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Full text of "Chicago daily news national almanac for .."

REMOTE BORAGE 



THE 

EQUITABLE 
TRUST COMPANY 

152 Monroe Street, CHICAGO 



^earning anb ^ 

LIBRARY 



Universityof Illinois. 

CLASS. BOOK. VOLUME. 



Accession No. 



DIRECTORS 

William Best Maurice Rosenfeld 

F. M. Blount John M. Smyth 

Andrew McNally J. R. Walsh 

L. A. Walton 

OFFICERS 
J. R. Walsh, President 

L. A. WALTON, Vice-President 

C. D. ORGAN, Sec. and Treas. 
C. HUNTOON, Ass't Sec'y and Asst. Treas. 



[TWENTIETH YEAR] 



THE CHICAGO DAILY NEWS 



ALMANAC 

AND YEAR BOOK 



FOR 



1904 



COMPILED BY JAMES LANGLAND, M. A. 



ISSUED BY 
THE CHICAGO DAILY NEWS COMPANY 

[Copyright. 1903, by The Chicago Daily News Co.] 



PREFACE. 



In The Daily News Almanac and Year Book for 1904 consider- 
able space has been devoted to information having a direct bearing 
upon the probable issues in the national political campaign of the 
year. An unusually complete list of the industrial trusts and local 
and "natural" monopolies in the .United States is given and the more 
important antitrust laws, new and old, are printed in full, together 
with a table of tariff rates having particular reference to articles 
dealt in or produced by the great trusts, and a synopsis of the de- 
cision in the Northern Securities case. Statistics designed to be 
helpful in the discussion of the monetary, negro, immigration, labor 
and other questions of the day are also supplied. The popular and 
electoral vote for president since 1824 and the vote by counties in 
every state and territory in recent elections are given as usual. 

While particular attention has been paid to the needs of the 
voter, the chief purpose of this publication namely, to be a useful 
book of reference for the public in general has by no means been 
neglected. The statistical, chronological, historical and other in- 
formation ordinarily found in works of this kind is given as com- 
pletely and compactly as heretofore, and not a little new matter 
suggested by experience, or required by circumstances, has been 
added without, however, increasing the size of the book. The effort 
has been to expand in variety of contents and-not in mere bulk. 

The information in the volume, whether relating to national, 
state or local affairs, has been obtained as far as possible from offi- 
cial and other authoritative sources and is believed to be accurate 
and trustworthy. 



O\ 




Chicago Daily News 

Almanac and Year Book. 

1904. 

NOTE. The time given In this Almanac is local mean time, except when otherwise indicated, 



ECLIPSES. 

In the year 1904 there will be two, eclipses, both of the Sun. 

I. An Annular Eclipse of the Sun, March 17. Invisible. Visible to the southern part of 
Asia, Japan, the Philippine Islands, the eastern half of Africa and the Indian Ocean. Being 
annular along a line drawn just north of the Island of Madagascar across the Indian Ocean 
the Malay Peninsular, Indo-China and the northern end of the Island of Luzon. 

II. A Total Eclipse of the Sun, September 9. Invisible. Visible to the western portions 
of South America, the Sandwich Islands, Polynesia and the Pacific Ocean. The path of 
totality extending from the Marshall Islands across the Pacific Ocean to the northern part of 
Chili. 

THE FOTJR SEASONS. 



SEASON. 



Begins. 



Lasts. 



Winter . . . 
Spring.... 
Summer., 
Autumn.. 
Winter... 



December 22, 1903, 6:20 P.M. 

March 20, 1904, 7:58 P.M. 

June 21, 1904. 3:51 P.M. 

September 23, 1904, 6:40 A.M. 

December 22, 1904, 1:14 A.M. 



H. M. 



92 19 53 

93 14 49 

89 18 34 

Leap Year,~366 6~56 



EMBER DAYS. 

February 24.26, 27 I September.... ... 21, 23, 24 

May 25, 27,28 | December 14, 16, 17 



MORNING AND EVENING STARS. 

MEKCTRY will be Evening Star about January 1, April 21, August 19 and December 14; 
and Morning Star about February 10, June 8 and October 1. 

VKXUS will be Morning Star until July 7 and then Evening Star the rest of the year. 

JCPITER will be Evening Star till March 27; then Morning Star till October 18; and then 
Evening Star again the rest of the year. 



CHURCH DAYS AND CYCLES OF TIME. 



Epiphany Jan. 6 

Septuagesima Sunday Jan. 31 

Sexagesima Sunday Feb. 7 

Quinquagesima Sunday. 

Ash Wednesday 

Quadragesima Sunday. . . 

Purim 

Mid-Lent Sunday 

Palm Sunday 

Good Friday ......Apr. 

Easter Sunday Apr. 



Whit Sunday May?2 

Trinity Sunday May 29 

Corpus Christi Jun. 2 

Feb. 14! Hebrew New Year (5fi63) Sep. 10 

Feb. 17 First Sunday in Advent Nov.L'7 

Feb. 21 Christmas Dec. 25 

" Dominical Letters CB 

Solar Cycle 9 

Lunar Cycle (or Golden Number) 

Roman Indiction 2 



Mar. 1 

Mar. 13 

.Mar. 27 

1 



Low Sunday Apr. 10 

Rogation Sunday May 8 



Ascension Day 



May 12 



Epact (Moon's Age, Jan. 1) 17 

Julian Period RH4 

Year of the World (Septuagint) 7412-7W 

Diony?ian Period 2o3 



C1694 



JHoon's phases. 


1904 




D. 


EASTERN TIME. 


CENTRAL TIME. 


IOUNTAINTIME 


PACIFIC TIME. 


| 

a 
a 

<-> 


Full Moon.... 
..ast Quarter. 
New Moon. . 
First Quarter. 


2 

it 

7 
25 


H. M. 

47 morn.* 
4 10 eve. 
10 46 morn. 
3 41 eve. 
3d. 


H. M. 

11 47 eve. 
3 10 eve. 
9 46 morn. 
2 41 eve. 


H. M. 

10 47 eve. 
2 10 eve. 
?46 morn. 
41 eve. 


H. M. 

9 47 eve. 
1 10 eve. 
7 46 morn. 
41 eve. 


Febru'y 


Full Moon.... 
,ast Quarter. 
<ew Moon... 
'irst Quarter. 


1 
8 
6 
24 


11 33 mom. 
4 56 morn. 
6 4 morn. 
6 8 morn. 


10 33 morn. 
3 56 morn. 
5 4 morn. 
5 8 morn. 


9 33 morn. 
2 56 morn. 
4 4 morn. 
4 8 morn. 


?''3 morn. 
56 morn. 
3 4 morn. 
3 8 morn. 


jA 

2 


s 


'ullMoon 
-ast Quarter, 
"few Moon... 
First Quarter. 
Full Moon.... 


1 

8 
ti 
_'4 
31 

15 
29 


9 48 eve. 
8 eve. 
39 morn.* 
4 37 eve. 
7 44 morn. 
17th. 


8 48 eve. 
7 Oeve. 
11 39 eve. 
3 37 eve. 
6 44 morn. 


7 48 eve. 
6 Oeve, 
10 39 eve. 
2 37 eve 
5 44 morn. 


6 48 eve. 
5 eve. 
9 39 eve. 
1 :>,7eve. 
4 44 morn. 


I 


Last Quarter. 
New Moon... 
<'irst Quarter. 
Full Moon 


53 eve. 
4 53 eve. 
1 1 54 eve. 
5 36 eve. 


11 53 morn. 
3 53 eve. 
10 54 eve. 
4 36 eve. 


10 53 morn. 
2 53 eve. 
9 54 eve. 
3 36 eve. 


9 53 morn. 
1 53 eve. 
8 54 eve. 
2 36 eve. 




i 

1-5 


jast Quarter. 
<ew Moon... 
First Quarter. 
<'ull Moon. . . . 


7 
15 

:! 

5 

20 


f> 50 morn. 
5 58 morn. 
5 18 morn. 
3 54 morn. 


5 50 morn. 
4 58 morn. 
4 18 morn. 
2 54 morn. 


4 50 morn. 
3 58 morn. 
3 18 morn. 
1 54 morn. 


3 50 morn. 
2 58 morn. 
218 morn. 
54 morn. 


jast Quarter, 
sew Moon... 
First Quarter. 
Full Moon 

, ast Quarter. 
tfew Moon... 
f rst Quarter. 
tullMoou 


53 morn.* 
4 10 eve. 
10 10 morn. 
3 23 eve. 

'Gth. 


11 53 eve. 
3 10 eve. 
9 10 morn. 
2 23 eve. 


10 53 eve. 
2 10 eve. 
8 10 morn. 
1 23 eve. 


9 53 eve. 
1 10 eve. 
7 10 eve. 
23 morn. 


t^ 

9 

>-3 


\f 


5 54 eve. 
27 morn.* 
3 48 eve. 
4 42 morn. 
*13th. 


4 54 eve. 
11 27 eve. 
2 48 eve. 
3 42 morn. 


3 54 eve. 

10 27 eve. 
1 48 eve. 
2 42 morn. 


2 54 eve. 
9 27 eve. 
48 eve. 
1 42 morn. 


August. 


Last Quarter. 
New Moon... 
First Quarter 
Full Moon. . . . 


4 
11 

17 

>_- 


?3 morn. 
58 morn. 
11 27 eve. 
8 2 eve. 


3 morn. 
58 morn. 
10 27 eve. 
7 2 eve. 


7 3 morn. 
5 58 morn. 
9 27 eve. 
6 2 eve. 


6 3 morn. 
4 58 moru. 
8 27 eve. 
5 2 eve. 


i 

I 
h 

o> 

.Q 
I 

1 

a 

i 

55 


Last Quarter 
New Moon... 
First Quartei 
Full Moon.... 


o 
r 

li 

'24 


9 58 eve. 
3 43 eve. 
10 12 morn. 
49 eve. 


8 58 eve. 
2 43 eve. 
9 12 morn. 
11 49 morn. 


7 58 eve. 
1 43 eve. 
8 12 morn. 
10 49 morn. 


6 58 eve. 
43 eve. 
7 12 morn. 
9 49 morn. 


Last Quarter 
New Moon.. 
First Quarter 
Full Moon.. 
Last Quarter 


^ 

ir 
3: 


8 52 morn 
25 morn.* 
54 morn.J 
5 56 morn. 
6 13 eve. 
*9th. iHUh. 


7 52 morn. 
11 25 eve. 
11 54 eve. 
4 56 morn. 
5 13 eve. 


6 52 morn. 
10 25 eve. 
10 54 eve. 
3 56 morn. 
4 13 eve. 


5 52 morn. 
9 '25 eve. 
9 54 eve. 
2 56 morn. 
3 13 eve. 


NPW Moon. . 
First Quarter 
Full Moon.. 
Last Quarter 


1- 


31 

e 

u 

')> 
.",(- 


10 86 morn. 
7 35 eve. ' 
10 12 eve. 
2 38 morn. 


9 36 morn. 
6 35 eve. 
!) 12 eve. 
1 38 morn. 


8 36 morn. . 
5 :>._> eve. 
S 1 2 eve.- 
38 morn. 


7 36 morn. 
4 35 eve. 
7 1 2 eve. 
11 38 eve.* 
29th. 


0> 
> 

1 

QJ 


New Moon... 
First Quarter 
Full Moon. . 
Last Quarter 


10 46 eve. 
5 7 eve. 
1 1 eve. 
10 46 morn. 


9 46 eve. 
4 7 eve. 
O 1 eve. 
9 46 morn. 


8 46 eve. 
3 7 eve. 
11 1 morn. 
8 46 morn. 


7 46 eve. 
2 7 eve. 
10 1 morn. 
7 46 morn. 



1st MONTH. JANUARY. 31 DAYS. 


DAT OF i 
YBAK. 


6 

S 
h 

< 
o 


S 

5g 

P 


January is named from Janus, 
an ancieat Roman divinity, and 
was added to the Roman Calen- 
dar 713 B. c. 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb., N.Y., Pa., 
S.Wls., S.Mich., 
N. 111.. Ind., 0. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St.Paul.N.E. 
Wis. and Mich., 
N.E.NewYork, 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD 1890-1902. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 

K.&S. 


Sun 
rises 


SuniMoon 
aets.'R.&s. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 

sets. 


Moon 
K.&S 


1 
2 
3 

4 
5 

6 

7 
8 

18 

11 
12 
13 
14 
15 
16 
17 
18 
19 
20 
21 
22 
23 
24 
25 
26 
27 
28 

i 

31 


1 

2 
3 
4 
5 
6 
7 
8 
9 
10 
11 
12 
13 
14 
15 
16 
17 
18 
19 
JO 

Jl 
_"_> 
23 
24 
25 
Ji) 
27 
>s 

f, 

31 


Fri. 
Sat. 
SUN. 
Mo 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SUN. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
sr.v 
Mo 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
srx. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat 
srx . 


John I. Blair, 1896 


7 H 'S 

?! 

7 29 
7 29 
7 29 
7 29 
7 29 

7 28 
7 27 
7 27 

7 25 
7 25 

7 24 
7 24 
7 23 

?! 

7 21 
7 20 
7 19 
7 18 
7 18 
7 17 
7 16 


H.M. 

4 37 

4 40 
441 
442 
443 

444 

ill 

447 
448 
449 
451 
452 
4 53 
454 
4 55 
457 
458 
459 
5 
5 1 
3 
5 4 
5 5 
5 6 
5 7 
5 9 
5 10 
5 11 


H. M. 

5 26 
629 
rises 
6 52 

9 16 

1027 
11 36 
morn 
042 
145 
2 47 
346 
442 
534 
6 22 
sets 
6 16 
7 12 

9 6 

10 2 
11 
morn 

4 8 
5 8 
6 B 


H.M. 

7 19 
7 19 
7 19 
7 19 
7 19 
7 19 
7 19 
7 19 
7 19 

7 18 
7 18 
7 18 

H? 

7 16 
7 16 
7 15 
7 15 
7 14 
7 14 

Hi 

7 12 
7 11 
7 10 

H 


H.M. 

4 48 
4 48 
449 
4 50 
451 
452 
453 
454 
455 
456 
457 
458 
459 
5 
5 1 
5 2 
5 3 
5 4 
5 5 

5 7 
5 8 
5 10 
5 11 
5 12 
5 13 
514 
5 15 
5 16 
517 
5 19 


H. M. 

5 19 
6 22 
rises 
6 57 
8 8 
9 19 
1028 
1135 
morn 
039 
1 41 
2 42 
340 
435 
5 27 
6 15 
sets 
6 21 
7 15 
8 11 
9 7 
10 2 
1058 
11 57 
morn 
?56 
57 
2 59 
4 1 

U 


f'3 M 9 
7 39 
7 39 
7 39 
7 39 
7 39 
739 

737 
7 37 
7 36 
736 
7 35 
7 35 

7 32 
7 31 
7 31 
7 30 

7 27 
726 
725 
724 
7 23 


H.M. 

428 
4 29 
430 
430 
431 
432 
433 
435 
4 36 
437 
438 
439 
441 
442 
443 
4 44 
4 45 
447 
4 48 

in 

4 52 
4 53 
4 55 
4 56 
4 57 
459 
5 
5 2 
5 3 
5 4 


H. M. 

IM 

rises 
6 47 
8 1 
9 15 
10 27 
11 38 
morn 
045 
1 51 
2 54 
3 54 
4 50 
5 43 
631 
sets 
6 11 

10 4 
11 3 
morn 
4 
1 6 
2 9 
3 13 
4 17 
5 17 
6 11 


Ignatius Donnellv, 1901 
Emile de Laveleye. 1893 
Admiral Von Stosch, 1S96 
Francis A. Walker, 1897 


Philip D. Armour. 1901 


Jean de Bloch, 1902..., 


Paul Verlaine, 1896 


William D. Kelley,1890 
Gen. B Ludlow, 1898 


Gen. B. F. Butler. 1893 


Norvin Green, 1893 
Nelson Dingley. 1899 


Cardinal Manning, 1892 


John W Root, 1891 


Gen. Rufus Ingalls, 1893 
Rutherford B. Haves, 1893... . 
Duke of Aosta, 1900 
George H. Liddell,1898 
John Ruskin, 1900.... 


Elisha Gray. 1901 ... 


Queen Victoria 1901 


Phillips Brooks 1893 


Adam Forepaugh, 1890 


Sir F. Leighton. 1896. 


Gen. Abner Doubleday. 1893. . . . 
J. G. Elaine, 1893; Verdi. 1901... 
Marshal Canrobert, 1895 
William Windom, 1891 
Count Andrassy, 1900 


Meissonier, 1891 


d MONTH. FEBRUARY. so DATS. 


& . 

c pa 

5 3 

&x 

32 
33 
34 
35 
36 
37 
38 
39 
40 
41 
42 
43 
44 
45 
46 
47 
48 
49 

i? 

62 
63 
C4 
55 
56 

11 

59 
60 


6 

JS 
[ 
< 
P 

1 
2 
3 

i 

7 



1? 
Ji 

14 
15 
16 

ii 

19 
20 
21 
2-2 
23 
24 
2.~> 
26 
''7 
28 
29 


N 

Qf* 

Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
St'X. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 


February is named from Roman 
divinity Februus (Pluto), or Feb- 
rua (Juno), and was added to 
Roman Calendar about 713 B. c. 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb.,N.Y., Pa., 
S.Wls. S. Mich., 
N. 111.. Ind., 0. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St.Paul.N.E. 
Wls. and Mich., 
N.E.NewYork, 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD 1890 1902. 


Sun 

rises 

H.M. 

7 15 
7 14 
7 13 
7 12 
7 11 

7 6 
7 5 
7 4 
7 2 
7 1 
6 59 
6 >8 
6 57 
6 55 
6 54 
6 52 
6 51 
6 50 
(5 J,'": 
6 47 
6 45 
6 44 
6 42 
6 41 
6 39 
6 37 


Sun 
sets. 

H.M. 

5 12 
5 14 
5 15 
5 17 
5 18 
5 19 
5 20 
5 22 
523 
5 24 
5 25 
5 27 
5 28 
5 30 
5 31 
5 32 
5 33 

5 38 
5 39 
5 41 
5 42 
5 43 
5 44 
5 46 

g 


Moon 

H.&S. 


Sun 
rises 

?-1 

? I 

7 6 
7 5 

? i 
? \ 

6 59 
6 58 
6 57 
6 56 
6 55 
6 54 
6 52 
6 51 
6 50 
6 49 
647 
6 46 
6 45 
6 43 
6 42 
6 41 
6 39 
6 38 
6 37 
6 35 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 

K,& S. 


Sun 

rises 

H.M. 

7 '22 
7 20 
7 19 
7 18 
7 17 
7 16 
7 14 
7 13 
7 12 
7 10 

?? 

7 6 
7 4 

7 
6 58 
6 57 
6 55 
6 54 
6 52 
6 51 
6 49 
6 47 
6 45 
6 44 
6 42 
6 40 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 

R.&S. 


Cardinal Jacobini. 1900.. . . 
Moses Hopkins, 1892 


H.M. 

rises 
6 52 
8 6 
9 19 
1029 
11 36 
morn 
039 
140 
238 
3 31 
420 
5 3 
542 
sets 
6 1 
6 58 
7 55 
8 53 
9 52 
10 51 
11 51 
morn 
52 
1 53 
2 52 
3 48 
439 
5 25 


H.M. 
5 20 
521 
522 
5 23 
524 
526 
527 
528 
5 29 
530 
531 
532 
5 34 
5 35 
5 36 
5 37 
5 38 
5 39 
5 40 
5 42 
543 
5 44 
5 45 
5 46 
5 47 
5 48 
5 49 
5 50 
5 51 


H. M. 

rises 
6 56 
8 8 
919 
10 27 
11 32 
morn 
035 

3 24 
4 13 
457 
5 37 
sets 
6 5 
7 
7 56 
852 
949 
1048 
11 47 
morn 
046 
1 47 
245 
3 41 
4 33 
5 21 


H.M. 

5 ti 
5 7 
5 9 
5 10 
5 11 
5 13 
5 14 
5 16 

ill 

5 20 

521 
5 23 
5 24 
5 25 
5 27 
5 28 
5 30 
5 31 
5 33 
5 34 
5 36 
5 37 
5 39 
5 40 
5 41 
5 43 
5 44 
5 45 


H. M 

rises 
6 00 
8 5 
9 20 
10 32 
11 40 
morn 
046 
148 
246 

2$g 

in 

sets 
5 59 
6 57 
756 
8 55 
9 55 
1056 
11 58 
morn 
1 
2 1 

U 

4 47 
5 32 


George W. Childs, 1894 


Alice Atherton, 1899 
Addison C. Cammack, 1901 
Gen. John A. Gibbon, 1896. 
William H. English, 1896 
Gen John R Lewis, 19(10 


Richard W. Thompson, 1900. . . . 
Albert D. Shaw, 1901 
Ferdinand Fabre, 1898 
Gen. Joseph O. Shelby, 1O7 
Hans von Bulow, 1894 


Gen. William T Sherman, 1891 
Maurice Thompson. 1901 
Felix Faure 1899 


Frances E. Willard. 1S98 
Dr. L. H Steiner 1892 


J. G. Biggar. 1890. 
Frederick Douglass, 1895..: 
Edgar W. Nve. 189(5 
John Jacob Astor, 1890 
Rufus Hatch, 1893 


Archduke Albert (Aus.), 1895... 
Steele Mackaye. 1894 
Gen Patrick Walsh. 1900 
William M. Singerlv. 1898 
William M Evarts, 1901 


Emily Yeamans. 1892 



3d MOXTH. MARCH. 31 DAYS. 


;i 

61 

62 
153 

i 67 
6S 
69 

?? 
8 

74 
75 
76 

a 

ig 

81 
82 

83 
81 
85 

i Sli 
87 
8-! 

so 
9<> 
91 


d 

S 

t>< 

-< 

Q 

1 

2 
3 

4 
5 
(j 

7 

10 
11 
12 
1:1 
14 
15 
It! 
17 
is 
19 
JO 
Jl 
)) 

}:! 
J4 
Jo 
It; 
'7 

JS 

J9 
30 
31 


= 13 

^ 

Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SUN. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 


March was named from Mars, 
the god of war. It was the. 
first month of the Roman year. 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb.,%.Y., Pa., 
S.Wis., S.Mich., 
N. 111., Ind.. 0. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky.,Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. ! 


St. Paul.N.E. 
Wle. and Mich., 
N.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


XOTED DEAD-1890-1002. 


Sun 

rises 


Sun 
sets. 

fl 

5 51 
5 52 
5 53 
5 55 
5 56 
5 57 

5 f>S 

5 59 
6 
6 1 

6 2 
6 3 

5 4 

6 10 
6 12 
6 13 
6 14 
6 15 
616 
6 17 
6 18 
6 19 
6 20 
6 21 
6 23 
6 24 


Moon 

H.& S. 

H. M. 

rises 
6 52 1 
8 5 
9 16 
10 23 
11 28 
morn 
028 
1 24 
2 16 
3 1 
341 
418 
4 52 
524 
sets 
6 47 
746 
845 
944 
1045 
11 45 
morn 
043 
1 38 
229 
3 16 
3 59 
440 
517 
rises 


Suu 

rises 

H.M. 

6 34 

.; 32 

6 31 
6 29 
6 2s 
6 27 
li _>.- 
6 24 
622 
6 21 
6 19 
6 17 
6 16 
6 14 
6 13 
6 11 
6 10 
6 8 
6 6 

6 2 
6 

5 58 
5 57 
5 55 
5 54 
5 52 
5 51 
549 
5 47 


Sun 
sets. 

H.M. 

5 53 
5 54 
5 55 
.-, nu 
557 
558 
5 59 
6 1 
6 2 
6 3 
6 4 
6 5 
6 6 
6 7 

to 8 

6 10 
610 
6 11 
6 12 
6 13 
6 14 
6 15 
6 16 
6 17 
6 18 
6 19 
6 20 
621 
6 22 


Moon 

R.& S. 
H. M. 

rises 
6 53 
4 
13 
1019 
11 23 
morn 
022 
1 17 
29 
2 5o 
3 36 
4 13 
448 
5 21 
sets 
646 
7 43 
8 41 
940 
1040 
11 39 
morn 
36 
131 
2 23 
3 11 
3 55 
437 
5 16 
rises 


Sum SuniMoon ! 
rises sets.lu.&S. 


William F Poole 1894 > 


-H.M. 

6 36 
(> 34 
(5 32 
6 31 
6 29 
ti 2S 
626 
6 24 
6 23 
621 
6 20 
618 
ti 16 
6 14 
6 13 



6 7 
6 5 
6 4 
6 2 
6 
5 58 
5 57 
5 55 
5 54 
5 52 
5 50 
5 49 
547 
5 46 


6/38 

(i \]:> 
6 33 
6 31 
6 29 
6 27 
6 21 
624 
622 
620 
6 18 
6 17 
6 15 
6 13 
6 11 
6 9 
6 8 
6. 6 
6 4 
6 2 
6 

5 54 
5 52 
5 50 
5 49 
5 47 
5 45 
543 


!& 

r> 4s 
5 49 

11 

5 53 
5 55 
5 56 

5 58 

! 5 8 

6 1 
6 3 
6 4 

6 11 
6 12 
6 13 
6 14 
6 16 

6 18 
6 19 
6 20 
6 22 
6 23 
6 24 
625 


H. M. 

rises 
6 52 
8 7 
9 20 
10 29 
11 35 
morn 

I 1 ! 

3 49 
4 25 
4 58 
5 28 
sets 
6 48 
749 
8 49 
9 50 
10 52 
11 53 
morn 
52 
1 47 
2 37 
3 23 
4 5 
t43 
19 
rises 


Gen. Jubal Early. 1894. . . . 


Prof . J. S. Blackie, 1895 
Noah Porter, 18 ( .r> 
Hippolyte A. Taine, 1893 
Edwards Pierrepont. ltt.r> 
James H. McVicker, 1896 
PaulL Ford 1 1 J02 


Edward J Phelps UKX) 


Charles F. Worth, 1895 
Henry Drummond, 1897 


John P Altgeld. 1902 


Benjamin Harrison, 1901 
Dr L. Windthorst, 1891 


Sir Henry-B. W- Brand, 1893=. . . 
Joseph Medill, 1899 


Max Strakosch 1892 


Prof O C Marsh 1899 


Ma j. -Gen. George Crook. 1890.. . 
Louis Kossuth, 1894 . 


Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, 1891.. 
William Q. Judge, 1896 
Koloman de Tisza. 1902 
Charlotte F. Yonue, 1901 
James Pavn 18)8 


Cecil Rhodes 1902 


Gen -Joubert 1900 


Anton Seidl, 1898 . 


Dr. Howard Crosby, 1898 
Archibald Forbes, 1900 


Hiram Berdan, 1893 


4tIiMOXTII. APRIL. 30 DAYS. 


N 

^a 
^ 


i 
2 
Y 

a 


H 

& 


April was named from apriere 
(toopenj, the season when buds 
open. 


Chicago, Iowa, (St. Louis, S. 111., 
Neb., N. Y., Pa., 1 Va., Ky., Mo., 
S.Wis., S.Mich. Kan.. Col., Cal. 
N. 111., Ind., 0. Ind., Ohio, 


St. Paul, N.E. 
iWis. and Mich. 
jN.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


XOTED DEAD -1890-1902. 


Sunj Sun; Moon Sun 
rises sets. K.& s. |rises 


Sun Moon Sun Sun Moon 
sets. u.& s. rises sets. K.& S. 


93 

1 IU 
95 

1 it<; 

H7 
98 
99 
LOO 
101 
L02 
103 
104 
105 
10*5 
107 
1 -.1- 
1 ).i 
110 
111 

Hi 

114 
115 
lib 
1 117 
11H 
119 
12( 
121 


I 

2 
9 

4 
6 

? 

B 
g 

10 

11 

12 
13 
14 
15 

n; 

17 

is 
19 

JO 
21 

.>., 

23 
24 

2.1 
2t 
27 
JS 
J< 
M 


Fri. 
Sat. 
SO. 

Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 

M V 

Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SO. 

Mo, 

iTu. 

i We 
Th. 
!Fri. 
'Sat. 


Sir John Stainer 1901 


H.M. 
5 44 

5 42 
5 40 
5 39 
5 37 
5 35 
5 33 
5 32 
5 30 
5 29 
"j 27 
5 25 
5 24 

ii 

5 19 
5 17 
5 16 

{ft 

5 11 
5 9 
5 8 
5 6 

l.i 

5 2 
5 1 

4 59 

4f,8 


H.M. 

<; 25 
6 26 
6 27 

f; 2* 
6 3l 

o 3.-, 

6 31! 

Hi 

t> 39 
(5 40 
6 41 
6 42 
6 43 
4.1 

*; 4.; 

6 47 
6 4S 
li 49 
(i 50 
6 51 
(i r,-_ 
6 53 
6 54 

m 


u. M. 
8 1 
9 9 
10 14 
11 14 
morn 
8 
56 
1 39 
218 
2 52 

4 24 
4 53 
sets 
7 37 
8 39 
9 40 
1039 
11 35 
morn 
027 
1 13 
1 55 
2 36 
3 14 
3 50 
4 26 
i rises 
! 7 54 


H.M. 
5 46 
5 44 
5 43 
5 41 

f> 37 
5 35 
5 34 
5 32 
5 30 
5 "9 
.-. 27 
5 26 

r> 24 

5 L'3 

5 20 
5 19 
o 1 1 
5 16 
5 15 
5 13 
5 12 
5 11 
.-, !< 

i T 

:, t, 

5 4 


H.M. 

6 23 

ti 24 
6 2.-) 
|) 26 

6 :~,i> 
6 :u 

ii 35 
6 :;; 
6 37 
6 3s 

6 40 
6 41 

6 42 
t; 43 
6 44 
6 45 

(i 46 
ti 47 
6 48 
6 4i> 

6 .-10 

(> 51 


H. M 

7 57 

9 r. 

10 8 
11 s 
morn 
1 
49 
1 33 
2 13 

11? 

;-; r.:; 

4 23 
4 54 

se t s o 

9 34 
10 32 
11 28 
morn 
21 
1 8 
1 51 
2 33 
3 12 
350 
428 
irises 
7 4D 


H.M. 
.1 41 
5 40 
5 38 
5 36 
5 34 

5 31 

r> 29 

5 27 

r, -5 

:> 23 

5 22 

r> 20 

5 18 
5 16 
5 14 
5 13 
5 11 
5 9 
."> , 

- 4 
5 3 

r> _l 

4 55 

4 53 

452 


H.M. 

6 27 
6 28 
6 30 
6 31 
632 
6 33 
6 35 
6 36 
6 37 
6 38 
6 39 
6 41 
6 42 
6 43 
6 44 

81? 

6 4S 
6 49 
6 50 
652 
6 53 

r> r>f> 

88? 

n 

7 1 
7 2 
7 3 


U. -M. 

8 5 
9 16 
1022 
11 22 
morn 
17 
1 4 
1 47 
2 25 

in 

3 58 
426 
4 53 
sets 
7 43 
8 46 
9 48 
10 48 
11 44 
morn 
35 
1 21 
2 1 
240 

3 51 
425 
rises 
8 1 


Johannes Brahms 189? 


D'Ovlv Carte, l!!01. 


Osman Pasha, 11*00 
Duke de Noailles. 1895 
Bishop W. T Kipp, 1S93. .. 


P T. Barmun 1891 


Edward de Pressense, 1891 
Stephen J Field. 1899 
D. W. Voorhees, 1897 


Wade Hampton. 1902 
T. DeWitt Talmage, 1902 
Samuel J. Randall, 1890 


Zebulon B. Vance. 1894 


Amelia B Edwards 1892 


C. V. de Grimm. 1890 
Lucy Larcom. 1893 


Gen. Crcspo. l~9s 


Admiral A. Ta vlor, 1891 
Frank R. Stockton, 1902 
Leon Sav. l>;n'> 
W. S. Holman. 1897 


Count von Moltke, 1891 


jGrand Duke Nicholas. 1891 
Sir Henrv Parkes 189M 


Gen. John M. Corse. 1893 
Prince Korsakoff. 1893 
William M. Osborne. 1P02 
Dr. H.C. Nicholson. 189C. 



6tli MOXTH. MAY. 31 DAYS. 


N 
% 


6 

2 
> 

c 


*g 

!H 
S* 


May if? from the Latin Maius, 
the growing month. 


Chicago. Iowa, 
Neb.,N.Y., Pa., 
S.Wis., 8. Mich. 
N. 111., Ind., O. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky., MO., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St. Paul, N.E. 
Wis. and Mich., 
N.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


KOTED DEAD 1890-1902. 


Sum Sun 
rises sets. 


Moon 
R.&S. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 

R.&S. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 
R.&S. 


122 

123 
124 
125 
126 

1 '~> 7 

131 
132 
133 
134 
135 

137 
138 
139 
140 
141 
142 
143 
144 
145 
146 
147 
148 
149 
150 
151 
152 


1 

4 
5 
6 

10 

11 
1J 
13 
14 
15 
Hi 
17 
18 
19 
20 
Jl 
_"_' 
23 
24 
25 
2(5 
27 
28 

31 


SUN. 

Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th 
Prl 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
B'ri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
st;x. 

Mo 
Tu 
We 
Th. 
Fri 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
TU 


Gen. John Newton, 1895 
Amos J. Cummings, 1902 
Johann Strauss, 1899 
Potter Palmer. 1!0'2 
Michael A Corrigan 1902. 


Mr 

4 56 
4 54 
4 53 
4 51 
4 50 
449 
4 48 
4 46 
4 45 
4 44 
4 43 
4 42 
4 41 
4 40 
4 39 
4 38 
4 37 
4 37 

433 
4 32 
431 

4 29 
4 29 

428 


iffy 

6 58 
6 59 
7 1 

i 

7 5 
7 6 
7 7 
7 8 
7 9 
7 10 
7 11 
7 12 
7 13 
7 14 
7 15 
7 16 
7 17 
7 18 
7 19 
7 20 
7 20 
7 21 
7 22 
7 23 
7 24 
7 25 
7 26 
727 


H. M. 
8 58 
9 56 
10 48 
11 34 
morn 
15 
52 
1 25 
1 56 
2 25 
2 54 
3 24 
3 55 
429 
sets 
8 32 
9 30 
1024 
11 13 
11 58 
morn 
038 
1 15 
1 50 
2 24 

4 17 
rises 
8 39 

9 28 


f' M 3 
5 2 

I A 

fi 

4 56 
4 55 
4 54 
4 53 
4 52 
4 51 
4 50 
4 49 
448 
4 47 
4 46 
445 
4 44 
4 44 
443 
4 42 
4 41 
4 41 
4 40 
4 40 
4 39 
4 38 
4 :-;H 
437 
437 


H M. 

6 52 

S8 

6 5."> 
6 5(i 
(5 ,-)7 
6 58 
6 59 
7 
7 1 
7 2 
7 3 

? i 

7 6 
7 7 
7 7 
7 8 
7 9 
7 10 
7 11 
7 12 
7 13 
7 13 

HI 

7 16 
7 16 
7 17 
7 18 


H. M. 
8 52 
9 49 
10 41 
11 28 
morn 
9 
47 
1 22 
1 53 
2 24 
2 54 

sets 
8 25 
9 23 
10 17 
11 7 
11 53 
morn 
35 
1 13 
1 49 
2 25 
3 2 
3 41 
4 22 
rises 
8 32 
921 


4 '50 
4 49 
4 47 
4 46 
4 45 
4 43 
4 42 
4 40 
4 39 
4 38 
4 37 
4 35 
4 34 

4 32 
4 31 
4 30 
4 29 
4 28 
4 27 
4 26 
4 25 
4 24 
4 23 
4 22 
4 21 
4 21 
420 
4 19 
419 
418 


?' M 4 
7 6 

7 7 
7 8 

7 10 

7 12 
7 13 
7 14 
7 15 
7 16 
7 17 
7 18 
7 19 
7 20 
7 21 
7 23 
7 24 
7 25 
7 26 
7 27 
7 28 
7 29 
7 30 
7 31 

?1 

7 34 
7 35 
7 36 
7 37 


H. M. 
9 6 
10 5 
10 57 
11 42 
morn 

1 31 
1 59 
2 27 
2 55 

sets 
8 40 
9 39 
10 32 
11 21 
morn 
5 
043 
1 18 
1 51 

III 

3 33 

4 12 
rises 
848 
9 37 


William T. Sampson, 1902 
Ward H. Lamon, 1893 
Manuel Gonzales, 1893 
Madame Blavatsky, 1891 
Mdlle. Rhea, 1899 


Henry C. Bunner, 1896 
Roswell P. Flower, 1899 
W. N. Haldeman, 1902 
Max Maratzek, 1897 


Edouard Remenyi, 1898 
Judge T Drummond, 1890... . 
Edwin F. Uhl. 1901 
Kate Field, 1896 
William E. Gladstone, 1898 
Edmund H. Yates, 1894 
Charles A Boutelle 1901.. 


Edward Bellamy 1898 


Lucius Fairchild. 1896 
Julian Pauncef ote, 1902 




Benjamin Constant, 1902 
Bishop James O'Connor, 1890. . 
Walter Q. Gresham. 1895 
Lyon Playf air, 1898 


Sylvester Pennover, 1902 
Col. William G. Rankin, 1891. . 


GtlL MONTH. JUNE. 30 DAYS. 


N 
$ 


6 
?. 

^ 
< 

fi 


a. 


June traced to Juno, the queen 
of heaven, who was thought to 
preside over marriages. 


Chicago, lowaj 
Neb., N.Y., Pa., 
S.Wis., S.Mich. 
N. 111., Ind. O. 


'St. Louis, S. 111.. 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal.. 
Ind., Ohio. 


St. Paul, N.E. 
Wis and Mich., 
N.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD 1890-1902. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 

sets. 


Moon 

R.&S. 


Sun] Sun 

rises sets. 


Moon 

R.&S. 


Suni Sun 
rises sets. 


Moon 

K.&S. 


153 

154 
155 
156 
157 

160 
161 
162 
163 
164 
165 

169 
170 
171 

172 
173 
174 
175 
176 
177 

BS 

180 
181 

182 


1 

2 
3 
4 

8 
9 

10 

11 

12 

1:1 
14 
15 

If, 
17 
is 
lit 

Jl) 

H.l 

_:; 

-Jl 
jr. 

! 

I'.s 

J< 

30 


We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
Sl'X . 
Mo. 
Tu. 

We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SUN. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SUN. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 


Emily Faithfull 1895 


H.M. 

428 
427 
427 
426 
426 
4 26 
426 
425 
425 
425 
425 
425 
424 
4 24 
4 24 
4 24 
424 
4 25 
425 
425 
4 25 
4 25 
426 
426 
426 
426 
427 
427 
4 28 
428 


f2 M 8 
7 28 

7 29 
7 29 

?i? 

7 31 
7 32 

7 ;u 
7 33 
7 34 

7 36 
7 36 
7 37 
7 37 
7 37 
7 37 
7 37 
7 38 

7 :-;s 
7 3S 
7 3S 
7 3S 
7 38 


H.M. 
10 12 
10 51 
11 26 
11 58 
morn 
27 
056 
1 24 
1 54 
2 26 
3 3 
3 43 

f?7 
9 10 
9 57 
1039 
11 18 
11 54 
morn 
28 
1 2 
138 
2 15 
256 
342 
rises 
8 8 
8 48 
9 25 


IH.M. 
4 36 
4 36 
4 36 
4 35 

ill 

434 
434 
434 
434 
4 34 
434 
4 34 
434 
434 
4 34 
4 34 
4 34 
4 34 
4 34 
4 34 
4 34 
4 35 
4 35 
4 35 
4 36 
4 36 

437 


f-ft 

7 19 
7 20 
7 21 
7 21 
7 22 
7 23 
7 23 
7 24 
7 24 
7 25 
7 25 
7 26 
7 26 
7 26 
7 27 
7 27 
7 27 
7 28 

7 29 
7 29 
7 29 

7 'Jit 

11 

7 29 
7 29 


H. M. 
10 6 
1046 
11 22 
11 54 
morn 
025 
55 
1 25 
1 57 
2 30 
3 7 
3 49 
sets 
8 10 
9 4 
9 52 
10 35 
11 15 
11 53 
morn 
29 
1 4 
1 41 
2 20 
3 2 
3 49 
rises 

842 
9 21 


fe 

4 17 
4 17 
4 17 
4 16 
4 16 
4 15 
4 15 
4-15 
4 15 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 14 
4 15 
4 15 
4 15 
4 15 
4 15 
4 16 
4 16 
4 16 
4 17 
4 17 


t^f 

7 38 
7 39 
7 40 
7 41 
7 41 
7 42 
7 43 
7 44 
7 44 
7 45 
7 45 
7 46 
746 
7 47 
7 47 
7 48 

Iti 

7 48 
7 49 
7 49 
7 49 
7 49 
7 49 
749 
7 49 
7 49 
7 49 
7 49 


H. M. 

10 20 
10 58 
11 32 
morn 
2 
030 
58 
1 24 
1 53 
2 24 
2 58 
3 37 
sets 
8 26 
9 18 
10 4 
10 45 
11 22 
11 56 
morifc 
028 

1 35 
2 10 
250 
336 
rises 
8 16 
8 56 
9 32 


James A. Herne, 1901 
Benson J. Lossing, 1891 
\ustin Corbin, 1896 .. 


Stephen Crane. 1900 
Sir John Macdonald, 1901 
Edwin Booth, 1893 


Frank Mayo, 1896 


Sir Walter Besant, 1901 
Carlo Mario Curci. 1891 
Col L L Polk 1892 


Isaac H Mavnard 1896 


Truman H. Safford, 1901 
Mrs W.E Gladstone, 1900 
"Fritz" Emmett. 1891 


Prince de Joinville. 1900 


Fathers. Kneipp, 1897 


Hazen S. Pimjrfie, 1901 
Gen. J. B. TurcMn, 1901 
Leland Stanford, 1893 


Franz von Suppe, 1895 , 
Benjamin H. Bristow, 1896 
Henry B Plant 1899 


President Carnot 1894 


Mrs. M. Oliphant, 1807 
Joseph Ladue. 1901 
'Col John T. Brady, 1891 


Sir Wyndham Hornby, 1899 .... 
Thomas H Huxley. 1894 
Anthony J Drexel, 1893 



7 til MONTH. JULY. 31 DATS. 


DAY OF i 
YEAR. 


6 

2 

*H 

< 

Q 


S S 

'~ W 
& 

Fri 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
St'N. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
six. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 


July named In honor of Julius 
Caesar, who was born on the 12th 
of July. 1 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb.,N. Y., Pa., 
S.Wls., S.Mich., 
N 111., Ind., O. 


St. Louis, S. 111.. 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind.. Ohio. 


St.Paul.N.E. 1 
Wis. and Mich. 
N.B.NewYork 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD-1890-1902. 


rfs^s 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 

R.&S. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 

sets. 


Moon 

.& s. 

H. M. 
9 55 
10 26 
10 57 
11 26 
11 57 
morn 
28 
1 3 
1 41 
2 25 
3 15 
sets 
7 44 
8 31 
9 13 
9 53 
10 30 
11 7 
11 44 
morn 
22 
1 3 
1 47 
2 35 
3 25 
4 16 
rises 

9 28 


Sun 

rises 


Sun 
sets. 


Moor | 
R.&S. 


L83 

188 
189 
190 
191 
192 
193 
194 
195 
19(5 
197 
198 
199 
200 
201 
202 
203 
204 
205 
206 
207 
208 
209 
210 
211 
212 
213 


1 

2 
3 

4 
5 
6 

7 

if) 
11 
12 
13 
14 
15 
1(5 
17 
IS 
19 
_'() 
21 
_"J 

j:l 

24 
25 
26 

S 

29 
30 
31 


Harriet Beecher Stowe, 1896 . . . 
Gen H G.Wright 1899 


t* 

4 29 
4 29 
4 30 
4 30 
431 
432 
4 32 
4 33 
4 34 
4 35 
436 
4 36 
4 37 
4 38 
4 39 
4 40 
4 40 
4 41 
4 42 
4 43 
4 44 
4 44 
4 45 
446 
447 
448 
449 
4 50 
4 51 
4 52 


f3 M 8 

7 38 
7 38 

7 38 
7 37 
7 37 
7 36 

7 36 

?! 

7 34 
7 34 
7 33 
7 32 
7 32 
7 31 
731 
7 30 
7 29 
7 28 
7 28 
7 27 
7 26 
7 25 
7 24 
7 23 
7 22 
7 21 
7 20 


H. M. 

9 58 
10 29 
10 58 
11 26 
11 55 
morn 
025 
59 
1 36 

I 1 ! 

sets 
7 50 
835 
9 17 
9 55 
1030 
11 5 
11 40 
morn 
18 
58 
1 41 
228 
3 18 
4 10 
rises 
7 59 
8 32 
9 1 
9 29 


fa's 

4 38 
4 39 
439 
440 
4 40 
441 
4 41 
4 42 
443 
443 
4 44 
445 
445 
446 
4 47 
447 
4 48 
4 49 
4 50 
4 51 
4 51 

ifl 

4 54 
455 
4 56 
4 56 

li 

459 


f3& 

I 29 

7 28 
7 28 
7 28 

?i? 
18 

7 26 
7 25 
7 24 
724 
7 24 
7 23 
7 22 
7 22 
7 21 
7 20 

liH 

7 18 
7 17 
7 16 
7 16 
7 15 
714 
7 13 


f?8 
4 18 
4 19 
4 20 
420 
4 21 
4 21 
4 22 
4 23 
4 24 
4 24 
4 25 
4 26 
4 27 
4 28 
4 29 
430 
4 31 
432 
4 33 
4 34 
4 35 

437 
4 38 
439 
4 40 
4 41 
4 42 
4 43 
444 


fH) 

7 49 
7 49 
7 49 
7 48 
7 48 
7 47 
7 47 
7 47 
7 46 
7 46 
7 45 
7 45 
7 44 
7 43 
7 43 
742 
7 41 
7 40 
7 39 
7 39 
7 38 
7 37 
7 36 
7 35 
7 34 
7 33 
7 32 
7 31 
7 30 
7 28 


H.M. 

10 4 
10 32 
11 
11 27 
11 54 
morn 
023 
55 
131 
2 13 
3 1 
sets 
7 58 

9 21 
9 58 
1031 

11 A 

morn 
14 
53 
1 35 
2 21 
3 11 
4 4 
rises 
8 5 
836 
9 4 
9 30 


Moses Kelly 1893 


Hannibal Hamlin, 1891 
Sir A. H. Layard, 1894 
De Maupassant, 1893 
Augustin Daly, 1899 


Isham G. Harris, 1897 


Clinton B. Fisk. 1890 


Grand Duke George, 1899 
Admiral D. Ammen, 1898 
Cyrus W. Field, 1892 .... 


John C Fremont, 1890. 


John H. Gear, 1900 . 


William B Russell, 1896 
Edmond de Goncourt. 1896. . . . 
Edward C Baring, 1897 


Horatio Alger 1899 


Thomas Cook 1892 


Jean Ingelow 1897 


Robert G. Ingersoll, 1899 
Archbishop Croke. 1902 
Eugene Spuller, 1896 
Gen. Li. McLaws, 1897 


Edward T. McLaughlin, 1893 ... 
Gen. A. J.Pleasonton, 1894.... 
Viscount Sherbrooke, 1892 
Robert Laird Collyer, 1890 
King Humbert. 1900 
Prince Bismarck, 1898 
John C. Ridpath, 1900 


StliMOXTH. AUGUST. 31 DAYS. 


& 
Op: 

n3 
& 


c 
S 

t 

q 

1 

2 
3 
4 
5 

(i 

7 
8 
9 
10 
11 
12 

i:1 

14 

15 
1C 
17 

18 
19 
_'( 
21 

->;_ 

2-] 
_T 
21 
27 

'!- 

2! 
3( 
131 


!i 


August was named In honor 
of Augustus Caesar, he having 
been made consul in this month. 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb.,N. Y.,Pa., 
S.Wis., S.Mich., 
N. 111., Ind., O. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St. Paul, N. E. 
WJs. and Mich., 
N.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD-1890-1902. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun Moon 
sets. R.&S. 


Sun 

rises 


Sun 

sets. 


Moon 

H.& S. 


Sun 
rises 
iTx. 
4 45 
4 46 
4 47 
448 
4 50 
4 51 
4 52 
4 53 
4 54 
4 56 
4 57 
4 58 
4 59 
5 
5 2 
5 3 
5 4 
5 5 
5 6 
5 8 
5 9 
5 10 
5 11 
5 12 
5 14 
5 15 
5 16 
5 17 
5 18 
5 19 
15 20 


Sun; Moon 
sets.u.&s. 


214 

215 

11? 

218 
219 
220 
221 
222 
223 
224 
225 
22(5 
227 
228 
229 
230 
231 
232 
233 
234 
235 
23(5 
237 
238 
239 
240 
241 
242 
243 
'244 


Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
si:x. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 

Sl'X. 

Mo 
Tu. 
We 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 


John Stephenson. 1893 


H.M. 

4 53 
4 54 
4 55 
4 56 
4 57 
458 

H 

i \ 

5 3 
5 4 
5 5 
5 6 

5 7 
5 8 
5 9 
5 10 
5 11 
5 12 
5 13 
5 15 
5 16 
5 17 
5 18 
5 19 
5 20 
5 21 
5 22 
5 23 
524 


H.M. 

7 19 
7 18 
7 17 
7 16 
7 15 
7 14 
7 12 
7 11 
7 10 

7 7 
7 6 
7 4 
7 3 
7 1 

3 55 
6 54 
(i 52 
6 51 
6 49 
6 48 
(I 415 
6 45 
6 43 
6 42 

t; 40 

15 US 
6 37 


H.M. 
9 57 

10 26 
10 58 
1133 
morn 
12 
57 
1 49 

18 

Tfi 

8 28 
9 4 
9 40 
10 19 
10 58 
11 40 
morn 
26 

i't 

3 
3 56 
4 53 
rises 
7 33 
8 
8 29 
9 
933 


R 

5 1 

1 I 

5 4 
5 4 
5 5 

? ? 

5 8 
a 9 

5 10 
5 11 
5 12 
5 13 
513 
5 14 
5 15 
5 16 
5 17 
518 
5 19 
5 20 
5 21 

11 

521 
5 24 
5 25 
5 2(i 
5 27 


H.M. 

7 12 
7 11 
7 10 
7 9 
7 8 
7 6 
7 5 

7 1 
6 59 

t; 5S 
(3 o7 
6 55 
6 54 
6 53 
(i 52 
C, 50 
6 49 
6 48 
(> 4(i 
(i 45 

5 4:; 

6 42 
I! 40 
li 3! I 
C, US 
6 3' 
6 34 
6 33 


H.M. 

9 58 
1029 
11 1 
1137 
morn 
018 
1 3 
156 
2 56 
4 2 
sets 
7 48 
827 
9 5 
9 43 
1023 
11 3 
11 46 
morn 
033 
1 22 
2 13 
3 6 

1.* 

rises 
7 32 
8 1 
8 31 
9 3 
9 37 


H.M. 

7 27 
7 2(5 
7 25 
7 23 
7 22 
7 20 
7 19 
7 18 
7 16 
7 15 
7 13 
7 12 
7 10 
7 9 
7 7 
7 6 
7 4 
7 2 
7 1 
6 59 
6 58 

(i 5t; 

6 54 
6 52 
6 51 
6 49 
6 47 
6 45 
6 44 
6 42 
641 


H. M. 

9 57 
10 25 
10 55 
11 28 
morn 
6 
051 
1 42 
242 
3 50 
sets 
7 54 
8 30 
9 4 
9 39 
10 15 
10 53 
11 34 
morn 
19 

2 
2 54 
3 51 
4 49 
rises 
7 35 

ii 


George W. Coaklev. 1893 
A L Littlejohn 1901 


Gen Jacob D Cox 1900. 


Ex-Empress Frederick, 1901. . . . 
George F. Root, 1895 
Georg M. Ebers. 1898 


Adolph Sutro. 1898 
Prince Henry of Orleans, 1901. 
Sir Charles Russell. 1900 
John Boyle O'Reilly. 1890 
James Russell Lowell, 1891. . . . 
Sir John Millais. 1896 
C. P. Huntington. 1900 
Gen J D Imboden 1S95 


John J. Ingalls. I'.KX) 
Gail Hamilton (Dodge), 1896... 
Duke of Manchester. 1892 
Edmond Audran 1901 
Prof. A. H Green, 1896 
Gen. Franz Sigel. 1902 


King Malietoa. 1898 


Ex-President Fonseca, 1892 
Judge Henry Hilton. 1899 
J. Idiarte Borda. 1897 
Ogden Goelet, 1897 


! Celia L. Thaxter. 1894 
Frank C Ives ls ( )9 


R. C. DeGraffenreid. 1902 
i Erastus Corning. 1896 
'George William Curtis. 1892. . . . 



9th MONTH. SEPTEMBER. so DAYS. 


5d 

5 3 

G* 

245 

24(5 
247 
248 
"49 


6 
S 

PM 

< 
fl 


a 


September, from Septem (sev- 
enth), as It was the seventh 
Roman month. 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb., N.Y., Pa., 

S.Wis., S. Mich. 
N. 111., Ind., O. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St. Paul,N.E. 
Wls. and Mich., 
N.B. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD-1890-1902. 


Sun 
rises 

1* 

5 26 

5 29 
5 30 
531 
532 
533 
5 34 
535 
5 36 
537 
538 
5 39 
5 41 
5 42 
5 43 
5 44 
5 45 
545 
546 
5 47 
548 
549 
5 51 
5 52 
5 53 
5 54 
5 55 


Sun 
sets. 

H.M 

6 35 
634 
632 
6 30 
6 2s 
6 27 
625 
623 
621 
6 20 
6 18 
6 17 
6 15 
6 13 
6 11 

6 4 
6 2 
6 1 

559 
5 57 
5 55 
5 53 
5 f.-J 
5 50 

m 

5 45 


Moon 
R.&8. 


Sun 
rises 

H.M. 

531 
5 32 
5 33 
5 33 
5 34 
5 35 
5 36 
5 37 
5 38 
5 39 
5 40 
5 41 
541 
542 
5 43 
544 
5 45 
5 46 
5 47 
5 48 
549 
5 50 
5 50 
5 51 
5 52 
5 53 
5 54 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 

R.&S. 


Sun 

rises 

H.M. 

5 21 
5 22 
5 23 
5 25 
5 26 
5 27 
5 28 
5 29 
5 31 
5 32 
5 33 
5 34 
5 35 
5 37 
5 38 
5 39 
5 40 
5 41 
5 43 
5 44 
5 45 
546 
5 47 
549 
5 50 
5 51 
5 52 
5 53 
5 55 
5 56 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 
R.&S. 
H. M 
10 4 
1044 
11 30 
morn 
25 

3 50 
sets 
7 
7 35 
8 12 
8 50 
9 31 
1016 
11 4 
11 55 
morn 
49 
146 
2 44 
3 42 
439 
rises 
6 31 
6 59 

1 3 2 

842 
9 27 


1 

2 
3 

4 

8 
9 
10 
11 
12 
13 
14 
15 
16 
17 

is 

19 
20 

21 
22 
_:; 
'1 


Th. 
Fri. 
Sat 
SIS. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 

SUN. 

Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat 

SUN. 

Mo. 
Tu. 
We 
iTh. 
Fri. 


Gen. N. P. Banks. 1894 
Wilford Woodruff, 1898 
Edward Eggleston 1902 


H.M. 

10 9 
1050 
11 37 
morn 
032 
1 34 
2 42 
3 54 
sets 
6 59 
7 36 
8 14 
8 55 
9 37 
1022 
11 11 
morn 
2 
55 
1 51 
2 48 
3 44 
4 40 
rises 
631 

I * 

8 4*8 
9 33 


H.M. 

6 31 
6 30 
6 28 
6 27 
6 25 
6 24 
6 22 
6 20 
6 19 
6 17 
6 16 
6 14 
6 13 
6 11 
6 10 

3 5 
6 3 
6 1 

\& 

m 

5 53 
5 52 
5 50 
5 49 

5 47 
545 


H. M. 

10 14 
105(5 
11 44 
morn 
039 
1 40 
247 
3 58 
sets 
6 5fi 

8 5 
943 
1029 
11 18 
morn 

?? 

156 

2 52 
3 48 
442 
rises 
633 

I?! 

8 54 
9 40 


H.M. 

6 39 
637 
6 35 

r, :;:-; 
6 31 

'i 2'. 1 

6 27 
6 25 
6 24 
6 22 
6 20 
6 18 
6 16 
615 
6 13 
6 11 
6 9 
6 7 
6 5 
6 3 

i59 
5 57 
5 56 
5 54 
5 52 
5 50 
548 
546 
5 44 


AlexandreChatrian. 1890 
Rudolph Virchow, 1902 


250 
251 
252 
2.l:i 
254 
255 
25(5 
257 
258 
25! 1 
2150 
2(51 
262 
263 
264 
265 

269 
270 
271 


George B. Goode, 181H5 , 
John Greenleaf Whittier, 1892. 
Isaac P. Christiancy, 1890., ...... 
Jules Grevy 1891 . . 


Empress Elizabeth, 1898. 
William Saunders, 1900.......... 
Cornelius Vanderbilt 1899 


James Lewis IS'.'O 


William McKinley, 1901.. 


Thomas H. Watts. 1892 
Dr John Hall, 1898 . 


Winnie Davis, 1S98 , 


Queen of Belgium. 1902 
Charles C Delmonico, 1901 
Stephen M. \Vhite. 1901... . . , 


Gen Bourbaki 1897 


Gen John Pope 1892 . 


P S. Gilmore 1892 


25 
26 
>- 

2S 

IS 


John M Palmer, 1900 




Abram Duryea 1890 


Abbie Goodsell. 1893 . 


Emile Zola, 1902 


Gen. A. J. Vaughn. 1890 


10th MOXTH. OCTOBER. 31 DAYS. 


fc 
o 

S 


6 

2 
; 
< 
Q 


a 


October was formerly the 
eighth month, and hence the 
name from Octem (eighth). 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb., N.Y., Pa., 
S.Wis., S.Mich. 
N. 111.. Ind., O. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St. Paul.N.E. 
Wis. and Mich., 
N.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD 1890-1900. 


Sun 

rises 


Sum Moon 
sets., R.&S. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 

sets. 


Moon 

R.& S 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 

K. & S. 


275 

276 
277 

281 

286 
! 2*7 
: 2ss 
_'*'. 
290 
291 
292 
2'.t:5 
294 
295 
296 
297 
298 
299 
300 
301 
302 
303 
304 
305 


1 

2 
3 

i 

6 

7 
8 
9 

i? 

12 
13 

14 
15 
16 

17 
18 
19 
20 
21 
1-1 
23 
24 

2(5 
>- 

2S 
29 

:;i 
31 


Sat. 

SIN. 

Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SI'S. 
Mo. 
Tu, 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th, 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SI:N 
Mo. 


Prof Benj. Jowett, 1893 


ff- 
558 
559 
6 
6 1 
6 2 

5 4 
6 5 
6 6 
6 8 

IJ 

g** 

6 14 
6 15 
6 16 

6 20 
6 21 
i! 22 
6 24 
25 
627 
628 
6 29 
6 30 
6 32 


ff3 
5 42 
540 
5 38 
536 
535 
533 
5 31 
5 29 
5 28 
5 26 
5 25 
5 23 

520 
5 18 
5 17 
5 15 
514 
5 12 
5 11 
5 9 
5 8 
5 6 

I i 
1 1 

4 59 

458 
45(5 


H. M. 

1024 
11 21 
morn 
24 

li 

3 55 
5 10 
sets 
6 46 
7 28 
8 13 
9 2 
954 
10 49 
11 45 
morn 
041 
137 
233 
329 
426 
5 24 
rises 
6 10 
6 48 
731 
820 
9 14 
1013 
11 18 


5 55 
5 56 
5 57 

5 58 

n 

5 2 
6 3 
6 4 

8 5 

6 8 
6 9 
6 10 
6 11 
6 12 
6 13 
6 14 
6 15 
6 16 
6 17 
6 18 
6 19 
6 20 
621 
6 22 
623 
6 24 
6 20 


H.M. 

5 44 
5 42 
5 41 
5 39 

5 38 
5 36 

5 32 
5 30 
r> _! 
5 27 
5 26 
5 24 
:> _':-. 
5 21 
5 -jo 
5 18 
5 17 
5 16 
5 14 
5 13 
5 12 
5 10 
5 9 

l i 

5 5 
5 4 
5 3 

5 2 


H.M. 
1031 

11 28 
morn 
30 
136 
246 
3 57 
5 10 
sets 
6 50 
7 33 
8 19 
9 9 
10 1 
10 55 
1150 
morn 
045 
1 40 

lis 

4 26 
5 22 
rises 
6 14 

9 21 

10 19 
11 23 


H.M. 

5 57 
5 58 
6 
6 1 

6 4 
6 5 
6 6 
6 8 
6 9 
6 10 
6 11 
6 12 
6 14 
6 15 
6 16 
6 17 
619 
620 
622 
6 23 
6 24 
626 
6 27 
6 29 
6 30 
631 
633 
6 34 
636 
6 37 


H.M. 

5 42 
5 40 
5 38 
5 37 
5 35 
5 33 
5 31 

5 28 
5 26 
5 24 
5 22 
5 20 

11? 

5 15 
5 13 
5 11 
5 10 

5 6 
5 4 
5 3 
5 1 
5 

4 4 i? 

455 
4 54 
4 52 
4 51 


H. HI. 

10 17 
11 15 
morn 
18 
1 27 
2 40 
3 54 
5 11 
sets 
6 42 
7 23 

1=1 

9 47 
1043 
11 39 
morn 
36 
1 33 
31 
29 
4 27 
5 27 
rises 
6 5 
6 42 
7 25 
8 13 

11 13 


Joseph Ernest Renan, 1892 
David Swing. 1894 
H. H. Boyesen, 1895. 


James Harlan, 1899 .. . 


Alfred Tennyson, 1893 
Oliver Wendell Holmes, 1894.. . 
George DuMaurier. 1896. , 
Marquis of Bute, 1900 
Peter E Studebaker 1897 


George W Carleton, 1901 


Senator C H Jones 1897 


Gen. W. W. Belknap. 18!*).. .. 
Charles Doty Bates 1895 
Rowland E. Robinson, 1900. . . . 
John T. Harris, 1699 
Charles A. Dana, 1897 
Charles F Gounod 18 ( >3 


George M. Pullman. 1893. , 
ijames A. Froude, 1894 . . . 


iHenrv Reeve, 1895 
John Sherman, 1900 


Charles F. Crisp 18% 


C H VanWyck 1895 


Grant Allen 1895 


'Elizabeth Cadv Stanton, 1902. 
! Florence Marryat. 1899 
jCarter Harrison, Sr., 1893 


Honore Mercier. 1894 
Gen. Joseph R. West, 1898 



nth MONTH. NOVKMBKR. so DAYS. 


h 
CM 

9 


6 
S 
h 

< 
S 


S 
II 


November, from ^orm(nlne), 
as It waa formerly the ninth 
month. 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb., N.Y., Pa., 
S. Wis., S.Mich. 
N. 111., Ind., 0. 


St. Louis, S. 111.,! 
Va., Ky., Mo., 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St. Paul, N. E. 
Wis. audMich., 
N.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


NOTED DEAD 1890-1902. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 
sets. 


Moon 
R.&S. 


Sun 
rises 


SunlMoon 

sets.R.& s. 


Sun 
rises 


Sun 

sets. 


Moon 

R.&S. 


306 

307 
i 308 
309 
310 
311 
312 
813 
314 
315 
316, 
317 
318 
319 
320 
321 
322 
323 
324 
! 325 

329 
1 330 
331 

11 

334 
335 


1 

2 
3 

i 

7 
8 

18 

11 
12 
13 
14 
15 
16 
17 
is 
19 
JO 
Jl 

J4 
J.-i 
J6 
>7 

JS 

29 

30 


Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
six. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
six. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SUN. 

St 

We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
six . 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 


Czar Alexander III.. 1894 
Lieut. Schwatka, 1892 
Heinrich Rickert. 1902 


H.M. 

633 
6 34 

6 38 
639 
6 40 
6 41 
642 
644 
6 45 
646 
6 47 
6 48 
6 50 
6 51 

6 53 
6 54 
6 56 
6 57 
6 58 

? 5 8 

7 2 
7 3 

I I 

7 S 


H.M. 

4 55 

til 

4 52 
4 50 
4 49 
4 48 
447 
446 
4 44 
443 
442 
441 
440 
440 
439 
4 38 
4 37 
4 36 
4 36 
4 35 
434 
4 33 
483 
432 
432 
4 31 
4 31 
4 30 
4 30 


H. M. 

morn 
26 
1 35 

2 46 
358 
5 12 

sets 

U 

741 
8 35 
9 31 
1029 
11 27 
morn 

2 17 
3 15 

4 13 
5 11 
6 11 

rises 
6 14 

7 8 

U 

10 16 
11 23 
morn 


H.M. 

6 27 

6 28 

is 

6 31 

*i 32 
6 33 
6 34 
6 36 
6 37 
6 38 
6 39 
640 
641 
6 42 
6 43 
6 44 
645 
6 47 
6 48 
6 49 
6 50 
6 51 
6 52 
6 53 
6 54 
6 55 
6 56 
657 
6 58 


H.M. 

5 
4 59 
4 58 
457 
456 
455 
4 54 
4 53 
4 52 
4 51 
450 

!! 

4 47 
446 
4 45 
4 45 
444 
444 
443 
4 42 
4 42 
4 41 
441 
4 40 
4 40 
439 
4 39 
439 


H. M. 
morn 
30 

2 47 
3 57 
5 9 

sets 

9 37 
10 34 
11 31 
morn 
26 
1 22 
2 17 
3 13 
4 10 
5 8 
6 6 
rises 
621 
7 15 
814 
9 16 
10 20 
11 27 
morn 


?3 M 8 
6 40 
6 41 
6 43 
6 44 
6 45 
6 47 
6 48 
6 50 
6 51 
6 52 
6 54 
6 55 
6 57 
6 58 

? 5 8 

7 2 
7 3 
7 4 

7 5 

? I 

7 10 
7 11 

7 12 
7 13 
7 15 
7 16 
; 7 17 


fib 

4 48 
4 47 
4 45 
444 
4 43 
4 41 
4 40 
4 38 
437 
436 
435 
4 34 
4 33 
4 32 
431 
4 30 
4 29 
428 
427 
4 26 
4 25 
425 
4 24 
423 
422 
4 22 
4 21 
4 21 
420 


H. M. 

morn 

ni 

2 46 
4 
5 16 
sets 
5 55 
643 
7 34 
8 28 
9 25 
10 24 
11 23 
morn 
021 

111 

4 16 
5 17 
6 18 
rises 
6 7 
7 1 
8 1 
9 4 
10 12 
11 21 
morn 


Eugene Field 1894 


Tschaikowsky 1893 


Prof. Charles A. Seeley, 1892... . 
Li Hung Chang. 1901 . . 


Francis Parkman, 1893 
Duke of Marlborougb, 1892 
Theodore R. Davis, 1894 
Richard M. Field. 1902 
Henry Villard. 1900 
Admiral C. Steedman. 1890 
Maj. John A. Logan. 1899 
Nicholas M. Fish. 1902 
James McCosh 1894 


G. H. Houghton, 1897 
Gen. Don C. Buell, 1898 
William J. Florence. 1891 
Anton G Rubinstein 1894 


Garret A Hobart 1899 


Sir Arthur Sullivan. 1900 
William III. of Holland 
August Belmont, 1890 


George R. Davis. 1899 


Thomas P. Ochiltree, 1902 
Alexandre Dumas, 1895 
Joseph Parker, 1902 
Count Edward von Taaf e, 1895. 
Oscar Wilde. 1900 


12th MONTH. DECEMBER. 31 DAYS. 


^ 

SB 

330 
i 337 
i 33* 
'33H 
1340 
341 
342 
! 343 
! 344 
345 
j 346 

m 

349 
350 
351 
352 
3.-,:', 
354 
355 
1 356 
357 
35,8 
3.-,9 
360 
361 
362 
i 363 
364 
365 
' 366 


6 

S 

*H 

< 

a 
i 

2 
3 
4 
5 

I 

9 

10 

11 

12 
13 

14 
15 

16 
17 
IS 
19 
20 
21 
22 
23 
24 
25 
Ji 
>- 

JS 

si! 

31 


a 

Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIN. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We: 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri. 
Sat. 
SIX 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Kri. 
Sat. 
SIX. 
Mo. 
Tu. 
We. 
Th. 
Fri, 
Sat. 


December, from Decem (ten), 
the Roman Calender terming it 
the tenth month. 


Chicago, Iowa, 
Neb.,^T.Y.,Pa., 
S.Wis., S.Mich., 
N. 111., Ind., O. 


St. Louis, S. 111., 
Va., Ky., Mo.. 
Kan., Col., Cal., 
Ind., Ohio. 


St. Paul.N.E. 
Wis. and Mich., 
N.E. New York, 
Minn., Or. 


XOTED DEAD 1890-1902. 


Sun 
rises 

n 

7 10 
7 11 

7 14 
7 15 
7 16 

?J* 

7 18 
7 19 
7 20 
721 
7 21 
7 22 
7 23 
7 24 
724 
7 25 
7 25 

HI 

7 27 

7 28 
7 28 

?1 

729 

7 29 


Sun 

sets. 


Moon 
R.&S. 


Sun 

rises 


SuniMoon 
sets.|R,&s. 


Sun 

rises 

H.M. 

7 18 
7 19 

7 22 

7 23 
7 24 
7 25 
7 20 
7 27 
7 2S 
7 29 
7 30 
7 30 
731 
7 32 
I il:: 

7 34 
7 3f) 
7 36 
7 36 
737 
7 37 
7 38 
7 3S 
7 38 
7 39 
7 39 

yf 


Sun 

sets. 

H.M. 

420 
4 20 
4 19 
4 19 
4 19 
4 19 
4 19 
4 18 
4 18 
4 18 
4 18 
4 18 
4 19 
4 19 
4 19 
4 19 
4 19 
4 20 
420 
4 20 
421 
4 21 
422 
4 22 
4 23 
4 24 
4 25 
4 25 

427 


Moon 

R.&S. 


Duke of Leinster, 1893.... 


H.M. 

28 

28 
28 

I 8 

28 
28 

29 
29 
29 
30 
4 30 
4 31 
431 
4 32 
4 32 
4 33 
433 
4 34 
4 35 
4 36 
4 36 
4 37 


H. M. 

033 
1 43 
2 53 
4 4 
5 12 
6 19 
sets 

?J? 
8 15 
9 13 
10 11 
11 8 
morn 
6 
1 1 
1 59 
2 58 
357 
457 
5 58 
rises 
5 56 

I 7 

916 
1025 
11 35 
morn 
44 
1 53 


H.M. 

fl 

7 2 
7 3 
7 4 
7 5 

7 8 
7 9 
7 10 
710 
7 11 
7 12 
7 13 
7 13 
7 14 
7 14 
7 15 
7 15 
7 16 
716 
7 17 
7 17 
7 18 
7 18 
7 18 
7 19 
7 19 


H V M. 

4 38 
4 38 
4 38 
4 38 

4 39 

439 
440 
440 
4 40 
4 40 
4 41 
441 
4 42 
4 42 
4 43 
444 
4 44 
4 45 
4 45 
446 
4 46 
4 47 


H. M. 
35 
143 
2 51 
4 
5 8 
6 13 
sets 
626 
7 24 
8 21 
9 17 
10 14 
11 11 
morn 
6 

Irf 

2 54 
3 53 
452 
5 52 
rises 
6 3 
7 6 
8 12 
9 19 
10 27 
11 36 
morn 
43 
150 


H. M. 

032 
144 
256 
4 8 
5 19 
627 
sets 
6 12 
7 11 

11 7 
morn 

? i 

2 2 
3 2 
4 3 
5 4 
6 6 
rises 
5 49 
6 54 

10 24 
11 36 
morn 
047 
1 57 


Jay Gould, 1892 


George N. Howard. 1893 
John Tvndall, Is93 
M L Hayward, 1*99. 


Tohn M L Irby, 1900 . 


Thomas B. Reed, 1902 


George A. Sal a. 1895 


Louis A. Rogeard, 1896 
William Black, 1898 


Gen. Calixto Garcia, 1898 
Allen G. Thurman. 1895 
Edward McPherson. 1895 
Alexandre Salvini, ISlti 
Randall L. Gibson. 18'.tt 
Gen. A. H. Terry, 1890 
Alexander Herrmann, 1896. . . . 
Francis Napier. 1899. 


Gen. H. W. Lawton. 1S99 
Preston B. Plumb, 1*91 . 
Edwin S Barrett 18 l )8 


j i Case 1S91 


Gen. Frederick T. Dent, 1892.. . . 
Clarence King. 1902 
Dr. H. Schliemann. 1890 
Gov. John R. Rogers, 1S01 


Orange Judd 1892 


James G Fair 1^94 


[Christina G. Rossetti. 1894 
Matias Romero. 1899 .. 
1 Francis E Spinner, 1890 .... 



Calendar n 

for ascertaining any day of the week for any given time within two hundred years from the 
introduction of the New Style. 1752* to 1952 inclusive. 



YEARS 1753 TO 1952. 



I! 



I Us Hi 



1761 
1801 



1767 
1807 



1789 

1829 



1795 
1835 



1846 1857 
1 1903 



1863 1 1874 
1914 \ 1925 



1885 1891 
1931 1 1942 



4 I 7 



1 3 



624 72 



1773 I 1779 I 1790 
1813 1819 1830 I 



1841 1847 1858 



1869 1875 
1915 1926 



1943 



oil 



624 



35 13 



1757 
1803 



1763 | 1774 | 1785 
1814 1825 1831 



1791 
1842 



1853 



1859 1870 1881 
1910 1921 1 1927 



1887 1898 
1938 1 1949 I 



62 2 5735 



1 462 4 



1754 
1805 



1811 1822 



1833 1839 



ITffl 

1S.VJ 



1861 
1907 



1867 1878 
1918 1929 



1935 194(5 



2 551 



6 1 



47257 



17551 
1806 



1766 I 1777 I 1783 
1817 1823 1834 



1794 
1845 



1SOO 
1*51 



1862 1873 
1913 1 1919 1 1 



1941 1947 



3 I 6 



247 



51361 



17.-8 I 1769 1 1775 
Icu9 1815 1826 



17S6 



1854 1865 
1905 1 1911 



1871 1882 
1922 1933 



1939 1950 



7 3 



614 



573 



1753 
1810 



1759 1770 1781 
1821 1827 1838 



1798 
1855 



1906 



1877 1883 



1900 
1945 
1951 



1 4 



725 



3614 



LEA P YEARS. 



.|29|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|...|. 



1764 
1768 
1772 
1776 
1780 
1756 
1760 



1792 



1804 



7|3|4|7|2|5|7|3|6|1|4I6 



1796 1808 1836 1864 1892 1904 | 1932 



5|1|2|5|7|3|5|1|4|-6|'2|4 



1812 



1840 



1868 



1896 



1908 | 1936 



3|6|7|3|5|1|-3|6|2|4|7|2 



1912 | 1940 



1|4|5|1|3|6|1|4|7|2|5|7 



1820 1848 1876 



6 | 2| 31 6| 1| 4| 6 I 2 I 5 I 7 | 3 I 5 



1784 



1852 | 1880 



1920 | 1948 



4|7|1|4|6|2|4|7|3|5|1|3 



1788 



1828 | 1856 | 1884 



1924 | 1952 



2| 5| 6| 2| 4| 71 21 51 



3| 



Monday.... 1 Tuesday... 1 Wednesd'y 1 Thursday.. 1 Friday 

Tuesday... 2 Wednesd'y 2 Thursday.. 2 Friday 2 Saturday.. 

Wednesd'y 3 Thursday.. 3 Friday 3 Saturday.. 3 Sunday... 

Thursday.. 4 Friday 4 Saturday.. 4 Sunday 4 Monday .. 

Friday 5 Saturday... 5\ Sunday 5 Monday... 5 ; Tuesday.. 



1 Saturday.. 1 Sunday 1 

2 Sunday.... 2 Monday... 2 

3 Monday ... 3 Tuesday. . . 3 

4 Tuesday. . . 4 Wednesd'y 4 

5 Wednesd'y 5 Thursday.. 5 



Saturday.. 6 Sunday- 6 1 Monday.... 6 Tuesday... GiWednesd'y 6 Thursday.. CiFriday 6 

Sunday.... 7 Monday... 7 Tuesday... 7 Wednesd'y 7 l Thursday.. 7 1 Friday.. .. 7jSaturday... 7 
... 8 Tuesday... 8 Wednesd'y 8 Thursday.. SiFriday 8 Saturday.. 8\ Sunday 



Monday 

Tuesday!!. 9 Wednesd'y 9 Thursday.". 9 Friday.."... 



Monday ...15 



Tuesd 
Wedni 



;Saturday.. 9 Sunday. ... 9:Monday... 



Wednesd'ylO Thursday.. 10| Friday 10 Saturday ..10 Sunday 10 Monday 10 Tuesday.... 1(J 

Thursday.. 11 Friday l^Saturday...!! Sunday.... 11 1 Monday... .11 Tuesday. ..11 Wednesd'yil 

Friday 12 Saturday... 12|Sunday 12 Monday ...12 [Tuesday. ..12, Wednesd'yl2 Thursday.. 12 

Saturday... 13 Sunday 13 1 Monday 13 Tuesday... 13[Wednesd'yl3 Thursday.. 13 Friday 15 

Sunday 14 Monday ...14 Tuesday. ..14 Wednesd'yU Thursday.. 14 Friday 14 Saturday. ..14 



Tuesday.. .15 Wednesd'yl5jThursday..l5 Friday 15|Saturday...l5 Sunday ....IS 



iesday...!6 Wednesd'ylO Thursday.. 16 Friday 16 Saturday,. M\ Sunday ....16 Monday.. ..1C 

ednesd'y!7 Thursday.. 17 Friday 17 [Saturday... 17 Sunday .. ..17 (Monday ...17 ~ 



Friday 5 

Saturday . .27 



Sunday 27 



Monday . . .29 Tuesday. . .29 
Tuesday... 30 Wednesd'ySO 
Wednesd'y31 Thursday.. 31 



Tuesday ..11 
Thursday .".18 Friday .."...18 Saturday... 18 'Sunday.'.... 18 Monday.-. .18 Tuesda'y. ..18 Wednesd'ylf 

Friday 19 K Saturday...l9 Su?iday....l9 Monday.. ..19 Tuesday. ..19 \Vednesd'yl9 Thursday.. If 

Saturday...* Sunday ....20 Monday ...20 Tuesday.... 20 Wednesd'y20 Thursday..20 Friday 21 

Sunday ....21 Monday ...21 Tuesday... 21 ;Wednesd'y21 Thursday.. 21 1 Friday 21 Saturday... 2 

Monday. ...22 Tuesday...?, 1 Wednesd'y22 Thursday.. 22 Friday 22 Saturday... 22 Sunday.... * 

Tuesday. ..23jWednesd'y23 Thursday..23 Friday 23|Saturday ..23|Simdj/....23|Monday .. 

Wednesd'y24 Thursday. .24 Friday 24 Saturday ..24 \Sunday 24 Monday .. .24 (Tuesday. . .2^ 

Thursday..25 Friday 25 Saturday.. .25 Sunday % Monday ...25 Tuesday... 25! Wcdnesd'y2! 

~- _ . 1 ~ -YlnnHaw O! IViaori a tr 9C \*7*HT*r,oH 'TrOClrrV. ,,,.oHa*r <>( 



Saturday. .26 Sunday. ...26j Monday.... 26iTuesday .. 26 



Monday.... 27 Tuesday. .27jWednesd'y27 Thursday .27|Friday 2 r 



8iMdav....28 Monday ...28 Tuesday.. .28 Wednesd'y28 Thursday.. 28 



Wednesd'y29 Thursday ..29 Friday 29 

Thursday..:* Friday 30 Saturday... 30 

Friday 31 -Saturday.. .311 Sunday ... .31 



Wednesd'y2(J|Thursday.. 



Friday 28 Saturday. .. 

Saturday. . .29! Sunday . . . .24 

Sunday 30 Monday ...31 

Monday . .. 31 i Tuesday..."' 



NOTE. To ascertain any day of the week first look in the table for the year required and 
nnder the months are figures which refer to the corresponding figures at the head of the 
columns of days below. For Example: To know on what day of the week July 4 was in the 
year 1895. in the table of years look for 1895, and in a parallel line, under July, is figure 1, whici 
directs to column 1. in which it will be seen that July 4 falls on Thursday. 

*1752 same as 1772 from Jan. 1 to Sept. 2. From Sept. 14 to Dec. 31 same as 1780 (Sept. 3-13 were 
omitted). This Calendar is from Whitdker's London Almanack, with some revisions. 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



MOHAMMEDAN CALENDAR--1904. 



MOHAMMEDAN YEAR, 
MONTH AND NAME. 



Gregorian 

date of 
beginning. 



Dur- 
tit'n. 
da i/s. 



MOHAMMEDAN YEAR, 
MONTH AND NAME. 



Gregorian 

date of 
beginning. 



Dur- 
at'n, 
da ys. 



132111. Dulkaedk Jan. 19.. 

1321-12. Dulheggee Feb. 18... 

Little Bairam Feast. March 2-6. 

1322- 1. Muharram March 18. 

1:122- 2. Saphar April 17. . 

13J2- 3. Rabial May 16... 

1322 4. Rabia II June 15... 

1322 5. Jomhadi I July 14. 



13226. Jomhadi II 

1322-7. Rajeb 

1322 8. Shaaban 

1322 9. Ramadan (Fasting).. 

132210. Shawall 

Great Bairam Feast.. 

132211. Dulkaeda 

132212. Dulheggee 



Aug. 13.... 
t.ll.... 



t. 11 

Nov. 9.... 

Dec. 9 

Dec. J-12 . . 
Jan. 7. 1905 
Feb. 6. 1905 



The year 1322 is the second if the 45th cycle of 30 years and is therefore a leap year. It is 
a lunar year of 355 days. The Mohammedan era dates from the night of Mohammed from 
Mecc i to Medina. July t;. 622 A. D. Each month begins with the crescent or new moon. 

The Mohammedan sabbath is Friday and besides this they observe three great holidays, 
viz. : The entire month of Ramadan, the ninth month of the Turkish year, is a time of general 
fasting while the sun is above the horizon. This is followed by the Bairam feasts, which 
continue for three days and are marked by exercise of great charity, with all sorts of amuse- 
ments and feasting. The Little Bairam. the third great holiday, is celebrated seventy days 
after the Great Bairam feasts and lasts four days. It is a religious holiday and is observed 

with much solemnity. 

JEWISH OR HEBREW CALENDAR--1904. 



JEWISH YEAR, MONTH 

AND NAME. 



Gregorian 

date of 
beginning. 



Dur- 

at'n. 
fht ys 



JEWISH YEAR. MONTH 
AXD NAME. 



Gregorian 

date <>f 
beginning. 



Dur- 

at'n, 
days. 



5664 4. Tebet 

5664 5. Sh'vat 

5i64 6. Adar 

56*U 7. Nisan 

5>i64 8. lyar 

&V4 9. Sivan 

566410. Tamhuuz 



Dec.19-20. '03 
Jan. 18. 1904 
Feb. 16-17.... 
March 17.... 
April 15-16.. 

May 15 

June 13-14... 



566411. Ab. or Av 

12. Elul 

5665- 1. Tishri 

5665 2. Cesvan 

5665 3. Kislev 

5tJt>5 4. Tebet 

5665 5. Sh'vat 



July 13 

Aug. 11-12... 
Sept. 10*.... 

Oct. 9-10 

Nov. 8-9 

Dec. 8-9 

Jan. 7. 1905.. 



*Or at sunset. Sept. 9. 

The Jewish era year 5665 is the third of the 299th cycle of nineteen years. It is an embolism ic 
year and contains 385 days. The year 56fr4 is a common lunar year of 50 sabbaths and 554 days, 
being the second of the 299th cycle. This era dates from the supposed time of the creation. 
When, as above, two dates are given as the date of beginning of a month the last one is al- 
ways reckoned as the date of beginning (Rosch-Chodesh), except Tishri. which is always 
counted from the first. HEBREW FESTiyALS AND pAgTg> 

First Day of New Year Tishri 1, Sat., Sept. 10 
Fast of Gedaliah Tishri 3. Monday. Sept. 12 
Yom-Kippoor Tishri 10 Monday. Sept. 19. 
First Day of Tabernacles Tishri'15, Sat., Sep. 24. 



Fast of Tebet (1903) Tebet 10. Tue., Dec. 29. 
Fast of Esther (1904) Adar 13. Mon.. Feb. 29. 
Fun m Adar 14. Tue.. Wed.. March 1-2. 
First Day of Passover Nisan lo.Thu.,M'rch 31. 
Lag B'Omer (33d Omer) Yiar IS. Tue.. May 3. 



First Day of Pentecost Sivan 6. Fri.. May 20. 
t- ast of Tamhuuz Tamhuuz 17,Thur.,June 30. 
Fast of Av-Av 9, Thursday. July 21. 



Fast of Tebet Tebet 10, Sunday,Dec. 18. 



Hoshannah-Uabbah Tishri 21. Fr>., Sept. 30 
Sh'Mini-Atseres Tishri 22. Saturday, Oct. L 
Simchas-Torah Tishri 23. Sunday. Oct. 2. 
First Day of Chanukah Kislev 2o, Sat., Dec. 3. 



CHINESE CALENDAR--1904. 
1st Month(Moon)beglns Feb. 16'oth Month(Moon)begins Jun. 13 9th Month (Moon) begins Oct. 9 
2d " " " March 17 6th " " " July 13 10th " - " Nov. 7 



3d 
4th 



" April 15 7th 
May 15,8th 



Aug. 11 llth 
Sept. 9.12th 



Dee. 6 
"Jan. 5/05 



The year 1904 corresponds nearly to the year 4601 of the Chinese era and is the 41st of the 
cycle of sixty years. Dragon festival. June 18; moon cake festival. Sept. 24; Nov. 17isthe 



birthday festival of the dowager empress and Aug. 8 is the birthday festival of the emperor. 

GREEK CHURCH AND RUSSIAN CALENDAR-A. D. 1904. A. M. 8013. 

New style. Holy days. Old style. 

May 27. . . .Coronation of Emperor* May 14 

July 12. .. Peter and Paul.chiefapostles.Jun.29 

..First Day of Theotokos Aug. 1 

. .Transfiguration Aug. 6 



Jan. 14 
Jan. 19 
Feb. 14... 
Feb. 15 
Keb. 17 
F -h. 21 
March 27. 
April 1... 
April 3. . . 
April 7 
May 6 
May 12... 
May 22... 



. Holy days. Old style. 

Circumcision ................... Jan. 1 

Theophany (Epiphany) ...... Jan. 6 

. Carnival Sunday ............. Feb. 1 

Hypapante (Purification) _____ Feb. 2 

Ash Wednesday ................ Feb. 4 

First Sunday in Lent .......... Feb. 8 

. Palm Sunday ............... March 14 

. Great Friday (Good Friday)March 19 
.Holy Pasch (Easter) ....... March 21 

Annunciation of Theotokos.. Mar. 25 
St. George ..................... April 23 

. Ascension Day ................ April 29 

. St. Nicholas ..................... May'.) 



Aug. 14. 
Aug. 19. 
Aug. 2*. 
Sept. 12. 



Sept. 27. 
Oct. 14.. 
Nov. 28. 
Dec. 4 . . 



. .Repose of Theotokos Aug. 15 

. .St. Alexander Nevsky* Aug. 30 

..Nativity of Theotokos Sept S 

..Exaltation of the Cross Sept 14 



Peculiar to Russia. 



..Patronage of Theotokos Oct. 1 

..First Day of Fast of Nativity. Nov.lo 

..Entrance of Theotokos .".Nov. 21 

. .Conception of Theotokos Dec. 8 

Jan. 7. l l J05.Nativity (Christmas) Dec. 25 



PLANETARY CONJUNCTIONS AND OTHER PHENOMENA. 13 


PLANETARY CONJUNCTIONS AND OTHER PHENOMENA FOR 1904. 


Mo. D. 


ASPECT. 


Central 
time, 
h. m. 


Distance 
apart. 


4fo. D. 


ASPECT. 


Central 
time. 
h. m. 


Distance 

apart. 
o ' 


Jan. 1 
2 


7 
10 
13 
15 
17 
17 
18 
20 
20 
22 

Feb. 1 
10 
11 
12 
13 
13 
15 
18 
18 
23 
25 

27 

Mar. 7 
9 
13 
14 
14 
15 
16 
17 
17 
18 
20 
20 
23 
24 
26 
26 
27 

Apr. 1 

6 
7 
8 
10 
13 
14 
16 



21 
23 
23 
24 
30 

May 2 

O 

9 
11 
11 
12 
13 
13 
14 


8 gr. elong. E. of o. 
9 gr. hel. lat. north. 
Neptune con j. moon 
Earth nearest sun. . 
S in ascending node 
Mercury stationary 
8 in perihelion 
Venus conj. moon. . 
Uranus conj. moon. 
Mercury conj. sun. . 
Mercury conj . moon 
Saturn conj. moon . 
Mars conj. moon 
B gr. hel. lat. north. 
Jupiter conj. moon. 
Venus conj. Uranus 
a stationary 
Neptune conj. moon 

Saturn conj. sun.... 
a gr. elong. west.... 
Uranus conj. moon. 
Venus conj. moon. . 
B in descend'g node 
Mercury conj. moon 
Saturn conj. moon.. 
Mars conj. moon 
Jupiter conj. moon, 
a in aphelion 
Mars conj. Jupiter.. 
Saturn con. Mercury 
Neptune conj. moon 
9 in descend'g node 

Venus con j.Saturn. 
Uranus conj. moon. 
Satur ) conj. moon.. 
Venus conj. moon. . 
Neptune stationary 
8 gr. hel. lat. south. 
Mercury conj. moon 
O ann. eclipse 


a.m. 
9 <)0 a.m. 
40 p.m. 
1000p.m. 
30()a.m. 
900p.m. 
50Up.m. 
2 57 p.m. 
48 a.m. 
600a.m. 
9 : a.m. 
421p.m. 
10 31 a.m. 
1200p.m. 
336a.m. 
200p.m. 
200p.m. 
10 42 p.m. 

600p.m. 
3 00 a.m. 
911a.m. 
9 46 p.m. 
1200a.m. 
1028p.m. 
5 13 a.m. 
106p.m. 
859p.m. 
500p.m. 
1100p.m. 
1100p.m. 
7 38 a.m. 
1100a.m. 

900p.m. 
5 24 p.m. 
547 p.m. 
842a.m. 
900a.m. 


1930'E 
v""355N 


15 
18 
21 
22 
25 
30 
30 

June 1 
1 
4 
8 
9 
11 
13 
13 
14 
17 
19 
19 
21 
26 
27 
29 
30 

July 1 

4 
4 
4 
6 
8 
9 
9 
10 
12 
12 
13 
13 
21 
23 
24 
28 

Aug. 3 

8 
-9 
10 
12 
13 
14 
17 
19 
20 
20 

13 

Sept. 2 

4 
5 

9 
10 
10 
15 
16 
19 
20 
23 
24 
26 
26 
30 

Oct. 1 


Mars conj. moon 
Neptune conj. moon 
8 in aphelion 
Venus con. Mercury 
a stationary 
Mars conj. sun 
Uranus conj. moon. 

Saturn stationary. . 
Jupit'r in perihelion 
Saturn conj. moon.. 
8 greatest elongat'n 
Jupiter conj. moon. 
Mercury conj. moon 
Venus conj. moon.. 
Mars conj. moon . . 
Neptune conj. moon 
Venus conj. Mars.. 
Opp. Uranus-sun... 
Venus in ft 


1025a.m. 
3 54 a.m. 
400p.m. 
9 00 a.m. 
1100a.m. 
11 00 a.m. 
.528p.m. 

700a.m 


<? 449N 
V 401 N 

V"l53S 

""d'o" 

S 513 S 




V"229S 
S 512 S 
Inferior 
8 123 S 
b 439 S 
c? 333 S 

a'"l55S 
9 147N 

v"4CBN 



8 2552W 
6 521 S 
9 408 S 


600p.m. 
132a.m. 
300p.m. 
202a.m. 
650p.m. 
129a.m. 
730a.m. 
1 10 p.m. 
1200p.m. 
11 00 a.m. 
200p.m. 
243p.m. 
1106p.m. 
1 00 p.m. 
1000p.m. 
200a.m. 

745a.m. 
700a.m. 
1000a.m. 
400p.m. 
700p.m. 
6 45 p.m. 
1 00 a.m. 
800a.m. 
500p.m. 
300a.m. 
022a.m. 
3 26 a.m. 
322a.m. 
850a.m. 
900p.m. 
6 00 a.m. 
3 '26 a.m. 
1100a.m. 

7 16 a.m. 
1000a.m. 
002p.m. 
9 52 p.m. 
1200a.m. 
1 20 a.m. 
325a.m. 
200a.m. 
400p.m. 
llUOp.m. 
7 48 a.m. 
1000a.m. 
1 43 p.m. 
2 11 p.m. 

200a.m. 
600a.m. 
1050p.m. 
5 00 a.m. 
234p.m. 
Invisi 
5 35 a.m. 
8 17 p.m. 
800p.m. 
1 57 p.m. 
400a.m. 
428p.m. 
5 32 a.m. 


b"352S 
B 2346W 

a i 20 N 

8 118N 
9 443N 
<? 531 N 
V 354N 
9 035 S 
SlSOEorW 


Centers sum.com 
Uranus conj. moon 
Neptune conj. sun. 
Neptune d Venus. 
Mercury in ft 

Saturn conj. moon.. 
Mercury conj. Mars. 
Mercury o" Neptune 
Merc, in perihelion. 
farthest from sun 
Jupiter conj. moon . 
Venus conj. sun 
Mars conj. Neptune 
Mercury conj. sun.. 
Mercury con. Venus 
Neptune conj.moon 
Mars conj. moon 
Venus conj. moon 
Mercury conj. moon 
Jupiter quad. sun... 
Venus in perihelion 
Uranus conj. moon. 
Saturn conj. moon!. 

Jupiter conj. moon. 


8 512 S 
000 
9 224N 

b 347 S 
8 016 S 

8 145 S 

a"l'49N 
Superior 
d 1 14:5N : 
Superior! 
8 043 N! 
V 354N 
<? 536N 
9 513N 
8 556N 
a 9000W 


8 435 S 
b 430 S 
d 1 108 S 
Ql 111 S 

tf'bsos 

a 049 S 
V 4 UN 


9 020N 
8 528 S 
b 423 S 
9 349 S 


200a.m. 




5 16 a.m. 
Invis 
335p.m. 
129p.m. 
300p.m. 
650p.m. 
1100p.m. 
2 38 p.m. 
300p.m. 
800p.m. 
400a.m. 

900p.m. 
200a.m. 
151a.m. 
500p.m. 
200p.m. 
549a.m. 
5 03 p.m. 
1100a.m. 
18 p.m. 
321a.m. 
846p.m. 
300p.m. 
4 00 a.m. 
9 00 a.m. 


8 319 S 
ble. 
a 031 S 
<? 120N 
3 9000N 

V9000E 

V 414N 
Superior 
8 005 S 



Jupiter conj. moon. 
Mars conj. moon 
Uranus quad. sun. . 
enters T sprg.com. 
Neptune quad. sun. 
Neptune conj. moon 
Mercury conj. sun.. 
Mercury & Jupiter- 
Jupiter conj. sun... . 

9 in aphelion 
a in ascending node 
Uranus conj. moon. 
a in perihelion 
Mercury conj. Mars 
Saturn conj. moon.. 
Venus conj. moon. . 
Jupit r conj. moon 
Mars conj. moon 
Mercury conj. moon 
Neptune conj. moon 
8 gr. elongation 
Venus conj. Jupiter 
Mars in ft 


8 518 S 
b 352 S 

a 206N 

VS'SS'N 

o" 508N 

b iSOE orW 

9 320N 
8 044 S 


Neptune conj.moon 
Mars conj. moon 
Opp. Saturn-sun 
Venus conj. moon. . 
Mercury conj. moon 
9 gr. hel. lat. N 
8 in aphelion 
Mercury gr. elong. . 
Uranus conj. moon. 
Jupiter stationary.. 
Saturn conj. moon.. 
Jupiter conj. moon. 

Mercury stationary. 
Uranus stationary.. 
Neptune conj.moon 
Mercury con. Venus 
Mars conj. moon 
Sun total eclipse.. . . 
Mercury conj. moon 
Venus conj. moon. . 
Mercury conj. sun.. 
Uranus conj. moon. 
Uranus quad. sun.. . 
Saturn conj. moon.. 
O enters = aut. com. 
a stationary 
8 in ft . 




6 523 S 

V'lieN 

b 515 S 

9 116 S 
a 007N 
d" 324N 
B 429N 
V 409N 
8 2012E 
9 030 S 


8 2724 E 
8 525 S 

b" 4'6YS 
a 207 N 

7"4'OON 
8 557 S 
c? 4 ION 
)le U.S. 
8 019 S 
9 030 S 
Inferior 
S 528 S 
8 9000E 
b 413 S 


9 greatest hel. lat. S. 
a greatest hel. lat.S. 

B stationary 
Uranus conj. moon. 
Saturn conj. moon.. 
Mercury conj. Mars. 
8 in descend'g node 
Saturn quad, sun . . . 
Jupiter conj. moon. 
Mercury conj. sun. . 
Venus conj. moon.. 
Mercury conj. moon 


700a.m. 
1100a.m. 

3 00 p.m. 
1011a.m. 
441 p.m. 
400p.m. 
1100a.m. 
200p.m. 
659a.m. 
500a.m 
957p.m. 
1007p.m. 






S"520"S 
b 403 S 
8 021N 

V 90 to w 

a 044N 
Inferior 
9 212N 
8 315N 


600a.m. 
1 00 a.m. 
4 11 p.m. 
300p.m. 





Jupiter conj. moon. 
a in perihelion 

Neptune quad. sun. 


a 152 N 


JJWj^m. 


V9000W 



14 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



PLANETARY CONJUNCTIONS AND OTHER PHENOMENA. CONTINUED. 



Mo. D 



31 



NOV. 



ASPECT. 



Mercury gr. elong.. . 
Neptune con j . moon 

6 Mars conj. moon 

7 Mercury conj. moon 
9 Venus in U 

10 Venus conj. moon. . 

stationary 

ranus conj. moon. 

17 Saturn conj. moon.. 

18 Opp. Jupiter-sun 

19 Saturn stationary . . 
23 Jupiter conj. moon.. 
" Mars gr. hel. lat. N.. 

Aldebaran oc. by 3> . 
Neptune conj. moon 
Mercury conj. O.... 



25 Mi 



3 Mercury in t? 

3 Mars conj. moon 

Saturn quad. sun. . . 

Mercury conj. moon 

9 Venus conj. moon. . 

10 Uranus conj. moon. 

Venus in aphelion.. 

a In aphelion 

14 Saturn conj. moon.. 



Central 
time, 
h. m. 



Distance 
apart. 



200p.m. 
6 56 a.m. 
5 09 a.m 
9 03 p.m. 
300a.m. 

4 44 p.m. 
1000a.m. 
1102p.m. 

9 37 p.m 
500p.m. 
300a.m. 
344p.m, 
300p.m. 

5 41 a.m 
030 p.m. 
4 00 a.m, 



8 1754W 

V 357N 

d" 249N 

102N 



9 427 S 

8"522S 
b 410 S 

QllSOEorW 

134N 



347N 
Superior 



10 00 a.m 
524p.m 

6 00 a.m 
3 06 p.m 

7 17 p.m 
10 44 a.m 

2 00 p.m 

3 00 p.m 
616a.m. b 353 S 



d" 114N 
b 9000 E 

8 507 S 

9 631 S 
8 511 S 



Mo. D 



16 Venus conj. Uranus 
19 Jupiter conj. moon.. 
25 Neptune conj. moon 
29 Mars in aphelion. . . 



Dec. 



ASPECT. 



2 Mars cf moon (oc.).. 

3 Mercury tf Uranus. 

9 gr. hel. iat. S 

Uranus conj. moon. 

8 Mercury conj.moon. 
10 Venus conj. moon. . 

Saturn conj. moon.. 

8 gr. elongation.... 
16 Jupiter stationary.. 
16 Jupiter conj. moon. 
~ 8 stationary 

Oentersrnpwin.com. 

Uranus conj. sun... . 

Neptune conj.moon 

s in a 

Venus conj. Saturn. 

Opp. Neptune-sun.. 

Mars conj. moon 

Mercury conj. sun. . 

Earth nearest sun. . 



Central 
time, 
h. m. 



900p.m. 
5 01 p.m. 
5 12 p.m. 
800p.m. 

309a.m. 

4 00 p.m, 
12 00 p.m. 
11 24 p.m. 
1127a.m. 

308a.m. 

603p.m. 

300a.m. 

4 00a.m. 

10 51 p.m. 
1100p.m. 

1 01 a.m. 
300a.m. 

11 37 p.m. 
1200p.m. 

300a.m. 

400p.m. 
1033a.m. 

9 00 a.m. 
1200p.m. 



apart. 



9 128 S 

Ql 131N 

336N 



022 S 
210 S 



8 502 S 

8 656 S 

9 54U S 
b 328 S 
B 2030E 



147N 



<P 332 N 
V'0488 



c? 145 S 
Inferior 



SEVEN PRINCIPAL NAVIES OF THE WORLD. 
Ranked in the order of their value, according to the Statesman's Year Book for 1903. 



WARSHIPS. 



Battleships 

Battleships 

Battleships 

Battleships 

Battleships 

Cruisers (armored) 
Cruisers (armored) 
Cruisers (armored) 
Cruisers (armored) 
Cruisers (armored) 
Cruisers (armored) 
Torpedo gunboatst 

Destroyerst 

Torpedo boatsf. . . . 
Submarinest 



BRITISH. 



FRENCH. 



GERMAN. 



RUSSIAN, 



U.S. A 



JAPANESE ITALIAN 



*Coast service. tBuilt and building. 

The "rate" indicates the fighting value and is the same for both battleships and cruisers; 
that is to say, a cruiser of the second rate is equal in fighting strength to a battleship of the 
same rate. 

NATIONAL PARKS IN THE TTNITED STATES. 



NAME. 



Location. 



Created. 



Acres. 



Antietam 

Casa Grande Rum 

Chickamauga and Chattanooga. 

Crater Lake 

General Grant 

Gettysburg 

Hot Springs Reservation 

Mount Rainier 

Rock Creek 

Sequoia 

Shiloh 

Vicksburg 

Wind Cave 

Yellowstone 

Yosemite 

Zoological 



Maryland 

Arizona 

Georgia and Tennessee.. 

Oregon 

California 

Pennsylvania 

Arkansas 

Washington 

District of Columbia 

California 

Tennessee 

Mississippi 

South Dakota 

Montana and Wyoming. 

California 

District of Columbia 



Aug. 20, 1890... 
June 22, 1892... 
Aug. 18.1890... 
May 22, 1002... 

Oct. 1,1890 

Feb. 11, 1895... 
June 16, 1880... 
May 22,1899... 
Sept. 27. 1890... 
let. 1.1890.. 



Dec. 27,1894... 
Feb. 21. 1899... 
Jan. 9, 1903.... 
March 1.1872.. 

Oct. 1, 1890 

March 2. 1889.. 



43 

480 

6,195 

159,360 

2.560 

877 

912 

207.360 

1.606 

160,000 

3,000 

1,233 

2,142.726 

967.680 
170 



WEATHER FORECASTS AND SIGNALS. 



15 



WEATHER FORECASTS AND SIGNALS. 



The weather bureau of the United States 
department of agriculture publishes dally 
more than 100,000 weather bulletins, not 
counting the forecasts in the newspapers. 
Most of these bulletins are in the form 
of postal cards printed by postmasters 
from telegraphic reports and sent by them 
to outlying towns for display at suitable 
points. There is also an elaborate system of 



redistribution by means of telephones and 
railroads from established centers, so that 
there are comparatively few accessible 
places which do not now receive dally 
weather forecasts within a very short time 
after the observers have completed their 
work. The old system of conveying informa- 
tion about the weather by means of flag 
displays is also in general use. 



No 1. 
White flag. 



EXPLANATION OF WEATHER FLAGS. 

No. 2. No. 3. No. 4. No. 5. 

Blue flag. White and blue Black triangu- White flag with black 

flag. lar flag. square in center. 






Clear or Rain or snow. Local rain or Temperature. Cold wave, 

fair weather. snow. 

Wheu No. 4 is placed above No. 1, 2 or 3 it indicates warmer; when below, colder; 
when not displayed, the temperature is expected to remain about stationary. During the late 
spring and early fall the cold-wave flag is also used to Indicate anticipated frosts. 

EXPLANATION OF STORM-WARNING FLAGS. 






Northwest winds. Southwest winds. Northeast winds. Southeast winds. "Hurricane"' signal 
A red flag with a black center indicates that a storm of marked violence is expected. The 
pennants displayed with the flags indicate the direction of the wind: Red, easterly (from 
northeast to south); white, westerly (from southwest to north). The pennant above the flag 
indicates that the wind is expected to blow from the northerly quadrants; below, from south- 
erly quadrants. 

By night a red light indicates easterly winds and a white light above a red light westerly 
winds. 

Two red flags, with black centers, displayed one above the other', indicate the expected 
approach of tropical hurricanes, and also of those extremely severe and dangerous storms 
which occasionally move across the lakes and northern Atlantic coast. Hurricane warnings 
are not displayed at night. 

THERMOMETERS COMPARED. 



There are three kinds of thermometers, 
with varying scales, in general use through- 
out the world the Fahrenheit, Reaumur and 
Centigrade. The freezing and boiling points 
on their scales compare as follows: 

Thermometer. Freezing pt. Boiling pt. 

Fahrenheit 32 degrees 212 degrees 

Reaumur zero 80 degrees 

Centigrade zero 100 degrees 

The degrees on one scale are reduced to 
their equivalents on another by these formu- 
las: 



Fahrenheit to Reaumur Subtract 32, mul- 
tiply by four-ninths. 

Fahrenheit to Centigrade Subtract 32. 
multiply by five-rinths. 

Reaumur to Fahrenheit Multiply by nine- 
fourths, add 32. 

Reaumur to Centigrade Multiply by live- 
fourths. 

Centigrade to Fahrenheit Multiply by 
nine-fifths, add 32. 

Centigrade to Reaumur Multiply by four 
fifths. 



SUEZ CANAL STATISTICS. 



1900. 



1901. 



1902. 



Receipts 

Expenditures 

Excess of receipts.. 
Tonnage 



$19.902.377 
7.707.609 



e . 



12,134.768 
10.823.840 



* 621,908 
140.303 
12.48L690~ 
11.248,413 



16 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



WEIGHTS AND MEASURES USED IN THE UNITED STATES. 



12 inches = 1 foot. 

3 feet = 1 yard = 36 inches. 

5^ yards = 1 rod = 16% feet. 
40 rods = 1 furlong = 660 feet. 



MEASURES OF LENGTH. 

8 furlongs = 1 mile = 5.2SO feet. 

1.153 miles = 1 geographic mile = 6.085 feet 
1.153 miles = 1 nautical(knot) mile = 6.085 feet 
1 fathom = 6 feet. 



LIQUID MEASURE, 
gills = 1 pint, 
pints = 1 quart, 
quarts = 1 gallon, 
gallons = 1 barrel, 
barrels = 1 hogshead. 



PRY MEASURE. 
2 pints = 1 quart. 
8 quarts = 1 peck. 
4 pecks = 1 bushel. 



APOTHECARIES' WEIGHT. 

20 grains = 1 scruple. 

3 scruples = 1 dram. 

8 drams = 1 ounce. 
12 ounces = 1 pound. 



TROY WEIGHT. 
24 grains = 1 pennyweight. 
20 pennyw's = 1 ounce. 
12 ounces = 1 pound. 



AVOIRDUPOIS WEIGHT. 

27 11-32 grains = 1 dram. 1 2,000 Ibs = 1 short ton. 

16 drams = 1 ounce. 2,240 Ibs = 1 long ton. 

16 ounces = 1 pound. 



SQUARE MEASURE. 

square inches = 1 square foot, 
square feet = 1 square yard. 
[ square yards = 1 square rod. 
square rods = 1 acre. 
acres = 1 square mile. 

square miles = 1 township. 



CUBIC MEASURE. 

1,728 cubic inches = 1 cubic foot. 
27 cubic feet = 1 cubic yard. 
128 cubic feet = 1 cord of wood or stone. 
1 gallon contains 231 cubic inches. 
1 bushel contains 2. 150.4 cubic inches. 
A cord of wood is 8 ft. long. 4 ft. wide & 4 ft.high 



TIME MEASURE. 

60 seconds = 1 minute. 

60 minutes = 1 hour. 

24 hours = 1 day. 
365 days = 1 year. 
100 years = 1 century. 



STATIONERS' TABLE. 
24 sheets = 1 quire. 
20 quires = 1 ream. 

2 reams *= 1 bundle. 

5 bundles = 1 bale. 



COUNTING. 
12 things = 1 dozen. 
12 dozen = 1 gross. 
12 gross = 1 great gross 
20 things = 1 score. 



METRIC SYSTEM. 

The metric system is compulsory in Germany, Austria-Hungary. Belgium. Spain. France. 
Greece. Italy, Netherlands. Portugal. Roumania, Servia. Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Argen- 
tine Republic, Brazil. Chile. Mexico. Peru and Venezuela. 



WEIGHTS. 

Milligram (.001 gram) = .0154 grain. 
Centigram (.01 gram) 
Decigram (.1 gram) 
Gram 

Decagram (10 grams) 
Hectogram (100 grams) 
Kilogram (1.000 grams) 
Myriagram (10.000 grams) = 22.046 pounds. 
Quintal (100,000 grams) =220.46 pounds. 
Millier or tonneau ton (1,000.000 grams) =2,204.6 



.1543 grain. 
= 1.5432 grains. 
= 15.432 grains. 
= .3527 ounce. 
= 3.5274 ounces. 
= 2.2046 pounds. 



pounds. 



Milliliter (.001 liter) 

Centiliter (.01 liter) 

Deciliter (.1 liter) 

Liter 

Decaliter (10 liters) 

Hectoliter (100 liters) 

Kiloliter (1,000 liters) 



DRY. 

= .061 cubic inch. 
= .6102 cubic inch. 
= 6.1022 cubic inches. 
= .908 quart. 
= 9.08 quarts. 
= 2.838 bushels. 
= 1.308 cubic yards. 



LIQUID. 

Milliliter (.001 liter) = .0388 fluid ounce. 



Centiliter (.01 liter) 

Deciliter (.1 liter) 

Liter 

Decaliter (10 liters) 

Hectoliter (100 liters) 

Kiloliter (1.000 liters) 



= .338 fluid ounce 
.845 gill. 
= 1.0567 quarts. 
= 2.6418 gallons. 
= 26.417 gallons. 
= 264.18 gallons. 



LENGTH. 

Millimeter (.001 meter) = .0394 inch. 

Centimeter (.01 meter) = .3937 inch. 

Decimeter (.1 meter) = 3.937 inches. 

Meter = 39.37 inches. 

Decameter (10 meters) = 393.7 inches 

Hectometer (100 meters) =328 feet linch 

Kilometer (1.000 meters) = .62137 mile (3 280 

feet 10 inches). 
My riameter(10,000 meters) = 6.2137 miles. 

SURFACE. 

Centare (1 square meter) = 1.550 sq. inches. 
Are (100 square meters) = 119.6 sq. yards 
Hectare(10,000sq. meters)= 2.471 acres. 



WEIGHTS OF DIAMONDS 

The weight of diamonds and other precious 
stones is expressed in carats, grains and 
quarter-grains. The grains are pearl grains, 
one of which is equal to four-fifths of a troy 
grain. Four quarter-grains make one grain 
and four grains make one carat. A carat is 
therefore equal to four-fifths of four troy 
giains, or 3.2. 



AND FINENESS OF GOLD. 

The fineness of gold is also expressed in 
carats. Pure gold is said to be twenty-four 
carats fine. If it contains eijfht parts of a 
baser metal or alloy it is only sixteen carats 
fine. The carats therefore indicate the pro- 
portion of pure gold to alloy. Most of the 
gold used by jewelers is about fourteen car- 
ats fine, having ten parts of alloy. 



GREAT AQUEDUCT IN AUSTRALIA. 



Water is carried to Kalgoorlie, Boulder 
and Southern Cross, mining towns in west- 
ern Australia, from a reservoir on the Hel- 



ena river to the Green Mount range, 3 9 8 
miles away, through a thirty-inch pipe. The 
cost of the work was $15,000,000. 



POPULAR VOTE FOR PRESIDENT. 



17 



POPULAR VOTE FOR PRESIDENT U824*-1900>. 



1824 J. Q. Adams had 105,321 to 155,872 for 
Jackson, 44,282 for Crawford and 46,587 for 
Clay. Jackson over Adams, 50.551. Adams 
less than combined vote of others, 141,420. 
Of the whole vote Adams had 29.92 per 
cent, Jackson 44.27, Clay 13.23, Crawford 
12.58. Adams elected by house of repre- 
sentatives. 

1828 Jackson had 647,231 to 509,097 for 3. Q. 
Adams. Jackson's majority, 138.134. Of 
the whole .vote Jackson had 55.97 per cent, 
Adams 44.03. 

1832 Jackson had 87,502 to 530,189 for Clay 
and 33,108 for Floyd and Wirt combined. 
Jackson's majority. 124,205. Of the whole 
vote Jackson had 54.96 per cent, Clay 42.39 
and the others combined 2.65. 

1836 Van Buren had 761,549 to 736,656, the 
combined vote for Harrison, White,' Web- 
ster and Mangum. Van Buren's majority, 
24,893. Of the whole vote Van Buren had 
50.83 per cent and the others combined 
49.17. 

1840 Harrison had 1,275,017 to 1,128,702 for 
Van Buren and 7,059 for Birney. Harri- 
son's majority, 139,256. Of the whole vote 
Harrison had 52.89 per cent, Van Buren 
46.82 and Birney .39. 

1844 Polk had 1,337,243 to 1,299,068 for Clay 
and 62,300 for Birney. Polk over Clay, 
88,175. Polk less than others combined. 
24,125. Of the whole vote Polk had 49.55 
per cent, Clay 48.14 and Birney 2.31. 

1848 Taylor had 1,360,101 to 1,220,544 for Cass 
and 291,263 for Van Buren. Taylor over 
Cass, 139,557. Taylor less than others com- 
bined, 152,706. Of the whole vote Taylor 
had 47.36 per cent, Cass 42.50 and Van 
Buren 10.14. 

1852 Pierce had 1,601,474 to 1,380,576 for 
Scott, 156,149 for Hale and 1,670 for Dan- 
iel Webster. Pierce over all, 63,079. Of 
the whole vote Pierce had 50.90 per cent, 
Scott 44.10 and Hale 4.97. 

1856^Buchanan had 1,838,169 to 1,341,264 for 
Fremont and 874.534 for Fillmore. Buchan- 
an over Fremont, 496,905. Buchanan less 
than combined vote of others, 377,629. Of 
the whole vote Buchanan had 45.34 per 
cent, Fremont 33.19 and Fillmore 21.57. 

I860 Lincoln had 1,866,352 to 1,375,157 for 
Douglas, 845,763 for Breckinridge and 589,- 
581 for Bell. Lincoln over Douglas, 
491 195. Lincoln less than Douglas and 
Breckinridge combined, 354,568. Lincoln 
less than combined vote of all others, 944,- 
149. Of the whole vote Lincoln had 39.91 
per cent, Douglas 29.40, Breckinridge 18.08 
and Bell 12.61. 

1864 Lincoln had 2,216.067 to 1,808.725 for Mc- 
Clellan (eleven states not voting, viz.: 
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, 
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, 
South Carolina. Tennessee, Texas and Vir- 
ginia). Lincoln's majority, 407,342. Of the 
whole vote Lincoln had 55.06 per cent and 
McClellan 44.94. 

1868 Grant had 3,015.071 to 2.709.613 for Sey- 
mour (three states not voting, viz.: Missis- 
sippi, Texas and Virginia). Grant's i 
jority, 305,458. Of the whole vote Grant 
had 52.67 per cent and Seymour 47.33. 

1872 Grant had 3.597.070 to 2.834.079 for Gree- 



ley, 29,408 for O'Conor and 5,608 for Black. 
Grant's majority, 729,975. Of the whole 
vote Grant had 55.63 per cent, Greelej 
43.83, O'Conor .15. Black .09. 

1876 Hayes had 4.033,950 to 4,284,885 for Til- 
den, 81.740 for Cooper, 9,522 for Smith and 
2,636 scattering. Tildeu's majority over 
Hayes, 250,935. Tilden's majority of the 
entire vote cast, 157,037. Hayes less than 
the combined vote of others, 344,833. Of 
the whole vote cast Hayes had 47.95 per 
cent, Tilden 50.94, Cooper .97, Smith .11. 
scattering .01. 

1880 Garfield had 4,449,053 to 4,442,035 for 
Hancock, 307,306 for Weaver and 12,576 
scattering. Garfield over Hancock, 7,018. 
Garfield less than the combined vote for 
others, 313,864. Of the popular vote Gar- 
field had 48.26 per cent, Hancock 48.25, 
Weaver 3.33, scattering .13. 

1884 Cleveland had 4,911,017 to 4,848,334 for 
Blame, 151,809 for St. John, 133,825 for 
Butler. Cleveland had over Blalne 62.683. 
Cleveland had 48.48 per cent, Elaine 48.22, 
St. John 1.56, Butler 1.33. 

1888 Harrison had 5,440,216 to 5,538,233 for 
Cleveland, 249,937 for Fisk, 141,105 for 
Streeter, 2,808 for Cowdrey, 1,591 for Curtis 
and 9,845 scattering. Harrison had 98,017 
less than Cleveland. Of the whole vote 
Harrison had 47.83 per cent, Cleveland 
48.63, Fisk 2.21 and Streeter 1.28. 

1892 Cleveland had 5,556,918 to 5,176,108 for 
Harrison, 264,133 for Bidwell. 1,041,028 for 
Weaver and 21,164 for Wing. Cleveland 
had over Harrison 380,810. Of the whole 
vote Cleveland had 45.73 per cent, Harri 
son 42.49, Bidwell 2.17 and Weaver 8.67. 

1896 McKlnley had 7,104,779, Bryan 6,502,925; 
Levering, 132,007; Bentley, 13,969; Match- 
ett, 36,274; Falmer,133,148. McKinley had 
over Bryan 601,854 votes. Of the whole 
vote McKinley had 50.49 per cent and 
Bryan 46.26. 

1900 McKinley had 7,217,810 to 6,357,826 for 
Bryan, 208,791 for Woolley, 50,218 for 
Barker, 87,769 for Debs, 39,944 for Mal- 
loney, 518 for Leonard and 5,098 for Ellis. 
McKinley over Bryan, 859,984: MeKinley's 
majority over all, 367,646. Of the whole 
vote McKinley received 51.66 per cent and 
Bryan 45.51 per cent. 



Of the presidents, Adams, federalist; Polk, 
Buchanan and Cleveland, democrats ; Taylor, 
whig; Lincoln (first term), Hayes, Garfield 
and Harrison, republicans, did not, when 
elected, receive a majority of the popular 
vote. The highest percentage of popular vote 
received by any president was 55. 97 for Jack 
son, democrat, in 1S28; the lowest, 39.91 for 
Lincoln, republican, in 1860; Buchanan, dem- 
ocrat, next lowest, with 45.34. Hayes and 
Harrison, with the exception of John Quinc: 
Adams, who was chosen by the house of 
representatives, were the only presidents 
ever elected who did not have a majoritj 
over their principal competitors, and Tilder 
and Cleveland the only defeated candidates 
who had a majority over the president-elect 



* Prior to 1824 electors were chosen by the 
legislatures of the different states. 



18 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



INTEREST AND STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS. 



STATE. 



INTEREST 



LIMITATIONS. 



STATE. 



INTEREST, 



LIMITATIONS. 



Alabama 

Arkansas 

Arizona 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut ... 

Delaware 

Dist, of Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indian Territory. 

Indiana 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts . . 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



P.ct. 



P.ct. 

8 

10 

Any 



Any 

10 

10 

8 
12 

7 
10 



An, 
Any 



Yrs, 



20 



Yrs. 
*H 
5 
4 
4 
8 

t 

5 
6 
5 

10 

'16' 

JO 

5 
15 

5 

1 



Yrs. 



Montana- 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico . . . 

New York 

North Carolina 
North Dakota. . 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania . 
Rhode Island.. 
South Carolina 
South Dakota. . 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia . . 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



P.ct 



P.ct. 
Any 

10 

Any 
6 



6 

6 
12 

8 
12 
10 

6 
Any 

8 
12 

6 

10 

Any 

6 

6 
12 

6 
10 
12 



Yrs. 
10 

5 

6 
20 
20 

7 

20 
10 
10 

5 

1 
10 

5 
20 
10 
10 
10 
10 



Yrs. 
8 
5 
6 



Yrs 

8 
4 
4 



* Under seal 10. tNo law. iNegotiable notes t>; nonnegotiable 17. Varies by counties 

11 Real estate 20. ft Under seal 12. ttUnder seal 14. 
DAYS OF GRACE ON NOTES AND DRAFTS. 

Days of grace are given in the following , iana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Mis 
states and territories: Alabama, Arkansas, souri, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico 
South Dakota, Georgia, Indian Territory, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina 
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louis- 1 Texas and Wyoming. 

APPROXIMATE VALUE OF FOREIGN COINS. 
(c. copper; g. gold; s. silver.) 



COIN. 



COUNTRY. 



[/. s. 
equiva- 
lent. 



COIN. 



u. s. 

COUNTRY. equiva- 
lent. 



Argentina, g 

Bolivar, s 

Boliviano. s 

Centavo. c 

Centime, c 

Colon, g 

Condor, g 

Copeck, c 

Crown, s 

Crown, s 

Crown, s... 

Crown, s 

Crown, s 

Dollar.g 

Dollar, s 

Doubloon, g 

Drachma, s 

Escudo, g 

Farthing, s 

Florin, s 

Florin, s 

Florin, s 

Franc, s 

Gourde, s 

Guilder, s 

Guinea, g 

Gulden, s 

Heller, s 

Kran. s 

Krone (see crown). 

Libra, g 

Lira, s 



Argentine Rep.. 

Venezuela 

Bolivia 

Mexico 

France 

Costa Rica 

Chile 

Russia 

Austria 

Denmark 

Great Britain... 

Norway 

Sweden 

Brit. Honduras. 

Mexico 

Chile.... 



$4.82 
.19 



.005 



.46 
7. 



Greece 

Chile 

Great Britain.., 

Austria 

Great Britain.., 

Netherlands 

France 

Haiti 

Netherlands 

Great Britain.., 

Austria 

Austria 

Persia 



.27 

.77 
.27 

i 

3.K5 
.19 

1.82 
.005 
.40 
.50 



Lira.g 

Mark, a 

Mark.g 

Medjidie, g 

Milreis, a 

Milreis, g 

Ore, c , 

Penny, c 

Peseta, s 

Peso.g 






5.04 
.48 
.004 
.07 



Peru 

I Italy 



4.87 



Peso, g 

Peso, s 

Peso.g 

Peso, g 

Pfennig, c 

Piaster, s 

Pound, g 

Pound, g 

Ruble.g 

Rupee, s 

Scudo, g, s 

Sen.c 

Shilling, s 

Sixpence, s 

Sol,s 

Soldo, c 

vereign, g 

ucre.s 

1 (customs) s. 
Yen, s 



Turkey 

Germany 

Finland 

Turkey 

Brazil 

Portugal 

Scandinavia 

Great Britain.... 

Spain 

Argentine Rep... 
Central America 
Chile 



Colombia 

Cuba 

Uruguay 

Germany 

Turkey 

Egypt 

Great Britain. 

Russia 

India 



Italy 

Japan 

Great Britain. 
Great Britain. 
Peru 



Italy 

Great Britain. 

Ecuador 

China 

Japan 



$4.40 
.24 
.19 



1.0 
.0025 
.02 
.19 
.1)6 
.38 
.36 



.0025 

.04 
4.94 
4.87 

.51 



.005 
.24 



.01 

4.87 



GREAT SHIP CANALS OF THE WORLD. 19 


SIMPLE INTEREST TABLE. 
NOTE To find the amount of interest at 2>^ per cent on any given sum, divide the amount 
given for the same sum in the table at 5 per cent by 2; at 3^ per cent divide the amount at 
7 per cent by 2, etc. 


TIME. 


JT 


1 




| 


e 





1 


i 

a 
e 


f 


1 


| 


a 

"2 


2 
s 


CM 

i 
i 
i 

i 

2 
2 
2 

3 
4 

3 
4 
5 


co 

1 

1 
1 
1 
2 
3 
3 
4 

4 
5 
5 


<* 

1 
2 
2 
2 

3 
4 
5 
4 
5 

e 


8 

S 

l 

3 
3 
4 
5 
6 
5 
6 
8 
9 


16 mos. 


11 year. 

\ 


Ami. 
$1 

$2 


Int. 
4 
5 
6 

7 






































































1 
1 
























4 

5 
6 

7 
























1 
1 


4 
5 
6 

7 

I 

9 
11 
8 
10 
12 
14 


8 
10 

12 
14 
































| 
























$3 


4 
5 
6 

7 
























1 
1 

2 
2 


12 
15 

1! 

16 

28 

30 
35 




















'"i 

i 


















"i 














$4 
$5 
$10 
$25 
$50 
$100 
$200 
$300 


4 
5 

6 

7 
























1 
2 
2 
2 


4 

5 
6 

7 


5 

7 
8 
9 
6 
8 
10 
12 
13 
17 
20 
23 
~33 
42 
50 
58 


6 
8 
10 
12 
















i 
i 
i 


i 
i 
i 












1 
1 












1 


4 
5 

6 

7 


















i 
i 
i 

i 


i 

i 
i 
i 


2 
2 


1 
2 
3 
3 


3 
4 
5 

6 


5 

6 
8 
9 


8 
10 
18 
15 
16 
21 
25 
29 
41 
52 
63 
73 
83 
1.04 
1.25 
1.46 
1.67 
2.08 
2.50 
2.92 


10 
13 
15 

18 












1 
1 
1 








1 
1 


1 
1 












4 
5 
6 












1 
1 
1 

1 


1 

1 
1 

1 


1 
1 

2 
2 


i 

I 


i 

2 
2 
2 


3 
3 

4 


3 
4 
5 
6 


6 

i 

16 
21 
25 
29 
33 
42 

s 

66 
83 
1.00 
1.17 


10 
13 
15 

18 
25 
31 
38 
44 
50 
63 
75 

1.00 
1.25 
1.50 
1.75 


20 
25 
30 
35 
50 
63 
75 
88 

IS 

1.50 
1.75 
2.00 
2.50 
3.00 
3.50 

Too 

5.00 
6.00 
7.00 


40 
50 
60 
70 










1 






1 
1 


1 
1 






4 
5 

6 




"i' 

i 
i 


1 
1 
1 

1 


1 
2 
2 
2 


1 
2 
2 
2 


1 

2 
3 
3 


2 
2 
3 
3 


2 
3 
3 
4 


I 


3 
3 
4 
5 


5 

1 

10 


13 
15 


1.00 
1.25 
1.50 
1.75 


4 
5 
6 
7 


T 

i 
i 


i 
i 

2 
2 


1 

2 

3 
3 


2 
3 
3 
4 


3 
3 
4 

5 


3 
4 

5 
6 


1 

6 


4 

6 
7 
8 


5 
6 
8 

9 


6 

7 
8 
9 


11 
14 
17 

1!) 


16 
21 
25 

29 


67 
83 
1.00 
1.17 


2.00 
2.50 
3.00 
3.50 


4 
5 

6 

7 


1 

2 


2 
3 
3 
4 


8 
4 
5 

6 


4 
6 

7 
8 


6 
7 
8 
10 


t; 

8 
10 
12 


8 
10 
12 
14 


9 
11 
13 

16 


10 
13 
15 
18 


11 
14 
17 
19 


22 
28 
33 
39 


33 
42 
50 
58 


1.33 
1.67 
2.00 
2.33 


4.00 
5.00 
6.00 
7.00 


4 

5 
8 

7 


2 
3 
3 
4 


4 
6 

7 
8 


6 
8 
10 
12 


13 
16 


11 
U 
17 
19 


13 
17 

20 
23 


15 
19 
23 
27 


18 
22 

31 


20 

25 
30 
35 


22 
28 
33 
39 


44 
56 

67 

78 


67 

83 
1.00 
1.17 


1.33 
1.67 
2.00 
2.33 


2.00 
2.50 
3.00 
3.50 


2.66 
3.33 
4.00 
4.67 


3.33 
4.17 
5.00 
5.83 


8.00 
10.00 
12.00 
14.00 
12.00 
15.00 
18.00 
21.00 

30 lOO 
35.00 
40.00 
50.00 
60.00 
70.00 


4 
5 

6 

7 


3 
4 
5 
6 


6 
8 
10 
12 


10 
18 
15 

18 


13 
17 
20 
23 


16 
21 
25 

29 


20 
25 
30 
35 


23 
29 
3o 
41 


26 
33 
40 

47 


30 
38 
45 
53 


33 
42 
50 

58 


66 
83 

1.00 
1.17 


1.00 
1.25 
1.50 
1.75 


2.00 
2.50 
3.00 
3.50 


3.00 
375 
4.50 
5.25 


4.00 
5.00 
6.00 
7.00 


5.00 
6.25 
7.50 

8.75 


6.00 
7.50 
9.00 
10.50 


$500 


4 

5 

6 

7 


5 

7 
8 
10 


11 
14 
17 
19 


it; 

21 
26 

29 


22 
28 
33 
39 


28 
35 
42 
49 


33 

42 
50 

58 


39 
M 

58 
68 


44 
56 
67 

78 


50 
63 
75 

88 


56 
69 
83 
97 


i.ll 
1.39 
1.67 
1.94 


1.66 

2! 0* 

2i92 


3.33 
4.17 

5.00 
5.83 


5.00 
6.25 
7.50 

8.75 


6.66 
8.33 
10.00 
11.67 


8.33 
10.42 
12.50 
14.58 


10.00 
12.50 
15.00 
17.50 
20.00 
25.00 
30.00 
35.00 


$1,000 


4 
5 
6 


11 
14 
17 
19 


22 
28 
33 
39 


33 
42 
50 
68 


44 

87 

78 


55 

69 
83 
97 


66 

83 
1.00 
1.17 


78 
97 
1.17 
1.36 


89 
1.11 
1.33 
1.56 


1.00 
1 .25 
1.50 
1.75 


1.11 

1.39 
1.67 
1.94 


2.22 

2.78 
;.:;:; 
189 


3.33 
4.17 
5.00 
5.83 


6.67 
8.83 
10.00 
11.67 


10.00 
12.50 
15.00 
17.50 


13. Si- 
lt;. 07 
20.00 
23.33 


16.66 
20.83 
25.00 
29.17 


GREAT SHIP CANALS OF THE WORLD. 


CAXAL. 


Openec 


I Length 


Depth. 


Width* 


Cost. 


Corinth <Gre( 
Cronstadt-St. 
Elbe and Tra 
Kaiser Wilhe 
Manchester s 
Sault Ste. Ma 
Sault Ste. Ma 
Suez (Egypt). 
Welland (Can 


>ce) 


Year. 
1893 
1890 
1900 

1895 
1894 
1855 
1895 
1869 
1887 


Miles. 
4 
16 
41 
61 
35.5 
1.6 
1.11 
90 
26.75 


Feet. 
26.25 
20.50 
10 
29.50 
26 
22 
20.25 
31 
14 


220 
72 

72 
120 
100 
142 
108 
100 


$5,000.000 
10,000.000 
5.831.000 
37.128.000 
75.000.1)00 
t2.250.786 
2.791.873 
100.000.00*) 
25,000.000 \ 


Petersbi 
pe (Gem 
m (Gere 
hip (En 
rie(U. S 
rie (Cans 


irg 
jani 
aan. 
lane 
) 


Russia) 


jr) 






uta) 








ada) 


*At the bottom. tExclusive of locks. 



20 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


PRESIDENTS AND THEIR CABINETS. 


PRESIDENTS 

AND 

VICE-PKESIDEXTS. 


InniKin- 
rated. 


Secretaries of state. 


Secretaries of the 
" treasury. 


Secretaries of war. 


*George Washington 


1789 
ITS'.* 


T.Jefferson 1789 
B.Randolph 1794 
T. Pickering 1795 


Alex. Hamilton. .1789 
Oliver Wolcott.. 1795 


Henry Knox... 1789 
T. Pickering. . .1795 
Jas. McHenry.,17% 






1797 
1797 


T. Pickering 1797 
John Marshall. . .1800 


Oliver Wolcott... 1797 
Samuel Dexter . .1801 


Jas.McHenry..l79r 
John Marshal 1.1806 
Saru'l Dexter.. 1800 
R. Griswold....l801 






*Thomas Jefferson 


Mil 

H .11 
1805 

Isw 

1809 

ISlo 

TR17 
1817 


James Madison. .1801 


Samuel Dexter.. 1801 
Albert Gallatin. .1801 


H. Dearborn... 1801 






"James Madison 
tGeorge Clinton 


Robert Smith.... 1809 
J arnes Monroe. . . 1811 

\ 


Albert Gallatin. .1809 
G.W.Campbell.. 1814 
A.J.Dallas 1814 
W. H.Crawford. 1816 


Wm. Eustis....l809 
J. Armstrong.. 1813 
James Monroe . 1814 
W.H.Crawford 1815 






* James Monroe 
*Daniel D Toinpkins 


J. Q. Adams 1817 


W.H.Crawford. 1817 


Isaac Shelby... 1817 
Geo. Graham.. 1817 
J. C. Calhoun.. 1817 




John Q.Adams 
*John C. Calhoun 


lS-,'o 

18->5 


Henry Clay 1825 


Richard Rush.... 1825 


Jas. Barbour...l825 
Peter B.Porter.1828 


*Andrew Jackson 
JJohn C. Calhoun 
Martin Van Buren 


1S29 
1829 

issy 

KK 

is;: 


M. Van Buren.... 1829 
E.Livingston.... 1831 
Louis McLane.... 1833 
John Forsyth. . . .1834 


Sam.D. Ingham.1829 
Louis McLane 1831 
W. J. Duane 183H 
Roger B. Taney..l833 
Levi Wood bury.. 1834 


John H.Eaton. 1829 
Lewis Cass 1831 
B.F.Butler.... 1837 


Martin Van Buren 
Richard M.Johnson 


John Forsyth... 1837 


Levi Woodbury.,1837 


Joel R.Poinsettl837 


fWilliamH. Harrison 
John Tyler 


1841 
1841 


Daniel Webster.. 1841 


Thos. Ewing 1841 


John Bell 1841 


John Tyler 


iJ 

1.S45 
1845 


Daniel Webster.. 1841 
Hugh S. Legare.,1843 
A-belP.Upshur..lS43 
John C. Calhoun.1844 


Thos. Ewing 1841 
Walter Forward. 1841 
John C. Spencer..l843 
Geo.M. Bibb 1844 


John Bell 1841 
John McLean.. 1841 
J. C. Spencer... 1841 
Jas.M. Porter.. 1843 
Wm. Wilkins..l844 


James K Polk 


James Buchananl845 


Robt. J. Walker. 1S45 


Wm. L. Marcy.1845 






tZaehary Taylor 
Millard Fillmore 


W.' 
H49 
1850 


John M. Clayton.1849 


Wm. M.Meredith 1849 


G.W. Crawford.1849 


Millard Fillmore 


Daniel Webster.,1850 
Edward Everett.,1852 


lhomasCorwin..l850 


C.M.Conrad... 1850 


Franklin Pierce 
tWilliam R. King 


KM 

18.>; 


W.L.Marcy 1853 


James Guthrie. ..1853 


Jefferson Davis 1853 


James Buchanan 
John C. Breckinridge 


Is., 

1857 


Lewis Cass 1857 
J. S. Black 1800 


Howell Cobb 1857 
Philip F.Thomas.lSO) 
John A. Dix 1861 


John B. Floyd.. 1&57 
Joseph Holt.... 1861 




*t Abraham Lincoln 
Hannibal Hamlin 


ISf.i 
l*;i 
IN 15 


W. H.Seward....lS61 


Salmon P. Chase.l^il 
W.P. Vessenden.l8W 
Hugh McCulloch.lStio 


S.Cameron 1861 
E.M.Stanton..l862 


Andrew Johnson 


Andrew Johnson 


lsU-, 


W. H.Seward....l865 


HughMcCulloch.1865 


E. M. Stanton.,1865 
U. S. Grant 1867 
L. Thomas 1868 
J. M. Schofleld.l8C>8 


*Ulysses S Grant 


18f,'.l 
1-tV.t 

187:; 

1S77 
1877 


E. B. Washburne.1869 
Hamilton Fish... 1869 


Geo. S. Boutwell 1869 
W.A.Richardson.1873 
Benj.H.Bristow.1-74 
Lot M. Morrill...lS7G 


J. A. Rawlins..l869 
W.T.Sherman. 1869 
W.W. Belknap.1869 
Alphonso Taf 1. 1876 
J.D. Cameron. 1876 


Schuvler Colfax 
tHenry Wilson 




Rutherford B. Haves 
William A. Wheeh-r 


W. M.Evarts....l877 


John Sherman. .1877 


G.W. McCrary.1877 
Alex. Ramsey.. 1879 


(Continued on page 22.) 
*Elected two consecutive terms. tDied while in office. iRosigned. 



PRESIDENTS AND THEIR CABINETS. 21 


PRESIDENTS AND THEIR CABINETS.-COXTINUED. 


Secretaries of the 
navy. 


Secretaries of the 
interior.* 


Postmasters- 
general.^ 


Attorney- 
generals. 






Samuel Osgood... .1789 
Timothy Plckeringl791 
Jos. Hal>ersham....l795 


E. Randolph 1789 
Wm. Bradford.. .1794 
Charles Lee 1795 


Benjamin Stoddert. ...1798 




Jos. Habersham.... 1797 


Charles Lee 1797 
Theo. Parsons... 1801 


Benjamin Stoddert.... 1801 
Robert Smith 1801 
Jacob Crowninshield.. 1805 




Jos. Habersham... 1801 
Gideon Granger... 1801 


Levi Lincoln 1801 
Robt. Smith 1805 
John Breck- 
inridge 1805 


C.A.Rodney 1807 


Paul Hamilton 1809 
William Jones 1813 




Gideon Granger... 1809 
R. J. Meigs, Jr 1814 


C.A.Rodney 1809 
Wm. Pincknev...l811 
William Rush.... 1814 


B. W. Crowninshield. .1814 


B. W. Crowninshield.. 1817 

Smith Thompson 1818 
S. L. Southard 1823 




R. J. Meigs, Jr 1817 
John McLean 1823 


William Rush.... 1817 
William Wirt.... 1817 


S. L. Southard 1825 




John McLean 1825 


William Wirt.... 1825 


John Branch 1829 
LeviWoodbury 1831 
Mahlon Dickerson 1834 




Wm. T. Barrv 1829 
Amos Kendall 1835 


John M. Berrien.1829 1 
Roger B.Taney.. 1831 
B.F.Butler 1833 


Mabioii Dickerson.... 1837 




Amos Kendall 1837 
JohnM. Niles 1840 


B.F.Butler 1837 
Felix Grundy....I838 
H.D. Gilpin 1840 


George E. Badger 1841 




Francis Granger. ..1841 


J. J. Crittenden.1841 


George E. Badger 1841 
Abel P. Upshur 1841 
David Henshaw 1843 




Francis Granger... 1841 
C.A. Wicklifle 1841 


J. J. Crittenden .1841 
Hugh S.Legare.. 1841 
John Nelson 1843 


Thomas W. Gilmer . . .1844 
John Y. Mason 1844 


George Bancroft 1845 
John Y. Mason.. 1846 




Cave Johnson 1845 


JohnY. Mason.. 1845. 
Nathan Clifford.. 1846 
Isaac Toucey 1848 


William B. Preston . . .1849 


Thomas E wing 1849 


Jacob Collamer. . . .1849 


Reverdy Johnsonl849 


William A. Graham.. .1850 
John P. Kennedy 1S52 


Thomas A.Pearce..l850 
T.M.T McKernonl850 
A. H.H.Stuart.... 1850 


Nathan K. Hall.. ..1850 
Sam D.Hubbard... 1852 


J. J. Crittenden..l850 


James C. Dobbin 1853 


Robt. McClelland. .1853 


James Campbell. . .1853 


Caleb Gushing... 1853 


Isaac Toucey 1857 


Jacob Thompson.. 1857 


Aaron V. Brown. .1857 
Joseph Holt 1859 


J.S. Black 1857 
Edw. M. Stanton.1860 




Gideon Welles 1861 


Caleb B. Smith 1861 
John P. Usher 1863 


Montgomery Blair.l8('>l 
William Dennison.1864 


Edward Bates... 1861 
Titian J. Coffey..l863 
James Speed 1864 


Gideon Welles 1865 


John P. Usher 1865 
James Harlan 1865 
O. H. Browning. . . .1866 


William Dennison.1865 
A.W.Randall 1866 


James Speed 1865 
Henry Stanbery. 1866 
Wm.M. Evarts...l868 


Adolph E. Borie 1869 
George M. Robeson . . .1869 


Jacob D. Cox 186'J 
Columbus Delano.. 1870 
Zach Chandler 1875 


J. A. J. Cresswell. .1869 
Jns. \V. MarshalL.,1874 
Marshall Jewell... 1874 
James N. Tyner...l87b 


E. R. Hoar 1869 
A. T. Ackerman.,1870 
Geo. U.Williams. 1871 
Edw. Pierrepont.1875 
Alphonso Taft.. .1876 


R. W. Thompson 1877 
Nathan Goff. Jr 1881 


Carl Schurz 1877 


David M. Key 1877 
Horace Maynard.,1880 


Chas.Devens 1877 






(Continued on page 23.) 
*This department was established bv an act of congress March 3, 1849. 
+Not a cabinet officer until 1829. 



22 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



PRESIDENTS AND THEIR CABINETS.-CONTINUED FROM PAGE 20. 



PRESIDENTS 

AND 
VICE-PRESIDENTS. 



tJames A. Garfleld. 
Chester A. Arthur.. 



Chester A. Arthur. 



Grover Cleveland 

tThos. A. Hendricks. 



Benjamin Harrison. 
Levi P.Morton 



Grover Cleveland 
Adlai E. Stevenson.. 



*tWilliam McKinley. 
tGarret A. Hobart... 
Theodore Roosevelt . 



Theodore Roosevelt. 



Secretaries of state. 



James G. Blaine,1881 



F. T. Frelinghuy 
sen , 



Chas. J. Folger...l881 
1881 W. Q. Gresham . .1884 
Hugh McCulloch.1884 



Thos. F. Bayard. 1885 



1889 Jamea 



1885 

1889 

1889 

1893 W. Q. Gresham. .1893 John G. Carlisle..l893 

1893 Richard Olney. . .1895 



sG. Blaine.1889 Wm 
W.Foster.. 1892 



1897 John Sherman. . .189 

Wm. R. Day 189 

1901 John Hay 1898 



1901 John Hay. 



Secretaries of the 
treasury. 



Wm. Windom 1881 



Daniel Manning. 1885 
Chas.S.Fairchild 1887 



Windom.... 1889 R 
Charles Foster... 1891 S. B 



Lyman J. Gage . .1897 



.1901 Lyman J. Gage. .1901 
Leslie M. Shaw. . 1902 W 



Secretaries of war, 



R. T. Lincoln. .1881 



R.T.Lincoln... 1881 



W. C. Endicott.1885 



. Proctor 1839 

. Elkins.,..1891 



D.S. Lament... 1893 



R. A. Alger 1897 

Elihu Root 1890 



Elihu Root 1901 

m. H. Taft. . .1904 



'Elected two consecutive terms. tDied while in office. 



SPEAKERS OF THE HOUSE. 



CON- 
GRESS 



1 

2.... 
3 

I: 5 ::: 

7-9. . . 
10-11. 
12-13. 
13.... 
14-16. 
16. . . . 

is";; 

19.... 

i: 23 : 

24-25. 
26.... 

27.... 



Years. 



Name. 



1789-91 F.A. Muhlenberg Pa. 
1791-93 J.TrumbulI.... 
1793-95 F.A. Muhlenberg Pa. 
1795-99 Jonathan Dayton N. J. 
1799-01 Theo. Sedgwick.. Mass. 
1801-07 Nathan '1 Macon. N. C.. 
1807-11 J. B. Varnum.... 

1811-14 Henry Clay Ky. . 

1814-15 Langdon Cheves. S. C. 

1815-20 Henry Clay 

1S20-2M. W.Taylor 

182 1-23 P. P. Bar hour.... 

1823-25 Henry Clay 

182.V2i J.W. Taylor 

1827-34 A. Stevenson . . . . Va. . . 

1834-35 John Bell Tenn. 

1835-39. lames K. Polk... Tenn. 
1839-41!R. M. T. Hunter. Va. .. 

1841-43 John White 

1843-45 J. W.Jones 



State. 



ill 

1750 1S01 
17401801' 
17.501801 
1760 1*24 
174> 1813 



1757 



1750 1821 
1777 1852 
1776 1857 
1852 
1784 1854 
1783 1841 



1837 



1852 47 



48-50.. 

51 

1797 1869 52-53. . 



17841854 
1784 185 r 



K!:,1S4H 54-55 
1809 1887 56-5' 
1805 



CON- 
GKESS. 



31 

32-33. . . 

34 

35 



38-40... 
41-43. . . 

44 

44-46. . . 



Tears. 



Name. 



1845-47 J. W. Davis 

1847-49R. C. Winthrop. 

1849-51 Howell Cobb 

1851-55 Linn Boyd 

1356-57>N. P. Banks.... 
1857-59'james L. Orr. . . . 
1860-61J W. Pennington. 

1861-63 G. A. Grow 

1863-69:8. Colfax 

1869-75 J. G.Blaine.... 
1875-76 M.C.Ke 



1876-81 S. J. Randall 

1881-83 J. W. Keifer 

1883-89 J. G.Carlisle 

1889-91 Thomas B. Reed 
1MM-H5C. F. Crisp.... 
1895-99 Thomas B. Reed. 
1899-03ID. B. Henderson 
. G. Cannon 



State. 



Ind... 
Mass. 
Ga.... 
Ky.. . 
Mass. 
S. C. . 
N.J. . 
Pa.... 
Ind.. . 
Me .. 
Ind. 



Pa... 



Ky.. . 
Me... 

a 

Me.. . 
towa. 
111.... 



1S2S1SS5 



is>? isrt; 

1828 1890 



THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE. 

Following Is the electoral vote of the states, based upon the apportionment of representa- 
tives made by congress under the census of 1900: 



Electoral 
State. vote. 

Alabama 11 

Arkansas 9 



State. 
Kansas 



Electoral 
vote. 
10 



Kentucky 13 



California 10 Louisiana 

Colorado 51 Maine 6 

Connecticut 7 Maryland 8 

Delaware 3 Massachusetts 16 

Florida 5 Michigan 14 

Georgia 13 Minnesota 11 

Idaho 3 Mississippi 10 

Illinois 27 Missouri 18 

Indiana 15 Montana 3 

Iowa 13 Nebraska 8 



Electoral 
State. vote. 

Nevada 3 

New Hampshire... 4 
New Jersey 12 



New York 

North Carolina... 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island. 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 



State. 



Electoral 
vote. 



Tennessee 12 



Texas 
Utah .... 
Vermont 



18 



. Virginia ia 

41 Washington 5 

23 West Virginia 7 

4 Wisconsin 13 

34 [Wyoming 3 

9 Total 476 

4 Nee. to choice 2b9 



SURVIVORS OF THE UNION ARMY AND NAVY IN THE CIVIL WAR. 

The probable number of survivors of the union army and navy in the war of the rebellion 
on June 30 for a series of years is estimated in a table prepared by Gen. F. C. Ainsworth, chief 
of the record and pension office, war department, as follows: 

1904 858,002 

1905 820.687 

1906 782.72-2 1910 626.231 

1907 744,196' 1915 429,727 



1908 705,197 

1909 665,832 



1920. 



.251,727 



19-25 116,073 

37,033 



1935. 



1940 

1945.... 



EASTER SUNDAY DATES. 



23 



PRESIDENTS AND THEIR CABIN ETS.-CoxxixcED FROM PAGE 21. 



Secretaries of the 

navy. 



Secretaries of the 
interior.* 



Postmasters- 
general. 



Attorney- 
generals. 



Secretaries nf 
agriculture.^ 



W. H. Hunt. . . .1881 S. J. Kirkwood.1881 T. L. James. . . . 



W.Mac Veagh 1881 



W.E. Chandler 1S81 



Henry M.Teller 1881 T. O. Howe 1881 

W.Q.Gresham.1883 
Frank Hatton.1884 



BHBrewster.1881 



W. C. Whitney.1885 



L. Q. C. Lamar.l885iWm. F. Vilas...] 
Wm. F. Vilas... 1SS8'D.M. Dickinson.1 



1885 A.H.Garlandl8S5 



N. J. Colman.1889 



Benj. F. Tracy. 1889 John W. Noble.1889 J. Wanamaker.1889 



WHH Miller. ISSyj.M. Rusk ..1889 



Hilary A. Her- 
bert 



1893 



Hoke Smith.... 1893 



W. S. Bissell...l893 R. Olney 1893 J. S. Morton. 1893 



D. R. Francis!! '.1896 w! L. Wilson'.'. '.1895|j.' Harmon.' .'J1895 



1897 James A. Gary. 189?' J. McKenna.,1897 
1899 Chas. E. Smith. 1898 J. W. Griggs.,1897 
P. C. Knox...l901 



John D. Long. .1897 



C. N. Bliss 

E.A.Hitchcock. 



[. Wilson 1897 



John D. Long.. 1901 E.A.HHcbcock.190] Chas. E. Smith. 1901 P. C. Knox ...1901 J. Wilson 1901 

Wm. H. Moody. 1902 | Henry C.Paynel902 



NOTE The department of commerce and labor was established by act of congress Feb. 
14, 1903. George B. Cortelyou was appointed the first secretary. 

*This department was established by an act of congress March 3, 1849. 
tEstablished by an act of congress Feb. 11, 1889. 

PRESIDENTIAL VOTE (1828-1900). 



YR. 



Candidate. 



1828 Jackson.. . . . 

1828 Adams 

1832; Jackson 

1832|Clay 

1832 Floyd 

1832 Win 

1836 Van Buren 
1836 Harrison... 

1836 1 White 

1836 ! Webster.... 
1836 Mangum 
1840 Van Buren. 
1840 Harrison... 

1840Birney 

1844! Polk 

1844 Clay 

1S44 Birney... 
1848, Taylor. .. 

1848 Cass 

1848 Van Uuren. 
1852 Pierce.... 

1852 Scott 

1852 Hale 

1856 Buchanan.. 

1856 Fremont 

1856 Fillmore.... 
1860 Douglas ... 
1860 Breckinr'ge 

1860 Lincoln 

1860 Bell 

1864 McClellan, . 

1864 Lincoln 

1868 Seymour.... 

1868 Grant 

1872 Greeley 

1872,0'Conor 

1872 1 Grant 

1872iBlack 



Party. 



Democrat.. 
. Federal 
. Democrat.. 

Whig 

[Whig 

!Anti-M 

Democrat. . 

Whig 

Whig 

Whig 

Whig 

Democrat. . 

Whig 

Liberty 

Democrat. . 

Whig 

.Liberty 

. Whig 

Democrat. . 

Free Soil... 
..Democrat.. 

.Iwhig 

.! Free Soil... 
. | Democrat. . 
.'Republican 

American.. 

Democrat. . 

Democrat.. 

Republican 

Union 

Democrat. . 

Republican 

Democrat. . 

Republican 

Democrat. . 

Ind. Dem.. . 

Republican 

T'mpera'ce 



Popular 
vote. 



647,231 
509.097 
68T.S03 
530,189 



toral 
vote. 



761,549, 



1,128,702! 
1,275.017 

7,059 . 
1,337,243 
1,299.068 

62,300 . 
1,360,101, 
1,220.544 

291,263 . 
1,601,474 
1,380.678 

156,149 . 



1,341,264 
874,534 
1.375,157 
845.763 
1.866,352 
589.581 
1.SOS.725 
2.216,067 
2.709,613 
3.015,071 
2,8b4,079! 
29,408 , 
3,597,070 
5.608 . 



1880 Do 
14 1880Phelps ..... 

" 1884 Cleveland. 



YR. 



Candidate. 



1876Tilden ...... 

1876 Hayes ...... 

1876 Cooper ..... 

1876 Smith ...... 

Walker.... 

Hancock . . 

Gartield.... 
eaver 



Party. 



Popular 
vote. 



1884 Elaine ...... 

1884 Butler ...... 

1884 St. John.... 

1888 Cleveland. 
1888 Harrison . . 
1888Streeter.... 

1888 Pisk ........ 

1888 Cow drey... 
1892 Cleveland. 
1892 Harrison. . 
1892 Bidwell.... 

1892 Weaver . . . 

1896 McKin'l'ey '. 
1896Brvan ...... 

1896 Levering . . 
1896 Bentley.... 

isv, Mutchett.. 
1896 Palmer ..... 

1900|McKinley.. 
1900 Bryan ..... 

1900 Woolley.... 

1900 Barker . . 



1900 



Debs 



1900Malloney.. 
1900 Leonard... 
1900;Ellis 



Democrat..; 

Republican 

Greenback.) 

Prohibition 

American.. 

Democrat.. 

Republican 

Greenback. 

Prohibition 

American.. 

. Democrat.. 

.Republican 

Greenback. 

Prohibition 

Democrat. . 

Republican 

Union Lab 

Prohibition 

United Lab 

Democrat. . 

..Republican 

.Prohibition 

.People's.... 

.Socialist 

. Republican 

. Democrat. . 

. Prohibition 

. National... 

. Sue. Labor. 

.Nat. Dem... 

. i Republican 

Democrat . . 

Prohibition 

People's 

Soc. Dem... . 
Soc. Lab.... 
United Chr. 
Union R 



4,284.88.5 

4,033,950 

81,740 

9,522 



4,449,053 

307,306 

10,487 

707 

4,911.017 

4.S48.334 

133,825 

151,809 

5,538,233 

5,440,216 

141,105 

249.937 

2,808 

5.5.V5.918 

5.176.108 

264,133 

1,041.028 

21.164 

7,104,779 

6,502.925 

132.107 

13,969 

36.274 

133. 14b 

7.217.810 

6.H.J7.NJ* 

203.791 

50.218 

87.769 

39.944 

518 

5,098 



* Owing to the death of Mr. Greeley, the 66 electoral votes were variously cast. Thomas A 
Hendricks received 42, B. Gratz Brown ]8, Horace Greeley 3, Charles J.Jenkins 2, David Davis 1 



1904. 

1905. 



,...April3 
...April 23 
...April 15 



EASTER SUNDAY DATES. 

1907 March 31 

1908 April 19 

1909 April 11 



1910 March? 

1911 April 1( 

1912 April 



24 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


QUALIFICATIONS FOR SUFFRAGE. 




PREVIOUS 
RESIDENCE 




d 






REOU1HEJ). 


i 


1 




REQUIREMENTS 
FOR VOTERS ix THE 








- 


1 


I 


Excluded from 


VARIOUS STATES. 


^ 


I 


g 


i 

S 


3 




voting. 




1 


8 


1 


6 


I 


1 




ALABAMA Citizens of good 


iy. 


}rn 


30 d 


-JUd 


Yes. 


Yes. 


.f convicted of treason, embezzle- 


character and understanding, or 
aliens who have declared inten- 
tion; must exhibit poll-tax re- 














nent of public funds, malfeasance 
n office or other penitentiary of- 
fenses, idiots or insane. 


ARB^NSAS-Like Alabama, ex- 


iy. 


6m 


SOd 


30 d 


No.. 


Yes. 


Idiots, insane, convicts until par- 


cept as to "good character." 
CALIFORNIA-Citizens by nativ- 
ity; naturalized for 90 days, or 




d 




*d 


Yes. 


Yes. 


doned, nonpayment of poll tax. 
Chinese, insane, embezzlers of pub- 
ic moneys, convicts. 


treaty of Queretaro. 
COLORADO-Citizens, male or fe- 
male, or aliens who declared in- 
tention 4 months before offer- 


6m 


90d 


30 d 


10 d 


Yes. 


Yes. 


Persons under guardianship, in- 
sane, idiots, prisoners convicted 
of bribery. 


ing to vote. 
CONNECTICUT Citizens who 


iy. 




6m 




Yes. 


Yes. 


Convicted of felony or other inf a- 


can read. 














nous crime unless pardoned. 


DELAWARE Citizens paying $1 


iy. 


3 m 




30d 


No.. 


Yes. 


Insane, idiots, felons, paupers. 


registration fee. 
















FLORIDA Citizens of United 


iy. 


6m 






Yes. 


Yes. 


Persons not registered, insane or 


States. 














inder guardian, felons/convicts. 


GEORGIA Citizens who can read 


iy. 


6m 






(a) 


No- 


Persons convicted of crimes pun- 


and have paid all taxes since 1877. 














shable by imprisonment, insane, 
















delinquent taxpayers. 


IDAHO Citizens, male or female. 


6m 


90d 


im 


10 d 


Yes. 


Yes. 


Chinese, Indians, insane, felons. 
















)Olygamists, bigamists, traitors. 
)ribers. 


ILLINOIS Citizens of United 
States. 


iy. 


90 d 


30d 


JOd 


Yes. 


Yes. 


Convicts of penitentiary until par- 
doned. 


INDIANA Citizens, or aliens who 
have declared intention and re- 
sided 1 year in United States. 


6m 


Od 


JOd 


30 d 


No.. 


Yes. 


Convicts and persons disqualified 
jy judgment of a court. United 
States soldiers, marines and sail- 
















ors. 


IOWA Citizens of United States. 


6m 


Wd 


10d 


10 d 


(ft) 


Yes. 


idiots, insane, convicts. 


KANSAS Citizens; aliens who 


6m 


d 


iOd 


iOd 


(ft) 


Yes. 


Insane, persons under guardian- 


have declared intention; women 














ship, convicts, bribers, defrauders 


vote at municipal and school 














of the government and persons 


elections 














dishonorably discharged from ser- 
















vice of United States. 


KENTUCKY Citizens of United 


iy. 


6m 


6m 


60d 


(c) 


No.. 


Treason, felony, bribery, idiots, 


States. 














nsane. 


LOUISIANA Citizens who are 


2y 


1 V 




5m 


Yes. 


No.. 


idiots, insane, all crimes punish- 


able to read. 














able by imprisonment, embezzling 


MAINE Citizens of the United 


3m 


3m 


3m 


3m 


Yes. 


Yes. 


mblic funds unless pardoned. 
Paupers, persons under guardian- 


States. 














ship. Indians not taxed. 


MARYLAND Citizens of United 


iy. 


6 m 






Yes. 


Yes. 


Persons convicted of larceny or 


States who can read. 














other infamous crime, persons un- 


MASSACHUSETTS-Citizens who 
can read and write English. 
MICHIGAN Citizens, or aliens 


iy. 

6m 


6m 
20 d 


6m 
20 d 


6m 
20 d 


Yes. 
Yes. 


Yes. 
Yes. 


der guardianship, insane, idiots. 
Paupers (except United States sol- 
diers), persons under guardianship. 
Indians holding tribal relations, 


who declared intention prior to 














duelists and their abettors. 


MINNESOTA CitUens of the 


6m 






30 d 


(d) 


Yes. 


Treason, felony unless pardoned. 


United States. 














nsane, persons under guardian- 
















ship, uncivilized Indians. 


MISSISSIPPI Citizens who can 
read or understand the constitu- 


2y. 


iy. 


iy. 


iy. 


Yes. 


Yes. 


:nsane, idiots, felons, delinquent 
taxpayers. 


M ISSOURI Citizens,or aliens who 


iy. 


60 d 


60 d 


(50 d 


(e) 


Yes. 


Paupers, persons convicted of fel- 


have declared intention not 














ony or other infamous crime or 


less than 1 nor more than 5 years 














misdemeanor or violating right of 


before offering to vote. 














suffrage, unless pardoned; second 
















conviction disfranchises. 


MONT ANA-Citizens of U. 8 


iy. 


30 d 


30 r 


-rt 


Yes. 


Yes. 


Indians, felons, idiots, insane. 


NEBRASKA Citizens, or aliens 


6m 


40dlOdlOd 


(ft) 


Yes. Lunatics, persons convicted of 


who have declared intention 












treason or felony unless pardoned, 


30 days before election. 












United States soldiers and sailors. 


(a) Registration required in some counties, (b) In all cities, (c) In the cities of first, second 
and third class, (d) Required in cities of 1,200 inhabitants or over, (e) In cities of 100.000 popu 


lation or over. 



QUALIFICATIONS FOR SUFFRAGE. 25 


QUALIFICATIONS FOR SUFFRAGB.-CONTINTED. 




PitEviors 










RESIDENCE 




j 




REQTIREMENTS 
FOH VO!ERS IX THE 


HEQt'lHED. 


| 


4 


Excluded from 








^j 


VARIOCS STATES. 




=: 


. 


= 


*- 


4a 


voting. 




| 


"5 


I 


'C 

C 


1 


o 

l 




NEVADA Citizens of United 


Jm 


MM 


Wd 


Wd 


Yes. 


Yes. 


Insane, idiots, convicted of treason 


States. 














or felony, unamnestied confeder- 
















ates against the United States, In- 
















dians and Chinese. 


NEW HAMPSHIRE-Citizens of 


j m 


i m 


> m 


! m 


Yes. 


Yes. 


Paupers (except honorably dis- 


United States. 














charged soldiers), persons excused 
















from paying taxes at their own re- 
















quest. 


NEW JERSBY-Citizens of Unit- 
ed States. 


ly. 


5m 






Yes 


Yes. 


Paupers, insane, idiots and persons 
convicted of crimes which exclude 




















them from being witnesses unless 


NEW YORK Citizens who have 


iy 


4 m 


30d 


Wd 


Yes. 


Yes. 


pardoned. 
Convicted of bribery or any infa- 


been such for 90 days. 














mous crime unless pardoned, bet- 
ters on result of election, bribers 
















for votes and the bribed. 


NORTH CAROLINA-Citizens of 
United States who can read. 


iy. 


Wd 






Yes. 


No- 


Idiots, lunatics.convicted of felony 
or ether infamous crimes, atheists. 


NORTH DAKOTA Citizens, or 
aliens who have declared inten- 


iy. 


; m 




10 cl 


(a) 


Yes. 


Felons, idiots, convicts unless par- 
doned. United States soldiers and 


tion 1 vear and not more than 6 








* 






sailors. 


prior to election, and civilized 
Indians. 
















OHIO - Citizens of the United 


ly. 


30d 


30 d 


d 


(b) 


Yes. 


Idiots, insane, United States sol- 


States. 














diers and sailors, felons unless ; 
















restored to citizenship. 


OREGON White male citizens. 


> m 


Wd 


Wd 


Wd 


No.. 


Yes. 


Idiots, insane, convicted felons. 


or aliens who have declared in- 














Chinese, United States soldiers and 


tention 1 year before election. 














sailors. 


1 PENNSYLVANIA Citizens at 


L V 






2m 


Yes. 


Yes. 


Persons convicted of some offense 


least 1 month, and if 22 years old 














forfeiting right of suffrage, non- 


must have paid tax within 2 yrs. 
RHODE ISLAND - Citizens of 


2y. 




