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XXVI

Thomas, Martha McCannon, author, 25Thomas, Mary Von Erden, author, computer U. S. coast survey, 25

Thomes, William Henry, author, 24-95. Thompson, Alexander Ramsey, clergyman,

22-95.

Thompson, Alfred, artist, 31-95.

Thompson, Alfred Wordsworth, artist, 40-96.
Thompson, Daniel Greenleaf, author, 50-97.
Thompson, Mary Harris, surgeon, -95.
Thompson, Thomas L., editor, 38-98.
Thompson, William, brig.-gen., 13-97.
Thomson, Frank, r'y pres., 41-99.

Thurman, Allen Granbery, senator, 13-95.
Tillman, J. Fount, register U. S. treas., 54-99.
Tillson, Davis, brig.-gen., 30-95.
Todd, Sereno E., author, 20-98.
Tome, Jacob, philanthropist, 10-98.
Tompkins, Henry Clay, lawyer, 23-98.
30-95.
Tompkins, Chas. H., brig.-gen.,

Toner, Joseph Meredith, M. D., author, 25-96.
Torrence, Joseph T., capitalist, 43-96.
Toucey, John M., ry. mgr., 28-98.
Towndrow, Thomas, stenographer, 12-98.
Townsend, Amos, congressman, -35.
Townsend, Frederick, brig.-gen., 25-98.
Townsend, John Pomeroy, financier, 32-98.
Townshend, Norton Strange, M. D., congress-
man, 15-95.

Train, Charles Russell, lawyer, author, 17-96.
Trego, William Henry, expressman, 37-
Trescot, William Henry, diplomat, 22-98.
Trott, Samuel, ocean cable layer, 32-99.
Trotter, Newbold H., artist, 27-98.
Trumbull, James Hammond, historian, eth-
nologist, 21-97.

Trumbull, Lyman, senator, 13-96.
Tucker, Henry Holcombe, clergyman, 19-98.
Tucker, John Randolph, congressman, 23-97.
Tucker, Joshua Thomas, clergyman, 12-97.
Tucker, Luther H., publisher, 35-97.
Tuckerman, Charles Keating, author, 21-96.
Turner, Carrie, actress, -97.

Turner, John Wesley, maj.-gen., 33-99.
Turner, Henry E., M. D., 16-97.

Turner, Jonathan B., educator, 06-99.
Turner, Oscar, congressman, -96.

Turner, Samuel Epes, author, 46-96.

Turner, S. S., congressman, -98.

Tuttle, Isaac Henry, clergyman, 11-96.
Tyler, W. R., artist, -96.

Tyng, Stephen Higginson, clergyman, 39-98.
Underhill, Edward Fitch, stenographer, 30-98.
Upham, Francis William. 17-95.
Upham, John A., Col., 37-98.

Upton, William W., jurist, 17-96.
Ure, William A., journalist, 39-96.
Vail, Albert D., clergyman, 35-98.

Valentini, Philip J. J., M. D., author, 28-98. Vanderbilt, Maria Louisa, philanthropist, 21-96.

Vanderburgh, Charles E.. jurist, 30-98.

Van der Weyde, Peter H., scientist, 13-95. Van Dyck, Cornelius Van Alen, missionary, 18-95.

Van Horne, J. J., Col., -98.

Van Ingen, Henry, prof. art, -98.

Van Wyck, Charles Henry, senator, 24-95.
Vaux, Calvert, landscape architect, 24-95.
Vaux, Richard, penologist, 16-95.

Veatch, James Clifford, maj.-gen., 19-95.
Veazey, Wheelock Graves, interstate com-

merce commr., 35-98.

*Vertin, John, R. C. bishop, 44-99. Vincent, Benjamin, journalist, 12-99.

