAA.r.enennenesnn.ns 258 ‘Smith, U. Grant, private secretary to the Seer stary of Commerce, 3118 Eighteenth St. 279 Smith, W. A., clerk, in charge at Capitol of Congr essional Redord, 3517 Jocelyn St., Chevy Chase Heights, D. C.............. 26, 284 Smith, W. F., office of Se: of the House, 219 Bast Capitol 8 Fo I Le Ne 222 Smith, William M., Bureau of Yards and Docks, IS BE. re ia iain ts 266 Smith, Braj. William R., Coast Artillery Di- vision, 1861 Mintwood Place I RE 258 Smither, Capt. Henry C., General Staff Corps, 5305 Connecticut Ave............... 258 PERE © TR 4 TM. Individual Index. Page. Smoot, Reed, member Joint Committee on Pr inting, 2521 Connecticut Ave. ........... Sniffin, William W. , Office of Public Roads, 2025: Garfield St... iar Snow, Maj. William J., Division of Militia Affairs, 1408 Twenty-first St Snyder, George F., clerk, ited States Com- merce Court, The Portsmouth... .......... Snyder, Lieut, Col. Henry D., Office of Sur- geon General, Army, The Marlbor ough. . Snyder, John O., office of Doorkeeper of House, 9829 Eleventh St.................n Solberg, "Thorvald , register, Copyright Office, Congressional Library, TOE Wh Ta Sonneck, Oscar G. T., division chief, Con- gressional Library, 3030 Macomb St. , Cleve- nd Pork... cit oe RR La Sornberger, Charles B., appointment clerk, Department of J ustice, 908 Sheridan St.. South, Jerry C., Chief Clerk of the House, 1831 eet Er RAL Rear Admiral W. H. H., Gen- eral Board, Navy, 192L.N St... ... ..... Sowdeny Harold G., House post office, Y. M. « As Building a Re Re, Spatiord Lieut. E. E., Navy Yard and Sta- tion, Ww ashington, D.C Sparks, J., House elevator conductor Sparrow, "Lieut. Commander Herbert FF: Bureau of Steam Engineering, The On- 3 ae Le ae Spaulding, Gertrude B., Senate Committee on Standards, Weights, and Measures, The GE Tee ee RR a eR Re Sper, Surg. Raymond: Naval Hospital, The Brighton........... Naval Medical S¢hool.................... Speer, Luther F., Deputy Commissioner In- ternal Revenue, 722 North Carolina Ave. SE a J. J.,House Committee on Judiciary. Speir, R. J., official stenographer to House committees, 411 Second St. SE............ Spencer, J. J., office of Doorkeeper of House, 16 Fourth St. SE Spicer, H. L., House document room, 606 North Carolina Ave. SE.....u.neeenrnen. Spillman, William J., Bureau of Plant In- dustry, The Cavendlih... ..... iv. vos Spilman, William R., office of First Assistant Postmaster General, 32+ Fifth St. SE...... Spinks, Maj. Marcellus G. , Division of Militia Affairs, The Beacon... .oaavios. iit. oluh, Spring-Rice, Sir Cecil Arthur, British am- LT Ty a Ste See Spring Rios, Hon. Thomas, British Em- BEEY iit. Sones eee Se te De en aa SO Een adiien ss di lan Stabler, man, Geological Seay, Be- AE re A Se Saree Stafford, Wendell P., associate justice, Dis- trict Supreme Court, 1725 Lamont St...... Stahl, Naval Constructor Albert W., Board of Tnspection for Shore Stations, The Neth- erlands. lo Laan Le en Stallings, B. D., Division of Publications, Department of "Agriculture, The Babcock. . Stanford, Civil Engineer H. R., U. S. Navy, Chief Bureau of Yards and Docks, he Presden i... a ee a a Stanton, T. W., Geological Survey, 54 S St. Starek, F. Jerome, marshal United States Commerce Court, 3211 Nineteenth St...... Starr, Robert C., Department of Labor, 4323 Blghth Bt. a n.. Stauffer, Henry E. ip riorences examiner, Patent Office, 1744 T St Steddom, R. P., Bureau of ‘Animal Industry, 1714 Thirteenth Bl i san Stedman, Charles M., member Joint Commis- sion to’ Investigate Purchase of American- om Tobacco by Foreign Governments, By%ed, Lyman, Columbia Institution for the I a Sp EN Sse 13823°—63-2—1sT ED——33 214 278 258 342 259 223 250 250 262 222 268 225 267 225 266 220 268 268 256 224 226 223 223 276 263 258 346 346 276 273 219 343 269 278 266 273 342 281 271 275 214 289 Page. Stejneger, Leonhard, National Museum, Thir- teenth and Monroe Sts., Brookland........ Stephan, W. P. , Capitol police, The Vendome Stephens, Alexander H., office of Second As- sistant Postmaster General, Falkstone COULIS. oo rinse See aus sous te Stephens, Francis H., assistant District cor- poration counsel, 1714 Summit Place Stephens, John H.: Member Commission on Indian Tubercu- fos 8 Sapearium, ete., 101 "Maryland VON ma Ty Rin to Investigate In- dian Afae... he e Sternberg, ex-Surg. Gen. George M., president board of visitors, Government Ho ospital for Insane. ease. a ea a Steuart, William M., Bureau of the Census, 3725 Morrison St.. Ghevy Chase, D.C... Stevens, Herbert A. , brivate secretary to As- sistant Secretary OE LOOT ves is eae Stevens, Wilfred, translator, State Depart- ment, Wesley Heights rE PEERS Sn Steward, Thomas G., examiner in chief, Pat- ent Office, 2934 Macomb St. ............... Stewart, Charles A. , office