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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 Clarksville, 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 Hopkins 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 jurisprudence and politics. In 1902 he was elected president of the university, resigning both that office and his professorship in October, 1910, immediately after his nomination 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 Axson, of a distinguished family of Savannah, Ga. Mrs. Wilson died at the White House on August 6, 1914. The President has three daughters, Miss Margaret Woodrow Wilson, Mrs. Francis Bowes Sayre, and Mrs. William Gibbs McAdoo. 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; attended St. Bridget's parochial school and subsequently entered St. Peter's College, Jersey City, from which he was graduated in 1899 with the degree of B. A.; admitted to the bar of New Jersey in 1902; practiced law in Jersey City. He was married in 1904 to Miss Mary Byrne, of Jersey City; they have six children, four girls and two boys. He served as 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. He continued, however, to act as secretary to the governor until the governor resigned to become President. On March 4, 1913, he was appointed Secretary to the President.

Executive clerk.-Rudolph Forster, 3204 Seventeenth Street.
Chief clerk.-Thomas W. Brahany, The Northumberland.

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DEPARTMENT OF STATE.

(Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 4510.)

ROBERT LANSING, Secretary of State (1323 Eighteenth Street), was born at Watertown, N. Y., October 17, 1864; graduate of Amherst College (A. B.), 1886; admitted to bar in 1889 and practiced law at Watertown, 1889-1892; author of "Government, Its Origin, Growth, and Form in the United States," and numerous articles on diplomatic subjects pertaining to international law and arbitration; associate counsel for the United States in Bering Sea arbitration, 1892-93; counsel for the United States before the Bering Sea Claims Commission, 1896-97; solicitor and counsel for the United States before the Alaskan Boundary Tribunal, 1903; counsel for the United States in the Atlantic fisheries arbitration, 1908-1910; technical delegate in the conference for modification of the fisheries award, 1911-12; technical delegate in the Fur-Seal Conference at Washington, 1911; special counsel for the Department of State on various pending diplomatic questions and for the negotiations with Great Britain of claims to be arbitrated under the special agreement of 1910; counsel, 1912, and agent, 1913-14, for the United States in the American and British claims arbitration; appointed Counselor for the Department of State March 27, 1914; appointed the representative of the Department of State on the central committee of the American National Red Cross April 3, 1914; Secretary of State ad interim June 9 to June 23, 1915; appointed Secretary of State June 23, 1915.

Counselor for the Department of State.-Frank Lyon Polk, 2622 Sixteenth Street.
The Assistant Secretary.-John E. Osborne, The Connecticut.

Second Assistant Secretary.-Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth Street.
Third Assistant Secretary-William Phillips, 1535 L Street.
Director of the Consular Service.-Wilbur J. Carr, The Ontario.
Chief clerk.-Ben G. Davis, 110 Oak Avenue, Takoma Park.
Solicitor.-Cone Johnson, Stoneleigh Court.

Foreign trade advisers.-William B. Fleming, 1317 M Street; Charles A. Holder.
Chief of Bureau of

Accounts and disbursing clerk.-William McNeir, 1844 Monroe 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, 1826 Ontario Road.

Indexes and Archives.-John R. Buck, 1318 Emerson Street.

Rolls and Library.-John A. Tonner, The Ethelhurst.

Chief of Division of

Far Eastern Affairs.-Edward T. Williams, 1901 Eighteenth Street.
Information.-John H. James, The Balfour.

Latin-American Affairs.-J. Butler Wright, The Albany.

Mexican Affairs.-Leon J. Canova, 1815 F Street.

Near Eastern Affairs.-Albert H. Putney, 1416 K Street.

Western European Affairs.-William Walker Smith, The Farragut.

Translators. John S. Martin, jr., 1731 F Street; Wilfred Stevens, Wesley Heights.

