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THIRD DISTRICT.-COUNTIES: Middlesex, Monmouth, and Ocean (3 counties). Population (1910), 230,478.

THOMAS J. SCULLY, Democrat, of South Amboy, was born in South Amboy, N. J., September 19, 1868; was educated in the public schools of South Amboy and Seton Hall College, South Orange, N. J.; engaged in the towing and transportation business; served three years as member of the board of education; was a Democratic presidential elector in 1908; was mayor of South Amboy 1909-10; was elected to the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-sixth Congress.

FOURTH DISTRICT.-COUNTIES: Hunterdon, Mercer, and Somerset (3 counties). Population (1910), 198,046.

ELIJAH C. HUTCHINSON, Republican, of Trenton, N. J., was born at Windsor, Mercer County, N. J., on August 7, 1855; he is a merchant miller, having a large flour mill and grain elevator situated in Hamilton Township, Mercer County, and is treasurer and manager of the Trenton Bone Fertilizer Co., and treasurer of the CochranDrugan & Co., of Trenton, N. J.; he is also a director of the Broad Street National Bank and the Mercer Trust Co., of Trenton, and the Commercial Casualty Insurance Co., of Newark, N. J.; represented Mercer County in the New Jersey House of Assembly in 1895 and 1896, and was elected to the New Jersey Senate in 1898 and again in 1901; during the fifth year as senator was the presiding officer of that body; in 1905 was appointed State road commissioner, which office he filled for three years; was elected to the Sixty-fourth Congress, receiving 17,078 votes, to 13,766 for Walsh, Democrat; 1,711 for Thorn, Progressive Republican; 561 for Alexander, Socialist; 326 for Barrett, Prohibitionist; and 112 for Phillips, Socialist Labor; was reelected to the Sixty-fifth Congress over Beekman, Democrat. Reelected to the Sixty-sixth Congress.

FIFTH DISTRICT.-COUNTIES: Morris and Union (2 counties). Population (1910), 214,901.

ERNEST R. ACKERMAN, Republican, of Plainfield, was born in New York City June 17, 1863. He studied at private and public schools, graduating from the high school in the class of 1880. He served as a member of the common council of the city of Plainfield in 1891 and 1892; was a McKinley presidential elector in 1896; in 1905 he was elected to the State senate, and reelected in 1908; in 1911 he was elected president of the senate, and during Gov. Wilson's absence from the State he served as acting governor of New Jersey on several occasions. Mr. Ackerman was a delegate to the Republican national convention in Chicago in 1908 and 1916, and has been a member of the New Jersey State board of education. He is engaged in manufacturing and banking; is a trustee of Rutgers College and a member of the Union League Club and Engineers' Club of New York. He was elected to the House of Representatives by a vote of 17,290, to 13,297 for Clement, Democrat; 1,737 for Furber, Socialist; and 415 for Clarke, National Party.

SIXTH DISTRICT.-COUNTIES: Bergen, Sussex, and Warren, and townships of Pompton and West Milford in Passaic County. Population (1910), 213,981.

JOHN RATHBONE RAMSEY, Republican, of Hackensack, was born at Wyckoff, N. J., April 25, 1862, the son of John P. and Martha (Rathbone) Ramsey, and spent much of his early life with his maternal grandfather, John V. Rathbone, in Parkersburg, W. Va., where he received a private-school education. In 1879 he returned to New Jersey and entered the law office of George H. Coffey, of Hackensack, and subsequently continued his law studies with Campbell & De Baun, also of Hackensack; was admitted to the bar as attorney in 1883 and as counselor at law in 1887 and began his practice in that city. He married Alice Taylor Huyler, of Hackensack, and has two children, John Rathbone, jr., and Alice Valleau. In 1895 he was elected county clerk of Bergen County, N. J., and was reelected in 1900 and 1905. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, the Elks, the Odd Fellows, and Junior Order of United American Mechanics; is president of the Hackensack Brick Co.; director of the Peoples Trust & Guarantee Co. of Hackensack, and the Ridgefield Park Trust Co. He was elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress, receiving 21,464 votes, to 18,770 for Heath, Democrat; 1,295 for De Yoe, Socialist; and 746 for Lefferts, National Prohibitionist. He was reelected to the Sixty-sixth Congress by a plurality of 3,155 over his Democratic opponent, Robert A. Sibbald.