of Comptroller of the Currency, East Falls Church. Va...... Stewart, Charles W.: Superintendent, “Library and Naval War Records Office, 1211 Kenyon St ....... United States Geographic Board... Stewart, Ethelbert, Bureau of Labor Statis- tics, 21 Channing Teta ee Stewart, Joseph: Second Assistant Postmaster General, R22 Lament St. ou. oo. Member Joint Commission on Govern- ment Purchase of Pneumatic Tubes. . Stiefel, C. V., U. 8S. Botanic Garden, 137 ROMA BE. i aor Stimpson, assistant surgeon general, The BOA ON i er i a ae Stirling, George A., District board of trustees National Training School for Boys......... Stitt, Medical Insp. E. R.: Board’ Resi Examinationof Medical Officers, 1708 Stockberger, Warner W., Bureau of Plant Industry, 529 Cedar St. , Takoma Park.... Stokes, Surg. Gen. C. F.: Chief Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, The Highlands. co... o.com nits American National Red Cross........... Board of visitors, Government Hospital or Insane. oo. oles ee Stone, George F., office of Second Assistant Postmaster General, 3023 Macomb St...... Stone, William J., Regent of Smithsonian In- stitution EIN Re pS LR Stormont, George T., attorney, Department of Justice, 223'S St. NE Straight, Harry B., Senate Committee on Claims, 1200 C St. NE Stratton, F. C., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 1018 Fast Capitol Bt. oc... us. Stratton, S. W., Director Bureau of Stand- ards, The Farragut Sie ei aaa AR Pe Strauss, Rear Admiral Joseph, Chief of Bu- reau of Ordnance Navy, Tho Dresden... Streater, Wallace, Bureat of Pensions, 3160 Eighteenth RR ee SL SE Re ei Strider, Luke C., judge, municipal court, 1450 Rhode Ran: AVE Ca DT a Fring Bertram N., commissioner of immi- gration, Stewart Building, Baltimore, Md.. Sturges, Merton A., Bureau of Natu ralization, Federal Building, Chicago, Tl... li os Sudrez, M., Sefior Don Eduardo, Chilean min- ister, hoPortland.. oc aes ates Sudworth, George B., Forest Service, 3768 Pattorson Ot os Sullivan, Andrew J., Disord fire Yodoparjment, 1506 Thirty-second St... Seyi eessesae - 226 263 396 216 216 289 279 281 254 271 256 265 287 281 263 214 284 257 306 268 268 276 267 287 289 263 282 262 218 285 280 266 272 343 276 221 276 281 281 344 276 306 498 Congressional Directory. Page. Sullivan, Joseph R., Senate Committee on Expenditures in State Department, Y. M. CoAu Building. J iain Sullivan, Milnor R., principal examiner, Pat- ent. Office, The Dewey... .. oo. oan bas Sullivan, Simon E., office of First Assistant Postmaster General, Friendship Heights, Summers, Alexander, Bureau of Education, {LT ay Re ies a De es SR a Sumner, Miss Helen L., Children’s Bureau, 20 Newarle St. cco aise Sutemi, Chinda, Viscount, Japanese ambas- Sador, BIST... 2 Sas STE Swan, O.T., Forest Service, The Earlington. Swanson, Claude A., member Joint Com- mittee on Federal Aid in Construction of Post Roads, 2136 R'St.....00.. 0. L . Sweet, Edwin F., Assistant Secretary of Commerce, 1706 Avenue of the Presidents. . Sweney, F. W., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 641 Lexington Place.............. Swingle, Walter T'., Bureau of Plant Industry, Tana, MQ... ......... acai Switzer, J. B., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 4420 Georgia Ave................. Sylvester, Richard, major and superintend- ai, Metropolitan police, The Northumber- I EE A SR Se ee EL RS Syme, Conrad H., District corporation coun- sel, 3458 McComb St...........: EET Symon, Mr. Charles, Belgian Legation........ Taft, William Howard, chairman Lincoln Memorial Commission, New Haven, Conn. . Talbott, Edward M., Office of Attending Surgeon, Army, 1627 Sixteenth St.......... Talbott, H., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1337. Pwellth St... .... od. on sodas Thooi; Edmund M., office of District, 8235 RRR aE al BC POTN a Talman, Prof. Charles F., Weather Bureau, 1166. Nineteenth St......... cai. Trinity Tallman, Clay, Commissioner General Land Office, 1654 Trving he renin cnionmsl soins sn Tamekichi, Ohta, Mr., Japanese Embassy, The Champlain... ..... Lid. inhi Tan Yao Fen, Mr., Chinese Legation......... Tanner, James: Register of wills, 1610 Nineteenth St..... American National Red Cross............ Tanner, M. S., Senate Committee on Expend- itures in the Department of Justice, 1502 VermontiAVC.. o.oo niin i ois oid, Tansill, Harry L., Senate Committee on Cen- sus, 706 East Capitol St...... FO er CR Tastet, W. F., Bureau of Entomology, 134 Seaton Place. ora ids oi Tatum, Sledge, Geological Survey, 2318 Nine- teenth St... a al Taussig, Lieut. Commander Joseph K., Bu- Foot of Navigation, Navy, The Westmore- Cnet Ee DR LE I aE Sa he Tavenner, Clyde H., member Joint Commit- tee on Tenime, 5401 Illinois Ave.......... Tawney, Hon. James A., chairman United States section of the International Joint Commission, Winona, Minn. ............... Tayloe, Joseph F., Senate Committee on Fi- nance, 107 aryland Ave NB. ............; Taylor, Augustus C., District pharmacy board, Second St.and Massachusetts Ave. NE..... Taylor, Christian A., document room, Senate, CEI BY ARAN REE Se a Taylor, Clarence M., Senate Committee on District of Columbia, The Octavia. ....... Taylor, Naval Constructor David W., Bureau of Construction and Repair, Navy Yard.... Taylor, George R., division chief, War De- partment, Fans Church, Va................ Taylor, Guy O., Bureau of Pensions, The A RS SR Seek ea Taylor, H. W., chief engineer, House, 100 BN Se vrei risa vat distin 219 272 263 273 281 346 262 273 276 Page. Taylor, Lieut. Col. Harry: “Office of Chief of Engineers, 1826 I St..... 260 Board of Engineers for Rivers and Har- 110 En SR aM 261 Taylor, Leighton C., Senate Committee on Additional Accommodations for the Li- brary of Congress, 207 East Capitol St... ... 218 Taylor, Miles, Senate Committee on Mines and Mining, 1007 Otis Place. ............... 219 Taylor, William A., Chief Bureau of Plant Industry, 38 Qt. NE... ............ 275 Taylor, Wm. Clark, office of register of wills, 00 Bwenty-frst Bl. alot aa 343 Terrell, Robert H., judge, municipal court, cP SASS RE Le RUSE 343 Terreros, Sefior Don A. Algara R. de: Mexican Embassy, 1413 IT St............ 347 Governing board, Pan American Union. 283 Terrill, Maj. J. D., office of Comptroller of the Treasury,1334 Vermont Ave. .........._... 256 Tewksbury, Dr. William D., District super- intendent Tuberculosis Hospital. ......_... 396 Theall, E. S., House Committee on Naval Afiafrs, The Woodward.............. 224 Theiss, Capt. Emil, Board of Inspection and Survey for Ships, 1741 QSb............ .... 269 Theleen, Lieut. Commander D. E., Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. gr 267 Thistlethwaite, Mark, secretary to President of the Senate, 1729 Oregon Ave............. 217 Thomas, Edw. W., office Secretary of Senate, 2518 Seventeenth St-................. =: 217 Thomas, Henry G., Senate Committee on Conservation of National Resources, 1223 Boarvord Sb. cas i iat: 218 Thomas, Julian M., Senate Committee on Expenditures in Department of the Inte- rior, VW. Mo CoA. Bullding J... 0. ol 218 Thompson, C. Roy, conference minority of the Senate, 1334 Farragut St.............. 218 Thompson, Harry H., Office of Third Assist- ant Postmaster General, 2443 Ontario Road 264 Thompson, J. B., Office of Experiment Sta- Hong, Guam... oo i ais 278 Thompson, J. David, law librarian, Congres- sional Library, The Ontario.............. 250 Thompson, J. Roy, Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, 910 Maryland RRR Ie ie SHG Ca TSR 218 Thompson, Lieut. Col. John T., Office of Chief of Ordnance, Army, The Westmore- dE a er re 260 Thompson, R. A.., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, San Franeisco, Cal............... 285 Thompson, Samuel Huston, jr., Assistant Attorney General, 2347 Ashmead St...... 262 Thompson, W. F., Senate Committee on Ex~ penditures in the Departments of Com- merce and Labor... Gillon nn 218 Thompson, William T., Solicitor for Treas- ury Department, The Savoy.............. 263 Thomson, Jessie, House Committee on Bank- ing and Currency, 817 New Jersey Ave.... 223 Thorne, George Il., assistant attorney, De- partment of Justice, 214 B St. SE.._...... 262 Thornton, Smith G., Senate Committee on Pigherles, 1517 P St. oi oil ii.i. 00 219 Thurman, Albert Lee, Solicitor Department of Commerce, The St. Regis............... 263 Thurtell, H., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 1217 Delafield ‘Plage. -.' 2 00: 7 285 Tieman, Edward C., Deputy Commissioner of Penglons 33 B85... -. Go nln 272 Tierney, John I., Senate Committee on Pa~- cific Islands and Porto Rico, 128 B St. NE. 219 Tindall, William, secretary to District board, TheStaflord: ci. toils Lhd 395 Tinker, Royal M., Senate Press Gallery, 919 208 Titlow, Charles B., Office of Buildings and Grounds, Congressional Library, 1204 Mon- in Re RO REE Ca I le GS 250 Tito, Michael A., dispatch agent, State De- arbment. soto to cn a ai 255 Tittmann, Otto H., Superintendent Coast and Geodetic Survey, 2014 Hillyer Place.... 