J m 




(c) 


taxpayers. 
Yes.jPaupers, lunatics, idiots, convicted 


United States. 














of bribery or infamous crime until 
















estored. 


SOUTH CAROLINA-Citizens of 


2y. 


iy 


4m 


4m 


Yes 


No- 


'aupers, insane, idiots, convicted 


United States who can read. 














of treason, dueling or other infa- 
















mous crime. 


SOUTH DAKOTA Citizens, or 


6m 


Wd 


10 cl 


10 d 


(d) 


Yes. 


Persons under guardian, idiots, in- 


aliens who have declared inten- 














ane, convicted of treason or fel- 


tion. 














ony unless pardoned. 


TENNESSEE Citizens who have 
paid poll tax preceding year. 


iy. 


;m 






(e) 


Yes. 


Convicted of bribery or other infa- 
mous crime, failure to pay poll tax. 


TEXAS Citizens, or aliens who 


ly. 


1 m 








Yes. 


diots, lunatics, paupers, convicts, 


have declared intention 6 months 














United States soldiers and sailors. 


before election. 
















UTAH Citizens of United States. 


iy. 


4m 










diots. insane, convicted of treason 


male or female. 














or violation of election laws. 


VERMONT Citizens of United 


iy. 




im 


Wd 


Yes 


Yes. 


Jnpardoned convicts, deserters 


States. 














rom United States service during 
















the war, ex-confederates. 


VIRGINIA - Citizens of United 


iy. 


{m 


3m 




Yes 


No- 


Idiots, lunatics, convicts unless 


States of good understanding. 
WASHINGTON Citizens of Unit- 


ly. 


Wd 


Wd 


'Wd 




Yes. 


mrdoned by the legislature, 
ndians not taxed. 


ed States. 
















WEST VIRGINIA Citizens of 


ly. 


Vid 






No. 


Yes. 


Paupers, idiots, lunatics, convicts. 


the state. . 














>ribers, United States soldiers and 
















sailors. 


WISCONSIN Citizens, or aliens 
who have declared intention. 


iy. 


iy. 


10 d 


lOd 


(a) 


Yes. 


nsane. under guardian, convicts 
unless pardoned. 


WYOMING Citizens, male or fe- 


ly. 


00 d 






Yes 


Yes. 


Iriints. insanp. fplons. nnahla tn 


male. 












read the state constitution. 


(a) In cities of 3,000 population or over. (6) In cities of not less than 9.000 inhabitants. 


(c) Nontaxpayers must register yearly before Dec. 31. (d) In towns having 1.000 voters and 


counties where registration has been adopted by popular vote, (e) All counties having 50,000 


inhabitants or over. (/) In cities of 10.000 or over. 


In a more or less limited form, relating to taxation and school matters, woman suffrage 
exists in Arizona. California, Delaware, Idaho Illinois. Indiana. Kansas, Kentucky. Massa- 
chusetts. Michigan. Minnesota. Montana. Nebraska, New Hampshire. New Jersey. North Da- 


kota. Oklahoma. Oregon. South Dakota. Texas. Vermont. Washingten and Wisconsin. 



26 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


PAST POLITICAL COMPLEXION OF THE STATES. 


R., Republican; W., Whig; D., Democratic; U.. Union; A., American; A. M.. Anti-Masonic; 
N. R., National Republican; P., Populist. 


STATE. 


* 

X 

H 


I 


1 


8 

2 


3 


1 


$ 
-f. 


(N 
>~ 
X 


I 


i 


i 


i 


i 


i 


| 


i 


t 

8j 


i 


| 


t 
































Alabama 
Arkansas 
California 


D. 


D. 


D 


D. 
D. 


D. 
D. 


D. 
D. 


D. 

D. 


D. 

D. 
D. 


D. 
D. 
D. 


D. 
D. 

R. 


R.' 

ii.' 

D. 


R. 
R. 
R. 

ii.' 

D. 
R. 
D. 


R. 
R. 
R. 

ii.' 

R. 
R. 
D. 


D. 

D. 
R. 
R. 
D. 
I). 
K. 
D 


D. 

D. 
1). 
R. 
11. 
1). 
D. 
D. 


D. 
D. 
R. 
R. 
D. 
I) 
D. 
D. 


D. 
D. 

R. 
R. 
1). 
D. 
D. 
D. 


D. 
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Connecticut. 
Delaware.... 
Florida 


R. 
VV. 


R. 
R. 


N. R. 
N.R. 


I). 
W. 


W. 
W. 


VV. 
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W. 
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Georgia 
Idaho 


W. 


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D. 


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Illinois 
Indiana 


D. 
D. 


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D. 
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Kentucky.... 
Louisiana... 
Maine 
Maryland.... 
Mass 
Michigan 


W. 
1). 
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R. 


1). 
J). 
H. 
R. 
R. 


N.R. 
D. 
D. 
N.R. 
N.R. 


W. 
D. 
D. 
W. 
W. 
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W. 
W. 
W. 
W. 
W. 
W. 


W. 
D. 
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b.' 

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ft. 

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R. 
R. 

B- 


Mississippi.. 
Missouri 
Montana 


D. 
W. 


D. 
D. 


b. 

D. 


D. 
D. 


W. 
D. 


D. 
D. 


D. 
D. 


I). 
D. 


D. 


R. 


R. 


Nebraska 
Nevada 
New Hamp.. 
New Jersey. 
New York... 
N. Carolina.. 
N. Dakota... 
Ohio 






















'ii.' 

R. 
D. 
R. 


R. 
Ii. 
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Ii. 


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vv. 




















R. 
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D. 


B: 

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D. 




D. 
D. 


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W. 
W. 


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VV. 


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W. 


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'b.' 

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R. 
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D. 

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I), 
'b.' 

R. 


Penn 


D. 
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W. 
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VV. 
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VV 
VV. 
D. 


D. 
D. 
D. 


D. 
R. 
D. 


Rhode Isl'd. 
S. Carolina. . 
S Dakota.... 


Tennessee . . 
Texas 
Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington. 
W Virginia 


D. 

'ii.' 

W. 


D. 

'ii.' 
D. 


D. 

A!M. 

D. 


W. 

w'. 

D. 


w. 
w'. 

D. 


W. 

w'. 

D. 


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VV 
D. 
W 
D. 


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D. 

IS: 


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D. 
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'ii.' 
'ii.' 

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'R. 


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XV. 


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D. 
R 
1). 


D. 
D. 
It. 
D. 

'i)." 
R. 






















K. 
ft. 


R. 
K. 


R. 
R. 


Wisconsin... 
Wyoming.... 














D. 


D. 


R. 


R. 




























In five states in 1892 the electoral vote wa 
Cleveland and 1 for Harrison and Ohio gave 1 i 
by act of the leg slature.each congressional dis 
1 of the 4 candidates for electors on the people' 
in North Dakota 1 of the 2 people's party electr 
electoral vote of the state to be equally divi 
In 18H6 California gave 8 electoral votes to M 
McKinley and 1 to Bryan. 

COPYRIGHT I 

The articles specified by law as proper 
subjects of copyright are: Books, maps, 
charts, dramatic compositions, musical 
compositions, engravings, cuts, prints, pho- 
tographs, photographic negatives, chromos, 
lithographs, periodicals, paintings, draw- 
ings, statuary and models or designs in- 
tended to be perfected as works of fine 
art. 
Any one desiring to secure a copyright 
should send to the librarian of congress 
for a blank application. This must be tilled 
up according to the printed directions, 
which will be found plainly and specifically 
given on the blank itself. A printed or 
typewritten copy of the title of the article 


s divided: California gave 8 electoral votes for 
or Cleveland and 22 for Harrison; in Michigan, 
trict voted separately for an elector; in Oregon 
s party ticket was also on the democratic ticket; 
rs cast his vote for Cleveland, this causing the 
ded between Cleveland, Harrison and Weaver. 
cKinley and 1 to Bryan; Kentucky gave 12 to 

tEGTTLATIONS. 

to be copyrighted must accompany the ap. 
plication; in the case of paintings, draw- 
ings, statuary or designs, descriptions must 
be inclosed. On or before the dav of pub- 
lication two complete copies of the book or 
other article must be sent to the library of 
congress to perfect the copyright. 
The fee for the entry of title of produc- 
tion of a citizen of the United States is 50 
cents; for a foreigner, $1: certificate, 50 
cents additional in either case. Remittances 
must be made by money order, express 
order or bank draft; postage stamps and 
checks will not be accepted. The copy- 
right is for twenty-fight years, but it may 
be renewed for fourteen more. 



IMPORTS OF MERCHANDISE. 27 


IMPORTS OF MERCHANDISE 


Fiscal years ended June 30. 


ARTICLES IMPORTED. 


1902. 


1903. 


Quant's. 


Values. 


Quant's. 


Values 


Animals .... 




$4,624,531 




14,531,345 

7,092,420 
296,626 
4,013,689 
4,323,938 
3.023,195 
2,654.604 
1,245,671 
3,547,914 
64,347,535 
1,285,097 
2.182,684 
10.562,005 
8,112.609 
59.200,749 
20,890,899 
2.567,580 
10.970,671 
52.462.684 
10.512.052 
5,164.901 
3,100,279 
34.462,513 
39.334.521 
8.514.934 
23,726,636 
15.301,912 
7.038,282 
2,775,084 
3,871.263 
2,238.109 
68,031.613 
834.421 
2,855,814 
31,888,402 
53,968.590 
1.396,721 
33,492,580 
4,125,675 
11,294,167 
2.087,741 
1,517,347 
1,753,780 
3.780,052 
7,056,654 
1.125,283 
12.283.957 
1,827,110 
3,015.084 
4,733,036 
1,371,588 
1,962.450 
4,703,536 
3,061,473 
2.&31.279 
50.011.819 
35,962,854 
933.772 
4,815.125 
4.834,580 
72.114.291 
1,583,980 
15. 659,229 
23,618,802 
17,234.449 
3,344.671 
4.232,074 
4.581.355 
10.249.296 
28,744.040 
22.155.096 
19.545.721 






6 124 226 




1 Art works free 




336.623 
3.179,913 
4,133.215 

2 080 268 






Books, music and otherprinted mattoj 
Breadstuff's 







Bristles Ibs 


2,013,109 
i23844.i6 


2.047.331 
1,151,016 
1,478,452 
57.723.33t) 
1,214.564 
2,460,324 
5.312.408 
6,952,425 
70.982.155 
24 972,788 


. 3,043,865 
il 10422761 

203.857 

' 3,610.225 
64.356,060 

915,066,380 






ghemicals. drugs and dyes 
lays or earths tons 


187,158 


Clocks and watches and parts of . 


Coa4 . . . .tons 


1,941,722 
52.353.366 
1091004252 


Cocoa or cacao Ibs 


Coffee Ibs 


Copper and manufactures of 






2 464 934 




Cotton Unmanufactured.. . . Ibs 


113,049.225 


12,208,231 
44,460,126 
9.680.156 
. 5 110 923 


75,401 926 


Manufactured .... 


Earthen, stone and china ware 




Feathers, natural and artificial 
Fertilizers 






2 426 758 




305,727 


31.545,962 
39.037,387 
8,289,524 
21,480.525 
15,605.958 
6,013,963 
2.055,536 
3.050:478 
381,417 
58,006,618 
696439 


276,404 




Fish fresh and cured or preserved 




Fruits including nuts 






Furs and manufactures of 
Glass and glassware 














293,112 
318,802,222 




48,415 
326,124,103 


Hides and skins ... . . .Ibs 


Hide cuttings, raw, and other glue stock . . 


Household effects, wearing apparel, etc 




2,934.244 
25.729,095 
29,542,799 
1,151,854 
25,990.570 
4 647 796 




India rubber and gutta percha and manufactures of. 




17,733,369 


Iron and steel and manufactures of 
Ivory, animal and vegetable Ibs 


15,157,417 


Jewelry precious stones etc 






Leather and manufactures of 
Malt liquors '. .gals 


' 3,751,511 

208,568 


1U17J78 
1380,348 

1,779,455 

1,641,388 
3,817.866 
6,223,383 
1,000,489 
9,300,198 
1603 181 


' 4,258,828 
175,845 

52,975,131 


Manganese ore and oxide of tons 
Marble and stone and manufactures of 




48,734,536 


Metals and manufactures of 






Oils of all kinds .. ... 







Paints, pigments and colors 




Paper stock, crude 




2,770,255 
4 223 125 




Paper and manufactures of 






Plants, trees, shrubs and vines 




1 172023 




Platinum Ibs 


6,695 


1,885.719 
3510696 
2.926,921 
3,252.152 
42,635,351 
32,640,242 
847,548 
3,685,242 
4,445,154 
55,061.097 
1,571,577 
9,390,128 
19.461,850 
15,211.<;71 
2.49(5,518 
4 021 974 


7,727 
169,656,184 


Provisions, meats and dairy products 


ttice Ibs 


156,658,894 


Seeds 


Silk Unmanufactured . . 




5i.2bV.i79 

3.229.526 
4216J08JOti 

nss&M 

108.574.it05 
88.018,036 
34,015.667 






Soap 




Spices Ibs 


37,483,054 
3,031.335 
3031915875 
429,606 
75,579,125 
79,-352.356 
29,428,837 


Spirits, distilled gals 


ugar Ibs 


ulphur ore tons 


Tea Ibs 
Tin Ibs 


Tobacco Unmanufactured Ibs 


Manufactured 


Toys 




Vegetables 
Wines 




7,039,835 
8,921.138 
24.427.704 
17.711.788 
17.384.463 


i77,i4&368 


Wood and manufactures of 




Wool, Hair of the Camel, etc. Unmanufactured Ibs 
Manufactured 


166,262,148 


Total value of merchandise | ^ 
Total value of imports of merchandise 




$6,818.774 
506.508.297 




33.880,216 
426.181.966 
599.569,572 




903327071 





28 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


EXPORTS OF DOMESTIC MERCHANDISE. 
Fiscal years ended June 30, J902 and 1903. 


ARTICLES EXPORTED. 


1902. 


1903. 


Quant's. 


Values. 


Quant's. 


Values. 


Agricultural Implements Mowers ard reapers 




$8,818,370 
2.791.092 

4.677.278 




$10.326.641 
3.169.961 
7,616,020 


Flows and cultivators 












Total agricultural implements 




16,286,740 

29,902.212 
88.330 
10.048.04<; 
2.692,21)8 
1.940.060 
200.738 




21,006,622 

29.848.936 
40,923 
3,152,159 
521.725 
1,067.860 
149.150 


Animals Cattle No 


392.884 
8,368 
103.020 
27,586 
358,720 


402,178 
4,031 
34,007 
4,295 
173,961 


Hogs No. 


Horses No. 


Mules No. 


Sheep No. 


All other 






44,871,684 

3.997,977 
1,930,810 

3,995.303 
604.136 
449.917 
16,185.673 
4.153,238 
1.581.491 
11 2.875.222 
65,661.974 
7.627.390 





34,781,193 

4,442,653 
2,000,432 

4,662.544 
589,536 
75.713 
40,540.637 
1.850,728 
3,143.910 
87.795,104 
73.756.404 
8,827.709 


Books maps and other printed matter 




Brass and manufactures of 






Breadstuffs Barley . ..bu. 


8,724.268 
11.641.411 
719.615 
26.636.552 
9.971,139 
2.697.863 
154.aT6,102 
17,759,203 


8,429,141 
11,104,575 
117.953 
74.8.33,237 
4.613.809 
6,422,731 
114.181.420 
19,716,634 


Bread etc .. ... .Ibs 


Buckwheat. . bu. 


Corn bu. 


Oats bu. 


Rye bu 


Wheat bu 


Wheat flour . .. brls 


All other 






213,134.344 
9,872,516 




221,242,285 

10,499,195 
13,697,601 
2,ia3,529 
21,206,498 
3,599.343 
1,912.459 
927,417 
39,667,196 
316,180.429 
32,216.304 
325,571 
6,724.301 
5.290.948 
6,717.274 
18,057,677 
6,181.115 
2,150,699 
2,400.022 
253,768 
'2,926,565 
2,454,510 
828,483 
1.224,409 
1,909.951 
4,176.351 
7.130.508 
96,909.449 
1,293.021 
1.133,290 
31,617,389 
1,178.740 
1,565.244 
3,281,509 

4.904.386 
8.014,322 


Carriages, cars, cycles 






Chemicals drugs, dyes, medicines 




13.288,218 
"2.144.490 
20.765.461 
3,447 343 




Clocks and watches 




' 6,598,875 


Coal tons 


6,971,184 


Coffee and cocoa 




402.495 
25,076 


1.720.457 
2.601.697 
41 218 373 


380.048 


Copper Ore tons 


Manufactures of .. 


Cotton Unmanufactured Ibs 


3500778763 


29W3W19 
32.108.362 
528.679 
6.256.035 
4 575 219 




Manufactures of 






2,717,990 
763,700 


1,517,189 
834,180 




Fi bers Bags, twine, cordage, etc ' 


Fish 




6.5611199 
8,719.344 
5.030,204 
1960106 




1 Kruits and nuts 




Furs and fur skins 






Glass and glassware 






Glucose or grape sugar Ibs 


130.419.611 
2,907,632 


2.319.286 
284,413 
2,610.925 
2.062.381 
2.580.622 
906.504 
1,550.657 
3.462.402 
6388,476 
98.552.562 
1,338,347 
963.638 


126,239.981 
2,569,164 


Glue ibs 


Grease and soap stock 


Gunpowder and other explosives 




"'50,974 

12.859,549 
7,794,705 


Hay tons 


153.431 
9,372.747 
10,715,151 


Hides and skins Ibs 


Hops Ibs 
























Leather and manufactures of 




29,K323 

1 290062 














1 701 696 








3,694,143 

4.302.314 

7.431.2:38 


2.431,082 

16.378.787 


Naval Stores Resin, tar, etc brls 


2.577.568 

19.177.788 


Turpentine, spirits of gals 


Total naval stores 




11 733 562 




12,918,708 

864.221 
19.743.711 
856.564 
6.329.899 
60.357.519 
16.234,362 
2.350.937 
7.180.014 
9.411.294 


Nickel nickel oxide and matte Ibs 


4.418.491 
1633353121 
2.121.6T.1 
133.536.SOU 
942.3(^.160 


1.190.606 
19,779,142 

910.697 
6.084.818 
65.342.826 
15.308.633 
2 0% 379 


2,997.400 
1671301137 
1.890.812 
134.892,170 
806,264,686 




Oils Animal . gals. 




Mineral (refined) gals. 












7.312.030 




Paraffin and paraffin wax Ihs 


i73'n83>03 


8.8.T8.8J4'26l.325,2i6 



VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS. 



29 



EXPORTS OF MERCHANDISE.-CONTINTJED. 



ARTICLES EXPORTED. 



1902. 



1903. 



Quant's. Values. \Quant' s. Values 



Provisions Beef . canned 

Beef, fresh 

Beef, salted, cured Ibs 

Tallow Ibs 

Bacon Ibs 

Hams Ibs 

Pork, canned 

Pork, fresh and salted 

T ard 

Lard compounds' '(cottblene, iardine.'etc'.) .' '.'.'.'. . . . . . ..Ibs 

Mutton Ibs 

Oleo and oleomargarine Ibs 

Poultry and game 

Sausage Ibs 

Sausage casings 

Canned meats 

All other meat products 

Cheese! ..'.'.'. '. '. '. '. '. '. '.'. '. ....... '. '.'. '. ..... '. '.'. ... '.'. '.'.'.. '.'. .. . '.'. "ibs 

Milk 

Total provisions, etc 



Ibs 301.824,473 
49.451,109 
34.065,758 
mioO.624 
227 (553.232 



$6,646,130 76,307.114 
211.045.056 254.7H5.W3 



3,10^863 

1.924.577 



53.927.252 

27.3tl8.924 



35,449.797 207.336000 
25.222.744 214,183.365 
832.910 13,590,897 
Ibs 160.067.949 13.770.026 116.253.487 



Ibs 55K.AiU.222 52.375.SW 49o. 



36.201.744 

430.351 

144.267,342 



2.687.653 

37.0K7 



7.137.297 



12.856.490 133.655.991 
856.801 
726.437 



795,044 



16.002.169 
27.203,184 



1.801 .385 
3.624.764 



2.885.609 
2.745.597 
1.473.564 



Spirits, distilled proof gals. 

Starch Ibs 

Sugar and molasses 

Tobacco Unmanufactured 

Manufactures of 

Vegetables 

Wood and manufactures of r , 

Wool and manufactures of 

Zinc-Ore tons 

Manufactures of 

All other articles 

Total value of exports of domestic merchandise 
Total value of exports of foreign merchandise. . . 
Total value of all exports except gold and silver 



28,183.967 



Ibs 301.007,365 



199.861,378 

8,027.824 

1.6X0.938 

3.011.894 
656.705 

2.771.835 
27. 

5. 

2.546.287 
47.779.848 



41.711 



1,217.907 

429.473 

24.393.056 



1 35548 1S61 
26.2-17.540 



1381719401 



.7ro 821 
46.130.004 
6.144.020 



5,264.&48 



18,987,178 



$7.916.928 

25.013.323 

3.916.8,55 

1.623.852 

22.71)7.301 

25.712.633 

1,369.687 

11.995.25S 

50.854.504 

3.607.542 

532.476 

12.780.161 

1.079.05t 

585.088 

1.964.524 

1.831.940 

2.101.785 

1.604.327 

2.250.229 

921.026 



' 2,390. 798 
27,759,599 



48.731 



179,839,714 

9.455.283 
2.452.777 
2.442.983 
832.943 
2.569.241 

35,250.893 
5.193.79f5 
2.543.488 

57,743.535 

1.722.128 

1.386.694 

2S5.H73 

20.431.386 



1392231637 
27,906.377 



1420138014 



VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OF MERCHANDISE BY COUNTRIES. 
Fiscal years 1901^1903. 



COUNTRY. 



IMPORTS. 



1901. 



1902. 



1903. 



EXPORTS. 



1901. 



1902. 



1903. 



Europe Austria-Hungary. . 

Azores and Madeira isl'ds. 

Belgium 

Denmark 

France 

Germany 

Gibraltar 

Greece 

Greenland, Iceland, etc... . 

Italy 

Malta. Gozo, etc 

Netherlands 

Portugal 

Koumania 

Russia-Baltic and White 
seas 

Russia Black sea 

Servia 

Spain 

Sweden and Norway.*.. 

Switzerland 

Turkey in Europe 

United kingdom 

Total Europe 

North America Bermuda.. . 

British Honduras 



$10.067.970 

25,395 

14,601.711 

644.993 

75.458.739 

100,445.902 

52.863 

1,124.775 

82,533 

24,618.384 

14,744 

20.598,799 

3,370.430 



5.546.280 
1.484,612 



5.409,301 
3,487,639 
15.799.400 
3.386,782 

143.3S8.501 



$10,150.601 

19.273 

16,522.206 

863.847 

82.SS0.036 

101.997.523 

21.494 

1,563.142 

61.116 

30.554.931 

17.556 

19.645.808 

3,179,449 



5.97S.276 
1.330.127 
32.781 
8.270,546 
3.806.179 

17.784.855 
4.935.346 

165.746.560 



$10,578.702 

16.588 

22,766.830 

600,193 

91.060.702 

119..S37.9US 

6.471 

1.326.935 

100.606 

36,368,860 

20.043 

22,710,673 

3,448.185 

6,554 

7,731.441 

1,508.341 

25.263 

8,474.528 

4,905.234 

21.183.378 

5,672.578 

191,666,505 



$7.222.650 

427.434 

49,389.259 

16.175.235 

78.714,927 

191,780.427 

678.814 

291.538 

520 

34.473,189 

438.982 

84,356.318 

5,294.240 

26,560 

6,345.293 

1,738,935 

369 

15,480.288 

11.844.152 

255,360 

392.958 

631.177.15 



$6,167.127 

356.518 

46,271.756 

15.464.tf22 

71,512.984 

173.148.280 

505.956 

305,950 

458 



321.251 

75,123, 135 

3,045.651 

128.879 

7.088.206 
2.214,153 



f7.209.aia 

369.405 

47,073.160 

16.144.935 

77.542.4*5 

193,555.495 

427.005 

330.544 

508 

35.022.660 

'453.529 

78.245.419 

3.652.194 

256,927 

13,399.370 
2,723.258 



15,511.987 

10,108.166 

217.515 

604,775 

548.548 477 



429,620,452 

531. 
241.509 



475.161.941 
487.231 
234.231 



17.626.084 

10.160.874 

'205.647 

496.785 

524.691,638 



550,056,518 
592.107 



136.504,605 1,008,033,981 
1,314.007 

813.S17 



30 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS BY COUNTRIES. CONTINUED. 


COUNTRY. 


IMPORTS. 


EXPORTS. 


1901. 


1902. 


1903. 


1901. 


1902. 


1903. 


British North America- 
Nova Scotia. New Bruns- 
wick, etc 
Quebec. Ontario, etc 
British Columbia 
Newfoundland and Lab- 
rador 


$5,496.697 
27.599,746 
9,385,720 

420,315 


17,518.324 
33.300.531 
7,257,269 

711.449 


$10.375.215 
37.942.258 
6,342,937 

868.238 


$7.011.930 
90.935.713 
7,841,571 

1,957.305 


$6,006,202 
95.tS8.t575 
7,948,116 

2,065,282 


$7.639,179 
109,8-28, 1S7 
6,005,070 

2,509,415 


Total British North 
America 
Central American States- 
Costa Rica 


42,902,478 

2.990.550 
3.512.445 
1.262.317 
2.035.636 
1.037.715 


48,787.573 

3,220.494 
2,993.336 
1.080.788 
1,978.025 

616.887 


55,528,648 

3,731,523 
2,400.063 
1,373.131 
1,862.217 
891,987 


107,746,519 

1,946,726 
1,424.814 
1.115.009 
1,482.194 

738.722 


111,708,275 

1,405,842 
1.680.939 
983,595 
1,359.386 

892.923 


125,981,831 

1,858,604 
1,128.045 
956.193 
1.399,696 
797,253 


Guatemala 
Honduras 


Nicaragua 
Salvador 


Total Central Ameri- 


10,838,663 
28,851.635 
32.S14 
12.851.325 
43,423.088 
478.262 
240.019 
13.972 
1,199.240 
3,553.776 


9,889,530 
40,382.596 
58,548 
12.178,596 
34,694.684 
394.948 
207.411 
3.245 
1,204.461 
2,553.470 


10,528.921 
41,254.542 
18,668 
13,454.557 
62.341.942 
734.020 
406.249 
19.538 
1,107,734 
2,833,676 


6,707,465 
36.475.350 
220.720 
8,876.052 
25,964.801 
692.150 
647,598 
1,851.634 
3.424.662 
1.799,685 


6,322.685 
39.878,606 
169,019 
9.714.963 
26,*)2;i500 
704.259 
630.472 
1,690.752 
2,691.413 
1,577.59-2 


6,139,791 
42,227.786 
191450 
10,137.055 
21,769.572 

633, no 

977.559 
1,611.(XK 
2.383.424 
1,390.967 


Mexico 
Miquelon, Langley, etc . . . 
West Indies British 
Cuba 


Danish 


Dutch 




Haiti 


Santo Domingo 


Total West Indies 
Total North America. . 
South America -Argentina. 
Bolivia .-... 


61.759.682 


51.236.815 


80,897,716 


43,256.582 


43.632.051 


38,903.289 


145,158.104 
8,065,318 


151,076,524 
11,120,721 
257 
79.178,037 
7,740.759 
3,271,894 
1,546.564 
18,120 
3,416,816 
1,386.870 
26,648 
1,959 
3,269.411 
2,520.579 
6.287.121 


188,527,569 
9,463.832 
1,500 
67.216,348 
9,377,313 
4,184.149 
1,?26,851 

""3,35i',656 
874.454 
215.811 
2,887 
2,703.943 
2,981.632 
5.312,954 


196,534.460 
11.587.668 
152.315 
11.603.574 
5.294.726 
3.142.052 
2,015.085 
797 
1,734.404 
610,987 
200.007 
12.695 
3,126,934 
1,637.074 
3.271.877 


203.971,080 
9,801,804 
89,141 
10.391,130 
3,714 722 
2,9731460 
1,462.105 
1,005 
1,954,394 
490.158 
209.917 
16,784 
2.558,995 
1.586,459 
2,793.743 


215,640,051 

11,430,496 
49,107 
10,738.748 
4.03S.S75 
4.293.2!'o 
1.353,162 


Brazil 


70,643,347 
8,683,279 
3,230,652 
1,424,840 


Chile 


Colombia 
Ecuador 


Falkland islands 


Guianas-British 


4.805.395 
1,272.731 
54,018 
1.740 
3,656,180 
1.883.994 
6,645,848 


'Sis 4 ! 

351.262 
13,021 
2,971.411 
1,505.100 
1,878.202 


Dutch 






Peru 
Uruguay 
Venezuela 


Total South America . . 
Asia Aden 
Chinese empire 


110,367,342 
1,520,629 

'*81 


119,785.756 
1,930.644 

"*tS 


107 H3,030 
2,328.654 
26,769.612 
22^355 


44,400.195 
999.898 
10,405,834 
220 


38,043,617 
916.896 
24,722,906 
6,782 


41,114,601 
1.508.999 
18,608.:*w 
1.670 
4,300 


' China British 








lift 






90Y>7 








1,655 

49.774.589 
16,277.606 

28 
1,355.444 
44.142,562 


377,252 
6.251.804 
2,061.705 
58.333 
1,034 
8.009.848 
19,000.640 
215.551 
1.505.842 
194.162 
305.589 


517,809 
4,621.876 
2,076.291 
1,310 


681.756 
4,795.411 
1,194.510 
131,692 
78 
8.780.741 
20.924 ,%"> 
171.400 
802.428 1 
276.247 
77.004 


East Indies British 
Dutch 


43,882.493 
19,026.481 


48,421.218 
14,749.211 
6,882 


French 


Portuguese 
Hongkong 


1.416,412 

29,229.543 
768 
3.529 
3,897.854 
396.115 


1.277.755 
37,522,778 


8.030.109 
21,485.883 
251.563 
1.030.220 
169.777 
103,588 






Russia Asiatic 


34,183 
3.960.394 

685.887 


28.320 

4.897.428 
212.268 


Turkey in Asia 


All other Asia 


Total Asia 


117,677,611 

4,767.661 
1,542.861 
657.336 
5.381 
1.044 
4.420.912 


129,682,651 

5.386.509 
1,476.716 
678.884 
11,652 


145,810,441 

6,969.017 
2,087.812 
579,457 
25,442 


49,390,712 

30.726.687 
146.068 
411.219 
46.672 
34.691 
4,027,064 


63,944,077 

28,375,199 
193.201 
353.639 
45.333 
18746 
5,258 470 
13,453 


57,954,467 

32,748.580 
98.669 
398.169 
120,041 


Oceania British Austra- 


British Oceania 


French Oceania 
German Oceania 


Philippine islands.. 


6,612,700 


11,372.584 
10.049 


4 *S 


All other 


Total Oceania. 


11,395.195 
813.440 
32.901 
417.223 


14,166,461 
979.361 
32.0J58 
480.642 


21,044,361 
971.908 
, 42,547 
450,690 


35,392.401 
21.654.458 
254.920 
843,414 


34,258.041 
28.780.105 
340.801 
318.592 


37.408.036 
33,788.629 
816,463 

410.097 


Africa British Africa 
Canary islands 


French Africa 





SUMMARY OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS. 



31 



VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS BY COUNTRIES. CoNTlNTFi). 



COUNTRY. 


IMPORTS. 


EXPORTS. 


1901. 


1902. 


1903. 


1901. 


1002. 


1903. 






$50 


129.526 
2,584 


18.039 
10.200 
8.822 
25,495 
28.134 
1,425.539 
13.585 
l,21f,.773 
1,48s 
51.770 


$4.330 
1,100 
125 
41.888 
31.121 
2.565,224 

'"i',2691449 

'"iis.sio 


$6.313 

"'29,086 
19.278 
2,324.216 
2,266 
740,375 


Italian Africa. 




Kongo Free State 
Liberia 
Madagascar 


(4.867 
547 




2.072 
575 
17,216 
10.631 
11,368,301 
209.494 
347.235 


2,747 
10.450 




1,643 
5.387 
7.212.279 
183.743 
281.431 




20.404 
10,661.978 
133.524 
173.261 


Turkey in Africa Egypt. . 
Tripoli 


All other Africa 


297,408 


Total Africa 
Grand total 


8.953.461! 13,447.615 


12.4W.619 


25.542.61o 


as. 468,605 


38,433.131 
1,420 138,014 


82b.172.165 


903.320948 1.025,651,538 


1.487,764.991 


1.381,719,401 





SUMMARY OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OF MERCHANDISE. 
Fiscal years ended June 30. 



GROCPS. 



1902. 



1903. 



IMPORTS. 

Free of Duty Articles of food and animals . 

Articles in a crude condition which enterinto the various 

processes of domestic industry. 
Articles wholly or partially manufactured for use as 

materials in the manufactures and mechanic arts 

Articles manufactured ready for consumption 

Articles of voluntary use. luxuries, etc 

Total freeof duty 

Dutiable Articles of food and animals 
Articles in a crude condition which enter into the various 

processes of domestic industry. 
Articles wholly or partially manufactured for use as 

materials in the manufactures and mechanic arts 

Articles manufactured ready for consumption 

Articles of voluntary use, luxuries, etc 

Total dutiable 

Free and Dutiable Articles of food and animals 

Articles in a crude condition which enter into the various 

processes of domestic industry 
Articles wholly or partially manufactured for use as 

materials in the manufactures and mechanic arts 

Articles manufactured ready for consumption 

Articles of voluntary use. luxuries, etc 

Total imports of merchandise 
Per cent of free 
Duties collected from customs. 

EXPORTS. 
Domestic Products of Agriculture 

Manufactures 

Mining 

Forest 

Fisheries 

Miscellaneous 

Total domestic 

Foreign Free of duty 

Dutiable 

Total foreign 

Total exports 



Values. 
194,117,169 

247,721,434 

33,782.932 
12.975.482 
8,221,854 
396^18,871 



106,973.656 



57.335.062 
137.545.652 
124.712.744 
506,502.077 



301,090,82o 
327.656397 

91.117.994 
150.521.134 
132.934,598 



103^20.948 




851.465,622 
403.641.401 
39.216,112 
4S.lW.rt51 
7.705.065 
5.265.000 
1355481861 



U.%2.234 
12.275.306 
26.237.540 



Per ct. Values. 

23.72iS9.779.088 



8.51 
3.27 
2.07 



100.00426,181.966 



11.32 



40.905.32J5 
14.372,996 
13,725,642 



21.12128.540,67 
15.78107,752.033 



73.514,394 



27.16156.016,1(19 
24.62133,845,359 
100.00599.569.572 



22.261218,319,765 
36.27375.150.947 

10.0jjll4.320.720 
16.66170.389.105 
14.72147.571.001 
100.001025751538 



82.S&73J285.142 

29.77408,187.207 
2.90 38.844.759 
3.55 57.830.778 
7,755.232 



53.23 
46.77 
100.00 



5,328.512 



100.0013<*2231(i37 



14.920.301 
12,986.076 
27.906.3 



Per ct. 
21.07 



3.37 

3.22 

100.00 



21.44 
17.97 

12.24 

26.02 
22.33 
100.00 
21.28 
36.58 

11.15 
16.61 
14.38 
100.00 



62.72 

29.32 

279 

4.15 

.56 

.46 

100.00 



53.50 
46.50 
100.00 



GOLD AND SILVER. 



METAL. 



Gold Imports.... 

Exports 

Silver Imports... 

Exports 



1902. 



1903. 



$52.021.25! $44.982.027 

48,568,95d 47.090,595 

28,232.254 24.163.491 

49.7H2.390l 44.250.259 



TONNAGE. 



VESSELS. 



1902. 



1903. 



Entered Sailing- 
Steam 

Cleared Sailing... 
Steam... 



4.09S.2W 3.&S0.153 
26.558.237 27.234.358 
4,070.367 3.827.022 



32 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



IMPORTS AND EXPORTS OF DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN MERCHANDISE. 
BY CONTINENTS (1896-1903). 



Fiscal years ended June 30. 



COTXTRY. 



189ti. 1897. 1898. 1899. 1900. 1901. 1902. 1903. 



IMPORTS. 

fiurope 

Vorth America 

South America 

ksiaand Oceania. 

Africa and other 

countries 



418639121 $430192205 $305933691 $353884534 $440567314 



120.877,126 105,924.053 



91.376.8071112.150,911 
__ 92.091,694:86.587,893 
114,206.986 111.695,036 119,453.823 1134,089,091 



108.828.462 107.389.405 



130,035321 

93.666,774 



174,453,438 129,072.806 



W89fi20452 $475229366 $550056518 
145.158.104 151,102.714 188,927.569 
110.3tJ7.342 119.785.319 107.413,030 



11,1^2,979 



9.529.713 



Total 

EXPORTS. 

Surope 

Sorth America 
South America 
A.sia and Oceania. 
Africa and other 

countries 

Total 



779.724,674 764,730.412 616,049,654 



673.043.753 813.385.644 
116,567,496 124,958,461 



36.297,671 

42.827,258 



33,768,646 

61.927,678 



11.218.437 



8,953.461 



10,436.060 
697,148,489 849.941.184 823,172.165 903.327,071 



13.421.236 



12,499.619 



1025751538 



973.806.245 
139.627.841 157.931.707 

33,821,701 

66,710,813 



35.659,902 
78,235,176 



1008108221 ! 1029587728 

187.594.625 196.5*1.460 2US.S5S.804 215,640.051 
38.074.292 41.114,601 
98,216.089 95,362,503 



1040167763 



38.945,763 
108.305.082 



1136504fW5 



44.400.195 
84,783,113 



13,870.760 16,953.127 17,515.730 18.594,424 19,469,849 25,542.618 



33.466,995 38,433,131 



882.606.9;* 1050993556 1231482330 1227023302 1394483082 1487764991 



1381719401 1420138014 



rOTAL VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS INTO AND FROM THE UNITED STATES 
From Oct. 1, 1789, to June 30, 1903. 



1790 



1793. 
794. 
.795. 
17%. 
1797. 
1798. 
1799. 



1810.. 
1811.. 
1812. . 
1813. . 
1814. . 
1815. . 
1816. . 
1817.. 
1818.. 
1819.. 
1820.. 
1821.. 
1822.. 
1823.. 
1824. . 
1825. . 
1826. . 
1827.. 
1828. 
1829.. 
1830.. 
1831.. 
1832.. 

18X3 



MERCHANDISE. 



Imports. 



123.000.000 
29.200.000 
31.500.000 
31.100,000 
34,600,000 
69,756.268 
81.436,164 



91,252.768 
111.363.511 
76.333.333 
64,666.666 
85.000.000 
120.600.000 
129.410,001] 
138.500.000 
56,990,000 
59,400,000 
85,400.000 
53,400.000 
77.030.000 
22,005.000 
12.965,000 
113.041,27 
147.ia3.000 
99.250.000 
121.750.001 
87,125.001 
74.450.000 
54.520,834 
79,871.695 
72.481,371 
72.169.172 
90.189.310 
78,01)3.511 
71.332.938 
81.020.08J 
67.088.91f 
62,720,956 
95,885.1" 
95.121.762 
101 047.94:- 



Exports. 



Excess of 
imports 
\roni.) or 
exports 
(italics) 



$20.205.156 
19.012,041 
20,753,098 
26.109,572 
33,043,725 
47.989.872 
58.574.625 
51,294,710 
61,327,411 
78,665.522 
70,971,780 
93.020.513 
71,957.144 
55.800.033 
77.699.074 
95.566,021 
101,536,963 
108,343.150 
22.430,960 



66,757.970 
61,316,832 
38.527.236 
27,856.017 
6,927,441 
52,557.753 
81.920,052 
87,671.569 
93.281.133 
70.142.521 



54,596.321- 
61.350.101 
68.326.043 
68.972.105 
90.738.333 
72.890.789 
74,309.94 
64.021.210 
67,434.65 
71,670,735 
72,295.652 
81.520.603 
87.528,732 



12,794.844 

10,187,959 

10.746.902 

4.990.428 

1.556,275 

21.766.396 

22,861.539 

24,084.696 

7,224.289 

403.626 

20,280.988 

18.W2.998 

4.376.189 

8.866.633 

7,300.925 



27,873.037 
30.156,85C 
34.559.04C 

7.193.767 
18,642.030 

7,916.832 
38.502.764 

5,851.01 

6.037,559 
60,483,52 
65.182.948 
11.578.43: 



633 Specie included with 
merchandise prior 
to 1821. 



16.982.479 
4,758,331 
75,4#9 
18.521,594 
4,155,328 
3.197,067 
549.023 
5,202,722 
2.977.009 
16,998.87? 
345.736 
8,949.779 
23.589.527 
13.601.1591 
13.519.2111 



SPECIE. 



Imports, 

gold and 

silver. 



Exports. 

gold and 

silver. 



$8.064.890 
3.369.846 
5.097.896 
8,378.970 
6.150.765 



8,151.130 
7,489.741 
7.403,612 
8,155.964 
7.305,945 
5,907.504 
7.070.363 



$10.478.059 
10,810.180 
6.372.987 
7,014,552 
8.797.055 
4,704,5tx 
8.014.88C 
8,243,476 
4,924.020 
2,178. 
9.014.931 
5,656,34C 
2.611.701 



IDSE. AND SPECIE COMBINED 



Total 
imports. 



$23,000.000 
29.200.000 
31,500,000 
31.100,000 
34,600,000 
69,756.268 
81,436.164 
75.379.406 
68.551,700 
79,069.148 
91.252.768 
111,363.511 
76.333.333 
64.666.6fib 
85.000.000 
120,600.000 
129.410,000 
138.500.000 
56.990.000 
59.400.000 
85.400.000 
53.400.001 

22!0051)(X 
12.965.000 
113.041.274 
147,103.000 
99.250.000 
121.750.000 
87.125.000 
74.450.000 
62,585,724 
83,241,541 
77,579.267 
80,548.142 
96.340.075 
84.974.4 
79.484.068 
88.5* 19.824 
74.492.527 
70.876.92t 
103,191.124 
101,029.26* 
108.118.S11 



Total 
exports. 



$20.205.156 
19.012.041 
20.753,098 
26,109.572 
33,043.723 
47,989,872 
58,574,625 
51,294.710 
61.327,411 
78,665.o22 
70.971.780 
93.020.513 
71,957,144 
55.800.033 
77.699.074 
95.566.021 
101.536,963 
108.343.150 
22.430.960 
52.203.233 
66.757.970 
61.316.832 
38.527.236 
27,856.017 
6.927.441 
52,557.753 
81.920.052 
87.671.569 
93.281.133 
70.142.521 



65.074. 332 

72.160.281 

74.699.030 

75.986,657 

99.535.388 

77,595.352 

82.324.827 

72.264.686 

72.358.671 

73.849.5tte 

81.310,583 

87.176.94 

90.140.4:33 



Excess of 
imports 

roman) or 
exports 

(italics). 



$2.794,844 
10,187,959 
10,746.902 

4,990.428 

1,500.275 
21.766,396 
22,861.539 
24,084 

7224.289 

403,626 

20,280.988 

18,342.998 

4,376,189 



7,300,926 
25.ft53.979 
27.873.037 
30.156,850 
34.559.040 
7,196,767 
18.642,030 
7,916.832 
38,502.764 
5.851,017 
6,037,559 
60,483.521 
65.182.948 
11.578.431 
28.468.867 
16,982,479 
4,758.331 
2.488.658 
11.081.260 
2,880,237 
4,561,485 
3,195,313 
7,379,125 
2.840.759 
16.245.138 

2,972.588 
21.880,541 
13.852.323 

17.977.878 



TOTAL VALUE OP EXPORTS AND IMPOKTS. 33 


TOTAL, VALUE OF IMPORTS AND EXPORTS.-CONTINFJED. 


jt; 


MERCHANDISE. 


SPECIE. 


MDSE. AND SPECIE COMBINED 






Hxc'ss o/ 










Excess of 


^5 






imports 


Imports, 


Exports, 


Total 


Total 


imports 


P 


Imports. 


Exports. 


(rom.) or 
exports 


gold and 
silver. 


gold and 
silver. 


imports. 


exports. 


(roman) or 
exports 


* 






(italics). 










(italics). 


1834... 


$108.609.700 


1102.260.215 


16,349.485 


$17,911,632 


f2.076.758 


$126.521.332 


$104,336.973 


$22.184.359 


; 1835. . . . 


136.764.295 


115.215,802 


21,548.493 


13.131.447 


6.477.775 


149,895.742 


121.693.577 


28,202.165 


1836... . 


176.579.154 


124.338.704 


52.240.450 


13.400,881 


4.324.336 


189.980,035 


128,663,040 


61,316.995 


;1837... . 


130.472.8aS 


111.443,127 


19,029,676 


10.516.414 


5,976,249 


140.989,217 


117,419,376 


23,569.841 


1838... . 


95,970,288 


104.978,570 


9,008.282 


17,747,116 


3.508,046 


113,717.404 


108.486.616 


5,230.788 


1839... . 


156.490,956 


112,251.673 


44,245.285 


5,595,176 


8,776,743 


162.092.132 


121.028,416 


41,063.716 


1840... . 


98.258.706 


123,668,932 


25,410.226 


8,882,813 


8.417,014 


107.141.519 


132,085.946 


24,944.427 


1841... . 


122.95 r.544 


111.817.471 


11.140.073 


4.988,633 


10,034.332 


127,946.177 


121.851.803 


6,094.374 


1842... . 


90.075,071 


99,877.995 


.3,802.924 


4,087.016 


4.813,539 


100.162,087 


104.691.534 


4,529.447 


1843... . 


42.433,464 


82,825.689 


40.392.225 


22.320,335 


1,520,791 


64,753.799 


84.346.180 


19,592.681 


'1844... . 


102.604.606 


105,745.832 


3,U1,226 


5,830.429 


5.454,214 


108.4135,035 


111.200,046 


2,765.011 


1845. . . . 


113,184,322 


106.040,111 


7,144.211 


4,070.242 


8,606,495 


117,254.564 


114.646.60b 


2,607.958 


'1846... . 


117,914.065 


109.583,248 


8,330.817 


3,777,732 


3,905.268 


121.691.797 


113,488.51b 


8.203.281 


;1847... . 


122,424.349 


156,741,598 


34.31 7.249 


24.121.289 


1,907,024 


146,545,638 


158,648.622 


12,lt>'>.<^4 


1848... . 


148.638,644 


138.190.515 


10,448,129 


6.360.284 


15.841,616 


154.998.928 


154.032,131 


966.797 


1849,.. . 


141.206.199 


140,351.172 


855.027 


6,651.240 


5,404,648 


147,857.439 


145,755,820 


2,101,619 


1850... . 
1851... . 


173.509.526 
210,771.429 


144,375.726 
188,915.259 


29.133.800 
21.856.170 


4,628.792 
5.453,503 


7,522.994 
29.472.752 


178.138.318 
216.224,932 


151.898.720 
218.388.011 


26.239,598 
2,163.079 


1852... . 


207.440.398 


166.984.231 


40,456.167 


5,505,044 


42,674.135 


212,945.442 


209.658.3tib 


3,287,076 


1853... . 


263,777.265 


203,489,282 


60.287.983 


4,201,382 


27.486.875 


267,978,647 


230,976,157 


37.002,490 


'1854... . 


297.803.794 


237.043.764 


60.760.030 


6,758,587 


41.281.504 


304.562.381 


278,325.268 


26.237.113 


11855... . 


257.808.708 


218.909.503 


38.899.205 


3,659.812 


56,247,343 


261,4!8.520 


275.156.84b 


13,688.326 


1856... . 


310.432.310 


281.219.423 


29.212,887 


4,207,632 


45,745,485 


314,639,942 


326.9tv4.908 


12,324.966 


1857... . 


348.428,342 


293.823.7tiO 


54.604.582 


12.461.799 


69,136.922 


360,890.141 


362.960.fi82 


2,070,541 


1858... . 


263,338,654 


272.011.274 


8.672.620 


19.274,496 


52.633.147 


282,613,1.50 


324.644.421 


42,031.271 


1859... . 


331,333,341 


292.902.051 


38.431.290 


7.434.789 


63.887.411 


338,768.130 


356.789.462 


18.021.332 


I860... . 


353,616.119 


3!S3.576.tto7 


20.040.062 


8,550.135 


66.546.239 


362.166,254 


400.122.2% 


37.956.042 


1861... . 


289.310.542 


219.553.833 


69.756.709 


46.339,611 


29,791.080 


335,650,153 


249.344.913 


86,305,240^ 


1862... . 


189,356,677 


190.670,501 


1.313.284 


16.415.052 


36,887.640 


205.771,729 


227.558.141 


21,786.412 


1863... . 


24J3.335.815 


203,964.447 


39.371. 368 


9,584,105 


64,156,611 


252.919.920 


268.121,058 


15,201.138 


1864... . 


316.447,283 


158.837.988 


157.609,295 


13.115.612 


105.396,541 


329.562.895 


264.234.529 


65.328.:;* 16 


1865. . . . 


238,745.580 


166,02'.,303 


72.716.277 


9,810,072 


67.643.226 


248.555.652 


233.672.529 


14,883.123 


1866... . 


434.812,066 


348.859.522 


85,952.544 


10,700,092 


86.044.071 


445.512.158 


4134.903.593 


10,608.565 


,1867... . 


395.761,096 


294.506.141 


101.254.955 


22,070.475 


60.8f 58,372 


417,831.571 


355,374.513 


62,457,058 


;1868... . 


357.436.440 


281,952,899 


75.483.541 


14.188.368 


93,784,102 


371,624.808 


375.737.001 


4,112.193 


1869... . 


417.50tJ.379 


286.117.697 


131.388.682 


19,807,876 


57.138,380 


437.314,255 


343.256,077 


94.058.178 


1870... . 


435.958:408 


392.771,768 


43,186,fi40 


26.419,179 


58,155,666 


462,377,587 


450.927.4:34 


11,450,153 


1871... . 


520,223,684 


442,820.178 


77.403.506 


21.270,024 


98,441,988 


541.493.708 


541.262.166 


231.542 


1872... . 


626.595.077 


444,177,586 


182.417.491 


13,743.689 


79,877.534 


640.338,766 


524.055.120 


116,283.646 ' 


1873... . 


642,136.210 


522,479.922 


119.656.288 


21,480.937 


84,608.574 


663,617,147 


607.088.4% 


56,528.651 


1874... . 


567.406,342 


586,283.040 


18.876.698 


28.454,906 


66,630.405 


595.861.248 


652.913,445 


57,052.197 


1875... . 


533.005.436 


513,442,711 


19.562.725 


20.900.717 


92,132.142 


553,906.153 


605.574,853 


51,668.700 


1876... . 


460,741,190 


540,384.671 


79.643.481 


15.936.681 


56.506.302 


476.677.871 


596,890.973 


120,213,102 


1877... . 


451,323,126 


602.475,220 


151.152.094 


40,774,414 


56,162,237 


492.097.540 


658,637.457 


166,539,917 


1878... . 


437,051.532 


694,865,766 


257.814.234 


29.821,314 


33,740,125 


466.872.84b 


728.605.89: 


261.733M5 '< 


1879... . 


445.777,775 


710.439,441 


264.661.666 


20.296.000 


24.997.441 


466.073,775 


735,436,882 


269.363.107 


1880... . 


667,954.746 


835.638.658 


167.683.912 


93.034,310 


17,142.919 


760.989.056 


852,781,577 


91,792.521 


1881... . 


642,664,628 


902.377.346 


25^712.718 


110.575.497 


19,406,847 


753.240.125 


921,784.193 


168,544.068 


1882.... 


724.639,574 


750.542.257 


25.902.683 


42,472.390 


49,417.479 


767.111.964 


799.956,736 


32,847,772 


1883 


723.180.914 


823,839,402 


100.658.488 


28,489,391 


31.820,333 


751.670.305 


855,659.735 


103,989.430 


1884 


667.697.693 


740,613,609 


72.815,916 


37.426.262 


67,133,383 


705.123,955 


807.646.992 


102,523.037 


1885... . 


577,527.329 


742,189.755 


164.662.426 


43,242.323 


42.231.525 


620.769.652 


784,421.280 


163,651.628 


1886. . . . 


635,436,136 


679.524,830 


44.088.694 


38.593.656 


72,463.410 


674,029.792 


751,988,240 


77.958,448 


1887 


692.319,768 


716,183,211 


23.863.443 


60.170,792 


35.991.691 


752.490.560 


752,180.902 


309,658 


'1888 


723,957,114 


695.954,507 


28.002.607 


59.337.986 


46,414,183 


783,295.100 


742.368.690 


40,926,410 1 


1889 


745.131,652 


742,401.375 


2.730,277 


28.963.073 


96.641.533 


774.094,725 


839.042.908 


64,948,183 


1890 


789.310,409 


857,828,684 


68,518275 


33,976,326 


52.148,420 


823,286.735 


909.977,104 


86,690.369 


1891 


844.916,196 


884.480,810 


39,564,614 


36,259,447 


108,953,642 


881,175.643 


993.434.452 


112,258.809 


1892 
1893 


827.402.462 
866.400.922 


1,030.278,148 
847,665.194 


202.875.686 
18.735.728 


69.654.540 
44.367,633 


83,005,886 
149.418.163 


897.057.002 
910,768.555 


1,113.284.034 

997,083.357 


216.227.032 
86,314.802 


1894 


654.994,622 


892.140.572 


237.145.950 


85,735,671 


127.429.326 


740,730.293 


1.019.569.898 


278.839,605 


1895 


731.969.965 


807,538.165 


75.568.200 


56.595.939 


113.763,767 


788.565.904 


921.301.932 


132,736.028 


1836 


779,724.674 


882.t>06.938 


102.882.264 


62.302.251 


172.951.617 


842.026.925 


1.055.558.555 


213,531.630 


1897 


764,730.412 


1,050,993.556 


286,263.144 


115,548,007 


102.308.218 


880.278.419 


1.153.301.774 


273,023.355 


1898 


616,049.654 


1,231.482.330 


615.432.676 


151.319.455 


70.511.630 


767.369.109 


1.301.993.960 


534.624.851 


1899 


697,148,489 


1.227,023.302 


529.874,813 


119,629.659 


93.841.141 


816,778,148 


1.320,864.443 


504,086,295 


1900 


849.941.184 


1,394.483.082 


544.541,898 


79,829.486 


104.979,034 


929.770.670 


1,499.462.1 It 


569,691.446 


1901 


823,172,165 


1,487,764.991 


664.592.826 


102,437,788 


117,470.357 


925,609.873 


l,605,2a : i,348 


679,625,475 


1902 


903,320.948 


I.;M. 719,401 


478.398,453 


80.253.508 


98.301, MO 


983.574,456 


1,480.020,741 


496,436,285 


1903 . . . . 


1,025.751, 538 


1,420.138.014 394,3X6.476 


69. 145.518 


91.340.854 


1.094.897.056 


1,511,478,868 


416,581.812 


*Fiscal year ended Sept. 30 prior to 1843; since that date ended June 30. 


NOTE Merchandise and specie are combined in the columns at right of table for the 


purpose of showing the total inward and outward movement of values by years. 



34 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


INTERNAL REVENUE. 

Comparative statement showing the receipts from the several objects of internal taxation 
in the United States during the fiscal years ended June 30, 1902 and 1903. 


OBJECTS OF TAXATION. 


1902. 


1903. 


Increase. 


Decrease. 


SPIRITS. 
Spirits distilled from apples, peaches, grapes, 
pears, pineapples, oranges, apricots, berries, 
prunes, flgs and cherries . 
Spirits distilled from materials other than 
apples, peaches, grapes, pears, pineapples, 
oranges, apricots, berries, prunes, flgs and 


$1,543,524.72 

113,741,691.18 
288.771.84 
5,043,097.00 
496,482.88 
1,110.01 
3,040.00 
3,233.40 
17,162.10 


$1,660,579.34 

124,195,938.74 
298,221.44 
5,220.tiot>.82 
540,535.70 
1.042.75 
2,721.00 
1,84020 
25,936.40 


$123,054.62 

10,454,347.56 
9,449.60 
177,559.82 
44,052.82 






Rectifiers (special tax) 





Retail liquor dealers (special tax) 






Manufacturers of stills (special tax) 
Stills and worms, manufactured (special tax). 
Stamps for distilled spirits intended for export 
Case stamps for distilled spirits bottled in bond 
Total 


f67.26 
319.00 
1,393.20 




"'8,774.36 


121,138,013.13 


131.953,472.39 


10,815,459.21 




TOBACCO. 

Cigars weighing more than 3 pounds per thou- 
sand 


18,311,142.25 
410,903.48 
2,655,974.88 

31,164.67 

l,69tU'.".Ur. 
28,612.644.15 
50.641.59 
10,810.08 
12,425.56 
144.826.94 


20,359,171.60 
345,869.93 
3,009.02006 

29,041.06 
1,130.4.55.00 
18,640,059.20 


2,048,029.35 
353,045.18 


' ' 


Cigars weighing not more than 3 pounds per 


65,033.55 

2,123.61 
565,974.02 
9,972,584.95 


Cigarettes weighing not more than 3 pounds 
per thousand 


Cigarettes weighing more than 3 pounds per 
thousand 


Snuff. 




Tobacco, chewing and smoking 












Manufacturers of tobacco* 
















Miscellaneous collections relating to tobacco. . 


962.57 
51,937,925.1 


1,193.39 
43,514.810.24 




218,473.35 
8 423 114 % 


FERMENTED LIQUORS. 

Ale, beer, lager beer, porter and other similar 
fermented liquors 


71,166.711.65 

lt!7.826.3<; 
241,456.87 
404,993.94 

7,913.57 


46,652.577.14 
163.933.48 
270.452.18 
458,647.31 

2,245.97 




24,514,134.51 

3,892.88 


Brewers (special tax) 


Retail dealers in malt liquors (special tax) 
Wholesale dealers in malt liquors (special tax) 
Miscellaneous collections relating to fer- 
mented liquors 


28,995.31 
53,653.37 


5.667.60 


OLEOMARGARINE. 

Oleomargarine, domestic, artificially colored 
in imitation of butter 


12,462,532.72 


272,044.48 

171,227.48 

3,286.86 
19,900.00 

73,638.25 
107,159.36 
30,538.16 

58.988.72 




2,190,488.24 


Oleomargarine, free from coloration that 
causes it to look like butter of any shade of 
yellow 


171,227.48 

2,204.,35 
400.00 

107,159.36 


Oleomargarine imported from foreign coun- 


1,082.51 
19,500.00 

377,732.23 








Retail dealers in oleomargarine artificially col- 
ored in imitation of butter (special tax) 
Retail dealers in oleomargarine free from ar- 


304,093.98 

53,106.84 


Wholesale dealers in oleomargarine artificially 
colored in imitation of butter (special tax).. . 
Wholesale dealers in oleomargarine free from 
artificial coloration (special tax) 


83,645.00 


58,988.72 


Total 


2.944,492.46 


736,783.31 




2.20r,709.15 


FILLED CHEESE. 

Pilled cheese, domestic an d imported 




5,711.93 
733.33 


5.711.93 
733.33 




Manufacturers of filled cheese (special tax)*.. . 
Retail dealers in filled cheese (special tax) .... 
Wholesale dealers in filled cheese (special tax) 
Total 




'"24.66 


24.00 






24.00 


6,445.26 


6,421.26 




MIXED FLOUR. 

Per barrel of 196 Ibs or more than 98 Ibs 
Half barrel of 98 Ibs or more than 49 Ibs 


12.46 
1,244.86 


21.06 

1,088.81 


8.62 


"'156.05 



TERRITORIAL GROWTH OF THE UNITED STATES. 



INTERNAL REVENUE. CONTINUED. 



OBJECTS OF TAXATION. 



1902. 



1903. 



Increase. Decrease. 



Quarter barrel of 49 Ibs or more than 24J Ibs.. . 

Eighth barrel of 24 ^ Ibs or less 

Manufacturers, packers or repackers of mixed 

flour (special tax) 

Total 

ADULTERATED BUTTER AND PROCESS OH 
RENOVATED BUTTER. 

Adulterated butter manufactured or sold, etc. . 

Process or renovated butter manufactured or 
sold, etc 

Manufacturers of process or renovated butter 
(special tax) 

Manufacturers of adulterated butter (special 
tax) 

Retail dealers in adulterated butter (special 
tax) 

Wholesale dealers in adulterated butter (spe- 
cial tax) 

Total 

BANKS, BANKERS, ETC. 

Bank circulation 

Notes of persons, state banks, towns, cities, 

etc., paid out 

Total 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

Playing cards 

Penalties 

Collections not otherwise herein provided for. 



$145.02 
310.53 



500.00 



151.61 
205.40 



428.56 



$93.41 
105.07 

71.44 



1,795.50 



500.0G 



124.60 

147,929.56 

3,48.81 



124.60 
147,929.56 



36.00 



36.00 



151,558.97 



151,058.97 



227.50 



227.50 



899.50 



899.50 



22T.5D 



899.50 



672.00 



364,677.72 

20S,2U!.U5 



422.580.32 

148,379.07 

16.255.801.93 



57,902.60 



Total... 



23,855,692.73 



6,826,761.32 



17,027,004.03 



17.028,931.41 



Aggregate receipts 



&50.740.382.57 



41,127,607.68 



*Special taxes repealed July 1, 1902. 

tOleomargarine; no restrictions as to color in the law in force prior to July 1, 1902. 
jSpecial taxes, legacies, schedules A and B, excise tax, etc., repealed July 1 1902 
^[Includes 15,356,774.90 from legacies. 

RECEIPTS BY STATES AND TERRITORIES DURING THE FISCAL YEAR 



State or territory. Collections. 

Alabama $323.135.62 

Arkansas 109,322.32 

Cal. and Nev 3,069.990.31 

Col. and Wyo 568.713.37 

Conn, and R. I. . . . 1,865,550.10 

Florida 719,400.39 

Georgia 425,591.16 

Hawaii 40,090.52 

Illinois 50.562.455.25 

Indiana 28,183,610,08 

Iowa 835.487.90 

Kas., I. T. and O.T. 311,403.23 

Kentucky 21,115.62t;.21 

La. and Miss 2,890,648.17 

"Including Delaware, 



State or territory. 

Maryland* 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Missouri 

Montana, Idaho 

and Utah 

Nebraska 

N. H.. Me. and Vt. 

New Jersey 

N. Mex. and Ariz. 

New York 

North Carolina... 
N. and S. Dakota. 



Collections. 

$5,612,791.16 
3,567.075.54 
4,044.317.94 
1,465.570.62 
8,948,547.13 

436.378.93 
2,313,931.26 
591.025.13 
5,998,058.98 
8.971.41 
26,749,C4S.18 
. 4,243,3W.07 
. 127.450.42 



State or territory. Collections 

Ohio $20,979,333.19' 

Oregon 392,288.77 

Pennsylvania 18,890.389.88 

South Carolina. . . . 616,800.33 

Tennessee 1.661.300.15 

Texas 667.670.33 

Virginia 3.433,249.51 

West Virginia 1.114.230.78 

Wisconsin 7,332,052.01 

Washington and 
Alaska 419,970.33 

Total 230,740,382.57 



District of Columbia and two counties of Virginia. 



TERRITORIAL GROWTH OF THE* UNITED STATES. 



ACQUISITION. 



Original territory.. . . 

Louisiana 

Florida 

Texas 

Bought of Texas 

Mexican purchase . . 
Gadsden purchase 

(from Mexico) 

Alaska 



Area in 
sq. miles. 



827,844 
1,182,752 

59.268 
371.063 

96,707 



45,535 

590,884 



Price 
paid. 



$27.267,621 



Annexed 

16.000.000 
15,000,000 

10,000,000 
7,000,000 



ACQUISITION. 



Hawaii 

Porto Rico 

Philippine islands 

Guam 

Isle of Pines 

Wake island 

Tutuilagro'p.Samoa 
Cagayan de Jolo. . . ) 
Sibutu $ 



~ ~ 

t-H *"" 



.4rea in 



6.449 
3.600; 



70 



Price 
paid. 



Annexed 

$20,000,000 

Annexed 
Annexed 

100,000 



36 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



MONEY AND FINANCE. 

PRODUCT OF GOLD AND- SILVER IN THE UNITED STATES (1792-1901). 
[The estimate for 1792-1873 is by R. \V. Raymond, commissioner, and since by the director of 

the mint.] 



PERIOD. 



April 2. 1792- 
July 31. 1834 

July 31. 1834- 
Dec. 81, 1844 

1845-1 SoU.... 

1851-1880.... 

1861-1870.... 

1871-1880. . . . 

1881-1890.... 



1892 



Gold. 



$14,000,000 
7.500.000 

I03.ai6.76y 

551.000.000 

4V4.250.000 

395.300.000 

326.620.000 

33.175.000 

33.000.000 



Stiver. I Total. 



Insignia- 
cant. 

$250,000 

300.000 

1.100,000 

100.750.000 

360,300.000 

535.056.000 

75.417,000 

82.101.000 



$14,000,000 

7.750.00o! 
103.336.769 
552.100.000 
575.000.000 
755.600,000, 
861.676.000! 
10S.592.OiiO 
115,101.000) 



PERIOD. 



1893 

1894 

1895 

1*96 .... 
1897..., 



1SW.. 
1900. . 
1901.. 



Total. 



Gold. 



Silver. 



$35.955.000 
39.500.000 
46,610.000 
53,088.000 
57.303,000 
64.463.IXJO 
71.053.000 
79.171,000 
78.667.000 



2.463.752.000 1,801.719.000 4.205.471 .000 



877,576,000 

64.UOO.OOO 
72.051,000 
76.069,000 
69.637.00i 
70.384.000 
70.806.000 
74.533.000 
71.3^8.000 



Total. 



$113,531,000 
103,500,000 
118,661,000 

129,157.0011 
127,000.000 
134.847.00(1 
141.859,000 
153.704.000 
150.055.000 



STOCK OF GOLD AND SILVER IN THE UNITED STATES. 



FISCAL YEAR ENDED 
JUNE 30. 



POPULA- 
TION. 



TOTAL COIN AND BULLION. 



Gold. 



Silver. 



PER CAPITA. 



Gold. 



Silver. 



1873 

1880.... 



1891.. 

1892.., 



1894.. 



1896 

1897 

1898 

1S99 

1900 

1901 

1902 




$135.000,000 
351.841.206 
695,563.029 
646,582.852 
664.275.335 
597.697.685 
627.293.201 
636.229.825 
599,597.964 
696,270.542 
861,514.780 
962.865,505 
1,034.439,264 
1.124.652,818 
1.192.395.607 



$6, 149,305 
148.522,678 
463,211.919 
522.277.740 
570.313.&44 
615.861.484 
624.347.757 
625,854,949 
628,728,071 
634.509.781 
637.672,743 
639,286,743 
647,371,030 
661,206,403 
670,540,105 



$3.23 
7.01 
11.10 
10.10 
10.15 
8.93 
9.18 
9.10 
8.40 
9.55 
11.56 
12.63 
13.45 
14.47 
15.07 



10.15 
2.96 
7.39 
8.16 
8.70 
9.20 
9.13 
8.97 
8.81 
8.70 
8.56 
8.38 
8.42 
8.50 
8.48 



$3.38 
9.97 
18.49 
18.26 
18.85 
18.13 
18. HI 
18.07 
17.21 
18.25 
20.12 
21.01 
21.87 
22.97 
23.55 



GOLD AND SILVER COINAGE OF THE UNITED STATES. 
By calendar years. 



YEAR. 



1873 

1874 

1875 

1876 

1877 

1878 

1879. . . . 



Gold. 



$57.022,748 
35.254.630 
32,951.940 
46.579,453 
43,999.864 
49,786.052 
39.080.080 
62.308.279 
96.850,890 



Silver. I 



$4.024.748 
6.851.777 
15,347.893 
24.503.308 
28.393.045 
28.518.850 
27.569,776 
27,411.694 
27.940.164 
27.973.132 



YEAR. 



. 
ISSo. 



1890. 
1891. 



Gold. 



129,241.990 129246,968 



23.991.756 
27,773.012 
28.945.542 



21.413,931 
20.467.182 
29.222.005 
34.787.223 



Stiver. [ 



28.534,866 
28,962.176 
32.086.709 
35,191.081 
33,025.606 
35.496.683 
39,202,908 
27.518,857 
12.641.078 



YEAR. 



1893.. 
1894.. 



1S9?. 
1MK 
1S9S>; 
[900. 
1901. 
Total 



Gold. 



$66,997,020 

79.546.160 
59.616.358 
47,053.060 
76.028.485 
77.985,757 

111.344.220 
99.272.942 

101,735.188 



1.510.496.643 701.949.008 



Silver. 



18,802.797 

9.200.351 
5.698.010 
23,089.899 
18.487.207 
23.034.033 
26.061,520 
36.295.321 
30.838.461 



PAPER CURRENCY OUTSTANDING JUNE 30, 1903. 
[Prepared by United States treasurer's office.] 



DENOMINATION. 



U.S. 

notes.. 



Treasury 
notes of 

1890. 



National 
bank 
notes. 



Gold cer- 
tificates. 



Silver cer- 
tificates. 



Total. 



One dollar 

Two dollars 

Five dollars 

Ten dollars 

Twenty dollars 

Fifty dollars 

One hundred dollars. . . 
Five hundred dollars.. 
One thousand dollars.. 
Five thousand dollars. 
Ten thousand dollars.. 
Fractional parts 

Total 

Unknown, destroyed. . . 

Net . . . 



$1.948.854 

1.505.664 

18.214.025 

233,501.631 

40.682,442 

6.686,300 

12.572.900 

7.701.500 

24,848.000 

10,000 

10,000 



$770.784 

612.756 

5.035.310 

8.324.790 

3,310.810 

57.250 

610.300 

""52i',666 



$345.959 

165.960 

61.798,905 

172.263,760 

127.446.540 

16,676.550 

34,815.200 

96,500 

25,000 



36.276 



$156.671.764 
33.0o6.005 
43.465.100 
13.095.500 
47.396.500 
28,425,000 
87.000,UOO 



$79.300.183 

44,590.188! 

264.025,068 

46.952,781 

23,547.150 

4,301.110 

1,793,020 

57,500 

139.000 



547,681,016 

1,000.000 



19,243,0001 
19.243.000 " 



413,670,650 



409.109,869 



413.670.650 



409.109.869 



$82,365.780 
46.874.268 
349.073.308 
461.042.962 
351,658.706 
60,777,215 
93.256.520 
20.951.000 
72.929,500 
28.4135 000 
87,010.000 
36,276 



464.706,000 1,654.410 535 
1.000.000 



464,706.000 1.653.410.535 



MONEY AND FINANCE. 



37 



CIRCULATION OF MONEY OF ALL KINDS IN THE UNITED STATES. 



JUNE 30. 



Amount. 



Per 
capita. 



Money 
per 



JUNE 30. 



Amount. 



Per 
capita. 



Money 
per 

capita* 



1873.. 
1874.. 
1875.. 
1876 '. 
1877., 
1878. , 
1879. . 



$751,881,809 
776,083,031 
754,101,947 
727,609,388 
722,314.883 
729,132,634 



1883. 

1884., 
1886!. 
1886.. 

1887.. 



973,382,228 
1,114,238,119 
1,174.-**), 419 
1,230,305,696 
1.243.925,969 
1,292.568,615 
1,252.700,525 
1,317,539.143 
1,372,170,870 



$18.04 
18.13 
17.16 
16.12 
15.58 
15.32 
16.75 
19.41 
21.71 
22.37 
22.91 
22.65 
23.02 
21.82 
22.45 
22.88 



$18.58 
18.83 
18.16 
17.52 
16.46 
16.62 
21.52 
24.04 
27.41 
28.20 
30.61 
31.06 
32.37 
31.51 
32.39 
34.40 



1891.. 
1892.. 
1893., 
1894.. 



$1,380.361,649 
1,429.251,270 
1,497,44U,707 
1,601, 34?, 187 
1,596,701,245 
1,664,061,232 
1,606,179,556 
I,5u6.ti31,026 
1,646.028/246 



1900.. 
1901.. 
1902.. 
1903.. 



1,843,435,749 
1,932,484,239 
2,062,425,496 
2,177,266.280 
2,246,529,412 
2,376.323,210 



$22.52 
22.82 
23.41 
24.44 
23.87 
24.33 
23.02 
21.10 
22.57 
24.74 
25.38 
26.50 
28.00 
28.40 



$33.86 
34.24 
34.31 
36.21 
34.75 
32.88 
31.68 
32.86 
32.46 
32.77 
33.54 
30.08 
31.94 
32.34 
33.24 



"Includes money in the treasury. 

COINS OF THE UNITED STATES (1792-1902). 

Authority for coining and changes in weight and fineness, total amount coined, legal-tender 

quality. 



GOLD COINS. 

Double Eagles Authorized to be coined, act 
of March 3. 1849; weight. 516 grains; fineness, 
.900. Total amount coined to June 3U, 1902, 
$1,628.668,640. Full legal tender. 

Eagles Authorized to be coined, act of 
April 2, 1792: weight. 270 grains ; fineness, .916%; 
weight changed, act of June 28. 1834. to 258 
grains; fineness changed, act of June 28, 1834, 
to .899225; fineness changed, actof Jan. 18, 1837, 
to .900. Total amount coined to June 30, 1902. 
$365,098.470. Full legal tender. 

Half-Eagles Authorized to be coined, act of 
April"2. 1792: weight, 135 grains; fineness, .916%; 
weight changed, act of June 28, 1834, to 129 
grains; fineness changed, actof June 28, 1834, 
to .899225; fineness changed, act of Jan. 18, 
1837, to .900. Total amount coined to June 30, 
1902. $283.820,325. Full legal tender. 

Quarter-Eagles Authorized to be coined, act 
Of April 2, 1792; weight. 67.5 grains; fineness, 
.916%; weight changed, act of June 28, 1834, to 
64.5 grains; fineness changed, act of June 28, 
1834, to .899225; fineness changed, act of Jan. 
18, 1837. to .900. Total amount coined to June 
30, 1902. $29.428.252.50. Full legal tender. 

Three-Dollar Piece Authorized to be coined, 
actof Feb. 21, 1853; weight. 77.4 grains; tine- 
ness. .900; coinage discontinued, act of Sept. 
26. 1890. . Total amount coined, $1,619,376. Full 
legal tender. 

One Dollar Authorized to be coined, act 
March 3, 1849; weight. 25.8 grains; fineness, .900; 
coinage discontinued. act of Sept, 26. 1890. Total 
amount coined, $19,499.337. Full legal tender. 

SILVER COINS. 

Dollar Authorized to be coined, act of 
April 2, 1792; weight. 416 grains; fineness, .8924; 
weight changed, act of Jan. 18, 1837. to 412}^ 
grains; fineness changed, act of Jan. 18. 1837, 
to .900; coinage discontinued, act of Feb. 12, 
1873. Total amount coined to Feb. 12, 1873. 
$8.031,238. Coinage reauthorized, act of Feb. 28, 
1878. Coinage discontinued after July 1, 1891, 
except for certain purposes, act July 14, 1890. 
Amount coined to June 30. 1902.$5r>0.229.103. Full 
legal tender except when otherwise provided 
in the contract. 

Trade Dollar Authorized to be coined, act 
Of Feb. 12, 1873; weight, 420 grains; fineness. 
.9()0; legal tender limited to $o. act of June 22. 
1874 (rev. stat. ); coinage limited to export de- 
mand and legal-tender quality repealed, joint 
resolution, July 22. 1876; coinage discontinued. 
act Feb.19.1887. Total amount coined, j<35.9i>5.924. 

Lafayette Souvenir Dollar Authorized by act 



of March 3, 1899; weight, 412^ grains; fineness 
.900; total amount coined, $50.000. 

Half -Dollar Authorized to be coined, actof 
April'2, 1792; weight, 208 grains; fineness, .8924; 
weight changed, act of Jan. 18, 1837, to 206^ 
grains; fineness changed, act of Jan. 18, 1837, 
to .900; weight changed, act of Feb. 21, 1853, to 
192 grains; weight changed, act of Feb. 12, 1873, 
to 12^ grams, or 192.9 grains. Total amount 
coined to June 30, 1902, $154,045,493. Legal 
tender, $10. 

Columbian Half -Dollar Authorized to be 
coined, act of Aug. 5. 1892; weight, 192.9 grains; 
fineness, .900. Total amount coined, $2,501,- 
1)52.50. Legal tender. $10. 

Quarter-Dolldr Authorized to be coined, act 
of April 2, 1792; weight, 104 grains; fineness, 
.8924; weight changed, act of Jan. 18. 1837. to 
103)4 grains; fineness changed, act of Jan. 18, 
1837. to .900; weight changed, act of Feb. 21, 
1853. to 96 grains; weight changed, act of Feb. 
12, 1873, to 6% grams, or 96.45 grains. Total 
amount coined to June 30, 1902, $71,270,994.75. 
Legal tender. $10. 

Columbian Quarter-Dollar Authorized to be 
coined.act of March 3. 1893; weight. 96.45 grains; 
fineness, .900. Total amount coined. $10,005.75. 
Legal tender. $10. 

Twenty-Cent Piece Authorized to be coined. 
act of March 3. 1875; weight, 5 grams, or 77.16 
grains; fineness. .900; coinage prohibited, act 
of May 2. 1878. Total amount coined. $271.000. 

Dime Authorized to be coined, act of April 
2, 1792; weight. 41.6 grains; fineness. .8924; 
weight changed, act of Jan. 18, 1837, to 41J4 
grains; fineness changed, act of Jan. 18. 1837, 
to .900; weight changed, act of Feb. 21, 1853, to 
38.4 grains: weight changed, act of Feb. 12, 
1873. to 2^ grams, or 38.58 grains. Total amount 
coined to June 30. 1902, $41,047,121.90. Legal 
tender. $10. 

Half-Dime Authorized to be coined, actof 
April2. 1792; weight. 20.8 grains; fineness. .8924; 
weight changed, act of Jan. 18, 1837, to 20^ 
grains; fineness changed, act of Jan. 18. 1857. 
to .900; weight changed, act of Feb. 21, 1853, to 
19.2 grains; coinage discontinued, act of Feb. 
12. 1873. Total amount coined, $4.880,219.40. 

Three-Cent Piece Authorized to be coined, 
actof March 3. 1851; weight. 12^ grains; fine- 
ness. .750; weight changed, act of March 3, 
1853. to 11.52 grains; fineness changed, act of 
March 3. 1853. to .900; coinage discontinued, act 
of Feb.12,1873. Total amount coined.$l,282.087.20. 

MINOR COINS. 

Five-Cent (nick-l) Authorized to be coined, 
act of May 16, 1866; weight, 77.16 grains, com 



38 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



posed of 75 per cent copper and 25 per cent 
nickel. Total amount coined to June 30, 1902, 
$20,876,352.70. Legal tender for $1, but reduced 
to 25 cents by act of Feb. 12, 1873. 

Three-Cent (nickel) Authorized to be coined, 
act of March 3, 1865; weight, 30 grains, com- 
posed of 75 per cent copper and 25 per cent 
nickel. Total amount coined, $941.349.48. Le- 
gal tender for 60 cents, but reduced to 25 cents 
by act Feb. 12. 1873. Coinage discontinued, act 
of Sept. 2(5, 1890. 

Two-Cent (bronze) Authorized to be coined, 
act of April 22, 1864; weight, 96 grains, com- 
posed of 95 per cent copper and 5 per cent tin 
and zinc. Coinage discontinued, act of Feb. 
12, 1873. Total amount coined, $912,020. 

Cent (copper) Authorized to be coined, act 
Of April 2, 1792; weight, 264 grains; weight 
changed, act of Jan. 14, 1793. to 208 grains; 
weight changed by proclamation of the presi- 
dent. Jan. 26. 1796. in conformity with act of 
March 3, 1795, to 168 grains: coinage discon- 
tinued, act of Feb. 21, 1857. Total amount 
coined, $1,562,887.44. 



Cent (nickel) Authorized to be coined, act of 
Feb. 21. 1857; weight, 72 grains, composed of 88 
per cent copper and 12 per cent nickel. Coin- 
age discontinued, act of April 22, 1864. Total 
amount coined, $2,007,720. 

Cent (bronze) Coinage authorized, act of 
April 22. 1864; weight, 48 grains, composed of 
95 per cent copper and 5 per cent tin and zinc. 
Total amount coined to June 30, 1902, $11,603,- 
018.24. Legal tender, 25 cents. 

Half-Cent (copper) Authorized to be coined, 
act of April 2, 1792; weight. 132 grains; weight 
changed, act of Jan. 14. 1793, to 104 grains; 
weight changed by proclamation of the presi- 
dent. Jan. 26. 1796. in conformity with act of 
March 3, 1795, to 84 grains; coinage discon 
tinued, act of Feb. 
coined, $39.926.11. 

TOTAL COINAGE. 
Gold . . . .$2,328.134.400.50 



Silver... 
Minor. . . 

Total.. "$3.227,630,701.97 



881.553,027.50 

37.943,273.97 



Total amount 

COINAGE 1902. 

Gold $61,980.572.50 

Silver 30.116.369.45 

Minor 

Total . . . 



PRODUCT OF GOLD AND SILVER IN THE UNITED STATES. 

Approximate distribution, by producing states and territories, for the calendar year 1902 
as estimated by the director of the mint. 



STATE OB TERRITORY. 



GOLD. 



Fine 
ounces. 



Value. 



SILVER. 



Fine 
ounces. 



Coining 
value. 



Commer- 
cial value. 



Total 
lvalue 
(silver at 
commer- 
cial value) 



Alabama 

Alaska 

Arizona 

California 

Colorado 

Georgia ^ . 

Idaho 

Maryland 

Michigan 

Montana 

Nevada 

New Mexico 

North Carolina 

Oregon 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Virginia 

Washington 

Wyoming 

Total 



119 

403,730 

198.933 

812,319 

1,377,175 

4,730 

7] ,352 

121 



$2,500 
8,345.800 
4.112.300 
$793,100 

28,468.TOO 

97..800 

1,475.000 

2,500 



100 

92.000 

3,043,100 

900.800 

15,676.000 

400 

5.854,800 



$129 

118,950 

3.934.513 

1.164.671 

20.267.960 

517 

7,569,842 



$53 

48,760 

1.612.843 

477.424 



211.571 

140.059 



4,390 

87,881 

5,896 

336,952 



4,873,600 

2,895.300 
531,100 
90,700 

1,816.700 
112,900 

6,965,400 



173.886 

148 

13.166 

1.879 



3,594.500 

3.100 

272,200 

38.800 



110.800 

13,243.800 

3,746 200 

457,200 

20.900 

93,300 

300 

340,200 

12.300 

446,200 

10,831.700 

5,900 

619,000 

5,000 



143,257 

17,123.297 

4,843.572 

591,127 

27.022 

120,630 

388 

439.855 

15,903 

576.905 

14,004.622 

7.628 

800.323 

6,464 



212 
3,103,044 



58.724 

7.019,214 

1,985,486 

242.316 

11.077 

49,449 

159 

180.306 

6.519 

236.486 

5,740.801 

3,127 

328.070 

2.650 



$2,553 

8.394.560 

5.725.143 

17,269,524 

36,776,970 

98,012 

4,578.044 

2,500 

58.724 

11,392.814 

4.880,786 

773,416 

101, 

I,86ti.l49 

122.059 

7,145.706 

6,519 

236,486 

9,335.301 

6.227 

600.270 

41.45C 



3,870.000 



80,000.000 



55,500,000 



71,757,575 



29,415,000 



109,415,000 



COINAGE OF GOLD AND SILVER OF THE WORLD (1891-1901). 



CALENDAR YEAR. 



1896 . . . 
1887... 

1898 ... 

1899 ... 
1900... 
1901 . . . 



GOLD. 



Fine 
ounces. 



5.782,463 
8,343.387 
11,243.342 



11.178,855 
9.476.620 
21.174,850 
19.131,244 
22.548,101 
17.170.053 
12,001,537 



Value. 



$119.534.122 
172,473.124 
2S2.420.517 
227.921.032 
231.087.488 
19.-..SW.517 
437. 7 19.345 
395.477,905 
46(5. 110.614 
354.JW.4a7 
248.0P3.787 



SILVER. 



fine 
ounces. 



106.962.049 
120.28~'.!>47 
106.697.783 
87.472.523 
94.057.903 
118.642,018 
129.775.082 
115.461,020 
128.566,167 
136.907.f43 
107,439,666 



Coining 
value. 



$138.294,367 
155,517,347 
137,952,690 
113,095.788 
121.610.219 
153.395.740 
167.760.297 



166.226.964 
177.011,902 
138,911,891 



- MONEY AND FINANCE. 



MONEY OF THE WORLD (JAN. 1, 1902). 

Monetary systems and approximate stocks of money in the principal countries of the world 
as reported by the treasury department's bureau of mint. 



PER CAPITA. 



COUNTRY. 



Gold. 
Gold. 
Gold. 
Gold. 
Gold . 
Hold. 



Gold. 

Gold. 

Sold. 

Gold. 

Gold. 

Gold. 

Gold . 

Gold 

Gold . 

Gold . 

Gold. 

Gold . 

Gold . 

Gold . 

Gold. 

Gold . 

Gold . 

Gold. 

Gold* 

Gold. 

Gold. 

Gold. 

Gold . 

Silver 

Silver 



1 to 15. 50 
1 to 16.50 
1 to 15. 50 



3.30 
5. 
1. 

7.76 
2.73 
13.72 
3.05 



29.29 
7. 

21.63 
4.76 
6.25 
2.72 



8.6 
9.5 
714.6 
1.4 
76.9 
79.1 
17.5 
27.5 



1 to 15.50 1 
1 to 15.50 1 
1 to 15.50 1 



I to 16. 501 to 16. 50 




United States... 

Austria-Hung'y 

Belgium 

Australasia 

Canada 

Cape Colony.... 

Great Britain. . 

India 

S. A. Republic. 

Bulgaria 

Cuba 

Denmark 

Egypt 

Finland 

France., 

Germany 

Greece 

Haiti 

Italy 

Japan 

Netherlands 

Norway 

Portugal 

Roumania 

Russia , 

Servia 

So. Am. states... 

Spain , 

Sweden 

Switzerland 

Turkey 

3n. Am. states 

tiina 

exico 

Siam .... 



tStraitsSettl'm't Silver 



Total 



9.31 



*BxceptBolivia,Colombia and Ecuador. tIncludesAden.Perim,Ceylon,HongkongandLabuan. 
PRICE OF BAR SILVER IN LONDON. 

Highest, lowest and average price of bar silver per ounce British standard (.925) since 1867 
and the equivalent in United States gold coin of an ounce 1,000 fine, taken at the average price. 



81.328 
1. 

1.325 
1. 
1. 

1.322 
1.2 
1.278 
1.24G 
1.156 
1. 

1.152 
1.123 
1.145 
1.138 
1.136 
1.110 
1.113 




40 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 




WORLD'S PRODUCTION OF GOLD AND 
Calendar year. 


SILVER IN 1901. 




COUNTRY. 


Gold. 


Silver* 


COUNTRY. 


Gold. 


Silver* 


United State 


s 


$78.666,700 
10,284.800 
24.128,500 
9.089.500 
76,880.200 
22.850,1)00 
2,136.700 
59,800 


$71,387.800 
74.545,900 
6,778,400 

' l'6,87i',706" 
203,000 
2,581.600 
7,139,100 
214,500 
69,800 
971.400 
4,118,400 
4,900 
1,492,100 
554.900 
10.100 
584.1500 
286,600 
58,400 
13.258.000 


Chile 




$1.067.200 
2.801.300 
110,000 
2.775.400 
321,200 
1,771,600 
405,600 
2,000000 


?11.966.200 
2,432,800 
10,000 




Colombia 








Ecuador 




Africa 




Brazil, 




Australasia 
Russia 




Venezuela 






Guiana (Bri 
Guiana (Du 
Guiana (Fre 
Peru 


tish)... 
ch) 
nch) 




Austria-Hui 
Germany. . . 


igary 








1,329,200 
31,700 
640,300 
1.201.GOO 
9,091,500 
4.500.001) 
9,395.900 
861.700 
435,000 


7,241,500 
1.000 
1.137.400 
2,236.300 


Sweden 




41,700 
35,200 
8.600 
1,300 


Uruguay 
Central Am< 


>rica 


Italy 










Portugal... 
Greece 




China, 
Korea 
India (British) 
East Indies (British)... 
East Indies (Dutch) 

Total 






24.500 
1,300 






io4',3o6 


France 




Great Britai 
Argentina. . 
Bolivia 


n 


276,200 
30,000 
119,600 


263,374,700 


226,260,700 









*Coining value. 
WORLD'S PRODUCTION OP GOLD AND SILVER SINCE 1492. 
[From report of the director of the mint, 1902.] 


CALENDAR 
YEARS. 


Gold. 


Silver 
(coining 
value). 





It 
& 


CALENDAR 
YEARS. 


Gold. 


Silver 
(.coining 
value) . 


h 


J! 

47.1 
21.7 
21.9 
27.1 
30.0 
41.5 
47.0 
54.5 
55.5 
55.6 
51.1 
46.8 
43.9 
41.4 
46.6 
46.2 

~53~ 


1492-1520. .. 
1521-1544. .. 
1545-1560. .. 
15611580. .. 
15811600. . 
1601-1620. .. 
1621-1640. .. 
1641-1660. .. 
1661-1680. .. 
1681-1700. . 
17011720. . 
1721-1740. . 
17411760. . 
17611780. . 
1781-1800. .. 
1801-1810. .. 
1811-1820. .. 
1821-1830. .. 
18311840. .. 


$107,931,000 
114,205.000 
90.492.000 
90,917.000 
98,095,000 
113,248.000 
110,324,000 
116,571,000 
123.048.000 
143.088.0UO 
170,403,000 
253.611,000 
327.161,000 
275,211.000 
236,464,000 
118.152,000 
76.063.000 
94.479,000 
134,841,000 


$54,703,000 
98.9861000 
207.240.000 
248.990.000 
348.254.000 
351,579,000 
327,221.000 
304,525,000 
280.166,000 
284.240.000 
295.629.000 
358.480,000 
443.282,000 
543.tB8.000 
730,810.000 
371,677,000 
224.786,000 
191,444.000 
247,930.000 


66.4 
55.9 
30.4 
26.7 
22.0 
24.4 
25.2 

Si 

33.5 
36.6 
41.4 
42.5 
33.7 
24.4 
24.1 
25.3 
33.0 
35.2 


33.6 
44.1 
69.6 
73.3 
78.0 
75.6 
74.8 
72.3 
69.5 
66.5 
63.4 
58.6 
57.5 
66.3 
75.6 
75.9 
74.7 
67.0 
64.8 


18411850.. . 
1851-1855.. . 
18561860.. . 
1861-1865. . 
1866-1870.. . 
1871-1875.. . 
1876-1880.. . 
18811885.. . 
18861890.. . 
18911895.. 
1896 
1897 
1898 
1899 


$363,928,000 
662,566,000 
670,415,000 
614,944,000 
648,071,000 
577,883.000 
572.931.000 
495,582.000 
564,474,000 
814,736.000 
202,251.600 
236,073,700 
286.586.500 
30(5,584,900 
255,634.500 
263,374,700 

10329^05000 


$324,400.000 
184.169.000 
188,092.000 
228,861.000 
278,313,000 
409.332,000 
509,25(5.000 
594,773,000 
704,074.000 
1.018.708.000 
203,069.200 
207.413.000 
223,971,500 
216,209.100 
223,408,200 
226,260,70C 

11,640,921, IOC 


52.9 
78.3 
78.1 
72.9 
70.0 
t.5 
,C 
45.5 
44.5 
44,4 
49.9 
53.2 
56.1 
58.6 
53.4 
53.8 

" 47 


1900 


1901 


Total 


COINAGE OF GOLD AND SILVER BY NATIONS IN 1901. 
[Reported by the director of the mint.] 


COUNTRY. 


Gold. 


Silver. 


COUNTRY. 


Gold. 


Sifver. 


United Statx 


ig 


$101,735,187 


$30,838,461 
94,059 
3,604,414 
579.000 
2,450,218 


Italy 
Japan 






$516,755 
53*5,025 

298.81X) 
21,821,900 






$988.264 


Austria-Hungary 
Belgium 


3,817,524 


Mexico 




625,798 
295,116 








Monaco 
Morocco . 




Australasia 
British Gun 




48,228.115 


117,084 
l,376,s:,0 
12.060 
402.000 
160,800 
4,698,055 
74,240 
611,506 
13,681.185 
85,687 
(t) 
72,603 
115,800 
8,335 
225,997 




4.867 
420.000 
4,187,662 
10,000 
30.248,656 
*16,658,916 
600.000 
366 700 


Netherlands 
Curacao . 




465,807 








Great Brita 


n 


12,672.366 


Dutch East 
Norway 
Persia 


Indies . ... 






Hongkong. 
India 








3,323 
395,427 




Peru 




Straits Settlements 
Crete 










Russia 




131,527,256 








367,867 
2,393.200 
3,876,984 










14,451,668 






Ot) 
1.932,915 

1,9:30,000 

296.537 


In do-China 
Tunis 










579,232 
28,149,252 


Switzerland 
Turkey 
Venezuela . 




Germany. 
Colony of G 
Africa. . . . 
Guatemala 




7,148,713 

243,492 
3,000 




erman East 






Total 


248.093,787 


138,911,891 


*Fiscal year 1899-1900. fRuble calculated at fO 5145. jNo returns. 



MONEY AND FINANCE. 



41 



BULLION VALUE OF 371^ GRAINS OF PURE SILVER AT THE ANNUAL 



AVERAGE PRICE OF SILVER. 



Year. Value. 



Year. Value. 
1855 $1.0391873. 

1870! 1.0271876 

1871 1.0251877.. 

1872 1.0221878.. 



1.0451874 

1.0351875... 



Year. Value. 
$1 0031879 $0.869 



Ymr. Value.] Year. Value. 

1885 $0.823 1891 $0.764 

1892 674 

.7571893 603 

.7261894 4901900. 

... .50511*01. 
. .522 



Fear. Value. 

1897 $0.467 

.456 
.465 
.479 
.460 



COMMERCIAL RATIO OF SILVER TO GOLD. 



Year. Ratio. 



14.941520 



1830. 
1850. 
1851. 



1700 ......... 14.81 

1720... ...... 15.04 

1740 ......... 14.94 

1750 ......... 14.551852 

1760 ......... 14.14 " 

1T70 ........ 14.62 

1780 ......... 14.72 l&oo 



1810 



15.77 



Year. 



1853. . , 
1854.. 



Ratio.] Year. 
...15.62 1859... 
...15.82 1860... 
...15.70 1861... 
.15.46 1862. 



..15.591863., 
...15.331864. 



.15. Si 



15.38 



1856 15.3818(57... 



15.6Sia=>7 15.2^ 



15.381869 



1865. 



1866 



1868 



Ratio. Year. 

15.19 1870... 

15.29 1871... 

15.501872... 

15.351873... 

15.371874... 

15.371875... 

15.441876... 

15.431877... 

15.571878... 

15.59 1879... 

15.60 1880... 



Ratio. 
...15.57 
...15.57 



Year. Ratio. 

15.571881 18.16 

18.19 

18.64 
18.57 
19.41 



.15.63 1883 
15.92 1884 



16.59 1886 20.78 1897 



.16.17 

.16 

.17 
...17 
...17.94 
...18.40 



21.13 1898. 
17.221888 21. S 



18.05 1891 



.22.101900. 

1901. 
1902. 



Year. 



1895. 
1896. 



Ratio. 
....23.72 
....26.49 
....32. 56, 
....31.60! 
. ..30.66| 
. ..34.28 
. ..35.03 
. ..34.36 
. ..33.38 
....34.68 



NATIONAL BANK STATISTICS. 
[From report of the comptroller of the currency.] 



DATE, 1ST 

OP 
EACH MONTH 



Authorized 
capital 
stock. 



Gold. 



Silver. 



U.S. bonds 
on deposit 
to secure 
circula- 
tion. 



Circula- 
tion 

secured by 
U. S. 
bonds. 



Lawful 
money on 
deposit to 
redeem cir- 
culation. 



Total 
national 
bank notes 
outstand- 
ing. 



1902. 

January.,.. 
February.. 

March 

April 

May 

June 

July 

AuRust.. 
September. 
October.... 
November... 
December... 
1903. 

January 

February .... 

March 

April 

May 

June 

July ,... 



4.337 

4,370 

4.385 

4.42-.' 

4:466 

4.510 

4.546 

4,5 

4.616 

4.651 

4,678 

4J08 

4,756 

4.784 



$670,164,195 
671.910.1951336,851,267 
673.279,195 
672,759.195 
675,279,195 
675,721,695 



$69,230,895 



$323.280,280 $325.009,306 



321,866,068 



708,701,695 
707,774,695 
711,167,695 
713.435.695 
719,300,695 

723.416,695 

726,271,695 



323,118.813 
298,862,666 
321,646,167 



76,894,493 
"81,645455 



67,374,054 
'69,635.494 



338.703,779 



78.868,367 



4,869 
4,914 
1,953 

5.005 



743,106.695 
748.531.695 
754,776,695 



314,876,344 
305,590,458 



74,205,177 
' 83,025,919 



324.031.280 
322,575.030 
319,526.330 
317.484.130 
316,196,180 
317,163.530 
318.588,480 
322,941.680 
326.052.770 
338.352,670 
343,018.020 

344,252.120 

342.903,520 
342,164,670 
342,160,770 
352.696,120 
367,827.920 
375,347,270 



322,278.391 
320,074,924 
317,460,382 
315,113,392 
313,609,837 
314.238,811 
316,614,767 
319,407,586 
323.843.144 
335,783.189 
341,100,411 

342,127,844 

340,587,939 



$35,280,420 $360,289.726 



338,349,814 
347.564.355 
363,586.987 
372,295,408 



37,166,224 
38.359.943 
40,016.025 
41,874,007 
43,137.347 
42.4:33.280 
42,369,417 
41.875,105 
43.150.454 
44,693.145 
43,754,103 

42,801,940 

43,385,607 
44,138.484 
44.169,444 
43,587,373 
42.a56,218 
41,375,242 



359,444,615 
358,434,867 
357,476.407 
356,987,399 
356,747,184 
356.672,091 
358.984,184 
361,282,691 



380,476,334 
384.854,514 

384,929.784 
383.973,546 
382.798,845 
382,519,258 
391,151.728 
406,443,205 
413,670,650 



SURPLUS, DIVIDENDS AND EARNINGS. 



Six MONTHS 
ENDING 



Capital. 



Surplus. 



Total 
dividends. 



Net 
earnings. 



RATIOS. 



Divi- 
dends 

to 
capital 



Divi- 
dends 
to capi- 
tal and 
surpVs. 



Earn- 
ings to 
capital 

a n d 
surpl's 



1897, Mar. 1 
Sept. 1 

1898, Mar. 1 
Sept.l 

1899, Mar. 1 
Sept. 1 

1900, Mar. 
Sept. 

1901, Mar. 
Sept. 

1902, Mar. 
Sept. 



3,648 
3,692 

;>..>; 

3.576 
3.568 
3.555 
3,587 
3,632 
3.909 
4.030 
4. ,-:;-' 
4.306 



$644.673.395 
631.674.395 
626.097.395 
605.540.055 
615.319,195 
60^.036.595 
604.75(5.505 
613.053.695 
631,979.492 
639.043.0SO 
680.173,259 
667,354,275 



8250.030,356 

248.059, 638 
248,16(5,708 
240.397,051 
248.251,704 
247.610.237 
2511475,898 
250.914.856 
265.470.791 
271,432.304 
299,814.593 
305.211,716 



$21,422.515 
20,971.725 
22,843.928 
21.448.043 
23.487.081 
23.204.421 
24.228.93fi 
23,7156.088 
26.414.956 
26.201.822 

:*,5i7.ao 

28,6^1.874 



$23.938,732 
JSO.334,581 
25.233,450 
24.799.522 
24.515.918 
29.S50.772 
40.151,038 
47.142.447 
40.548.375 
41.305.420 
57.797,74 
48,783,730 



3.32 
3.32 
3.65 
3.54 
3.82 
3.85 
4.01 
3.88 
4.18 
4.10 
5.80 
4.30 



2.39 

2.as 

2.61 
2.54 
2.72 
2.73 
2.82 
2.75 
2.94 
2.88 
4.03 



2.31 



2.84 
3.51 
4.68 
5.46 
4.52 
4.54 
5.90 
5.02 



42 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


SAVINGS BANKS OF THE UNITED STATES. 

Aggregate savings deposits of savings banks, with the number of depositors, by states and 
territories, 1900-1901 and 1901-1902. 


STATES, TERRITORIES 

AND DIVISIONS. 


1900-1901. 


1901-1902. 


Number of 
depositors. 


Amount of 
deposits. 


Average 
due each 

depositor. 


V umber of 

depositor*. 


Amount of 
deposits. 


Average 
due each 

depositor 


Eastern Maine 


196.503 
131.482 
123.151 
'L536.009 

HB$M 

410.342 


$69.533.058 
57,128.616 
40.209.059 
540,403.687 
72.330,141 
183,781,942 


$353.71 

424.80 
326.50 
352.05 
520.80 
447.88 


193,005 
147.928 
12&K9 
1,593.640 
138,966 
425.588 


$72.082.694 
60.. 49.862 
41.9S7.497 
560.705.752 
71.900.541 
193,248,909 


$373.47 
407.29 
326. 68 
351.84 
519.64 
454.07 


New Hampshire 
Vermont 




Connecticut 


Total 


2.538.451 


963,386.503 


379.52 


2,627,056 


1.000.175.255 


380.72 


Middle New York 


2.129.790 
211.278 
358.418 
23.307 
175.740 
5.635 


987.621.80!) 
63,361.489 
113,748.461 
5.511.495 
61,250,694 
831.832 


463.72 
299.90 
319. 14 
236.47 
348.53 
147.62 


2,229.661 
227.180 
396,877 
4.187 
186408 
10.845 


1,051.689.186 
69.836.709 
120,441.275 
1,265.586 
64.367.767 
1.309.555 


471.68 
307.60 
303.47 
302.26 
345.52 
120.75 


New Jersey 
Pennsylvania 




District of Columbia. . . . 
Total 


2,902.168 


1.232.325.780 


424.62 


3.054.993 


1,308.940,078 


428.46 


Southern West Virginia 
North Carolina 


4.728 
12.171 
23.164 


563.264 
2,096.453 
5,785,792 


119.13 
172.25 

249.78 


4,687 
12,201 


680.372 
2,451.838 


155.16 
200.95 


South Carolina. ~ 








Louisiana 














Texas 


19.823 


3.519,333 


177.54 








Total 


59,886 


11,964.842 


199.79 


16.888 


3.132.210 


185.47 




90.803 
22.354 
1253.916 
3.385 
t56.179 
203,227 


43,672.493 
6.561.464 
$80,251.287 
634.236 
13,961.616 
73.578,268 


480.96 
293.53 
309.95 
187.87 
248.52 
362.05 


103.405 
24.362 
*277.879 
3,908 
63,293 
t238.421 


48.180.436 
7.288.506 
tlOO.072.804 
719.009 
15.526.701 
85.703.614 


465.94 
299.17 
360.13 
183.98 
245.31 
359.46 




Illinois 






Iowa 


Total 


634.864 


218.659.364 


344.42 


711.268 


257,491.072 


362.02! 


Pacific States and Terri- 
tories California 
(total Pacific states).. 

Total United States. 


1223,354 


170.758.091 


764.52 


255.467 


180,438,675 


703.55 


6,358,723 


2,597,094,580 


408.30 


6.666,672 


2.750.177,290 


412.53 


*Partially estimated. fEstiraated. JSavings deposits in state institutions having saving 8 
departments abstract included with state banks. 

SAVINGS-BANK STATISTICS FROM 1820. 


YEAR. . 


Number 
of 
banks. 


Number of 
depositors. 


Deposits. 


Average 
due each 
depositor. 


A re rage 
per 
capita 
in the 
U. S. 


1820 


10 
36 
61 
108 
278 
517 
629 
921 
1.011 
1.059 
1,030 
1.024 
1,017 
988 
980 
979 
987 
1,002 
1.007 
1,036 


8.635 
38.085 
78,701 
251.354 
693.870 
1.630.846 
2,335.582 
4.258.893 
4.533.217 
4,781.605 
4,830.599 
4.777,687 
4,875.519 
5.065.494 
5,201.132 
5.385.746 
5,687,818 
6,107.083 
6,358.723 
6,666,672 


51.138.576 
6.973,304 
14.051.520 
43.431.130 
149.277.504 
549.874.358 
819,106.973 
1.524,844.506 
1.623.079.749 
1.712.769.026 
1,785.150.957 
1,747.961.280 
1.810.597.023 
1,907.1.56.277 
1.939.376.035 
2,065,631,298 
2,230.366.954 
2.449.547,885 
2.597.094.580 
2.750,177.290 


$131.86 
183.09 
178.54 
172.78 
215.13 
337.17 
350.71 
358.03 
358.04 
358.20 
369.55 
365.86 
371.36 
376.50 
372.88 
383.54 
392.13 
401.10 
408.30 
412.53 


w :g 

.82 
1.87 

A5 
gi 

25.2! 
26.11 
26. K 

1.1 
26.56 
27.67 
29.24 
31.78 

u 


1K30 


1840 


1350 


1860 


1870 


1880 


1890 


1891 


1892 . 


18y3 . 


1894 


1845 


1896 


1897 


1898 
1899 
1900 . 


1901 




1902 



MONEY AND FINANCE. 



43 



FINANCIAL, AND COMMERCIAL STATISTICS OF THE UNITED STATES (1874-1902). 
Upon a per capita basis. 



YEAR. 



GOVERNMENT FINANCE (Per Capita). 



Popula- 
tion, 
June 1. 




II 

If 



GOLD AND SlLVEK. 




1874. 

18,5. 
1876. , 
1877., 
1878. . 
1879.. 
IrtSU.. 
1881.. 
is.82. . 
1883.. 
1884., 
188.5.. 
1886.. 
1887.. 
18S8. . 
1S89.. 
ISUJ. . 
1891.. 
1892.. 



. 

ISH5. 



1901. 
1HU2. 



14.52 
13.45 

r.'.27 



$2.31 

2.20 

2.11 

2.01 

1.99 

1.71 

1.59 

1.46 

1.09 

.96 

.87 

.84 

.79 

.71 

.65 

.53 

.4' 

.37 

.35 

.35 



.o 
6.55 
6.52 
6.07 
5.41 
5.60 
6.65 
7.01 
7.64 
7.37 
6.27 
5.77 
5. 

6. 
6.32 
6.01 
6.44 
6.14 
5.45 
5.81 



4.65 
4.85 
5.56 
6.94 
7.43 
7.56 
7.11 



17.07 
6.25 
5.87 
5.21 
4.98 
5.46 
5.34 
5.07 



4.39 
4.64 
4.15 
4.47 
4.33 



5.73 
5.30 
5.78 
5.43 
5.16 
5.01 
5.11 
6.07 
8.14 



$0.71 



1.03 
1.13 
1.04 
1.17 
1.13 
1.27 
1.33 
1.45 
1.71 
1.95 
2.07 
2.40 
2.09 
2.05 
1.98 
1.97 
2.02 
1.88 
1.85 
1.79 
1.75 



.947 



16.17 
16.59 
17.88 
17.22 
17.94 
18.40 
18.05 
18.10 
18.19 
18.64 
18.57 
19.41 
20.78 
21.13 
21.99 
22.10 
19.76 
20.92 
23.72 
26.49 
32.56 
31.60 
30.59 



34.36 



34.68 
39.15 



11.278 

.246 
.156 
.201 
!l58 
.128 
.145 



1.046 



.635 
.654 

>,71 
.604 
.590 



.528 



$.989 
.960 
.900 



.875 
.878 
.857 
.859 



.757 
.726 



.76416 
.67401 
.60351 
.49097 
.50587 
.52257 
.46745 
.45640 
.46525 
.47958 
.46093 
.40835 



YEAR. 



COINAGE 

PER 

CAPITA 

OP- 



PRODUC- 
TION PER 
CAPITA 
OF 



INTERN'L 

REVENUE. 




1874 

1875 

187 

1877 

1878 

1879 

1880 



IS'.U. 
IS'.C). 



1886 , 

1887... 



1900. 
IfiOl., 

1902. 



$0.82 

liffi 

.95 
1 

l".24 
I. 

1.2b 
.54 
.4 

.4 
.51 
.4 
.52 
.35 
.3r 



.86 
1.18 

.86 

.67 
I.Ob 
1.07 
1.51 
1.30 
1.28 

.60 



.5t 
M 

.K 

.52 
.fi 

.51 
.5-1 
.8 

M 

.7t 

.81 

.<sa 

.8! 

. 

1.01 

1.02 



$0.87 



.81 

.95 

.84 
.78 
.84 
.89 
.87 
M 
.90 
.8! 
.9 
. 
l.U" 
!l8 
.18 
.-.' 
.1 
.'.; 
,(i: 

.08 
.97 

.97 

! 

.<<; 

.9t 
.\ 



12.85 

3.52 

2.59 

2.56 

2.32 

2.32 

2.47 

2.64 

2.79 

2.69 

2.21 

2.00 

2.03 

2.02 

2.07 

2.13 

2.28 

2.28 

2.36 

2.43 

2.1 

2.08 

2.oy 

2.05 
2.34 

H.;> 
8.87 
3.91 
3.44 



4.40$13.2f 



10.29 
9.49 
9.21 
8.99 

12.51 



3.89 
3.38 
2.99 

2.9e 

2i9G 

3.20 

3.06 13!05 
3.47 12.16 
3.42 
3.06 
3.22 

2.88 
2.66 



10.32 
10.89 
1165 



2.57 
2.55 
2.2 
2.62 

2.4H 
9 17 

l'.59 
1.51 
1.43 
1.60 



12.35 
13.38 
12.50 
12. 
9.41 
10.61 
10.81 
11.02 
8.05 
9.22 
10.88 
10.58 
11. 



$3.7, 
3.. 5 



2.67 
2.73 
3.64 
3.78 
4.12 
3.92 
3.47 
3.17 
3.30 
3.65 
3.60 
3.60 
3.62 



3.00 
1.92 
2.17 

2.23 
2.41 
1.99 



38.58 

40.62 

44.74 

42.89 

-I'.'. 7:. 

44.87 

4:;.4- 

48.20 

42.66 

42.45 

41.61 

45.* 

45.55 



45.11: 
44.41 

-(;.> 

48.71 

!'.'..> 
50 06 
41.75 
40.18 
42.41 
40.20 
50.21 
4H.46 
-I'.t.s:; 



26.88 

-N>j( 

30.19 

26.68 

27.13 

X.91 

29 

29 

30.11 

:.".< 

28.44 

30.59 

30.13 

31.02 

29.99 

29.50 

29.12 

25.2o 

21.26 

23! 

20.25 

20.21 

20.67 

21.su 

24.77 

29.48 

27.62 

28.91 

27.95 



.49 
.47 
.53 
.96 
.47 
3.96 
3.23 
3.22 
2.95 
3.07 
3.44 
3.58 
3.33 
3.16 
3.27 
3.14 
2.98 
3.17 
3.74 
3.32 
5.15 
4.43 
4.52 
4.01 
4.78 



3.23 
3.13 



44 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL STATISTICS OF THE U. S.-CONTINUED. 



YEAR. 



EXPORTS. 



Domestic 
merchandise. 



f i 

II! 



*ft 



Per cent of domestic 
products exported. 



CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA. 



1874., 
1875., 
1876., 
18. 
1878., 
1879. 
1880., 
1881. 
1882. 
1883., 
1884., 
1885. 

i8s;., 

1887., 



1890.. 

1891.. 
1892.. 



.., 
1896.. 

1*97.. 

1-.-., 
I.S.W.. 
1900., 
1901., 
1902. 



113.31 
11.36 
11.64 
12.72 
14.30 
14.29 

i?>5 

13.97 
14.98 
13.20 
12.94 
11.60 
11.98 
11.40 
11.92 
13.50 
13.66 
15.61 
12.98 
12.85 
11.51 
12.29 
14.42 
16.59 
16.20 
17.96 
18.81 
17.16 



Perct. 
79.37 
76.95 
71.67 
72.63 
77.C 
78.1 
83.3 
82. t_ 
75.31 
77.00 
73.98 
E5.98 
72.82 
74.40 
73.23 
72.87 
74.51 
73.69 
78.60 
74.05 
72.28 
69.73 
66.03 
66.23 
70.54 



P. ct. 

70.03 



32.54 



70.69 23.60 
25.34 
19.73 
25.29 
67.74 35.16 
65.73 40.18 



67.23 

67. -It i 



87.38 
81.82 
29.33 



i.53 



6.49 
6.33 
6.43 
5.46 



P. ct. 
73. OB 



,. 

71.47 
61.1 
43.22 



68.96 25.86 
61.68 



65.83 2H.23 
69.33 21.31 
68.15 22.31 



67.36 



26.60 
36.88 



65.99 37.20 



69.83 

65.00 
70.59 
67.82 40.91 



41.4' 
31.41 
27.07 



_5.19 65.12 32.97 
60.98: 65.18; 34.00 
64.62! 62.87 41.36 
62.83 64.47! 31.37 



2.99 
2.95 
3.35 
2.48 
1.74 
3.57 
4.85 
2.15 
3.72 
2.89 
4.11 
2.36 
4.70 
7.83 
11.14 



62.35 

67.24 

76.07 

60.13 

57. 

63.30 

53.09 

43.80 

37.35 

45.10 

50^76 
47.44 
44.78 
47.17 
45.73 
45.131 
8.621 43.83) 
1.841 42.63 



Lbs. 
13.6C 
11.90 
14. 

u. as 

13.71 
15.90 
18.94 
19.64 
16.15 
20.8 



. 

19.55 
16.84 
19.59 
17.22 
18.50 
22. 
24. 
17.84 
16.45 
22. 
18.67 
18 

25.76 
27.87 
22.57 
25.94 
25.65 



501 
5.72 
5.58 
5.35 



5.64 



5.11 

5.62 



26.13 
26.37 



31.64 
21.92 
29.24 
27.40 
31.04 
3-2.60 

2?: 

23.81 



5.34 
6.09 32.09 
4.59 22.84 
5.94! 30.48 
4.89 23.83 
3.44! 22.9fi 



4.59 
4.85 
3.96 

4.29 
6.09 



17.18 
29.18 
29. 4U 
23.19 
23.51 



4.74, 24.44 

3.951 24.77 
6.5d 18.92 



Lbs 
41.5 
43.6 
35.2 
38.9| 
34.3 
40. 
42.9 
44.2 



51.8 



51.8 

52.8 

66.3 

63.8 

64.4 

66. 

63.4 

62.5 

64.8 

81.5 

62.6 



72.8 



Lbs. 



7.33 
6.94 
624 
7.42 

8.78 

1:1 

8.91 
9.26 
9.60 
9.36 
8.53 
6.81 
9.16 
7.83 
8.00 
9.6 
8.31 
8.30 
9.33 
8.11 
10.12 
11.68 
10.79 
9.81 
10.60 
13.37 



Lbs 
.27 

.44 



s, 

1.50 
1.33 

1:1 



1.38 
1.40 
1.46 
1.48 
1.26 
l. 
1.21 
1.26 
1.32 
1.40 



1.52 
1.34 
1.13 
1.01 
1.02 
1.12 
1.17 
1.27 
1.33 



Gal. 
7.00 



6.83 



7 

8.26 

8.65 

10. as 

10.27 
10.74 
10.62 
11.20 
11.23 
12.80 
12.72 
13.67 
15.31 
15.17 
16.20 
15.32 
15.13 
15.38 
14.94 
15.96 
1528 
16.01 
1W.20 
17.49 



Gal. 

.48 
.45 
.45 
.47 
.47 



YEAR. 



. . 
1SS5 . 



tags . . . 

IS'. 14 ... 
1895 . . . 



. 
1898. 



CONSUMPTION 
OP RAW WOOL. 



7.39 



17.5 
22.1 
18.3 
16.3 
16.9 
14.2 
34.9 
17.3 
19.0 
18.7 
20.6 
18.0 
28.9 
27.4 
28.9 
31.8 
27.0 
30.8 
33.1 
35.7 
14.2 
40.0 
45.9 
57.8 
32.8 
19.2 
34.4 
24.9 
34.1 



POSTOFPICE 

DEPARTMENT. 



Per cent. 
27.2 
26.2 
27.7 
26.9 



17.4 
16.5 
15.8 
16.0 
17.2 
15.3 
15.5 
14.3 
14.0 
14.3 
12.9 
12.5 
12.3 
12.2 
13.3 
11.7 
12.0 
11.0 
9.3 
8.9 
9.3 



.66 
.72 



.79 
.76 
.77 



.97 
1.03 
1.09 
1.14 
1.11 
1.12 
1.17 
1.15 
1.22 
1.28 
1.34 
1.44 
1.54 



fO.75 

.79 

'.72 
.69 
.73 

.77 

S. 



.91 
.94 
1.01 
1.11 
1.14 
1.19 
1.27 
1.27 
1.31 
1.34 
1.34 
1.39 
1.41 
1.46 
1.49 
1.53 



PUBLIC 
SCHOOLS. 



Millions 

13.1 
13.4 
13.7 
14.0 
14.4 
14.7 
15.1 
15.4 
15.7 
16.0 
16.4 
16.7 
17.1 
17.4 
17.8 
18.2 
18.5 
18.8 
19.2 
19.6 
20.1 
20.4 
20.9 
21.1 
21.6 
21.9 
21.4 
21.9 




16.11 



5.67 
5.49 
5.18 
5.17 
5.43 
5.67 
6.05 
6.29 
6.61 
6.63 
6.65 
6.98 
7.28 
7.60 
7.85 
8.12 
8.31 
8.49 
8.60 
8.84 
8.89 
9.01 
9.13 
10.04 



. 
1111 



19.70 
14.33 
11.67 
11.12 
14.02 
35.45 
57.71 
66.92 
50.44 
42.58 
31.96 
26.61 
38.41 
42.26 
34.06 
34.16 
45.86 
50.17 
39.82 
24.51 
21.50 
26.01 
17.25 

22^73 
22.58 
36.31 

47 



'No data. 



AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS. 45 


AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS. 
WHEAT CROP OF THE WORLD (1S98-1902). 


COUNTRY. 


1898. 


1899. 


1900. 


1901. 


1902. 


United States 


Bushels. 

675,149.000 


Bushels. 
547,304.000 


Bushels. 
522,230,000 


Bushels. 

748,460,000 


Bushel*. 
670.063,000 




33,042.000 
26.112,000 
9.000.000 
68 154 000 


22.158.000 

28.802,000 
9,000.000 

riQ ( TJI IttV 


31,265.000 
13.436.000 
7.000,000 
51 701 000 


22,118.000 
52,094.000 
16,000.000 

Qfi 919 IHl 


26.904.000 
54,750.000 
17.000.IKIO 


Manitoba 


Rest of Canada 


Mexico 


8,789.000 9,287,000 
75'' O 1 -) 9 UOO <a:1 Iy;1 mft 


12.429.000j 9.000.000 


12,403,000 


Chile 


14,000.000 
53,389.000 
6.000,000 


13,000.000 
104.977.000 
7.1fc4.000 


12.000 000| 9.000.000 
101.655.000 72.181.0;*) 
6,891.000 3,664.000 


12,000.000 
56.380,000 
7.604.000 




Uruguay 


Total South America 


73,389.000 


125.141.000 


120.546.0001 84.845,000 


75.984.000 


75,330.000 
1.856,000 


67.594.003 
1.786.000 


64,299.000 
1,682.000 


54.111.000 
1,470.000 


58,463.000 
1,602.000 


Ireland 




"" 300.000 
4.542.000 
2.991.000 
5.406.000 
13.211.000 
36H.49S.OOO 
123.865.000 
7.800.000 
137,345.000 
4.500,000 
132.557,000 
188,822.000 
58.457.000 
33.993.000 
11.000.000 
220.000 
25.000.000 
4.000.000 
40S.347.000 


260.000 
4,430.000 
3.654.000 
5.09(5,000 
11.319.000 
364.414,000 
100.759,000 
6.400,000 
137,912.000 
4,200.000 
141.369.000 
202.508.000 
26.064.000 
21.630.000 
10,000.000 
200.000 
15.000.000 
2,500.000 
393.876.000 


300.000 
5,249.000 
3.604.000 
4,670.000 
13.788,000 
326.083,000 
92,424.000 
8.000,000 
133.741,000 
4,200.000 
141.139.000 
194.935.000 
56,663.000 
27.000,000 
8,135.000 
220.000 
20,000.000 
3.000.000 
396.013.000 


300.000 
4,310.000 
942.000 
4.300.000 

13,872,000 
310.938.000 
117,765.000 
10,000.000 
156.755.000 
4,400.000 
91.817.000 
180,665.000 
72,386.000 
24,000,000 
9,000,000 
200.000 
22.000.000 
3,200.000 
401.782.000 


60.065.000 

260.000 
4.649,000 
3.000.000 
5.400,000 
14.228,000 
352.716,000 
123.440,000 
10,400,000 
131.102.000 
4.200.UOO 
143.315.000 
234.554,000 
76.220,000 
32.000,000 
8,000,000 
200.000 
25,000.000 

567.014,'000 












Spain 
Portugal 
Italy 






Austria-Hungary 
Roumania 
Bulgaria 
Servia 
Montenegro 


Turkey in Europe 




Russia in Europe 


Total Europe 
Russia in Asia. 


1.603.040.000 


1,520,971,000 


1,495, 145.000 


1,484,213.000 1 ,798,963,000 


91.101.000 

14,000.000 
2.400.000 
17,600.000 
259.6VO.OOO 
21.407.00U 


93.411.000 
35.200.000 
2,000.000 
16,000.000 
236.679.00U 
20,772.000 


62,131.000 
30.000.000 
2.400.000 
16,000.000 
181.803.000 
21.688.000 


61,149.000 

30.000,000 
2,000,000 
15.200.000 
252,587.000 
20.000.000 


81,693.000 
35.000,000 
1.800,000 
13.600.000 
224,335.000 
20,000.000 


Turkey in Asia 


Cyprus 


Persia 


British India 


Japan 


Total Asia 
Algeria 


426.178.000 


404,061,000 


314.022.000 


380,936.000 


376,428.000 


27.114.000 

6.500.000 
13.000.000 
2,012.000 


22,282.000 

4,800,000 
13.000,000 
2,291.000 


23,000,000 
5,600,000 
13,000,000 
2.000.000 


23,000,000 

6,400,000 
12.000.000 
2,000.000 


27,000,000 
7.000.000 
12.000.000 
2,000.000 


Tunis 


Cape Colony 
Total Africa 

Australasia 


48.626.000 


42.373.0UU 


43.600.000 


43,400.000 


48.000.000 


34.980,000 


56,202,000 


50,111,000 


56,610,000 


43,927,000 




RECAPITULATION BY CONTINENTS. 


North America 


752,092.000 
73.389.000 
1.603.040.000 
436.178.000 
48.626.000 
34.980.000 


616.551.000 
125,141.000 
1,520.971.000 
404,001,000 
42,373,000 
56.202.000 


586,360,000 
120,546.000 
1.495.145.000 
314.022,000 
43.l-.00.OOU 
50,111.000 


847,672,000 
84,845,000 
1.484,213.000 
380,93(3,000 
43.41 KJ.OOO 
56.610,000 


781.120.000 
75.984,000 
1,798,963.000 
376,428.000 
48,000,000 
43.927,000 


South Americn 




Asia 


Africa 


Australasia 


Total 2,948,305,'OGO 2,765,299,000 


2,609,784,000 


2,897,676,000 


3,124,422,000 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



WHEAT AND OATS (1902). 



STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 



OATS. 



S588.612 

368.235 
1.504,746 
17.899.361 



18,7 

246.801 

2,052.679 

293.770 



1,673.042 

4,215.362 
19.2:15.140 
24.129.425 

1,513, 

8.173.085 
25.105.122 

5,558,537 



284,531 

273,180 
1,821,337 
2,217.778 

201.754 
1.174.891 
4.395.319 

807,692 



35.484.448 
2,481.574 
14,869,245 
45,827,495 
7,511,536 



1,056,114 

5.737.583 

3,488 

2,827.462 

90,583 
2,525,150 

19,839 



18,693,218 

79,752.404 

27,904 

56,266.494 

2,355.158 

52.726.451 

537,637 



48,648,966 

23; 

32,634.: 
1,460.198 
25,835.%! 
526.884 



106.004 
45.624 
478,196 
576.558 



1,289.009 
670.946 
fi,346.617 
2,811.296 
3t5.465.HOO 



19,073,722 
1,542,452 
7.948,099 

14.851,133 
4.505.704 
3.317,764 

15,312,302 

26,804 

1.673.645 



3.055 757 
62.872,241 
36,3X3.379 
12.073,992 
15.512,460 
24,628.171 



2.124.759 

1,087,747 

777,377 

1,558,745 



7.002,915 
10.393.348 
17,978,565 



267,673 

3,604.347 

840.381 

959.253 

176.824 

1,725 

637.806 

1,065.452 

356,264 

532,104 

_ 23.130 

40.202.424 



1.528.948 
25.064,629 
4.598,565 
6,647.623 
2,848.988 
35,349 
2,872.040 
I5,38(i.921 
2,249.451 
6,179,260 
440.280 



43.973.03I3 
6,050.743 
8,633.277 
3,748.669 
32,430 
3,635.494 

23.672.187 

2.743.233 

9,655.094 

54;>.555 




Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California. 

Colorado 

Connecticut. 
Delaware 
Florida 
Georgia. . 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Indian Territory. 

Iowa 

Kansas. 

Kentucky . 

Louisiana 

Maine.... 

Maryland 

Massachusetts... 

Michigan.. 

Minnesota. 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire. 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina.. 
North Dakota.... 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 
South Carolina . . 
South Dakota.... 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia . . . 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 

United States 



987.842.712 303,584,852 



CORN (1902). 



STATE OR TER. 



Alabama 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indiana 

IndlanTerritory 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts.. 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 



2,764.717 

7,502 

2,378,171 

60,300 

115,697 

52,434 

187.134 

602.400 

3,899,931 

5,142 

9.623.680 

4.520.637 

1,549.878 

9.302.688 

7.451,693 

3,336.791 

1,342,781 



46.670 
1.333.099 
1.483.621 
2.144,225 
6,775.1951 
3.714 



23,223.623 $15,559,827 



Acres. Bushels. Value. STATE OR TER. Acres. 

7,817.962 
5,761 
292,770 
39,909 
645,230 
2.706.682 
82,700 
3,200.224 
1,569.831 
17.045 
1,486.383 
10.322 
1,825.837 
1.577.398 
3.337.047 
5.539.187 
10.810 
57.718 
1,879.348 
10.014 
774,061 
1,504.445 
2,384 



151,540 

30,655,042 

1,839.150 

1.909,000 

1,651,671 

5.239,752 

5,180,640 

35,093.979 

127.007 

372,436,416 

171,332.142 

38.591,962 

2tt7.H.016 

222.805.621 

90,093,357 

16,784,762 

305.167 

20,379.017 

1.460,771 

35.193,814 

33,826.559 

24,658.588 

264,232.605 

SI. 71 18 



153.055 
24,820.971 
1,416,146 
1,126.310 
1.222.237 
2.567,478 
3.989,093 
25,618,605 
78,744 
134,077,110 
61.679.571 
16.594.544 



75.753.911 
37,839,210 
11,077,943 
,824 



1,080.971 
18,300.783 
13,530.624 
15.041.739 
87,196,760 
5S.S30 



Nebraska 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina. 

North Dakota. . . 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania. . . 

Rhode Island... 

South Carolina. 

South Dakota... 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

i Virginia 

1 Washington 

West Virginia... 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 

United States 



Value. 




94.043,613 2.523.648312 1017017344 



AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS. 47 


PRINCIPAL FARM CROPS OF THE UNITED STATES BY YEARS. 
[From tables prepared by the department of agriculture.] 


YEAR. 


CORX. 


WHEAT. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Value. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Value. 


1892 ... 


70.626,658 
72.0136.465 
62.582.269 
82,075,830 
81.027.156 
80,095.051 
77,721,781 
82,108.587 
83,320,872 
91,349.928 
94,043,613 


1,628.464.000 
1.619.496,131 
1.212.770.052 
2.151.138.580 

2.2s:;.s75.15 
].9U2.Ht;7,'.t:;:i 
1.924.184,660 
2.078.143.H33 
2.105.102.516 
1.522.519,891 
2.523,648.312 


$642.146.630 
o1.625.fi27 
554.71H.162 
544,985.534 
491.006.967 
501.072.952 
552.023.428 
629.210.110 
751.220,034 
921.555,768 
1,017,017,349 


38,554,430 
34.629.418 
34,882.436 
34.047,332 
34.618.646 
39.465.006 
44.055.278 
44.592.516 
42,495,385 
49.895.514 
46.202.424 


515.949,000 
396,131,725 
460.267,416 
467,102.947 
427.6S4.346 
530.149,168 
675.148.705 
547,303.846 
522,229.505 
748.460,218 
670.063.008 


$322,111,881 
213,171,381 
225,902,025 
237,938,998 
310,602,539 
428,547,121 
392,770.320 
319,545.259 
323,515,177 
467.350,156 
422,224,117 


1893.... 


1894 


1895 


1896 


1897 


1898 


1899 


1900 


1901 


1902 


YEAR. 


OATS. 


RYE. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Value. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Value. 


1892 
1893 . .. 


27.063,835 
27.273.033 
27.023,553 
27,878,406 
27,565,985 
25,730,375 


661,035,000 

638.854.850 
662,036.928 
824,443.537 
707.346,404 
698,767.809 
730.906.f43 
796,177.713 
809,125,989 
736.808,724 
987,842,712 


$209,253,611 
187,576.092 
214,816,920 

163,655.068 

132.485.033 
147,974.719 
186,405.364 
198,167.975 
208.669.233 
293,658,777 
303.584,852 


2.163,657 
2,038,485 
1,944,780 
1,890,345 
1.831.201 
1,703.561 
1.643,207 
1,659,308 
1,591,362 
1.987,505 
1.978.548 


27,978,824 
26,555.446 
26,727.615 
27,210.070 
24.369.047 
27,363.324 
25,657,522 
23.961.741 
23.995,927 
30,344.830 
33,630.592 


$15,160,056 
13,612,222 
13,395,476 
11,964.826 
9,960,769 
12,239.647 
11,875,350 
12,214.118 
12,295,417 
16.909.742 
17,080.793 


1894 


1895 


1896 


1897 


1898 

1899 .., 


25.777.110 
26.341.380 
27 364 795 


1900 


1901... 


2S;541,476 
28.653,144 


1902 


YEAR. 


BARLEY. 


BUCKWHEAT. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Value. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Value. 


1892 
1893 


3.400.361 
3.220.371 
3.170.602 
3.299.973 
2.950.539 
2.719,116 
2,583.125 
2.878.229 
2.S'.'4.282 
4.295.744 
4,661.063 


80.096,762 
69.86H.4H5 
61.400.465 
87.072,744 
69.695.223 
66.685.127 
55,792.257 
73.381.563 
58.925.833 
109.932.924 
134.954.023 


$38.0-26,062 
28,729.386 
27.134.127 
29.312.413 
22.491.241 
25.142,139 
23.Wi4.359 
29,594,254 
24.075.271 
49.705.163 
61,898.634 


861,451 
815.614 
789.232 
763,277 
754.898 
717,836 
678,332 
670,148 
637.930 
811,164 
804,889 


12.143,185 
12.122.311 
12,668.200 
15.341.399 
14.089.783 
14.997.451 
11,721,927 
11,094,473 
9,566.966 
15.125,939 
14.529,770 


$6.295.643 
7,074,450 
7,040.238 
6,936.325 
5,522.339 
6.319,188 
5,271.462 
6.iaS.675 
5,341.413 
8,523.317 
8.654,704 


1894 


1895 


1896 


1897 


1900 


1901 


1902 


YEAR. 


TOBACCO. 


COTTON. 


Acres. 


Pounds. 


Value. 


Acres. 


Bales 


Value. 


1892..., 


725.195 
702.952 
523.103 
633.950 
594,749 


498,621.686 
483,023,963 
406.678.385 
491,544.000 
403.004,320 
610.860.25C) 
698.418.146 
868,163,275 


$46,728,959 
39,155.442 
27,750.739 
35.574,220 
24,258.070 
* 


18.067,924 
19,525.000 
23.687.950 
20,184,368 
23.273.209 
24.319.584 
24.967.295 
23,403,497 
* 


6,700.365 
7,493.000 
9,476,435 
7.161.094 
8.5132,705 
10.897,857 
11,189.205 
9.142,838 
10,401,453 
9,966,478 


$262.252,286 
274.479,637 
287,120,818 
260,338,096 
291,811,564 
319,491.412 
305.467.041 
334.847.868 
511,098.111 


1893 


1894 


1895 


1896 


1897 


1898 j - - * 


'-' ' '56,993,663' 


1899 


1,101,483 


iqOO 


1901 


* 


* 


9 


$ 


1902 1.030,734 


821,823.963 


57.563.516 


* ... 


*No data. 


YEAR. 


POTATOES. 


HAY. 


Acres. 


Bushels. 


Value. 


Acres. 


Tons. 


Value. 


1892 


2.547.962 
2.605,186 
2,737.973 
2,954,952 
2.767.465 
2,534.577 
2.557.729 
2,581. 353 
2,611.054 
2.864.335 
2.965.5S7 


156.654.819 
183.034.aB 

170.787,338 
297.237,370 
252.234.540 
164,015,964 
192,306.338 
228.783.232 
210.92fi.8H7 
187.598.087 
2St.6H2.7SH 


$103.567,520 
108.661,801 
91,526,787 
78.984,901 
72.182.350 
89,643,059 
79,574.772 
89,32S.S32 
90.811.11)7 
143,979.470 
134.111.4X 


50.853,061 
49.613,469 
48,321.272 
44.2CMi.453 
43,259.756 
42.426.770 
42.780,827 
41.328.462 
39.132,890 
39,390.508 
39.825 227 


59.823,735 
65,766,158 
54.874.408 
47.078.541 
59,282.158 
60.664.876 
66,376.920 
56.655.756 
50.110.906 
59.590.877 
50 Si7 -i7t; 


$490,427.798 
570.882.872 
468,578,321 
393,185.615 
388,145,614 
401.390.728 
398,060.647 
411.926.187 
445.538.S70 
506,191.553 


1893 


1894 


1895 


1896 


1897 


1898 


18qq 


igoo 


jqQl 


1902 



48 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



TOBACCO PRODUCTION IN THE UNITED STATES (1908). 



STATE. 



Acre- 
age. 



Pounds. 



Value. 



STATE. 



Pounds. Value. 



Alabama 

Arkansas 

Connecticut 

Florida 

Georgia 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Mississippi 

Missouri 



648 

12J25 
3.079 
2,050 
1,311 

7,469 



259,200 

899.200 

21,785,200 



1.373,500 
852,150 
6,236,615 
322,194 357,755,200 



34,081 

4.755 

302 

175 

2,140 



21.300,625 

7,417.800 

231,030 

87,500 

1,819,000 



107,904 
3,485,632 
480,324 
260,965 
59.650 
436,563 
15.465.312 
6.675 
1.278.038 
1,112,670 
18,482 
15,750 



New Hampshire 

New York 

North Carolina. ... 

Ohio 

Pennsylvania 

South Carolina 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Vermont 

Virginia 

West Virginia.... 
Wisconsin 

United States. . 



131 



216,150 



8.040 10.050,000 
219,263 142.520.950 
62,949 55,709.865 
17,269 22.017.975 
34.912 25.625,408 
59,880 38,889.500 



191 

182,359 
4,676 



174.850 
343.800 
136,769.250 
2.969,260 



$34.584 

804,OUO 

9,976,466 

3.899,691 

1,321,078 

1,793.779 

2,333,370 

38,467 



9,573,848 



48,422 64,885,480 
3o7r34 821,823,963 



4.541,984 
57,563,510 



FARM ANIMALS IN THE UNITED STATES 
[Estimate of the agricultural department statistician January, 1903.] 



FARM 
ANIMALS. 



Number. 



Average 

price per 

head. 



Value. 



FARM . 
ANIMALS. 



Number. 



Average 

price per 

head. 



Value. 



Mules 1903 

1902 

Milch cows.1903 
1902 



16,557,373 
16.531,224 
2.728,088 
2,737,017 
17,105,227 



$62.25 
58.61 
72.59 
67.61 
30.21 
29.23 



$1,030,705,959 
963,935,178 
197,753,327 
186.411.704 
516,711,914 
488,130,324 



Other cattle!903 
1902 

Sheep 1903 

1902 

Swine 1903 



44,659.206 
44,727.797 
63,964.876 
62.039,091 



$18.45 
18.76 
2.63 
2.65 
7.78 
7.03 



$824,054,902 
839,116,073 
163,315.750 
164,446,091 
364.973,688 
342,120,780 



FARMS IN THE UNITED STATES. 
[Federal census, 1900.] 



YEAR. 



Farms. 



Total. 



Improved. 



Unimproved. 



Average. 



Improved. 



1900. 



1880 

1870 



Number. 
5.739.657 
4.564,641 
4,008,907 
2,659.985 
2,044.077 
1,449,073 



Acres. 
841.201,546 
623.218,619 
5S6.U81.835 
407,735.041 
407,212,538 
293,560.614 



Acres. 
414.793,191 
357,616,755 
284,771.042 



163.110,720 
113,032,614 



Acres. 
426.408,355 
265.601,864 
251.310,793 
218,813,942 
244,101,818 
180,528,000 



Acres, 
146.6 
136.5 
133.7 
153.3 
199.2 



Per cent. 
49.3 
57.4 
53.1 
46.3 
40.1 



VALUE OF FARM PROPERTY AND PRODUCTS. 



YEAR. 



Total value. 



Land and 
buildings. 



Implements, 
machinery. 



Live stock. 



Products/ 



1900. 



1870 

1860 

1850 



$20,514.001,838 
15.982,267.689 
12,104,001.538 
11,124.958.747 
7,980,493,063 
3,967,343.580 



$16.674.690,247 



10,197.096,776 
9,262.803,861 
6,645,045.007 
3.271,575,426 



$761,261,550 
494.247.467 
406.520.055 
336,878,429 
246.118.141 
151.587,638 



$3.078,050,041 
t2,208.767,573 
tl,500,384.707 
1,525 276.457 
1,089.329,915 
544,180.516 



$4.739,118,752 
2.460,107.454 
2,212.540.927 

12,447,538,658 



*For year preceding that designated. tExclusive of stock on ranges. 
^Includes betterment and additions to stock. 

AVERAGE FARM VALUE OF CROPS (1892-1902). 



DEC. 1. 


Wheat. 


Oats. 


Corn. 


Rye. 


Barley 


Buck- 
wheat. 


Pota- 
toes. 


Hay, 
per ton 


1892 


Cents. 
62.4 


Cents. 
31.7 


Cents. 
39.4 


Cents. 
54.2 


Cents. 
47.5 


Cents. 
51.8 


Cents. 
66.1 


Dollars 

8.20 


1893 


53.8 


29.4 


36.5 


51.3 


41.1 


58.4 


59.4 


8 68 


18<)4 


49.1 


32.4 


45.7 


50.1 


44.2 


55.6 


53.6 


8.54 


1895 


50.9 


19.9 


25.3 


44.0 


33.7 


45.2 


26.6 


8.35 


18% 


72.6 


18.7 


21.5 


40.9 


32.3 


39.2 


28.6 


6.55 


1897 


80.8 


21.2 


26.3 


44.7 


37.7 


42.1 


54.7 


6.62 


1898 


58.2 


25.5 


28.7 


46.3 


41.3 


45.0 


41.4 


6.00 


1899 


58.4 


24.9 


30.3 


51.0 


40.3 


55.7 


39.0 


7.27 


1900 


61.9 


25.8 


35.7 


51.2 


40.8 


55.8 


43.1 


8.89 


1901 


62.4 


39.9 


60.5 


55.7 


45.2 


56.3 


76.7 


10.01 


1902... 


64.8 


30.7 


40.3 


50.8 


45.9 


59.6 


47.1 


9.06 



AGRICULTURAL STATISTICS. 49 


CORN CROP OF THE COUNTRIES NAMED (1896-1901). 


COUNTRY. 


1896. 


1897. 


1898. I 1899. 


1900. 


1901 


United States 


Bushels. 
2,283.875,000 
24.830,000 
76,264,000 


Bushels. 
1,902,968,000 
25,441.000 
121,893,000 


Bushels. Bushels. 
1,924,185.0002,078,144.000 

24, 181.000, 22,35<;.OOU 
111,000.000 93,438,000 


Bushels. 
2,105.103,000 
27,947.000 
92,204,000 


Bushels.. 
,522,520.000 

2:>.621.000 
80,000.000 






Total North America 
Chile 


2,384.969.000 


2,050,302,000 


,059,713,0002,193,938,000 


2,225,254.000 


.628,141.000 


9.000.000 
80.000.0UO 
5,000,000 


8,000.000 
40.000.000 
4.000,000 


9,932.000 
56.000.000 
4,000,000 


9,000,000 
72,000.000 
6,000,000 


8.000,000 
60.000.000 
3,035,000 


9.000,000 
78,000.000 
5,576.000 


Argentina 


Total South America 


94,000,000 


52,000,000 


69.932,000 


87,000,000 


71,035,000 


92,576.000 


30.426.000 
18,252.000 
15,000.000 
79,910,000 


30,401.000 
19,644,000 
15.500.000 
65,891,000 


23,496,000 
14.098.000 
15.50U.OOO 
79.640.00t 


25,548,000 
24.667.000 
16.000.000 
88,536,000 


22,232,000 
26.010.000 
16.000.000 
83,286.000 


26,393,000 
23,000,000 
15,000.000 
87,969,000 






Italy 




17.492,000 
128,866,000 
17,617,000 


14,757.000 
103,910.000 
14,608,000 


16.074,000 
127,382.000 
20,822.000 


14,583,000 
115,981,000 
14,680,000 


15,446.000 
127,656,000 
18,691,000 


17.212,000 
132,000.000 
19000,000 


Hungary _ 


Total Austria-Hungary. . 


163,975.000 


133,275.000 


164,278,000 


145,244,000 


161,793.000 


168,212.000 


65,428,OUO 
26.400.000 
16,000.000 
23.77H.OOU 


79,753,000 
25.000,000 
16.000,000 
51,966,000 


101.907,000 

37,759,000 
24,568,000 
47,918,000 


27,721.000 
20.462.000 
15,000,000 
30,912,000 


85,047,000 
18,000.000 
18,472,000 
34.256.000 


116.945,000 
30,000,000 
25.000,000 
64.596,000 


Bulgaria and E. Roumelia... 


Russia 


Total Europe 


439,164,000 


437,430,000 


509,154,000 


394,090,000 


465.102.000 


557,115,000 


\lgeria 


451,000 

34.000.000 
1.650.000 


301,000 
35.000.000 
2,761,000 


347.000 
32.000.000 
2,061,000 


349.000 
30,000.000 
2,858,000 


350.000 
25.000,000 
2.000,000 


350,000 
30.000,000 

2,000.000 






Total Africa * 


36,101.000 


38,062.000 


34,408,000 


33.207,000 


27 .350,000 


32.350,000 


10,201,000 


9,412,000 


9,780,000 


10,025,000 


10,168,001 


10,505,000 j 




RECAPITULATION 


BY CONTINENTS. 




2,384.969,000 
94.000,000 
439,161,000 
3t>.101.000 
10,201,000 


2,050.302,000 

52.000,000 
437.430,000 
38.062,000 
9,412.000 


2.059,713,000 

69.932,000 
509,154.000 
34,408.000 
9,780,000 


2,193,938,000 
87.900000 
394,090,000 
33.207,000 
10,025,000 


2,225,254,000 
71,035,000 
465,102,000 
27,350.000 
10,168,000 


1,628.141,000 
92.576,000 

557,115.000 
32.350,000 
10,505,000 j 






Afric'i 






2.964,435,000 


2,587,206,000 


2,682,987,000 


2,718,260,000 


2,320,687,000 


2,320,687,000 




SUGAR CROPS OF THE 

[Estimated by Willett & Gray. ] 

T^ni^flna' , 300.000 Br 


WORLD 

>Jew York, 
Country. 
itish Indis 
im crop 


(1902-3). 
Sept. IT, 1903.] 
Tons.* 
exports 15 000 




85,000 
349,000 
975,000 
50,000 
31,000 
18,772 
18,000 
28,000 
41,000 
13,000 
45,000 
12,000 
115,000 
10,000 
5,000 
4,500 
4,000 
105,000 
13.000 
3,000 
140,000 
130,000 
187,500 


Su 
Ja 
Ph 

1 
Qi 
Nc 
Fi 

1 
E*. 
Mi 
Kt 

3 
Ei 
Tc 
Ei 
U. 

( 
Gr 

] 

4 


. ? nnn 




V&, Crop 849! 819 




ilippine is 

rotal in A 
eensland 
w South ~\ 
ji islands, 

["otal in Ai 
ypt, crop, 
luritius .. 
union .... 


lands, exports 80,000 
sia 944 812 








76 626 


Antigua and St. Kitts 


Vales 21 000 


exports 35500 




istralia and Polynesia.. 138,126 
qn nnn 




Haiti and Santo Domingo 
Lesser Antilles, not named above... 




. . 135,000 
35,000 

260 000 




rotal in A 
rope Spai 
t. cane su 
rope beet 
S. beet su 

Jrand tota 
and total 

Estimated 
'Tons of 2, 


frica 






n 


28,000 
i.) 4,048,710 
it) 5,605,000 
i.) 195,463 

r.. 9,849,173 
11 n^4 141 




'ar production (VV. &( 
sugar product' n (Lie 
gar product'n (W. & C 

1 cane and beet suga 
1901-1902 


British Guiana (Demerara). exports 
Dutch Guiana (Surinam), crop 


v eiiczuc 


Argentine Republic, crop.. 
Brazil, crop 








Total in America 2,682,772 


decrease 1,204,96 
240 pounds. 



50 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAli BOOK FOR 1904. 



Yea r. 

1SS3-S4 
1884-85 
1885-86 
1S86-87 
18S7-8S 
1888-89 
1889-90 
1890-91 
1891-92 



BEET AND CANE SUGAR PRODUCED IN THE UNITED STATES. 

Tons of 2,240 pounds. 
Cane. 
Beet. (Louisiana.) 

535 

953 

600 



128,443 
94,376 
127,958 



255 

1,861 

2.203 

3,459 

5,356 

1892-93 12.018 

1893-94 19,950 

1894-95 20,092 

1895-98 29,220 

1896-97 37,536 

1897-98 40,398 



157,971 
144,878 
130.413 
215,844 
160,937 
217.525 
265,836 
317,334 
237,721 
282,009 
310,313 



Total. 
128,978 

95,329 
128,558 

81,659 
158,226 
146,739 
132,616 
219,303 
166,293 
229,543 
285,786 
337,426 
266,941 
319,545 
350,711 



Cane. 

Beet. (Louisiana.) Total. 
32,471 248,658 281,129 

142,485 215,457 

270,338 



310,000 



347,197 
473,126 
495,463 



Year. 

1898-99 

1899-1900 72,972 

1900-01 76.859 

1901-02 163,126 

1902-03 195,463 

In 1902-03 California produced 70,909 tons 
of beet sugar; Michigan, 57,678; Colorado, 
29.643, and Nebraska, 7,768 tons. The amount 
produced by other states was insignificant. 

The beet-sugar production of Europe in 
1902-03 was 5,605,000 tons, distributed as fol- 
lows: Germany, 1,730,000; Russia, 1,275,000; 
Austria, 1,025,000; r ranee, 880.000; Belgium. 
240,000; Holland, 125,000; other countries, 
330,000. 



FLAXSEED. 

The acreage of flax in the United States I with South Dakota and Minnesota, produced 
in 1902 was 3,739,700 acres and the produc- | nearly 88 per cent of the crop of the entire 
tion 29.284,880 bushels. About half the crop country. Flaxseed crop x>f the world in 1901 
was raised in North Dakota. That state, was 72,241,000 bushels. 



COTTON CROPS AND CONSUMPTION. 



PRODUCTION OF THE UNITED STATES BY 
YEARS 

[From the New York Commercial and Finan- 
cial Chronicle.] 



Tear.* 

1890-91 . 
1891-92 . 



1893-94 
1894-95 
1895-96 
1896-97 
Year 



Bales. + 
8,655, 51S 
9,038,707 
6,717,142 
7,527.211 
9,892,766 



rear.* 
1897-98 



1899-00 
1900-01 
1901-02 
1902-03 



.11,180,960 
.11,235,383 
. 9,439,559 
.10,425,141 
.10,701,453 
.10,758,326 



7,162,473 
8,714,011 
d Sept. 

weight per bale in 1902-03, 508.55 pounds. 
PRODUCTION OF THE UNITED STATES BT 
STATES. 

1902-3. 
State. Bales. 

Alabama 216,557 

Georgia 1,576,090 

Louisiana 2,316,617 

North Carolina 385,583 

Tennessee, etc 3,337,737 

Texas 2.239,941 

South Carolina 210,226 

Virginia 475,575 



t Average gross 



1901-2, 
Bales, 

156,619 
1,509,180 
2,273,428 

326,298 
3,501,107 
2,202,556 

277,564 

454,701 



Total crop 10,758,326 10,701,453 

WORLD'S PRODUCTION OF COTTON. 

(In bales of 500 pounds.) 

Country. 1902-3. 1901-2. 

United States 10,511,020 10,380,380 



Country. 1902-3. 1901-2. 

East Indies 2,792.000 2,475,230 

Egypt 1,078,680 1,292,443 

Brazil, etc 270,000 265,896 



Total 14,651,700 14,414,908 

WORLD'S CONSUMPTION OF COTTON. 

(In bales of 500 pounds.) 

Country. 1902-3. 1901-2. 

Great Britain 3,200.000 3,253,000 

Continent 5,096,000 4,836.000 

United States 4,015,101 4,037,332 

East Indies 1,400,000 1,383,790 

Japan 439,000 726,454 

Canada 117,614 117,384 

Mexico 59,215 31,524 

Other countries 25,000 29,424 

Total 14.351,930 14,414,908 

COTTON SPINDLES IN THE WORLD. 

Country. 19fi3. 1902. 

Great Britain 47,200,000 47,000,000 

Continent 34.000.000 33,900,000 

United States 22.239,633 21,558,974 

East Indies 5,100,000 5.006,965 

Japan 1.450.000 1,400,000 

China 600,000 600,000 

Canada 700,000 690,000 

Mexico 500,000 500,000 

All other 1,200,000 1,190,000 

Total world 111,789,633 110,655,939 



WORLD'S IRON AND STEEL PRODUCTION. 



According to a report made by Sir A. E. 
Bateman to the British board of trade the 
total output of iron ore in 1901 amounted to 
between 85,000.000 and 90,000,000 tons. The 
production of pig iron in the same year was 
approximately 40.000,000 tons and of steel 
28,000,000 tons. The chief producing nations 
were: 

Iron ore. Pio iron. Steel. 

Country. Tons.* Tons* Tons* 

United States. 28. 887. 000 15,878,000 13,474,000 

Germany 16,570,000 7,867.000 6,394.000 

Un. kingdom.. 12.275.000 7,929,000 4,904,000 

Spain 7,907,000 121,000 

Russia 2,821,000 



Pid iron. 

Tons.* 

2,389,000 

1,482,000 

528,000 

764,000 



Steel 

Tons. 

1,425,000 



653,000 



Iron ore 

Country. Tons.* 

France 4,791,000 

Aust. -Hungary 3.520,000 

Sweden 2,795,000 

Belgium 227.000 

*Metric tons of 2.204 pounds, except in th 
case of the United States and the united 
kingdom, for which the tons are of 2,240 
pounds. 

In 1902 the United States produced 18.003, 
448 metric tons of pig iron and 15,186.406 of 
steel. Great Britain produced 8,653.976 tons 
of pig iron and 5,102.420 cf steel, while Ger- 
many's output was 8,402,660 tons of pig iron 
and 7,780,682 of steel. 



RELATIVE PRICES OP COMMODITIES. 



51 



RELATIVE PRICES OF COMMODITIES. 

In this table, prepared by the department of labor in Washington, the average wholesale 
price in New York and other primary markets of each article for the years 1890-1899. inclusive, 
is taken as the base price and is represented by 100. The relative price is the average whole- 
sale price for each year from 1891 to 1902, inclusive, compared with the base price. 



YEAR. 



CATTLE AND CATTLE PRODUCTS. 



Cattle. 



Beef, 
fresh. 



Bef, 
hams. 



Beef, 
mess. 



TaUmv. 



Hides. 



DAIRY PRODUCTS. 



Mttk. Butter. Cheese. 



1891. 



139*5. 



1899 

1900. 
1901. 



109.2 
95.4 
103.0 
96.3 
103.7 
88.3 
99.5 
102.2 
113.2 
111.3 
116.6 
139.5 



106.2 
98.8 
105.4 
97.0 
102.7 
90.5 
99.7 
101.3 
108.3 
104.3 
102.1 
125.9 



85.8 
80.5 



125.1 

118.8 
125.6 
114.2 
112.6 
118.0 



104.4 
84.8 
102.2 
101.0 
101.4 
93.7 
95.7 
114.2 
115.9 
121.7 
116.3 
147.1 



111.0 
106.4 
125.1 
110.3 
99.8 
78.9 
76.3 
81.8 
104.1 

119 '.1 
144.6 



101.5 
92.8 
79.9 
68.4 
109.7 
86.6 
106.3 
122.8 
131.8 
127.4 
132-.0 
142.8 



104.7 
105.1 
109.4 
103.1 
99.2 
91.8 
92.2 
93.7 
99.2 
107.5 
102,7 
112.9 



116.1 
116.4 
121.3 
102.2 
94.5 
823 
84.1 
86.8 
' 8 
J1.7 
1.1 
112.1 



102.4 
107.2 
109.0 
107.4 
94.1 
92.0 
98.1 
83.3 
10S.9 
114.3 
102.4 
114.1 



YEAR. 



HOGS AND HOG PRODUCTS. 



SHEEP AND SHEEP 
PRODUCTS. 



Hogs. 



Bacon. 



sm a oi. Mess pork. 



Lard. 



Sheep. Mutton. Wool. 



1893... 
1894. . . 
1895... 
1896... 
1S97... 



1899. . . 
1900. . . , 
1901... 
1902.... 



99.2 
115.7 
148.6 
112.2 

96.6 

85.6 
91.8 
115.5 
134.5 
155.2 



103.7 
116.6 
154.7 
111.8 
96.3 
73.1 
79.9 
89.4 
85.8 
111.5 
132.3 
159.3 



109.3 
126.9 
103.6 



82.0 
93.8 
104.2 
109.2 
123.1 



99.1 
157.6 
121.4 
101.7 

7e.s 

76.6 
84.8 
80.3 
107.5 
134.2 
154.2 



100.9 
117.9 
157.5 
118.2 
99.8 
71.7 
67.4 
84.4 
85.0 
105.5 
135.3 
161.9 



117.8 
125.2 
103.8 
73.6 
78.4 
78.7 
94.2 
104.9 
104.3 
112.0 
92.0 
103.2 



114.9. 
121.2 
106.5 

80.2 



96.6 
98.0 
94.3 
96.4 
89.5 
97.9 



125.8 
113.2 
101.6 



108.3 
110.8 
117.7 
96.6 
100.8 



YEAR. 



CORN, ETC. 



Corn. 



Glu- 



Meal. 



FLAXSEED, 
ETC. 



Lin- 
seed 
oil. 



RYE AND 
RYE FLOUR. 



Rye. 



Rye 
flour. 



WHEAT AND 
WH'T FLOUR. 



Wheat 



Wheat 
flour. 



FLOUR, ETC. 



Wheat 
flour. 



Crack-\Loaf 
ers. 'bre'd 



KU. 

i>'.i;>. 
I-'.H;. 

1897. 



1900. 
1901. 
1902.. 



151.0 
118.3 
104.2 
113.7 
104.0 
67.8 



87.6 
100.2 
130.6 
156.9 



124.3 
111.4 
109.2 
81.7 
86.0 
91.8 
95.6 
104.9 
116.0 
153.6 



142.0 
114.0 
105.8 
105.6 
103.3 
77.4 
76.5 
83.7 
91.2 
97.0 
115.5 
148.2 



97.1 
91.4 
97.7 
121.6 
111.8 
72.9 
78.1 
99.8 
104.0 
145.7 
145.8 
135.0 



106.8 
90.0 
102.2 
115.6 
115.6 
81.2 
72.2 
86.5 
94.1 
138.7 
140.0 
130.8 



92.6 
88.1 
91.2 
66.5 
74.9 
93.8 
104.4 
97.9 
100.8 
102.5 



148.3 
121.1 



94.5 

80.9 
84.6 
92.9 
99.4 
103.3 
100.1 
103.8 



128.1 
104.9 
90.1 
74 4 
79.9 
85.4 



95.7 
98.7 



125.6 
104.2 
89.3 
77.6 
84.4 
91.2 
110.1 
109.0 
87.9 
88.3 
87.4 



125.6 
104.2 
89.3 
77.6 
84.4 
91.2 
110.1 
109.0 
87.9 
88.3 
87.4 



107.7 100.8 
104.3 100.8 
100.6 100.8 



98.8 
95.6 
94.1 
85.3 
107.3 
99.1 
102.7 
108.2 



100.8 



. 

100.S 
100.8 
100.8 
100.8 
100.8 



COTTON AND COTTON GOODS. 



YEAR 



Cotton: 
Upland, 
middling. 



Bags: 
2-bushel 
Amosk'g. 



Calico: 
Cocheco 
prints. 



Cotton 
flannels 



Cotton 
thread. 



Cotton 
yarns. 



Denims, 



Drill- 
ings. 



Ging- Ho- 
hams, siery. 



1891.. 

1892.. 
1893. . 



1896.. 
1897.. 

Kts" 

IS'.".*.. 

1900.. 
1901.. 



110.8 
99.0 
107.2 
90.2 
94.0 
102.0 
92.2 
76.9 
84.7 
123.8 
111.1 
115.1 



111.7 
110.8 
10t). 8 
91.1 
82.2 
91.6 
92.9 
95.6 
103.4 
112.6 
101.0 
102.4 



104.0 
117.5 
113.0 
99.5 
94.9 
94.9 
90.4 
81.4 
87.3 



90.4 



121.8 
115.9 
101.4 
95.7 
91.7 
93.9 
88.6 
81.0 
88.0 
101.6 
95.4 
96.1 



100.7 
100.7 
100.7 
100.7 
100.7 
99.6 
98.4 
98.4 
93.4 
120.1 
120.1 
120.1 



112.8 
117.0 
110.5 
93.0 
92.1 
93.0 
90.6 
90.8 
88.5 
115.5 
98.3 
94.0 



109.6 
109.6 
112.5 
105.4 

94. t; 

94.6 

89.2 
85.9 
85.8 
102. S 
100.2 
100.6 



114.6 
102.2 
105. t; 
97.1 
93.2 
100.2 
90.4 
86.8 
88.5 
105.0 
102.2 
102.0 



122.1 
122.1 
114.9 
89.5 
87.0 
88.0 
84.2 
83.1 
89.7 
96.3 
92.3 
99.2 



122.*; 
117.4 
109.4 
1008 
94.4 
90.5 
86.7 
83.4 
82.5 
87.3 
85.9 
85 2 



52 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



RELATIVE PRICES OF CGMMODITIES.-CONTINUED. 



YEAR. 



1891.. 

is;*;. 1 . . 
MM.. 
1894.. 
1895. . 
1890.. 
1897.. 
1898. . 
1899.. 
1900.. 
1901.. 
1902.. 



COTTON AND COTTON GOODS. 



Print 
cloths. 



103.5 
119.3 
114.6 
96.8 
100.9 
90.9 
87.6 
72.6 
96.3 
3 108.6 
99.3 
108.9 



Sheet- 
ings. 



112.3 
103.8 
107.7 
95.9 
94.6 
97.4 
91.8 
86.7 
92.2 
105.9 
101.8 
101.4 



Shirt- 
ings. 



110.2 
107.4 
110.2 
99.9 
97.6 

41 

83.8 
87.8 
100.4 
98.9 



Tick- 
ings. 



110.7 
108.4 
111.3 
102.2 
94.8 
96.0 
91.9 
84.3 
87.0 
102.2 
95.5 
99.0 



WOOL AND WOOLEN GOODS. 



Wool. 



125.8 
113 2 
101.6 
79.1 
70.1 
70.6 



110.8 
117.7 



100.8 



Blank- 
ets (all 
wool). 



106.0 
107.1 
107.1 
101.2 



89.3 
107.1 

95.2 
107.1 
101.2 
101.2 



Broad- 
cloths. 



113.7 
113.7 
113.7 
91.2 
79.7 
79.7 
98.2 
98.2 
98.2 
108.0 
110.3 
110.3 



Car- 
pets. 

112.8 
104.5 
104.5 
98.7 
91.0 
90.2 
93.5 
100.2 
99.4 
102.7 
101.9 
1U2.5 



Flan- 
nels. 



116.8 
115.9 
109.5 
94.1 
81.7 
85.4 
82.6 
97.8 
99.5 

lOO'.S 
105.8 



Horse 
blank- 
ets. 



104.7 
10-.'. 1 
104.7 
96.0 
92.5 



99.5 
94.2 
118.7 
109.9 
109.9 



WOOL AND WOOLEN GOODS. 



HIDES. LEATHER, 
BOOTS AND SHOES. 



PETROLEUM. 



YEAR. 



1891 
1892 
1893 
1894 
1895 



1898 
1899 
1900 
1901 
1902. 



Over- 
coat- 
ings 
(all 
wool). 

111.9 
111.9 
108.6 
97.5 
90.8 
86.7 
87.8 
97.1 
100.6 
116.1 
105.3 
105.3 



Shawls 



107.0 
107.0 
107.0 
107.0 
107.0 
89.1 



89.1 
107.0 
107.0 
107.0 



Suit- 
ings. 



113.1 
113.4 
112.7 
98.3 
89.2 
87.8 
88.7 
103.4 
106.1 
115.8 
104.9 
105.8 



Under- 
wear 
(all 

wool). 



110.0 
110.0 
110.0 
92.7 
92.7 
92.7 
92.7 
92.7 
100.4 
100.4 
100.4 
100.4 



Dress 
goods 
(all 
wool). 

123.0 
124.1 
114.7 
90.6 
82.7 
74.1 
82.2 
88.5 
102.7 
118.7 
107.9 
109.8 



Wors- 
ted 
yarns. 



Hides. 



123.4 
117.2 
109.5 
91.3 
74.0 
72.9 
82.5 
100.5 
106.7 
118.4 
102.2 
111.7 



101.5 

92.8 
79.9 
68.4 
109.7 
86.6 
106.3 
122.8 
131.8 
127.4 
132.0 
142.8 



Leather 



100.9 
97.0 
96.9 
91.5 
108.0 
95.2 
96.1 
104.4 
109.3 
113.2 
110.8 
112.7 



Boots 
and 
shoes. 



Crude 



103.5 
102.7 
100.9 
99.4 
98.7 
99.6 
97.2 
96.3 
96.8 
99.4 



73.6 
61.1 
70.3 
92.2 
149.2 
129.5 
86.5 
100.2 
142.1 
148.5 
132.9 
135.9 



Re- 
fined. 



102.2 
91.5 
81.0 
80.5 
106.6 
112.5 
96.6 
99.5 
118.0 
132.6 
119.3 
118.8 



SUMMARY OF RELATIVE PRICES OF COMMODITIES, 
Average price for 1890-1899100. 