Volk, Leonard Wells, sculptor, 28-95.
Voorhees, Daniel Wesley, senator, 27-97.
Voorhis, Charles H., congressman, -96.
Vrooman, Daniel, missionary, -95.
Wachsmuth, Charles, paleontologist, -96.
Waddell, John N., clergyman, 12-95.
Wainwright, Wm. Pratt, soldier, 18-95.
Walke, Henry, rear admiral, 08-96.
Walker, Charles L., historian, 44-95.
Walker, Francis Amasa, economist, 41-97.
Walker, Henry, rear admiral, -96.
Walker, Hiram, merchant, 16-99.
Walker, Moses B., Gen., -95.
Walker, William, missionary, -96.
Wallace, William A., senator, 27-96.
Waller, Emma, actress, 29-99.
Walling, A. T., congressman, -96.
Walsh, Patrick, senator, 40-99.
Walsh, Robt. F., author, 58-95.

Walthall, Edward Cary, senator, 31-98.
Warburton, Charles E., journalist, -96.
Ward, Hamilton, jurist, 29-98.

Ward, Julius Hammond, clergyman, 37-97.
Ward, James Thomas, theologian, -97.
Waring, George E., engr., sanitarian, 33-98.
Warner, Olin Levi, sculptor, 44-96.

Warren, Nathan Boughton, composer, 15-98. Waterman, Daniel A., treas. M. C. R. R., -99.

Watterson, John Ambrose, R. C. bishop.

44-99.

Watts, James, W., engraver, 30-95.
Watts, Robert, clergyman, 20-95.
Wayland, Heman Lincoln, 30-98.

Wayman, Alexander Washington, A. M. E. bishop, 21-95.

Weaver, Leroy G., soldier, diplomat, -95.
Webb, Frances Isabel Currie, author, 57-95.
Webster, Amos, Col., 36-98.

Webster, Warren, surgeon, 35-96.
Weeks, Joseph D., statistician, 41-96.
Weidemeyer, John William, author, 19-96.
Welch, Rodney, journalist, -96.

Weld, Theodore Dwight, abolitionist, 03-95.
Weller, F. M., M. D., -95.

Wellington, Arthur Mellen, civil engr., 47-95.
Wells, David Ames, economist, 28-98.
Wells, James Madison, ex-gov., 08-99.
Wentworth, William Pitt, architect, 39-96.
West, Joseph Rodman, senator, 22-98.
Westbrook, Benjamin Frank, M. D., 51-95.
Westervelt, Daniel D., shipbuilder, 28-96.
Weston, Byron, It.-gov. Mass., 32-98.
Weston, James A., engr., 27-95.
Wheatcroft, Nelson, actor, 52-97.
Wheaton, Jesse C., Ill. pioneer, -95.
Wheeler, Calvin T., capitalist, 17-99.

Wheeler, Crosby Howard, missionary, 23-96.
Wheeler, Orlando Belina, civil engr., 35-95.
Whiteley, Robert Henry Kirkwood, brig.-
gen., 09-96.

Whitefield, S. A., asst. p. m. gen., -95.
Whitney, Josiah Dwight, geologist, 19-96.
Whittlesey, Sarah Johnson Cogswell, author,
25-96.

Wiard, Norman, inventor, 26-96.
Wickliffe, Robt. C., ex-gov., -95.

Wicks, Hamilton S., journalist, 48-99.
Wigglesworth, Edward, dermatologist, 41-96.
Wight, Moses, artist, 27-95.

Wight, E. B., journalist, -96.

Wikoff, Charles A., Col. 22d inf. U. S. A., 37-98.

Wilbour, Charles Edwin, Egyptologist, 33-96.

Wilcox, James M., inventor, 24-95.
Wilcox, John M., journalist, -95.
Wildes, George Dudley, clergyman, 19-98.
Willard, Frances Elizabeth, reformer, 39-98.
Willard, Joseph C., hotel prop., 17-97.
Willet, Joseph Edgerton, educator, 26-97.
Willett, Wm. Marinus, clergyman, 03-95.
Willey, Austin, Rev., abolitionist, 06-96.
Williams, Charles F., editor, 42-95.
Williams, Henry Warren, jurist, 30-99.
Williams, John, bishop of Conn., 17-99.
Williams, John Stuart, senator, 20-98.
Williams, Nelson Grosvenor, gen., 23-97.
Williams, Joseph Hartwell, lawyer, 14-96.
Willis, Albert Sydney, congressman, 43-97.
Willis, Edmund Aylburton, painter, 08-99.
Willits, Edwin, congressman, -96.
Wilson, Anne Read, philanthropist, -96.
Wilson, Henry Parke Custis, M. D., 27-97.
Wilson, James F., senator, 28-95.
Wilson, John Alston, civil engr., 37-96.
Wilson, John Laird, journalist, 32-96.
Wilson, Robert, jurist, 13-98.