280 Essie a sa Individual Index. Page. Tobey, Paymaster E. C., Siren of Supplies and Accounts, The St. Regis Tonror John A., bureau chief, State Depart- ment, The BEROLIIIEY. . i voriodv sons Torbert, Charles R., House electrician, 505 G SEBW. os a hea Torney, Brig. Gen. George H.: Surgeon General, Army, Stoneleigh Court. American National Red Cross. .......... Commissioner, Soldiers’ Home........... Board of Visitors, Government Hospital for ie nye ES Se Re Towers, District deputy collector of of Ln ‘243 Teli St. NE Townsend, Charles E.: Member Commission on Indian Tuber- culosis Sanitarium, ete., The Portland. Member Commission to Investigate In- diam Aflades. ooo asa Member Joint Committee to Investigate General: Pareelb Post. ocr sisi os Townsend, J. V., House Committee on In- dian Affairs, The Congressional. ........... Traidos Prabandh, Prince, Siamese minister. Trail, William W., Quartermaster’s Depart- ment, Marine Corps, 1712 Pennsylvania SL eee SUI a Se ee TLE TP Trainer, John W., attorney, Department of Justios, B08) ns Trask, J. W., Assistant Surgeon General, Bureau of the Public Health, 300 R St. NE. Travis, John A., Office of Doorkeeper of House, 1008 East Capitol St re Tremere , House elevator conductor, 115 C 3] ThEbenadaiing Trench, Commander Martin E., Bureau of N avigation , Navy, The Woodward......... Trescot, T. C. , Bureau of Chemistry, R. F. D. No. 1 Ballston, Nr ea el Trimbls, South, Clerk of the House, 3536 Phiri St... a Trotter, Charles F., Office of First Assistant Postmaster General, 2439 Eighteenth St. True, A. C., Director of Experiment Stations, 1604 Seventeenth EE Sr Pr I BB True, Frederick W.: Assistant Secr: etary Smithsonian Institu- tion, 1320 Fairmont: St... co... In charge of International Exchanges, Smithsonian.Institution. .............. True, Rodney H., Bureau of Plant Industry, Glendale, Ma ee En Tryon, Frod M. ., principal examiner, Patent Office, 1225 Massachusetts Ave. SE"... .. Tucker, "George P., rincipal Sxaner, Patent Office, 802 Massachusetts Ave. NE......... Tulley, Thomas H., pringipal legislative clerk, Senate, 1835 NowionSt...o oo Tumulty, J oseph P., Secretary to the Presi- dent, 2311 Calvert Be Turkenton, WT; Gon Supply Com- mittee, 1513 T hirty- thiv@ Stee ois ir Turner, Hon. George, Joint Commission, Spokane, Washo ..o0. a Turner, John P., V. M. D., Government Hos- pital for Insane Se TE UL SN Cae Turner, Robert H., secretary Joint Commit- tee on Postage on Second-Class Mail Matter and Compensation for Transportation of Mails, The Hoftman..,.....-.c.0ii on Turner, Capt. Thomas C., Marine Barracks. Tuttle, ‘William E. SIL; member of Joint Com- mittee on Postage on Second-Class Mail Matter and Compensation for Transporta- tion of Mails, Cosmos Club. ........ Cots Alonzo, District auditor, Falkstone ONES. Ls en iS Tyrer, Arthur J., Bureau of Navigation, De- partment of Commerce, The Albemarle.. Tyson, A. H., superintendent of municipal lodging house, 312 Twelfth St............. 266 278 499 Page. Uberroth, Capt. Preston H., Revenue-Cutter Service, The Grafton... 0. oo toad a Uhler, George, Supervising Inspector General Steamboat- Inspection Service, 1433 Euclid Underwood, Lineas D., principal examiner) - Patent Office, The Harford........ .....0 Updegraff, Prof. Milton, Naval Observatory; 719 Phirty=-th Stn soos ovat ne Urculli y Cereijo, Col. Don Nicolas, Spanish Yegalion 0. i nr ae Vale, Henry A.: Secretary Lincoln Memorial Commission, 2415 Twentieth St... 0.5. Secretary Joint Commission for the Ex- tension and Completion of the Capitol Building... Loan en Vance, John T. , jr., deputy general receiver of customs, POO RICO 2 Van Cleve, W. C., assistant bill clerk, House, IB PIlSE NG. i Van Devanter, Willis, Associate Justice, Su- Pome Court (biography), 1923 Sixteenth Van Dyne, Frederick, Assistant Solicitor State Department, 12 Kirke St., Chavy Chase, Md: 0. cose a Van Fleet, M. C., House Committee on Inva- lid Pensions, TIO K St... ...............} Van Horn, Capt. Robert O., General Staff Corps, The Ontario... .o. 0 i Cao... Van Orsdel, Josiah A., associate justice, Disizios Court of Appeals, 1854 Wyoming Van rind C. E., Geological Survey, 1607 Thirty-first St BL i a Van Wagoner, John D., Senate Committee on Expenditures in Interior Department, Y. MC A Building... 2.0 "ad Vardaman, James K., jr., Senate Committee on Conservation of National Resources The:Benediek: avi condo Tana Varnall, Malcolm K., ny Maal cor- poration counsel, BIBER SE. Vassilieft, Capt., Russian SRE 1756 Q Si Vaughan, Dan C. , division chief, Department of Commerce, 1706 Jackson St. NE... Vaughan, T. w., Geological Survey, 1721 Riggs Place. ....