SEVENTH DISTRICT.-COUNTY: Passaic, except the townships of Pompton and West Milford. Population (1910), 209,891.

AMOS H. RADCLIFFE, Republican, of Paterson, was born in Paterson, N. J., January 16, 1870; when the James Radcliffe & Sons Co. was incorporated as structural-iron works, he was made secretary of the company, which position he still holds; served in the New Jersey State Assembly for five years, from 1907 to 1912; was elected sheriff of Passaic County in 1912 for a three-year term; in 1915 he was elected mayor of Paterson for a two-year term, and in 1917 was reelected mayor for a second two-year term; in 1918 he was elected as a Member of the House of Representatives from the seventh district; Mr. Radcliffe is a director in the Franklin Trust Co.; in 1917 he was appointed by Gov. Walter E. Edge as a member of the board of fish and game commissioners of New Jersey for a five-year term.

EIGHTH DISTRICT.-ESSEX COUNTY: First, eighth, eleventh, and fifteenth wards of city of Newark; towns of Bloomfield and Nutley and Belleville Township. HUDSON COUNTY: City of Bayonne and seventh ward of Jersey City; towns of Harrison and Kearney; borough of East Newark. Population (1910), 207,647.

CORNELIUS A. McGLENNON, Democrat, of East Newark, was born in East Newark, N. J., December 10, 1878; he was educated at Holy Cross School, St. Francis Xavier's High School, and was graduated from Seton Hall College, South Orange, N. J., in 1899, receiving the degree of A. B., and two years later that of A. M.; he has been a public and high school principal for the past 15 years; studied law at New Jersey Law School and was admitted to practice law in June, 1916; was elected a member of the New Jersey State Senate and served as leader in that body of the Democratic minority; he was elected mayor of East Newark in 1907 and has held that office continuously up to the present time; he is president of the Glendon Auto Co. and a director and executive member of the West Hudson County Trust Co.; he is a member of the Knights of Columbus, being a past State deputy of that order; a member of Kearny Lodge, No. 1050, B. P. O. E., Modern Woodmen of America, Holy Cross Holy Name Society, and numerous other fraternal and social organizations; he was elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress by a plurality of 299 over William B. Ross, Republican, in a vote as follows: McGlennon, Democrat, 12,436; Ross, Republican, 12,137.

NINTH DISTRICT.-ESSEX COUNTY: First, third, sixth, seventh, thirteenth, and fourteenth wards (as they were in 1911) of the city of Newark, and the cities of East Orange and Orange. Population (1910), 213,027.

DANIEL F. MINAHAN, Democrat, of Orange, N. J.; born at Springfield, Ohio, August 8, 1877; educated at Stevens Institute Preparatory School and Seton Hall College; elected mayor of Orange, N. J., May, 1914, and reelected May, 1918; resigned as mayor August, 1919; elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress November 5, 1918.

TENTH DISTRICT.-ESSEX COUNTY: Second, fourth, fifth, ninth, tenth, twelfth, and sixteenth wards of the city of Newark; towns of Irvington, Montclair, and West Orange; boroughs of Caldwell, Essex, Fells, Glen Ridge, North Caldwell, Roseland, Verona, and West Caldwell; townships of Caldwell, Cedar Grove, Livingston, Milburn, and South Orange; and the village of South Orange. Population (1910), 206,693.