Wilson, Theodore Delavan, naval constructor, 40-96.

Wilstach, John Augustine, lawyer, author, 24-97.

Wingfield, John Henry Ducachet,

bishop, 33-98.

P. E.

Winlock, William C., scientist, 59-96.
Winser, Henry Jacob, journalist, 33-96.
Winslow, Charles H., journalist, 64-99.
Winsor, Justin, author, 31-97.
Winter, Herman, shipbuilder, 28-95.
Wise, Daniel, clergyman, author, 13-98.
Witherspoon, Thomas Dwight, clergyman,
36-98.

Wolcott, Charles Carroll, maj.-gen., 38-98.
Wolcott, James L., jurist, 42-98.

Wood, De Volson, inventor, 32-97.
Wood, William Maxwell, U. S. N., 50-97.
Woodbury, Augustus, clergyman, 25-95.
Woodbury, Charles Levi, lawyer, 20-98.
Woodruff, Wilford, pres. Mormon church,

07-98.

Woodson, Silas, jurist, 19-96.

Woodward, Eliza Brand, philanthropist, 11-97.
Woodward, John B., banker, 35-96.
Woolf, Michael Angelo, artist, -99.
Worden, John Lorimer, rear admiral, 18-97.
Wormley, Theodore George, chemist, 26-97.
Worth, Edward W., dermatologist, -96.
Worthen, William Ezra, civil engr., 19-97.
Worthington, Roland, journalist, 17-98.
Wright, Charles Barstow, financier, 22-98.
Wright, Edward, soldier, 24-95.
Wright, George Groves, jurist, 20-96.

Wurtele, Arthur S. Campbell, civil engr., -99. Wyckoff, Benjamin Du Bois, missionary, 34-99.

Wylie, Theophilus Adam,

10-95.

mathematician.

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ADDENDA

ADDICKS, George B., pres. Central Wesleyan Coll., Mo.; b. Hampton, Ill., Sept. ?, 1854; grad. Central Wesleyan Coll., Mo., 1875; ordained to M. E. ministry, and after some pastoral work became pres. of his alma mater. Address: Warrenton, Mo. ADDICKS, John Edward, capitalist; b. Philadelphia, Nov. 21, 1841; became interested in building of gas plants and later in gas companies; organized, 1884, and became pres. Bay State Gas Co., Boston; bought majority interest and became pres., 1892, Brooklyn (N. Y.) Gas Co.; also at head of other companies in Brooklyn and in Wilmington, Del.; received largest vote for U. S. Senator from Del. in legislature, 1899, but failed of election. Address: Wilmington, Del.

ALBEE, John, author; b. Bellingham, Mass., April 3, 1833; educated at Andover and Cambridge; lived for many years at New Castle, N. H.; now of Chocorua, N. H. Author: Literary Art (1881); St. Aspenquid: an Indian Idyll; Poems (1883); Prose Idylls (1892); Biog. of Henry Dexter, sculptor (1898). Address: Chocorua, N. H.

ANDERSON, Thomas McArthur, brig.gen. U. S. A.-maj.-gen. U. S. V.; b. Chillicothe, O., Jan. 22, 1836; grad. Mt. St. Mary's Coll., Md., 1855; grad. Cincinnati Law School, 1858; practised at Newport, Ky. Entered Civil war as private 6th Ohio vols., later 2d lt. 5th cav., capt. 12th regular inf.; maj. 21st inf. and 10th inf., lt.-col. 9th inf.; col. 14th inf., Sept. 6, 1886. In war with Spain, brig.-gen. vols., May 4, 1898; maj.gen. vols., Aug. 13, 1898; brig.-gen. regular army, March 31, 1899. At different times commanded the dept. of the Columbia, a sub-district in Alaska, the first expedition to the Philippines, 1st div. 8th army corps, and May, 1899, the dept. of the Lakes, with headquarters at Chicago (Pullman Bldg.); was v.-p. gen. of Sons of Am. Revolution; commander Oregon Commandery, Loyal Legion; 32d degree Mason; m. Elizabeth Van Winkle, of New Jersey. Address: War Department, Washington.

