LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. (Capitol Hill. Phone, Main 2727.) Librarian of Congress.-Herbert Putnam, 2025 O Street. Chief Assistant Librarian.-Appleton P. C. Griffin, 2150 Florida Avenue. Superintendent of reading room.—Frederick W. Ashley, 3932 Morrison Street, Chevy Chief assistants in reading room.-John G. Morrison, 1230 Irving Street; Henry E. Lower, 205 East Capitol Street. Reading room for the blind.-Mrs. Gertrude T. Rider, The Portner. Bibliography.-Herman H. B. Meyer, 2608 Tunlaw Road. Card. Charles H. Hastings, 3600 Ordway Street, Cleveland Park. Documents. Henry J. Harris, 1857 Lamont Street. Legislative reference.-C. W. Collins, jr. (in charge), 2012 O Street. Maps and charts.-Philip Lee Phillips, 1308 Twentieth Street. Periodical.-Yale O. Millington (in charge), 1022 Newton Street NE. Law librarian.-C. W. Collins, jr., 2012 O Street. Copyright office: Register, Thorvald Solberg, Glen Echo Heights, Md. Superintendent, Frank L. Averill, 1479 Columbia Road. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE.1 (Corner North Capitol and G Streets. Phone, Main 6840.) Public Printer.-George H. Carter, 1661 Hobart Street. Chief clerk.-Henry H. Wright, 1250 E Street NE. Private secretary to the Public Printer.-Miss Mary A. Tate, 1453 Belmont Street. UNITED STATES BOTANIC GARDEN. (West of the Capitol Grounds.) Director.-George W. Hess, Botanic Garden. (Phone, Main 3120, Branch 256.) 1 For official duties, see p. 352. EXECUTIVE. THE WHITE HOUSE. (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets. Phone, Main 6.) WARREN G. HARDING, President, of Marion, Ohio, was born in Blooming Grove, Morrow County, Ohio, November 2, 1865; has been a newspaper publisher since 1884; is married; was member of the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Ohio General Assemblies as senator from the thirteenth district 1899-1903, and lieutenant governor of Ohio in 1904 and 1905; elected to the United States Senate November 3, 1914; he resigned his seat on January 13, 1921, having been elected President of the United States on November 2, 1920. GEORGE B. CHRISTIAN, JR., Secretary to the President, of Marion, Ohio (2649 Connecticut Avenue), was born in Marion County March 25, 1873; he attended the Marion public schools, and was graduated from the Pennsylvania Military College at Chester in 1896, with the degree of C. E.; he was married in 1897 to Miss Stella Farrar, of Shelby, Ohio, and they have two children-Warren W. and John F.; he engaged in the limestone industry in Marion County until March 4, 1915, when he became private secretary to Senator Warren G. Harding, of Ohio; on March 4, 1921, he was appointed Secretary to the President. Executive clerk.-Rudolph Forster, Wardman Park Hotel. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 4510.) CHARLES EVANS HUGHES, Secretary of State (1529 Eighteenth Street), was born at Glens Falls, N. Y., April 11, 1862; attended Colgate University 1876-1878; A. B. Brown University 1881, À. M. 1884; LL. B. Columbia University 1884; (LL. D. Brown 1906; Columbia, Knox, and Lafayette 1907; Union and Colgate 1908; George Washington 1909; Williams College, Harvard, and University of Pennsylvania 1910; Yale University 1915;) admitted to New York bar 1884; prize fellowship Columbia Law School 1884-1887; practiced law in New York 1884-1891, 1893–1906; professor of law 1891-1893, special lecturer 1893-1895, Cornell University; special lecturer, New York Law School, 1893-1900; counsel Stevens gas committee (New York Legislature) 1905; counsel Armstrong insurance committee (New York Legislature) 1905-6; special assistant to Attorney General, coal investigation, 1906; nominated for mayor of New York by Republican convention 1905, but declined; elected governor of New York for two terms (1907-8 and 1909-10); resigned October 6, 1910; appointed Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court, May 2, 1910, and assumed duties October 10, 1910; nominated for President of the United States by the Republican national convention at Chicago June 10, 1916, and resigned from the Supreme Court on the same day; received 254 electoral votes for the Presidency, as against 277 for Woodrow Wilson, Democratic nominee; practiced law in New York since January 1, 1917; chairman district board of draft appeals, New York City, 1917-18; special assistant to the Attorney General in charge of aircraft inquiry 1918; appointed Secretary of State March 5, 1921. Undersecretary of State.-Henry P. Fletcher, 831 Eighteenth Street. Second Assistant Secretary.-Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth Street. Third Assistant Secretary.-Robert Woods Bliss, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue. Acting foreign trade adviser.-William W. Cumberland, 1760 Euclid Street. Ex De M 0 D |