-.... a. ie ao an Vaux, George, jr., chairman Board of Indian Commissioners, Philadelphia, Pa.......... Vega-Calderon, Sefior Don Manuel de la: Cuban Legation, The Burlington. ...... Governing board, Pan American Union. Veitch, F. P., Bureau of Chemistry, College Park, Ma ne en Velazquez, Mr. Hector: Dorapuayan minister, 2017 Massachusetts Governing board, Pan American Union, Venable, Earl, Senate Committee on Indian Depredations, The Marlborough... ....._. Venable, Kate E., Senate Committee on Indian Depredations, The Marlborough. . Vermillion, E. F.: District inspector of boilers, 762 Quebec Be a me a Pe A a Te a ee District board on automobiles. .......... Vick, Walter W., general receiver of customs, Santo DOMINGO. =. . coin bianca mae me es Vickroy, W. H., House Post Office... _...... Vipond, ‘Benjamin 1 Su Government Printing Office, 223 B St. Von Bayer, Hopton, Ln of Fisheries, 2418 TourteomB BL... os is Von Lersner, Baron Horst, German Em- bassy , 1226 A venue of the Presidents ..... - Von Lersner, Baron Kurt, German Em- bassy, 1226 ‘Avenue of the Presidents ..... Von Schroeders, Lieut. Edgar, Chilean Lega- tion, Seattle, Wash res Voorhees, Samuel S., Bureau of Standards, BASE NOWATE SE o.oo racers doe ie os Vouros, Alexandre C., Greek Legation. ..... Vreeland, Rear Admiral C. E., General Board, Navy, The Westmoreland... ........onee... 257 280 348 396 © 395 261 225 280 346 | | 4 | i | - dq] | 500 Page. Vrooman, Charles E., chief clerk, office Solic- itor of the Treasury Department, 1123 . Buelld Stor, ooo) oie ie Wadsworth, Maj. James W., president Na- tional Home for Disabled Volunteer Sol- diers, 346 Broadway, New York, N. Y..... ‘Wagner, Frank J., chief District fire depart- ment, 2611 Bloventh 8c 0. corer Wagner, Katharine F., Senate Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard, IEEE Se EN Se Se es LR ‘Waidner, C. W., Bureau of Standards, 1744 RigegPlaeeu oo ani rani ii Wainwright, Dallas B., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1821 Kalorama Road Waite, Merton B. , Bureau of Plant Industry, Rudd, mtr Walcott, Charles D., secretary of Smith- sonian Institution, 1743 enya] St. Walcutt, Col. Charles C., Bureau of In- sular Affairs, 1869 Wyominn AVVO. Lau Wales, George R., Civil Service Commission, S00 NOTION PIO. vss ave sss fie angn ast Walker, Francis, Bureau of Corporations, 2415 Twentieth’S Walker, John E., House Committee on Ways and Means The Mansfield =... Jo Walker, P. H., NoWaTE HE. cree oy er iran Walker, William D. Don of Indian Com- missioners, Buffalo, N Wallace, Capt. Charles 9 office of Chief Sig- nal Officer, 3108 Eighteenth St Wallace, Frank C., Government Printing Oakland . Wallace, William, jr., Assistant i Gen- eral, Department GITAtiCe sree Walls y Merino, Sefior Don Manuel, Spanish Legation oe: iit. ol didi a hes Walsh, Frank P., chairman Commission on Industrial Relations «.....oveeneeraneenns Walsh, Capt. James L., office of Chief of Ord- nance, Army, The Sterman. .... noe Walter, RY , Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, 118 Willow Ave., Takoma Park, D.C. Walton, Constructor John Q., Revenue-Cutter Service, BS Kansas Ave... i. eoph os Wampler, T. Morris, United attorney’s office, The Maxwell.......... ‘Wane.er, We O., Senate Lommisice on Manu- factures, The Lonsdal Ward, J. "M., clerk, Districk Building, 1123 Harvard Tsai sling nal ‘Waring, Dr. J. H. N. ys oword University. . Warner, Passed Asst, Surg. R. A.: Board for Examination of Dental Le I Se fs Board for Examination of Medical OIICO Ee cnsrsalinsisns nome ninesson Naval Hosplial. oleae iene Warner, Walter B:, House Committee on Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. . Warner, Willard F., O.fice Treasurer of the United States, The Concord. .............. Warrington, George, Bureau of Lighthouses, 3311 Avenue of the Presidents. ........... Warwick, Walter W., Assistant Comptroller of the Treasury, 1539 I St ‘Washington, Lawr ence, in charge of House of Representatives Reading Room, Congres- sional Library, 216 A St. SE Wa'erbury, Shaw T., Senate Commitiee on Geological Survey, ’1884 Columbia Road. . ‘Waters, C. E., Bureau of Standards, 3700 Prttamon St thie Soe Watkins, W. K., House Committee on Revi- sion of the Laws, The Santa Rosa. ........ Watson, Lieut. Commander Adolphus E., Office ’of Naval Intelligence, The Wyoming. ‘Watson, George S., District fire department, 3928 Fourteenth St ‘Watt, Chief Constructor Richard Morgan, Chief Bureau of Construction and Repair, 1823 Jeflerson Place... or obs Ui Watson, Robert, chief clerk, Department of Labor, 40 New York Ave. NE 263 286 396 262 257 396 290 268 268 219 224 266 Congressional Durectory. Page. Watts, C. L., House Committee on Pensions, 227 New J ersey are SE Wayland, John Assistant Sergeant at Arms of I'he i 1 le EO Wealley, A. D., D. D pital for TSANG. Weaver, Lieut. D. A. “Sy Yard and Station, Washington, DC aa Weaver, Brig. Gen, Erasmus M.: Chief Qoask Artillery Division, The Far- PAG. a Ra Sees Pea of Ordnance and Fortification, The Farragut ‘Weaver, H. B., official stenographer to House committees, Congress Hall ‘Webb, Charles A., Senate Committee on University of the United States, 1305 East Caplio St... oe. i eae Weber, Alexander H., Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, 2219 California St. . Worn F. C., Bureau of Chemistry, Bethesda, ‘Webster, F. Bureau of Entomology, Kensington, Mi A Sr de en EA ‘Weeks, John W., member Joint Committee on Postage on’ Second-Class Mail Matter