TO 1902, BY GROUPS. 



House- 

farnish- 

ing 

goods. 



YEAR, 



1891... 

1892. . . 



1897... 
1898... 
1899. . . 
1900.... 
1901... 
1902... 



Farm 
products. 



110.0 
121.5 
111.7 

107.9 
95.9 
93.3 
78.3 
85.2 
96.1 
100.0 
109.5 
116.9 
130.5 



Food, 
etc. 



112.4 
115.7 
103.6 

110.2 
99.8 
94.6 

94i4 
98.3 
104.2 
105.9 
111.3 



Cloths 

and 

clothing. 



113.5 
111.3 
109.0 
107.2 
96.1 
92.7 
91.3 
91.1 
93.4 
96.7 
106.8 
101.0 
102.0 



Fuel 

and 

lighting. 



104.7 
102.7 
101.1 
100.0 
92.4 
98.1 
104.3 
96.4 
95.4 
105.0 
120.9 
119 5 
134.3 



Metals 
and 
imple- 
ments. 



119.2. 
111.7 
106. 
100.7 
90.7 
92.0 
93.7 
86.6 
86.4 
114.7 
120.5 
111.9 
117.2 



Lumber 

and 

building 
material 



111.8 
108.4 
102.8 
101.9 
96.3 
94.1 
93.4 
90.4 
95.8 
105.3 
115.7 
11(5.7 
118.8 



Drugs 
and 

chemi- 
cals. 



110.2 
103.6 
162.9 
100.5 



94.4 
106.4 
111.3 
115.7 
115.2 
114.2 



111.1 
110.2 
106.5 
104.9 
100.1 
96.5 
94.0 
89.8 
92.0 
95.1 
106.1 
110.9 
112.2 



Mis- 
cella- 
neous. 



110.3 
109.4 
106.2 



94.5 

91.4 
92.1 
92.4 
97.7 
109.8 
107.4 
114.1 



All 
com- 

innil- 
iti.s. 



112.9 
111.7 
106.1 
105.6 
96.1 
93.6 
90.4 
89.7 
93.4 
101.7 
110.5 
108.5 
112.9 



AVERAGE WHOLESALE PRICES IN 1902. 

Based on reports to the department of labor, Washington. D. C. The quotations are from New 
York, Chicago and a few other primary markets. 



FARM PRODUCTS. 

Barley, bu $0.63 

Cattle, steers, 100 Ibs 6.58 

Corn, No. 2 cash, bu 60 

Cotton, upland, Ib 10 

Flaxseed. No. 1, bu 1.50 

Hay, timothy, ton 12.62 

Hides, green, Ib 13 

Hogs, heavy. 100 Ibs 6.97 

Hops, New York state, Ib 24 

Oats, cash, bu 40 

Rye, No. 2 cash, bu 54 

Sheep, western. 100 Ibs 4.18 

Wheat, contract, cash, bu 74 



FOOD, ETC. 

Beans, medium, bu $1.92 

Bread, crackers, soda, Ib , .07 

Bread, loaf, 1 Ib 04 

Butter, creamery, Ib 24 

Cheese, New York cream, Ib 11 



Coffee, Rio, No. 7, Ib. 

Eggs, fresh, dozen ". 



fff; 



salmon, dozen cans 1.61 



Flour, wheat, brl..,, 3.81 

Flour, wheat, winter, brl 3. 49 

Fruit, apples, evaporated, Ib 09 

Fruit, currants. Ib 05 

Fruit, prunes, Ib 05 



AVERAGE WHOLESALE PRICES IN 1902. 



Lard, prime, Ib $0.11 

Meal, com, yellow, 100 Ibs 1.53 

Meat, bacon, smoked, Ib 11 

Meat, beet, fresh, Ib 10 

Meat, beef, salt, brl 11.79 

Meat, hams, smoked, Ib 12 

Meat, mutton, dressed, Ib 14 

Meat, pork, salt, brl 17.94 

Milk, quart 03 

Molasses, N. <_>., gal 36 

Rice, Ib 06 

Salt, brl 64 

Soda, bicar., Ib 01 

Spices, pepper, Ib 13 

Starch, corn, Ib 04 

Sugar, granulated, Ib 04 

Tallow, Ib .06 

Tea, Formosa, Ib 30 

Vegetables, potatoes,. bu 60 

CLOTHS AND CLOTHING. 

Blankets, all wool, Ib .85 

Boots and shoes, broga'ns, pair 93 

Boots and shoes, men's calf, pair 2.30 

Boots and shoes, women's 86 

Broadcloths, yard 1.91 

Calico, yard '. 05 

Carpets, Brussels, yard 1.03 

Carpets, ingrain, yard 48 

Carpets, Wilton, yard 1.88 

Cotton flannels, heavy, yard 06 

Cotton thread, spool 04 

Denims, yard 10 

Drillings, brown, yard 06 

Flannels, white, yard 40 

Ginghams, yard 05 

Hosiery, men's cotton, dozen ' 73 

Hosiery, women's cotton, dozen 1.85 

Leather, harness, Ib 33 

Leather, sole, Ib 24 

Linen thread, dozen spools 89 

Overcoatings, beaver, yard 2.21 

Overcoatings, chinchilla, yard 45 

Print cloths, yard 03 

Shawls, wool, each 4.90 

Sheetings, bleached, yard 19(85 .29 

Sheetings, brown, yard 05fa) .07 

Shirtings, bleached, yard OStf| .09 

Silk, raw, Italian, Ib ". 4.11 

Silk, raw, Japan, Ib 3.82 

Suitings, Clay worsted, yard 91 

Suitings, serge, yard 79 

Tickings, yard 10 

Dress goods, alpaca, yard 07 

Dress goods, cashmere, yard 32 

Wool, scoured, Ib 58 

Worsted yarns, Ib 1.12 

FUEL AND LIGHTING. 

Candles, Ib 11 

Coal, anthracite, broken, ton 3.72 

Coal, anthracite, chestnut, ton ^.... 4.46 

Coal, anthracite, egg, ton 4.37 

Coal, bituminous, ton 4.05 

Coke, ton &.69 

Matches, gross 1.58 

Petroleum, refined, gal 11 

METALS AND IMPLEMENTS. 

Augers, % inch, each 18 

Axes, each 48 

Barbwire. 100 Ibs .. 2.95 

Chisels, 1 inch, each 27 

Copper, ingof, Ib... 12 

Doorknobs, steel, pair 22 

Files, 8 inch, dozen 1.05 



Hammers, each $0.42 

Lead, pig, Ib 04 

Locks, common, each 08 

Nails, cut, 8-peuuy, 100 Ibs 2.13 

Nails, wire, 100 Ibs 2.10 

Pig iron, Bessemer, per ton 20.67 

Planes, each 1.51 

Quicksilver, Ib 65 

Saws, crosscut, each 1.60 

Saws, hand, dozen 12.60 

Shovels, steel, dozen 9.35 

Silver, bar, fine, ounce 52 



Steel rails, ton 28.00 

Tin plafes, 100 Ibs 4.12 

Trowels, each 34 

Wood screws, gross 10 

Zinc, sheet, 100 ibs 5.73 

LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS. 

Brick, common, per M 5.39 

Cement, Portland, brl 1.95 

Hemlock, 2 by 4, per M 15.83 

Lime, common, brl 81 

Linseed oil, raw, gal 59 

Maple, hard, 1 inch, per M 28.58 

Oak, white, 1 inch, 6 in. and up, per M. 40.87 

Oxide of zinc, gal 04 

Pine, boards, white, 1 by 10, per M 23.50 

Pine, yellow boards, 1 by 1%, per M.... 21.00 

Plate glass, square foot 26 

Putty, Ib 02 

Resin, brl 1.61 

Shingles, white pine, per M 3.59 

Spruce, 6 to 9 inches, per M 19.25 

Tar, brl 1.32 

Turpentine, gal 47 

Window glass, 50 square feet 3.21 

DRUGS AND CHEMICALS. 

Alcohol, grain, gal 2.41 

Alcohol, wood, refined, gal 64 

Alum, lump, Ib 02 

Glycerin, refined. Ib 14 

Muriatic acid, Ib 02 

Opium, Ib 2.83 



uinine, ounce.. 

Sulphuric acid, lb... v 01 

HOUSEFURNISHING GOODS. 

Earthenware, plates, dozen 47 

Earthenware, plates, granite, dozen 51 

Earthenware, cups and saucers, gross... 3.76 
Furniture, ash bedstead, bureau and 

washstand 11.75 

Furniture, cane-seat maple chairs, doz.. 7.33 

Furniture, kitchen chairs, dozen 4.92 

Furniture, tables, kitchen, dozen 15.60 

Glassware, pitchers. % gal., dozen.' 1.30 

Glassware, tumblers, common, dozen.. .18 
Table cutlery, knives and forks, gross... 6.50 

Woodenware, pails, dozen 1.55 

Wooden ware, tubs, nest of 3 1.45 

MISCELLANEOUS. 

Cottonseed meal, ton 27.13 

Cottonseed oil, gal 41 

Jute, raw. Ib 



Malt, western, bu 79 



Paper, news, wood. Ib 

Paper, wrapping, Ib 

Proof spirits, gal 

Rope, Manila, % inch, Ib 

Rubber, Para, ID 

Soap, castile. Ib 

Starch, laundry, Ib 

Tobacco, plug, Ib 45 

Tobacco, smoking, Ib 56 



AMERICAN LOSSES IN SPANISH AND PHILIPPINE WARS. 

(From wounds or disease.) 



Officers. En. men. 

May 1, 1898. to June 30, 1899..... 224 6,395 

June 30. 1899, to July 1. 1900 74 1.930 



July 1, 1900, to June 



Officers. En. men. 
1901 57 1,933 



54 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



MANTTFACTTIRES IN THE UNITED STATES. 

[Twelfth census, 1900.] 
COMPARATIVE SUMMARY BY DECADES (1850-1900). 



1900. 



1890. 



1880. 



1870. 



1860. 



1850. 



Establishments .. 

Capital 

Salaried persons.. 

Salaries 

Wage-earners* 

Wages 

General expenses 
Cost of materials 
Value of productst. . 



512.726 355.415 253.852 
$9,874,664.087 $6,525,156,486 f2,790,272,606 $2,118,208 



$404.837,591 
5,321,087 



,730 461,009 



140,433 
'69 $1,009,855,715 



123,025 
$533,245,351 



4,251.613 



$2.330,273,021 $1.891.228.321 



$1.028,855.586 
$7.3b0.954.597 
113.0*0,013,638 



$631.225.035 

t 



2,732.595 
$947.953,795 



2.053,996 

$775,584,343 



1,311.246 



957,059 
$236,755,464 



162,044,076 $3.396,823.549 $2.488.427,242 



,372,437.283 $5.369,579.191 $4.232,325.442 



$1.031,605.092 $555.123.822 
$1,885.861,676 $1,019,106.616 



*Average number. tGross value. 
MANUFACTURES BY STATES AND TERRITORIES (1900). 



STATE OB 
TERRITORY. 



Alabama 

Alaska 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

Dist. of Columbia. 

Florida 

Georgia 

Hawaii 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Indian Territory.. 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky , 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota, 

Mississippi 

Missouri. 



Capital 
invested. 



Gross value 
of product. 

$80.741.449 
4,250.984 
21,315.189 
45.197,731 
302,874.761 
102,830,137 
352,824.106 
45,387,630 
47,667,622 



STATE OR Capital Gross value 

TERRITORY. invested, of product. 



106,654.527 
24.992,068 

4.020.532 

1,259,571,105 

378,120,140 

3,892.181 
164,617,877 
172,129,398 
154.605.115 
121,181.683 
127,361.485 
242,552.990 



Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire. 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina. . 
North Dakota.... 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina., 
uth Dakota 



$40,945.846 

71,982.127 

1,472,784 

100.929,661 



2.698,786 
1,679,906,515 
76.503.8&4 
5.396,490 
605,762.566 



356.944.082 
262.655.881 
40,431.386 
385,492,784 



Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia. . . 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



33,422.393 

1.551,548.712 

183.784.587 

67.356.465 

7.578,895 

71.182.966 



14.650,948 
48.547,964 

103.670,988 
52.649, iW 
55.904.238 

330,568,779 
2,411,435 



$57.075,824 

143.990.102 

1,643,675 

118,669,308 

611,748,933 

5,605,795 

2,175,766,900 

94,919,663 

9,183.114 

832,438.113 

7,083.938 

46.000,587 

1,835,104.431 

184,074,378 

58,748,731 

12.231,239 

107,437,879 

119.414,982 

21.215,783 

57,646.715 

132.937,910 

86,795,051 

74.838.330 

360,818,942 

4,301,240 



Total 



9,874,664,087 13.040.013,638 



SUMMARY OF GREAT INDUSTRIES. 

Showing percentage of increase in number of establishments, capital invested and gross value 

of product as compared with 1890. 



Value of 
product. 



INDUSTRY. 



Num- 
ber. 



In- 
crease. 



Capital. 



crease. 



In- 
crease. 



Agricultural implements 

Boots and shoes (factory) 

Carriages and wagons 

Cars (steam roads) 

Cheese, butter, milkf 

Chemical products 

Clay products 

Coke 

Cordage and twine 

Cotton manufactures 

Dyeing and finishing textiles. 

Flour mill products 

Gas 

Glass 

Iron and steel 

Jute and jute goods. 

Leather 

Liquors, distilled.... 

Liquors, malt 

Liquors, vinous 

Lumber products 

Oleomargarine 

Paper and w.ood pulp. 
Petroleum, reflnintr 



715 
l.fiOO 
7.632 
1.296 
9.351 
1,740 
6,422 

241 

105 
1,051 

298 



355 
725 

18 

1.306 

967 

1.524 

359 

33,035 

24 

763 



*21.4 
*23.2 
*11.4 
81.0 
98.5 
2.5 
*1.7 
10.6 
*30.0 
16.1 
20.2 
36.8 
18.2 
20.7 
.8 

157.1 
*25.3 
119.8 
22.1 
52.1 
46.1 
100.0 
17.6 
*28.7 



$157,707,951 
101,795.233 

118.187.838 
119.580.273 
36.491.799 



147,913.323 
36,502.679 
29.275.470 

467,240.157 
60.643.104 

218.714.104 

567,000,506 
61.423,903 

580.041.710 
7.027.293 

173,977,421 
32.551.604 

415,284.468 
9.838.015 

611.611.524 
3.023.646 

167,507,713 
95.327.892 



8.5 
6.8 
13.4 
56.9 

119,5 
44.7 
36.1 

109.0 
25.4 
32.0 

4^9 

119.1 

49.9 

43.0 

327.0 

78.2 

5.0 

78.6 

69.8 

9.6 

376.5 

86.5 

23.1 



$101,207,428 
261,028,580 
121,537,276 
218.238.277 
131.183.338 
202,582.396 
95.443.862 
35,585.445 
37.849,651 
339,198,619 
44,963,831 
560,719.063 
75.716,693 
56.539.712 
835,759.034 
5,383,797 
204.038,127 
96.798.443 
237,269,713 
6.547.310 
566,832.984 
12.499.812 
127.236.162 
123.929.384 



24.5 
18.3 
6.1 
68.6 

109.3 
16.0 
6.3 

115.7 
13.6 
26.6 
55.6 
9.1 
32.9 
37.7 
74.6 

380.7 
19.3 
7.1 
29.8 

130.0 
29.4 

318.3 
61.2 
45.8 



STRIKES AND LOCKOUTS IN THE UNITED STATES. 



55 



SUMMARY OF GREAT INDUSTRIES. CONTINUED. 



INDUSTRY. 



Printing and pubJ ishingt 

Salt 

Ships and boats, wood 

Ships, iron and steel 

Silk and silk goods 

Slaughtering 

Turpentine and resin 

Woolen goods 

Worsted goods 

Hosiery and knit goods 

Carpets, rugs (not rag) 

Felt goods .-. 

Wool hats 

Shoddy 



Jnun- In- 

ber. crease 



15.305 

159 

1.116 

44 

483 

921 

1.503 

1.036 

185 

921 

123 



*20.5 
10.9 



*17.6 
124.3 
*21.0 
29.4 
15.7 
*23.1 
5.9 
*25.0 
11.7 



Capital. 



$192,443,708 

27,123.3*54 

17o23.14ti 

59,839.555 

81.802.201 

189,198,264 

11,847.495 

12*5,169.862 

130,384,610 

81,860.604 

44.449.299 

7,125,276 

2,050,802 

5,272.929 



52.4 

101.8 

no.i 

670.1 
59.0 
61.9 



91.5 
61.8 
16.3 
59.7 
50.5 
40.5 



Value of 
product. 



In- 
crease. 



$222,983.569 

7.966.897 

24.210.419 

50,3(57,739 

107.256,258 

786,603,f)70 

20,344,888 

120,038:792 

118,705.710 

95.482.5(56 

48,192.351 

6,461.691 

3.591,940 

6.730,974 



24.0 

45.3 

3.7 

289.5 

22.9 

40.1 

151.9 

*10.1 

49.9 

42.0 

.9 



44.7 



*Decrease. tCondensed milk. {Newspapers and periodicals. 



MANUFACTURES ACCORDING TO BANK (1900). 



Industry. Value of product. 

Textiles $966,924,835 

Iron and steel 835,759,034 

Slaughtering 786,603,670 

Lumber and timber products 566,832,984 

Flour and grist mill products 560,719,063 

Smelting and refining 358,786,472 

Liquors 340,615.466 

Boots and shoes (factory) 261,028,580 

Printing and publishing 222,983,569 

Car building by steam roads 218,238,277 

Leather 204,038,127 

Chemical manufactures 202,582,396 

Cheese, butter, condensed milk... 131,183,338 



Value of product. 



Industry. . 

Paper and wood pulp $127,286,162 

Petroleum, refining 123,929,384 

Carriages and wagons 121,537,276 

Agricultural implements 101,207,428 

Clay products 95,443,862 

Gas, illuminating and heating.... 75,716,693 

Ship building 74,578.158 

Glass 56,539,712 

Coke 35,585,446 

Turpentine and resin 20,314, 

Oleomargarine 12,499,812 

gait 7,966,897 

Sugar and molasses, beet 7,323,857 



STRIKES AND LOCKOUTS IN THE UNTIED STATES. 

From Jan. 1, 1881, to Dec. 31, 1900. 
[Compiled from sixteenth annual report of the commissioner of labor.] 



YEAR. 



1881 



1884 

1885 



1891 



1894 

1895.... 



1900 

Total. 



STRIKES. 



22.793 



II 



2.105 
2,759 
2,367 
2.284 

10,053 
6,589 
3,506 
3.786 
9.424 
8.116 
5.540 
4,555 
8,196 
6,973 
5.462 
8.492 
3,809 

11.317 
9.248 



117.509 



Thrown out of tworfe. 



129.521 
154.671 

149.763 
147.054 
242,705 
508.044 
379,676 
147.704 
249.559 
351.944 
298.939 
20*5.1571 
25. ( J14 
6*50.425 
392.403 
241.170 
408.391 
249.002 
417.072 
505,0t>6 



6.105,1594 



94.08 
92.15 
87.66 
88.78 
87.77 
86.17 
91.77 
91.50 
90.48 
90.53 
94.90 
93.57 
93.0(5 
90.14 
84.56 
87.08 
88.89 
85.78 
89.42 
94.80 



SO. 00 



1L 

5.92 
7.85 
12.34 
11.22 
12.23 
13. 83 
8.23 
8.50 
9.52 
9.47 
5.10 
6.43 
6.94 
9.86 
15.44 
12.92 
11.11 
14.22 
10.58 



10.00 



LOCKOUTS. 



1.005 



117 

354 

183 

1,509 

1,281 



132 
324 
546 
716 
305 
875 
370 
51 
171 
164 
323 
2.281 



;<.;: 1:1 



Thrown out of work. 



655 
4,131 
20,512 
18,121 
15.424 



59.630 
15.176 
10,731 
21.555 
31.014 
32.014 
21.842 
29.619 
14,785 
7,668 
7,763 
14.217 
14.817 
62.653 



504.307 



83.21 
93.80 
73.53 

78. as 

83.77 
63.02 
94.76 
79.53 
73.91 
72.49 
59.13 
96.02 
84.95 
84.94 
67.07 
89.95 
91.34 
88.85 
93.20 
93.17 



80.24 



16.79 
6.20 
2(5.42 
21.07 
16.23 
36.98 
5.24 
20.47 
26.09 
27.51 
40.87 
3.93 
15.05 
15.06 
32.93 
10.05 
8.66 
11.15 
6.80 
6.83 



19.76 



NOTE Of the total number of strikes 14,457 were ordered by organizations and 8,326 were 
not so ordered. Of those ordered 52.86 per cent succeeded, 13.00 per cent partly succeeded and 
33. 54 per cent failed; of those not ordered, 35.56 per cent succeeded, 9.05 per cent partly sue 
ceeded and 55.39 per cent failed. 



56 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



COFFEE AND TEA CONSUMED IN THE UNITED STATES. 



YEAR ENDED 
JUNE 30. 



COFFEE. 



Imports. 



**** 



TEA. 



Imports. 



Price* 



Per 

capita. 



1830.. 
1840. , 
1850. . 
I860.. 
1870., 
1880., 
1890. 
1891. 
is'.t'.. 
is;*:;.. 
1894.. 
1895.. 
tsii.;.. 
1897.. 
1898.. 
1899.. 
1900.. 
1901.. 
IH02.. 



Pounds. 
51.488.24S 
94.996,095 
145,272.687 
202,144.733 
235,256.574 
446.850.727 
499.159,120 
519,538.432 
640.210,788 
563.466,068 
550,934,337 
652.208,975 
589.597.915 
737,645,670 
870,514.455 



787.95)1,911 

854.871,310 

1,091.004,252 



Value. 
$4,227,021 
8.546,222 
11,234,835 
21.883,797 
24.234,879 
60.860,769 
78,267,432 
96.123,777 
128.041 .930 
80.485,558 
90.314.676 
96.130,717 
84.793.124 
81.544,384 
65,067,631 
55.275.470 
52.467,943 
62,861.399 
70,982.155 
59.200.649 



Cents. 



7.6 
10.8 
10.3 
13.5 
16. 
19. 
20. 
14.0 
16.4 
14.7 
14.6 
11.0 
7.4 
6.5 
7.5 
7.3 
6.4 
6.4 



Pounds. 



20.006,595 
29.872,654 
31,696,657 
47.408.481 
72.162.936 



,463,33? 



89,061,287 
93.518,717 
97,253.458 
93.998,372 
113,346,175 
70.957.715 
74,089.890 
84,845,107 



75.579.125 

108.574.905 



Value. 
$2,425.018 
5.427.010 
4.719.232 
8.915.327 
13.863,273 
19.782.931 
12,317,493 
13,828.993 
14.373.222 
13,857,482 
14,144.243 
13.171.379 
12.704,440 
14.835.862 
10,054.283 
9.675.081 
10.558.110 
11,017.876 
9,390,128 
15.659.229 



Lbs. 

S 

1.22 

.84 

1.10 



1. 
1. 
1. 

1.36 
1.40 
1.33 



.98 
1.09 
1.14 

.94 
1.34 



* Average import price per pound. tConsumption per capita based on net imports. 
WINES AND LIQUORS CONSUMED IN THE UNITED STATES. 



YEAR. 



1840. 

1850. 



1870. 



1891. 
1892. 
1893. 
1894. 
1896. 
iv.it;. 
1897. 

IV. IS 

1899. 
1900. 
1901. 
1902. 



WINES. 



Consump- Per 
tion. capita 



Oallons. 

4,873.096 
6,315,871 
11.059,141 
12.225.067 
28.329.541 
28.95T,,981 
29,033.792 
28.467.860 
31,987.819 
21,293.124 
19,644.049 
18,701,406 
38.588.307 
20.557,317 
26,360,696 
30.427.491 
28,791.149 
49,754,403 



Gals. 
.29 
.27 



.56 
.46 
.45 
.44 

.48 
.31 
.28 
.26 
.53 



.40 
.37 



MALT LIQUORS. 



Consumption. 



Gallons. 
23,310.843 

36,563,009 
101,346,669 
204,756.156 
414,220,165 
855,792.335 
977,479.761 



1,074.546.336 
1.036,319.222 
1,043.292.106 
1.080.626,165 
1,069.310.262 
1,164,226.462 
1,135.520.629 
1,221,500.160 
1,258.249.391 
1.381.875.437 



Gals. 
1.36 
1.58 
3.22 
5.31 
8.26 
13.67 
15.31 
15.17 
16.20 
15.^2 
15.13 
15.38 
14.94 
15.96 
15.28 
16 01 
16.20 
17.49 



DISTILLED SPIRITS 



Consump- 
tion. 



Pf. gallons. 
43,060.884 
51,833.473 



79,895,708 
63,526.694 
87,829,562 
91,157.565 
98,328.118 
101.197.753 
90.541.209 
77,828.561 
71,051.877 
73.166.833 
81.487.587 
87,310.228 
97.248.382 



107,452.151 



Per 
capita. 



Pf.gals 
2.52 
2.23 
2.86 
2.07 
1.27 
1.40 
1.43 
1.51 
1.52 
1.34 
1.13 
1.01 
1.02 
1.12 



1.33 
1.36 



Total wines 
and liquors. 



Gallons, 

71,244,823 

94,712,353 

202.374.461 

296,876,931 

506.076.400 

972,578,878 

1.097,671,118 

1,114,292.201 

1,207.731,908 

1,148.153.555 

1,140.764,716 

1,170.379.448 

1,181.065402 

1.266,281,366 

1,249.191.553 

1,349.176,033 

1.390.127,379 

1,539,081,991 



Per 

capita of 
all wines 

and 
liquors. 



Gallons. 
4.17 
4.08 
6.44 
7.70 
10.09 
15.53 
17.19 
17.12 
18.20 
16.97 
16.54 
16.66 
16.50 
17.36 
16.80 
17.68 
17.90 
19.48 



THE NATION'S DRINK BILL. 

Quantity and cost of stimulating beverages consumed in the United States. 
[From American Grocer, March 25, 1903.] 



YEAR. 



1896... 
1897.. 



1899 

1900 

1901 

1902 



COFFEE. 



Pounds. 



531.395,220 
547.068,994 
643.234.766 
572.671.840 
724,559.536 
851.691,084 
801,756.868 
748.800,771 
809,036.029 
1.056.541,637 



Per 

capita 



9.33 
8.11 
10.12 
11.68 
10.79 
9.81 
10.60 
13.37 



BEER. 



Gallons. 



1,074,546,336 
1,036,319,222 
1,043.242.106 
1,080.626,165 
1.0t>9,3lO,262 
1.164,226.462 
1,135.520.629 
1,221,600,160 
1,258.249.391 
1.381.875,437 



16.20 
15.32 
15.13 
15.38 
14.94 
15.96 
15.28 
16.01 
16.20 
> 17.49 



Pounds. 




capita 



SPIRITS AND 
WINES. 



Gallons. 



133,185.572 
111,834,333 
97.472,610 
89.753,283 
111.755,190 
102.054.904 
113,670,924 
127,675,873 
131.877,988 
157.206,554 



Per 

capita. 



The total cost to the nation for stimulants in 1902 was $1.369.098.276. of which $1,172,565.235 
was for alcoholic drinks, $149,891.030 for coffee. $39.1)42,011 for tea and $7,000.000 for cocoa. This 
represents a per capita expenditure of $17.33 for the year, or 4.7 cents per day. The total for 
1901 was $1,273.212.3,%; for 1900. ?1.228.fi74.'.fia; for 1899. $1.146.897.822. and for 1898, $1,177.661.306. 



UNITED STATES CUSTOMS DUTIES. 57 


UNITED STATES CUSTOMS DUTIES. 


Following Is a list of the existing tariff rates on articles in common use or of extensive 
importation, with especial reference to such as are made or dealt in by the leading American 
trusts. The abbreviation n. s. p. signifies "not specially provided for.' 1 The amounts given 
in dollars and cents are specific and the percentages are ad valorem duties. 


Agricultural implements, 20%. 


Charcoal, 20%. 


dates, %c Ib. ; figs, 2c Ib.; 


Alcohol, amyl or fusel oil, 


Cheese, 6c Ib. 


jellies, 35%; preserved, n. 


%c Ib. 


Chemical compounds, n. s. 


s. p., Ic Ib and 35%; 


Animals, n. s. p., 20%; for 


p., 25%. 


prunes, 2c Ib. ; raisins, 2%c 


breeding, free; cattle less 


China, plain, 55%; decorated, 


Ib. 


than 1 year old, $2 per 
head; value under $14; $3.76 


60%. 
Chocolate and cocoa, value 


Furniture (wood), 35%. 
Fur, manufactures, n. s. p., 


head; value over $14,27%%; 


not over I5c Ib., 2%c Ib.; 


35%; skins, undressed, free. 


hogs, $1.50 head; noises 
and mules, value under 


value 15c to 24c, 2%c Ib. 
and 10%; value 24c to 35c, 


Glass, n.s. p., 45%; polished 
plate, from 8c to 35c per 


$150, $30 head; value over 


5c Ib. and 10%; value over 


square foot, according to 


$150, 25%; sheep, 1 year 
or older, $1.50; under 1 


35c, 50%. 
Cigars, cigarettes, $4.50 Ib. 


size; polished and silvered, 
from lie to 38c square foot; 


year, 75c head. 


and 25%. 


common window glass, l%c 


Apples, green, 25c bu.; 
dried, 2c Ib. 


Clocks, n. s. p., 40%. 
Clothing, cotton, 50%; fur. 


to 4%c per square foot. 
Glass, articles of, orna- 


Art, works of, such as 


35%; rubber, 30%; silk, 


mented, 60% ; manufac- 


paintings and statuary, 
20%; by American artists, 
free. 
Bacon and hams, 5c Ib. 
Barley, 30c bu. of 48 Ibs.; 
malt, 45c bu. of 34 Ibs. 
Barrels, casks, empty, 30%. 


60%; wool, 44c Ib. and 60%. 
Coal, free; coke, 20%. 
Coffee, free. 
Combs. 35% to 60%. 
Copper, manufactures of, 
45%; ingots, ores, free. 
Cork bark, 8c Ib. ; manufac- 


tures, n. s. p., 45%. 
Gloves, cotton, 50%; fur, 
35%; linen, 50%; leather, 
from $1.75 to $4.75 per doz. 
pairs, according to length. 
Glucose or grape sugar, l%c 
Ib. 


Baskets, 35% to 60%. 
Beaded fabrics, not wool, 
60%; wool, 50c Ib. and 60%. 
Beads, not strung, 35%; in 


tures, 25%. 
Corn, 15c bu. of 56 Ibs. 
Cornstarch (food), 20%. 
Cotton, raw, free; cloth, 


Glue, value less than lOc Ib., 
2y 2 c Ib. ; over lOc, 25%. 
Gold, manufactures, 45%: 
jewelry, 60%. 


jewelry, 60%. 
Beans, edible, 45c bu. of 60 
Ibs. 


from Ic to 8c square yard 
and 45%; duck, 35%: arti- 
cles made of, without silk, 


Grass fibers, n. s. p., 45%. 
Gutta-percha, manufactures 
of, n. s. p., 35%. 


Beef, fresh, 2c Ib. 
Bindings, 45% to 60%. 
Birds, free; dressed for or- 


45%; with silk. 50%. 
Cotton-seed meal, 20%; oil, 
4c gal. 


Hair, human, unmanufac- 
tured, 20%; manufactures 


naments, 50%. 
Biscuit and crackers, 20%. 
Blankets, 22c Ib. and 30%; 
value 40c to 50c, 33c Ib. 
and 35%: value over 50c, 
33c Ib. and 40%; over 3 
yards long, 33c to 44c Ib. 


Cotton thread on spools, 6c 
doz. 
Diamonds, cut but not set, 
10%; rough, free; set, 60%. 
Drugs, crude, free; refined 
or ground, %c Ib. and 10%. 
Dyewoods, crude, free; ex- 


of, 35% . 
Hats, caps, bonnets and 
hoods, from 35% to 60%, ac- 
cording to material. 
Hay, $4 per ton. 
Hemp, hackled, $40 per ton; 
not hackled, $20; manufac- 


and 50% to 55%. 
Bone, manufactures of, n. 
s. p., 30%. 


tracts, %c Ib. 
Earthenware, plain, 25%; 
decorated, 55% to 60%. 


tures, n. s. p., 45%. 
Hides, raw, 15%. 
Honey, 20c gal. 


Books, pamphlets, 25%; print- 
ed 20 years, free. 


Eggs, n. s. p., 5c doz. 
Embroideries. 60%. 


Hops, 12c Ib. 
Horn, manufactures, n. s. p., 


Boots and shoes (leather), 
25%. 
Bottles, glass, ornamented. 


Engravings, 25%. 
Envelopes, plain, 20%; 
other, 35%. 


30%. 
India rubber, manufactures 
of, n. s. p., 30%; vulcan- 


60%; plain, empty, Ic to 
l%c, but not less than 40%. 
Braids, cotton, linen, rub- 
ber, silk, 60%; grass, 
straw, 30%. 


Fans, palmleaf, free; all 
other. 50%. 
Feathers, for beds, 15%; 
plain, 15%; colored, etc., 
50% 


ized. 35%. 
Ink, 25%. 
Iron and steel, common 
sheets, various specific 
rates, according to value 


Bronze, manufactures, 45%. 
Brushes, 40%. 
Buggies, carriages, 45%. 
Butter and substitutes for, 
6c Ib. 
Buttons, sleeve and collar, 
gilt, 50%. 
Cameras, 45%. 
Canvas, sail, cotton, 35%. 
Carbons, for electric lights, 
90c per 100; pots, 20%. 
Carpets, 2-ply ingrain, 18c 


Felt roofing, 10%. 
Pelts, not woven, n. s. p., 
44c Ib. and 60%. 
Fertilizers, free. 
Fish, American fisheries, 
free; anchovies, sardines 
and the like, iy 2 c to lOc per 
pkg., according to size; 
smoked, dried. %c Ib.; hali- 
but, Ic Ib. ; herrings, pic- 
kled, Ic Ib.; fresh, y 4 c Ib.; 
lobsters, free; mackerel, 


per Ib., average 45.43% ad 
val. ; manufactures of, n. 
s. p., 45%; beams, girders, 
etc., %c Ib. ; hoop, band 
or scroll, n. s. p., 5-10c to 
8-10c Ib. ; round iron or 
steel wire, average 40.22% 
ad val. ; wire nails not 
less than 1 inch long, etc., 
%c Ib. ; iron or steel tubes, 
etc., 2c Ib. or 35%; cast- 
iron pipe, 4-lOc Ib. ; rails, 
7-20c Ib 


square yard and 40%; Brus- 
sels, 44c square yard and 
40%; Axminster, 60c square 
yard and 40%: Wilton, 


salmon, Ic Ib. 
Flax, manufactures of, n. s. 
p., 45%. 
Flaxseed, 25c bu. of 56 Ibs. 


Ivory, unmanufactured, free; 
manufactured, 35%. 
Jet, manufactures of, n. s. 


ditto; rugs. 5c to lOc square 


Flour, wheat, 25%. 


p., 50%. 


yard and 35% to 40%. 
Cement, Portland, hydraulic, 


Flowers, artificial, 50%. 
Fruits, green, n. s. p., free; 


Jewelry, 60%. 
Jute, manufactures of, n. s. 


8c per 100 Ibs. : India rub- 


dried, 2c Ib. ; cherries. 25c 


p., 45%. 


ber, etc., 20%. 


bu.; cranberries, 25%; 


Knit wearing apparel, 60%. 



58 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


Knives, pocket, 40% to 20c 


Palm leaf, manufactures, 30%. 


Smokers' articles, n. a. p.. 


each and 40%, according 


Paper, n. s. p., 25%; manu- 


60%. 


to value; other knives, 45%. 


factures of, 35%; boxes, 


Snuff, 55c lb. 


Lace, articles of, n. a. p., 


45%; photographic. 3c lb. 


Soap, castile. l%c lb. ; fancy, 


60%. 


and 10%; printing, 3-10c lb. 


15c lb. ; laundry. 20%. 


Lamps, 45% to 60%. 


to 15%; stock, crude, free. 


Spices, n. s. p., 3c lb. 


Lard, 2c lb. 


Paper, writing, from 2c lb. 


Sponges, 20%; manufactures, 


Laths, 25c per 1,000. 


and 10% to 3%c and 25%. 


40%. 


Lead, manufactures of, n. . 


Pencils, lead, 45c gross and 


Starch, l^c lb. 


p., 45%; in any form, n. a. 


25%. 


Stoves, 45%. 


p., 2%c lb. 


Pens, except gold. 12c gross. 


Straw, manufactures, n. s. 


Leather, n. s. p., 20%; man- 


Pepper, unground, free; 


p., 30%; fibers, n. a. p., 


ufactures, n. s. p., 35%. 


other, 2V 2 c to 3c lb. 


45%; unmanufactured, $1.50 


Linen, manufactures, 45%; 


Perfumery, nonalcoholic, 


ton. 


clothing, 60%. 


50%; alcoholic, 60c lb. and 


Sugars, not above No. 16 


Linseed, 25c bu. of 56 Ibs.; 


45%. 


Dutch standard, .95c lb.; 


meal, 20%; oil cake, free; 


Pewter, manufactures of, 


above No. 16 Dutch stand- 


oil, 20c gal. of 71/2 Ibs. 


45%. 


ard, 1.95c lb. ; molasses, 3c 


Liquors, ale, porter and beer, 
in bottles, 40c gal. ; brandy, 


Phosphorus, 18c lb. 
Photographic lenses, slides, 


to 6c gal. ; confectionery, 
n. s. p., value 15c or less 


n. s. p., $2.25 prf. gal. ; 
cordials, whisky, gin, $2.25 


negatives. 45%; plates or 
films, 25%. 


per lb., 15%; value more 
than 15c lb., 50%. 


prf. gal.; champagne and 
all sparkling wines, in bot- 
tles of 1 pint to 1 quart, $8 

doz. 


Photographs, printed for 
more than 20 years, free; 
on glass, 45%; paper, 25%. 
Pickles, n. s. p., 40%. 


Tallow, %c lb. 
Tea, free. 
Thread, cotton, on spools, 6c 


Macaroni, etc., l%c lb. 
Manila cordage, Ic lb. 
Mantels, slate, 20%; marble, 
50%; wood, 35%. 
Maple sirup, sugar, 4c lb. 
Marble, in blocks, 65c cub. 
ft. ; manufactures, n. s. p., 
50%. 


Pins, not jewelry, 35%. 
Plants, nursery stock, n. a. 
p., 25%. 
Plaster, court, etc., 35%. 
Porcelain, 55% to 60%. 
Pork, fresh, 2c lb. 
Potatoes, 60 Ibs. to bu., 25%. 
Poultry, live, 3c lb. ; dressed, 


doz. 
Thrashing machines, 20%. 
Tiles, plain, 4c square foot; 
ornamented, 8c to lOc 
square foot and 25%. 
Tin, in bars or ore. free; in 
plates, l%c lb. ; manufac- 
tures of, 45%, but not less 


Marmalade, Ic lb. and 35%. 
Matches, friction, 8c gross, 
in boxes of 100 each; not 
in boxes, Ic per 1,000. 
Matting, floor, n. s. p., value 
not over lOc square yard, 
3c square yard; over lOc, 
7c square yard and 30%. 
Meats, prepared or pre- 
served, n. s. p., 25%: In 
carcasses, except beef, pork, 
mutton or poultry, 10%. 
Meerschaum, crude, free; 


5c lb. 
Powder, gun, 4c to 6c lb. ; 
tooth, 50%. 
Precious stones, not Bet, 
10%; set, 60%; imitations, 
not set, 20%. 
Proprietary articles and 
medicines, 25% to 50%. 
Pulp, wood, n. s. p., 35%; 
mechanically ground, l-12c 

Rabbits, live, 20%; dressed, 
10%. 


Tobacco, wrapper, unstem- 
med, $1.85 lb. ; stemmed, 
$2.50 lb. ; filler, n. s. p., 
unstemrned, 35c lb. ; stem 
med, 50c lb. ; all other man- 
ufactured or unmanufac- 
tured, n. s. p., 55c lb. 
Twine, binding, free; cotton, 
45%; manila, 45%. 
Vegetables, n. s. p., 25%; 
preserved, n. s. p., 40%. 
Vinegar, 7%c prf. gal. 


pipes, 60%. 
Milk, fresh, 2c gal. 
Mineral waters, 20c to 30e 


Raga, wool, lOc lb. ; other, 
free. 
Railroad ties, wood, 20%. 


Waterproof cloth, lOc square 
yard and 20%. 
Wax, manufactures, n. s. p., 


doz. bottles. 
Mirrors, 45%. 


Rattan, in rough, free; man- 
ufactured, 10% to 35%. 


Whalebone, manufactures, n. 


Molasses (see "Sugars"). 
Musical instruments, 45%. 
Mutton, fresh, 2c lb. 


Reapers. 20%. 
Rice, cleaned, 2c lb. ; un- 
cleaned, l^c lb. 


s. p., 30%. 
Wheat, 25c bu. 
Willow, manufactures, 40%. 


Nails, cut, 6-10c lb.; horse- 


Rubber boots and shoes, 44c 


Wire, . brass, copper, iron, 


shoe, 2%c lb. ; wire, 1 inch 


lb. and 60%. 


steel, n. a. p., 45%; rods, 


and over, y>c lb. 


Rye, lOc bu. 


4-10c to %c lb. 


Naphtha, 20%". 
Needles, n. s. p., 25%; darn- 


Salt, in bags, 12c per 100 
Ibs. ; in bulk, 8c per 100 Ibs. 


Wood, manufactures, n. s. 
p., 35%; all wood, unmanu- 


ing, free. 
Nickel, manufactures, 6c lb. 


Sausages, bologna, German, 
free; other, 20% to 25%. 


factured, n. s. p., 20%; 
sawed lumber, n. s. p., $2 


Nuts, n. s. p., Ic lb.; al- 


Scissors, 15c .doz. and 15% to 


per 1,000 feet, board meas- 


monds, not shelled, 4c lb. ; 
shelled, 6c lb. ; filberts, 


75c doz. and 25%. 
Screws, 4c to 12c lb. 


ure. ' 
Wool, first class, unwashed. 


shelled, 5c lb. ; not shelled, 


Seeds, n. s. p.. 30%. 


lie lb. ; washed. 22c lb. ; 


3c lb. ; walnuts, shelled, 
5c lb. : not shelled, 3c lb. 
Oats, 15c bu. 
Oilcloth for floors, n. s. p., 
8c square vard and 15%. 
Oils, n. s. p.. 25%: castor. 
35c gal. ; cod liver. 15c gal. ; 


Sewing machines, 35% to 
45%. 
Shingles, 30c per 1,000. 
Silk, carded and combed, 
40c lb.; manufactures, 50%; 
appliqued articles. 60%: 
cocoons, free; fabrics, from 


and scoured, 33c lb. ; sec- 
ond class, washed or un- 
washed, 12c lb. ; scoured, 
36c lb. ; wools of third 
class, 4c to 7c lb.; blan- 
kets. 22c lb. and 30% to 
44c lb. and 55%. according 


olive, n. s. p., 40c gal. 


50c lb., but not less than 


to value and size; manu- 


Onions, 40c bu. 


50%, to $4.50 lb., but not 


factures, n. s. p., 33c lb. 


Opium, crude. $1 lb. ; pre- 
pared for smoking, $6 lb 


less than 50%: laces, 60%. 
Silver, manufactures, n. s. 


and 50% to 44c and 55%, 
according to value: yarns, 


Ore, iron. 40c ton; lead bear- 
ing, l%c lb. ; antimony, 


p., 45%: bullion, tree. 

Skins, hides of cattle, 15%: 


value not over 30c lb.. 
2iy. 2 c lb. and 40%; value 


ground, 20%; other, free. 


of all kinds, n. s. p., 


OV<T 30c lb., 38yc lb. and 


Oysters, free. 


free; bird, 15% to 50%. 


40%. 


Paints, colors and pigments, 


Slate, manufactures, n. s. p., 


Zinc, manufactures of, n. s. 


n. s. p., 30%. 


20%. 


p.. 45%. 



STATISTICS OF POPULATION. 59 


STATISTICS OF POPULATION. 

POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES AT EACH CENSUS (1850-1900). 
[From the reports of the superintendents of the census.] 


STATE OK 
TERRITORY. 


1900. 


1890. 


1880. 


1870. 


1860. 


1850. 


Alabama 


18 
25 
21 
31 
29 
42 
32 
11 

1 

8 
10 
22 

13 

~7 
9 
19 
20 
5 
41 
27 
45 
88 
16 
1 
15 
39 
4 
35 
2 
34 
2t 
37 
13 
6 
40 
38 
17 
33 
28 
14 
44 


1.828,697 
1.311.564 
1.485,053 
'539,700 
908,420 
184.735 
528,542 
2.21li.331 
161.772 
4,821,550 
2,516.462 
2.231,853 
1.470.495 
2,147.174 
1,381.625 
694,466 
1,188.044 
2,805.346 
2.420,982 
1,751.394 
1.551,270 
3.106.665 
243.329 
1,066,300 
42,335 
411,588 
1,883.669 
7,268.894 
1,893.810 
319,146 
4,157.545 
413,536 
6,302,115 
428,556 
1,340.316 
401.570 
2.020.616 
3.048.710 
276,749 
343.641 
1.854.184 
518,103 
958,800 
2,069.042 
92,531 


17 

24 
22 
31 
29 
41 
32 
12 
43 
3 

18 

19 
11 

25 
30 
27 
6 
9 
20 
21 
5 
42 
26 
45 
33 
18 
1 
16 
39 

3! 

2 

35 
23 
37 
13 
7 
40 
86 
15 
34 
28 
14 
44 


1,513,017 
1,128,179 
1,208,130 
412198 
746,258 
168,493 
391,422 
1,837,353 
84,385 
3,826,351 
2,192,404 
1,911,896 
1,427,091! 
1,858.635 
1,118,587 
661,086 
1.042,390 
2,238,943 
2,093,889 
l,301,82i 
1.289, tiOO 
2,679,184 
132,159 
1,058,910 
45,761 
376,530 
1,444,933 
5,997,853 
1,617,947 
182 719 


17 

25 
24 
86 

28 
37 
34 
13 

4 

6 
10 
20 

2 f 

27 

"7 
9 

a; 

18 
5 


1,262,505 
802,525 
864,694 
194,327 
622,700 
146,608 
269,493 
1,542,180 

'3.077,871 

1,978,301 
1,624,615 
996,096 
1,648,690 
939.946 
648,936 
934,943 
1,783 085 
1,636,937 
780,773 
1,131,597 
2,168,380 


If, 
26 

24 

'25' 
34 
33 
12 

"4" 
6 

11 

29 
8 
21 
23 
20 
7 

i 

18 
5 


996,992 
484,471 
5<>0,247 
39,864 
537,454 
125,015 
187,748 
1,184,109 

' 2,539,89'i 

].fvs().f,37 
1,194,020 
364,399 
1,321,011 
726,915 
626,915 
780,894 
1,457,351 
1,184,059 
439,706 
827,922 
1,721,295 


r 
25 
26 

'24' 
32 
31 
11 

"4" 

f, 

20 
33 
9 
17 

22 
19 
7 

16 
30 
14 

8 


964,201 
435,450 
379,994 
34,277 
460.147 
112,216 
140,424 
1,057,286 


12 

2f, 
29 


771.623 

209,897 
92,597 


Arkansas 
California 


Connecticut 


21 
30 
31 
9 


370,792 
91,532 
87,445 
906,185 


Florida 




Idaho 


Illinois 


1,711,951 
1,350,428 
674,913 
107,206 
1,1.55,684 
708,002 
628,279 
687,049 
1,231,066 
749,113 
172,023 
791,305 
1,182,012 


11 

7 
27 

"8 
18 
16 
17 

f; 
20 
33 
15 
13 


851,470 
988,416 
192,214 

"'982,465 
517,762 
583,169 
583,034 
994,514 
397,654 
6,077 
606,526 
682,044 


Indiana 


Kansas 




Maine 


Maryland 
Massachusetts.... 
Michigan 
Minnesota 


Mississippi 
Missouri 
Montana 




30 

as 

31 
19 

,1 


452,402 
62,266 
346,991 
1,131,116 
5,082,871 
1,399,750 


35 
37 
31 
17 
1 
14 


122,993 
42,491 
318,300 
906,096 
4,382,759 
1,071,361 


35 
36 
27 
21 

1 
12 


28,841 
6,857 
326,073 
672,035 
3,880735 
992,622 







Nevada 


New Hampshire.. 
Xew Jersey 
New York 


22 
19 

,5 


317,976 

489,555 
3,097,394 
869,039 


North Carolina... 
North Dakota .... 
Ohio 


3,672',316 
313.767 
5,258,014 
345,506 
1,151,149 
328,808 
1,767,518 
2,235,523 
207.905 
332,422 
1,655,930 
349.390 
762,794 
1,686,880 
60,705 


3 

3; 

2 
33 
21 

'l2' 
11 

14 

'29' 
16 


3,198,062 
174,768 
4,282,891 
276,531 
995,577 


3 

30 

32 
22 


2,665,260 
90,923 
3,521,951 
217,353 
705,606 


3 
34 
2 

2*,) 
18 


2,339,511 
52,465 
2,906,215 
174,620 
703,708 


3 

32 

28 
14 


1,980,329 
13,294 
2,311,786 
147,545 
668,507 


Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island. ... 
South Carolina... 
South Dakota 
Tennessee 


1,542,359 
1,591,749 


9 

19 


1,258,520 
818,579 


10 
23 


1,109,801 
604,215 


5 
25 

'' 
4 


1,002,717 
212,592 

'"314426 
1,421,661 


Texas 


Utah 


Vermont 


332,286 
1,512,565 


30 
10 


330,551 
1,225,163 


28 
5 


315,098 
1,596,318 


Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

The states 
Alaska 


618,457 
1,315,497 


27 
15 


442,014 
1,054,670 


'15' 








775,881 


24 


305,391 




















74,610,523 




62,116,811 





49,371,340 




38,155,505 





31,218,021 




23,067,262 


6 


63,592 
122.931 


6 
5 




















\rizona ... 


59,620 


6 
3 
1 


40,440 
135.177 
177,624 


9 
8 
1 


9,658 
14,181 
131,700 


"e 

2 








Dakota 
Dist. of Columbia 
Hawaii 
Idaho 


4,837 
75,080 






3 
5 


278.718 
154,001 


1 


230,392 


2 


51,687 








32,610 


7 












Indian Territory. 
Montana 


2 


392.060 


2 




8 


14,999 














39,159 


.. 












New Mexico 
Oklahoma 
Persons in service 
of the U. S. sta- 
tioned abroad... 


4 
1 


'195.310 
398,331 

91219 


3 
4 


153,593 
61,834 


7 
4 


119,565 




20.595 
91,874 


1 


93,516 


1 


61,547 










Utah 












143,963 
75,116 
20,789 


"5" 

10 


86,786 
23,955 
9,118 

402,86' 


"a' 


40,273 
11,594 




11,380 












5 
9 












The territories.. 
United States. . . 
Per cent of gain.. 



















1.604.943 


.... 


505,439 




784,443 




225,300 


in: 


124,614 
23,191,876 




76,303.387 




62,622,250 




50,1.55,783 




38,558,371 




31,443,321 


21 


24.9 


30.08 


22.65 


35.58 


35.86 


NOTE The narrow column under each census year shows the order of the states and 
territories when arranged according to magnitude of population. 



60 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES AT EACH CENSUS (1790-1840). 
[From the reports of the superintendents of the census.] 


STATE OH 
TERRITORY. 


1840. 


1830. 


1820. 


1810. 


1800. 


1790. 


Alabama 
Arkansas 
California 


12 

25 


590,756 
97,574 


15 
27 


309,527 
30,388 


19 

25 


127,901 
14273 








































Colorado 


























Connecticut 
Delaware 


20 

H 

a 

9 


309,978 
78,085 
54,477 
691,392 


ifi 

24 
25 

10 


297.675 
76.748 
34,730 
516,323 


14 
22 

'ii' 


275.248 
72,749 


9 
19 


26i,&42 
72,674 


i! 


251,002 
64,273 


8 

u; 


237,964 
59,096 


Florida 




340,989 


11 


252,433 


12 


162,686 


13 


82,548 


Idaho 


Illinois 


14 

1U 

28 


476,183 
43J12 


20 
13 


157,445 
343,031 


24 

IS 


55,211 
147,178 


i 


12,282 
24,520 










Indiana 
Iowa 
Kansas 


20 


5,641 


.... 
























Kentucky 


8 

19 
13 
15 

8 




779,828 
352.411 
501.793 
470,019 
737.1599 
212,267 


6 
19 

12 
11 

8 
26 


687.9i7 
215,739 
399,455 
447,040 
610,408 
31,639 


6 

17 
12 
10 

88 


564,317 
153,407 
298,335 
407.350 
523.287 
8,765 


7 
IS 
14 
8 
5 
24 


406,oii 
76,556 
228.705 
380,546 
472,040 
4.762 


9 


220,955 


14 


73,677 




14 
7 
5 


t719 
548 
845 


11 
6 
4 


96,540 
319,728 
378,787 


Maryland 


Massachusetts 
Michigan 
Minnesota 










Mississippi 


17 

u 


375,651 
383,702 


B 

21 


136,621 
140,455 


21 
23 


75,448 
66,586 


20 
22 


40,352 
20,845 


19 


8,850 

















Nebraska 


























Nevada 


























New Hampshire . . 
New Jersey 
New York 


22 

18 
1 

7 


284,574 

373.306 
2,42S,H21 
753,419 


is 

5 


269,328 
320.823 
1,918.608 
737,987 


15 

13 
1 
4 


244,161 

277,575 
1,372,812 
638,829 


is 

12 
2 
4 


214,460 
245.562 
959,049 
555,500 


11 
10 
3 
4 


183.858 
211,149 
589.051 
478,103 


10 
9 
5 
3 


141,885 
184.139 
340.120. 
393,751 


North Carolina... 
North Dakota 


Ohio 


3 


1,519,467 


4 


937.903 


5 


581,434 


13 


230,760 


IS 


45,365 








Pennsylvania... . 
Rhode Island... . 
South Carolina. . 


i 

24 

11 


1,724.033 
108,830 
594,398 


2 
23 

9 


1, 348,233 
97J99 
581,185 


3 
20 

8 


1,049.458] 
83,059 
502,741 


3 

17 

6 


810,091 
76,931 
415,115 


3 

16 
6 


602,365 
69,122 
345,591 


2 
15 
7 


434,373 
68,825 

249,073 

'"35,69i 


Tennessee 


5 


829,210 


7 


681,904 


9 


422,823 


10 


261,72" 


15 


105,602 


17 


Vermont 
Virginia 


21 
4 


291,948 
1,239,797 


17 
3 


280,652 
1,211,405 


16 
I 


235i96G 
1,065,366 


15 

1 


235,981 
974,600 


13 

1 


154,465 
880,200 


12 
1 


85,425 
747,610 


Washington 




























W : sconsin 
Wy^ining 


28 


30,945 










































The states 
Alaska 

















7,215,858 





5,294,390 








17,019,641 


.... 


12,820,868 




9,600,783 




















































































Dist. of Columbia. 
Idaho 
Indian Territory. . 


1 


43,712 


1 


39,834 


1 


33.039 


1 


24,023 


1 


14,093 






































































































Utah 














































































The territories 

On public ships in 
service of L.S... 

United States. 
Per cent of gain... 




437n2 


























39,834 




33,039 




24,023 


.... 


14.093J.... 






6.100.... 


5.318 


































... 

1, 


17,069,4531... 


12,SG6,020J.... 


9,638.453 




7,239.881 




5.308,483 




3,929,214 


.32.67 33.55 33.06 


3638 35.10 






NOTE -The narrow column under each census year shows the order of the states and 
territories when arranged according to magnitude of population. 



STATISTICS OF POPULATION. 61 


POPULATION BY CERTAIN AGES AND BF LITERACY. 
[Census of 1900.J 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 


MALES OP VOTING AGE. 


MALES OF MILITIA AGE. 


Total 
illiterate. 


Persons 

of 

school 
age. 


Aggre- 
gate. 


Native 
born. 


Foreign 
born. 


Aggre- 
gate. 


JVafit'e 
bom. 


Foreign 
born. 


Alabama 


413.SC.2 
37.956 
44.081 
313.836 
544,087 

185,708 
280.340 
54.018 
83,823 
139,601 

500.752 
70.607 
53,932 
1,401,456 
720,206 

97.361 
635,298 
413.786 
543,996 
325,943 

217,663 
321.903 
843.465 
719,478 
506,794 

349.177 
856.684 
101.931 
301.091 
17,710 

130,987 
666,608 

55.067 

2,184,965 
417,578 

95.217 
1,212,223 
109.191 
144,446 
1,817,239 

127.144 
283,325 
112,681 
487,380 

737,768 
67,172 
108,356 
447,815 

195.572 
247,970 
570.715 

37.898 


405,598 
261489 
30306 
305.464 
318,817 

133.935 
173,248 
47.202 

73.722 
127,865 

493.740 
13,064 
38,185 
932.574 
646,889 

94,361 

477,273 
346.761 
518,772 
299,772 

178,931 
279,216 
495.734 
457,353 

245,768 

344,151 
743.659 
58.237 
209,961 
10.523 

. 96.099 
357,447 
47.482 
1,346.829 
415,048 

39,344 
985,969 
100.528 
1U1,923 
1,330,099 

72,820 
280,221 
67.079 
477,739 

650,599 
41,939 
87,465 
436,389 

126,190 
235,036 
313,188 
26,563 


8.264 
11,467 
13.775 
8,372 
225.270 

51,773 
107,092 
6.816 
10,101 
11,736 

?,012 
66.543 
15.747 

468.882 
73,317 

3.000 
158.025 
67.025 
25.224 
26.171 

38.732 
42,687 
347,731 
262.125 
261,026 

5.026 
113,025 
43.694 
91,130 

7,187 

34,888 
198.161 
7,585 
838.136 
2,530 

55,873 
226,254 
8,663 
42.523 
487,140 

54.324 
3,104 
45.602 
9,641 

87.169 
25,233 
20.891 
11,426 

69,382 
12.934 
257.527 
11.335 


328.949 
19.703 
34.231 
250.380 
378,877 

142,136 

207.696 
40.029 
62,981 
114.500 

409,186 
72.596 
41,783 
1,091.472 
530,615 

82,252 
475,760 
304,439 
428.622 
268,739 

142.175 
243,776 
632.369 
516.802 
399.734 

289,599 
662,928 
83.574 
235.572 
11,596 

88,149 
422.758 
41,464 
1,639.395 
326,202 

80,191 
893.327 
85.884 
105.628 
1,405,916 

95.737 
236.767 
87.505 
384,249 

599.221 
53.755 
70,850 
346,030 

149.586 
200.503 
425.825 
32.988 


324,516 
121371 
24.207 
246.332 
251,028 

106.609 
131,605 
35,681 
58.087 
106,566 

405.359 
10,064 
31,674 
795,822 
498,893 

80,475 
396.201 
272.706 
418,709 
255.082 

115.499 
220,983 
379.147 
359,128 
234,386 

287,245 
609.646 
49,533 
181,752 

7,854 

61,400 
288.427 
36.749 
1,078.237 
324,855 

37,465 
774,274 
80.934 
80,020 
1,066,136 

56.459 
235.261 
59.049 
379,751 

547,750 
40,683 
58,259 
340.247 

100,731 
192.516 
290.8!)1 
24.158 


4,433 

7,332 
10.024 
4.048 
127,849 

35,527 
76,091 
4!348 
4,894 
7,934 

3,827 
62.532 
10.109 
295,650 
31,722 

1,777 

79,559 
31.733 
9.913 
13,657 

26,676 
22,843 
253.222 
157,674 
165.348 

2,354 
53,282 
34,041 
53.820 
3,742 

28.749 
134,331 
4. 1 ; 15 
561,158 
1,347 

42,726 
119.053 
4,950 
25.608 
339,780 

39.278 
1,506 
28,456 
4,498 

51.471 
13,072 
12,591 
5,783 

48,855 
7.987 
134.9:>4 
8.830 


139.649 
10.735 
10.533 
62,615 
33.508 

7,639 
18,984 
7,538 
7.052 
30,849 

158,247 
27,363 
2,936 
67.481 
40,016 

15,482 
17.061 
14,214 
102.KS 
122,638 

13.952 
40,352 
53.694 
39,230 
20,785 

118,054 
60,327 
5,900 
7.388 
2,271 

10,295 
38,305 
15,585 
130,004 
122,658 

5,158 

58.698 
6.479 
6.978 
139,982 

11,675 
99,5iq 
5.442 
105,851 

113.783 
2.470 
8.544 
113,353 

6.635 
32.066 
31.13t 
1.636 


7X3,222 
11.408 
38.868 
529,375 
420,081 

160.531 
257.101 
59,635 
77,291 
197,600 

885,725 
33.774 
54.964 
1.589.915 

843,885 

159.125 

767,870 
527.560 
798.027 
538,267 

199.153 
403.026 
778.110 
790.275 
612,990 

633,027 
1,105.258 
65.871 
386.384 
11,399 

110.895 
572.923 
69,712 
2.146.764 
753,826 

112.789 
1.338,345 
147,656 
132.887 
2,031,171 

124.646 
560.773: 
147.165 '' 
780,421 

1,215.634 1 
106.513 ; 
98.614 
704.771 ; 

1.')S.215 
356.4? Ij 
730,6851 
27,500 1 


Alaska 






California 




Delaware 
Dist. of Columbia. . . 
Florida 




i Hawaii 


Idaho 


Illinois 


Indiana 


(ndian Territory . . . 




Kentucky 
Louisiana 

Maine 


Maryland 
Massachusetts 


Minnesota 
Mississippi 






Nebraska 
Nevada 


New Hampshire 
New Jersey". 




New York 


North Carolina 

North Dakota... r-.... 
Ohio 


Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 
South Carolina 
South Dakota 
Tennessee 




Utan 




Virginia 


Washington 


West Virginia 


Wisconsin 


Wyoming 


Total 
IN LARGE CITIES. 
New York 


21,251,862 

1,007,670 
511.048 
386.953 
171.798 
176.068 
141.271 
111,522 


16,163,566 

460,445 
237,688 
257.575 
116,218 
93.488 
111.181 
54.378 


5,087,306 

547,225 
273.360 
129,378 
55.580 
82.580 
30,090 
57,144 


16,2/5,001 

822.172 
420,136 
302,440 
138.008 
138.548 
110.530 
90,621 


13,061.362 

425,331 
223.423 
217.663 
108.629 
77.736 
93.553 
51,342 


3,213,639 

396,791 
196,713 
84.777 
29.379 
60.812 
16.977 
39,279 


2.325,320 

65,556 
20.572 
17.588 
7.026 
8.111 
10.152 
5,786 


26,098,123 

1.028,069 
526.013 i 
369.657 
179.529 
143.858! 
1 60.379 1 
122,005 


Chicago 


Philadelphia 
St. Louis 


Boston 


Baltimore 


Cleveland . 





62 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


FOREIGN-BORN POPULATION BY STATES. 
[Twelfth census, 1900.1 
Distributed according to countries of birth. 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 


Total* 


Aus- 
tria. 


Bo- 
hemia. 


Can- 
ada. 


Den- 
mark. 


Eng- 
land. 


France 


Ger- 
man]/. 


Hol- 
land. 


Hun- 
gary. 


Alabama 
Alaska 


14.592 

12,661 
24.233 
14,289 
367,240 
91,155 
238.210 
13,810 
20,119 
23,832 
12.403 
90,780 
24.604 
966.747 
142,121 
4,858 
305.920 
126.685 
50,249 
52,903 
93,330 
93,934 
846,324 
541,653 
505,318 
7,881 
216,379 
67.067 
177,347 
10.093 
88,107 
431,884 
13.625 
1,900,425 
4.492 
113,091 
458.734 
15-.680 
65,748 
985,250 
134.519 
5.528 
88,508 
17,746 
179,357 
53.777 
44,747 
19.461 
111,364 
22.451 
515.971 
17,415 


341 

228 
298 
451 
5,356 
6,024 
5,330 
117 
187 
91 

294 
18,212 
2.089 
203 
2,309 
3,517 
475 
765 
165 
1,756 
3,955 
6,049 
8,872 
246 
4,458 
3,575 
3^93 
96 
201 
14,728 
352 

w 

1.131 
11,575 

485 

67,492 
578 
77 
926 
284 
6.870 
240 

2.343 
1,025 
7.319 
1,046 


31 
8 
16 
281 
504 
330 
493 
4 
12 
20 
23 

si 

38,570 
526 
24 
10,809 
3,039 
52 
30 
16 
2,813 
810 
2,160 
11,147 
13 
3,453 
177 
16,138 
5 
11 
1.063 
15 
16,347 

i,l 

15,131 

IS 

3.368 
41 

HI 

9,204 
13 



396 
27 
14,145 

58 


706 
1,619 
1,269 
1,093 
29,818 
9,797 
27,045 
298 
906 
1,202 
759 
351 
2,923 
50.595 
5,934 
38Q 
15,687 
8.538 
1,208 
1,034 
67, Oi7 
1,230 
293. 169 
184.398 
47,578 
420 
8,616 
13,826 
9.049 
1.032 
58,967 
7,132 
764 
117,535 
480 
28,166 
22,767 
1,427 
6,508 
14,760 
39,277 
204 
7,044 
1.045 
2,949 
1,331 
25,540 
1,030 
20,284 
711 
33,951 
1,148 


96 
260 
199 
135 
9,040 
2,050 
2,249 
43 
88 
204 
88 
72 
1,626 

*S 

33 
17,102 
2,914 

& 

886 
177 
2.470 
6,390 

nig 

1,510 
1,041 
12,531 
339 
75 
3,899 
57 
8,746 
36 
3,953 
1,468 
226 
1,663 
2,531 
268 
55 
5.038 

i 

9,132 
905 

128 

^ 
16 -il 


2.347 
674 
1,561 
1,394 
35,746 
13,575 
21,569 
1,506 
2.299 
2,231 
1,514 
739 
3,943 
64,390 
10,874 
779 
21,027 
13,283 
3.256 
2,068 
4,793 
5,299 
82,346 
43.839 
12,022 
798 
15,666 
8,077 
9,757 
1,167 
5,100 
45428 
968 
135,685 
904 
2,909 
44.745 
1,121 
5.663 
114,831 
22832 
474 
3,8P2 
2207 
8,213 
18,879 
2,447 
3,425 
10,481 
2.622 
17,995 
2,596 


539 
93 
253 
387 
12,256 
1,162 
2,427 
148 
389 
262 
249 
100 
194 
7,787 
2,984 
216 
1,905 
2,012 
983 
6,500 
180 
534 
3,905 
2,590 
1,449 
365 
3,288 
539 
876 
303 
211 
5.543 
298 
20,008 
95 
251 
5,604 
300 
775 
9,158 
679 
84 
262 
332 
2,025 
220 
171 
316 
1,065 
29S 
1,637 
183 


3,634 
1,020 
1.245 
5.971 
72,449 
14,606 
31.892 
2,332 
5.857 
1,812 
3,407 
1,154 
2.974 
332.169 
73,546 
842 
123,162 
39.509 
27,555 
11,839 
1,356 
44,990 
31,395 
125,074 
117.007 
1,926 
109.282 
7,162 
65.506 
1,179 
2,006 
119,598 
1.360 
480,026 
1,191 
11,546 
204,160 
5,112 
13,292 
212.453 
4.300 
2,075 
17.873 
4.569 
48,295 
2.360 
882 
4,504 
16,686 
6.537 
242,777 
2.146 


42 
30 
23 
69 
1,015 
260 
153 
69 
42 
52 

ft 

50 
21,916 
1,678 

'ft 
136 

78 

30,406 
2,717 

812 
316 

1 

21 
10,261 
99 
9,414 
17 
317 
1,719 
73 
324 
637 
69 

'ii 

262 

1 

72 
632 
22 
6,496 
18 


332 

A 

97 

799 
574 

1 

37 
166 
5 
37 
6,734 
1,379 
20 
453 
650 
146 
148 
29 
323 

2,182 
40 
902 
274 
461 
3 
84 
14,913 
41 
37,168 

1.327 
16,463 
158 
156 
47,393 
69 
19 
421 
296 
593 
33 
128 
607 
222 
810 
1,123 
287 


Arizona 
Arkansas 




Colorado 


Connecticut 
Delaware 
Dist. Columbia . . . 
Florida 


Georgia 


Hawaii 


Idaho 

Illinois 


Indian Territory. 
Iowa 




entucky 
Louisiana 




Massachusetts 
Michigan 










Nebraska 


Nevada 
New Hampshire. . 
New Jersey 


New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina... 
North Dakota 
Ohio 
Oklahoma 


Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 
South Carolina... 
South Dakota 


Texas 
Utah 


Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia.... 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 


STATE OK 
TERRITORY. 


J 


?s 

1 


1 


Poland 
(Austri- 
an and ' 
German) 


*ite 

2-l 

$1| 


Russia. 


Scotland 


1 


Switzer- 
land. 


1 


Alabama 


1.792 

iS 

1.345 
44,476 
10,132 
70.994 
5.044 
6,220 
797 
2,293 
225 
1.633 
114.563 
16.30fi 
3l>7 
28.321 
11.516 
U,874 
6.4% 


862 
438 
699 
876 
22,777 
6,818 
19.105 
1.122 
930 
1,707 
218 
58 
779 
23,523 
1.327 
573 
1.198 
987 
679 
17.431 


159 
1,243 

1 

as 

709 
49 
101 
235 
155 
198 
1,173 
29,970 
384 


M 

189 


26 

""2 

259 
87 
2.441 
445 

'! 

32 


107 
13 
16 
93 
1.061 
533 

S 

119 
13 
137 
72 
31 
20.167 
1.395 
195 
598 
483 
622 
138 


468 
218 
107 
276 
3,421 
2,938 
11,401 
380 
807 
220 

"S 

124 

28,707 
1,215 
200 
1,998 
11,019 
1.076 
92 


1.223 
295 
399 
342 
9,467 
4,069 
6,175 
341 
574 
434 
417 
427 
796 
20.021 
2,805 
404 
6,425 
4,219 
793 
399 


488 
1,445 

nz 

355 
14,549 
10,765 
16.164 
302 
234 
561 
204 
140 
2.822 
99,147 
4,673 
88 
29.875 
15,144 
222 
359 


679 
10,974 
1,479 
1,499 
59 
244 
113 
180 
28 
1.017 
9,033 
3,472 
63 
4,342 
3,337 
1,929 
523 


306 
41 
136 
113 
1,949 
1,955 
650 
43 
82 
169 
65 
21 
732 
4,364 
2,083 
175 
3,091 
2,005 
337 
126 


Alaska 




Arkansas 
California 


Colorado 
Connecticut. .... 
Delaware 
Dist. Columbia... 
Florida 




Hawaii 


Idaho 


15 
47,782 
4,672 
4 
153 
268 
46 
30 


Illinois 


Indiana 
{ndian Territory, 
owa 


Kentucky 


! Louisiana 



STATISTICS OF POPULATION. 63 


FOREIGN-BORN POPULATION BY STATES. CONTINUED. 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 


1 


1 


| 


Poland 
(Austri- 
an and 

di'i-mani 


SI 


J 


S 
1 


1 


{! 


I 


Maine 
Maryland 
Massachusetts . . 
Michigan 
Minnesota 
Mississippi 
Missouri 


10.159 
13.874 
249.916 
29.182 
22.428 
1.264 
31,832 
9,436 
11,127 
1,425 
13,547 
94,844 
692 
425.553 
371 
2,670 
55,018 
987 
4,210 
205,909 
35,501 
1,131 
3.298 
3,372 
6,173 
1,516 
7,453 
3.534 
7,262 
3.342 
23,544 
L591 


s 

28,785 
6,178 
2,222 
845 
4,345 
2,199 
752 
1,296 
947 
41,865 
661 
182,248 
201 
700 

"1 

1,014 
66,655 
8,972 
180 
360 
1,222 
3,942 
1,062 
2,154 

t 

2,921 
2,172 

781 


509 
246 
3,3H5 
7,582 
104,895 
74 
530 
3,354 
2,883 
5C 
295 
2,-296 
33 
12,601 
21 
30.206 
639 
118 
2,789 
1,393 
342 
49 
119.788 
141 
1,356 
2,128 
54 
123 
9,891 
19 
61.575 
378 


31 
1,115 

9.698 
22,281 

' 3 
1,840 
64 
2,462 
4 
508 
3,670 

29,49$ 
7 
878 
9,945 
68 
50 
29,895 



316 
41 
2,186 
24 
107 
11 
194 
224 
26,975 
39 


412 
2.566 
11.805 
6.005 
2,300 
87 
1,840 
149 
632 
21 
356 
10,687 
41 
40,265 

6,877 
98 
263 
46,463 
964 
95 
156 
281 
1,162 

& 

136 
312 
409 
4,814 
40 


1,021 
11,301 
26,963 
4,138 
5,907 
414 
6,672 
394 

8 '27 
722 
19,745 
99 
165,610 
253 
14.979 
8,203 
2,649 
1,753 
50.959 
2,429 
316 
12,365 
927 
2,259 
119 
377 
1.242 

2 $f 
^ 


2.127 
2.123 
24,332 
10,343 

4,810 
196 
3,878 
2,422 

2 '2i? 
2,019 
14,211 
427 
33,862 
320 
1,800 
9,327 
333 
2,283 
30,386 
5,455 
239 
1,153 
544 
1,952 
3,143 
2,049 
1,162 
3.623 
855 
4,569 
1,253 


1,935 
347 
32,192 
26.956 
115.476 
303 
5,692 
5,346 
24,093 
278 
2.032 
7,337 
244 
42,708 
68 
8,419 
3,951 
494 
4,555 
24.130 
6,072 
65 
8,647 
337 

TJ 

1,020 
218 
12,737 
132 
26,196 
1,727 


3 

1,277 
2,617 
3,258 
83 

6 S 

2,340 
344 
96 
6,570 
123 
13,678 
77 
374 
12,007 
361 
2,677 
6,707 
166 
36 
585 
1.004 
1.709 
1,469 
98 
229 
1,825 
696 
7,666 
199 


199 
674 
1.680 
838 

1,288 
30 
1.613 
935 
922 
128 
68 
1,195 
105 
7,304 
20 
147 
11,481 
94 
401 
35,453 
256 
8 
549 
300 
313 
2,141 
1,056 

1.509 
482 
3,356 
393 




Nebraska 




New Hampshire.. 
New Jersey 
New Mexico 
New York 
North Carolina... 
North Dakota 
Ohio 


Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island 
South Carolina. . . 
South Dakota .... 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 


Vermont 


Virginia 
Washington 


West Virginia.... 


Wyoming 


*lncludes also those born in other foreign countries. 

FOREIGN-BORN POPULATION OF AMERICAN CITIES 
Having 100,000 or more inhabitants, distributed according to country of birth. 
[Twelfth census, 1900.] 


CITY. 


Aus- 
tria. 


Bohe- 
mia. 


Can- 
ada. 


Den- 
mark. 


Eng- 
land. 


France 


Ger- 
many 


Hol- 
land, 


Hun- 
guru 


Ire- 
land. 


New York. N. Y... 
Chicago 111 


71.427 
11,815 
5,154 
2,563 
1.115 
1.356 
4,6130 
776 
1,841 
654 
3.553 
391 
471 
1.616 
187 
4.074 
1.445 
163 
1,133 
423 
255 
375 
1,488 
171 
379 
275 
3,929 
145 
103 
142 
286 
392 
139 
293 
504 
316 
90 
829 


15,055 
36,362 
270 
2,590 
93 
2,321 
13.599 
39 
197 
94 
75 
17 
612 
1,719 
12 
213 
32 
16 
385 
33 
17 
62 
1,343 
6 
89 
15 
757 
12 
1 
9 
8 
28 
6 

2 '1 

63 


21.926 
34,779 
3,283 
2,490 
50.2S2 
680 
8,611 
17,242 
5,199 
1,031 
1,073 
395 
28,944 
1.904 
906 
964 
1,041 
410 
7,343 
7,732 
673 
1,549 
4.572 
8,299 
2,868 
3,295 
465 
494 
8,367 
2,955 
1.170 
559 
22,501 
526 
1,270 
2,897 
189 
281 


5.621 
10,166 

934 

390 
675 
107 
373 
148 
2,171 
49 
38 
92 
231 
514 
88 
216 
319 
34 
1.473 
109 
200 
241 
1.UJ6 
51 
573 
97 
15 
29 
153 
48 
234 
47 
47 
92 
2,430 
239 
30 
9 


68,836 
29.308 
36,752 
5,800 
13.174 
2,841 
10.621 
6,908 
8.956 
2,201 
8,902 

&347 
2,134 
2,299 
5,874 
4,642 
830 
2.289 
9,639 
1454 
1.863 
2,005 
3.909 
3,344 
1,636 
2,177 
1.057 
2,615 
2,383 
1.912 
6.285 
12.268 
632 
1.526 
3.017 
367 
3.692 


14,755 
2,989 
2,521 
1,462 
1,003 
369 
485 
791 

4 fl 

573 
4,428 
589 
263 
389 
646 
648 
370 
207 
244 
230 
264 

307 
324 
248 
359 
132 
88 
187 
144 
813 

109 
147 
993 
104 
99 


322.343 
170,738 
71,319 
58,781 
10,523 
33,208 
40.648 
36,720 
35494 
38.219 
21,222 
8.733 
32.027 
53,854 
5,857 
25.139 
17.375 
12.383 
7,335 
2,257 
8,632 
4,816 
12,935 
15,685 
5414 
12,373 
12.022 
6,296 
626 
7,865 
4.743 
6.584 
245 
3,566 
5,522 
4.023 
1,508 
4,704 


'258 
368 
391 
98 
804 
311 
244 
369 
62 
47 
397 
606 
42 
108 
145 
43 
96 
42 
53 
44 
122 
927 
73 
51 
8 
15 
8 
19 
19 
4,893 

iV 

68 
86 
13 
4 


31.516 

'561 
330 
155 
9,558 
215 
315 
208 
2,124 
68 
91 
381 
48 
1,325 
138 
50 
581 
35 
138 
118 
659 
32 
179 
647 
560 
34 
4 
124 
65 
317 
4 
19 
253 
60 
47 
561 


275.102 
73.912 
98.427 
19,421 
70.147 
9.690 
13,120 
11,292 
15,963 
9,114 
18.620 
5,398 
6.412 
2,653 
6.220 
12,792 
19,314 
4498 
3.213 
18,686 
3.765 
3.507 
4.892 
5,59!) 
3,485 
2,684 
5,070 
2,079 
11,620 
5.717 
10,491 
6,714 
7,317 
1,241 
2,164 
1.720 
1.133 
7.193 


Philadelphia, Pa.. 
St Louis Mo .. .. 


Boston. Mass 
Baltimore, Md 
Cleveland, O 
Buffalo, N. Y 
SanFrancisco.Cal. 
Cincinnati O 


Pittsburg. Pa 
New Orleans, La. . 
Detroit. Mich 
Milwaukee. Wis.. 
Washington.D. C.. 
Newark, N. J 
Jersey City. N. J.. 
Louisville, Ky 
Minneapolis.Minn 
Providence. R. I.. 
Indianapolis. Ind 
Kansas City. Mo. 
St. PauLMinn.... 
Rochester, N. Y.. 
Denver, Col 
Toledo, O 
.Allegheny. Pa.... 
Columbus, O 
Worcester. Mass. 
Syracuse, N. Y... 
New Haven, Conn 
Paterson, N. .1 
Fall River. Mass. 
St. Joseph, Mo 
Omaha, Neb 
Los Angeles. Gal.. 
Memphis, Tenn... 
Scranton. Pa 



64 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


FOREIGN-BORN POPULATION OF AMERICAN CITIES.-COXTIXCED. 


CITY. 


| 


Norway. 


Poland (Aus- 
trian and 
German). 


ill 

e| 

26.997 
15.219 
4.856 
1.343 
3.555 
1.939 
4,263 
3.095 
648 
378 
6.646 
44 
1.854 
1,291 
119 
1.293 
2,558 

710 
263 
315 
438 
489 
267 
599 
550 
34 
1,212 
1.144 
308 
460 
274 
51 
154 
92 
86 
2.568 


Russia. 


1 


1 


Switzerland. 


Wales. 


Total* 


New York, N. Y. . 
Chicago, 111., 
Philadelphia, Pa. 
St. Louis, Mo., .. 
Boston Mass.. .. 
Baltimore Md . . 
Cleveland. O.. .. 
Buffalo. N. Y.. .. 
SanFrancisco.Cal. 
Cincinnati. O 
Pittsburg, Pa 
New Orleans. La. . 
Detroit, Mich 
Milwaukee, Wis... 
Washington. D. C. 
Newark, N.J 
Jersey City. N. J. . 
Louisville, Ky 
Minneapolis.Minn 
Providence, R. I.. 
Indianapolis, Ind. 
Kansas City, Mo. . 
St. Paul, Minn 
Rochester, N. Y. . . 
Denver. Col 
Toledo O 


145.433 
16.008 
17.830 
2.227 
13.738 
2.042 
3.065 
5,669 
7.508 
917 
5.709 
5,866 
905 
726 
930 
8,537 
3.832 
330 
222 
6.256 
282 
1.034 
529 
1,278 
999 
79 
786 
349 

5^262 
4,266 
280 
146 
449 
763 
726 
1.312 


11.387 
22.011 
692 
172 
1.145 
188 
249 
185 

*1 

63 
33 
75 

1,702 
101 
62 
647 
10 
11.532 
228 
18 
100 
2,900 

i 

9 
14 

269 
13 
119 
18 
26 
42 
312 
163 
6 
6 


5.876 
42.494 
2.698 
1.514 
277 
872 
4.329 
15.735 
218 
93 

4,5,58 

11.777 
15.742 
13 
620 
566 
35 
499 
59 
59 
19 
803 
617 
19 
3,876 
153 
10 
73 
256 
48 
23 
263 
60 
441 
15 
8 
1.182 


155.201 
24.178 
28.951 
4.785 
14.995 
10.493 
3,607 
1.199 
1.511 

1.W7B 

28.951 
439 
1,332 
L135 
807 
5.511 
1,694 
649 
1.929 
1.996 
338 
941 
987 
1.777 

l;338 
516 
531 
310 
1.348 
732 
3,193 
1,672 
1,095 
627 
997 
233 
321 
671 


19,836 
10,347 
8.479 
1,264 
4.473 
GB4 
2.179 
1.868 
3.000 
461 
8,479 
218 
2.496 
667 
574 
1.760 
1,690 
225 
81ft 
1,914 
429 
512 
673 
663 
1,033 
256 
1,183 
172 
714 
307 
761 
2,782 
1.045 
152 
574 
573 
90 
576 


28.320 
48.836 
2443 
1.116 
5.541 
236 
1,000 
743 
5.248 
111 
2.143 
170 
267 
659 
234 
469 
899 
94 
20,035 
2,775 
125 
1,869 
9,852 
109 
3,376 
112 
186 

1,376 
235 
104 

J& 

808 
110 
114 


8.371 
3.251 
1,707 
2752 
400 
186 
1,288 
590 
2.085 
657 
1,707 
314 
491 
653 
244 
736 
443 
717 
303 
71 
272 
233 
492 
478 
364 
698 
488 
343 
21 
291 
139 

M. 

34S 
190 
370 
95 
206 


1.686 
1.818 
1.033 
238 
308 
92 
1.490 
153 
386 
240 
1,033 
35 
101 
307 
82 
91 
159 
26 
230 
82 
41 
109 
70 
59 

798 
595 
40 
65 

1 

102 
32 
68 
156 
12 
4,621 


1.270.08U 
587. 112 i 
295.340 
lll,35tj| 

68!606' 
124.6:51; 
104.252 i 
116,885! 
57,961 
84.878 
30.325 
96.503 1 
88,991 
20,119 
71,363 
5S.4-.J4 
21.427 
61.021 
55.855 
17,122 
18.410 
46,819 
40.748 
25.301 
27.822 
30.216 
12,328 
37,652 
23,757 

38^791 
50,042 
8,424 
23.552 
19,964 
5.110 
28.973 


Allegheny, Pa 
Columbus, O 
Worcester. Mass. . 
Syracuse. N. Y 
New Haven. Conn. 
Paterson. N.J 
Fall River. Mass.. 
St. Joseph. Mo 
Omaha. Neb 
Los Angeles. Cal. . 
Memphis, Tenn.... 
Scranton, Pa . 


*I 
PO 

Classification. 
Males 


ncludes 
PULAT 

dumber. 

c59.059.242 
57.244,145 
55.843.302 
LO. 460.485 
H, 053,017 

IND 


all 

to: 

F 
V 

g 

F 

IA 


o those born in other J 

BY SEX. NATIVH 
[Twelfth census, 190 
Classification. Nv 
oreign parents 15. 
rhite . . 66, 


foreign 
T ANI 

0.3 

mber. ( 

687.322 J 
490.8(i2 ( 
-512.585 ; 
740.739 1 
250.063 

} STA1 

0.] 


countne 
) COLO 

Tlassiflca 
f egro. . . 
Dhinese 
apanes 


s. 
R. 
tion. A 


Tumber. 
8.840.789 
119.050 
85.986 
266,760 


Females 
Native born 
Foreign born 
Native parents. . 


j 


olored 9, 
ative white 56, 
oreign white 10. 

N8 IN THE UNITEJ 
[Twelfth census. 190 




'ES. 




STATE OR <r nv ,, a 
TERRITORY. * 


tS&. 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 




Not 
taxed. 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 


Taxed. 


Not 
taxed . 


Alabama 
Alaska 2 


177 
0.536 
1.83B 
66 

X.VN 
840 

9 

22 
358 
19 

'3 
>f 


24.644 

l'.549 

5H7 


L< 

M 

M 
M 
M 
M 
M 
N 
N 
N 
N 
N 
N 
N 
N 
01 


Hiisiana. ... 


593 

587 ! 
6.354 . 
7.414 
2.203 . 
'130. 
597 
3.322 . 
3.551 
22 . 
63 
10,207 
546 
5.687 . 
2.276 
42 . 




Oklahoma 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania.. 
Rhode Island . . 
South Carolina 
South Dakota. . 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 
Vermont 
Virginia 
Washington 
West Virginia. . 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming '... 

Total 


6.018 
4,951 
1,639 
35 
121 
9,293 
108 
470 
1,151 
5 
354 
7,508 
12 
6.715 
1,686 

137,242 


5,927 


Arizona 
Arkansas 
California 1 


aryland 
\ssachusetts. 
ichigan.. .. 
nnesota. . . 
ssissippl. .. 
issouri 
ontana . . . . 
jbraska.. .. 
jvada 
?wHampshire 
sw Jersey 
?w Mexico... 
?w York 
3rth Carolina 
arth Dakota . . 
lio 


"i',768 


10,932 


Connecticut.... 
Delaware 
Dist. Columbia. 
Florida 


:::!* 


' 10.746 
" 1,865 




1.472 

'"2,53i 
'"1,657 


Georgia 
Idaho 


Indiana 
Indian Ter 


2,937 
4,711 

"4,692 


51,393 


Kansas 2.130|. 
Kentuckv 1021 


129.518 



STATISTICS OF POPULATION. 65 


POPULATION OF FOREIGN BIRTH OR DESCENT IN THE UNITED STATES. 
[Twelfth censusam] 


NATIONALITY *%? f% Total, 
age* 


Of 
NATIONALITY Foreign foreign Total 
JMATIOAALITY. born, parent- - towt - 
age.* 


\ustrian 27t 


).702 408,195 684,897 
.999 325,400 482.399 , 
.798 683.440 1.471.2:>S 
>.427 635.972 1,031.399 ! 
,616 266.752 421.3tS 
.491 1.364.159 2.207.650 
.534 171.347 275,881 
.164 6.244.799 8,913.963 
,815 210.307 356.122 i 


Irish 1 6K 


.469 4.001.461 5,620,930 
.703 706.598 1.191.301 
,426 684,100 1.022.526 
.595 668,536 1.052.131 
,372 669,810 1.094.182 
,699 421,192 655,891 
.625 998.538 1,573,163 
>.959 187.924 303,883 
i.744 173,416 267,160 


Bohemian lot 
Canadian (Eng.). 78" 
Canadian (Fr'ch) 39; 
Danish IS 


Italian .... 484 


Norwegian 3& 


Polish 385 


Russian 42J 
Scotch 2& 


>. English 84: 
French 10J 
German 2,66 
Hungarian He 


Swedish... 574 


Swiss 11, 


Welsh 9t 


Includes only those whose par 
FOREIGN BORN OF O1 
Country. Number.l Country. Numbe 
Africa 2.577;Cuba 11.1 = 


ents are of the same nat 
HER NATIONALITY 
r. Country. Number 
Japan 81.59C 


ionality. 
S. 
Country. Number. 
South America 4,814 
Spain 7284 


Asia 11.92 
Atlantic islands.. 10.95 
Australia 7.04 
Belgium 29.84 
Cenfl America.. 3.91 
China 106.65 


S Europe* 2.2" 
5 Finland 63.44 
1; Greece 8.6i 
8>Holland 105.0ij 
1 India 20t 


2| Luxemburg 3.042 
4) Mexico 103.445 
5 Pacific islands. 2.659 
8! Portugal ... 37144 


Turkey 9,949 
West Indies.... 14,468 
Other countries 2,587 
I Born at sea.... 8,310 

'OINT. 

a of the country, each 
the median point is the 
ind south with the line 
s at a .point six miles 
es and west longitude 
Ind.. or latitude 40 de- 
l 29 seconds, 
iwaii and other recent 
>es 55 minutes and ap- 
therefore about three- 
ater of area. 

D TILLAGES 

Chicago Heights 5,100 
Danville 16.354 
Decatur 20754 


SiRoumania 15,043 
*Not otherwise specifiec 

AND ITS MEDIAN f 
ravity of the populatio 
ight. What is known as 
>pulation equally north i 
of population in 1900 wa 
39 degrees and 9.5 minut 
1900 was at Spartanburg 
4 degrees 51 minutes anc 
ccluding Alaska and HE 
:imate latitude 39 degre 
e center of population is 
m degrees east of the ce 

CITIES, TOWNS AN! 
e inhabitants in 1900. 
DIST. OF COLUMBIA 
Washington. . . . 278,718 
FLORIDA. 
Jacksonville.... 28,429 


l 
ER OF POPULATION 
lation is the center of g 
ed to have the same we 
the line dividing the pc 
and west. The center 
, Ind.. or north latitude 
The median point in 
seconds and longitude 8 
Df the United States, e; 
ern Kansas, in approj 
degrees 50 minutes. Th 
th and more than thirtet 

r OF INCORPORATE! 
Having 5,000 or mor 
Santa Cruz 5.659 
Santa Rosa 6.673 
Stockton 17.506 
Vallejo 7.965 
COLORADO. 
Boulder 6,150 
ColoradoSprings 21.085 
Cripple Creek. . . 10.147 
Denver 133.859 
Leadville 12.455 
Pueblo 28,157 
Trinidad 5,345 


CENT 

The center of popu 
individual being assum 
point of intersection ol 
dividing it equally east 
southeast of Columbus 
80 degrees 48.9 minutes, 
grees 4 minutes and 22 
The center of area < 
accessions, is in nortt 
proximate longitude 98 
fourths of a degree sou 

POPULATE 

ALABAMA. 

Anniston 9.695 


Bessemer . . 6,358 


Birmingham ... 38.415 
Florence 6.478 
Huntsville .... 8.068 
Mobile 38.469 


DeKalb 59U4 


Dixon 7.917 


Pensacola 17,747 
Tampa 15 839 


East St. Louis. . . 29.655 
Elgin 22,433 


Montgomery ... 30.346 
Selma 8,713 
Talladega 5,056 
Tuscaloosa 5.0&4 
ALASKA. 


GEORGIA. 
Americus 7,674 
Athens 10,245 


Evanston 19.259 
Freeport 13 258 


Galena 5005 


Galesburg 18,607 
Harvey 5.395 


Atlanta 89.872 


Nome City 12,486 
ARIZONA. _ 
Pho3nix 5.544 
Tucson 7,531 


CONNECTICUT. 


Brunswick 9.0S1 
Columbus 17.614 
Griffin 6.857 


Joliet 29.353 


Bridgeport 70.996 
Bristol 6 286 


Kankakee 13,595 
Kewanee 8.382 


Macon 23 272 


ARKANSAS. 
Fort Smith 11.587 
Helena 5550 
Hot Springs 9.973 
Little Rock 38,307 
Pine Bluff 11,496 

CALIFORNIA. 
Alameda 16.464 


Danbury 16.537 
Derby 7.930 
Hartford 79,850 


Rome...' 7.291 


Lincoln 8 %2 


Savannah 54.244 


Litchfleld 5 918 


Thomasville 5.322 
Valdosta 5.613 
Waycross 5,919 
HAWAII. 
Honolulu . 39306 




Meriden 24.296 
Middletown 9.589 
Naugatuck 10.541 


Mattoon 9,622 
Moline 17,248 


New Britain 25.998 
New Haven 108.027 
New London.... 17.548 


Mount Vernon.. 5,216 
Murphysboro.. . . 6.463 
Ottawa 10.588 


IDAHO. 


i Berkeley 13.214 
Eureka 7 S 9 ? 


Norwich 17,251 


ILLINOIS. 
Alton 14.210 


Pana 5.530 
Paris 6.105 
Pekin 8,420 
Peoria 56.100 
Peru. 6 863 


Fresno 12.470 
Los Angeles 102.479 
'Oakland 66960 


Putnam 6,667 
Rockville 7,287 
South Norwalk.. 6.591 
Stamford 15.997 
Torrington 8.360 
Wallingford 6.737 
Waterbury 45.859 
West Haven 5.247 
Willimantic 8.937 
Winsted 6,804 
DELAWARE. 
Wilmington 76.508 


Aurora 24.147 
Belleville 17 484 


Pasadena 9 117 


Belvidere 6.937 
Bloomington 23.286 
Blue Island 6.114 
Cairo 12.566 
Canton 6,564 
Centralia 6.721 
Champaign 9.09* 
Charleston 5.488 
Chicago 1.698.575 


Suincv 36 252 


Pomona 5.526 
Riverside 7.973 
Sacramento 29,282 
San Bernardino. 6.150 
San Diego 17 700 


ockford 31 051 


Rock Island 19.493 
Springfield 34.159 
Spring Valley.... 6.214 
Sterling 6309 


San Francisco. . .342.782 
San Jose 21.500 
Santa Barbara . . 6 587 


Streator 14,079 
Urbana 5.728 
Waukegan 9.426 



66 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOB 1904. 


INDIANA. 
Alexandria 7,221 
Anderson 20,178 
Bedford 6.115 


Ottawa 6.934 
Parsons 7.682 


Northampton... 18,643 
Pittsfleld 21.766 


Carthage. . 9 416 


Chillicothe 6.905' 
Clinton 5.061 
Columbia 5,651 


Pittsburg 10.112 
Salina 6,074 


Plymouth 9.592 
Quincy 23.899 


Bloomington 6.460 
Brazil 7,786 


Wichita 24,671 


Somerville 61.643 


De Soto 5.611 
Hannibal 12,780 


Columbus 8.130 
Connersville .... 6.836 
Crawfordsville.. 6.649 


Winfleld 5,554 
KENTUCKY. 
Ashland 6.800 


Springfield 62,059 
Taunton 31.036 
Waltham 23,481 
Woburn 14 254 


Independence... 6.9741 
Jefferson City... 9.664; 
Joplin 2*5.023; 


Elkhart 15.184 
Elwood 12.950 
Evansville 59,007 
Fort Wayne 45,115 
Frankfort 7,100 
Goshen 7.810 
Jreeiisburg 5,034 
Hammond 12,376 
Hartford 5.912 
Huntington 9.491 
Indianapolis.... 169.164 
Jeffersonville.... 10,774 
Kokomo 10.609 


Bellevue 6.332 
Bowling Green.. 8,226 
Covington 42,938 


Worcester 118,421 
MICHIGAN. 


Kirksville.. .'.'.'.'.'. 5!966 
Louisiana 5,131 
Marshall 5.08*5 


Frankfort 9.487 
Henderson 10,272 
Hopkinsville.... 7,280 
Lexington 26,369 
Louisville 204.731 


Alpena 11,802 


Mexico 5,099 
Moberly 8012 


Ann Arbor 14.509 
Battle Creek.... 18,563 
Bay City 27.628 
Benton Harbor.. 6.562 
Cadillac 5.997 
Cheboygan . ..6489 


Nevada 7*461 


St. Charles 7.982 
St. Joseph 102 979 


St. Louis 575,2:i8 
Sedalia 15.231 
Springfield 23.2*57! 
Trenton 5,396. 


Maysville 6 423 


Newport . 28 301 


Owensboro 13.189 


Cold water 6,216 
Detroit 285,704 
Escanaba 9,549 
Flint 13,103 


Lafayette 18.116 
Laporte 7,113 
Logansport 16.204 
Madison 7.835 
Marion 17 337 


Winchester 5,964 
LOUISIANA. 
Alexandria 5,648 
Baton Rouge. . . . 11.2*59 
Lake Charles.... 6,680 
Monroe 5.428 
New Iberia 6.815 
New Orleans.... 287.104 
Shreveport 16,013 
MAINE. 
Auburn... 12.951 


Webb 9.201 
MONTANA. 
Anaconda 9,453 ] 
Butte 30.7401 


Grand Rapids... 87.565 
Holland 7,790 


Michigan City... 14.850 
Mishawaka 5.560 
Mount Vernon. . 5,132 
Muncie 20,942 


Iron Mountain.. 9,242 
Ironwood 9,705 
Ishpeming 13,255 


Great Falls 14.930 
Helena 10,770 
NEBRASKA. 
Beatrice 7,875 
Fremont 7.241 
Grand Island 7.554 
Hastings 7.1831 
Kearney 5 *534 


New Albany 20.628 
Peru 8.463 
Princeton 6,041 


Kalamazod 24^404 
Lansing 16,485 
Laurium 5.643 
Ludington 7,166 
Manistee 14.260 
Marquette 10.058 
Menominee 12.818 
Monroe 5 043 


Richmond 18 226 




Augusta.. . . 11 683 


Lincoln 40.16H 
Nebraska City. . 7.3SO 
Omaha 102.555 
South Omaha . . . 26,001 
York 5,132 
NEVADA.* 
Carson City 2.100 
Reno 4 500 


Shelby ville 7.169 
South Bend 35.999 
Terre Haute .... 36,673 
Valparaiso 6,280 
Vincennes 10,249 
Wabash 8.618 
Washington 8,551 
INDIAN TBR. 
Ardmore 5,681 
IOWA. 
Atlantic City.... 5.046 
Boone 8.880 


Bangor 21,850 
Bath 10.477 
Biddeford 16,145 
Brunswick 5,210 
Calais 7,655 


Mount Clemens. 6,576 
Muskegon 20.818 


Eastport 5,311 


Gardiner 5,501 
Lewiston 23,761 
Oldtown . . 5,763 
Portland 50.145 
Rockland 8,150 


Owosso 8.696 


Pontiac 9 769 


Virginia Citv.... 2/.'.'.~> 
*Has no city of 5.000 
or more inhabitants. 
NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
Berlin 8,886 


Port Huron 19,158 
Saginaw 42.345 
St. Joseph 5,155 
Sault Ste. Marie. 10.538 
Traverse 9,407 
West Bay City.. 13,119 
Wyandotte 5,183 
Ypsilanti 7,378 


Saco 6 122 


South Portland.. 6.287 
Waterville 9,477 
Westbrook 7,283 
MARYLAND. 
Annapolis 8,525 
Baltimore 508,957 
Cambridge 5,747 
Cumberland 17.128 


Cedar Falls 5.319 
Cedar Rapids.... 25.656 
Centerville 5.256 


Concord 19.KX 
Dover . . , 13 207 


Franklin 5.846 
Keene 9. 1*15 
Laconia 8,042 
Manchester 56.Us7 
Nashua 23>'.* 
Portsmouth 10.637 
Rochester 8 466 


Council Bluffs... 25.802 
Creston 7,752 


MINNESOTA. 
Austin 5 474 


Davenport. 35.254 
DesMoines 62.139 
Dubuque 36.297 
Fort Dodge 12,162 
Fort Madison.. . . 9.278 
Iowa City 7.987 
Keokuk 14,641 


Brainerd 7.524 


Frostburg 5,274 
Hagerstown 13,591 

MASSACHUSETTS. 
Beverly 13,884 


Crookston 5.359 
Duluth 52,969 
Faribault 7,868 
Fergus Falls 6.072 
Little Falls 5.774 
Mankato 10.599 


Somersworth.... 7,023 
NEW JERSEY. 
Atlantic City.... 27.838 
Bayonne 32.722 
Bloomneld...... 9.f,-^ 
Bridgeton 13.1M2 
Burlington 7.H'.'2 
Camden 75 ^35 


Marshalltown... 11.514 
Mason City 6.746 


Boston 560,892 
Brockton 40.063 
Cambridge 91.886 
Chelsea 34,072 
Chicopee 19 167 


Minneapolis 202,718 
New Ulm^ 5,403 
Owatonna 5.561 
Red Wing 7.525 
Rochester 6.843 


Muscatine 14.073 
Oelwein 5.142 
Oskaloosa 9.212 
Ottumwa 18.197 
Sioux City 33.111 
Waterloo 12,580 
KANSAS. 
Argentine 5.873 
Arkansas City... 6,140 
Atchison 15.722 


Everett 24.336 
Fall River 104.863 
Fitchburg 31.531 


Dover 5.938 


St. Paul 163.065 
Stillwater 12 318 


East Orange 21.5U! 
Elizabeth 52.130 


Gloucester 26.121 
Haverhill 37.175 
Holyoke 45,712 


Winona 19.714 
MISSISSIPPI. 
Biloxi 5.467 
Columbus 6.434 


Englewood 6.253 
Gloucester 6.340 
Hackensack .... 9,443 
Harrison 10.596 


Lawrence. 62.55J 
Lowell 94.969 
Lvnn 68 513 


Hoboken 59 3t>4 


Irvington 5.255 
Jersey City 206.433 
Kearney 10>'. 
Long Branch.... 8.872 
Millville 10.583 
Montclair 13,!"V> 
Morristown 11.267 
Newark 246.070 
New Brunswick. 2U.OOf,l 


Fort Scott 10.322 
Gilena 10 155 


Maiden 33 664 


Jackson 7,816 
Meridian 14.050 
Natchez 12.210 
Vicksburg 14,834 
MISSOURI. 
Aurora 6.191 
Brookfleld 5.48t 


Marlboro 13.609 
Medford 18.244 
Melrose 12.962 
New Bedford.... 62,442 
Newburyport.. . . 14.473 
Newton 33.537 
North Adams... 24. 200 


Hutchinson 9,319 
lola 5.791 
Kansas City 51.418 
Lawrence 10.3ti2 
Leavenworth . . . 20.735 
Newton 6.208 





STATISTICS OF 


POPULATION. 


67 


North Plaintield 5,009 
Orange 24.141 
Passaic 27 777 


White Plains.... 7,899 
Yonkers 47,931 


WashingtonC.H. 5.751 
Wellston 8.045 
Wellsville 6 146 


Pottstown 13,696 
Pottsville 15.710 
Reading 78 9fc'i 


Paterson 105.171 


NORTH CAROLINA. 


Wooster 6.063 




: Perth Amboy . 17.699 


Asheville ... 14,694 


Xenia . 8,696 


Scranton 10 9 O 9 *! 


! Philli]i!>burg 10.052 
Plaintield 15.369 
Rah way 7,935 


Charlotte 18.091 
Concord 7.910 
Durham 6,679 


Youngstown -44,885 
Zanesville 23,538 


Shamokin 18.202 
Sharon 8.916 
Sharpsburg 6 84 9 


Red Bank 5,428 
talem 5,811 


Elizabeth City... 6.348 
Goldsboro 5 877 


Guthrie 10,006 


Shenandoah 20*321 


outh Amboy... 6.349 


Greensboro 10.035 


Oklahoma City.. 10,037 


Steelton. 12 os; 


i Summit 5,302 


Newbern. . 9,090 


OREGON. 




Trenton . 73.307 


Raleigh 13.643 




Tamaqua 7*267 


Union 15 187 


Salisbury (5 277 






WestHoboken.. 23,U94 


Wilmington 20.976 


Portland 90 426" 


Titusville 8244 


i West New York. 5,267 
West Orange.... 6,889 
NEW MEXICO. 


Winston 10.008 
NORTH DAKOTA. 
Fargo 9 589 


PENNSYLVANIA. 
Allegheny 129,896 


Tyrone 5.847 
Uniontown 7.344 
Warren 8.043 


Albuquerque 6.238 
Santa Fe 5,603 


Grand Forks 7,652 
OHIO 


Allentown 35,416 
Altoona... 38,973 


Washington... . 7.670 
Waynesboro... . 5..V.*'> 


NEW YORK. 


Akron 42 728 


Ashland 6 438 


West Pittston 5 846 


Albany . 94.151 


Alliance 8,974 


Beaver Fails 10.054 


Wilkesbarre....! 5L721 


Amsterdam 20,929 
Auburn 30 345 


Ashtabula 12,949 
Bedford. 9,912 


Bethlehem 7,293 


Wilkinsburg 11.886 
Williamsport 28 757 


Batavia 9,180 
Binghamton 39.647 
Buffalo 352 387 


Belief ontaine. . . 6,649 
Bowling Green,. 5,067 
Bucyrus 6,560 


Braddock 15,654 
Bradford 15,029 
Bristol 7,104 


York 33.708 
RHODE ISLAND. 


! Canandaigua .... 6,151 


Cambridge 8,241 


Butler 10,853 


Central Falls.... 18,167 
Newport 22034 


; Cohoes 23,910 


Canton. . . . . . 30*,667 


Carlisle 9,626 


Pawtucket 39;.':>1 


Corning 11,061 
Cortland. 9.014 
Dunkirk 11 616 


ChiLlicothe 12.976 
Cincinnati 325.902 
Circleville . . 6 991 


Carnegie 7,330 
Ch ambersburg . . 8.864 
Charleroi . 5930 


Providence 17o.. r )H7 
Woonsocket 28,204 


Elmira 35 672 


Cleveland 381,768 


Chester . . . 33 988 




Fulton . 5,281 


Columbua 125,560 


Clearfleld 5.081 


Anderson 5.498 


Geneva 10,433 


Conneaut 7.133 


Coatesville 5 J21 


Charleston 55.807 


Glens Falls 12,613 
Gloversville 18,349 


Coshocton 6,473 
Dayton. 85,333 


Columbia 12,316 
Connellsville . . . 7.160 


Columbia 21.108 
Greenville 11.8HO 
Rock Hill 5 4>~> 


Herkimer 5.555 


Delaware 7,940 


Corry 5,369 


Spartanburg 11.395 


Hoosick Falls... 5,671 
! Hornellsville . 11,918 


East Liverpool.. 16,485 
Elvria.. .. 8.791 


Danville 8,042 
Dubois 9,375 


Union 5,400 


Hudson .... 9,528 


Findlav 17,613 


Dunmore 12,583 


SOUTH DAKOTA 


llion 5,138 


Fostoria 7,730 


Duquesne 9,036 




Ithaca 13,136 


Fremont 8,439 


Easton 25,238 




Jamestown 22 892 


Gallon 7 282 


Edwardsville 5 165 




: Johnstown 10 130 


Gallipolis 5 432 


Erie 52 733 


TENNESSEE. 


Kingston 24 535 


Glenville 5,5 a 8 


Etna . . 5 384 




JLansingburg.... 12.595 
Little Falls . . 10,381 


Greenville 5,501 
Hamilton . . 23,914 


Franklin 7.317 
Freeland 5,254 


Chattanooga 30.154 


Lockport 16.581 


Ironton 11,868 


Greensburg. . . . 6.508 




; Malone 5,935 


Kenton 6.852 


Hanover 5,302 


Jackson 14 511 


Matteawan 5.807 
Middletown 14.522 


Lancaster 8,991 
Lima 21,723 


Harrisburg 50.167 
Hazleton 14230 


Knoxville :;37 


Mount Vernon . 21 228 


Lorain. 16 028 


Homestead 12 554 




Newburg 24.14:; 
i New York .. ..3.4M7.-:iri 


Mansfield 17,640 
Marietta 13.348 


Huntington 6,053 
Jeannette 5 S 05 


TEXAS. 


i Niagara Falls... 19,457 
; No.Tonawanda. 9.069 
; Norwich 5,766 


Marion 11,862 
Martin's Ferry.. 7.760 
Massillon 11.944 


Johnstown , 35.936 
Kane 6,296 
Lancaster 41,459 


Austin 22.258 
Beaumont 9.427 
Bonham 5 04'' 


Ogdensburg 12.033 


Middletown 9,215 


Lebanon 17.628 


Brenham. . 5 968 


Olean 9.462 


Mount Vernon 6 633 


Lock Haven 7 2W 


Brownsville 6 305 


lOneida 6.361 


Nelsonville 5,421 


McKeesport 34,227 


Cleburne . 7 4')3 


Oueonta 7.147 
Ossining 7,939 


Newark, 18,157 
Newburg 5,909 


McKees Rocks.. 6.352 
Mahanoy City... 13,504 


Corsicana 9.313, 
Dallas 4 9 t;:;s 


i Oswego 22,199 


NewPhiladelphia 6.213 


Meadville 10,291 


Denison 11 807 : 


Owego 5.039 


Niles 7,468 


Middletown 5,608 


El Paso 15 ( X)<> 


Peekskill 10.358 


Norwalk 7,074 


Millvale 6,736 


Fort Worth 9 t> >',s^ 


i Plattsburg 8,434 
! Port Chester.... 7,440 
Port Jervis 9.385 
Poughkeepsie .. . 24,029 


Norwood 6,480 
Painesville 5,024 
Piqua 12.172 
Portsmouth 17,870 


Milton 6.175 
Monongahela.... 5.173 
Mount Carmel.. 13,179 
Nanticoke 12,116 


Gainesville 7*874 
Galveston 37.1st 
Greenville 6.MW 
Hillsboro 5 Mir, 


Rensselaer. 7 466 


St Mary's 5359 


New Brighton 6 820 




Rochester 162 6u8 


Salem ' 7*582 


New Castle ' ' ' 28*839 




Rome 15.343 
SaratogaSprings 12.409 


Sandusky 19^664 
Sidney 5 688 


Norristown 22.265 
North Braddock 6 535 


Marshall 7X>"> 


Schenectady . . . . 31.682 


Springfield 38*,253 


Oil City 13 264 


Paris 9 358 


Seneca Falls.... 6,519 
Svracuse 108.374 


Steubenville.. .. 14.349 
Tiffin. . 10989 


Old Forge 5,630 
Olyphant 6 180 


San Antonio 53,321 


Tonawanda 7,421 


Toledo 131822 


Philadelphia i 293*697 


Temple 7 065 


Troy 60.651 


Troy 5,881 


Phoenixville 9,196 


Terrell '".'"!'!. e'330 


Utica 56 383 








Watertown 2UW6 


Van Wert ........ 6*422 


Pittston . 12 556 


Tyler 8 069 


Watervliet 14.321 


Warren 8.529 


Plymouth 13.649 


Waco 20.636 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



UTAH. 

Logan 5,451 

Ogden 16.313 

Provo 6,185 

Salt Lake City.. 53,531 
VERMONT. 



Barre 

Bennington.. 

Brattleboro. 

Burlington.. 

Montpelier. 

Hutland 

St. Albans.. 
St. Johnsbury 

VIRGINIA. 

Alexandria 14,528 

Charlottesville. . 6.449 

Danville 16.520 

Fredericksburg.. 5.068 
Lyhchburg 18,891 



8,448 
5,65ti 
5.297 

Kii40 
6.2Kt> 

11.499 
6.239 
5,666 



Manchester 9.715 

Newport News.. 19.635 
Norfolk 46.624 



21.810 
17,427 
85.U50 
21.41)5 



5,161 



Petersburg.. 

P9rtsmouth 

Richmond.. 

Roanoke 

Staunlon 

Winchester. 

WASHINGTON. 
Everett .......... 7.838 

NewWhatcom.. 6.834 

Seattle 

Spokane 

Tacoma 

Walla Walla 



80,671 
36.848 
37. 714 
10,049 



WEST VIRGINIA. 
Charleston ...... 11.099 

Fairmont ......... 5.655 

Grafton .......... 5.650 i 

Huntington ...... 11,923 I 



Martinsburg 7.564 

Moundsville.. .. 5,362 

Parkersburg 11.703 

Wheeling 38,878 

WISCONSIN. 

Antigo 5,145 

Appleton..., 15,085 

Ashland 13,074 

Baraboo 5.751 

Beaver Dam 

Beloit 

Chippewa Falls 
Eau Claire.. 
Fond du Lac 
Green Bay. . 
Janesville. . 
Kaukauna.. 

Kenosha 

LaCrosse.... 

Madison 

Manitowoc.. 



5.128 
10.436 

8,094 
17.517 
15.110 



13.185 
5.115 
11.606 



19.164 
.... 11.786 



Marinette 

Marshtield 

Meuasha 

Menomonie . . . 

Merrill 

Milwaukee 

Neenah, 

Oconto 

Osnkosh 

Portage 

Racine 

Sheboygan 

Stevens Point. 

Superior 

Watertown 

Waukesha 

Wausau 



.. 16.195 
.. 5,240 
.. 5.589 
.. 5,655 
.. 8.537 
..285.315 
.. 5.954 
.. 5.646 
.. 28.284 
.. 5.459 
. . 29,1(12 
.. 22.9K2 
.. 9.524 
.. 31.091 
. . 8.437 
.. 7.419 
.. 12,354 



WYOMING. 

Cheyenne.... .. 14.087 

Laramie 8.207 



URBAN POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES. . 
[Twelfth census, 1900.] 



YEAR. 



Total. 



Urban. 



Per 

cent. 



YEAR. 



Total. 



Urban. 



Per 

cent. 



1900 

1890 

1880 

1870 

I860 

1850.... 



75,468,099 

62.622.250 
50.155.783 
38,558.371 
31,443,321 
23.191.876 



24.i02.199 
18,272,503 
11.318.547 
8,071.875 
5,072.256 
2.897.586 



33.1 

29.2 
22.6 
20.9 
16.1 
12.5 



1830. 
1820. 



1800. 
1790. 



17.069.453 
12.8rti.lEO 
9.633.453 



1.483 
1214 



1.453.994 
864.509 
475.135 
356.920 
210,873 
131.472 



In the above table the total population for 1900 is exclusive of residents on Indian lands 
and of Hawaii. The urban population in all cases includes persons living in cities and towns 
of 8.000 or more inhabitants. On the basis of places of 4.000 or more inhabitants the urban pop- 
ulation of the United States in 1900 was 28.411,698, or 37.3 per cent. 



DENSITY OF POPULATION. 
Inhabitants per square mile of land area in the states and territories in 1900. 



State or territory. 
Alabama 35.5 



Alaska 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California... 

Colorado 

Connecticut. 
Delaware 



.1 
1.1 
24.7 
9.5 
5.2 
187.5 
94.3 



Dist.of Col'mbia 4,645.3 

Florida 9.7 

Georgia 37.6 

Hawaii 23.9 

Idaho 1.9 

Illinois 86.1 



State or territory. 

Indiana 

Indian Territory. 
Iowa 



Kansas 18.0 

Kentucky 53.7 

Louisiana 30.4 

Maine 23.2 

Maryland 120.5 

Massachusetts . . "548.9 
Michigan 42.2 



State or territory. 

70.1 Nebraska 

12.6 1 Nevada 

40.2 1 New Hampshire. 



Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana.. 



22.1 
33.5 
45.2 



New Jersey 
New Mexico ..... 

New York 

North Carolina. 



13.9 
.4 
45. 



250.3 
1.6 
152.6 



North Dakota 4.5 

Ohio 102.0 

Oklahoma 10.3 

Oregon 4.4 

Pennsylvania.... 140.1 



Rhode Island . , 



407.0 



State or territory. 
South Carolina . 
South Dakota. . . 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington ... 
West Virginia.. 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



37.6 
46.2 
7.7 



United States.. 26.6 



POPULATION BY CONJUGAL CONDITION. 
[United States census, 1900.] 



CONDITION. 


Both sexes. 


Per 

cent. 


Males. 


Per 
cent. 


Females. 


Per 

cent. 


Single 


44,187,155 


57 9 


23.666,836 


60.6 


20,520,319 


55.1 


Married 


27 849,761 


36.5 


14003798 


35.9 


13,845.963 


37.2 


Widowed 


3,903857 


5.1 


1,182.298 


3.0 


2.721,564 


7.3 




199.858 


.3 


84.903 


?, 


114.965 


.3 


Unknown 


162,746 


.2 


121,412 


.3 


41.334 


.1 


Total 


76.303.387 


100 


39,059,242 


100 


37,244,145 


100 



POPULATION OF THE WORLD. 

[Based upon the Statesman's Year Book for 1903 and publications of the bureau of statistics 

Washington, D. C.] 

AFRICA. 
151,631,036 



BY GRAND DIVISIONS. 

Africa 

Asia 

Europe 393,577,190 

North America 105,615,599 

Oceania 52,203,955 

South America 38,893,185 



Total 



1,604,805,353 



Abyssinia (est., 1902) 3,500,000 

British colonies (1901) 7,001,073 

British protectorates (est., 1902). 35,000,000 

Egypt (est., 1902) 9,821,045 

French Africa (1901) 32,126,380 

German Africa (est.. 1902) 12.600,000 

Italian Africa (est., 1902) 450,000 

Kongo Indep. State (est., 1902)... 30,000,000 



STATISTICS OF POPULATION. 



151,631,036 



Liberia (est., 1902) 2,060,000 

Morocco (1889) 9,400,000 

Portuguese Africa (est., 1902).... 8,248,527 

Spanish Africa (est., 1902) 124,011 

Turkish Africa (est., 1902) 1,300,000 



Total 

ASIA. 

Aden and Perim (1901)... 

Afghanistan (1900) 

Baluchistan (1901) 

Bhutan (1900) 

Ceylon (1901) 

China (1901).. 



41,222 
4,000,000 
1,049,808 
30,000 
3,578,333 

... 407,337,305 

French Iiido-China* (1901) 18,507,500 

Hongkong (1901) 386,159 

India. British (1901) 294,360,356 

Japan (1899) 47,018,765 

Korea (1900) 5,608,151 

Labuan (1901) 8,411 

Malay states (1901) 678,595 

Manchuria (1901) 8,500,000 

Mongolia (1901) 2,580,000 

Nepal (1900) 4,000,000 

Oman (1900) 1,500,000 

Persia (1902) 9,500,000 

Portuguese Asia (1901) 640,917 

Russia in Asia (1901) 22,697,469 

Samos (1900) 54,834 

Siam (1900) 5,000,000 

Sikkim (1901) 59,014 

Straits Settlements (1901) 572,249 

Tibet (1901) 6,430,000 

Turkestan, Chinese (1901) 1,200,000 

Turkey in Asia (1900) . 17,545,300 

Total : 862,884,388 

including French India. 
E TROPE. 

Andorra (1901) 6,000 

Austria-Hungary (1900) 45,405,267 

Belgium (1900) 6,693,548 

Bulgaria (1900) 3,744,283 

Denmark (1901) 2,464,770 

France (1901) 38,961,945 

Germany (1900) 56,367,178 

Great Britain (1901) 42,168,111 

Greece (1896) 2,433,806 

Iceland (1901) 78,470 

Italy (1901) 32,475,253 

Monaco (1900) 15,180 

Netherlands (1901) 5,263,232 

Norway (1900) 2,239,880 

Portugal (1900) 5,428,659 

Roumania (1899) 5,912,520 

Russia (1897) 106,264,136 



San Marino (1899).. 

Servia (1900) 

Spain (1900) 

Sweden (1901) 

Switzerland (1900).... 
Turkey (1900) 



Total 393,577,190 



11,002 
2,493,770 
18,618,086 
5,175,228 
3,315,443 
8,041,423 



54,358 

195,588 

17,535 

5,371,315 

312,816 

1,572,845 

52,301 

30,527 

392,140 

11,895 

1,647,300 

1,294,400 

587,500 

37,479 

770,242 

127,434 

13,545,462 



NORTH AA1EK1CA. 

Bahamas (1901) 

Barbados (1901) 

Bermudas (1901) 

Canada (1901) 

Costa Rica (1901) 

Cuba (1899) 

Curacao (1900) 

Danish West Indies (1901).. 

French islands (1901).... 

Greenland (1901) 

Guatemala (1900) 

Haiti (1901) 

Honduras (1900) 

Honduras, British (1901) 

Jamaica (1902) 

Leeward islands (1901) 

Mexico (1900) 

Newfoundland* (1901) 

Nicaragua (1900) 

Porto Rico (1899) 

Salvador (1901) 

Santo Domingo (1888) 

United Statesf (1900) 76,303J387 

Total 105,615,599 

including Labrador, -(-Including Alaska. 

OCEANIA. 

Australian Federation (1901) 

Borneo, British (1901) 

Dutch East Indies (1900) 

Fiji islands (1901) 

Guam (1900) 

Hawaii (1900) 

Marquesas islands (1897) 

Marshall islands (1901) 

New Caledonia (1901) 

New Guinea, British (1901).... 
New Guinea, German (1901)... 

New Zealand (1901) 

Philippine islands (est., 1902). 

Samoan islands (1901) 

Society islands (1897) 

Taumotu islands (1897) 

Timor, Portuguese (1900) 

Tonga islands (1900) 

Total 52,203,955 

SOUTH AMERICA. 

Argentine Republic (1901) 4,894,149 

Bolivia (1900) 1,894.149 

Brazil (1890) 14,333,915 

Chile (1901) 3,146,577 

Colombia (1898) 4,000,000 

Ecuador (1902) 1,271861 

Falkland islands (1901) 2!o76 

Guiana, British (1891) 278,328 

Guiana, French (1901) 32908 

Guiana, Dutch (1901) 121,269 

Paraguay (1899) 630,103 

Peru (1896) 4,609999 

Trinidad (1901) 2731898 

Uruguay (1901) 959,137 

Venezuela (1894) 2,444.816 

Total 38,893,185 



500,000 

953.243 

1,006,848 

610,000 



3,777,715 
200.000 
36,000,000 
117,870 
9.000 
154,001 
4,280 
13,000 
51,415 
350,000 
385,000 
772,719 
10,000,000 
33,100 
11,896 
5,000 



18,959 



ELECTION OF POPE PITTS X. 



Giuseppe Sarto, cardinal archbishop and 
patriarch of Venice, was elected pope in 
succession to Leo XIII. by the conclave of 
cardinals Tuesday, Aug. 4. 1903. He was not 
imong those most frequently mentioned for 
he position and his elevation to the head -of 
he church occasioned some surprise. The 
choice, however, gave general satisfaction, 
is his fitness for the position was conceded 
5y all who knew him. Like his predecessor 
n office he was at first unwilling to accept 



the high honor bestowed upon him, bat the 
appeals of his brother cardinals prevailed 
and he was duly crowned in St. Peter's 
Aug. 9. He assumed the title of Pope 
Pius X. The conclave which elected him 
pope began its sittings on Saturday, Aug. 1 
and six ballots were taken before a choice 
was made. Cardinal Camerlengo Oreglia 
was in charge of the affairs of the church in 
the interim between the death of Leo XIIJ. 
and the election of Pius X. 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR ROOK FOR 1904. 



NEGROES IN THE UNITED STATES. 

[Federal census of 1900.] 



STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 



Alabama 

Alaska 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia. 

Florida 

Georgia 

Hawaii 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Indian Territory 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

M assachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 

Nevada 

New Hampshire. 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania.. 
Rhode Island., 
fr-outh Carolina.. 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 

United States 



1900. 



White. 



1,001.152 
30,493 



944,580 
1,402,727 
529.046 
892.424 
153.977 
191,532 



1,181.294 



154,495 

4,734,873 
2.458.502 
302,680 
2,218,667 
1,416,319 
1,8*52.309 



692.226 

952.424 
2,769.764 
2,398.563 
1.737.036 

641.200 
2,944.843 

226,283 

1,056.526 

35,405 

410,791 
1.812,317 

180.207 
7,156,881 



311,712 

4,060,204 

367,524 

394.582 

6,141.664 

419.050 

557.807 

380,714 

1.540,186 

2.426,669 

272,465 

342,7?1 

1,192,855 

496.304 

915.233 

2.057.911 

89,051 



Bfi.lWO.7 



Negro. 



827.307 

168 

1.848 



11,045 

8,570 

15.226 

30.697 

86,702 

230.730 

1,034,813 

233 

293 

85,078 

57.505 

36,853 



52.006 

284.706 

650.804 

1.319 

235.064 

31,974 

15.816 

4,959 



161.234 
1,523 



134 
662 



1,610 

99.2H2 



^96.901 

18,831 

1.105 

156.845 

9.092 

782,321 

465 

480,243 



672 
826 

660.722 

2,514 

43.999 

2.542 

940 



PERCENTAGE 
1900. 



White. Negro 



54.7 
48.0 
756 
72.0 
94.5 
98.0 
98.2 
83.4 
68.7 
56.3 
53.3 
43.4 
95.5 
98.2 
97.7 
77.2 
99.4 
96.3 
86.7 
52.8 
99.7 
80.2 
98.7 
99.1 
99.2 
41.3 
94.8 
93.0 
99.1 
83.6 
99.8 
96.2 
92.3 
98.5 
66.7 
97.7 
97.7 
92.3 
95.4 
97.5 
97.8 
41.6 
94.8 
76.2 
79.6 
98.5 
99.7 
64.3 
95.8 
95.5 
99.5 
_96.2_ 
87.8 



45.2 

.3 

1.5 

28.0 

.7 

1.6 

1.7 

16.6 

31.1 

43.7 

46.7 

.2 

.2 

1.8 

2.3 

9.4 

.6 

3.5 

13.3 

47.1 

.2 

19.8 

'.i 

.3 

58.5 
5.2 



,3 
.2 

3.7 
.8 

1.4 

33.0 

.1 

2.3 

4.7 



Ji 

.1 

23.8 
20.4 

.2 

.2 
35.6 

.5 
4.5 

.1 
1.0 



11.6 



PERCENTAGE, 
1890. 



White. Negro. 



55.1 
13.4 
63.2 
72.6 
91.6 
97.9 
98.3 
83.1 
67.1 
57.5 
53.2 
86.6 
92.7 
98.5 
97.9 
61.2 
99.4 
96.4 
85.6 
49.9 
99.7 
79.3 
98.9 
99.0 
98.9 
42.2 
94.4 

82^6 
99.8 
96.7 



65.2 
95.5 
97.6 
79.4 
95.1 
97.9 
97.8 
40.1 
94.1 
75.6 
78.1 
97.7 
99.7 
61.6 
95.4 
95.7 
99.3 
94.8 



87.5 



44.8 

.3 

1.5 

27.4 

.9 

1.5 

1.6 

16.8 

32.8 

42.5 

46.7 

.8 

.2 

1.5 

2.1 

10.3 

.6 

3.5 

14.4 

50.0 

.2 

20.7 

1.0 

.7 

.3 

57.8 

5.6 

1.0 

.8 

.5 



1.2 

1.2 

34.7 

.2 

2.4 

3.8 

.4 

2.0 

2.1 

59.8 



21.8 
.3 
.3 

38.4 
.4 
4.3 
.1 
1.5 



PER CENT 

GAIN 
1890-1900. 



White. Negro 



20.1 
609.5 
66.7 
15.4 



21.7 



32.2 
20.7 
10.3 
45.6 
25.6 
14.5 
174.5 
16.7 
2.9 

ir.i 

30.7 
5.0 
15.2 
25.0 
25.6 
34.0 
17.7 
16.5 
77.2 
.9 
9.5 
9.3 
29.8 
26.1 
20.8 
19.7 
70.9 
13.3 
489.9 
30.7 
19.3 
24.0 
20.7 
16.1 
15.2 
39.0 
32.3 
3.4 
16.9 
45.6 

_5ai_ 

21.4 



21.9 
50.0 
36.2 
18.7 
2.4 



8.1 
14.7 

38.8 
20.5 

"56'.9 
49.2 
27.2 
97.8 
18.8 

4.6 

6.2 
16.4 
10.8 

9.0 
44.4 
49.2 
34.6 
22.2 

7.4 

2.2 
29.7 
44.6 

7.8 
46.6 
17.7 
41.6 
11.3 
23.3 
11.2 
533.4 

6.8 
45.8 
23.0 
13.6 
14.0 
11.5 
27.2 
14.3 
11.8 
. 4.0 
56.9 
33.1 
.4 

2.0 
18.1 



NEGRO POPULATION BY CENSUS YEARS. 



YEAR. 



1900 

1890.... 



1870 

18(50 

I860 

1840 

1830 

1820 

1810 

1800 

1790.... 



Total 
population. 



76.3ffi.387 
63.069.756 
50 ,55.783 
38,558.371 
31.*43.321 
23.191,876 
17.069.453 
12.806.020 
9.638.453 
7,23!.S81 
5.308.483 
3,929.214 



White. 



55.166.184 
4H.403.400 
33.589.377 
26,922.537 
19.553.068 
14.1U5.805 
10,537.378 
7,866.797 
5,862.073 
4,306.446 
3,172,306 



Negro. 



8,840.789 
7,488.788 
6.580.793 
4.8S0.009 
4,441,830 
3.638.808 
2.873.648 
2.3:>8.<>42 
1,771,656 
1.377.XOS 
1,002.037 
757.208 



PER CENT OF 
TOTAL. 



White. Negro. 



87.8 
87.5 
86.5 
87.1 
85.6 
84.3 
83.2 
81.9 
81.6 
81.0 
81.1 
80.7 



11.6 

11.!) 
13.1 
12.7 
14.1 
15.7 
16.8 
18.1 
18.4 
19.0 
18.9 
19.3 



APPROPRIATIONS BY CONGRESS. 



71 



DEATH RATE IN_A1IERICAN CITIES. 
Per 1.000 of population in the census year 1900. 



City. Rate. 

iTall River 22.4 

Indianapolis 16.7 

Boston 20.1 i Jersey City 20.7 

Buffalo 14.8 KansasCity 17.4 

Los Angeles 18.1 

Louisville 



City. Rate. 

Allegheny 18.4 

Baltimore 21.0 



Chicago 16.2 

Cincinnati 19.1 



Cleveland. 

Columbus 

Denver 

Detroit 



17.1 
15.8 
is.ti 
17.1 



Memphis 

Milwaukee 

Minneapolis 
Newark 



2<I.O 

-'.V 1 
15.9 
Hl.s 
19.8 



City. 

New Haven.. 
New Orleans 
New York.... 

Omaha 

Paterson 

Philadelphia 

Pittsburg 

Providence... 
Rochester 



Rate. 

. 17.2 

. 28.9 

20.4 

13.5 

19.0 

21.2 

20.0 

.19.9 

. 15.0 



City. 



Rate. 



St. Joseph, Mo 9.1 

St. Louis 17.9 

St. Paul 9.7 

San Francisco 20.5 

Scranton 20.7 

Syracuse 13.8 

Toledo 16.0 

Washington 22.8 

Worcester 15.5 



CHIEF CAUSES OF DEATH. 



Death rate per 100.000 population from prevalent diseases in the United States in 1900. 
[From twelfth census reports.] 



Cause. Rate. 

Pneumonia 191.9 

Consumption 190.5 

Heart disease 134.0 

Diarrhea! diseases 85.1 

Kidney diseases 83.7 

Apoplexy 66.6 

dancer.. . 60.0 

)ld age 54.0 

Bronchitis 48.3 

Cholera infantum 47.8 

Debility and atrophy 45.5 

Diphtheria 35.4 



Cause. Rate. 

Typhoid fever 33.8 

Inflammation of brain 

and meningitis 41.8 

Coavulsions 33.1 

Paralysis 32.8 

Inan ition 27 . 3 

Influenza 23. 9 

Diseases of liver 22.7 

Diseases of stomach 20.0 

Brain diseases 18.6 

Peritonitis 17.5 



Cause. Rate. 

Measles 13.2 

Whooping cough 12.7 

Scarlet fever 11.5 

Hydrocephalus 11. 

Appendicitis 9.9 

Croup 9.8 

Diabetes 9.4 

Malarial 9.8 

Cerebro-spinal fever 7.1 

Dropsy 6.9 

Rheumatism 6.8 



BIRTH AND DEATH RATES OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES. 

Table prepared by the United States census office, showing the annual birth and death rate 

per 1.000 of population in the countries named for the ten years 1890-1899. 



Country. Births.Deaths. 

United States 35.1 17.4 

England, Wales.. ..30.1 18.4 



Scotland 30.7 

Ireland 23.0 

Denmark 30.3 

Norway 30.4 



18.8 



Country. 



Births.Deatlis. 



Sweden ............ 27.2 

Austria ........... 37.2 

Hungary .......... 40.5 



16.4 
27.1 
30.3 



German empire ____ 36.2 22.5 



Prussia 36.8 



22.1 



Country. 



Births.Deaths 



Netherlands ....... 32.7 18. 

Belgium ........... 28.9 19.2 



17.7 
16.5 
APPROPRIATIONS_BY CONGRESS. 

[From the Congressional Record.] 



France 
Italy 



21.6 
35.5 24.6 



Switzerland 27.7 



19.0 



FIFTY-SEVEXTH CONGRESS 



TITLE OP ACT. 



Fiscal year 
1904. 



Fiscal year 
1903. 



FIFTY-SIXTH CONGRESS. 



Fiscal year 

1902. 



Fiscal year 
1901 



AgriCHlture 

Army 

Diplomatic and consular. . 

District of Columbia 

Fortification 

Indian 

Legislative, etc... 
Military academy... 

Navy 

Pension 

Postoffice 

River and harbor 

Sundry civil 

Total 

Deficiencies 

Total 

Miscellaneous 

Isthmian canal.. .., 



$5.978.160.00 

78,138.752.83 

1.9tK250.69 

8,647.497.00 

7.188,416.22 

8.512,950.47 

27.595,953.66 

653.248.67 

81.877.291.43 

139,847,600.00 

153,401,549.75 



82.273,955.10 
596,082,625.82 
21, .561,572.47 



85,208^60.00 

91,730.136.41 
1,957.925.69 
8,544.49.!*7 
7.298.935.00 
8,986,028.10 
25.396.681.50 
2.627.324.42 
78.856.363.13 
139.842.230.00 
138,416,589.75 
.771.442.00 



$4.582.420.00 

115.734,049.10 

l,84!U2s.7r; 

8,502.269.94 

7,364.011.00 

9,747,471.09 

24.594,968.85 

772,653.68 

78.101,791.00 

1 l.V,'4.>.230.00 

I--':;.7v..i588.75 



60,16o,oo9.13 



61.795.90S.21 



$4,023.500.00 

114.220,095. 5 

1,771,168.76 

7,577.369.31 

7.383.628.00 

8.197.989.24 

24U75.652.53 

674.306.67 

65,140,916.67 

145.245.230.00 

113,658.238.75 

560.000.00 

65,319,915.45 



595.800,474.10 
28.050.007.32 



5S2.072.890.38 
15.917.44r>.94 



557.948,010.93 
15.688.330.61 



617.W4.198.29 
oV-'oO.i; 00.00 



>VJ. l.-O). 181.42 
2.722.795.13 
50,130.000.00 



597,990^37,32 

7,990.018.67 



573,636,341.54 

3,802,301.34 



Total reg'lar annual appropriates 

Permanent annual appropriations 

Grand total reg' lar and permanent 

annual appropriations 



620,894.198.29 
132.589,320.00 



676,703.27t;.5.~) 

123.921.220.00 



<i05.980.355.99 

1-,'4.:;.-).s.22aOO 



577,438.642.88 
132.712.220.00 



753,484.018.29 



800.624,496.55 



730.338.575.99 



710,150.862.88 



Total appropriations by congress.. 



1.554.108,514.84 



1,440.48<U:;S.>7 



TOTALS FOR SIX PRECEDING CONGRESSES. 



Congress. Fiscalyear. Amount. 

50th 1889-1890 $817,9<!3,859.80 

51st 1891-1892 1.035.680. 109.94 

52d 18931894 1.027.104,547.92 



Congress. 
53d. . 

54th 18971898 1.044.580.273.87 

55th 1899 1900 1.566,890.016.28 



Fiscalyear. Amount. 
, . . 1895-1896 989.239.205.f 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



IMMIGRATION INTOJTHE UNITED STATES. 
Fiscal years ended June 30. 







1902. 






1903. 






Male. 


Female. 


Total. 


Male. 


Fe in< ile. 


Total. 




127 136 


44853 


171 989 


147 984 


58 07 


206 Oil 




1.759 


878 


2577 


2308 


1 152 


S 460 




3.681 


1,978 


5.660 


4 554 


2 604 


7 158 




2.007 


1,110 


3.117 


3513 


2 065 






18.018 


10.286 


28.304 


24861 


15935 


40086 


Greece 


7.867 


237 


8,101 


13634 


456 


14090 


Italy 


145729 


32643 


178 372 


18ti { *06 


43656 


230 6'*2 




1 474 


813 


2*287 


2 4^9 


1 199 


3 998 




12,348 


5.136 


17,484 


16 24^ 


8.212 


24*461 


Portugal etc 


3.123 


2.184 


5.307 


5829 


2478 


9 307 




3.656 


3.540 


7.196 


5313 


3997 


9310 




71864 


35483 


107 347 


99935 


43 158 


136 093 




765 


86 


851 


1*090 


' 62 


1 761 




869 




975 


1 733 


347 


2 080 




19,424 


11 470 


30894 


29808 


16220 


46028 




1.656 




2,344 


2 796 


1 187 


3983 




157 


30 


187 


4453 


76 


1 529 


United Kingdom England ... 
Ireland. 


8.107 
12,936 


5.468 
16.202 


13,575 

29.138 


15.593 
15956 


10.626 
19344 


26.219 
35300 


Scotland 


1*582 


978 


2.560 


3963 


2 190 


6,153 


Wales 


471 


292 


763 


835 


440 


1 275 


Europe, not specified 


JB 


1 


37 


3 


2 




Total Europe 


444.665 


114,403 


619,068 


580,484 


234.023 


814,507 




1 5% 


53 


1 649 


2 167 


42 


'* ~M) 




10414 


3856 


14 270 


15909 

wow 


4059 


19 68 


India 


87 


6 


93 




15 


' 94 


Turkey in Asia . ... 


4.209 


2014 


6223 


5114 


2004 


7 118 


Other Asia 


33 




36 


507 


70 


577 


Africa 


32 


5 


37 


121 


55 


176 


Australia, Tasmania, etc 
Hawaii 


231 


15 


384 
9 


796 


354 


1.150 


Philippine islands 


126 




126 


123 


9 


132 


Pacific islands not specified . . . 
British North America 


44 

463 
208 


12 
173 
97 


56 
636 
305 




477 


41 
300 
199 


99 
1.028 
676 


Mexico 


631 


178 


709 


416 


112 


528 


South America 


235 


102 


337 


405 


184 


589 


West Indies 


3,397 


1,314 


4 711 


5743 


2427 


8 170 


Grand total 


91 
466.369 


3 
182.374 


94 
648,743 


' 19 
613.146 


6 

243.900 


25 

857.046 



July 50.782 

August .... 45.549 
September 58,228 



October... 
November. 55.177 
December. 50,291 



IMMIGRATION BY MONTHS. 

Fiscal year 1903. 
63.314 | January.... 31.851 I April ] 

February.. 47.267 May 137,514 

March 



IMMIGRATION SINCE 1869. 
Years ended June 30. 



1869... 

1870. . . 
1871... 
1872. 



1873 

1874 

1875 



, .352 569 

. .887.203 
. .321.350 
.404.S06 



...459.803 
. . .313,339 
...227,498 



1876 

1877 141.857 

1878 138.469 

1879 177.826 

1880 457.257 

1881 669.431 

1882 788.!<92 



1883. 

Iv4. 



603.322 

518.592 

395:346 

3S4.203 

490.109 

546,889 

444,427 



1890 455.302 

1891 560,319 

1892 623.084 

1893 502.917 

1894 285.631 

1895 258.536 

1896 343.267 



1897 

1898 

1899 

1900 

1901 

1902 

1903. . . . 



.229.299 
.311.715 
.448.572 
.487.918 
.648.743 
.857,046 
of the 



The total recorded immigration into the United States since the organization 
government is, in round numbers, 20,000,000 persons. 

IMMIGRATION LAW OF THE UNITED STATES. 
(Approved March 4, 1903.) 

The act codifies and amends the existing! paid the tax. The money collected frrm th ! s 
immigration laws. It raises the poll tax on source is to go into the national treasury and 



aliens from $1 to $2, whether they arrive by 
sea or land, but exempts citizens of Can- 
ada, Cuba and Mexico. The tax is not levied 
on aliens in transit through the Unitp'l 
States nor upon such as have been admitted 
into the country before and have already 



'onstitute a permanent fund for del raying 



the expenses of re 



gulating 
'lasses a 



immigration. 



The following classes are excluded from 
admission into the United States: Idiots, 
insane persons, epileptics and persons who 
have been insane five years previous; paupers 



APPLICATIONS FOR PATENTS. 



73 



and persons likely to become public charges; 
persons afflicted with dangerous and conta- 
gious diseases; felons, polygamists, anarch- 
ists or persons who believe in or advocate 
the overthrow by force or violence of the 
government of the United States- or of all 
governments or of all forms of law, or the 
assassination of public officials; prostitutes; 
those who have been, within one year from 
the date of application for admission, de- 
ported as being under agreement or contract 
to perform labor or service of some kind; all 
assisted immigrants unless it is affirmative- 
ly shown that they do not belong to any of 
the foregoing classes; but this section snail 
not be held to prevent persons living in the 
United States from senuiug for a relative or 



friend who is not of the excluded classes. 
Persons convicted of purely political offenses 
are not excluded. 

It is provided that skilled labor may be 
imported if labor of like kind unemployed 
cannot be found in this country. The pro- 
visions of the law applicable to contract 
labor do not exclude professional actors, 
artists, lecturers, singers, ministers of any 
religious denomination, professors for col- 
leges or seminaries, persons belonging to any 
recognized learned profession or persons em- 
ployed strictly as personal or domestic serv- 
ants. The time within which persons landed 
in violation of law, or who shall become 
public charges, may be deported is extended 
from one to two and three years. 



APPLICATIONS FOR PATENTS. 



[Condensed from Rules of Practice 

A patent may be obtained by any person 
who has invented or discovered any new 
and useful art, machine, manufacture or 
composition of matter, or any new and use- 
ful improvement thereof not previously 
patented or described in this or any other 
country, or more than two years prior to 
his application, unless the same is proved 
to have been abandoned. A patent may 
also be obtained for any new design for a 
manufacture, bust, statue, alto-relievo or 
bas-relief; for the printing of woolen, silk 
or other fabrics; for any new impression, 
ornament, pattern, print or picture to be 
placed on or woven into any article of 
manufacture; and for any new, useful and 
original shape or configuration of any 
article of manufacture, upon payment of 
fees and taking the other necessary steps. 

Applications for patents must be in writ- 
ing, in the English language and signed by 
the inventor if alive. The application must 
include the first fee of $15, a petition, speci- 
fication and oath, and drawings, model or 
specimen when required. The petition must 
be addressed to the commissioner of patents 
and must give the name and full address 
of the applicant, must designate by title 
the invention sought to be patented, must 
contain a reference to the specification tor 
a full disclosure of such invention and must 
be signed by the applicant. 

The specification must contain the follow- 
ing in the order named: Name and resi- 
dence of the applicant with title of inven- 
tion; a general statement of the object and 
nature of the invention: a brief description 
of the several views of the drawings (if the 
invention admits of such illustration): a 
detailed description; claim or claims: sig- 
nature of inventor and signatures of two 
witnesses. Claims for a machine and its 
product and claims for a machine and the 
process in the performance of which the 
machine is used must be presented in 
separate applications, but claims for a proc- 
ess and its product may be presented in 
tho same application. 

The applicant, if the inventor, must make 
oath or affirmation that he beli-eves himself 
to be the first inventor or discoverer of 
that which he seeks to have patented. The 
oath or affirmation must also state of what 
country he is a citizen and where he re- 
sides. In every original application the ap- 
plicant must swear or affirm that tho In- 
vention has not heon patented to himself 
or to others with his knowledge or con- 
sent in this or any foreign country for more 
than twg ypars prior to his application, or 
on an application for a patent filed in any 



in the United States patent office.] 
foreign country by himself or his legal rep- 
resentatives or assigns more than seven 
months prior to his application. If appli- 
cation has been made in any foreign, coun- 
try full and explicit details must lie given. 
The oath or affirmation may be made be- 
fore any one who is authorized by the laws 
of his country to administer oaths. 

Drawings must be on white paper with 
india ink and the sheets must be exactly 
10x15 inches in size with a margin of one 
inch. They must show all details clearly 
and without the use of superfluous lines. 

Applications for reissues must state why 
the original patent is believed to be de- 
fective and tell precisely how the envrs 
were made. These applications must be ac- 
companied by the original patent and an 
offer to surrender the same; or, if the 
original be lost, by an affidavit to that ef- 
fect and certified copy of the patent. Ev- 
ery applicant whose claims have been twice 
rejected for the same reasons may appeal 
from 'the primary examiners to the exam- 
iners in chief upon the payment of a fee 
of $10. 

The duration of patents is for seventeen 
years except in the case of design patents, 
which may be for three and a half, seven 
or fourteen years as the inventor may elect. 

Caveats or notices given to the patent 
office of claims to inventions to prevent the 
issue of patents to other persons upon the 
same invention, without notice to the 
caveators, may be filed upon the payment 
of a fee of $10. Caveats must contain the 
same information as applications for pat- 
ents. 

Schedule of fees and prices: 

Original application 

On issue of patent 

Design patent (3% years) 

Design patent (7 years) 

Design patent (14 years) 

Caveat 

Reissue 

First appeal 10.00 

Second appeal 20.00 

For certified copies of printed patents: 

Specification and drawing, per copy $0.05 

Certificate 25 

Grant .50 

For manuscript copies of records, per 

100 words 

If certified, for certificate 

Blue prints of drawings, 10x15, per copy .25 
Blue prints of drawings, 7x11, per copy 15 
Blue prints of drawings, 5x8. per copy. .05 
For searching records or titles, per hoar .50 
For the Official Gazette, per year, in 

United States 5.00 



.$15.00 
. 20.00 
. 10.00J 
. 15. 00 | 
. 30.00 
. 10.00 
30.00 



10 



74 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


FAMILIES, DWELLINGS AND OWNERSHIP OF HOMES. 
(Census 1900.) 
IN THE STATES AND TERRITORIES. 


STATE. 


Families* 


Dwellings, t 


HOMES OP PRIVATE FAMILIES.* 


Total. 


Owned. 


Hired. 


Unknown. 


Alabama 
Alaska 


374,765 
13.459 
29.875 
265.238 
341,781 
127,459 
203,424 
39.446 
5(5.078 
117.001 
455i557 
36,922 
37,491 
1,036.158 
571,513 
76,701 
480,878 
321,947 
437.054 
284,875 
163.344 
242.331 
613,659 
548.094 
342.658 
318,948 
654.333 
55.889 
220,947 
11,180 
97,902 
415.222 
46.355 
1,634,523* 
370,0?J 
64,6'. W 
944,433 
86.908 
91,214 
1,320.025 
94.179 
269,864 
83,536 
402.536 
589.291 
56,1% 
81,462 
364,517 
113,086 
186,291 
426,063 
20,116 


362,295 
10.565 
28,763 
259.004 
313.217 
120,364 
159,677 
38,191 
49,385 
113.594 
436,153 
32.366 
36,487 
845,836 
552,495 
75,539 
468.682 
314.375 
413,974 
269.395 
148,507 
221,706 
451,362 
521,648 
317.037 
310.963 
593,528 
53779 
213.972 
10.960 
6,635 
321,032 
44.903 
1,035,180 
360,491 
63,319 
857,636 

1,2361238 
67.816 
259,302 
81,863 
385,588 
575,734 
53.490 
75.021 
347.159 
106.622 
180.715 
398.017 
19.664 


370,980 
12,183 
27,817 
262.421 
324,690 
122,349 
200.640 
39,007 
55,465 
113,629 
450,712 
29,763 
35,819 
1,024,189 
567,072 
76,017 
476,710 
319,422 
434.228 
281,449 
161,588 
239.837 
604,873 
542,358 
337,284 
316.114 
646,872 
52.125 
217.990 
10,472 
96.534 
408,993 
45.510 
1,608,170 
367,565 
66.360 
934,674 
85,929 
87,545 
1,303.174 
92,735 
267,859 
82,290 
399,017 
582055 
55.208 
80,559 
360,749 
107,171 
183,780 
420,327 
18,632 


122,449 
7,212 
15,317 
119,827 
146,994 
54,965 
76,855 
13,641 
12,998 
50,930 
129.667 
6,321 
24.370 
451,597 
312.283 
24.531 
282,760 
183,286 
218,142 
83.575 
102,537 
90,702 
206.127 
330,276 
208,189 
102,645 
322,244 
281563 
120,705 
6,511 
50.593 
136,055 
29,223 
521,537 
165,222 
49,163 
481.592 
59,762 
50,174 
523.843 
26,009 
77.054 
56.785 
179.175 
261.933 
86,724 
47.751 
170,574 
57,204 
98,469 
274,010 
9,674 


231,180 
1,644 
10,545 
130,411 
162.275 
61.386 
119.094 
23.835 
40.753 
55.920 
291,447 
21,086 
9.218 
547,369 
242,588 
47,746 
183,053 
12.240 
204.009 
181,577 
55,028 
135,353 
379,696 
198.078 
118.034 
194,637 
307.492 
20,556 
90.711 
3,134 
42,840 
259,848 
13,118 
1,043,800 
188,162 
11,863 
431,301 
23.157 
33,745 
742.385 
64,362 
174.448 
22.610 
206.077 
299,3 '2 
17,012 
31,014 
177,087 
45.113 
80,759 
137,009 
7.388 


17,351 
3,327 
1,955 
12,183 
15,421 
5,998 
4,691 
1,531 
1,714 
6,779 
29,598 
2,356 
2,231 
25,223 
12,201 
3.740 
10.897 
9,896 
12,077 
16,297 
4,023 
13.782 
19.050 
14.004 
11.061 
18.832 
17,136 
3.006 
6,574 
827 
3,101 
13,090 
3,169 
42,833 
14,181 
2,334 
21J81 
3.010 
3,626 
36,946 
2,364 
16,357 
2,285 
13,765 
20,810 
1,472 
1.794 
13,088 
4,854 
4,552 
9,308 
1.576 








Colorado 






District of Columbia 
Florida 


Georgia 
Hawaii 
Idaho 


Illinois 




Indian Territory 








Louisiana 
Maine 


Maryland 
Massachusetts 


Mi higan 








Montana 
Nebraska 






New Jersey 
New Mexico 


New York 
North Carolina 


North Dakota 


Ohio 


Oklahoma .... 


Oregon 
Pennsylvania 


Rhode Island 




South Dakota .... 




Texas 


Utah 




Virginia 


Washington 


West Virginia 


Wisconsin 
Wyoming 
Total 


16,239,797 


14,474.777 


16,00(5,437 


7.218,755 


8,246.747 


540,935 


IN CITIES OF 100,000 OR MORE INHABITANTS. 


Allegheny Pa 


26.558 
105.584 
117,244 
73.631 
359.960 
74,536 
81,519 
27.582 
30,936 
60.505 
21,027 
39,710 
44.760 
36,496 
25.207 
44.912 
21,66(3 


20.321 
89,442 
66.482 
49,914 
193,895 
40,634 
63.205 
24,219 
27.100 
52,046 
9.509 
36,160 
23.627 
28.027 
22,531 
34.655 
17,443 


26.148 
104,146 
114,705 
72.436 
354.036 
73,519 
80,014 
27,013 
29,979 
59,836 
20.874 
38,978 
44,367 
35.341 
24.180 
44.098 
20,956 


6.490 
26.989 
' 20.696 
23.168 
86.435 
14.891 
29.139 
8,093 
8,269 
22,540 
3,659 
12,729 
8,536 
8,443 
10.094 
11,363 
3,665 


18.983 
69,761 
89.083 
47.298 
258.582. 
36,384 
48.844 
17,822 
21,215 
35.178 
16,711 
25,004 
34,060 
26,466 
12.745 
31,640 
15,851 


675 
7,369 
4.926 
1,970 
9.919 
2.244 
2,031 
1,098 
495 
2.118 
504 
1,245 
1,771 
432 
1,386 
1,095 
1.440 


Baltimore Md 


Boston Mass 


Buffalo N.Y 


Chicago 111 


Cincinnati O 


Cleveland O . 


Columbus, O 
Denv* r. Col 


Detroit Mich 


Fall River Mass 


Indianapolis. Ind 
Jersey City, N. J 
Kansas City, Mo 
Los Angeles, Cal 


LouisviUe Ky 


[Memphis, Tenn 



GROSS AREA OP THE UNITED STATES. 



75 



FAMILIES, DWELLINGS AND OWNERSHIP OF HOMES.-CONTINUED. 



CITY. 



Milwaukee. Wis 

Minneapolis. Minn 

Newark.N. J 

New Haven, Conn 

New Orleans, La 

NewYork,N. Y 

Omaha, Neb 

Paterson, N. J 

Philadelphia, Pa 

Pittsburg. Pa 

Providence. R.I 

Rochester, N. Y 

St. Joseph. Mo 

St. Louis, Mo 

St. Paul, Minn 

San Francisco. Cal 

Scranton, Pa 

Syracuse, N. Y 

Toledo, O 

Washington, D. C 

Worcester. Mass 



Families* 



59.806 
42.530 
54.654 
23.601 
fil,775 
735.621 



23,472 
265.880 
63.959 
39.236 
34.402 
17.150 
123.719 
30.919 
71,697 



25,347 
28,928 

56,678 
24,841 



Dwellings.-* 



HOMES OP PRIVATE FAMILIES.* 



Total. 



58.889 
41.704 
53.965 
23,275 
60.796 

722.670 
20.047 
23.153 

263.093 
62.942 
38,516 
33.964 
16,632 

121,123 
30,221 
67,592 



24,928 
28.319 
55,465 
24.544 



Owned. Hired. Unknown 



20,955 
11,473 
11,041 
61062 



5,230 
55,528 
16.582 

7,895 
12,469 

4,620 



15,774 
7,436 
9,238 

11,962 



5,913 



87,466 



41.270 
16,722 
45,129 

617.474 
13,941 
17.285 

196,124 
44,364 



20.481 

11.080 

1,983 



12,209 
15,439 
15,851 
40,753 

17,875 



468 
1.709 
1,654 

491 
2.781 
20,027 

765 

638 
11.441 
1,996 

925 



3.336 

1,303 

2.162 

654 

251 

506 

1,714 

756 



*The word family, as used here, means a group of individuals who occupy jointly a dwelling 
place, or part of a duelling place, or an individual living alone in any place of abode. tMeans 
any place in which one or more persons regularly sleep, iGroups of related individuals. 

GROSS AREA OF THE UNITED STATES. 

Including Alaska, Hawaii, Porto Rico and the Philippine islands, the gross area (land and 
water surface) of the United States is approximately 3.622.933 square milesi Excluding Alaska 
and the islands named, the gross area at each census from 1790 to 1900 compares as follows: 
Census year. Sq. miles. \ Census year. Sq. miles. I Census year. Sq. miles. Census year. Sq. miles 
1900 3,025.600 1 1870 3.025,600 1 1840 2,059,043 1810 1,999.775 



1880.. 



1800. 



.3.025,60011880 ............. 2,059.04311 



..3,025,600 
...3,025,600 

AREA BY STATES AND TERRITORIES (1900). 



827.844 



STATE OB 
TERRITOKY. 



Alabama 

Alaska 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

Districtof Columbia 

Florida 

Georgia 

Hawaii 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Indian Territory... 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 



Gross Water Land 
area, surfce. surface. 



52,250 



113.020 

53.850 

158.360 

103.925 

4.990 

2,050 

58.680 
59,475 
6,449 
84,00 
56.650 
36.350 
31.400 
56.025 



40.400 
48.720 
33.040 
12.210 
8,315 
58.915 
83.365 
46.810 
69.415 
146.080 
77.510 



710 



100 

805 

2,380 

280 

145 

90 

10 

4,440 
495 



510 

650 

440 

400 

550 

380 

400 

3,300 

3,145 

2,350 

275 

1,485 

4,160 

470 

680 

770 

670 



51,540 



112.920 

53,045 

155.980 

103.645 

4,845 

1,960 

60 

54.240 
58,980 



84,290 
56,000 
35.910 
31,000 
55,475 
81.700 
40.000 
45.420 
29.895 
9.860 
8,040 
57.430 
79.205 
46.340 
68.735 
145.310 
76.840 



STATK OR 
TERRITORY. 



Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

NewYork 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 



Delaware bay 

Raritan bay and 
lower N. Y. bay. . . 

Total 



Gross 
area. 



110.700 
9.305 
7,815 
122.580 
49.170 
52,250 
70.795 
41.060 



96,030 
45.215 

1.250 
30.570 
77.650 
42.050 
265.780 
84.970 

9,565 
42,450 



24.780 
56,040 
97,890 



100 



Water 
surfce. 

960~ 



120 

1,550 

3.670 

600 

300 

200 



197 

400 

800 

300 

3.490 

2,780 

430 

2,325 

2,300 

135 

1,590 

315 



100 



'55.562 



Land 
surface. 



109.740 
9,005 
7.525 
122.460 
47,620 
48,580 
70,195 
40,760 
38.830 
94,5,0 
44,985 
1.053 
30,170 
76.850 
41.750 
262,290 
82.190 
9,135 
40,125 



24.645 
54.450 
97,575 



*2.970.038 



*Exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii. 

Area of Porto Rico is approximately 3,600 and of the Philippine islands 114.000 square miles. 

NOTE The areas as given above were computed under the direction of Henry Gannett, 
geographer of the United States geological survey, for the census office. In some cases the 
figures vary from those given by the general land office, but they are believed to be as nearly 
correct as possible. In the case of states bordering on the great lakes the water surface of 
the latter has been included in the computation of areas by the land office and excluded by 
Mr. Gannett. This will account in large measure for the apparent discrepancies. 



76 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


GENERAL STATISTICS OF AMERICAN CITIES. 

Year of incorporation, area, parks, mileage of paved and unpaved streets and mileage of 
sewers. [From United States department of labor report for September, 1902.] 


CITY. 


tl 
1? 


Area. 
(Acres.) 


Parks. 
(Acres) 


MILES OF STREETS. 


Sewers 
(Miles) 


Paved. 


Un- 
paved. 


Total. 


New York N Y 


1902 
1837 
1887 
1822 
1822 
1898 
1836 
1832 
1900 
1819 
1816 
1896 
1883 
1846 
1791 
1857 
1871 
1828 
1867 
1892 
1891 
1889 
1854 
1834 
1893 
1851 
1840 
1834 
1848 
1847 
1784 
1871 
1854 
1883 
1857 
1889 
1879 
1866 
1836 
1900 
1836 
1898 
1874 
1850 
1840 
1142 
1883 
1890 
1784 
1847 
1832 
1S28 
1874 
1836 
1850 
1854 


*209,218 
122,240 
84,933 
t.277 
,251 
20.255 
21,190 
32,600 
77.520 
22,560 
19,418 
122,240 
18,700 
14.419 
44,320 
11.957 
10,423 
12.800 
34,228 
11,705 
18,112 
16,640 
35,483 
11,635 
30,208 
18,304 
6,200 
10,400 
23,000 
10,807 
14,340 
5,357 
26.240 
6.208 
15,680 
27,697 
10,240 
12,333 
7,961 
7,197 
4,182 
25.600 
7,040 
11,200 
6,880 
3,926 
(i.l.92 
21.238 
11.102 
3.965 
6.514 
5.029 
4.481 
8,576 
7,251 


6,838 
2,186 
4.006 
2.183 
2,620 
1,284 
1,438 
1,049 
2,804 
539 
910 
743 
1,284 
503 
3,596 

1 

1.370 
1,581 
540 
1,259 
1.897 
1,204 
670 
521 
809 
360 
1,108 
387 
274 
1,100 
96 

592 
3,720 
782 
100 
68 
268 
486 
206 
155 
134 
8 
376 

ul 
'ffl 

270 
4 
64 
289 
2,41.4 
262 
130 
255 
529 
490 
53 
350 
153 
33 
8 
6 
80 


1.765.42 
1,346.40 
1,126.69 
445.38 
496.90 
378.92 
198.84 
337.42 
370.63 
391.00 
250.04 
204.77 
290.00 
315.27 
241.07 
124.53 
108.97 
166.65 
103.11 
227.50 
203.94 
185.08 
68.66 
126.33 
30.53 
137.06 
85.05 
117.49 
142.86 
40.60 
76.39 
67.34 
94.02 
48.41 
85.21 
237.29 
74.22 
21,32 
37.86 
81.90 
122.74 
122.05 
63.39 
163.87 
191.66 
92.10 
197.33 
23.53 
88.87 
72.58 
54.28 
56.74 
23.61 
79.18 
52.08 
151.50 
61.12 
136.67 
62.85 
130.60 
43.80 
35.06 
.73 
,34 
35.61 
25.00 
25.79 


761.99 
2,816.71 
413.31 
432,66 
90.45 
51.30 
374.16 
300.00 
383.00 
234.00 
130.00 
495.23 
276.03 
207.98 
79.11 
94.12 
92.76 
59.50 
686.34 
13.28 
215.00 
254.92 
375.00 
195.91 
844.00 
234.24 
91.50 
199.24 
42.61 
246.00 
127.42 
139.62 
40.97 
93.00 
296.69 
315.00 
153.34 
164.84 
86.04 
52.00 


2,527.41 
4,16311 
1,540.00 
878.04 
587.35 
430.22 
573.00 
637.42 
753.63 
625.00 
380.04 
700.00 
566.03 
523.25 
320.18 
218.65 
201.73 
226.15 
789.45 
240.78 
418.94 
440.00 
443.66 
322.24 
874.53 
371.30 
176.55 
316.73 
185.47 
286.60 
203.81 
206.96 
134.95) 
141.41 
381.90 
552.29 
227.56 
186.16 
123.90 
133.90 


1.543.32 
1,500.86 
919.12 
504.21 
575.18 
41.66 
306.93 
421.07 
309.87 
226.28 
295.15 

"507'.96 
340.48 
418.39 
184.49 
108.27 
99.45 
161.57 
192.60 
108.00 
178.75 
175.31 
228.76 
259.91 
164.28 
97.38 
147.50 
157.49 
182.69 
99.06 
72.81 
58.13 
62.45 
130.55 
162.90 
170.96 
63.67 
85.61 
91.22 
111.53 
100.76 
93.63 
134.15 
128.75 
55.00 
5.42 
' 73.90 
92.86 
70.55 
66.50 
51.70 
44.00 
70.00 
59.85 
178.00 
54.85 
64.41 
. 68.94 
96.40 
80.08 
70.80 
26.80 
47.23 
25.60 
26.00 
23.00 




hiladelphia Pa 


St LO'iis Mo . 


Boston, Mass 
Baltimore, Md 




Buffalo N Y 


San Francisco Cal . . 


Cincinnati. O 


Pittsburg. Pa 


New Orleans, La 


Det oit, Mich 


Milwauk e Wis 


Washington D. C 


Newark N. J 


Jersey City. N J 


Louisville Kv . . . 