Assistant Solicitors.-Lester H. Woolsey, 3353 Runnymede Street, Chevy Chase;
Fred K. Nielsen, Y. M. C. A.; Hampson Gary, 1822 Nineteenth Street.
Private secretary to the Secretary of State.-Richard Crane, 1701 Twenty-first Street.
Law clerks.-Henry L. Bryan, 604 East Capitol Street; Joseph R. Baker, 3214 Nine-
teenth Street.

Confidential clerk to the Secretary of State.-E. C. Sweet, Willard Court.

DISPATCH AGENTS.

I. P. Roosa, 2 Rector Street, New York.

W. A. Cooper, Room 5, Ferry Station, 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.-Col. William W. Harts, United States Army, 1842 Mintwood Place. Assistant superintendent.-W. E. Chapman, The Sagamore.

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 chairman during the greater part of the campaign of 1912; married Sarah Houston Fleming, of Chattanooga, Tenn., who died February, 1912; was married May 7, 1914, to Eleanor Randolph Wilson, daughter of the President; was appointed Secretary of the Treasury March 5 and took the oath of office March 6, 1913; is the father of seven children-three sons and four daughters.

Assistant Secretary in charge fiscal bureaus.-William P. Malburn, 2139 Wyoming
Avenue.
Assistant Secretary in charge public buildings and miscellaneous.—Byron R. Newton,
2610 Garfield Street.

Assistant Secretary in charge customs.-Andrew J. Peters, Woodley Lane.

Chief clerk.-James L. Wilmeth, 300 Takoma Avenue.

Private secretary to the Secretary of the Treasury.-George R. Cooksey, 323 E Street SE. 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.-William S. Broughton, 1819 Q Street.

Mail and Files.-S. M. Gaines, 1257 Hamlin Street, Brookland.
Printing and Stationery.-F. F. Weston, Forest Glen, Md.
Public Moneys.-E. B. Daskam, 1433 R Street.

Secret Service.-William J. Flynn.

Special Agents.-Joseph W. Wheatley, The Cairo.

Disbursing clerk.-Sydney R. Jacobs, 1473 Harvard Street.

Section of surety bonds-Chief, Llewellyn Jordan, The La Grande.

COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Comptroller.-John Skelton Williams, 1712 H Street.

Deputy comptrollers.-Thomas P. Kane, 1931 Calvert Street; Willis J. Fowler, Hammond Court.

Chief clerk.-Charles A. Stewart, East Falls Church, Va.

TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Treasurer. John Burke, 3615 Macomb Street, Cleveland Park.

Assistant Treasurer.-George Fort, 2817 Q Street.

Deputy Assistant Treasurer.-Frank J. F. Thiel, 3436 Mount Pleasant Street.
Cashier. James A. Sample, The Ontario.

Chief clerk.-Willard F. Warner, The Concord.

NATIONAL BANK REDEMPTION AGENCY.

Superintendent.-Edwin W. Wilson, Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md.

COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Commissioner.-William H. Osborn, The Wyoming.

Deputy commissioners.-David A. Gates, Wardman Courts; George E. Fletcher, 1333
Park Road; Luther F. Speer, 722 North Carolina Avenue SE.
Chief clerk.—Paul F. Myers, The Roydon.

DIRECTOR OF THE MINT.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Director.-Robert Wickliffe Woolley, Fairfax, Va.
Examiner.-Fred H. Chaffin, The Powhatan.

COMPTROLLER OF THE TREASURY.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Comptroller.-Walter W. Warwick, 1462 Columbia Road.
Assistant comptroller.-Charles M. Foree, The Rockingham.
Chief clerk.-W. G. Platt, Takoma Park.

Chief law clerk.-J. D. Terrill, 1334 Vermont Avenue.

AUDITORS FOR DEPARTMENTS.

Treasury (Auditors' Building, Fourteenth and B Streets SW.).-Samuel Patterson, 3204 Nineteenth Street.

War (Winder Building, Seventeenth and F Streets).-James L. Baity, The Brighton. Interior (Auditors' Building, Fourteenth and B Streets SW.).—Oscar A. Price, 1917 S Street.