and Compensation for Transportation of Mails, 1701 Twenty-second St.............. Weinstock, Harris, Commission on Indus- STi BOIRIONE er dere ae Won Howard, Forest Service, Madison, ‘Welch, John, office of Seperiniendent of the Capitol, 116 Eleventh St. SE Wells, Commander Chester Navy Yard and Station, Washington, D. Wells, T. J., Senate Committee on the Geo- logical Survey, 138 C St. SE Wells, William C., Pan American Union, Hyattsville Md so iar rat Wemple, William L., Assistant Attorney General, 641 Washington St., New York, Wender, Louis, M. D., Government Hospi- To] TOU TORO. reer de ot Tae Wenderoth, Oscar, Supervising Architect, ELAS Rs a mC ee a ad Wendt, F. E., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, The Brunswick. ...........co.... Werner, A. E., custodian of Senate Office Building ath ee Sa A LE ‘West, Maj. P . W. (retired), deputy governor, Soler HOME. rr he ei el West, Preston C., Assistant Attorney General 220 290 267 258 261 226 220 261 277 277 215 288 276 226 267 219 283 262 289 255 285 226 287 for Interior Départment, The Kenesaw. 262,270 Weston, F. F., division chief, Treasury De- paitment, 4320 Pighth St. ov... ‘Wetmore, George 1% Chairman Joint Commission for the Ex- tension and Completion of the Capitol Building, Newport, R. I Member Lincoln Memorial Commission . ‘Wetmore, James A., Supervising Architeet’s Office, COREE. Wharton, G. W., chief of office of informa- tion, Department of Agriculture, 3825 Ww oodley Road. he sn eo Wheatley, Joseph W., division chief, Treas- ury Department, Florence Court West. . Whelan, William M., superintendent House document room, The Dar lington.. ilo. 2 ‘Whelen, First Lieut. Townsend, Division of Militia Affairs, 2139 Wyoming Ave n. ; Whitaker, P. C., Committee on Interstate ad Foreign Commerce, House, The Ro- and an RL White, Andrew D., Regent of Smithsonian Institution, Ithaca, N. Y White, David: Geological Survey, 2812 Adams Mill Road . National Museum... ...c.vccnavaonsnasins White, Edward Douglass: Chief Justice Supreme Court (biography), 1717: Rhode Island Ave. i... =... in. Chancellor, Regent, and member of Smitksonjan Institution. .............- White, Maj. Herbert A., Office of Judge Advo- cate ‘General, Army, 2519 California St... .-- 255 214 214 = KE yo Indwidual Index. Page. White, William A., M. D., Superintendent Government Hospital for Insane... ........ Whiteford, Roger J., assistant District cor- poration’ counsel, 1108 P St Whitehead, Robert F. , law examiner, Patent Office, 1521 Twenty-eighth Bf ni ea Whitmore, Maj. Eugene R., Army Medical Museum and Library, 2349 A teed Place. Whiteside, J. Garrett, stenographer to Jour- nal clerk of House, Falkstone Courts. ..... ‘Whitney, Elizabeth’ A., District board of trustees, National Training School for Girls. Whitney, Milton, Chief Bureau of Soils, Ta- koma Park, Md. Whittaker, W. H., superintendent of work- house, Occoquan, CE Wight, John B., director Columbia Instiiu- tion for the Deal, New York.-o:. 08.242 Wilbur, Cressy L. , Bureau of the Census, 1374 Heorverd it... Wilcox, E. V., Office of Experiment Stations, Honololu. cin. con fo ni a ue Wilkinson, A. George, principal examiner, Patent Office, 1526 K st Ww illiams, Earl B. , Senate Committee on For- eign Relations, 120 Maryland Ave. NE..... Williams, George H., Office of Superintendent ofthe Capitol, 1723 PSE Los tl ool Williams, H. or reading clerk of the House, Riverdale, Mid... >... ~ Lo. ...... Williams, Henry E., Assistant Chief of Weather Bureau, 1317 Rhode Island Ave. . Williams, G., District public utilities commission, TIO Lamont 86... -vooes Williams, John Skelton: Assistant Secretary, Treasury Depart- ment, 1712 H St Treasurer American National Red Cross. ‘Williams, Robert, jr., office Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 3114 Mount Pleasant St.. ‘Williams, Robert 1. assistant District corpo- ration counsel, 1428 Chapin St Williams, Robert T. ,office of Secretary of the Senate, The Poly Williams, Ross, clerk Commission on Indian Tuberculosis Sanitarium, OCs Jed Ta vaas Williams, Stephen W. attorney, Department of Justice, 222 Oak Ave., Takoma Park. . Williams, Lieut. William, Revenue-Cutter Services, The Caire. oo. .. nc. ion to ies Willis, Charles B. , Deputy Sergeant at Arms of House, The Tt Willis, George L., House Committee on the Census, 107 Second SL NE... Willis, Luther J., Senate Committee on the Philippines The New Winston. .......... Wills, Capt. Davis B. , Paymaster’s Depart- ment, Marine Corps, "The Cordova. ........ Willson, George H., "Weather Bureau, San Francisco, Cal ne a EA Wilmeth, J ames L. , chief clerk, Treasury De- partment, 618 Kenyon St Sto a Wilson, Clarence R. , United States attorney, 1707 Rhode ISIAnd AVE. «..ovnreeeneennss Wilson, E. H., Senate Committee on Rail- OME. re Wilson, Edwin W., Superintendent National Bank Redemption Agency, 1819 Riggs a Lo BC Sn i Wilson, George S., District Board of Charities, 7001 Georgia Ave. Wilson, Capt. Henry B., president of Inspec- tion and Survey for Ships RR I Wien, Mr. J. M., British Embassy, 1722 H Wit on, John, Office of Surgeon General, Army, THe Bovere. .. cise Wilson, John A., commissioner of the inte- rior, Porto RIoo a Wilson, Brig. Gen. John M. (retired), Wash- ington National Monument Society ....... Wilson, Louis C., District disbursing officer, BP Roads. oc oe Wilson, P. M., Sasson financial clerk, Sen- ate, 1901 QS 289 396 271 259 222 596 277 226 255 287 501 Page. Wilson, W. E., International Waterways Commission, “Federal Building, Buffalo, ‘Wilson, William B.: Secretar y of Labor (biography), 1600 T St. Member of Smithsonian Institution ..... Wilson, Woodrow Fe of the United States (biog- FADNY): s est ns LE a President American National Red Cross. President ex officio Washington National Monument Sociely.................... Member of Smithsonian Ghia Ar ‘Winants, House folding room, 1113 Avenue of the Presidents. ................ ‘Winchester, Miss Almira M., Bureau of Ed- ucation, 1727 Tamont St. ......cava. ton Wingard, B. J., Senate Committee on Im- migration Sr Te SOE IR ‘Winship, Maj. Blanton, Office of Judge Advo- - cate General , Army, RES. ‘Winslow, Lieut. Col. E. Eveleth, Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, Edge- water, Noriolle Va... co a.oosiioain i: Winterhalter, Capt. Albert G.: Aid for Matériel, Navy Department, The Wyoming. «i oe General Board, Navy, The Wyoming... Wy Beekman, American National Red Bomneks i Wither, S., Sefior Dr. Don S. S., Ecuadorian Legation, 31 Broadway, New York City. . Withers, Lieut. Thomas, Office of Naval In- telligence, The Coronado. ......-..-.-5---. Witten, James W., chief law clerk General Land Office, 2518 "Thirteenth St. .......... Wixson, Franklin G., assistant attorney, Department of Justice, The Iroquois....... Wolcott, Charles D., Washington National Monument Solely... Lai Wolcott, John D. om of Education, 1418 DUE Bloooe critic ioe or oars Wold, Ansel, printing clerk, Senate, The Bal- EL Wolfe, Antony A., House Committee on Prisiting, SIO E000 Bt esinee: sean: Wols, 7 ., Bureau of Standards, 1744 Riggs OBS os rites Aen we le RE Womack, H., House elevator conductor. . Wongkong Yat, Mr., Chinese Legation..... ‘Wood, Alban M., Senate Committee on the District of Columbia, 324 Maryland ave. Wood, 3 M., Geological Survey, 1368 Ken- TT rT Re i, rf OE el ood, George L., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, 3149 Mount Pleasant Wood, Maj. Gen. Leonard: Chief General Staff Corps, Fort Myer, President Board of Ordnance and Fortifi- cation, Fort Myer, Va Wood, M., Interstate Commerce Commission, 1368 Kenyon St... o.oo. dotnet Wood, Capt. R. E., Isthmian Canal Commis- gion, Culebra... 0. ction sn Wood, Virginia H., Pan American Union, 2207 5 Ss sas Wood, William C., office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, 2902 Fourteenth St... Wood, Col. William T. (retired), Soldiers’ OTe a a bn ae Woodell, Mark A., Senate Committee on In- teroceanic Canals, 1418 W St Woodruff, Maj. James A., Office of Chief of Engineers, 1406 Twenty-first Sateen asians Woods, Elliott: Bn iniendons of the Capitol, Stoneleigh 211 Fir SA SN I ES SEE SE Member of Commission in Control of House Office Building. . Member of Commission on Enlarging the Capltol Grounds:. .. oo ni 284 281 282 253 287 289 282 264 268 002 Page. Woods, Paymaster R. H., navy yard and station, Washington, D. C Woodson, Lieut. Walter B., Office of Judge Advocate General, Navy, The Dupont. ... Woodward, H. M.: District permit clerk, engineer depart- ment, 1234 Monroe NE District board of automobiles............ Woodward, Karl W., Forest Service, 1519 Ld a ST ES RD a Woodward, William C., District health offi- COT, 1760 LONIOr PIACE. oo. sus neensn iis - Woolard, William F., chief clerk, Patent Of- fice, 3615 Newark St., Cleveland Park..... Wooldridge, Harry T., House post office, The OR ER i Ro ney Woolley, Robert W., Auditor for Interior Department, Fairfax, Va... .............. Woolley, William R., custodian of House Office Building, The Bartholdt. ........... Woolsey, Lester H., Assistant Solicitor De- partment of State, 3353 Runnymede St., Chevy: Chase, oc. ooo i. io Worley, J. S., Interstate Commerce Commis- sion, Kansas City, Moo. vo or ae Worsley, A. S., assistant engineer, Senate, OL BE i ae Wotherspoon, Maj. Gen. William W., Assist- ant to Chief of Staff, General Staff Corps, BheDupont: oC ra gas Wrede, Edward C., House Committee on Expenditures in War Department, 314 BastCnplitel 80. oon on ‘Wrenn, Augustus C., Bureau of Steam Engi- neering, 234 Tenth St. NE .......cc...._.. Wright, Cortez L., Senate Committee on Fi- nance, 107 Maryland Av. NE ‘Wright, Daniel Thew, associate justice, Dis- trict Supreme Court, 2032 Sixteenth Bt Wright, Lieut. George B., Bureau of Steam Engineering, 1884 Columbia Road......... Wright, Herbert, principal examiner, Patent Office, Kensington, Md Wright, J. M., marshal, Supreme Court, Met- repolitan:Club. ... o.oo aan Wu Chang, Mr,, Chinese Legation........... 