Minneapolis, Minn 
Providence. R. I 


Indianapolis, Ind 

Kansas City Mo 


St. Paul, Minn 
Rochester N Y 




Toledo O 


Allegheny, Pa 




Syracuse N Y 




Paterson N. J 


Fall River, Mass 










Scranton Pa 


Lowell Mass 


Albany, N. Y 


Cambridge, Mass 


Portland. Ore 


75.93 
137.00 
119.93 
40.00 
28.30 
90.48 
115.50 
30.61 
62.42 
39.02 
112.18 
101.39 
69.28 
62.92 
85.00 
30.88 


197.98 
200.39 
283.80 
231.66 
120.40 
287.81 
139.03 
119.48 
135.00 
93.30 
168.92 
125.00 
148.46 
115.00 
2,56.50 
92.00 

'"512.85 
* 143.60 
65.00 
150.06 
90.60 
114.34 
130.26 
90.00 
72.40 


Atlanta. Ga 


Grand Rapids Mich .... 


Dayton O 


I Richmond, Va. ... 


Nash ille. Teun 
Seattle, Wash 




Reading Pa 


Wilmington Del 


Camden, N J .... .... 


Trenton. N. J 
Bridgeport, Conn 


Oakland Cal. 


Lawrence, Mass 


1853 
1847 
1857 

18o2 

1872 
1892 
1895 
1810 
1852 
IStS 
1852 


4,577 
12.373 
35,264 
24.661 
2,701 
5.303 
3.654 
3,840 
5.184 
3.840 
2,520 


New Bedford. Mass 


450.00 
13.00 
23.00 
115.00 
56.8V 
85.00 
94.65 
65.00 
46.61 


Springfield Mass 


Somerville, Mass 
Peoria, 111 
Ouincy, 111 


Springfield 111 


Rockford 111 


East St. Louis, 111 
Joliet.Ill 


*Land area only. 



WEALTH, TAXATION AND DEBTS OF CITIES. 77 


WEALTH, TAXATION AND DEBTS OF AMERICAN CITIES. 
[From the bulletin of the United States department of labor for September, 1902.] 


, i CITY. 


ASSESSED VALUATION. 


PER CENT 
OF FULL 
VALUE. 


Taju 
rate 
per 

$1,000. 


Net debt. 


Heal. 


Personal. 


Total. 


Real 


Per- 
sonal 


New York, N. Y 


$3.237,778.261 
259.254.598 
919.706.697 
342.325,544 
925.037.500 
258,304,425 
143.323,490 
221,405.290 
289,682,092 
170.173.990 
347.560.580 
108.079.794 
175,766.620 
134.135,624 
180.334.641 
129.832.105 
86,241.745 
90.200.000 
80.129.845 
151.533.940 
94,935.180 
59.001,060 
71.067,159 
107,303,311 


$550.192.612 
115.325.842 
1.619199 
52,470.160 
227.468.334 
175,039,397 
53,i:*. 155 
20.943.848 
123.417.901 
44.476.630 
4.596.755 
37.594.075 
71.481.880 
31.089.263 
12.567.084 
28.753.530 
9.360.817 
33.900.000 
22,082.661 
41,267.920 
34.249,770 
20.775.781 
15,890.170 
9,145,662 


$3,787.970.873 
374.580,440 
921.356.496 
394,795,704 
1.152,505.834 
433.343,822 
196.453,615 
242,349.138 
413,099.993 
214.650,620 
352,157.335 
145,673,869 
247,248,500 
165,224,887 
192,901,725 
158.585.635 
95,602.562 
124,100.000 
102,212.506 
192,801,860 
129,184.950 
79,776.841 
86.957.329 
116,448,973 


70 
20 
80 
66% 
100 
80 
50 
100 
60 
60 
100 
100 
70 
60 
75 

<R 

80 
60 
100 

V 

60 
80 
100 
60 
100 
50 
100 
100 
100 

iSJ 
IS 

50 
60 
33JS 
101) 
100 
100 
30 
66% 
100 
65 
75 
80 
60 
75 
100 

IS! 
*! 

100 
60 
80 
100 
25 
90 
100 
100 
10 
20 
100 
20 
20 
20 


100 
20 
100 
66% 
100 
60 
50 
100 
60 
60 
90 
100 
70 
60. 
100 
100 
70 
60 
60 
100 
66% 
40 
60 
80 
100 
60 
90 
50 
100 
100 
100 
30 
100 
50 
40 
50 
60 
33^$ 
100 
100 
100 
30 
100 
100 
65 
100 
80 
60 
75 
100 

"ioo" 

50 
100 
100 
60 

80 

18 

100 
100 
100 

IS 

100 
20 
20 
20 


"52.oi" 
18.50 
19.50 
14.90 
19.85 
26.70 
23.72 
15.56 
24.82 
17.00 
29.00 
19.64 
22.46 
15.00 
21.40 
28.00 
21.95 
29.86 
16.00 
19.50 
30.40 
26.90 
19.04 
32.40 
30.40 
18.80 
28.50 
16.40 
24.75 
12.75 
25.00 
18.20 
29.50 
58.58 
26.50 

"37.40 
18.60 
21.00 
16.90 
28.00 
24.00 
17.32 
26.80 
18.00 
26.00 
31.00 
17.50 
14.50 
23.00 
19.60 
21.50 
13.90 
17.80 
24.20 
15.60 
17.40 
53.40 
14.00 
15.90 
23.84 
80.20 
67.80 
69.02 
50.56 
72.60 
77.50 


$311,140.375 
36.40o.533 
47.758.659 
18.262.412 
47,152,085 
30,848,705 
14,725.423 
17,737.028 
517.776 
27.081. 25 1 
13.596.793 
17,902,808 
4,885.024 
6.860,686 
14,134.652 
14,80 i. 439 
16,205.526 
8,33i,834 
6.6S3.897 
14.029.846 
4,051.735 
6,075.775 
8,630.887 
10,246,018 
1,889,092 
6.932,051 
6.696,121 
5.410.6H5 
5.553,893 
9,136,896 
3.823.594 
3,9-22.673 
8,719,267 
1,717.451 
6,588.349 
1, 14.>.323 
3,240.111 
1.055.808 
3,108.626 
3,168.559 
6,374.916 
5.637.2* iO 
3.369.749 
1,863,097 
2,991,411 
6.610.5S2 
3.507.827 
6.251.041 
4.679.042 
1,420.868 
2,232,393 
2,656,532 
2,555.837 
1,639,827 
3,472.915 
441,195 
1.901.','S^ 
3,255.347 
1.201,410 
2,196.888 
1,761,000 
2,0^8.534 
773,964 
973.830 
1,021.271 
495.963 
1,020.600 
196800 


Philadelphia, Pa 




Baltimore, Md 
Cleveland O 


Buffalo, N. Y 
San ITrancisco, Ca^ 


Cincinnati, O 




New Orleans, La 
Detroit Mich . . . 


Milwaukee. Wis 
Washington. D. C 
Newark N. J 


Jersev City, N. J 


Louisville Ky 


Minneapolis, Minn 
Providence. R.I 
Indianapolis, Ind 
Kansas City. Mo 
St Paul. Minn 


Rochester N Y 




Toledo O 


49.401.580 
95.829.425 
51,180.860 
88,054,200 
81.045.860 
88,175.138 
40.960.583 
46.198.000 
16,696.460 
29.244.215 
62.300.365 
32,714.389 
21,818.895 
56.248,745 
61.630.400 
78,568,300 


14,658,830 
1,374.450 
14.333.540 
26,223.935 
6.058.243 
11.327,480 
8,141.402 
28.356.380 
8.650,280 
7,129,971 
11,077.565 
5.158,368 
1.535.151 
15.425.843 
8.108,838 
17,648,575 


64,060,410 
97,203,875 
65,514.400 
114.278.ia5 
87,104.103 
99.502,618 
49.101.985 
74.554.380 
25,346,740 
36.374.186 
73,377.390 
57,872,757 
23.354.046 
71,674,588 
69.469.238 
92,216.875 
43.360.537 
57.202.574 
59.956.729 
45,364.300 
71,117.607 
38.785.840 
42,980,924 
59.853.916 
43.942.981 
43.784.990 
28.654.210 
33,702.266 
63,236.971 
52,168.015 
44,224,168 
40.654.758 
64,511.991 
14,180.850 
74.338.927 
53,924.200 
56.924.5VJ9 
12.390.717 
5,629.528 
6.665.371 
6.165.984 
5.403.919 
3,821,023 


Allegheny, Pa 
Columbus, O 
Worcester. Mass 
Syracuse. N.Y 


Paterson, N.J 
Fall River Mass 


St Joseph, Mo 


Omaha, Neb 
Los Angeles, Cal 


Memphis. Tenn 






Albany, N.Y 
Cambridge. Mass 
Portland. Ore 




43,565.385 
41,494,010 
33.911.100 

42.608.869 
29.982.740 
35.236.279 
52.831,862 


13,637.189 
18,462.719 
11.453.200 
25.508.738 
8,803.100 
7,744,645 
7,021,954 


Grand Rapids. Mich 


Richmond, Va 
Nashville, Tenn 
Seattle. Wash 






Wilmington Del 


43,784,990 
26,552,660 
27.448.537 
56.183.524 
42.638.505 
37,979,854 
31.469.325 
36.170.900 
11.213,950 
57,394,710 
48.721,800 
49.958.227 
9,247.975 
3.673.691 
4.713.392 
4,411.097 
4.644.814 
2,853.523 






2,101.550 
6.253.729 
7.053,447 
9.529.510 
6,244,314 
9,185,433 
28.341,091 
2.966.900 
16.944,217 
5,202.400 
6.966,372 
3,142.742 
1,955.837 
1.951.979 
1,754.887 
759.105 
967.500 




Bridgeport, Conn 


Lynn, Mass 
Oakland. Cal 




New Bedford, Mass 
Des Moines, Iowa 
Springfield, Mass 
Somerville. Mass 


Troy N Y 




Quincy 111 


Springfield. Ill 
Rockford.Ill 
East St. Louis, 111 
Joliet, 111 




*Xot assessed. fFrom $23.17 to 35.38 in various boroughs. JI27.10 to $33.50. 



78 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMAXAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. . 


POLICE, SALOONS AND 


CRIME IN LARGE CITIES. 


[From report of the department of labor. Washington , D. C.] The figures are in most cases 
for fiscal or calendar years ended in 1901, but in some instances they extend to April, 1902. 


CITT. 


Po- 
lice- 
men. 


LICENSED 
SAL.OONS. 


AKBESTS FOR 


Total 
arrests. 


Drunk- 
enness. 


Dis- 
turb- 
ing 
the 
peace 


As- 
sault 
and 
bat- 
tery. 


Hom- 
icide. 


Va- 
gran- 
cy. 


House- 
break- 
ing. 


Lar- 
ceny. 


All 

other 

f'nxes 


No. 


Am't 
of li- 
cense 


New York, N. Y... 
Chicago, 111 
Philadelphia, Pa.. 
St. Louis. Mo 
Boston. Mass 
Baltimore, Md 


7.233 
2.974 

2>.'2 
1,264 
1.245 
947 
361 
732 
586 
486 
497 
271 
492 
314 
607 
360 
357 
339 
212 
310 
165 
222 

1 

130 
123 
136 

is 

'i 

12( 

& 
94 
55 
121 
15S 
110 
59 

"8 

89 
100 
105 



4b 
87 
99 
88 
62 
83 
61 
62 
85 
59 
69 
55 


10.821 
6,740 
1,737 
2.253 
980 
2.095 
1.820 
2,570 
3.052 
1,676 
572 
1.49t 
1.252 
1,869 
492 
1.283 
1,021 
887 
351 
461 
525 
475 
314 
506 
361 
659 
1VO 
533 
90 
394 
405 
481 
98 
155 
220 
200 
64b 
1% 
91 
413 


"$500 
1,100 
500 
...t.. 
250 
350 
500 
84 
350 
1,100 

'"566 
200 
400 
250 
250 
155 
1,000 
400 
350 
250 
1,000 
500 
600 
350 
1.100 
350 

-loo 

450 
250 

'1.066 

1,000 
600 
50 
1,100 
1,800 
500 


71,573 
H32.482 
30,4^8 
4,068 
19.511 
10,225 
10,192 
11.289 
14,742 
1.928 
15,040 
5.157 
2.043 
1,901 
4,072 
1,630 
3,197 
1.360 
2,090 
5.561 
1,085 
1,333 
1.614 


28.515 


10,338 
fi.020 
3.540 
609 
.2.503 
3.910 
1,076 
1,100 
1,300 
550 
194 
676 
622 
481 
3,383 
548 

MS 

IS 

1.101 
290 
199 


629 
37 
60 
61 
32 
21 
31 
19 
55 
39 
25 
47 
5 
5 
12 
27 
13 

1 

4 
13 

20 

1 


6.976 
819 
5,372 
1,805 
311 
351 
221 
2.824 
2.127 
2.795 
1,370 
2,154 
259 
383 
2,196 
240 
285 
232 
579 
122 
961 
4,549 
336 


1,896 
1,831 
213 
228 
617 
129 
231 
238 
246 
73 
28 
35 
61 
51 
179 
238 
217 

1 

125 
162 
45 


10.403 
6.77K 
4.W3 
1.753 
2.921 
2.708 
1.612 
2,006 
957 
705 
229 
577 
799 
408 
2,485 
583 
654 
681 
423 
596 
901 
933 
327 


3.419 
21.844 

s.s-r, 

8,747 
7.690 
8,859 
5.000 
3.46S 

ti.ii-.'s 
6.2Sfc> 
4.8(12 
3.883 
2,114 
824 
8.038 
1.485 
1,128 
1,882 
1,391 
2.100 
2.761 
3.877 
823 


133,749 
69,809 
61,189 
23,666 
34.500 
31.423 
19.219 
25.057 
27.362 
12.913 
23.067 
17,221 
7,795 
5,260 
26,062 
6,399 
7.343 
7.396 
5,292 
9,025 
7.033 
16,230 
3,881 


7.818 
6.395 
91o 
5.220 
79(5 
4.113 
1.907 
1,531 
1,319 
4.692 
1,892 
1.207 
5,647 
1.648 
625 
2,755 
496 
300 
86 
5,066 
536 


Buffalo, N. Y 
San Francisco.Cal. 
Cincinnati, O 
Pittsburg, Pa 
New Orleans, La... 


Milwaukee, Wis... 
Washington, D. C. 
Newark, N.J 
Jersey City, N. J. . 
Louisville. Ky 
Minneapolis, Minn 
Providence, R. I... 
Indianapolis, Ind.. 
Kansas City. Mo... 
St. Paul, Minn 
Rochester, N. Y.... 
Denver, Col 
Toledo. O 


1,621 
343 
965 
655 
3,524 
1.321 
2.544 


880 
360 
1,596 
719 
115 
362 
773 


ihi 

159 
37 
237 
317 
147 
6 


18 
5 
5 
5 
6 
1 
5 


1,640 
111 
94 
372 
62 
43 
198 


. m 

31 
14 
21 

58 
51 
68 


528 
285 
53 
241 
272 
517 
442 


2.702 
2,143 
608 
1,718 
647 
1.234 
1,193 


7.678 
3,437 
3.372 
3,968 
5.001 
3.676 
5,229 


Allegheny, Pa 
Columbus, O 
Worcester, Mass.. 
Syracuse. N. Y.... 
New Haven. Conn. 
Paterson, N. J 
Fall River. Mass... 
St. Joseph. Mo 
Omaha. Neb 
Los Angeles. Cal.. 
Memphis, Tenn 
Scranton. Pa 
Lowell, Mass 
Albany, N. Y 
Cambridge, Mass.. 
Portland. Ore 
Atlanta. Ga 
GrandRapids,Mich 


2,250 
704 
2,559 
3,006 

Jl 

4,079 
1.005 
1.620 
1.419 
4,163 
1,081 
1.344 
1,360 
2.136 
1,020 
2,602 
497 
1,346 
1,146 
815 
1.036 
2,904 
1.333 
1,321 
1.197 
1,669 
1,494 
739 
536 
861 
345 
920 
164 
722 
277 
647 
1.310 


429 
612 
459 

191 
91 
571 
406 
137 
8.642 
211 
475 
799 
1.958 
1,797 
405 
102 
989 
488 
719 
159 
155 
156 
115 
139 
348 
52 
33 
572 
473 
121 
395 
188 
1.537 
217 
337 
226 


398 
106 
376 
223 
610 
37 
227 
257 
176 
239 
23 
37 
258 
1,144 
1,433 
153 
254 
39 
351 
186 
208 
454 
263 
119 
197 
214 
109 
93 
127 
212 
197 
382 
237 
18 
205 
49 
161 
41 


..... 

3 
6 
26 
2 
1 
3 
1 
4 
2 
2 
1 
9 
20 
8 

""i 

3 
3 
10 
2 
2 
3 


64 

248 
1,188 
525 
643 
113 
27 
360 
8 
367 
2,439 
82 
348 
162 
2,405 
1.139 
149 
122 
136 

'"190 
65 
17 
60 
25 
24 

8 

17 
142 
32 
132 
236 
88 
311 
67 
141 
411 


96 
43 
69 
61 
113 
18 
62 
61 
101 
23 
42 
12 
46 
120 
172 

g 

27 
36 
62 
40 
46 
16 
37 
22 
42 
49 
24 

""36 
11 

76 
16 
30 
29 

1 


259 
230 
363 
261 
476 
62 
247 
246 
268 
274 
212 
188 
307 
519 
1,232 
306 
244 
75 
323 
199 
187 
243 
178 
119 
190 
137 
126 
156 
83 
109 
158 
300 
170 
15 
37 
58 
162 
38 


857 
970 
2.598 
1.261 
],774 
427 
666 
451 
687 
1.H40 
1,763 
301 
3,439 
1.024 
1.104 
5.315 
557 
298 
448 
229 
539 
580 
665 
803 
512 
325 
2,474 
411 
352 
417 
407 
798 
649 
76 
930 
333 
11,165 
207 


4.353 
2.916 
7,615 
5.898 
4,734 
2,273 
5.400 
2.954 
3,267 
3,803 
17,286 
1,917 
6,218 
5.137 
10.460 
9,797 
4,231 
1,143 
3,623 
2,287 
2,730 
2,579 
4.230 
2.609 
2,397 
2,063 
5.115 
2.321 
1.376 
1,988 
2.173 
2,097 
2,685 
566 

1,030 

2,641 
2,266 


269 
119 

180 
418 
297 
232 
268 
171 
170 
178 
20t 

ft 

218 
62 
58 
78 
54 


400 
1,000 
51C 
350 

1 

600 
450 
500 
300 
500 
350 
450 
1,500 
400 
2.500 
1,400 
1,200 
1,500 


Richmond. Va 
Nashville. Tenn... 
Seattle. Wash 
Hartford. Conn 
Reading, Pa 
Wilmington. Del.. . 


Trenton, N.J 
Bridgeport, Conn. . 
Lynn, Mass 
Oakland, Cal 
Lawrence, Mass... 
New Bedf ord.Mass. 
DesMoines,Iowa.. 
Springtield, Mass.. 


5 
8 
1 
1 
...... 

8 
2 
1 
5 

""5 


Troy N Y 


124 
92 
63 
65 

31 
19 
39 
33 


289 
362 
292 
210 
130 
153 
48 
160 
105 


500 
250 

75 
500 
500 
502 
1,000 
500 
1.000 


Hoboken, N. J 
Bvansville.lnd.... 
Peoria 111 . 


Quincy, 111 
Springfield. Ill 
Rpckford, 111 
E. St. Louis, 111.... 
Joliet. Ill 


*$100 to $800. tlnnkeepers. $2,OOiJ; common victualers, $500 to I 1.100. }#100 to $1.500. Sinn- 
keepers. $2.000; first-class saloons, $1.500; second-class saloons. $600. II Innkeepers, $2,500; first- 
class saloons. $1,800: fourth-class, SI. 500. "[Includes arrests tor disturbing peace. 



VESSELS IN FOREIGN CARRYING TRADE. 


79 


APPORTIONMENT OF REPRESENTATIVES. 

Under each census since the formation of the government. 


STATE. 


Admitted. 


Constitu- 
tion. Ratio 
30,000. 


1st census . 
Ratio 
33,000. 


k 


13d census. 

Rut in 
35,000. 


1 

PI 
3 


5th census. 

Ratio 

47.7(H>. 


5=SS 
1 


17th census. 
Ratio 
03.423. 


1 


9th census. 
Ratio 

HI. 425. 


i 


| 


5 


Ili 

7 
8 
3 

1 

11 

25 
13 
11 
8 
11 
7 
4 
6 
14 
12 
9 
8 
16 
1 
6 
1 
2 
10 
37 
10 
2 
21 
2 
32 
2 
7 
2 
10 
16 
1 
2 
10 

11 

1 
383 


Alabama 


Isl'i 






5 


6 
3 
3 


8 
4 


8 
5 

6 

1 


9 
6 
7 
2 




Arkansas 


1 SHfi 










California 


1S50 














Colorado 


1ST*', 
















Connecticut .. 


is'h 


5 

1 


7. 
1 


7 
1 


7 
2 


6 

1 


6 

1 


1 


i 


1 
1 
8 


1 

1 
7 


1 
2 
9 


1 
2 
10 
1 
20 
13 
11 

4 

4 
6 
12 

'J 

7 
14 
1 

3 
1 
2 
7 
34 
9 

2 ! 

28 

7 

11 


1 

2 
11 

8* 
11 
6 
4 
6 
13 
12 
7 
7 
15 
1 
6 

8 
34 
9 

A 

30 
2 
7 
2 
10 
13 
1 
2 
10 
2 
4 
10 
1 


Florida 






3 


2 


4 


6 


7 


9 


1 


Idaho 


1 s'H 1 


Illinois 


1818 










1 


3 

7 


7 
10 


9 
11 
2 


14 
11 
6 

i 

5 
5 
10 
6 
2 
5 
9 


19 
13 
9 
3 
10 
6 
5 
6 

i 

3 
6 
13 




l-'li; 










Iowa 


is-i; 




























Kentucky 
Louisiana 


1792 




2 


6 


10 


12 

7 

4 


13 
12 


10 

4 

7 

.1 

.... 
5 


10 
4 
6 
6 
11 
4 
2 
5 
7 


Maine 
Maryland 


1820 










6 

8 


14 


9 

17 


9 
20 


Massachusetts 


Kr 




1 SVs 














Mississippi 


1817 










i 
i 


2 
2 


Missouri 












Montana 
Nebraska 


18S5J 


























i 

5 

31 
7 


3 

7 
33 
8 

"26" 

27 
2 
5 




1S(>4 


















N. Hampshire. 
New Jersey 




3 

4 
6 
5 


j 
10 


j 

12 


6 

2? 

13 


6 
6 

it 


1 


4 

5 
34 
9 


3 
5 

as 

8 


New York 
North Carolina 
North Dakota. 
Ohio 


i siV> 








6 


14 


19 


21 


21 
1 
25 
2 

6 


19 

24 
2 
4 




ISVt 








Pennsylvania. 
Rhode Island.. 
South Carolina 
South Dakota. 
Tennessee 


1796 

1-1" 


8 

1 
5 


13 

6 


8 


23 
2 
9 


26 
2 
9 


1 


24 
2 

7 







3 


6 


9 


13 


11 


10 
2 


8 
4 


10 

6 


Utah 


1-10 


















1791 
[868 


"io" 


2 
19 


4 

22 


6 
23 


5 
22 


5 
21 


ii 


.1 


3 
11 


3 
9 


10 
1 
4 

9 

1 


Virginia 


Washington. .. 
West Virginia. 


















'"e" 


3 

8 
















3 


Wyoming J1890 
















Total 1 


65 


105 


141 


181 


213 


240 


223 


237 


243 293 


332 


357 


VESSELS IN FOREIGN CARRYING TRADE. 


Values of imports and exports of the United States carr 
with the percentage carried in American vessels. 


ied in American and foreign vessels, 


YEAR ENDED JCTNE 30. 


IMPORTS. 


EXPORTS. 


Per cent, 
in Am. 

vessels. 


In American 
vessels. 


In foreign 
vessels. 


In American 
vessels. 


In foreign 
vessels. 


1870 




$153,237.077 
149.317.368 
124.926.977 
127.471,688 
139.139,891 
127,096,434 
121.561.193 
108.229.615 
117.299,074 
109,1:33.454 
93.535.867 
82.050.118 
104.304.940 
92.900.710 
108,178,706 
123,696.385 


$309,140.510 
503.494.913 
623.676.134 
676.51 1.763 
648.535.976 
695,184.394 
503.810.334 
590.538.362 
626.890.521 
619,784,338 
492.08f5.003 
581.673.550 
701.223.735 
682.671.474 
744.772.048 
_ 835.846.5*8 


$199.732.324 
109.029.209 
75.382.012 
78.9JJ8.047 
81.033.844 
70.670.073 
71.258.893 
62.277.581 
70.392.813 
79.441.823 
67.792.150 
78.562.0*8 
90.779.252 
83.385,296 
80.083,527 
_. 88.359.812 


$329.786.978 
720.770.521 
739,594.424 
773.589.324 
916,022,832 
733,132.174 
825.798.918 
695,357.830 
751.083.000 
905,969.428 
1,090,406.476 
1.064.590.307 
1.193.220.689 
1,291.518.933 
.1.098,269.505 
1.174.<iS1.765 


35.6 
17.4 
12.9 
12.5 
12.3 
12.2 
13.3 
11.7 
12.0 
11.0 
9.3 
8.9 
,.9.3 
8.1 
9.0 
9.6 


1880 


1890 


1891 




IQQO 


1894 




1895 


1896 


1897 


1898 


1899 . .. 




1900 


1901. . . 


1902 


1903 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



PUBLIC DEBT OF THE UNITED STATES. 

Statement of the outstanding principal on Jan. 1 of each year from 1791 to 1843. inclusive, 
and on July 1 of each year since then. 



YEAR. I Amount. I YEAR. Amount. YEAR. Amount. YEAR. Amount. 



1791. 

1792. 
1793. 
17!4. 
1795. 
1796. 
1797. 
1798. 
1799 
1800. 
1801. 
1802. 

iso3. 

1<U4. 

i<o:>. 
1806. 

1S( 17. 



. 

1S10. 
1811. 
1812. 
1813. 
1814. 

HI:.. 
M6. 

1817. 
1818. 
1819. 



$75,463,476.52 
77.227.924.66 
80.358.634.04 
78/27.404.77 



1820 



83,762.172.07 
82.064.479.33 
79.228.529.12 
78.408.669. 
82.976.294.35 
83.038.050.80 
80.712.632.25 
77.054.ffi6.40 
86,427,120.88 
82,312.150.50 
75.723.270.Wi 
69,218,398.64 
65.196.317.97 
57.023.192.09 
53.173.217.52 
48.005,587.76 
45,209,737.90 
55,962.827.57 
81.487,846.24 
99.a33.660. 15 
127.334.933.74 
123.591 .965.16 
103,466,633.83 
95.529,648.28 



1823 ... 

1824.... 



1829.... 
1830.... 

iasi ... 



835.... 
_a36.... 
1837 .. 



1840.... 
1841.... 
1842.... 
1843 ... 



1845. 
1846 
1847 



Wl,015.5ti6.15 

8a.987.427.tw; 
93.546.67ti.98 
90.875.877.28 
90,2611.7:7.77 
83,788.332.71 
81.955,059.99 
73.987.357.20 
67.475.048.87 
58.421,413.67 



48.565.40b.50 

39,123.191.68 

24.3-J2.235.18 

7,001,696.83 

4,760.082.08 

33.733.05 

37.513.05 

336.957.83 

3,308.124.07 

10.434,221.14 

3,573.343.32 

5.250.875.54 

13.594.480.73 

20.201.226.27 

32.742,922.00 

23. 461. 652.50 

I5.925.h03.01 

15.550.202.97 

88.Sifi.534.77 



1818.. 
1849.. 
1850.. 
Nil . . 

1-52.. 

853.. 
1854.. 

:855. . 

856.. 
857. 



858.. 

859.. 

I860. , 

1861.. 

J. 

863.. 

864. . 
1S65. . 

.: 

867.. 

868.. 
186-.).. 
1870. , 
1871.. 

872.. 
1873. , 
1874. 
1875. , 



$47.044,863.23 

63,061.858.69 

63,452.773.55 

68,304.7'. 6.li2 

66.199.811.71 

59.80:1117.70 

42.24-J.t--J.4-J 

35,586,956.56 

31462,537.90 

28.699.831.85 

44,911.881.03 

58,496,837.a8 

64.842.287.88 

90.580.873.72 

524.176.412.13 

1,119.772.138.63 

1.815,784. :>;i).:,7 

2,680.647.869.74 

2.773.236.173.69 

2,678,126.103.87 

2,611.687,851.19 

2,588.452.213.94 

2,480.672.427.81 

2.353.211.332.32 

2,253,251.328.78 

2, 284.482.993.20 

"2,251,690,468.43 

*2, 232.284,531.95 



1*76. 
1S77. 

i-7s. 

1-79. 
1880. 
1881. 
H*2. 
1883. 
18S4. 
1885. 
18*6. 
1837. 
1888. 
1889. 

i-;to. 

1891. 

1 8! 12. 

1*93. 
1*94. 
1SU.V 
1*96. 
1897. 
1896! 
1*99. 
1900. 
1901 
1902. 



. . . . *2, 180.395.067.15 

....*2, 205.301 ,392.10 

....*2, 256,205.892.53 

....*2,349.567.4S2.04 

....*2, 120.415.870.63 

....*2. 069,913.560.58 

....*!, 918.312.994.03 

....*!, 884,171.728.07 

....*!. aSO.528.923.57 

....tt, 876,424.275.14 

....fl. 756.445.205.78 

.tl. 688.220.Ktl.RS 

.tl. 795.992,320.58 

.+1.640,673.340.28 

.tl, 585.821 .048.73 

.tl, 560.472,784.61 

.tl, 628 840. 151 .ftS 

.tl, 598,111.156.13 

.tl, 668,757.127.68 

....tl, 698.67 6.661 .25 

....tl. 778,434.491.40 

....tl. 811 ,435, 708.90 

.... tl. 798.066.421.90 

....tl. 984,766.107.92 

....t2, 101.445,225.67 

....+2.094.481,966.89 

....J2, 111.654.973.89 

....tl, 309.405.912.89 



*In the amount are included the certificates of deposit outstanding, for which a like 
amount in United States notes was on special deposit in the treasury for their redemption 
and added to the cash balance in the treasury. 

-(Exclusive of Bold, silver, currency and treasury notes of 1890 held in the treasurer's cash 
and including bonds issued to the several Pacific railroads not yet redeemed. 

{Exclusive of gold and silver certificates and treasury notes of 1890 held in the treasurer's 
cash. 

ANALYSIS OF THE PUBLIC DEBT. 



JULTl. 


Debt on 
which in- 
terest has 
ceased. 


Debt bear- 
ing no 
interest.* 


Outstanding 
principal. 


Cash in the 
treasury. 


Principal of 
debt less cash 
in treasury. 


Popula- 
tion 
of the 
United 
States. 


$ 

S 


Interest \ 
per 
capita. \ 


1880. .. 


$7,621,455.26 


$388,800,815.37 


$2,120.415.370.63 


$201,088.622.88 


$1,919.326,747.75 


50.155.78.3 


138.27 


$1.59 


1890. .. 


1,815,805.26 


825,011,289.47 


1,552.140.204.73 


661.355.884.20 


924,465.218.53 


62JJ22.250 


14.22 


.47 


1891. .. 


1.614.705.26 


933.So'J.T' it;.: 1 ..'. 


1,545,996.591.61 


694.083.839.83 


851.912.751.78 


63.975.000 


13.34 


.37 


1892. . 


2,785,875.26 


1.000.C48.939.37 


1.558.464,144.63 


746,937,681.03 


841,526.463.60 




12.93 


35 


1S93. . 


2.094,060.26 


958.854.525.87 


1,545.985,686.13 


707.016.210.89 


838.969.475.75 


66:82i)'.000 


12.64 


:i5 


1894. . 


I,a51,240.26 


9!>5.360,506.42 


1.632.253.636.68 


732.940,256.13 


899.313.380.55 


68.275.000 


13.30 


.38 


1895. . 


1.721.590.26 


958.1 ( .7,:vil.9'.i 


1.675,120,988.25 


811.061.686.46 


864.059.314.78 


69.878.000 


13.08 


.42 


1896. . 


1,600.890.26 


H2( 1,839.543.14 


1,769,840.323.40 


953,906,635.6] 


915,934,687.89 


71.390.000 


13.60 


.49 


1897. . 


1346,880.26 


968,960.655.64 


1,817.672.>5.90 


<25.649.7f>. : i.87 


992.022.900.03 


72.807.000 


13.78 


.48 


1898. . 


1.262.680.00 


947.901 .845.64 


1.796.531.985.90 


769.446.503.76 


1.027,085.492.14 


74.522.000 


14.08 


.47 


1899. . 


1.218.3110.26 


944.0UJ.V;..;,; 


1.991.9-27.:'^;.'.r2 


8:36.607.071.73 


1.155.320,235.19 


76.011.000 


15.55 


.54 


1900. . 


1,176,320.26 


1.112.805911.41 


2.136.il.i iS'1.67 


1.029.249.833.78 


1.107.711.257.89 


76.304.799 


14.52 


.44 


1901. . 


1,415.620.26 


I.154.770.j::x.;:, 


2.14:i.82;.933.89 


1.098.587,813.92 


1,044.739,119.97 


77.647.000 


13.45 




1902.. . 


1,280,860.26 


L-J-Jii.259.245.63 


2.158.610.443.89 


1,189.153.204.85 


969.457,241.04 


79.003.000 


12.27 


.'35 


1903.. . 


1,205,090.26 1.286.718.281.63 


2.202,464.781.89 


1.362,698.474.16 8:39.766.307.47 80.847.000 


10.31 


.31 



*Include3 certificates issued against gold, silver and currency deposited in the treasury. 
TRAFFIC THROUGH THE STE. MARIE CANALS. 



YEAR. 



1892... 
1*93.. 
1894... 
1895... 

1*97.".! 
1898... 
l.*99... 
1900... 
1901... 
1902... 



12.58T 
12.008 
14.491 
17 9.56 
18.615 
17.171 
17.761 
20.255 
19.452 
20.041 
22.059 



10.647.mS 
8.949.754 
13.110.866 
16.806.781 
17.249.418 
17.619.933 
18.622,754 
21.958.347 
22.315.&M 
24.626.976 
31.955.582 



Freight, tons.* Freight, value. 



11.214.333 

10.796.572 
13.195.8W 
15.062.580 



18.982.755 
21.234.W4 
25.255.810 
25.643.073 
28,403.065 
35.961.146 



$1*5.117.267 
145,436.957 
143.114,502 
159.575,129 
195.146.842 
218.2:35.927 
233.069.740 
281.364.7rO 
267,041^9 
289.906.865 
358.306,300 



Passengers 



25.890 



27.236 
31,656 
37,066 
40.213 
43,426 
49.082 
68.556 



'Registered. tNet tons of 2.000 pounds each. 



NEWSPAPERS IN AMERICA IN 1903. 



81 



RECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES^ THE GOVERNMENT (1891-1903). 
REVENUE BY FISCAL YEARS. 



YEAR. 



distorts. 



Internal 
revenue. 



Miscel- 
laneous. 



Total 
revenue. 



Excess of 
revenue over 
ordinary ex- 
penditures. 



1891. 

1892. 



1900. 
1901 . 
1902. 
1903. 



$219,522,205 
177.452,964 
208,365,017 

131.818,531 

152,158,617 
160.021,751 
176,554,126 
149.575,062 
206,128,148 
233.164,871 
238.585.45*5 
254,456,927 
283,891.719 



$145.686.249 
153,971,072 



147.111,232 
143,421.672 
146.762.864 
146.668,774 
170,900,641 
273,437.161 
295.327.926 
307,180,664 
272,503,214 
230,115,256 



$23,374.457 
20,251,872 
18,253,898 
17,118.618 
16,706,438 
19.186.060 
23.614,422 
83.602,501 
34,716,730 
35,911,170 
41,919.218 
36,445.046 
44,880,551 



$392,612.447 
354,397.784 

385,818.629 
297,722.019 
313.390.075 



347,721,905 
405,321 .335 
515,960,620 
567,240,851 



563.405,188 



$26,&38.542 
9,914,454 
2,341,674 
*69.803,260 
*42.805.223 
*25.203.245 
*18.052,254 
*38.(47.247 
'89,111,559 
79,527.060 
77,717,984 
92.287,376 
52,615,453 



* Expenditures In excess of revenue. 
EXPENDITURES BY FISCAL YEARS. 



YEAR 



CIVIL AND HISC'LLANEOUS 



Prem. on 
loans, pur- 
chase of 
bonds, etc. 



Other civil 
and mis- 
cellaneous 
items. 



War 
depart- 
ment. 



Navy 
depart- 
ment. 



Indians. 



Pensions. 



Interest 

on public 

debt, 



Total ordi- 
nary ex- 
penditures, 



1892. 
IS93. 
is.)4. 
1895. 



$10,401,221 



$110,048,167 



1900. 
1901. 
1902. 
1903. 



103,732,799 
101.943,730 
93,279,730 
87.216.234 
90.401,267 
35.520.505 
119,191,255 
105,773.190 
122,305,571 
113.512.627 
125,096.000 



148,720,069 

46.895,456 
49,641.773 
54.567.930 
51.804,759 
50,830.920 
48.950.267 
91,992.000 
229.841,254 
134,774,767 
143,746,433 
111.661.793 
118.310.382 



$26,113,896 



30.136,084 
31.701,294 
28,797.795 
27,147,732 
34,561,546 
58,823,667 
63,942,104 
55.953,077 
61.339.449 
68,458,426 
82.970,223 



$8,527,469 
11,150,578 
13,345,347 
10,293,482 
9,939,754 
12,165,528 
13.016.802 
10,994.667 
12,805,711 
10,175,106 
10.887.448 
10,039.015 
12.922.004 



$124,415,951 
134.583,053 
159.357.585 
141.177,285 
141,395.228 
139.434.000 
141,053.164 
147.452.368 



$37,547,135 9365,773,905 



140.877,316 
139,312,527 
138.479,570 
138.416,666 



23,378,116 
27,264,392 
27,841.406 
30,978,030 
35,385.028 
37,791,110 
7,585.056 



40,160.333 
32.447,274 
29.116,171 
28,556.797 



345,023,330 
383,477.954 
365.195.298 
356,195,296 
352,179.448 
3ti5.774,159 
443,368.582 
605,072.179 
487.713,791 
510,038,704 
471.267,601 
506.272.073 



NEWSPAPERS OF AMERICA IN 1903. 
From American Newspaper Annual.] 



STATE OR TERRITORY 



Alabama 

Alaska 

Arizona 

Arkansas 

California 

Colorado 

Connecticut 

Delaware 

District of Columbia... 

Florida 

Georgia 

Hawaii 

Idaho 

Illinois 

Indiana 

Indian Territory 

Iowa 

Kansas 

Kentucky 

Louisiana 

Maine 

Maryland 

Massachusetts 

Michigan 

Minnesota 

Mississippi 

Missouri 

Montana 

Nebraska 



Daily. 



Weekly Total. 



477 
296 
128 
30 
27 
137 
281 
15 
82 

1,204 
612 
134 
905 
612 
236 
155 
100 
147 
419 



40 



362 
35 
97 

1,737 
868 
148 

1,122 
716 
317 
201 
165 
204 
683 
807 
762 
259 
994 
100 
&40 



STATE OR TERRITORY. 

Nevada 

New Hampshire 

New Jersey 

New Mexico 

New York 

North Carolina 

North Dakota 

Ohio 

Oklahoma 

Oregon 

Pennsylvania 

Philippines 

Porto Rico 

Rhode Island 

South Carolina 

South Dakota 

Tennessee 

Texas 

Utah 

Vermont 

Virginia 

Washington 

West Virginia 

Wisconsin 

Wyoming 

Total 

Gain over 1902 

Canadian provinces . . . 



Daily. 
9 

16 
57 
5 

207 
28 
8 

169 
32 
22 

20! 
4 
15 
14 
12 
16 
16 
91 



2,313 

64 
116 



Weekly 



21 
124 
282 

60 

1.097 

187 

191 

802 

235 

167 

954 

1 

9 

41 
111 
264 
244 
695 

56 

78 



16,132 

197 
795 



Total. 

34 

150 

376 



272 
207 
1,201 
279 
226 
1,481 
5 
24 
66 
150 
300 
322 
855 
81 
99 
253 
262 
220 
709 
50 



372 
1,141 



'Includes periodicals of all kinds. 



82 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


NATIONAL DEBTS 


OF THE WORLD. 


[From report prepared by O. P. Austin, chief of bureau of statistics.] 










Interest 






PER CAPITA OF 






Total in 


Rates 


and 


other 








. 


COUNTRY. 




United 
States 


of 
inter- 


annual 
charges 


Revenue. 


Expendi- 
ture. 





1 


1 




3 


currency. 


est. 


(bu 


dyet 






S 


2 


E 




^ 






estir 


late). 






D 


si 


.^ 








Per ct. 










M 


*"* 




Argentine 


1901 


$509.604.444 


4*6-6 


O6. 


902.377 


163.339,188 


$<>i.283,632 


1128.85 5.80 


116.01 


Australasia 


1900 


1,183.055.000 


3-5 


45. 


458,000 


167,335.000 


161,738.000 


263.90 


10.14 


37.48 


Austria-Hungary 


1901 


1,154.791.000 


3 -4 


51. 


175,285 


73.659.000 


73.659,000 


25.80 


1.14 


1.64 


Austria 


1900 


042.194.000 


3 -5 


30. 


W9.000 


215.237.000 


215.208.000 


24.89 


1.20 


8.34 


Hungary 


1900 


904.941.000 


3 -4 


41. 


"92. (Ml 


209.001.000 


208.50Sl.000 


47.75 


2.22 


11.02 


Belgium 


1901 


504.459.540 


2*6-3 


19. 


V;.;.>11 


85.494.672 


S3.S-Si.s60 


75.63 


2.93 


12.81 


Bolivia 


1901 


2.336.258 


4-5 




115.0! 


3.431.000 


3.712.000 


1.16 


.05 


1.70 


Brazil 


1901 


480,985.000 


4 -5 


*21. 


jOMxm 


90,152.000 


70.0til.000 


33.56 


1 50 


6.29 


British coloniesf. 


19(>i 


265.541.<00 


3 -6 


*10. 


Mil.Um 


79.956.595 


81.071.024 


26.43 


1.04 


7.95 


Canada 
Chile 


1901 


ffi&ffig 


2*6-5 


13, 


(92!000 


51.030.000 


42.975.000 
38.052.000 


50.59 
36.41 


2.55 
.31 


9.72 
13.90 


China 




287.123.500 


4^/7 


*12. 


00,000 


*73:500'OOC 


*73.500 000 


72 


.03 


18 


Co'ombia 


1898 


15 809 (XX) 


3 -5 






7,031.000 


8.897.000 


3 95 


.22 


1 76 


Costa Rica 


1901 


13.124.00C 


3 -5 


* 


Y.'.Vimi 


3.513.000 




43. 75 


1.75 


11 71 


Denmark 




55795724 


3 


1. 


v.'l >!_' 


19247008 


2061'361 


24 15 


82 


8 33 


Ecuador 


191JO 


7.882.435 


3*6-5 


1,696:600 


3,564.000 


3.620.000 


6.21 


.86 


2.80 


Egypt 


KMI 


500.402.729 


3-4*6 


20, 


063.637 66,424,345 


54.43', .259 


53.61 


2.15 


6.04 


France 


1901 


5.800,691.814 


3 -3*1 


241. 


762.029 fi91.349.-im 


691 291 192 


150 61 


6.28 


17 95 


German empire.. 


1901 


557.626.622 


3 -3*fc 


18,283;i41 471. 002.666 


489.804,000 


9.96 


.33 


8.39 


German states . . 




2 015 958 OOC 


















Greece 


1901 


10S.54S.444 


4 -5 


6.293.730 


13.tJ50.533 


13.626.206 


69.25 


2.58 


5.61 


Guatemala 


19110 


20.826.507 


4 -5 


* 


950.000 


2.687.000 


2.643.000 


13.23 


.60 


1.70 


Honduras 1900 


89.376.92C 


4 -5 


1. 


125,190 


1.114.429 


1.119,295 


219.60 


2.76 


2.74 


India British... . 1902 




2*6-4*6 


33. 


971.400 


328.955.934 


316.103.507 


4.67 


.15 


1.49 


Italy 1901 


2'583l983J8C 


3*6-5 


114. 


177.185 


317.349.o32 


313.276.071 


81.11 


3.58 


9.96 


Japan loni 


206 799 994 


4-5 


18 


!'; ~\rl 


121 433 725 


119 934 893 


4 73 


41 


2 78 


Mexico 


laoi 


16S.771.428 


3 -5 


10. 


89.689 


29.267.131 


26.035.775 


13.36 


.84 


2.32 


Netherlands 


1901 


46C.419.294 


2*6-3 


14. 


117338 


58.323.000 




90.74 


2.74 


11.35 


Nicaragua. 


1901 


4.901.819 


4-6 


* 


Jm.oui 


*1.459.950 


*2.'433.'250 


9.80 


.40 


2.92 


Norway 


1901 


53.211.132 


3 -3*6 


1, 


423,884 


21.457.420 


20.912.308 


25.08 


.67 


10.11 


Paraguay 


1900 


19.972.000 


3 -4*6 




300,000 


844.000 


892.000 


30.45 


1.22 




Peru 


1900 


20.321.784 


4 -6 


* 




5.914.000 


6.072.000 


4.41 




1 28 


Portugal 


1901 
1901 


670.221.374 

2SO.13ti.991 


13* 


21,550.320 
17.904.996 


56.3ti3.000 
28.001.000 


59.237.000 
29.249.000 


143.82 
$.37 


4^62 
3.00 


12 '.09 
4.74 


Roumania 


Russia 


1901 


3,167.320.000 


3 -5 


141. 


il9,000 


891.7?2.000 


921.063.000 


24.56 


1.10 


6.91 


Servia 


1901 


81.972.118 


4 -5 


3. 


107,478 


15.144.548 


14.842.825 


33.43 


1.5$ 


6.17 


Spain 


1H01 


1,727.994.620 


4 -5 


80, 


782.000 


170.998.000 


174,752.000 


95.53 


4.46 


9.45 


fweden 


1901 


85.154.320 


3 -3*6 


3, 


173,388 


39.043.000 


39.043.000 


16.71 


.62 


7.66 


witzerland 
Turkey 


1901 


5.919.219 
726.511.195 


%&t 


820.000 
28.419.600 


19.392.000 
81.S93.462 


18.924.000 
81.533.341 


5.10 
29.25 


.26 

1.14 


6.21 
3.29 


United kingdom. 


1901 


3,060.926.304 




112. 


185,531 


583.201. 360 


650.258,113 


74.83 


2.76 


14.20 


United States}... 


1902 


969.457.241 


2 -4 


27. 


542,945 


634.OS2.s43 


595.795.609 


12.25 


.35 


8.65 


Uruguay 


1101 


124.374.189 


3*6-5 


6. 


166.000 


16.608.000 


16.tiOS.000 


148.06 


7.2C 


19.77 


Venezuela 


1896 


37.725.814 


4-5 


1.949.686 


6.452.000 


8.790.000 


14 51 




2.48 


Total 




31.063.505.258 




1.208.305.409 


5.902.879.975 


5.881.372.515 


24.00 






*Estimated. fExcept Australasia, Canada and British India. ^Figures for June 30, 1902. 


THE MONROE DOCTRINE. 


The famous "Monroe doctrine" was enun- 


amicable relations existing between the 


ciated by President Monroe in his message 


United States and those powers to declare 


to congress Dec. 2, 1823. Referring to steps 


that we should consider any attempt on 


taken to arrange the respective rights of 
Russia, Great Britain and the United 


their part to extend their system to any 
portion of this hemisphere as dangerous to 


States on the northwest coast of this conti- 


our peace and safety. With the existing 


nent, the president went on to say: 
"In the discussions to which this interest 


colonies or dependencies of any European 
power we have not interfered and shall not 


has given rise, and in the arrangements by 
which thev may terminate, the occasion has- 


interfere. But with the governments who 
have declared their independence and main- 


been deemed proper for asserting, as a 


tain it. and whose independence we have, 


principle in which the rights and interests 
of the United States are involved, that the 
American continents, by the free and in- 
dependent condition which they have as- 
sumed and maintain, are henceforth not to 
be considered as subjects for future colo- 


on great consideration and on just princi- 
ples, acknowledged, we could not view anv 
interposition for the purpose of oppressing 
them or controlling in any other manner 
their destiny by any European power in any 
other light than as the manifestation of an 


nization bv anv European power. * 


unfriendly disposition toward the United 


We owe it. therefore, to candor and to the 


States." 



DISASTERS TO SHIPPING. 83 


ARMIES AND NAVIES OF THE WOELD. 
[Data chiefly from the Statesman's Year Book for 1903.] 




COUNTRY. 


ARMIES. 


NAVIES. 


T[ Annual 
cost of army 
and navy. 


Pence 

footing. 


War 

footing. 


Ships. 


Men. 


Afghui 
Argent 
Austra 
AustriE 
Belgiui 
Bolivia 
Brazil. 


1st an 
ine Repu 
lian Com 
i-Hungar 
n 








150.000 
44.000 
120.000 
82 (511 










blic .... 
nonwez 
y 






500,000 


45 

7 
35 


5.000 

2.009 


$12,000.000 
3.955.40T 
70.124.32C 
11.050.883 
1.082.000 
12.493.000 
2.043.829 
7,950.000 
22.000.000 
266,300 


ilth 








374.148 
61,644 

82.560 
28.000 
39.000 
17.385 
300.000 
1,000 
12.600 
9.769 
3.341 
18.068 
587,286 
581.519 
279,758 
22.104 
7,000 
6.828 
20500 


2,580.000 
143,000 
































12 


8,800 


Canada 
Chile , 


















400.397 
1,000.000 

'"35.666" 
61.582 


24 

I 

2 
52 
2 





China. 
Colomt 
Costa 1 
Denma 
Benadc 
Egypt 
France 
Germai 
Great I 
Greece 
Guaten 
Haiti 










ia 










tica 
rk 














4.468.5(10 
1.845.700 
2.611.000 
203.559.750 
16.-5.977.500 
504.KOO.OOO 
3,000.000 
256.000 


r 








128 


















2,500.000 
3.000.000 
934.050 
82.000 
86.900 


352 
109 
447 

22 


53.827 
31.171 
122.500 
3.000 


ly 








Jritain... 














lala 
















6 




Hondu 
Italy . 


ras 










343.250 
76,292.200 
37,412,562 
7,142,000 










261.976 
Ifi7,fi29 

32.143 
12.400 
25.438 
2.000 
30.900 
1 582- 


3,356.926 
682,007 

146.500 
30.400 
68.000 
17.000 
81,700 


94 
110 

7 
3 
38 

""72" 
3 
2 
4 

56 


25.595 
35,355 
590 


Japan. 
Mexico 
Morocc 
Nether 
Nicaraj 
Norway 
Paragu 
Persia 
Peru.. 
Portug 
Rouma 
Russia 
Salvad 
Servia 
Siam.. 
Spain. 
Sweden 
Switzei 
Turkey 
United 
Urugus 
Venezu 














o .... 
















8.500 
""890" 


16,686.100 
490.300 
5.000.000 
645.852 
1,260.0(0 
1,925,000 
9.713.500 
7,544.000 
213,826.060 
1,719,850 
3,694.800 










rf 
























24.500 
4.000 
31.578 
63.280 
1,100.000 
4,000 
22.448 
5.000 
119.432 
37,200 


53,520 

'"i7i'.324" 
173.948 
4.600.000 
29.000 
3UO.OOO 
10.000 
213.972 
500.000 
526.105 
1,500,000 













il 








nia 


















117 

1 


60,000 


























22 
24 
56 
...... 

116 

4 


10.000 










35,989.800 
12.267,600 
5,710,451) 
32.511.000 
II 180,509.779 
1.750.520 
2.049.200 










land 










"30.666" 

28,000 
184 










700,620 

59,8(56 


States*.. 














3,504 
9,000 


100.050 
60.000 


lia:::::: 








*Active militia. +Troops of the line. ^Authorized army. 100.000. Shipsof all kinds, built 
and building in 1903. ^In most cases the figures are for 1902-1903. || Fiscal year 1903. 
NOTE According to the above table the total number of men under arms in the world is 
approximately 5.500,000. not counting reserves, marines and sailors in the navies. The total 
cost of the military and naval establishments of the world for one year is approximately 
?1,Q81,768,000. 


DISASTERS TO SHIPPING. 

On and near the coasts and on the rivers of the United States and therAmerican vessels 
at sea, and on the coasts of foreign countries. 


Tear. 


Wrecks.* 


Lives 
lost. 


Loss on 
vessels. 


rear. Wrecks* 


Lives 
lost. 


Loss on 
vessels. 


Loss on 
cargoes. 


1381.. . 

1882.. . 
1883. 
18S4. . 
1885. . 
1886. . 
1887. .. 
1888. .. 
1889. .. 
LS90. .. 
1891 .. 


1.528 
1.514 
1.41t; 
1,647 
1.407 
1.650 
1,569 
1.534 
1.526 
1.470 
1.475 


623 
502 
539 
807 
335 
76 
553 
553 
656 
556 
448 


f7.080.295 
6.848,270 
7.020.955 
7.384,380 
7.378,595 
7.093.085 
6.265.055 
6.811,440 
9.578.195 
7,653.480 
r,.l)34.(;<.t.-> 


$4,607,610 1892. . 1.556 
3.414.310 1893. . 1.481 
2.393,760 1S94. . 1.653 
3.874.815 1895. . 1.496 
2,443.410 1896. . l.:-;<2 
3.267,135 1897 . 1,206 
2.140.990 1898. . 1.191 
3.571.290 1899. . 1.574 
2.446.605 1900. . 1.234 
2.172.595 1901. . 1.265 
2.593,010 1902. . . . 1.306 


646 

401 
80:! 
704 
369 
299 
743 
742 
25-2 
437 
52(5 


17.386.675 
7.7(53.995 
8.576.<5 
7.530,540 
6.4S5.595 
(5.442.175 
10.7-.K2aO 
8,882.835 
7.186,990 
6.965.160 
8.5^0.770 


$2.577.870 
2,003.655 
2.15^(555 
1.944..S10 
2.01S.140 
1.731.7(55 
1.740.515 
2,451,905 
3,350.500 
2.119.335 
2.294.530 ! 


*Total or partial. 



84 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


CAUSES FOR DIVORCE. 

Summary of the laws in effect in various states and territories. 


STATE OR 
TKRKITOKY. 


J? 


I 


Is 

g 


1 


a 

's 

NJ 


1 


1 


NON- 

AGE. 


11 

J! 


ft 


j 


| 


*1 


Alabama. 


Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes. . 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes . 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
?es.. 
es.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 

f: 

Yes- 
Yes. . 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes.. 


2 yrs. 
2 yrs. 
lyr.. 
lyr.. 
lyr- 
3 yrs. 
3 yrs. 
2 yrs. 
lyr.. 
3 yrs. 
lyr.. 
2 yrs. 
2 yrs. 
lyr.. 
2 yrs. 
2 yrs. 
1 yr.. 
Yes. 
3 yrs. 
3 yrs. 

2 yrs'. 
1 yr- 
3 yrs. 
2 yrs. 
lyr.. 

iy'r'.: 

3 yrs. 
lyr.. 
lyr.. 
2 yrs. 
5 yrs. 
No... 
lyr.. 
2 yrs. 
3 yrs. 
1 yr.. 


fit::: 

Yes- . 
Yes.... 

Yes..:: 

Fraud. 
No 

Yes.::: 

Yes.... 
Yes- . 
Yes.. . 
Yes- . 
Yes.. . 
Yes.. . 
Yes- . 
Yes.. . 

Yes:::: 

Fraud. 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 

Yes.::: 

Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Force- 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 

Yes'.::: 

Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Fraud. 
Yes.... 


2 yrs 
Felony.. 
Felony.. 
E"elony- 
Felony- 
Felony.. 
Felony- 
Felony.. 

2'yrs'.:::: 

Felony. . 
Felony.. 
Feionyf. 
Felony.. 
Felonyt. 
Felonyf. 
Felony. . 
Felony- 
Life .... 

5 yrs'.:::: 

3 yrs 
Yest 
Felony. . 
Felony- 
Felony.. 
3 yrs 
Felony. . 
lyr 


Yes.... 
Idiocy. 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 

Yes.::: 

Yes.... 
4 yrs.. . 
Yes.... 
Idiocy. 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
YesJ... 
Yes.. . . 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes. .. 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes 


Yes.... 

i'yr.::: 

lyr.... 
lyr.... 
Hab'l.. 
Hab'l.. 
No 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
lyr.... 
2 yrs. . . 


2 yrs. 

iyr..' 
lyr.. 

3 yrs'. 
i'yr..' 
iyf'..' 


17 
18 
17 
18 

'21 

18 
21 

'if 

18 
17 
18 
17 
16 
21 
14 

21 
21 

18 

14 
14 

18 
18 
14 
21 
18 
16 
18 
18 
18 
18 
18 

'is' 

16 
16 
16 

21 
14 

21 
IS 

18 
IS 


14 
16 
14 
15 

'21* 

11 

'ii' 

18 
14 
16 
14 
14 
18 
12 
12 
18 
16 
18 

It 

18 
12 
12 
16 
16 
13 
18 
15 

18 
16 
15 
15 

"15" 

It 

14 
18 
12 

18 
16 
15 
16 


Ito3y. 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
3 yrs. . . 
Actual 
3 yrs... 
2 yrs... 
lyr.... 
6mos- 
lyr.... 
2 yrs... 
lyr.... 
lyr... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 

i'yr.::: 

2 yrs... 
3to5y. 
Ito2y. 
lyr.... 
Ito2y. 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
6mos.. 
6mos.. 
Actual 
2to3y. 
lyr.... 
2 yrs... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 
lyr.... 

e'm'os" 
2 yrs... 
6mos . 
lyr. . 
lyr. . 
lyr. . 
lyr. . 
lyr. . 
lyr. . 
lyr. . 


Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes*. 
Yes- 
No... 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 

Yel:: 

Yes- 
Yes. . 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 

Yes- 
Yes. . 
Yes- 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 
Yes- 


Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes.B 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes 
Yes. 
Yes. 
YesB. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 

Yes.' 
Yes. 

fa 

Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 
Yes. 




Arkansas 
California 


Connecticut 
Delaware 
Dist. of Col 
Florida 
Georgia 
Idaho 
Illinois.. 
Indiana 
Indian Ter 


Hab'l.. 
lyr.... 
Hab'l.. 
Hab'l.. 
Yes.... 
Hab'l.. 
Hab'l.. 

Hab'l.'. 
Hab'l.. 
lyr.... 
Hab'l.. 
lyr.... 
1 yr.... 
Hab'l.. 
Hab'l.. 
3 yrs... 


2 yrs. 

Yes..' 

lyr.. 

Yes'..' 

Yes- 
Yes. . 

Yes'..' 
lyr- 


Kansas 
Kentucky 
Louisiana 
Maine 
Maryland 
Massachusetts. . . 
Michigan 
Minnesota 


Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 
NewHampshire. . 


New Mexico 
North Carolina.. 
North Dakota . . . 
New York 
Ohio 


Felony. . 
Felony. . 
Felony- 


Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes 


Hab'l.. 


Yes.. 


lyr.... 


lyr., 


Felony.. 
Felony- 
Felony.. 
2 yrs 
Felony- 
Felony. . 
Felony- 
Felony. . 
Felony. . 
3 yrs 
Yes 
Yes 
Yes 


Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.. . . 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 

Yes.::: 

Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 


3 yrs... 
Hab'l.. 
lyr.... 

Hab'l.: 

lyr 
Hab'lt 
Hab'l.. 
Hab'l.. 

HabiV. 


Yes- 
Yes.. 

Yes" 

Yes*:: 
fit: 

Yes- 


Oklahoma Ter 
Oregon 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode Island.... 
South Carolina.. 
Sjuth Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 


Vermont 
Virginia .... 


Yes.. 


3 yrs. 
3 yrs. 
lyr.. 
3 yrs. 
3 yrs. 
lyr.. 


Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes.... 
Yes. .. 


Washington 
West Virginia.... 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 


Yes.. 
Yes- 
Yes.. 
Yes.. 


Yes.... 
Yes.... 


3 yrs 
Yes 


Yes.... 
Yes.... 


lyr.... 
Hab'l.. 


Yes.. 
lyr- 


*Innocent party only. tSubsequent to ma 
Of ten years. UAfter divorce. 
NOTE Consanguinity and infidelity are c 

MARRIA 

Marriage may be contracted without th<> 
consent of parents by males who are 21 
years of age or more. This is the rule in 
about all the states having laws on the 
subject. In Arizona the age is 18. For fe- 
males the age is 21 in Connecticut, Florida, 
Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Ohio. Penn- 
sylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vir- 
ginia, West Virginia and Wyoming; 16 Is 
the age in Arizona, Maryland and Ne- 
braska and 18 in the other states. Mar- 
riages contracted before the age of consent 
are illegal in nearly all the states. 
Marriage licet ses are required in all the 
states and territories with the exception of 
New Mexico, New Jersey, New York. North 
Dakota, Oklahoma and South Carolina. 
Marriages between whites and negroes 
are prohibited by law in Alabama, Arizona, 


rriage. ^Incurable, after marriage. Absence 
auses for divorce in all the states. 

SE LAWS. 
Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, 
District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, 
Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Mis- 
sissippi, Missouri, Nebraska. Nevada, North 
Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Caro- 
lina, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia and 
West Virginia. Michigan specifically de- 
clares such marriages valid. 
Marriages between first cousins are pro- 
hibited in Arizona, Arkansas, Illinois, In- 
diana, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Mon- 
tana, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Da- 
kota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsyl- 
vania, South Dakota and Wyoming. Step- 
relatives are not permitted to Intermarry 
except in California. Colorado. Florida, 
Georgia, Idaho, Minnesota, New Mexico, 
New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Utah 
and Wisconsin. 



TRUSTS IN THE UNITED 


STATES. 




85 


TRUSTS IN THE UNITED STATES JAN. 1, 1903. 

[Compiled by the congressional information bureau (nonpartisan), Washington, D. C.] 
PART 1. -INDUSTRIAL TRUSTS, 


Name. 


Com. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


* Total. 


Alabama and Georgia Iron Co 


$650,000 


$650,000 . 




$1,300.000 


Alabama Consolidated Coal and Iron Co. 


2,500,000 


2,500,000 


$495,000 


5,495,f'00 


Allied Securities Co 


25,000,000 






25,000,000 


Allis-Chalmers and Wisconsin Bridge Co. 


20,000,000 


16,250,000 .. 




36,250,000 


Amalgamated Copper Co 


155,000,000 






155,000,000 


American Agricultural Chemical Co 


16,715,600 


17,153,000 .. 




33,868,600 


American Alkali Co 


24,000,000 


6,000,000 .. 




30,000,000 


Am. Automatic Weighing Machine Co... 
American Axe and Tool Co 


3,000,000 
2,000,000 


600,000 




3,600,009 
2,000,000 


American Beet Sugar Co 


15,000,000 


5,000,000 . . 




20,000,000 


American Bicycle Co 


20,000,000 


10,000,000 


10,000,000 


40,000,000 


American Book Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


American Brake Shoe and Foundry Co... 


1,500,000 


3,000,000 


1,000,000 


5,500,000 


American Brass Co 


20,000,000 






20,000,000 


American Can Co 


44,000,000 


44,000 000 . 




88,000,000 


American Car and Foundry Co 


30,000,000 


30,000,000 .. 




60,000,000 


American Caramel Co 


1,000,000 


1,000,000 


600,000 


2,600,000 


American Cement Co 


2,000,000 




930,000 


2,930,000 


American Cereal Co 


3,400,000 




1,600,000 


5,000.000 


American Chicle Co 


6,000,000 


3,000,000 .. 




9,000,000 


American Cigar Co 


10,000,000 






10,000,000 


American Coal Co 


1,500,000 






1,500,000 


American Cotton Co 


4,000,000 


3,000,000 . 




7,000,000 


American Cotton Oil Co 


20,237,100 


14,562,300 


5,000,000 


39,799,400 


American Felt Co 


2,500,000 


2,500,000 


500,000 


5,500,000 


American Fire Engine Co 


500,000 




370,000 


870,000 


American Fork and Hoe Co 


2,400,000 


2,400,000 


800,000 


5,600,000 


American Fruit Products Co 


1,750,000 






1,750,000 


American Ginning Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,003 


American Glue Co 


800,000 


1,600,000 .. 




2,400,000 


American Graphophone Co 


1,200,000 


800,000 


300,000 


2,300,000 


American Grass Twine Co 


15,000,000 






15,000.090 


American Hard Rubber Co 


2,500,000 






2,500,000 


American Hardware Corporation 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


American Hide and Leather Co 


17,500,000 


17,500,000 


10,000,000 


45,000.000 


American Hominy Co 


2,500,000 


1,250,000 


1,250,000 


5,000.000 


American Ice Co 


25.000,000 


15,000,000 


1,750,000 


41,750,000 


American Iron and Steel Mfg. Co 


17,000,000 


3,000,000 . . 




20,000.000 


American Jute Bagging Mfg. Co 
American Lamp Chimney Co 


2,800.000 
500,000 


'"250]666 '. 




2,800,000 
750,000 


American Last Co 


2,000,000 


1,500,000 .. 




3,500,000 


American Linseed Co 


16,750,000 


16,750,000 .. 




33,500,000 


American Lithographic Co 


4,000,000 




3,000,000 


7,000,000 


American Locomotive Co 


25,000,000 


25,000,000 


1,312,500 


51.312,500 


American Machine and Ordnance Co 


10,000,000 






10,000,060 


American Malting Co 
American Nickel Steel Co 


15,000,000 
1,500,000 


15,000,000 


5,000,000 


35,000.000 
1,500,000 


American Packing Co 


20,000,000 






20,000.000 


American Pastry and Manufacturing Co. 


2,000.000 


1,000,000 .. 




3,000.000 


American Patent Kid Co 


300.000 


100.000 . . 




400,000 


American Pegamoid Co 


2,500,000 


2,500,000 .. 




5,000,000 


American Perfume Co 


5.000.000 






5,000.000 


American Pipe Manufacturing Co 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


American Plow Co 


37,500,000 


37,500.000 .. 




75,000,000 


American Pneumatic Service Co 


10,000,000 


5,000,000 


464.000 


15,464,000 


American Powder Co 


1,500,000 






1,500,000 


American Radiator Co 


5,000,000 


5,000,000 .. 




10,000,000 


American Railway Equipment Co 


12.000.000 


10,000,000 .. 




22 000,000 


American Refractories Co 


2,250.000 






2,250.000 


American Rice Co 


650.000 


350.000 . . 





1,000,000 


American Saddle Co 


1.000.000 


800,000 .. 




1,800.000 


American Sash and Door Co 


3.500.000 


2,500,000 . 




6,000,000 


American School Furniture Co 


15,000.000 


15,000.000 . 




30.000,000 


American Screw Co 


3,250.000 






3.250.000 


American Sewer Pipe Co 


10,000.000 




2.500.000 


12.500,000 


American Shipbuilding Co 


15,000.000 


15,000,000 .. 




30,000.000 


American Shot and Lead Co 


3,000.000 






3.000.000 


American Silk Manufacturing Co 


7,500.000 


5.000,000 .. 




12.500,000 


American Smelting and Refining Co 


32,500,000 


32.500.000 


35.000,000 


100.000,000 


American Snuff Co 


12,500.000 


12,500,000 .. 




25,000,000 


American Soda Fountain Co 


1,250.000 


2.500,000 .. 




3,750.000 


American Sparklets Co 


13,500,000 


1,500,000 .. 




15,000,000 


American Steel Casting Co 


2,750.000 


1,450,000 


490.000 


4,690.000 


American Steel Fotin-lries Co 


30.000.000 






30,000,000 



86 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


Name 


Com. stock. 


Pre/. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total, 


American Stopper Co 


1,000,000 






1,000,000 


American Stove Co 


5,000,000 






5,090,000 


American Stove Board Co 


100,000 






100,000 


American Sugar Refining Co 


37,500,000 


37,500,000 


10,000,000 


85,000,00* 


American Thread Co 


6,000,000 


6,000,000 


6,000,000 


18,000,000 


American Tube and Stamping Co 


2,800,000 






2,800,000 


American Typebar Machine Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


American Typefounders Co 
American Warp Drawing Machine Co... 


4,000,000 
2,300,000 


2.000,000 
700,000 


975,000 


6,75,000 
3,000,000 


American Whip Co 


250,000 






250,000 


American Window Glass Co... 


13,000,000 


4,000,000 




17,000.000 


American Wood Fireproofiug Co 


500,000 






500,000 


American Woodworking Machinery Co... 


2,000,000 


2,000,000 


2,000,000 


6,000,000 


American Woolen Co 


40,000,000 


25,000,000 




65,000,000 


American Wringer Co 


850,000 


1.650,000 




2,500,000 


American Writing Paper Co 


12,500,000 


12,500.000 


17,000,000 


42,000.000 


Ames Shovel and Tool Co 


3,000,000 


2,000,000 




5,000,000 


Ammunition Manufacturers' association. 


4,000,000 






4,000,000 


Anthony & ScoTille Co 


1,000,000 


600,400 




1,600,000 


Anthracite Coal Trust 


150,000,000 






150.000.000 


Artificial Lumber Company of America.. 


8,500,000 


3,500,000 




12,000,000 


Associated Merchants Co 


5,000,000 


10,000,000 




15,000.008 


Ass'n of Boat-Oar Mfrs. of the U. S 


500,000 






500.000 


Atlantic Dynamite Co.... 


2,500,000 






2,500.000 


Atlantic Rubber Shoe Co 


2,500,000 


7,500,000 




10,000,000 


Atlas Portland Cement Co 


6,000,000 


1,500,000 




7,500,000 


Atlas Tack Co 


700,000 




1,250,000 


1,950.000 


Automatic Weighing Machine Co 


3,000,000 


600,000 




3,600.000 


Automobile and Cycle Parts Co 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


Baltimore Brick Co 


1,500.000 


600,000 


1,500,000 


3,600,000 


Bessemer Ore association 


20,000,000 






20,000.000 


Bigelow Carpet Co 


4.030,000 




425,000 


4.455.000 


Bolt and Nut association 


10,000,000 






10,000.000 


Booth, A., & Co. ("fish trust") 


3,000.000 


2,500,000 




5,500.000 


Borax Consolidated Co., Ltd 


3,000.000 


4,000,000 


4,000,000 


11,000.000 


Borden's Condensed Milk Co 


17,500,000 


7.500.000 




25.000.000 


Boston Breweries Co 


3,250,000 


6,500,000 




9,750.000 


Boston Fruit Co 


10,000,000 






10,000.000 


Boxmakers' Combine (Cal. and Oregon).. 


1.000.000 






1,000,000 


Brass Foundry and Machine Co 


6,000,000 






6,000,000 


Brooklyn Wharf and Warehouse Co 


5,000,000 


7,500,000 




12,500,00 


Broommakers' Association of the U. S 


5.000,000 






5,000.000 


Broom Twine Selling combine 


500,000 






500.000 


Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co 


1,500.000 






1.500.000 


California Fruit Canners' association 


3,500,000 






3,500,000 


California Raisin Growers' association... 


5,000.000 






5,000.000 


California Wine association 


10,000,000 






10,000,000 


California Wire Co 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


Cambria Steel Co 


50,000.000 




206,000 


50,206,000 


Carter Steel & Iron Co. of E. Tennessee. 


5,000,000 






5.000.000 


Casein Company of America 


5.500,000 


1,000,000 




6,500.000 


Castner Electrolytic Alkali Co 


2.000,000 




1,000,000 


3,000,000 


Cedar Shingles Manufacturers' ass'n 


5,000.000 






5.000.000 


Celluloid Co 


6,000.000 






6,000.000 


Central Car Trust Co 


500,000 




1,046,000 


1,546,000 


Central Coal & Coke Co. (Columbus, O.). 


500,000 






500,000 


Central Coal & Coke Co. (Kas. City, Mo.) 


1,500,000 


1,500.000 




3,000,000 


Central Fireworks Co 


1.750.000 


1.750,000 




3.500.000 


Central Foundry Co 


7,000.000 


7,000.000 


4,000,000 


18,000,000 


Central Lumber Company of California.. 


70,000,000 






70,000.000 


Central New York Brewing Co 


2,200,000 


1,800,000 




4.000,000 


Central Walnut Association of California 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


Chain Manufacturers' association 


3.000,000 






3,000.000 


Chemical Company of America 


5.000,000 






5.000.UOO 


Chem. & Pharmaceutical Mfrs.' combine 


50,000,000 






50,000.000 


Cherokee-Lanvon Spelter Co 


600,000 




600.000 


1,200,000 


Chicago and Northwest Granaries Co... 


600,000 


600,000 


600.000 . 


1,800,000 


Chicago Breweries Co., Ltd 


3,000,000 




1,948,000 


4.948,000 


Chicago Milk Co 


3,000.000 


3,000.000 




6.000.000 


Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co 


5,000.000 


2.500.000 


2,500,000 


10,000,000 


Chicago Ry. Terminal and Elevator Co... 


1,330.850 


1.402.920 


1,365,500 


4,099.270 


City of Chicago Brewing & Malting Co.. 


3.043,750 


3.043,750 


3,166.000 


9.253.500 


Clairton Steel Co 






10,025.000 


10.025.000 


Cleveland and Sandusky Brewing Co 


3,000.000 


3.000.000 


6,000.000 


12.000.000 


Colonial Box and Lumber Co 


15.000.000 






15.000.000 


Colorado Fuel and Iron Co 


23.000.000 


> 2,000,000 


15,300,000 


40,300.000 


Columbia Spring Co 


2.000.000 






2,000.000 


Commercial Chemical Co 


2.000,000 







2,000.000 


Compressed Air Co 


7.245.000 


755,666 


500.000 


8.500.000 



TRUSTS IN THE UNITED STATES. 


87 


Name. 


Com. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


Connecticut Breweries Co., Ltd 


350,000 


350,000 




700,000 


Consolidated Car Heating Co 


1,250,000 






1,250,000 


Consolidated Fruit Jar Co 


500,000 






500,000 


Consolidated Ice Co 


2,000,000 


2,000,000 




4,000,000 


Consolidated Lake Superior Co 


82,4)00,000 


35,000,000 




117,000,000 


Consolidated Lime Co 


1,500,000 


1,500,000 




3,000,000 


Consolidated Kosendale Cement Co 


500,000 


1,000,000 


1,100,000 


2,600,000 


Consolidated Rubber Tire Co 


4,000,000 


1,000,000 


3,000,000 


8,000,000 


Consolidated Tobacco Co 


94,844,600 




167,844,600 


262,689,200 


Consolidated Wagon and Machine Co 


1,200,000 






1,200,000 




1,900,000 


1,900,000 


1,700,000 


5,500,000 


Continental Cement Co 


5,000,000 


5,000,000 




10,000,00'J 


Continental Co. (Ohio) 


3,500,000 




2,750,000 


6,250,000 


Continental Cotton Oil Co 


3,000,000 


3,000,000 




6,000,000 


Continental Gin Co 


3,000,000 




750,000 


3,750,000 


Copper Sheets and Bolts Mfrs.' ass'n 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Corn Products Co 


50,000,000 


30,000,000 




80,000,000 


Coxe Bros. & Co 


3,320,100 






3,320,100 


Crucible Steel Company of America 


25,000,000 


25,000,000 




50,000,000 


Denver United Breweries Co., Ltd 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


Diamond Match Co 


15,000,000 






15,000.000 


Diamond State Steel Co 


4,250,000 




1,000,000 


5,250,000 


Distilleries Securities corporation 


32,500,000 




16,000,000 


48,500,000 


Dominion Securities Co 


3,000,000 






3,000,000 


East Coast Milling Co 


7,000,000 


2,000,000 




9,000,000 


Eastman Kodak Co 


25,000,000 


10,000,000 




35,000,000 


Edison Portland Cement Co 


11,000,000 


2,000,000 




13,000,000 


Electric Boat Co 


5,000,000 


5,000,000 




10,000,000 


Elk Tanning Co 


12,500,000 






12,500,000 


Empire Steel and Iron Co 


5,000,000 


5,000,000 




10,000,000 


Erie Brewing Co 


1,000,000 


500,000 


1,000.000 


2,500,000 


Fairmont Coal Co 


12,000,000 




6,000,000 


18,000,000 


Federal Sewer Pipe Co 


10,750,000 


10,750,000 




21,500,000 


Federal Sugar Refining Co 


25,000,000 


25,000,000 




50.000,000 


Fireproofing Co 


1,000,000 


1,000,000 




2,000,000 


Fisheries Co 


1,000,000 


2,000,000 


500,000 


3,500.000 


Flour combine (San Francisco, Cal.) 


20,000,000 






20,000,000 


General Aristo Co 


2,500,000 


2,500,000 




5,000,000 


General Chemical Co 


12,500,000 


12.-500.000 




25,000,000 


Graniteware trust 


20,000,000 






20,000.000 


Grape Growers' pool (Ohio) 


2,000,000 






2,000.000 


Great Lakes Towing Co 


3,627,850 






3,627,850 


Great Western Cereal Co 


3,000,000 




1,500,000 


4,500.000 


Hall Signal Co 


1,900.000 


. 100,000 




2,000,000 


Harbison-Walker Refractories Co 


22,250,000 




3,500,000 


25,750,000 


Havana Tobacco Co 


45,000,000 






45,000,000 


Hawaiian Commercial Sugar Co 


10,000,000 




2,356,328 


12,356,328 


Hecker-Jones-Jewell Milling Co 


2,000,000 


3,000,000 




5,000,000 


Herring-Hall-Marvin Safe Co 


1,650,000 


1,650.000 




3,300,000 


Heywood Bros, and W T akefield Co 


2,000,000 


4,000,000 




6,000,000 


Hydraulic Press Brick Co 


3,000,000 






3,000,000 


Illinois Brick Co 


5,000,000 


4,000,000 




9,000,000 


Indiana Portland Cement Co 


5,000,000 




2,000,000 


7,000,000 


Indianapolis Breweries Co 


675,000 


675,000 


800,000 


2,150,000 


Indurated Fiber Industries Co 


1,000,000 






1,000,000 


International Elevating Co 


2,200,000 






2,200,000 


International Emerv and Corundum Co.. 


1,150,000 




500,000 


1,650,000 


International Fire Engine Co 


5,000,000 


4,000,000 




9,000,000 


International Harvester Co 


120,000,000 






120,000,000 


International Heater Co 


900.000 


900,000 




1,800,000 


International Mercantile Marine Co 


60,000,000 


60,000.000 


75,000,000 


195,000,000 


International Nickel Co 


12,000,000 


12,000.000 


10,000.000 


34,000,000 


International Paper Co 


20,000,000 


25,000,000 


9,169,000 


54,169,000 


International Pulp Co 


3.000.COO 


2,000,000 




5,000.000 


International Salt Co 


30,000,000 




12,000,000 


42.000.000 


International Steam Pump Co 


15.000.000 


12,500,000 


3,650.000 


31,150,000 


Jefferson and Fairfield Coal and Iron Co. 


3,000,000 




3,000,000 


6,000,000 


Johns (H. W.)-Manville Co 


3.000,000 






3.000.000 


Jones (Frank) Brewing Co 


4,000.000 




2,500,000 


6,500,000 


Jones & Laughlin Steel Co 


20,000,000 






20,000,000 


Kanawhaand Hocking Coal and Coke Co. 


3,500.000 




2,750,000 


6,250.000 


Kevstone Coal and Coke Co 


2,500.000 






2,500,000 


Keystone Watch Case Co 


3,240.000 






3.210,000 1 


Kirbv Lumber Co 


10.000.000 






10,000,000 


Knickerbocker Ice Co 


4.000,000 


3; ooo. ooo 


1.962.000 


8,962,000 


Lackawanna Iron and Steel Co 


20,000.000 




1,800,000 


21.800.000 


Lake Carriers' association 


10,000.000 






10,000.000 


Lake Dredgers' association 


5,000.000 






5,000,000 


Linen Thread Co 


4,000.000 






4.000.000 



88 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC A>TD YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


^ame. 


Com stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


Pennsylvania Salt Manufacturing Co 


3.000,000 






3.000,000 


Locomobile Company of Auieric a 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Lumber Carriers' association 


8,000,000 






6,00.000 


Macbeth-Evans Glass Co 


2,000,000 


200,000 


600,000 


2,800,000 


Magnus Metal Co 


,1,500,000 


1,500,000 




3,000,000 


Manhattan Spirit Co 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


Manufacturers and Consumers' Coal Co.. 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Manufacturers' Paper Co 


10,000,000 






10,000,000 


Manville Co 


4,000,000 


2,000,000 




6,000,000 


Maple Flooring Manufacturers' associa'n 


2,000,000 






2,000.000 


Marsden Co. (cellulose trust) 


35,000,000 


15,000,000 




50,000,000 


Martin Kalbfleisch Chemical Co 


1,450,000 






1,450,000 


Martin, The L., Co 


600,000 






600,000 


Maryland Brewing Co 


3,250,000 


3,250,000 


9.125,000 


15,625,000 


Massachusetts Breweries Co 


15.000,000 




1,200,000 


16,200,000 


Medina Quarry Co 


2,000,000 


1,200,000 


1,140,000 


4,340,000 


Metropolitan Securities Co 


30,000,000 






30,000,000 


Michigan Salt association 


' 4,000,000 






4,000,000 


Milwaukee and Chicago Breweries, Ltd. 


3,774,250 


3,774,250 


2,500,000 


11.048,500 


Mississippi Wire Glass Co 


1,500,000 






1,500.000 


Monongahela River Cons. Coal & Coke Co. 


20,000,000 


10,000,000 


9,479,000 


39,479,000 


National Abrasive Manufacturing Co 


1,000.000 






1,000,00-) 


National Asphalt Co 


19,600,000 




35,963,000 


55.563,000 


National Association of Axle Mfrs 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


Nat. Assn. Cham. Suit and Case Mfrs... 


25,000.000 






25,000.000 


National Biscuit Co 


30.000,000 


25.000,000 


1,683,000 


56,683,000 


National Candy Co 


5.200,000 


2,200.000 




7,400,000 


National Carbon Co 


5,500,000 


4,500.000 




10,000,000 


National Cash Register Co 


4,000,000 


1,000,000 




5,000,000 


National Casket Co 


6,000.000 






6,000,000 


National Enameling and Stamping Co... 


20,000.000 


10,000.000 




30,000,000 


National Fireproofing Co 


2,000,000 


3,000,000 


7.500,000 


12,500,000 


National Glass Co 


2,317,900 




2,000,000 


4,317,900 


National Harrow Co 


2,000,000 






2.000,000 


National Lead Co 


15.000,000 


15,000,000 




30.000,000 


National Malleable Castings Co 


3,000,000 






3.000,000 


National Mirror Manufacturers' assn 


5,000.000 






5,000,000 


National Rice Milling Co 


3.000.000 


2,000,000 




5,000.000 


National Roofing and Corrugating Co 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


National Saw Co 


400,000 


600,000 




1,000,000 


National Shear Co 


1,500,000 


1,500,000 




3,000.000 


National Ship Copperplating Co 
National Steel and Wire Co 


1,500.000 
2,500.000 


2.500,000 




1,500,000 
5,000.000 


National Sugar Refining Co 


10,000,000 


10,000,000 




20.000,000 


National Tinplate and Stamp Ware Co.. 


10,000,000 


10,000,000 




20,000.000 


National Wall Paper Co 


30,000,000 




8,000,000 


38,000,000 


New England Breweries Co 


2,050.000 




1,000,000 


3.050,000 


New England Brick Co 


2,000.000 


3,000,000 


750,000 


5.750.000 


New England Consolidated Ice Co 


16,000,000, 






16,000.000 


New England Cotton Yarn Co 


5,000.000 


6,500,000 


5,577.000 


17,077,000 


New England Lime combination 


1,500,000 






1,500,000 


New Jersey Zinc Co 


10. 000. WO 




10,000,000 


20,000.000 


New Orleans Brewing Co 


1,690.000 


1,100,000 


13.000,000 


15.790.000 


New York Air Brake Co 


10.000.000 






10,000,000 


New York and Kentuckv Co 


1,000,000 


1,000,000 




2,000.000 


New York Arch Terra Cotta Co 


2,000.000 






2,000,000 


New York Auto-Truck Co 


10.000,000 






10.000,000 


Now York Breweries Co. , Ltd 


3,000.000 




1.890,000 


4,890,000 


New York Dock Co 


17.000,000 




11,580,000 


28.580,000 


Nicholson File Co 


2,000.000 






2.000,000 


Nilps-Bement-Pond Co 


5.000.000 


3,000,000 




8,000.000 


Norfolk Refrigerating, Storage & Ice Co. 


1.000,000 




1,000,000 


2,000,000 


North American Co 


12,000.000 






12.000.000 


North American Copper Co 
North Carolina Pine Timber association. 


20,000.000 
20.000.000 








20,000.000 
20,000,000 


Northern Commercial Co 


1.622.800 




2.620,000 


4.242,800 


Northern Securities Co 


400.000.000 






400.000,000 


Osborne Oil combine (Pittsburg. Pa.) 


14.000.000 






14.000,000 


Otis Elevator Co 


6.500.000 


4,500.000 




11,000.000 


Pacffic American Fisheries Co 


5.000.000 






5,000,000 


PaHfic Coast Biscuit Co 


2.500.000 


1,500,000 


i.ooo.oeo 


5,000.000 


Par-ific Coast Co 


12.145.800 




4,446,000 


16.591,800 


Pacific Hardware and Steel Co 


10.000.000 






10.000.000 


Pacific Packing and Navigation Co 


6.150.000 


6,100,000 


3,000.000 


15.250,000 


Park Steel Co 


10.000.000 






10.000.000 


Patersnn Brewing and Malting Co 


3,000.000 




3,000,000 


6.000.000 


Penn Tanning Co 


13.500.000 






13.500.000 


Pennsvlvania Central Brewing Co 


2.SOO.OOO 


2.800.000 


2.700.000 


8.300.000 


Pennsylvania Furnace Co 


2.100.000 






2.100.000 



TRUSTS IN THE UNITED STATES. 


89 


Same. 


Com. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


Pennsylvanfa Steel Co 


27,250,000 




7.000,000 


34.250.000 


People's Brewing Co. of Trenton 


1,100,000 






1,100,000 


Pepperell Manufacturing Co 


2,556,000 






2.556,000 


Photographic Paper association 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


Pittsburg Brewing Co 


13,000.000 


6,500,000 


6,500,000 


26,000,000 


Pittsburg Coal Co 


32,000,000 


32,000,000 . 




64.000,000 


Pittsburg Plate-Glass Co 


9,850,000 


150,000 . 




10,000,000 


Pittsburg Stove and Range Co 


1,000,000 


1,000,000 . 




2,000,000 


Pittsburg Valve and Foundry Co 


1,150,000 






1.150,000 


Planters' Compress Co 


10,000,000 






10,000.000 


Pneumatic Signal Co 


3,000,000 






3.000,000 


Pressed Steel Car Co 


12,500,000 


12,500,000 


5,000,000 


30,000,000 


Print Cloth pool 


50,000.000 






50,000.000 


Puget Sound Packing Co 


500.000 






500,000 


Pullman Co 


74,000,000 






74,000,000 


Pure Oil Co 


8.000.000 


2,000,000 . 




10,000,000 


Quaker Oats Co 


11,500,000 






11,500,000 


Railroad Securities Co 


10.000,000 




8,000,000 


18,000,000 


Railway Steel Car Co 


25,000,000 






25,000,000 


Railway Steel Spring Co 
Railways Company General 


10.000,000 
1,200,000 


10,000,000 . 




20,000,000 
1.200.000 


Reece Buttonhole Machine Co 


1,000,000 






1.000.000 


Refrigerator trust 


8,000,000 






8,000.000 


Republic Iron and Steel Co 


30,000,000 


25.000,000 . 




55.000,000 


Rochester Optical and Camera Co 


1,750,000 


1,750,000 . 




3,500.000 


Rock Island Co 


150,000,000 






150,000,000 


Rocky Mountain Paper Co 


750,000 


600,000 . 




1.350,000 


Rogers, William A.. Ltd 


750,000 


600,000 . 




1,350.000 


Rope combine (Cleveland, O.) 


'11,000,000 






11,000.000 


Royal Baking Powder Co 


10.000.000 


10,000.000 . 




20.000.000 


Rubber Goods Manufacturing Co 


25,000.000 


25,000,000 . 




50,000.000 


Safety Car Heating and Lighting Co.... 


4.125.000 






4.125.000 


St. Louis Breweries. Ltd 


4,383,000 


4,383.000 


4.961,600 


13.727.600 


San Francisco Breweries, Ltd 


412,200 


611,100 


2,425.000 


3.448.300 


Sanitary Laundrv Co 


2,000.000 




100.000 


2.100,000 


Santy Kalsomine Co. (plaster trust) 


3,000,000 






3.000.000 


Sash and Door combine 


15,000,000 






15.000.000 


Seacoast Packing Co 


5.000.000 


3,000,000 . 




8,000.000 


Sheet Lead and Pipe Mfrs.' combine 


25.000,000 






25,000.000 


Shovel Makers of the U. S. and Canada.. 


6.000,000 






6.000.000 


Sloss-Sheffield Steel and Iron Co 


10,000.000 


10.000.000 


4,000,000 


24,000.000 


Soapmakers' combine 


25.000.000 


25,000,000 . 




50.000.000 


Somerset Coal Co 


4.000,000 




4,000,000 


8,000.000 


Southern Car and Foundry Co 


1,750.000 


1,750,000 . 




3.500.000 


Southern Cotton Oil Co 


11,000.000 






11.000.000 


Southern States Cement Co 


2,000,000 






2.000,000 


Springfield Breweries Co 


1.150,000 


1.150,000 


1,250,000 


3,550.000 


Squire, John P., & Co. (pork packing)... 


6,000,000 


1.500,000 . 




7,500.000 


Standard Chain Co 


1,500.000 


1.500.000 


700.000 


3,700.000 


Standard Milling Co 


4,600,000 


6,900,000 


5,750,000 


17.250.000 


Standard Oil Co 


97,000,000 






97,000,000 


Standard Quarrying and Construction Co. 
Standard Rope and Twine Co 


1,000,000 
12,000.000 




10,335.000 


1.000.000 
22.335.000 


Standard Sanitary Manufacturing Co 


2,500.000 


2.500,000 


2,500,000 


7.500,000 


Standard Sardine Co 


3,000,000 


2.000,000 . 




5,000,000 


Standard Screw Co 


1,500.000 






1,500,000 


Standard Shoe Machinery Co 


3.000.000 


2,000,000 . 




5.000.000 


Standard Table Oilcloth Co 


5,000.000 


5,000,000 . 




10,000.000 


Standard Typewriter Co 


1.000,000 




925.000 


1.925,000 


Standard Wheel Co 


500.000 


500,000 


300,000 


1.300.000 


Steel Tired Wheel Co 


4,000.000 






4,000,000 


Sterling Co. , The 


625.000 


1,250,000 . 




1,875.000 


Stillwell-Bierce and Smith-Vaile Co 


1,100.000 




300.000 


1.400.000 


Street's Western Stable Car Line 


4.000,000 


1,000.000 


300.000 


5,300.00" 


Susquehanna Iron and Steel Co 


1,500.000 




300.000 


1,800.000 


Tacoma Co. (steel and ore) 


25.000.000 






25,000,000 


Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Co... 


22.553.600 


248,000 


13.893,000 


36.694.600 


Theatrical trust 


30.000.000 






30,000,000 


Thomas Iron Co 


2,500,000 






2,500.000 


Trenton Potteries Co 


1.750.000 


1,250,000 .. 




3.000.000 


Tubular Despatch Co 


2,100,000 




600,000 


2,700.000 


Umbrella Hardware Co 


2.000.000 






2,000.000 


Union Bag and Paper Co 


16.000.000 


11,000,000 .. 




27,000.000 


Union Bleaching and Finishing Co 


2,500.000 






2,500,000 


Union Carbide Co 


6.000.000 




500.000 


6,500.000 


Union Steel and Chain Co 


30.000.000 


30,000,000 .. 




60,000,000 


Union Steel Co 


85.000.000 






85,000,000 


Union Switch and Signal Co 


1.495.550 




530,000 


2,025.550 


Union Tanning Co 


10.000.000 







10.000,000 



90 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


JVame. Com. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


Union Typewriter Co 


10,000,000 


10,000,000 




20,000,000 


Union Waxed and Parchment Paper Co.. 


1,800,000 


800,000 


600,000 


3,200,000 


United Boxboard and Paper Co 


30,000.000 






30,000.000 


United Breweries Co 


11,063,000 




3,413,000 


14,476,000 


United Button Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


United Copper Co 
United Engineering and Foundry Co 


75,000,000 
3,000,000 


5,000,000 
2,500,000 




80,000,000 
5,500,000 


United Fruit Co '. 


20.000,000 




3,000,000 


23,000,000 


United Mattress Machinery Co 


800,000 


216,666 




1,010,000 


United Paper Co. (tissue paper) 


1,500,000 


1,500,000 




3,000,000 


United Shoe Machinery Co 


12,500,000 


12,500,000 




25.000.000 


United Starch Co 


3,500,000 


2,500,000 


1,250,000 


7,250,000 


United States Bobbin and Shuttle Co... 


1,200,000 


800,000 


300.000 


2,300,000 


United States Brewing Co. (Chicago).... 


5,000,000 




3,500,000 


8,500,000 


United States Brewing Co. (Newark) 


1,750,000 


1,750,000 


2,000.000 


5,500,000 


United States Cast Iron Pipe & Fdy. Co. 


15,000,000 


15,000,000 


15,000,000 


45,000,000 


United States Cigar Co. (Delaware, O.). 


6,000,000 






6,000,000 


United States Cigar Co. ("stogie trust") 


5,000,000 


2,500,000 




7,500,000 


United States Cotton Duck corporation.. 


25,000,000 


18,100,000 




43,100,000 


United States Dyewood and Extract Co.. 


4,000,000 


6,000,000 




10,000,000 


U. S. Eavestrough & Conductor Pipe assn. 


2,000,000 






2,000.000 


United States Envelope Co 


1,000.000 


4,000,000 


2,000,000 


7,000,000 


United States Finishing Co 


1,000,000 


2,000,000 


1,750,000 


4,750,000 


United States Furniture Co 


10,000,000 






10,000,000 


United States Glass Co 


5,000,000 


1,000,000 




6.000,000 


United States Gypsum Co ' 


3,000,000 


4,500.000 




7,500,000 


United States Leather Co 


64,000.000 


64,000,000 


52,800,000 


180,800,000 


United States Paving Co 


2.000,000 






2,000,000 


United States Playing Card Co 


3,600,000 






3,600,000 


United States Printing Co 


3,500,000 






3.500,000 


United States Realty & Construction Co. 


66,000,000 






66,000,000 


United States Reduction & Refining Co.. 


6,000,000 


6.000,000 


3.000.000 


15,000.000 


United States Rubber Co 


25,000.000 


25,000,000 


12,000,000 


62,000,000 


United States Shipbuilding Co 


45,000,000 




9,000.000 


54,000.000 


United States Silver corporation 


3,000.000 




3,000,000 


6,000,000 


United States Steel corporation 


550,000.000 


550,000.000 


304,000,000 


1.404,000,000 


United States Varnish Co 


18,000,000 


18,000,000 




36,000.000 


United States Voting Machine Co 


1,000,000 






1,000,000 


United States Whip Co 


1,000.000 


1,200,000 


800,000 


3,000,000 


United Wire and Supply Co 


1,000,000 


1,000,000 




2,000,000 


Universal Tobacco Co 


10.000,000 






10,000,000 


Utah Fuel Co 


10,000.000 






10,000,000 


Utica Steam & Mohawk Val. Cotton Mills 


2.000,000 






2,000,000 


Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co 


38.000,000 


12,000,000 




50:000.000 


Virginia Iron, Coal and Coke Co 


10,000,000 




10,000,000 


20,000,000 


Vulcan Detinning Co 


3.500,000 






3,500,000 


Washburn Wire Co 


1,250,000 


2,500,000 




3,750.000 


Western Consolidated Granite Co 


300.000 


300,000 




600,000 


Western Drug Jobbers 


15,000,000 


15,000,000 




30,000,000 


Western Stone Co 


2,250.000 




488,000 


2,738.000 


Westinghouse Air Brake Co 


11,000,000 






11.000.000 


Westinghouse Aut. Air& Steam Coupler Co. 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Westinghouse Electric and Mfg. Co 


21,000,000 


4,000,000 


3,200.000 


28,200,000 


Wheeling Consolidated Coal Co 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


Wheeling Steel and Iron Co 




5,000,000 


600.000 


5.600.000 


White Mountain Paper Co 


10,000,000 


5,000,000 


10,000.000 


25,000,000 


Wholesale Druggists' National associat'n 


25.000,000 






25.000,000 


Wholesale Grocers of New England 


75,000,000 






75,000,000 


Window Shade Manufacturers' ass'n 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


Wire Cloth Manufacturers' association.. 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Wisconsin Lime and Cement Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Yarn Manufacturers' combine 


3,000,000 






3,000,000 


Yellow Pine Co 


1,500,000 


1,000,000 




2.500,000 


Total 5,973,853,850 


2,091,508,320 


9.231.136,698 


17,296,498,868 


PART II.-LOCAL AND 


"NATURAL" MONOPOLIES. 


Adams Express Oo 


$12,000.000 




$12,000.000 


$24.000,000 


Akron Gas Co 


200,000 


$200,000 


400.000 


800.000 


Alabama and Hudson Ry. and Power Co. 


2,500.000 






2.500,000 


American District Telegraph Co 


3,844.700 






3,844,700 


American Electric Heating corporation.. 


10,000.000 






10.000,000 


American Electric Telephone Co 


200.000 


1,000,000 


500,000 


1.700.000 


American Express Co 


18.000.000 






18,000.000 


\merican Gas Co. (Philadelphia) 


1.000.000 






1,000,000 


American Home Telephone Co 


2,000.000 




1,000,000 


3,000.000 


American Indies Co 


13.000.000 


5.000.666 




18,000,000 


\merican Light and Traction Co 


15.000,000 


25.000.000 




40,000,000 


American Railways Co 


25.000.000 




2.500,000 


27.500,000 



TRUSTS IN THE UNITED STATES. 


91 


Name. 


Com. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


American St. Ry. Generator & Power Co. 


2,500,000 






2,500,000 


American Telephone and Telegraph Co... 


114,748,000 




38,000,000 


152,748,000 


Am. Wireless Telephone and Teleg'h Co. 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Ass'n of Fire Underwriters of Arkansas. 


39,694,226 






39,694,226 


Auto-Electric Co 


1,000,000 






1,000,000 


Baltimore Electric Light Co 


5,000,000 






5,000.000 


Bay State Gas Co 


100,000,000 




12,000,000 


112,000,000 


Bell Telephone Company of Missouri 


4,000,000 






4,000,000 


Binghamton Railway Co 


1,150,000 




1,199,000 


2,349,000 


Boston & N. Y. Telephone & Teleg'h Co.. 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Boston Electric Light Co 


3,000,000 




1,250,000 


4,250,000 


Boston Elevated Railway Co 


20,000,000 




14,336,000 


34,336,000 


Boston Suburban Electric Companies 


3,000,000 


3,000,000 


840,000 


6,840,000 


Brooklyn Ferry Co 


8,500,000 




7,500,000 


16,000,000 


Brooklyn Rapid Transit combine 


45,000,000 






45,000,000 


Brooklyn Union Gas Co 


15,000.000 






15,000,000 


Buffalo Gas Co 


7,000,000 


2,000,000 


5,900.000 


14,900,000 


Buffalo General Electric Co 


2,400,000 




2,400,000 


4,800,000 


California Central Gas and Electric Co.. 


1,000,000 






1,000,000 


California Gas and Electric corporation.. 


30,000,000 






30,000,000 


Central District Printing & Teleg'h Co.. 


10,000,000 






10,000,000 


Central Electric Ry. of Kansas City, Mo. 


500,000 






500,000 


Central Hudson Steamboat Co 


600,000 


400,000 


500,000 


1,500,000 


Central N. Y. Telephone & Telegraph Co. 
Central Union Gas Co. (Ohio and Indiana) 


1,000,000 
5,000,000 


9,000,000 


100,000 


1,100,000 
14,000,000 


Central Union Telephone Co. (111. & Ind.) 


10,000,000 




6,000,000 


16,000,000 


Charleston (S. C.) Con. Ry., Gas & El. Co. 


1,500,000 






1,500,000 


Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co.. 


2,650,000 




1,500,000 


4,150,000 


Chicago City Railway Co 


19,000,000 






19,000,000 


Chicago Edison Co 


7,590,000 




7,483,000 


15,073,000 


Chi. Sectional Electric Underground Co.. 


300,000 




260,000 


560,000 


Chicago Telephone Co 


15,000,000 






15,000,000 


Chicago Union Traction Co 


20,000,000 


12,000,000 


88,394,200 


120,394,200 


Cincinnati Gas and Electric Co 


28,000.000 




1,300,000 


29,300,000 


Cincinnati. Newport & Covington Ry 


4,000,000 




3,000,000 


7,000,000 


Cincinnati Street Railway Co 


20,000,000 




692,000 


20,692,000 


Citizens' Lighting Co. of Louisville, Ky.. 
i Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co 


1,000,000 
1.500,000 


'"i]666',666 


1,000,000 
2,500,000 


2,000,000 
5,000,000 


Cleveland Electric Railway Co 


13,000,000 




4,350,000 


17,350,000 


Columbia Car Elec. Lighting &Brake Co. 


10,000.000 






10,000,000 


Columbus (O.) Gas Light & Heating Co.. 


1,700,000 


3,600,000 


1,500,000 


6,800,000 


Commercial Cable Co 


15,000,000 




10,952,000 


25,952,000 


Commonwealth Electric Co. (Chicago)... 


5,000,000 




3,100,000 


8,100,000 


Connecticut Railway and Lighting Co... 


11,000,000 


4,000,000 


15,000,000 


30.000,000 


Consolid'd Oltr Water Co. (Los Angeles). 


2,480,000 






2,480,000 


Consolidated Gas Co. (Baltimore) 


11,000,000 




10,584,500 


21,584,500 


Consolidated Gas Co. (Long Branch) 


1.000.000 




1,000,000 


2,000,000 


Consolidated Gas Co (Newark, N. J.) 


6,000,000 






6,000,000 


Consolidated Gas Co. (New York) 


80,000.000 




71,235,000 


151,235,000 


Consolidated Gas Co. (Pittsburg) 


4.000,000 


2,500,000 




6,500,000 


Con. Ry. Elec. Light. & Refrigerating Co. 


22,000,000 






22,000.000 


Consolidated Water Co. (Utica) 


1,500,000 


1,000,000 


2,100,000 


4,600,000 


Cumberland Valley Telephone Co 


200,000 






200.000 


Denver City Tramway Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Denver Gas and Electric Co 


3,500,000 




5,500,000 


9,000,000 


Denver Union Water Co * 


5,000,000 


2,500,000 




7,500.000 


Detroit City Gas Co 


5,000,000 




6,000,000 


11,000,000 


Detroit United Railway Co 


12,500.000 




25,000,000 


37,500,000 


Duluth General Electric Co 


300,000 




1,200,000 


1,500,000 


East Jersey Electric Co 


1,000,000 






1,000,000 


I East St. Louis and Suburban Co 


5,000,000 




8,000,000 


13,000.000 


Edison Electric Co. (Los Angeles) 


2,000,000 




1,641,000 


3,641,000 


Edison Electric Illuminat'g Co. (Boston). 


8,750,000 






8,750,000 


Edison Electric Illuminating Co. (N. Y.). 


9,200,000 






9.200,000 


Electric Company of America 


25,000,000 






25,000,000 


Electric Storage Battery Co 


13,000,000 


5,000.000 




18,000.000 


Electric Vehicle Co 


10,000,000 


8.000,000 


1,675,000 


19,675,000 


Electrical Lead Reduction Co 


2.000,000 






2,000,000 


Electrotvpers' combine (New York) 


5,000.000 






5,000,000 


Elgin. Aurora & Southern Traction Co... 


2,000,000 




2.000,000 


4,000,000 


Elizabeth, Plainfield & Cent. Jersey Rv.. 


3,000.000 




2,500.000 


5.500,000 


Equitable Gas Light Co. (Memphis) 


1,000,000 




1,005,000 


2,005,000 


Factory Insurance association 


34.655,000 






34,655,000 


FairhaVen & Westville (Conn.) Ry. Co... 


5.000,000 




2,543,000 


7,543,000 


Federal Telephone Co 


10,000,000 






10,000.000 


Fort Pitt Gas Co < 


2,500,000 




1,000.000 


3,500.000 


Fort Scott Consolidated Supply Co 


250,000 




200,000 


450,000 


Gas and Electric Co. (Bergen Co., N. J.). 


2,000.000 





1,500,000 


3.500.000 


General Carriage Co 


20.000.000 







20,000,000 



92 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND 


YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


Name. Com. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


General Electric Co 


45,000,000 


8t>5,000 


3,720,000 


49,585,000 


General Electric Co. (Minneapolis) 


2,100,000 






2,100,000 


General Electric Railway Co. (Chicago). 


5,000,000 




3,000,000 


8,000,000 


Georgia Ry. and Electric Co. (Atlanta).. 


5,000,000 


1,800,000 


11.000,000 


17,800,000 


Hamilton Otto Coke Co. (Ohio) 


500,000 




500,000 


1,000,000 


Helena (Mont.) Power and Light Co 


1,000,000 




1,750,000 


2,750,000 


Herkimer County Light and Power Co... 


400,000 




355,000 


755,000 


Hudson County Gas Co. (Jersey City) 


10,500,000 





10,500,000 


21,000,000 


Hudson River Telephone Co 


4,000,000 






4,000,000 


Hudson River Water-Power Co 


2,000,000 




2,000,000 


4,000,000 


Hudson Valley Railway Co 


3,000,000 




4,000,000 


7,000,000 


Illinois State Board of Fire Underwriters 


49,4.;0,760 






49,430,760 


Imperial Elec. Light. Heat & Power Co. 


1,500,000 




1,000,000 


2,500,000 


Indiana League of Fire Underwriters.... 


10,028.568 






10,028,568 


Indianapolis Street Railway Co 


5,000,000 





10,000,000 


15,000.000 


Interborough Rapid Transit Co 


25,000,000 






25,000,000 


Internat. Lt., Heat & Power Co. (Phila.) 


500,000 






500,000 


International Express Co 


1.000,000 






1,000.000 


International Power Co 


7,400,000 


600.000 


225,000 


8,225,000 


International Traction Co. (Buffalo) 


10,000,000 


5,000,000 


30,000,000 


45,000,000 


Interocean Telephone and Telegraph Co.. 


1,000,000 






2,000,000 


Interstate Telephone Co. (Trenton) 


5,000,000 




1,100.000 


6,100,000 


Iowa Telephone Co 


4,000,000 




275,000 


4,275,000 


Jersey Central Traction Co 


1,000,000 




350,000 


1,350,000 


Jersey City, Hoboken & Paterson Ry. Co. 


20,000,000 




20,000,000 


40,000.000 


Johnstown Light, Heat and Power Co 


500,000 






500,000 


Kansas City Electric Light Co 


2,500,000 




750,000 


2,250,000 


Kansas City Gas Co 


5,000.000 




3,942,000 


8,942.000 


Kentucky Heating Co 


700,000 




100,000 


800,000 


Keystone Telephone Co. (Philadelphia).. 


5,000.000 


5,000,000 




10,000,000 


Kings County Electric Light & Power Co. 


2.500,000 




11.951.000 


14.451,000 


Kinloch Telephone Co. (St. Louis) 


2,000,000 




2,000,000 


4,000.000 


Knoxville Electric Light and Power Co.. 


110,000 






110.000 


Laclede Gas Light Co. (St. Louis) 


8,500,000 


2,500.000 


10.750.000 


21.750,000 


LaCrosse Gas and Electric Co 


375,000 


125,000 


500,000 


1,000.000 


Lake Shore Electric Railway Co 


4,500,600 


1,500,000 


4,000.000 


10,000.000 


Lake Street Elevated R. R. Co. (Chicago) 


10,000,000 




7,574,000 


17.574,000 


Lehigh Traction Co 


1,000,000 




585.000 


1.585,000 


Lehigh Valley Traction Co 


3.000.000 




6,652,000 


9.652,000 


Lexington (Ky.) Railwav Co 


1,500,000 




875,000 


2.375,000 


Light, Heat & Power corporat'n (Boston) 


1,000,000 


250,000 


100. 060 


1,350.000 


Louisville Gas Co 


3,600.000 




500,000 


4.100.000 


Louisville Home Telephone Co 


1,000,000 




2,500,000 


3.500,000 


Louisville Railway Co 


3,500.000 




7,412,300 


10.912,300 


Lvnchburg Traction and Light Co 


750,000 




1,000,000 


1,750.000 


Mahoning Valley Ry. Co. (Youngstown).. 


1,500,000 




1,200.000 


2,700,000 


Manchester (X. H.)Trac., Lt. & Pow. Co. 


5,000,000 




1,500.000 


6.500.000 


Manhattan Railway Co 


48,000,000 




40,000,000 


88,000,000 


Manhattan Transit Co... 


1Q,000.000 






10.000.000 


Mfrs.' Light and Heat Co. (Pittsburg)... 


5,000,000 





750,000 


5,750,000 


Marconi Wireless Tel. Co. of America... 


6,500,000 






6,500,000 


Market Street Ry. Co. (San Francisco).. 


18,750,000 




12,091.000 


30.841,000 


Massachusetts Electric Companies 


14,293,100 


15,057,400 


3,500.000 


32,850.500 


M.Chunk-Lehighton-Slatington St.Ry.Co. 


600,000 




600,000 


1,200,000 




500,000 




100.000 


600,000 


Memphis Street Railway Co 


500,000 




900.000 


1,400,000 


Metropolitan Securities Co. (New York).. 


52,000.000 




95.449,000 


147.449,000 


Met. Street Railwav Co. (Kansas City).. 


8,500.000 




15,600,000 


24,100.000 


Met. West Side El. Ry. Co. (Chicago).... 


7,500.000 


9,000.000 


11.907.000 


28,407,000 


Michigan Telephone Co 


5,000.000 




3.285.000 


8.285.000 


Middlesex & Somerset Traction Co -.. 


1,500,000 




1,500,000 


3,000.000 


Mill Creek Vallev St. Rv. Co. (Cincinnati) 


1,000,000 


750.000 




1.750.000 


Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Co. 


15.000.000 


4,500.000 


10,000,000 


29.500.000 


Minneapolis General Electric Co 


1.500.000 


750,000 


3,008,000 


5.25S.OOO 


Minnesota & Dakota Fire Underwriters.. 


45,119.740 






45.119.710 


Missouri and Kansas Telephone Co 


5,000.000 




1.250.000 


6.250.000 


Missouri Edison Electric Co 


2,000.000 


2.000.000 


4,000.000 


8.000.000 


Mobile Light and Railroad Co 


2,250,000 




2.250.000 


4,500.000 


Monongahela Street Railway Co 


7,000.000 




4,400.000 


11,400.000 


Montgomery Light and Power Co 


750.000 






750,000 


Montgomery Railway Co 


350.000 




350.000 


700.000 


Municipal Gas Co. (Albany) 


2,000.000 




500,000 


2,500 000 


Nashville Railway Co 


6,500.000 




6,500.000 


13,000.000 


National Electric Car Lighting Co 


2.000.000 






2,000.000 


National Gas and Construction Co 


1,000.000 






1.000.000 


New Amsterdam Gas Co 


12,000.000 


9.000,000 




21,000.000 


New England Gas and Coke Co 


17.500.000 




17,500.000 


35.000.000 


New England Insurance Exchange 


58.537.167 


. 




58,537.167 


New England Telephone & Telegraph Co. 


20.000.000 




4,000.000 


24.000.000 



TRUSTS IN THE UNITED STATES. 


93 


J\ume. Cam. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


New Hampshire Traction Co. (Exeter)... 


1,000,OUO 






1,000,000 


New Orleans Lighting Co 


2, DUO. WO 




1,500,000 


3,500,000 


New Orleans Traction Lanes 


80,000,000 






80,000.000 


New Orleans Waterworks Co 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


Newp't News <fc Old Pt. lly. & Elec. Co.. 


1,075,000 




3,075,000 


4,150,000 


New York and New Jersey Telephone Co. 


15,000,000 




1,324,000 


16,324,000 


N. Y. <& Pa. Telephone & Telegraph Co.. 
N. Y. & Queens Elec. L-ight & Power Co. 


1,000,000 
1,250,000 


1,250,000 


566,500 
2,500,000 


1,566,500 
5,000,000 


New York Telephone Co 


30,000,000 





1,925,000 


31,925,000 


New York Transportation Co 


S.OOO.'XW 






5,000,000 


Niagara Falls and Power Co 


10,000,900 




10,000,000 


20,000,000 


Norfolk, Ports'th & Newp't News Ry. Co. 


550,tOO 




1,000,000 


1,550,000 i 


Norfolk Railway and Light Co 


1,650,000 




4,000,000 


5,650,000 


North American Co. (elec. financiering).. 


12,000,000 






12,000,000 


North Jersey Street Railway Co 


30,504,000 




28,500,000 


59,004,000 


North Shore Traction Co 


4,000,000 


2,500,000 




6,500,000 


Northern Ohio Traction Co. (Akron) 


2,500,000 


1,000,000 


3,300,000 


6,800,000 


Northwestern Elevated R. R. (Chicago). 


5,000,000 


5,000,000 


15,000,000 


25,000,000 


Northwestern Telephone Exchange Co... 


4,354,300 






4,354,300 


Oakland (Cal.) Transit Co 


6,000.000 




3,000,000 


9,000,000 


Ohio and Ind. Air Line Ry. Co. (Toledo) 


750,000 






750,000 


Ohio & Ind. Con. Nat. & Ilium. Gas Co.. 


10,000,000 




7,350,000 


17,350,000 


Ohio River Electric Ry. and Power Co... 


300,000 




300,000 


600,000 


Old Colony Street Railway Co 


5,777,700 




4,671,000 


10,448,700 


Old Dominion Ry. Co. (Portsmouth, Va.) 


2,000,000 




542,000 


2,542,000 


Omaha & Council Bluffs liy. & Bridge Co. 


1,500,000 




1.350,000 


2,850,000 


Omaha Street Railway Co 


5,000,000 




2,350,000 


7,350,000 


Pacific Lighting Co. (San Francisco) 


4,000.000 






4,000,000 


Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Co. 


15,000,000 




750,000 


15,750,000 


Paterson & Passaic Gas & Electric Co.. 


5,000,000 




3,632,000 


8,632,000 


Peninsular and Occidental Steamship Co. 


3,000,000 






3,000,000 


Pennsylvania Electric Vehicle Co 


800,000 


400,000 




1,200,000 


Pennsylvania Mfg., Light and Power Co. 


15,000,000 






15,000,000 


Pennsylvania St. Ry. & Lighting Plants. 


8,000,000 






8,000,000 


Pennsylvania Telephone Co 


3,000,000 




500,000 


3,500,000 


Peoples Gas and Electric Co. (Oswego).. 


450,000 




450,000 


900,000 


Peoples Gas Light & Coke Oo. (Buffalo). 


4,975,000 


3,025,000 




8,000,000 


Peoples Gas Light & Coke Co. (Chicago). 


35,000,000 




29,046,000 


64,046,000 


Peo. Light & Power Co. (Newark, N. J.). 


20,000,000 






20,000,000 


Peo. Mut. Telephone Co. (San Francisco) 






500,000 


500,000 


Philadelphia Co. (natural gas) 


15,000,000 


6,000,000 


20,250,000 


41,250,000 


Philadelphia Electric Co 


25,000,000 




28,307,300 


53,307,300 


Phoenix Gas and Electric Co 


800,000 




1,000,000 


1,800,000 


Pittsburg-Birmingharn Traction Co 


2,000,000 




3,064,000 


5,064,000 


Pitts.-McKeesport-Connellsville Ry. Co.. 


3,500,000 




3,500,000 


7,000.000 


Portland Lighting and Power Co 


300,000 


100,000 


400,000 


800,000 


Portland (Me.) Railroad Co 


1,000,000 




2,000,000 


3,000,000 


Portland (Ore.) Railway Co 


700.000 


100,000 


800,000 


1,600,000 


Pottsville Union Traction Co 


1,250,000 




1,117,000 


2,367,000 


Poughkeepsie-Wap. Falls Elec. Ry. Co... 


750,000 




404,000 


1,154,000 


Providence-Pawtucket Suburban Ry. Co. 


8,000,000 




13,702,000 


21,702,000 


Public Works Co. (Bangor, Me.) 


600,000 




600,000 


1,200,000 


Pueblo Traction and Lighting Oo 


1,500,000 




1,000,000 


2,500,000 


Quaker City Cab Co 


1,000,000 






1,000,000 


Quincy Gas and Electric Co 


600,000 




600,000 


1,200,000 


Railways Co. General (Philadelphia).... 


1,200,000 






1,200,000 


Rapid Transit Co. (Chattanooga) 


350.000 




300,000 


650,000 


Rapid Transit Ferry Co. (New York) 


1,000.000 






1,000,000 


Rapid Transit Railway Co. (Dallas) 


100.000 




200.000 


300,000 


Richmond Passenger and Power Co 


1,000,000 


1,000,000 


4,000,000 


6,000,00,1 


Richmond Traction Co 


1,000,000 




500,000 


1,500,000 


Rochester Gas and Electric Co 


2,150,000 




3,000.000 


5,150,000 


Rochester Railway Co 


5,000,000 




4,524,500 


9,524,500 


Rochester Telephone Co 


700.000 




400,000 


1,100,000 


Rockford (111.) Ry., Light & Power Co... 


350,000 




300,000 


650,000 


Rockv Mountain Bell Telephone Co 


2,500,000 






2,500.000 


Sacramento Electric, Gas and Ry. Co.... 


2,500,000 




2,100,000 


4,600.000 


Saginaw Valley Traction Co 


700 000 


400,000 


705,000 


1,805,000 


St. Louis & Suburban Railway Co 


3,000,000 




2,300,000 


5,300,000 


St. Paul Gas Light Co 


1,500,000 






1,500,000 


San Francisco Gas and Electric Co 


20,000.000 




623,000 


20,623,000 


Savannah Electric Co 


2,500,000 


1,000,000 


1,500,000 


5,000.000 


Sohenectadv Railway Co 


600.000 




1,050,000 


1,650,000 




1.500,000 




2,000,000 


3,500.000 


Sohuvlkill Valley Traction Co 


500,000 




500,000 


1,000,000 


Scott-Jannev Electric Co 


15,000,000 


15,000,000 




30,000,000 


Scranton Railway Co 


6,000,000 




3,655,500 


9,655,500 


Seattle Electric Co 


5,000,000 


3,000,000 


5,000,000 


13,000,000 


Shamokin Light, Heat and Power Co... 


350.000 




225,000 


575,00-) 



94 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


Name. 


Com. stock. 


Pref. stock. 


Bonds. 


Total. 


Sioux City Traction Co 


1,200,000 




750,000 


1,950,000 


South Chicago Elevated Railway Co 


10,323,800 




1,500,000 


11,823,800 


South Jersey Gas, Electric & Traction Co. 


6,000,000 




6,000,000 


12,000,000 


Southeastern Tariff association 


41,424,318 






41,424,318 


Southern Light and Traction Co 


2,500,000 





2,500,000 


5,000,000 


Southern New England Telephone Co... 


5,000,000 




1,000,000 


6,000,000 


Sbuthern Ohio Traction Co 


2,000,000 




2,300,000 


4,300,000 


Southwest Missouri Electric Ry. Co 


800,000 




800,000 


1,600,000 


Sprague Electric Co. (New Jersey) 


500,000 






500,01*0 


Standard Carbide Gas Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Standard Telephone Co. (Kansas City)... 


10,000,000 






10,000,000 


Stanley Electric Manufacturing Co 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


Staten Island Midland Railway Co 


1,000,000 




1,000,000 


2,000,000 


Storey General Electric Co 


3,500,000 






3,500,000 


Strowger Auto. Tel. Exchange (Chicago). 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Strohm Auto. Electric Block Signal Co.. 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Suburban Gas Co. (Philadelphia) 


1,500,000 




1,550,000 


3,050,000 


Syracuse Gas Co 


2,500,000 




2,500,000 


5,000,000 


Syracuse Lighting Co 
Syracuse Rapid Transit Railway Co 


3,000,000 
2,750,000 


1,000,000 
1,250,000 


2,000,000 
4,086,000 


6,000,000 
8,086,000 


Tacoma Railway and Power Co 


2,000,000 




1,700,000 


3,700,000 


Tampa Electric Co 


500,000 




500,000 


1,000,000 


Taylor Signal Co 


400,000 


100,000 


200,000 


700,000 


Telephone Company of America 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Teleph., Teleg. & Cable Co. of America.. 
Terre Haute Electric Co 


9,000,000 
1,000,000 





"'i]5oo!666 


9,000,000 
2,500,000 


Toledo, Bowling Green & S. Traction Co. 


1,500,000 




1,191,000 


2,691,000 


Toledo, Col., Springfield & Cln. Ry. Co.. 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Toledo Railways and Light Co 


12,000,000 





9,875,000 


21,875,000 


Topeka Railway Co 


1,250,000 




450,000 


1,700,000 


Trenton Gas and Electric Co 


2,000,000 






2,000,000 


Trenton Street Railway Co 


1,000,000 




2,000,000 


3,000,000 


Triple State National Gas and Oil Co 


2,000,000 




800,000 


2,800,000 


Twin City Rapid Transit Co 


17,000,000 


3,000,000 


10,888,000 


30,888,000 


Twin City Telephone Co 


1,500,000 




750,000 


2,250,000 


Underwriters' Association of New York.. 


56,428,711 






56,428,711 


Union Electric Co. (Dubuque) 


500,000 


500,000 




1,000,000 


Union Electric Construction Co 


5,000,000 






5,000,000 


Union Elevated Railroad Co. (Chicago).. 


5,000,000 




5,000,000 


10,000,000 


Union Ferry Co. (New York) 


3,000,000 




2,200,000 


5,200,000 


Union Light and Power Co. (Utah) 


4,250,000 


300,000 




4,550,000 


Un. Lt., Heat & Power Co. (Covington).. 
Union Telephone Co. (Alma, Mich.) 


1,500,000 
400,000 





1,500,000 


3,000,000 
400,000 


Union Traction Company of Indiana 


4,000,000 


1,000,000 


5,000,000 


10,000,000 


Union Traction Company of Philadelphia 


30,000,000 




42,341.684 


72,341,684 


United Electric Company of New Jersey. 


20,000,000 




16,110,000 


36,110,000 


Unit. Elec. Lt. & Power Co. (Baltimore). 


2,000,000 


1,000,000 


4.500,000 


7,500.000 


United Electric Securities Co 


500.000 


1,000,000 


2,231,000 


3,731,000 


Unitea Express Companies 


1,000,000 


500,000 




1,500,000 


United Gas and Electric Co. (New York. 


2,500,000 


1,500,000 


3,000,000 


7,000,000 


United Gas Improvement Co 


12,500,000 


12,500,000 


3,250,000 


28,250,000 


United Illuminating Co. (New Haven)... 


1,000,000 




2,000,000 


3,000,000 


United Lighting and Heating Co 


6,000,000 


6,000,000 




12,000,000 


Unit. Power & Trans. Co, (Philadelphia) 


12,500,000 




8,787,630 


21,287,630 


United Railways Co. (Detroit) 


12,500.000 


1,000,000 


8,280,000 


21,780,000 


United Railways Go. (St. Louis) 


25.000.000 


20,000,000 


45.000,000 


90,000,000 


United Rys. and Electric Co. (Baltimore) 


24.000.000 


14,000,000 


52,000,000 


90,000,000 


United Rys. Inv. Co. (San Francisco).... 


10,000.000 


15,000,000 


20,000,000 


45,000,000 


United States Automatic Telephone Co.. 


1,000.000 






1,000,000 


United States Express Co 


10,000,000 






10,000,000 


United States Telephone Co. (Ohio) 


2,000.000 




1,800,000 


3.800,000 


United Telegraph, Tel. & Electric Co... 


1,000,000 




500,000 


1,500,000 


United Telephone Co 


300.000 






300,000 


United Telephone & Tel. Co. (Md. & Pa.) 


5.000,000 


2,500,000 




7,500.000 


United Traction Co. (Albany) 


5,000.000 




4,121.300 


9,121,300 


United Traction Co. (Reading, Pa.) 


403,700 




594,900 


998,600 


United Trac. & Elec. Co. (Rhode Island) 


8,000.000 






8,000.000 


Universal Gas Co 


1,000.000 






1,000,000 


Utica & Mohawk Vallev Railwav Co 


2,500.000 


600,000 


4,000.000 


7,100,000 


Utica Electric Light and Power Co 


1.000.000 




1,000,000 


2,000,000 


Va. Cons. St. Ry. Sys. of Tidewater 


6.000.000 






6,000,000 


Washington (D. C.) Gas Light Co 


2.600.000 




600.000 


3,200.000 


Washington (D. C.) Ry. and Electric Co. 


6,500.000 


8,500,000 


17,500,000 


32,500.000 


Washington Water Power Co. (Spokane). 


2.000,000 




2,000,000 


4.000.000 


Wells-Fargo Express Co 


s.ooo.ooo 






8.000.000 


Westchester Lighting Co. (New York)... 


10.000.000 


2,500,000 


4,450.000 


16. 950.000 


Western Factory Insurance association.. 


23,862,500 






23.862.500 


Western Gas Co. (Milwaukee) 


4.000,000 




4.000,000 


8.000,000 


Wostern Telephone and Te^graph Co... 


16.000.000 


16.000.000 


19.000.000 


51.000,000 



PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE "BEEF TRUST." 



Com. stock. Pref. stock. Bonds. 



Western Union Fire Insurance associat'n 47,902,368 

Western Union Telegraph Co 100,000,000 

Wheeling Traction Co 2,000,000 

Wilkes-Barre & Wyoming Val. Trac. Co. 5,000,000 

Wilmington & Chester Traction Co 2,000,000 

Wilmington Gas and Electric Co 500,000 

Woods Motor Vehicle Co 7,500,000 

Worcester Railways and Investment Co.. 6,000,000 

Wyandotte Gas Co. (Bethlehem, Pa.)... 600,000 

York Countv Traction Co. (Pennsylvania) 1,500,000 

York Telephone Co 200,000 

Youngstown-Sharon Ry. and Light Co... 2,500,000 



1,000,000 
2,500,000 



2,892,566,240 296,922,400 
*Authorized capitalization. 



Total. 
47,902,368 
128,502,000 
4,500,000 
7,175,000 
6,000,000 
2,500,000 
10,000,000 
6,000,000 
1,100,000 
2,471,000 
400,000 
5,000,000 

1,312,558,819 4,502,048,459 



28,502,000 
2,500,000 
2,175,000 
4,000,000 
1.000,000 



500,000 

971,000 

200,000 

2,500,000 



UNITED: STATES STEEL CORPORATION. 

Organized in 1901. 



CAPITAL STOCK ISSUED. 



AUTHORIZED CAPITALIZATION. 



Preferred. Common. 



Preferred. Common. 



80.000.000 
85,000,000 
15.000.000 
100.000.000 
40.000.000 
40.000,000 



80.000.000 
35.000.000 
15.000.000 
100.000.000 
50.000.000 
40,000.000 
32.000,000 
26.500.000 
30.000.000 
19.000.000 



156,800,000 

61.055.000 
29.425.940 
745,200 



78,400.000 

30,527,800 
14,712,970 
46.484,300 

50.000,00(J 
40,000,00(J 
32.000.000 
24,500.000 
28,000.000 
19.000.00t 




U. S. Steel Corporation. . 
Constituent companies : 

The Carnegie 

American Bridge 

Lake Sup.Con.lron mines 

Federal Steel 

American Steel and Wire 

National Tube 

National Steel 

American Sheet Steel. 
American Tin Plate. . . 
American Steel Hoop. 

Shelby Steel Tube 

Total 



363.625.070 



NOTE-Total amount of bonds authorized, $304.000,000; issued, $301,000,000. 
MISSOURI "BEEF-TRUST" CASE. 



On the 6th of May, 1902, the beef-packing 
companies doing business in Missouri were 
ordered by the state Supreme court to show 
cause why they should not be cited to appear 
and answer to the charge of violating the 
antitrust laws. A hearing followed which 
resulted in the filing of a suit by the attor- 
ney-general against the packers. The testi- 
mony was taken by I. H. Kinley, commis- 
sioner, who made a report Jan. 3, 1903, ad- 
verse to the defendants. 

The Supreme court, on the 20th of March, 
filed its decision declaring that the packers 
were guilty of the charge made against 
them. The Armour Packing company, the 
Cudahy Packing company, Sivift & Co., the 
Hammond Packing company and Schwarzs- 
child & Sulzberger were each fined $5,000. 

In the opinion of the court it was conclu- 
sively shown that there was a combination 



of the packers to maintain trust prices on 
beef in Missouri; that the representatives of 
the packers met on certain days to fix prices 
for the week; that rebating was done; that 
the same prices prevailed at all the coolers 
at the same time, and that no competitor 
could enter the field against the packers 
without being undersold and forced out of 
business. The court declared: "The law has 
placed the stamp of condemnation upon all 
arrangements, pools, trusts or conspiracies 
to fix or maintain the price of articles of 
prime necessity. The only course the court 
can pursue is to enforce the law. The state- 
ments of the packers that they had built ui 
a demand for their products, increased tht 
price of live stock and distributed millions 
of dollars among the people in no way or 
measure condone, even if such allegation 
be true, their violation of the antitrust 
law." 



PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THE "BEEF TRUST.' 



Prosecution ordered by the president April 
12, 1902. 

Petition for injunction against Swift & Co., 
Armour & Co. and other packers filed May 
10, 3902, in the United States Circuit court 
for the northern district of Illinois. Pro- 
ceeding based on Sherman antitrust law. 



Temporary injunction granted by Judge 

Peter S. Grosscup May 20, 1902. 
Demurrer filed by packers Aug. 4, 1902; peti 

tiou for injunction attacked on technical 

grounds. 
Demurrer overruled by Judge Grosscup Feb 

18, 1903, and injunction made permanent. 



96. 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



THE SHERMAN ANTITRUST LAW. 
Passed by the 51st congress and approved July 2, 



Section 1. Every contract, combination in 
the form of trust or otherwise, or conspir- 
acy, in restraint of trade or comimrce 
among the several states or with foreign 
nations, is hereby declared to be illegal. 
Every person who shall make any such con- 
tract or engage in any such combination or 
conspiracy shall be deemed guilty of a mis- 
demeanor, and, on conviction thereof, shall 
be punished by fine not exceeding $5,000 or 
by imprisonment not exceeding one year or 
by both said punishments, in the discretion 
of the court. 

Section 2. Every person who shall monop- 
olize or attempt to monopolize or combine 
or conspire with any person or persons to 
monopolize any part of the trade or com- 
merce among the several states or with 
foreign nations shall be deemed guilty of 
a misdemeanor, and on conviction thereof 
shall be punished by fine not exceeding 
$5,000 or by imprisonment not exceeding 
one year, or by both said punishments, in 
the discretion 'of the court. 

Section 3. Every contract, combination in 
form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in 
restraint of trade or commerce In any ter- 
ritory of the United States 6r of the Dis- 
trict of Columbia, or in restraint of trade 
or commerce between any such territory and 
another, or between any such territory or 
territories and any state or states or the 
District of Columbia or with foreign na- 
tions, or between the District of Columbia 
and any state or states or foreign nations, 
is hereby declared illegal. Every person who 
shall make any such contract or engage in 
any such combination or conspiracy shall be 
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and on 
conviction thereof shall be punished by fine 
not exceeding $5,000 or by imprisonment not 
exceeding one year or by both said punish- 
ments. In the discretion of the court. 

Section 4. The several Circuit courts of 
the United States are hereby invested with, 
jurisdiction to prevent or restrain viola- 
tions of this act; and it shall be the duty 
of the several district attorneys of the 
United States, in their respective districts, 
under the direction of the attorney-general, 
to institute proceedings in equity to pre- 
vent and restrain such violations. Such 



proceedings may be by way of petition set- 
ting forth the case and praying that such 
violation shall be enjoined or otherwise 
prohibited. When the parties complained 
of shall have been duly notified of suc-h pe- 
tition the court shall proceed, as soon as 
may be, to the hearing and determination 
of the case; and pending such petition and 
before final decree the court may at any 
time make such temporary restraining or- 
der or prohibition as shall be deemed just 
in the premises. 

Section 5. Whenever it shall appear to 
the court before which any proceeding un- 
der section 4 of this act may be pend- 
ing that the ends of justice require that 
other parties should be brought before the 
court, the court may cause them to be 
summoned, whether they reside in the dis- 
trict in which the court is held or not; and 
subpoenas to that end may be served in 
any district by the marshal thereof. 

Section 6. Any property owned under anj 
contract or by any combination or pursuant 
to any conspiracy (and being the subiect 
thereof) mentioned in section 1 of this 
act and being in the course of transporta- 
tion from one state to another or to a for- 
eign country shall be forfeited to the United 
States and may be seized and condemned 
by like proceedings as those provided by 
law for the forfeiture, seizure and condem- 
nation of property imported into the United 
States contrary to law. 

Section 7. Any person who shall be in- 
jured in his business or property by any 
other person or corporation by reason of 
anything forbidden or declared unlawful 
by this act may sue therefor in any Cir- 
cuit court of the United States in the di~- 
trict in which the defendant resides or Is 
found, without respect to the amount in 
controversy, and shall recover threefold the 
damages by him sustained and the cost of 
suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee. 

Section 8. That the word "person" or 
"persons" wherever used in this act be 
deemed to include corporations and associa- 
tions existing under or authorized by the 
laws of either the United States, the laws 
of any of the territories, the laws of any 
state or the laws of any foreign country. 



ACT EXPEDITING ANTITRUST LITIGATION. 



Passed by senate Feb. 4, 1903. 
Passed by house Feb. 5. 
Approved Feb. 11. 

In any suit in equity pending or hereafter 
brought in any Circuit court of the United 
States under the act entitled "An act to pro- 
tect trade and commerce against unlawful 
restraints and monopolies," approved July 
2, 1890: "An act to regulate commerce," ap- 
proved Feb. 4, 1887, or any other acts having 
a like purpose that hereafter may be en- 
acted, wherein the United States is com- 
plainant, the attorney-general may file with 
the clerk of such court a certificate that in 
his opinion the case is of general public im- 
portance, a copy of which shall be immedi- 
atelv furnished by such clerk to each of the 
Circuit judges of the circuit in which the 
case is pending. Thereupon such case shall 
be given precedence over others and in every 
way expedited and be assigned for hearing 
at the earliest practicable day before not 
less than three of the Circuit judges of said 
circuit, if there be three or more, and if 



there be not more than two Circuit judges, 
then before them and such District judge as 
they may select. In the event the judges 
sitting in such case shall be divided in opin- 
ion the case shall be certified to the Su- 
preme court for review in like manner as if 
taken there by appeal as hereinafter pro- 
vided. 

Section 2. That in every suit in equity 
pending or hereafter brought in any Circuit 
court of the United States under any of said 
acts, wherein the United States is complain- 
ant, including cases submitted but not yet 
decided, an appeal from tbe final decree of 
the Circuit court will lie only to tfie Supreme 
court and must be taken within sixty days 
from the entry thereof: Provided, that 'in any 
case where an appeal may have been taken 
from the final decree of a Circuit court to 
the Circuit Court of Appeals before this act 
takes effect the case shall proceed to a final 
decree therein and an appeal may be taken 
from such decree to the Supreme court in the 
manner now provided by law. 



THE ELKINS REBATE LAW. 



97 



FUNDS FOR PROSECUTING ANTITRUST SUITS. 



The following paragraph was made a part 
of the legislative, executive and judicial ap- 
propriation bill approved Feb. 26, 1903: 

That for the enforcement of the provisions 
of the act entitled "An act to regulate com- 
merce." approved Feb. 4, 1887, and all acts 
amendatory thereof or supplemental there- 
to, and of the act entitled "An act to pro- 
tect trade and commerce against unlawful 
restraints and monopolies," approved July 
2, 1890, and all acts amendatory thereof or 
supplemental thereto, and sections 73, 74, 75 
and 76 of the act entitled "An act to reduce 
taxation, to provide revenue for the govern- 
ment and other purposes," approved Aug. 
27, 1894, the sum of $500,000, to be immediate- 
ly available, is hereby appropriated out of 
any money in the treasury not heretofore ap- 
priated, to be expended under the direc- 
tion of the attorney-general in the employ- 
ment of special counsel and agents of the 
department of justice to conduct proceed- 
ings, suits and prosecutions under said acts 
in the courts of the United States. Pro- 
vided, that no person shall be prosecuted or 
be -subjected to any penalty or forfeiture for 
or on account of any transaction, matter or 
thing concerning which he may testify or 
produce evidence, documentary or otherwise, 
in any proceeding, suit or prosecution under 



said acts. Provided further, that no person 
so testifying shall be exempt from prose- 
cution or punishment for perjury committed 
iu so testifying. 

In the general deficiency act approved 
March 3, 1903, it was provided: That under 
and to be paid from the appropriation of 
$500,000 for the enforcement of the provisions 
of the act entitled "An act to regulate com- 
merce," approved Feb. 4, 1887, and all acts 
amendatory thjreof or supplemental there- 
to, and other acts mentioned in said appro- 
priation, made in the legislative, executive 
and judicial appropriation act for the fiscal 
year 1904, the president is authorized to ap- 
point, by and with the advice and consent of 
the senate, an assistant to the attorney-gen- 
eral with compensation at the rate of $7,000 
per annum and an assistant attorney-general 
at a compensation at the rate of $5,000 per 
annum, and the attorney-general is author- 
ized to appoint and employ without refer- 
ence to the rules and regulations of the civil 
service two confidential clerks at a compen- 
sation at the rate of $1.600 each^er annum, 
to be paid from said appropriation.' Said as- 
sistant to the attorney-general and assistant 
attorney-general shall perform such duties 
as may be required of them by the attorney- 
gerieral. 



THE ELKINS REBATE LAW. 



Passed by senate Feb. 3, 1903. 

Passed by house Feb. 13. 

Approved by the president Feb. 19. . 

The act amending the interstate-commerce 
law, known as the Elkins bill, Is in sub- 
stance as follows: Anything done or omitted 
to be done by a corporation common carrier 
subject to the act to regulate commerce and 
amendatory acts which, if done or omitted 
to be done by any director or office thereof, 
would constitute a misdemeanor under the 
acts named or under this act shall also be 
held to be a misdemeanor committed by such 
corporation and upon conviction shall be sub- 
ject to the penalties prescribed in said acts 
or by this act with reference to such persons 
except as such penalties are herein changed. 

The willful failure upon the part of any 
cairier to file and publish tne tariffs or rates 
and charges as required or strictly to ob- 
serve such tariffs until changed according to 
law shall be a misdemeanor and upon convic- 
tion thereof the corporation offending shall 
be subject to a fine of not less than $1,000 
nor more than $20,000 for each offense; and it 
shall be unlawful for any person, persons or 
corporation to offer, grant or to give or to 
solicit, accept or receive any rebate, con- 
cession or discrimination in respect of the 
transportation of any property in interstate 
or foreign commerce by any common carrier 
subject to said act to regulate commerce and 
the acts amendatory thereto whereby any 
such property shall by any device whatever 
be transported at a less rate than that 
named in the tariffs published and filed by 
such carrier as is required by said act to 
regulate commerce and the acts amendatory 
thereto, or whereby any other advantage Is 
given or discrimination is practiced. Every 
person or corporation who shall offer, grant 
or give or solicit, accept or receive any such 
rebates, concession or discrimination shall 
be deemed guilty of misdemeanor and on 



conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine 
of not less than $1,000 nor more than $20,000. 
In all convictions occurring after the passage 
of this act for offenses under said acts to 
regulate commerce no penalty shall be im- 
posed on the convicted party other than the 
tine prescribed by law, imprisonment wher- 
ever now prescribed as part of the penalty 
being hereby abolished. 

In construing and enforcing the provisions 
of this section the act, omission or failure 
of any officer, agent or other person acting 
for or employed by any common carrier act- 
ing within the scope of his employment shall 
in every case be also deemed to be the act, 
omission or failure of such carrier as well as 
that of the person. Whenever any carrier 
files with the interstate-commerce commis- 
sion or publishes a particular rate under the 
provisions of the act to regulate commerce 
or acts amendatory thereto or participates 
in any rates so filed or published, that rate 
as against such carrier, its officers or agents 
in any prosecution begun under this act shall 
be conclusively deemed to be the legal rate, 
and any departure from such rate or any of- 
fer to depart therefrom shall be deemed to 
be an offense under this section of this act. 

The second section provides that in any 
proceeding for the enforcement of the provi- 
sions of the statutes relating to interstate 
commerce it shall be lawful to include as 
parties in addition to the carrier all persona 
interested in or affected by the rate, regu- 
lation or practice under consideration, and 
inquiries, investigations, orders and decrees 
may be made vfith reference to and against 
such additional parties in the same manner, 
to the same extent and subject to the same 
provisions as are 6"r shall be authorized by 
law with respect to carriers. 

Section 3 provides that whenever the inter- 
state-commerce commission shall have rea- 
sonable ground for belief that any common 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



carrier is engaged in the carriage of passen- 
gers or freight traffic between given points 
at less than the published rates on tile or is 
committing any discriminations forbidden by 
law a petition may be presented alleging 
such facts to the Circuit court of the United 
States sitting in equity haying jurisdiction, 
and when the act complained of is alleged 
to have been committed or as being commit- 
ted in part in more than one judicial district 
or state it may be dealt with, tried and de- 
termined in either such judicial district or 
state, whereupon it shall be the duty of the 
court summarily to inquire into the circum- 
stances upon such notice and in such manner 
as the court shall direct and without the 
formal pleadings and proceedings applicable 
to ordinary suits in equity and to make such 
other persons or corporations parties thereto 
as the court may deem necessary, and upon 
being satisfied of the truth of the allegations 
of said petition said court shall enforce an 
observance of the published tariffs or direct 
and require a discontinuance of such dis- 
crimination by proper orders, writs and proc- 
ess, which said orders, writs and process 
may be enforceable as well against the par- 
ties interested in the traffic as against the 
carrier, subject to the right of appeal as now 
provided by law. It shall be the duty of the 
several district attorneys of the United 
States whenever the attorney-general shall 
direct, either of his own motion or upon the 
request of the interstate-commerce commis- 
sion, to institute and prosecute such proceed- 
ings and the proceedings provided for by this 
act shall not preclude the bringing of suit 
for the recovery of damages by any party in- 
jured or any other action provided by the act 



to regulate commerce and the acts amenda- 
tory thereof. And in proceedings under this 
act and the acts to regulate commerce the 
said courts shall have the power to compel 
the attendance of witnesses, both upon the 
part of the carrier and the shipper, who 
shall be required to answer on all subjects 
relating directly or indirectly to the matter 
In controversy and to compel the productlo* 
of all books and papers, both of the carrier 
and the shipper, which relate directly or in- 
directly to such transaction; the claim that 
such testimony or evidence may tend to 
criminate the person giving such evidence 
shall not excuse such person from testifying 
or such corporation producing its books and 
papers, but no person shall be prosecuted or 
subjected to any penalty or forfeiture for or 
on account of any transaction, matter or 
thing concerning which he may testify or 
produce evidence documentary or otherwise 
in such proceeding: Provided, that the pro- 
visions of an act entitled "An act to expe- 
dite the hearing and determination of suits 
in equity pending or hereafter brought under 
the act of July 2, 1890, entitled 'An act to 
protect trade and commerce against unlaw- 
ful restraints and monopolies,' 'An act t 
regulate commerce,' approved Fen. 4. 1887, 
or any other acts having a like purpose that 
may be hereafter enacted, approved Feb. , 
1903," shall apply to any case prosecuted un- 
der the direction of the attorney-general In 
the name of the interstate-commerce com- 
mission. 

Section 4 repeals all conflicting acts and 
ection 5 makes the act effective from its 
passage. 



NORTHERN SECURITIES COMPANY DECISION. 



Northern Securities company, incorporated 
Nov. 13, 1901. 

Authorized capital stock, $400,000,000. 

President James J. Hill. 

Suit brought by government March 11, 1902. 

Decision against company April 9, 1903. 

The Northern Securities company was or- 
ganized Under the laws of New Jersey for 
the purpose of taking over and holding the 
stocks of the Northern Pacific and Great 
Northern Railroad companies. This was 
deemed by the government to be in restraint 
of interstate trade and suit was brought in 
the United States Circuit court at St. Paul, 
Minn., under the Sherman antitrust act of 
1890. In February, 1903, congress passed an 
act expediting antitrust suits, and in ac- 
cordance with the provisions of this law 
(see "Act Expediting Antitrust Litigation") 
the case was given precedence over other 
business and was heard before four judges 
of the 8th circuit namely. Judges A. M. 
Thayer, H. C. Caldwell, Walter H. San- 
born and Willis Van Devanter. Their de- 
cision, written by Judge Thayer but con- 
curred in by all, was fhat the Northern Se- 
curities company was an illegal combination 
within the meaning of the act of 1890. A 
decree was entered adjudging that the stock 
of the Northern Pacific and Great Northern 
companies held by the Securities company 
was acquired in virtue of a combination 
among the defendants in restraint of trade 
and commerce among the several states, 
such as the antitrust act denounces as ille- 
gal; enjoining the Securities company from 
acquiring further stock and from voting such 
stock at any meeting of the stockholders of 
either of the railroad companies, or exer- 



cising any control or influence over the acts 
of the companies; enjoining the Northern 
Pacific and Great Northern companies from 
permitting such stock to be voted by the 
Securities company at any corporate elec- 
tion for directors or officers of said com- 
panies, and likewise enjoining them from 
paying any dividends to the Securities com- 
pany on account of said stock, or permitting 
the Securities company to exercise any con- 
trol whatsoever over the corporate acts of 
the companies or to direct the policy of 
either; and, finally, permitting the Securi- 
ties company to return to the stockholders 
of the Northern Pacific and Great Northern 
companies any and all shares of stock of 
those companies which it might have re- 
ceived from ; such stockholders in exchange 
for its own stock. 

The court, after reciting the facts of the 
merger, declared: 'The scheme which was 
thus devised and consummated led inevi- 
tably to the following results: 

"First, it placed the control of the two 
roads in the hands of a single person to 
wit, the Securities company by virtue of 
its ownership of a large majority of the 
stock of both companies. 

"Second, it destroyed every motive for 
competition between two roads engaged in 
interstate traffic, which were natural com- 
petitors for business, by pooling the earn- 
ings of the two roads for the common bene- 
fit of the stockholders of both compa- 
nies. * * * 

"The general question of law arising upon 
this state of facts is whether such a combi- 
nation of interests as that described falls 
within the inhibition of the antitrust act 



NORTHERN SECURITIES COMPANY DECISION. 



or is beyond its reach. The act brands as 
illegal every contract, combination in the 
form of trust or otherwise or conspiracy in 
restraint of trade or commerce among the 
several states or with foreign nations. The 
generality of the language employed is, in 
our opinion, of great significance. It indi- 
cates, we think, that congress, being un- 
able to foresee and describe all the plans 
that might be formed and all the expedients 
that might be resorted to to place restraints 
on interstate trade or commerce, deliberate- 
ly employed words of such general import 
as in its opinion would comprehend every 
scheme that might be devised to accomplish 
that end. * * * 

"Moreover, in cases arising under the act 
it has been held by the highest judicial 
authority in the nation, and its opinion has 
been reiterated in no uncertain tone, that 
the act applies to interstate carriers of 
freight and passengers as well as to all other 
persons, natural or artificial; that the words 
'in restraint of trade or commerce' do not 
mean in unreasonable or partial restraint of 
trade or commerce, but any direct restraint 
thereof; that an agreement between com- 
peting railroads which requires them to act 
in concert and fixing the rate for carriage 
of passengers or freight over their respective 
lines from one state to another, and which 
by that means restricts temporarily the right 
of any one of such carriers to name 'such 
rates for the carriage of such freight or pas- 
sengers over its road as it pleases, is a con- 
tract in direct restraint of commerce within 
the meaning of the act in that it tends to 
prevent competition; that it matters not 
whether, while acting under such a contract, 
the rate fixed is reasonable or unreas9nable, 
the vice of such a contract or combination 
being that it confers the power to establish 
unreasonable rates and directly restrains 
commerce by placing obstacles in the way of 
free and unrestricted competition between 
carriers who are natural rivals for patron- 
age; and, finally, that congress has the pow- 
er, under the grant of authority contained 
in federal legislation to regulate commerce, 
to say that no contract or combination shall 
be legal which shall restrain interstate com- 
merce or trade by shutting off the operation 
of the general law of competition. 

"Taking the foregoing propositions for 
granted, because they have been decided by 
a court whose authority is controlling, it Is 
almost too plain for argument that the de- 
fendants would have violated the antitrust 
act if they had done through the agency of 
natural persons what they have accomplished 
through an artificial person of their own 
creation. That is to say. if the same indi- 
viduals who promoted the Securities com- 
pany, in pursuance of a previous understand- 
ing or agreement so to do, had transferred 
their stock in the two railroad companies 
to a third party or parties and had agreed 
to induce other stockholders to do likewise, 
until a majority of the stock of both com- 
panies had been vested in a single individual 
or association of individuals, and had em- 
powered the holder or holders to vote the 
stock as their own, receive all the dividends 
thereon, and pro rata or divide them among 
all the stockholders of the two companies 
which had transferred their stock, the result 
would have been a combination in direct re- 
straint of interstate commerce, because it 
would have placed in the hands of a small 
coterie of men the power to suppress com- 
petition between two competing interstate 
carriers whose lines are practically parallel. 



"It will not do to say that so long as each 
railroad company has its own board of di- 
rectors they operate Independently and are 
not controlled by the owners of the majority 
of their stock. It is the common experience 
of mankind that the acts of corporations are 
dictated and that their policy is controlled 
by those who own the majority of their 
stock. Indeed, one of the favorite methods 
in these days, and about the only method, of 
obtaining control of a corporation is to pur- 
chase the greater part of its stock. It was 
the method pursued by the Northern Pacific 
and the Great Northern companies to ob- 
tain control of the Chicago, Burlington & 
Quincy railroad; and so long as directors 
are chosen by stockholders the latter will 
necessarily dominate the former and in a 
real sense determine all important corporate 
acts. * * * Competition, we think, would 
not be more effectually restrained than it 
now is under and by force of the existing 
arrangement if the two railroad companies 
were consolidated under a single charter." 

Referring to the laws of New Jersey under 
which the Securities company was Incorpo- 
rated, the court held that presumptively no 
charter granted by a state is intended to de- 
feat a national law such as that relating to 
interstate commerce, over which congress 
has absolute control. The power of con- 
gress over interstate commerce is supreme, 
far-reaching and acknowledges no limita- 
tions other than such as are prescribed in the 
constitution itself. No legislation on the 
part of a state can curtail or Interfere with 
its exercise, and in view of repeated de- 
cisions no one can deny that it is a legiti- 
mate exercise of the power in question for 
congress to say that neither natural nor 
artificial persons can combine or conspire in 
any form whatever to place restraints on 
interstate trade or commerce. 

In reply to the contention that such a com- 
bination of adverse interests as was formed 
was lawful and not prohibited by fhe anti- 
trust act because such restraint as it im- 
poses, if any, is indirect, collateral and re- 
mote, the court held that the combination 
did directly impose restraint upon interstate 
commerce. It did not matter through how 
many hands the orders came by which the 
aims of the company were accomplished. 
The power was not only acquired by the 
combination but it was effectually exercised, 
and it operated directly on interstate com- 
merce, notwithstanding the manner of its 
exercise, by controlling the means of trans- 
portation to wit, the cars, engines and 
railroads by which persons and commodities 
are carried, as well as by fixing the price to 
be charged for such carriage. 

With respect to the contention that if the 
Securities company was held to be In viola- 
tion of the antitrust act then fhe act un- 
duly restricted the right of the individual to 
make contracts, and for that reason was in- 
valid, the court cited the case of Addyston 
Pipe and Steel company vs. the United 
States, in which the Supreme court held that 
the provision of the constitution regarding 
the liberty of the citizen is to some extent 
limited by the commerce clause of the con- 
stitution, and that the power of congress to 
regulate interstate commerce comprises the 
right to enact a law prohibiting the citizen 
from entering into those private contracts 
which directly and substantially, and not 
merely indirectly, remotely, incidentally and 
collaterally, regulate to a greater or less de- 
gree commerce among the states. 

In the case of the state of Minnesota 



100 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



against the Northern Securities company, 
the Great Northern and Northern Pacific 
railroad companies Judge Lochren of the 
United States Circuit court handed down a 
decision at St. Paul, Minn., Aug. 1, 1303, in 
which he found for the defendants and dis- 
missed the bill of complaint of the state. 
He decided that the Northern Securities 



company had not violated the state laws 
forbidding the consolidation of parallel and 
competing railroads through its ownership 
of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific 
stock. The decision did not affect that given 
in the government's case against the same 
defendants. In one case state law and in 
the other federal law was at issue. 



DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE AND LABOR. 



Bill passed by senate Jan. 8, 1902. 
Passed by house Jan. 17, 1903. 
Approved by president Feb. 14, 1903. 

The law provides that there shall be at the 
seat of government an executive department 
to be known as the department of commerce 
and labor and a secretary of commerce and 
labor to be appointed by the president. His 
salary is fixed at $8,000 a year and his term 
of office is to be the same as that of other 
heads of executive departments. It is also 
provided that there shall be an assistant sec- 
retary of commerce and labor to be appoint- 
ed in the same way at a salary of $5,000 a 
year, a chief clerk, a disbursing clerk and 
such other clerks as may be authorized by 
congress. 

It is the province of the department to fos- 
ter, promote and develop the foreign and do- 
mestic commerce, the mining, manufactur- 
ing, shipping and fishery industries, the la- 
bor interests and the transportation facili- 
ties of the United States. The following of- 
fices, bureaus, divisions and branches of the 
public service are placed under the jurisdic- 
tion of the new department: 

Lighthouse board. 

Lighthouse establishment. 

Steamboat inspection service. 

Bureau of navigation. 

United States shipping commissioners. 

National bureau of standards. 

Coast and geodetic survey. 

Commissioner-general of immigration. 

Commissioners of immigration. 

Bureau of immigration. 

Immigration service at large. 

Bureau of statistics. 

Census office. 

Department of labor. 

Fish commission. 

Commissioner of fish and fisheries. 

Bureau of foreign commerce. 

Bureau of manufactures. 

Bureau of corporations. 

The secretary of commerce and labor Is 
given authority to rearrange the statistical 
work of the various bureaus and to control 
the gathering and distribution of statistical 
information. He also has the power to call 
upon other departments of the government 
for statistical data and results and to pub- 
lish such information. 

The bureaus of manufactures and corpora- 
tions are new. The chief of the bureau of 
manufactures is to be appointed by the 
president and is to get $4,000 a year salary. 
The province of this bureau is to foster, pro- 
mote and develop the various manufacturing 
interests of the United States and markets 
for the same at home and abroad, domestic 
and foreign, by gathering, compiling and 
publishing all available and useful informa- 
tion concerning such industries and markets. 
All consular officers are required to furnish 
such information and data as may be called 
for by the secretary. 

The section of the law providing for a bu- 
reau of corporations was intended as a meas- 



ure looking toward the regulation and con- 
trol of trusts and industrial combinations 
and is as follows: 

"Section 6. That there shall be in the de- 
partment of commerce and labor a bureau to 
be called the bureau of corporations, and a 
commissioner of corporations who shall be 
the head of said bureau, to be appointed by 
the president, who shall receive a salary of 
$5,000 per annum. There shall also be in said 
bureau a deputy commissioner who shall re- 
ceive a salary of $3,500 per annum and who 
shall in the absence of the commissioner act 
as and perform the duties of the commission- 
er of corporations and who shall also perform 
such other duties as may be assigned to him 
by the secretary of commerce and labor or 
by the said commissioner. There shall also 
be in the said bureau a chief clerk and such 
special agents, clerks and other employes as 
may be authorized by law. 

"The said commissioner shall have power 
and authority to make under the direction 
and control of the secretary of commerce and 
labor diligent investigation into the organi- 
zation, conduct and management of any cor- 
poration, joint stock company or corporate 
combination engaged in commerce among the 
several states and with foreign nations, ex- 
cepting common carriers, subject to 'An act 
to regulate commerce,' approved Feb. 4, 1887, 
and to gather such information and data as 
will enable the president of the United 
States to make recommendations to congress 
for legislation for the regulation of such 
commerce and to report such data to the 
president, from time to time as he shall re- 
quire, and the information so obtained or as 
much thereof as the president may direct 
shall be made public. 

"In order to accomplish the purposes de- 
clared in the foregoing part of this section 
the said commissioner shall have and exer- 
cise the same power and authority in respect 
to corporations, joint stock companies and 
combinations subject to the provisions here- 
of as is conferred on the interstate-com- 
merce commission in said 'Act to regulate 
commerce' and the amendments thereto in 
respect to common carriers so far as the 
same may be applicable, including the right 
to subpoena and compel the attendance and 
testimony of witnesses and the production 
of documentary evidence and to administer 
oaths. All the requirements, obligations, lia- 
bilities and immunities imposed or conferred 
by said 'Act to regulate commerce' and by 
'An act In relation to testimony before the 
interstate-commerce commission' and so 
forth, approved Feb. 11, 1893, supplemental 
to said 'Act to regulate commerce' shall also 
apply to all persons who may be subpoenaed 
to testify as witnesses or to produce docu 
mentary evidence in pursuance of the 
authority conferred by this section. 

"It shall also be the province and duty of 
said bureau under the direction of the secre- 
tary of commerce and labor to gather, com 
pile, publish and supply useful information 
concerning corporations doing business with- 



UNITED STATES CIVIL SERVICE. 



101 



In the limits of the United States as shall 
engage in interstate commerce or in com- 
merce between the United States and any 
foreign country, including corporations en- 
gaged in insurance, and to attend to such 
other duties as may hereafter be provided by 

The department of commerce and labor is 
given jurisdiction over the fur-seal, salmon 



and other fisheries of Alaska, over the immi- 
gration of aliens into the United States and 
the enforcement of the Chinese exclusion 
law. The president is authorized to transfer 
to the new department any other bureau or 
branch of the public service engaged in sta- 
tistical or scientific work at any time he may 
see fit. The secretary is required to make 
an annual report to congress. 



UNITED STATES CIVIL SERVICE. 

Civil-Service 'Act Approved Jan. 16, 1883. 

Officers Three commissioners are appointed 
by the president to assist him in classify- 
ing the government offices and positions, 
formulating rules and enforcing the law. 
Their office is in Washington, D. C. The 
chief examiner is appointed by the commis- 
sioners to secure accuracy, uniformity and 
justice in the proceedings of the examining 
boards. The secretary to the commission 
is appointed by the president. 

General Rules The fundamental rules gov- 
erning appointments to government posi- 
tions are found in the civil-service act it- 
self. Based upon these are many other 
regulations formulated by the commission 
and promulgated by the president from 
time to time as new contingencies arise. 
The present rules were approved March 
20, 1903, and went into effect April 15, 1903. 



In a general way they require that there 
must be free, open examinations of appli- 
cants for positions in the public service; 
that appointments shall be , made from 
those graded highest in the examinations; 
that appointments to the service in Wash- 
ington shall be apportioned among the 
states and territories according to popula- 
tion; that there shall be a period (six 
months) of probation before any absolute 
appointment is made; that no person in 
the public service is for that reason obliged 
to contribute to any political fund or is 
subject to dismissal for refusing to so con- 
tribute; that no person in the public serv- 
ice has any right to use his official author- 
ity or influence to coerce the political ac- 
tion of any person. Applicants for positions 
shall not be questioned as to their polit- 
ical or religious beliefs and no discrimina- 
tion shall be exercised against or in favor 
of any applicant or employe on account of 
his religion or politics. The classified civil 
service shall include all officers and em- 
ployes in the executive civil service of the 
United States except laborers and persons 
whose appointments are subject to con- 
firmation by the senate. 

E>aminations These are conducted by 
boards of examiners chosen from among 
persons in government employ and are held 
twice a year in all the states and terri- 
tories at convenient places. In Illinois, 
for example, they are usually held at 
Cairo, Chicago and Peoria. The dates are 
announced through the newspapers or by 
other means. They can always be learned 
by applying to the commission or to the 
nearest postoffice or custom house. Those 
who desire to take examination are ad- 
vised to write to the commission in Wash- 
ington for tne "Manual of Examinations," 
which is sent free to all applicants. It is 
revised semiannually to Jan. 1 and July 1 
The January edition contains a schedule 
of the spring examinations and the July 
edition contains a schedule of the fall ex- 
aminations. Full information is given aa 



to the methods and rules governing exam- 
inations, manner of making application, 
qualifications required, regulations lor rat- 
ing examination papers, certification for 
and chances of appointment, and as far as 
possible it outlines the scope of the differ- 
ent subjects of general and technical ex- 
aminations. These are practical in char- 
acter and are uesigned to test the relative 
capacity and fitness to discharge the duties 
to be performed. It is necessary to obtain 
an average percentage of 70 to be eligible 
for appointment, except that applicants 
entitled to preference because of honorable 
discharge from the military or naval serv- 
ice for disability resulting from wounds or 
sickness incurred in the line of duty need 
obtain but 65 per cent. The period of eligi- 
bility is one year. 



Qualifications of Applicants No person will 
be examined who is not a citizen of the 
United States; who is not within the age 
limitations prescribed; who is physically 
disqualified for the service which he seeks; 
who has been guilty of criminal, infamous, 
dishonest or disgraceful conduct; who 
has been dismissed from the public serv- 
ice for delinquency and misconduct or has 
failed to receive absolute appointment 
after probation; who is addicted to the 
habitual use of intoxicating liquors to ex- 
cess, or who has made a false statement 
in his application. The age limitations in 
the more important branches of the public 
service are: Postoffice, 18 to 45 years; 
rural letter carriers, 17 to 55; internal rev- 
enue, 21 years and over; railway mail, 18 
to 35; lighthouse, 18 to 50; life saving, 18 
to 45; general departmental, 20 and over. 
These age limitations are subject to change 
by the commission. They do not apply 
to applicants of the preferred class. Ap- 
plicants for the position of railway mail 
clerk must be at least 5 feet 6 inches In 
height, exclusive of boots or shoes! and 
weigh not less than 135 pounds in ordinary 
clothing and have no physical defects. Ap- 
plicants for certain other positions have to 
come up to similar physical requirements. 

Method of Appointment Whenever a va- 
cancy exists the appointing officer makes 
requisition upon the civil-service commis- 
sion for a certification of names to fill the 
vacancy, specifying the kind of position 
vacant, the sex desired and the salary. 
The commission thereupon takes from the 
proper register of eligibles the names of 
the three persons standing highest of the 
sex called for and certifies them to the ap- 
pointing officer who is required to make the 
selection. He may choose any one of the 
three names, returning the o'ther two to 
the register to await further certification. 
The time of examination is not considered, 
as the highest, in average percentage on the 
register must be certified first. If after a 
probationary period of six months the 



102 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



name of the appointee is continued on the 
roll of the department in which he serves 
the appointment is considered absolute. 
Removals No person can be removed from 
a competitive position except for such 
cause as will promote the efficiency of the 
public service and for reasons given in 
writing. No examination of witnesses nor 
any trial shall be required except in the 
discretion of the officer making the re- 
moval. 