Navy (Auditors' Building, Fourteenth and B Streets SW.).—Edward L. Luckow, Wardman Courts.

State and Other Departments (Auditors' Building, Fourteenth and B Streets SW.).— Edward D. Hearne, The Brunswick.

Post Office (Post Office Department Building; phone, Main 5360).—Charles A. Kram, Chevy Chase, Md.

REGISTER OF THE TREASURY.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Register.-Houston B. Teehee, George Washington Inn.
Assistant register.-James W. McCarter, 1505 R Street.

BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING.

(Fourteenth and C Streets SW.)

Director.-Joseph E. Ralph, 1246 Newton Street NE.
Assistant director.-Frank E. Ferguson, 1239 Kenyon Street.

BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE.

(Surgeon General's Office, 3 B Street SE.)

Surgeon General.-Rupert Blue, The Benedick.

Assistant Surgeons General.-A. H. Glennan, The Concord; W. G. Stimpson, 2141 Wyoming Avenue; L. E. Cofer, Metropolitan Club; J. W. Kerr, 2806 Twentyseventh Street; W. C. Rucker, The Dresden; J. W. Trask, 3311 Newark Street. Chief clerk.-D. S. Masterson, 1115 Massachusetts Avenue.

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Assistant director.-Surg. A. M. Stimson, 414 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md.

THE COAST GUARD.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Captain Commandant.-Ellsworth P. Bertholf, 1643 Harvard Street.
Chief of Division of Operations.-Oliver M. Maxam, 1749 Park Road.
Personnel. Capt. Charles E. Johnston, 1418 Madison Street.
Chief of Division of Matériel.-G. H. Slaybaugh, 1502 R Street.
Equipment.-Lieut. C. W. Cairnes, 1303 Clifton Street.

Superintendent of Construction and Repair.-Senior Capt. Howard Emery, 2415 Twentieth Street.

Constructor F. A. Hunnewell, The Dupont.

Engineer in chief.-Charles A. McAllister, The Ontario.
Constructor John Q. Walton, 4325 Kansas Avenue.
Inspector.-Senior Capt. D. P. Foley, The Cairo.
General superintendent.-S. I. Kimball, The Portner.

SUPERVISING ARCHITECT'S OFFICE.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Supervising Architect.

Executive officer.-James A. Wetmore, 1336 Oak Street.
Technical officer.-George O. Von Nerta, The Alendale.

Superintendent drafting division.-Louis A. Simon, 1634 Riggs Place.
Superintendent computing division.-John W. Ginder, Hyattsville, Md.
Superintendent structural division.-Ernest C. Ruebsam, 10 T Street.

Superintendent mechanical engineering division.-Nelson S. Thompson, 1615 Hobart
Street.

Superintendent repairs division.-Clarence A. Miller, 1738 Lamont Street.
Superintendent accounts division.-Frank A. Birgfeld, The Wilmington.
Chief files and records division.-L. H. Blanton, 1220 I Street.
Superintendent maintenance division.-Harry G. Sherwood, The Elkton.

BUREAU OF WAR-RISK INSURANCE.

(Treasury Department Building.)

Director.-William C. De Lanoy, 1712 H Street.
Assistant director.-J. Brooks B. Parker.

CUSTOMHOUSE.

(1221 Thirty-first Street. Phone, West 243.)

Deputy collector in charge.—John D. C. Koogle, 1825 Kilbourne Place.

DEPARTMENT OF WAR.

(Seventeenth 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 Breckinridge, 1909 S Street.

Assistant and chief clerk.-John C. Scofield, 1614 P Street.

Private secretary to Secretary of War.-Walter R. Pedigo, 1354 Quincy Street.
Clerk to Assistant Secretary.-Robert E. Parker, The Portner.

Assistant chief clerk.-John B. Randolph, 1729 Corcoran Street.
Disbursing clerk.-Sydney E. Smith, 3037 O Street.

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