ANDREWS, Addison F.,musician-musical mg'r; b. Cavendish, Vt., April 2, 1857; removed to New York in boyhood; grad. Dartmouth, 1878; studied law; also studied violin with Godone and vocal art with Tamaro; was member Dartmouth Coll. Glee Club while at college, and traveled with it through New England; engaged in newspaper work on Tribune, Telegraph, Commercial Advertiser, Graphic and other New York journals; later in musical journalism; now conducts dept. for Musical America; was asst. mg'r Carnegie Hall and the Symphony Orchestra, 1 year; since then in business as musical mg'r; founded Manu

script Soc. of New York. Composer songs, quartets, anthems, piano pieces, "Dartmouth Songs" (16 compositions for male voices), etc. Address: 18 E. 22d St., New York.

ANGELL, Henry C., M.D.; oculist; b. Providence, R. I., Jan. 27, 1829; grad. Hahnemann Med. Coll., Philadelphia, 1853; studied 3 years in Vienna Univ., Austria, and has since practiced in Boston; for 20 years prof. of ophthalmology, Boston Univ.; later pres. Philharmonic Soc., Boston. Author: Diseases of the Eye; also other technical books, and papers on literary and art subjects. Address: 16 Beacon St., Boston. APPLETON, William Hyde, prof. Greek, Swarthmore Coll. since 1872; also prof. Early English, same; b. Portland, Me., June 10, 1842; grad. Harvard, 1864. Author: Greek Poets in English Verse (an anthology). Address: Swarthmore, Pa. ARCHIBALD, James F. J., war correspondent Leslie's Weekly and Scribner's; b. New York Sept. 22, 1869; grad. Ohio Wesleyan Univ., 1888; served in Chinese-Japanese war, in the Sioux campaign, and the last Apache campaign; on Gen. McKibben's staff in Santiago campaign; was on first scouting expedition that landed in Cuba about a month before the Santiago expedition; first man wounded in war with Spain, being shot through left arm in an engagement that lasted about three hours; was in Chippewa campaign on Leech Lake and arranged surrender of the hostiles; with army of occupation with staff of Gen. Ludlow; with British forces in Soudan, 1899. Address: Bohemian Club, San Francisco. AYERS, Howard, pres. Univ. of Cincinnati from July 1, 1899; b. Olympia, Wash., May 21, 1861; grad. Harvard, S. B., 1883; grad. Univ. of Freiberg, Germany, Ph. D., 1885; studied Univ. of Strasburg and Heidelberg (LL. D. Univ. of Mo., 1899). Director Lake Laboratory, 1889-93; member staff of instruction Marine Biol. Laboratory, Wood's Holl, Mass., since 1889; instr. in zoölogy, Harvard Univ. and Radcliffe Coll.; prof. biology, Univ. of Mo., 1894-9. Pres. Scientific Assn., Univ. of Mo., 1894-9; member Am. Soc. Naturalists, Am. Morphological Soc.; fellow Am. Assn. Adv. Science, corr. member Philadelphia Acad. of Sciences. Author: The Vertebrate Ear; also other works and papers on morphology of animals. Address: Cincinnati. BAILEY, Benjamin Franklin, M. D.; b. Littleton, N. H., June 22, 1860; high school ed'n; grad. Hahnemann Med. Coll., Philadelphia, 1881; m., Feb. 8, 1882, Minnie F. Bryant, of Wareham, Mass. Practised Wareham, 1881-2, Manchester, N. H., 1882-6; since then at Lincoln, Neb. Elected pres. Neb. State Home. Soc. at age of 28; chairman of

.

Sect. of Paidology, 1895; pres., 1898, Am. Inst. of Homœopathy; treas., 1895, pres., 1898, Neb. State Bd. of Health. Author: (with Dr. Allison Clakey) The Present State of Pediatrics in 1896; also contributions to

Has written short stories for "Harper's"
and "The Pall Mall Magazine." Address:
West House, Campden Hill, W., London,
England.

medical journals. Address: 141 S. 12th St., BROWN, Moses True, educator; b. DeerLincoln, Neb.