Salaries Entrance to the departmental serv- 
ice is usually in the lowest grades the 
higher grades being generally filled by pro- 
motion. The usual entrance grade is about 
$900, but the applicant may be appointed 
at $840, $760 or even $600. 

Extent of the Classified Service The fol- 
lowing table shows the number of classi- 
fied, excepted and excluded and unclassi- 
fied positions in Washington and outside, 
June 30, 1902: 



DEPARTMENT. 



White bouse 

State 

Consular service 

Treasury 

War 

Navy 

Postoffice 

Interior 

Justice 

Agriculture 

Labor 

Fish commission 

Interstate commerce com. 
Civil service commission. 
Smithsonian institution.. 
Governm't printing office 
State, war and navy de- 
partment building. . . 
Total 



CLASSIFIED 
COMPETITIVE. 



*In. *0ut. 



1,716 

452 

1,119 



B 

60 
112 



3,865 
120 



18,110 



16.750 
7.613 
16.080 
49.371 
2,929 
116 
1,476 



117 



94.452 



EXCEPTED 

AND 
EXCLUDED: 



In. Out. 



420 

970 

6,786 



293 12,135 



UNCLASSIFIED. 



Out. 



**" 



119 
230 



2,103 



765 

576 

7 

'4.73i' 
376 
152 



Below 



2.441 

17.756 

180 



Total. 



765 



27.250 
17.241 



75 



t80.027, 136.387 
1,468 16,536 
901 
3,475 
102 
242 
133 
67 
350 
4,096 



219 



6,607 102.687 



*The words "in" and "out' 1 indicate whether employes serve in the departments at Wash- 
ington, D. C., or outside. The word "below" indicates below classification mere laborers. 
171,193 of these are fourth-class postmasters. 

DTJTIES COLLECTED FROM CUSTOMS (1901-1902). 



On principal articles or groups of articles 
imported for consumption in the United 
States. 



Artworks 426,196.81 

Books, etc 389,766.06 

Breadstuffs 399,823.33 

Buttons 271,581.63 

Chemicals 5,603,646.99 

Clays or earths 339.471.92 

Clocks, watches 722,685.89 

Coal coke 1,072,298.82 

Cork 201,688.85 

Cotto'n* 21,826,690.11 

Earthenware 5,407.622.76 

Feathers 1,283,003.36 

Fibers* 12,908,017.44 

Firecrackers 378.381.76 

Fish 1,079.241.15 

Fruits, nuts 4.472,338.26 

Furs* 983,159.00 

Glassware 2,743.096.37 

Gold.* silver*....'... 494,390.85 

Hats, etc 608,852.08 

Hides, skins 2,230,838.03 

Hops 298.688.28 

India rubber* 207,160.93 

Iron, steel 6,988,479.27 



496,373.10 
440,366.16 
468,274.98 
444,159.38 
6,369,018.49 



833,542.54 
1,060,879.74 

240,960.83 
24,485,987.67 
5,587.275.82 
1,763.591.37 
15,157,639.53 

360.317.99 
1,325,578.27 
5,532,712.55 
1,225,135.54 
3,545.789.55 



746,566.45 

2.650.420.05 

347.334.48 

186,566.18 

10,464,404.28 



Articles. 1901. 1902. 

Jewelry $2,142,731.96 $2,492,694.60 

Lead* 320,509.78 439,722.03 

Leather* 4,104,453.35 4,074,792.67 

Marble, stone* 601,644.67 744,855.99 

Matting 1,206,782.10 1,483,403.41 

Musical instruments 437,897.17 447,695.65 

Oils 815,621.59 1,093,676.07 

Paints, colors 462,437.19 513,619.59 

Paper* 1,163,015.14 1,238,285.33 

Plants 308,213.20 312,875.40 

Provisions 1,026,773.56 1,217,408.88 

Rice 1,194.935.56 1,290,417.48 

Salt 287,415.54 268,682.82 

Seeds 584.774.96 296,072.65 



.14,245,693.08 17,293,290.27 



Silk' 

Spices 146,052.17 179,625.90 

Spirits 9,121.235.92 10,148,513.66 

Sugar 62,680,260.03 52,622,601.01 

Tea 8,259,353.78 7,882.607.23 

Tobacco* 16.655,743.67 18,756,035.56 

Vegetables 1,361,715.25 3.295,871.94 

Wood* 2,212,567.29 2,804,244.12 

Wool* 21,575.005.20 26,396,839.23 

The total amount of duty collected in 1901 
on articles entered for consumption in the 
United States was $233^556,109.86 and in 1902, 
$251,453,154.97. 

*Including manufactures of. 



DISASTER AT HEPPNER. ORE. 



Sunday afternoon, June 14. 1903, the little 
city of Heppner. in Morrow county. Oregon, 
was swept by a sudden flood caused by 
heavy rains. The water in Willow creek, a 
mountain stream running through the town, 
rose from a few inches to twenty feet in less 



than ten minutes. Bridges and houses wero 
carried away almost instantly and between 
200 and 300* persons were drowned. The 
larger part of the town, which was located 
on the bottom land along the banks of the 
stream, was destroyed. 



DIFFERENCE IN TIME. 



103 



AWARD OF THE COAL-STRIKE ARBITRATORS. 



Anthracite coal strike began May 12, 1902; 
ended Oct. 21, 1902. 

Commissioners to arbitrate strike named 
Oct. 14, 1902. 

Coal-strike inquiry begun Oct. 27, 1902; 
ended Feb. 17, 1903; award announced March 
21, 1903. 

The award of the anthracite coal strike 
arbitrators was, in brief, as follows: 

1. That an increase" of 10 per cent over and 
above the rates paid in April, 1902, be paid 
to all contract miners after Nov. 1, 1902. 

2. That other employes be paid 10 per cent 
increase on their earnings between Nov. 1, 
1902, and April 1, 1903; that after that date 
engineers employed in hoisting water be 
paid the wages effective in April, 1902, but 
with eight-hur shifts; that other engineers 
be given 5 per cent increase with teundays 
off without loss of pay, and that all other 
employes be paid on the basis of a nine-hour 
day, receiving therefor the same wages as 
for a ten-hour day in April, 1902. 

3. That during the life of the award the 
present methods of payment for coal mined 
shall be adhered to unless changed by mutual 
agreement. 

4. That any disagreement arising under 
this award which cannot be settled in the 
ordinary way shall be referred to a board of 
conciliation of six persons, three represent- 
ing the mine workers and three the opera- 
tors, and in case the board cannot* agree the 
point of disagreement shall be referred to an 
umpire to be appointed by the Circuit judges 
of the 3d judicial circuit of the United 
States, the decision of the umpire to be final. 

5. That whenever requested by a majority 
of the contract miners of any colliery, cher-k 
weighmen or check docking bosses, or both, 
shall be employed at the expense of the 
miners. 

6. That mine cars shall be distributed 
equitably among miners at work and that 
there shall be no concerted effort on the part 
of the miners or mine workers of any col- 
liery or collieries to limit the output of the 
mines unless such limitation of output be in 
conformity with an agreement between thn 
operators and an organization representing a 
majority of the miners. 

7. In all cases where miners are paid by 
the car the increase awarded to the contract 



miners is based upon the cars in use, the 
topping required and the rates paid per car 
which were in force April 1, 1902. 

8. That a sliding scale of wages shall be 
adopted based upon the wages fixed in the 
award. For each increase of 5 cents in the 
average price of white-ash coal sold at or 
near New York above $4.50 per ton the em- 
ployes shall have an increase of 1 per cent in 
compensation until there is a change in the 
price, but in no case shall the rate of com- 
pensation be less than that fixed in the 
award. 

9. No person shall be refused employment 
or in any way discriminated against on ac- 
count of membership or nonmembership in 
any labor organization and there shall be 
no interference with any employe who is not 
a member of any labor organization by mem- 
bers of such organization. 

10. All contract miners shall be required 
to furnish within a reasonable time before 

ach pay day a statement of the amount of 
money due from them to their laborers, and 
such money is to be deducted from the 
amount due the contract miners and paid 
directly .to the laborers. 

11. The awards made shall continue in 
force until March 31, 1906. 

In its report the commission declared that 
riot and bloodshed prevailed at the time of 
the strike and that the use of militia and 
armed guards for the protection of life and 
property was necessary. It held that the 
right of a citizen to work when he pleases, 
for whom he pleases and on what terms he 
pleases cannot be successfully denied. The 
use of the boycott as practiced in the anthra- 
cite strike was declared cruel, immoral and 
antisocial. The blacklist was condemned 
in equally severe terms. 

The commission , recommended the discon- 
tinuance of the coal and iron police, a 
stricter enforcement of the laws relating to 
child labor and the compulsory investigation 
of labor troubles. Compulsory arbitration, 
however, was not favored. 

The losses occasioned by the strike, as es- 
timated by the commission, were: To mine 
owners, $46,100,000; to employes, $25,000,000; 
to transportation companies, $28,000,000; 
total, $99,100,000. 



DIFFERENCE IN TIME. 



By noting the variation in time between 
the cities representing the eastern, central, 
mountain and Pacific divisions in the United 
States and those in Alasua, Hawaii, Porto 
Rico and th > Philippines and in foreign 
countries the variation in time between all 
the other cities in the United States and the 
places "named may be easily calculated. 
The time in all cases except where other- 
wise specified is local or actual time. 

When it is 12 o'clock noon on Monday, 
eastern time, in New York the correspond- 
ing time in the cities named below is: 
Chicago (central time). 11:00 a. m. Monday 
Denver (mountain time). 10:00 a.m. Monday 
S. Francisco (Pac. time). 9:00 a. m. Monday 

Sitka, Alaska 7:58 a. m. Monday 

Honolulu 6:28 a. m. Monday 

Havana. Cuba 11:30 a. m. Monday 

San Juan, Porto Rico. ..12:35 p. m. Monday 

Dublin 4:34 p. m., Monday 

Edinburgh 4:47 p. m., Monday 

London 5 :00 p. m., Monday 



Paris 

Berlin 

Vienna 

Rome 

Brussels 

The Hague 

Copenhagen 

Christiania 

Stockholm 

St. Petersburg ... 
Constantinople ... 
City of Mexico... 
Valparaiso, Chile. 

Madrid 

Bern 

Calcutta, India... 

Pretoria 

Rio de Janeiro 

Pekin 

Manila 

Tokyo 

Melbourne 

Sydney 

Apia, Samoa 



. 5:09 p. m 
. 5:53 p. m 
. 6:05 p. m 
. 5:49 p. m 
. 5:17 p. m 
. 5:17 p. m 
. 5:50 p. m 
. 5:42 p. m 
. 6:12 p. m 
. 7:01 p. m 
. 6:56 p. m 
.10:24 a. m 
.12:13 p. m 
. 4:45 p. m 
. 5:29 p. m 
.10:53 p. m 
. 6:55 p. m 
. 2:07 p. m 
.12:45 a. m. 
. 1:03 a. m, 



2:18 a. m. 
2:39 a. m. 
3:04 a. m. 
5:33 a. m. 



, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
., Monday 
,, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
,, Monday 
, Monday 
., Monday 
,, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
, Monday 
, Tuesday 
, Tuesday 
. Tuesday 
, Tuesday 
, Tuesday 
, Tuesday 



104 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



RATES OF POSTAGE AND MONEY ORDERS. 



DOMESTIC. 

Embraces the United States and island pos- 
sessions, including Hawaii, Porto Rico, 
the Philippines, Guam and Tutuila. 
FIRST CLASS. Letters and all written or 
partly written matter, whether sealed or 
unsealed, and all other matter sealed or 
otherwise closed against inspection, 2 cents 
per ounce or fraction thereof. Postal cards 
issued by the government sold at 1 cent 
each; double, or reply cards, 2 cents each. 
Cards must not be changed or mutilated in 
any way and no printing or writing other 
than the address is allowable on the ad- 
dress side. "Private mailing cards" (post 
cards) require 1 cent postage. These cards 
mast conform in shape and quality and 
weight of paper used to the cards issued 
by the government. Each card must be an 
unfolded niece of cardboard not exceeding 
3 9-16 by 5 9-16 inches, nor less than 2 15-16 
by 4% inches, and must bear at the top of 
the address side the words "Post Card." 
Advertisements and illustrations may be 
printed on either side provided they do not 
Interfere with the distinctness of the ad- 
dress or postmark. 

Among the articles requiring first-class 
postage are blank forms filled out in writ- 
ing; certificates, checks and receipts filled 
out in writing; copy (manuscript or type- 
written) unaccompanied by proof sheets; 
plans and drawings containing written 
words, letters or figures; price lists contain- 
ing written figures changing individual 
items; old letters sent singly or in bulk; 
typewritten matter and manifold copies 
thereof, and stenographic notes. 

SECOND CLASS. All regular newspapers, 
magazines and other periodicals issued at 
stated intervals not less frequently than 
four times a year, when mailed by publish- 
ers or news agents, 1 cent a pound or frac- 
tion thereof; when mailed by others, 1 cent 
for each four ounces or fractional parts 
thereof. 

THIRD CLASS. Books, circulars, pamphlets 
and other matter wholly in print (not in- 
cluded in second-class matter), 1 cent for 
each two ounces or fractional part thereof. 
The following named articles are among 
those subject to third-class rate of postage: 
Almanacs, architectural designs, blue prints, 
bulbs, seeds, roots, scions and plants, cal- 
endars, cards, press clippings with name 
and date of papers stamped or written in, 
engravings, samples of grain in its natural 
condition, imitation of hand or type writ- 
ten matter when mailed at postoffice win- 
dow in a minimum number of twenty iden- 
tical copies separately addressed; insur- 
ance applications and other blank forms 
mainly in print; printed labels, lithographs, 
maps, music books, photographs, tags, 
proof sheets, periodicals having the char- 
acter of books and publications which de- 
pend for their circulation upon offers of 
premiums. 

FOURTH CLASS. All matter not in the 
first, second or third class, which is not in 
its form or nature liable to destroy, deface 
or otherwise damage the contents of the 
mailbag or harm the person of any one 
engaged in the postal service. 1 cent an 
ounce or fraction thereof. Included in 
fourth-class mail matter are the following 
articles: Blank books, blank cards or pa- 
per, blotters, playing cards, celluloid, coin, 
crayon pictures, cut flowers, metal or wood 
cuts, drawings, dried fruit, dried plants. 



electrotype plates, framed engravings, en- 
velopes, geological specimens, letterheads, 
cloth maps, samples of merchandise, met- 
als, minerals, napkins, oil paintings, paper 
bags or wrapping paper, photograph albums, 
printed matter on other material than pa- 
per, queen bees properly packed, stationery, 
tintypes, wall paper and wooden rulers 
bearing printed advertisements. 

UNMAILABLE MATTER. Includes tnat which 
is prohibited by law, regulation or treaty 
stipulation and that which by reason of 
illegible or insufficient address cannot be 
forwarded to destination. Among the arti- 
cles prohibited are poisons, explosives or 
inflammable articles, articles exhaling bad 
odors, vinous, spirituous and malt liquors, 
specimens of disease germs, lottery letters 
and circulars, indecent and scurrilous mat- 
ter. 

SPECIAL DELIVERY. Any article of mail- 
able matter bearing a 10-cent special-deliv- 
ery stamp in addition to the regular post- 
age is entitled to immediate delivery on 
its arrival at the office of address between 
the hours of 7 a. m. and 11 p. m., if the 
office be of the free-delivery class; and be- 
tween the hours of 7 a. m. and 7 p. m., if 
the office be other than a free-delivery of- 
fice. 

REGISTRATION. All mailable matter may 
be registered at the rate of 8 cents for each 
package in addition to the regular postage, 
which must be prepaid. An indemnity not 
to exceed $10 for any one piece, or the 
actual value if less than $10, will be paid 
for the loss of first-class registered matter. 

LIMITS OF WEIGHT. No package of third 
or fourth class matter weighing more than 
four pounds, except single books, will be 
received for conveyance by mail. The limit 
of weight does not apply to second-class 
matter mailed at the second-class rate of 
postage, or at the rate of 1 cent for each four 
ounces, nor is it* enforced against matter 
fully prepaid with postage stamps affixed 
at the first-class or letter rate of postage. 

'MONET-ORDER FEES. For domestic money 
orders in denominations of $100 or less the 
following fees are charged: 
For orders for sums not exceeding $2.50...3c 

For over ?2.50 and not exceeding $5 5c 

For over $5 and not exceeding $10 8c 

For over $10 and not exceeding $20 lOc 

For over $20 and not exceeding $30 12c 

For over $30 and not exceeding $40 15c 

For over $40 and not exceeding $50 18c 

For over $50 and not exceeding $60 20c 

For over $60 and not exceeding $75 25c 

For over $75 and not exceeding $100 30c 

SUGGESTIONS. Direct your mail matter to 
a postoffice, writing the name of the state 
plainly; and if to a city, add the street and 
number or postoffice box of the person ad- 
dressed. Write or print your name and ad- 
dress, and the contents, if a package, upon 
the upper left-hand corner of all mail mat- 
ter. This will insure the immediate return 
of all first-class matter to you for correc- 
tion, if improperly addressed or insufficient- 
ly paid; and if it is not called for at des- 
tination it can be returned to you without 
going to the dead-letter office, 'if a letter, 
it will be returned free. Undelivered sec- 
ond, third and fourth class matter will not 
be forwarded or returned without a new 
prepayment of postage. When a roturn card 
appears on this matter either the sender or 
addressee is requested to send the postage. 
Register all valuable letters and packages. 



THE HOMESTEAD LAW. 



105 



FOREIGN". 

Mail matter may be sent to any foreign 
country subject to the following rates and 
conditions: 

REGISTRATION. Eight cents additional to 
ordinary postage on all articles to foreign 
countries. 

ON LETTERS. Five cents for each half 
ounce or fraction thereof prepayment op- 
tional except as to Canada and Mexico. 
Double rates are collected on delivery of Ain- 
paid or short-paid letters. 

POST CARDS. Single. 2 cents each; with 
paid reply, 4 cents each. 

"Private Mailing Cards" (Post Cards). 
Two cents each, subject to conditions gov- 
erning domestic post cards. 

On newspapers, books, pamphlets, photo- 
graphs, sheet music, maps, engravings and 
similar printed matter, 1 cent for each two 
ounces or fraction thereof. Prepayment re- 
quired at least in part. 

To CANADA (including Nova Scotia, New 
Brunswick, Manitoba and Prince Edward 
Island). Letters, 2 cents for each ounce or 
fraction thereof; postal cards, 1 cent each; 
books, circulars and similar printed matter, 

1 cent for each two ounces or fraction 
thereof: second-class matter, same as in the 
United States; samples of merchandise, 1 
cent for each two ounces. Minimum post- 
age, 2 cents. Merchandise, 1 cent for each 
ounce or fraction. Packages must not ex- 
ceed four pounds in weight prepayment 
compulsory. 

CUBA. Rates of postage same as to the 
United States. 

To MEXICO. Letters, postal cards and 
printed matter, same rates as in the United 
States; samples, 1 cent for each two ounces; 

2 cents the least postage on a single pack- 
age; merchandise other than samples can be 
sent only by parcels post. 

To SHANGHAI, CHINA. Letters, 2 cents an 
ounce or fraction thereof. 

LIMITS OF SIZE AND WEIGHT. Packages 
of samples of merchandise to foreign coun- 
tries must not exceed twelve ounces, nor 
measure more than twelve inches in length, 
eight in breadth and four in depth; and 
packages of printed matter must not exceed 
four pounds six ounces. 

PARCELS POST. 

Unsealed packages of mailable merchan- 
dise may be sent by parcels post to Jamaica, 
including the Turks and Caicos islands, 
Barbados, the Bahamas, British Honduras, 



Guatemala, republic of Honduras. Mexico, 
the Leeward islands, New Zealand, Nica- 
ragua, the republic of Colombia, Salvador, 
Costa Rica, the Danish West India islands 
St. Thomas, St. Croix and St. John Brit- 
ish Guiana, the Windward islands, New- 
foundland, Trinidad, including Tobago, and 
Germany at the postage rate and subject 
to the conditions herein prescribed. Parcels 
may also be sent to Chile and Venezuela, 
subject to these conditions, at the rate 
of 20 cents per pound or fractional part 
thereof. 

Limit of weight 11 pounds 

Greatest length 3 feet 6 inches 

Postage 12c a pound or fraction thereof 

Greatest length and girth combined... 6 feet 

Except that parcels for Colombia, Costa 
Rica and Mexico must not measure more 
than two feet In length or more than four 
feet in girth. 

A parcel must not be posted in a letter 
box, but must be taken to the postoffice 
window and presented to the person in 
charge, between the hours of 9 a. m. and 
5 p. m., where a record will be made and 
a receipt given therefor. 

INTERNATIONAL MONEY ORDERS. 
For sums not exceeding $10 lOc 



Over 

Over i 

Over $30 and not exceeding $40 40c 



10 and not exceeding $20 20c 

20 and not exceeding $30. 



,.30c 



40 and not exceeding $50 50c 

550 and not exceeding $60 60c 

60 and not exceeding $70 70c 



Over ! 
Over 
Over ! 

Over $70 and not exceeding $80 80c 

Over $80 and not exceeding $90 90c 

Over $90 and not exceeding $100 $1 

Domestic rates apply to Cuba and to the 
island possessions of the United States. For 
Mexico the rates are one-half of the regular 
international fees. 

Money orders are exchanged between the 
United States and Switzerland, Great Brit- 
tain and Ireland, Germany, France, Italy, 
Canada and Newfoundland, Jamaica, New 
South Wales, Victoria, New Zealand, 
Queensland, Cape Colony, Windward and 
Leeward islands, Belgium, Portugal, Tas- 
mania, Sweden, Norway, Japan, Denmark, 
Netherlands, Dutch East Indies, the Ba- 
hamas, Trinidad and Tobago. British Gui- 
ana, republic of Honduras, Austria, Hun- 
gary. Hongkong. Salvador. Bermuda, Lux- 
emburg, South Australia, Cuba, Chile, Brit- 
ish Honduras, Egypt, Finland and Korea. 



THE HOMESTEAD LAW. 



Any person who is the head of a family, or 
who is 21 years old and is a citizen of the 
United States, or has filed his declaration of 
intention to become such, and who is not 
the proprietor of more than 160 acres of land 
in any state or territory, is entitled to en- 
ter one-quarter section (160 acres) or less 
quantity of unappropriated public land un- 
der the'bomestead laws. The applicant must 
make affidavit that he is entitled to the 
privileges of the homestead act and that 
the entry is made for his exclusive use and 
for actual settlement and cultivation, and 
must pay the legal fee and that part of the 
commissions required, as follows: Fee for 
160 acres, $10; commission. $4 to $12; fee for 
eighty acres, $5; commission. $2 to $6. 
Within six months from the date of en- 
try the settler must take up his residence 
upon the land and cultivate the same for 



five years continuously. At the expiration 
of this period, or within two years there- 
after, proof of residence and cultivation 
must be established by four witnesses. The 
proof of settlement, with the certificate of 
the register of the land office, is forwarded 
to the general land office at Washington, 
from which a patent is issued. Final proof 
cannot be made until the expiration of five 
years from date of entry, and must be made 
within seven years. The government recog- 
nizes no sale of a homestead claim. After 
the expiration of fourteen months from date 
of entry' the law allows the homesteader to 
secure title to the tract, if so desired, by 
paying for It in cash and making proof of 
settlement, residence and cultivation for 
that period. 

The law allows only one homestead privi- 
lege to any one person. 



106 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOE 1904. 



COLONIES OF THE WORLD IN 1903. 
Number, area and population of the noncontiguous territories of the nations of the world. 



COUNTRIES WITH COLONIES. 



Austria-Hungary. 

Belgium 

Chinese empire... 

Denmark 

France 

Germany 

Great Britain 

Italy 

Japan 

Netherlands 

Portugal 

Russia 

Spain 

Turkey 

United States 

Total 



No. of 
colo- 
nies. 



152 



AKEA IN 
SQUARE MILES. 




15,639.683 



Colonies. 



900,000 

2,744,750 

86,634 

4,072.076 

1,027,820 

11.125.105 

188,500 

13.543 

783.000 



114.320 
252,850 
464,936 

729.272_ 

23,329.128" 



POPULATION. 



Mother 
country. 



45,405.267 



407,337.305 
2,464.770 
38,961,945 
56.367,178 
41.952,510 
32,475.253 
44.260.604 
5.263.232 
5,428.659 
129,004.514 
18.618.086 
24,931.600 
75,693.734 



934.858.205 



Colonies. 



1,568,092 

30,000,000 

18,710.000 

120.892 

51.139,340 

13,087,000 

360.000,000 

850.000 

2,758,161 

36.000.000 

9,267,444 

2,050.000 

124,011 

15,509.357 

9.185.636 

550,369.933 



DEPENDENCIES OF EACH NATION. 



AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. 

Sq.miles. Population. 
Bosnia, Herzegovina 23,262 1,568,092 

BELGIUM. 

Kongo Free State 900,000 

CHINA. 

East Turkestan 550,340 

Manchuria 363,610 

Mongolia 1,367,600 

Tibet 463,200 

DENMARK. 

Danish West Indies 138 

Faroe islands 512 

Greenland 46,740 

Iceland 39,756 

FRANCE. 

Algeria 184,474 

Algerian Sahara 123,500 

Anain 52,100 

Cambodia 37,400 

Cochin China. r. 22,000 

Comoro islands 620 

Dahomey 60,000 

Guadeloupe 688 

Guiana, French 30,500 

Guinea, French 95,000 

India, French 196 

Ivory Coast 116,000 

Kongo, French 450,000 

Madagascar 227,750 

Martinique 380 

Mayotte 140 

New Caledonia 7,650 

Reunion 965 

Sahara 1,544,000 



30,000,000 

1,200,000 
8,500,000 
2,580,000 
6,430,000 



30,527 
50,230 
11,895 
78,470 

4,739,331 

50,000 

6,124,000 

1,500,000 

2,968,600 

47,000 

1,000,000 

182,110 

32,910 

2,200,000 

273,000 

2,000,000 

15,000,000 

2,505,237 



St. Marie 64 

St. Pierre and Miquelon. 

Senegal 

Senegambia and Niger... 

Society islands, etc 

Somali Coast 

Tonquin and Laos 

Tunis 

GREAT BRITAIN. 

Aden and Perim 80 

Ascension 

Australian Federation. . .2,972,595 

Bahamas 4,470 

Bahrein islands 273 

Baluchistan 132,315 



210,000 
1,520 

46,000 
144,400 

50,840 



11,640 
51,410 
173,192 
2,550,000 
7,670 
6,250 
1,800,000 
3,000,000 
29,000 
200,000 
7,641,900 
1,900,000 

41,222 
430 

3,832,850 
54,358 
68,000 
500,000 



Sq.miles. Population. 

Barbados 166 195,600 

Basutoland 10,293 264,100 

Bechuanaland 213,000 200,000 

Bermudas 20 17,535 

Borneo 31,106 200,000 

British Central Africa... 42,217 900,700 

British East Africa 350,000 4,000,000 

Canada 3,048,710 5,371,315 

Cape Colony 276,775 1,787,960 

Ceylon 25,365 3,578,333 

Cyprus 3,584 237,022 

Falkland islands 7,500 2,076 

Fiji and Rotuna islands.. 7,740 120,950 

Gambia 69 13,500 

Gibraltar 2 27,460 

Gold Coast 40,000 1,500,000 

Guiana 104,000 294,000 

Honduras 7,560 37,650 

Hongkong 407 386,159 

India 1,087,404 

Jamaica and Turk's isl.. 4,370 771,900 

Lagos ; 3,460 

Leeward islands 700 127,440 

Malay States 26,500 678,595 

Malta and Gozo 117 188,141 

Mauritius, etc... 729 378.040 

Natal 29,200 925,118 

Newfoundland 162,200 217,100 

New Guinea 90,540 350,000 

New Zealand 104,470 787,660 

Nigeria 500,000 25,000,000 

Orange River Colony 48,330 207,500 

Rhodesia 164,000 869,653 

St. Helena 47 3,342 

Seychelles 148 19,237 

Sierra Leone 4,000 77,000 

Sikkim 2,818 59,014 

Somali Coast 68,000 500,000 

Straits Settlements 1,472 572,249 

Transvaal Colony 119,140 1,094,100 

Trinidad 1,868 279,700 

Tristan da Cunha 45 100 

Uganda 80,000 4,000,000 

Windward islands 500 162,800 

Zanzibar and Pemba 1,020 200,000 

GERMANY. 

Bismarck archipelago.... 20,000 

Caroline islands, etc.... 810 

German East Africa 384,180 

German Southw't Africa 322.450 200.000 

Kaiser Wilhelm Land.... 70,000 110.000 



WORLD'S COPPER PRODUCTION. 



107 



Kamerun 191,130 

Kiauchau Bay 200 

Mariaua islands 250 

Marshall Islands 150 

Samoan Islands 1,000 

Solomon islands 4,200 

Togoland 33,700 

ITALY. 

Eritrea, etc 88,500 

Somali Coast 100,000 

JAPAN. 

Formosa 13,455 

Pescadores 85 

NETHERLANDS. 

Guiana 46,060 

Bali and Lombok 4,065 

Banca 4,446 

Billiton 1,863 

Borneo 212,737 

Celebes 71,470 

Curacao 403 

Java and Madura .. 50,554 

Molucca islands 43,864 

New Guinea 151,789 

Riau Luiga 16,301 

Sumatra 161,612 

Timor, Dutch 17,698 

PORTUGAL. 

Angela 484,800 

Azores and Madeira 1,510 

Cape Verde islands 1,480 



Sq.miles. Population. 



3,500,000 
60,000 
2,000 
13,000 
19,100 
45,000 

3,500,000 

450,000 
400,000 

2,705,905 
52,256 



431,696 

103,305 

43,386 

1,087,597 

1,742,647 

52,301 

28,745,698 

430,855 

200,000 

74,483 

3,052,699 

119,239 

4,119,000 
407,002 
147,424 



East Africa 

Goa 

Guinea 

Damao, Diu 

Macao 4 

Prince's and St. Thomas. 360 

Timor 7,458 

RUSSIA. 

Bokhara 92,000 

Khiva 22,320 

Kwangtung 79,456 

SPAIN. 

Canaries 2,807 

Ceuta 13 

Fernando Po, etc 850 

Rio de Oro and Adrar.... 243,027 

Rio Muni, etc 9,000 

TURKEY. 

Bulgaria, East Roumelia. 38,080 

Crete 3,326 

Egypt 400,000 

Samos 180 

Tripoli 398,900 

UNITED STATES. 

Alaska 599,446 

Guam 150 

Hawaii 6,449 

Porto Rico 3,606 

Philippines 119,542 

Samoan islands 79 



Sq.miles. Population. 
. 301,000 3,120,000 

1,390 

4,440 



494,836 
820,007 
77,454 
78,627 
42,103 
300,000 



1,250,000 
800,000 



358,564 
13,000 
23,709 

100,000 
302 



3,744,283 

303,543 

9,734,405 

54,830 

1,300,000 

63,592 

9,000 

154,001 

953,243 

8,000,000 

5,800 



REVOLUTION IN SERVIA. 



Early on the morning of June 11, 1903, a 
number of military conspirators entered the 
royal palace in Belgrade, Servia. and as- 
sassinated King Alexander and Queen 
Draga. They also killed Gen. Lazar Petro- 
vich, the king's aid-de-camp; Nicodem and 
Nikola Lungevica, the queen's brothers; Gen. 
Markovich, the prime minister; Gen. Paulo- 
vich, Gen. Nikovich, M. Todorovich, Capt. 
Milkovich and Lieut. Gagovich. 

The cause given for the coup d'etat was 
the alleged determination of the king and 
queen to adopt as heir to the throne Draga's 
brother, Lieut. Nicodem Lungevica. This 
was regarded with much dissatisfaction, as 
his family was not of royal blood. The mar- 
riage of King Alexander to Draga, the di.- 
vorced wife of a physician and at one time 
lady-in-waiting to Queen Natalie, the king's 
mother, was also a source of irritation in 
military circles and unsuccessful efforts had 
been made to drive her from the throne. 

Col. Maschin, the queen's brother-in-law, 
was the leader of the conspiracy. He had 
gathered around him a number of officers 



opposed to the Obrenovich dynasty and also 
had the support of the adherents of Peter 
KarageorgeTich, who claimed the throne be- 
cause of his descent from the family dis- 
possessed in 1859 by the house of Obreno- 
vich. He had made his home in Geneva, 
Switzerland, and was aware of the plot in 
his favor, but afterward declared that he 
was opposed to assassination and deplored 
the killing of the king and queen. Prince 
Peter was announced by the conspirators a8 
the choice of the Servian people for their 
ruler and on the 15th of June he was form- 
ally elected to the throne by the parlia- 
ment in Belgrade. He arrived at the capi- 
tal June 24 and took the oath of office on 
the following day. None of the representa- 
tives of the foreign powers was present, the 
ministers by agreement having withdrawn 
as a protest against the assassination of 
King Alexander and Queen Draga. King 
Karageorgevich was recognized officially by 
Russia and Austria and was personally con- 
gratulated by monarchs of other European 
nations. 



WORLD'S COPPER PRODUCTION. 

(In tons of 2,240 pounds.) 

From report of Henry R. Merton & Co., London, England. 
1901. 



United States 267,410 294,600 

Canada 18,800 17,485 

Mexico 30,430 35,785 

Newfoundland 2,000 2,000 

Argentina 85 240 

Bolivia 2,000 2,000 

Chile 30,780 28,930 

Peru 9.520 7,580 

Austria 1,015 1,015 

England 532 600 

Germany 21,790 21,605 

Hungary 320 485 



Norway 3,375 

Russia 8,000 

Spain and Portugal 53,621 

Sweden 450 

Turkey 980 

Japan 27,475 

Cape of Good Hope 6,400 

Australia 30.875 



1902. 
3,370 
3,565 
4,000 

49,790 

455 

1,100 

29,775 
4.450 

28,640 



Total 518,788 542,470 



108 . CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



THE NOBEL PRIZE FUND. 

[Prepared for The Daily News Almanac and Year Book by Dr. D. O. Bell of Stockholm and 
approved by the Nobel committee in Sweden.] 



Alfred Bernhard Nobel, son of Immanuel 
Nobel, an eminent engineer, was born in 
Stockholm, Sweden, Oct. 21, 1833. In 1867 he 
invented dynamite, which he introduced as a 
blasting agent for industrial purposes. For 
the manufacture and sale of this and other 
explosives, such as smokeless powder and 
callistite, he formed companies and estab- 
lished factories in various parts of the world 
and soon amassed a considerable fortune. 
With two brothers he was also largely inter- 
ested in a naphtha enterprise in Russia. In 
1893 he was created honorary doctor of phi- 
losophy by the University of Dpsala. He died 
at his villa at San Remo, on the Mediter- 
ranean, Dec. 10, 1896, leaving an estate val- 
ued at $8,465,370.14. 

PROVISIONS OF THE WILL. 

The will disposing of this great property 
contained provisions for establishing what 
has since become widely known as the Nobel 
fund. The essential part of the document 
as translated from the original Swedish fol- 
lows: 

"With the residue of my convertible estate 
I hereby direct my executors to proceed as 
follows: They shall convert my said residue 
of property into money, which they shall 
then invest in safe securities; the capital 
thus secured shall constitute a fund the in- 
teres't accruing from which shall be annually 
awarded in prizes to those persons who shall 
have contributed most materially to benefit 
mankind during the year immediately pie- 
ceding. The interest shall be divided in'o 
five equal amounts, to be apportioned as fol- 
lows: One share to the person who shall 
have made the most important discovery or 
Invention in the domain of physics; one 
share to the person who shall have made the 
most important chemical discovery or im- 
provement; one share to the person who efiall 
have made the most Important discovery in 
the domain of physiology or medicine: ono 
share to the person who shall have produced 
in the field of literature the most distin- 
guished work of an idealistic tendency; and, 
finally, one share to the person who shall 
have most or best promoted the fraternity of 
nations and the abolishment or diminution 
of standing armies and the formation and In- 
crease of peace congresses. The prizes for 
physics and chemistry shall be awarded by 
the Swedish Academy of Science (Svenska 
Vetenskapsakademien) in Stockholm; the one 
for physiology or medicine by the Caroline 
Medical institute (Karollnska Institute!) in 
Stockholm; the prize for literature by the 
Academy in Stockholm (i. e., Svenska Akade- 
mien), and that for peace by a committee of 
five persons to be elected by the Norwegian 
storthing. I declare It to be my express de- 
sire that in the awarding of prizes no consid- 
eration whatever be paid fo the nationality 
of the candidates; that is to say, that the 
most deserving be awarded the prize, wheth- 
er of Scandinavian origin or not." 

AS OFFICIALLY CONSTRUED. 

In order to put the will into practice and 
complete its stipulations King Oscar II. has 
approved a code of statutes or rules for the 
Nobel foundation (in Swedish, "Nobelstift el- 
sen"), of which the following are the most 



important: 
The term 



literature" used In the will 



shall be understood to embrace not only 
works falling under the category of polite 
literature but also other writings which may 
claim to possess literary value by reason of 
their form or their mode of exposition. 

The proviso in the will to the effect that 
for the prize competition only such works or 
inventions shall be eligible as have appeared 
"during the preceding year" is to be so un- 
derstood that a work or an invention for 
which a reward under the terms of the will 
is contemplated shall set forth the most 
modern results of work being done in that of 
the departments as defined in the will to 
which it belongs; works or inventions of old- 
er standing to he taken into consideration 
only in case their importance has not previ- 
ously been demonstrated. 

Every written work to qualify for a prize 
must have appeared in print. 

The amount allotted to one prize may be 
divided equally between two works submit- 
ted should each of such works be deemed to 
merit a prize. 

In cases where two or more persons shall 
have executed a work in conjunction, and 
that work be awarded a prize, such prize 
shall be presented to them Jointly. 

The work of any person since deceased 
cannot be submitted for award; should, how- 
ever, the death of the individual in question 
have occurred subsequent to a recommenda- 
tion having oeen made in due course that 
his work receive a prize, such prize may be 
awarded. 

It shall fall to the lot of each corporation 
entitled to adjudicate prizes to determine 
whether the prize or prizes they have to 
award might likewise be granted to some in- 
stitution or society. 

THE PRIZE ADJUDICATORS. 

For Physics and Chemistry The Royal 
Academy of Science in Stockholm, founded 
in 1739 for the purpose of encouraging the 
study of the sciences and to publish scientific 
papers and monographs. The institution 
numbers 100 Swedish and Norwegian and 
seventy-five foreign members. 

For Medicine The Caroline Medical-Chi- 
rurgical institute 'in Stockholm, founded in 
1815. It corresponds to a university medical 
faculty, having a staff of twenty-two pro- 
fessors who give theoretical and practical 
instruction in the medical sciences. 

For Literature The Swedish academy In 
Stockholm, founded in 1786 for the purpose 
of preserving the purity, force and elevation 
of diction in the Swedish language, especially 
in works of poetry and elocution, though 
scientific and religious works are not exclud- 
ed. Part of its mission is to prepare for pub- 
lication a dictionary and grammar of the 
Swedish language and to issue papers and 
treatises calculated to establish and culti- 
vate good taste. It awards annual prizes to 
winners of competitions in elocution and 
poetry. The membership of the academy is 
fixed at eighteen. 

For the Peace Prize The Norwegian Nobel 
committee, elected by the Norwegian parlia- 
ment and consisting in 1903 of the following 
members: Mr. Lovland, minister, chairman; 
Mr. Lund, director of the Bank of .Norway; 
Mr. Steen, ex-prime minister; Mr. BJo'rnst- 
jerne BjSrnson, the poet, and Mr. Herat, 
president of the storthing. 



THE NOBEL PRIZE FUND. 



It is essential that every candidate for a 
prize under the terms of the will be pro- 
posed as such in writing by some duly quali- 
fied person. A direct application for a prize 
will not be considered. At each annual ad- 
judication such proposals as have been hand- 
ed in during the twelve months preceding 
the 1st of February are considered. 
PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY. 

Those who have the right to hand in names 
of candidates for the physics and chemistry 
prize are: 

1. Home and foreign members of the Royal 
Academy of Science in Stockholm. 

2. Members of the Nobel committees of the 
physical and chemical sections as denned in 
the code. 

3. Scientists who have received a Nobel 
prize from the Academy of Science. 

4. Professors of the physical and chemical 
sciences at the Universities of Upsala, Lund, 
Christiania, Copenhagen and Helsingfors, at 
the Caroline Medico-Chirurgical institute 
and the Royal Technical college in Stock- 
holm, and also those teachers of the same 
subjects who are on the permanent staff of 
the Stockholm University college. 

5. Holders of similar chairs at other uni- 
versities or university colleges to the num- 
ber of at least six, to be selected by the 
Academy of Science in the way most appro- 
priate for the just representation of the rari- 
ous countries and their respective seats of 
learning. 

6. Other scientists whom the Academy of 
Science may see fit to select. The selections 
provided for in the last two paragraphs must 
be made before the end of September of each 
year. 

FOR MEDICINE. 

1. Members of the professorial staff of the 
Caroline institute. 

2. Members of the medical class in the 
Royal Academy of Science. 

3. Those persons who shall have received a 
Nobel prize In the medical section. 

4. Members of the medical faculties at the 
Universities of Upsala. Lund, Christiania, 
Copenhagen and Helsingfors. 

6. Members of at least six other medical 
faculties to be selected by the staff of the 
Caroline institute in the way most appropri- 
ate for the just representation of the vari- 
ous countries and their respective seats of 
learning. 

6. Scientists whom the said staff may see 
fit to select. The selections under section g 
5 and 6 shall be made within the first half 
of September, the Initial proposal to ema- 
nate from the Nobel committee. 
FOR LITERATURE. 

Members of the Swedish academy and of 
the academies in France and Spain which 
are similar to it in constitution and purpose; 
members also of the humanistic classes of 
other academies and of those humanistic In- 
stitutions and societies that are on the same 
footing as academies, and teachers of SPS- 
thetics, literature and history at university 
colleges. 

FOR THE PEACE PRIZE. 

Members of the Nobel committee of the 
Norwegian storthing; members of the legis- 
lative assemblies and of the governments of 
the various states; members of the interpar- 
liamentary council; members of the perma- 
nent international peace commission: mem- 
bers of the "Instltut de Droit Internation- 
al-"; professors of law and of political 
science, history and philosophy in the uni- 



versities; persons who have received the 
Nobel peace prize. 

For each of the four sections in which a 
Swedish corporation is charged with ad- 
judicating the prizes that corporation shall 
appoint a committee of three or five mem- 
bers to make suggestions with reference to 
the award. The presidents of the Swedish 
committees are: Physics, Prof. Hasselberg; 
chemistry, Prof. Cleve; medicine, Prof. 
Count Morner; literature, D:r af Wirsfin. 

The adjudicators are authorized to estab- 
lish institutes to assist in making the 
awards and to promote the object of the fund 
in other ways. One Nobel institute for lit- 
erature has been established in Stockholm. 
The Norwegian Nobel committee has estab- 
lished a library in Christiania containing lit- 
erature appertaining to peace and interna- 
tional law. 

ADMINISTRATION. 

The Nobel fund is administered by a board 
of control located in Stockholm. The board 
consists of the following five members. 

1. Mr. E. G. Bostrom, prime minister of 
Sweden, chairman. Mr. G. F. Gilljam, chan- 
cellor of the Swedish universities, Is acting 
chairman at the sittings of the board. 

2. Mr. H. Santesson, barrister, managing 
director. 

3. Mr. R. TSrneblad, a director of the Bank 
of Sweden. 

4. Mr. R. Sohlman, engineer, one of the 
executors of Alfred Nobel's will. 

5. Baron G. Tamm, ex-minister and ex- 
governor of Stockholm. 

Five auditors pass upon the administration 
and accounts of the board once a year. 
CAPITAL AND INCOME. 

The capital of the Nobel fund amounted on 
Dec. 31, 1902, to $7,462,563.44 (Swedish crowns 
27,845,385.85). The disposition of the annual 
income is as follows: From that portion of 
the income derived from the main fund that 
it falls to the lot of each of the five sections 
annually to distribute, one-fourth shall be 
deducted before the distribution is made. 
The immediate expenses connected with the 
award having been discharged the remainder 
of the amount deducted as above directed 
shall be employed to meet the expenses of 
the section in maintaining its Nobel Insti- 
tute. The money which is not absorbed in 
thus defraying the current expenditures for 
the year shall form a reserve fund for the fu- 
ture needs of the institute. One-tenth part 
of the annual Income derived from the main 
fund shall be added to the capital. To the 
same fund shall be also added the Interest 
accruing from the sums set aside for prizes 
while they remain undistributed or have not 
been carried over to the main or other (spe- 
cial) fund. 

The income derived from the main fund in 
1902 amounted to $280,620.92. A deduction 
therefrom of one-tenth, or $28.062.09, waa 
added to the main fund and the remainder. 
$252,558.83, was divided into five equal parts 
each of $50.511.76. From this amount one- 
fourth, or $12,627.94, is deducted to meet the 
expenses as above directed, and three- 
fourths, or $37,883.82 (Swedish crowns, 141,- 
357.57), is thus the amount of each of the 
five Nobel prizes awarded Dec. 10, 1903. 

In 1902 each prize amounted to $38,014.87 
and in 1901 (the first year) to $40,409.64. 
WINNERS OF PRIZES. 

Physics In 1901, William Conrad Roent- 
gen, professor of physics at the University of 
Munich, for his discovery of the rays bear- 
ing his name; in 1902, divided equally be- 



110 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


tween Henrik Anton Lorentz, professor of 
physics at the University of Leyden, and 
Peter Zeeman, professor of physics at the 
University of Amsterdam, for their re- 
searches in the effects of magnetism on the 
phenomena of radiation. 
Chemistry In 1901, Jakob Hendrik van't 
Hoff, professor of chemistry In the Univer- 
sity of Berlin, for discovering the laws of 
chemical dynamics and of osmotic pressure 
in solutions; in 1902, Emil Fischer, professor 
of chemistry at the University of Berlin, for 
his synthetic works within the sugar and 
purine groups. 
Medicine In 1901, Emil Adolf von Behring, 
professor of hygiene and medical history at 
the University of Marburg, Prussia, for his 
works on serum therapeutics, with especial 
reference to diphtheria; in 1902, Ronald Ross, 
professor of tropical medicine at the Uni- 
versity College of Liverpool, for his discoT- 
ery of the cause and cure of malaria. 


Literature In 1901, Rene Francois Armand 
Sully-Prudhomme, member of the French 
academy, for poetical works exhibiting the 
highest idealism and artistic perfection as 
well as a rare union of the qualities of heart 
and genius; in 1902, Theodor Mommsen, pro- 
fessor of history at the University of Berlin, 
"the greatest living master of the art of his- 
torical writing, with special regard to his 
monumental work 'Rb'mische Geschichte.' " 
Peace In 1901, divided equally between 
Henri Dunant, founder of the International 
Red Cross Society of Geneva, and Frederic 
Passy, founder of the first French peace as- 
sociation, the "Societe Francaise pour 1' Ar- 
bitrage Entre Nations"; In 1902, divided 
equally between Elie Ducommum, honorary 
secretary of the international peace bureau 
at Bern, and Albert Gobat, chief of the in- 
terparliamentary peace bureau at Bern. 
The prizes 'are awarded on the 10th of De- 
cember of each year. 


STATISTICS OF RAILROADS 
[From the report of the interstate-commer 

MILEAGE AND EQUIPMENT. 


IN THE TJ1T 

ce commission f 
Interest and. 1 
Net dividends 

Surplus 


[TED STATES. 

or year ended June 30, 1902.] 
axes $322,478,387 


157,215,380 


Second track 13,721 


172 977.RKR 


Third track 1,204 
Fourth track 895 


INCREASE OF MILEAGE. 

Year. Mileage. Increase. 
1902 202,472 5,234 


Yards and sidings 58,221 




Total miles track 274,195 


Number of locomotives 41,225 
Number of cars 1,640,185 


1901 
1900 

1899 


197,237 3,892 
193,345 4,051 
189 294 2 898 


Number of employes 1, 189, 315 

PUBLIC SERVICE. 

Passengers carried 649,878,505 


1898 

1897 


186,396 1,967 
184 428 1 651 


1896 


182,776 2,119 


Tons freight carried 1,200,315,787 

CAPITALIZATION. 

Common stock . $4,722,056,120 


MI 

Alabama ... 
Arkansas ... 
California .. 
Colorado . . . 
Connecticut. 
Delaware . . 
Florida 
Georgia 
Idaho 


LEAGE BY STATES. 

4,426.96 New Jersey. 2,271.60 
3,578.55 New York... 8,188.71 
5,979.10 N. Carolina. 3,895.51 
4,791.00 N. Dakota.. 2,950.78 
1,026.12 Ohio 8,972.94 
335.81 Oregon 1,685.40 
3,402.21 Pennsyl'nia. 10,581.47 
6,022.41 Rh. Island.. 211.89 
1,446.33 S. Carolina. 3,074.03 
1,299.43 S. Dakota... 2,992.10 
6,756.70 Tennessee .. 3,318.85 
9,493.79 Texas 10,761.40 
8,777.75 Utah 1,564.55 
3,143.61 Vermont .... 1,054.42 
3,285.79 Virginia .... 3,832.21 
1,932.59 Washington. 3,157.79 
1,414.47 W. Virginia 2,573.84 
2,117.02 Wisconsin .. 6,833.87 
8,415.73 Wyoming ... 1,238.92 


Preferred stock 1 302 145 175 


Funded debt 6,109,981,669 


Total 12 134 182 964 


Capital per mile. 62,301 


Current liabilities 643 563,064 


EARNINGS AND EXPENSES. 

Passenger revenue $392,963,248 


Illinois 1 
Indiana .... 


Mail 39,835,844 


Express 34,253,459 
Other earnings (passenger) 8,858,769 
Freight ... 1207,228,845 


Kansas 
Kentucky .. 
Louisiana .. 
Maine 
Maryland . . 
Massach'ts.. 
Michigan ... 
Minnesota .. 
Mississippi . 
Missouri .... 
Montana .... 
Nebraska ... 
Nevada 
N. H'pshire 

NIYERSARIES 

and fine linen, 
'stal. 
ina. 
Silver. 


Other earnings (freight) 4,846,718 
Other earnings from operation. 38,339.384 
Unclassified 54,000 


Gross earnings 1,726,380,267 


Clear income from investments 43,067,141 


3,136.96 Arizona .... 1,620.52 
7.086.15 D. of Col'bia 31.75 
3,214.63 Indian Ter.. 1,793.05 
5,742.94 New Mexico 2,017.86 
951.49 Oklahoma .. 1.455.52 
1,248.09 Un. States. ."202,471.85 

Thirtieth Pearl. 
Fortieth Ruby. 
Fiftieth Golden. 
Seventy -fifth Diamond. 


Total 1769447,408 


Operating expenses 1,116,775,785 




Net earnings 652671623 


WEDDING AN 

First Cotton. Tenth Tin. 
Second Paper. Twelfth Silk 
Third Leather. Fifteenth Crj 
Fifth Wooden. Twentieth Ct 
Seventh Woolen. Twenty-fifth 



DATES OF RECENT HISTORICAL EVENTS. 



DATES OF RECENT HISTORICAL EVENTS. 



Aguinaldo captured, March 23, 1901. 

Alfonso III. ascended throne of Spain, May 
17, 1902. 

Alger, Secretary, resigned, July 19, 1899. 

Anarchists pardoned by Altgeld, June 26, 
1893. 

Andree began arctic balloon trip, July 11, 
1897. 

Anglo-American arbitration treaty signed, 
Jan. 11, 1897. 

Anglo-Boer war began, Oct. 10, 1899; ended, 
May 31, 1902. 

Anglo-Japanese treaty signed, Jan. 30, 1902. 

Armenian massacres began In 189J; culmi- 
nated in 1895, 1896 and 1897. 

Australian commonwealth inaugurated, Jan. 

I, 1900. 

Bering sea seal treaty signed, Nov. 8. 1897. 
Bismarck resigned chancellorship, March 18, 

1890; died, July 30, 1898. 

Borda, President, assassinated, Aug. 25, 1897. 
Boxer outbreak in China began. May, 1900. 
Brazil proclaimed a republic, Nov. 15, 1889. 
Cable, Pacific, laying of begun at San Fran- 
cisco, Dec. 14, 1902. 

Campanile in Venice fell, July 14, 1902. 
Carnot, President, assassinated, June 24, 

1894. 
Caroline islands bought by Germany, Oct. 1, 

1899. 
Cholera epidemic in Hamburg, Germany, 

August, 1892. 
Coal (anthracite) strike began, May 12, 1902; 

ended, Oct. 21, 1902. 
Corinth ship canal opened, Aug. 6, 1893. 
Cuba under sovereignty of United States, 

Jan. 1, 1899. 

Cuban constitution signed. Feb. 21. 1901. 
Cuban republic inaugurated, May 20, 1902. 
Cuban revolt began, Feb. 24, 1895. 
Czolgosz, McKinley's assassin, tried and sen- 
tenced, Sept. 24, 1901; executed, Oct. 29, 

1901. 
De Lesseps, Ferdinand, convicted of Panama 

fraud, Feb. 9, 1893. 

Delhi coronation durbar began, Dec. 29, 1902. 
Dewey's victory at Manila, May 1, 1898. 
Dingley tariff bill signed, July 24, 1897. 
Dom Pedro exiled from Brazil, Nov. 16, 1889. 
Dreyfus, Capt., degraded and sent to Devil's 

island, Jan. 4, 1895; brought back to 

France. July 3, 1899; new trial begun, Aug. 

7; found guilty, Sept. 9; pardoned Sept. 

19, 1899. 
Edward VII. proclaimed king, Jan. 24, 1901; 

crowned, Aug. 9, 1902. 
Elizabeth, empress of Austria, assassinated, 

Sept. 10, 1898. 
Emmanuel III., king of Italy, crowned, Aug. 

II, 1902. 

Formosa transferred to Japan, June 4, 1895. 

Galveston tornado, Sept. 8, 1900. 

Gladstone resigned premiership, March 2, 

1894; died, May 19, 1898. 
Goebel, Gov. William, shot, Jan. 30, 1900; 

died, Feb. 3. 
Greco-Turkish war began, April 16, 1897; 

ended, May 11, 1897; peace treaty signed, 

Sept. 18, 1897. 

Harrison, Benjamin, died, March 13, 1901. 
Harrison, Carter, Sr., assassinated, Oct. 28, 

1893. 

Hawaii made a republic, July 4, 1894; an- 
nexed to United States, Aug. 12, 1896; made 

a territory. June 14. 1900. 
Hay-Pauncefote isthmian canal treaty 

signed, Nov. 18, 1901. 
Homestead, Pa., labor riot. July 6. 1892. 



Hugo, Victor, centenary celebration begun in 

Paris, Feb. 26, 1902. 

Humbert, King, assassinated, July 29, 1900. 
Idaho admitted as a state, July 3, 1890. 
Isthmian canal bill signed by president, 

June 28, 1902. 
Italian army routed in Abyssinia, March 1, 

1896. 
Italian prisoners lynched in New Orleans, 

March 14, 1891. 
Jameson raiders in Transvaal routed, Jan. 

2, 1896. 
Japan declared war on China, Aug. 1, 1894; 

war ended, April 17, 1895. 
Johnstown flood, May 31, 1889. 
Ketteler, Baron von, killed in Pekin, June 

20, 1900. 

Koch's lymph cure announced, Nov. 17, 1890. 
Kossuth, Louis, died, March 20, 1894. 
Lawton, Gen. H. W., killed, Dec. 19, 1899. 
Leiter wheat deal collapsed, June 13, 1898. 
Liliuokalani, queen of Hawaii, deposed, Jan. 

16, 1893. 

Madagascar annexed to France, Jan. 23, 1896. 
Maine blown up, Feb. 15, 1898. 
Marconi signals letter "S" across Atlantic, 

Dec. 11, 1901. 
Meyerbeer centenary celebrated in Berlin, 

Sept. 5, 1891. 
McKinley, President, shot by anarchist, 

Sept. 6, 1901; died, Sept. 14, 1901. 
Nansen arctic expedition started July 21, 

1893; returned, Aug. 13, 1896. 
Nicholas II. proclaimed czar of Russia, Nov. 

2, 1894; crowned, May 26, 1896. 
Omdurman, battle of, Sept. 4, 1898. 
Panama fraud trials in Paris, Jan. 10 to 

March 21, 1893. 
Pan-American congress, first, began, Oct. 

2, 1889; second, Oct. 23, 1902. 
Peace congress called by czar, Aug. 24, 1898. 

opened at The Hague, May 18, 1899; closed, 

July 29, 1899. 

Pekin captured by the allies, Aug. 15, 1900. 
Philippine-American war began, Feb. 4, 1899; 

ended, April 30, 1902. 
Philippines ceded to the United States, Dec. 

10, 1898. 

Pope Leo XIII. died, July 20, 1903. 
Pope Pius X. elected, Aug. 4, 1903. 
Port Arthur captured by Japanese, Nov. 21, 

1894. 
Porto Rico ceded to the United States, ]>ec. 

10, 1898. 

Porto Rico hurricane, Aug. 8, 1899. 
Pretoria captured by the British, June 4, 

1900. 
Pullman strike began. May 11, 1894; boycott 

began, June 26; rioting in Chicago and 

vicinity, June and July; strike and boycott 

ended, August. 

Rhodes, Cecil, died, March 26, 1902. 
Roentgen ray discovery made public, Feb. 1, 

1896. 
Salisbury, Premier, resigned, July 13, 1902; 

died, Aug. 22, 1903. 
St. Louis cyclone, May 27, 1896. 
St. Pierre, Martinique, destroyed, May 8, 

1902. 
San Juan and El Caney, battles of, July 1, 

1898. 
Santiago de Cuba, naval battle of, July 3, 

1898. 

Santiago de Cuba surrendered, July 17, 1898. 
Schley inquiry ordered, July 26, 1901; began, 

Sept. 20; ended, Nov. 7; verdict announced, 

Dec. 13. 



112 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Servia, king and queen of, assassinated, 

June 11, 1903. 

Shah of Persia assassinated, May 1, 1896. 
Spanish-American war began, April 25, 1898; 

peace protocol signed, Aug. 12, 1898; Paris 

peace treaty signed, Dec. 12; peace treaty 

ratified, Feb. 6, 1899. 

Steel workers' strike began, Aug. 10, 1901. 
Stone, Ellen M., captured by brigands, Sept. 

3, 1901; released, Feb. 23, 19u2. 
Transvaal republic annexed to Great Britain, 

Sept. 1, 1900. 
Utah admitted as a state, Feb. 4, 1896. 



Venezuelan blockade by England, Germany 

and Italy began in first part of December, 

1902; ended, Feb. 13. 1903. 
Victoria, queen of England, died, Jan. 22. 

1901. 
Wilhelmina proclaimed queen of Holland, 

Aug. 31, 1898. 
Windsor hotel, New York, burned, March 17, 

1899. 
World's Fair in Chicago opened, May 1, 1893; 

ended, Oct. 30, 1893. 

Wyoming admitted as a state, July 10, 1890. 
Yalu, battle of, Sept. 17, 1894. 



CHRONOLOGY OF RECENT WARS. 



SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR, 1898. 

Maine blown up Feb. 15 

Diplomatic relations broken April 21 

Cuban blockade declared April 22 

War declared by Spain April 24 

War declared by United States April 25 

Dewey'a victory at Manila May 1 

Hobson's Merrimac exploit June 3 

U. S. army corps land in Cuba June 21 

Battle at El Caney and San Juan July 1 

Cervera's fleet destroyed July 3 

Santiago de Cuba surrenders July 17 

Peace protocol signed Aug. 12 

Surrender of Manila Aug. 13 

Peace treaty signed in Paris Dec. 12 

PHILIPPINE WAR, 1899-1902. 

Hostilities begin Feb., 4, 1899 

Battles around Manila Feb. 4-7, 1899 

Battle at Pasig March 13, 1899 

Santa Cruz captured April 25, 1899 

San Fernando captured May 5, 1899 

Battle at Bacoor June 13, 1899 

Battle at Imus ...June 16, 1899 

Battle at Colamba ....July 26, 1899 

Battle at Calulut Aug. 9, 1899 



Battle at Angeles Aug. 16, 

Maj. John A. Logan killed Nov. 14, 

Gen. Gregorio del Pilar killed. Dec. 10, 

Gen. Lawton killed Dec. 19, 

Taft commission appointed.. ..Feb. 25, 

Aguinaldo captured March 23, 

End of the war April 30, 

Military governorship ended July 4, 

ANGLO-BOER WAR, 1899-1902. 

Boers declare war Oct. 10, 

Boers invade Natal Oct. 12, 

Battle of Glencoe.... Oct. 20, 

Battle of Magersfontein Dec. 10, 

Battle at Colesburg Dec. 31, 

Spion Kop battles Jan. 23-25, 

Kimberley relieved Feb. 15, 

Gen. Cronje surrenders t eb. 27, 

Ladysmith relieved March 1, 

Maf eking relieved May 17, 

Johannesburg captured May 30, 

Orange Free State annexed May 30, 

Pretoria captured June 4, 

South African Republic annexed. Sept. 1, 

Gen. Methuen captured March 7, 

Treaty of peace signed May 31, 



1899 
1899 
1899 
1900 
1901 
1902 



1899 
1899 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1902 
1902 



DEATH OF POPE IEO XTTT. 



Joachim Pecci, who as Pope Leo XIII. 
was the 263d successor of St. Peter as su- 
preme pontiff of the catholic church, died at 
the Vatican in Rome, July 20, 1903. His last 
illness began July 3, when he was stricken 
with a form of pneumonia, and for sixteen 
days he hovered between life and death be- 
fore the end came. He was attended by Drs. 
Lapponi, Mazzoni and Rossoni, who did all in 
their power to prolong his existence, but his 
advanced age made recovery impossible. 
Following is a brief chronology of his life: 

Born at Carpineto, Italy, March 2, 1810. 

Ordained priest Dec. 31, 1837. 

Consecrated archbishop of Damietta, Feb. 
17, 1843. 

Transferred to see of Perugia Jan. 19, 1846. 

Proclaimed cardinal Dec. 19, 1853. 

Created Cardinal Camerlengo July, 1877. 

Elected pope Feb. 20, 1878. 

Crowned March 3, 1878. 



Issued encyclical against communism Dec. 
28, 1878. 

Encyclical against divorce Feb. 18, 1880. 

Encyclical against heresy, socialism, etc., 
Nov. 5. 1882. 

Condemned liberalism Nov. 6, 1885. 

Asserted territorial rights June 15, 1887. 

Celebrated jubilee Jan. 1-5. 1888. 

Encyclical on labor question May 16, 1891. 

Episcopal jubilee February, 1893. 

Issued encyclical on Americanism Feb- 
ruary, 1900. 

Encyclical on "Recent Errors of Human- 
ity," March 29, 1902. 

Encyclical on the scriptures Oct. 30, 1902. 

Celebrated 25th anniversary of his election 
as pope Feb. 20, 1903. 

Celebrated 93d birthday anniversary March 
2, 1903. 

Died July 20, 1903. 



UNDERGROUND RAILROAD DISASTER IN PARIS. 



Nearly 100 persons lost their lives in the 
tunnel of the Paris Metropolitan Electric 
railway near the Menilmontant station on 
the evening of Aug. 10, 1903. A train with a 
defective motor was being pushed by an- 
other train to the repair shops, when both 
caught fire and were consumed. These 
trains had been emptied of passengers, but 
other trains coming from opposite directions 
were brought to a stop in the tunnel, which 



was now dark and full of smoke. A panic 
ensued during which men and women were 
trampled to death or killed by the live third 
rail. Many were suffocated by the dense 
fumes from the burning cars. The guards 
and other officials of the road at the scene 
of the accident lost their presence of. mind 
and only those of the passengers escaped 
who succeeded in reaching the few and ob- 
scure exits. 



LEGAL HOLIDAYS. 



113 



LEGAL HOLIDAYS. 



Alabama Jan. 1; Jan. 19 (Lee's birthday); 
Feb. 22; Alardi Gras (the (lay before Ash 
Wednesday, first day of Lent); Good Fri- 
day (the Friday before Jbiaster); April 26 
(Confederate Memorial day); June 3 (Jef- 
ferson Davis' birthday); July 4; Labor day 
(first Monday in September; Thanksgiving 
day (last Thursday in November) ; Dec. 25. 

Alaska Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30 (Decora- 
tion day); July 4; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 
25. 

Arizona Jan. 1; Arbor day (first Monday in 
February); Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; gen- 
eral election day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 
25. 

Arkansas Jan. 1; Feb. 22; July 4; Thanks- 
giving day; Dec. 25. 

California Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
Sept. 9 (Admission day); Labor day (first 
Monday in September); general election day 
in November; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Colorado Jan. 1; Feb. 22; Arbor and School 
day (third Friday in April); May 30; 
July 4; first Monday in September; gen- 
eral election day; Thanksgiving day; 
Dec. 25; every Saturday afternoon from 
June 1 to Aug. 31, in the city of Denver. 

Connecticut Jan. 1; Feb. 12 (Lincoln's 
birthday); Feb. 22; Good Friday; May 30; 
July 4; Labor day (first Monday in Septem- 
ber); Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Delaware Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; May 30; 
July 4; first Monday in September; 
Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

District of Columbia Jan. 1; Feb. 22; 
March 4 (Inauguration day); May 30; ^uly 
4; first Monday in September; Thanksgiv- 
ing day; Dec. 25. 

Florida Jan. 1; Jan. 19 (Lee's birthday); 
Arbor day (first Friday in February); 
Feb. 22; April 26 (Confederate Memorial 
day) ; June 3 (Jefferson Davis' birthday) ; 
July 4; first Monday in September; Thanks- 
giving day; general election day; Dec. 25. 

Georgia Jan. 1; Jan. 19 (Lee's birthday); 
Feb. 22; April 26 (Confederate Memorial 
day); June 3 (Jefferson Davis' birthday); 
July 4; first Monday in September; Thanks- 
giving day; Arbor day (first Friday in 
December); Dec. 25. 

Idaho Jan. 1; Feb. 22; Arbor day (first Fri- 
day after May 1); July 4; first Monday in 
September; general election day; Thanks- 
giving day; Dec. 25. 

Illinois Jan. 1; Feb. 12 (Lincoln's birth- 
day); Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; Labor day 
(first Monday in September); general, 
state, county and city election days; 
Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Indiana Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
first Monday in September; general elec- 
tion day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Indian Territory July 4; Dec. 25. 

Iowa Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; first 
Monday in September; general election 
day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Kansas The only holidays by statute are 
Feb. 22, May 30, Labor day (first Monday 
In September) and Arbor day; but the 
days commonly observed in other states 
are holidays by common consent. 

Kentucky Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; first 
Monday in September; Thanksgiving day; 
general election day: Dec. 25. 

Louisiana Jan. 1; Jan. 8 (anniversary of 
the battle of New Orleans): Feb. 22; 
Mardi Gras (day before Ash Wednesday): 
Good Friday (Friday before Eastor); April 



26 (Confederate Memorial day); July 4; 
Nov. 1 (All Saints' day); general election 
day; fourth Saturday in November (Labor 
day, in the parish of New Orleans only); 
Dec. 25; every Saturday afternoon in New 
Orleans. 

Maine Jan. 1; Feb. 22; Good Friday; May 
30; July 4; Labor day; Thanksgiving day; 
Dec. 25. 

Maryland Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
first Monday in September; Sept. 12 (De- 
fenders' day); general election day; Dec. 
25; every Saturday afternoon. 

Massachusetts Feb. 22; April 19 (Patriota' 
day); May 30; July 4; first Monday in 
September; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Michigan Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
first Monday in September; Thanksgiving 
day; Dec. 25. 

Minnesota Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; Good 
Friday (Friday before Easter); May 30; 
July 4; first Monday in September; 
Thanksgiving day; general election day; 
Dec. 25; Arbor day (as appointed by the 
governor). 

Mississippi First Monday In September; 
by common consent July 4, Thanksgiving 
day and Dec. 25 are observed as holi- 
days. 

Missouri Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
Labor day; general election day; Thanks- 
giving day; Dec. 25; every Saturday after- 
noon in cities of 100,000 or more inhabi- 
tants. 

Montana Jan. 1; Feb. 22; Arbor day (third 
Tuesday in April); May 30; July 4; first 
Monday in September; general election 
day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25; any day 
appointed by the governor as a fast day. 

Nebraska Jan. 1; Feb. 22; Arbor day (April 
22); May 30; July 4; first Monday in Sep- 
tember; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Nevada Jan. 1; Feb. 22; July 4; Thanksgiv- 
ing day; Dec. 25. 

New Hampshire Feb. 22; fast day appoint- 
ed by the governor; May 30; July 4; first 
Monday in September; Thanksgiving day; 
general election day; Dec. 25. 

New Jersey Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; May 
30; July 4; first Monday In September; 
general election day; Thanksgiving and 
fast days; and every Saturday afternoon. 

New Mexico Jan. 1; July 4; Thanksgiving 
and fast days; Dec. 25; Decoration, Labor 
and Arbor days appointed by the governor. 

New York Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; May 
30; July 4; first Monday in September; 
.general election day; Thanksgiving and 
fast days; Dec. 25; every Saturday after- 
noon. 

North Carolina Jan. 1; Jan. 19 (Lee's birth- 
day) ; May 10 (Confederate Memorial day) ; 
May 20 (anniversary of the signing of the 
Mecklenburg declaration of independence) ; 
July 4; state election day in August; 
first Thursday In September (Labor day); 
Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25; every Satur- 
day afternoon. 

North Dakota->Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; 
May 30; July 4; Arbor day (when appoint- 
ed by the governor); general election day; 
Thanksgiving day: Dec. 25. 

Ohio Jan. 1; Feb. 22: May 30; July 4; first 
Monday in September; general election 
day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25; every 



114 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOB 1904. 



Saturday afternoon in cities of 50,000 or 
more inhabitants. 

Dklahoma Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
general election day; Thanksgiving day; 
Dec. 25. 

Oregon Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; first Satur- 
day in June; July 4; first Monday in Sep- 
tember; general election day; Thanksgiv- 
ing day; public fast day; Dec. 25. 

Pennsylvania Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; May 
30; Good Friday; July 4; first Monday in 
September; general election day; Thanks- 
giving day; Dec. 25; every Saturday after- 
noon. 

Philippines Jan. 1; Feb. 22; Thursday and 
Friday of Holy week; July 4; Aug. 13; 
Thanksgiving' day; Dec. 25; Dec. 30. 

Porto Rico Jan. 1; Feb. 22; Good Friday; 
May 30; July 4; July 25 (Landing day); 
Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Rtfode Island Jan. 1; Feb. 22; second Fri- 
day in May (Arbor day); May 30; July 4; 
first Monday in September; general elec- 
tion day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

South Carolina Jan. 1; Jan. 19 (Lee's birth- 
day); Feb. 22; Mav 10 (Confederate Me- 
morial day); June 3 (Jefferson Davis' birth- 
day); general election day; Thanksgiving 
day; Dec. 25, 26, 27. 

South Dakota Same as in North Dakota. 

Tennessee Jan. 1; Good Friday; May 30; 
July 4; first Monday in September; gen- 
eral election day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 
25; every Saturday afternoon. 

Texas Jan. 1; Feb. 22 (Arbor day); March 
2 (anniversary of Texas Independence); 



April 21 (anniversary of battle of San 
Jacinto); July 4; first Monday in Septem- 
ber; general election day; appointed fast 
days; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Utah Jan. 1; Feb. 22; April 15 (Arbor day); 
May 30; July 4; July 24 (Pioneer day); first 
Monday in September; Thanksgiving and 
appointed fast days; Dec. 25. 

Vermont Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
Aug. 16 (Bennington Battle day); Labor 
day; Thanksgiving day ; Dec. 25. 

Virginia Jan. 1; Jan. 19 (Lee's birthday); 
Feb. 22; July 4; first Monday in Septem- 
ber; Thanksgiving and appointed fast 
days; Dec. 25; every Saturday afternoon. 

Washington Jan. 1; Feb. -12 (Lincoln's 
birthday); Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; first 
Monday in September; general election 
day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

West Virginia Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; 
May 30; July 4; La"bor day; general elec- 
tion day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Wisconsin Jan. 1; Feb. 22; May 30; July 4; 
first Monday in September; general elec- 
tion day; Thanksgiving day; Dec. 25. 

Wyoming Jan. 1; Feb. 12; Feb. 22; May 30; 
July 4; first Monday in September; gen- 
eral election day; Dec. 25. < 

The national holidays, such as July 4, 
New Year's, etc., are such by general cus- 
tom and observance and not because of 
-congressional legislation. Congress has 
passed no laws establishing holidays for the 
whole country. It has made Labor day a 
holiday in the District of Columbia, but 
the law is of no effect elsewhere. 



STATE NICKNAMES AND STATE FLOWERS. 



State. 
Alabama.. 
Arizona . . . 
Arkansas . 
California. 
Colorado . . 
Delaware.. 

Florida 

Georgia 

Idaho 

Illinois.... 
Indiana.... 

Iowa 

Kansas 
Kentucky.. 
Louisiana.. 

Maine 

Maryland 

Mass 

Michigan.. 
Minnesota. 
Mississippi 
Montana... 
Missouri... 
Nebraska . 
Nevada ... 



Nickname. Flower. 

.Cotton state Goldenrod 

Sequoia cactus 

. Bear state Apple blossom 

.Golden state Poppy 

. Centennial state Columbine 

.Blue Hen state Peach blossom 

.Peninsula state. 

. Cracker state Cherokee rose 

Syringa 

.Sucker state Rose 

.Hoosier state. 

.Hawkeye state Wild rose 

.Sunflower state Sunflower 

.Blue Grass state. 

. Pelican state Magnolia 

.Pine Tree state Pine cone 

.Old Line state. 
.Bay state. 

.Wolverine state Apple blossom 

. Gopher state Moccasin 

. Bayou state Magnolia 

.Stub Toe state . . .Bitter root 

Goldenrod 

Goldenrod 

.Silver state. 



Flower. 



Staff. Nickname. 
New Hamp.Granite state. 
New Jersey. Jersey Blue state Sugar maple 

New York.. Empire state Rose 

N.Carolina. Old North state. 

N. Dakota. .Flickertail state Goldenrod 

Ohio Buckeye state. 

Oklahoma Mistletoe 

Oregon Beaver state Oregon grape 

Pennsylv'iaKeystone state. 

Rhode'lsl. . .Little Rhody Violet 

S. Carolina.. Palmetto state. 
S. Dakota.. .Swinge Cat state. 
Tennessee ..Big Bend state. 

Texas Lone Star state Bluebonne 

Utah Seiro lily 

Vermont... .Green Mount'n state.. .Red clover 

Virginia The Old Dominion 

Washing'n.. Chinook state Rhododendron 

W. VirginiaThe Panhandle. 
Wisconsin. .Badger state. 

NOTE Only nicknames that are well known 
and "state flowers" ofllclally adopted or com' 
menly accepted are given in the foregoing list 



PRODUCTION OF STEEL RAILS IN THE TTNTTED STATES. 
[From statistics of the American Iron and Steel association.] 



Price Duty 

Year. Tons. per ton. per ton. 

1880 852,196 $67.50 $28.00 

1883 1,284,067 48.50 28.00 

1S85 959,471 28.50 17.00 

1890 1,867,887 31.75 13.44 

1894 1,016.013 24.00 7.84 

1897 1,644,520 18.75 7.84 

1898 1,976,702 17.64 7.84 

1899 2,270,585 28.12 7.84 



Price Duty 

Year. Tons. per ton. per ton 

1900 2,383,654 $32.29 $7.84 

1901 ;.... 2,870,816 27.33 7.84 

1902 2,876,293 28.00 7.84 

The highest price paid for rails was $132.2E 
per ton in 1869, while the lowest was $17.64 
per ton, paid in 1898, when the steel trad' 
was at its low period of depression. 



NORTHWESTERN GAME AND FISH LAWS. 



115 



NORTHWESTERN GAME AND FISH LAWS. 



(Revised to 

NOTE The laws as given below are neces- 
sarily very much condensed and many of 

'the restrictions as t& modes. of bunting and 
fishing and as to the transportation, ex- 
port and sale of game are omitted. Copies 
of the state laws may usually be obtained 
by writing to* the commissioners and war- 
dens whose names and addresses are given. 
The dates are for the open season except 
where it is otherwise specified. 

ILLINOIS. 

GAME Deer protected until 1914; quail, Nov. 
10 to Dec. 20; prairie chickens and par- 
tridges (after 1907), Aug. 31 to Oct. 1; wood- 
cock or mourning doves, Aug. 1 to Dec. 1; 
snipe and plover, Sept. 1 to May 1; squir- 
rels, July 1 to Dec. 1; pheasants cannot be 
killed until after 1908; wild geese, ducks, 
brant or other waterfowl, Sept. 1 to April 
15. One person is limited to fifty ducks 
and twenty-five other game birds in one 
day. The killing of wild birds other than 
sparrows, hawks and crows is forbidden. 

FISH Fishing with nets, June 1 to April 15; 
with seines, July 1 to April 15; fishing with 
hook and line, all the year. Black bass, 
pike and pickerel may be taken only with 
hook and line. The meshes of seines must 
be at least 1% inches square. Minimum 
length or weight of fishes allowed to be 
sold: Black bass, 11 inches; white or 
striped bass, 8; rock bass, 7; river croppie, 
7; white croppie, 8; yellow perch, 6; wall- 
eyed pike, 15; pike or pickerel, 18; buffalo, 
15; German carp, 13; native carp, 12; sun- 
fish, 6; red-eyed perch, 6; white perch, 10; 
common whitefish, 1* pounds; lake trout, 
1% pounds. 

LICENSES Issued by secretary of state; 
hunting license for nonresidents, $15.50; 
residents, $1. 

State Game Commissioner A. J. Lovejoy, 
Springfield, 111. 

WISCONSIN. 

GAME Deer, Nov. 10 to Dec. 1; in Sauk, 
Adams, Columbia, Richland and Marqnette 
counties, Nov. 20 to Dec. 1; protected in 
Fond du Lac, Sheboygan, Manitowoc and 
Calumet counties: protected in LaCrosse, 
Monroe, Verion, Trempealeau and Jackson 
counties until open season of 1907; hunting 
game of any kind during open deer season 
forbidden; kill limit, two deer in one sea- 
son. WoodcocK, partridge, pheasant, prairie 
chicken, grouse, plover and snipe, Sept. 1 
to Dec. 1; duck, brant, wild geese and 
snipe, April 10 to April 25 and Sept. 1 to 
Jan. l; teal, mallard and wood duck, Sept. 
1 to Jan. 1; quail protected until Sept. 1 
1905; kill limit for ducks, fifteen in one 
day. Rabbits and squirrels, Seut. 1 to 
May 1; marten, fisher, otter, inuskrat and 
mink, Feb. 1 to May 1; beaver protected. 

FISH Black and yellow bass, mnskellunge, 
pike, sturgeon and pickerel, May 25 to 
March 1; brook trout, April 15 to Sept. 1. 

LICENSES Nonresidents, for all kinds of 
game. $25; for all kinds except deer, $10; 
licenses for residents, free. 

State Game Warden Henry Overbeck, Jr., 
Madison, Wis. 



Oct. 1, 1903.) 

MICHIGAN. 

GAME Deer, Nov. 8 to 30, inclusive, except 
on Bois Blanc island and in Lapeer, Huron, 
Monroe, Sanilac, Tuscola, Macomb, Alle- 
gan, Ottawa and St. Clair counties, in 
which deer are protected until 1906; deer 
protected in Lake, Osceola, Clare, Mason, 
Manistee, Wexford, Missaukee, JNewaygo, 
Mecosta, Isabella, Benzie, Loelanaw, Grand 
Traverse, Oceana and Gladwin counties 
until 1908; moose, elk and caribou, pro- 
tected until 1911; prairie chicken, pheas- 
ants, wild turkeys and wild pigeons pro- 
tected until 1910; squirrels, Oct. 15 to Dec. 
1; otter, fisher and marten, Nov. 15 to May 
1; mink, raccoon, skunk and muskrats, all 
the year euept September and October; 
partridge, quail, spruce hen and woodcock. 
Oct. 20 to Dec. 1 in lower peninsula and 
Oct. 1 to Dec. 1 in upper peninsula; ducks, 
geese and other waterfowl, Oct. 1 to Deo. 1. 

FISH Speckled trout, grayling, landlocked 
salmon, California trout and German 
brown trout, May 1 to Sept 1, to be taken 
with hook and line only; black bass, May 
20 to April i, with hook and line only; 
limit of catch, fifty in one day. 

LICENSES Nonresidents (for deer), $25; resi- 
dents, 75 cents. 

Commissioner Charles H. Chapman, Sault 
Ste. Marie, Mich. 

MINNESOTA. 

GAME Deer, male moose and male caribou, 
Nov. 10 to :-.0; l-.il! limit, three; doves, snipe, 
prairie chicken, grouse, woodcock and plov- 
er, Sept. 1 to N*ov. 1; quail, ruffed grouse, 
partridge and pheasant, Oct. 15 to Dec. 15; 
wild ducks, geese, brant and other aquatip 
fowls, Sept. 1 to Dec. 1; kill limit, twenty- 
five birds a day; mink, muskrat, otter and 
beaver, Nov. 1 to May 1. 

FISH Trout, April 15 to Sept. 1; black, gray 
or Oswego bass, May 29 to March 1; pike, 
muskellunge, whitefish, croppie, perch, 
sunfish, sturgeon, lake trout and catfish, 
May 1 to March 1; pickerel, suckers, bull- 
heads, redhorse and carp, May 1 to March 

LICENSES Nonresidents, $25 for big game 
and $10 for small game; licenses obtained 
from state commissioners: resident license, 
obtained from county auditors, $1. 

Executive Agent of Game and Fish Commis- 
sioners Samuel F. Fullerton, St. Paul, 
Minn. 

IOWA. 

GAME Pinnated grouse and prairie chicken. 
Sept. 1 to Dec. 1; woodcock, July 10 to 
Jan. 1; ruffed grouse, pheasants, wild tur- 
key and quail, Nov. 1 to Jan. 1; wild duck, 
goose and brant, Sept. 1 to April 15; squir- 
rels, Sept. 1 to Jan. 1; beaver, mink and 
otter, Nov. 1 to April 1. 

FISH Trout and salmon, March 1 to Nov. 1; 
bass, pike, croppies and other game fish, 
May 15 to Nov. 1. 

LICENSES Nonresidents, $10. 

Wsrden George A. Lincoln, Cedar Rapids, 
Iowa. 

INDIANA. 

G> ME Quail, ruffed and pinnated grouse, 
prairie chicken, Nov. 10 to Jan. 1; squir- 
rels, Aug. 1 to Jan. 1; wild geese, ducks, 
brant and other wild waterfowl, Sept. 1 to 



116 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Oct. 1 and Nov. 10 to Jan. 1; wild doves, 
Aug. 15 to Oct. 1 and Nov. 10 to Jan. 1; 
wild deer, turkeys and pheasants protected. 

PISH Fishing with hook and line lawful 
during whole year; open season otherwise, 
April 1 to Dec. 1. 

LICENSES Resident, $1; nonresident, $25.50; 
issued by clerks of County Circuit courts. 

Game Commissioner Z. T. Sweeney, Colum- 
bus, Ind. 

NEBRASKA. 

GAME Deer and antelope, with horns, Aug. 
15 to Nov. 15; prairie chicken, sage chick- 
en and grouse, Oct. 1 to Nov. 30; quail, 
Nov. 1 to Nov. 30; wild ducks, geese, 
brant, swans, cranes and game water- 
fowl, Sept. 1 to April 15; snipe, Sept. 1 to 
April 15; wild pigeons, doves and plover, 
April 15 to Oct. 30. 

FISH Trout, June 1 to Oct. 31; all other 
lish, April 1 to Oct. 31. 

LICENSES For residents, $1; nonresidents, 
$10; issued by county clerks. 

Chief Deputy Game and Fish Commissioner 
George B. Simpkins, Lincoln, Neb. 

COLORADO. 

GAME Deer, having horns, Sept. 15 to Sept. 
30; mountain sheep, antelope aud elk pro- 
tected to 1907; prairie chickens, sage chick- 
ens and grouse, Sept. 1 to Oct. 20; wild 
turkey protected until 1907; wild water- 
fowl, Sept. 10 to April 15, except in alti- 
tudes above 7,000 feet, where season opens 
Sept. 15 and closes May 1; doves, Aug. 1 to 
Aug. 31; quail protected. 

FISH Trout not less than seven inches -long 
and other fish, June 1 to Oct. 31. 

LICENSES General hunting license for non- 
residents, *25; bird-hunting license in each 
county, $2 first day and $1 for each addi- 
tional day; general state license, $1. 

Commissioner John M. Woodward, Denver. 

Col. 

NORTH DAKOTA. 

GAME Prairie chicken, pinnated grouse, 
sharp-tailed grouse, ruffed grouse, wood- 
cock, Sept. 1 to Oct. 15; quail and pheas- 
ant protected until 1905; wild duck, Sept. 
1 to May 1; wild geese, cranes and brant, 
Sept. 1 to May 1; buffalo, moose, elk, cari- 
bou, mountain sheep, permanently pro- 
tected; deer, Nov. 10 to Dec. 1; beaver and 
otter protected until 1905; antelope pro- 
tected until 1911. 

FISH Pike, pickerel, perch, croppie, trout, 
buffalo, bass and muskellunge, May 1 to 
Jan. l; fishing with hook and line alone al- 
lowed. 

LICENSES Nonresident, $25; resident, 75 
cents. 

Warden Ever Wagness, Devil's Lake, N. D. 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 

GAME Buffalo, elk, deer, mountain sheep, 
Nov. 15 to Dec. 15; prairie chickens, grouse, 
woodcock and quail, Sept. 1 to Jan. 1; wild 
ducks, geese and brant, Sept. 1 to May 1; 
plover and curlew, Sept. 1 to May 15; bea- 
ver and otter, protected until 1911. 

FISH Trout, bass, carp, shad and croppies, 
May 1 to Oct. 1. 

LICENSES For nonresident, who must be ac- 
companied by warden as guide, $25; issued 
by county treasurers. 

Wardens Bach county has a fish and game 
warden. 

MONTANA. 

GAME Deer, mountain sheep, 'Sept. 1 to Dec. 
1; buck elk, Sept. 1 to Nov. 1; prairie 



chickens, sage hens and partridge, Aug. 15 

to Dec. 1; wild waterfowl, Sept. "1 to 

Jan. 1. 

FISH No restrictions. 
LICENSES Nonresident, for big game, $25; 

for bird hunting, $15. 
Warden William F. Scott, Helena, Mont. 

IDAHO. 

GAME Moose, buffalo, antelope and caribou 
protected permanently; deer, elk, mountain 
sheep, Sept. 1 to Dec. 31; quail, Nov. 1 to 
Dec. 1; sage hens, July 15 to Dec. 1; turtle 
doves and snipe, Feb. 15 to July 15; par- 
tridges, pheasants, grouse, prairie chicken, 
Aug. 15 to Dec. 1; ducks, Sept. 15 to Feb. 
15; geese and swans, Sept. 15 to Feb. 15. 

FISH Trout, grayling, bass and sunfish, with 
hook and line only, Nov. 1 to April 1. 

Warden T. W. Bartley, Moscow, Idaho. 

WYOMING. 

GAME Deer, elk, antelope, mountain sheep, 
Sept. 15 to Nov. 15; moose and marten pro- 
tected until 1912; ducks and geese, Sept. 1 
to May l; partridges, pheasant, prairie 
chicken, Sept. 1 to Dec. 1; grouse, July 15 
to Oct. 15. 

FISH In Big Horn and North Platte rivers, 
May 1 to Oct. 1; in other rivers and lakes, 
June 1 to Oct. 1. 

LICENSES For nonresidents, $50; guides must 
be employed. 

Warden D. C. Nowlin, Big Piney, Wyo. 

ONTARIO. 

GAME Deer, Nov. 1 to Nov. 15; moose, rein- 
deer, caribou, south of Canadian Pacific 
railroad, Nov. 1 to Nov. 15; north of rail- 
road, Oct. 16 to Nov. 15; elk protected; 
wild turkeys, pheasants, beaver and otter 
protected until 1905; grouse, partridge, 
woodcock, squirrels and hares, snipe, 
plover or other shore birds, Sept. 15 to 
Dec. 15; swans and geese, Sept. 15 to 
May 1. 

FISH Bass, June 15 to April 15; speckled 
trout, April 30 to Sept. 15; whitefish and 
salmon trout, all the year except in No- 
vember; pickerel. May 15 to April 15. 

LICENSES Nonresident, for hunting, $25; 
resident, to hunt deer, $2; nonresident, 
fishing, $15 for two weeks, $20 for three 
weeks and $25 for four weeks. 

Chairman W. M. Smith, Strathroy. 

MANITOBA. 

GAME Male deer, antelope, elk, moose and 
caribou, Sept. 15 to Dec. 1; female deer, 
etc., permanently protected; otter, sable, 
Oct. 1 to May 15; marten, Nov. 1 to April 
15; grouse, prairie chicken, pheasant, par- 
tridge, Sept. 15 to Nov. 15; plover, quail, 
woodcock, snipe, Aug. 1 to Jan. 1: ducks, 
Sept. 1 to Jan. 1. 

FISH Pickerel, May 15 to April 15; speckled 
trout, Jan. 1 to Oct. 1. 

LICENSES For nonresident, $25; issued by 
minister of agriculture. 

W'arden C. Barber, Winnipeg. 

BRITISH COLUMBIA. 

GAME Deer, Sept. 1 to Dec. 15; bull cari- 
bou, buck elk, bull moose, grouse and 
prairie chicken, Sept. 1 to Jan. 1; moun- 
tain goat, Sept. 1 to Dec. 15. 

FISH No restrictions. 

LICENSES For all except officers in govern- 
ment service, $50; issued by any provin- 
cial officer. 

Superintendent F. S. Hussey, Victoria. - 



SECRET, FRATERNAL AND BENEVOLENT SOCIETIES. 



117 



SECRET, FRATERNAL AND BENEVOLENT SOCIETIES. 



MASONIC GRAND LODGES. 

NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF GRAND SECRE- 
TARIES (OCTOBER, 1903). 
Alabama George A. Beauchamp, Mont- 
gomery. 

Arizona George J. Roskruge, Tucson. 
Arkansas Fay Hempstead, Little Rock. 
British Columbia R. E. Brett, Nelson. 
California George Johnson, San Francisco. 
Canada J. J. Mason, Hamilton, Unt. 
Colorado William D. Todd, Denver. 
Connecticut John H. Barlow, Hartford. 
Cuba Aurelio Miranda, Havana. 
Delaware Benjamin F. Bartram, Wilming- 

District of Columbia A. W. Johnston, Wash- 
ington. 

England Edward Letchworth. London. 

Florida W. P. Webster, Jacksonville. 

Georgia W. A. Woolihin, Macon. 

Idaho Theodore W. Randall, Boise. 

Illinois J. H. C. Dill, Bloomington. 

Indiana Calvin W T . Prather, Indianapolis. 

Indian Territory Joseph S. Burrow, Atoka. 

Iowa Newton R. Parvin, Cedar Rapids. 

Ireland Archibald St. George, Dublin. 

Kansas Albert K. Wilson, Topeka. 

Kentucky Henry B. Grant, Louisville. 

Louisiana Richard Lambert, New Orleans. 

Maine Stephen Berry, Portland. 

Manitoba James A. Ovas, Winnipeg. 

Maryland Jacob H. Medairy, Baltimore. 

Massachusetts Sereno D. Nickerson, Bos- 
ton. 

Michigan J. g. Conover, Coldwater. 

Minnesota Thomas Montgomery, St. Paul. 

Mississippi Frederic Speed, acting, Vicks- 
burg. 

Missouri John D. Vincil, St. Louis. 

Montana Cornelius Hedges, Helena. 

Nebraska Francis E. White. Omaha. 

Nevada Chauncey N. Noteware, Carson 

New Brunswick J. Twining Hartt, St. John. 

New Hampshire George P. Cleaves, Con- 
New Jersey Thomas H. R. Redway, Tren- 
ton. 

New Mexico Alpheus A. Keane, Albu- 
querque. 

New York Edward M. L. Ehlers, New York. 

New Zealand Malcolm Niccol, Auckland. 

North Carolina John C. Drury, Raleigh. 

North Dakota Fi-ank J. Thompson, Fargo. 

Nova Scotia Thomas Mowbray, Halifax. 

Ohio J. H. Bromwell, Cincinnati. 

Oklahoma James A. Hunt, Stillwater. 

Oregon James F. Robinson, Eugene. 

Pennsylvania William A. Sinn, Philadel- 
phia. 

Prince Edward Island Neil McKelvie, Sum- 
merside. 

Quebec Will H. Whyte, Montreal. 

Rhode Island S. Penrose Williams, Provi- 
dence. 

Scotland David Reid, Edinburgh. 

South Australia J. H. Cunningham, Ade- 
laide. 

South Carolina Charles Inglesby, Charles- 
ton. 

South Dakota George A. Pettigrew, Flan- 
dreau. 

Tasmania John Hamilton, Hobart. 

Tennessee John B. Garrett, Nashville. 

Texas John Watson, Houston. 

United Grand Lodge of Victoria John 
Braim. Melbourne. 

United Grand Lodge of New South Wales- 
Arthur H. Bray, Sydney. 



Utah Christopher Diehl, Salt Lake City. 

Vermont Henry A. Ross, Burlington. 

Virginia George W. Carrington, Richmond. 

Washington Thomas M. Reed, Olympia. 

West Virginia George W. Atkinson, Charles- 
ton. 

Wisconsin W 7 illiam W. Perry, Milwaukee. 

Wyoming William M. Kuykendall, Sara- 
toga. 

The membership of the grand lodges in 
this country and Canada in 1902 was 901,968. 

ROYAL ARCH MASON&. 

GENERAL, GRAND CHAPTER. 

General Grand High Priest Arthur G. Pol- 
lard, Lowell, Mass. 

General Grand King William Swain, Mil- 
waukee, Wis. 

General Grand Scribe Nathan Kingsley, 
Austin, Minn. 

General Grand Treasurer John M. Carter, 
Baltimore, Md. 

General Grand Secretary Christopher G. 
Fox, Buffalo, N. Y. 

General Grand Captain of the Host Ber- 
nard G. Witt, Henderson, Ky. 

Headquarters, Buffalo, N. Y. 

Number of grand chapters, 44. 

KNIGHTS TEMPLARS. 
OFFICERS OF THE GRAND ENCAMPMENT. 

Grand Master Henry B. Stoddart, Texas. 
Grand Deputy Master George H. Moulton, 

Chicago, 111. 
Grand Generalissimo H. W. Rugg, Rhode 

Island. 
Grand Captain-General W T illiam B. Mel- 

lish. Ohio. 
Grand . Senior Warden Joseph A. Locke, 

Ohio. 
Grand Junior Warden Frank H. Thomas, 

District of Columbia. 

Grand Treasurer H. Wales Lines, Connec- 
ticut. 
Grand Recorder John A. Gerow, Detroit, 

Mich. 
Grand commanderies in the United States, 

43. 
Commanderies under jurisdiction of grand 

encampment. 1,059. 

ANCIENT ACCEPTED SCOTTISH RITE 
MASONS. 

NORTHERN MASONIC JURISDICTION. 

M. P. Sovereign Grand Commander Henry 
L. Palmer, Wisconsin. 

Grand Treasurer-General Newton D. Ar- 
nold, Rhode Island. 

Grand Secretary-GeneralJames H. Cod- 
ding, New York. 

SOUTHERN MASONIC JURISDICTION. 

M. P. Sovereign Grand Commander James 
D. Richardson, Tennessee. 

Secretary-GeneralFrederick Webber, Dis- 
trict of Columbia. 

ORDER OF THE~EASTERN STAR. 

(Organized Nov. 16, 1876.) 

OFFICERS OF THE GENERAL GRAND CHAPTER. 

Most Worthy Grand Matron Mrs. Laura B. 
Hart, San Antonio, Tex. 

Most Worthy Grand Patron L. C. William- 
son, Washington, D. C. 

Right Worthy Associate Grand Matron Mrs. 
M. B. Conkling, Pawnee, O. T. 

Right Worthy Grand Secretary Mrs. Lor- 



118 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



raine J. Pitkin, 2456 Kenmore avenue, Chi- 
cago, 111. 

Right Worthy Grand Treasurer Mrs. Har- 
riette A. Ercaubrack. Anamosa, Iowa. 

Membership in 1903250,000. 

INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FEL- 
LOWS. 
SOVEREIGN GRAND LODGE. 

Grand Sire John B. Goodwin, Atlanta, Ga. 

Deputy Grand Sire Robert E. Wright, Al- 
len town. Pa. 

Grand Secretary J. Frank Grant, Balti- 
more, Md. 

Grand Treasurer M. Richards Muckle. 
Philadelphia. Pa. 

Grand Chaplain J. W. Venable, Hopkins- 
Grand' Marshal John B. Cockrum, Indian- 
apolis, Ind. 

Grand Guardian Edwin L. Pilsbury, Bos- 
ton, Mass. 

Grand Messenger Louis F. Hart, Tacoma, 
Wash. 

Membership Dec. 31, 1902, 1,329,956. 

Total paid for relief since 1830, $96,468,425.32. 

KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. 
SUPREME LODGE. 

Supreme Chancellor Tracy R. Bangs, Grand 
Forks, N. D. 

Supreme Vice-Chancellor Chas. E. Shively, 
Richmond, Ind. 

Supreme Prelate George E. Church, Fresno, 
Cal. 

Supreme Keeper of Records and Seals R. 
L. C. W T hite, Nashville, Tenn. 

Supreme Master of Exchequer Thorns D. 
Mears, Wilmington, N. C. 

Supreme Outside Guard John W. Thompson, 
Washington, D. C. 

Supreme Inner Guard C. W. Hall, Charles- 
ton, W. Va. 

Major-General Uniform Rank James R. Car- 
nahan, Indianapolis, Inti. 

Board of Control of the Endowment Rank- 
Tracy R. Bangs, Grand Forks, N. D. ; 
Charles E. Shively. Richmond, Ind.: Charles 
F. S. Neal, Manhattan building, Chicago; 
Frank B. Hoskins. Fond du Lac. Wis.; 
John T. Sutphen. Middletown, O.; George 
A. Bangs, Grand Forks, N. D.; J. Zach 
Spearing, New Orleans. Officers : C. F. S. 
Neal, president; Samuel M. Smith, secre- 
tary; Dr. George G. McConnell, medical 
examiner-in-chief: Carlos S. Hardy, gen- 
eral counsel; office, twelfth floor Man- 
hattan building, Chicago. 

Grand Chancellor of Illinois Gen. James H. 
Barkley. Springfield. 

Membership Dec. 31. 1902, 552,773 active and 
about 500,000 inactive. 

Total death claims paid by endowment rank, 
$19,388,230.07. 

IMPROVED ORDER OF RED MEN. 
(Founded 1763 and 1834.) 

GREAT CHIEFS OF THE GREAT COUNCIL OF 
THE UNITED STATES. 

Great Incohonee Thomas G. Harrison, In- 
dianapolis, Ind. 

Great Senior Sagamore Thomas H. Watts, 
Montgomery, Ala. 

Great Junior Sagamore John W. Cherry, 
Norfolk, Va. 

Great Prophet Edwin D. Wiley, Des 
Moines, Iowa. 

Great Chief of Records Wilson Brooks. 
Chicago, 111. 

Great Keeper of Wampum William Pro- 
vin, Westfield, Mass. 



Number of great councils, 55. 
Subordinate tribes and councils, 3,801. 
Members, 334.495. 

Benefits disbursed since organization, $18,- 
737,357.95. 

PATRIOTIC ORDER SONS OF AMERICA. 
(Organized Dec. 10, 1847.) 

NATIONAL CAMP OFFICERS. 

President J. S. Krause, Lebanon, Pa. 

Vice-PresidentWilliam H. Tilton, Tren- 
ton, N. J. 

Master of Forms William E. Valliant, 
Chestertown, Md. 

Secretary F. E. Stees, 524 North 6th street, 
Philadelphia, Pa. 

Treasurer F. P. Spiese. Tamaqua. Pa. 

Assistant Secretary Charles H. Stees, 1915 
North 33d street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Chaplain Rev. D. E. Rupley, Lock Haven, 
Pa. 

Conductor John L. Dill. Dayton, O. 

Inspector F. W. Alexander, Oak Grove, Va. 

Guard Henry W. Ray, Maysville, Ky. 

Membership 100,000. " 



ANCIENT ORDER OF UNITED WORK- 

MEN. 
(Founded 1868.J 

SUPREME LODGE OFFICERS 1903-1904. 

Past Supreme Master Workman Webb Mc- 
Nall, Gaylord, Kas. 

Supreme Master Workman William H. Mil- 
ler, Benoist building, St. Louis, Mo. 

Supreme -Foreman Will M. Narvis, Musca- 
tine, Iowa. 

S" preme Overseer Wiil iam M. Colvig, Jack- 
sonville, Ore. 

Supreme Recorder M. W. Sackett, Mead- 
ville, Pa. 

Supreme Receiver H. B. Dickinson, Buffalo, 

Supreme Guide L. C. Merrill. Concord, N. H. 
Supreme Watchman S. B. Ritchie, Winni- 

leg, Manitoba. 
Supreme Medical Examiner D. H. Shields, 

M. D., Hannibal, Mo. 
Supreme Trustees D. S. Hirshberg, San 

Francisco. Cal; J. H. Erford, Lincoln, 

Neb.; S. L. Johnson, Okmulgee, I. T. ' 
Membership Aug. 1, 1903, 460.165. 
Amount of beneficiary fund distributed from 

organization to Aug. 1, 1903, $130,891,958.07. 

NOBLES OF THE MYSTIC SHRINE. 
(First temple founded Sept. 26, 1872.) 

IMPERIAL COUNCIL. 

Imperial Potentate George H. Greene, Dal- 
las,. Tex. 

Imperial Deputy Potentate Geo. L. Brown, 
New York. 

Imperial Chief Rabban Henry A. Collins, 
Toronto, Ont. 

Imperial High Priest and Prophet Frank C. 
Roundy, Chicago. 

Imperial Oriental Guide E. I. Alderman, 
Marion, Iowa. 

Imperial Treasurer W. S. Brown, Pittsburg. 

Imperial Recorder B. W. Rowell, Boston. 

Imperial First Ceremonial Master George 
L. Street, Baltimore. 

Imperial Marshal Charles Tonsor, Brook- 
lyn. 

Imperial Captain of the Guards J. Frank 
Treat, Fargo. 

Imperial Outer Guard William J. Cunning- 
ham, Baltimore. 

Membership in 1903. 78,182. The order has 
gained 81 temples and 77,757 members in 
25 vears. 



SECRET, FRATERNAL AND BENEVOLENT SOCIETIES. 



119 



JUNIOR ORDER UNITED AMERICAN 

MECHANICS. 

(Founded 1853.) 

NATIONAL COUNCIL. 

National Councilor Dr. James L. Cooper, 
Fort Worth, Tex. 

National Vice-Councilor W. E. Faison, Ra- 
leigh, N. C. 

Junior Past National Councilor George B. 
Bowers, Altoona, Pa. 

National Secretary Edward S. Deemer, 
postoffice box 766, Philadelphia, Pa. 

National Treasurer J. Adam Sohl, Balti- 
more, Md. 

Membership Jan. 1, 1903, 116,000. 

INDEPENDENT ORDER OF FORESTERS. 

(Founded 1874.) 

SUPREME OPFICEBS. 

Supreme Chief Ranger Dr. Oronhyatekha, 
Toronto, Ont. 

Past Chief Ranger Judge W. Wedderburn, 
Hampton, N. B. 

Supreme Vice-Chief Ranger J. D. Clark, 
Dayton, O. 

Supreme Secretary John A. Macgillivray, 
Temple building, Toronto, Ont. 

Supreme Treasurer H. A. Collins, Toron- 
to, Ont. 

Supreme Physician Thomas Millman, 
M. D., Toronto, Ont. 

Supreme Counselor E. G. Stevenson, De- 
troit, Mich. 

Total number of members, 214,000. 

Benefits disbursed since organization, 
$14,000,000. 

ROYAL ARCANUM. 
(Organized June 23, 1877.) 

SUPREME COUNCIL. 

Supreme Rege it A. S. Robinson, St. 'Louis, 
Mo. 

Supreme Vice-RegentHoward C. Wiggins, 
Rome, N. Y. 

Supreme Orator Robert Van Sands, Chi- 
cago, 111. 

Supreme Secretary W. O. Robson, 407 
Shawmut avenue, Boston, Mass. 

Chairman Supreme Trustees J. M. John- 
son, 342 Franklin street, Chicago. 

Grand Secretary of Illinois Grand Council 
John Kiley, 76 Monroe street. Chicago. 

Head office at 407 Shawmut avenue, Boston. 

Number subordinate councils, 2,095; state 
councils, 28. 

Membership Oct. 1, 1903, 276,000. 



KNIGHTS AND LADIES OF HONOR. 
(Organized 1877.) 

SUPREME LODGE OFFICERS. 

Supreme Protector L. B. Lockard, Toledo, O. 

Supreme Vice-Protector W. S. McCullough, 
Brinkley, Ark. 

Supreme Secretary George D. Tait, Indian- 
apolis, Ind. 

Supreme Treasurer George A. Byrd, Indian- 
apolis, Ind. 

Supreme Guide Mrs. L. A. E. Harding, Som- 
erville, Mass. 

Headquarters of order in Indianapolis, Ind. 

Total membership Sept. 1, 1903, 70,000. 

Death claims paid since organization, $20,- 
000,000. 

NATIONAL UNION. 

' OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. 

President M. G. Jeffris, Janesville, Wis. 
Speaker C. R. Morrow, Nashville, Tenn. 



Secretary J. W. Myers, National Union 
building, Toledo, O. 

Treasurer C. O. Evarts, Cleveland, O. 

General Solicitor C. J. Kavanagh, Chicago. 

Usher J. J. Ward, Chicago. 

Sergeant-at-Arms S. R. Johnston, Atlanta, 
Ga. 

Doorkeeper James E. Field, San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 

Executive Committee M. G. Jeffris, J. W. 
Myers, Leo Canman, C. J. Daoust, J. E. 
Smith. 

Total membership, 75,000; in Cook county, 
Illinois, 16,500. 

KNIGHTS OF THE MACCABEES. 
(Instituted 1881.) 

SUPREME TENT OFFICERS (1901-1904). 

Past Commander D. D. Aitken, Flint, 

Mich. 
Commander D. P. Markey, Port Huron, 

Mich. 
Lieutenant-Commander S. W. Trusler, 

Camlachie, Ont. 
Record Keeper G. J. Siegle, Port Huron, 

Mich. 
Finance Keeper L. E. Sisler, Port Huron, 

Mich. 
Medical Examiner Dr. R. E. Moss, Port 

Huron, Mich. 
Chaplain Rev. G. A. Robbins, Hamilton, 

Mo. 
Master-at-Arms F. W. Marshall, Sioux 

City, Iowa. 
First Master of the Guards M. F. Elkin, 

Stanford, Ky. 
Second Master of the Guards J. E. Kain- 

meyer, Kansas City, Kas. 
Sentinel John B. Ogle, Mankato, Minn. 
Picket John F. Johnson, Hartford, Conn. 
Supreme Board of Trustees D. P. Markey, 

H. M. Parker, G. J. Siegle, James F. 

Downer. L. E. Sisler. 
Membership Sept. 1, 1903, 350,444. 
Benefits paid cince Sept. 1,1883, $16,^59,305.70. 

SELECT KNIGHTS OF AMERICA. 
(Organized 1881.) 

GRAND LEGION OFFICERS. 

Grand Commander W. G. Livingston, Chi- 
cago. 

Grand Vice-Commander F. Rote, Baraboo, 
Wis. 

Grand Lieutenaat-Commander W. Schoen- 
born, Chicago. 

Grand Recorder Fred W. Smith, 1257 West 
17th street, Chicago. 

Grand Treasurer Adolph Pike, Chicago. 

General Organizer J. J. Diedrich, Chicago. 

MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA. 
(Founded 1883.) 

ROSTEB OF HEAD CAMP OFFICERS (1903-1905). 

Head Consul A. R. Talbot, Lincoln, Neb. 

Head Clerk Charles W. Hawes, Rock 
Island, 111. 

Head Banker A. N. Bort, Beloit, Wis. 

General Attorneys J. W. White, Rock 
Falls, 111.; B. D. Smith, Mankato. Minn. 

Board of Directors Edward E. Murphy, 
chairman, Leavenworth, Kas. ; George \V. 
Reilly, Danville, 111.; C. G. Saunders, 
Council Bluffs, Iowa; C. J. Byrns, Ish- 
peming, Mich.; R. R. Smith, Brookfield, 
Mo. These with the head consul and head 
clerk constitute the executive council of 
seven. 

Deputy Head Consul for Illinois W. H. 
Dwyer, Fitnian, 111. 

Membership Sept. 1, 1903, 743,860. 



120 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Death claims paid to Sept. 1, 1903, $34,075,- 

146.45. 
Home office, Rock Island, HI. 

THE ROYAL LEAGUE. 

(Incorporated Oct. 26, 1883.) 

OFFICERS FOR 1903-1904. 

Supreme Archon W. E. Hyde. 

Supreme Vice-Archon Thomas V. Dally. 

Supreme Orator H. P. Kountree. 

Past Supreme Archon C. E. Bonnell. 

Supreme Scribe C. E. Piper, 1601 Masonic 

Tomple, Chicago, 111. 
Supreme Treasurer Holmes Hoge, First 

National bank, Chicago, 111. 
Supreme Prelate A. G. Brownlee. 
Supreme Guide G'. H. Gibson. 
Supreme Warder J. Abrams. 
Supreme Sentry .W. S. Wells. 
Membership Dec. 31, 1902, 22,086. 

WOODMEN OF THE WORLD. 

(Organized June 6, 1890.) 

SOVEREIGN CAMP. 

Sovereign Commander Joseph C. Root, 
Omaha, Neb. 

Sovereign Adviser F. A. Falkenburg, Den- 
ver, Col. 

Sovereign Clerk John T. Yates, Omaha, 
Neb.. 211 W. O. W. building. 

Sovereign Banker Morris S'heppard, Tex- 
arkana, Tex. 

Sovereign Escort H. F. Simrall, Jr., Co- 
lumbus, Miss. 

Sovereign Watchman B. W. Jewell, Man- 
chester, Iowa. 

Sovereign Sentry Dr. E. Bradshaw, Little 
Rock, Ark. . 

Sovereign Physicians Dr. A. D. Cloyd and 
Dr. Ira W. Porter, Omaha. 

Sovereign Managers E. B. Lewis, Kinston, 
N. C. ; C. K. Erwin, Chippewa Falls, Wis. ; 
O. C. Farmer. Mount Carroll. 111.; W. A. 
Fraser, Dallas, Tex.; M. D. Roche, Cleve- 
land, O.; J. E. Fitzgerald, Kansas City, 
Mo.; N. B. Maxey, Muskogee, I. T. 

Headquarters. Omaha, Neb. 

Membership Oct. 1, 1903, 367,902. 

Losses paid from organization to Oct. 1, 
1903, $17,768,497.46; insurance in force, 
$585, 737,400. 

FRATERNAL ORDER OF EAGLES. 

OFFICERS OF THE GRAND AERIE. 

Grand Worthy President Timothy D. Sul- 
livan, New York, N. Y. 

Past Grand Worthy President Del Cary 
Smith, Spokane, Wash. 

Grand Worthy Vice-President W. F. Ed- 
wards, Anderson, Ind. 

Grand Worthy Chaplain Joseph H. Ellis, 
Minneapolis, Minn. 

Grand Worthy Secretary A. E. Partridge 
Seattle. Wash. 

Grand Worthy Treasurer Ed L. Head, San 
Francisco, Cal. 

Grand Worthy Conductor Edward Krause 
Wilmington, Del. 

Grand Inside Gurrd John Sheridan, Worces 
ter, Mass. 

Worthy Secretary Aerie No. 36, Chicago Dr. 
John A. Schulte, 430 State street. 

TRIBE olF~BEN-HUR. 
(Founded March 1, 1894.) 

SUPREME OFFICERS. 

Supreme Chief D. W. Gerard. 

Supreme Scribe F. L. Snyder, Crawfords- 

ville, Ind. 
Supreme Keeper of Tribute S. E. Voris. 



supreme Medical Examiner J. F. Davidson, 

M. D. 
Membership Sept. 1, 1903, 72,000. 

Surplus, $425,328. 

BENEVOLENT AND PROTECTIVE 

ORDER OF ELKS. 

rand Exalted Ruler Joseph T. Fanning, 
Indianapolis, Ind. 

Grand Esteemed Leading Knight Charles 
A. Kelly, Boston, Mass. 
rand Esteemed Loyal Knight Richard J. 
Wood, Sioux Falls, S. D. 

'"'rand Esteemed Lecturing Knight C. F. 
Tomlinson, Winston, N. C. 

Grand Secretary George A. Reynolds, Sag- 
inaw, Mich. 

Srand Treasurer Samuel H. Noeds, Cleve- 
land, O. 

Grand Tyler Charles W. Kaufman, Hobo- 
ken, N. J. 

Membership 153,722. 

NORTH AMERICAN UNION. 

SUPREME COUNCIL. 

President Robert S. lies. 
Chancellor Thomas Dempster. 
Secretary G. Langhenry. 
Treasurer J. R. Chapman. 
General Manager F. Nunemaker. 
Orator I. W. Cranmer. 
Conductor G. L. Hinckley. 
Prelate B. F. Nichols. 
Warder Max Robinson. 
Juard E. M. Murphy. 
Medical Director A. H. Brumback. 
Headquarters, 406-407 Tacoma building, Chi- 
cago. 
Membership over 10,001). 

ANCIENT ORDER OF HIBERNIANS. 

GENERAL OFFICERS. 

President James E. Dolan, Syracuse. N. Y. 
Vice-PresidentJames O' Sullivan, Philadel 

pbia, Pa. 

Secretary J. P. Bree, New Haven. Conn. 
Treasurer M. J. O'Brien, Richmond, Ind. 
Directors John T. Keatfng, Chicago; P. J 

O'Connor, Savannah, Ga. ; Daniel Hen 

nessy, Butte, Mont.; W. J. Cronin, Bos- 

ton, Mass. 
Next biennial meeting in St. Louis, 1904. 

INDEPENDENT ORDER FREE SONS OF 

ISRAEL. 
(Organized in 1849.) 

GENERAL OFFICERS. 

Grand Master M. S. Stern, New Yoi-k, N. Y. 
First Deputy Grand Master I. Huppen 

heimer. New York, N. Y. 
Second Deputy Grand Master A. Finken 

burg, New York, N. Y. 
Third Grand Master Adolph Pike, Chicago, 

111. 
Grand Secretary I. H. Goldsmith, New 

York, N. Y. 
Grand Treasurer L. Frankenthaler, New 

York. N. Y. 
Members Executive Committee Hon. Ph. 

Stein, Hon. E. C. Hamburgher, Isaac A. 

Loeb and Adolph Pike, all of Chicago. 
Membership in 190313,000. 

AMERICAN FRATERNAL LEAGUE. 

(Organized 1897.) 

GENERAL OFFICERS. 

President Marcus Russ. 
Vice-PresidentCharles L. Cole. 
Secretary Clayton C. Pickett, 502, 167 Dear- 
born street, Chicago. 
Treasurer Fred M. Blount. 



SECRET, FRATERNAL AND BENEVOLENT SOCIETIES. 



121 



NATIONAL FRATERNAL CONGRESS. 

Piesident E. O. Woods, Flint, Mich. 

Secretary M. W. Sackett, Meadville. Pa. 
Orders that are members of the National 

Fraternal Congress, with names and ad- 
dresses of the secretaries: 

American Benefit Society N. P. Cormack, 
2 Park square, Boston, Mass. 

American Guild S. Galeski, 9 North 10th 
street, Richmond, Va. 

American Legion of Honor Adam Warnock, 
200 Huntington avenue, Boston, Mass. 

Ancient Order ol Gleaners G. H. Slocum, 
Caro, Mich. 

Ancient Order of Pyramids Harry Landis. 
Gibraltar building, Kansas City, Mo. 

Ancient Order United Workmen M. W. 
Sackett. Meadville, Pa. 

Catholic Benevolent Legion John D. Car- 
roll, 367 Fulton street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Catholic Knights of America Gerard Rie- 
ter, Vincennes, Ind. 

Catholic Mutual Benefit Association Joseph 
Cameron, Hornellsville, N. Y. 

Catholic Order Foresters Thomas F. Mc- 
Donald, 1235 Stock Exchange building, Chi- 
cago, 111. 

Catholic Relief and Benefit Association- 
Thomas H. O'Neill, 120 Genesee street, 
Auburn, N. Y. 

Catholic Women's Benevolent Legion Mrs. 
Annie O'Connor, 117 East 23d street, New 
York city. 

Columbia League James B. Moran, 33 Mc- 
Graw building, Detroit, Mich. 

Court of Honor W. E. Robinson, Spring- 
field, 111. 

Degree of Honor Mrs. E. Allburn, 118 Mar- 
ket street. Sioux City, Iowa. 

Fraternities Accident Order E. S. Cook, 
Walnut and Juniper streets, Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

Fraternal Aid Association M. D. Greenlee, 
Lawrence, Kas. 

Fraternal Brotherhood E. A. Beck, Wil- 
cox building, Los Angeles, Cal. 

Fraternal Mystic Circle J. D. Myers, Land 
Title building, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Fraternal Union of America Samuel S. Baty, 
Taber building, Denver, Col. 

Home Circle Julius M. Swain, 120 Tre- 
mont street. Boston, Mass. 

Improved Order Heptasophs Samuel H. 
Tattersall, Preston and Cathedral streets, 
Baltimore, Md. 

Independent Order of Foresters John A. 
Macgillivray, Toronto, Ont. 

Independent Order of Mutual Aid Charles 
D. Brainard, Peoria, 111. 

International Congress Cecil B. Harris, 
Dowagiac, Mich. 

Iowa Legion of Honor J. H. Helm, box 
582, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 

Knights of Columbus Daniel Colwell. New 
Haven, Conn. 

Knights of Honor Noah M. Givan, St. 
'Louis, .Mo. 

Knights of Pythias S. M. Smith, Manhat- 
tan building, Chicago, 111. 

Knights and Ladies of Security J. M. Wal- 
lace, Topeka. Kas. 

Knights and Ladies of Golden Star Rev. 
Samuel P. Lacey, 772 Broad street, New- 
Knights 'of' the Loyal Guard F. H. Ran- 
kin. Jr., Flint. Mich. 

Knights of the Maccabees (supreme tent) 
G. J. Siegle, Port Huron, Mich. 

Knights of the Modern Maccabees Thomas 
Watson, Port Huron, Mich. 

L. C. B. A. Mrs. James A. Royer, 415 
West llth street, Erie, Pa. 



Ladies of the Maccabees (supreme hive) 
Miss Bina M. West, Port Huron, Mich. 

Ladies of the Modern Maccabees (grand 
hive) Emma E. Bower, Ann Arbor, Mich. 

Legion of Honor of Missouri R. J. T. 
White, 410 Fulton building, St. Louis, Mo. 

Legion of the Red Cross John B. Treibler, 
Jr,, Hollins street, Baltimore, Md. 

Loyal Association Frank S. Petter, 76 Mont- 
gomery street, Jersey City, N. J. 

Modern Woodmen of America C. W. 
Hawes, Rock Island, 111. 

National Union J. W. Myers, National 
Union building, Toledo, O. 

Order of Pendo Ernest Duden, 601 Cali- 
fornia street, San Francisco, Cal. 

Order of Columbian Knights Edwin D. 
Peifer. 704 Masonic Temple, Chicago. 111. 

Pathfinder U. F. Houriet, Akron, O. 

Protected Home Circle W. S. Palmer, 
Sharon, Pa. 

Prudent Patricians of Pompeii David 
Swinton, Saginaw, Mich. 

Royal Arcanum W. O. Robson, 408 Shaw- 
mut avenue, Boston, Mass. 

Royal Circle James Walsh, 420 East Mon- 
roe street, Springfield, 111. 

Royal League Charles E. Piper, 1 1601 Ma- 
sonic Temple, Chicago, 111. 

Royal Neighbors of America Mrs. Winnie 
Fielder, 529 Woolner building, Peoria, 111. 

Royal Society of Good Fellows Arthur J. 
Bates, 200 Summer street, Boston, Mass. 

Royal Templars E. B. Rew, 43 Niagara 
street, Buffalo, N. Y. 

Royal Highlanders F. J. Sharp. Lincoln, 
Neb. 

Select Knights and Ladles Ed H. Wheel- 
er, Kansas City, Kas. 

Shield of Honor W. T. Henry, Baltimore, 
Md. 

S. L. Order Mutual Protection G. Del 
Veccbio, 1121 National Life building, Chi- 
cago, 111. 

Supreme Tribe Ben-Hur F. L. Snyder, 
Crawfordsville, Ind. 

United Order of the Golden Cross W. R. 
Cooper, Knoxville, Tenn. 

United Order Pilgrim Fathers Nathan 
Crary, Lawrence, Mass. 

Women of Woodcraft J. L. Wright, Lead- 
ville, Col. 

Woodmen of the World (sovereign camp) 
John T. Yates, 211 Sheely block, Omaha, 
Neb. 

Woodmen of the World (Pacific .jurisdic- 
tion) I. I. Boak, box 1706, Denver, Col. 

Woodmen Circle Emma B. Manchester, 
Omaha, Neb. 

ASSOCIATED FRATERNITIES OF AMER- 
ICA. 

The general secretary of the association 
is Edmund Jackson of Fulton, 111. Names 
of orders included, their location and secre- 
taries follow: 
American Benevolent Association St. Louis. 

Mo.; E. J. Norris. 
American Catholic Union Philadelphia, 

Pa.; J. J. Coyle. 
Bankers' Fraternal Union Cleveland, O.; 

George R. McKay. 
Brotherhood of American Yeomen Des 

Moines, Iowa; W. E. Davey. 
Catholic Women's Benevolent Legion New 

York city; Annie O'Connor. 
Daughters of Columbia Chicago, 111.; J. 

M. Goodell, Jr., Austin, 111. 
Equitable Fraternal Union Neenah, Wis. ; 

Merritt L. Campbell. 
Fraternal Bankers' Reserve Cedar Rapids, 

Iowa; J. W. Roe. 



122 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Fraternal Bankers of America St. Louis, 

Mo.; C. F. Hatfield. 
Fraternal Censer Cleveland, O.; R. P. 

Nichols, Dayton, O. 
Fraternal Choppers of America Des Moines, 

Iowa; C. I. Tilson. 

Fraternal Tribunes Rock Island. 111.; Rob- 
ert Rexdale. 

erman Beneficial Union Pittsburg, Pa.; 

Louis Thumm. 
Highland Nobles Des Moines, Iowa; E. S. 

Randall. 
Home Guards of America Van Wert, O.; 

Ideal . Reserve ' Association Detroit, Mich. ; 

E. B. Newcooib. 
Independent Order of Lions Portland, Ore. ; 

Alex Smuk. 
Knights and Ladies of Columbia South 

Bend, Ind. ; John Roth. 
La Societe des Artisans Canadiens-Fran- 

cais, Montreal, P. Q. ; Germain Beaulieu. 
Loyal Mystic Legion of America Hastings, 

Neb.; G. O. Churchill. - 
Modern American Fraternal Society Effing- 
ham, 111. ; George M. Le Crone. 
Modern Brotherhood of America Mason 

City, Iowa; E. L. Balz. 
Modern Order of Praetorians Dallas. Tex.; 

William G. Brown. 
Mutual Protective League Litchfield, 111.; 

J. R. Paisley. 
Mystic Toilers Des Moines, Iowa; J. F. 

Taake. 
Mystic Workers of the World Fulton. 111.; 

Edmund Jackson. 
National Protective Union W^verly, N. Y.; 

North Star Benefit Association Mollne, 111.; 

G. L. Peterson. 
Order of American Plowmen Loganspor^, 

Ind.; L. J. Burdge. 
Order of Americus Greensburg, Pa. ; Lee 

Order of the Golden Seal Roxbury, N. Y.; 
Arthur F. Bouton. 



Order of Washington Portland. Ore.; J. 

L. Mitchell. 
Royal Fraternal Union St. Louis, Mo.; W. 

R. Eidson. 
Sons and Daughters of Justice Minneapo 

lis, Kas.; W. W. Walker, Jr. 
The Chevaliers Akron, O. 
The Grand Fraternity Philadelphia, Pa.; 

W. E. Gregg. 
Triple Tie Benefit Association Clay Center, 

Kas.; G. M. Stratton. 
United Moderns Denver, Col.; Erastus W. 

Smith. 

United Presbyterian Mutual Benefit Asso- 
ciation Monmouth, 111.; Hugh R. Moffet. 
Yeomen of America Aurora, 111.; C. M. 

Coats. 

OTHER ORGANIZATIONS. 

Order Sons of St. George Supreme lodge of- 
ficers: President, John Kenworthy, Pitts- 
burg. Pa.; vice-president, Walter Willis, 
South Chicago, 111. ; secretary, J. Henry 
Williams, 133 South 12th street, Philadel- 
phia, Pa.; treasurer, George H. Toop, 406 
East 91st street, New York city; messen- 
ger, W. F. Barlow, East Boston, Mass. 

Order of Mutual Protection Supreme lodge 
ofllcers: President, D. G. Clemow, Peo- 
ria, 111.; secretary, G. Del Vecchio, 1121- 
1122 National Life building, 159 LaSalle 
street, Chicago; treasurer, G. F. Schmal- 
stieg, 76 Clybourn avenue, Chicago. The 
order was organized in St. Louis, Mo., in 
1878. Membership in 1903, 7,550. 

Ancient Order of Shepherds of America Su- 
preme chief shepherd, T. W. Cosgrove; 
vice-chief shepherd, Mrs. C. E. Cosgrove; 
supreme scribe, W. T. Newman; supreme 
custodian, J. C. Barber. Headquarters, 
suite 64, 95 and 97 Washington street, Chi- 
cago. Order founded, Dec. 16, 1901. Mem- 
bership September, 1903, 1,013. 



FASTEST VOYAGES ACROSS THE ATLANTIC. 



Queenstown to New York, 6 days 7 hours 
23 minutes, by the Lucania, Oct. 21-26, 1894. 

New York to Queenstown, 5 days 8 hours 
38 minutes, by the Lucania, Sept. 8-14, 1894. 

Hamburg to New York, 5 days 11 hours 54 
minutes, by the Deutschland, Sept. 4-8, 1903. 

Cherbourg to New York, 5 days 11 hours 
57 minutes, by the Kronprinz Wilhelm, 
Sept. 10-16, 1902. 

New York to Cherbourg, 5 days 16 hours, 
by the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, Jan. 

Southampton to New York, 5 days 20 
hours, by the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, 
March 30-April 5, 1898. 

Havre to New York, 6 days 7 hours, 
by LaSavoie, March 22-28, 1902. ' 



New York to Southampton, 5 days 17 
hours 8 minutes, by the Kaiser Wilhelm der 
Grosse, Nov. 23-29, 1897. 

New York to Havre, 6 days 11 hours 5 
minutes, by LaSavole, Nov. 14-21, 1901. 

New York to Plymouth, 5 days 7 hours 
28 minutes, by the Deutschland, Sept. 6-10, 
1900. 

Plymouth to New York, 5 days 15 hours 
46 minutes, by the Deutschland, July 7-12, 
1900. 

Distances: New York to Southampton, 
3,100 miles; to Plymouth, 2,962 miles: to 
Queenstown, 2.800 miles; to Cherbourg, 
3,047 miles; to Havre, 3,170 miles; to Ham 
burg, 3,820 miles. 



FAMINE IN SWEDEN AND FINLAND. 



Owing to the total failure of the crops in 
northern Sweden, Finland and Norway in 
1902 on account of the continued rains and 



floods great destitution prevailed among 
inhabitants of many districts in the wi 



the 
nte 



verge of actual starvation. Measures to pro- 
vide relief were taken in Sweden and Russia, 
but these proved inadequate and appeals foi 
funds were made in the United States. Gen 

erous responses were made, especially in 

of 1902-3. Horses and cattle died for the I Chicago and the northwest generally, and 
lack of fodder or were slaughtered for food,! large sums of money were forwarded to the 
Little or no employment of any kind was to, relief committees in Stockholm, Uleaborg 
be had and thousands were brought to the and elsewhere. 



LABOR ORGANIZATIONS. 



123 



LABOR ORGANIZATIONS. 



AMERICAN FEDERATION OP LABOR. 

Headquarters, Washington), 1). C. 
President Samuel Gompers. 
Secretary Frank Morrison. 
Treasurer John B. Lennon, Bloomington, 111. 
National and international unions, 110. 
State branches, 28. 
Central bodies, 580. 

Local trade and federal labor unions, 2,174. 
Estimated total membership, 1,500,000. 
First convention held Nov. 15-18, 1881. 

AFFILIATED NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL 

ORGANIZATIONS, NAMES AND ADDRESSES 

OF SECRETARIES. 

Actors' National Protective Union Lew 
Morton, 8 Union square,- New York. 

Allied Metal Mechanics, International As- 
sociation of John E. Devlin, Valentine 
bldg., Toledo, O. 

Bakers and Confectioners' International, 
Journeymen F. H. Harzbecker, 236 Supe- 
rior street, Cleveland, O. 

Barbers' International Union, Journeymen 
W. E. Klapetzky, box 278, Indianapolis, 
Ind. 

Blacksmiths, International Brotherhood of 
Robert B. Kerr, Moline, 111. 

Blast Furnace Workers and Smelters of 
America, National Association of Wil- 
liam J. Clark, 128 Sandusky street, Buf- 
falo, N. Y. 

Boilermakers and Iron Shipbuilders, Broth- 
erhood of W. J. Gilthorpe, Portsmouth 
building, Kansas City, Kas. 

Bookbinders, International Brotherhood of 
J. A. B. Espey, 929 Westminster street, 
Washington, D. C. 

Boot and Shoe Workers' Union C. L. Baine, 
434 Albany building, Boston, Mass. 

Brewery Workmen, International Union of 
United Louis Kemper, Odd-Fellows' Tem- 
ple, Cincinnati, O. 

Brick, Tile and Terra Cotta Workers' Al- 
liance, International George Hodge, 155 
Washington street, Chicago, 111. 

Broommakers' Union, International W. R. 
Boyer, 387 South Prairie street, Gales- 
Carpenters and Joiners of America, United 
Brotherhood of Frank Duffy, P. O. box 
520, Indianapolis, Ind. 

Carpenters and Joiners, Amalgamated So- 
ciety of Thomas Atkinson, 332 East 93d 
street. New York. 

Carriage and Wagon Workers, Internation- 
al C. A. Peterson, 181 Superior street, 
Cleveland, O. 

Carvers' Association of North America, In- 
ternational Wood M. A. Brinkman, Day- 
ton, Ky. 

Car Workers, International Association of 
A. T>. Wheeler, 644 Prudential building, 
Buffalo, N. Y. 

Chainmakers' National Union of the United 
States of America Curtain O. Miller, 560 
E. Lain street, Columbus, O. 

Clear-makers' International Union of Amer- 
icaGeorge W. Perkins, room 820, 320 
Dearborn street, Chicago. 111. 

Clerks' International Protective Associa- 
tion. Retail Max Morris, box 1441, Den- 
ver, Col. 

Cloth Hat and Cap Makers of North Amer- 
ica, United Maurice Mikol, 66 East 4th 
street, New York. 

Commercial Telegraphers' Union of Amer- 
icaWilbur Eastlake, Evening Post, New 
York. 



Coopers' International Union of North 
America James A. Cable, P. O. box 77. 
Kansas City, Kas. 

Curtain Operatives of America, Amalga- 
mated Lace Charles Pasley, 3338 Howard 
street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

Drivers' International Union, Team George 
Innis, 29 Monroe avenue W., Detroit, Mich. 

Electrical Workers of America, Internation- 
al Brotherhood of H. W. Sherman, Cor- 
coran building, Washington, D. C. 

Elevator Constructors' International Union 
William Havenstrite, 212 St. Nicholas 
avenue, New York. 

Engineers, National Brotherhood of Coal 
Hoisting T. E. Jenkins, Danville, 111. 

Engineers, International Union of Steam 
R. A. McKee, 224 Masonic Temple, 
Peoria, 111. 

Engravers, International Association of 
Watch Case F. Huber, box 263, Can- 
ton, O. 

Firemen, International Brotherhood of Sta- 
tionary C. L. Shamp, 1053 Grand avenue, 
Toledo, O. 

Flour and Cereal Mill Employes, Interna- 
tional Union of A. E. Kellington, 112 
Corn Exchange street, Minneapolis, Minn. 

Freight Handlers and Interior Warehouse- 
men's Union of America M. J. Donnelly, 
188 West Van Buren street, Chicago, 111. 

Garment Workers of America, United 
Henry White, rooms 116-117 Bible Hous, 
New York. 

Garment Workers' Union, International La- 
dies'Bernard Braff, 8 1st avenue, New 
Yprk. 

Glass Bottle Blowers' Association of the 
United States and Canada William Lau- 
ner, rooms 930-931 Witherspoon building, 
Philadelphia, Pa. 

Glass House Employes, International Asso- 
ciation W. R. Brookfield, Streator, 111. 

Glass Workers, International Association 
Amalgamated William Figolah, 3.257 
Union avenue, Chicago, 111. 

Glass Snappers' National Protective Asso- 
ciation of America, Window L. L. Jack- 
lin, 409 Bayard street, Kane, Pa. 

Glove Workers, Union of America, Interna- 
tionalA. H. Cosselman, 42 1st avenue, 
Gloversville, N. i. 

Gold Beaters' National Protective Union of 
America, United W. Norris Batturs, 316 
Bechett street, Camden, N. J. 

Granite Cutters' National Union James 
Duncan, 606 F street N. W., Washing 
ton, D. C. 

Grinders' National Union, Table Knife- 
Richard Odhim. Unionville, Conn. 

Hatters of North America. United John 
Phillips, 11 Waverley place, New York. 

Hod Carriers and Building Laborers' Union 
of America, International H. A. Stem- 
burgh, Waverly, N. Y. 

Horseshoers of the United States and Can- 
ada, International Union of Journeymen 
Roady Kenehan, 1548 Wazee street, Den- 
ver. Col. 

Hotel and Restaurant Employes' Interna- 
tional Alliance and Bartenders' Interna- 
tional League of America Jere L Sulli- 
van, 903 Elm street, Cincinnati, O. 

Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, Amalgamated 
Association of John Williams, House 
building. Pittsburg, Pa. 

Jewelry Workers' Union of America, Inter- 
national J. O. Jackson, 275 7th street, 
Buffalo, N. Y. 



124 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Lathers, International Union of Wood. Wire 
and Metal A. F. Leibig, 182 Abbey street, 
Cleveland, O. 

Laundry Workers' International Union, 
Shirt, Waist and Charles E. Nordeck, 
lockbox 10, station 1. Troy, N. Y. 

Leather Workers on Horse Goods^ United 
Brotherhood of J. J. Pfeiffer. 435 Gibral- 
tar building, Kansas City, Mo. 

Leather Workers' Union of America, Amal- 
gamatedJohn Roach, 317 North 7th 
street, Olean, N. Y. 

Longshoremen's Association, International 
Henry C. Barter, Elks' Temple, Detroit, 

Machinists, International Association of 
George Preston, Corcoran building, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

Machine Printers and Color Mixers of the 
United States, National Association of 
Charles McCrory, 32 Auburn place, Brook- 

Maintenance of Way Employes, Interna- 
tional Brotherhood C. Boyle, 304 Benoist 
building, St. Louis, Mo. 

Marble Workers, International Association 
of Henry Roberts, 273 Porter street, De- 
troit. Mich. 

Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen of 
North America, Amalgamated Homer D. 
Call, lockbox 317. Syracuse, N. Y. 

Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers and Brass 
Workers' Union of North America James 
J Cullen, 25 3d avenue, station D, New 
York. 

Metal Workers' International Association, 
Amalgamated Sheet John E. Bray, 313 
Nelson building, Kansas City, Mo. 

Metal Workers' International Union, United 
C. O. Sherman, 148 West Madison street, 
Chicago, 111. 

Mine Managers and Assistants' Mutual Aid 
Association, National William Scaife, 
Springfield, 111. 

Mine Workers of America, United William 
B. Wilson, 1101 Stevenson building, In- 
dianapolis, Ind. 

Mine Workers of North America United 
Mineral Matt Wasley, Ishpeming, Mich. 

Molders' Union of North America, Iron E. 
J. Denney, 433 Walnut street. Cincin- 
nati. O. 

Musicians, American Federation of Owen 
Miller, 20 Allen building, St. Louis. Mo. 

Oil and Gas Well Workers, International 
Brotherhood of Jay H. Mullen, 330 South 
Soto street, Los Angeles, Cal. 

Painters, Decorators and Paperhangers of. 
America, Brotherhood of M. P. Carrick, 
drawer 199. Lafayette, Ind. 

Papermakers of America, United Brother- 
hood of Thomas Mellor, 57 Smith build- 
ing, Watertown, N. Y. 

Patternmakers' League of North America 
J. B. McNerney, 25 3d avenue, New York. 

Paving Cutters' Union of the United States 
of America J. H. Patterson. Lithonia, Ga. 

Piano and Organ Workers' Union of Amer- 
ica, International Frank Helle, 1350 42d 
court, Chicago, 111. 

Pilots' Association, International Capt. D. 
Wilson, 8 Winslow street, Detroit, Mich. 

Plumbers, Gasfitters, Steamfitters and 
Steamfltters' Helpers, United Association 
of L. W. Tilden, 506 Bush Temple, Chi- 
cago, 111. 

Plate Printers' Union of North America, 
International Steel and Copper T. L. 
Mahan, 12 LeRoy street, Dorchester, Mass. 

Potters. National Brotherhood of Operative 
T. J. Duffy, box 50, East Liverpool. O. 

Powder and High Explosive Workers of 



America, United James G. McCrindle, 
Gracedale, Pa. 

Printers* Association of America, Machine 
Textile George Udell, 368 Branch aveuue, 
Providence, R. I. 

Printing Pressmen's Union, International 
W. J. Webb, 1007 Putnam avenue, Brook- 
lyn, N. Y. 

Print Cutters' Association of America, Na- 
tionalErnest J. Dix, 1934 Moore street, 
Philadelphia, Pa. 

Railway Clerks, International Association 

A. W. Anderson, 908 Unity building, Chi- 
cago, 111. 

Railway Expressmen of America, Brother- 
hood R. J. Jeffs, 56 5th avenue, Chicago, 

Railway Employes of America, Amalga- 
mated Association of Street and Electric 
W. U. Mahon, 45 Hodges block, Detroit, 
Mich. 

Railroad Telegraphers, Order of L. W. 
Quick, Fullerton building, St. Louis, Mo. 
Rubber Workers' Union of America, Amal- 
gamated C. E. Akerstrom, 35 Park build- 
ing, Park square, Boston, Mass. 
Sawsmiths' Union of North America 
Charles G. Wertz, 351 South Illinois 
street, Indianapolis, Ind. 
Shingle Weavers' Union of North America, 
International W. H. Clock, Everett 
Wash. 

Shipwrights, Joiners and Calkers of Amer- 
ica, National Union of Thomas Durett, 
187 Marshall street, Elizabeth, N. J. 
Seamen's Union, International William H 
Frazier, 1%A Lewis street, Boston, Mass. 
State Quarrymen, Splitters and Cutters, In- 
ternational Union Robert J. Griffith, box 
275, Bangor, Pa. 

Slate and Tile Roofers' Union of America, 
international H. J. Harms, 454 Garneld 
avenue, Chicago, 111. 
Spinners' Association, Cotton Mule-^Samuel 

Ross, box 367, New Bedford, -Ma<s. 
Stage Employes' International Alliance, 
Theatrical Lee M. Hart, care of Bartl's 
hotel, Chicago, 111. 

Stereotypers and Elect rotypers' Union of 
North America, International George W. 
Williams, 534 Warren street, Boston, Mass. 
Stove Mounters' International Union J. H. 
Kaefer, 166 Concord avenue, Detioir. Mich. 
Tailors' Union of America, Journeymen- 
John B. Lennon, box 597, Bloomington, 111. 
Textile Workers of America, United Albert 

Hibbert, box 713, Fall River, Mass. 
Tilelayers and Helpers' Union, Internation- 
al Ceramic, Mosaic and Encaustic James 
P. Reynolds, 108 Corry street, Allegheny, 
Pa. 

Tinplate Workers' Protective Association 
of America, International Charles E. 
Lawyer, Reilly block. Wheeling. W T . Va. 
Tobacco Workers' International Union E. 
Lewis Evans, American National Bank 
building, Louisville, Ky. 
Trunk and Bag Workers' International 
Union of America Charles J. Gille, 1522 
North 17th street, St. Louis, Mo. 
Tube Workers of United States and Can- 
ada, International Association of John 

B. McDonough. 327 Orange street, Read- 
Typographical Union, International J. W. 

Bramwood, De Soto block, Indianapolis, 

Ind. 
Upholsterers' International Union of North 

America Anton J. Engel, 28 Greenwood 

terrace, Chicago, 111. 
Watch Case Makers' Union, International 



RAILdOAD ACCIDENTS IN THE UNITED STATES. 



125 



William H. Hurst, 116 Clymer street, 

Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Weavers' Amalgamated Association, Flas- 

tic Goring Thomas Pollard, box 46, East- 

hampton, Mass. 
Weavers' Protective Association, American 

Wire E E. Desmond, 112 Powers street, 

Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Wood Workers' International Union of 

America, Amalgamated Thomas I. Kidd, 

616-617 Garden City block, Chicago, 111. 

OTHER ORGANIZATIONS. 

Bricklavers and Masons' International Union 
President, George P. Gubbins, 312 Lawn- 
dale avenue, Chicago. 

Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, In- 
ternational 307 Society for Savings build- 
ing, Cleveland, O. 

Engineers, National Association of Station- 



arySecretary, F. W r . Raven, Chicago; 
president, Rob. G. Ingleson, Cleveland, O. 

Knights of Labor (organized 1878) General 

' secretary-treasurer, John W. Hayes, 43 B 
street, Washington, D. C. 

Letter Carriers' National Association Pres- 
ident, J. C. Keller, Cleveland, O. 

Plasterers' International Association, Oper- 
ativeSecretary, William O'Keefe, St. 
Louis, Mo. 

Postoffice Clerks, National Association of 
Secretary, R. C. Loeffler, Milwaukee, Wis. 

Railway Conductors, Order of Secretary, 
W. J. Maxwell, Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 

Railway Employes, United Brotherhood of 
President, George Estes, Roseburg, Ore. 

Teamsters' National Union of America 
Secretary, E. L. Turley, 130 Dearborn 
street, Chicago, 111. 

Telegraphers, International Union of Com- 
mercialSecretary, A. G. Douglass, Mil- 
waukee, Wis. 



PROGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES SINCE 1800. 



From table prepared by 0. P. Austin of bureau of statistics, department of commerce and 

labor, Washington, D. C. 



Area sq. miles 

Population 

Wealth dollars 

Debt* dollars 

Money in circulation dollars 

Deposits in national banks dollars 

Deposits in savings banks dollars 

Farms, value dollars 

Manufactures, value dollars 

Receipts Net ordinary dollars 

Customs dollars 

Internal revenue dollars 

Expenditures Net ordinary., .dollars 

\Var dol.ars 

Navy dollars 

Pensions dollars 

Imports, merchandise dollars 

Exports, merchandise dollars 

Gold produced dollars 

Silver produced dollars 

Coal produced tons 

Petroleum produced gallons 

Pig iron produced tons 

Steel produced tons 

Copper produced toms 

Wool produced Ibs 

Wheat produced bushels 

Corn produced , bushels 

Cotton produced bales 

Sugar produced tons 

Railroads miles 

Postoffices No. 

Postoffice receipts dollars 

Newspapers and periodicals No. 

Immigrants No 



1800. 1830. 



827.844 
5,308,483 



82,976,294 



10,848. .'49 

9.U80.9H3 



2,500.879 
3,448,716 
64,131 
91,252,7fi8 
dollars '70,971,780 



155,556 



HOS 



48,565,406 



6,973,304 



24.844,117 



12,161 

13.229.533 
4.767,129 
3.2:39.429 
1.363.297 
62.720. " 
71.670,735 
564,950 



179,754 



165.000 



977,845 



23 

8.450 

1,850.583 

861 

23.322 



1850. 



2.980.959 

23,191,876 

7,135,780.000 

63,459,774 



43,431,130 

3,967,343,589 

1,019,106.616 

43.592,839 



37.165.990 
9.637.025 
7.904,725 



173.509.526 

144,375.726 

50,000.000 

50.000 

3,358,899 



100.485.944 

592,071.104 

2,333,718 

110.526 

9.021 

18.417 

5,499.985 

2.526 

310,004 



1880. 



1900. 



3,U25.(>00 



94.300.000,000 
1,107,711,258 
2,055.150,9 
2.623.997,5 
2.449,547,885 
20.514,001.838 
13,039,279,566 
567.240,852 
233,164.871 
295.327,927 
447.553,453 
134,774,768 
55,953,078 
140.877,316 
849.941,184 
1,394.483,082 
79,17l!oOO 
74,333,495 
240.965,917 
2,661.233,568 
13.789,242 
10,188,329 
270.000 



522,229,505 

2,105,102.516 

9,436.416 

149,229 

194,321 



*Less cash in treasury. Total prior to 1850. 
RAILROAD ACCIDENTS IN THE UNITED STATES. 
[From report of interstate-commerce commission.] 



1902. 



1901. 



1900. 



1893. 



Passengers.. 

Employes... 

Total 



Killed. 

303 
2,516 



2.819 



Silled. 

282 
2,675 



39.800 



2.957 



Injured. 
4,988 
41.142 



Killed. 

249 
2.550 



46,130 



2,799 



Injured. 
4.128 
39,643 



Killed. 

299 
2,727 



43.771 



3.026 



Injured. 

3.229 
31.729 



34,958 



In 1902 there were 5.042 train collisions and 3,633 derailments, or a total of 8,675 accidents 
involving a total monetary loss of $7.645,406. 



126 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOB. FOR 1904. 


CARNEGIE INSTITTJTI 

[Prepared by Marcus Ba 
The Carnegie institution of Washington, 
founded by Andrew Carnegie, was incorpo- 
rated July 4, 1902, and endowed by its founder 
with $10,000,000. This endowment and the 
conduct of the institution were intrusted to 
a board of twenty-seven trustees chosen by 
the founder. This board is self-perpetuating. 
The purpose of the institution is thus de- 
clared by its founder: 
"It is proposed to found in the city of 
Washington an institution which with the 
co-operation of institutions now or here- 
after established, there or elsewhere, shall 
in the broadest and most liberal manner en- 
courage investigation, research and discov- 
ery, show the application of knowledge to 
the improvement of mankind, provide such 
buildings, laboratories, books anS apparatus 
as may be needed, and afford instruction of 
an advanced character to students properly 
qualified to profit thereby." 
To determine how to accomplish these 
purposes is the duty of the trustees. 
A beginning has been made by (1) making 
about ninety small grants to various scien- 
tists to conduct specific researches; (2) by 
creating a few special committees charged 
with the duty of investigating and report- 
ing upon certain large projects which it is 
proposed that the institution shall take up; 
(3) by beginning the publication of scientific 

PS The S onice of the institution is in the Bond 
building, corner 14th street and New York 
avenue, Washington, D. C. 


ON OF WASHINGTON. 

ker, assistant secretary.] 

TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS. 

The board of trustees consists of the fol- 
lowing: 
John S. Billings. Wayne MacVeagh. 
William N. Frew. D. O. Mills. 
Lyman J. Gage. S. Weir Mitchell. 
Daniel C. Gilman. W. W. Morrow. 
John Hay. Elihu Root. 
Henry L. Higginson. John C. Spooner. 
Henry Hitchcock. Andrew D. White. 
C. L. Hutchinson. Edward D. White. 
William Lindsay. Charles D. Walcott. 
Seth Low. Carroll D. Wright. 

EX-OFFICIO. 

President of the United States. 
President of the United States senate. 
Speaker of the house of representatives. 
Secretary of the Smithsonian institution. 
President of the National Academy of Sci- 
ences. 

OFFICERS OF BOARD OF TRUSTEES. 

Chairman Vacant. 
Vice-Chairman Dr. John S. Billings. 
Secretary Charles D. W T alcott. 
Executive Committee Daniel C. Gilman, 
chairman; Charles D. Walcott, secretary; 
John S. Billings, S. Weir Mitchell, Elihu 
Root, Carroll D. Wright. 
President of the Institution Dr. Daniel C. 
Gilman. 
Assistant Secretary Marcus Baker. 
(In October, 1903, there were two vacancies 
in the board of trustees caused by the deaths 
of William E. Dodge and Abram S. Hewitt.) 


DISTRIB 

[From article by Dr. 
AMERICA. 


TTTION OF JEWS IN THE 

Richard Gottheil in the World's 
Italy .. 44,037 


WORLD. 

Work for July, 1903.] 
Turkestan and Af- 
ghanistan 14,000 


Luxemburg 1,200 
Norway and Sweden 3,402 
Portugal 700 


Canada 16,432 


318,677 
AFRICA. 
Morocco -. 150,000 


Mexico 1,000 
Central America 3,000 
Argentine Republic. 7,015 
Dutch Guiana 1,250 
Venezuela and Costa 
Rica 711 


Roumelia (Eastern). 6,982 
Roumania 229 000 


Russia 5 189 401 


Tunis 45 000 


Servia 5 100 


Algeria 57132 


Spain (with Gibral- 
tar) ... 4,500 


Egypt 25,300 
Tripoli 10,000 


Brazil 2,000 
Rest of S. America.. 2,000 

1,169,648 
EUROPE. 
Austria-Hungary ... 1,994,378 
Belgium ... 12 000 


Switzerland 12,551 
Turkey 75 295 


Abyssinia 50,000 
South Africa . 25 000 


Cyprus and Malta... 130 

8,581,772 
ASIA. 
Palestine 60 000 




362,432 
AUSTRALIA. 
New South Wales... 6,447 


Bosnia 5 845 






Bulgaria 28,000 


Siberia 34,477 


New Zealand 1611 


Denmark 4,080 


Central Asia 12,729 
Asia Minor and Syria 65,000 
Persia 35 000 


Victoria 5 897 


England etc 179,000 


South Australia 786 
West Australia 1,259 


France 86885 


Germany 586948 


India 22 000 




Arabia 15 000 


16,840 
Total 10 149 369 


Holland 103,988 


China and Japan.... 2^000 


D 

Robert Arthur Talbot Gz 
marquis of Salisbury, died at 1 
England, Aug. 22, 1903. He ha 
ing health for more than a yes 
dition did not become critical 
two before the end came. ] 
was prime minister in 1885-188 
from 1895 to the date of his fi 


r. 

fe, July 13, 1902, when he was 
Lord Balfour. From the time 
d parliament in 1853 until his 
a leader of the conservative 
nd and for the last quarter of 
s looked upon as one of the 
smen of the world. 


EATH OF LOI 

scoyne Cecil, 
iatfield House, 
d been in fail- 
r, but his con- 
until a day or 
rd Salisbury 
5. 1886-1892 and 
nal retirement 


ID SALISBUR^ 

from public 11 
succeeded by 1 
that he entere 
death he was 
party of Engla 
a century wa 
foremost state 



PATRIOTIC SOCIETIES. 



127 



patriotic Societies of tfye HnttetJ States. 

SOCIETY OF THE CINCINNATI. 
(Organized June 24, 1783; incorporated Feb. 24, 1814.) 



GENERAL OFFICERS. 

President Gen. Winslow Warren, Massa- 
chusetts. 

Vice-PresidentGen. James Simons. South 
Carolina. 

Secretary Gen. Asa Bird Gardiner. Rhode 
Island. 

Treasurer Gen. F. W. Jackson, New Jersey. 

Assistant Treasurer Gen. John Cropper, 
Virginia. 

Only the thirteen original states have 
state societies. These, with names of presi- 
dent and secretary of each in the order 
named, are: 
New Hampshire John Gardner Gilman, F. 

Bacon Philbrook. 



Massachusetts Winslow 
Greene Haskins. 



Warren, David 



Rhode Island Asa Bird Gardiner, George 
W. Olney. 

Connecticut George B. Sanford, Morris W. 
Seymour. 

New York Talbot Olyphant (acting), Fran- 
cis Key Pendleton. 

New Jersey Frank Landon Humphreys, W. 
TenBrock S. Imlay. 



Pennsylvania Richard Dale, Samuel M. 

Turner. 
Delaware Tbomas David Pearce. Henry 

Hobart Bellis. 
Maryland Otho Holland Williams, Thomas 

Edward Sears. 
Virginia John Cropper, Patrick Henry Cary 

Cabell. 
North Carolina Wilson Gray Lamb, Charles 

Lukens Davis. 
South Carolina James Simons, Henry M. 

Turner, Jr. 
Georgia Walter Glasco Charlton. F. Ap- 

thorp Foster. 

The Order of the Cincinnati was organized 
by American and French officers who served 
in the war of the revolution, for the purpose 
of perpetuating the remembrance of that 
event and kee 



ping 

ibers 



up the friendships then 
formed. Membership goes to the eldest 
male descendant, if worthy; in case these 
is no male descendant, to male descend- 
ants through intervening female descend- 
ants. The present membership is about 
650. George Washington was the first presi- 
dent and Alexander Hamilton the second. 



GENERAL OFFICERS. 
(1902-1904.) 

President-General John Cadwalader 

Pennsylvania society). 
Vice-Presidents-General Capt. Henry 



Bellas, U. 



A. ; James Edward Carr, 



Jr.; Charles W. Galloupe, M. D.; Col. 
George Bliss, U.S.A.; George M. Wright; 
Hon. James Page Bryan (Illinois); Mar- 



cus Benjamin 



Page Brya 
. Ph. D.; 



Baker; Hon. Appleton Morgan, LL. D. ; 
James G. Longfellow. 

Secretary-General Henry Randall Webb, 
727 19th street N. W., Washington, D. C. 

Assistant Secretary-GeneralHenry Har- 
mon Noble, 96 Chestnut street, Albany, 

, N. Y. 

Treasurer-GeneralFrederick B. Philbrook, 
32 Worcester square, Boston, Mass. 

Assistant Treasurer-General William Por- 
ter Adams, 278 Madison street, Chicago. 



SOCIETY OF THE WAR OF 1812. 
(Organized Sept. 14. 1814.) 

Registrar-GeneralAlbert K. Hadel, M. D.. 

Baltimore. Md. 

/ of Surgeon-GeneralGeorge H. Burgin, M. D. 
Judge-Advocate General Hon. Aloysius L. 

Knott. 

Chaplain-General Rt.-Rev. Leighton Cole- 
man, S. T. D., LL. D., bishop of Dela- 
ware. _ 

State societies have been formed in Penn- 
Hon. George C. sylvania, Maryland, Massachusetts. Connec- 
ticut, Ohio, Illinois, District of Columbia, 
New York, New Jersey and Delaware. Mem- 
bership is made up of male persons above 
the age of 21 years who participated in or 
are lineal descendants of one who served 
during the war of 1812 in the army, navy, 
revenue-marine or privateer service of the 



United States, upon offering proof thereof 
satisfactory to the state society to which 
they may. make application for membership, 
and who are of good moral character and 
reputation. 



SOCIETY OF COLONIAL WARS. 

(Instituted 1892.) 

OFFICERS OF THE GENERAL SOCIETY. 

Governor-General Frederic J. de Peyster, Chaplain-General Rt.-Rev. William Law- 



New York. 

Vice-Governor-General Howland Pell, New 
York. 

Secretary-GeneralSamuel V. Hoffman, 45 
William street, New York. 

Deputy Secretary-General William B. Sea- 
man, New York, N. Y. 

Treasurer-General Edward Shippen, Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

Deputy Treasurer-General Se'ymour Morris, 
Chicago, 111. 

Registrar-General George Norbury Macken- 
zie, Baltimore. Md. 

Historian-General Rev. Charles E. Sterens, 
Philadelphia. Pa. 



Surgeon-General V. Mott Francis, M. D. 
Chancellor-General Prof. Theodore S. 
Woolsey. 

SECRETARIES OF STATE SOCIETIES. 

California Harrison B. Alexander, Los 

Angeles. 

Colorado C. E. Dewey, Denver. 
Connecticut George D. Seymour, New 

Haven. 

Delaware William H. Porter. Wilmington. 
District of Columbia Frank B. Smith, 

Washington. 

Georgia C. C. Quackenbush, Savannah. 
Illinois Roger Sherman, 135 Adams street, 

Chicago. 



128 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK ^OR 1904. 



Indiana William O. Bates, Indianapolis. 
Iowa John E. Bready, M. D., Dubuque. 
Kentucky Leonard Bacon. Louisville. 
Maine Henry Burrage, Portland. 
Maryland George N. Mackenzie, Baltimore. 
Massachusetts F. W. McGlenen, Boston. 
Michigan Charles A. Du Charme, Detroit. 
Minnesota William G. White. St. Paul. 
Missouri Hobart Brinsmade, St. Louis. 
Nebraska Edwin C. Wetater, Omaha. 
New Hampshire F. W. Morse, Durham. 



New Jersey John Eyerman, Easton, Pa. 
New York Arthur S. Walcott, 45 William 

street, New York. 

Ohio Charles T. Grieve, Cincinnati. 
Pennsylvania E. S. Sayres. Philadelphia. 
Rhode Island Henry B. Rose, Providence. 
Vermont Chas. S. Van Patten, Burlington. 
Virginia Thomas Boiling, Jr., Richmond. 
Washington Millard T. Hartson. 
Wisconsin W. S. Brockway, Milwaukee. 



SONS OF THE REVOLUTION. 

(Organized 1875.) 

GENERAL OFFICEHS (1902-1905). 



General President John Lee Carroll, Elll- 
cott City, Md. 

General V ice-President Garret Dorset Wall 
Vroom, Trenton, N. J. 

Second General Vice-PresidentPope Bar- 
row, Savannah, Ga. 

General Secrtary James Mortimer Mont- 
gomery, New York city. 

Assistant General Secretary William Hall 
Harris, Baltimore, Md. 

General Treasurer Kichard McCall Cad- 
walader, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Assistant General Treasurer Henry Cadle, 
Bethany, Mo. 

General Chaplain Rev. Thomas E. Green, 
Iowa. 

General Registrar Walter G. Page, Massa- 
chusetts. 

General Historian H. O. Collins, Califor- 
nia. 

Organizations exist in thirty-one states 
and territories. Membership, 7,000. 



SOCIETY OF THE SONS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 
(Organized June 29, 1876.) 

GENERAL OFFICERS. 



President-GeneralGen. E. S. Greeley, New 
Haven, Conn. 

Vice-Presidents-General Maj. Ira H. Ev- 
ans, Austin, Tex.; Dr. John W. Bayne, 
Washington, D. C. ; Daniel M. Lord, Chi- 
cago, 111. ; John J. Hubbell, Newark, N. J. ; 
Arthur W. Dennis, Providence, R. I. 

Secretary-GeneralEdward Payson Cone, 
100 Broadway, New York. 



Treasurer-GeneralNathan Warren, Bos- 
ton, Mass. 

Registrar-General A. Howard Clark, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

Historian-GeneralGeorge W. Bates, De- 
troit. Mich. 

Chaplain-GeneralRev. Rufus W Clark 
D. D., Detroit, Mich. 



DAUGHTERS OF THE-AMERICAN REVOLUTION. 



President-GeneralMrs. C. W. Fairbanks, 
Indiana. 

Vice-President-GeneralMrs. Miranda B. 
Tulloch, District of Columbia. 

Vice-PresidentsMrs. John B. W T alker, Mis- 
souri; Mrs. A. G. Foster, Washington 
state; Mrs. Julian Richards, Iowa; Mrs. 
William P. Jewett, Minnesota; Mrs. Mat- 
thew Scott, Illinois; Mrs. John A. Murphy, 
Ohio; Mrs. F. F. Brooks. Colorado; Mrs. 
J. J. Estay, Vermont; Mrs. Walter H. 
W r ood, Montana; Mrs. Frank Wheaton, 
California. 



Chaplain-GeneralMrs. T. S. Hamlin. 
Recording Secretary-GeneralMrs. John W. 
Holcombe. 

Corresponding Secretary-General Mrs. Hen- 
ry Mann. 

Registrar-GeneralMrs. Ruth M. G. Pealer. 
Treasurer-General Mrs. N. K. Shuto. 
Historian-GeneralMrs. Anita N. McGee. 
Librarian-GeneralMrs. F. B. Rosa. 

Officers whose addresses are not given live 
in Washington, D. C. Terms of officers ex- 
pire in 1905. 



MILITARY ORDER OF THE: LOYAL LEGION OF THE UNITED STATES. 
(Instituted 1865. Membership July 31, 1903, 9,064.) 

Council-in-Chief Bvt. Maj. Henry L. 
Swords, Capt. Roswell H. Mason, Bvt. 
Maj. A. M. Van Dyke, Bvt. Brig.-Gen. 
Frederick A. Starring and Bvt. Maj. 



GENERAL OFFICERS. 

Commander-in-Chief Maj.-Gen. David Mc- 

Senior Vice-Commander-in-Chief Maj. -Gen. 
John R. Brooke, U. S. A. 

Juinor Vice-Commander-in-Chief Rear- Ad- 
miral Charles E. Clark, U. S. N. 

Recorder-in-Chief Bvt. Lieut. -Col. John P. 
Nicholson, U. S. V. 

Registrar-in-Chief Bvt. Maj. William P. 
Huxford, D. S. A. 

Treasurer-in-Chief Paymaster George De F. 



Barton, D. S. N. 
Chancellor-iu-Chief Bvt. Capt. 
Foering. U. S. V. 



John O. 



Chaplain-in-Chief Bvt. Maj. Henry S. Bur- 
rage, U. S. V. 



Charles A Hopkins. 

COMMANDERIES. 

California Bvt. Maj. E. A. Denicke, com- 
mander; Col. W. R. Smedberg, recorder. 

Colorado Capt. Michael E. Smith, com- 
mander; Lieut. J. R. Saville, recorder. 

District of Columbia Rear-Admiral John R. 
Bartlett, commander; Maj. W. P. Hux- 
ford, recorder. 

Illinois Bvt. Maj. George Mason, command- 
er; Roswell H. Mason, recorder. 

Indiana Brig.-Gen. George F. McGinnis, 



PATRIOTIC SOCIETIES. 



129 



commander; Capt. William W. Dougherty, 
recorder. 

Iowa Lieut. -Col. C. C. Horton, commander; 
Adjt. J. W. Muffley, recorder. 

Kansas Col. Camillo C. C. Carr, command- 
er; Brig. -Gen. H. B. Freeman, recorder. 

Maine Bvt. Brig.-Gen. Charles Hamlin, 
commander; Henry S. Burrage, recorder. 

Massachusetts Col. Norwood P. Hallowell, 
commander; Col. Arnold A. Rand, re- 
corder. 

Michigan Lieut. John S. Conant, command- 
er; Gen. F. W. Swift, recorder. 

Minnesota Bvt. Capt. Loren W. Collins, 
commander; Lieut. D. L. Kingsbury, re- 
corder. 

Missouri Bvt. Maj. Amos M. Thayer, com- 
mander; Capt. W. R. Hodges, recorder. 