267 396 395 276 397 271 225 256 226 255 285 221 258 224 266 219 343 266 Congressional Directory. Page. Wiirdemann, J. V., Office of Building and Grounds, Congressional Library, 821 Ran- ROTH Ree SURE IC Se Re eee Wyatt, W. Carl, Office of Public Roads, 36 Randolph Place........... rE I Wyche, C. Granville, Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, 128 B St. NE Wyvell, Manton M., private secretary to Secretary of State, 3347 Eighteenth St..... Yager, Arthur, governor of Porto Rico...... Yancey, G. Farle, Bureau of Navigation, Navy, 5602 Thirty-ninth St. .............. Yénes, Francisco J., Assistant Director Pan American Union, The Oakland............ Yeates, Charles M., Bureau of Pensions, 3167 Fighteenth St. oi omits Yelverton, John D., division chief, General Land Office, 802 Twenty-first St.......... Yerby, E. D., Division of Accounts and Dis- bursements, 2512 Clifibourne Place. ....... Yerkes, John W., board of visitors, Govern- ment Hospital for Insane.................. Yonine, Mr. Boris, Russian Embassy, Rouseheris.. oo. or. i ii ee. Young, Charles E., Government Printing Office, 75 Rhode Island Ave............... Young, Frank M., Senate Committee on In- terstate Commerce, 404 Seventh St. NE.... Young, Fred S., House post office. .......... Young, Hurlbert, District board of examin- Young, John R., clerk, District Supreme Court, 1522 R S Young, Lieut. Gen. S. B. M., (retired) gov- ernor, Soldiers. Home-2.:.. ci. oie Younger, Mary M., Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, 3212 Thirteenth St. Youssouf Zia Pacha, Turkish Ambassador... Zappone, A., chief, Division of Accounts and Disbursements, 2222 First St.............. Zavala, Sefior Dr. Don Joaquin Cuadra, Nie- araguan Legation... o.oo oii Lian Zinkhan, Louis F., superintendent Washing- ton-Asylum and Jafl..- cons ol 0 a Zon, Raphael, Forest Service, 522 Butternut St., Takoma Pork... coe coi a trian Oo 219 225 218 348 ee ——— I 0 LE ER =n aT STE rma ue mw | | eisai a aca dann MARYLAND WIRE. : MAR YLEAND== NEN & NA 7 J 4 I$: ] = ; 3 RO Poi L) B® ROAD ¢/ 2 fo PERMANENT SYSTEM OF HIGHWAYS DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PREPARED IN THE OFFICE OF THE ENGINEER COMMISSIONER D.C. Scale: FitTwoo |. 0 5000 Igooof EET 1911 EXISTING HIGHWAYS IN FULL LINES" PROPOSED . « DOTTED LINES “iznz— my “Er SATNS AL » \ ™ SE ? TN OR ERs vs Vie a or, 7 LON SS > , Cg TOT EES | ¢ ’ Fo ’ pra AV » $4 7] Vea Ss EN ANN, -- 7 Sh A oo v dos 2 wd - Bs ay 2» bis Rg ON 2 : os JT \ 3 Amn > FF Ne R&S TIONAL TRAI NA AN 2p Xe Q \ R8 ® = pilp—""10 RE Agri¢ulture, Department of. Arlington Cemetery. Army Medical “Museum and brary. Army War College. . Botanic Garden, United States. A Ca Bite . Cemrsus, Bureau of the. . Cify Asylum. City-Halland Courthouse. Loom LS Deaf and Dumb. . Commerce, Department of. . Congressisnal Cemetery. . ContinentahHall. . Corcoran Art Gallery. . Court of Claims: . District Armory Building. : Brraving and Printing, Bureau of. 920. Fisheries, Bureau of. 21. Fort Myer. 92. General Land Office. 23. Government Hospital for the Insane. 94. Government Printing Office. 95. House Office Building. 96. Interior, Department of the, and Patent Office. 97. Justice, Department of. . Labor, Department of. NING SCHOOL FOR BOYS SV = REFERENCES. City Post e. 35. Naval Observatory. . Civil Service Commission. 36. Navy Yard and Station. . Coagt and Geodetic Survey. 37. Pan American Union. _ Columbia Institution for the 38-~Pension Office and Bureau of J ; 3 x C4 pple J as NR et riers Sh puatmonge coi 2% ge Shi Ns a So iampiano% 2 o i Yori x Ri pr aR 7p CADET... 2, yn BALL GSA my HINBE SQ A Te UT B.6 0.112 ZN < NAAN 2 iy \ - a 3 \ mitt ¥ Ws . \ > = GT 28. Library of Congress. 29. Marine Barracks. 30. Mills Building (Navy Dept.). 31. Municipal Building. 32. National Museum (New). 33. National Museum (Old). 57. National Training School for Boys. 34. Naval Medical School and Hos- pital. ndian Affairs. 39. Police C : 40. Post Office Department. 41. Public Health Service. 56. Public Libr 42. Rock Creek Park: 43. Senate Office Building. 44, Smithsonian I 45. Soldiers’ Home. 46. Standards, Bureau of. 47. State, War, and Navy Building. 48. Tregsury Department. 49. Union Station. 52. 53. 54. 55. 4 A — ——.—.—.,.-.H Ii TTA _ sw PE rr 43118 U.S.~Congress. of Of Tinian ONnvicrro oe 431\6 352 aD lrmarseesh pee a FE Fe ron a a ererem ret gsr TRI Shassamasis