BAUM, L. Frank, author-editor; b. Chittenango, N. Y., May 15, 1856; academic ed'n, Syracuse, N. Y.; m., Nov. 9, 1882, Maud, dau. Matilda Joslyn Gage, Fayetteville, N. Y. Edited Dakota Pioneer, Aberdeen, S. Dak., 1888-90; The Show Window, since 1897. Author: Mother Goose in Prose; By the Candelabra's Glare; Father Goose, His Book; magazine stories. Has for 15 years written children's stories for Youth's Companion, Harper's and St. Nicholas. Residence: 68 Humboldt Park Boul. Office: 490 Caxton Bldg., Chicago.

BEVERIDGE, Albert J., U. S. Senator from Ind. for term 1899-1905; b. on a farm on border of Adams and Highland counties, Ohio, Oct. 6, 1862; family moved to Ill. after war; attended common and high schools, Sullivan, Ill.; grad. De Pauw Univ., Ind., 1885; m., Nov. 24, 1887, Katherine Langsdale, of Greencastle, Ind. From age of 12 led a life of privations: plowboy at 12, railroad laborer at 14, logger and teamster at 15, then attended high school. Read law in office of Senator McDonald, became managing clerk; admitted to bar and was associated with McDonald & Butler until he began practice for himself; identified with many important cases; well known as orator and Republican campaign speaker. Address: Indianapolis, Ind. BISHOP, Heber Reginald, retired merchant and banker; b. Medford, Mass., March 11, 1840; first business training at Boston; in Dec., 1859, settled at Remedios, Cuba; established house of Bishop & Company, March 4, 1861; retired at age of 36 (1876) to Irvington-on-the-Hudson, where he has summer residence. Since then financially interested in railroad, gas, iron and other properties; director in New York Elevated Ry. Co., Manhattan Elevated Ry. Co.; St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha R. R. Co., Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific R. R. Co., Duluth & Iron Range R. R. Co., Minnesota Iron Co., Chandler Iron Co., Metropolitan Trust Co., and other corporations; also interested in management of hospitals, the Am. Museum of Natural History, Metropolitan Museum of Art, etc. Address: 881 Fifth Av., New York.

BOUGHTON, George Henry, artist; b. nr. Norwich, Eng., 1834, came with family to Albany, N. Y., 1839; ed. in public and high schools there. Began painting in boyhood; went to London to study, 1853; had studio in New York, 1858-61; studied in Paris, 1861-2; settled in London, 1862; famous as a genre and landscape artist. Became National Academician (New York Acad. of Design), 1871; asso. of Royal Acad. (London), 1879; Royal Academician, 1896; regular exhibitor in U. S. and England; many of his pictures are owned in this country. Author: (with E. A. Abbey, A. R. A.), Sketching Rambles in Holland.

field, N. H., 1827; ed. Tufts Coll. (A. M.); was 30 years prof. oratory at Tufts Coll.; 4 years at head of dept. of elocution, Boston public schools, 5 years supt. schools, Toledo, O.; 10 years at head of Boston School of Oratory, later removing to Ohio. Author: The Synthetic Philosophy of Expression, as Applied to the Arts of Reading, Oratory and Personation. Address: Sandusky, O.

van.

CARRYL, Charles Edward, broker-au-
thor; b. New York, Dec. 30, 1841; was officer
and director in various railroads, 1863-72;
member New York Stock Exchange. Author:
Davy and the Goblin; The Admiral's Cara-
Residence: 33 W. 9th St. Office: 5 Nas-
sau St., New York.
CARTWRIGHT, James Henry, chief
justice supreme court of Ill. since June 6,
1899; formerly asso. justice (see page 117).
CASSATT, Alexander Johnson, elected
pres. Pa. R. R., June, 1899. (See p. 118.)
CHENOWETH, Caroline Van Dusen,
asso. editor Medico-Legal Journal, New
York; b. in Indiana (nr. Louisville, Ky.),
Dec. 29, 1846; m. Col. Bernard Peel Cheno-
weth, who died while U. S. consul at Can-
ton, China. After his death she conducted
and settled the affairs of the consul, receiv-
ing formal recognition as vice-consul; prof.
English literature Smith Coll., 1883-4; lec-
turer on English literature. Author: Stories
of the Saints: a Book for Children. Address:
39 Broadway, New York.