Nebraska Lieut. George E. Pritchett, com- 
mander; Lieut. Frank B. Bryant, re- 
corder. 

New York Bvt. Brig.-Gen. Thomas H. 
Hubbard, commander; Paymaster A. N. 
Blakeman, recorder. 

Ohio Maj. -Gen. J. Warren Keifer, com- 
mander: Maj. W. R. Thrall, recorder. 

Oregon Maj. Alfred F. Sears, commander; 
Capt. Gavin E. Caukin, recorder. 

Vermont Lieut. George G. Benedict, com- 
mander; Bvt. Capt. Henry O. Wheeler, re- 
corder. 

Washington Col. Byron O. Carr, com- 
mander; Lieut. J. E. Noel, recorder. 

Wisconsin Capt. Edwin B. Parsons, com- 
mander; Lieut. A. Koss Houston, recorder. 



GKAND ARMY OF THE REPUBLIC. 

(First post organized at Decatur, 111., April 6, 1866.) 



GENERAL OFFICERS. 

Commander-in-Chief Gen. John C. Black, 
Chicago, 111. 

Senior Vice-CommanderCol. C. Mason 
Keene, California. 

Junior Vice-CommanderCol. Harry Kess- 

ler, Montana. 

Surgeon-General George A. Harmon, Ohio. 
Chaplain The Rev. Winfield Scott, Arizona. 



OFFICIAL STAFF. 



Adjutant-GeneralCharles A. Partridge, 



Chicago, 111. 
Quartermaster-General Charles 
Rutherford, N. J. 



Burrows, 



Inspector-General E. B. Messer, Hartley, 

Iowa. 
Jndge-Advocate General James Tanner, 

Washington, D. C. 
General Headquarters Memorial hall, Chi- 

cago, 111. 



DEPARTMENT COMMANDERS (1903-1904). 

Department. Commander. Assistant Adjutant-General. 

Alabama R. H. Allison New Decatur E. D. Bacon Birmingham. 

Arizona George W. Sanders. . Phoenix W. F. R. Schindler.. .Phoenix. 

Arkansas John H. Avery Hot Springs Samuel Hamblen.. . .Hot Springs. 

Cal. and Nevada.. .Wm. R. Shafter San Francisco., . .John H. Roberts San Francisco. 

Col. and Wyoming.H. S. Vaughn Denver G. A Hamilton Denver. 

Connecticut M. G. Bulkeley Hartford John H. Thacher Hartford. 

Delaware Wm. G. Baugh Wilmington P. B. Ayars Wilmington. 

Florida J. F. Chase St. Petersburg.. T. R. Chapman St. Petersburg 

Georgia F. D. Lee Fitzgerald A. W. Keeny Fitzgerald. 

Idaho E. S. Whittier Pocatello Samuel Wallace Pocatello. 

Illinois Benson Wood Efflngham C. A, Partridge Chicago. 

Indiana Geo. W. Grubbs Martinsville Jacob M. Neely Indianapolis 

Indian Territory. .John A. Rose Chickasha "~ 

Iowa../. L. B. Raymond Hampton 

Kansas A. W. Smith McPherson ... 

Kentucky W. G. Force Louisville 

La.andMississippi.Chas. W. Keeting....New Orleans.. 

Maine J. L. Chamberlain. . . Brunswick . 

Maryland William Stahl Baltimore J. L. Hoffman Baltimore. 

Massachusetts Dwight O. Judd Holyoke Edward P. Preble . . .Boston. 

Michigan D. B. K. Van Raalte. Holland Fayette Wyckoff .... Lansing. 

Minnesota Isaac L.Mahan St. Paul Orton S. Clark Minneapolis. 

Missouri Frank M. Sterrett ...St. Louis.... .....Thos. B. Rodgers.... St. Louis. 

Montana J. S. Wisner Anaconda E. A. Waterbury Anaconda. 

Nebraska Lee S. Estell Omaha W. S. Askwith Omaha. 

New Hampshire .Edward E. Parker. ..Nashua Frank Battles Concord. 

New Jersey Stephen M. Long East Orange Lewis H. Bridgem... Newark. 

New Mexico J. W. Edwards Albuquerque W. W. McDonald. . . .Albuquerque. 

New York John S. Foster Port Leyden HenryE. Turner. . . .Albany. 

N. Dakota H. J. Rowe Casselton John W. Daley Hunter. 

Ohio A. C. Yengling Salem W. G. Bentley Salem. 

Oklahoma , . . .C. P. Green Alva S. P. Strahan Perry. 

Oregon D. H. Turner Portland J. K. Mayo Portland . 

Pennsylvania Edwin Walton Philadelphia Chas. A. Suydam, Philadelphia. 

Potomac I. G. Kimball Washington B. F. Chase Washington. 

Rhode Island Jas. S. Hudson Providence Philip S. Chase Providence. 

S. Dakota Thomas Reed Arlington J. B. Wolgemutb... .Carthage. 

Tennessee George W. Patten... Chattanooga W. W. French Chattanooga. 



. . . 

..Samuel H. Smith Muskogee. 

. .Geo. A. Newman Des Moines. 

..W. W. Denison Topeka. 

. . J. H. Browning Louisville. 

. .R. B. Baquie New Orleans. 

.Isaac H. Danforth. .Brunswick. 



Texas ............... John H. Bolton ...... San Antonio ...... A. I. Lockwood 

Utah ............ Frank H. Clark ...... Salt Lake City.. . .C. O. Farnsworth. 



San Antonio. 
Salt Lake City. 



Vermont ........... Frank Kenfleld .... Morrisville ....... A. A. Niles ........... Morrisville. 

Va. and N.CarolinaM. II. Haas .......... Phoebus .......... A. A. Hager .......... Nat. Sold. Home 

Wash'n & Alaska. .T. H. Cavanaugh. . . .Olyrapia .......... J. C. Robinson ....... Olympia. 

West Virginia ...... A. C. Moore ........... Clarksburg ....... Henry Raymond Clarksburg. 

Wisconsin ........... J. P. Rundle ......... Milwaukee ........ W. H. Richardson. ..Milwaukee. 



130 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



NATIONAL ENCAMPMENTS AND COMMANDEBS- 
IN-CHIEP. 

1866 Indianapolis; S. A. Hurlbut, Illinois. 

1868 Philadelphia; John A. Logan, Illinois. 

1869 Cincinnati; John A. Logan, Illinois. 

1870 Washington; John A. Logan, Illinois. 

1871 Boston; A. E. Burnside, Rhode Island. 

1872 Cleveland; A. E. Burnside, K. I. 

1873 New Haven; Charles Devens, Jr., 
Massachusetts. 

1874 Harrisburg; Charles Devens, Jr., Mas- 
sachusetts. 

1875 Chicago; J. F. Hartranft, Pennsyl- 
vania. 

1876 Philadelphia; J. F. Hartranft, Penn- 
sylvania. 

1877 Providence; J. C. Robinson, New York. 

1878 Springfield; J. C. Robinson, New York. 

1879 Albany; William Earnshaw, Ohio. 

1880 Dayton, O.; Louis W 7 agner, Pennsyl- 
vania. 

1881 Indianapolis; George S. Merrill, Mas- 
sachusetts. 

1882 Baltimore; P. Vandervoort, Nebraska. 

1883 Denver; R. B. Beath, Pennsylvania. 

1884 Minneapolis; John S. Kountz, Ohio. 

1885 Portland, Me.; S. S. Burdette, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

1886 San Francisco; Lucius Fairchild, 
Wisconsin. 

1887 St. Louis; John P. Rea, Minnesota. 

1888 Columbus, O.; Wm. Warner, St. Louis. 

1389 Milwaukee; Russell A. Alger, Detroit. 

1890 Boston; W. G. Veazey, Rutland, Vt. 

1891 Detroit; John Palmer, Albany. 

1892 Washington; A. G. Weissert, Mil- 
waukee. 

1893 Indianapolis; J. G. B. Adams, Lynn, 
Mass. 

1894 Pittsburg; T. G. Lawler, Rockford. 111. 

1895 Louisville; I. N. Walker, Indianapolis. 

1896 St. Paul; T. S. Clarkson, Omaha, Neb. 

1897 Buffalo; J. P. S. Gobin, Lebanon, Pa. 

1898 Cincinnati; James A. Sexton, Chicago. 

1899 Philadelphia; Albert D. Shaw, N. Y. 

1900 Chicago: Loo Rassieur, St. Louis. 

1901 Cleveland; Ell Torrance. Minneapolis. 

1902 Washington: Thomas J. Stewart. Nor- 
ristown, Pa. 

1903 San Francisco; J. C. Black, Chicago. 

MEMBERSHIP BY DEPARTMENTS. 

(June 30, 1903.) 
Department. Posts. Members. 

Alabama 12 126 

Arizona 8 206 

Arkansas 45 706 

California and Nevada 95 5,424 

Colorado and Wyoming 68 2.106 

Connecticut 64 4,061 

Delaware '. 22 538 

Florida 19 342 

Georgia 11 392 

Idaho 19 436 

Illinois 548 20,800 

Indiana 416 15,599 

Indian Territory 21 378 

Iowa 377 12,458 

Kansas 385 10,525 

Kentucky 92 2,270 

Louisiana and Mississippi 34 1,038 

Maine 157 6,185 

Maryland 55 2,403 

Massachusetts 211 16,804 

Michigan 363 13,709 

Minnesota 171 5,994 

Missouri 275 9,401 

Montana 12 403 

Nebraska 226 4,921 

New Hampshire 88 3,144 

New Jersey 108 5,000 

New Mexico 5 144 



Department. Posts. Members. 

New York 621 29,988 

North Dakota 24 487 

Ohio 599 25,529 

Oklahoma 71 1,574 

Oregon 56 1,944 

Pennsylvania 544 26,425 

Potomac 17 2,411 

Rhode Island 26 1,598 

South Dakota 83 1,675 

Tennessee 48 1,579 

Texas 27 586 

Utah 5 233 

Vermont 102 3,116 

Virginia and North Carolina... 40 741 

Washington and Alaska 89 2,581 

West Virginia 45 1,216 

Wisconsin 253 9,044 

Total 6,557 256,510 

MEMBERSHIP BY YEARS. 



1878 31,016 

1879 44.752 

1880 60.634 

1881 85,856 

1882 134,701 

1883 215.446 

1884 273.168 

1885 294.787 

1886 323.571 



1887 355.916 

1888 372,960 

1889 397,774 



185)1 407.781 

1892.... 



1896 340.610 

1897 319,456 

1898 305.603 

1899 287.981 

1900 276.662 

1901 269.507 

1902 263.745 

1903 256.510 



DEATH RATE BY YEARS. 

No. P.ct. 



. .. 

1887. .3.406 .95 

1888. .4.433 1.18 

1889. .4.696 3.18 

1890. .5,476 1.33 

1891.. 5,965 1.46 

1892. .6,404 1.61 



No. P.ct. 

1893. .7,002 1.78 

1894. .7,283 2.97 

1895. .7,368 2.06 

1896. .7,293 2.21 
1897.. 7,515 2.35 
1898.. 8,383 2.41 



No. P.ct. 
1899.. 7,994 2.78 
1900. .7.790 2.80 
1901.. 8.166 3.02 
19 2. .8,299 3.08 
1903. .8,366 3.22 



Total expended for relief during year 
ended June 30, 1903, $103,810.10. 

WOMAN'S RELIEF CORPS. 

(Organized at Denver, Col., July, 1883.) 
President Sarah D. Wlnans, Troy, O. 
Senior Vice-PresidentUrsula M. Mattison, 

Tacoma, Wash. 
Junior Vice-PresidentMary J. Tygard, 

Denison, Tex. 

Treasurer Sarah E. Phillips, Syracuse, N. Y. 
Chaplain Mary Lyle Reynolds, Covington, 

Ky. 

Secretary Jennie S. Wright, Troy, O. 
Inspector Lydia C. Hopkins, Detroit, Mich. 
Counselor Sarah E. Fuller, Medford, Mass. 
Instituting and Installing Officer Jennie B. 

Atwood, Trenton, N. J. 
Patriotic Instructor Kate E. Jones, Ilion, 

N. Y. 
Press "Correspondent Mary M. North, Snow 

Hill. Md. 
Membership in 1903147,000. 

LADIES OF THE GRAND ARMY OF THE 

REPUBLIC. 
(Organized in Chicago, September, 1886.) 

President Mrs. Belinda S. Bailey, San 
Francisco, Cal. 

Vice-PresidentMrs. Ruth E. Foote, Den- 
ver, Col. 

Junior Vice-PresidentMrs. Emma E. 
Pierce, Springfield, Mass. 

Treasurer Mrs. Julia M. Gordon, Topeka, 
Kas. 

Secretary Mrs. Abbie E. Krebs, San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 

Counselor Mrs. M. Anna Hall, Wheeling, 
W. Va. 

Inspector Mrs. Annie Michener, Pittsburg, 
Pa. 



PATRIOTIC SOCIETIES. 



131 



National Council of Administration Mrs. E. 
M. Chamberlain, Albany, N. Y. ; Miss Ruth 
Hall, 2214 Market street, Wheeling, W. 
Va. ; Mrs. Mary T. Hager, Chicago, 111. 

SONS OF VETERANS. U. S. A, 

(Organised September, 1879.) 
Commander-in-Chief Arthur B. Spink, 

Providence, R. I. 
Senior Vice-Commander James B. Adams, 

Atlantic City, N. J. 

Junior Vice-Commander Dr. P. H. B. Mc- 
Dowell, Racine, Wis. 
Council-in-Chief H. B. Speelman, Cincin- 



nati, O.; Walter E. Smith, Allentown, 
Pa.; Newton J. Maguire, Indianapolis, 
Ind. ; Louis Wagner, Philadelphia, Pa. 



DAUGHTERS OF VETERANS. 
President Carrie Westbrook, Elmira, N. Y. 
Treasurer Mrtle Kramer, 73 Center aven, 

Chicago, 111. 
Secretary Anna M. Clark, 29 DeRussey 

street, Binghamton, N. Y. 
Secretary Illinois Department Miss L. B. 

Phillips, 5929 West Superior street, Austin 

station, Chicago. 



UNITED CONFEDERATE VETERANS. 
(Organized June 10, 1889.) 



GENERAL OFFICERS. 

General Commanding Gen. John B. Gordon, 

Atlanta, Ga. 
Adj. -Gen. and Chief of Staff Maj.-Gen. 

William E. Mickle, New Orleans, La. 

Army of Northern Virginia Dept. Com- 
mander, Gen. C. I. Walker, Charleston, 
>S. C.; Adj.-Gen. and Chief of Staff, Brig.- 
Gen. J. G. Holmes, Charleston, S. C. 

Kentucky Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. Ben- 
nett H. Young, Louisville, Ky.; Adj.-Gen. 
and Chief of Staff, Col. H. P. McDonald, 
Louisville. 

Maryland Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. A. 
C. Trippe, Baltimore, Md.; Adj.-Gen. and 
Chief of Staff, Col. D. S. Briscoe, Balti- 
more. 

North Carolina Div. Commander, Maj.- 
Gen. Julian S. Carr, Durham, N. U.; 
Adj.-Gen. and Chief of Staff, Col. H. A. 
London, Pittsboro, N. C. 

South Carolina Div. Commander, Maj.- 
Gen. T. W. Oarwile, Edgefield, S. C.; 
Adj.-Gen. and Chief of Staff, Col. J. M. 
Jordan, Greenville, S. C. 

Virginia Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. Theo- 
dore S. Garnett, Norfolk, Va.; Adj.-Gen. 
and Chief of Staff, Col. J. V. Bidgood, 
Richmond. 

West Virginia Dir. Commander, Maj.-Gen. 
Robert White, Wheeling, W. Va.; Adj.- 
Gen. and Chief of Staff, Col. A. C. L. 
Gatewood, Linwood. 

Army of Tennessee Dept. Commander, 
Lieut.-Gen. S. D. Lee, Columbus, Miss.; 
Adj.-Gen. and Chief of Staff, Brig.-Gen. 
E. T. Sykes, Columbus. . 

Alabama Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. G. 
P. Harrison, Opelika; Adj.-Gen. and Chief 
of Staff, Col. H. E. Jones, Spring Hill. 

Florida Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. E. M. 
Law, Bartow; Adj.-Gen. and Chief of 
Staff, Col. F. L. Robertson,. Tallahassee. 

Georgia Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. G. A. 
Evans, 442 Peach Tree street, Atlanta; 



Adj.-Gen. and Chief of Staff, Col. William 

L. Crumley, Atlanta. 
Louisiana Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. J. 

B. Levert, New Orleans; Adj.-Gen. and 

Chief of Staff, Col. A. B. Booth, Neir 

Orleans. 
Mississippi Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. 

Robert Lowry, Jackson; Adj.-Gen. and 

Chief of Staff, Col. J. L, McCaskill, Bran- 
don. 
Tennessee Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. G. 

W. Gordon, Memphis, Tenn.; Adj.-Gen. 

and Chief of Staff, Col. J. P. Hickman, 

Nashville. 
Transmississippi Dept. Commander, Lint.- 

Gen. W. L. Cabell, Dallas; AdJ.-Uen. 

and Chief of Staff, Brig.-Gen. A.T.Watta, 

Dallas. 
Arkansas Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. B. 

W. Green, Little Rock; Adj.-Gen. and 

Chief of Staff, Col. Frank T. Vaughan, 

Little Rock. 
Indian Ter. Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. R. 

B. Coleman, McAlester, I. T.; Adj.-Gen. 

and Chief of Staff, Col. J. H. Reed, Mc- 
Alester. 
Missouri Dlr. Commander, Maj.-Gen. Elijah 

Gates, St. Joseph; Adj.-Gen. and Chief of 

Staff, Col. John C. Landis, St. Joseph. 
Oklahoma Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. S. 

J. Wilson, Norman; Adj.-Gen. and Chief 

of Staff, Col. William L. Cross, Oklahoma 

City. 
Pacific Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. A. W. 

Hutton, Los Angeles, Cal. 
Texas Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. K. M. 

Van Zant, Fort Worth; Adj.-Gen. and 

Chief of Staff, Col. S. P. Greene, Fort 

Worth. 
Northwest Div. Commander, Maj.-Gen. F. 

D. Brown, Philipsburg, Mont. ; Adj.-Gen. 

and Chief of Staff, Col. J. H. Williams, 

Philipsburg, Mont. 

Membership, about 45,000; camps, 1,523. 
The purpose of the society is strictly so- 
cial, literary, historical and benevolent. 



MILITARY ORDER OF FOREIGN WARS OF THE UNITED STATES. 
(Instituted Dec. 27, 1894.) 



OFFICERS OF THE NATIONAL COMMANDERY. 

Commander-in-Chief Maj.-Gen. Alex. S. 
Webb, U. S. A., 150 Broadway, New York. 

Vice-Commanders-General Maj.-Gen. Chas. 
F. Roe, N. G. N. Y., 280 Broadway, New 
York; Brig.-Gen. William H. H. Davis, 
U S. V., Doylestown, Pa.; Morris W. 
Seymour, Bridgeport, Conn.; Brig.-Gen. 
George M. Moulton, D. S. V., Chicago, 
111.; the Hon. Horace Davis, LL. D., San 
Francisco, Cal.; William De Lancey 



Howe, Boston, Mass.; Col. T. V. Kessler, 
Pensacola, Fla. ; Col. H. Ashton Ramsay 
Baltimore, Md.; Rear- Admiral John D. 
Walker, U. S. N., Washington, D. C.; 
Brig.-Gen. Henry A. Axline, U. S. V., Co- 
lumbus, O.; Col. Milton Moore, D. S. V 
Kansas City, Mo. ; Capt. Frank L. Greene, 
U. S. V., St. Albans, Vt.; Dr. George B. 
Johnston, Richmond, Va. ; Capt. Stephen 
Watermann, U. S. V., Providence, R. I.; 
Commander John W. Bostick, L. N. R., 
New Orleans, La.; Brig.-Gen. Edw. E. 



132 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWd ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Campbell, U. S. V., Newark, N. J.; Col. 

Horace M. Seaman, U. S. V., Milwaukee, 

Wis.; Maj. George H. Hopkins, Detroit, 

Mich.- Brig. -Gen. William W. Gordon, 

D. S. V., Savannah, Ga. ; Maj.-Gen. L. N. 

Oppenheimer, T. V. G., Austin, Tex.; 

Gen. Irving Hale, Denver, Col. ; Brig. -Gen. 

William J. McKee, U. S. V., Indianapolis, 

Ind. 
Secretary-GeneralJames M. Morgan, St. 

Paul building, New York, N. Y. 
deputy Secretary-General Maj. David 

Banks, Jr., New York, N. Y. 
Treasurer-General Col. Oliver C. Bosby- 

shell, Fidelity building, Philadelphia. 
Registrar-General Rev. Henry N. Wayne, 

Ainenia Union, New York. 
Judge-Advocate General The Hon. Frank 

M. Avery, 154 Nassau street, New York. 
Chaplain-General Capt. C. Ellis Stevens, 

2227 Spruce street. Philadelphia, Pa. 



Deputy Treasurer-GeneralJames T. Sands, 

Commanderies have been established in 
twenty-two states and territories. Total 
membership about 1,600. 



The order Is a military organization with 
patriotic objects, having for its scope the 
period of American history since national 
Independence. It stands for the needed and 
honorable principle of national defense 
against foreign aggression. The principal 
feature of the order is the perpetuating of 
the names, as well as the services, of com- 
missioned officers who served in either the 
war of the revolution, the war with Tripoli, 
the war of 1812, the Mexican war or the war 
with Spain. Veteran companionship Is con- 
ferred upon such officers and hereditary 
companionship upon their direct lineal de- 
scendants in the male line. 



NATIONAL ARMY AND NAVY SPANISH WAR VETERANS. 
Commander-in-chief Col. Harold C. McGrew. Indianapolis. Ind. 

Inspector-General Capt. Fred C. Kuehnle, 

New York, N. Y. 

Surgeon-General Dr. Frank W. Heldley, 
Cincinnati, O. 



Senior Vice-Commander Capt. C. S. An- 
drews, New York, N. Y. 

Junior Vice-CommanderCol. L/ucien F. 
Burpee, Waterbury, Conn. 



Judge-Advocate General Lieut. I. N. Ken- 
ney, Bay City, Mich. 



Chaplain-GeneralRev. W. H. I. Reaney. 
U. S. N. 



NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF UNION EX-PRISONERS OF WAR. 



National Commander James D. Walker, 

Pittsburg, Pa. 
National Senior Vice-Commander Clinton 

T. Hull, San Francisco. 
National Junior Vice-CommanderJohn T. 

Kissane, Ohio. 
Chaplain John S. Ferguson, Keokuk, Iowa. 



Historian Gen. Harry White, Indiana, Pa. 
Quartermaster Stephen M. Long, East 

Orange, N. J. 
Executive Committee--Gov. A. T. Bliss of 

Michigan, O. A. Parsons of Pennsylvania, 

Charles G. Davis of Boston and Charles 

S. Fisher of Minnesota. 



NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF ARMY NURSES. 

President Mrs. Addle L. Ballou, California. I Chaplain Mary E. Lacey, New Jersey. 
Vice-Pres't Mrs. S. Mimps, Pennsylvania. Guard Mary F. Fox, New Jersey 
Treas'r Mrs. S. M. Stewart, Gettysburg, Pa. I Conductor Mrs. E. L. Chapman, lUinois. 



NATIONAL SOCIETY OF THE ARMY OF THE PHILIPPINES. 

(Organized Aug. 13, 1900.) 
President Gen. Charles King, Milwaukee. 
Secretary A. E. Fouts, Missouri. 
Treasurer J. E. White, Illinois. 
Chaplain Capt. James M. Mailley, Ne- 
braska. 



Vice-Presidents Col. J. W. Pope, Colorado: 
Capt. C. E. Locke, Colorado; F. M. 
Schutte, St. Paul; Capt. H. A. Crowe, 
Pennsylvania; Col. W. S. Metcalfe, Kan- 
sas; Maj. D. S. Falrchild, Jr., Iowa. 



FAILURES IN THE UNITED STATES. 
[From Dun's Review, New York.] 



CALENDAR 
YEAR. 



1894. 



1899., 
1900., 
1901. 
1902. 
1903. 



1ST QUAR. 2D QUAR. 3D QUAR. 4TH QUAR. TOTAL FOR YEAR. 



3384 189.284.349 



^202 



4031 

3932 
3687 
2772 



3200 



Amt. of 
liabili- 
ties. 



2119 f22.989.331 



Amt. of 
liabili- 
ties. 



47.338,300 3199 121.541,239 40151 82.469.821 4826 

64.137,333 2734 37,595,9732868 29.411.196J 3979 

2855 41,026,261 2792 32,167.179 3748 

57,425,135 2995 40,444,547 3757 73.2*4.649 4305 

48,007,911 2889 43,684.876 2881 25.601,188 3649 

32,946.565! 3031 34.498.074 2540! 25.104.778 2938 

27.152,031! 2081 14.910.902 2001 17.640.972 2483 

33.022.573,2438 41,724.879 2519! 27.119.996 2923 

31,703.486!2424 24.101.204 2324 24,756.172 2919 

33.731,758 2747 26,643.098 2511 25,032.634 2939 

34.344.433 2248 32.452.827 2548) 34.858.595 



Amt. of 
liabili- 
ties. 



1984 ?1 8,659.235 2867 $33.111.252 10.344 



Amt. of 
liabili- 
ties. 



95.430.529 
41.S48.354 
52,188.737 



54.941.803 15,088 
37,038,09613.351 
38.113.482 12, 186 
31,175.984 9,337 
36.628,22510.774 
32,531.514 11,145 
32.069.279 11.615 



15,242 
13.885 
13.197 




1114.044.167 

346.779.889 
172,992.856 
173.196.060 
226.096.134 
154.332.071 
130.662.899 



138,495.673 
113.093.37fi 
117,476,769 



111,026 

22.751 
12,458 
13,124 
14.992 
11.559 
10.722 
9,733 
12.854 
10,279 
10,114 



UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. 133 



UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES. 

(Corrected to Oct. 1, 1903.) 

School. Location. . President. Instructors. Students 

Amherst...... ..... '..... Amherst, Mass ......... George Harris, D. D., LL. D ..... 37 415 

Armour institute ....... Chicago ................. p \y Gunsaulus D D 57 1434 

Augustana .............. Rock Island, 111 ......... Q'. Andreen ........................ 38 659 

Baker university ....... Baldwin, Kas ........... L. H. Murlin, A. M., D. D ........ 42 985 

Bates .................... Lewiston, Me ........... G. C. Chase, D. D., LL. D ........ 22 356 

Baylor university ....... Waco, Tex .............. Samuel P. Brooks, A. M .......... 43 587 

Beloit ................... Beloit, Wis ............. E. D. Eaton, D. D., LL. D ........ 27 465 

Berea .................... Berea, Ky... ............ William G. Frost, D. D ........... 56 977 

Bethany ................. Lmdsborg, Kas ......... Carl Swenson, Ph. D., D. D ...... 49 878 

Boston university ...... Boston, Mass ........... w. E. Huntington (acting) ....... 135 1,361 

Bowdoin ................. Brunswick, Me ......... Wm. DeWitt Hyde, D. D., LL. D. 36 391 

Brigham Young ......... Logan, Utah ............ James H. Linford, B. S., D. B... 32 731 

Brown university ....... Providence, R. I ........ w. H. P. Faunce, D. D .......... 78 882 

Bucknell university ---- Lewisburg, Pa .......... John H. Harris LL D 45 650 

Catholic U. of Am ...... Washington, D. C ...... Dennis J. O'Connell, S. T. D.... 28 154 

Central university ...... Richmond. Ky ......... Rev. W. C. Roberts, D.D., LL.D.107 1,205 

Claflin university ....... Orangeburg, S. C ....... L. M. Dunton, D. D.. 40 700 

Colby .................... Waterville, Me ......... Charles L. White, A. M .......... 16 195 

College City of N. Y... New York, N. Y ........ John H. Finley, LL. D... ...119 2348 

Colorado college ........ Colorado Springs, Col... W. F. Slocum, LL D. 43 600 

Columbia ................ New York, N. Y ........ N. M. Butler, Ph. D., LL. D'. '...'. '.530 4242 

Columbian university.. Washington, D. C ...... Charles W. Necdham, LL. D ..... .158 1 298 

Cornell college .......... Mount Vernon, Iowa... William F. King LL D 38 743 

Cornell university ...... Ithaca, N. Y ............ J.G.Schurman. A.M., D.s'.',' LL.D*.450 3,500 

Dartmouth .............. Hanover, N. H ......... William J. Tucker, LL D 72 * 867 

Denison university ..... Granville, O ............ Emory W. Hunt, D. D., LL D.. 35 450 

De Pauw university... Greencastle, Ind ........ Edwin H. Hughes, S T D 30 617 

Drake university ....... Des Moines, Iowa ..... Hill M. Bell "*112 1687 

Fisk university ......... Nashville, Tenn ........ James G. Merrill, D. D....' .'..'.'..'.' 32 '517 

Fort Worth university. Fort Worth, Tex ....... Rev. G. MacAdam, A M D D 54 851 

Georgetown university George town., D. C.. Rev. Jerome Daugherty, S. J....'ll8 760 

Girard college .......... Philadelphia ............ A. H. Fetterolf. LL. D ..... 67 1.677 

Grove City college ...... Grove City, Pa ......... I. C. Kettler, D. D... ..20 605 

Hampton institute ..... Hampton, Va ........... H. B. Frissell, D. D., LL. D ...... 74 1,180 

Harvard university ..... Cambridge, Mass ....... Charles W. Eliot, LL. D .......... 525 4,226 

Howard university ..... Washington, D. C ...... J. E. Rankin, D D . LL D 60- 900 

Illinois Wesleyan ....... Bloomington, 111 ........ E. M. Smith, M. A. D. D..'. '. 34 1516 

Indiana university ..... .Bloomington, Ind ....... William L. Bryan 75 1*469 

Iowa State college ..... Ames, Iowa ............. A. B. Storms, LL. D.. '..'.'.'.'. '.'.88 1*450 

Johns Hopkins, The... Baltimore, Md .......... Ira Remson, M. D., PhD LL D 150 ' 702 



, . ., . . 

Lafayette college ...... Eiaston, Pa ..... ... ..... Rv. E.D.Warfield, D. D., LL. D. 28 440 

Lake Forest, college... Lake Forest, 111 ........ Richard D. Harlan, D. D ......... 20 135 

Lawrence university... Appleton, Wls .......... Samuel Plautz, Ph. D., D. D.... 31 585 

Lehigh university ...... Bethlehem, Pa .......... Thomas M. Drown, LL D .. 

Lewis institute ......... Chicago ................. George N. Carman, director ....... 75 2,505 

Leland Stanford, Jr ---- Palo Alto, Cal .......... Dnvid S. Jordan, LL. D 130 1 400 

Manhattan college ...... New York, N. Y ........ Rev. Brother Jerome, S. C ....... 27 270 

Mass. Inst. Tech ....... Boston, Mass ............ Henry S. Pritchett, LL. D ........ 183 1,600 

Michigan Agricultural.. Lansing, Mich .......... J. L. Snyder, Ph D . 70 775 

Monmouth college. ..... Monmouth, 111 .......... Thomas H. McMichael. LL. D.... 19 350 

Mount Holyoke college.. South Hadley, Mass... Mary E. Woolley Lit D LHD 58 676 

Nevada State univ ...... Reno, Nev ............... Joseph E. Stubbs, D. D ........... 27 255 

New York university... New York, N. Y ......... H. M. MacCracken, D. D., LL. D.212 2,100 

Northwestern univ ...... Evanston, 111 ............ Edmund J. James, LL. D ......... 304 3,691 

Oberlin college .......... Oberlin, O ............... Henry C. King ..... .. 86 1,377 

Ohio State university... Columbus, O ............ Wm. O. Thompson, D. D , LL. D.140 1,735 

Ohio Wesleyan .......... Delaware, O ............ James W.Bashford, D. D., Ph. D.126 1,500 

Ottawa university ...... Ottawa, Kas ............ J. D. S. Riggs, Ph. D L H. D 23 650 

Polytechnic institute... Brooklyn, N. Y .......... Henry S. Snow, LL. D' 50 600 

Pratt institute .......... Brooklyn, N. Y ......... Charles M. Pratt... ...134 3,183 

Princeton university... Princeton, N. J ......... W.Wilson, Ph. D., Lit D. LL D.105 1 550 

Purdue university ...... Lafayette, Ind .......... W. E. Stone, Ph D ' 95 1280 

State Univ. of Iowa .... Iowa City, Iowa ........ Geo. E. MacLean. LL. D., Ph. D.163 1,442 

St. Francis Xavier ..... New York, N. Y ........ Rev. David W. Hearn, S. J ..... 30 660 

St. Ignatius ............. Chicago ................. Henry J. Dumbach ................ 26 536 

Simpson college ......... Indianola, Iowa ......... Charles E. Shelton, A. M ........ 39 772 

Smith college ........... Northampton, Mass ..... L. Clarke Seelye, D. D. LL D . 90 1,035 

State Univ. of Ky ...... Louisville, Ky .......... L. C. Pierce, D. D ................. 12 200 

Syracuse university ..... Syracuse, N. Y .......... James R. Day, S. T. D., LL. D..180 2,200 

Talladega college ....... Talladega, Ala .......... G. W. Andrews .................... 30 550 

Tufts college ............ Tufts College, Mass....E. H. Capen, D. D., LL. D ...... 165 1,000 

Tulane university ....... New Orleans, La ....... E. A. Alderman, LL. D ........... 91. 1,365 

Union college ........... College View, Neb ...... L. A. Hoopes ...................... 25 425 

Union college ........... Schenectady, N. Y ..... A. V. V. Raymond, D. D., LL. D. 22 250 

U. S. Military academy. West Point, N. Y ....... Col. Albert L. Mills ............... 78 483 



134 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



School. 

U.S. Naval academy... 
Univ. of Alabama ...... 

Univ. of Arizona 
Univ. of California 
Univ. of Chicago 
Univ. of Cincinnati 
Univ. of Colorado 
Univ. of Denver ........ 

Univ. of Georgia 

Univ. of Idaho 

Univ. of Illinois ........ 

Univ. of Kansas ........ 

Univ. of Maine ......... 

Univ. of Michigan 
Univ. of Minnesota 
Univ. of Missouri 
Univ. of Mississippi... 
Univ. of Montana ...... 

Univ. of Nebraska 
Univ. of N. Carolina... 
Univ. of N. Dakota 
Univ. of Notre Dame.. 
Univ. of Oklahoma ..... 

Univ. of Oregon ........ 

Univ. of Pennsylvania. 
Univ. of S. Dakota ..... 

Univ. of Tennessee ..... 

Univ. of Texas ......... 

Lniv. of Utah ........... 

Univ. of Virginia ....... 

Univ. of Vermont ...... 

Univ. of Washington.. 
Univ. of Wisconsin 
Univ. of Wyoming ..... 

Vanderbilt university.. 
Vassar college .......... 

Washington university. 
W. Virginia university 
Western Reserve univ. 
Western Univ. of Pa.. 
Williams college....... 

Yale university 



Location. 



President. 



Jnst motors. Students 
654 
400 
198 
4,150 
4,463 
1,400 
1,024 
1,311 
320 
350 
3,824 
1,400 
521 
4,000 
3,800 
1,591 
254 
347 
2,560 



.Annapolis, Md Capt. W. H. Brownson... 

University, Ala w. S. Wyinan, LL. D... 

.Tucson, Ariz. Kendrick C. Babcock 24 

.Berkeley, Cal Benjamin Ide Wheeler, LL. D....434 

.Chicago w.R. Harper, Ph. D..D.D., LL.D.325 

.Cincinnati, O Howard Ayers, LL. D 185 

.Boulder, Col James H. Baker, M. A., LL. D...105 

.Denver, Col H. A. Buchtel, D. D 175 

.Athens, Ga... Walter B. Hill, LL. D 26 

Moscow, Idaho James A. McLean, Ph. D 25 

Urbana, 111 Andrew S. Draper, LL. D 413 

Lawrence, Kas Frank Strong, Ph. D., chancellor. 90 

Orono, Me Q. E.Fellows,Ph.D.,L.H.D.,LL.D. 63 

.Ann Arbor, Mich James B. Angell, LL. D 260 

.Minneapolis, Minn Cyrus Northrop, LL. D 280 

.Columbia, Mo Richard H. Jesse, LL. D 120 

University, Miss R. B. Fulton, LL. D 22 

Missoula, Mont Oscar J. Craig, A. M., Ph.-D.... 15 

.Lincoln, Neb E. Benjamin Andrews, LL. D....190 

Chapel Hill, N. C F. P. Venable, Ph. D 66 

Grand Forks, N. D w. Merrifield, M. A... ..46 

.Notre Dame, Ind , R ev . Andrew Morrissey, C. S. C.. 60 

Norman, O. T David R. Boyd, Ph. D 34 

Eugene, Ore Prince L. Campbell, A. B 76 

Philadelphia Charles C. Harrison, LL. D 290 

Vermilion, S. D G. Droppers, A. B 35 

Knoxville, Tenn C. W. Dabney, Ph D , LL. D....120 

Austin, Tex William L. Prather, LL. D 91 

.Salt Lake City, Utah... J. T. Kingsbury Ph D 39 

. Charlottesville, Va James M. Page (acting) 56 

Burlington, Vt M. S. Buckham, D. D 64 

.Seattle, Wash Thomas F. Kane, Ph. D 40 

.Madison, Wis Charles R. Van Hise, Ph. D 205 

Laramie, Wyo ,C. W. Lewis, B. S., Sc. M., D. D. 17 

Nashville, Tenn J. H. Kirkland, Ph. D., LL. D..101 

Poughkeepsie, N. Y James M. Taylor, D. D., LL. D.. 79 

St. Louis, Mo W. S. Chaplin, LL. D 32 

Morgantown, W. Va....D. B. Purinton, Ph. D., LL. D.. 70 

.Cleveland, O Charles F. Thwing, LL. D 150 

.Pittsburg, Pa J. A. Brashear, Sc. D., LL. D....126 

Williamstown, Mass.. Rev Henry Hopkins, D.D..LL.D. 34 
.New Haven, Conn Arthur T. Hadley, LL. D 350 



700 
352 
553 

2,550 
450 
756 

1,348 
800 
616 
586 
631 

2,340 
200 
691 
927 
205 
935 
740 
914 
455 

3,000 



MEMBERS OF THE FRENCH ACADEMY. 



. and name. Elected. 

Legouve, Ernest, b. 1825 1855 

Ollivier, Emlle, b. 1825 1870 

Mezieres, Alfred, b. 1826 1874 

Boissier, Gaston, b. 1823 1876 

Sardou, Victorien, b. 1831 1877 

Audiffret-Pasquler, Due de, b. 1823.. 1878 

Ronsse, Edmond, b. 1816 1880 

Sully-Prudhomme, Rene, b. 1839 1881 

Perraud, Adolphe, b. 1828 1882 

Coppee, Franoois, b. 1842 1884 

Halevy, Ludovic, b. 1834 1884 

Greard, Octave, b. 1828 1886 

Haussonville, Comte de, b. 1843 1888 

Claretie, Jules, b. 1840 1888 

Vogue, Melchior, Vicomte de. b. 1848.1888 

Freycinet, Charles de, b. 1828 1890 

Viaud, Julien (Pierre Loti), b. 1850.. 1891 

Lavisse. Ernest, b. 1842 1892 

Thureau-Dangan, Paul, b. 1837 1893 

Krunetiere, Marie Ferdinand, b. 1849.1893 

Sorel, Albert, b. 1842 1894 

Heredia, Jose, b. 1842 1894 

Bourget, Paul, b. 1852 1894 

Houssaye, Henri, b. 1848 1894 

Lemaitre, Jules, b. 1853 1895 



The Academic Franchise, or French 
academy, was instituted in 1635. It is a 
part of the Institute of France and its 
particular function is to conserve the French 
language, foster literature and encourage 
genius. The members are forty in number 
and are popularly known, as the "forty im- 
mortals." 



and name. Elected. 

Thibault, Jacques (Anatole France), 
b. 1844 ................................. 1896 

Beauregard, Marquis de, b. 1835 ..... 1896 

Paris, Gaston, d. Mar. 6,1903; b. 1839.1896 
Theuriet, Andre, b. 1833 ............. 1896 

Vandal. Albert, b. 1853 ................ 1896 

Mun, Albert, Comte de, b. 1841 ...... 1897 

Hanotaux, Gabriel, b. 1853 ........... 1897 

Guillaume, Eugene, b. 1822 ........... 188 

Lavedan, Henri, b. 1859 .............. 1898 

Deschanel, Paul, b. 1856 .............. 1899 

Hervieu, Paul, b. 1857 ................ 1900 

Faguet, Emile, b. 1841 ............... 1900 

Bertholet, Eugene, b. 1827 ............ 1900 

Rostand, Edmond, b. 1868 ............ 1901 

Vogue, Charles de, b. 1829 ............ 1901 



GIFTS FOR PUBLIC PURPOSES. 



Totals by years of gifts and bequests in the United States of $5.000 or more for public pur- 
poses as noted in Appleton's Annual Encyclopedia from 1893 to 1902 inclusive: 

1893 $29.000.000|1897 $45.000.00011901 

QQ nnn nnn'iarw 



L 00011897 

1S94 32.000.00011898 .. '38.000,000 ! 1902. .. 



82,800,00011899 62.750.0001 

27.000.0001900.... .. 47.500.000 Total.... 



$107,860,000 

. 94.000.000 



1515,410.000 



ALASKAN BOUNDARY AWARD. 



135 



ALASKAN BOUNDARY AWARD. 



Jan. 24, 1903, Secretary John Hay and Sir 
Michael Herbert, British ambassador, signed 
a treaty to submit the Alaskan boundary 
question to adjudication by a commission of 
six jurors, of whom three were to be Amer- 
ican and three British. The agreement was 
ratified by the United States senate Feb. 11. 

The jurors chosen for the United States 
were Secretary of War Elihu Root of New 
York, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massa- 
chvsetts and Senator George Turner of 
Washington; for Great Britain, Lord Chief 
Justice Alverstone, Sir Louis N. Jette and 
A. B. Aylesworth. 

The claim of the United States was based 
upon the treaty of 1825 between England and 
Russia fixing the line of demarcation be- 
tween the main body of Alaska and British 
Columbia. In this document it is declared 
th^it Prince of Wales island is the southern 
extremity of the Russian holdings and that 
between this island and the Alaskan main- 
land the line of demarcation shall follow 
the summit of the mountains situated paral- 
lel to the coast. It is further declared: 
"That wherever the summit of the moun- 
tains which extend in a direction parallel to 
the coast shall prove to be at a distance of 
more than ten marine leagues (34.6 miles) 
from the ocean the limit between the Brit- 
ish possessions and the line of coast which 
is to belong to Russia as above mentioned 
shall be formed by a line parallel to the 
windings (sinuosities) of the coast and which 
shall never exceed the distance of ten ma- 
rine leagues therefrom." 

The claim of Great Britain, first made in 
1898, was that the boundary was not to be 
drawn parallel to the windings- of the coast, 
but to a line leaping from headland to head- 
land across all bays, inlets and fiords. If 
this claim were found tenable it would give 
several outlets to the sea from upper British 
Columbia. 

The members of the boundary commission 
assembled in -London and the arguments 
were begun Sept. 1, with Lord Chief Justice 
Alverstone presiding. The attorneys appear- 
ing for Canada were the Hon. Clifford Sif- 
ton, Sir Robert Finlay and Mr. Christopher 
Robinson; those for the United States were 
Judge John M. Dickinson, John W. Foster, 
Daniel T. Watson and Hannis Taylor. The 
sittings were concluded Oct. 17, when it was 
announced that the decision was in favor of 
the United States, Chief Justice Alverstone 
having voted with the American jurors. 

The questions formally set forth in the 
Hay-Herbert treaty and the answers thereto 
of the commission were: 

1. What is intended as the point of com- 
mencement of the line? Answer: The line 
commences at Cape Muzoan. 

2. What channel is the Portland channel? 
Answer: The Portland channel passes north 
of Pearse and Wales islands and enters the 
ocean through Tongas passage, between 
Wales and Sitklan islands. 

3. What course should the line take from 
tho point of commencement to the entrance 
to Portland channel? Answer: A straight 
line to the middle of the entrance of Tongas 
passage. 

4. From what point on the 56th parallel 
is the line to be drawn to the head of the 
Portland channel and what course should 
it follow between these points? Answer: A 
straight line between Salmon and Bear riv- 
ers direct to the 56th parallel of latitude. 



5 In extending the line of demarcation 
northward from said point on the parallel 
of the 56th degree of north latitude, fol- 
lowing the crest of the mountains situated 
parallel to the coast until its intersection 
with the 141st degree of longitude west of 
Greenwich, subject to the condition that 
if such line should anywhere exceed the dis- 
tance of ten marine leagues from the ocean 
then the boundary between the British and 
the Russian territory should be formed by a 
line parallel to the sinuosities of the coast 
and distant therefrom not more than ten 
marine leagues, was it the intention of said 
convention of 1825 that there should remain 
iu the exclusive possession of Russia a con- 
tinuous fringe or strip of coast on the main- 
land, not exceeding ten marine leagues in 
width, separating the British possession 
from the bays, ports, inlets, havens and wa- 
ters of the ocean and extending from the 
said point on the 56th degree of latitude 
north to a point where such line of demarca- 
tion should intersect the 141st degree of 
longitude west of the meridian of Green- 
wich? Answer: Yes. 

The sixth question required no answer 
after the fifth question had been answered 
in the affirmative. 

7. What, if any exist, are the mountains 
referred to as situated parallel to the coast, 
which mountains when within ten marine 
leagues from the coast are declared to form 
the eastern boundary? Answer: The major- 
ity of the tribunal selected the line of peaks 
starting at the head of Portland channel 
and running along the high mountains on 
the outer edge of the mountains shown on 
the maps of survey made in 1893 extending 
to Mount Whipple and thence along what is 
known as the Hunter line of 1878, crossing 
Stikine river about twenty-fohr miles from 
its mouth, thence northerly along the high 
peaks to Kate's Needle, from Kate's Needle 
to the Devil's Thumb. The tribunal stated 
that there was not sufficient evidence owing 
to the absence of a complete survey to 
identify the mountains which correspond to 
those intended by the treaty. This contem- 
plates a further survey of that portion by 
tli3 two governments. From the vicinity of 
Devil's Thumb the line runs to the conti- 
nental watershed, thence through White and 
Taiya or Chilkoot passes, westerly to a 
mountain indicated on the map attached to 
the treaty as 6,850 feet, thence to another 
mountain 5,800 feet and from that point in a 
somewhat curved line across the head of 
the glaciers to Mount Fairweather. This 
places the Canadian outpost on the upper 
water of Chilkat river in British territory 
and the mining camps of Porcupine and 
Glacier creek in American territory. From 
Mount Fairweather the line passes north 
on high peaks along-the mountains indicated 
on the map by Mounts Pinta, Rubama and 
Vancouver to Mount St. Ellas. 

Messrs. Aylesworth and Jette, the Cana- 
dian commissioners, declined to sign the 
award, though they signed the map agreed 
upoa by the majority of the tribunal. They 
issued an official statement giving the rea- 
sons for their dissent. Concerning the Port- 
land channel they said: "There are two 
channels parallel with each other, with foul- 
islands' between them. The Canadian con- 
tention was that the northern channel 
should be adopted. The United States con- 
tended for the southern channel. On the re- 



136 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


suit of the decision depended the possession run to the northward of the four islands 
of the four islands, Kannaghunut, Sitklan, named, thus giving them to Canada. 
Wales and Pearse. When the tribunal met "Notwithstanding these facts the mem- 
after the argument and considered this bers of the tribunal other than ourselves 
question the view of the three British com- have now signed an award giving two of the 
niissioners was that the Canadian conten- islands, Kannaghunut and Sitklan, to the 
tioa was absolutely unanswerable. A memo- United States. These two islands are the 
raudum was prepared and read to the com- outermost of the four. They command the 
inissioners embodying our views and show- entrance of the Portland channel and the 
ing it to be beyond dispute that the Cana- ocean passage to Port Simpson. Their loss 
dian contention in this branch of the case wholly destroys the strategic value to Can- 
should prevail and that the boundary should ada of the Wales and Pearse islands." 

WORLD'S SUBMARINE AND LAND TELEGRAPH SYSTEMS. 


SD 

Company. Miles.* 
African direct . . 2 943 


BMARINE ELECTRIC CABLJ 

LINES IN PRIVATE OWNERSHIP. 

Company, Miles.* 
Direct W r est India... 1,265 
East and S. African. 9,077 
Eastern Extension... 18,143 
Eastern Telegraph... 39,473 
Europe and Azores.. 1,053 
French 12 102 


SS. 

Company. Miles* 
Mexican 1 528 




River Plata 32 


Black sea 337 


South American 2,049 
United States-Haiti.... 1,391 
West African 3,000 
West Coast of America 1,979 
Western 17 260 


Central and S. Amer.. 7,500 


Commercial Pacific 6,912 
Compagnie AUemande.. 5,253 
Compania del Plata... 28 
Cuba Submarine 1,143 


Great Northern 7*946 


Halifax and Bermuda. 849 
India Rubber 125 


Western Union 7 478 


W. India and Panama. 4*639 
Total . 178 591 


Direct Spanish 718 


Indo-European 23 


Direct United States.. 3,100 

Country. Miles* 
Austria . . . 217 


LINES OWNED BY NATIONS. 

Country. Miles* 
Russia 319 


Country. Miles.* 
British India 1 784 


Belgium 54 


Spain 1 743 


Cochin China 774 


Denmark 288 


Sweden 209 


Japan 2 022 


France 5,054 


Switzerland . . 9 




Germany 2,636 
Great Britaint 10 074 


Turkey 344 
United States 1 000 


New Caledonia 1 


Netherlands Indies 891 


Greece .... 54 


Egypt 187 


Holland 241 


Argentine and Brazil... 99 
Australia & N. Zealand. 349 


Siam 13 


Italy ' 1 060 


Nouvelle Galles du Sudi 31 
Total 30 528' 


Norway 543 


Portugal 115 
tNautical. tlncludes British 
L 
Country. Year. Miles.* 
Argentina 1901 28, 107 
Australia 1901 45,441 
Austria-Hungary. 1901 38,253 
Belgium 1901 3,993 


British America 199 


Pacific cable from Australia to 
A.ND TELEGRAPH LINES. 
Country. Year. Miles.* 
Francef 1901 99 135 


British Columbia, 8,000 miles. 

Country. Tear. Miles.* 
Persia 1900 4 800 


Germany 1901 78,607 
Greece 1898 5,300 
Guatemala .1899 3,490 


Peru 1897 1,933 


Portugal 1900 5 180 


Roumania 1901 4 344 


Brazil 1900 14,710 


India 1901 55 055 


Russia 1900 98 570 


Bulgaria 1900 3 220 


Honduras 1900 2 790 


Salvador 1900 1*850 


Canada 1901 35,902 


Italy 1900 27,918 


Santo Domingo... 1901 *430 
Servia . 1901 2 350 


Cape Colony 1900 7 470 


Japan 1902 16 377 


Chile . 1900 14 592 


Kongo State 1901- 888 
Korea 1901 2 170 


Siam 1901 2*900 


China 1900 14 000 


Spain 1900 20 178 


Colombia 1898 8,600 
Costa Rica 1901 840 
Cuba 1901 2,300 


Mexico 1901 43,675 


Sweden 1900 9,456 
Switzerland 1901 5,572 
Turkey 1901 24,670 
United kingdom. .1902 47,786 
United States.... 1902 243,000 
Uruguay 1901 4,604 
Vf>np7.np1a . 1898 3 889. 


Montenegro 1901 343 
Netherlands 1901 3,880 
New Zealand 1902 7,469 
Nicaragua 1901 2,440 
NorwayJ 1901 9,635 


Denmark .1901 2,413 


Dutch Indies 1900 7,003 
Ecuador 1901 1,242 
Egypt 1902 2 877 


Paraguay 1901 500 


*Of lines; not of wires. 
SHLPPIN 

[F 
Country. Tonnage. 
England 16 006 374 


tlncluding colonies. {Telegraph and telephone lines. 


OF THE WORLD IN JUI 

rom Lloyd's Register for 1903-190 
Country. Tonnage. 
Spain 764 447 


,Y, 1903. 

4-3 
Country. Tonnage. 
Belgium 157047 


United States 3,611,956 


Japan 726 818 


Brazil .... 155 086 


'Sweden 721,116 
Holland ... 658 845 


Turkey . 154 494 


Norway 1 653 740 


Chile 103*758 


France 1,622,016 
Italy 1 180 335 


Denmark 581,247 
Austria-Hungary ... 578,697 
Greece 378,199 


Portugal 101 304 


Argentina 95 780 


Russia 809,648 





RELIGIOUS. 137 


Religious. 

STATISTICS OF CHURCHES IN THE UNITED STATES IN 1902. 
[Compiled by Dr. H. K. Carroll for the Christian Advocate.] 


DENOMINATION. 


00 


Churches. 


Members. 


DENOMINATION. 


Ministers. 


Churches. 


Members. 


Adventists 1. Evangelical 
2 Advent Christians 


34 
912 
435 
19 
60 

94 


30 
610 
l,6g 

28 
95 


1,147 

26.500 
63,521 

$ 

2,872 


7. Christian Common- 
wealth 




1 


80 


3 Seventh Day 
4 Church of God 


Total Communists 
Congregationalistsf 


5,829 
6,477 

2,612 
213 
22< 


22 

5.856 
10,957 

800 
75 
190 

( 


3,084 

659,324 
L207,377 

90.000 
4,000 
12,000 
194 


5 Life and Advent Union 
6 Churches of God in 
Jesus Christ 
Total Adventists 

Baptists 
1. Regular (North)*. .. . 
2. Regular (South)* 
3. Regular (Colored)*... . 
4 Six Principle 


Disciples of Christ 


Dunkards 1. Conservative. 
2. Old Order . . . 


I,6o4 

7,512 
12,599 
10,126 
8 
107 
1,360 
12C 
484 
113 
25 
80 
2,130 

300 


2,402 

8,983 
19,894 

15,588 
12 
100 
1,518 
16T 
423 
ME 
204 
152 
3,530 

473 


98,487 

1,012,276 
1.702.324 
1.615,321 
828 
10.734 
84,436 
12,000 
24,775 
6.479 
13,209 
8.254 
126,000 

12.851 


3. Progressive. 


4. Seventh Day (German) 
Total Dunkards 

Evangelical Bodies 
1. Evangelical Associat'n 
2. United Evangelical Ch. 
Total Evangelical 

Friends 1 . Orthodox 


3,050 

920 

501 


1,071 

1,659 
820 


106,194 

98.641 
63.390 


5. Seventh Day 
6. Freewill 


7. Original Freewill 




1,421 

1,190 
115 
38 
11 


2,479 

830 
201 

8 


162,031 

91,614 

21.992 
4.468 

2o2 j 




10. United 


11. BaptistChurch of Christ 
12. Primitive 
13. Old T wo - Seed -in- the - 
Spirit Predestinarian. . 
Total Baptists * 

Brethren (River) 
1. Brethren in Christ 
2. Old Order, or Yorker... . 
3. United Zion's Children. 
Total River Brethren.. . 

Brethren (Plymouth) 
1. Brethren I.. 1 
2. Brethren II 
3. Brethren III 
4. Brethren IV 


2. Hicksite 
3. Wilburite.. 


4. Primitive 


Total Friends 

Friends of the Temple 
German Evangelical Prot.. 
German Evangelical Synod 

Jews 1. Orthodox... 
2. Reformed 


1,354 

4 

100 
940 

135 
Ifih 


1,093 

IK 
1,179 

340 

230 


118,306 

340 

20.000 
209.156 

62.000 
81.000 


35,564 

124 

7 
20 


51,142 

75 
8 
25 


4,629,4S7 

2,866 
214 
525 




109 
88 
86 
31 


2,289 
2.419 
1,235 

718 


Total Jews 

Latter-Day Saints 
1. Utah branch 


301 

700 
800 
1,500 

1,238 
210 
1.249 
2.129 
376 

1 

106 
tj 
11 
451 
3U6 
41 
47 
- 8 
20 

17 
68 
96 
10 
85 


570 

7% 
514 


143,000 

300.000 
40.600 


2. Reorganized branch 


Total Plymouth Breth'n 
Catholic 1. Roman 


12,671 
33 
40 
8 
15 
3 
6 
3 


314 
10,951 

If 

9 
21 
5 
6 
4 


6,661 

9,401,798 
42,850 
40,000 
21.230 
8,500 
425 
1,500 
15.000 


Lutherans General bodies. 
1. General Synod 
2. United Synod (South) . . 
3. General Council 


1.627 
441 
1,961 
2.775 
1,191 

635 
42 
270 
52 
15 
856 

1 

116 
34 
29 

if 

400 
145 
13 

200 


211,238 
42.597 
344,037 
599.951 
142,360 

90,167 
5.435 
18,712 
3.076 
2.065 
84.610 
76.158 
10,000 
6,735 
3,726 
4.089 
2,000 
18.933 
40.078 
9.621 
5,000 
25.000 


2. Polish ^ 
3. Russian Orthodox 
4. Greek Orthodox 


4. Synodical Conference. . 
5. United Norwegian 
Independent synods: 
6. Ohio . . . 


5. Armenian 


6. Old Catholic 
7. Reformed Catholic 
All others 


7. Buffalo 


8. Hauge's 




12.779 
95 


11,070 

10 
47 


9,531.303 
1,491 


9. Eielsen's 




10. Texas 


11. Iowa 


Chinese Temples 


12. Norwegian 
13. Michigan, etc -. 






63 
1.517 
50 
13 

508 

580 
157 

15 

1 
1 


1,277 
97,207 
40,000 
754 
51,608 

38.000 

7,892 

1,000 
1,766 
| 


Christian Connection 
Christian Catholic (Dowie) 
Christian Missionary Ass'n 
Christian Scientists 
Church of God (Winebren- 
narian). 
Church of New Jerusalem.. 

Communistic Societies 
1. Shakers 


1.151 
55 
10 
1,016 

460 
149 


14. Danish in America 
15. Icelandic 


16. Augsburg 


17. Immanuel 


18. Suomai (Finnish) 
19. Norwegian Free.. 


20. Danish United 
21. Slovakian 


22. Ind. congregations 
Total Lutherans 
Swedish Evangelical Mis- 
sion Covenant (Walden- 


7,015 

274 
418 
9 


11,785 

291 
2S8 
5 


1,745,588 

32,100 

22,743 
352 


2. Amana 




3. Harmony 




4. Separatists 




5. Altruists 




1 
3 


3| 


Mennonites 1. Mennonit'e. 
2. Bruederhoef 


6. Church Triumphant. . . 








138 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMAXAO AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



STATISTICS OF CHURCHES.- CONTINUED. 



DENOMINATION . 



3. Amish 

4. Old Amish 

5. Apostolic 

6. Reformed 

7. General Conference.... 

8. Church of God in Christ 

9. Old ("VYisler) 

10. Bundes Conference 

11. Defenseless 

12. Brethren in Christ 

Total Mennonites 

Methodists- 

1 . Methodist Episcopal . . . 

2. Union American M. E. . 

3. African M. E.* 

4. African Union M. Prot. 

5. African M. E. Zion 

6. Methodist Protestant.. 

7. Wesleyan Methodist.. 

8. MethodistEpis. (South)* 

9. Congregational Meth. 

10. Congrega'l Meth. (Col.).. 

11. New Cong Methodist . 

12. Zion Union Apostolic. . 

13. Col. Meth. Episcopal... 

14. Primitive 

15. Free Methodist 

16. Independent Methodist 

17. Evangelist Missionary. 
Total Methodists. . . . 



Moravians 

Presbyterians 

1. Northern} 

2. Cumberland 

3. Cumberland (Colored).. 

4. Welsh Calvinistic 

5. United 



16,80526,7092.801,798 



ISO 



700 



6,247 14,1 
400 3 

5 

192 J 
30 
2,061 lo 



126 



7.361 

1.595 

450 

88 



073 



205 

5.715 

68 



2.401 



1,009 
1 
44 



89.22056,787 6,084,755 



106 



2.944 
400 
162 
914 



13,226 



10,395 

449 

603 

2,950 

1.126 

3.103 

59,274 



16,500 



2.930 
542.422 
184.097 
17.000 
4 1.518.854 
22,000 
319 
4,000 
2.346 
204.972 
6,520 
2S.I c>> 
2.569 
2.036 



DENOMINATION. 



6. Southern 

7. Associate 

8. AssociateReformed,So, 

9. Reformed (Synod) 

10. Reformed (Gen. Synod) 

11. Reformed (Covenant'd) 

12. Reformed in U.S. & Can. 
Total Presbyterians 

Protestant Episcopal 

1. Protestant Episcopal.. . 

2. Reformed Episcopal... 
Total Prot. Episcopal. . . 

Reformed 

1. Reformed (Dutch) 

2. Reformed (German).. . 

3. Christian Reformed.... 
Total Reformed . . 



Salvation Army , 

Schwenkfeldians 

Social Brethren , 

Society for Ethical Culture 

Spiritualists 

Theosophical Society. . . 



United Brethren 

1. United Brethren 

2. U. Breth. (Old Const'n) 



12.20715,3151,635,016 



15,505 



.552 1,024.196 



184.493 
39.000 
11.683 

117. -.':>:> 



Total United Brethren., 



Unitarians 

Universalists 

Independent congregations 

Grand total in 1902 

Grand total in 1901... 



L501 
12 
104 



4,971 

100 

5,071 



3,01 

31 

151 

105 

37 

] 

1 



6,647 



8,726 



1,112 1,691 
99 155 



1,9061 2,474 



2,51C 
17 



1.912 
436 



2,348 

540 
750 
54 



015 



3,965 



4,855 
452 



230,655 



758.1 



767,334 



110,456 
255,408 
19.174 



385,038 

22,534 

306 

913 

1,500 

45,030 

1,629 



246.250 
31.102 



71.000 

52.944 
14.126 
147113 1941 16 2S6S'.'Q28 
146393 192855:28285285 



Estimated. tCongregational Year Book for 1903 gives the number of churches as 5.821; 
ministers, 6.015, and members, 652.849. iDr. W. H. Roberts, stated clerk of the Presbyterian 
general assembly, gives the total membership in July. 1903. as 1,067.477. This is for the main 
body only and does not include branches of the denomination. 
OPvDER OF DENOMINATIONS. 



DENOMINATION. 



Rank in 
1902. 



Cominnni- 
eantg. 



Hank in 



Communi- 
cants. 



Roman Catholic , 

Methodist Episcopal 

Regular Baptist, South : 

Regular Baptist, Colored 

Methodist Episcopal, South 

Disciples 9f Christ 

Presbyterian. Northern , 

Regular Baptist, North 

Protestant Episcopal 

African Methodist Episcopal 

Congregational 

Lutheran Synodical Conference 

African Methodist Episcopal, Zion. 

Lutheran General Council 

Latter-Day Saints 

Reformed (German) 

United Brethren 

Presbyterian. Southern 

Lutheran General Synod 

German Evangelical Synod 

Colored Methodist Episcopal 

Cumb?rland Presbyterian 

Methodist Protestant 

United Norwegian Liitheran 

Primitive Baptist 

United Presbyterian 

Reformed (Dutch) 



9.401.798 

2.801. 798 

1.702.324 

1.015.331 

1.518.854 

1.207.377 

1.024.196 

1,012.276 

758.052 

72S.354 

659.324 

599.951 

542.422 

344.037 

300.000 

255.408 

246.250 

230.W55 

211.288 

209. If. 6 

-J04.972 

184.493 

184,097 

142.360 

126.000 

117.232 

110.456 



RELIGIOUS. 


139 


ORDER OF DENOMINATIONAL FAMILIES. 


DENOMINATIONAL- FAMILY. 


Rank in 
1W2. 


Communi- 
cants. 


Rank in Communir 
1890. cants. 


Catholic 


1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 

I 

9 
10 
11 
12 
13 
14 
15 


9,531.303 
6.084,755 
4,629,487 
1.745,588 
1,635,016 
767,334 
385.038 
340,500- 
277,352 
162.031 
143,000' 
118,306 
106.194 
98.487 
59.274 


1 6.257.871 
1 2 4.589.-.M 
3 3,717.'.K)'.< 
5 1.231,072 
4 1,278,332 
6 540.509 
7 309.458 
9 166.125 
8 225,281 
10 133,313 
11 130 406 
12 107.208 
13 73,795 
14 60,491 
15 41,541 


Methodist 


Baptist ... . 








Reformed 


Latter-Day Saints 


United Brethren 


Evangelical bodies 




Jewish 


Friends .. . . 


Dunkards '. 


Adventists 


Mennonites 




SUMMARY FOR 1902. 


DENOMINATION. 


Minis- 
ters. 


Churches 


Commu- 
nicants. 


Minis- 
ters, 
grain. 


Ch'rches, 
gain. 


Commu- 
nicants, 
gain. 


Adventists (6 bodies) 


1,554 
35,564 

""*8 


2,402 
51,142 
108 
314 
11,070 
10 
47 
63 
1,517 
50 
13 
508 
580 
157 
22 
5,856 
10,957 
1,071 
2.479 
1,093 
4 
155 
1,179 
570 
1.310 


98.487 
4,629,487 
3.605 
6,661 
9,531.303 
l,4!tl 


49 
164 
*28 

""259' 


116 
*8 
*3 

'289' 


9.782 
48.654 
* 1,134 

im634 


Baptists (13 bodies) 


Brethren (River. H bodies) 


Brethren (Plymouth, 4 bodies) 
Catholics (8 bodies) 
Catholic Apostolic 


Christadelphians 
Christian Connection 
Christian Catholics (Dowie) 


1,151 
55 
10 
1,016 
460 
149 


S 

40,000 

51,608 
38.000 
7,892 
3,084 
659.324 
1,207,377 
106,194 
162.031 
118,306 
340 
20.000 
209,156 






*12,071 


Christian Missionary Association 
Christian Scientists 


76 


38 


2,678 


Church of God ( Winebrennarian) 
Church of the New Jerusalem 
Communistic Societies (7 bodies) 








ii2" 

92 
49 

47 
*89 


.3 

268 
*30 

*148 


*926 
13.330 
27.836 
*9.000 

4 ^ 


5,829 
6,477 
3,050 
1,421 
1,354 

100 
940 
301 
1,500 
7,015 

274 
1,112 
39,2*0 
126 
12.207 
5.071 
1,906 
2,510 
3 




Dunkards (4 bodies) 


Evangelical (2 bodies) 
Friends (4 bodies) 


Friends of the Temple 
German Evangelical Protestant 
German Evangelical Synod 


55 

18 


166' 

26 


"S 


Jews (2 bodies) 
Latter-Day Saints (2 bodies) 


340,500 
1,745,588 

32,100 
59,274 
6,084.755 
15.505 
1,635,016 
767,334 
385.038 
22,534 
306 
913 
1.500 
45.030 
1.629 
277,352 
71.000 
52.944 
14,126 




*400 
25 

6 


*86 
294 

10 


*3,324 
49,320 

1.100 
546 
98,184 
280 
30,001 
16.355 
8,498 


Lutherans (22 bodies) 


11,785 

291 
673 
56.787 
106 
15,315 
6.725 
2,474 
615 
4 
20 
4 
334 
71 
4,855 
452 
772 
156 


Swedish Evangelical Miss. Covenant 
( Waldenstromians) 


Mennonites (12 bodies) 
Methodists (17 bodies) 


228 
9 
158 
44 
4 


442 
*5 
71 
8 
10 




Presbyterians (12 bodies) 


Protestant Episcopal (2 bodies) 
Reformed (3 bodies) 
Salvation Army 


Social Brethren 
Society for Ethical Culture 


17 




*i 


200 


Theosophical Society 
United Brethren (2 bodies) 


'"'2,348' 
540 
750 
54 


'"'*i58' 
*4 

4 


*51 
*172 
*1 


*1.371 
10,345 

""ii 




Universalists 


Independent Congregations 
Grand total in 1902 






147.113 

146.393 


194,116 
192,855 


28,689.038 
28,285,285 


720 
2,561 


1,261 
2,431 


403.743 
924,675 


Grand total in 1901 




*Uecrease. 



140 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


ECUMENICAL LUTHERAN STATISTICS. 

Prepared by J. N. Lenker, D. D., president of the National Lutheran Library association, 
based on official church and state reports, Perthes Hof-Kalender, 1903, and the German edition 
of "Lutherans in All Lands." 


COUNTRY. 


Pastors. 


Churches 


Baptized 
members. 


Parochi'l 
schools. 


Dea 
con- 
esses. 




tir^oo 

1,700 
900 
2,857 
180 
10 


J27.715 

1,900 
1.060 
2,614 
300- 
40 


37,300,000 

2.540,000 
2.343.000 
5,310.000 
78,489 
15,230 


62.050 

3,100 
6,500 
12,100 
180 
65 


12,454 

275 
414 
245 


Denmark R 
Norway R 




Iceland R 


Faroe Islands R 




Scandinavians 
Russia j . RD 


5,647 

588 
950 
66 


5,914 

1,814 
1,034 
165 


10,286,719 

4.600.000 
2,766.000 
450,000 


.21,945 

3,000 

2.787 
634 


934 

203 
60 
2 


Finland RH 
Poland R D 


European Russia, . . 


1,604 

261 
1,215 
3 
10 
13 
3 

4 
3 
1 
12 
8 
4 
3 
130 
2 

8 

34 
3 

7 


3,013 

670 
1,672 
10 
30 
38 

' 

21 

j 

10 
9 
4 
91 
4 
11 
70 

3 

21 


7,366,000 

400.000 
1,300.000 
1,664 
21.000 
20,000 
1,800 
2,000 
6,000 
3,000 
200 
25,000 
150,000 
2.300 
1,400 
105.000 
3,000 
25,000 
100,000 
250,000 
2,500 
20.000 


6,421 

330 
2,612 
10 
14 
26 
2 
2 
11 
4 
1 
10 
4 
6 
4 
50 
2 
3 
51 
26 
2 
4 


265 

64 
25 


Austria RD 


Hungary RD 


Croatia .. RD 


Slavonia R D 




11 
2 

""ii 
'"is 

4 
2 

""i? 
""i 

45 
16 
2 




Bervia ... . R D 


Bosnia D 


Turkey D 


Greece D 


Italy D 




pain D 




France .... ..BD 




Belgium * RD 


Holland RD 


England . D 


Wales and Ireland -D 


Scotland D 




26.851 
26,478 


39.433 
34,561 


57,401,583 
53,870,769 


93,590 
89.414 


13,879 
12,088 


Europe', 1900 




373 

1 

14 

24 
2 
13 


4,872 

12 
14 

21 

102 

21 
123 


3,530,814 

2,100 
4,000 
2,480 

45.000 
5,100 
26,000 


4,176 

21 
14 

18 

?5 

24 


1,791 

it 

2 


Palestine D H 


Asia Minor D H 


Persia -D H 




Central Asia . D 


Siberia E 


Asiatic Russia 


39 

358 
6 
1 


226 

i*| 


76,100 

212.000 
3,632 
520 
3,000 
16.085 
2.000 


95 

1,495 
14 

4 


2 

26 
17 


India H. D 




Ceylon H 


Siam . . D 




China H D 


121 

7 


270 
8 


178 
8 


4 


Japan H D 


Asia 1904 


544 
449 


2,127 
1,452 


321,917 
234,700 


1,847 
1,190 


112 

90 
22 

""23 
4 
10 
8 
4 
6 


Asia, 1900 


Increase 


95 

10 
3 

77 
282 
130 
13 
136 


675 

40 
4 
94 
810 
402 
66 
952 


87,217 

5.000 
1.400 
2.245 
201,644 
25,403 
3.874 
115.000 


657 

20 
4 
55 
565 
347 
69 
1,107 


Algeria .... D 


E-rpt D 


East Africa H 


South Africa H D 


W est Africa H D 


Kongo State H D 


Madagascar H 


Africa. 1904 


651 
540 


2.368 
1.659 


354,566 
303,754 


2.107 
1.509 


' 55 
40 


Africa. 1900 


Increase 
Australia . D H 


111 

114 


709 

267 
""20" 


50,812 

110.000 
700 
12.751 


658 
118 


6 
2 




New Zealand D H 


13 


11 





RELIGIOUS. 141 


ECUMENICAL LUTHERAN STATISTICS.-CONTINUED. 


COUNTRY. 


Pastors. 


Churches 


Baptized 
members. 


Paroch'l 
schools. 


Dea- 
con- 
esses. 


New Guinea H D 


8 
12 
71 

18 

1 


10 
25 
212 
23 

3 


1,000 
2.206 
48,984 
5,778 

3 C 

100 
300 
120 
1.800 


1 
21 
219 
26 
1 
3 






..... 


Sumatra H 


Nias .H 


Java . ..... ' ............ ......... .D H 


Samoa .. D 


Marshall Islands D 




Philippines . D 










Caroline Islands D 






Hawaii f. D 


1 


4 


4 




Oceania 1904 


256 
241 


545 

505 


186.145 
173,052 


410 
358 


' 6 

6 


Oceania. 1900 


Increase 
Venezuela D 


15 

1 

1 
84 
3 
2 

1? 


40 

7 i 

I 

200 

1 


13,093 

1,100 
00 

3.200 

460,000 
6,000 
4.000 

1,000 
100 
300 


52 

1 
1 
2 
174 
3 
2 
11 
17 




British Guiana D 


Dutch Guiana D 


2 
2 


Brazil I) 








Chile D 





Bolivia : D 


Peru I) 


1 


1 


1 








Colombia D 










South America 1904 


117 
100 


266 
227 


621,500 
507.600 


212 
202 


4 

2 


South America, 1900 1) 


Increase 


17 

18 
90 

8 
7,289 

i 

i! 


39 

20 
230 
25 
12,220 

4 

J 


113,900 

10,816 
150.000 
12,J>00 
11,100.000 
1,000 
5.200 
1,000 

tffi 


10 

-40 
100 


2 


Greenland H D 


Canada . . D 




Nova Scotia D 




United States D 


4,663 
1 
4 


258 


Mexico D 


Danish West Indies H D 




Cuba D 


Porto Rico D 


3 
12 




Alaska HD 


North America, 1904 
North America, 1900. 


7,422 
6,888 


12,501 
11.782 


11,284,016 
10,181.716 


4,833 
3,625 


258 
211 


Increase 


534 

35,841 
34,696 


722 

57,243 
50,186 


1,102,300 

70.160,727 
65,270.991 


1,208 

103,059 

96,298 


47 

14,314 
12,446; 


World 1904 


World, 1900 


Increase . . ; 


1.145 


7,057 


4.398,736 


6,761 


1.868 


*"R" signifies the church was founded by th 
or emigration movement and "H" by the 
ordained ministers are included under pasto 
gospel is regularly preached are counted as c 
mens or pupils in mission schools, all who are 
baptismal covenant. 
ROMAN CATHOLIC CHTJRCI 
Apostolic Delegate Most Rev. Diomede Fal- 
conio. Washington, D. C. 
Cardinal James Gibbons, Baltimore, Md. 

ARCHBISHOPS. 

Archdiocese. Name. 
Boston, Mass John Joseph Williams. 
Chicago, 111 James E. Quigley. 


e reform 
heathen 
rs. Jin 1 
hurches. 
born in 

[ OF Tl 

Diocet 
Altoom 
Baker ( 
Baltinn 
Bellevi 
Belmon 
Boise C 
Boston 
Brooklj 
Buffalo 
Burling 
Charles 
Cheyen 
Chicagc 

Clevela 
Columb 
Concon 
Covingt 
Dallas, 
Davenp 
Denver 
Detroit 


ation movement, "D' 
mission movement, 
leathen lands all sta 
{Baptized members 
the church and will 

IE UNITED STATE 

e. Nam 
i, Pa Eugene 


by the diaspora 
tOnly regularly 
tions where the 
nclude catechu^ 
be reared in the 

8. 

e. 
A. Garvey. 
J. O'Reilly. 

inssen. 
id. 
lorieux. 
rady. 
cDonnell 
3 H. Colton. 
chaud. 
orthrop. 
>ane. 
ildoon. 
cGavicb. 
jrstmann. 
Moeller. 
nuingham. 
aes. 
none. 
Cosgrove. 
atz. 
>ley. 


)ity, Ore Charles 


>re. Md Vacant 
le. Ill John J. 


t,N.C Leo Ha 
ity. Idaho A. J. G 


Cincinnati,O William H. Elder. 
Dubuque,Iowa John J. Keane. 
Milwaukee, Wis Vacant. 
New Orleans, La.. . .P. L. Chapelle. 
NewYork.N.Y J.M.Farley. 
Oregon City, Ore.. . .Alex. Christe. 
Philadelphia, Pa Patrick John Ryan. 
San Francisco, Cal Patrick W. Riordan. 


n, N. Y C. E. M 
N.Y... Charle 


ton, Vt J.S. Mi 


ton. S. C... ...H. P. IS 


ne, Wyo J.J. K< 
111 P. J. M 


A.J.M 
nd,O I.F.H 


St. Louis, Mo J. J. Glennon. 


us, O Henry 
lia. Kas J.F. Ci 


BISHOPS. 
Diocese. Name. 
Albany NY .T A M Burke. 


on, Ky P.C. M 
Tex E. J. D 
ort. Iowa Henry 
Col N. C. M 
Mich J.S. F< 


Alton. Ill J ames Ryan. 



142 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Diocese. 

Duluth. Minn 

Brie. Pa 

Fargo. N. D 

Fort Wayne. Ind 

Galveston, Tex 

Grand Rapids, Mich. 

Green Bay, Wis ,. 

Guthrie, O. T 

Harrisburg, Pa 

Hartford. Conn 

Helena. Mont 

Indianapolis. Ind.... 

Kansas City, Mo 

LaCrosse. Wis 

Laredo, Tex 

Lead. S. D 

Leaven worth. Kas. . . 

Lincoln, Neb 

Little Rock, Ark 

Los Angeles. Cal 

Louisville, Ky 

Manchester. N. H... 

Marquette. Mich 

Mobile, Ala 

Monterey, Cal 

Nashville, Tenn 

Natchez, Miss 

Natchitoches, La.... 

Newark.N.J 

New Orleans, La 

New York. N. Y 

Ogdensburg, N. Y.... 

Omaha,Neb 

Peoria,Ill 



Philadelphia, Pa 

Pittsburg. Pa 

Portland, Me 

Providence. R.I 

Richmond , Va 

Rochester, N. Y 

Sacramento, Cal 

Salt Lake City. Utah 
San Antonio, Tex.... 



Name. 

. .James McGolrick. 
..J. B. Fitzmaurice. 
. .John Shanley. 
.H. J. Alerding. 
..N. A. Gallagher. 
..H. J. Richter. 
. .8. G. Messmer. 
..T. Meerschaert. 
..J. W. Shanahan. 
. .M. Tierney. 
. .Vacant. 
. .Denis O'Donaghue. 

F. S. Chatard. 
...J. J. Glennon. 

John J. Hogan. 
. . J. Schwebach. 
..P. Verdaguer. 
..JohnM. Stariha. 
..L. M. Fink. 
. .Thomas Bonacum. 
..B. Fitzgerald. 
. .George Montgomery. 
. .W. G. McCloskey. 
..D. M. Bradley. 
..Frederick Bis. 
. .Edward P. Allen. 
. .Thomas J. Conaty. 
..T. S. Byrne. 
. .Thomas Heslin. 
. .Anthony Durier. 
..John J. O'Connor. 
..G. A. Rouxel. 
. .Vacant. 
..Henry Gabriels. 
. .R. Scannell. 
..J.L. Spalding. 

P. J. O'Reilly. 
..E. F. Prendergast. 
..R. Phelan. 

J. F. R. Canevin. 
..Thomas F. Kennedy. 
..M.J. Harkins. 
. .A. Van de Vyver. 
..B. J.McQuaid. 
..Thomas Grace. 
. .L. Scanlan. 
..J. A. Forest. 



Diocese. 

Savannah, Ga 

Scran ton, Pa 



Sioux City, Iowa. . 

tioux Falls, S. D.. 
pringfleld. Mass. 
St. Augustine, Fla 
St. Cloud. Minn... 
St. Joseph, Mo.... 

Syracuse. N. Y , 

Trenton. N. J , 

Tucson. Ariz 

Vancouver. Wash- 
Vancouver's Isl., B. 
Wheeling. W.Va.. 

Wichita. Kas 

Wilmington, Del 
Winona, Minn.. 



Name. 

...B.J.Keiley. 
. . .M. J. Hoban. 

W . O'Hara. 
...P. J. Garrigan. 
. . .Thomas O'Gorman. 
...T. D. Beaven. 
...William Kenney. 
...James Trobec. 
...M. F. Burke. 
...P. A. Ludden. 
...J.A. McFaul. 
,...H. Granjon. 

Edward O'Dea. 

.C.Bertram Orth. 
....P.J.Donahue. 
....John J.Hennessy. 
...John J. Monaghan. 
....Josephs. Cotter. 



CATHOLIC CHURCH STATISTICS. 
(From the Catholic Directory for 1903. Fig- 
ures are for the Unked States.) 
Cardinal 1. 
Archbishops 13. 
Bishops 86. 
Secular clergy 9,743. 
Religious clergy 3,225. 
Total clergy 12,968. 
Churches With resident priests 7,005. 
Missions with churches 3,873. 
Total churches 10,878. 
Universities 7. 
Seminaries 71. 
Students 3,382. 
Colleges for boys 162. 
Academies for girls 643. 
Parishes with schools 3,978. 
Children attending 963,683. 
Orphan asyfums 257. 
Orphans 37,108. 
Charitable institutions 923. 
Total children in catholic institutions 111,- 

031. 
Catholic population of United States About 

11,289,710. 



CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH. 



AMERICAN BOAKD FOREIGN MISSIONS. 

President S. B. Capen. 

Treasurer Frank H. Wiggin. 

Secretaries Rev. Judson Smith, D. D., Rev. 
Charles H. Daniels. D. D., Rev. James L. 
Barton. D. D. 

Editorial Secretary Rev. B. B. Strong, D. D. 

District Secretaries Rev. C.C.Creegan. D. D., 
4thav.and22dst..N. Y.city; Rev. A.N.Hitch- 
cock. Ph. D.. 153 LaSalle street, Chicago, 111.; 
Rev. H. M. Tenney, San Francisco. Cal. 

Headquarters Congregational House, Boston. 

AMERICAN MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION. 

President Washington Gladden, D. D. 
Treasurer H. W. Hubbard. 
Secretaries-Rev. A. F. Beard, D. D.; Rev. F. P. 

Woodbury, D. D. ; Rev. J. C. Ryder, D. D. 
Western Secretary W. L. Tenney. (J. B. Roy, 

emeritus). 153 LaSalle street, Chicago. 
Headquarters 4th avenue and 22d street, 

N. Y. city. 

SUNDAY SCHOOL AND PUBLICATION 
SOCIETY. 

President Will ard Scott, D. D., Worcester, 



Secretary and Treasurer George M. Boynton, 

D. D. 

Field Secretary W. A. Duncan, Ph. D. 
District Secretary Rev. W. F. McMillen. D.D., 

room 100S Association building, 153 LaSalle 

street. Chicago. 



Managers Western Agency R. N. Hays, book 
department, and F. B. Atwood, periodical 
department, 175 Wabash avenue. Chicago. 

Headquarters Congregational House,Boston. 
CHURCH BUILDING SOCIETY. 

President Dr. Lucien C. Warner, N. Y. city. 

Secretary Rev. L.H. Cobb. D. D.. N. Y. city. 

Field Secretaries Rev. C. H. Taintor, 151 
Washington street, Chicago; Rev. George A. 
Hood, Boston; Rev. H. H. Wikoff.San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 

Headquarters 4th avenue and 22d street. 
New York city. 

HOME MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 

President- Newell D. Hillis. Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Treasurer William B. Howland. 

Secretaries Joseph B. Clark, D. D.; Washing- 
ton Choate, D. D. 

Headquarters 4tb av. and 22d st,, N. Y. city. 

Supt. German Dept. M. E. Eversz, D.D., 1002. 
153 LaSalle street. 

ILLINOIS HOME MISSIONARY SOCIETY. 
President Rev. Andrew M. Brodie, D. D. 
Vice-PresidentRev. F. L. Graff. 
Supt. and Cor. Sec. James Tompkins. 
Treasurer Aaron B. Mead. 
Office 153 LaSalle street, Chicago. 

EDUCATION SOCIETY. 

President W. H.Willcox. D. D., Maiden, Mass. 
Secretary Rev. Edward S. Tead. 
Treasurer S. F. Wilkins. 



RELIGIOUS. 



143 



Headquarters Congregational House.Boston. 

Chicago Office 151 Washington street. Kev. 
Theodore Clifton, D. D., Western Field Sec- 
retary. 

MINISTERIAL RELIEF. 

Chairman Rev. H. A. Stimson, D. D..N.T. city. 
Secretary William A. Rice, N. Y. city. 
Treasurer Rev. S. B. Forbes, 206 Wethersfield 

avenue, Hartford. Conn. 
Headquarters-135 Wall street.Hartford.Conn. 

MINISTERIAL RELIEF ASSOCIATION OF 
ILLINOIS. 

President Dr. H. A. Bushnell, LaGrange. 



Treasurer Rev. Geo. W. Colman, 6158 Ingle- 
side avenue, Chicago. 

NATIONAL TRIENNIAL COUNCIL. 

Rev. Eugene C. Webster, Congregational 
House, Boston, Acting Statistical Secretary. 

WOMAN'S BOARD OF MISSIONS. 

Secretary Miss E. H. Stanwood, Congrega- 
tional House, Boston. 

WOMAN'S HOME MISSIONARY ASSOCIATION 

Secretary Miss L. L. Sherman, Congrega- 
tional House. Boston. 



PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 



Diocese. Bishop. Residence. 

Alabama. . . .R. W. Barnwell ..... Mobile. 

Ariz.&N.M.J.M. Kendrick ...... Santa Fe. 

Arkansas.... Wm. M. Brown ..... Little Rock. 

Boise ........ James B. Funsten. .Boise City. 

California. . . W. F. Nichols ....... San Francisco 

Sacram'to. Wm. H. Moreland.. Sacramento. 

Los Ang's.J. H.Johnson ....... Los Angeles. 

Colorado. . . .Chas. S. Olmsted.. ..Denver. 

Connecticut.C. B. Brewster ....... New Haven. 

Del aware. . . . L. Coleman ......... Wilmington. 

Northern.. E. G. Weed .......... JacksonviUe. 

Southern. . W. C. Gray ......... Orlando. 

Georgia ..... C. K. Nelson ........ Atlanta. 

Illinois- 
Chicago... .W. E. McLaren ..... Chiqago. 

C. P. Anderson, co- 
adjutor ............ Oak Park. 

Spr'gfleld. .G. F. Seymour ...... Springfield. 

M. E. Fawcett ....... Quincy. 

Indiana- 

Southern.. Joseph M. Francis-Indianapolis. 
Northern.. John H. White ...... Michigan City 

Iowa ......... T. N. Morrison ..... Davenport. 



......... 

Kansas ...... F. R. Millspaugh.. . .Topeka. 

N. S. Thomas ....... Sallna. 

Kentucky .. .T. TJ. Dudley ........ Louisville. 



Lexington.L. W. Burton ........ Lexington 

Louisiana. ..Davis Sessums ..... New Orleans. 

Maine ....... Robert Codman, Jr. Portland. 

Maryland W. Paret ............ Baltimore. 

Easton ____ W. F. Adams ....... Easton. 

Wash'ton. .H. Y. Satterlee ..... Washington. 
Massachusetts- 

Eastern.. ..W. Lawrence ....... Boston. 

Western.. .Alex. H. Vinton. . . .Worcester. 
Michigan- 

Eastern . . .T. F. Davies ........ Detroit. 

Western... G. DeN. Gillespie.-GrandRapids. 

Marquette.G. M. Williams ..... Marquette. 
Minnesota.. . S. C. Edsall .......... Faribault. 

Duluth....J. D. Morrison ...... Duluth. 

Mississippi.. A. S. Loyd ........... Jackson. 

Missouri... .D S Tuttle ......... St. Louis. 

Western . .E. R. Atwill ......... Kansas City. 

Montana. ...L. R. Brewer ........ Helena. 

Nebraska.... G. Worthington ____ Omaha. 

A. L. Williams, co- 
adjutor ........... Omaha. 

Laramie. ..A. N. Graves ........ Kearney. 

N. Hamp....W. W. Niles ......... Concord. 

New Jersey. J. Scarborough ..... Trenton. 

Newark.. . .T. A. Starkey ....... East Orange. 

New York. . .H. C. Potter ......... New York city 

Central ____ F. D. Huntington. .Syracuse. 

Albany ____ W. C. Doane ........ Albany. 

Western.. . W. D. Walker ....... Buffalo. 

N. Carolina.. J. B. Cheshire ....... Raleigh. 

Eastern .. .A. A. Watson ....... Wilmington. 

Asheville..Julius M. Homer.... Asbeville. 
Ohio ......... W. A. Leonard ..... Cleveland. 

Southern. .T. A. Jaggar ........ Cincinnati. 

B.Vincent.coadj'torCincinnati. 
Oklahoma 

and Ind.T..F. K. Brooke ........ Guthrie. 

Oregon ...... B. W. Morris ........ Portland. 



Diocese. Bishop. Residence. 

Penn O. W. W hitaker. . . . Philadelphia 

AlexanderMackay- 
Smith, coadjutor.Philadelphia. 

Pittsburg.. C. Whitehead Pittsburg. 

Central E. Talbot S. Bethlehem 

Rhode Isl'd.T. M.Clark,* presid- 
ing bishop Providence. 

Wm. N. McVickar, 

coadjutor Providence. 

S. Carolina. .Ellison Capers Columbia. 

S. Dakota... W. H. Hare Sioux Falls. 

Tennessee . .T. F. Gailor Memphis. 

Texas G. H. Kinsolving. . .Austin. 

Western.. . J. S. Johnson San Antonio. 

Dallas A. C. Garrett Dallas. 

Salt Lake ... A. Leonard Salt Lake City 

Vermont ... .Arthur C. A. Hall. .Burlington. 
Virginia R. A. Gibson, coad- 
jutor. Richmond. 

Southern.. A.M.Randolph Norfolk. 

W. Virginia. G. W. Peterkin Parkersburg. 

W. L. Gravatt, co- 
adjutor Charlestown. 

Wisconsin 

Milw'kee.. Isaac L. Nicholson. Milwaukee. 
F. du Lac. Charles C. Grafton.Fond du Lac. 
R.H.Weller, Jr., co- 
adjutor Stevens Point. 

Washington 

Olympia.. .F. W. Keator Tacoma. 

Spokane.. .L. H. Wells Spokane. 

Africa S. D.Ferguson Cape Palmas. 

China- 
Shanghai. .F. R. Graves Shanghai. 

Japan John McKim Tokyo. 

Kyoto Sidney C.Partridge.Kyoto. 

Brazil L.L. Kinsolving... Rio Grande. 

Haiti J.T. H. Holly P't au Prince 

Honolulu. . .H. B. Restarick Honolulu. 

Philippines.Chas. H. Brent Manila. 

Porto Rico. .J. H. Van Buren. . . .San Juan. 
*Died Sept. 7, 1903. 

THE GENERAL CONVENTION. 

The general convention of the protestant 
episcopal church takes place once in three 
years. It consists of the house of bishops, 
which includes the diocesan and missionary 
bishops, and the house of deputies, made up 
of four clergymen and four laymen from 
each diocese. It legislates for the church 
in the United States. Changes in the con- 
stitution or in the Book of Common Prayer 
must be adopted at one .convention, re- 
ferred to the dioceses and then ratified by 
a second convention. The next convention 
will be held in Boston in October, 1904. 

Officers House of Bishops: Presiding 
bishop, Thomas M. Clark, bishop of Rhode 
Island (deceased); chairman, Thomas U. 
Dudley, bishop of Kentucky; secretary, Rev. 
Sanmel Hart, House of Deputies: President, 
Rev. John S. Lindsay; secretary, Rev. 
Ctarles L. Hutcbins, Concord, Mass. 



144 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



UNITARIAN CHURCH. 



NATIONAL CONFEBENCB. 

President Carroll D. Wright, Washington. 

Council Rev. Thomas R. Slicer, New York; 
Rev. Win. W. Fenn, Cambridge; Rev. 
George Batcheler, Boston; Frank N. Hart- 
well, Louisville; Charles A. Murdoch, San 
Francisco; Mrs. Paul R. Frothingham, 
Boston; William Reed, Boston; Rev. Sam- 
uel M. Crothers, Cambridge; Edward C. 
Eliot, St. Louis; Miss Emma C. Low, 
New York; Rev. Daniel W. Morehouse, 
New York; Richard C. Humphreys, 
Boston. 

WESTERN CONFERENCE. 

President Morton D. Hull, Chicago. 
Secretary Rev. Fred V. Hawley, Chicago. 
Treasurer Herbert W. Brough, Chicago. 



Vice-Presidents A. J. Dpham, Milwaukee; 
Prof. C. M. Woodward, St. Louis. 

Directors Rev. W. M. Backus, Mrs. E. A. 
Delano, C. L. Wilder, F. A. Delano, J. 
W. Hosmer, Mrs. Marion H. Perkin.s, C. 
E. Raymond, Rev. W. H. Pulsford, all of 
Chicago; Rev. Mary A. Saffiord, Des 
Moines; Rev. John W r . Day, St. Louis; 
Rev. A. M. Judy, Davenport; Rev. F. A. 
Gilmore, Madison; Rev. Florence Buck, 
Kenosha; Rev. F. M. Bennett, Lawrence, 
Kas.; Rev. J. H. Crooker, D. D., Ann Ar- 
bor; Rev. J. C. Hodgins, Milwaukee; 
Rev. R. W. Boynton, St. Paul. 

AMERICAN UNITARIAN ASSOCIATION. 

President Samuel A. Eliot. 
Secretary Charles E. St. John, Brookline, 
Mass. 



Bishop. 

Stephen M.Merrill.... 
Edward G. Andrews . . 

Henry W. Warren 

Cyrus D. Foss 

John M. Walden 

WillardF.Mallalieu.. 
Charles H. Fowler 
John H. Vincent . 



METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 



Residence. 
...Chicago, 111. 
... New fork, N.Y. 

SniversityPark.Col 
tiiladelphia, Pa. 

...Cincinnati. O. 

. ..Auburndale, Mass. 

...Buffalo, N. Y. 

. . .Zurich, Switzerland. 

James N. FitzGerald St. Louis, Mo. 

Isaac W.Joyce Minneapolis, Minn. 

Daniel E. Goodsell '..Chattanooga, Tenn. 

Charles C. McCabe Omaha, Neb. 

Earl Cranston Portland, Ore. 

David H.Moore Shanghai. China. 

John W. Hamilton San Francisco, Cal. 

Frank W. Warne Calcutta, India. 

Thomas W. Bowman East Orange, N. J. 

James M. Thoburn India. 

Joseph C. Hartzell Africa. 

METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH 

SOUTH. 
Bishop. Residence. 

John C. Keener Ocean Springs.Miss- 

Alpheus W. Wilson Baltimore, Md. 



John C. Granbery . 
Robert K. Hargrove . . 
Wallace W. Duncan.. 
Eugene R. Hendrix. . . 
Charles B Galloway.. 

Josephs. Key 

Oscar P. Fitzgerald . . . 
Henry C. Morrison 



____ Ashland, Va. 
....Nashville, Tenn. 

Spartanburg, S. C. 
....Kansas City, Mo. 

Jackson, Miss. 
____ Sherman. Tex. 
____ Nashville, Tenn. 

Louisville, Ky. 



Warren A. Candler. ........ Atlanta, Ga. 

E. E. Hoss ................... Dallas, Tex. 

A. Coke Smith .............. Norfolk, Va. 

EPWORTH LEAGUE. 

(Founded at Cleveland, O., May 14,1889.) 
President Bishop Isaac W. Joyce, Minne- 

apolis, Minn. 



General Secretary Rev. J. F. Berry, 57 

Washington street, Chicago. 
Treasurer R. S. Copeland, Ann Arbor, Mich. 
German Assistant Secretary Rev. F. Munz, 

Cincinnati, O. 

Assistant Secretary for Colored Conferences 
Rev. Irvine G. Penn, South Atlanta, Ga. 
BROTHERHOOD OF THE M. E. CHURCH. 
President Rev. T. B. Neely, 150 5th ave- 
nue, New York city. 

Corresponding Secretary Rev. P. W. Ad- 
ams, New Haven, Conn. 
METHODIST TWENTIETH CENTURY 

THANK OFFERING. 
In November, 1898, the bishops of the 
methodist church in America approved of a 
plan to raise a fund of $20,000.000 to be 
known as the twentieth century thank offer 
ing of the church and to be used for the fol 
lowing purposes: Education as represented 
either by particular schools in this or other 
countries or by a general educational fund 
for the aid of needy schools; charitable and 
philanthropic work; city evangelization en- 
dowment; invested funds for the support of 
conference claimants; the payment of debts 
on church property, and any specific objects 
in foreign fields. A commission was ap- 
pointed with Bishop E. G. Andrews as presi- 
dent and Dr. Edmund M. Mills as secretary 
and executive head. 

Work began March 20, 1899, and closed 
Dec. 31, 1902, when Dr. Mills reported that 
the total subscription to the fund amounted 
to $20,800,000. This was in addition to the 
usual gifts for regular benevolences and 
ordinary expenses of the denomination and 
did not include a sum of more than $16,000,- 
000 spent on new churches and parsonages 
and improvements. 



PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 



Stated Clerk and Treasurer Rev. William H. 
Roberts, D. D., 1319 Walnut street, Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

Permanent Clerk Rev.William B. Noble, Red- 
lands, Cal. 

TRUSTEES. 

President John H. Converse, LL. D., Phila- 
delphia, Pa. 

Treasurer Frank K. Hippie, 1340 Chestnut 
street, Philadelphia. Pa. 

Corresponding Secretary Rev. Edward B. 
Hodge, D. D. 

Office 1319 Walnut street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

BOARD OF HOME MISSIONS. 
Secretary-Rev. Charles L. Thompson, T). D. 
Assistant Secretarv Rev* John Dixon. D. D. 



Treasurer Harvey C. Olin. 

Supt. of School Work-Rev. G. F. McAfee. 

Office 1565th avenue. New York city. 

BOARD OP FOREIGN MISSIONS. 

President Rev. John D. Wells, D. D. 
Corresponding Secretaries Rev. Frank F. El 

linwood. D. D.; Rev. A. W. Halsey, D. D.; 

Robert E. Speer and Rev. Arthur J. Brown 

Treasurer-Charles W. Hand. 

Field Secretary Rev. Thomas Marshall, D. D. 

48 LeMoyne building. Chicago, 111. 
Office 1565th avenue. New York city. 
BOARD OF EDUCATION. 

Corresponding Secretary Rev. Edward B. 
Hodge, D. D. 



RELIGIOUS. 



145 



Treasurer Jacob Wilson. 

Office 1319 Walnut street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

BOARD OF PUBLICATION AND SABBATH 
SCHOOL WORK. 

President-Hon. Robert N Willson, Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 

Secretary Rev. Elijah R. Craven, D. D. 

Superintendent of Sabbath School and Mis- 
sionary Work Rev. James A. Worden, D. D. 

Editorial Superintendent Rev.J.R.Miller.D.D. 

Business Superintendent John H. Scribner. 

Manufacturer Henry F. Scheetz. 

Treasurer Rev. C. T. McMullin. 

Office 1319 Walnut street, Philadelphia, Pa. 

BOARD OP CHURCH ERECTION. 

President Rev. David Magie, D. D., Pater- 
son, N. J. 

Corresponding Secretary Rev. Erskine N. 
White, D. D. 

Treasurer Adam Campbell. 

Office 156 5th avenue. New York city. 

BOARD OF MINISTERIAL RELIEF. 

President A. Charles Barclay, Esq. 
Corresponding Secretary Rev. B. L. Agnew, 

Recording Secretary and Treasurer Rev. Wil- 
liam W. Heberton. 

Office 1319 Walnut street. Philadelphia, Pa. 
President Rev. Henry T. McClelland, D. D. 

BOARD OF FREEDMEN. 

Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer Rev. 
Edward P. Cowan, D. D. 



Recording Secretary Rev. Samuel J. Fisher, 

D. D. 

Treasurer Rev. John J. Beacom, D. D. 
Office 516 Market street, Pittsburg, Pa. 

BOARD OF AID FOR COLLEGES AND 

ACADEMIES. 

President Rev. Herrick Johnson, D. D., Chi- 

CilJJO, 111. 

Secretary and Treasurer Rev. Edward C. Ray, 

D. D. 
Office 78 LaSalle street. Chicago, 111. 

COMMITTEE ON SYSTEMATIC BENEFICENCE. 

Chairman-Rev. D. G. Wylie, D. D., New York 

city. 
Secretary Rev. W. H. Hubbard, D.D, Auburn, 

N. Y. 

COMMITTEE ON TEMPERANCE. 

Chairman W. C. Lilley, Pittsburg. Pa. 
Corresponding Secretary Rev. John F. Hill, 

Pittsburg, Pa. 
Recording Secretary Rev. C. S. McClelland, 

D. D. 
Treasurer W. C. Lilley, box 316, Pittsburg. Pa. 

PRESBYTERIAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY. 

President-Rev. H. C. McCook, D. D., Sc. D. 
Librarian-Rev. W. L. Ledwith, D. D., 1531 

Tioga street, Philadelphia. 

orresponding Secretary Rev. Samuel T. 

Lowrie- >. D., 1827 Pine street, Philadelphia. 
Recording Secretary Rev. James Price. 107 

East Lehigh avenue, Philadelphia. 
Treasurer-Prof. De B. K. Ludwig, Ph. D., 3739 

Walnut street, Philadelphia. 



BAPTIST DENOMINATION. 



Missionary Union President, H. Kirke 
Porter, Pennsylvania; recording sec- 
retary, Henry S. Burrage, D. D., Port- 
land, Me. 

Publication Society President, Samuel A. 
Crozer, Pennsylvania; secretary, A. J. 
Rowland, D. D., 1420 Chestnut street, 
Philadelphia. 

Home Mission Society President, E. M. 
Thresher, Ohio; corresponding secretary, 
H. L. Morehouse, D. D., New *ork. 

Historical Society President, B. L. Whit- 
man, D. D., LL. D., Philadelphia. 

Education Society President, A. Gaylord 
Slocum, Michigan; corresponding secre- 
tary, H. L. Morehouse, D. D., Ill 5th ave- 
nue, New York city. 

Southern Baptist Convention President, 
Edwin William Stephens, Columbia, Mo.; 
secretaries, Lansing Burrows, D. D., Nash- 
ville, Tenn.; Oliver F. Gregory, D. D., 
Baltimore, Md. 

Woman's Baptist Foreign Missionary So- 
cietyPresident, Miss Sarah C. Durfee, 



Providence, R. I.; corresponding secre- 
tary foreign department, Mrs. H. G. Saf- 
ford, Tremont Temple, Boston; secretary 
home department, Mrs. N. M. Waterbury, 
same address. 

Woman's Baptist Foreign Missionary So- 
ciety of the West President, Mrs. John 
Edwin Scott, Evanston, 111. ; foreign cor- 
responding secretary, Mrs. Frederick 
Clatworthy, Evanston, 111. ; home secre- 
tary, Miss Julia L. Austin, 1535 Masonic 
Temple, Chicago. 

Baptist Young People's Union of America 
(organized 1891) President, John H. Chap- 
man, Chicago; recording secretary, Rev. 
H. W. Reed, Rock Island, 111.; general 
secretary, Walter Galley, Chicago; treas- 
urer, H. B. Osgood, Chicago. The twelfth 
annual convention of the society was held 
at Atlanta, Ga., July 7-12, 1903. 

Woman's Baptist Home Mission Society 
President. Mrs. J. N. Grouse; corre- 
sponding secretary, Miss M. G. Burdette, 
2411 Indiana avenue, Chicago. 



RELIGIONS OF THE WORLD. 



According to the revised (1898) edition of 
Mulhall's Dictionary of Statistics there are 
476,100,000 Christians and 654,200,000 non- 
Christians in the world. The same author- 
ity places the number of Roman catholics 
in Europe, America and Australia at 223,- 
090,000: protestants, 157,050,000, a&d Greeks, 
88,660,000. It has been estimated that there 
are in the world 256,000,000 followers of Con- 



fucius, 190,000,000 Hindoos, 148,000,000 Bud- 
dhists, 118,000,000 polytheists, 43,000,000 Tao- 
ists, 14,000,000 Shintoists and 12,000,000 Jews. 
Of the Christians more than 230,000,000 are 
catholics, 98,000,000 orthodox Greek, 70,000,- 
000 Lutherans. 21,000.000 episcopalians, 17,- 
000,000 meT-hodists, 11,000.000 baptists, 9,000,- 
000 presbyterlans and 4,500,000 congregation- 
alists. 



SOLDIERS IN UNITED STATES WARS. 



Wars. 

Revolutionary 
War of 1812... 
Mexican 



184. OSS 
286,730 
78,718 



Wars. 
Indian wars., 

Civil , 

Spanish 



No. 

. 83.993 
.2,213,363 
. 312,000 



Wars. No. 

Philippines and China 146,151 



Total 3,304,993 



146 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOB 1904. 


STATES AND TERRITORIES. 

The following table gives the capitals, governors, their salaries and terms of office and data 
regarding the state legislatures. 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 


Capital. 


Governor. 


Term 
Yrs. 


Sal- 
ary. 


Term 
expires . 


Kext ses- 
sion leg- 
islature. 


Limit 
of 
ses- 
sion. 


Alabama 
Alaska Territory. 
Arizona Territory 


Montgomery... 
Sitka 


W.D. Jelks,D 
tJohnG. Brady. R... 
tA. O. Brodie, R 
J.Davis D 


4 
4 

4 
2 
4 

2 
2 
4 


$3,000 
3.000 
2.600 
3.000 
6,000 

5,000 
4,000 
2,000 


Nov. 1906 
Sept.1905 
Dec. 1906 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 190? 

Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 


tNov.1906 


50 days 


Phosnix 
Little Rock.... 
Sacramento.... 

Denver 
Hartford 


Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 

Man. 1905 
Jan. 1904 
Man. 1905 


60 days 
60 days 
60 days 

90 days 
None. 
None. 


California 
Colorado 


G. C. Pardee, R 


J. H. Peabody, JR.... 
A. Chamberlain, R.. 
John Hunn, R 


Delaware 
Dist. of Columbia. 

Florida ... . 


Dover 
Washington 


Tallahassee 
Atlanta 
Agana 
Honolulu 
Boise City 
Springfield 

Indianapolis... 
Des Moinea. ... 
Tahlequah 
Topeka 
Frankfort 

Baton Rouge.. 
Augusta 
Annapolis 
Boston 


W. S. Jennings, D... 
J.M.Terrell,!) 
tWm. E.Sewell 
tGeorge R. Carter, R 
John T. Morrison, JR. 
Richard Yates.JS.... 

W.T.Durbin. JR 
A. B. Cummins, R. . . 
tS. H. Mayes, R 
W. J. Bailey, R 
J. C. W. Beckham, D 

W. W. Heard, D 
John F Hill R 


4 
2 


3.500 
3,000 


Jan. 1905 
Nov. 1904 


*Apr, 1905 
Nov.W04 


60 days 
50 days 


Georgia . .. 


Guam Colony 
Hawaii 


4 

2 
4 

4 
2 
4 
2 
4 

4 
2 
4 

2 

2 
4 

4 
4 
2 

4 
2 
3 
4 
2 

4 
2 
2 
4 
4 

4 


5,000 
3.000 
6,000 

a! ooo 

6,500 

5,000 
2,000 
4.500 
8,000 
4,000 

5,000 
3,509 
5,000 
5,000 
2.500 

4,000 
2,000 
10,000 
2,600 
10,000 

3,000 

3,000 

s.tioo 

2,600 
1,500 

10.000 
15 000 


Oct. 1907 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 

Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1906 


Feb. iikJi 
*Dec. 1905 
Man. 1905 

Man. 1905 
Man. 1904 


eOdays 
None. 

60 days 
None. 


Idaho 


Illinois 


Indiana 


Indian Territory- 
Kansas 


Jan. 1905 
Dec. 1907 

May 1904 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1908 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 

Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1908 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 

Jan. 1907 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 

Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1906 
May 1905 
Jan. 1907 

Jan. 1907 


Man. 1905 
*Dec. 1904 

*May 1904 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1904 
Jan. 19u4 
Man. 1905 

Man. 1905 
Man. 1904 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 

Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Jan. 1904 
Man. 1905 
Jan. 1904 

Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1904 
Man. 1904 
Man. 1904 

Man. 1905 


40 days 
60 days 

60 days 
None. 
90 days 
None. 
None. 

90 days 
60 days 
70 days 
K) days 
60 days 

30 days 
None. 
None. 
60day 
None. 

60 days 
60 days 
None. 
60 days 
40 days 

None. 




Louisiana 
Maine 


Maryland 
Massachusetts ... 
Michigan 

Minnesota 
Mississippi 


Edwin Warfleld, D. . 
J. L. Bates, R 
A T Bliss R 




St. Paul 


S. A.VanSant,R... 
Jas. K. Vardaman, T) 
A. M. Dockery,D.... 

J. K. Toole. Fus . 


Jackson 
Jefferson City . 
Helena 




Nebraska 




John Mickey, R 

John Sparks, Fus.... 
N. J. Batchelder, R. . 
Franklin Murphy, R 
tM. A. Otero, R 
B. B. Odell, R . . . 


Nevada 
New Hampshire.. 


Carson City.... 
Concord 
Trenton 
Santa Fe 
Albany 


New Mexico Ter. 
New York . 


North Carolina... 
North Dakota .... 
Ohio 
Oklahoma Ter.... 
Oregon 

Pennsylvania 
Philippines Prot. 
Porto Kico Ter 
Rhode Island 
South Carolina... 

South Dakota 
Tennessee 
Texas 
Utah 


Raleigh 


C. B. Aycock, D 
Frank White, R 
Myron T. Herrick. R 
tT. B. Ferguson. R.. 
G.E.Chamberlain.D. 

S.W. Pennypacker,R. 
tLuke E. Wright. D.. 
tWilliamH.Hunt,R 
L. F. C. Garvin, D... 
D.C.Heyward.D.... 

C. N. Herreid, R.... 
J. B. Fraser, D 
S.W.T. Lanham, D.. . 
H. M. Wells, R 
J.G .McCul lough, R. 

A. J. Montague. D. . . 
Henry McBride, R. . 
A.B. White. R 
R. M. LaFollette, R.. 
F.Chatterton, R(act.) 


Bismarck 
Columbus 
Guthrie 
Salem 

Harrisburg 
Manila 
San Juan 
Providence 
Columbia 

Pierre 
Nashville 
Austin 
Salt Lake City. 
Montpelier 

Richmond 
Olympia 


4 
1 

2 

2 
2 
2 

4 
2 

4 
4 
4 
2 
4 


8.000 
3,000 
3,500 

2,500 
4,000 
4.000 
2.000 
1,500 

5.000 
4,000 
2,700 
5,000 
2,500 


May im 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 

Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Jan 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Oct. 1904 

Jan. 1906 
Jan. 1905 
Mar. 1905 
Jan. 1905 
Jan. 1907 






Jan. i904 
Nov. 1904 

Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
*Oct. 1904 

*Dec. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 
Man. 1905 


None. 
None. 

60davs 
75 days 
90 days 
60 days 
None. 

90 days 
60 days 
45 days 
None. 
40 days 


Vermont 
Virginia 


Washington 
West Virginia 


Charleston..... 
Madison 
Cheyenne 






Republican governors of states, 27; democratic governors, 16; fusion, 2. 
*Biennial sessions. ^Appointed by the president. JQuadrennial sessions. 



STATES AND TERRITORIES. 147 


STATES AND TERRITORIES. 

The following table gives valuable historical data as to the states and territories, their area, 
population and electoral vote. 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 


Admitted to 
t)w union. 


Popula- 
tion, 
1900. 


Area. 
Sg.M. 


Settled at 


Date 


By whom. 


Rep. 
in 
cony. 


Elec- 
toral 
vote. 


Alabama 
Alaska Ter 
Arizona Ter 
Arkansas 
California 

Colorado 
Connecticut 
Delaware 

Dist. of Colu'bia 

Florida 
Georgia 
Guam Colony... 
Hawaii Ter 
Idaho 
Illinois 

Indiana 

Iowa 


Dec. 14,1819.. 
t.July27, 1S63.. 
tFeb. 24.18C.3.. 
June 15, 1836.. 
Sept. 9, 1850. . 

Aug. 1. 1876... 
Man. 9, 1788. . . 
*Dec.7,1787... 

tJuly!6,1790.. 

March 3, 1845. 
Man. 2. 1788... 
[Aug. 12, 1898. 
t April 30. 1900. 
July3, 1890... 
Dec. 3, 1818... 

Dec. 11, 1816.. 
March 3, 1845. 
t 


1,828,697 
63.592 
122,931 
1,311,564 
J.485,053 

539.700 
908,420 
184,735 

278,718 

528,542 
2,216.331 
8,661 
154.001 
161,772 
4,821,550 

2,516,462 
2,231,853 
318,060 
1.470,495 
2,147,174 

1,381,625 
694,466 
1,188,044 
2,805.346 
2,420,982 

1,751,394 
1,551,270 
3.106,665 
243.329 
1,066,300 

42,335 
411,588 

1,883.669 
195,310 

7,268,894 

1,893,810 
319.146 
4,157.545 
398.331 
413,536 

6.302.115 

7.000.000 
957,6?9 
428,556 
1,340,316 

401,570 
2.020,616 
3.048,710 
276.749 
343,641 

1.854,184 
518.103 
958.800 
2,069.042 
92,531 


52.250 
577.390 
118.020 
53.850 
158,360 

103.925 

70 

58,680 
59,475 
150 
6,740 
84,800 
56,650 

36,350 
56,025 
31.400 
82,080 
40,400 

33^040 
12.210 
8,315 
58,915 

83,365 
46,810 
69.415 
146,080 
77,510 

110,700 
9,305 

7,815 
122.580 
49,170 

52.250 
70,795 
41,060 
39.030 
96,030 

45.215 
114.000 
3.600 
1,250 
30,570 

77.650 
42,050 
265.780 
84.970 
9,565 

42,450 

69.180 
24,780 
56.040 
97,890 


Mobile.... 


1702 
1801 
1580 
16-85 
1769 

1858 
1635 

1627 
1660 

1565 
1733 


French 


9 


11 


Sitka 
Tucson 
Ark'nsas Post 
San Diego.... 

Near Denver. 
Windsor 
Cape Henlo- 
pen 


Russians 


Spaniards 


'! 

8 

3 
5 

1 


...9" 
10 

5 

7 

3 


Spaniards.. .. 

Americans.... 
Puritans 

Swedes 
English 


St. Augustine 
Savannah 
Agana 


Spaniards 
English 
Spaniards 


11* 


5 

13 








1 




Coeurd'Alene 

Kaskaskia.... 

Vincennes.... 


1842 
1720 

1730 


Americana.... 
French 


T l 

25 

13 
11 


3 
27 

15 
13 

"16" ' 
13 

9 
6 
8 
16 
14 

11 
10 
18 

3 

4 ' 
12 

"39" 
12 

4 

"4" 
34 




Burlington... 


1788 
1832 


French 


Indian Ter 




Kansas 
Kentucky 

Louisiana . .. 


Jan. 29, 1861.. 
Feb. 4, 1792... 

April 8, 1872.. 
March 3, 1820. 
* April 28, 1788. 
*Feb. 6,1788... 
Jan. 26, 1837.. 

May 11, 1858.. 
Dec. 10,1817.. 
March 2. 1821. 
Nov. 8, 1889... 
March 1, 1867. 

Oct. 13, 1864... 
Mune 21, 1788. 

*Dec. 18, 1787. . 
tSept. 9,1850.7 
*July26,1788.. 

*May23,1785.. 

Nov. 2. 1889.. . 
Nov. 29. 1802.. 
tMay2,1890... 
Feb. 14, 1859. . 

*Dec. 12, 1787. . 
**Nov. 28. 1898. 
[Aug. 12. 1898. 
*May 29. 1790. . 
*May23,1788.. 

Nov. 2, 1889... 
June 1,1796... 
Dec. 29, 1845.. 
Jan. i, 1896... 
Feb. 18. 1791.. 

*June26,17S8.. 
Nov. 11. 1889.. 
Dec. 31. 1862. . 
May 29, 1848... 
July 11, 1890. . 




1831 
1765 

1699 
1624 
1634 
1620 
1650 

1805 
1716 
1764 
1809 
1847 

1850 

1623 
1620 
1537 
1614 

1650 
1780 
1788 
1889 
1810 

1682 
1570 
1510 
1636 
1670 

1856 
1757 
1686 
1847 
1764 

1607 
1811 
1774 
1670 
1834 


Americans.... 
From Va 

French 
English 
English 


8 
11 

7 
4 
6 
14 
12 

9 
8 
16 
1 
6 

1 

2 
10 
ii 

34 
10 

I 
1 

32 


Lexington.... 

Iberville.... 
Bristol 
St. Mary's 
Plymouth 
Near Detroit. 

St. Peter's R.. 
Natchez 
St. Louis 




Maryland 


Massachusetts. . 
Michigan 

Minnesota 
Mississippi 
Missouri . .. 


Puritans 
French 


Americans.... 
FromS. C 
French 
Americans.... 
Americans.... 

Americans.... 

Puritans 
Swedes 
Spaniards.. .. 
Dutch 


Montana 
Nebraska 


Bellevue 

Genoa 
Dover and 
Portsmouth 
Bergen 
Santa Fe 
Manhattan Id 

Albemarle 
Pembina 
Marietta 


Nevada 
New Hampshire 

New Jersey 
New Mexico Ter 
New York 

North Carolina. 
North Dakota. . 
Ohio 


English 


French 
Americans.... 
Americans.... 
Americans.... 

English 
Spaniards 


Oklahoma Ter.. 
Oregon 

Pennsylvania... 
Philippine Prot. 
Porto Rico Ter.. 
Rhode island 
South Oarolina.. 

South Dakota... 
Tennessee. 
Texas 


Astoria 

Delaware R.. 
Manila 


Caparra 
Providence... 
Port Royal.. . 

Sioux Falls... 
Ft. London.. . 
Matagorda B. 
Salt Lake City 


Spaniards 
English 
Huguenots... 

Americans... 
English . ... 


1 

10 
16 
1 
2 

10 

! 

11 

1 


4 

9 

4 
12 
18 
3 
4 

12 
5 

7 
13 
3 


French 
Americans... 
English 

English 
Americans.... 
English..;.... 
French 
Americans.... 


Utah 


Vermont 


Ft. Dummer.. 

Jamestown,.. 
Astoria- 


Virginia 


Washington 
West Virginia... 
Wisconsin 
Wyoming 


Wheeling 
jreen Bay.... 
Ft. Laramie.. 


*Ratifled the constitution. tOrganized as territory. tDelee&te. ^Signing of protocol relin- 
quishing sovereignty. **Tielding sovereignty. ttCommissioner. 
Historians do not all agree as to some of the dates in the above table. The dates given 
are from the statistical abstract of the United States published by the government, and are 
well supported in all disputed cases. 



148 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


BANK AND POPULATION OF AMERICAN CITIES. 

[From the twelfth census.} 


CITY. 


1900. 


Per cent 
inc. 1890 
to 19(H>. 


CITY. 


1900. 


Per cent 
inc. 1890 
to 1900. 


Rank. 


Pop. 


Rank. 


Pop. 


New York, N.Y 
Chicago 111 ... 


1 
2 
3 
4 
5 
6 

10 
11 
12 
13 

1! 

16 
17 
18 
19 
20 
21 
22 
23 
24 
25 

1? 

28 
29 
30 
31 
32 
33 
34 
35 
36 
37 
38 
39 
40 
41 
42 
43 
44 
45 
46 
47 
48 
49 
50 
51 
52 

g 

55 
56 
57 

g 

60 
61 
62 
63 
64 
65 
66 
67 
68 
69 
70 

72 
73 
74 
75 
76 
77 


3.437,202 
1.K98.575 
1.298.697 
575,238 
560.892 
.508.957 
381,768 
352,387 
342,782 
325,902 
321,616 
287,104 
285,704 
285,315 
278,718 

202',718 
175,597 
169,164 
163,752 
163,065 
162.608 
133,859 
131822 
129,896 
125,5fK) 
118 421 
108.374 
108,027 
105,171 
104.863 
102.979 
102,555 
102,479 
102,820 
102.0-26 
94,969 
94,151 
91.886 
90,426 
89,872 
87,565 
85,333 
85,050 
80.865 
80,671 
79,850 
78,961 
76,508 
75.935 
73,307 
70.996 
68.513 
66,960 
62,559 
62,442 
62.139 
62,059 
61,643 
60,651 
59,864 
59,007 
56,987 
56,383 
56,100 
55,807 
54,244 
53,531 
53,321 
52,969 
52,7.33 
52,130 
51,721 
51,418 
50.167 


126.8 
54.4 
23.6 
27.3 
25.1 
17.2 
46.1 
37.8 
14.6 
9.8 
34.8 
18.6 
38.8 
39.5 
21.0 
35.3 
26.6 
27.1 
23.1 
32.9 
60.4 
23.4 
22.5 
21.4 
25.4 
61.9 
23.4 
42.4 
39.9 
23.0 
32.9 
34.2 
40.9 
96.8 
*27.0 
103.4 
58.6 
35.6 
22.2 
*.8 
31.2 
94.9 
37.1 
45.3 
39.4 
4.5 
6.2 
88.3 
50.0 

&! 

i?:l 

45.3 
22.9 
37.5 
40.1 
53.3 
24.0 
40.5 
53.5 
*.5 
36.0 
16.3 
29.1 

L6 

25.6 
19.4 
41.5 
60.0 
29.8 
38.0 
37.1 
34.2 
27.4 


Portland, Me 
Yonkers. N. Y 


% 

80 
81 
82 
88 

84 
85 
86 
87 
88 
89 
90 
91 
92 
93 

% 

96 
97 
98 
99 
100 
101 
102 
103 
104 
105 
106 
107 
108 
109 
110 
111 
112 
113 
114 
115 
116 
117 
118 
119 
120 
121 
122 
123 
124 
125 
126 
127 
128 
129 
I'M 
131 
132 
133 
134 
135 
136 

139 
140 
141 
142 
143 
144 
145 
146 
147 
148 
149 
150 
151 
152 
153 
154 


50.145 
47.931 
46.624 
45.859 
45,712 
45,115 
44,885 
44,633 
42.938 
42,728 
42,638 
42.345 
41.459 
40.169 
063 
647 
441 
39.306 
39.231 
38.973 
38,878 
38.469 
38,415 
38,307 
38,253 
37,789 
37,714 
37.175 
36.848 

36)252 
35,999 
35.956 
35.936 
35,672 
35,416 
35.254 
34,227 
34,159 
34,072 
33,988 
33,708 
33,664 
33,608 
33,587 
33.111 
32,722 
32,637 
31,682 
31,531 
31.091 
31,051 
31,036 
30,667 

30!345 
30,154 
29,655 
29,353 

29,282 
29.102 
28,895 
28,757 
28.429 
28.389 
28,301 
28.284 
28,204 
28.157 
27,838 
27^77 
27.628 
26,688 
26.369 
26,121 


37.7 
49.6 
33.7 
60.1 
28.3 
27.5 
35.1 
62.0 
14.9 
54.8 
12.0 
*8.6 
29.5 
*27.2 
46.8 
13.3 
18.4 
71.6 
42.0 
28.5 
12.6 
23.8 
46.7 
48.1 
19.9 

S:? 

35.6 
85.0 
21.4 
19.7 
15.1 
65.0 
16.7 
64.8 

&J 
31.2 
65.0 
36.8 
22.1 
68.0 

& 

8.4 
37.8 
*12.4 
71.9 
44.8 
59.2 
43.1 
159.5 
31.7 
22.0 
17.1 
184.2 
38.7 
17.4 
3.6 
95.5 

a? 

38.5 
15.2 
6.0 
65.3 
144.3 
13.6 
23.9 
35.4 
14.7 
113.2 
113.2 
*.8 
15.7 
22.3 
6.0 


Philadelphia, Pa 
St. Louis. Mo 
Boston, Mass 
Baltimore Md 


Norfolk, Va 


Waterbury. Conn 


Fort Wayne, Ind 
Youngstown, O 
Houston, Tex 
Covington Ky . 


Cleveland, O 
Buffalo. N. Y 
San Francisco, Cal... 
Cincinnati. O 
Pittsburg. Pa 
New Orleans. La 
Detroit, Mich 
Milwaukee, Wis 
Washington, D. C.... 
Newark N J 


Akron, O. . ..* 


Dallas, Tex 


Saginaw Mich 


Lancaster, Pa 
Lincoln, Neb 
Brockton, Mass 
Binghamton, N. Y... 


Jersey City, N. J 
Louisville, Ky 
Minneapolis. Minn... 
Providence, R.I 
Indianapolis, Ind 
Kansas City. Mo 
St Paul Minn 


Honolulu, Hawaii... 
Pawtucket, R.I 
Altoona, Pa 
Wheeling, W. Va 
Mobile, Ala 


Birmingham, Ala 
Little Rock, Ark 
Springfield, O 
Galveston, Tex 
Tacoma, Wash 
Haverhill, Mass 
Spokane. Wash 
Terre Haute, Ind 
Dubuque, Iowa 
Quincy 111 


Rochester, N.Y 
Denver Col 


Toledo O 


Allegheny, Pa 


Columbus, O 


Worcester, Mass 
Syracuse, N.Y 
New Haven, Conn.... 


Fall River. Mass 
St. Joseph. Mo 
Omaha Neb 


South Bend, Ind 
Salem Mass 


Johnstown, Pa 
Elmira. N. Y 
Allentown, Pa 


Los Angeles. Cal 
Memphis, Tenn 
Scranton. Pa 
Lowell, Mass 
Albany. N. Y 


Davenport. Iowa 
McKeesport. Pa 
Springfield, 111 
Chelsea, Mass 


Cambridge, Mass 
Portland Ore. 


Chester, Pa 


Atlanta Ga 


York, Pa 
Maiden, Mass 
Topeka, Kas 


Grand Rapids. Mich. 
Dayton. O 


Richmond, Va 
Nashville, Tenn 
Seattle Wash 


Newton, Mass*- 
Sioux City, Iowa 
Bayonne, N. J 
Knoxville, Tenn 
Schenectady, N. Y.... 
Kitchburg. Mass 
Superior, Wis 
Rockford, 111 


Hartford, Conn 
Reading, Pa 
Wilmington, Del 
Carnden, N J 


Trenton. N. J 


Bridgeport, Conn 


Taunton, Mass 
Canton . .. 


Oakland. Cal 
Lawrence. Mass 
New Bedford, Mass . . 
Des Moines, Iowa 
Springfield, Mass 
Somerville, Mass 
Troy. N.Y 


Butte, Mont 
Montgomery, Ala 
Auburn, N.Y 
Chattanooga, Tenn. . 
East St. Louis, 111.... 
Joliet 111 


Sacramento. Cal 
Racine, Wis 
LaCrosse,Wis 
Williamsport, Pa 
Jacksonville, Fla.... 
Newcastle. Pa 
Newport. Ky 


Hoboken, N. J 
Evansville, Ind 
Manchester, N.H... 
Utica N. Y 


Peoria. Ill 
Charleston, S. C 
Savannah, Ga 
Salt Lake City. Utah 
San Antonio, Tex. . . 
Duluth, Minn 
Erie. Pa 
Elizabeth, N. J 
Wilkesbarre, Pa 
ansas City, Kas 
arrisburg, Pa 


Oshkosh Wis 


Woonsocket, R. I.... 
Pueblo, Col 
Atlantic City, N. J... 
Passaic. N. J 
Bay City. Mich 
Fort Worth, Tex 
Lexington, Ky 
Gloucester. Mass 


'Decrease 



OCCUPATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. 



149 



OCCUPATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES, 

[Census of 1900.] 



Actors 8,392 

Actresses 6,418 

Agents 241,333 

Agents (station) 45,992 

Agricultural laborers 4,459,346 

Architects 10,604 

Artists and art teachers 24,902 

Authors 6,058 

Baggagemen 19,085 

Bakers 79,407 

Bankers and brokers 73, 384 

Barbers 131,383 

Bartenders 88,937 

Blacksmiths 227,076 

Boarding-house keepers 71,371 

Boilermakers . 33,087 

Bookbinders , 30,286 

Bookkeepers 255,526 

Boot and shoe dealers 15,239 

Boot and shoe makers 209, Ot 6 

Bottlers 10,546 

Boimakers (paper) 21,098 

Brakemen , 67,492 

Brass workers 26,760 

Brewers and maltsters 20,984 

Brick and tile makers 49,934 

Broom and brush makers 10,222 

Builders and contractors 56,935 

Butchers 114,212 

Butter and cheese makers 19,261 

Cabinetmakers 35,641 

Carpenters and joiners 602,741 

Carpet factory employes 19,388 

Carriage and hack drivers 36,794 

Charcoal and coke burners 14,476 

Chemical workers 14,81* 

Chemists 8,887 

Cigar dealers 15,367 

Clergymen 111,942 

Clerks and copyists 632,099 

Clock and watch makers 24,188 

Clothing dealers 18,097 

Coal and wood dealers 20,866 

Commercial travelers 92,936 

Compositors 36,849 

Conductors (steam road) 42,935 

Confectioners 31,242 

Coopers ' 37,226 

Copper workers '. 8,188 

Cotton mill operatives 246,004 

Dairymen 10,931 

Dentists 29,683 

Designers and draftsmen 18,956 

Distillers and rectifiers 3,145 

Dressmakers 347,076 

Dry-goods dealers 45,840 

Druggists 57,346 

Dyers 17,904 

Electricians 50,782 

Electro-platers 6,387 

Elevator tenders 12,691 

Engineers (civil) 43,535 

Engineers and firemen (not railway). 224,546 

Engineers and firemen (railway) 107,150 

Engravers 11,156 

Formers 5,681,257 

Firemen (fire departments) 14,576 

Fishermen 73,810 

Foremen and overseers 55,503 

Furniture factory employes 23,078 

Gardeners 62,418 

Glassworkers 49,999 

Glovemakers 12,276 

Gold and silver workers 26,146 

Harnessmakers 40,193 

Hat and cap makers 22,733 

Hcstlers .. 65,381 



Hotelkeepers 

Housekeepers and stewards 

Iron and steel workers 

Janitors 

Journalists 

Knitting-mill operatives 

Laborers (general) 

Laborers (railroad) 

Laundry employes 

Lawyers 

Lead and zinc workers 

Leather curriers and tanners 

Librarians 

Liquor merchants 

Lithographers 

Liverymen 

Locksmiths, gunmakers, etc 

Longshoremen 

Lumber dealers 

Lumbermen 

Machinists 

Marble and stone cutters 

Masons, stone and brick 

Merchants (wholesale) 

Messengers 

Millers 

Milliners 

Miners (coal) 

Miners (gold and silver) 

Model and pattern makers 

Molders 

Musicians and music teachers.., 

Nurses (total) 

Nurses (trained) 

Office boys 

OfUcials (bank) 

Officials (government) , 

Oil well and works employes 

Packers and shippers 

Painters and glaziers , 

Paperhangers , 

Paper-mill operatives 

Peddlers 

Photographers , 

Physicians! and surgeons 

Plasterers , 

Plumbers and fitters 

Policemen 

Porters 

Potters 

Printers and pressmen 

Produce dealers , 

Professors in colleges 

Publishers 

Quarrymen 

Restaurant keepers 

Roofers and slaters 

Salesmen and salesladies 

Sailors 

Saloonkeepers 

Saw and planing mill employes. 

Seamstresses 

Servants 

Sextons 

Shirt, collar and cuff makers... 

Showmen (professional) 

Silk-mill operatives 

Soldiers and sailors (U. S.) 

Stenographers 

Stereotypers and electrotypers.. 

Stock raisers 

Storekeepers (general) 

Storekeepers (grocery) 

Stovemakers 

Street-railway employes 

Switchmen, yardmen, etc 

Tailors 

Teachers 



, 54,931 

. 155,524 

. 203,295 

. 51,226 

. 30,098! 

. 47,120 
.2,588,283 

. 249,576 

. 387,013 

. 114,703 

5,335 

. 42,684 

4,184 

. 13,119 

7,956 

. 33,680 

7,432 

. 20,934 

. 16,774 

. 72,190 

. 283,432 

. 54,525 

. 161,048 

. 42,310 

. 44,460 

. 40,576 

. 87,881 

. 344,292 

. 59,095 

. 15,083 

. 87,504 

. 92,264 

. 121,269 

. 11,892 

. 16,727 

. 74,246 

. 90,290 

. 24,626 



277,990 
22,004 
36,329 
76,872 
27,029 

132,225 
35,706 
97,884 

116,615 
54,274 
16,140 

103,855 
34,194 
7,275 
10,970 
34,598 
34,023 
9,068 

611,787 
61,873 
83,875 

161,687 

151,379 
1,458,010 
5,394 
39,432 
16,625 
54,460 

126,744 
98,827 
3,172 
85,469 
33,031 

156,557 
12,473 



50,241 
230,277 
439,522 



150 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOB 1904. 



Teamsters 504,321 

Telegraph operators 55,885 

Telephone operators 19,195 

Theatrical managers 3,488 

Tinplate and tinware workers 

Tobacco factory employes 

Tool and cutlery makers 

Trunkmakers 



70,613 

131,464 

28,122 

3,657 



Typewriters 13,637 

Undertakers 16,200 

Upholsterers 30,839 

Veterinary surgeons 8,190 

Waiters 107,430 

Whoelwrights 13,539 

Wireworkers 18,487 

Woolen-mill operatives 73,196 



SOME OCCUPATIONS OF AMERICAN WOMEN. 



[Census 

Actresses 6,418 

Agents 10,500 

Artists and art teachers 11,027 

Authors and scientists 2,616 

Bakers 4,346 

Barbers and hairdressers 5,582 

Boarding-house keepers 59,511 

Bookbinders 15,635 

Bookkeepers 74,186 

Boot and shoe workers 37,425 

Boxmakers (paper) 17,302 

Carpet factory employes 9,017 

Clerks and copyists 85,269 

Compositors 9,617 

Coufectioners 9,216 

Corsetmakers 7,201 

Cctton-mill operatives 120,216 

Dentists 787 

Dressmakers 344,949 

Farming 307,788 

Hat and cap makers 7,625 

Housekeepers 147,103 

Jewelry manufactory employes 5,172 

Journalists 2,193 

Knitting-mill operatives 34,490 

Lace and embroidery makers 7,316 

Laundry employes 335,711 

Librarians 3,125 



of 1900.] 

Merchants (retail) .................... 34,132 

Messengers ........................... 6,663 

Milliners .............................. 86,142 

Ministers ............................. 3,405 

Musicians and music teachers ....... 52,377 

Nurses (not specified) ................. 92,214 

Nurses (trained) ...................... 11,134 

Packers and shippers ............... .'. 19,988 



9,424 
3,587 
7,399 
463 

149,256 
146,542 



Paper-mill operatives 

Photographers 

Physicians 

Professors in colleges 

Saleswomen 

Seamstresses 

Sen ants .............................. 1,242,192 

Shirt, collar and cuff makers ........ 30,941 

Silk-mill operatives ................... 82,437 

Stenographers ........................ 75,274 

Straw workers ........................ 3,068 

Tailoresses ........................... 68,978 

Teachers .............................. 327,586 

Telegraph operators .................. 7,229 

Telephone operators .................. 15,349 

Tobacco factory operatives ........... 43,498 

Typewriters .......................... 10,884 

Waitresses ............................ 42.839 

Watch factory operatives ............ 3,907 

Woolen-mill operatives . .............. 30, 630 



GREAT CITIES OF THE WORLD. 



CITT. 



Census 
ar. 



Papula 
tion. 



CITY. 



Census 
year. 



Popula- 
tion. 



London* 

New York 

Paris 

Cantonf 

Berlin 

Chicago 

Vienna 

Tokyo 

St. Petersburg}:. . 

Philadelphia 

Constantinople! . 

Calcutta* 

Tientsin! 

Pekint 

Hankowt 

Buenos Ayres . . . 

Osaka 

Bombay 

Rio de Janeiro!-. 
Glasgow 



1901 
1900 
1901 
1901 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1898 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1901 
1899 
1899 
1899 
1901 
1898 
1901 
1900 
1901 



8,680,616 

3.437.202 

2,690.559 

2,500.000 

1.888,326 

1,698.575 

1.674,957 

1.440,121 

1,439,375 

1.293.697 

1.125.000 

1.121,664 

1.000.000 

1.000.000 

1,000.000 

836.381 

821.235 

770.843 

750.000 

735,906 



Budapest , 

Hamburg 

Hangchau! 

Liverpool 

Fuchaut 

Warsaw 

Shanghai! 

Bern 

St. Louis 

Naples 

Brussels* , 

Boston 

Manchester... 
Birmingham... 
Amsterdam.. 

Madrid 

Barcelona 

Madras , 

Baltimore 

Suchaut 



1900 
1POO 
1899 
1901 
1S99 
1897 
1900 
1900 
1900 
1901 
1900 
1900 
1901 
1901 
1900 
1897 
1897 
1901 
1900 



732^2 
705.76 
700.011 



*Greater London. tEstimated. JWith suburbs. 
NOTE For population of other cities see countries in which thi 



they are situated. 



THE RHODES SCHOLARSHIPS. 



The first election of scholars in the United 
States under the terms of the bequest made 
by Cecil Rhodes will be made between Feb- 
ruary and May, 1904. The elected scholars 
will begin residence in the following Octo- 
ber. A qualifying examination will be held 
within this period in each state and terri- 
tory to which scholarships are assigned and 



the scholars will be elected from the candi- 
dates who have passed this examination, one 
for each state and territory. Candidates 
must have reached the end of their sopho- 
more year at some university or college and 
must be unmarried citizens between 19 and 
25 years of age. 



STATISTICS OF EDUCATION. 151 


STATISTICS OF EDUCATION. 


COMMON SCHOOL STATISTICS (1901-1902). 
Population, enrollment, average daily-attendance, number and sex of teachers. 


STATE OB 
TERRITORY. 


Estimated 
total 
popula- 
tion 
in 1902. 


Pupils 
enrolled 
in the 
element- 
arn and 
secondary 
common 
schools. 


Per 
cent 
of the 
popu- 
lation 
en- 
rolled. 


Average 
daily 
attend- 
ance. 


NUMBER OP TEACHERS. 


Male. 


Female. 


Total. 


United States 


78,544,816 


15,925,887 


20.28 


10,999,273 


122,392 


317,204 


439,596 


North Atlantic Division.. . . 
South Atlantic Division 
South Central Division 
North Central Division 
Western Division 


21,802,750 
10.696,435 
14,715.700 
26,912,400 
4,417,531 


3,733.683 

2.279.290 
3,156,590 

5.866.096 
889,928 


17.12 
21.31 
21.45 
21.80 
20.15 


2.741.360 
1,445.797 
2.097,819 
4.101,022 
613,275 


18,069 
19,567 
30.652 
48,152 
5,952 


90,003 
31,818 
34.848 
139.691 
20.844 


108.072 
51,385 
65,500 
187.843 
26,796 


North Atlantic Division- 
Maine 


700,750 
419.000 
345,900 
2.856.000 
451,000 
955.600 
7,553.500 
1.986.000 
6,535,000 

184,735 
1.204,000 
289.500 
1.883.000 
979,900 
1,956.000 
1,382.000 
2,256.000 
561,300 

2,210,000 

2.044.000 
1,919.000 
1.580,000 
1.441.000 
3.191.000 

4.238,000 

2.528.000 
4.940.000 
2,445,500 
2,103.000 
1.85S.OOO 
2.233,000 
3,200.000 
371.800 
428,100 
1,080.000 
1,487,000 

261,600 
92,531 
611,000 
219,600 
139.500 
286.100 
43,000 
180.600 
618.0UO 
4-25.600 
1.540,000 


133,537 
67,250 
65.008 
468,188 
69,357 
161,545 
1,268,625 
336.664 
1,163,509 

36,895 
224,004 
48,432 
381.561 
236,015 
464.669 
272,443 
502.887 
112,384 

498,989 
499,010 
365,171 
387.488 
198.896 
712,629 
340.695 
131,591 
22,121 

832,044 
560.224 
971.841 
510,031 
446.247 
414,671 
560.173 
703.057 
83,077 
105.691 
289,468 
389,272 

42,400 
14.512 
130.3C9 
40.184 
19.203 
74,578 

6.952 

46.117 
136.824 
100,659 
278,330 


19.06 
16.05 
18.79 
16.39 
15.38 
16.91 
16.80 
16.95 
17.80 

19.98 
18.60 
16.73 
20.26 
24.09 
23.76 
19.71 
22.29 
20.02 

22.58 
24.41 
19.03 
24.52 
13.80 
22. 33 
25.18 
25.32 
4.83 

19.63 
22.16 
19.67 
20.86 
21 22 
22.32 
25.09 
21.97 
22.51 
24.69 
26.80 
26.18 

16.21 
15.68 
21.34 
18.30 
13.77 
26.07 
16.17 
25.54 
22.11 
23.65 
18.07 


98,918 
49,280 
49.220 
371.048 
50,519 
118.056 
908.401 
223,960 
871,958 

25,300 
135,515 

37.996 
225.912 
152.174 
269.003 
208.378 
315.355 
76,164 

315,545 

338.091 
240.000 
227,995 
140.242 
524.400 
214.981 
83.039 
13,526 

610.622 
423.078 
765.057 
331.500 
278.803 
264.275 
374.103 
472,799 
48.987 
72.846 
185,755 
273,197 

25.900 
9.650 
82.696 
27,314 
11.514 
53.688 
5,014 
30,022 
91.333 
t>6,779 
209,365 


943 
207 
458 

'ill 

389 
5,060 
1.041 
8,585 

210 
1.071 
171 
2.701 
3.972 
3,976 
2.537 
4,030 
899 

4.638 
4.896 
3,103 
3.779 
1,346 
7.051 
4,386 
1,212 
241 

9.913 
7,006 
6.800 
3.040 
2.243 
1.974 
4,161 
5,562 
1,198 
1.007 
1,862 
3,386 

191 
89 
761 
385 
- 118 
556 
38 
359 
1.039 
1.141 
1,275 


5,691 
2,169 
3,448 
12.408 
1.830 
3,929 
31,576 
6.897 
22,055 

621 
3.965 
1,152 
6.307 
3.334 
4,755 
3,295 
6.489 
1,900 

4.863 
4,588 
3,200 
4,736 
2.925 
9.119 
3.337 
1.703 
377 

16,497 
9.033 
20.386 
13.014 
10,913 
10,631 
24.912 
10,785 
3,385 
4,045 
7,767 
8,323 

1,030 
481 
3.186 
325 
339 
1,037 
281 
879 
3.120 
3.369 
6,797 


6,634 
2,376 
3,906 
13.622 
2.002 
4,318 
36.636 
7.938 
30,640 

6JS 
1.323 
9,008 
7,306 
8,731 
5.832 
10,519 
2,799 

9.501 

8.515 
4,271 
16,170 
7,723 
2.915 
618 

26.410 
16.039 
27.186 
16.054 
13.156 
12.605 
29.073 
16.347 
4.583 
5.052 
9.629 
11,709 

1,221 

570 
3,947 
710 
457 
1.593 
319 
1.238 
4.159 
4.510 
8,072 


New Hampshire (1899-1900) 


Massachusetts (1900-1901). . 
Rhode Island 


Connecticut 


New York 


New Jersey 


Pennsylvania 


South Atlantic Division- 
Delaware (1899-1W)) 
Maryland (1900-1901) 
District of Columbia 
Virginia (1898-195)9) 
West Virginia (1900-1901).. 
North Carolina 






Florida 


South Central Division- 
Kentucky (1900-1901) 


Tennessee (1900-1901) 
Alabama (1900-1901) 
Mississippi (1900-1901) 


Texas 


Arkansas 


Oklahoma 


Indian Territory 


North Central Division- 
Ohio 


Indiana 


Illinois 


Michigan (1900-1901) 
Wisconsin (1900-1901) 
Minnesota 






North Dakota (1899-1900)... 
South Dakota 


Nebraska 


Kansas 


Western Division- 
Montana (1900-1901) 
Wyoming (1899-1900) 
Colorado 


New Mexico (1900-1901).... 


Utah .... 


Nevada 


Idaho 
Washington 




California 





152 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOB 1904. 


INSTRUCTORS AND STUDENTS IN PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOLS AND IN PRIVATE 
HIGH SCHOOLS AND ACADEMIES (1901-1902). 


STVTE OR 
TERRITORY. 


PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOLS. 


PRIVATE SECONDARY SCHOOLS. 


Number. 


Secondary 
teachers. 


Secondary 
students. 


Number. 


Secondary 
teachers. 


Secondary 
students. 


Male. 


Female 


Male. 


Female 


Male. 


?emale 


Male. 


Female 


United States 


5292 


10,958 


11,457 


226.914 


323,697 


1835 


4,073 


5,830 


51,536 


53,154 


North Atlantic Division. . 
south Atlantic Division.. 
South Central Division... 
tforth Central Division ... 
Western Division 

North Atlantic Division- 
Maine f. 


1476 
436 
702 

I:;:.:-; 
i45 


2,960 
691 
1,037 

M 


4.333 
568 
755 
5,084 
717 


75,888 
11.024 
16.450 
109,736 
13,816 


105,143 
16,937 
24.004 
156,714 
20,899 


650 
350 
364 
343 
128 


1,885 
629 
589 
704 
266 


2,529 
852 
735 
1,295 
419 


20,900 
9,098 
9.805 
8,680 
3,053 


18,893 
9,610 
9,541 
11,248 
3,862 


145 

58 
58 
244 
22 
75 
393 

M 

12 

49 
7 
64 
28 
30 
92 
114 
40 

80 
100 
73 
8< 
41 
236 
60 
16 

r 

720 
38". 

1 

215 
128 
346 
2tt 

as 

71 

so; 

220 

39 

11 
4~ 

1 

7 
3 
Ik 


171 

3 

653 
78 
143 
844 
212 
715 

19 
111 

76 
79 

1 

120 
147 
55 

127 
125 

100 
96 

3 

86 
27 
8 

1.152 
764 
781 
480 
361 
222 
495 
461 
41 
86 

37 
15 
141 
24 
5 
25 
13 
14 
117 
52 
292 


183 
121 

89 

^ 

250 
1,597 
364 
599 

25 

86 
96 

68 
102 
40 

109 
91 
92 
95 
79 
213 
44 
24 
8 

694 

403 
800 
687 
452 
404 
665 
348 
41 

& 

253 

52 
8 
128 

! 

26 
10 
7 
96 
46 
331 


3,776 
1,622 
1.561 
17,193 
1.524 
3,788 
28,459 
4,877 
13,088 

427 

1,949 
1,264 
1,561 
627 
588 
1,594 
2291 
723 

2,252 
1,996 
1.495 
1,509 
1,249 
6,161 
1,248 

% 

20,557 
11,456 
16,199 
12,282 
8,202 
5,985 
12.030 
8,250 
542 
1.253 
6,609 
6,271 

735 
159 
2,452 
193 

N 86 
516 
198 
228 
1.860 
1.083 
6,306 


5,092 
2,173 
2,136 
22.058 
2,160 
4.891 
38,276 
7,198 
21,159 

660 
2,559 
2,075 
2,561 
1,100 
751 
2,386 
3,667 
L178 

3.138 
3,237 
2285 
2,182 
1.759 
8,919 
1,685 
613 
186 

26.409 
15,825 
25,478 
16,876 
11,521 
8,837 
16,988 
12,936 
861 
1,837 
9,534 
9,612 

1,312 
275 
3,683 
176 
102 
778 
289 
256 
2,956 
1.617 
9,455 


32 

28 

'1 

61 
194 
68 
134 

3 

46 
23 
70 
15 
101 
24 
57 
11 

SI 

I 2 

38 
2ft 
5~ 
2- 

4" 
21 
58 
22 
22 
2ft 
.% 
7( 

It 
11 

1 

14 


53 

116 

ll 

28 
137 
554 
232 
462 

6 
111 
47 
136 
24 
167 
57 
73 
8 

123 
134 
56 
47 
29 
132 
49 
9 
10 

115 
55 

89 
< 40 
71 
76 
76 
127 

io' 

19 

26 

2 


101 
40 

& 

47 
206 
869 
251 
480 

11 

151 
142 
166 
39 
138 
60 
121 
24 

198 
122 
55 
71 
90 
131 
41 
8 
19 

200 
108 
237 



110 
122 
200 

2 
63 
22 

16 
4 
25 
5 
12 
40 


1,140 
1.387 
462 
2.817 
297 
1,280 
4.773 
2,347 
6,397 

68 
932 
181 
1,565 
589 

s fi 
^ 

1,773 
2,454 
936 
977 
495 
2,047 

1 

247 

1,095 
791 
981 
588 
668 
1.075 
1,137 
1,680 
10 
77 
242 
336 

22 
8 
54 
35 
1 
1,193 


1,251 

626 

578 

3 il 

1,454 
5.735 
1,702 
4,105 

66 
1,217 

82^ 
1,364 
615 

ffi 

* 

1,848 
2,290 
764 
976 

888 

'Si 

78 
269 

1,476 
1,001 

n 

w 

1,302 
1,999 
60 
128 
474 
354 

1& 

22' 
70 
55 
944 


New Hampshire 


Massachusetts 






New York 






South Atlantic Division- 
Delaware 


Maryland 
District of Columbia... . 
Virginia 




North Carolina 


South Carolina 
Georgia 


Florida 
South Central Division 


Tennessee 


Alabama 
Mississippi 
Louisiana 


Texas 






Indian Territory. 


North Central Division- 
Ohio 




Illinois 


Michigan 


Wisconsin 


Minnesota 


Iowa 


Missouri 
North Dakota 


South Dakota 


Nebraska 


Kansas 


Western Division 


Wyoming 


Colorado 


4 
4 

""69 


New Mexico 
Arizona 


Utah 






,1 

IS 

63 


6 
24 
33 
124 


11 

38 

206 


72 
333 
375 
960 


106 
399 
483 
1,418 


Washington 


Oregon 
California 



STATISTICS OF EDUCATION. 153 


INSTRUCTORS AND STUDENTS IN COEDUCATIONAL COLLEGES- AND UNIVER- 
SITIES AND IN COLLEGES FOR MEN ONLY (1901-1902). 


STATE OR 
TERRITORY. 


ffiimber of insti- 
tutions. 


PROFESSORS 
AXD 
INSTRUCTORS 


STUDENTS. 


Total 
income. 


Preparatory. 


Collegiate. 


Resident 
graduate. 


Male. 


Female 


Male. 


Female 


Male. 


Female 


Male. 


Female 


United States.... 

North Atlantic Div.. 
South Atlantic Div.. 
South Central Div.. . 
North Central Div.. . 
Western Division.... 

North Atlantic Div. 
Maine 
New Hampshire . . 
Vermont 
Massachusetts 
Rhode Island 
Connecticut 
New York 


464 

85 
73 
77 
190 
39 


9,329 


1,907 


32,094 


14,508 


62,430 


21,051 


3,895 


1,456 


$25,112,169 


3.000 
1,050 
878 
3,583 
818 


164 
169 
305 
1,085 
184 


6.408 
3,465 
5,761 
13,871 
2,589 


960 
1,532 
3,026 
7,188 
1,802 


22.903 
6,629 
6,467 
21,993 
4,438 


2,629 
1,081 
2,472 
12.043 
2,826 


1,696 
452 
155 

'216 


444 

36 
69 

700 
207 


9.382,226 
2.115.295 
2,172,238 
8.944.906 
2.497,504 


4 
2 

3 
9 
1 
3 
23 
5 
35 

2 
11 
7 
11 
3 
14 
9 
11 
5 

11 
24 
6 
4 

8 
14 
7 
1 
2 

34 
13 
31 
9 
9 
9 
25 
22 
8 
5 
10 
20 

1 

4 
1 
1 
2 
1 
1 
7 
8 
12 


48 

71 
56 
519 
76 
268 
1,062 
168 
692 

23 
224 
221 
128 
48 
172 
85 
92 
57 

147 
252 
65 
49 
112 
164 
65 
16 
8 

695 

223 
732 
198 
225 
198 
312 
362 
38 
52 
273 
275 

,1 

114 
8 
11 
56 
17 
15 
88 
95 
391 


2 






859 
690 
374 
4,055 
650 

S 

1,582 
6,109 

131 
766 
553 
1,318 
328 
1,446 

'153 

987 
1,718 
618 
499 
881 
1,218 
492 
44 
10 

3.848 
2.014 
4.025 
1,728 
2,284 
1.624 
1,837 
1,959 
101 
142 
1,103 
1,328 

32 
37 
514 
7 
48 
148 
112 
77 
572 
343 
2.548 


226 

""98" 
433 

'2 

1,005 
""649" 

7 
129 
187 
107 
107 
178 
87 
204 
75 

309 
791 
73 
23 

266 
567 
398 
32 
13 

1.962 
897 
2,695 
959 
680 
925 
1.363 
799 
57 
100 
818 
788 

28 
40 
409 
3 
21 
119 
91 
69 
192 
213 
1,641 


6 
13 

392 
44 

277 
660 
124 
179 

4 
173 
145 
48 
26 
23 
14 
19 


1 

3o' 
34 
43 
292 

""39" 


223,841 
187,122 
132,943 
2,025.274 
180.246 
936,860 
.3,633,951 
315,959 
1,746,030 

68,697 
372,996 
435,571 
372,287 
227,124 
238.940 
113.513 
145,296 
140,871 

277,860 
581,892 
133,650 
95.045 
284,623 
498,755 
167,843 
121.500 
11,070 

1.431,206 
504,956 
2,329.4.i6 
914,091 
610.740 
758.524 
640,437 

is 

83,531 
369.916 
463,143 

50,765 
65,711 
249.938 
13.350 
64.828 
129,221 
74.098 
52,2*56 
176.861 
109,077 
1,511,389 


68 




10 

1 


466 


25 






65 
5 
81 

2 
17 
14 
10 
11 
29 
12 

S 

53 

106 
' 3 
2 
41 
53 

2 

17 

192 

207 
54 
35 
50 
174 
107 
11 
30 
83 
104 

5 

4 

5 
5 
6 

6 
29 
39 
63 


3,724 
252 

1,898 

25 
658 
515 
306 
222 
658 
380 
394 
307 

1,333 
1,711 
112 
172 
545 
1,089 
554 
133 
112 

2,253 
851 
2,442 
433 
618 
1,121 
1,435 
2,141 
189 
359 
843 
1,186 

86 

45 

82 
520 
63 
76 
368 
223 
668 


241 
48 
646 

20 
79 
35 
114 

71 
314 
287 
270 
342 

654 

994 
85 
18 
263 
516 
315 
89 

1.237 
261 
1,310 
174 
80 
288 
1,088 
1,122 
192 
314 
445 
677 

90 
35 

1 

60 
467 
65 
58 
173 
168 
333 


New Jersey 
Pennsylvania 

SouthAtlanticDiv. 




Dist. of Columbia. 
Virginia 
West Virginia 
North Carolina 
South Carolina 
Georgia 


16 
.... 

1 
2 
12 
2 

9 
15 
1 

1 
28 
14 
1 


Florida 


South Central Div. 
Kentucky 
Tennessee 


22 
63 
6 
6 

3 


Alabama 
Mississippi 
Louisiana 


Texas 


Arkansas 
Oklahoma 
Indian Territory . . 

North Central Div. 
Ohio 




o2 
69 
745 
73 
95 
127 
68 
34 
2 


29 
32 
380 
38 
36 
50 
41 
16 
1 


Indiana 


Illinois 


Michigan 
Wisconsin 
Minnesota 


Iowa 




North Dakota 
South Dakota 
Nebraska 
Kansas 


60 
41 


50 
27 

3 
1 

20 


Western Division- 
Montana 
Wyoming 
Colorado 
New Mexico 
Arizona 
Utah 


1 
57 


2 
2 


2 


Nevada 




Idaho 


1 
5 


2 

8 


Washington 


Oregon 


California 


148 


171 



154 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



GROWTH OF PROFESSIONAL, SCHOOLS IN THE UNITED STATES. 



YBAR. 



1891-1892 

1892-1893...: 

1893-1894 

1894-1895 

1895-1896 

1896-1897 

1897-1898.... 



1899-1900... 
1900-1901... 
1901-1902... 



THEOLOGICAL 
SCHOOLS. 



141 
142 
147 
149 
144 
157 
155 
163 
154 
150 
148 



854 
8ti2 
963 
906 
969 
'.ISO 



994 

988 
1,034 



7,729 
7,836 
7.658 
8.050 
8,017 
8.173 
8,371 
8,261 
8.009 
7.567 
7,343 



LAW SCHOOLS 



MEDICAL SCHOOLS. 



507 

5S7 

621 

604 

658 

744 

845 

966 

1,004 

1,106 

1.155 



6.073 
6,776 
7,311 



10.449 
11,615 
11,874 
12.516 
13642 
13.912 



2.423 
2,494 
3,077 
2,738 
2.902 
3,142 
3,423 
3,562 
3,545 
3,876 
5,029 



14,934 
16.130 
17,601 
18,660 
19,999 
21.438 
21,002 
21.401 
22,752 
24.199 
26.821 



INSTRUCTORS AND STUDENTS IN COLLEGES AND SEMINARIES FOR WOMEN 
WHICH CONFER DEGREES (1901-1902). 



STATE OK TERRITORY. 



PROFESSORS 
AND 

NSTRIJCTORS. 



Male. Female 



Prepara- Colle- Grad- 
tory. giate. uate. 



FEMALE STUDENTS. 



Total 
income. 



United States... 



131 



670 



1,767 



7,610 



16,534 



$3.954,462 



North Atlantic Division. . . , 
South Atlantic Division. . . , 

South Central Division 

North Central Division 

Western Division 



1.281 

2.006 

2.675 

1.423 

225 



5,376 
5.256 
4,377 
1.493 
52 



157 



906,868 

646.048 
467.763 
47,000 



North Atlantic Division- 
Maine 

Massachusetts 

NewYork 

Pennsylvania 



South Atlantic Division- 
Maryland 

District of Columbia 

Virginia 

West Virginia 

North Carolina 

South Carolina 

Georgia 

South Central Division- 
Kentucky 

Tennessee 

Alabama 

Mississippi 

Louisiana 

Texas 

Arkansas 



North Central Division- 
Ohio 

Illinois 

Wisconsin 

Minnesota 

Missouri 

Kansas 



Western Division California. 



194 

261 

169 

17 

c,s-j 

100 
225 



25 

2.935 
1,540 



45 

963 

64 

891 

1.151 

1,446 



1.168 
582 

1,289 
153 
346 
50 



2-22 
830 
68 

11 
962 



18.045 

828,474 



403,352 



5181,601 

1731424 
18.560 
163.920 
130.385 
226,187 



95,556 
171.690 
57,100 
221,714 
17.850 
72,138 
10,COO 



74.110 
101.984 

57.172 

9,800 

204.29 

20,400 

47,000 



PUBLIC DEBT STATEMENT. 



155 



STATEMENT OF THE PUBLIC DEBT. 
Oct. 1. 1903. 



INTEREST-BEARING DEBT. 



TITLE OF LOAN. 



Authorizing act. 



Bate. 



Amount 
issue d. 



Total out- 
standing 
Sept. 30, 1903. 



Consols of 1930 

Loan of 1908-1918 

Funded loan of 1907 

Refunding certificates 

Loan of 1935 

Loan of 1904 



March 14, 1900 2 per cent.. 

lune 13, 1898 3 per cent.. 

July 14, 1870, & Jan. 20,1871 4 per cent.. 

Feb. 26. 1879 4 per cent.. 

Jan. 14, 1875 4percent.. 

Jan. 14,1875 5percent.. 



$528,723.050 
198,792.660 
740.925,630 
40.012.750 
162.315.400 
100,000,000 



3,723,050 



167.026,800 

30.53G 

118,489,900 

17,383.100 



Aggregate of interest-bear- 
ing debt 



1,770,769,510 



912.539.440 



DEBT ON WHICH INTEKEST HAS CEASED SINCE MATURITY. 

Funded loan of 1891, continued at 2 per cent, called for redemption May 18, 1900; in- 
terest ceased Aug. 18. 1900 $83,200.00 

Funded loan of 1691, matured Sept. 2, 1891 56,750.00 

Old debt matured at various dates prior to Jan. 1, 1861, and other items of debt ma- 
tured at various dates subsequent to Jan. 1, 1861 1,057,100.26 



Aggregate of debt on which Interest has ceased since maturity 1,197,050.26 

DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST. 

United States notes-Feb. 25, 1862; July 11, 1862; March 3, 1863 $346,681,016.00 

Old demand notes July 17, 1861; Feb. 12, 1862 '... 53,847.50 

National bank notes Redemption account July 14, 1890 39,827,135.50 

Fractional currency July 17, 1862; March 3, 1863; June 30, 1864, less $8,375,934 esti- 
mated as lost or destroyed, act of June 21, 1879 6,871.240.63 

Aggregate of debt bearing no interest 393.433,23! 

CERTIFICATES AND NOTES ISSUED ON DEPOSITS OF COIN AND LEGAL-TENDER NOTES AND 
PURCHASES OF SILVER BULLION. 



CLASSIFICATION. 



In the 
treasury. 



In circu- 
lation. 



Amount 
issued. 



Gold certificates-March 3, 1863; July 12, 1882; March 14, 1900. . . 126,390,210 $394,097,659 $420,487,869 
Silver certificates-Feb. 28, 1878; Aug. 4, 1886; March 3, 1887; 

March 14, 1900 6.192.784 458,522.216 464,715,000 

Treasury notes of 1890 June 8, 1872; March 14, 1900 162,792 17,335,208 17,498,000 

Aggregate of certificates and treasury notes offset by 
cash in the treasury 32,745,786 869,955,083 902,700,869 

RECAPITULATION. 

Classification. Sept. 30, 1903. Aug. 31, 1903. 

Interest-bearing debt $912.539.440.00 $914.541.400.00 

Debt on which interest has ceased since maturity , 1,197.050.26 1,204.070.26 

Debt bearing no interest 393,433.239.63 ~? 891,629,597.63 

Aggregate of interest and noninterest-bearing debt 1,307,169,729.89 1,307.375,067.89 

Certificates and treasury notes offset by an equal amount of 

cash in the treasury '. 902.700.869.00 

Aggregate of debt, including certificates and treasury notes. 2,209,870,598.89, 2,204,114,936.89 
CASH IN THE TREASURY. 

Reserve fund Gold coin and bullion . . $150,000,000.00 

Trust fund Gold coin $420.487,869.00 

Silver dollars 464.715.00000 

Silver dollars of 1890 2.515.041.00 

Silver bullion of 1890 14.982.959.00 

General fund-Gold coin and bullion $84,323,847.50 

Gold certificates 26,390.210.00 

Silver certificates 6,192,784.00 

tilver dollars 15,212,497.00 
ilver bullion..... 1.546,131.32 

United States notes 10,302.24700 

Treasury notesof!890 162,792.00 

National bank notes 15.520.836.69 

Fractional si Iver coin 7,958,266.42 

Fractional currency 83.64 

Minor coin 406.642.99 

Bonds and interest paid, awaiting reimbursement. 1.116.969.49 
In national bank depositaries 

To credit of treasurer of the United States 153.264.807.99 

To credit of United States disbursing officers 12,122,844.22 165.387,652.21 a34.520.960.26 

Total .. 1.387,221,829.26 



156 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



STATEMENT OF THE PUBLIC DEBT.-CONTINUED 
DEMAND LIABILITIES. 

Sold certificates. 



4W.715.000.00 
17,498.000.00 8902,700.869.00 



Silver certificates 

Treasury notes of 1890 

National bank 5 per cent fund 14,702,527.67 

Outstanding checks and drafts 9.160,625.26 

Disbursing officers' balances 63.327,320.92 

Postofflce department account 6,249.356.48 

Miscellaneous items 1,663,945.71 95.103.776.04 1997.804,645.04 

Reserve fund. 150,000.000.00 

Available cash balance 239,417,184.22 389,417,184.22 



Total 1,387,221,829.26 

CIRCULATION STATEMENT. 
Oct. 1, 1903. 



CLASSIFICATION. 



Gold coin (including bullion in treas.) 

Gold certificates' 

Standard silver dollars 

Silver certificates* 

Subsidiary silver 

Treasury notes of 1890 

United States notes 

Currency certificates, act June 8,1872* 

National bank notes 

Total 



General 
stock of 



money in the as assets of 

TT S rift 1 fha nntSvn't 



U. S. Oct. 1, 
1903. 



81,277,362,651 
" 555,886,980 



108,825,368 

17,498.000 
346,681,016 



420,426.535 
2,720.680.550 



T-Held in 
treasury 
s assets o. 
the gov'm't 
Oct. 1, 1903. 



$260,714,058 
"21,405,28*1 



7,958.266 

162.792 

10,302,247 



15,520.837 



MONEY IN CIRCULATION. 



Oct. 1, 1903. 



$622.550,934 



75.959.483 
458,522,216 
94,867.102 
17.335.208 
336,378,769 



404.905.698 



316.063.481 2,404,617,069 2,275,686,651 



Oct. 1, 1902. Ja 



$624.728.060 
304. 382.054 
75,043.719 
459,571.478 



26,741.790 



352.383,259 



$96,262,850 

21,189,280 

5.790,721 

413,360 

67,982,601 

"277"" 
33, 

314,339.398 



816,286,721 



Population of United States Oct. 1, 1903, estimated at 80,831,000; circulation per capita. $29.75. 

*For redemption of outstanding certificates an exact equivalent in amount of the appro- 
priate kinds of money is held in the treasury and is not included in the account of money held 
as assets of the government. 

fThis statement of money held in the treasury as assets of the government does not include 
deposits of public money in national bank depositaries to the credit of the treasurer of the 
United States, and amounting to $153,264,807.99. 



PHILIPPINE CURRENCY LAW. 



An act of congress approved Feb. 26, 1903, 
provides that the unit of value in the Phil- 
ippine islands shall be the gold peso, consist- 
ing of 12.9 grains of gold, nine-tenths fine, 
the coin to become the unit of value when 
the government of the island shall have 
coined or have placed in circulation not less 
than 5,000,000 of silver pesos provided for In 
the same act, and the gold coins of the 
United States at the rate of $1 for 2 pesos 
shall be legal tender for all debts, public and 
private, in the island. 

In addition to the coinage authorized for 
use in the Philippines by the act of July 
1, 1902, the government of the islands is 
authorized to coin to an amount not to ex- 
ceed 75,000,000 pesos a silver coin of the de- 
nomination of 1 peso and of. the weight of 
416 grains, and the standard of these coins 
shall be such that of 1,000 parts, by weight, 
900 shall be of pure metal and the alloy shall 
be of copper. This silver peso shall be legal 
tender for all debts, public or private, unless 
otherwise specifically provided by contract. 

Section 77 of the act of July 1, 1902, is 
amended by authorizing the Philippine gov- 
ernment to issue a coin of the denomination 
of 50 centavos and of the weight of 208 
grains, a coin of the denomination of 20 cen- 
tavos and of the weight of 83.10 grains, and 
a coin of the denomination of 10 centavos 
and of the weight of 41.53 grains. The 
standard of these coins shall be such that of 
1,000 parts, by weight, 900 shall be of pure 
silver and 100 of copper alloy. The sub- 



sidiary coins are legal tender to the amount 
of $10. 

In order to maintain parity between the 
silver pesos and gold pesos the Philippine 
government may issue temporary certificates 
of indebtedness bearing interest at a rate 
not to exceed 4 per cent annually, payable 
at periods of three months or more, but not 
later than one year from the date of issue, 
which shall be in denominations of $25 or 
50 pesos, or some multiple of such sum, and 
shall be redeemable in gold coin of the 
United States, or in lawful Philippine 
money. The amount of such certificates out- 
standing at any one time shall not exceed 
$10,000,000, or 20,000,000 pesos. 

The Mexican silver dollar and Spanish sil 
ver coins coined for use in the Philippine 
islands shall be receivable for public dues 
at a rate to be fixed from time to time by 
the civil governor until such date, not earlier 
than Jan. 1, 1904. as may be fixed by public 
proclamation, when such coins shall cease 
to be so receivable. The treasurer of the 
Philippine islands is authorized to receive 
deposits of the standard silver coins of 1 peso 
at the treasury or at any of its branches in 
sums of not less than 20 pesos, and to issue 
silver certificates therefor in denominations 
of not less than 2 pesos nor more than 1C 
pesos, and coin so deposited shall be retained 
in the treasury and held for the payment ol 
such certificates on demand. The certifi- 
cates shall be receivable for customs, taxes 
and for all public dues. 



THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT. 



157 



e National (Kobernmcnt. 

Corrected to Dec. 26, 1903. 



EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT. 

President, Theodore Roosevelt (N. Y.)... $50.000 
Sec. to the President. Wm. Loeb, Jr. (N.Y.). 5,000 
Vice-President, Vacant.. . . ... 8,000 

U.S.Dist. Marshal, Aulick Palmer (D. C.). 6.000 



DEPARTMENT OF STATE. 



Secretary, J ohn Hay (D. C.) 

Asst. Sec., Francis B. Loomis (O.) 

Second Asst. Sec., Alvev A. Adee (D. C.) . . 

Third Asst. Sec., Herbert H. D. Peirce 
(Mass.) 

Solicitor, Wm. L. Penfield (Ind.) 

Assistant Solicitor, Frederick Van Dyne 
(N.Y.) 

Chief Clerk, Wm. H. Michael (Neb.) 

Chief of Diplomatic Bureau, Sydney Smith 
(D.C.) 

Chief Consular Bureau, Wilbur J. Carr 
(N.Y.) 

Chief of Bureau of Indexes and Archives, 
Pendleton King (N. C.) 

Chief of Bureau of Accounts, Thomas Mor- 
rison (N. Y.) 

Chief of Bureau of Rolls and Library, An- 
drew H. Allen (N.C.) 

Chief of Bureau of Appointments, Robert 
Brent Mosher ( Ky .) 

Chief of Bureau of Passports, Galllard 
Hunt(La.) 

Chief of Bureau of Trade Relations, 

Frederic Emory (Md.) 

J Henry L. Thomas (N.Y.)... 
\ Jonn * g Martin , Jr . (Pa .). . . 

Private Sec. to Sec. of State, E. J. Bab- 
cock (N. Y.) 



4,500 
4,000 

4,000 
4,500 

2,500 
3.000 

2,100 
2,100 
2,100 
2,300 
2,100 
2,100 
1,800 

2.250 
2,100 

2,250 



TREASURY DEPARTMENT. 
Secretary, Leslie M. Shaw (Iowa) .......... 8,000 

Private Sec., J. H. Edwards (O.) ............ 2,250 

Asst. Sec., Robert B. Armstrong (111.) ..... 4,500 

Asst. Sec., Horace A. Taylor ( Wis.) ......... 4,500 

Asst. Sec., Charles H. Keep (N.Y.) ......... 4,500 

Chief Clerk, W. H. Hills (N.Y.) ............ 3,000 



Chief of Appt. Div., Chas. Lyman (Conn.). 2,750 
Chief of Warrants Div., W. F. Maclennan. 3.500 
Chief Pub. Moneys Div., Eugene B.Daskam 2,500 



Chief of Customs Div.. James L. Gerry 

(111.) ........................................ 2,750 

Chief of Rev. Cutter Div., Charles F. Shoe- 

maker (N. Y.) .............................. 2,500 

Chief of Stationery, Printing and Blanks 

Div., Geo. Simmons (D. C.) ............... 2500 

Chief of Loans and Currency Div., Andrew 

T. Huntington (Mass.) ................... 3.000 

Chtef of Misc. Div., Lewis Jordan (Ind.).. . 2.500 

Supervising Architect's Office. 
Supervising Architect, Jas. K.Taylor (Pa.) 4,500 

Bureau of Engraving and Printing. 
Director, William M. Meredith (111.) ....... 4,500 

Asst. Director, Thomas J. Sullivan (D. C.). 2,250 
Supt. Engraving Div., John R. Hill (N.Y.) 3,600 

Life-Saving Service. 
Gen'ISupt., S. I. Kimball (Me.) ............ 4,000 

Asst., Horace L. Piper (Me.) ................ 2,500 

Register of the Treasury. 
Register, Judson W. Lyons (Ga.) ........... 4.000 

Asst., Cyrus F. Adams (111.) ................. 2,250 

Comptroller of the Treasury. 
Comptroller, Robt. J. Tracewell (Ind.) ...... 5,000 

Asst., Leander P. Mitchell (Ind.) ......... . . 5,000 

Chief Clerk, C. M. Force (Ky.) .............. 2,750 

Chief Law Clerk, J. D. Terrill (Mich.) ..... 2,750 



Auditors. 
Auditor for the Treasury Dept., William E. 

Andrews (Neb.) $4,000 

Deputy, Vacant 2,250 

Auditor for War Dept., F.E. Rittman(O.) 4.000 
Deputy, Edward P. Seeds (O.) 2,250 



Auditor for the Interior Dept., R. S. Per- 
son (S. D.) 



4,000 



Deputy, George P. Dunham (O.) 2,250 

Auditor for the Navy Dept., W. W. Brown 

(Pa.) 4.000 

Deput y, John M. Swing (Wis.) 2,250 

Auditor for the State and Other Dept*.,E. 

G.Timme (Wis.) 4,000 

Deputy, Geo. W. Esterly (Minn.) 2,250 

Auditor for the Postoffice Dept., Henry A. 

Castle (Minn.) 4,000 

Deputy, N.L. Chew (Ind.) 2,250 

Deputy, H. Allen (Pa.) 

Treasurer of the United States. 

Treasurer, Ellis H. Roberts (N. Y.) 6,000 

Asst. Treas., J. F. Meline (D. C.) 3.600 

Supt. Nat.Bank Red. Div., Thos. E. Rogers 3,500 

Comptroller of the Currency. 
Comptroller, William Barrett Ridgely ail.) 5,000 

Deputy, Thomas P. Kane (D. C.) 2,800 

Commissioner of Internal Revenue. 

Commissioner, John W. Yerkes (Ky.) 6,000 

Deputy, Robt. Williams, Jr. (N. Y.) 3.200 

Deputy, Jas. C. Wheeler (Mich.) 

Director of the Mint. 
Director, Geo. E. Roberts (Iowa) 4,500 



NAVY DEPARTMENT. 

Secretary, William H. Moody (Mass.) 8.000 

Asst. Sec., Charles H. Darling (Vt.) 4,500 

Chief Clerk, Benj . F. Peters (Pa.) 3,000 

Private Sec., Howard L. Fishback 2,250 

Office of the Admiral. 
Admiral, George Dewey. 
Aids, Commander Nathan Sargent and Lieut. 

Frank Marble. 
Secretary, John W. Crawford. 

Bureau Yards and Docks. 
Chief, Rear-Admiral Mordecai T. Endicott. 
Civil Engineers, Robert E. Peary, Prof. H. M. 

Paul and Charles A. Wentworth. 
Bureau of Equipment. 
Rear-Admiral, G. A. Converse. 
Commander, T. E. D. W. Veeder, George H. 

Peters. 
LieutenantrCommanders, J. L. Jayne, C. C. 

Rogers. 

Captain, L. C. Logan. 
Lieutenants, Harry George and Georgo C. 

Sweet. 

Bureau of Navigation. 
Chief, Rear- Admiral Henry C. Taylor. 
Asst. to Bureau, Capt. W. S. Cowles. 
Commanders, R. F. Nicholson, and C. McR. 

Winslow. 

Lieut.-Commander, Alex. Sharpe. Jr. 
Ldeuts., Wm. S. Sims, Reginald R. 

Ridley McLean and D. F. Sellers. 

Bureau of Ordnance. 
Chief, Rear-Admiral Chas. O'Neil. 
Lieutenant-Commander, W. McLean. 
Lieutenants, J. K, Latimer. I. C. Bulmer, Vol- 

ney O. Chase, Frank K. Hill. I. K. Seymour 

and Edward McCauley, Jr. 

Bureau of Construction and Repairs. 
Rear-Admiral, Washington Lee Capps. 
Naval Constructors, J. H. Linnard, D. W. Tay 

lor, H. G. Smith and J. D. Beuret. 



Belknap, 



158 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOB 1904. 



Bureau of Steam Engineering . 
Rear-Admiral, Engineer-in-Chief Charles W. 

Kae. 
Commanders, J. H. Perry. A. B. Canaga, J. R. 

Edwards, 
Lieut.-Commanders, W. M. Parks and B. C. 



. E. Reed, H. V. Butler and H. C. 
Dinger. 

Bureau of Supplies and Accounts. 
Paymaster-General, H. T. B. Harris. 
Asst. to Bureau, Pay Inspector George W. 

Simpson. 

Paymasters, Samuel McGowan, Victor S. Jack- 
son and George W. Reeves. 

Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. 
Rear-Admiral, Presley M. Rixey. 
Asst. to Bureau, Surgeon John F. Urie. 
Special Duty, Medical Inspector W. R. DuBose. 

Office of Judge-Advocate General. 
Judge-Advocate General. Capt. S. C. Lemly. 
Lieutenant, Robert L. Russell. 
First Lieutenant, Harry R. Lay. 
State, War and Navy Department Building. 
Supt., Charles W. Stewart. 

Nautical Almanac Office. 
Professor, W. S. Harshman. 

Office Naval Intelligence. 
Chief Intelligence Officer, Capt. S. Schroeder. 
Lieut.-Commanders, Charles N. Atwater, John 

B. Bernadou. 

Lieutenant. Humes H. Whittlesey. 
Asst. Engineer, Robert E. Carney (ret.). 

Hydrographic Office. 
Hydrographer, Commander W. H. H. Souther 

land. 

Commander, R. G. Peck (ret.). 
Lieut.-Commander, W. L. Burdick. 
Lieut.-Commander, Holman Vail (ret.). 
Lieutenants, George W. Logan and (J. M. Mc- 
Carteney (ret.). 

Naval Observatory. 

Superintendent, Capt. Colby M. Chester. 
Commander. J. M. Robinson. 
Assistant. Lieut.-Commander E. E. Hayden. 
Profs., A. N. Skinner, W. S. Eichelberger, F. B. 

Littell. 

Assistant Astronomers, Geo. A. Hill, Theo. I. 
King. 

Naval Examining Board. 
President, Rear-Admiral John C. Watson. 
Members, Capts. Theo. F. Jewell, Henry B. 
Mansfield and George W. Baird. 

Board of Medical Examiners. 

Medical Directors, Francis M. Gunnell (ret.), 

Adolph A. Hoebling (ret.) and John C. Wise. 

Naval Retiring Board. 
President, Rear-Admiral John C. Watson. 
Members, Capts. Theo. F. Jewell and Henry 

B. Mansfield: Med. Directors J. C. Wise 
and Richard C. Dean (ret.). 

Board of Inspection and Survey. 
President, Capt. Charles J. Train. 
Members, Commander W. C. Cowles, Capt. L. 

C. Logan, Naval Constr. J. J. Woodward 
and Maj. C. H. Lauchheimer, D. S. marine 
corps. 

Naval Dispensary. 
Medical Inspector, W. S. Dixon. 
Medical Inspector, D. N. Bertolette. 

Naval Museum of Hygiene and Medical School. 
Medical Director, Robert A. Marmion. 
Medical Director, John W. Ross. 
Medical Inspector, John C. Boyd. 
Surgeons. C. F. Stokes, E. R. Stitt. 



Navy Pay Office. 
Pay Director, L. A. Frailey. 

Headquarters of United States Marine Corps. 

Brig. -Gen. Commandant, George F. Elliott. 

Adjt. and Inspector. Col. George C. Reid. 

Asst.Adj.and Inspectors, Maj. C. H. Lauchheim- 
er, Maj. Rufus H. Lane, Maj. Louis J. Magill. 

Quartermaster, Col. Frank L. Denny. 

Asst. Quartermasters, Capt. C. S. McCauley 
and Capt. Hugh L. Matthews. 

Paymaster, Col. Green Clay Goodloe. 

WAR DEPARTMENT. 

Secretary, Elihu Root* (N. Y.) $8,000 

Asst. Sec., Robert Shaw Oliver (N. Y.) 4,500 

Sec. to Sec. of War. MerrittO. Chance (111.) 2,250 

Chief Clerk, John C. Scofleld 3,000 

General Staff. 

Chief of Staff, Lieut.-Gen. S. M. B. Young. 
Secretary, Lieut.-Col. H. A. Greene. 
Assistants to Chief of Staff, Maj .-Gen. Adna R. 

Chaffee and Brig.-Gen. William H. Carter. 
Chief of Artillery, Brig.-Gen. Wallace F. Ran- 
dolph. 

Adjutant-General's Department. 
Adjt.-Gen., Col. W. P Hall. 
Assistants. Lieut.-Col. James Parker. Lieut. 

Col. E. R. Hills. Lieut.-Col. J. S. Pettit, Maj. 

S. W. Dunning, Maj. Eben Swift, Maj. W. P. 

Evans, Maj. J. F. Guilfoyle. 

Chief Clerk, R. P. Thian $2,000 

Inspector-General's Department. 
Inspector-Gen., Brig.-Gen. George H. Burton. 
Assistants, Lieut.-Col. S. C. Mills and Maj. 

Hobart K. Bailey. 
Chief Clerk, O. B. Goodall. 

Judge-Advocate General's Office. 
Judge-Advocate Gen., Brig.-Gen. G. B. Davis. 
Assistants, Maj. John B. Porter, Capt. Jos. W. 

Glidden, First Lieut. C. E. Hay. 
Chief Clerk, Lewis W. Call. 

Subsistence Department. 

Commissary-Gen., Brig.-Gen. John F. Weston. 
Assistants, Col. W. L. Alexander. Capt. H. E, 

Wilkins, Capt. Charles P. Stivers. 
Chief Clerk, Emmet Hamilton. 

Quartermaster's Department. 
Quartermaster-Gen., C. F. Humphrey. 
Assistants, Lieut.-Col. George E. Pond, Lieut.- 
Col. John W. Pullman, Lieut.-Col. George 

Ruhlen, Maj. Oscar F. Long, Maj. John B. 

Bellinger, Maj. John T. French. Jr., Maj. 

James B. Aleshire, Maj. Isaac W. Littell, 

Capt. C. B. Baker, Capt. T. H. Slavens. 
Chief Clerk, Henry D. Saxton. 

Medical Department. 

Surgeon-Gen.. Brig.-Gen. Robert M. O'Reilly. 
Assistants, Col. Charles L. Heizmann, Maj. 

Walter D. McCaw, Maj. Jefferson R. Kean. 

Capt. Merritte W. Ireland, Capt. Carl R. 

Darna, Capt. Charles Lynch, First Lieut. 

James Carroll. 
Chief Clerk, George A. Jones. 

Pay Department. 

Paymaster-Gen., Brig.-Gen. A. E. Bates. 
Assistant, Lieut.-Col. C. C. Sniffen. 
Chief Clerk, T. M. Exley. 

Corps of Engineers. 

Chief of Engineers, Brig.-Gen. G. L. Gillespie. 
Assistants, Maj. Frederic V. Abbot, Maj. H 

F. Hodges, Capt. William V. Judson and 

Capt. Charles W. Katz. 
Chief Clerk, P. J. Dempsey. 

Public Buildings and Grounds. 
Officer in Charge. Col. T. W. Symons. 



THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT. 



159 



Ordnance Department. 

Chief of Ordnance. Brig.-Gen. William Crozier. 
Assistants. Col. A. Mortiecai, Maj. H. D. Borup, 

Maj. L.L. Bruff. Capt. C. B. Wheeler, Capt. 

T. C. Dickson. Capt. C. C. Williams, Capt. E. 

B. Babbitt, Capt. George Montgomery and 

Capt. T. L. Ames. 
Chief Clerk, John J. Cook. 

Signal Office. 

Chief Signal Officer, Brig.-Gen. A. W. Greely. 
Assistants, Maj. George P. Scriven, Maj. J. E. 

Maxfleld, Capt. Edgar Russell and Capt. L. 

D. Wildman. 

Dtobwrgfna officer. Capt. D. J. Carr. 
Chief Clerk. George A. Warren. 

Record and Pension Office. 
Chief of Office, Brig.-Gen. F. C. Ainsworth. 
Assistant, Maj. John Tweedale. 
Chief Clerk, Jacob Freeh. 

Bureau of Insular Affairs. 
Chief of Bureau, Col. Clarence R. Edwards. 
Assistant. J. Van Ness Philip. 
Law Officer, Charles E. Magoon. 
Chief Clerk, W. Leon Pepperman. 



*Resigned. To be succeeded early in 1904 by 
William H. Taft (O.). 



POSTOITICE DEPARTMENT. 

Postmaster-Gen., Henry C. Payne (Wis.).. $8,000 

Chief Clerk, Blain W. Taylor (W. Va.) 2,500 

\Asst. Atty.-Gen., Charles H. Kobb (Vt.)... 4,5(0 
1 Asst. Atty.-Gen.. Edwin W. Lawrence (Vt.) 2,000 

Appointment Clerk. William S. Nicholson 

Supt. and Disbursing Clerk, Ruf us B. Mer- 
chant (Va.) 2,250 

Topographer, A.Von Haake(N. Y.) 2,750 

OFFICE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. 

First Asst. P. M. G.. Robt. J. Wynne (Pa.) 5,000 

Chief Clerk. John J Howley (N. Y.) 2.500 

Supt.Div.P. O. Sup.. Michael W. Louis (O.) 2.250 
Gen'l Supt. Div. Free Delivery. Vacant. . . . 3,500 
\Gen J l Supt. Salaries and Allowances, 

Vacant 3,500 

[Assistant Supt. Salaries and Allowances, 

Charles P. Grandfleld (Mo.) 2,000 

Supt. Money-Order System, Vacant 3,500 

. Chief Clerk Money-Order System, E. F. 

Kimball (Mass.) 2,250 

Supt. Dead-Letter Office, David P. Leib- 

hardt (Ind.) 2,500 

Chief Clerk Dead-Letter Office, Ward Bur- 

lirigame (Kas.) 1,800 

Chief Div. of Correspondence. J.R.Ash(Pa.) 2.000 

I Supt . Citu Delivery Service. Vacant 3.000 

Supt. Rural Free Delivery. H. Conquest 
Clark (La.), headquarters Washington.. 3,000 

OFFICE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. 

Second Asst. P. M. G., W. 8. Shallenberger 

(Pa.) 4,500 

Chief Clerk, George F. Stone (N. Y.) 2,500 

Supt. Railway Adjustments. J.H.Crew(O-) 2,500 
Chief Div. of Inspection, James B. Cook 

(Md.) 2,000 

Chief Div. Mail Equipment, Thomas P. 

Graham (N. To 2,000 

Gen. Supt. Railway Mail Service, James 

E. White (111.) 4,000 

Asst. Gen. Supt. Railway Mail Service, 

Alexander Grant (Mich.) 3,500 

Chief Clerk Railway Mail Service, John 

W. Hollyday (O.) 2,000 

Supt. Foreign Mails, N. M. Brooks (Va.). . 3,000 
Chief Clerk Foreign Mails. R. L. Maddox 

(Ky.) 2,000 

OFFICE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. 

Third Asst. P. M. G., Edwin C. Madden 

(Mich.) 4.500 

Chief Clerk. A.M. Travers (Mich.) 2.500 



Chief Div. Finance. C. H. Buckler (Md.)... $2,250 
Chief Div.Postage Stamps, James H.Reeve 

(N.Y.) 2.500 

Chief Class iflcation Division, Howard M. 

Bacon (Mich.) 2.750 

Superintendent Registry System. Vacant.. 3,500 
hief Clerk Registry System, W.M.Mooney 

Chief' ' Cleric ' 'Division "of" 'Files'. ' jfu i/V 
etc..E.S. Hall(Vt.) 2,000 

Chief Redemption Div., George D. Scott, 
(N. Y.) 2.000 

Postage Sfamp Agent, John P. Green (O.). . 2,500 

Postal Card Agent, Edgar H. Shook (W. 
Va.) 2.500 

Stamped Envelope Agent, Vacant 2,500 

OFFICE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER-GENERAL. 

Fourth Asst. P. M. G., J. L. Bristow (Kas.) . 4,500 

Chief Clerk, Charles A. Conrard (Ky.) 2,500 

Chief Div. of Appointments. W. R. Spil- 

man(Kas.; 2,000 

Chief Div. of Bonds and Commissions, 

Christian B. Dickey (O.) 2,000 

Chief P. O. Inspector. W. E. Cochran (Col.). 3,000 
Chief Clerk Div. P. O. Inspectors and Mail 

Depredations, Theodore Ingalls (Ky.). . . 2.000 

OFFICE OF AUDITOR FOR POSTOFF1CE DEPARTMENT. 

Auditor, Henry A. Castle (Minn.) 4,000 

Deputu Auditors, Nolan L. Chew(Ind.)and 

Harrison Allen (N. D.) 2,500 

Chief Clerk, John B. Sleman (111.) 2.000 

Law Clerk, D. H. Fenton (Ind.) 2.000 

Disbursing Clerk. B. W. Holman(Wis-). .. 2,000 
Chief Collecting Div.. Arthur Clements(Md) 2.000 
Chief Bookkeeping I>iv..D.W.Duncan(Pa.) 2,000 

Chief Pay Div., A. M. McBath (Tenn.) 2,000 

Chief Inspecting Div., B. A. Allen (Kas.). . 2,000 
Chief Assorting and Checking Div., M. M. 

Holland (D. C.) 2.000 

Chief Foreign Div., D. N. Burbank (N. Y.).. 2,000 
Chief Recording Div., W. S. Belden (Kas.). 2,000 



INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. 

Secretary, Ethan A. Hitchcock (Mo.; 

First Asst. Sec., Thomas Ryan (Kas. ) 

Asst. Sec., Melville W. Miller 

Chief Clerk, Edward M. Dawson (Md.) 

General Land Office . 

Commissioner. Wm. A. Richards (Wyo.).. 

Asst. Comr., John H. Fimple 

Office of Indian Affairs. 



Commissioner, William A. Jones (Wis.)... 

Asst. Comr., A. Clarke Tonner (O.) 

Supt. Indian Schools, Miss Estelle Reel 

(Wyo.) 

Pension Office . 

Commissioner, Eugene F. Ware (Kas.) 
First Deputy Comr., J.L.Davenport(N.H.). 
Second Deputy Comr., Leverett M. Kelly 

Chief ^ierk. William H.' Bayiy (O. ')'. ' .' .' .' .' .' .' .' 
Medical Referee, Samuel Houston (Pa.) 

Office of Commissioner of Railroads. 
Commissioner, James Longstreet (Ga.).. . . 

Patent Office. 

Commissioner, Frederick I. Allen (N. Y.). 
Asst. Comr., Edward B. Moore (Mich.).... 
Chief Clerk. Charles M. Irelan (Md.) 

Office of Education. 

Commissioner, William T.Harris (Mass.). 
Chief Clerk, Lovick Pierce (Ga.) 

Geological Survey. 

Director, Charles D. Walcott (N. Y.) 

Chief Clerk, Henry C. Rizer(Kas.) 



5.000 
3,000 



2,000 



5.000 
3,600 

3.600 

2.250 
3,000 



4,500 



2,500 



3,500 
1,800 



6.000 
2.500 



160 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOE 1904. 



DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. 
Atty.-Gen., Philander C. Knox (Pa.) ...... 18.000 

Solicitor-Gen., Henry M. Hoy t (Pa.) ....... 7,500 

Asst. to Atty.-Gen., William A. Day (O.). .. 7,000 
Asst. Atty.-Gen., James C. McReynolds. .. 5.000 

5, 



Asst. Atty.-Gen., Milton D. Purdy. 
Asst. Atty.-Gen., John G.Thompson (111.).. 5,000 
Asst. Atty.-Gen., Louis A. Pradt (Wis.).. .. 5,000 
Asst. Atty.-Gen. (Dept. of Int.), Willis Van 

Devanter(Wya). .... ..... .. .............. 5,000 

Asst. Atty.-Gen. (Spanish Treaty Claims 

Commission), William E. Fuller (Iowa). 5,000 
Spl. Asst. Atty.-Gen. (Insular and Territo- 

rial Affairs), Chas. W. Russell (W.Va.) . . 5.000 
Asst. Atty.-Gen. (P. O. Dept.), C. H. Robb. . 4,000 
Solicitor for Dept. of State, W. L. Penfleld 

(Ind.).. ...................................... 4,500 

Law Clerk and Examiner of Titles, A. J. 

Bentley (O.) ................................ 2,700 

Chief Clerk and Supt. of Building, Orin 

J. Field (Kas.) ............................. 2,750 

Gen. Agent, Cecil Clay (Va.) ................ 4,000 

Disbursing Clerk, Alex. C. Caine (O.) ...... 2,750 

Appointment Clerk, J. Harwood Graves... 2,000 
Atty. in Charge of Pardons, James S. B. 

Smith (Ala.) ................................ 2,400 

Solicitor of Treas. (Treas. Dept.) Maurice 

D. O'Connell (Iowa) ........................ 4,500 

Asst. Solicitor, Felix A. Reeve (Tenn.) .... 3,000 

Chief Clerk Solicitor's Office (Treas. Dept.), 

Charles E. Vrooman (Iowa) .............. 2,000 

Asst. Attorney in Charge of Dockets, S. B. 

Sheibley(Ga.) .............................. 2,500 

DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 

Secretary, James Wilson (Iowa) ........... 8,000 

Asst. Sec., Joseph H. Brigham (O.) ......... 4,500 

Chief Clerk, Sylvester R. Burch (Kas.) ..... 2.500 

Appointment Clerk, J. B. Bennett (Wis.) . . 2,000 
Private Secretary to Secretary of Agricul- 

ture, Jasper Wilson (Iowa) .............. 2,250 

Chief of Weather Bureau,Vf .L.Moore(lll.) 5,000 
Chief of Bureau of Animal Industry, D. 

(E.Salmon (N.J.) .......................... 4,000 

Statistician, John Hyde (Neb.) ............. 3,000 

Chemist, H. W. Wiley (Ind.) ............... 3,000 

Entomologist, L. O. Howard (N. Y.) ........ 2,500 

Botanist. F. V. Coville (N. Y.) .............. 2,500 

Chief of Biological Survey, C. Hart Mer- 

riam (N. Y.) .......... ........... ........... 2,500 

Chief of Bureau of J'orestry.GiflordPinchot 

Pomolo'gist, G* B. 'Br'ackett* (Iowa)' .'.'.'.'..'.'.. 2,500 
Agrostoloaist, Wm. J. Spillman (Wash.)... . 2,500 

\ief of Bureau of Soils, Milton Whitney 

iMd.) ........................................ 3,000 

Plant Pathologist and Physiologist, A. F. 

Woods (Neb.) ............................. 2.500 

Director Office of Experiment Stations, A. 

C.True (Conn.) ............................ 3,000 

Chief Div. of Accounts and Disbursements, 

F. L. Evans (Pa.) .......................... 2,500 

Editor, George William Hill (Minn.) ...... 2.500 

Chief Bureau of Plant Industry (in cha 

Seed Distribution), B. F. Galloway (Mo.) . 3,000 
Chief of Section of ForeignMarkets, George 

K. Holmes (Mass.)..... ................... 2,500 



INDEPENDENT DEPARTMENTS. 
Government Printing Office. 

Public Printer, F. W. Palmer (111.) $4,500 

Chief Clerk, Henry T. Brian (Md.) 2.500 

Foreman of Printing, O. J. Ricketts (111.). 2,500 
Foreman of Binding. P. J. Byrne (N. Y.).. 2,100 

United States Civil-Service Commission. 
Commissioners, John R. Procter (Ky.), 

A.W. Cooley(N.Y.), H. F. Greene (Minn.) 3,500 
Chief Examiner, Frank M. Kiggins (Ky.) . 3.000 

Secretary, John T. Doyle (N. Y.) 2,000 

Interstate-Commerce Commission. 

Chairman, Martin A. Knapp (N. Y.) 7,500 

Judson C. Clements (Ga.) 7,500 

James D. Yeomans (Iowa) 7,500 

Charles A. Prouty (Vt.) 7,500 

Joseph W. Fifer (111.) 7,""" 

Secretary, Edward A. Moseley (Mass.) 3, 

COMMERCE AND LABOR DEPT. 

Secretary, George B. Cortelyou (N.Y.) 8,000 

Chief Clerk. F. H. Hitchcock (Mass.) 3,000 

Bureau of Corporations. 

Commissioner, James R. Garfleld (O.) 5,000 

Deputy Comm'r, H. K. Smith (Mass.) 3,500 

Chief Clerk, Warren R. Choate (Md.) 2,000 

Bureau of Labor. 
Commissioner, Carroll D. Wright (Mass.) . 5,000 

Chief Clerk, G. W. W. Hanger (Miss.) 2,500 

Lighthouse Board. 

President (ex-officio), George B. Cortelyou. 
Chairman, Rear-AdmiralJ. J. Read, U. S. N. 
Members, Col. W. S. Franklin, Col. A. Macken- 
zie, Dr. H. S. Pritchett, Capt. Geo. C. Reiter, 
Col. A. Stickney. 

Naval Sec., Capt. C. T. Hutchins, U. S. N. 
Bureau of the Census. 

Director, S. N . D. North (Mass) $6,000 

Chief Clerk, Ed. McCauley ( I). C.) 2,500 

Coast and Geodetic Survey. 

Superintendent, O. H. Tittmann (Mo.) 5.000 

Asst. Supt., F. W. Perkins (N. Y.) 4,000 

Bureau of Statistics. 

Chief, Oscar P. Austin (D. C.) 4.000 

Chief Clerk, J. N. Whitney (Me.) 2,250 

Steamboat Inspection Service. 
Supervising Insp.-Gen'l, Geo. Uhler (Pa.). . 3,500 

Chief Clerk, Wm. F. Gatchell (O.) 2,000 

Fisheries. 

Commissioner, G. M. Bowers (W. Va.) 5,000 

Deputy Commissioner, H. M. Smith (D- C.) 3,000 

Bureau of Navigation. 

Commissioner, B. T. Chamberlain (N.Y.). 3,600 
Deputy Comm'r, T. B. Sanders (Mass.).... 2,400 

Bureau of Immigration. 
Commissioner-General, F. P. Sargent (111.) 5,000 

Chief Clerk, F. H. Lamed (Md.) 2,500 

Bureau of Standards. 

Director, S, W. Stratton (111.) 5,000 

Secretary, H. D. Hubbard (111.) 2.000 



WORK OF THE 57TH CONGRESS (SECOND SESSION). 



Session began Dec. 1, 1902; ended March 
4, 1903. 

Total appropriations, $753,484,018.29. 

Total appropriations for 57th congress, 
$1,554,108,514.84. 

Act expediting antitrust suits in United 
States courts passed by the senate Feb. 4, 
1903; by the house Feb. 5. 

Army staff bill passed by the house Jan. 6, 
1903; by tlhe senate Feb. 3; approved 

Coal tariff-rebate bill passed by both houses 
Jan. 14, 1903. 



Department of commerce and labor bill 
passed by the senate Jan. 8, 1902; by the 
house Jan. 17, 1903; approved Feb. 14. 

Elkins rebate bill passed by the senate Feb. 
3, 1903; by the house Feb. 13. 

Immigration bill passed by the house May 
27, 1902; by the senate Feb. 28, 1903; ap- 
proved March 4. 

Militia bill passed by the house June 30, 
1902; by the senate Jan. 14, 1903; approved 
Jan. 21. 

Philippine currency bill passed by the house 
Jan. 22, 1903; by the senate Feb. 16; ap 
proved Feb. 26. 



THE FEDERAL JUDICIARY. 



161 



SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES. 

Chief Justice MELVILLE W. FULLER, Illinois, 1888. 

William B. Day Ohio... 

Edward D. White Louisiana.... 

Rufus W. Peckham. . .. .New York. . . 



Justices JohnM.Harlan.Kentucky 1877 

Oliver W. Holmes Massachusetts 1902 

David J. Brewer Kansas 



Joseph McKenna California. . . 



1903 

iy,)4 

.......189.) 



Henry B. Brown Michigan 1890 

Clerk J. H. McKenney. D. C 1880 

Salaries: Chief Justice, $10,500; Justices, $10,000; Clerk, $6,000. 
Marshal J. M. Wright, Kentucky $3,500 | Reporter C. H. Butler, New Fork $4,501; 

UNITED STATES CIRCUIT COURTS OF APPEALS. 

SIXTH CIRC PIT. Judges MrJustice John M. 



FIRST CIRCUIT. Judges Mr. Justice Oliver 
W. Holmes; Circuit Judges, Le Baron B. Colt, 
W.L. Putnam ; District Judges, Francis C. Low- 
ell. Clarence Hale, Arthur L. Brown, Edgar 
Aldrich. Clerk-J. G. Stetson. Boston, Mass. 

SECOND CIRCUIT. Judges Mr. Justice Ru- 
fus W. Peckham; Circuit Judges. "William J. 
Wallace, E. H. Lacombe, William K. Town- 
send, Alfred C. Coxe; District Judges, HoytH. 
Wheeler. James P. Platt, Edward B. Thomas, 
George B Adams. George C. Holt. George W. 
Ray, John R. Hazel. CTerfc-Wm. Parkins. New 
York city. 

THIRD CIRCUIT. Judges Mr. Justice 
Henry B. Brown; Circuit Judges, M. W. Ache- 
son. G.M.Dallas, George Gray ; District Judges, 
John B.McPherson,Robt. W. ArchDald, Andrew 
Kirkpatrick, Joseph Bufflngton,Edw'd G.Brad- 
ford. Clerk W. V. Williamson, Philadelphia. 

FOURTH CIRCUIT. Judges Mr. Chief Jus- 
tice Melville W. Fuller, Chief Justice United 
States; Circuit Judges.C. H. Simonton, Nathan 
Goff; District Judges, John J.Jackson, Benj. t>: 
Kellar. Thomas R. Purnell, James E. Boyd, 
W. H. Brawley. T. J. Morris, Edmund Waddill, 
Jr., H. Clay McDowell. Clerk H. T. Meloney. 
Richmond, Va. 

FIFTH CIRCUIT. Judges Mr. Justice B. D. 
White; Circuit Judges, D. A. Pardee, A. P. 
McCormick. David D. Shelby; District Judges, 
W. T. Newman. Emory Speer, Charles Swayne. 
J. W. Locke, Thos. G. Jones, H. T. Toulmin, H. 
0. Niles,CharlesParlange. Aleck Boarman, Ed- 
ward R. Meek, D. E. Bryant, T. S Maxey, 
Waller T. Burns. Clerk James M. McKee. 
New Orleans, La. 



Harlan; Circuit Judges. Henry F. Severens. 
H. Lurton, John K. Richards; District Judges. 
Albert C. Thompson, A. J. Ricks, H. H. Swan, 
George P. Wanty, Walter Evans. E. S. Ham- 
mond, C. D. Clark. Francis J. Wing, A. M. J. 
Cochran. Clerk Frank O. Loveland. Cincin- 
nati, O. 

SEVENTH CIRCUIT. Judges Mr. Justice Wil- 
liam R. Day. Circuit Judges, J.G.Jenkins, P. S, 
Grosscup, Francis E. Baker; District Judges. 
C. C. Kohlsaat, Albert B. Anderson. J. Otis 
Humphrey, W. H. Seaman, R. Bunn. Clerk 
Edw. M. Holloway. Chicago, 111. 

EIGHTH CIRCUIT. Judges Mr. Justice D. J. 
Brewer; Circuit Judges, Willis Van Devanter, 
W. H. Sanborn, A. M. Thayer; District J ufige*. 
Wm.H.Munger. O. P. Shiras. Smith McPherson. 
Wm.Lochren, Page Morris, J.F.Phillips, Jacoo 
Trieber. Moses Hallett, Wm. C. Hook. J. A. 
Riner, Elmer B.Adams, John H. Rogers. Chas. 
F. Amidon, JohnE. Carland, Jno. A. Marshall. 
Jos.A.Gill,Wm.H.H.Clayton,HoseaTownsend. 
CharlesW. Raymond, William J. Mills, John H. 
Burford. Clerk J. D. Jordan. St. Louis. Mo. 

NINTH CIRCUIT. Judges -Mr .Justice Joseph 
McKenna; Circuit Judges, E. M. Ross, William 

B. Gilbert, W. W. Morrow; District Judges. 
James H. Beatty, J. J. DeHaven, C. B. Belling- 
er, T. P. Hawley, O. Wellborn. Hiram Knowlcs 

C. H. Hanford, Melville C. Brown, Alfred S. 
Noyes, Jas. Wickersham, Sanford B. Dole (con- 
firmation pending), Edward Kent, W. F. Freur. 
Clerk F. D. Monckton. Sau Francisco. 



UNITED STATES COURT OF CLAIMS, 

(Salaries of Judges, $4,500 each.) 
Chief Justice C,. C. NOTT, New York, 1865. 
Judges Lawrence Weldon.. Illinois ......... 1883 I C. B. Howry ............ Mississippi. 

S.J.Peelle .................... Indiana ....... 1892 | Francis M. Wright.... Illinois ..... 



Chief Clerk Archibald Hopkins, Massachusetts, 1873, $3,000. 



CIRCUIT COURTS OF THE UNITED STATES. 

(Salaries of Circuit Judges. $6,000 each.) 



FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Justice 
Holmes. Boston, Mass. Districts of Maine, New 
Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island. 
Circuit Judges -Le Baron B. Colt, Bristol, R. I., 
July 5, 1884; W. L. Putnam, Portland, Me., 
March 17, 1892. 

SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Justice 
Peckham. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut, 
New York. Circuit Judges Win. J. Wallace, 
Albany. N. Y., April , 1882; E. H. Lacombe, 
New York, May 2t>, 1887; Wm. K. Townsend, 
New Haven. Conn.. March 23, 1902; Alfred C. 
Coxe, Utica, N. Y., June 3, 1902. 

THIRD JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Justice 
Brown, Pittsburg, Pa. Districts of New Jer- 
sey, Pennsylvania, Delaware. Circuit Judges 
Marcus W. Acheson. Pittsburg, Pa., Feb. 3, 
1891; George M. Dallas. Philadelphia, Pa., 
March 17, 1892; George Gray, Wilmington, Del.. 
March 29, 1899. 



FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Chief j u<- 
tice Fuller, Washington,D.C. Districts of Mur, - 
land, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina 
South Carolina. Circuit Judges C. 11. Sf- 
uionton, Charleston, S. C., Dec. 19. 189.;; Na- 
than Goff, Clarksburg, W. Va., March 17, is 1 .)" 

FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Justice 
White. Districts of Georgia. Florida. Ala- 
bama, Mississippi. Louisiana. Texas. Circuit 
Judges Don A. Pardee, New Orleans. La., 
May 13, 1881; A. P. McCormick, Dallas, Tex. 
March 17, 1892; D. D. Shelby, Huntsville, Ala- 
March 2, 1899. 

SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Justice! 
Harlan. Districts of Ohio, Michigan. Kentucky, 
Tennessee. Circu it Judges Henry F. Severens 
Cincinnati,O.. Feb. 20. 1900: H.H. Lurton, Xash- 
ville, Tenn., March 27. 1893; John K. Richards 
Ironton. O.. Feb. 25. 1903. 

SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Justice 
Day. Districts of Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin 



162 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOB 19O4. 



Circuit Judges J. G.Jenkins. Milwaukee.Wis., 
March 23. 181)3; Peter S. Grosscup, Chicago, 111.. 
Jan. 23, 1899; Francis B. Baker (Indiana), Jan. 
21, 1902. 

EIGHTH JUDICIAL CIKCUIT. Mr. Justice 
Brewer, Leavenworth.Kas. Districts of Minne- 
sota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, 
Iowa, Missouri, Kansas. Arkansas, Nebraska, 
Colorado, Utah. Circuit Judges W.H. Sanborn, 



St. Paul, Minn., March 17, 1892; Willis Van De- 
vanter, Cheyenne. Wyo., Feb. 18, 1903; Amos 
M. Thayer. St. Louis. Mo., Aug. 9, 1894. 

NINTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT. Mr. Justice Mc- 
Kenna. Districtsof California, Montana. Wash- 
ington, Idaho, Oregon, Nevada. Circuit Judqes 
E. M. Ross, Los Angeles, Cal.. Feb. 22. 1895; \V. 
B. Gilbert, Portland, Ore.. March 18. 1892; Wm. 
W. Morrow, San Francisco, Cal., May 20, 1897. 



Little Rock Jan. 



JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTS. 

(With date of commission. Salaries, 15,000 each.) 
ALABAMA Northern and Middle Dist. Thomas Goode Jones Montgomery Dec. 

Southern District H. T. Toulmin Mobile .....Jan. 

ALASKA First District Melville C. Brown.. . Juneau June 

Second District Alfred S. Moore Nome May 

Third District Jas. Wickersham. . . . Eagle City June 

ARK ANS AS Eastern District Jacob Trieber ' 

Western District John H. Rogers 

ARIZONA Edward Kent 

CALIFORNlA-NorthernDistrict. ....... John J. De Haven. 

Southern District ,...Olin Wellborn 

COLORADO Moses Hallett 

CONNECTICUT James P. Platt Hartford Mar. 

DELAWARE Edward G. Bradford Wilmington May 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA William H. Holt .... Washington June 

FLORIDA Northern District Charles Swayne... 

Southern District James W. Locke. . 

GEORGIA Northern District Wm. T. Newman. 

Southern District Emory Speer 



17. 1901 
13. 1887 

6. 190C 

27. 1902 
6,1900 
9,1901 



Fort Smith Nov. 27,1896 

Phoenix Mar. 21,1902 

San Francisco June 8,1897 

Los Angeles Mar. 1,1895 

p - env?r "-- Jan - i;S 

11, 1897 
5.1900 
17, 1889 



Pensacola May 

Jacksonville Feb. 1,1872 

Atlanta Aug. 13, 1886 

Macon. Feb. 18,1885 



HAWAII Sanf ord B. Dole Honolulu. Confirmation pend'ng 

IDAHO James H. Beatty.... Boise Feb. 4,1892 

ILLINOIS Northern District C. C. Kohlsaat Chicago Feb. 28. 1899 

Southern District J.Otis Humphrey... Springfield Mar. 8,1901 

INDIANA A. B. Anderson Indianapolis Dec. 8,1902 

INDIAN TERRITORY-Northern Dist.. Joseph A.Gill Vinita Dec. 18.1899 

Middle District Wm. H. H. Clayton.. South McAlester . . Dec. 17, 1901 

Southern District Hosea Townsend Ardmore Jan. 

Western District Charles W.Raymond Muscogee Dec. 



IOWA Northern District Oliver P. Shlras. . . . 

Southern District Smith McPherson 

KANSAS Wm. C. Hook 

KENTUCKY Eastern District A. M . J. Cochran.. 

Western District Walter Evans 

LOUISI ANA Eastern District C. Parlange 

Western District Aleck Boarman. . . 

MAINE Clarence Hale 

MARYLAND Thomas J. Morris. 

MASSACHUSETTS Francis C. Lowell 

MICHIGAN Eastern District Henry H. Swan. . . 

Western District Geo. P. Wanty . . . . 

MINNESOTA. . . ... William Lochren. . 



Dubuque ........... Aug. 

. Red Oak ............ May 

. Leavenworth ....... Mar. 

. Maysville .......... Dec. 

,. Louisville ........... Mar. 

.. New Orleans ........ Jan 

, . Shreveport ......... May 

,. Portland ............. July 

.. Baltimore .......... July 

. Boston .............. Jan. 

. Detroit ............. Jan. 

Grand Rapids ...... Mar. 

Minneapolis ........ May 



17, 1901 
4,1882 
7,1900 
1,1899 

17, 1901 
3. 1899 

15, 1894 



MISSISSIPPI Two Districts Henry C. Niles 

MISSOURI Eastern District E. B. Adams 

Western District John F. Philips 

MONTANA Hiram Knowles 

NEBRASKA... ... Wm. H. Munger.. 



Page Morris .......... Duluth ............. July 



1, 

1, 1879 
10, 1.S98 
19,1891 
16, 1900 
18, 1896 

1,1903 
11.1902 
17, 1895 



NEVADA 

NEW HAMPSHIRE 

NEW JERSEY 

NEW MEXICO 

NEW YORK Northern District. 
Southern District 



.Thomas P. Hawley. 



osciusko Jan. 

St. Louis May _., 

Kansas City June 25, 

Helena Feb. 21,1890 

Omaha Feb. 



Carson City Sept. 

Edgar Aldrich Littleton Feb. 

Andrew Kirkpatrick Newark Nov. 

Wm. J. Mills Las Vegas Jan. 

George W. Ray Norwich Dec. 

George B. Adams.... New York city Dec. 

George C. Holt New York 

Eastern District Edw. B. Thomas Brooklyn Feb. 

Western District John R. Hazel Buffalo June 

NORTH CAROLINA Eastern District.. Thomas R. Purnell.. Raleigh May 

Western District James E. Boyd Greensboro Jan. 

NORTH DAKOTA Charles F. Amidon.. Fargo Feb. 

OHIO Northern District Francis J. Wing Cleveland June -,':'.. i'.'fH 

Augustus J. Ricks... Cleveland July 1. 19& 

Southern District Albert C. Thompson Cincinnati Sept 23 N.s 

OKLAHOMA John H. Burford.... Guthrie Feb. If, H'.'S 

OREGON Charles B. Bellinger Portland April 15.1*9:; 

PENNSYLVANIA Eastern District John B. McPherson.. Philadelphia Mar. 2. IS'.)') 

Middle District Robt. W. Archbald.. Scranton Mar. 2<. ?9<ii 

Western District Joseph Buffing ton. . . Pittsburg Feb. 23. 1S92 

PORTO RICO William H. Holt San Juan June 

RHODE-JSLAND Arthur L. Brown.... Providence Oct. 

SOUTH CAROLINA W.H. Brawley Charleston Jan. 

SOUTH DAKOTA John K. Carland Sioux Falls Aug. .. 

TENNESSEE Eastern and Middle Dists. Charles D.Clark Chattanooga Jan. 21, 1895 

Western District Ell S. Hammond Memphis June 17, 1878 



5. 1900 
1.". lv.tr, 
18. 1894 

31, IS'.tii 



THE FEDERAL JUDICIARY. 163 



JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTS.-COXTINUED. 

TEXAS-Eastern District David E. Bryant Sherman May 27,1890 

Western District Thomas S. Maxey... Austin June 25,1888 

Northern District Edw. R. Meek Fort Worth Feb. 15,1899 

Southern District Walter T. Burns Houston July 1,1902 

UTAH John A. Marshall... Salt Lake City Feb. 4,18% 

VERMONT HoytH. Wheeler.... Brattleboro Mar. 16,1877 

VIRGINIA Eastern District Edmund Waddill.Jr. Richmond Mar. 22, 19* 

Western District H. Clay McDowell. .. Bigstone Gap Dec. 18. 1901 

WASHINGTON C. H. Hanford Seattle Feb. 25, 1890 

WEST VIRGINIA Northern District... John J. Jackson Parkersburg Aug. 3,1861 

Southern District Benj. F. Kellar Bramwell July 1, 1901 

WISCONSIN Eastern District W. H. Seaman Sheboygan April 3. 1893 

Western District Romanzo Bunn Madison Oct. 30, 1877 

WYOMING JohnA.Riner Cheyenne Sept. 22, 1890 

UNITED STATES DISTRICT ATTORNEYS. 

ALABAMA Northern District.... ... Thomas H. Roulhac Sheffield. 

Middle District Warren S. Reese, Jr Montgomery. 

Southern District Morris D. Wickersham... . Mobile. 

ALASKA First District John T. Boyce Juneau. 

Second District Melvin Grigsby Nome. 

Third District . . N athan V. Harlan Eagle City. 

ARIZONA ... Frederick S. Nave Tucson. 

ARKANSAS Eastern District ... William G. Whipple Little Rock. 

Western District ... James K. Barnes Fort Smith. 

CALIFORNIA Northern District Marshall B. Woodwortb... San Francisco. 

Southern District L. H. Valentine Los Angeles. 

COLORADO Earl M. Cranston Denver. 

CONNECTICUT Francis H. Parker Hartford. 

DELAWARE ... John P. Nields Wilmington. 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ... Morgan H. Beach Washington. 

FLORIDA Northern District Wiliiam B. Sheppard Pensacola. 

Southern District Joseph N. Stripling Jacksonville. 

GEORGIA Northern District Edgar A. Angler Atlanta. 

Southern District Marion Erwin Macon. 

HAWAII Robert W. Breckons Honolulu. 

IDAHO Robert V. Cozier Moscow. 

ILLINOIS Northern District Solomon H. Bethea Chicago. 

Southern District Thomas Worthington Springfield. 

INDIANA Joseph B. Kealing Indianapolis. 

INDIAN TERRITORY Northern District.... Pliny L. Soper Vinita. 

Western District William M. Mellette Muscogee. 

Central District John H. Wilkins South McAlester. 

Southern District William B. J ohnson Ardmore. 

IOWA Northern District Horace G. McMillan Cedar Rapids. 

Southern District : Lewis Miles Corydon. 

KANSAS John S. Dean Topeka. 

KENTUCKY Western District Reuben D. Hill Louisville. 

Eastern District James H. Tinsley. 

LOUISIANA Eastern District William W. Howe New Orleans. 

Western District Milton C. Elstner Shreveport. 

MAINE Isaac W. Dyer Portland. 

MARYLAND John C. Rose Baltimore. 

MASSACHUSETTS Henry P. Moulton Boston. 

MICHIGAN Eastern District William D. Gordon Detroit. 

Western District George G. Covell Grand Rapids. 

MINNESOTA Charles C. Haupt St. Paul. 

MISSISSIPPI Northern District Mack A. Montgomery.... Oxford 

Southern District Robert C. Lee Vicksburg. 

MISSOURI-Eastern District David P. Dyer St. Louis. 

Western District William Warner Kansas City. 

MONTANA Charles Rasch Helena. 

NEBRASKA Williamson S. Summers.. Omaha. 

NEVADA Sardis Summerneld Carson City. 

NEW HAMPSHIRE Charles J. Hainblett Concord. 

NEW JERSEY Cortlandt Parker, Jr Woodbury. 

NEW MEXICO William B. Childers Albuquerque. 

NEW YORK Northern District George 3. Curtis Binghamton. 

Southern District Henry L. Burnett... New York city. 

Eastern District William J. Youngs Brooklyn. 

Western District Charles H. Brown Buffalo. 

N ORTH CAROLINA-Eastern District Harry Skinner Raleigh. 

Western District Alfred E. Holton Winston. 

NORTH DAKOTA Patrick H. Rourke Fargo. 

OHIO Northern District John J. Sullivan Cleveland. 

Southern District Sherman T. McPherson . . Cincinnati. 

OKLAHOMA Horace Speed Guthrie. 

OREGON John H. Ha 11 Portland. 

PENNSYLVANIA Eastern District Joseph B. Holland Philadelphia. 

Middle District S. J. McCarrell Harrisburg. 

Western District James S. Young Pittsburg. 



164 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



UNITED STATES DISTRICT ATTORNEYS.-CONTlxrjED. 

PORTO RICO.... N. B. K. Pettingill San Juan 

RHODE ISLAND Charles A. Wilson Providence 

SOUTH CAROLINA John G. Capers Charleston ' 

SOUTH DAKOTA James D. Elliott Sioux Falls. 

TENNESSEE Eastern District William D. Wright Knoxville. 

Middle District Abram M. Tillman Nashville. 

Western District .'. George Randolph Memphis 

TEXAS Eastern District JamesW. Ownby Paris. 

Northern District WilUam H. Atwell Dallas. 

Western District Henry Terrell San Antonio. 

Southern District Marcus C. McLemore Galveston. 

tJTAH Joseph Lippman Salt Lake City. 

VERMONT James L. Martin Brattleboro. 

VI RGIN1 A Eastern District Lunsf ord L. Lewis Richmond. 

Western District Thomas L. Moore Roanoke. 

WASHINGTON Jesse A. Frye Seattle. 

WEST VIRGINIA Northern District Reese Blizzard Parkersburg. 

Southern District George M. Atkinson Charleston. 

WISCONSIN Eastern District Henry K. Butterfleld.... Milwaukee. 

Western District William G. Wheeler Madison. 

WYOMING Timothy F. Burke Cheyenne. 

UNITED STATES MARSHALS. 

ALABAMA Northern District D. N. Cooper Birmingham. 

Middle District Leander J. Bryan Montgomery. 

Southern District Frank Simmons Mobi le. 

ALASKA First District .. James M. Shoup ;.. Juneau 

Second District Frank H. Richards St Michael 

Third District G. G. Perry Eagle City. 

ARIZONA Myron H. McCord Tucson. 

ARK ANS AS Eastern District Asbury S. Fowler Little Rock. 

Western District Solomon F. Stahl Fort Smith 

CALIFORNIA- Northern District John H. Shine San Francisco. 

Southern District Henry Z. Osborne Los Angeles 

COLORADO Dewey C. Bailey Denver 

CONNECTICUT Edson S. Bishop New Haven. 

DELAWARE William R. Flinn Wilmington. 

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA Aulick Palmer Washington. 

FLORIDA Northern District Thomas F. McGourin . . . . Pensacola. 

Southern District John F. Horr Tampa 

GEORGIA Northern District Walter H. Johnson Atlanta. 

Southern District John M.Barnes Macon. 

HAWAII E. R. Hendry Honolulu. 

IDAHO Ruel Rounds Boise City. 

ILLINOIS Northern District John C.Ames Chicago. 

Southern District Charles P. Hitch Springfield 

INDIANA H. C. Pettet Indianapolis. 

INDIAN TERRITORY Northern District William H. Darrough.... Vinita. 

Central District BenjaminF. Hackett Sout McAlester. 

Southern District B. H. Colbert Ardmore. 

Western District Leo F. Bennett Muscogee. 

IOWA Northern District Edward Knott Dubuque 

Southern District George M. Christian DesMoines. 

KANSAS William H. Mackey, Jr... Topeka. 

KENTUCKY-Western District A.D.James Louisville. 

Eastern District S. G. Sharpe Covington 

LOUlSIANA-Eastern District Charles Fontelieu New Orleans. 

Western District B. F. Oneal Shreveport. 

MAINE Henry W. Mayo Portland. 

MARYLAND John F. Langhammer Baltimore. 

MASSACHUSETTS Charles K. Darling Boston. 

MICHIGAN Eastern District William R. Bates Detroit. 

Western District Frank W. Wait Grand Rapids. 

MINNESOTA ... William H. Grimshaw.... St. Paul. 
MISSISSIPPI-Northern District George M. Buchanan Oxford. 

Southern District Edward S. Wilson Jackson. 

MISSOURI-Eastern District William L. Morsey St. Louis. 

Western District Edwin R. Durham KansasCity. 

MONTANA C. F. Lloyd Helena. 



NEBRASKA 

NEVADA 

NEW HAMPSHIRE 

NEW JKRSEY. 
NEW MEX1C 



T. L. Mathews Omaha. 

J. F. Emmitt Carson City. 



Eugene P. Nute Concord. 



DO Creighton 

Northern District Clinton D. 



Thomas J. Alcott 

Creighton M. Foraker 



NKW YORK Northern District - Clinton D. MacDougal ... Auburn 



Southern District William Henkel 

Eastern District Charles J. Haubert. . . 

William R. Compton . 

Eastern District Henry C. Dockery 

Western District JamesM. Millikan... 

NORTH DAKOTA John E. Haggart 



Western District.... 
NORTH CAROLINA- 



Trenton. 
. . Albuquerque. 



. New York city. 
. . Brooklyn. 
. Elmira. 
. . Raleigh. 
. . Greensboro. 
. . Fargo. 



THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. 



165 



Frederick C. Leonard. . 
Stephen P. Stone 



UNITED STATES MARSHALS.-COXTINCED. 
OHIO Northern District Frank M. Chandler 

Southern District Vivian J. Fagiu 

OKLAHOMA William D. Fossett 

OREGON... Walter F. Matthews 

PENNSYLVANIA Eastern District John B. Robinson... 

Middle District 

Western District _ 

PORTO RICO Edward S. Wilson. 

ftUODE ISLAND John E. Kendrick 

SOUTH CAROLINA J. Dnncan Adams 

SOUTH DAKOTA Edward G. Kennedy.... 

TENNESSEE Eastern District Richard W. Austin 

Middle District John W. Overall 

Western District Frank S. Elgin 

TEXAS Eastern District Andrew J. Houston 

Northern District George H. Green 

Western District George L. Siebrecht 

Southern Distric . William M. Hanson 

UTAH. . . . Benjamin B. Heywood. . 

VERMONT 

VIRGINIA Eastern District Morgan Treat 

Western District S. Brown Allen 

WASHINGTON ... Charles B. Hopkins 

WEST VIRGINlA-Northera District Charles D. Elliott 

Southern District John K. Thompson 

WISCONSIN Eastern District Thomas B. Reid 

Western District Charles Le wiston 

WYOMING Frank A. Hadsell 



Cleveland. 

Cincinnati. 

Guthrie*. 

Portland. 

Philadelphia. 

Harris burg. 

Pittsburg. 

San Juan. 

Providence. 

Charleston. 

Sioux Falls. 

Knoxville. 

Nashville. 

Memphis. 

Paris. 

Dallas. 

San Antonio. 

Galveston. 

Salt Lake City. 

Richmond. 

Harrisonburg. 

Tacoma. 

Parkersburg. 

Charleston. 

Milwaukee. 

Madison. 

Cheyenne. 



POSTMASTERS OF LARGE CITIES. 



Albany, N. Y. C. M. Argensinger. 
Allegheny, Pa. James A. Grier. 
Baltimore, Md. S. Davis Warfield. 
Boston, Mass. George A. Hibbard. 
Buffalo, N. Y.-Oliver A. Jenkins. 
Camden, N. J. Robert Barber. 
Ch.-rleston, S. C. W. L. Harris. 
Chicago, 111. F. E. Coyne. 
Cinciimati, O. E. R. Monfort. 
Cleveland, O. C. C. Dewstoe. 
Columbus, O. R. M. Round. 
Dayton, O. F. B. G. Withoft. 
Denver, Col. John C. Twombley. 
Des Moines. Iowa John McKay, Sr. 
Detroit, Mich. F. B. Dickerson. 
Duluth, Minn. E. L. Fisher. 
Fall River, Mass. George A. Ballard. 
Fort Wayne, Ind. William D. Page. 
Galveston, Tex. Harry A. Griffin. 
Grand Rapids, Mich. Loomis K. Bishop. 
Hartford, Conn. Edward B. Bennett. 
Indianapolis, Ind. George F. McGinnis. 
Jersey City, N. J. Peter F. Wanser. 
Kansas City, Mo. James H. Harris. 
Lincoln, Neb. E. R. Sizer. 
Los Angeles, Cal. Lewis A. Groff. 
Louisville, Ky. Thomas H. Baker. 
Lowell. Mass. A. G. Thompson. 
Memphis, Tenn. T. W. Dutro. 
Milwaukee, Wis. E. R. Stillman. 



Minneapolis, Minn. W. D. Hale. 
Nashville, Teiin. A. W. Wills. 
Newark, N. J. James L. Hays. 
New Haven, Conn. J. A. Howarth. 
New Orleans, La. J. W. Kearney. 
New York, N. Y. Cornelius Van Cott. 
Omaha, Neb. Joseph Crow. 
Paterson, N. J. George W. Pollitt. 
Peoria, 111. William E. Hull. 
Philadelphia, Pa. Clayton McMichael. 
Pittsburg, Pa. G. L. Holliday. 
Portland, Me. C. Barker. 
Portland, Ore. F. A. Bancroft. 
Providence, R. I. Clinton D. Sellew. 
Reading, Pa. A. M. High. 
Richmond, Va. W. T. Knight. 
Rochester, N. Y. James S. Graham. 
St. J6seph, Mo. A. W. Brewster. 
St. Louis, Mo. F. W. Baumhoff. 
St. Paul, Minn. Andrew R. McGill. 
Salt Lake City, Utah A. L. Thomas. 
San Antonio, Tex. G. G. Clifford. 
San Francisco, Cal. W. W. Montague. 
Seattle, Wash. G. M. Stewart. 
Springfield, 111. L. E. Wheeler. 
Springfield, Mass. Louis C. Hyde. 
Toledo, O. W. H. Tucker. 
Trenton, N. J. A. E. Yard. 
Troy, N. Y. J. A. Leggett. 
Wilmington, Del. William H. Heald. 



THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. 



Directors, 1903-1904: Albert J. Barr, Pitts- 
burg Post: Clark Howell, Atlanta Constitu- 
tion; Charles W. Knapp. St. Louis Repub- 
lic; Frank B. Noyes, Chicago Record-Her- 
ald; M. H. De Young, San Francisco Chroni- 
cle; Whitelaw Reid, New York Tribune; W. 
L. McLean, Philadelphia Bulletin: George 
Thompson, St. Paul Dispatch; William D. 
Brickell, Columbus (O.) Dispatch; Qharles 
H. Grasty, Baltimore Evening News; Har- 
vey W. Scott, Portland Oregonian; Thomas 
G. Rapier, New Orleans Picayune; Herman 
Hidder. New York Staats-Zeitung: A. P. 



Langtry, Springfield Union; Victor F. Law- 
son. Chicago Daily News. 

Executive Committee Frank B. Noyes, 
Victor F. Lawson, Charles W. Knapp, 
Whitelaw Reid and Charles H. Grasty. 

Officers President, Frank B. Noyes, Chi- 
cago Record-Herald; first vice-president, E. 
B. Haskell. Boston Herald; second vice- 
president, J. H. Estill. Savannah News; 
secretary and general manager. Melville E. 
Stone, New York: assistant secretary, 
Charles S. Diehl, New York; treasurer, Va'l- 
entine P. Snvder, New York. 



166 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



CLIMATOLOGY OF THE UNITED STATES. 

The following table of average rainfall, highest and lowest temperatures, based upon 
observations of thirty-two or fewer years at selected stations in the several states and territories 
of the United States, was compiled from the records of the weather bureau for The Chicago 
Daily News Almanac by the United States weather bureau, Washington, D. C.: 



STATIONS. 



ilt. db. 
ilev'l 

(feet). 



of 
Hears 



Alabama Mobile 

Montgomery 

Arizona Yuma 

Arkansas Little Rock 

Calif ornia San Francisco 

San Diego 

Colorado Denver | 5.183 

Pueblo 

Connecticut New Haven 

District of Columbia Washington 

Florida Jacksonville 

Key West 

Georgia Atlanta 

Savannah 

Illinpis Cairo 

Chicago 

Springfield 

Indiana Indianapolis 

Oklahoma Oklahoma City 

Iowa Des Moines 

Kansas-Dodge City 

Kentucky Louisville- 

Louisiana New Orleans 

Shreveport , 

Maine Eastport 

Portland 

Maryland Baltimore 

Massachusetts Boston 

Michigan Alpena 

Detroit 

Marquette 

Minnesota St. Paul 

Moorhead 

Mississippi Vicksburg 

Missouri St. Louis 

Montana Helena 

Havre (Assiniboia) 

Nebraska North Platte 

Omaha 

Nevada Winnemucca 

New Jersey Atlantic City 

New York-Albany 

Rochester 

New Mexico-Santa Fe 

North Carolina Charlotte 

Wilmington 

North Dakota Bismarck 

FortBuford(Williston) 

Ohio Cincinnati 

Cleveland 

Oregon Portland. 

Roseburg 

Pennsylvania Philadelphia 

Pittsburg 

Rhode Island Block Island 

South Carolina Charleston , 

South Dakota-Rapid City 

Yankton 

Tennessee Knoxville 

Memphis 

Texas Abilene 

Galveston , 

Utah Salt Lake City 

Virginia Norfolk 

Vermont Northfield . .. 

Washing! on Spokane 

West Virginia Parkersburg 

Wisconsin Milwaukee 

Wyoming Cheyenne 



10 
12 
8 

22 

1.033 

21 

314 

603 

682 

706 

1,195 

632 

2,484 

394 

2 



11 

8 

A 

579 

628 

711 

904 

94 

455 

4.013 

2.477 

2.803 

1.042 

4.335 

,1 

510 

6,954 
725 



1,855 
546 
594 
11 
482 
9 

697 
16 
10 
3.196 

I.N; 

933 
271 

1,718 
6 

4,248 
11 
739 

l.ss:i 
616 
634 

fi.054 



31) 



TEMPERATURE.* 



Max Year. Mi. Tear' 



1901 



I'.U 
1891 



18S1 
1881 
1879 

IsS'i 
1887 
1879 
1901 
1901 
1901 
1901 
1896 
1901 
1876 
1901 
1901 
1-75 
1901 
1893 

1901 
1-7 
1901 
1901 
1 -'.'4 
1881 
1901 
1-r, 
1900 
1877 

1 >'.!4 

1877 
1880 



1878 
1SS7 
1879 
11KJ1 
1900 
19ol 
1881 
IS'l 
]s'.t4 
1901 
1-1 
1900 
1S7-.I 
1900 
1>94 
1887 
1901 
iss,; 
1901 



1901 
189S 



. 

1901 
1SS1 



-20 



1S99 
1899 
ISNS 
1899 

1SSS. 
1894 
1875 
ls<t<) 
1873 
1899 
1899 



1884 
1872 
1884 
18M 
l>!'9 
1SS4 
1899 
1SS4 
1 >'.'. i 
1899 
1884 
1872 
1899 
1882 
18S-J 
1872 
1875 



1884 
1893 
1887 

Km 

1SS4 



1878 

ls;r, 



18S7 

18,8.8 
IS'.t!) 
1873 

1S88 

Jv'SX 
18SI9 
1899 



. 

18s 1 



1,899 
IS! IH 



18;9 
1S75 



Av.pre- 
cipitti- 
iion.t 



'Corrected to Dec. 31. 1902. fPrecipitation normals adopted In 1896. 



DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR SERVICE. 167 


toilet! States Diplomatic anfc Consular Serbtce. 

DIPLOMATIC SERVICE--OCT. 14, 1903. 
Explanation A. E. and P., Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary; E. E. and 
M. P., Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary; M. R., Minister Resident; 
M. R. andC.-G., Minister Resident and Consul-General. 


C OUNTRY. | Representative. 


Location. 


App' ted from. 


Salary. 


Argentine Republic 
Austria-Hungary 


John Barrett, E.E. &M. P... 
Edw. W.Ames, Sec. of Leg... 
Bellamy Storer, A. E. & P. ... 
Chandler Hale, S. of Enib 
T. M. Potts. Naval Attache. .. 
Geo. B. Rives. 2d S. of Emb. . 
Capt. F. W. Harris. M. Att.. . . 
L. Townsend, E. E. & M. P. . . 
R. M. Winthrop, Sec. of Leg. . 
\Vm. B. Sorsby, E. E. and M.P. 
D. E. Thompson.E. E. & M. P. 
Thos. C. Dawson, Sec. of Leg. 
C. M. Dickinson, Agent 
Henry L Wilson E E &M P 


Buenos Ayres. 
Buenoa Ayres. 
Vienna 
Vienna .. . 


Vermont 
Massachus'ts. 
Ohio 
Maine 
Navy 
New Jersey... 
Army 
Pennsylvania 
Massachus'ts. 
Mississippi... 
Nebraska... . 
Iowa 
New York.... 
Washington.. 
California.... 
Iowa 
Massachws'ts. 
Pennsylvania 
Navy 
Ohio 


$10,000 
1.800 
12,000 
2,500 

i',866' ' 




Vienna 
Vienna ... 
Vienna. 
Brussels 
Brussels 
LaPaz 
Rio de Janeiro.. 
Rio de Janeiro- 
Constantinople 
Santiago 
Santiago 
Pekin 
Pekin 
Pekin 


10,000 
1800 

5',000 
10,000 
1.800 
12.000 
2.625 
1.800 

' 3,666" 


Bolivia 


Brazil 


Bulgaria 


Chile 


China 


N. Hutchinson. Sec. of Leg. 
E. H. Conger, E. E. & M. P. 
J . G. Coolidge, Sec. of Leg 
H. P. Fletcher. 2d Sec. of Leg. 
Lt. C. C. Marsh, Nav. Att 
E. T. Williams, Chinese-Sec. . 
Capt. A. W. Brewster, Mil.Att. 
A.M. Beaupre, E. E. &M.P.. 
A. G. Snyder, Sec. of Leg 

W. L. Merry, E. E. & M. P. . . . 
James G. Bailey, Sec. of Leg. 
Herbert G.Squiers.E.E.&M.P. 
Jacob Sleeper, Sec. of Leg 
G. L. Lorillard, 2d Sec. of Leg. 
Lt. M. E. Hanna. Mil. Att. ... 
L. S. Swenson, E. E. & M. P.. 
Wm. F. Powell, Charge d'A. . 
A. J. Sampson, E. E. &. M. P. . 
J. W. Riddle, Agt. & C. G 
Horace Porter. A. E. & P 
Henry Vignaud. Sec. of Em.. 
A.B. Blanchard.2d Sec.of Em. 
Louis Eincken, 2d Sec. of Em. 
Lt.-Com. R. C. Smith 
Capt. T. B. Mott, Mil. Attache 
C Tower A E & P 


Pekin 
Pekiu 
Pekin 




Illinois 
West Virginia 

California.... 
Kentucky 
New York 
Massachus'ts. 
Rhode Island. 
Army 
Minnesota 
New Jersey... 
Arizona 
Minnesota 
New York 
Louisiana 
Louisiana.. . . 
New York 
Navy 
Army 
Pennsylvania 
Massachus'ts. 
Illinois 


10.000 
2,000 

10.000 
1,800 
12.000 
2.000 
1,500 

"TisOO" 
7,500 
7,500 
5,000 
17.500 
2,625 
2,000 
1.200 

' 17,566' ' 
2,625 
2,000 
1,200 

' 'rr'.soo' ' 

2,625 
2,000 
1,200 


Costa Rica, Nicaragua 
and Salvador 




SanJose 
San Jose 


Cuba 


Havana 
Havana 
Havana 
Havana 
Copenhagen. .. 
Port au Prince. 


Denmark 
Dominican Republic 




Cairo ... 
Paris 
Paris 
Paris 
Paris 
Paris 
Paris 
Berlin 
Berlin 
Berlin 






Great Britain . . . 


H. P. Dodge, Sec. of Em 
R. S. R. Hitt, 2d Sec. of Em. . 
C Richardson 3d Sec 


Berlin 
Berlin 
Berlin 
London 
London 
London 
London 


Massachus'ts. 
Navy 
Army 
New York.... 
Rhode Island. 
Maryland 
Dis. Columbia 
Navy . 


Lt.-Comdr. T. M. Potts, N. A. 
Capt. W. S. Biddle, Mil. Att. . 
J. H. Choate, A. E. &P 
Henry White, Sec. of Em .... 
J ohn R. Carter, 2d Sec. of Em. 
C.W.Wadsworth.3dSec.ofEm. 
Capt. C. H. Stockton. N. A... . 
Maj. J. H. Beacom. Mil. Att.. 
I. B. Jackson. E.E.,M.P.&C.G. 
L. Combes, E.E. &M. P 
Philip M. Brown.Sec.L.& C.G. 
Wm. F. Powell, E. E. & M. P. 
L. Combes. E. E. & M. P 
Geo. von L.Meyer, A. E.& P. 
L. M. Iddings. SfC. of Em 
L. M. Thomas, 2d Sec. of Em. . 
Lt.-Com. T. M. Potts.Nv. Att. 
Lloyd C. Griscom.E.E.& M.P. 
H.Wilson, Sec. of Leg 
J. M. Ferguson, 2dSec.of Leg. 
Lt. C. C. Marsh, Nav. Att.. . . 
Maj. O. E. Wood, Mil. Att. . . . 
Kansford S. Miller, Jr., Int. . . 
11. N. Allen. M. R. &C.G 
Gordon Paddock, Sec. of Leg. 
K won Yu Sup, Int 
Ernest Lyon. M. R. & C. G... . 
Geo. W. Ellis, Sec. of Leg 
Powell Clayton, A. E. & P 
F. H. McCreery, Sec. of Leg. . 
Wm. Heimke. 2d Sec. of Leg. 


Greece . . 


London 




Army 




Athena 
Guatemala 
Guatemala 
Port au Prince 
Guatemala 


New Jersey... 
Kentucky 
Massachus'ts. 
New Jersey... 
Kentucky 
Massachus'ts. 
New York.... 
Pennsylvania 
Navy.. . 


6,500 
10.000 
1,800 
7,500 
10.000 
12,000 
2,625 
2,000 


Guatemala 


Haiti 


Honduras. . . .* . . . 


Italy 




Rome 
Rome 
Rome . . 


Tokvo (Yedo).. 
Tokvo (Yedo).. 
Tokyo (Yedo).. 
Tokyo (Yedo).. 
Tokvo (Yedo).. 
Tokyo (Yedo).. 
Seoul 
Seoul 
Seoul 
Monrovia 
Monrovia 
Mexico 
Mexico 
Mexico 


Pennsylvania 
Illinois 
Pennsylvania 
Navy 
Army 
New York .... 
Ohio 
New York.... 
Korea 
Maryland 
Kansas 
Arkansas 
Michigan 
New York.... 


12.000 
2.625 
1,800 

2',506' ' 
7,500 
1,500 
500 
4,000 
1,500 
17,500 
2.625 
2.000 




Liberia 


Mexico ." 





168 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



UNITED STATES DIPLOMATIC SERVICE. CONTINUED. 



COUNTRY. 



Netherlands 



Paraguay and Uruguay. 
Persia 



Peru 



Portugal 

Roumaniaand Servia... 



Russia. 



Siam 

Spain 

Sweden and Norway 



Switzerland 
Turkey 



Venezuela. 



Representative. 



Stanford Newel, E. E.&M.P. 

J. W. Garrett, Sec. of Leg 

Wm. R. Finch. E. E. & M. P. . 

R. Pearson. E. E.&M.P 

John Tyler. Int 

I. B. Dudley, E. E. & M. P. . . . 
Richard R.'Neill. Sec. of Leg. 
Chas. Page Bryau,E.E.& M.P. 
John B. Jackson E.E.&M.P. 

C. S. Wilson. Sec. of Leg 

R. S. McCormick, A. E. & P.. . 

S. F. Eddy, Sec. of Em 

M. Schuyler, Jr.. 2d Sec 

Lt.-Comdr. R. C.Smith,Nv.At. 
Hamilton King, M. R. & C. G. 

LevyHui. Int 

A. S. Hardy, E. E. & M. P 

Stanton Sickels. Sec 

W W. Thomas, E. E. & M. P. 

E. L. Adams, Sec. Leg 

David J. Hill. E. E. & M. P.. . 
J.G.A.Leishman. E. E.&M.P. 

Peter A. Jay. Sec. of Leg 

A. A. Gargiulo, Int 

Herbert W.Bowen,E.E.&M.P. 
W. W. Russell, Sec. of Leg. . 



Location. App' ted from. Salary. 



The Hague 

The Hague 

Montevideo 

Teheran 

Teheran 

Lima 

Lima 

Lisbon 

Athens 

Athens 

St. Petersburg. 
St. Petersburg. 
St. Petersburg. 
St. Petersburg. 

Bangkok 

Bangkok 

Madrid 

Madrid 

Stockholm 

Stockholm 

Bern 

Constantinople 
Constantinople 



Minnesota.... | 
Maryland.... 
Wisconsin . .. 
N. Carolina... 

Persia 

California.... 
Pennsylvania 
Illinois.... 
New York 
Maine...., 
Illinois... 
Illinois.... 
New York 

Navy 

Michigan.... 



5. Hampshire 
ew York .... 

Maine 

New York.... 
New York.... 
Pennsylvania 
Rhode" Island. 

nstantinople Turkey 

New York.... 
Maryland . 



2,000 



12,000 
1.800 
7,500 

lOJOOO 
1,800 
3,000 

10.000 
1,800 



UNITED STATES CONSULAR SERVICE. 

Abbreviations: C.-G.. consul-g eneral ; C., consul; V.-C., vice-consul; C. A., commercial agent 



ARGENTINE REPUBLIC. 



Salary. 



Buenos Ayres Daniel Mayer, W. Va.,C.$2, 500 

Cordoba J. M. Thome, Pa., V.-C Fees 

Rosario J. M. Ayers, Ohio, C 2,000 

AUSTRIA-HUNGARY. 
Budapest F. D. Chester, Mass., C... 1,500 
Carlsbad John S. Twells, Pa., C. A... Fees 

Prague Urbain J. Ledoux, Me., C 3,000 

Reichenberg S. C. McFarland, la., C. 2,500 

Trieste F. W. Hossfeld, Iowa, C 2,000 

Vienna William A. Rublee, W T is.,C.-G. 3,500 

BELGIUM. 
Antwerp Church Howe, Neb., C.-G.... 3,500 

Brussels G. W. Roosevelt, Pa., C 2,500 

Ghent F. R. Mowrer, O., C 2,000 

Liege James C. McNally, Pa., C 2,000 

BOLIVIA. 

LaPaz Vacant, V.-C Fees 

BRAZIL. 

Bahia H. W. Furniss, Ind.. C 2,500 

Para Louis H. Ayme, 111., C 3,000 

Pernambuco W. L. Sewell, O., C 3,000 

Rio de Janeiro E. Seeger. 111., C.-G.. 5,000 
Santos J. H. Johnson, W. Va., C 3,000 



CHILE. 



Antofagasta C. C. 
Arica J. W. Lutz, 



Greene, R. I., C.. Fees 

O. C Fees 

Iquique C. S. Winans, N. Y., C Fees 

Valparaiso R. E. Mansfield, Ind., C... 3,000 
CHINA. 

Amoy J. H. Fesler, Col., C 3.500 

Canton R. M. McWade, Pa., C 4,000 

Chef u John Fowler, Mass., C 3,000 

Fuchau S. L. Gracey, Mass., C 3,000 



Hankow L. S. Wilcox, 111., C 



3, COO 



Nanking Wm. Martin, N. Y.. C 3,000 

Newchwang H. B. Millar. Ore., C.... 3,000 

Shanghai John Goodnow. Minn., C.-G. 5,000 

Tientsin-J. W. Ragsdale, Cal., C - ... 3,500 

COLOMBIA. 

Barranqullla Vacant, C 2,000 

Bogota A. G. Snyder, W. Va., C.-G... 2,000 



Salary, 

Cartagena Glair A. Orr, 111., C $1,500 

Colon O. Malmros, Minn., C 3,000 

Panama H. A. Gudger, N. C., C.-G.. 4,000 

COSTA RICA. 
Port Limon Pierre P. Demers.N. H., C. 1,500 
San Jose J. C. Caldwell, Kas., C.... 2,000 

CUBA. 

Cienfuegos M. J. Baehr, Neb., C 3,000 

Havana F. Steinhart, Pa., C.-G 5,000 

Santiago R. E. Holaday, O., C 3,000 

DENMARK AND DOMINIONS. 
Copenhagen R. R. Frazier, Wis., C... 2,000 
St. Thomas C. H. Payne, W. Va., C.. 2,500 

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC 

Puerto Plata T. Simpson, R. I., C.. Fees 

Santo Domingo C. L. Maxwell, O., 

C.-G 2,000 

ECUADOR. 

Guayaquil H. R. Dietrich, Mo., C.-G.. 3,000 

FRANCE AND DOMINIONS. 

Algiers J). S. Kidder, Fla., C 1,500 

Bordeaux A. W. Tourgee, N. Y., C.. 3,000 

Calais J. B. Milner. Ind., C 2,000 

Goree-Dakar P. Strickland, Ct., 'C.. Fees 

Grenoble C. P. H. Nason, Pa,. C 1,500 

Guadeloupe G. B. Anderson, D. C., C. 1,500 

Havre A. M. Thackera. Pa., C 3,500 

LaRochelle G. H. Jackson, Ct., C.... 1,500 
Limoges W. T. Griffin, N. Y., C. A.. 1.500 

Lyons J. C. Covert. O., C 3,000 

Marseilles R. P. Skinner, O., C.-G.... 3,000 

Martinique J. F. Jewell. 111., C 1,500 

Nantes B. H. Ridgely, Ky., C 1,500 

Nice H. S. Van Buren. N. J., C 1,500 

Noumea G. M. Colvocoresses, Ct., 

C. A Fees 

Paris John K. Gowriy. Ind., C.-G 5.000 

Reims-W. A. Prickilt, N. J., C 2,000 

Roubaix W. P. Atwell. O,, C 2,000 



Rouen T. Haynes, S. C., C 



1,000 



Saigon E.Schneegans, Fr.. C. A Fees 



DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR SERVICE. 



Salary. 

St. Etienne H. S. Brunot, Pa., C $2,000 

St. Pierre, Miquelon C. M. Freeman, 

N. H., C. A 1,500 

Tahiti W. F. Doty, N. J., C 1,000 

Tamatave W. H. Hunt. N. Y., C 2.000 

Tunis St, L. A. TouJiay, 1>. C., C Fees 

GERMANY. 
Aix-la-Chapelle F.M.Brundage.Pa., C. 2,600 

Annaberg J. F. Winter, 111., C 2,500 

Apia George Himrod, Neb., C.-G 3,00t) 

Bamberg William Bardel, N. Y., C. A. 2,000 

Barmen T. J. Bluthardt, 111., C 3,000 

Berlin F. H. Mason. O., C.-G 4,000 

Bremen H. W. Diederich, D. C., C.. 2,500 

Breslau E. A. Man, Fla., C 2,000 

Brunswick T. J. Albert, Md., C 2,000 

Chemnitz J. F. Monaghan, R. I., C... 2,500 
Coburg O. J. D. Hughes, Ct., C.-G.... 3,000 

Cologne C. E. Barnes, 111.. C 2.500 

Crefeld T. R. Wallace, Iowa, C 2.000 

Dresden C. L. Cole, Pa.. C.-G 3.000 

Dusseldorf Peter Lieber, Ind., C 2,000 

E'benstock-E. L. Harris, 111., C. A... Fees 
Frankfort R. Guenther, Wis., C.-G.. 3,000 

Freiburg E. T. Lief eld. Ct., C 2,000 

Glauchau E. A. Creevey, Ct., C 2,000 

Hamburg H. Pitcairn, Pa.. C 2,500 

Hanover Jay White, Mich., C 2.000 

Kehl J. I. 'Brittain, O., C 2,000 

Leipzig B. H. Warner, Md., C 2,000 

Magdeburg Wm. A. McKellip, Md., C. 2,000 

Mainz W. Schumann, N. Y., C 2,500 

Mannheim H. W. Harris, O.. C 2000 

Munich J. H. Worman, N. Y., C.-G... 2,500 

Nuremberg G. E. Baldwin, O., C 3,000 

Plauen Hugo Muench, Mo., V. & D. G. 2,500 

Solingen J. J. Langer, Neb., C 2,000 

Stettin J. E. Kehl, O., C X. 1,500 

Stuttgart E. O. Ozmun, Minn., C.... 2,500 

Weimar T. E. Moore, O., C 2.000 

Zittau W. J. Pike, Pa 1,500 

GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. 

Aden W. W. Masterson, Ky., C 1,500 

Amherstburg C. W. Martin, Mich., C. 1,500 

Antigua W. R. Estes. Minn., C 1,500 

Auckland F. Dillingham. Cal., C 2,500 

Barbados D. F. Wilbur. N. Y., C 2,500 

Belfast W. W. Touvelle, O., C 3,000 

Belize W. L. Avery, Mont., C 2,000 

Belleville M. J. Hendrick, N. Y., C.. Fees 
Birmingham M. Halstead. N. Y., C... 2,50 

Bombay W. T. Fee, O.. C 2,500 

Bradford E. S. Day, Ct., C 3,000 

Bristol L. A. Lathrop. Cal., C 1.500 

Brockville E. S. Hotchkiss. Wis., C... 1,500 
Calcutta R. F. Patterson, Tenn.. C.-G. 5,000 
Campbellton J. S. Benedict, N. Y., 

C. A s Fees 

Cape Town W. R. Bingham. Kas., C.-G. 5,000 

Cardiff D. T. Phillips, 111., C 2.000 

Ceylon William Morey. Me.. C 1.500 

Charlottetown D. J. Vail Vt., C 1,500 

Chatham C. E. Monteith. Idaho, C... 2.000 

Chandiere Junction Vacant, C. A Fees 

foaticook F. D. Hale. Vt.. C 1,500 

Collingwood William Small. D. C., C. 2,000 

Cork Daniel Swiney. O., C 2,000 

Cornwall J. E. Hamilton, Ky., C. A. 1,500 
Dawson City H. D. Say lor. Pa.. C... 3,500 

Demerara G. H. Moulton, Col., C 3,000 

Dublin Rufus Waterman. R. I.. C 2,000 

Dundee J. C. Higgins. Del., C 2,500 

Dilnfermline J. N* McCunn. Wis., C. 2,000 

Edinburgh Rufus Fleming. O., C 2.500 

Falmouth Howard Fox, Eng., C Fee8 

Fort Erie H. J. Harvey. N. Y., C... 1,500 
Gaspe Basin A. F. Dickson, Mass..C. 1,600 
Gibraltar R. L. Sprague, Mass., C.. 1,600 

Glasgow S. M. Taylor O., C 3,000 

Goderich J. H. Shirley, 111., C. A 1,500 



Salary. 

Guelph C. N. Daly, N. J., C $1,500 

Halifax W. R. Holloway, Ind., C.-G.. 3,500 
Hamilton, Ber. W. M. Greene. R. L, C. 2,OuO 
Hamilton. Ont. J.M.Shepard, Mich., C. 2.000 

Hi hart A. G. Webster, Tas., C Fees 

Hongkong E. S. Bragg, Wis., C.-G.. 5,OuO 

Huddersfleld B. F. Stone. O., C 2,500 

Hull W. C. Hamm, Pa., C 1,000 

Kingston, Jamaica G. H. Bridgman, 

N*. J., C 3,000 

Kingston, Ont. M. H. Twitchell, La., 

1,500 

Leeds Lewis Dexter, R. 1., C 2,000 

Liverpool James Boyle, O., C 5,000 

London H. C. Evans, Tenn., C.-G. .. 5,000 
London. Ont. H. S. Culver. O., C.. .. 2,000 

Malta J. H. Grout, Mass., C 2,000 

Manchester W. H. Bradley, 111., C. .. 3,000 
Melbourne J. P. Bray, N. D., C.-G .. 4,500 
Moncton G. Beutelspacher, O., C. A.. Fees 
Montreal A. W. Edwards, N. D..C.-G. 4,000 

Nassau T. J. McLain, O., C 2.000 

Newcastle H. W. Metcalf. Me.. C.... 2,000 
Newcastle, N. S. W. F. W. Coding, 

111.. C Fees 

Niagara Falls W. Jarvis, N. H., C.... 1,500 

Nottingham F. W. Mahin, la., C 3,000 

OriJlia E. A. Wakefield, Me., C 1.600 

Ottawa John G. Foster, Vt., C.-G 4,000 

Plymouth J. G. Stephens, Ind., C Fees 

Pt. Antonio N. R. Snyder, Pa., C. A. Fees 

Port Hope H. P. -Dill. Me., C 1,500 

Port Louis J. P. Campbell, Cal.. C... 2,000 
Port Rowan G. B. Killmaster, Mich., 

C. A Fees 

Port Sarnia Neal McMillan, Mich., C. 2,000 

Port Stanley J. E. Rowen, la., C 2,000 

Prescott M. R. Sackett. N. Y., C 1, 

Pretoria J. E. Profit, W. Va., C 3,500 

Quebec W. W. Henry. Vt., C 3.000 

Rimouski C. A. Boardman, Me., C. A. Fees 
St. Christopher J. Haven, 111.. C. A.. 1.500 
St. George W. D. Fox, Ber., V.-C. A. Fees 
St. Helena R. P. Pooley. N. Y., C... 2,000 
St. Hyacinthe J.M.Authier. R.I..C.-A. 1.600 
St. John. N. B. Ira B. Myers. Ind.. C. 2,000 
St John's. N. F. G.O.Cornelius, Pa., C. 2,000 
St.' John's, Que. C. Deal, N. T., C.... 1,600 

t. Stephen C. A. McCullough, Me., C. 1,600 
t. Thomas M. J. Burke. 111., C 2,000 

Sault Ste. Marie G. W. Shotts, Mich., 

C. A Fees 

Sheffield Vacant, C 1 2,500 

Sherbrooke Paul Lang, N. H., C 1,000 

Sierra Leone J. T. Williams, N. C., C. 1,500 
Singapore O. F. Williams. N. Y., C.-G. 3.500 

Southampton A. W 7 . Swalm, la., C 2,500 

Stanbridge F. S. S. Johnson, N. J., 

C. A 1,500 

Stratford A. G. Seyfert, Pa., C 1,600 

Suva Leslie E. Brown, Fiji, C. A.... Fees 

Swansea G. W. Prees, Wis.. C 2.600 

Svdney. N. S. G. N. West. D. C.. C... 2,000 
Sydney. N. S. W. O. H. Baker, la.. C. 2,500 
Three' Rivers Leo Bergholz, N. Y., C.. 2,000 

Toronto E. N. Gunsaulus, O., C 2,00 

Trinidad Alvin Smith. O.. C I.00 

Tunstall W. P. Smyth. Mo.. C 2,500 

Turks Is. Thos. P. Moffat. N. Y., C.. Fees 
Vancouver L. E. Dudley. Ma*s.. C... 2,000 

Victoria A. E. SmitB. 111., C 2. BOO 

Wallaceburg S. D. Holmes, N. Y., C. A. 1.500 
Windsor N. S. J. T. Hoke, W. Va., C. 1,00* 
Windsor, Ont. H. C. Morris. Mich.,C. 1,500 
Winnipeg W. H. H. Graham. Ind., C. 1,500 

Woodstock F. C. Denison. Vt.. C 1.600 

Yarmouth M. J. Carter, Pa., C 2,000 

GREECE. 

Athens D. E. McGinley, Wis., C 2,600 

Patras J. V. Long, Pa., C 1,500 



170 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



GUATEMALA. Salary. 

Guatemala A. A. Winslow, Ind., C.-G.$2,0(to 

HAITI. 

^ape Haitien L.W.Livingston. Fla.,C. 1,000 
Port au Prince J. B. Terres, N. Y., 
V. r C.-G ................................. Fees 

HONDURAS. 
Ceiba Dean R. Wood, N. Y., C ........ 

Puerto Cortez W. E. Alger, Mass., C. 
Tegucigalpa A. K. Moe, N. J., C ..... 

Utiiia J. B. Richardson, Kas., C ...... - 



1,500 
1,500 
2,000 
1,000 



ITALY. 

Castellamare C. S. Crowninshield, 

D. C., C. A 1,500 

Catania A. Heingartner, O., C 1,500 

Florence F. B. Keene, Wis., C 1,500 

Genoa W. H. Bishop, Conn., C 2,000 

Leghorn James A. Smith, Vt., C 2,000 

Messina C. M. Oaughy, Md.. C 1,500 

Milan H. W. Brush, N. Y.. C 2,000 

Naples A. H. Byington, Conn., C 2,000 
Palermo James Johnston, N. J., C-... 2,000 
Rome Hector de Castro. N. Y., C.-G. 3,000 

Turin Pietro Ouneo, O., C 1,000 

Venice R. W. Bliss, Mass., C 1,500 

JAPAN. 

Kobe S. S. Lyon, N. J., C 3,000 

Nagasaki C. B. Harris, Ind., C 3,000 

Tamsui J. W. Davidson, Minn., O 1,500 

Yokohama E. C. Bellows, Wash., C.-G. 4,000 

KOREA. 

Seoul G. Paddock, N. Y., C.-G 1,500 

LIBERIA. 

Monrovia Ernest Lyon, Md., C.-G 4,000 

MEXICO. 
Acapulco G. W. Dickinson, N. Y., C. 2,000 

Aguas Calientes Vacant, C. A Fees 

Chihuahua W. W T . Mills, Tex., C 2,000 

Ciudad Juarez C. W. Kindrick, La.,C. 2,500 
Ciudad Porfirio Diaz L. A. Martin, 

W Va., C 2,000 

Durango J. A. LeRoy, Mich., C 1,500 

Ensenada E. E. Bailey, 111., C 1,500 

LaFaz James Viosca, Cal., C Fees 

Manzanillo K. M. Van Zandt, Tex., 

C. A Fees 

Matamoras P. M. Griffith, O., C 1,500 

Mazatlan Louis Kaiser, 111., C 2,000 

Mexico A. D. Barlow, Mo., C.-G 4,000 

Monterey P. C. Hanna, la., C.-G 3,000 

Nogales A. R. Morawetz, Ariz., C.... 1,500 
Neuvo Laredo A. B. Garrett, W. Va., C. 2,000 
Progreso E. H. Thompson. Mass., C. 1,500 
Saltillo H. L. Worcester, N. H., C.... 1,500 

Tamoico S. E. Magill, 111.. C 2,000 

Tuxpan A. J. Lespinasse, N. Y., 0... Fees 
Vera Cruz W. W. Canada, Ind., C... 3,000 

MOROCCO. 
Tangier S. R. Gummere, N. J., C.-G.. 2,500 

NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS. 
Amsterdam Frank D. Hill, Minn, C.. 2,500 

Batavia B. S. Rairden, Me., C 1,000 

Curacao E. H. Cheney, N. H., C 2,000 

Rotterdam Soren Listoe, Minn., C.-G. 2,500 
St Martin D. C. van Romondt, St. 

M., C Fees 

NICARAGUA. 
Cape Gracias a Dios W. P. Henley, 

Ind., C. A Fees 

Managua C. Donaldson, N. Y., C 2,000 

San Juan del Norte W. A. Deverall, 

N. Y., V. and D. C 2,500 



PARAGUAY. Salary, 

Asuncion J. N. Ruffin, Tenn., C $1,500 

PERU. 

Callao A. L. M. Gottschalk, N. Y., C. 3,500 
PORTUGAL AND DOMINIONS. 

Funchal T. C. Jones, Ky., C 1.500 

Lisbon J. H. Thieriot. N. "Y., C Fees 

Lourenco Marquez W. S. Hollis, 

Mass., C 2,500 

St. Michaels G. H. Pickerell, O., C... 1,500 

ROUMANIA. 
Bucharest W. G. Boxshall, Roumania, 

V.-C.-G Fees 

RUSSIA. 

Batoum J. C. Chambers, N. Y., C.... Fees 
Dalny M. M. Langhorne. Va., C. A... Fees 
Helsingfors Victor Ek, Russia, V.-C.. Fees 

Moscow Samuel Smith, N. J., C 2,000 

Odessa T. E. Heenan, Minn., C 2,500 

Riga N. P. A. Bornholt, Russia, C... 1,000 
St. Petersburg E. Watts, Pa., C.-G.. 3,000 
Vladivostok R. T. Greener,N.Y.,C. A. 2,500 
Warsaw C. R. Slocum, N. Y., C 'Fees 

SALVADOR. 
San Salvador J. Jenkins. Neb., C.-G. 2,000 

SERVIA. 

Belgrade C. Vogeli, Servia, V.-C.-G.. Fees 
SIAM. 

Bangkok Paul Nash, N. Y., C.-G 1,800 

SPAIN AND DOMINIONS. 
Alicante H. W. Carey, Spain, V.-C... Fees 

Barcelona J. G. Lay, D. C., C.-G 3,000 

Cadiz R. M. Bartleman, Mass., C 1,500 

Cartagepa J. Bowron, Spain, C Fees 

Corunna Julio Harmony, N. Y., C Fees 

Madrid A. Danziger, Cal., V.-C Fees 

Malaga D. R. Birch, Pa., C 1,500 

Teneriffe S. Berliner, N. Y., C 1,500 

Valencia H. A. Johnson, D. C., C 1,500 

SWEDEN AND NORWAY. 
Bergen E. S. Cunningham, Tenn., C.. Fees 
Christiania H. Bordewich.Minn., C.-G. 2,000 
Gothenburg R. S. S. Bergh. N. D., C. 1,500 
Stockholm E. L. Adams, N. Y., C.-G.. 1,500 
SWITZERLAND. 

Basel George Gifford, Me., C 3,000 

Bern Edw. Higgins, Mass., C 2,000 

Geneva H. L. Washington, D. C., C.. 2,000 

Lucerne H. H. Morgan, La., C 2000 

St. Gall T. W. Petros, D. C., C.-G.... 3,000 

Zurich A. Lieberknecht, 111., C 2,500 

TURKEY AND DOMINIONS. 

Alexandretta W. R. Davis, O., C 1,500 

Bagdad R. Burner, Turkey, V.-C Fees 

Beirut G. B. Ravnd-al. S. D., C 2,000 

Cairo J. W. Riddle, Minn., C.-G 5,000 

Constantinople C. M. Dickinson, 

N. Y., C.-G 5,000 

Erzerum E. J. Sullivan, N. Y., C 2,000 

K?rput T. H. Norton, O., C 1,500 

Jerusalem S. Merrill, Mass., C 2.500 

Sivas M. A. Jewett, Mass., C 1,500 

'Smyrna R. W. Lane, O., C 2,500 

URUGUAY. 

Colonia B. D. Manton, R. I., C Fees 

Montevideo J. E. Hopley, O., C 3,000 

Paysandu J. G. Hufnagel. Md., C. A. Fees 

VENEZUELA. 

LaGuayra L. Goldschmidt, N. H., C.. 2,000 
Maracaibo E. H. Plumacher, Tenn., C. 2,000 
Puerto Cabello L. T. Ellsworth, O., C. 1,500 

ZANZIBAR. 
Zanzibar M. Mitchell, N. Y., C 2,000 



FOREIGN LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. 171 


FOREIGN LEGATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES. 


COUHTBY. 


Name. 


Rank. 


ARGENTINE REPUBLIC 
AUSTRIA-HUNGARY 
BELGIUM 


Senor Don Martin G. Merou 


E. E. and M. P. 

Secretary of Legation. 
A. E. and M. P. 
Counselor of Legation. 
E. E. and M. P. 
Counselor of Legation. 
E. E. and M. P. 
E. E.andM. P. 
E. E.andM. P. 
First Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
E. E. and M. P. 
First Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
Secretary Interpreter. 
E. E. and M. P. 
First Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
Charge d'Affaires. 
E. E.andM. P. 
E. E. and M. P. 
Charge d'Affaires. 
E. E.andM. P. 
A. E. and P. 
Military Attache. 
Counselor. 
A. E. and P. 
Counselor, First Secretary. 
Military Attache. 
A. E. and M. P. 
Secretary of Embassy. 
Second Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
Military Attache. 
E. E. and M. P. 
E. E. and M. P. 
A. E. and P. 
First Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
E. E.andM. P. 
First Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
Counselor of Legation. 
E. E. and M. P. 
Attache. 
A. E. and P. 
First Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
E. E. and M. P. 
E. E.andM. P. 
E. E. and M. P. 

E. E. and M. P. 
E. E. and M. P. 
E. E. and M. P. 
A. E. and P. 
First Secretary. 
Military Attache. 
E. E. and M. P. 
E. E. and M. P. 
E. E. and M. P. 
First Secretary. 
Second Secretary. 
Military Attache. 
E. E. and M. P. 
Secretary of Legation. 
E. E. and M. P. 
Secretary of Legation. 
E. E. and M. P. 
First Secretary of Legation. 
Charge d'Affaires. 
E. E. and M. P. 




Baron Karl von Giskra 


Baron Ludovic Moncheur 
Mr. Charles Wauters 
Senor Don F. E. Guachalla 
Mr J F de Assis-Brasil 


BOLIVIA 


1 BRAZIL 


i CHILE .. , 


Senor Don J. Walker-Martinez. .. 
Senor Don Domingo Gana 
Senor Don E. G. de la Huerta 


\ CHINA 


CUBA 


Mr. Chow Tdzchi 


Mr. Chang Chuan 


Mr. Yung Kwai. 


Senor Don Gonzalo de Quesada... . 
Senor Don Antonio M. Rivero 
Sr. Don M. de la Vega y Calderon.. 
Dr. Thomas Herran 


COLOMBIA... 
i COSTA RICA... 


Senor Don Joaquin B. Calvo 


DENMARK 


DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. 
ECUADOR 


Senor Don Fco. L. Vasquez 
Senor Dr. Alfredo Baquerizo 


FRANCE 


GERMANY 


Capt P Vignal 


M. Pierre de Marjorie 


Freiherr Speck von Sternburg 
Frei. v.d. Bussche-Haddenhausen. 
Major Otto von Etzel 
Sir H. M. Durand 


GREAT BRITAIN 
GUATEMALA 


Mr. Arthur S. Raikes 


Mr. Percy Wyndham 
Mr. Herbert G. Dering 


Li ^ut.-Col. H. J. Foster. R. E 
Senor Don A. L. Arriaga 
Mr J N Leger 


HAITI 


ITALY 


Sig. Edmondo M. des Planches 
Count V. Macchi di Cellere.. . 


JAPAN 


Sig. Giulio C. Montagna 
Mr. K. Takahira 
Count Hirokichi Mutsu 


KOREA 
MEXICO 


Mr Shotaro Kokubu 


Mr Durham W Stevens 


Mr. Minhui Cho 
Mr. Chiyu Han 


Senor Don Manuel de Azpiroz. . . . 
Senor Don Federico Gamboa 


NETHERLANDS..., 
NICARAGUA 
PANAMA 


Senor Don Rodrigo de Azpiroz.. . . 
Baron W. A. F. Gevers 
S^nor Don Luis F. Corea . .. 


Philinnp Runau-Varilla. . . 


PARAGUAY 


PERSIA Gen Isaac Khan 


PERU Mr M A rinlrlprnn 


PORTUGAL 


Viscount de Alte .... 


j RUSSIA 


Comte Cassini 


' SALVADOR 


Mr. Theodore Hansen 


Col. Raspopow 


Mr Rafael S Lopez 


i SIAM 


Phya Akhara j Varadhara 
Senor Don Emilio de Ojeda 
Senor Don Juan Riano 
Sr. Don. Manuel Walls y Merino. 
Lt.-Col. Federico de Monte verde. 
Mr A Grip 


! SPAIN 


SWEDEN AND NORWAY 
SWITZERLAND 


Mr. C. Hauge 


Mr. F. Du Martheray 


TURKEY 


Mr. Ernst Probst.. 


ChekibBey... 


URUGUAY 


DjelalBey 


Senor Dr. Luis Albert de Herrera. . 
Sen'r Don Gen. Jose M. Hernandez 


VENEZUELA 


DISTANCES TO INSULAR POSSESSIONS. 

San Francisco to Honolulu. 2,089 miles. New York to San Juan, P. R., 1,425 miles. 
San Francisco to Manila, 6,789 miles. New York to Manila, 11,361 miles. 
San Francisco to Tutulla, 4,408 miles. Tampa to Key West, 250 miles. 
San Francisco to Guam, 5,589 miles. Key West to San Juan, P. R., 1,050 miles. 



172 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Congress. 

From March 4, 19U3, to March 3, 1905. 

SENATE. 
Republicans, 57; democrats, 33. Compensation of senators, $5,000. 

President Pro Tempore William P. Frye. 
ALABAMA. | NEBRASKA. 



John T. Morgan, Dem Selma..l907 

Edmund W. Pettus, Dem Selma.,1909 

ARKANSAS. 

James H. Berry, Dem Bentonville.,1907 

James P. Clarke, Dem Little Rock.. 1909 

CALIFORNIA. 

Thomas R. Bard. Rep Hueneme..l905 

George C. Perkins, Kep Oakland. ..1909 

COLORADO. 

Thomas M. Patterson, Dem Denver.. 1907 

Henry M. Teller, Dem.... Central City.. 1909 

CONNECTICUT. 

Joseph R. Hawley, Rep Hartford.. 1905 

Orville H. Platt, Rep Meriden..l909 

DELAWARE. 

James F. Allee, Rep Dover. .1907 

Lewis H. Ball, Rep Faulkland.,1905 

FLORIDA. 

Jas. P. Taliaferro, Dem.. Jacksonville.. 1905 

Stephen R. Mallory. Dem.. ..Pensacola.. 1909 

GEORGIA. 

Augustus O. Bacon, Dem Macon.,1907 

Alexander S. Clay, Dem Marietta.. 1909 

IDAHO. 
Frederick T. Dubois, Dem.. Blackfoot.. 1907 

Weldon B. Hey burn, Rep Wallace.. 1909 

ILLINOIS. 

Shelby M. Cullom, Rep Springfield.. 1907 

Albert J. Hopkins, Rep Aurora.. 1909 

INDIANA. 

Albert J, Beveridge, Rep.. Indianapolis.. 1905 

Chas. W. Fairbanks, Rep.. Indianapolis.. 1909 

IOWA. 

William B. Allison, Rep Dubuque..l909 

Jonathan P. Dolliver, Rep.. Ft. Dodge.. 1907 
KANSAS. 

Joseph R. Burton, Rep Abilene. .1907 

Chester I. Long, Rep.. Medicine Lodge.. 1909 

KENTUCKY. 
J. C. S. Blackburn, Dem.. ..Versailles.. 1907 

James B. iMcCreary, Dem Richmond.. 1909 

LOUISIANA. 

Murphy J. Foster. Dem Franklin.. 1907 

Samuel D. McEnery. Dem. New Orleans.. 1909 
MAINE. 

William P. Frye. Rep Lewiston.,1907 

Eugene Hale, Rep Ellsworth.. 1S05 

MARYLAND. 

Arthur Pue Gorman, Dem Laurel.. 1909 

Louis E. McComas, Rep.. .Hagerstown.. 1905 
MASSACHUSETTS. 

George F. Hoar, Rep Worcester.. 1907 

Henry Cabot Lodge, Rep Nahaut..l905 

MICHIGAN. 

Russell A. Alger, Rep Detroit.. 1907 

Julius C. Burrows, Rep Kalamazoo.,1905 

MINNESOTA. 

Knute Nelson, Rep Alexandria.. 1907 

Moses E. Clapp, Rep St. Paul.. 1905 

MISSISSIPPI. 

Anselm J. McLaurin. Dem Brandon.. 1907 
H. De Soto Money, Dem.. ..Carrollton.. 1905 

MISSOURI. 
Francis M.Cockrell, Dem. Warrensburg.. 1905 

William J. Stone, Dem St. Louis. .1909 

MONTANA. 

William A. Clark, Dem Butte.,1907 

Paris Gibson, Dem Great Falls.. 1905 



1907 
1905 



Joseph H. Millard, Rep Omaha. 

Charles H. Dietrich, Rep.. ..Hastings. 

NEVADA. 
William M. Stewart, Rep.. Carson City.. 1905 

Francis G. Newlands, Dem Reno.. 1909 

NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
Henry E. Burnham, Rep.. .Manchester.. 1907 

Jacob H. Gallinger, Rep Concord.. 1909 

NEW JERSEY. 

John F. Dryden. Rep Newark.. 1907 

John Kean, Rep Elizabeth.. 1905 

NEW YORK. 
Ciiauncey M. Depew, Rep.... New York.. 1905 

Thomas C. Platt. Rep Owego.,1909 

NORTH CAROLINA. 
Furnifold M. Simmons, Dem.. Raleigh.. 1907 

Lee S. Overman, Dem Salisbury.. 1909 

NORTH DAKOTA. 

Porter J. McCumber, Rep.. ..Wahpeton.. 1905 

Henry C. Hansbrough, Rep.Devil's Lake.. 1909 

OHIO. 

Marcus A. Hanna, Rep Cleveland. 

Joseph B. Foraker. Rep Cincinnati. 

OREGON. 



. 1905 
1909 



John H. Mitchell. Rep Portland.. 1907 

1909 



Rep Fi 

Charles W. Fulton, Rep Astoria. 

PENNSYLVANIA. 

Matthew S. Quay, Rep Beaver.. 1905 

Boies Penrose, Kep Philadelphia.. 1909 

RHODE ISLAND. 

George P. Wetmore, Rep Newport.. 1907 

Nelson W. Aldrich, Rep.... Providence.. 1905 

SOUTH CAROLINA. 
Benjamin R. Tillman, Dem.. ..Trenton.. 1907 

Asbury C. Latimer, Dem Belton.,1909 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 

Robert J. Gamble, Rep Yankton.,1907 

Alfred B. Kittredge, Rep.. Sioux Falls.. 1909 

TENNESSEE. 
Edward W. Carmark, Dem. ..Memphis.. 1907 

William B. Bate, Dem Nashville.. 1905 

TEXAS. 
Joseph W. Bailey, Dem.... Gainesville.. 1907 

Charles A. Culberson. Dem Dallas.. 1905 

UTAH. 
Thomas Kearns, Rep... Salt Lake City.. 1905 

Reed Smoot, Rep Provo..l909 

VERMONT. 

Redfield Proctor. Rep Proctor.. 1905 

Wm. P. Dillingham. Rep... Montpelier.. 1909 

VIRGINIA. 
Thomas S. Martin. Dem.... Scot tsville.. 1907 

John W. Daniel, Dem Lynchburg. .1905 

WASHINGTON. 

Addison G. Foster, Rep Tacoma.,1905 

Levi Ankeny, Rep Walla Walla.. 1909 

WEST VIRGINIA. 

Stephen B. Elkins. Rep Elkins.,1907 

Nathan B. Scott. Rep Wheeling.. 190T- 

WISCONSIN. 

Joseph V. Quarles. Rep Milwaukee.. 1905 

John C. Spooner. Rep Madison.. 1909 

WYOMING. 

Francis E. Warren, Rep Cheyenne.. 1907 

Clarence D. Clark. Rep Evansfon.,1905 



FIFTY-EIGHTH CONGRESS. 



HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. 

Speaker, Joseph G. Cannon. 

Republicans, 203; democrats. 178; whole number. 38ti. Those marked * served in 57th congress. 
tAt large. Compensation of representatives, $5,UOU; of speaker, $8,000. 

ALABAMA. I 14. Benjamin F. Marsh, Rep Warsaw 

r,* Uem Demopolis lj>- George W. Prince,* Rep Galesburg 

.* Dem Montgomery j 16. Joseph \. Graff,* Rep ....... Peona 



1. George W. Taylo , 

2. Ariosto A. Wiley,* Dem Montgomery 

3. Henry D. Clayton.* Dem Kufaula 

4. Sydney J. Bowie,* Dem Anniston 

5. Charles \V. Thompson,* Dem...Tuskegee 

6. John H. Baukhead,* Dem Fayette 

7. John L. Burnett,* Dem Gausden 

8 William Richardson,* Dem....Huutsvillo 
9. O. W. Underwood,* Dem. ...Birmingham 

ARKANSAS. 

1. R. Bruce Macon, Dem Helena 

2. Stephen Brundidge, Jr.,* Dem...Searcey 

3. Hugh A. Dinsmore,* Dem. ..Fayetteville 

4. John S. Little,* Dem Greenwood 

5. Charles C. Reid,* Dem Morrillton 

6. Joe T. Robinson, Dem Lonoke 

7. Minor Wallace, Dem Magnolia 

CALIFORNIA. 

1. J. N. Gillett. Rep Eureka 

2. Theodore A. Bell, Dem Napa 

3. Victor H. Metcalf,* Rep Oakland 

4 E. J Livernash, U. L San trancisco 

5. William J. Wynn, U. L....San Francisco 

6. James C. Needham,* Rep Modesto 

7. James McLachlan,* Rep Pasadena 

8. M. J. Daniels, Rep Riverside 

COLORADO. 
F. E. Brooks,! Rep Colorado Springs 

1. John F. Shafroth,* Dem Denver 

2. H. M. Hogg, Rep Telluride 

CONNECTICUT. 
George L. Lilley,! Rep Waterbury 

1. E. Stevens Henry,* Rep Rockville 

2. N. D. Sperry,* Rep New Haven 

3. Frank B. Brandegee,* Rep.. New London 

4. Ebenezer J. Hill,* Rep Norwalk 

DELAWARE. 

Henry A. Houston,! Dem Millsboro 

FLORIDA. 

1. S. M. Sparkman,* Oem Tampa 

2. Robert W. Davis,* Dem Palatka 

3. William B. Lamar, Dem Monticello 

GEORGIA. 

1. Rufus E. Lester,* Dem Savannah 

2. James M. Griggs,* Dem Dawson 

3. Elijah D. Lewis,* Dem Montezuma 

4 William C. Adamson,* Dem...Carrollton 

5. L. F. Livingston.* Dem Covington 

6. Charles L. Bartlett.* Dem Macon 

7. John W. Maddox,* Dem Rome 

8. William M. Howard,* Dem.. ..Lexington 

9. Farish C. Tate,* Dem Jasper 

10. T. W. Hardwick. Dem Saundersville 

11. William G. Brantley,* Dem.. .Brunswick 

IDAHO. 

Burton L. French,! Rep Moscow 

ILLINOIS. 

1. Martin Emerich, Dem Chicago 

2. James R. Mann,* Rep Chicago 

3. William W. Wilson. Rep Chicago 

4. George P. Foster,* Dem Chicago 

5. James McAndrews,* Dem Chicago 

6. William Lorimer, Rep Chicago 

7. Philip Knopf. Kep Chicago 

8. William F. Mahony.* Dem Chicago 

9. Henry S. Boutell.* Rep Chicago 

10. George E. Foss,* Rep Chicago 

11. Howard M. Snapp, Rep Joliet 

12. Charles E. Fuller, Rep Belvidere 

13. Robert R. Hitt.* Rep Mount Morris 



17. John A. Sterling, Kep Bloomington 

18. Joseph G. Cannon,* Rep Danville 

19. Vespasian Warner,* Rep Clinton 

20. Henry T. Rainey, Dem Carrollton 

21. Ben F. Caldwell,* Dem Chatham 

22. Wm. A. Rodenberg, Rep.. East St. Louis 

23. Joseph B. Crowley,* Dem Robinson 

24. James R. Williams,* Dem Carmi 

25. George W. Smith,* Rep Murphy sboro 

INDIANA. 

1. James A. Hemenway,* Rep Boonville 

2. Robert W. Miers,* Dem Bloomington 

3. William T. Zenor,* Dem Corydon 

4. Francis M. Griffith,* Dem Vevay 

5. Elias S. Holliday,* Rep Brazil 

6. James E. Watson,* Rep Rushville 

7. Jesse Overstreet,* Rep Indianapolis 

8. George W. Cromer,* Rep Muncie 

9. Charles B. Landis,* Rep Delphi 

10. E. D. Crumpacker,* Rep Valparaiso 

11. Frederick K. Landis, Rep Logansport 

12. James M. Robinson,* Dem.. Fort Wayne 

13. Abraham L. Brick,* Rep South Bend 

IOWA. 

1. Thomas Hedge,* Rep Burlington 

2. Martin J. Wade, Dem Iowa City 

3. B. P. Birdsall, Rep Clarion 

4. Gilbert N. Haugen,* Rep Northwood 

5. Robert G. Cousins.* Rep Tipton 

6. John F. Lacey.* Rep Oskaloosa 

7. John A. T. Hull,* Rep Des Moiues 

8. William P. Hepburn,* Rep Clarinda 



'. Walter I. Smith, 
10. James P. Conner, 



Rep...rCouncil Bluffs 
Rep Denison 



11. Lot Thomas,* Rep Storm Lake 

KANSAS. 
Charles F. Scott, t Rep lola 

1. Charles Curtis.* Rep Topeka 

2. Justin D. Bowersock,* Rep. . ..Lawrence 

3. P. P.'Campbell, Rep Pittsburg 

4. James M. Miller, Rep Council Grove 

5. William A. Calderhead,* Rep.Marvsville 

6. William A. Reeder,* Rep .'Logan 

7. Victor Murdock, Kep Wichita 

KENTUCKY. 

1. Ollie M. James, Dem Marion 

2. A. O. Stanley, Dem Henderson 

3. John S. Rhea, Dem Russellville 

4. David H. Smith.* Dem Hodgensville 

5. Joseph S. Sherley, Dem Louisville 

6. D. Linn Gooch,* Dein Covington 

7. South Trimble.* Dem Frankfort 

8. George G. Gilbert. Dem Shelbyville 

9. James N. Kehoe,* Dem May'sville 

10. Frank A. Hopkins, Dem Prestonburg 

11. Godfrey W. Hunter, Rep London 

LOUISIANA. 

1. Adolph Meyer,* Dem Now Orleans 

2. Robert C. Davey,* Dem New Orleans 

3. Robert F. Broussard,* Dem.. New Iberia 

4. Phanor Breazeale.* Dem.. . .Natchltoches 

5. J. E. Ransdell,* Dem... Lake Providence 

6. S. M. Robertson,* Dem Baton Rouge 

7. A. P. Pujo, Dem Lake Charles 

MAINE. 

1. Amos L. Allen,* Rep Alfred 

2. Charles E. Littlefield.* Rep.. ..Rockland 

3. Edwin C. Burleigh,* Rep Augusta 

4. Llewellyn Powers, * Rep Houston 



174 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. CONTINUED. 



MARYLAND. 

William H. Jackson,* Rep Salisbury 

J. F. C. Talbott, Dem ....Towson 

Frank C. Wachter,* Rep Baltimore 

James W. Denny, Dem Baltimore 

Sydney E. Mudd,* Rep Laplata 

George A. Pearre,* Rep Cumberland 

MASSACHUSETTS. 
George P. Lawrence,* Rep. North Adams 

Frank H. Gillett,* Rep Springfield 

John R. Thayer,* Dem Worcester 

Charles Q. Tirrell,* Rep Natick 

Butler Ames, Rep Lowell 

A. P. Gardner,* Rep Hamilton 

Ernest W. Roberts,* Rep Chelsea 

Samuel W. McCall,* Rep Winchester 

John A. Keliher, Dem Boston 

William S. McNary, Dem Boston 

John A. Sullivan, Dem Boston 

Samuel L.. Powers,* Rep Newton 

William S. Greene,* Rep Fall River 

William C. Levering,* Rep Taunton 

MICHIGAN. 

Alfred Lucking, Dem Detroit 

Charles E. Townsend, Rep Jackson 

Washington Gardner,* Rep Albion 

Edward L. Hamilton,* Rep Niles 

Wm. Alden Smith,* Rep... Grand Rapids 

Samuel W. Smith,* Rep Pontiac 

Henry McMoran, Rep Port Huron 

Joseph W. .Vordney,* Rep Saginaw 

Roswell P. Bishop,* Rep Ludington 

George A. Loud, Rep Oscoda 

A. B. Darragh,* Rep St. Louis 

H. O. Y-oung, Rep Ishpeming 

MINNESOTA. 

James A. Tawney,* Rep Winona 

James T. McCleary,* Rep Mankato 

C. R. Davis, Rep St. Peter 

Fred C. Stevens,* Rep St. Paul 

John Lind. Dem Minneapolis 

C. B. Buckman, Rep Little Falls 

A. J. Volstead, Rep Granite Falls 

J. Adam Bede, Rep Pine City 

Halvor Steenerson, Rep Crookston 

MISSISSIPPI. 

Ezekiel S. Chandler, Jr.,* Dem... Corinth 
Thomas Spight,* Dem Ripley 

B. G. Humphreys, Dem Greenville 

W. S. Hill, Dem Winona 

Adam Byrd, Dem Philadelphia 

E. J. Bowers, Dem Bay St. Louis 

Frank A. McLain,* Dem Gloster 

John S. Williams,* Dem Yazoo 

MISSOURI. 

James T. Lloyd,* Dem Shelby ville 

William W. Rucker,* Dem...Keytesville 

John Dougherty,* Dem Liberty 

Charles F. Cochran,* Dem St. Joseph 

William S. Cowherd.* Dem.. Kansas City 

D. A. DeArmond,* Dem Butler 

C. W. Hamlin, Dem Springfield 

D. W. Shackleford,* Dem. .Jefferson City 

Champ Clark,* Dem Bowling Green 

Richard Bartholdt,* Rep St. Louis 

John T. Hunt, Dem St Louis 

James J. Butler,* Dem St. Louis 

Edward Robb,* Dem Perryville 

W. D. Vandiver,* Dem.. Cape Girardeau 

Maecenas E. Benton,* Dem Neosho 

Robert Lamar. Dem Houston 

MONTANA. 

Joseph M. Dixon.t Rep Missoula 

NEBRASKA. 

Elmer J. Burkett.* Rep Lincoln 

Gilbert M. Hitchcock, Dem Omaha 

J. J. McCarthy, Rep Ponca 



E. H. Hinshaw, Rep ............. Fairbury 

George W. Norris, Rep.'. ......... McCook 

M. P. Kinkaid, Rep ............... O'Neill 

NEVADA. 
C. D. Van Duzer.t Dem .......... Tonopah 

NEW HAMPSHIRE. 
Cyrus A. Sulloway,* Rep ..... Manchester 

Frank D. Currier,* Rep ........... Canaan 

NEW JERSEY. 
H. C. Loudenslager,* Rep ...... Paulsboro 

John J. Gardner,* Rep ..... Atlantic City 

Benj. F. Howell,* Rep.. New Brunswick 
William M. Lanning, Rep ........ Trenton 

Charles N. Fowler,* Rep ....... Elizabeth 

William Hughes, Dem ........... Paterson 

R. Wayne Parker,* Rep .......... Newark 

William H. Wiley, Rep ..... East Orange 

Allan Benny, Dem ............ Jersey City 

Allan L. McDermott,* Dem.. Jersey City 

NEW YORK. 

Townsend Scudder, Dem ........ Brooklyn 

George H. Lindsay,* Dem ....... Brooklyn 

Charles T. Dunwell, Rep ........ Brooklyn 

Frank E. Wilson,* Dem ......... Brooklyn 

E. M. Bassett, Dem ............. Brooklyn 

Robert Baker, Dem .............. Brooklyn 

John J. Fitzgerald,* Dem ...... New York 

T. D. Sullivan, Dem ........... New York 

Henry M. Goldfogle,* Dem.... New York 

William Sulzer,* Dem .......... New York 

William R. Hearst. Dem ....... New York 

George B. McClellan,* Dem... New York 

F. B. Harrison, Dem ...... ...... New York 

Ira E. Rider, Dem .............. New York 



William H. Douglas,* Rep.... New York 

Jacob Ruppert, Jr.,* 

Frank E. Shober, Dem ......... New York 



, .... 

Dem ...... New York 



Joseph A. Goulden, Dem ....... New York 

Norton P. Otis, Rep .............. Yonkers 

Thomas W. Bradley. Rep ........ Walden 

John H. Ketcham,* Rep ____ Dover Plains 

William H. Draper,* Rep.. .Lansingburg 
George N. Southwick,* Rep ....... Albany 

George J. Smith, Rep ........... Kingston 

Lucius N. Littauer.* Rep.. ..Gloversville 

William H. Flaak, Rep ............ Malone 

James S. Sherman,* Rep ............ Utica 

Charles L. Knapp.* Rep ........ Loweville 

Michael E. Driscoll,* Rep ....... Syracuse 

John W. Dwight,* Rep ............ Dryden 

Sereno E. Payne,* Rep ............ Auburn 

James B. Perkins.* Rep ........ Rochester 

Charles W. Gillett, Rep .......... Addison 

James W. Wadsworth,* Rep ..... Genesee 

William H. Ryan,* Dem .......... Buffalo 

De Alva S. Alexander.* Rep ...... Buffalo 

Edward B. Vreeland,* Rep... Salamanca 

NORTH CAROLINA. 
John H. Small,* Dem ........ Washington 

Claude Kitchin,* Dem ..... Scotland Neck 

Charles R. Thomas.* Dem ..... New Bern 

Edward W. Pou,* Dem ........ Smithfield 

William W. Kitchin.* Dem ...... Roxboro 

G. B. Patterson, Dem ............. Maxton 

Robert N. Page, Dem .............. Biscoe 

Theodore F. Kluttz,* Dem ..... Salisbury 

E. Y. Webb, Dem .................. Shelby 

J. M. Gudger. Jr., Dem ......... Asheville 

NORTH DAKOTA. 
Thomas F. Marshall,*! Rep ........ Oakes 

B. F. Spalding.t Rep ............... Fargo 

OHIO. 
Nicholas Longworth, Rep ...... Cincinnati 

Herman P. Goebel, Rep ....... Cincinnati 

Robert M. Nevin.* Rep ............ Dayton 

Harvey C. Garber. Dem ....... Greenville 



COAL PRODUCTION IN THE UNITED STAES. 



175 



HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.-CONTINUED. 



John S. Snook,* Dem Paulding 

Chas. Q. Hildebrant,* Rep. ..Wilmington 

Thomas B. Kyle,* Rep Troy 

William R. Warnock,* Rep Urbana 

James H. Southard,* Rep Toledo 

Stephen Morgan,* Rep Oak Hill 

Charles H. Grosvenor,* Rep Athens 

DeWitt C. Badger, Dem Columbus 

Amos H. Jackson, Rep Fremont 

William W. Skiles,* Rep Shelby 

H. C. Van Voorhis,* Rep Zanesville 

Capell L. Weerns, Rep.... St. Clairsville 
John W. Cassingham,* Dem...Coshocton 

James Kennedy, Rep Youngstowu 

Charles Dick,* Rep Akron 

Jacob A. Beidler,* Rep Willoughby 

Theodore E. Burton,* Rep Cleveland 

OREGON. 
(Vacant.) 
J. N. Williamson, Rep Prineville 

PENNSYLVANIA. 

1. Henry H. Bingham,* Rep. . .Philadelphia 

2. Robert Adams, Jr.,f Rep Philadelphia 



Henry Burk,* Rep Philadelphia 

Reuben O. Moon, Rep Philadelphia 

Edwd. DeV. Morrell.* Rep.. Philadelphia 
George D. McCreary. Rep. ..Philadelphia 

Thomas S. Butler,* Rep West Chester 

Irving P. W T anger,* Rep Norrfstown 

H. Burd Cassel,* Rep Marietta 

George Howell, Dem Scranton 

Henry W. Palmer,* Rep Wilkesbarre 

George R. Patterson,* Rep Ashland 

Marcus C. L. Kline, Dem Allentown 

Charles F. W T right,* Rep.. .Susquehanna 

Elias Deemer, Rep Williamsport 

Charles H. Dickerman, Dem Milton 

T. M. Mahon,* Rep Chambersburg 

Marlin E. Olmste'ad,* Rep.. ..Harrisburg 

Alvin Evans,* Rep Ebensburg 

Daniel F. Lafean, Rep York 

S. R. Dresser, Rep Bradford 

George F. Huff, Rep Breensburg 

Allen F. Cooper, Rep Uniontown 

Ernest F. Acheson,* Rep Washington 

Arthur L. Bates, Rep Meadville 

J. H. Shull, Dem Stroudsburg 

W. O. Smith, Rep Punxsutawney 

Joseph C. Sibley,* Rep Franklin 

G. Shiras, 3d, Rep Allegheny 

John DalzeJl,* Rep..... Pittsburg 

H. Kirke Porter, Rep Pittsburg 

James W. Brown, Rep Pittsburg 

RHODE ISLAND. 

1. D. L. D. Granger, Dem Providence 

2. Adin B. Capron.* Rep Smithfleld 

SOUTH CAROLINA. 

1. George S. Legare, Dem Charleston 

2. George W. Croft, Dem Aiken 

3. Wyatt Aiken, Dem Abbeville 

4. Joseph T. Johnson,* Dem.. .Spartanburg 

5. David B. Finley,* Dem Yorkville 

6. Robert B. Scarborough,* Dem...Conway 

7. A. F. Lever.* Dem Wallaceville 

SOUTH DAKOTA. 

Charles H. Burke, *t Rep Pierre 

Eben W T . Martin,*! Rep Deadwood 

TENNESSEE. 

1. Walter P. Brownlow,* Rep.. ..Jonesboro 

2. Henry R.^ Gibson,^ Rep ^..Knoxville 



John A. Moon,* Dem Chattanooga 



4. M. C. Fitzpatrick, Dem Hartsville 

5. J. D. Richardson,* Dem Murfreesboro 

6. John W. Gaines,* Dem Nashville 

7. Lemuel P. Padgett,* Dem Columbia 

8. Thetus W. Sims,* Dem Linden 

9. Rice A. Pierce,* Dem Union City 

10. M. R. Patterson,* Dem .. Memphis 

TEXAS. 

1. Morris Sheppard,* Dem Texarkana 

2. Sam S. Cooper,* Dem Beaumont 

3. Gordon Russell,* Dem Tyler 

4. C. B. Randell,* Dem Sherman 

5. Jack Beall, Dem Waxahachie 

6. Scott Field, Dem Calvert 

7. A. W. Gregg, Dem Palestine 

8. Thomas H. Ball,* Dem Huntsville 

9. George F. Burgess, Dem Gonzales 

10. Albert S. Burleson,* Dem Austin 

11. Robert L. Henry,* Dem Waco 

12. O. W. Gillespie, Dem Fort Worth 

13. John H. Stephens,* Dem Vernon 

14. James L. Slayden,* Dem San Antonio 

15. John N. Garner, Dem Uvalde 

16. W. R. Smith, Dem Colorado 

UTAH. 

Joseph Howell, t Rep Wellsville 

VERMONT. 

1. David J. Foster,* Rep Burlington 

2. Kittredge Haskins,* Rep.... Brat tleboro 

VIRGINIA. 

1. William A. Jones,* Dem Warsaw 

2. Harry L. Maynard,* Dem Portsmouth 

3. John Lamb,* Dem Richmond 

4. R. G. Southall, Dem Amelia 

5. Claude A. Swanson,* Dem Chatham 

6. Carter Glass, Dem Lynchburg 

7. James Hay,* Dem Madison 

8. John F. Rixey,* Dem Brandy 

9. Campbell Slemp, Rep Big Stone Gap 

10. Henry D. Flood,* Dem..W. Appomattox 

WASHINGTON. 

W T esley L. Jones,*t Rep Yakima 

Francis W. Cushman,*f Rep Tacoma 

William E. Humphrey, Rep Seattle 

WEST VIRGINIA. 

1. B. B. Dovener,* Rep Wheeling 

2. Alston G. Dayton,* Rep Philippi 

3. Joseph H. Gaines,* Rep Charleston 

4. Harry C. Woodyard, Rep Spencer 

5. James A. Hughes,* Rep Huntington 

WISCONSIN. 

1. Henry A. Cooper,* Rep... Racinn 

2. Henry C. Adams, Rep Madison 

3. Joseph W. Babcock,* Rep Necedah 

4. Theobald Otjen,* Rep Milwaukee 

5. William H. Stafford, Rep Milwaukee 

6. C. H. Weisse. Dem Sheboygan Falls 

7. John J. Esch.* Rep LaCrosse 

8. James H. Davidson.* Rep Oshkosh 

9. Edward S. Minor,* Rep.. ..Sturgeon Bay 

10. Webster E. Brown,* Rep Rhinelander 

11. John J. Jenkins,* Rep Chippewa Falls 

WYOMING. 

Frank W. Mondell,*t Rep Newcastle 

TERRITORIAL DELEGATES. 

ARIZONA J. F. Wilson, Dem Prescott 

NEW MEXICO B.S.Rodey,* Rep. Albuquerque 
OKLAHOMA Bird S. Maguire, Rep.. .Guthri*> 
HAWAII J. K. Kalanianaole, Rep. .Honolulu 
PORTO Rico (Commissioner) F. Dege- 

tau, Rep San Juan 



COAL PRODUCTION IN THE UNITED STATES. 



Year. Coal. Tons 

1901 Anthracite 

1902 Anthracite 

1901 Bituminous 225, 



Value 

. 60,242,560 $112,504,020 
81,016,937 
236,406,449 



Year. Coal. 



Tons* 



Value. 



1902 Bituminous 259,641,064 $292,113,906 

*Short tons for anthracite and long tons 
for bituminous. 



176 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



THE PENSION OFFICE. 

NUMBER OF PENSIONS ALLOWED AND INCREASED. 
Fiscal year ended June 30, 1903. With the annual value of all pensions on the rolls. 



CLASS. 



Army, general law- 
Invalids , 

Nurses 

Widows, etc 

Navy, general law- 
Invalids 

Widows, etc 

Army. war with 
Spain Invalids. 
Widows, etc 

Navy , war with Spain 

Invalids 

Widows, etc 

Army, act June 27,'90 

Invalids 

Widows, etc 

Navy, act June 27, '90 

Invalids 

Widows, etc 

War of 1812- 

Survivors 

Widows 

War with Mexico- 
Survivors 

Widows 

Indian wars, 1832-42 

Survivors 

Widows 

Total . . . 



PENSIONS ALLOWED AND INCREASED 
DURING THE YEAR. 



Original. 



No. 



Ann 1 a I 
value. 



Increase, re- Restoration 
issue and and 

additional. renewal. 



No, 



Annual 
value. 



DROPPED 
FROM 

THE 

ROLLS. 



No. 



Annual 
value. 



11 



340 
31 

3.232 



73 
3,313 



$38.634 

4.H20 

458,128 

7,245 
12,924 

351.274 
128,772 

17,862 
9,804 



21,310 



$1,708,4(58 



fc.8'>0 



55 



178 
7 



722 
8 

23 



140301.212,88832,590 



238 1,529,242 



76,560 
38,760 



147 



1,009 
10 



3,852 



18,566 
1,680 



52,614 
980 



1,854 
300 



1.090,267 
13,122 



32.702 
- 744 



2,666 



1.353 
H59 

50 



9,593 

41 

6,357 



119 



136,28418,542 



403,801 



1,836 

188| 



3,334 
144 



4,48 
864 



8,076 



12.096,082 

6.216 

970,892 

45.048 
25,8f2 

110.655 
. 17,364 

8,860 
1,704 

2,273.994 
869,856 

112,242 
41,371 



264. 139 548.393.485 

624 88,536 

86,871 13,391,482 



433 



1,344 

42,432 



80.544 
19.008 



3,134 
17 

7 
7 



150.288 



48 



2.64 
9t> 



'29,568 

112.808 
52.034 

18.000 
33,310 



4,142 

2.221 



8,798 



427,711 
155,249 



16,010 
6,992 



1 
1.115 



5.964 
7,910 



755.624 
437,324 



1,129.719 
538,594 



64,538 
32,454 



47,715.600 

15,825,956 



1,695.576 

701,880 



300 
158,544 



865.344 
770.280 



40.086 4,030/02958,120 



3.019.397 



4.401 



602.71* 



47.388 



6.82r,876 



1,565 152,352 

3.169 305.472 

996,545! 133,029.090 



Average ann ual value each pension 

Average annual value each pension under the general law 

Average annual value each pension on account war with Spain. 
Average annual value each pension under act of June 27. 1890. . 

DISBURSEMENTS. 
Fiscal year ended June 30, 1903. 



$133.49 

170.16 

137.25 

108.82 



Pen- 
sioners. 



Pensions. 



Total. 



Navy 
pensions. 



Grand total. 



Augusta 

Boston 

Buffalo 

Chicago 

Columbus 

Concord 

Des Moines 

Detroit 

Indianapolis 

Knoxville 

Louisville 

Milwaukee 

New York 

Philadelphia 

Pittsburg 

San Francisco 

Topeka 

Washington 

Total 



18.597 
58,044 
48/239 
70.947 
102.037 
17.574 



43.331 
K4.767 
62.880 
28,585 
50.675 
53.758 
61.393 
47,893 
38,051 
115.K29 
53,205 



$2.789.851.78 
6.488.465.35 
6.330.888.07 
9.817.802.84 

14.920.045.53 
2,677.080.11 
7.732.872.03 
6,551,980.22 

10.245.286.72 
8.231,135.51 
3,952.045.22 
7,070.931.28 
6.132,779.28 
7,172.135.08 
6,419.679.87 
4.749,999.85 

15,851,710.29 
6,672,740.75 



$2.802.987.22 
6,517.800.56 
6.356.551.75 
9,853,723.10 

14.964.072.10 
2.089.610.97 
7,760.745.93 
6.575.705.15 

10.280.247.07 
8,261.583.00 
3.969.056.68 
7,104,209.56 
6.166,0(53.58 
7.204.401.31 
6.466.08(5.00 
4.771,506.32 

15.898.40S.08 
7,433,248.57 



$829,445.26 
' 780,b8i'.24 



721.907.63 
503,574.75 



213,529.42 

7S4',13.33' 



$2,802,987.22 
7.347 305.82 
6.356,551.75 

10,633.804.34 

14.964,672.10 
2.089.010.97 
7,700.745.93 
6.575,705.15 

10.280,247.07 
8.261. 583.00 
3.969.050.68 
7.104,269.56 
6.888,631.21 
7.707,970.06 
6.446,080.00 
4.985.035.74 

15.898,408.08 
8.217,411.90 



990.545 



1X3,813,379.78 



135.057.327.01 



8.832,761.63 



138,890.088.04 



"Includes salaries, clerk hire, rents, surgeons' fees and contingent expenses. 

In addition to the above there was disbursed during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1903, the 
following sum. chargeable to the appropriation for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1902: Fees 
of examining surgeons, pensions, $202.037.34. 



THE PENSION OFFICE. 


177 


PENSIONERS CLASSIFIED BY WARS. 


CLASS. 


1903. 


1902. 


1901. 


1900. 


1899. 


Elevoluti unary \var Widows 


2 
3 
1 
1,115 
LS66 
3.169 
5.964 
7,910 

261,139 

86.866 
4,142 
2.221 
624 

427.711 
155.249 
16.010 
6,992 

8,798 
3,488 
402 
174 


4 

J 

903 
3.320 
6.828 
8,017 

277.965 
87.046 
4.360 
2,263 

634 

426.188 
148,201 
151953 
6,977 

6.282 
2.727 
329 
127 


4 

5 

1 
1.527 
1.086 
3.479 
7.568 
8,109 

293.186 
86.504 
4.489 
2.298 
650 

422.481 
138.490 

15,633 
6,621 

3.344 
1.981 
211 

68 


4 

7 
1 
1.742 
1.370 
3,739 
8.352 
8.151 

305.980 
88.463 
4.622 
2,314 
646 

415,265 
129.412 
15.392 
6,314 

822 

845 

8 


4 

7 

1.993 
1,668 
3.899 
9,204 
8,175 

316.834 
90.597 
4,721 
2.293 
653 

405,987 
124,127 
14,925 
6.139 

117 
165 
6 
11 


Daughters 


War of 1812 Survivors 


Widows 


Indian wars Survivors 


Widows 


Mexican war Survivors 


Widows . . . 


SERVICE AFTER MARCH 4, 1861. 










ACT JCNE 27, 1890. 
Army invalids . 






Navv invalids 




Navy widows 


WAR WITH SPAIX. 
General laws Army invalids... 
Army widows 
Navy invalids 






Navy widows 


Total 


996.545 


999.446 


997.735 


993.529 


991.519 


NUMBER OF t 

United States. Xo. Amount. 
Alabama.... 3,756 1433.032.3H 
Alaska 97 12.H14.59 
Arizona 733 103,383.48 
Arkansas.... 11,342 1.515.350.53 
California.... 21.972 2.857.088.22 
Colorado .... 8,359 1,135.866.73 
Connecticut. 12.173 1.419.449.91 
Delaware.... 2.753 384.167.26 
Dist. of Col.. 8.707 1,36-9.038.71 


ENSIONERS ON 1 
I'nittd States. No. 
Tennessee... 18.493 
Texas 8.594 
Utah 8^7 


rHE ROLL 
Amount. 
S8.656.57S.6t; 
L08S.486.4f 
130.43S.4f 
1.347,270.95 
1.285.357.6? 
1,022,161.7^ 
1.746.405.32 
4,083.717.14 
123.714 54 


3 JUNE 30, 1903. 
Foreign. No. 
iGermany 584 
.Greece 7 
Guatemala.. 3 
Honduras.... 2 
| Hongkong... 5 
! India . . 7 


Amount. 
$81,755.17 
1.002.00 
410.93 
330.00 
456.00 
1.311.33 
62.855.5.') 
72.00 
5.598.60 
1.548.00 
1.223.67 
696.00 
551.20 

20.718.55 
942.00 
475.47 
678.00 
120.00 
6,099.53 
420.00 
612.00 
54.00 
1,222.50 
90.00 
16,938.79 
144.00 
72.00 
225.00 
588.00 
144.00 
7,978.47 
10,639.33 
960.00 
288.00 
4oO.OO 
72 IN 
1.4SXJ;; 
1.444.53 


Vermont 8.786 
Virginia 9.6S 
Washington. 8.067 
W. Virginia.. 12.687 
Wisconsin... 27.5t 
Wyoming.... 883 


! Ireland 449 
'Isle of Man.. 1 
! Italy 40 


Florida 3.409 425.t5til.24 
Georgia 3,618 452.813.79 
Idaho 1.802 242,849.13 
Illinois 71.627 9,762.859.67 
Indiana 64,164 10,101.722.26 
Indian Ter. . 3.558 467.074.29 
Iowa 36.782 5,362.589.84 
Kansas 40.669 5.676.671.86 
Kentucky . . . 28.508 3,946,M3.88 
Louisiana... 6.402 831,739.68 
Maine . 19,542 2.913.173.U1 


Tota 

IftffUi 

possess^ 
Hawaii 
Philipp 
Porto B 
Tota 

Fore id 
Argenti 
Austral 
Aust.Hi 
Azores. 
Baham: 
Belgiun 
Bermud 
Bolivia. 
Brazil .. 
Brit.Gu 
Canada 
Chile ... 
China.. 
Comoro 
Costa R 
Cuba... 
Dan.W. 
Denmai 
DutcliV 
Ecuado 
Englanc 
Egypt.. 
France 

d territo 
ossessio 
countrie 


1 991.836 136.992.181.32 Liberia 10 


or 

ons. 
39 $2:279.60 
nes.. 31 2.439.4c 
ico. . 20 1.188.01 


Madeira 5 
Malta 3 
Mauritius... 1 
Mexico 148 
Netherlands. 7 
NewfoundFd 5 
New Zealand 6 
Nicaragua... 1 
Norway 50 
Paraguay.... 2 
Peru 6 
Portugal 1 
Russia 9 
Samoa , 2 
(Scotland...,. 121 
) Seychelleslsl 1 
) Siarn 1 
1 South Africa 2 
Spain 5 
St. Helena.. 1 
Sweden 57 
Switzerland. 76 
Turkey 6 
1 U. S. ofCol'a 3 
Uruguay 2 
> Venezuela... 
J Wales 11 


1 90 5,907.0c 


n. 
na . . . 8 
ia.... 4S 

ing'y & 

is"!' 4 
i 14 
a.... 4 
1 


Jl.026.0l 
6,859.61 
4.758.6C 
444.01 
537.(X 
2,567.2- 
510.W 
144.01 
492.01 
72.0 
323,6t;.8< 
2.238.0( 
3.124.7 
210.01 
486.01 
6,580.t> 
96.01 
4.478.1; 
372.01 
276.01 
47.463.0 
ZI6M 
fcraa 

IV. 

ymentstott 
ments to th< 
ents to the 


Maryland.... 12.944 1.683.843.02 
Massachu' ts 40.071 5.228,190.62 
Michigan.... 43.435 6.546.50U.91 
Minnesota... 16.750 2.294.ir,''i.44 
Mississippi.. 4.629 570.284.8tJ 
Missouri .... 52.157 7.124.771.91 
Montana.... 1.894 258.4U5.61 
Nebraska.... 17.151 2,319.129.10 
Nevada 276 34.412.51 
N.Hampsh'e. 8.662 1.300.578.6K 
New Jersev.. 20.646 2.329.346.13 
New Mexico. 1.802 251,586.23 
New York.... 89.921 11.756.050.86 
N.Carolina.. 4.096 509.001.67 
N.Dakota... 1.951 231.529.00 
Ohio 102.318 15.029.565.62 
Oklahoma... 8.818 1,200,678.16 
Oregon.. .. 6.117 77s.773.77 
Pennsvlva'a.lOl.lW 13.33U.2U1.72 
Rhode" Isl'd.. 4.885 573.S36.13 
S.Carolina.. 1.9*2 23S.S-i2.20 
S. Dakota.... 5.066 509.365.69 

Pensioners residing in states ac 
Pensioners residing in insular i 
Pensioners residing in foreign 


iana. 1 

:::::: 2 - 3 !! 

14 
Islds 1 
ica... 4 
47 
Ind's. 1 
*.... 32 

r.ind. a 

r 2 
1 33H 
2 
7C 

SOIMAI 

ries and pa 
nsand pay 
s and paym 


J West Indies.. 9 
) Total 4.619 

Pensioners 
lem 991,836 $ 
jni 90 


648,053.04 

Payments. 
I36.992.lsi.3i 
5.907.05 
648.053.04 


01 


4.619 




996.545 


137.646.141.41 
113.512.;>0 


Payments by treasury department (treasury settlements) . . . 
Total pavments on account of army and navy pensions 


137.759.653.71 



178 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



TOTAL COST OF PENSIONS. 



FISCAL YEAR. 



DISBURSEMENTS FOR 
PENSIONS. 



Army. 



Nary. 



Vostofdis- 
Fees of ex- bursem'nt 
amining 
surgeons. 



PENSION BUREAU. 



Salaries. 



Other ex- 
penses. 



Num- 
ber of 

pen- 

ioners 
m rolls 



1st;:. 
1868. 

I St I'.). 

1870. 
1871. 

1ST'.'. 
1873. 
1874. 
1875. 
1876. 
1877. 
1878. 
1879. 
l-sn. 
1881. 
18821 
1883. 
1-^4. 
1885. 
1886. 



1890 

1891....... 

189S 

1893 

1894 

1895 

1896 

1897 

1898 

1899 

1900 

1901 

1902 

1903 

Total 



$15.158.598.64 
20,552.948.47 
22.811,183.75 
28il6S.323.34 
29.043.237.00 
28.081.542.41 
29276,921.02 
26,502.528.96 
29.603.159.24 
28.727.104.76 
27.411.309.53 
27,659.461.72 
26.251.725.91 
33.109.339.92 
55.901.670.42 
49.419.905.35 
53.328.192.05 
59 468.610.70 
56.945,115.25 
64,222,275.34 
63,034.642.90 
72,464.236.69 
77.712,789.27 
86.996.502.15 
103.809.250.39 
114,744.750.83 
135,9H,611.76 
153,045,460.94 
136,495,965.61 
136,156,808.35 
134,632,175.88 
136.313,914.64 
140.924,348.71 

134,743.790.81 
133.655 245.75 

133,922.581.95 



$291.951.24 

231.841.22 

290,325.61 

344.923.93 

308.251.78 

437.250.21 

475.825.79 

479,534.93 

603,619.75 

543.300.00 

524.900.00 

523.360.00 

534.283.53 

555.089.00 

787.558.6b 

1.163,500.00 

984.980.00 

958.963.11 

967.272.22 

949.661.78 

1.058.500.00 

1.288,760.39 

1.237.712.40 

1.846,218.43 

2,285,000.00 

2,567.939.6' 

3,479.535.85 

3,861.177.00 

3.490.760.56 

3.1550.980.43 

3.582,999.10 

3.635.802.71 

3.727,531.09 

3.683.794.27 

3.761.533.41 

3,787.693.03 

3.849.022 24 

3.837.400.76 



) Paid 

|. from 
army 
and 
navy 

j-pen- 

I sions. 

I No 
separate 

I account 

J kept. 
$66,824.42 
234.968. 
86.538. 
75,547. 
116,737.00 
232.595.87 
341,186.49 
262.066.32 
482.181.13 
492,714.76 

1,106.324.92 
845.143.61 
787,391.7 
895,677.62 

1.640.993.76 

1,725.597.4' 

1,657.628.30 
672.678.50 
807,767.33 
672,587.4 
678.395.44 
894.249.08 

1.007,636.7fc 
747.497.8C 
844.262.6t 
814,470.32 
928,408.58 



1,986,027.55 
1.978.119.98 
1.957,725.43 
2.301,721.80 
2,494.122.87 
2.460.044.50 
2,403.522.75 
2,461.890.50 
2.258.959.35 
2.262.597.7( 
2,254.181.41 
496.49 2,151.578.85 



522.812.lfc 



2.135.542.55 
2.118.993.2C 
2.114.153.75 
2.114.483.05 



$15,000.00 
27.615.86 
31.834.14 
43,519.50 
51.125.00 
58.980.00 
57.557.78 
90.855.39 
75.048.72 
73,799.35 
98.798.88 
67,102.78 
41.240.90 
54.088.70 
55,035.68 
46.462.19 
130,981.85 
241.555.83 
333,522.42 
511.492.12 
509,291.91 
430.195.91 
420.776.24 
422.554.5( 
380,281.73 
377.560.74 
178.823.44 
230,768.6~ 
370,344.6V 
504.912.55 
494.800.94 
474.350.55 
429.031.1 
465.805.6,' 
435.854.2; 
379.646.7( 
376.340.7 
422.683.1 



155,474 

1871963 
188,686 
207,495 
232.189 

238,411 
236,241 
234.821 
232.137 
232,104 
223,998 
242,755 
260^02 

113 

803,668 

322,756 
345,125 

%% 

452,557 
489,725 
537,944 
676,160 
876.068 
966.012 
969.544 
970,524 
970.678 
976.01 
993.71 
991,51i 
983,52f 
997.73 
999,44 
996,54f 



2.875,581.357.33 66,596.788.60 



19,118.071.53 



14,194,939.3 



52.925.283.30 



9.409,640.51 



Total disbursements since 1790, $3,037,826,080.64. *Approximate. 

NAMES OF SURVIVING WIDOWS AND DAUGHTERS OF REVOLUTIONARY SOL- 
DIERS ON THE PENSION ROLLS JUNE 30. 1902. 



NAME. 



Barrett, Hannah Newell*. . . 

Damon, Esther S 

Hurlburt. Sarah C.* 

Mayo, Rebecca 

Thompson, Rhoda Augusta* 



Name of soldier. 



Harrod, Noah 

Damon, Noah 

Weeks. Elijah 

Mayo, Stephen 

Thompson, Thaddeus. 



Service. 



Address. 



Massachusetts. Boston. Mass. 
Massachusetts. Plymouth Union, Vt 
Massachusetts. Little Marsh, Pa. 

Virginia ..iNewbern, Va. 

New York Woodbury. Corn. 



*Daughter; pensioned by special act. 
SPANISH WAR PENSIONS. 



1902. 



1901. 



1899. 



Total. 



Original invalid applications 

Other applications 

Applications admitted 

Applications rejected 

Applications consolidated, etc.... 
Applications on hand 



11.970 
4.242 
5.266 



10,210 
2.783 
4,530 
7.977 



12.814 

2.639 
4,212 
6.385 



12,038 

1.580 
1,511 



15.009 

2.593 

303 

41 



37.195 



34.456 



28.545 



17,335 



62.04 
13.837 
15. 
20, 
2.035 



The expenditures by way of total annual payments are as follows: 

1899 $28.606,81 I 1901 $1.175.225.76 I 191)3 .$2.204.084.21 

1900 332,905.2511902 1.738.446.381 Total 5,479.26 

RATES OF EXISTING PENSIONS 



$6 and under 129.614 



From $6 to $8. inclusive. .344.620 From $18to$20. inclusive. 7.316 Fromi72to$l65.inclusive. ' 77 



From $8 to $10, inclusive. 83.696 
From $10 to $12. inclusive. 296.084 
From $12 to $14. inclusive. 22,926 



From $14 to $15, inclusive . 
From $15 to $16. inclusive. 



3.732 
9.034 



From $17 to$18. inclusive. 736 



From $20to*24. inclusive. 26.216 At $125 
From $24 to $25. inclusive. 3.114 At $16rt' 
From $25 to $30, inclusive. 14.472 At $208 



From $16 to $17, inclusive. 43.784 



From $30 to $36. inclusive. 
From $36 to $45, inclusive. 
From $45 to $50, inclusive. 



From $50 to $72, inclusive. 3,787 



540 At $416 
3.536 
3.254 Total. 



996.545 



THE ARMY. 



179 



of tfjc mntteti States. 

Corrected to Oct. 20, 1903. 
GENERAL STAFF, DIVISION AND DEPARTMENT COMMANDERS. 



GENERAL STAFF OF THE ARMY. 
Lieut. -Gen. Samuel B. M. Young, chief of 

staff. 

Maj.-Gen. Adna R. Chaffee. 
Brig.-Gen. William H. Carter. 
Brig.-Gen. Wallace F. Randolph. 

COLONELS. 

Alexander Mackenzie, corps of engineers. 
John B. Kerr, 12th U. S. cavalry. 
Enoch H. Crowder, judge-advocate general's 

department. 

LIEUTENANT-COLONELS. 

Henry P. McCain, adjutant-general's de- 
partment. 

James T. Kerr, adjutant-general's depart- 
ment. 

Frederick A. Smith, U. S. infantry, in- 
spector-general's department. 

Crosby P. Miller, quartermaster's depart- 
ment. 

Charles Shaler, ordnance department. 
MAJORS. 

John G. D. Knight, corps of engineers. 

George W. Goethals, corps of engineers. 

Edward J. McClernand, U. S. cavalry, ad- 
jutant-general's department. 

James A. Irons, U. S. infantry, inspector- 
general's department. 

William A. Mann, 14th U. S. infantry. 

William P. Duvall, artillery corps. 

Montgomery M. Macomb, artillery corps. 

William D. Beach, 10th U. S. cavalry. 

John S. Mallory, 1st U. S. infantry. 

Samuel Reber, signal corps. 

CAPTAINS. 

William W. Gibson, ordnance department. 

David Du B. Gaillard, corps of engineers. 

Benjamin Alvord, 25th U. S. infantry. 

Jostph T. Dickman, 8th U. S. cavalry. 

Harry C. Hale, 20th U. S. infantry. 

Chrrles H. Muir, 2d U. S. infantry. 

Frank DeW. Ramsey, 9th U. S. infantry. 

Frank Mclutyre, 19th U. S. infantry. 

Sydney A. Cloman, 23d U. S. infantry. 

Robert E. L. Michie, 12th U. S. cavalry. 

John J. Pershing, 15th U. S. cavalry. 

Charles T. Menoher, artillfiry corps. 

William C. Rivers, 1st U. S. cavalry. 

Poyton C. March, artillery corps. 

William G. Haan, artillery corps. 

Charles D. Rhodes, 6th U. S. cavalry. 

Horace M. Reeve, 3d U. S. infantry. 

Hugh J. Gallagher, subsistence department. 

Dernis E. Nolan, 30th U. S. infantry. 

John C. Oakes (1st It. corps of engineers). 
DIVISIONS AND DEPARTMENTS. 

DIVISION OF THE PHILIPPINES Consisting of 
the department of Luzon, Visayas and 
Mindanao; commander, Maj.-Gen. James 
F. Wade. 

DEPARTMENT OF LUZON Includes all that 
portion of the Philippine archipelago lying 
north of a line passing southoastwardly 
through the west pass of Apo, or Mindoro 
strait, to the 12th parallel of north 
latitude, thence east along said parallel 



to the 124th degree 10 minutes east of 
Greenwich, but including the entire island 
of \iasbate, thence north to San Bernard- 
ino straits; headquarters, Manila, P. I.; 
commander, Brig.-Gen. G. M. Randall. 

DEPARTMENT OF THE VISAYAS Includes all 
islands south of the southern line of the 
department of Luzon east of longitude 
121 degrees 45 minutes east of Greenwich 
and north of the 9th parallel of latitude, 
excepting the islands of Mindanao and 
Paragua and all islands east of the straits 
of Surigao; headquarters, Iloilo, P. I.; 
commander, Brig.-Gen. Theodore J. Wint. 

DEPARTMENT OF MINDANAO Includes all 
the remaining islands of the Philippine 
archipelago; headquarters, Zamboango, P. 
I.; commander, Maj.-Gen. Leonard Wood. 

DEPARTMENT OF CALIFORNIA States of Cali- 
fornia and Nevada, the Hawaiian islands 
and their dependencies; headquarters, San 
Francisco, Cal. ; commander, Maj.-Gen. 
Arthur MacArthur. 

DEPARTMENT OF THE COLORADO States of 
Wyoming (except so much thereof as is em- 
braced in the Yellowstone national park), 
Colorado and Utah, and the territories of 
Arizona and New Mexico; headquarters, 
Denver, Col.; commander, Brig.-Gen. 
Frank D. Baldwin. 

DEPARTMENT . OF THE COLUMBIA States of 
Washington, Oregon, Idaho (except so 
much of the latter as is embraced in the 
Yellowstone national park), and the terri- 
tory of Alaska; headquarters, Vancouver 
barracks, Washington; commander, Brig 
Gen. Frederick Funston. 

DEPARTMENT OF DAKOTA States of Minne- 
sota, North Dakota, South Dakota, Mon- 
tana, and so much of Wyoming and Idaho 
as is embraced in the Yellowstone nation- 
al park; headquarters, St. Paul, Minn.: 
commander, Brig.-Gen. William A. Kobbe. 

DEPARTMENT OF THE EAST New England 
states, New York, New Jersey, Pennsyl- 
vania, Delaware, Maryland, District of 
Columbia, West Virginia, Virginia. North 
Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, 
Alabama, Mississippi. Louisiana, the 
island of Porto Rico and the islands 
and keys adjacent thereto; headquarters, 
Governor's island. Now York; command- 
er, Maj.-Gen. Henry C. Corbin. 

DEPARTMENT OF THE LAKES States of Wis- 
consin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana. Ohio, 
Kentucky and Tennessee; headquarters, 
Chicago, 111.; commander, Maj.-Gen. John 
C. Bates. 

DEPARTMENT OF THE MISSOURI States of 
Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri. Kansas and Ar- 
kansas, the Indian Territory and the ter- 
ritory of Oklahoma; headquarters, Omaha, 
Neb.; commander, Maj.-Gen. Samuel S. 
Sumner. 

DEPARTMENT OF TEXAS State of Texas; 
headquarters, San Antonio, Tex.; com- 
mander, Brig.-Gen. F. D. Grant. 



OFFICERS OF THE ARMY. 

LIEUTENANT-GENERAL S. B. M. Young. I BRIGADIER-GENERALS G. M. Randall, W. 

MAJOR-GENERALS Adna R. Chaffee, Arthur | A. Kobbe. F. D. Grant. J. F. Bell, F. 
MacArthur, John C. Bates, James F. I Funston, F. D. Baldwin, T. J. Wint. Jesse 
Wade. S. S. Sumner. Leonard Wood. M. Lee. W. H. Carter, T. H. Bliss, J. 



180 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



P. Sanger, Francis Moore, P. C. Hains, 
Camillo C. C. Carr, Thomas H. Barry. 
ADJUTANT-GENERAL William P. Hall (act- 

ASSISTANT ADJUTANTS-GENERAL With rank 
of colonel: William P. Hall (acting aaju- 
tant-general), Arthur L. Wagner, H eury 
O. S. Heistand, George Andrews, W. A. 
Simpson. 

With rank of lieutenant-colonel: Henry 
P. McCain (gen. staff), James T. Kerr, 
R. W. Hoyt, James Parker, E. R. Hills, 
S W. Taylor, J. S. Pettit. 

With rank of major: Edward J. Mc- 
Clernaud (gen. staff), Alfred C. Sharpe, 
Robert K. Evans, W. E. Wilder, Millard 
F. W'altz, Daniel A. Frederick, William 
P. Evans, W. L. Finley, Charles G. Starr, 
Edward Davis, Hunter Liggett, John R. 
Williams, Eben Swift, S. W. Dunning, J. 
\. White. 