CHOPIN, Kate, author; b. (O'Flaherty)
St. Louis, Feb. 8, 1851; grad. Sacred Heart
Convent, St. Louis, 1868; m., 1870, Oscar
Chopin, New Orleans, cotton factor (now
deceased). Lived in La. 14 years; now in
St. Louis. Author: Bayou Folk; At Fault;
A Night in Acadie; The Awakening; etc.
Address: St. Louis.

b.

COXE, Macgrane, lawyer; b. Huntsville,
Ala., May 29, 1859; grad. Yale, 1879, Colum-
bia Law School, 1881; admitted to N. Y.
bar, 1881; has since practised in New York;
asst. U. S. dist. atty., Southern dist., N. Y.,
1885-9; apptd. U. S. comm'r U. S. circuit
court for same dist., Dec. 1, 1889; U. S.
minister to Guatemala and Honduras, 1896-
7; m., Aug. 28, 1888, Lena Townsend Craw-
ford, of New York. Residence: Southfields,
Orange Co., N. Y. Office: 63 Wall st., New
York.
CURTIS, George Milton, lawyer;
Worcester, Mass., June 18, 1843; ed. by pri-
vate tutors and at Baptist Acad., Worces-
ter, Mass.; served in 3rd battalion Mass.
Rifles, in Civil war; after war studied law;
admitted to bar and has since practised
at New York; served two terms as member
N. Y. Assembly; one term asst. corpora-
tion counsel of New York; judge Marine
Court, 1868-74; has been engaged in many
prominent will cases in New York, Calif.,
and elsewhere; defended and saved from
gallows Col. Buford, of Ky., for murder of

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DENISON, John Henry, clergyman; b. Boston, March 3, 1841; grad. Williams, 1862 (D. D.); pastor 1st Cong'l Ch., New Britain, Conn., 7 years; pastor Williams Coll. 5 years; m. Miss Hopkins, dau. late Mark Hopkins, pres. Williams Coll.; now retired from Williamstown, Mass. Author: Christ's Idea of the Supernatural. Address: Williamstown, Mass. d'INVILLIERS, Edward V., geologist and mining eng'r; b. Germantown, Philadelphia, Aug. 2, 1857; grad. Univ. of Pa., 1878; m. Ann Maitland. Member 2d geol. survey of Pa., 1878-90; also since 1882 in private professional practice. Member Am. Inst. Mining Eng'rs; fellow Geol. Soc. of America; Am. Philosophical Soc.; Franklin Inst., of Philadelphia. Author of numerous reports on coal and iron resources of Pa., Va., Ky. and the South, and one on the phosphate deposits of the Island of Navassa, W. I. Address: 711 Walnut St., Philadelphia.

DOYLE, C. W., M. D.; author; b. Landour, India, Aug. 29, 1852; father killed in action in Sepoy war, 1858; ed. at an academy at Mussoorie, near his birthplace; won Maddock scholarship there; studied at Calcutta Univ.; studied medicine in London, Edinburgh and Aberdeen; grad. M. D., Univ. of Aberdeen, 1875; practised in England, 1875-88; since then in Calif. Contributor of verse and prose to magazines. Author: The Seats of Judgment; The Making of a Man; also various serials and short stories. Address: Santa Cruz, Calif. DUNBAR, Charles Franklin, prof. political economy Harvard since 1871; b. Abington, Mass., July 2, 1830; ed. Harvard (LL. D.).

Editor Boston Daily Advertiser, 185969; member Am. Hist. Assn.; Mass. Hist. Soc.; pres. Am. Economic Assn., 1892-3; editor of a quarterly journal of economics, 1886-96. Author: Chapters on the Theory and History of Banking; Currency, Finance and Banking; etc. Address: Cambridge, Mass.