INSPECTOR-GENERAL With rank of briga- 
dier-general: George H. Burton. 

INSPECTORS-GENERAL With rank of colonel: 
Ernest A. Garlington, Charles H. Heyl, 
Stephen C. Mills. 

With rank of lieutenant-colonel: John 
L. Chamberlain, Frederick A. Smith, 
Charles A. Williams, Frank West. 

With rank of major: Herbert E. Tuth- 
erly, Hobart K. Bailey, James A. Irons, 
Thomas R Adams, L. A. Lovering, Lea 
Ft-biger, J. D. C. Hoskins, W. A. Nichols, 
George H. G. Gale. 

JUDGE-ADVOCATE GENERAL With rank of 
brigadier-general: George B. Davis. 

JUDGE ADVOCATES With rank pf colonel: 
Edward Hunter, Enoch H. Crowder. 

With rank of lieutenant-colonel: Edgar 
S. Dudley, H. C. Carbaugh, John A. Hull. 
With rank of major: George M. Dunn, 
Frank L. Dodds, John Biddle Porter, 
Lewis E. Goodier, Henry M. Morrow, Wal- 
ter A. Bethel. 

QUARTERMASTER-GENERAL With rank of 
brigadier-general: Charles F. Humphrey. 

ASSISTANT QUARTERMASTERS-GENERAL With 
rank of colonel: James M. Marshall, C. 
A. H. McCauley, F. H. Hathaway, J. W. 
Jacobs, John L. Clem, W. S. Patten. 

With rank of lieutenant-colonel: George 
E. Pond, John W. Pullman, James W. 
Pope, Crosby P. Miller, Theodore True, 
John McE. Hyde, George Ruhlen, W. H. 
Miller. S. R. Jones. 

COMMISSARY-GENERAL With rank of briga- 
dier-general: John F. Weston. 

ASSISTANT COMMISSARIES-GENERAL With 
rank of colonel: Henry G. Sharpe, Frank 
E. Nye. William L. Alexander. 

DEPUTY COMMISSARIES-GENERAL With rank 
of lieutenant-colonel: Henry B. Osgood, 
Edward E. Dravo, Abiel L.' Smith, James 

SURGEON-GENERAL With rank of brigadier- 
general: Robert M. O'Reilly. 



ASSISTANT SURGEONS-GENERAL With rank 
of colonel: Charles Smart, Henry Lippin- 
cott, Charles L. Heizmanu, Alfred C. 
Girard, Joseph B. Girard, John D. Hall, 
W. C. Gorgas, Philip F. Harvey, Charles 
B. Byrne. 

DEPUTY SURGEONS-GENERAL With rank of 
lieutenant-colonel: Timothy E. Wilcox, 
Valery Havard, John Van R. Hoff, 
George W. Adair, Edward B. Mosely, 
Louis M. Maus, Henry S. Turrill, Blair D. 
Taylor, Edward T. Comegys, H. S. Kil- 
bourn, G. H. Torney, Louis W. Crampton. 

PAYMASTER-GENERAL With rank of briga- 
dier-general: Alfred E. Bates. 

ASSISTANT PAYMASTERS-GENERAL With rank 
of colonel: Frank M. Coxe, Albert S. 
Towar, Culver C. Suiffen. 

DEPUTY PAYMASTERS-GENERAL With rank 
of lieutenant-colonel: Francis S. Dodge, 
Charles H. Whipple, William H. Comegys, 
William F. Tucker. 

PAYMASTERS With rank of major: John C. 
Muhlenberg, George R. Smith, Elijah W. 
Halford, Charles E. Kilbourne, John L. 
Bullis, Harry L. Rogers, Jerome A. Wat- 
rous, William W. Gilbert, Harry L. Rees, 
Webster Vinson, Hamilton S. Wallace, 
Francis L. Payson, George F. Downey, 
Thomas C. Goodman, James B. Houston, 
Beecher B. Ray, Herbert M. Lord, Wil- 
liam B. Rochester, Jr., Robert S. Smith, 
Seymour Howell. 

CHIEF OF ENGINEERS With rank of briga- 
dier-general: George L. Gillespie. 

Colonels: Charles R. Suter, Garret J. 
Lydecker, Amos Stickney, Alexander Mac- 
kenzie, O. H. Ernst, David P. Heat, Wil- 
liam A. Jones. 

Lieutenant-colonels: Charles J. Allen, 
Charles W. Raymond, Alexander M. Mil- 
ler, Milton B. Adams, William R. Liver- 
more, William H. Heuer, William S. 
Stanton, Thomas H. Handbury, Henry M. 
Adams, Charles E. L. B. Davis, James B. 
Quinn, D. W. Lockwood, E. H. Ruffner, 
Clinton G. Sears. 

CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER With rank of briga- 
dier-general: William Crozier. 

Colonels: Alfred Mordecai, John R. 
McGinnis, Frank H. Phipps, John G. 
Butler. 

Lieutenant-colonels: J'ohn E. Greer, 
John Pitman, Charles Shaler, Charles S. 
Smith, S. E. Blunt, Frank Heath. 

CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER With rank of briga- 
dier-general: Adolphus W. Greely. 

SIGNAL OFFICER With rank of colonel: 
Henry H. C. Dunwoody. 
Lieutenant-colonel: James Allen. 

RECORD AND PENSION OFFICE. 
CHIEF With rank of brigadier-general: 

Fred C. Ainsworth. 
ASSISTANT CHIEF With rank of major: 

John Tweedale. 



REGIMENTAL OFFICERS. 



CAVALRY. 

1. Colonel, Martin B. Hughes; lieutenant- 
colonel, Frederick K. Ward: majors, 
Joseph A. Gaston, A. P. Blocksom, 
Jacob G. Galbraith. 

2. Colonel, W. S. Edgerly; lieutenant-colo- 
nel. Walter S. Schuyler: majors, Daniel 
C. Pearson, John- Bigelow, Jr., H. J. 
Sloourn. 

3. Colonel. Joseph H. Dorst; lieutenant- 
colonel, William H. Beck; majors, Ed- 
win P. Andrus, George A. Dodd, A. G. 
Hammond. 

4. Colonel, Edgar C. Steever; lieutenant- 



colonel. S. W. Fountain; majors, Cun- 
liffe H. Murray, Frank A. Edwards, 
James Lockett. 

5. Colonel, Clarence A. Stedman; lieuten- 
ant-colonel, George H. Paddock; majors, 
Charles H. Watts, Hoel S. Bishop, F. O. 
Johnson. 

6. Colonel, Allen Smith; lieutenant-colonel, 
Peter S. Bomus: majors, George K. Hun- 
ter, John Pitcher, B. H. Cheever. 

7. Colonel, Charles Morton; lieutenant-colo- 
nel, Samuel L. Woodward; majors, 
Charles A. Varnum, Ezra B. Fuller, L. 
S. McCormick. 



THE ARMY. 



181 



8. Colonel, George S. Anderson; lieutenant- 
colonel, Henry P. Kingsbury; majors, 
Charles G. Ayers, William A. Shunk, 
Henry L. Ripley. 

9. Colonel, E. S. Godfrey: lieutenant- 
colonel, Edward A. Godwin; majors, 
James B. Erwiu, George H. Morgan, D. 
H. Boughton. 

10. Colonel, Jacob A. Augur; lieutenant- 
colonel, Otto L. Hein; majors, George L. 
Scott, William D. Beach, Robert D. 
Read. Jr. 

11. Colonel, Earl D. Thomas; lieutenant- 
colonel, William Stanton; majors, James 

B. Hickey, F. W. Sibley, H. W. 
Wheeler. 

12. Colonel, John B. Kerr; lieutenant-colo- 
nel. George F. Chase; majors, John F. 
Guilfoyle. H. F. Kendall, H. G. Sickel. 

13. Colonel, Charles A. P. Hatneld; lieuten- 
ant-colonel, Frank U. Robinson; majors, 
Levi P. Hunt, T. W. Jones, Charles W. 
Taylor. 

14. Colonel, Thomas C. Lebo; lieutenant- 
colonel, Joseph Garrard; majors, F. H. 
Hardie, Charles M. O'Connor, Hugh L. 
Scott. 

15. Colonel, M. Wallace; lieutenant-colo- 
nel, Alex. Rodgers; majors, M. W. Day, 
John C. Gresham, C. B. Hoppin. 

INFANTRY. 

1. Colonel, Walter T. Duggan; lieutenant- 
colonel, Henry A. Green; majors, Frank 
De L. Carrington, John S. Mallory, R. 
N. Getty. 

2. Colonel, Francis W. Mansfield; lieuten- 
ant-colonel, William B. Wheeler; ma- 
jors. Nat P. Phister, E. H. Browne, 
Harry L. Bailey. 

3. Colonel, Harry L. Haskell; lieutenant- 
colonel, James E. Macklin; majors, 
Arthur Williams, William L. Buck, E. 
H. Plummer. 

4. Colonel, Henry P. Ray; lieutenant-colo- 
nel, Calvin D. Cowles; majors, Henry 
E. Robinson, Charles W. Mason. John 

C. F. Tillson. 

5. Colonel, Henry H. Adams; lieutenant- 
colonel, George P. Borden; majors, Wil- 
liam H. C. Bowen, E. F. Glenu, Wallis 
O. Clark. 

6. Colonel, Joseph W. Duncan; lieutenant- 
colonel, R. H. R. Loughborough ; majors, 
Charles G. Morton, W. W. Wotherspoon, 
J. H. Beacom. 

7. Colonel, . Daniel Cornman; lieutenant- 
colonel, Charles A. .Booth; majors. E. E. 
Hardin, Arthur C. Ducat, W.K. Wright. 

8. Colonel, William E. Dougherty; lieuten- 
ant-colonel, Charles J. Crane; majors, 
R. H. Wilson, R. B. Turner, Colville P. 
Terrett. 

9. Colonel, James Regan; lieutenant-colo- 
nel, Edgar B. Robertson: majors, R. J. 
C. Irvine, Frank J. Jones, Charles R. 
Noyes. 

10. Colonel, Charles H. Noble; lieutenant- 
colonel, Edwin B. Bolton; majors. H. B. 
Moon, L. W. V. Kennon, R. C. Van 
Vliet. 

11. Colonel, Albert L. Myer; lieutenant-colo- 



nel, Daniel H. Brush; majors, James B. 
Jackson, P. M. Travis, R. M. Blatch- 
ford. 

12. Colonel, J. W. Bubb; lieutenant-colonel, 
H. S. Foster; majors, P. G. Wood, F. P. 
Fremont, George Bell. Jr. 

13. Colonel, A. C. Markley; lieutenant- 
colonel, Thomasi C. Woodbury; majors, 
B. A. Byrne, A. R. Paxton, William 
Black. 

14. Colonel, S. P. Jocelyn; lieutenant-colonel, 
George LeR. Brown; majors, Charles 
McClure, William A. Mann. 

15. Colonel, Henry C. Ward; lieutenant- 
colonel, Edward B. Pratt; majors, C. St. 
J. Chubb, William Lassiter, W. T. May. 

16. Colonel, Butler D. Price; lieutenant- 
colonel, L. C. Allen; majors, F. H. 
French, R. F. Ames, John Newton. 

17. Colonel, John T. Van Orsdale; lieuten- 
ant-colonel, George K. McGunnigle; ma- 
jors, James A. Maney, E. Chynoweth, F. 

B. McCoy. 

IS. Colonel, Charles B. Hall; lieutenant- 
colonel, \Valter S. Scott; majors, G. S. 
Young, William Paulding, Henry Kirby. 

19. Colonel, Joseph T. Huston; lieutenant- 
colonel, Frank Taylor; majors, S. A. 
Wolf, James B. Coe, S. W. Miller. 

20. Colonel, William S. McCaskey; lieuten- 
ant-colonel, Alfred Reynolds; majors, 
William T. Wood, James S. Rogers, 
Charles B. Hardin. 

21. Colonel, Jacob Kline; lieutenant-colonel, 
Cornelius Gardener; majors. George Pal- 
mer, L. J. Hearn, H. A. Leonhauser. 

22. Colonel. Henry Wygant; lieutenant-colo- 
nel, Marion P. Maus; majors, John J. 
Crittenden, Abner Pickering, John S. 
Parke, Sf. 

23. Colonel, Philip Reade; lieutenant-colo- 
nel, Charles L. Hodges; majors, H. H. 
Benham, Charles M. Truitt, Henry W. 
Hovey. 

24. Colonel, James A. Buchanan; lieutenant- 
colonel, John C. Dent; majors. Z. W T . 
Torrey, W. H. Cowles, Elias Chandler. 

25. Colonel, John B. Rodman; lieutenant- 
colonel, W. H. W. James; majors, W. 

C. Butler, J. M. T. Partello. Charles W. 
Abbott. 

26. Colonel, C. Williams; lieutenant-colonel, 
G. A. Cornish; majors, L. W. Cooke, G. 
F. Cooke, Charles J. T. Clarke. 

27. Colonel, Samuel R. Whitall; lieutenant- 
colonel, Richard Y. Yeatman; majors, J. 
A. Emery, Charles R. Tyler, E. W. 
Howe. 

28. Colonel, Owen J. Sweet; lieutenant-colo- 
nel, William L. Pitcher; majors, G. H. 
Roach, R. L. Bullard, L. H. Strother. 

29. Colonel, B. C. Lockwood; lieutenant- 
colonel, J. G. Ballance; majors, A. A. 
Augur, W. A. Thurston, E. P. Pendle- 
ton. 

30. Colonel, John J. O'Connell; lieutenant- 
colonel, Thomas F. Davis; majors, 
Charles Byrne, W. R. Abercrombie, 
George R. Cecil. 

Porto Rico Provisional Regiment Lieuten- 
ant-colonel, Charles J. Crane; majors, 
Robert F. Annes, R. L. Howze. 



RETIRED LIST. 

ABOVE THE RANK OF MAJOR-ALPHABETICALLY ARRANGED. 
Annual pay Lieutenant-general. $8.250; major-general, $5,625; brigadier-general, $4.125; 
colonel, $3,375; lieutenant-colonel. $3.000. 

Corrected to Nov. 20, 1903. 

Abbott, Henry L., Col.. Cambridge. Mass. \ Anderson, Thomas M., Brig. -Gen., Soldiers' 
Alden. Charles H.. Col.. Nfwtonville, Mass. Home, Erie county, Ohio. 
Alexander. Chas. T., Col.. Washington, D.O. ' Andrews, Geo. L., Col., Washington, D. C. 



182 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Andrews, John N., Col., Wilmington, Del. 
Andruss, E. V. A., Col., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Atwood, E. B., Brig.-Gen., Chicago, 111. 
Auman, Wm., Brig.-Gen., Buffalo, N. Y. 
Avery, Robert, Lieut. -Col., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Babbitt, L, S., Col., Dover, N. J. 
Babcock, John B., Brig.-Gen., Stonington, 

Conn. 

Bacon, John M., Col., Vancouver, Wash. 
Bailey, Clarence M., Col., Chicago, 111. 
Baily, Elisha I., Col., San Francisco, Gal. 
Bainbridge, Augustus H., Lieut.-CoL, Kan- 

Baird, Absaloni. Brig.-Gen., Catonsville, Md. 
Baird, G. W., Brig.-Gen., Washington, D. C. 
Baldwin, T. A., Brig.-Gen., Catoosa 

Ba&'erfMerritt, Col., West Troy, N. Y. 
Barlow, John W., Brig.-Gen., New London, 

Conn. 
Barr, Thomas F., Brig.-Gen., Lawrence, 

Barriger, John W., Col., New York, N. Y. 
Bates, Alfred E., Brig.-Gen., Washington. 
Beaumont, Eugene B., Lieut. -Col., Wilkes- 

bafre, Pa. 

Bell, George, Col., Washington, D. C. 
Bell, James M., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

Bell, William H., Brig.-Gen.. Denver, Col. 

Bt-nham, Daniel W., Col., Bellevue, O. 

Bernard, Reuben F., Lieut. -Col., Washing- 
ton, D. C. 

Biddle, James, Col., Berkeley Springs, Va. 

Billings, John S.. Lieut. -Col., New York 

Bingham, Judson D., Col., New York. N. Y. 

Bird, Charles, Brig.-Gen., Wilmington, Del. 

Bisbee, Wm. H., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 
D. C. 

Blunt, Matthew M., Col., New York, N. Y. 

Bowman, A. H., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 
D. C. 

Boyle, Wm. H., Lieut.-Col., Montclair, N.J. 

Bradford, Jas. H., Lieut.-CoL, Columbus, O. 

Bradley, Luther P., Col., Tacoma, W 7 ash. 

Brayton, George M., Col., Wernersville, Pa. 

Breck, Samuel, Brig.-Gen.. Boston, Mass. 

Breckinridge, J. C., Maj.-Gen., Washington, 
D. C. 

Brinkerhoff, H. R., Lieut.-Col., Oak Park, 

Brooke, John R., Maj.-Gen., Rosemont, Pa. 
Brcwn. J. M., Col.. Hackensack. N. J. 
Bufflngton, A. R., Brig.-Gen., Madison, N.J. 
Burbank, James B., Col., New York, N. Y. 
Burke, D. W., Brig.-Gen., Portland, Ore. 
Burt, Andrew S., Brig.-Gen., Ft. Myer, Va. 
Byrne, Charles C.. Col.. New York. N. Y. 

Calef, John H., Lieut.-Col., St. Louis, Mo. 

Campbell, John, Col., Coldspring, N. Y. 

Card. Benjamin C., Lieut.-Col., Cobourg, 
Ont. 

Carey, Asa B., Brig.-Gen., Vineyard Haven, 
Mass. 

Carlton, Caleb H., Brig.-Gen.. Rye, N. Y. 

Carpenter, Gilbert S., Brig.-Gen., Mont- 
clair, N. J. 

Carpenter, Louis H., Brig.-Gen., Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 

Carr. Eugene A., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

Car'rington, Henry B., Col., Hyde Park, 



Carroll, Henry. Col.. Lawrence, Kas. 
Catlin, Isaac, Col., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Chcnce, J. C., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

Chandler, John G., Col.. Los Angeles. Cal. 
Chipman, Henry L., Lieut.-Col., Detroit, 

Mich. 
Clague, J. J., Col., Minneapolis, Minn. 



Clapp, William H., Lieut.-Col., East Wind- 
sor Hill, Conn. 

Ck-ary, Peter J. A., Brig.-Gen., Tarpon, ' 
Tex. 

Olosson, Henry W., Col., Washington, D. C. 

Clous, J. W., Brig.-Gen., New York, N. Y. 

Coates, Edwin M., Col., Burlington, Vt. 

Cochran, Melville A., Col., Fort McPher- ' 
son, Ga. 

Coe, John N., Lieut.-Col., Albany, N. Y. j 

Collins, Edward, Lieut.-Col., Milton. Mass. 

Coniba, Richard, Col., San Francisco, Cal. 

Compton, Charles E., Col., New York, N. Y. ' 

Comstock, Cyrus B., Col., New York, N. Y. 

Cook, Henry C., Col., Fall River, Mass. 

Coolidge, Charles A., Brig.-Gen., Cam- 
bridge, Mass. 

Cooney, Michael, Col., Washington, D. C. 

Cooper, Charles L., Brig.-Gen., San Fran-, 
Cisco, Cal. 

Coppinger, John J., Brig.-Gen., Washington. ! 

Corliss, Augustus W., Col., Denver, Col. 

Craig, Robert, Lieut.-Col. , Washington, D. O. 

Craighill, William P., Brig.-Geu., Charles-, 
town, W. Va. 

Craigie, David J., Brig.-Gen., Hot Springs, 
Ark. 

Daggett, A. S., Brig.-Gen., Boston, Mass. 
Damrell, A. N., Lieut.-Col., Mobile, Ala. 
Dandy. George B., Col., San Francisco. Cal. 
Davis, Charles L., Brig.-Gen., Cooperstown, 

Davis,' George W., Maj.-Gen., Washington, 

D. C. 

Davis, Wirt. Col., Baltimore, Md. 
Day, Selden A., Lieut.-Col., Washington, 

Demmi'ck, E. D., Col., Washington. D. C. 
Dempsey, Charles A., Col., Alexandria, Va. 
De Russy, Isaac D., Brig.-Gen.. abroad. 
De Witt, Calvin, Brig.-Gen.. Washington. 
Drum, Richard C., Brig.-Gen., Bethesda, 

Md. 

Dudley, Nathan A. M., Col., Roxbury. Mass. 
Eagan, Charles P., Brig.-Gen., New York. 
Ellis, Philip H.^ Col., Elkton, Md. 
Evans, Andrew W., Col., Elkton, Md. 

Farley, Joseph P., Brig.-Gen.. Philadelphia. 

Fessendeo, Francis, Brig.-Gen., Portland, 
Me. 

Field, Edward, Lieut. -Col.. San Francisco. 

Foote. M. C., Brig.-Gen., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Forbes, T. F., Brig.-Gen., Japan. 

Forbush, W. C., Col., Buffalo. N. Y. 

Forsyth, George A., Lieut.-Col., Washing- 
ton, D. C. 

Forsyth, James W., Maj.-Gen., Columbus, O. 

Forwood, William H., Brig.-Gen., Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

Frank, Royal T., Brig.-Gen., Washington. 

Freeman, H. B., Brig.-Gen., Leavenworth, 
Kas. 

Fryer, Blencowe E., Lieut.-Col., Kansas 
City, Mo. 

Furey, John V., Brig.-Gen., Brooklyn, N. Y. 

Gardner, William H., Lieut.-Col., Paris, 
France. 

Gibson, Horatio G., Col.. Washington, D. C. 

Gibson, Joseph R., Lieut. -Col., Philadel- 
phia, Pa. 

Oilman. Jeremiah H., Lieut.-Col., New 
York. N. Y. 

Gilmore, John C., Col., Washington. D. C. 

Gocdale, G. A., Brig.-Gen., Wakefleld. Mass. 

Gordon, David S.. Col., Washington. D. C. 

Graham, Lawrencp P.. Col.. Washington. 

Graham. William M., Brig.-Gen., San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 

Green, John. Lieut.-Col.. Germany. 

Greene, Oliver D., Col., San Francisco, Cal. 



THE ARMY. 



183 



Greenleaf, Charles K., Col., "San Francisco, 
Cal. 

Grierson, Benjamin H., Brig.-Gen., Jackson- 
ville, 111. 

Groesbeck, S. W., Brig.-Gen.. St. Louis. Mo. 

Guenther, F. L., Brig.-Gen., New York.N.Y. 

Hall, Robert H., Brig.-Gen., Washington. 

Haunay, J. W., Col., San Francisco, Cal. 

Harbach, A. A., Brig.-Gen., Rochester, 
X. Y. 

Hardin, Martin D., Brig.-Gen., Chicago, 111. 

Hartsuff, Albert. Col.. Detroit, Mich. 

Hartz, Wilson T., Lieut. -Col., abroad. 

Hasbrouck, H. C., Brig.-Gen., Xewburgh, 

Ha.skin, William L., Brig.-Gen., New York. 
Hawkins, Hamilton S., Brig.-Gen., High- 
land Falls, N. Y. 

Hawkins, John P., Brig.-Gen., Indianapolis. 
Hayes, E. M., Brig.-Gen., Morganton, N. C. 
Head, George E., Lleut.-Col., Jefferson 

Barracks, Mo. 

Head, John F., Col., Washington, D. C. 
Heger, Anthony, Col., New York, N. Y. 
Hobart, Charles, Lieut. -Col., Washington. 
Hodges, Henry C., Col., Buffalo, N. Y. 
Holabird, Sam B., Brig.-Gen., Washington. 
Hood, Charles C., Brig.-Gen., Philadelphia, 

Pa. 

Hooton, Matt, Brig.-Gen., Washington. 
Horton, Sam M., Lieut. -Col., Newport, R. I. 
Hough, Alfred L., Col., Princeton, N. J. 
Howard, Oliver O., Maj.-Gen., Burlington, 

Vt. 

Huggins, Eli, Brig.-Gen.. Liberty, N. Y. 
Hughes, R. P., Maj.-Gen., New Haven, 

Conn. 

Humphreys, Henry H., Lieut. -Col., Chicago. 
Huntt. George G., Col., Carlisle, Pa. 
Iiigalls, James M., Lieut.-CoL, Providence, 

R. I. 

Irwin, Bernard J. D., Col., Cobourg, Ont. 
Jackson, Henry, Col., Leavenworth, Kas. 
Jackson, James, Lieut.-CoL, Portland, Ore. 
Janeway, John H., Lieut.-CoL, Princeton, 

N. J. 

Jordan, William H.. Col., Portland, Ore. 
Ke'llogg, Edgar R., Brig.-Gen., Baltimore, 

Md. 

Kent, Jacob F., Brig.-Gen., Troy. N. Y. 
Kimball, A. S., Brig.-Gen., New York. N. Y. 
Kirkman, J. T., Lieut. -Col., Washington. 
Kiiox, Thomas T., Col., New York, N. Y. 
Koerper, Egon A., Lieut.-CoL, Washington. 
Kress, J. A., Brig.-Gen., St. Louis, Mo. 
Lacey, Francis E., Lieut.-CoL, Columbus, O. 
Laiigdon. Loornis L., Col., Brooklyn. N. Y. 
Lazelle, Henry M., Col., Boston, Mass. 
Le^, Fitzhugh, Brig.-Gen.. Richmond, Va. 
Lee, James G. C., Col., Ft. Senn, Houston, 

Tex. 

Lieber, G. Norman, Brig.-Gen., Washington. 
Lincoln, S. H., Brig.-Gen., Fern Bank, O. 
Lippincott, H., Col., Brooklyn. N. Y. 
Lodor, Richard, Col.. New York. N. Y. 
Ludington, M. L, Maj.-Gen., Skaneateles, 

McGregor, Thomas, Col., Benicia, Cal. 

McKibbin, C., Brig.-Gen., Washington. 
D. C. 

McLaughlin, William H., Lieut.-CoL, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

McNally, V 7 ., Lieut.-CoL, Washington. D. C. 

Magruder, David L., Col., Philadelphia, Pa. 

Mansfield, S. M., Brig.-Gen.. Boston. Mass. 

Marye, Wm. A., Col., Washington, D. C. 

Matile, L. A., Brig.-Gen.. Cranford, N. J. 

Morriam, Henry C., Brig.-Gen., Prouts 
Neck. Me. 

Merritt, Wesley, Maj.-Gen., Washington, 
D. C. 



Middleton, Johnson V. D., Lieut.-CoL, Sau 

Francisco, Cal. 

Miles, Evan, Col., San Francisco, Cal. 
Miles, Nelson, Lieut.-Gen., Washington, 

D. C. 

Miller, James, Brig.-Gen., Boston, Mass. 
Miller, Marcus P., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

D. C. 

Mills, Anson, Brig.-Gen., Washington, D. C. 
Miner, Charles W., Brig.-Gen., Martinsville. 

Ind. 

Mizner, Henry R., Col., Detroit, Mich. 
Mcale, Edward, Col., Baltimore, Md. 
Moore, James M., Col., New York, N. Y. 
Moore, John, Brig.-Gen., Washington, I). C 
Morgan, Michael R., Brig.-Gen., St. Paul. 

Minn. 

Morrow, Albert P., Col., Gainesville, Fla. 
Murray, Robert, Brig.-Gen., Elk Ridge, Md. 
Myrick, John R., Brig.-Gen., New York, 

Norvell, Stephen T., Lieut.-CoL, Jefferson 
Barracks, Mo. 

Noyes, H. E., Col., Berkeley, Cal. 

Oakes, James, Col., Pittsburg, Pa. 

O'Brien, Lyster M., Lieut. -Col., Detroit, 
Mich. 

Otis, Elwell S,, Maj.-Gen., Rochester, N.Y. 

Ovenshine, Samuel, Brig.-Geu., Washing- 
ton, D. C. 

Page, Charles, Col., Baltimore, Md. 

Page, John H., Brig.-Gen., Ft. Thomas. Ky. 

Parker, Daingerfield, Col., Washington. 

Parker, Leopold O., Lieut.-CoL, Falla 
Church, Va. 

Patterson, John H., Brig.-Gen., Albany, 

Pearson, Edward P., Col., Boston, Mass. 
Penney, Charles G., Brig.-Gen., Buffalo, 

Pejinington, Alex. C. M., Brig.-Gen., New 

York, N. Y. 
Pennypacker, Galusha, Col., Philadelphia, 

Pa. 

Perry, Alex., Col., Washington. D. C. 
Perry, David, Col., Trenton, N. J. 
Powell, James W., Col., New York. N. Y. 
Pratt, Richard H., Col., Carlisle, Pa. 
Quinton, William, Brig.-Gen., Pacific 

Grove. Cal. 
Randlett, James F., Lieut.-CoL, Anadarko, 

O. T. 
Robe, C. F., Brig.-Gen., Madison Barracks, 

N. Y. 
Robert, Henry M., Brig.-Gen., Haworth, 

Roberts, C. S., Brig.-Gen., San Antonio, 

Tex. 
Rochester, William B., Brig.-Gen., Vineyard 

Haven, Mass. 

Rodenbugh, T. F., Col., New York, N. Y. 
Rodgers, John I., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

Rodney, George B., Brig.-Gen., San Fran- 
cisco. Cal. 

Rogers, W. P., Brig.-Gen., Winona, Minn. 
Ruckcr, Daniel H.. Brig.-Gen.. Washington 
Rucker, L. H., Brig.-Gen., Los Angeles, 

Ruger, Thomas H., Maj.-Gen., Stamford 

Conn. 
Ruggles, George D., Brig.-Gen., Cazenovia, 

Rus'seli, George B., Lieut.-CoL, Boston, 

Mass. 

Sanford, George B., Col., Litchfield, Conn. 
Sanno, J. M. J., Brig-Gen., Washington, 

Savage', Egbert B., Lieut. -OoL, Seattle, 
Wash. 

Sawtflle, Charles G., Brig.-Gen., Wash- 
ington, D. C. 



184 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Saxton, Rufus, Col., Washington, D. C. 
Schwan, Theo., Brig.-Gen., Washington, D.C. 
Schofleld, John M., Lieut.-Gen., Washing- 
ton, D. C. 

Scully, J. W., Col., Atlanta. Ga. 
Shatter, William R., Brig.-Gen., San Fran- 

cisco, Cal. 

Shea, Thomas, Lieut. -Col., Westport, Ky. 
Sheridan, Michael V., Brig.-Gen., Carlisle, 

Pa. 

Sickles, Daniel E., Maj.-Gen.,New York,N. Y. 
Simpson, John, Brig.-Gen., New York, N. Y. 
Simpson, Marcus D. L., Col., Riverside, 111. 
Sinclair, William, Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

D. C. 

Smith, Alfred T., Col.. Buffalo, N. Y. 
Smith, Frank G., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

D. C. 

Smith, Jacob H., Brig.-Gen., Portsmouth, O. 
Smith, Jared A., Brig.-Gen., Cleveland, O. 
Smith, Joseph R., Col.. Philadelphia, Pa. 
Smith, Leslie, Lieut. -Col., South Norwalk, 

Conn. 

Smith, Rodney, Col., St. Paul. Minn. 
Smith, William, Brig.-Gen., Pelham Manor, 

N. Y. 

Snyder, Simon, Brig.-Gen., Reading, Pa. 
Spurgin, Wm. F., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

D. C. 
Sternberg, G. M., Brig.-Gen., Washington, 

D. C. 

Stewart, Charles S., Col., Cooperstown, N. Y. 
Stewart, Joseph, Lieut. -Col., Berkeley, Cal. 
Stretch, John F., Col., Marion, Ind. 
Sullivan, Thomas C., Brig.-Gen., Berkeley 

Springs, Va. 

Summers, John E., Col., Washington, D. C. 
Sumner, Edwin V., Brig.-Gen.. Easton, Pa. 
Swaine, Peter T., Col., Lps Nietos, Cal. 
Swigert, S. M., Col., San' Francisco, Cal. 

Terrell, Charles M., Col.. San Antonio, Tex. 

Thompson. J. M., Brig.-Gen., San Fran- 
cisco. Cal. 

Tidball, John C., Col., Montclair, N. J. 

Tilford, Joseph G., Col., Washington, D. C. 

Tilton, Henry R., Lieut.-Col., San Fran- 
cisco. Cal. 

Tompkins, Charles H., Col., Atlantic City, 

Town, Francis L., Col., San Antonio, Tex. 
Townsend, Edwin F., Col., Washington. 



Van Home, William M., Col., Chicago. 
Van Valsah, David D., Col., Lewistoun, Pa 
Van Voast, James, Col., Cincinnati, O. 
Varney, A. L., Lieut.-Col., Washington 
Viele, Charles D.. Col., Los Angeles, Cal. 
Vincent, Thomas M., Col., Washington, D. C 
Vose, William P., Col., Saratoga, N. Y. 
Vroom, Peter D., Brig.-Gen., New York. 
Wagner, Henry, Lieut.-Col., New York. 
Ward, Thomas, Brig.-Gen., Oswego, N. Y. 
Waters, William E., Lieut.-Col., Eggemog 

gin. Me. 

Weeks, George H., Brig.-Gen., Washington 
Wf.-lls, A. B., Brig.-G^n.. Geneva, N. Y. 
Wessels, Henry W., Col.. Washington, D.C. 
Wheaton, Frank, Maj.-Gcn.. Washington. 
Wheaton L., Maj.-Gen., Chicago, 111. 
Wheelan, J. N., Col., abroad. 
Wheeler, Joseph, Brig.-Gen., Wheeler, Ala. 
Wherry, William M., Brig.-Gen., New York, 

Whitside, Samuel M., Brig.-Gen., Washing- 
ton, D. C. 

Whittemore, James M., Col.. New Haven, 
Conn. 

Wilcox, John A., Lieut.-Col., London, Eng 
land. 

Willard, Wells, Lieut.-Col. , Springfield, Mass. 

Wilcox, Orlando B., Brig.-Gen., Cobourg. 
Ont. 

Williston, Edward B., Col., Washington 

Wilson, Charles I.. Col., New York. N. Y. 

Wilson, David B., Lieut.-Col., Sionx City, la. 

Wilson, James H., Brig.-Gen., Wilmington, 
Del. 

Wilson, John M., Brig.-Gen., Washington 

Winne, C. K., Lieut.-Col., Baltimore, Md. 

Wittick, W., Lieut.-Col., Ft. Adams, R. I. 

Wolverton. William D., Lieut.-Col., Van- 
couver, Wash. 

Wood, Henry C., Col., New York, N. Y. 

Wood, Thomas J., Brig.-Gen., Dayton, O. 

Woodhull, Alfred A., Col., Princeton, N. J. 

Woodruff, Carter A., Brig.-Gen., Raleigh, 

Woodruff, Charles A., Brig.-Gen., San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 

Woodruff. Edward C., Lieut.-Col., Glen 
Ridge, N. J. 

Woodruff, Ezra, Lieut.-Col., Highland, N. Y. 

Woodward, George A., Col., Washington. 

Worth, William S., Brig.-Gen., New York. 



ORGANIZATION OF THE ARMY. 

Under the army reorganization act, ap 
proved Feb. 2, 1901, the number of general 



officers provided for was 22, staff officers 
870, line oflBcers 2,922; total, 3,814. The 
minimum of the commissioned and enlisted 
strength was fixed at 57.870 and the maxi- 
mum at 102,258. (The total of the old army 
was 31.472.) .On the 24th of October, 1902, 
the secretary of war established the organi- 
zation of the enlisted strength of the army 
as follows: 

CAVALRY. 

12 troops of 65 enlisted men each 780 

Regimental and squadron noncommis- 
sioned staff 8 

Regimental band 28 

Total enlisted men in regiment 816 

Number of regiments 15 

Total enlisted men in cavalry... ., 12.240 
Each troop of cavalry consists of 1 first 
sergeant, 1 quartermaster sergeant, 6 ser- 
geants, 6 corporals, 2 cooks, 2 blacksmiths 
and farriers, 1 saddler, 1 wagoner, 2 trum- 
peters, 43 privates 85. 



Each cavalry band consists of 1 chief 
musician, 1 chief trumpeter, 1 principal 
musician, 1 drum major, 4 sergeants, 8 cor- 
porals, 1 cook, 11 privates 28. 

ARTILLERY CORPS. 

Sergeants major, senior grade 21 

Sergeants major, junior grade 27 

10 bands (organized as provided for 

cavalry) of 28 men each 280 

Total noncommissioned staff, bands. 328 

COAST ARTILLERY. 

126 companies of 109 enlisted men each.13,734 

FIELD ARTILLERY. 

30 batteries of 120 enlisted men each.. 3,680 
Total enlisted men in artillery corps. 17,7^2 
Each company of coast artillery consists 
of 1 first sergeant, 1 quartermaster sergeant. 
8 sergeants, 12 corporals. 2 cooks, 2 mechan- 
ic;?, 2 musicians, 81 privates 109. 

Each battery of field artillery consists 
of 1 first sergeant, 1 quartermaster sergeant, 
1 stable sergeant, 6 sergeants, 12 corporals. 



THE ARMY STAFF LAW. 



185 



2 cooks, 4 artificers, 2 musicians, 91 pri- 
vates 120. 

INFANTRY. 

12 companies of 65 enlisted men each.. 780 
Regimental and battalion noncommis- 
sioned staff 8 

Regimental band 28 

Total enlisted men in regiment 816 

Number of regiments 30 

Total enlisted men in infantry 24,480 

Each infantry company consists of 1 first 
sergeant, 1 quartermaster sergeant, 4 ser- 
geants, 6 corporals, 2 cooks, 1 artificer, 2 
musicians, 48 privates 65. 

Each infantiy baud consists of 1 chief 
musician, 1 principal musician, 1 drum 
major, 4 sergeants, 8 corporals, 1 cook, 12 
privates 28. 

ENGINEERS. 

4 companies of 104 enlisted men each.. 416 
Battalion noncommissioned staff 2 



Total enlisted men in battalion 418 

Number of battalions 3 

Total of enlisted men in battalions.... 1,254 
Engineer band (organized as provided 

for infantry) 28 



Total enlisted men in engineers 1,282 



Each engineer company consists of 1 first 
sergeant, 1 quartermaster sergeant, 8 ser- 
geants, 10 corporals, 2 cooks, 2 musicians, 
40 first-class privates, 40 second-class pri- 
vates 104. 

Additional strength For four troops of 
cavalry, 2 corporals and 33 privates each, 
and 12 companies of infantry, 2 sergeants, 
4 corporals and 59 privates each, when sta- 
tioned at the General Service and Staff col- 
lege; for 12 troops of cavalry. 2 corporals 
and 18 privates each, when stationed at the 
School of Application for Cavalry and Field 
Artillery; for the company of infantry on 
duty as legation guard, Pekin, China, 2 
sergeants, 4 corporals, 79 privates 1,245. 
Total enlisted in line of the army... -.56,989 

STAFF DEPARTMENTS, ETC. 

United States military academy.. 342 

Signal corps 810 

Ordnance department 700 

Post commissary sergeants 200 

Post quartermaster sergeants 150 

Electrician sergeants 100 

Indian scouts 75 

Recruiting parties and recruits 500 

Total staff, etc 2,877 

Total army 59,866 



UNITED STATES ARMY PAY TABLE. 



Annual salaries of officers in active serv- 
ice and on retired list: 



Grade. 

Lieutenant-general 

Major-general 

Brigadier-general 

Colonel 

Lieutenant-colonel 

Major 

Captain, mounted 

Captain, unmounted 

First lieutenant, mounted... 
First lieutenant, unmounted 



Active. Retired. 

$11,000 $8,250 
5,625 
4,125 
2,650 
2.250 
1,875 
1,500 



7,500 
5,500- 
3,500 
3,000 
2,500 
2,000 
1,800 
1,600 
1,500 



1,350 
1,200 
1, 



Grade. Active. Retired. 

Second lieutenant, mounted.. $1,500 $1,125 
Second lieutenant, unmounted 1,400 1,050 

After five years' service 10 per cent is add- 
ed to the salaries at intervals of five years 
until the increase amounts to 40 per cent of 
the pay of the grade. Thus a colonel after 
twenty years' service gets $4,500 a year. 

Noncommissioned officers get from $18 to 
$45 a month and private soldiers get $13. 
Officers and enlisted men serving in the 
Philippines, Porto Rico, Hawaii and Alaska 
get 10 and 20 per cent additional, respect- 
ively. 



MILITARY DEPARTMENT OF THE LAKES. 

Headquarters, Pullman building, Chicago, fourth floor. 



Commander Maj. -Gen. John C. Bates. 
Chief of Staff Lieut. -Col. F. A. Smith. 
Aid-de-Camp Capt. William M. Wright, 2d 

infantry. 

Adjutant-General Maj. Hunter Liggett. 
Inspector-GeneralCol. C. H. Heyl. 
Judge Advocate Capt. B. Winship. 
Chief Quartermaster Col. C. A. H. Mc- 

Cauley. 



Chief Commissary Col. F. E. Nye. 
Chief Surgeon Lieut. -Col. P. F. Harvey. 
Chief Paymaster Col. A. S. Towar. 
Engineer Oflicer Lieut. -Col. O. H. Ernst. 
Ordnance Officer Col. J. R. McGinness. 

The department of the lakes includes Wis- 
consin, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, 
Kentucky and Tennessee. 



THE ARMY STAFF LAW. 



Following is a synopsis of the general 
staff bill passed by the 57th congress and 
approved Feb. 14, 1903: 

There is established a general staff corps 
to be composed of officers detailed from the 
army at large under such rules as may be 
prescribed by the president. The duties of 
the staff shall be to prepare plans for the 
national defense and for the mobilization 
of the military forces in time of war; to 
consider all questions relating to the ef- 
ficiency of the army and its state of prep- 
aration for military service; to render pro- 
fessional aid to the secretary of war and 
superior commanders and to act as their 
agents in informing and co-ordinating the 
action of all the different officers to the su- 



pervision of the chief of staff; and to per- 
form such other duties not otherwise as- 
signed by law as may be prescribed by the 
president. 

The general staff corps shall consist of 
one chief of staff and two general officers 
not, below the grade of brigadier-general, all 
to be detailed by the president; four colo- 
nels, six lieutenant-colonels and twelve ma- 
jors, to be detailed under such rules of se 
lettion as may be prescribed by the presi- 
dent; and twenty captains to be detailed 
from officers of the army at large of the 
grades of captain or first lieutenant. The 
term of the detail snail be four years. Offi- 
cers cannot be reappointed to the general 
staff until after an interval of two years 



186 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



unless an emergency arises in time of war. 
The chief of staff shall have supervision 
of all troops of the line and of the ad- 
jutant-general's, inspector-general's, judge 
advocate's, quartermaster's, subsistence, 
medical, pay and ordnance departments, the 
corps of engineers and the signal corps and 
shall perform such other duties not other- 
wise assigned by law as the president may 
diiect. Duties now prescribed for the com- 



manding general of the army as a member 
of the board of ordnance and fortification 
and of the board of commissioners of the 
soldiers' home shall be performed by the 
chief of staff or other officer designated by 
the president. The chief of artillery shall 
serve as an additional member of the gen- 
eral staff. 

The act went into effect Aug. 15, 1903. 



ORGANIZATION OF THE MILITIA. 



Under an act "to promote the efficiency of 
the militia," passed by congress in January, 
1903, it is provided that the militia of the 
United States shall consist of every able- 
bodied male citizen who is more than 18 and 
less than 45 years of age, and shall be di- 
vided into the organized and the reserve 
militia. The regularly enlisted, organized 
and uniformed active militia participating 
in the appropriation provided for by federal 
law. whether known as national guard, 
militia or otherwise, shall constitute the 
organized militia. The organization, arma- 
ment and discipline shall be the same as 
that prescribed for the regular and volun- 
teer armies of the United States. 

Whenever the United States is invaded, or 
is in danger of invasion*, or of rebellion 
against the authority of the government, or 
the president is unable to execute the laws 
with the other forces at his command, it 
sha 1 ! be lawful for the president to call 
forth, for a period not exceeding nine 
months, such a number of the militia as he 
may deem necessary. Every officer and en- 
listed man so called out and found fit for 
duty shall be mustered into the United 
States service by a duly authorized muster- 
ing officer of the government. When in the 
actual service of the United States the 
militia forces are subject to the same rules 
and articles of war and are entitled to the 
same pay and allowances as the forces of 
the regular army. 

The secretary of war is authorized to is- 
sue, on the requisition of governors of 
states and territories, such number of rifles, 
with ammunition and equipment as are re- 
quired for the army of the United States, 
for arming all of the organized militia with- 
out charging the cost against the federal 
appropriation for the militia. The arms 
and equipment remain the property of the 
government. It is also provided that the of- 
ficers and men of the organized militia 
when engaged in field or camp seryice for 
instruction shall be entitled to the same 
pay, subsistence and travel allowances as 
officers and enlisted men of the same grade 
in the regular army. The militia will be 
allowed upon request to participate in the 
encampment, maneuvers and field instruc- 
tion of any part of the regular army at or 
near any military post or camp. 

Officers of the organized militia will be 



permitted to study at any military school or 
college of the United States upon the sarru> 
terms as officers of the regular army. The 
annual appropriation made by section 1661, 
revised statutes, as amended, is made 
available for the issue to the organized 
ii'ihtia of any stores and supplies which are 
supplied to the army by any department. 
Each state or territory furnished with ma- 
terials of war must require every company, 
tic-op and battery of the organized militia 
to participate in practice marches or go into 
a camp of instruction at least five consecu- 
tive days and to assemble for drill and 
instruction at company, battalion or regi- 
mer-tal armories, or for target practice, not 
less than twenty-four times. Upon applica- 
tion one or more officers of the army may be 
detailed to attend any encampment of 
organized militia and give such instruction 
as may be requested. 

When any officer or private of the militia is 
disabled in the service of the United States 
he is entitled to the benefits of the pension 
laws existing at the time and if he dies 
while in the service his widow and children, 
if any, are entitled to a pension. 

For the purpose of securing a list of per- 
sons specially qualified to hold commissions 
in any volunteer force which may hereafter 
be called for and organized under the au- 
thority of congress, other than a force com- 
posed of organized militia, the secretary of 
war is authorized from time to time to con- 
vene boards of officers who shall examine 
as to their qualifications for the command 
of troops or for the performance of staff 
duties all applicants who shall have served 
in the regular army, in any of the volunteer 
forces, or in the organized militia, or who 
shall have attended any military school or 
college. The names of the applicants who 
ar3 certified to be qualified snail be regis- 
tered in the war department and those who 
are so certified and registered shall con- 
stitute an eligible class for commissions in 
any volunteer force hereafter called for and 
organized. Appointments made from this 
list shall be distributed proportionately 
among the states contributing the volun- 
teers. Officers of any company, troop, bat- 
tery, battalion or regiment of organized 
militia which volunteers as a body are not 
to be displaced by such appointments. 



UNITED STATES MILITARY ACADEMY. 

(West Point. N. Y.) 
The United States military academy is | graduates from 1802 to 1902 inclusive is 



a school for the practical and theoretical 
training of cadets for the military service 
of the United States. Upon completing the 
course satisfactorily cadets are eligible for 
promotion and commission as second lieu- 
tenants in any arm or corps of the army 
in which there may bp a vacancy the duties 
of which they may have been judged com- 
petent to perform. The total number of 



4,121. The maximum number of cadets at 
present permitted by law is 521. The corps 
of cadets consists of one from each con- 
eressional district, one from each territory, 
one from the District of Columbia, two 
from each state at large and forty from 
the United States at large, all appointed 
by the president. 



THE NAVY. 



187 



Cfje Kabg of tfjc fottrt States. 

Corrected to Nov. 11, 1903. 
ACTIVE LIST. 



ADMIBAL. 

George Dewey, senior member general board. 

REAR-ADMIRALS. 

John C. Watson, president naval examining 

and retiring boards. 
Francis J. Higginson, commandant navy 

yard, Washington, D. C. 
Frederick Rodgers, commandant navy yard, 

New York. 

George W. Sumner, waiting orders. 
Albert S. Barker, commanding North At- 
lantic fleet. 
Charles S. Cotton, commanding European 

squadron. 

Robley D. Evans, commanding Asiatic fleet. 
Silas W. Terry, commandant naval station, 

Honolulu. 
Merrill Miller, commandant Pacific naval 

district. 

John J. Read, chairman lighthouse board. 
Henry C. Taylor, chief bureau of navigation. 
Mortimer L. Johnson, commandant navy 

yard, Boston. 

Henry Glass, commanding Pacific squadron. 
Charles E. Clark, governor Naval home. 
Philip H. Cooper, commanding cruiser 

squadron, Asiatic fleet. 
Joseph B. Coghlan, commanding Caribbean 

squadron, North Atlantic fleet. 
James H. Sands, commanding coast squad- 
ron, North Atlantic fleet. 
Yates Stirling, commanding Philippine 

squadron, Asiatic fleet. 
William C. Wise, commanding Atlantic 

training squadron. 
Purnell F. Harrington, commandant navy 

yard, Norfolk. 
Charles D. Sigsbee, commandant navy yard, 

League island. 

Colby M. Chester, supt. naval observatory. 
Charles J. Barclay, commandant navy yard, 

Piiget sound. 
Benjamin P. Lamberton, commanding South 

Atlantic squadron. 
French E. Chadwick, president Naval War 

college. 
Bcwman H. McCalla, commandant navy 

yard, Mare island. 
William H. Whiting, commandant naval 

training station, San Francisco. 

CAPTAINS. 

Charles O'Nell, chief bureau of ordnance. 
Caspar F. Goodrich, commandant navy yard, 

Portsmouth. 
Theodore F. Jewell, member examining and 

retiring boards. 
William M. Folger, lighthouse inspector 

3d district. 
Francis W. Dickins, commandant navy yard, 

Pensacola. 
George F. F., Wilde, captain navy yard, 

Boston. 

Charles H. Davis, commanding Alabama. 
Charles J. Train, president board of inspec- 
tion and survey. 
George W. Pigman, commanding receiving 

ship Wabash. 
George A. Converse, chief of bureau of 

equipment. 

*Royal B. Bradford, commanding Illinois. 
Joseph E. Craig, captain navy yard, Nor- 
folk. 
Charles M. Thomas, commanding receiving 

ship Franklin. 



Albert S. Snow, commanding receiving ship 
Hancock. 

George C. Reiter, member lighthouse board. 

Willard H. Brownson. supt. naval academy. 

William W. Mead, commandant naval train- 
ing station, Newport, R. I. 

Edwin Longnecker, naval station, Charles- 
ton. 

Thcmas Perry, captain navy yard, New 
York. 

Charles H. Stpckton, naval attache, London. 

Asa Walker, waiting orders. 

Henry W. Lyon, commanding Olympia. 

James H. Dayton, duty with general board. 

Morris R. S. Mackenzie, captain navy yard, 
Portsmouth. 

Charles S. Sperry, Naval War college. 

John J. Hunker, commanding New York. 

William T. Burwell, commanding Oregon. 

Robert M. Berry, commanding Kentucky. 

Saml. W. Very, commanding San Francisco. 

Henry N. Manney, Naval War college. 

William T. Swinburne, commanding Texas. 

Joseph N. Hemphill, command'g Kearsarge. 

William H. Emory, commanding Indiana. 

George A. Bicknell, commandant naval sta- 
tion, Key West. 

Charles T. Hutchins, sec. lighthouse board. 

Benjamin F. Tilley, captain navy yard, 
Mare island. 

Harry Knox, commanding Brooklyn. 

John P. Merrell, commandant naval station, 
New Orleans. 

Joseph G. Eaton, command'g Massachusetts. 

Eugene H. C. Leutze, commanding Maine. 

Uriel Sebree, commanding Wisconsin. 

Albert R. Couden, commandant naval sta- 
tion, Cavite. 

Edwin C. Pendleton, supt. gun factory. 

William Swift, bureau of navigation. 

Henry B. Mansfield, commanding Iowa. 

Albert Ross, commanding Buffalo. 

Richardson Clover, commanding Wisconsin. 

James M. Miller, commanding Columbia. 

Johft V. B. Bleecker, captain navy yard, 
Puget sound. 

Andrew Dunlap, commanding naval station, 
San Juan. 

John A. B. Smith, navy yard, New York. 

Harrison G. O. Colby, recruiting duty, 
Boston. 

Leavitt C. Logan, bureau of equipment. 

Conway H. Arnold, commanding Puritan. 

William S. Cowles, assistant to bureau of 
navigation. 

Robert W. Milligan, navy yard, Norfolk. 

Edward D. Taussig, comdg. Independence. 

Richard Inch, insp. duty. Newport News. 

John E. Pillsbury, member general board. 

William H. Reeder. waiting orders. 

George W. Baird, superintendent state, war 
and navy building. 

Charles W. Rae, chief of bureau of steam 
engineering. 

Charles C. Cornwell, sick leave. 

Holland N. Stevenson, inspection duty, Sac 
Francisco. 

George H. Kearny, navy yard, Boston. 

Adolph Marix. commanding Minneapolis. 

Raymond P. Rodgers, navy yard, New York. 

William S. Moore, inspection duty. 

Royal R. Ingersoll. Naval War college. 

Seaton Schroeder. chief intelligence officer. 

Duncan Kennedy, member ex. a'nd retg. bds. 

Richard Wainwright, commanding Newark. 



188 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Jefferson F. Moser, commanding Pensacola. 
Franklin J. Drake, navy yard, Mare island. 
Thomas T. McLean, captain navy yard, 

League island. 

William J. Barnette, mem. general board. 
Francis H. Delano, waiting orders. 
Charles T. Forse, navy yard, Pensacola. 
Edwin K. Moore, navy yard, Boston. 

COMMANDERS. 

John A. Rodgers, commanding Albany. 

Albion V. Wadhams, commanding Prairie. 

John D. Adams, navy yard, New York. 

James K. Cogswell, navy yard, Portsmouth. 

Frederick Singer, commanding Solace. 

James R. Selfridge, navy yard, Boston. 

William H. Everett, navy yard, Norfolk. 

John M. Hawley, inspr. 5th L. H. district. 

Gottfried Blockinger, comdg. New Orleans. 

Perry Garst, inspector 10th L. H. district. 

Arthur B. Speyers, navy yard, New York. 

Ebenezer S. Prime, commandant naval sta- 
tion, Port Royal. 

William P. Potter, navy department. 

Nathan E. Niles, Naval home. 

Giles B. Harber, Asiatic station. 

John B. Briggs, commanding Baltimore. 

Newton E. Mason, commanding Cincinnati. 

Thomas H. Stevens, navy yard. Pensacola. 

Charles P. Perkins, commanding Concord. 

Chas. G. Bowman, navy yard, League island. 

William H. Beehler. comdg. Monterey. 

Arthur P. Nazro, commanding Raleigh. 

William W. Kimball, commanding Alert. 

William P. Day, commanding iMohican. 

John C. Wilson, waiting orders. 

George P. Colvocoresses, comdg. Yankee. 

Uriah R. Harris, commanding Wilmington. 

Richard G. Davenport, navy yard, Wash- 
ington. 

John A. Norris, sick leave. 

Edward B. Barry, navy yard, New York. 

Herbert Winslow, inspr. llth L. H. district. 

William H. Turner, commanding Atlanta. 

Charles E. Colahan, comdg. Cleveland. 

Albert G. Berry, inspection duty. 

Nathaniel J. K. Patch, comdg. Montgomery. 

Thomas S. Phelps, Jr., comdg. Marblehead. 

Karl Rohrer, navy yard, New York. 

John A. H. Nickels, commanding Topeka.- 

Clinton K. Curtis, commanding Alliance. 

Theodoric Porter, waiting orders. 

Daniel D. V. Stuart, recruiting duty, N. Y. 

Charles A. Adams, navy yard, New York. 

Kossuth Niles, lighthouse insp., 8th district. 

Warner B. Bayley, member examining bd. 

Dennis H. Mahan. comdg. Monadnock. 

James H. Perry, bureau steam engineering. 

Albert F. Dixon, navy yard, Mare island. 

Samuel P. Comly, L. H. inspr., 4th district. 

John Hubbard, commanding Nashville. 

Alexander McCrackin, comdg. Des Moines. 

George L. Dyer, commanding Rainbow. 

Corwin P. Rees, L. H. inspr., 1st district. 

Lewis C. Heilner, commanding Essex. 

Joseph B. Murdock, commanding Denver. 

Hu;;o Austerhaus. Asiatic station. 

Albert C. Dillingham, commanding Detroit. 

Job a B. Collins, naval station, Cavite. 

Charles E. Vreeland, comdg. Arkansas. 

Nathan Sargent, aid to tho admiral. 

James H. Bull, insp. 7th L. H. district. 

Greenlief A. Merriam. commanding Dixie. 

John B. Milton, lighthouse insp., 12th dirt. 

William H. Nauman, insp. duty, Bath, Me. 

Aaron Ward, waiting orders. 

George W. Mentz, comdg. Monongahela. 

Sidney A. Staunton, waiting orders. 

Charles W. Bartlett, L. H. inspr.. 2d dist. 

Chauncey Thomas, commanding Bennington. 

William A. Marshall, comdg. Vicksburg. 



John E. Roller, navy yard, Norfolk. 

Carlos G. Calkins, inspr. 13th L. H. district. 

William E. Sewell. naval governor island 
of Guam. 

Henry McCrea, waiting orders. 

Edward F. Qualtrough, supervisor harbor 
of New York. 

Lucien Young, inspr. 9th llgnthouse district. 

Asher C. Baker, St. Louis exposition. 

William H. H. Southerland, hydrographer. 

Charles E. Fox, commanding Adams. 

John C. Fremont, commanding Florida. 

Albert Mertz, commanding Newport. 

Rogers H. Gait, navy yard, Norfolk. 

Vincenden L. Cottman, comdg. Wyoming. 

Frank E. Sawyer, commanding Helena. 

Thomas B. Howard, commanding Nevada. 

Walter C. Cowles, bd. inspection and survey. 

Austin M. Knight, commanding Castine. 

Charles J. Badger, naval academy. 

Samuel W. B. Diehl, commanding Boston. 

Reginald F. Nicholson, bureau of navigation. 

Edn'und B. Underwood, comdg. Wheeling. 

William F. Halsey. naval academy. 

Frank A. Wilner, naval sta., New Orleans. 

Henry Morrell, navy yard, New York. 

William Winder, commanding Mirhigan. 

Chas. B. T. Moore, navy yard. Mare island. 

Ten Eyck DeW. Veeder, comdg. Hartford. 

Alfred Reynolds, navy yard, League island. 

John M. Robinson, naval observatory. 

John K. Barton, naval academy. 

Robert G. Denig, navy yard, League island. 

George H. Peters, bureau of equipment. 

Bradley A. Fiske, inspection duty. 

Frank H. Holmes, navy yard, Mare island. 

John F. Parker, naval station, Cavite. 

Hamilton Hutchins, comdg. Annapolis. 

John M. Bowyer, navy yard, Washington. 

John C. Colwell, navy yard, League island. 

George B. Ransom, navy yard, Portsmouth. 

Edward J. Dorn, navy yard, Boston. 

Bernard O. Scott, commanding Machias. 

William C. Eaton, inspection duty. 

Alfred B. Canaga, bureau of steam engi- 
neering. 

Abraham V. Zane, inspection duty, Phila- 
delphia. 

John R. Edwards, bureau steam engineering. 

Stacy Potts, waiting orders. 

Henry T. Cleaver, inspection duty. 

James M. Helm, L. H. service, Philippines. 

Albert B. Willits. waiting on'.ers. 

Cameron McR. Winslow, bureau of nar'g'n. 

James P. S. Lawrance, inspection duty. 

Isaac S. K. Reeves, New York. 

LIEUTENANT-COMMANDERS. 

York Noel, Asiatic station. 
A'bon C. Hodgson, L. H. inspr., 6th district. 
William G. Cutler, L. H. inspr., 3d district. 
Alexander Sharp, Jr., bureau of navigation. 
Charles Laird, sick leave. 
Nathaniel R. Usher, duty with genl. board. 
Walter S. Hughes, Pensacola. 
Fidelio S. Carter, navy yard, Pensacola. 
Frank F. Fletcher, torpedo station, New- 
port, R. I. 

Harry H. Hosley, Buffalo. 
Frank E. Beatty, commanding Gloucester. 
Moses L. Wood, commanding Eagle. 
Robert M. Doyle, commanding Culgoa. 
George M. Stoney. commanding Santee. 
Frederick W. Coffin, comdg. Isla de Cuba. 
Wythe M. Parks, bureau steam engineering. 
Frank H. Bailey, Brooklyn. 
Harry M. Hodges, Chicago. 
William B. Capcrton, Prairie. 
James T. Smith, Hancock. 
George S. Willits. Baltimore. 
Walter F. Worthington, Kearsarge. 



THE NAVY. 



William N. Little, Minneapolis. 

Theodore F. Burgdorff, Newark. 

Frank H. Eldridge, Texas. 

Edgar T. Warburton, Indiana. 

Henry C. Gearing, Baltimore. 

Templin M. Potts, naval attache, Berlin, 

Vienna and Rome. 

William H. Allen, commanding Vixen. 
Burns T. Walling, navy yard. New York. 
Clifford J. Boush, commanding Scorpion. 
James H. Sears, Brooklyn. 
Abraham E. Culver, commanding Bancroft. 
Henry T. Mayo, Wisconsin. 
Charles C. Rogers, bureau of equipment. 
John T. Newton, inspection duty, Newport 

News, Va. 

Benjamin Tappan, commanding Petrel. 
Charles F. Pond, training station, San 

Francisco, Cal. 

Walter McLean, bureau of ordnance. 
Washington I. Chambers, torpedo station, 

Newport, R. I. 

James C. Gillmore, Cincinnati. 
Charles A. Gove, bureau of equipment. 
DeWitt Coffman. Essex. 
Richardson Henderson, Alabama. 
Thomas D. Griffin, sick leave. 
Henry Minett, Wabash. 
Richard T. Mulligan, San Francisco. 
William Braunersreuther, Dixie. 
Francis H. Sherman, naval academy. 
William S. Hogg, Nevada. 
Reynold T. Hall, Olympia. 
William F. Fullam, naval academy. 
Horace M. Witzel, Nashville. 
Albert G. Winterhalter, waiting orders. 
John M. Orchard, Missouri. 
John N. Jordan, inspection duty. 
Augustus F. Fechteler, Union iron works. 
Edward E. W T right, Atlanta. 
Albert Cleaves, commanding Mayflower. 
James P. Parker, Columbia. 
Ben W. Hodges, Chicago. 
Herbert O. Dunn, waiting orders. 
Arthur W. Dodd, Wisconsin. 
George W. Denfeld, commanding Don Juan 

de Austria. 

Albert W 7 . Grant, commanding Frolic. 
Horace W T . Harrison, assistant lighthouse 

inspector, 3d district. 
Valentine S. Nelson, Buffalo. 
WHliam S. Benson, Iowa. 
Frank M. Bostwick, commanding Nipsic. 
James H. Oliver, Naval War college. 
Harry M. Dombaugh, Hartford. 
Simon Cook, New York. 
Thomas S. Rodgers, Maine. 
Franklin J. Schell, naval academy. 
John G. Qninby, Texas. 
James H. Glennqn, waiting orders. 
Percival J. Werlich, Denver. 
William R. Rush, Albany. 
Harry S. Knapp, Naval War college. 
William L. Rodgers, Naval War college. 
Harry McL. P. Huse, naval academy. 
Roy C. Smith, naval attache Paris and St. 

Petersburg. 

George W. MoElroy. Wisconsin. 
Robert S. Griffin. Chicago. 
Albert N. Wood, San Francisco. 
Edward Lloyd, Jr., Massachusetts. 
Richard M. Hughes. Concord. 
Charles N. Atwater, office naval intelligence. 
John H. L. Holcombe, coaling station, Pt. 

Isabella, P. I. 

William L. Burdick, hydrographic office. 
Frank W. Bartlett, Maine. 
Frederick C. Bieg. Missouri. 
Harry Kimmell. Indiana. 
Howard Gage, inspection duty. 
John L. GOW T , Massachusetts. 



George R. Clark, Monongahela. 

George H. Stafford, Alert. 

Allen G. Rogers, Solace. 

William P. White, Alliance. 

George E. Burd, Union iron works. 

John H. Shipley, navy yard, Washington. 

John E. Craven, Oregon. 

James H. Hetherington, Newark. 

John J. Knapp, navy yard, Washington. 

Augustus C. Almy, Marblehead. 

Jonn Hood, commanding Elcano. 

Carl W. Jungen. recruiting officer, N. Y. 

Edward E. Hayden, naval observatory. 

Benjamin C. Bryan, bureau of steam engi- 
neering. 

LeRoy M. Garrett, Maine. 

Charles C. Marsh, naval attache, Tokyo. 

Charles H. Harlow, Raleigh. 

Clarence A. Carr, inspection duty. 

John B. Blish, sick leave. 

William A. Gill, waiting orders. 

Thomas W. Ryan, Puritan. 

Harold P. Norton, Albany. 

Walter J. Sears, inspection duty. 

Edward H. Scribner, inspection duty. 

Frank M. Bennett, receiving ship Franklin. 

John A. Bell, Cleveland. 

John A. Dougherty, Hancock. 

John B. Bernadou, office naval intelligence 

John H. Gibbons, commanding Dolphin. 

Thomas Snowden, Illinois. 

Edwin H. Tillman, commanding Amphitrit*. 

Thomas F. Carter, San Francisco. 

Frederic C. Bowers, inspection duty. 

George R. Salisbury, Montgomery. 

John L. Purcell, commanding Abarenda. 

Robert F. Lopez, New York. 

Frank W. Kellogg, Yankee. 

Reuben O. Bitler, Newport News. 

Samuel O. Leonard, Jr., inspection duty. 

Harry Phelps, Helena. 

Homer C. Poundstone, navy yard. New York. 

Albert A. Ackerman, Kearsarge. 

Leo D. Miner, Monterey. 

Albert P. Niblack, naval station, Honolulu. 

William Truxton, Independence. 

Harry Hall, inspection duty. 

Edward Simpson, Arkansas. 

William C. P. Muir, naval academy. 

Edwards F. Leiper, Detroit. 

Thomas W. Kinkaid, Oregon. 

William H. Allerdice, sick leave. 

Joseph H. Rohrbacher, inspection duty. 

William S. Sims, inspr. target practice. 

Louis S. Van Duzer, Olympia. 

Wilson W. Buchanan, Bennington. 

William J. Maxwell, inspection duty. 

William S. Smith, inspection duty (bureau 
steam engineering). 

John F. Luby, Inspection duty. 

Lewis J. Cla*k, Alabama. 

Theodore G. Dewey, naval academy. 

Hug-h Rodman, commanding Iroquois. 

John A. Hoogewerff, Minneapolis. 

Edward E. Capehart, Constellation. 

Henry B. Wilson. Kentucky. 

Gustav Kaemmerling, naval station, Cavite. 

Clarence H. Mathews, Hancock. 

DeWitt O. Redgrave, naval academy. 

William W. White, Cincinnati. 

Bias O. B. Sampson, navy yard, Norfolk. 

Solon Arnold. New Orleans. 

Martin A. Anderson. Concord. 

Albert Moritz, Alabama. 

Emil Theiss, navy yard, Norfolk, 

Spencer S. Wood, Columbia. 

(iny W. Brown, Adams. 

William B. Fletcher. Xaval War college. 

William H. Chambers, Illinois. 

Marbury Johnston, commanding 2d torpedo 
flctilla. 



190 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Charles E. Rommell, Kentucky. 

Edwin A. Anderson, commanding Callao. 

Joseph L. Jayne, bureau of equipment. 

James G. Doyle, Wilmington. 

Albert L. Key, New Orleans. 

William L. Howard, Illinois. 

Wiley R. M. Field, Illinois. 

John'M. Foyer, naval academy. 

Harry G. Leopold, nary yard, Puget sound. 

Robert B. Higgins, Atlanta. 

John O. Leonard, Hancock. 

MEDICAL CORPS. 
MEDICAL DIRECTORS. 

(Rank of Captain.) 

Hosea J. Babin, charge naval hospital, N. Y. 

Abel F. Price, navy yard, New York. 

Robert A. Marmion, president medical ex- 
amining board. 

Dwight Dickinson, naval hospital, Boston. 

William G. Farwell, navy yard, Portsmouth. 

John C. Wise, member retiring board. 

George P. Bradley, naval hospital, Wash- 
ington. 

Paul Fitzsimmons, waiting orders. 

William S. Dixon, naval dispensary. 

Remus C. Persons, naval hospital, Norfolk. 

Nelson M. Ferebee, navy yard, Washington. 

James R. Waggener, navy yd., Mare Island. 

Thomas H. Streets, hospital naval home. 

John W. Ross, naval museum of hygiene. 

Manly H. Simons, naval hospital, Mare is- 
land. 

John C. Boyd, member b'd. med. examiners. 

MEDICAL INSPECTORS. 

(Rank of Commander.) 

George E. H. Harmon, naval laboratory, 
New York. 

Howard Wells, naval hospital, Newport. 

Daniel N. Bertolette, marine barracks, 
Washington. 

Ezra Z. Derr, navy yard, Boston. 

Presley M. Rixey, chief bureau of medi- 
cine and surgery. 

W'alter A. McClurg, Kearsarge (fleet). 

Cumberland G. Herndon, naval hospital, 
Yokohama. 

Lucieii G. Heneberger, Olympia. 

Edward H. Green. Wisconsin. 

Samuel H. Dickson, waiting orders. 

David O. Lewis, New York (fleet). 

Howard E. Ames, naval academy. 

Frank Anderson, Brooklyn (fleet). 

Phillips A. Lovering, naval hospital, Cavlte. 

William R. Du Bose, bureau of medicine 
and surgery. 

SURGEONS. 

(Rank of Lieutenant-Commander.) 
Charles T. Hibbett, receiving ship Franklin. 
Nelson H. Drake, Maine. 
Henry G. Beyer, member barracks board. 
John M. Steele. naval hospital. Port Royal. 
James E. Gardiner, waiting orders. 
George P. Lumsden, torpedo station, New- 
port, R. I. 

James C. Byrnes, Texas. 
Samuel H. Griffith, Minneapolis. 
Averley C. H. Russell, Newark. 
Clement Biddle, Puritan. 
Henry T. Percey, Indiana. 
Emlyn H. Marsteller. Columbia. 
James D. Gatewood, Yankee. 
Oliver Diehl, Oregon. 
John M. Edgar. Wisconsin. 
Philip Leach, Massachusetts. 
Lloyd W. Curtis, Buffalo. 
Henry B. Fitts, Pensacola. 
Victor C. B. Means, Monterey. 
Frederick J. B. Cordeiro, Solace. 



Francis W. F. Wieber, Prairie. 

Oliver D. Norton, navy yard, League island. 

Isaac W. Kite, navy yard, Norfolk. 

Andrew R. Wentworth, Albany. 

Corbin J. Decker, Alabama. 

Thomas A. Berryhill, Baltimore. 

Eugene P. Stone, Mayflower. 

Geo. Pickrell, naval station, San Juan, P. _R. 

Rand P. Crandall, naval station, Guam. 

Hatton N. T. Harris, navy yard, Peusacola. 

John F. Urie, assistant to bureau of medi- 
cine and surgery. 

Albert M. D. McCormick, Hartford. 

Will F. Arnold, sick leave. 

George B. Wilson, Wabash. 

Charles F. Stokes, naval museum of hy- 
giene. 

Exlward R. Stitt, naval museum of hygiene. 

Manly F. Gates, naval home, Philadelphia. 

Charles H. T. Lowndes, naval academy. 

George H. Barber, naval training station, 
Newport. 

George Rothganger, San Francisco. 

George T. Smith, naval hospital, Norfolk. 

George A. Lung, Columbia. 

Luther L. von Wedekind, Cincinnati. 

Edward S. Bogert, naval academy. 

Leckinski W. Spratling, Hancock. 

Robert M. Kennedy, Dixie. 

Norman J. Blackwood, Illinois. 

William O. Braisted, naval hospital, N. Y. 

James G. Field, Bennington. 

Sheldon G. Evans, Cleveland. 

Adrian R. Alfred, navy yard, Puget sound. 

John E. Page, Montgomery. 

Middleton. S. Guest, New Orleans. 

Joseph A. Guthrie, waiting orders. 

Charles M. De Valin. Rainbow. 

Chas. P. Bagg, naval hospital. Mare island. 

Carl DeW. Brownell, Alliance. 

Henry D. Wilson, naval station, Olongapo. 

Lewis Morris, Florida. 

John M. Moore, Raleigh. 

Edward M. Shipp, waiting orders. 

Charles E. Riggs, Dolphin. 

James F. Leys, naval station, Guam. 

Frank C. Cook, Nevada. 

Ammen Farenholt, Concord. 

Charles P. Kindleberger, Independence. 

Arthur W. Dunbar, Wyoming. 

Theodore W. Richards, Arkansas. 

Reginald K. Smith, naval receiving station, 
San Francisco. 

Moulton K. Johnson, naval hospital, N. Y. 

William M. Wheeler, leave of absence. 

Middleton S. Elliott, naval hospital, Norfolk. 

Frank L. Pleadwell, naval dispensary. 

Dudley N. Carpenter, Chicago. 

Daniel H. Morgan, sick leave. 

James C. Pryor, Bancroft. 

Washington B. Grove, Atlanta. 

Raymond Spear, waiting orders. 

William H. Bucher, naval station. Cavite. 

Edgar Thompson, marine det'm't, Culebra. 

Elon O. Hunting-ton, sick leave. 

John B. Dennis, Detroit. 

Ralph T. Orvis, marine det'm't, Culebra. 

David B. Kerr, Buffalo. 

Eugene J. Grow, Mohican. 

Alfred G. Gran-well, naval hospital, W r ash- 
ington. 

PAY CORPS. 

PAY DIRECTORS. 

(With rank of Captain.) 
Leonard A. Frailey, navy pay office, Wash- 
ington. 

Theodore S. Thompson, navy yard, Boston. 
John B. Redfleld, naval home, Philadelphia. 
Ichabod G. Hobbs, navy pay office, Newport. 



THE NAVY. 



191 



*Henry T. B. Harris, chief bureau supplies 

and accounts. 

Stephen Rand, navy pay office, Manila. 
Lawrence G. Boggs, navy pay office, New 

York. 

Samuel R. Colhoun, navy yard, New York. 
James A. Ring, general storekeeper, Boston- 
James E. Cann, navy pay office, New Or- 
leans. 

John N. Speel, navy yard, New York. 
Reah Frazer, navy pay office, Philadelphia. 
Hiram E. Drury, navy yard, Portsmouth. 

PAT INSPECTORS. 

(With rank of Commander.) 

Chas. W. Littlefield, genl. inspr., pay corps. 

William W. Gait, Kentucky (fleet). 

John R. Martin, naval station, Cavite. 

Charles M. Ray, naval academy. 

Mitchell C. McDonald, general storekeeper, 
Yokohama. 

Eustace B. Rogers, clothing factory, New 
York. 

Leeds O. Kerr, navy yard, Mare island. 

Richard T. M. Ball, navy pay office, San 
Francisco. 

Charles S. Williams, Newark. 

Thomas J. Cow T ie, Brooklyn. 

John S. Carpenter, New York (fleet). 

Livingston Hunt, general storekeeper, Wash- 
ington. 

John A. Mudd, Kearsarge (fleet). 

George W. Simpson, assistant bureau of 
supplies and accounts. 

Harry R. Sullivan, navy yard, Boston. 

John C. Sullivan, navy yard, League island. 

PAYMASTERS. 

(With rank of Lieutenant-Commander.) 

Samuel L. Heap, navy yard, Washington. 

James S. Phillips, navy yard, Norfolk. 
(With rank of Lieutenant.) 

Thomas S. Jewett, navy yard, New York. 

Htnry E. Jewett, Hancock. 

Frank T. Arms, Minneapolis. 

Thomas H. Hicks, Illinois. 

Ziba W. Reynolds. Texas. 

Eugene D. Ryan, waiting orders. 

Samuel McGowan, bureau of supplies and 
accounts. 

Henry A. Dent, San Francisco. 

Walter L. Wilson, Olympia. 

Willis B. Wilcox, Alabama. 

William J. Little, navy yard, League island. 

Philip V. Mohun, sick leave. 

Martin McM. Ramsey, Baltimore. 

Joseph J. Cbeatham, Maine. 

Richard Hatton, Columbia. 

Barren P. DuBois, Cincinnati. 

Harry E. Biscoe, Oregon. 

George G. Seibels, Yankee. 

Edmund W. Bonnaffon, naval statn., Cavite. 

Joseph Fyffe, Raloigh. 

Johu Irwin, navy yard. Mare island. 

John H. Merriam, Mayflower. 

Timothy S. O'Leary, navy yard, Norfolk. 

Ulysses G. Ammen. sick leave. 

George Brown, Jr., Massachusetts. 

Walter B. leard, bureau of supplies and ac- 
counts. 

David Potter, sick leave. 

Samuel Bryan, naval academy. 

George M. Lukesh, Franklin. 

John W. Morse, Wisconsin. 

Arthur F. Huntfington, Iowa. 

Harry H. Balthis, Solace. 

Charles Conrad, naval station, Oavite. 

William T. Gray, navy yard, League island. 

George P. Dyer. Missouri. 

Robert H. Woods, Buffalo. 



Robert H. Orr, Culgoa. 

William A. Merritt, Helena. 

P"rauklin W. Hart, Puritan. 

Harrison L. Robins, navy yard, Pensacola. 

Webb V. H. Rose, Cleveland. 

William H. Doherty, Chicago. 

Charles Morris, Jr., Bennington. 

Frederick K. Perkins, Albany. 

George C. Schafer, navy yard, New York. 

Theodore J. Arms, Southery. 

George R. Venable, New Orleans. 

Howard P. Ash, Hartford. 

Hugh R. Insley, Atlanta. 

Geo. M. Stackhouse, navy yard, Charleston. 

Grey Skipwith, Marblehead. 

Trevor W. Leutze, Prairie. 

McGill R. Goldsborough, Independence. 

David D. Chadwick, navy station, San Juan. 

Eugene O. Tobey, assistant general store- 
keeper, navy yard, New York. 

Arthur H. Cathcart, sick leave. 

Jonathan Brooks, Concord. 

Eugene F. Hall, navy yard. Boston. 

Dexter Tiffany, Jr., torpedo boat destroyer 
Truxton. 

Franklin P. Sackett, navy yard, Boston. 

David M. Addison, navy yard, Puget sound. 

William T. Wallace, Machias. 

Victor S. Jackson, bureau supplies and ac- 
counts. 

John R. Sanford, waiting orders. 

Herbert E. Stevens, Wabash. 

Chas. R. O'Leary, navy yard, League island. 

Charles W. Eliason, navy yard, New York. 

Cuthbert J. Cleborne, navy yard, Norfolk. 

John D. Robnett, Monadnock. 

George W. Pigman, Jr., naval training sta- 
tion, Newport. 

Perry G. Kennard, Boston. 

George W. Reeves, Jr., bureau of supplies 
and accounts. 

Walter T. Camp, waiting orders. 

Ray Spear, Pensacola. 

MARINE CORPS. 

BRIGADIER-GENERAL, COMMANDANT. 

George F. Elliott, headquarters, Washing- 
ton. 

ADJUTANT AND INSPECTOR'S DEPARTMENT. 

George C. Reid, adjutant and inspector, 
with the rank of colonel, headquarters, 
Washington. 

Charles H. Lauchheimer, assistant adjutant 
and inspector, with the rank of lieutenant- 
colonel, headquarters, Washington. 

Henry C. Haines, assistant adjutant and in- 
spector, with the rank of major, special 
duty, North Atlantic fleet. 

Rufus H. Lane, assistant adjutant inspector, 
with the rank of major, marine barracks, 
Portsmouth. 

Louis J. Magill, assistant adjutant and in- 
spector, with rank of major, Kearsarge. 
QUARTERMASTER'S DEPARTMENT. 

Frank L. Denny, quartermaster, with the 
rank of colonel, headquarters, Washington. 

Thomas C. Prince, assistant quartermaster, 
with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, as- 
sistant quartermaster's office, Philadel- 
phia. 

Charles L. McCawley, assistant quartermas- 
ter, with the rank of major, quartermas- 
ter's office, Washington. 

Cyrus S. Radford, assistant quartermaster, 
with the rank of major, marine barracks, 
Cavite, P. I. 

William B. Lemly, assistant quarterm.aster, 
with the rank of captain, assistant quar- 
termaster's office, Philadelphia. 



192 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Edwin A. Jonas, assistant quartermaster, 
with the rank of captain, marine bar- 
racks, Cavite, P. I. 

Henry L. Roosevelt, assistant quartermas- 
ter, with the rank of captain, marine bar- 
racks, Olongapo, P. I. 

Norman G. Burton, assistant quartermas- 
ter, with the rank of captain, special 
duty, North Atlantic fleet. 

Hugh L. Mathews, assistant quartermaster, 
with the rank of captain, recruiting duty, 
Buffalo. 

Rupert C. Dewey, assistant quartermaster, 
with the rank of captain, marine bar- 
racks, Washington. 

Frank J. Schwable, assistant quartermas- 
ter, with the rank of captain, headquar- 
ters, Washington. 

PAYMASTER'S DEPARTMENT. 

Green Clay Goodloe, paymaster, with the 
rank of colonel, headquarters, Washington. 

George Richards, assistant: paymaster, with 
the rank of lieutenant-colonel, assistant 
paymaster's office, San Francisco, Cal. 

William C. Dawson s assistant paymaster, 
with the rank of major, paymaster's of- 
fice, Washington!. 

William G. Powell, assistant paymaster, 
with the rank of captain, San Francisco. 

COLONELS. 

James Forney, charge marine recruiting of- 
fice, Boston. 

Percival C. Pope, marine barracks, Mare is- 
land. 

Henry C. Cochrane, commanding marine 
barracks, League Island, Pa. 

Francis H. Harrington, commanding marine 
brigade, Philippine islands. 

Mancil O. Goodrell, commanding marine 
barracks, Norfolk, Va. 

*Rank of rear-admiral 



LIEUTENANT-COLONELS. 

Allan O. Kelton, commanding marine bar- 
racks 1 , Boston, Mass. 

Benjamin R. Russell, commanding marine 
barracks, Washington, D. C. 

Otway C. Berryman, marine barracks, naval 
training station, Newport, R. I. 

William F. Spicer, marine barracks, navy 
yard. New York. 

Paul St. C. Murphy, marine barracks, Ca- 
vite. 

William P. Biddle, marine headquarters, 
Washington. 

Littleton W. T. Waller, marine recruiting 
office, Philadelphia. 

MAJORS. 

Randolph Dickins, marine headquarters, 
Washington*. 

Thomas N. Wood, commanding marine naval 
station, Guam. 

Harry K. White, marine barracks, Wash- 
ington. 

Lincoln Karmany, marine brigade, Cavite, 
P. I. 

George Barnett, U. S. S. Kentucky. 

Charles A. Doyen, marine barracks, naval 
academy, Annapolis, Md. 

Franklin J. Moses, commanding marine bar- 
racks, Portsmouth. 

James E. Mahoney, charge of marines, Lou- 
isiana Purchase exposition. 

Con M. Perkins, marine barracks, Cavite, 
P. I. 

Joseph H. Pendleton, marine barracks, Sit- 
ka, Alaska. 

John A. Lejeune, U. S. S. Dixie. 

Eli K. Cole, marine barracks, navy yard, 
New York. 

Theodore P. Kane, marine barracks, San 
Juan, P. R. 

L. C. Lucas, Naval War college, Newport. 

Charles G. Long, navy yard, Puget sound. 

while chief of bureau. 



RETIRED LIST. 



REAR-ADMIRALS. 

George B. Balch, Baltimore, Md. 
Aaron K. Hughes, Washington, D. C. 
John H. Upshur, Washington, D. C. 
Samuel R. Franklin, Buena Vista Spring 

hotel, Franklin county, Pa. 
Stephen B. Luce, Newport, R. I. 
Bancroft Gherardi, New York city. 
David B. Harmony, Washington, D. O 
A. E. K. Benham, Washington, D. C. 
James A. Greer, Washington, D. C. 
Aaron W. Weaver, Washington, D. C. 
George Brown, Indianapolis, Ind. 
John G. Walker, Washington, D. C. 
Francis M. Ramsay, Washington, D. C. 
Oscar F. Stanton, New London, Conn. 
Henry Erben, New York. 
Thomas O. Self ridge, Jr., Washington, D. C. 
Joseph N. Miller, T^ew York. 
Edmund O. Matthews, on leave abroad. 
Charles S. Norton, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Winfield S. Schley, Washington, D. C. 
Henry L. Howison, Yonkers, N. Y. 
Albert Kautz, Amherst, Mass. 
William G. Buohler, Philadelphia, Pa. 
Henry B. Robe-son, Walpole, N. H. 
Benjamin F. Day, Glasgow, Va. 
Alexander" H. McCormick, Annapolis, Md. 
Nicoll Ludlow, Washington, D. C. 
James Entwistle, Paterson, N. J. 
Nehemiah M. Dyer, Melroso, Mass. 
Joseph Trilley, San Francisco. Cal. 
John Lowe, Washington, D. C. 
James G. Green, New York city. 



James M. Forsyth, Philadelphia, Pa. 
George E. Ide, New York city. 
Oscar W. Farenholt, San Francisco, Cal. 
William C. Gibson, Brooklyn, N. Y., also 

Rayville, S. C. 

John Schouler, Annapolis, Md. 
Edwin White, Princeton, N. J. 
John McGowan, Washington, D. C. 
George M. Book, New Castle, Pa. 
Edward T. Strong, Albany. N. Y. 
Frank Courtis, Berkeley, Cal. 
John A. Howell, Warrenton, Va. 
Norman H. Farquhar, Washington, D. C. 
Bartlett J. Cromwell, Washington, D. C. 
Edwin M. Shepard, Washington, D. C. 
George H. Wadleigh, Dover. N. H. 
Louis J. Allen, New York city. 
Ralph Aston, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
Charles H. Rockwell, Chatham, Mass. 
Edwin S. Houston, Washington, D. C. 
Eugene W. Watson, Washington, D. C. 
John F. Merry, Somerville. Mass. 
C. H. West, Brooklyn, N. Y. 
James D. Ford, inspection duty, Baltimore, 

Md. 

Washburn Maynard. Washington, D. C. 
George O. Reiney, Washington, D. C. 
Louis Kempff, Berkeley, Mass. 
Silas Casey, Washington, D. C. 
Arent S. Crowninshiold, Seal Harbor, Me. 
George W. Melville, Philadelphia, Pa. 
Franklin Hanford, Scottsville, N. Y. 
Abraham B. H. Lillie, New York city. 
Harrie Webster, Richmond. Va. 



THE NAVY. 193 


SHIPS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY. 

Nov. 15, 1903. 
(ABBREVIATIONS Hull: S., steel; S.W., steel, wood sheathed; I., iron; W., wood: Co., 
composite. Propulsion: S., screw; T. S., twin screw; Tr. S., triple screw; P., paddle.) 

FIRST RATE. 


NAME. 


Ill 


Type. 


K 
1 


1^ 


i! 


~x 
If 

ll 

<S 


Station or condition. 


Missouri , 


12,500 
12.500 
3,214 
11,525 
11,525 
11,525 
11,525 
11,525 
11,340 
ld.:.'ss 
10,288 
10,288 
9,215 
8.200 


Ist-class battleship.. 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Monitor . . 


|. 


16.000 
16,000 
2,400 


T.S. 

T!S'. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 


20 
20 
6 
18 
It 

22 
16 
It 
U 

1( 

2( 
18 


Unassigned. 
North Atlantic Fleet. 
Coast Squadron. 
North Atlantic Fleet. 
North Atlantic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
North Atlantic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Navy Yard, New York. 
Coast Squadron. 
North Atlantic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
European Squadron. 
Pacific Squadron. 


Maine 




Alabama... . 


Ist-class battleship.. 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship.. 
lst>-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Armored cruiser 
Armored cruiser 


S. 
S. 
S. 

s. 

s. 

si 
s. 


11,366 
ll.:;i;r, 
10,000 
11,954 
12,318 
l:.'. in:, 
9,738 
10,403 
11.111 
isl7fi 
17,401 


Illinois 






Kentucky 






Massachusetts 




New York 


SECOND RATE. 


Columbia 


7.375 

7,375 
6,315 
6,060 
5.870 
5,000 
6,888 
6,872 
6.888 
6.145 
4,413 
4,324 
4.098 
4,098 
4,084 

7,000 


Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
2d-class battleship . . 
Double-tur. monitor. 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Cruiser (converted). 
Cruiser (converted) . 
Cruiser (converted). 
Cruiser (converted). 
Protected cruiser.... 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Barbette turret, low 
freeboard monitor. 
Transport 


s. 
i. 

s. 
s. 
I. 
I. 

s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 

s. 
I. 


18.509 
20.862 

8.610 
3,700 
17,313 
9.000 
3.800 
3.800 
3600 
3,800 
10.064 
8,815 
8,869 
9,913 

5,244 
4,000 


Tr.S. 
Tr.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
S. 
S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

r- 


11 
11 

S 

ll 

14 

18 

10 
M 
t 

10 
1U 
12 

12 
4 


Atlantic Train'g Squad' 
Atlantic Train'g Squad- 
Coast Squadron. 
Navy Yard.League Isl'd. 
Caribbean Squadron. 
North Atlantic Fleet. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Caribbean Squadron. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Navy Yard,Puget Sound 
SouthAtlanticSquadron 
European Squadron. 

Asiatic Fleet. 
Navy Yard, New York. 


Minneapolis 


Texas 








Yankee 


Prairie 


Buffalo 


Dixie 




Philadelphia 


NewarK 


San Francisco 


Monterey 
Hancock 


THIRD RATE. 


Ajax 


*7,500 
*7,000 
6.428 
*6.300 
*6,220 
6.2O; 
*6,200 
6,181 
6,100 
*6.000 
5,663 
5,016 
4,925 
*4,827 
4,670 
4,460 
*4.400 
4,291 
4,242 


Collier 
Refrigerator ship . . . 


g' 


3,000 

'i'gqo 


1: 


I; 


Collier service. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Navy Yard. Boston. 
NavyYard. Puget Sound. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Nav.Stat'n,Culebra,P.R. 
Collier service. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Collier service. 
Collier service. 
Collier service. 
Collier service. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Naval Station, Guam. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Collier service. 
Collier service. 
Transport service to 
Manila. 
Training service. 
NavyYard. League Isl'd. 
TrainingStat'n,Newport 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Naval Acad., Annapolis. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Navy Yard,League Isl'd. 
Coast Squadron. 
Pacific Squadron. 
Coast Squadron. 
Coast Squadron. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 


Glacier 


Celtic 






s 


*1 500 








Collier 


I. 

3. 

si 
s. 
1. 

si 
I. 
1. 

ll 

ll 

sw 
sw 
w. 

s. 
s 

s 


1,500 
1,800 

'i,'026 
1,300 
1,200 
*926 
1,500 
1,000 

'1,050 
1,069 
1,200 
1,100 
l.OUO 
3,200 

ileoo 

7,500 
7.500 
1,000 
2.400 
2.400 
2.400 
2.400 
10.000 
10,000 


3. 

3l 
S. 
S. 

S. 


V 

"t2 

' '12 
t~> 
M 

t4 


Rainbow 


Cruiser (converted) . 
Tank steamer 
Collier 


Arethusa 




Iris 


Supply & repair ship 




Sterling 


Collier 




Collier 


Nero 


Collier 
Collier 




Abarenda 


Collier 


S. 

s. 
s. 

s. 

T.S. 

Si 

T.S. 
T.S. 

* 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 


t4 
t2 


t2 
t2 

8 
4 
6 
6 
4 
10 
10 
12 
6 
6 
6 
6 
11 
11 








Repair ship 




Collier 




Collier 


Solace 


4,700 

4,260 
3,990 
3,990 
3,990 
3.990 
3.437 
3,437 
3,250 
3,214 
3,214 
3,714 
3,214 
3,213 
3,213 


Hospital ship 

Cruiser (converted). 
Double-tur. monitor. 
Double-tur. monitor. 
Double-tur. monitor. 
Double-tur. monitor. 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 










Terror 


Albany 


New Orleans 








Monitor 


Nevada 
Florida 


Monitor 
Monitor 




Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 


Raleigh 


*Estimated. t Secondary battery. 



194 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


SHIPS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY. CONTINUED. 


NAME. 


Ill 

|s 


Type. 


1 


* 

IP! 
pi 


li 


IJ 

a 


Station or condition. 




3.090 
3,000 
3,000 
2.790 
2,(i9( 
2.372 
2,155 
2.100 
2.089 
2.08! 
2JN 
1,900 
1875 
1.875 
1,875 
1,875 
1,800 
1,710 
1 710 


Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Cruiser 


S. 

s. 
s. 
w. 
s. 
.\. 
s. 

vv. 
i. 
i. 
i. ' 

s. 
I. 
1. 

s. 
s. 

8. 

S. 
8. 
W. 
W. 

w. 

s. 
s. 

&, 

s'. 
s. 

I 

Co. 
Co. 
Co. 
Co. 


3.700 
4,030 
4,030 
2,000 

4.700 
2.000 
5,(HW 
340 
5.227 
5,5>0 
5,451 
1,100 
340 
340 
340 
340 
750 
8,430 
3,405 
3,392 
2.253 
1,894 
1,988 
800 
800 
800 

2,536 

2,199 
2,046 

i$ 

2 -i5 

. 500 
1,227 
1,118 
1,081 
1,054 
1.008 
800 


s. 
s. 

I s - 

T.S. 

S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 

S. 
S. 

s. 
s. 
s. 

s. 

T.S. 

T.S. 

& 

T.S. 
T.S. 

S. 
S. 

s. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
Sails 

If 

S.' 
S. 

s. 
s. 

T.S. 

I s - 

S. 


"'" 
8 
13 

2 
E 

4 

2 

10 

10 

10 
6 
2 

2 
2 
2 
2 

t; 

6 
6 
3 
8 
8 
6 
ti 
1 

8 
8 
8 

4 
6 

1 

(> 
6 
(i 
6 
6 
6 
6 


Navy Yard. Portsmouth. 
Caribbean Squadron. 
Pacific Squadron. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Special service. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Navy Yard, League Isl'd. 
Navy Yard.League Isl'd. 
SouthAtlanticSquadron 
SouthAtlanticSquadron 
Pacific Squadron. 
Training (landsmen). 
Navy Yard.League Isl'd. 
Navy Yard,League Isl'd. 
Navy Yard, League Isl'd. 
Navy Yard.League Isl'd. 
Navy Yard. Mare Island. 
Pacific Squadron. 
Pacific Squadron. 
Navy Yard.Mare Island. 
Special service. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Training service. 
Atlantic Train'g Squad. 
Public Marine School, 
Boston. 
Caribbean Squadron. 
Navy Yard.League Isl'd. 
European Squadron. 
Cadet practice ship, 
Naval Academy. 
Asiatic Fleet. ' 
Navy Yard, Pensacola. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Training (apprentices). 
Navy Yard. Puget Sound. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Station ship, Tutuila. 
Navy Yard. Boston. 
Caribbean Squadron. 
NavyYard, Mare Island. 


Atlanta 


Boston 


Hartford 
Mayflower 
Topeka 
Katahdin 


Cruiser (converted). 


Harbor-defense ram 
Single-tur. monitor. 
Unprotected cruiser. 
Unprotected cruiser. 
Unprotected cruiser. 
Cruiser 


Canonicus 
Detroit 
Montgomery 






Single-tur. monitor. 
Single-tur. monitor. 
Single-tur. monitor. 
Single-tur. monitor. 
Gunboat 
Gunboat 


Lehigh 




Nahant 


Manila 






Gunboat 


Yorktown. ... . 


1.710 
1.486 
1,392 
1,392 
1,375 
1,375 
1.375 

1,371 


Gunboat 


Dolphin 


Dispatch boat 
Light-draft gunboat. 
Light-draft gunboat. 
Cruiser . . 


Wilmington. 


Helena 
Adams 

Essex 


Cruiser 


Enterprise 
Nashville 


Cruiser 

Light-draft gunboat. 
Gunboat 
Gunboat 
Gunboat 

Gunboat 


Castine 
Machias 
Chesapeake 

Don Juan deAustria . . 
Islade Luzon 
Isla deCuba 

Alert 


1,177 
1,177 
1,175 

1,159 

1,030 

i.o;;n 

1,020 
1.020 
1,000 
1,000 
1,000 
1,000 
1,000 
1,000 


Gunboat 
Gunboat 
Cruiser 






Annapolis 


Composite gunboat- 
Composite gunboat.. 
Composite gunboat.. 
Composite gunboat- 
Composite gunboat.. 
Composite gunboat- 


Vicksburg 
Wheeling 
Marietta 


Newport 
Princeton 


FOURTH RATE. 


Lebanon 
Justin 


3,375 
3,300 
*3,100 

*3,085 
*2,000 
1,400 
975 
929 
892 
850 
840 

839 
806 

78(5 
685 

630 
607 
594 
560 
550 
*546 
488 
472 
434 
425 
400 
400 


Collier 
Collier 
Collier 


\. 





s. 
s! 
s. 


I 

t2 


Collier service. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Prison ship. Navy Yard, 
Portsmouth. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Navy Yard, Portsmouth. 
Navy Yard, Boston. 
Navy Yard.Mare Island. 
North Atlantic Fleet. 
Naval Militia, Dist. of 
Columbia. 
Naval Station,SanJuan. 
Caribbean Squadron. 
SouthAtl anticSquadron 
Special service, North- 
western Lakes. 
Navy Yard, Pensacola. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Naval Militia, Illinois. 
Asiatic Fleet, 
N.Militia.SanDiego.Cal. 
NavalMilitia, Louisiana 
Tender .to Puritan. 
Special service. 
Special service. 
NavyYard. Norfolk. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 


Pompey 


Collier 


s 








g 








8. 

S. 

S. 

w. 

8. 

i.' 

s. 

s. 

8. 

L 

S. 
S. 

L 

Co. 


770 
750 
3,795 
1.095 
2,800 
300 

1,213 

1.250 
2,000 
365 

1.800 
550 
1,558 
600 
310 

'"566 
850 
800 
208 
208 


s. 
I.S. 

p 

T.S. 

1. 

s. 
s. 

r 

s! 
s. 
s. 

s! 


14 

ts 
fS 

i 
4 

t 


t4 

no 

t6 

1 

t2 




Gunboat (converted) 
Dynamite-gun vessel 
Gunboat 
Gunboat(converted) 
Tender . . . 


Vesuvius 


Petrel 




Fern 


Bancroft 
Vixen 


Gunboat . 


Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 
Cruiser 






Wasp 
Frolic 


Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat.. 








Gunboat 


Stranger 
Peoria 
Hist 


Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat(converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat 
Gunboat 


Eagle 




Villalobos 


*Estimated. fSecondary battery. 



THE NAVY. 193 


SHIPS OF THE NAVY.-CONTlxrEJ). 


NAME. 


ti! 


Type. 


5 


75 

^ ,. r- 

"2^5. 


| 


g 

I? 
11 


Station or condition. 


Ha-,vk 
Siren 


375 
*3K 
*302 
200 
200 
200 
200 
200 
192 
174 
*173 
152 
150 
150 
150 
150 

142 
142 

142 
142 
137 
122 


Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted ) 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat 


s. 

8. 
I. 

8. 
1. 
1. 
1. 
1. 
S. 
I. 
S. 
8. 
I. 
!. 
!. 

w. 

I. 
1. 
1. 
1. 
1. 

8. 
W. 

8. 

S. 

Co. 
1. 
I. 


1,000 

'"250 
250 
250 
250 
260 
500 

188 

550 
125 
125 
125 
350 

125 
125 
125 
125 

500 

"'400 
137 

137 

" "44 
44 
44 


S. 
8. 
S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

r 

T.S. 

T.S. 

r- 

T.S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

s! 

3. 

S. 

k. 
s. 

s. 
s. 


t-t 

t4 
M 

tii 

% 

t2 

ts 
t:i 

t:; 

t:; 
1-6 

t4 

W 

i 

12 

12 

12 


t2 
+2 


Naval Militia, Ohio. 
Tender to Franklin. 
NavalMilitia,Maryland. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Naval Militia,NewYork. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Naval Militia, Conn. 
Special service. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet, 
Naval Militia, Dist. 'of 
Columbia. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet- 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Nav'l Militia,Pen'sylv'a 
Nav'IMilitia.Massach'ts 
Naval Academy,Annap- 
olis, Md. 
Naval Academy,Annap- 
olis, Md. 
Naval Militia, N. Jersey 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Asiatic Fleet. 


Svlvia . . 


Callao 








Gunboat 






Gunboat 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 


Aile'en 




i Elfreda 


! Sylph 




Albay 




Leyte .. 


Gunboat 


Oneida 


Gunooat (converted) 








Mariveles 
Mindoro 
Restless 


Gunboat 
Gunboat 
Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat (converted) 


Shearwater 


Inca 


*120 
100 

100 

"82 
42 
42 
42 


Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat 


Alvarado 




Gunboat. 


Huntress 


Gunboat (converted) 
Gunboat 


Basco 


Urdaneta 


Gunboat 


TORPEDO VESSELS. 


Decatur 
Bainbridge 


420 
420 
420 
420 
420 
433 
433 
433 
408 
420 
400 
420 
408 
420 
420 
165 
105 
120 
142 
142 
142 
165 
165 
182 
146 

146 
273 
132 
132 
105 
46.5 
46 
65 
165 
65 
235 
145 
*30 
167 


Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat, destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat destyr 
Torpedo boat 


8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
S. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
S. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
S. 
S. 

S. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 
8. 

8.' 
S. 
8. 
3. 


8.000 
8.000 
8,000 
8,000 
8,000 
8,300 
8,300 
8,300 
7.200 
7.000 
8,400 
7.0UO 
7.200 
7,000 
7.000 
3,000 
1,720 
1.800 
2,000 
2,000 
2,000 

*:i400 

3.400 
3,200 
4,200 

4,200 
5.600 
1,750 
1.750 
1,750 
850 
850 
850 
3,000 
850 
5,600 
1.900 
*250 
4.200 


T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 

S. 
T.S. 
8. 

I.S. 


t2 
12 

fa 
ts 

1 

+2 

i 

12 

i 
| 

I 

$ 
P 
s 
P 

j 
1 

::! 
+> 
:::; 

::2 

i 


First torpedo flotilla. . 
First torpedo flotilla. 
First torpedo flotilla. 
First torpedo flotilla. 
First torpedo flQtilla. 
Second torpedo flotilla. 
Second torpedo flotilla. 
Second torpedo flotilla. 
Second torpedo flotilla. 
Second torpedo flotilla. 
Second torpedo flotilla. 
Navy Yard, Mare Island. 
Navy Yard,League Isl'd. 
Navy Yard, Mare Island. 
Navy Yard,Mare Island. 
Reserve torpedo flotilla. 
Res., Navy Yd., Norfolk. 
Res., Navy Yd., Norfolk. 
Res., Navy Yd., Norfolk. 
Res., Navy Yd., Norfolk. 
Torpedo Sta., Newport. 
Annapolis, Md. 
Annapolis, Md. 
Puget Sound Naval Sta. 
Special service. 

Torpedo Sta., Newport. 
Navy Yard.Marelsland. 
Navy Yard, Mare Island. 
Navy Yard, Mare Island. 
Annapolis. Md. 
Annapolis, Md. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk 
Navy Yard, Norfolk 
Navy Yard. Norfolk. 
Torpedo Sta., Newport. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Navy Yard. Norfolk. 
Naval Acad., Annapolis. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 


Barry 


Dale 






1 Worden 


Wuipple 


Hull 






Paul Jones 


Hopkins 
i Perry 






Gushing cN D.I) 
Ericsson (No. 2) 


Torpedo boat 


Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 


Foote (No. 3) 
Rodgers (No. 4) 
Winslow(No. 5) 
Porter (No. 6) 
Dupont (No 7).. .. 


Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 

Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 


Rowan (No 8) 


Dahlgren (No 9) 


T. A. M. Craven 
(No 10) 


Farragut (No 11 ) 
Davis (No. 12) 
Fox: (No 13) 


Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 


Morris (No. 14) 
Talbot (No 15) 


i Gwin (No 16) 


Mackenzie (No.17) 
Wilkes (No. 36) 
McKee(No.l8)./. 
Bailev (No 21) .. . 


Torpedo boat 


8omers (No. 22) 


Torpedo boat 


Manley (No. 23) 


Torpedo boat 


Bagley (No. 25) 


Torpedo boat 


*Estimated. tSecondary battery. JTorpedo tubes. 



196 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


SHIPS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY.-CONTINUED. 


NAME. 


Dixplacc- 
mfnt 
(tons). 


Type. 


1 


Indicated 
horse 
power. 


| 


Guns (main 
battery). 


Station or condition. 


Barney (No. 26) 
Biddle(No.27) 
Shubrick(No.32) 
Stockton (No. 33) 


167 
167 
16H 
166 
165 
31 
73 
120 
120 
120 
120 
120 
120 
120 


Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Subm'ne torpedo b't. 
Subm'ne torpedo b't. 
Subm'ne torpedo b't. 
Subm'ne torpedo b't. 
Subm'ne torpedo b't. 
Subm'ne torpedo b't. 
Snbm'ne torpedo b't. 
Subm'ne torpedo b't. 


S. 
8. 

W. 

S. 

s. 

S. 

s. 

3. 

s. 


4.200 
4,200 
3.000 
3.000 
3,000 
359 
150 
160 
160 
160 
160 
160 
160 
160 


T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

3! 

S. 
3. 


*3 

*3 
*3 
*3 

*2 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 


Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Navy Yard. Norfolk, 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Navy Yard. Norfolk. 
Navy Yard. Norfolk. 
Torpedo Sta., Newport. 
Naval Acad..Annapolis. 
Torpedo Sta., Newport. I* 
Torpedo Sta.. Newport. 
Navy Yard, Mare Island 
Navy Yard. Mare Island/ ; 
New Suffolk. L. 1. S 
New Suffolk, L. I. 
New Suffolk. L. I. 


Stiletto (No 53) 


Holland (No. 54) 
Adder (No. 55) 
Moccasin (No. 57).... . 
Grampus (No. 56) 
Pike (No. 58) 
Plunger (No. 24) 
Porpoise (No. 59) 
Shark (No. 60) 


Torpedo tubes. 

TUGS. 




187 
296 
356 
650 
100 
350 
450 
198 
702 
192 
202 
241 
420 
192 
156 
357 
571 


Tug .. . . 


I. 

s. 
w. 
\v. 
1 


2508. 


*2 

*5 

*2 
*3 
*1 
*3 

"*3 
*3 

"*2 

"*2 

"*4 
*3 
*4 
*2 
*1 

2 

*1 

*2 


Naval Sta., Key West. 
Navy Yard.Mare Island. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Navy Yard, New York. 
Navy Yard, New York. 
Navy Yard. Norfolk. 
Pacific Squadron. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Naval Station, Hawaii. 
Navy Yard, Boston. 
Naval Sta., Key West. 
Navy Yd.. League Island. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Navy Yard. New York. 
Navy Yard. Portsmouth. 
Navy Yard, New York. 
Naval Sta., Pensacola. 
Navy Yard. New York. 
Navy Yd., Puget Sound. 
Naval Sta.. Port Royal. 
Asiatic Fleet. 
Navy Yard. New York. 
Nav'l Sta..SanJuan,P.R. 
Navy Yard. New York. 
Asiatic Fleet (Cavite). 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Navy Yd.,League Island. 
Navy Yard. Pensacola. 
Navy Yard. Portsmouth. 
Naval Acad.. Annapolis, i 
Navy Yard, Washington. , 
Navy Yard. New York. 
Navy Yard.Washington. 
Navy Yd.. Mare Island. 
Nav'l Sta..SanJuan,P.R. 
Tr. Sta 1 ., San Francisco. 
Naval Sta., Pensacola. 
Navy Yard, Norfolk. 
Asiatic Fleet. 


Active 
Alice 
Apache 


IS!:::::::::::::::::::: 

Tug 


Chickasaw 


Tug 


Choctaw 


Tug 
Tug . 


1. 
I. 

T 


340 


! 

a. 
s. 

s. 

s. 

s! 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s 


Hercules 
Iroquois 


Tug 


Tug 
Tug 


S. 

3. 


'3(X 


Massasoit 


Tug 


Modoc 
Mohawk 


Tug 
Tug 


9. 


'"466 
300 
400 

388 




Tug 




Tug 


Nina 


Tug.. 




Tug 




275 
225 
225 
631 
401 
677 
194 
100 
270 
225 
190 

450 
214 

280 


Tug. . . 


W. 

s. 
s. 
s. 


250 
450 
450 
1,600 
426 
2.000 
397 

450 




Tug 
Tug 
Tug 






Pontiac 


Tug 


Potomac 
Powhatan 


Tug 
Tug 
Tug . 


s. 
s. 
1. 

s' 


Rocket 
Samoset 
Sebago 
Sioux 
Standish 


Tug 
Tug 


Tuf. ....... 




V. 


290 
340 
500 


Tug... 




Tug 




Tug . 




212 
345 
441 

S8 

192 
462 


Tug.. . 


s. 
s. 
s. 


450 


s. 
s. 

1: 


"*2 
*5 
*1 

"*2 


Unadilla 


Tug 




Tug 


Vigilant.... 


Tug 

Tug 




Tug 


8. 


300 
650 


S. 

s. 




Tug . 






*Secondary battery guns. 

SAILING SHIPS. 


Alliance 


1,375 
2,100 
1,186 

1,150 

1,125 
1,025 

1,025 


Sailing ship 
Sailing ship 


W. 

w 




Sails 
Sails 
Sails 

Sails 

Sails 
Sails 

Sails 




8 

12 


Atlantic Training Sq'd'n 
Atlantic Training Sq'd'n 
Stationary train'g ship, 
Newport. 
Transferred to Marine 
Hospital service. 
Naval Militia, N. J. 
Public Marine School, 
Philadelphia. 
Public Marine School 
New York. 




Constellation 
Jamestown 


Sailing ship 
Sailing ship 
Sailing ship 


w. 
w. 
w 




Portsmouth 




Sailing ship 
Sailing ship 


w. 
w. 










THE NAVY. 197 


SHIPS OF THE UNITED STATES NAVY.-CONTINrED. 
WOODEN RECEIVING SHIPS. 


NAME. 


jii 


Type. 


1 


^ -_ 
/= i = 


J, 
= ~ 


= J 

'=r 

~4 

^ 


Station or condition. 


Franklin 


5,170 




W 








Etecg. ship, Norfolk. 
Elecg. ship, Boston, 
ttecg. ship. Mare Island. 
Tr. Sta., San Francisco. 
Auxiliary to Franklin. 
Navy Yd., Puget Sound. 


Wabash 


4.650 




W 










H.27U 




\V 








Pensacola 


o.l IX 
2700 




W. 

w 






.... 


Nipsic 


1,375 




w 






UNSERVICEABLE. 


New Hampshire 


4.LX) 
2,400 

2.200 
1,575 

830 
675 

1,900 
900 


Sailing ship 
Cruiser 


\v. 
w 




Sails 


2 


Naval Militia. N. Y. 
Transferred to Marine 
Hospital service. 
Navy Yard. Boston. 
Transferred to Marine 
Hospital service. 
Naval Militia, Pa. 
Naval Militia, Md. 
Naval Militia, Cal. 
Naval Militia. Mich. 


Constitution 


Sailing ship 


w 






4 




Cruiser 


w 








Sailing ship . 


\v 








Dale 


Sailing ship 


\\ 










Cruiser 
Cruiser 


w. 
w. 


1,100 
310 


1: 


S 
4 


Yantic 


VESSELS UNDER CONSTRUCTION. 




16,000 

W,000 

16,000 

10.000 
16,000 

12.500 
15.000 
15.0UO 
15.000 
14,600 
14.6UO 

is. a o 

13 OUO 


Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship.. 

Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 

Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship.. 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Ist-class battleship.. 
Ist-class battleship. . 
Armored cruiser 
Armored cruiser 
Armored cruiser 
Armored cruiser. 
Armored cruiser. 

Armored cruiser 
Armored cruiser 
Armored cruiser 
Protected cruiser. . . . 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser 
Protected cruiser.... 
Protected cruiser 
Gunboat. 


s. 
ft 

s. 

s. 
sw 
<w 
sw 
s. 
s. 
s. 
s. 
sw 
-w 
sw 
s. 
s. 

s. 
s. 
J. 
s. 
8. 

s. 
sw 
sw 
sw 
sw 

sw 

SW 

sw 

sw 

s 


16,500 
16,500 

16.500 
16,501 

16.500 

16,000 

KiKHi 
KOOO 
Kl.MJ 

KiMi 
18,000 

10,0)0 
10. OUO 
23.000 
23,000 
23,000 
>:>.(*** 
25,000 

23,000 
23,000 

23.000 
21.000 
21.000 
21,000 
4,700 
4.700 
4,700 
4,700 
4.700 
4,7UO 
1,050 
,050 


T.S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 

?i 
If 

T.S. 
T.S. 

T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T,S. 


8 

24 
24 
24 

2U 
24 
24 
24 
24 
24 
22 
22 
22 
22 
22 
21) 
20 

22 
22 
22 
14 
14 
14 
10 
10 
1U 
10 
10 
10 
8 
6 


Navy Yard, New York. 
New York Ship Building 
Co., Camden. 
Newport News. 
Newport News. 
Fore River Ship and En- 
gine Building Co. 
Union Iron Works, S. F. 
Bath Iron W'ks, Maine. 
Fore River S. & E. Co. 
Seattle, Wash. 
Newport News Co. 
Fore River S. & E. Co. 
Contract not awarded. 
Contract not awarded. 
Union Iron Works. 
Cramp & Sons, Phila. 
Newport News Co. 
Cramp & Sons. Phila. 
New York Ship Build- 
ing Co. 
Newport News Co. 
2ramp & Sons. 
Union Iron Works. 
Neafle & Levy. Phila. 
Union Iron Works. 
Newport News Co. 
Elizabethport. N. J. 
Bath Iron Works. 
Neafle & Levy, o 
Fore River S. & E. Co. 
Richmond, Va. 
Union Iron Works. 
Morris Heights, N. Y. 
Morris Heights. N. Y. 
Contract not awarded. 
Navv Yard, Boston. 
NavyYard. Mare Island. 
NavyYard Portsmouth 


Kansas 

Louisiana 
Minnesota 


Ohio 




New Jersey 
Nebraska 
Virginia 


Rhode Island 


Idaho 


Mississippi .... 




14 000 


Pennsylvania 
West Virginia 


14,000 
14.000 

14.. 500 
14.5dO 




Maryland 


13.600 
3,600 

lo.^M 

9,600 
B.600 

9,600 
3.100 
3,100 
3,100 
3,100 
3 100 




South Dakota 


St Louis 


(Milwaukee 


! Charleston . : 














3,100 

1.0S5 
1,085 

'i.'stio 

1,800 
345 

340 
247.5 
165 
174 
174 

225 




Paducah 


Gunboat 


junboat No. 16 




Trainin^ ship 


s 






6 
6 




Training ship 
Training brigantine. 
Torpedo boat destyr. 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 


s. 

w. 

s. 
s. 
s. 

S. 

s. 

s. 

s. 
s. 
s. 






Boxer 






Macdonough (No. 45) . . 
Stringham (No. 19). ... 


8.400 
7.200 
6.01)0 
3,000 
3,000 

'3,666 
450 

450 


T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
T.S. 
S. 
S. 


*2 
*2 
*2 
*3 
8 

*3 

*3 


Fore River S. & E. Co. 
Wilmington. Del. 
Portland, Ore. 
South Boston, Mass. 
Elizabethport, N. J. 
Lewis Nixon. 
Baltimore, Md. 
Navy Yard, Boston. 
NavyYard, Mare Island. 


Goldsborough fNo. 20) 
Blakelev (No. 28) 
Nicholson (No. 30) 
O'Brien (No. 31) 
Tingey (No 35) .. 


Torpedo boat 
Torpedo boat 
Tugboat 


Pentucket (No. 8) 
Sotoyomo (No. 9) 


Tugboat 


* Torpedo tubes. 



198 CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 


THE PUBLIC DOMAIN. 

VACANT LANDS IN THE UNITED STATES AT THE CLOSE OF THE FISCAL 
YEAR ENDED JUNE 30. 1903. 
[From the repcn-t of the commissioner of the land office.] 


STATE OR TERRITORY. 


AREA UNAPPROPRIATED AND 

UNRESERVED. 


Area 
reserved. 


Area ap- 
propriated. 


Surveyed. 


Unsurveyed. 


Total. 


Alabama 
Alaska 


Acres. 
258,420 


Acres. 

''"'367.983,566 
35,312,783 


Acres:. 
258.420 
367.9a3.506 
47,003.821 
2,759.553 
36.965.530 
37,926.616 
1,339,267 
41.785,780 


Acre lim 

1120.174 
20,159.837 
2.560 
19,718,027 
5,486.643 
19.259 
1,334,031 


Acres. 
32,347,480 

""5.628.662 
30,731 .507 
43,286,863 
22.934 ,901 
33,714.114 i 
10.173,629 
35.842.500 j 
22,950,400 




11,691.038 
2 759.553 




California 
Colorado 
Florida 


29.450.676 
33.638.530 
1.179.197 
12,376,285 


7,508.854 
4.288,086 
160.070 
29,409,495 


Illinois 












Indian Territory 
Iowa 








19,658,880 








35,646.686 
50.347,014 
27.411. 944 j 
36.333.440 
43.3W.040 
29,572,400 
43.56S.iWi 
18.323.x :; 
39,631.703 
3,075. 323 
18,049,682 
28,387.251 
26,062.720 
17.920.605 
25.369,824 
25.578.872 
4,984,234 
20W.483 
84,729,395 
9,523,571 


Kansas 
Louisiana 


1,047.831 
109,964 
3(55,065 
3.498,127 
112.720 
227,158 
18,244.326 
8.848.906 
30.792.220 
39,336,648 
8,749,864 


""65,618 


1.047.S31 
174.H82 
365,065 
5,168,685 
112.720 
227.158 
57,835.663 
8,848.906 
61,277.908 
53.772,359 
13.197,339 


987.8V5 
1,468.434 
120.695 
2,686,355 






1,670,558 




Missouri 
Montana 
Nebraska 
Nevada 






39,641,337 


17,384,134 
606,611 
5,983.409 
6.606,75! 
3,325,490 


30,485.688 
14,435,711 
4,447,475 




North Dakota 


Ohio.. 


Oklahoma 
Oregon 
South Dakota 


3,091.333 
17,182.749 
10,522.553 
11,526.008 
4,464,185 
113.001 
34.543,<98 




3,091,333 
23.105,816 
10.905.154 
41,369.561 
9.485.192 
113,001 
37,118,869 


3.762.462 
12,801,800 
32,722.374 
6.187,645 
11,865.205 
432,524 
15.790,840 


5.923.667 
382.601 
29,843,553 
5,021,007 


Utah 


Washington 


Wisconsin 
Wyoming 

Grand total 


2,574,871 


284,136.355 


579,153,680 


863,290.035 


169.2S4.043 


776.965.802 


*The unreserved lands in j 
as estimated. 
DISPOSAL OF PUBLIC 

CASH SALES. 

Private entries 
Public auction 


Alaska are i 

LANDS. 

A en 

28,899 
59,058 
14,200 
.. 1,765,222 


DOS 

g. 

40 

54 

57 
-i:; 
O.t 
77 
71 

ss 
02 
54 

2S 
41 


tly unsui 

Cherokee 
Klamatt 
Southeri 
Ute 


veyed and unappropriat 

INDIAN LANDS. 

i 


ed, fSo far j 

Acres. 
619.14 
723.61 
16,487.38 j 


Indian reserve 
i Ute 


Pre-emption entries 
Timber and stone entries 


Osage t 
serve 
Kansas 
serve 
Chipper 
Flathea< 
Omaha 
Umatills 
Sioux .. 


rust and* diminished n 


'- 
14,082.07 

301.68 
2,383.98 
160.00 
1,120.17 
80,543.07 
81.40 


Mn;eral-land entries 
Desert-land entries (original) 
Excesses on homestead entrie 


.. 1,025,825 
5.. 22,676 
38,007 
1,111 


trust and diminished r( 


a 
1 


Town sites 


Abandoned military reservations 1,033 


i 


Total 




Uinta ar 
Colville 
Total 
RECI 
Total re 
public 
Total 
Indian 
Total r 
tions c 
Total re 
her ur 
and Ji 
Total re 
or i' me 
furniti 
Total r 
copies 
Grand 


id White River Ute lands 176.65 
Indian reserve 8,162.14 


.. 3,073,896 


GO 

eg, 

25 
IS 
38 
23 

Hi 

20 
67 
59 
S8 


MISCELLANEOUS. ACT 

Homestead entries (original) 11,193,120 
Timber-culture entries (original). 316 
Entries- with warrants and scrip. 38,496 
State selections 1,515,291 
Railroad selections 3,864,182 


ilPTS OF T 

ceipts from 
lands 
ceipts from 
lauds 
eceipts fro 
n public Ian 
eeipts from 
cler acts M< 
me 4, 1897.. 
ceipts from 
at property 
ire) 
eceipts for 
of records a 
total 


173,371.56 
HE LAND OFFICE, 
disposal of 
$10,557,618.66 
disposal of 
308,939.14 
m depreda- 
ds 95.251.31 




sales of tim- 
irch 3, 1891, 

sales of gov- 
(old office 

furnishing 
nd plats 


31,966.24 

849.82 
30,118.48 


Small holdings 7,357 




Swamp lands patented..,. 


. ... 2,909,747 


19 577 031 


10 


Total area of public-land 




en- 

99 Rtin Q98 


09 


11.024.743.65 







POLITICAL COMMITTEES. 



iloiittcal Committees (19004904). 

REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE. 



Headquarters Chicago aiid New York. 
Chairman M. A. Hanua, Ohio. 
Secretary Perry s. Heath, Utah. 
Treasurer Cornelins N. Bliss, New York. 
Asst. Treasurer Volney W. Foster, Illinois. 
Exucutive Committee Henry C. Payne of 
Wisconsin, vice-chairman; Perry S. Heath 
of Utah. Secretary; Kit-hard C. Kerens 
of Missouri, Graeme Stewart of Illinois, 
Harry S. New of Indiana, Joseph H. Mau- 
ley of Maine, N. B. Scott of West Vir- 
ginia, Franklin Murphy of New Jersey, 
Cornelius N. Bliss of New York. Head- 
quarters, Cleveland, O. 

Alabama J. W. Deiuinick Montgomery 

Arkansas Powell Clayton 

Eureka Springs and City of Mexico 

California W. C. Van Fleet.. San Francisco 

Colorado A. M. Stevenson Denver 

Connecticut Charles F. Brooker Ausonia 

Delaware John E. Addicks Wilmington 

Florida J. N. Ooombs Apalachicola 

Georgia Judsou W. Lyons 

Augusta and Washington, D. C. 

Idaho D. Wi Standrod Pocatello 

Illinois Graeme Stewart Chicago 

Indiana Harry S. New Indianapolis 

Iowa Ernest E. Hart Council Bluffs 

Kansas David W. Mulvane Topeka 

Kentucky John W. Yerkes Danville 

Louisiana Lewis S. Clark Patterson 

Maine Joseph H. Mauley Augusta 

Maryland Louis E. McComas 

Hagerstown and Washington, D. O. 

Massachusetts George V. L. Meyer.. Boston 

Michigan J. W. Blodgett Grand Rapids 

Minnesota Thomas H. Shevlin. Minneapolis 

Mississippi H. C. Turley Natchez 

Missouri Richard C. Kerens St. Louis 

Montana C. H. McLeod Missoula 

Nebraska R. B. Schneider Fremont 

Nevada Patrick L. Flanigan Reno 

New Hampshire J. H. Gallinger Concord 

New Jersey Franklin T. Murphy Newark 

New York George R. Sheldon New York 

North Carolina W. S. O'B. Robinson 

Goldsboro 

N. Dakota Alexander McKenzie. .Bismarck 

Ohio Myron T. Herrick Cleveland 

Oregon George A. Steel Portland 

Pennsylvania M. Stanley Quay Beaver 

Rhode Island Chas. R. Bray ton. Providence 
South Carolina John G. Capers. .Charleston 
South Dakota J. M. Greene.. ..Chamberlain 

Tennessee Walter P. Brownlow, M. C 

Jonesboro an<l Washington, D. C. 

Texas R. B. Hawley, M. C 

Galveston and Washington, D. C. 

Otah^O. J. Salisbury Salt Lake City 

Vermont James W. Brock Montpelier 

Virginia George E. Bowdeu Norfolk 

West Virginia N. B. Scott 

Wheeling and Washington, D. C. 

Washington George H. Baker. ..Goldendale 

Wisconsin Henry C. Payne Milwaukee 

Wyoming George E. Prexton Wyoming 

Alaska John G. Heid Juneau 



Arizona W. M. Griffith Tucson 

New Mexico Solomon Luna Los Lunas 

Oklahoma William Grimes Kingfisher 

Indian Ter. Wm. M. Mellette....Muskogee 
District of Columbia Myron M. Parker.. 

Washington 

Hawaii Samuel Parker Honolulu 

CHAIRMEN STATE COMMITTEES (1903). 
Alabama Willard I. W T ellman....Huutsville 

Arkansas H. L. Remmel Little Rock 

California William M. Cutter 

Palace hotel, San Francisco 

Colorado D. B. Fairley 

1625 Champa street, Denver 

Connecticut Andrew F. Gates Hartford 

Florida Henry S. Chubb Gainesville 

Georgia W. A. Pledger Atlanta 

Idaho Frank R. Godding Boise 

Illinois F. H. Rowe..Gt. Northern, Chicago 
Indiana James P. Goodrich. 

Majestic building, Indianapolis 

Iowa R. H. Spence 

F.quitable bdg. , Des Moines 

Kansas Morton Albaugh Topeka 

Kentucky C. ,M. Baruett Louisville 

Louisiana Emile Kuntz 

139 Decatur street, New Orleans 

Maine F. M. Simpson Baugor 

Maryland P. L. Goldsborough Baltimore 

iMassachusetts A. H. Goetting 

194 Washington street. Boston 

Michigan Gerrit J. Diekema Detroit 

Minnesota Robert Jamison 

Windsor hotel, St. Paul 

Missouri Thomas J. Akius St. Louis 

Montana W T illiam Lindsey Helena 

Nebraska H. C. Lindsey, the Ldndell, Lincoln 

-Nevada George T. Mills Carson City 

New Hampshire J. H. Gallinger 

White's Opera House, Concord 

New Jersey E. C. Stokes (acting).. Trenton 
New York George W. Dunn 

Fifth Avenue hotel, New York 

North Carolina J. C. Pritchard. Greensboro 

North Dakota L. B. Hanna Fargo 

Ohio Charles Dick.. Clinton bdg., Columbus 
Oregon W. F. Matthews 

Benson block, Portland 

Pennsylvania M. S. Quay 

1417 Locust street, Philadelphia 

Rhode Island Hunter C. White. Providence 

South Dakota Frank Crane Sioux Falls 

Tennessee Jacob W. Borches Knoxvtile 

Texas Cecil A. Lyons Sherman 

Utah P. P. Christensen 

Central block, Salt Lake City 

Vermont Ira A. Allen Fairhaven 

Virginia Park Agnew Alexandria 

Washington Ellis Morrison Seattle 

W. Virginia W. M. O. Dawson. .Charleston 
Wisconsin George E. Bryant 

Pfister hotel, Milwaukee 

Wyoming J. A. Van Orsdell Cheyenne 

New Mexico Frank A. Hubbell. Albuquerque 
Oklahoma C. M. Cade Guthrie 



DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL COMMITTEE. 



Headquarters Chicago. 

Chairman James K. Jones, Washington, 
D. C. 

Vice-Chairman W. J. Stone, St. Louis, Mo. 

Secretary C. A. Walsh, Ottuimva, Iowa. 

Treasurer M. F. Dunlnp, Jacksonville, 111. 

Executive Committee J. G. Johnson, Ar- 
kansas, chairman; C. A. Walsh, Iowa, 



secretary; W. J. Stone, Missouri; H. D. 
Clayton, Alaoama; Thomas Gahan, Illi- 
nois'; D. J. Campau, Michigan; J. M. 
Guffey, Pennsylvania; George Fred Wil- 
liams, Massachusetts; T. D. O'Brien, Min- 
nesota; Thomas Taggart, Indiana; James 
C. Dahlman, Nebraska; Norman E. Mack, 
New York. 



200 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



Alabama H. D. Clayton Buf anla 

Alaska L. L. Williams Juneau 

Arizona J. B. Breathitt Tucson 

Arkansas J. P. Clarke Little Rock 

California M. F. Tarpey Alameda 

Colorado Adair Wilson Denver 

Connecticut H. S. Cummings Stamford 

Delaware R. R. Kenney Dover 

Florida George P. Raney Tallahassee 

Georgia Clark Howell Atlanta 

Hawaii W T . H. Coruwell Honolulu 

Idaho E. M. Wolfe Mountain Home 

Illinois Thomas Gahan Chicago 

Indiana Thomas Taggart Indianapolis 

Iowa C. A. Walsh Ottumwa 

Kansas J. G. Johnson Peabody 

Kentucky Urey Woodson Oweusboro 

Louisiana N. E. Blanchard Shreveport 

Maine George E. Hughes Bath 

Maryland A. P. Gorman Laurel 

Massachusetts G. P. Williams Boston 

Michigan D. J. Campau Detroit 

Minnesota T. D. O'Brien St. Paul 

Mississippi A. J. Russell Meridian 

Missouri William J. Stone St. Louis 

Montana J. S. M. Neill '.Helena 

Nebraska J. C. Dahlman Omaha 

Nevada J. R. Ryan Virginia City 

New Hampshire True L. Norris. Portsmouth 

New Jersey W. B. Gourley Paterson 

New Mexico H. B. Pergusson. .Albuquerque 

New York N. E. Mack Buffalo 

North Carolina Joseph Daniels Raleigh 

North Dakota J. B. Eaton Fargo 

Ohio John R. McLean Cincinnati 

Oklahoma J. R. Jacobs Shawnee 

Oregon M. A. Miller Lebanon 

Pennsylvania J. M. Guffey Pittsburg 

Rhode Island G. W. Greene Woonsocket 

South Carolina B. R. Tillman Trenton 

South Dakota Maris Taylor Huron 

Tennessee James M. Head Nashville 

Texas R. M. Johnston Houston 

Utah D. C. Dunbar Salt Lake City 

Vermont J. H. Senter Montpeller 

Virginia Peter J. Otey Lynchburg 

Washington W. H. Dunphy... Walla Walla 
West Virginia John T. McGraw.... Graf ton 

Wisconsin T. E. Ryan Waukesha 

Wyoming J. E. Osborne Rawlins 



CHAIRMEN STATE COMMITTEES (1903). 

Alabama R. J. Lowe Birmingham 

Arizona Samuel F. Webb Phoanix 

Arkansas Carroll Armstrong Morrillton 

California James C. Sims... San Francisco 

Colorado Milton Smith Denver 

Connecticut Charles F. Thayer Norwich 

Delaware Willard Saulsbury. . .Wilmington 
Florida Arthur T. Williams.... Jacksonville 

Georgia E. T. Brown Atlanta 

Idaho K. I. Perky Mountainhome 

Illinois John P. Hopkins Chicago 

Indiana W. H. O'Brien Lawrenceburg 

Iowa A. E. Jackson Tama 

Kansas H. P. Parrelly Chanute 

Kentucky A. W. Young Frankfort 

Louisiana E. W. Krutschnitt.New Orleans 

Maine John Scott Bath 

Maryland Murray Vandiver Baltimore 

Massachusetts W. S. McNary Boston 

Michigan J. R. Whiting St. Clail 

Minnesota L. A. Rosing St. Cloud 

Mississippi C. C. Miller Meridian 

Missouri W. A. Rothwell Moberly 

Montana Walter Cooper (1901) Helena 

Nebraska P. L. Hall - Omaha 

Nevada W. J. Westerfleld (1901) Reno 

New Hampshire Henry F. Hollis.. Concord 
New Jersey William B. Gourley.. Paterson 
New Mexico C. F. Easley (1901). .Santa Fe 

New York Frank Campbell Albany 

North Carolina F. M. Simmons Raleigh 

North Dakota B. S. Brynjolfson.Gd. Forks 

Ohio Harvey C. Garber Greenville 

Oklahoma William M. Anderson Enid 

Oregon R. S. Sheridan (1901) Roseburg 

Pennsylvania Wm. T. Creasy. * 
Rhode Island Geo. W. Greene. 



.Harrisburg 
.Woonsocket 

Columbia 

Armoui 



South Carolina Willie Jones.. 
South Dakota E. S. Johnson. 

Tennessee F. M. Thompson Nashville 

Texas James B. Wells Brownsville 

Utah William M. Roylance Provo 

Vermont E. S. Harris Bennington 

Virginia J. Taylor Ellyson Richmond 

Washington Henry Drum (1901) Seattle 

West Virginia James H. Miller Hinton 

Wisconsin A. F. Warden Milwaukee 

Wyoming Cohn Hunter (1901) Cheyenne 



PROHIBITION NATIONAL COMMITTEE. 



Headquarters 1414 Monadnock building, Chi- 
cago. 

Executive Committee Oliver W. Stewart, 
chairman, Chicago, 111.; Samuel Dickie, 
vice-chairman, Albion, Mich.; James A. 
Tate, secretary, Harriman, Tenn. ; Samuel 
Dickie, treasurer, Albion, Mich. ; A. 
A. Stevens, Tyrone, Pa. ; James A. Tate, 
Harrimam, Tenn. ; T. R. Oarskadon, Keyser, 
W. Va.; H. P. Faris, Clinton, Mo. 

Arkansas Mrs. B. Babcock Little Rock 

California G. T. Stickney Los Angeles 

Colorado J. N. Scouller Denver 

Mrs. M. E. Craise Denver 

Connecticut F. G. Platt Now Britain 

Charles E. Steele Now Britain 

Delaware A. R. Tatum Wilmington 

G. W. Todd Wilmington 

Idaho H. A. Lee Weiser 

[llinois O. W. Stewart Chicago 

F. S. Regan Rockf ord 

Indiana Charles Eckhart Auburn 

F. T. McWhirter Indianapolis 

Iowa Malcolm Smith Cedar Rapids 

Kansas T. D. Talmadge Hutchlnson 

J. B. Garton Clayton 

Kentucky" P. E. Beauchamp Lexington 

T. B. Domaree Union Mills 



Maine N. F. Woodbury Auburn 

A. H. Clary Hallowell 

Maryland J. Levering Baltimore 

L. S. Melson Bishopville 

Massachusetts F. M. Forbush Newton 

H. S. Morley Baldwinville 

Michigan F. W. Corbett Adrian 

Samuel Dickie Albion 

Minnesota W. J. Dean Minneapolis 

J. F. Heiberg Heiberg 

Missouri H. P. Faris.: Clintou 

Charles E. Stokes Kansas City 

Montana T. P. Street Missoula 

E. M. Gardner Bozeman 

Nebraska A. G. Wolfenbarger Lincoln 

L. G. Parker Crab Orchard 

New Hampshire H. O. Jackson.. .Littleton 

L. F. Richardson Peterboro 

New Jersey W. H. Nicholson... Haddonfleld 

J. G. Van Cise Summit 

New York W. T. Wardwell New York 

P. E. Baldwin Elmlra 

North Carolina T. P. Johnson.. . .Salisbury 

Edwin Shaver Salisbury 

North Dakota M. H. Kiff Tower City 

J. Y. Easterbrook Jamestown 

Ohio John Danner Canton 

R. A. Candy Columbus 



POLITICAL COMMITTEES. 



201 



Oregon W. P. Elmore Brownsville 

E. O. Miller Portland 

Pennsylvania A. A. Stevens Tyrone 

Charles R. Jones Philadelphia 

Rhode Island H. B. Metcalf Pawtucket 

Smith Quiinby Hill's Grove 

South Dakota H. H. Curtis Castlewood 

F. J. Carlisle Brookings 

Tennessee James A. Tate Harriman 

R. S. Cheves Unicol 

Texas D. H. Hancock Farmersville 

Rev. J. G. Adams Fort Worth 

Ctah J. S. Boreman Ogden 

C. D. Savery Salt Lake City 

Vermont C. W. Wyman Brattleboro 

H. T. Comings East Berkshire 

Virginia W. T. Bundick Onancock 

Washington E. S. Smith Seattle 

West Virginia T. R. Carskadon Keyser 

U. A. Clayton Fairmont 

Wisconsin Vacant. 



CHAIRMEN STATE COMMITTEES. 

Alabama Rev. W. D. Gay Montgomery 

Arizona Dr. J. W. Thomas Phoenix 

Arkansas Martin Henry Jacinto 

California C. L. Meracle Oakland 

Colorado John Hipp Denver 

Conn. E. L. G. Hohenthal...S. Manchester 

Delaware R. H. Cooper Cheswold 

Florida Dr. A. L. Izler Ocala 

Georgia Dr. J. O. Perkins Atlanta 

Idaho Edwin R. Headley Moscow 

Illinois A. E. Wilson Chicago 

Indiana C. W. Newlin Indianapolis 



Iowa W. D. Elwell Ames 

Kansas E. R. De Lay Emporia 

Kentucky Dr. J. D. Smith Paducah 

Louisiana Alf W. Wagner Columbia 

Maine Arthur J. Dunton Bath 

Maryland J. N. Parker Baltimore 

Massachusetts J. B. Lewis, Jr Boston 

Michigan F. W. Corbett Adrian 

Minnesota George W. Uiggins. Minneapolis 

Mississippi T. J. Bailey Jackson 

Missouri Charles E. Stokes Mexico 

Montana J. M. Waters Bozeman 

Nebraska W. Burt Clark Ashland 

Nevada E. W. Taylor (sec.) Reno 

N. Hampshire L. F. Richardson.. Peterboro 

New Jersey Graf ton E, Day Millville 

New Mexico Rev. R. Renison.Albuquerque 

New York Rev. J. H. Durkee Rochester 

North Carolina Edwin Shaver.. ..Salisbury 

North Dakota T. E, Ostlund Hillsboro 

Oklahoma Charles. Brown Perry 

Ohio F. M. Mecartney Columbus 

Oregon I. H. Amos Portland 

Pennsylvania Chas. R. Jones.. Philadelphia 

Rhode Island C. H. Tilley Providence 

South Carolina M. B. Inele Orangeburg 

South Dakota C. V. Templeton.Woonsocket 

Tennessee Prof. J. A. Tate Harriman 

Texas E. H. Conibear Dallas 

Utah Rev. R. Wake Salt Lake City 

Vermont Dr. L. W. Hanson. Barre 

Virginia J. O. Alwood Richmond 

Washington R. E. Dunlap Seattle 

West Virginia D. A. Clayton Fairmdnt 

Wisconsin J. E. Clayton Milwaukee 

Wyoming Mrs. Grace Craft (sec.)..Laramie 



NATIONAL COMMITTEE SOCIALIST PARTY. 



Headquarters 303-304 McCague building, 

Omaha, Neb. 
National Secretary William Mailly, Omaha, 

Neb. 

Quorum B. Berlyn, Illinois; S. M. Rey- 
nolds, Indiana; John M. Work, Iowa; 
Charles Dobbs, Kentucky; Victor L. Ber- 
ger, Wisconsin. (The quorum of five mem- 
bers of the national committee assists the 
national secretary in matters demanding 
immediate attention.) 

NATIONAL COMMITTEEMEN. 
California N. A. Richardson. San Bernardino 

Colorado A. H. Floaten Telluride 

Connecticut W. E. White New Haven 

Florida W. R. Healey Longwood 

Idaho J. E. Miller Idaho Falls 

Illinois B. Berlyn Chicago 

Indiana S. M. Reynolds Terre Haute 

Iowa John M. Work Des Moines 



Kentucky Charles E. Dobbs Louisville 

Kansas Walter T. Mills.. Kansas City, Mo. 

Maine Charles L. Fox Portland 

Massachusetts James F. Carey... Haverhill 

Minnesota C. C. Talbott Minneapolis 

Missouri George H. Turner Kansas City 

Montana J. F. Fox Butte 

Nebraska C. Christensen Elattsmouth 

New Hampshire S. F. Claflrn... Manchester 

New Jersey George H. Goebel Newark 

New York Morris Hillquit...New York city 

North Dakota R. C. Massey Fargo 

Ohio W. G. Crithlow Dayton 

Oklahoma G. G. Halbrooks Graves 

Pennsylvania J. M. Barnes Philadelphia 

South Dakota Samuel Lovett Aberdeen 

Texas John Kerrigan Dallas 

Utah Vacant. 

Washington George E. Boomer Prosser 

Wisconsin Victor L. Berger Mil 



.Milwaukee 



THE FLOODS OF MAY AND JUNE. 1903. 



Heavy and continued rains in Kansas, 
Iowa and Nebraska in the latter part of 
May, 1903, caused a flood not exceeded in ex- 
tent since that of 1844 and never surpassed 
in that part of the country in destructive- 
ness to life and property. The inundation 
began about the 25th of May and lasted 
some ten days. The total amount of damage 
done was variously estimated at from $10,- 
000,000 to $15,000,000 and the loss of life at 
approximately 100. Thirty-five persons were 
drowned at Topeka, Kas. ; eight in Kansas 
City, Mo. ; fourteen in East St. Louis, and 
many others at scattered points in the flood- 
ed district. All the railroad bridges over 
the Kaw at Kansas City were swept away 
with one exception and the wholesale sec- 
tion between the bluffs and the river was 
flooded to a depth of several feet. 



No account is taken of the smaller towns, 
although, nearly 200 of these were affected 
by the floods. The lowest estimate of the 
loss to crops was $5,000,000. 

OTHER FLOODS OF THE TEAE. 

Easton, Pa., Aug. 11 Floods in the Dela- 
ware cause great damage; many persons 
made homeless. 

Burlington, N. J., Oct. 11 Four-fifths of the 
town inundated. 

Oakford Park, Pa., July 5 Thirty-six per- 
sons drowned by collapse of a dam. 

Passaic, N. J., Oct. 11 Floods cause a loss 
of $2.000,000: hundreds made homeless. 

Paterson, N. J., Oct. 11 Flood in Passaic 
river causes loss of $2,000,000. 

Spartanburg, S. C., June 6 Eight cotton 
mills swept away by a cloudburst; forty- 
five lives lost. 



202 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 



MEN OF THE YEAR, 



AI LEE James Frank Born in Dover, Del., 
in 1857; engaged in the 
watchmaking and jew- 
elry business ; presi- 
dent of Bay State Gas 
Company of Delaware 
and the Staten Island 
Brick company; elect- 
ed to the state senate 
as a union republican 
in 1898 and 1902; was 
an adherent of J. Ed- 
ward Addicks in the 
long senatorial strug- 
gle ended in 1903 ; elect- 
ed United States sen- 
ator March 2, 1903; his 





term expires in 1907. 

ANKENY, Levi Born in St. Joseph, Mo., 
1844; educated at Port- 
land, Ore.; first mayor 
of Lewiston, Idaho; 
banker by occupation; 
home, Walla Walla, 
Wash.; was chairman 
of the republican dele- 
gation from Washing-- 
ton to the national 
convention in 1900; was 
chairman of the Wash- 
ington commission for 
the Buffalo exposition 
in 1901; member of the 
W T alla Walla common 
council; elected United 
States senator Jan. 29. 1903. 



BALL. Lewis Helsler Born Sept. 21, 1861, 
near Wilmington, Del. ; 
graduated from Dela- 
ware college in 1882 
and from the Univer- 
sity of Pennsylvania 
in 1885; was state 
treasurer of Delaware 
from 1898 to 1900; was 
elected to the 57th 
congress by the repub- 
licans as a representa- 
tive; was elected, 
after a long contest, 
to the United States 
senate March 2, 1903, 
as a republican, for 
the short term, which expires in 1905. 

FAIRBANKS, Charles W. Born in Union 
county, Ohio, May 11, 
1852; graduated from 
the OhioWesleyan uni- 
versity at Delaware in 
1872; studied law and 
was admitted to prac- 
tice in state Supreme 
court in 1874; removed 
to Indianapolis and 
has since made that 
city his home; was a 
candidate for United 
States senator in 1893, 
but was defeated by 
David Turpie, demo- 
crat; elected senator 
in 1897 and re-elected in 1903. 






FULTON. Charles W. Born in Ohio, Aug. 
17, 1853 ; moved to Iowa, 
where he studied law 
and was admitted to 
the bar; moved to Ore- 
gon in 1875 and for a 
time taught school, 
making his home in 
Astoria, where he re- 
sumed the practice of 
law; elected state sen- 
ator four times; presi- 
dent of state senate in 
1893 and 1901; elected 
United States senator 
Feb. 20, 1903, as a re- 
publican; his term of 
office expires in 1909. 



GALLINGEH, Jacob H. Born in Cornwall, 
Ont., March 28, 1837; 
received a common- 
school and academic 
education; graduated 
as a physician in 1858 
and practiced in Con 
cord, N. H., his pres- 
ent home; member of 
the legislature as rep- 
resentative and sen- 
ator for several terms; 
elected as a republic- 
an to the 49th and 50th 
congresses; elected to 
the TT nited States sen- 
ate in 1891 and re 
elected in 1897 and 1903. 




HANSBROUGH 




and re-elected 



Henry Clay Born in Ran- 
dolph county, Illinois, 
Jan. 30, 1848; became a 
printer and engaged in 
newspaper work in 
California, Wisconsin 
and Dakota territory; 
made his permanent 
home in Dakota; was 
twice elected mayor of 
Devil's Lake and was 
nominated for congress 
by the first republican 
state convention in 
North Dakota and was 
elected; elected United 
States senator in 1891 
in 1897 and 1903. 



HEYBURN, Weldon Brinton Born in Dela- 
ware county, Pennsyl- 
vania, May 23, 1852; 
educated at a local 
academy and by pri- 
vate tutors; studied 
law and went west to 
Idaho, becoming a resi- 
dent of Shoshone coun- 
ty in February, 1884; 
acquired a reputation 
as an able lawyer; was 
active in politics as a 
republican, but held no 
office until elected 
United States senator 
in January, 1903, to 
succeed Henry Heitfeld. 




MEN OF THE YEAR. 



203 





HOPKINS, Albert J. Born in Dekalb coun- 
ty, Illinois, Aug. 15, 
1846; was graduated at 
Hillsdale (Mich.) col- 
lege in 1870; studied 
law and practiced at 
Aurora, 111. ; member of 
republican state cen- 
tral committee from 
1878 to 1880; elect- 
ed to the 49th, 50th, 
51st, 52d, 53d, 54th, 
55th, 56th and 57th con- 

fresses; elected United 
tates senator in 1903 to 
succeed W. E. Mason. 

KITTREDGE, Alfred B. Born in Cheshire 
county, New Hamp- 
shire, March 28, 1861; 
was graduated from 
Yale in 1882 and from 
the law school of that 
institution in 1885; 
moved to Sioux Falls, 
S. D., the same year 
and began the prac- 
tice of his profession; 
appointed to the 
United States senate 
in 1901; elected to 
same position in 1903; 
is a republican. 

LATIMER, Asbury O. Born in Abbeville 
county, South Caro- 
lina, July 31, 1851; 
brought up on his 
father's farm and edu- 
cated in the public 
schools; removed to 
Belton, Anderson coun- 
ty, in 1880 and engaged 
in farming; took an 
active part in politics 
and was elected to 
congress In 1893 as a 
democrat; was elected 
United States senator 
In 1903. 

LONG, Chester I.- Born in Perry county, 
Pa., Oct. 12, 1860; re- 
ceived an academic 
education, studied law 
and was admitted to 
the bar in 1885 in Kan- 
sas, to which state he 
had moved in 1879; 
made his home at 
Medicine Lodge; elect- 
ed to state senate in 
1889 as a republican; 
elected to the 54th, 
55th and 57th con- 
presses; elected United 
.States senator in 1903. 

NEWLANDS, Francis G. Born in Natchez, 
Miss., Aug. 28, 1848; 
educated at Yale; 
went to San Francisco 
and practiced law 
there until 1886, when 
he removed to Nevada; 
advocated the free 
coinage of silver and 
was made chairman of 
the national silver 
committee; congress- 
man-at-large from Ne- 
vada from 1893 to 1903, 
when he was elected 
United States senator. 








PENROSE, Boies Born in Philadelphia, 
Pa., Nov. 1, 1860; grad- 
uated from Harvard in 
1881; studied law and 
was admitted to the 
bar in 1883; elected to 
the state house of 
representatives as a re- 
publican in 1884 and to 
the state senate in 
1886, 1890 and 1894; was 
president pro tern, of 
the senate in 1889 and 
1891; elected to the 
United States senate 
In 1897 and 1903. 

PERKINS. George C. Born in Kennebunk- 
port/ Me., Aug. 23, 
1839; was a sailor until 
1855; engaged in mer- 
cantile business in 
Oroville, Gal. ; subse- 
quently engaged in 
banking, milling, min- 
ing and the steamship 
business; republican in 
politics; state senator 
eight years from 1868; 
elected governor of 
California in 1879; 
elected United States 
senator 1893, 1897, 1903. 

PETTUS. Edmund W. Born in Limestone 
county, Alabama, July 
6, 1821; educated in 
Clinton college; was 
admitted to the bar 
in 1842 and practiced 
at Gainesville, Ala. ; 
served as lieutenant in 
Mexican war; went to 
California in 1849, re 
turning in 1851; briga 
dier-general in confed 
erate army during civil 
war; elected United 
States senator in 1897 
&nd re-elected in 1903. 

PLATT, Orville H. Born in Washington 
Conn., July 19, 1827; 
received an academic 
education; admitted to 
the bar in 1849 and 
practiced law at 
Meriden; secretary of 
state, 1857; member of 
state senate in 1861- 
1862 and of state house 
of representatives in 
1864 and 1869; elected 
United States senator 
as a republican in 1879 
and re-elected in 1885, 
1890, 1897 and 1903. 

PLATT, Thomas C. Born in Owego, N. Y., 
July 15, 1833; was a 
member of the class of 
1853 at Yale, but did 
not graduate on ac 
^ount of ill-health; en 
tered mercantile life 
and engaged actively 
in politics as a repub- 
lican; elected to 43d 
and 44th congresses 
and chosen United 
States senator in 1881, 
but resigned; elected 
again in 1896 and re- 
elected in 1903. 






204 




CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 19O4. 



Herbert 




W. Born in Brooklyn 
Feb. 29, 1856; educated 
at Brooklyn Polytech- 
nic, Yale and Colum- 
bia Law school; began 
practice of law Ln New 
York, 1881; consul at i 
Barcelona, 1890; con- 
sul-general, 1895; min- 
ister to Persia, 1899; 
minister to Venezuela, 
1901; active in the set- 
tlement of the dispute 
between Venezuela, 
Germany and Italy in 
1902 and 1903. 

CARTER George Rl^-Born in Honolulu, 
H. I., Dec. 28. 1866: 
educated at Phillips 
academy and Yale; en- 
gaged in banking and 
Insurance business in 
Seattle, 1893-96; re- 
turned to Honolulu to 
live and became man- 
ager of the Hawaiian 
Trust company; elect- 
ed to Hawaiian senate, 
1900; secretary of ter- 
ritory. 1902-03; appoint- 
ed governor of the ter- 
ritory, 1903. 
BRYAN. Charles Page Born in Chicago, 
1856; educated at the 
University of Virginia 
and the Columbian Col- 
lege of Law; admitted 
to the bar in 1878: resi- 
dent of Colorado, 1S79- 
1883; member of lower 
house of Colorado leg- 
islature; returned to 
Illinois. 1883; member 
of the legislature four 
terms; appointed min- 
ister to Brazil. 1898; 
appointed minister to 
Portugal, 1903. 
CORTELYOU, George Bruce Bom in New 
- York city July 26, 1862; 
educated at Hemp- 
stead (L. I.) institute 
and State Normal 
school, at Westfield, 
Mass. ; law reporter, 
1883-1885; school princi- 
pal, 1885-1889; clerk in 
executive mansion, at 
Washington, 1895-1900; 
private secretary to 
president, 1900: secre- 
tary of new depart- 
ment of commerce and 

Jabor, 1903. 

DAY, William R. Born at Ravenna, O., 
April 17, 1849; was 
graduated at Univers- 
ity of Michigan. 1870; 
admitted to the bar, 
1872; practiced at Can- 
ton, O.: judge Court 
cf Common Pleas, 1886- 
1890; assistant secre- 
tary of state in 1897 
and secretary in lv^: 
chairman of American- 
Spanish peace commis- 
sion in Paris at close 
of war; United States 
Supreme court, 1903. 








M'CORMJCK, Robert S. Born in Virginia, 
L852: educated in uni- 
rersity of same state; 
made his home in Chi- 
cago; appointed sec- 
ond secretary of the 
legation in London, 
April 20, 1889; resigned 
in July, 1891; appoint- 
ed a director of the 
Chicago public library, 
1895; appointed minis- 
ter to Austria-Hun- 
gary March 7, 1901; 
made ambassador to 
Russia, 1903. 

NORTH, Simon Newton Dexter Born at 
Clinton, N. Y., Nov. 
29, 1849; was graduated 
from Hamilton college 
fn 1869: on staff of 
Utica Morning Herald, 
1869-1886; president of 
New York State Asso- 
ciated Press, 1885-1886; 
editor Albany Express, 
1886-1888; chief statis- 
tician for manufac- 
tures, twelfth United 
States census, 1900; ap- 
pointed director of 

census, 1903. 

TAFT, William H, Born in Cincinnati, O., 
Sept. 15, 1857; was 
graduated from Yale, 
1878; admitted to Ohio 
bar, 1880; judge Su- 
perior court of Ohio, 
1887-90; United States 
solicitor-general, 1890- 
92; United States Cir- 
cuit court judge, 1892- 
1900; civil governor 
Philippines, 1901-03; 
secretary of war, 1904, 
succeeding Elihu Root, 
resigned in August, 

TOWER, Charlemagne Born in Philadel- 
phia April 17, 1848: was 
graduated at Harvard, 
1872; studied in Europe, 
1872-1876; admitted to 
the bar. 1878: resident 
of Duluth, Minn., 1882 
1887; became an officer 
and director in sev- 
eral large corpora- 
tions; appointed min- 
ister to Austria-Hun- 
gary, 1897; made am- 
bassador to . Russia, 
1899; ambassador to 
G_ermany, 1903. 

WRIGHT, Luke E. Born in Tennessee in 
'1847; studied law and 
became a member of 
the Memphis bar; 
served eight years as 
attorney-general ; was 
a leader in relief work 
during yellow fever 
epidemic of 1878; gold 
democrat in politics: 
appointed member of 
Philippine commission 
in 1900 and was named 
to succeed William H 
Taft as governor in 
1903. 






MEN OF THE YEAR. 



205 





SMOOT, Reed Born in Salt Lake City, 
Utah, Jan. 10, 1862; 
educated in Brigharu 
Young academy and 
Branch State univer- 
sity; engaged in ruin- 
ing, manufacturing and 
banking business, mak- 
ing his home at Provo; 
April 8, 1900, was ap- 
pointed an apostle of 
the Church of Latter 
Day Saints; director of 
territorial insane asy- 
lum; elected United 
jstates senator, 1903. 

SPOONER, John C. Born in Lawreneeburg, 
Ind., Jan. 6, 1843; re- 
moved with parents to 
Madison, Wis., in 1859; 
was graduated at the 
Wisconsin state uni- 
versity in 1864; served 
in the civil war; stud- 
ied law and began 
practice in 1867; as- 
sistant attorney-gen- 
eral of the state until 
1870; member of the 
assembly in 1872; 
United States senator. 
1885, 1897, 1903. 

STONE. William J. Born in Madison coun- 
ty, Kentucky, May 7, 
1848; educated at the 
Missouri state univer- 
sity and began the 
practice of law in Ne- 
vada, Vernon county. 
Mo. ; was prosecuting 
attorney a short time; 
was elected to the 
49th, 50th and 51st con- 
gresses and was gov- 
ernor of Missouri from 
1893 to 1897; elected 
United States senator 
in January, 1903. 
TELLER. Henry M. Born in Granger, Al- 
legany county, N. Y., 
May 23, 1830: educated 
in 'public schools and 
Alfred university; ad- 
mitted to the bar 1856; 
practiced in Illinois, 
1858-1861; removed to 
Colorado, 1861; United 
States senator, 1876- 
1S82; was secretary of 
the interior, 1882-1885; 
United States senator 
since 1885; elected as 
independent silver re- 
publican, 1903. 
TUKXKK. George Born in Edina. Mo.. 
Feb. 25. 1850; educated 
in common schools: 
Jnited States marshal 
n Alabama from 1876 
o 1880: associate jus- 
ice of the Supreme 
ourt of the state of 
Washington. 1884-1888: 
elected United States 
senator by people's 
party (fusion) in 1897; 
term expired in 1903, 
when he was appointed 
member of the Alaskan- 
boundary commission. 







JPJTTE, Sir Louis A. Born at L'Assomp- 
i tiou, Quebec, Jan. 15, 
1S36; aumitted to the 
oar in isoV; engaged in 
journalism; judge of 
the Superior court, 
1S78; professor of civil 
law in Laval univer- 
sity, 1879, and after- 
ward dean of the fac- 
ulty at Montreal; lieu- 
tenant-governor prov- 
ince of Quebec since 
1898; member of Alas- 
kan boundary commis- 
sion. 1903. 

Cabot Born in Boston, 
Mass., May 12, 1850; 
graduated at Harvard 
in 1871 and at Harvard 
Law school in 1875; au- 
thor of many biograph- 
ical and historical 
works; representative 
in congress 1887-1893 
and since that time 
United States senator; 
republican in politics 
and a leader in his. 
party; appointed a 
member of the Alaskan 
i commission in 1903. 

ROOT, Elihu Born at Clinton. X. Y., Feb. 
15, 1845; graduated at 
Hamilton College In 
1864 and at University 
Law School of New 
York in 1867; admitted 
to the bar and prac- 
ticed law in New York 
until appointed secre- 
tary of war by Presi- 
dent McKinley in 1899; 
resigned in 1903; ap- 
pointed and served as 
member of the Alaskan 
boundary commission 
in 1903. 

WEBSTER, Richard E., Lord Alverstone 
Born Dec. 22. 1842; 
educated at Cambridge 
university; became 
barrister in 1868; at- 
torney-general in 1885; 
member of parliament 
from 1885 to 1900; lord 
chief justice in 1900; 
made first baronet in 
1899 and first baron in 
1900; appointed a mem- 
ber of the Alaska 
boundary commission 
in 1903 and became its 
president. 

AYLE5WORTH, Allen B. Born at New- 
burg, Ont., on Nov. 27, 
1854; graduated at To- 
ronto university; ad- 
mitted to the bar. 1878; 
member of the firm of 
Barwick, Ayleswortb 
& Pranks: senior coun- 
sel for Countess d'lvry 
in her libel suit 
against the Toronto 
World in 1897: became 
queen's counsel in 1889; 
residence. Toronto: in 
1903 member of Alaskan 
boundary commission. 






206 



CHICAGO DAILY NEWS ALMANAC AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1904. 




SARTO, Giuseppe Born June 2,1835, at Riese, 
Italy; educated at sem- 
inary of Treviso and at 
the Sacra Theologia, 
Rome; made patriarch 
of Venice in 1891 and 
created and proclaimed 
cardinal June 12, -1893; 
member of congrega- 
tions of bishops and 
regulars, sacred rites, 
indulgences and sacred 
relics and studies; 
elected pope Aug. 4, 
1903, taking the title of 
Pius X. 



M. Born July 29 1853, 
in Kendall county, 111. ; 
educated in public 
schools; city clerk of 
Aurora in 1874; deputy 
county clerk of Kane 
county eight years; 
elected county clerk in 
1886; appoined secre- 
tary of legation and 
consul-general at Gua- 
temala, 1897, and to 
same position at Bo- 
gota in 1899; appointed 
minister to Colombia 
in 1903. 



John O. Born at Lexington, Miss., 
Jan. 27, 1839; educated 
in schools of Danville. 
111., and at Wabash 
college.Indlana; served 
in civil war, attaining 
rank of brigadier-gen- 
eral; commissioner of 
pensions 1885-89; con- 
gressman from Illinois 
1893-95; United States 
district attorney 1895- 
99; elected commander 
of the Grand Army of 
the Republic in Au- 
gust, 1903. 

HARDY. Arthur S. Born at Andover, Mass., 
Aug. 13, 1847; gradu- 
ated at West Point, 
1869; professor of engi- 
neering at Iowa college, 
1871-1873; studied in 
Paris one year; profes- 
sor of mathematics at 
Dartmouth, 1874-1893; 
minister to Persia, 
1897-1899; minister to 
Greece, Roumania and 
Servia, 1899-1900; min- 
ister tc Switzerland, 
1900-1903 ; minister to 
Spain, 1903. 

0. Born at Riverton, N. 
J., Nov. 4, 1872; en- 
tered diplomatic serv- 
ice in 1893 as private 
secretary to T. F. Bay- 
ard, ambassador to 
Great Britain; resigned 
in 1894; served as cap- 
tain in the volunteer 
army in Cuba in 1898; 
secretary of legation 
in Constantinople, 1899- 
1901; minister to Per- 
sia. 1901-1902; appointed 
minister to Japan in 
December, 1902. 







HILL, David Jayne Born at Plainfield. N. 
J., June 10, 1850; edu- 
cated at Bucknell uni- 
versity and the univer- 
sities of Berlin and 
Paris; president Buck- 
nell, 1879-1888; president 
University of Roches- 
ter, 1888-1896; made a 
specialty of diplomacy 
and international law; 
appointed first assist- 
ant secretary of state 
in 1898 and minister to 
Switzerland in 1903 to 
succeed A. S. Hardy. 

KARAGEORGEVITCH, Peter Born in Bel- 
grade, Servia, in 1846; 
educated in Hungary 
and at St. Cyr. France; 
became an officer in 
French army and 1 
served in Franco- 
Prussian war; was mar- 
ried to Princess Zorka 
of Montenegro in 1883; 
made hi-s home in Gen- 
eva, Switzerland; elect- 
ed to throne of Servia 
after assassination of 
King Alexander in 
June, 1903. 




LOOMTS. Francis 





(.Born at Marietta, O., 
July 27, 1861; educated 
at Marietta college; on 
staff of New York Trib- 
une, 1883; Ohio state 
librarian, 1886-1890; con- 
sul at St. Etienne. 
France, 1890-1893: editor 
Cincinnati Tribune, 
1893-1897; minister to 
Venezuela, 1897-1901; 
minister to Portugal, 
1901-1903 ; appointed first 
assistant secretary of 
state, 1903, to succeed 
Dr. David J. Hill. 

nd Born at Richmond 
Bill.N. C., Jan. 26, 1852; 
educated at Princeton; 
admitted to the bar, 
1874: appointed consul 
to Verviers and Liege, 
1874; resigned, 1877; 
member North Carolina 
legislature, 1885 and 
1887; elected to 54th, 
55th and 56th congresses 
as protectionist and 
republican; appointed 
consul to Genoa, 1901; 
appointed minister to 
Persia, December, 1902. 



STOKER. Bellamy Born in Cincinnati, Aug. 
28, 1847: graduated at 
Harvard. 1867: at Cin- 
cinnati law school. 1869; 
admitted to the bar the 
same year and prac- 
ticed law in Cincinnati; 
member of confess, 
1891-1895; appointed 
minister to Belgium, 
May 4, 1897: appointed 
minister to Spain, April 
12, 1899; promoted to 
ambassador to Austria- 
Hungary in January, 
1903. 




THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. 



207 



THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. 



The Philippine islands were ceded to th