EDWARDS, William Henry, naturalist; b. Hunter, Greene Co., N. Y., March 15, 1822; grad. Williams, 1842; admitted to New York bar, 1847; made a voyage up the River Amazon, 1846, collecting objects in natural history; has lived for some years in W. Va.; m., May 29, 1851, Katherine Colt Tappan. Author: Voyage Up the Amazon (1847); The Butterflies of North America (3 series --1879, 1884 and 1897); Shaksper, not Shakespeare, 1899. Address: Coalburgh, W. Va. FAUNCE, William Herbert Perry, Baptist clergyman; b. Worcester, Mass., Jan. 15, 1859; grad. Brown, 1880 (A. M., D. D.); Newton Theol. Sem., 1884; m., 1884, Sarah R. Edson, Lynn, Mass. Pastor State St. Baptist Ch., Springfield, Mass., 1884-92; since then pastor Fifth Av. Baptist Ch.,

New York. Trustee Rochester Univ. and Brown Univ.; lecturer at Univ. of Chicago; preacher at Harvard Univ. Elected, May, 1899, pres. Brown Univ. Address: 2 W. 46th St., New York. FENGER, Christian, M. D.; surgeon; b. Copenhagen, Denmark, 1840; ed. there; grad. Univ. of Copenhagen, M. D., 1867: private and hospital practice there until Franco-German war, in which was surgeon in Internat. Ambulance Assn.; afterward 3 years prosector at City Hosp., Copenhagen; later in Egypt, where was apptd. by Khedive med. officer of Khalifa Quarter, Cairo; in Chicago since 1877. Was many years prof. principles and practice of surgery until he resigned, 1899, to become prof. operative surgery, Rush. Med. Coll. Has also been prof. principles of surgery and clinical surgery, Coll. of Phys. and Surg.; prof. surgery, Chicago Polyclinic; surgeonin-chief, German Hosp.; is surgeon Passavant Memorial, Tabitha, Mercy and Cook Co. hospitals; v.-p. Am. Surg. Assn., 1896; member Am. Med. Assn., Ill. State Med. Soc., Chicago Med. Soc., Chicago Gynecological Soc., etc. Address: 269 La Salle Av., Chicago.

FIELD, Caroline Leslie, author; b. Milton, Mass.; da. late Seth D. and Mrs. A. D. T. Whitney (q. v.); m. James A. Field (died 1884); lived some years at Guilford, Conn.; now at Milton, Mass. Author: HighLights (novel-1885); The Unseen King and Other Verses (1887). Address: Milton, Mass. FRANCIS, Joseph Martin, P. E. bishop of Indiana; b. Eaglesmere, Pa.; educated at Racine Coll. and Oxford Univ.; grad. Nashotah Theol. Sem., 1889; deacon, 1884; priest, 1886; pastorates at Milwaukee and Greenfield, Wis., 1884-86; canon of Cathedral, Milwaukee, 1886-8; went to Japan as missionary and there became priest in charge cathedral at Tokyo, and prof. in Trinity Divinity School there; m. Miss Stevens of Milwaukee. Returned from Japan, 1897; rector St. Paul's Cathedral, Evansville, Ind., Jan., 1898; elected bishop of Ind., June, 1899. Address: Evansville, Ind.

GARDNER, Eugene C., architect; b. Ashfield, Mass., March 28, 1836; m., Sept. 7, 1858, Harriet B., dau. John Hubbard, of New Ipswich, N. H. (granddau. Prof. John Hubbard of Dartmouth Coll.). Prin. Academy Tallmadge, O., 1858-62; practised architecture, Northampton, Mass., 1863-8; since then at Springfield. Edited The Builder, published at Holyoke, Mass., 3 years, 18857; frequent contributor to Springfield Republican; also contributes to magazines. Author: Homes and How to Make Them; Illustrated Homes; Home Interiors; House that Jill Built; Town and Country School Houses; Common Sense in Church Building. Address: Springfield, Mass. GARRISON, Francis Jackson, b. ton, Mass., Oct. 29, 1848; son of William Lloyd Garrison (died, 1879); grad. Boston Latin School, 1865; with the Riverside Press and its allied publishing houses of Hurd & Houghton, Houghton, Osgood & Co., and Houghton, Mifflin & Co., since 1871. Author: William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879: The

Bos

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