FREDERICK R. LEHLBACH, Republican, of Newark, was born in New York City January 31, 1876; removed to Newark in 1884, where he has since resided; attended the public schools of Newark and went from the high school to Yale University, graduating therefrom in the class of 1897; then studied law in the New York Law School and was admitted to the New Jersey bar in February, 1899, and has practiced his profession in Newark ever since. In 1899 he was elected a member of the board of education of Newark; served three terms as member of the General Assembly of New Jersey in the years 1903, 1904, and 1905; in April, 1908, was appointed assistant prosecutor of Essex County, which position he resigned in 1913; in 1908 married Frances E. Martin, of Newark; was elected to the Sixty-fourth Congress; and reelected to the Sixty-fifth and Sixty-sixth Congresses.

ELEVENTH DISTRICT.-HUDSON COUNTY: City of Hoboken and second ward of Jersey City; towns of Guttenberg, West Hoboken, West New York, Union, and Secaucus; and the townships of North Bergen and Weehawken. Population (1910), 199,612.

JOHN J. EAGAN, Democrat, of Weehawken, was born in Hoboken, N. J., January 22, 1872; is the founder and president of the Eagan Schools of Business of Hoboken, Union Hill, Hackensack, N. J., and New York City; first vice president of Merchants & Manufacturers' Trust Co., of Union Hill, N. J.; was elected to the Sixty-third, Sixtyfourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-sixth Congress.

TWELFTH DISTRICT.-HUDSON COUNTY: First, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth wards of Jersey City. Population (1910), 223,138.

JAMES A. HAMILL, Democrat, of Jersey City, was born in Jersey City, N. J., March 30, 1877; received his education at St. Peter's College, Jersey City, from which institution he was graduated in 1897, receiving the degree of A. B., and in the subsequent year that of A. M.; completed the regular course of lectures in the New York Law School and in 1899 obtained the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar of New Jersey in June, 1900; was elected in 1902 a member of the New Jersey House of Assembly, where he served four consecutive one-year terms, during the last two of which he was leader in that body of the Democratic minority; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses, and reelected to the Sixty-sixth Congress.

NEW MEXICO.

(Population (1910), 327,301.)
SENATORS.

ALBERT BACON FALL, Republican, of Three Rivers, was born November 26, 1861, at Frankfort, Ky.; educated in country schools, principally self-taught; taught school and read law when 18 to 20 years of age; practiced law 1889-1904, and from 1904 made a specialty of Mexican law; worked on farm, cattle ranch, and as a miner; became interested in mines, lumber, lands, and railroads; now engaged in farming and stock raising in New Mexico and in mining in Mexico; member New Mexico Legislature several times and member of constitutional convention; associate justice of the Supreme Court of New Mexico and twice attorney general of the Territory; captain Company H, First Territorial Volunteer Infantry, 1898-99 (Spanish-American War); married; elected to United States Senate by New Mexico Legislature March 27, 1912, and drew term expiring March 4, 1913; reelected June, 1912, and credentials not being signed by governor was again reelected on January 22, 1913, for the term ending March 3, 1919; reelected November 5, 1918, for the term ending March 3, 1925.

ANDRIEUS A. JONES, Democrat, of East Las Vegas; lawyer and stock raiser; born May 16, 1862, near Union City, Tenn., son of Rev. James H. W. and Hester A. A. (May) Jones; B. S. Valparaiso University 1884, A. B. 1885; taught school in Tennessee, and was principal of public schools of Las Vegas 1885-1887; admitted to New Mexico bar 1888, bar of Supreme Court United States 1894; president of New Mexico Bar Association 1893; mayor of Las Vegas 1893-94; special United States attorney 1894-1898; delegate Democratic national convention, Chicago, 1896; chairman New Mexico Democratic committee 1906-1908; chairman New Mexico Democratic committee during first State campaign, 1911; member Democratic national committee since 1908; received vote of all Democratic members of first State Legislature of New Mexico, 1912, for United States Senator; First Assistant Secretary of Interior 19131916; at general election, 1916, he received 34,142 votes for United States Senator; Frank A. Hubbell, Republican, received 30,622, and W. P. Metcalf, Socialist, 2,033.

REPRESENTATIVE.

AT LARGE.-Population (1910), 327,301.

BENIGNO CARDENAS HERNANDEZ, Republican, born Taos, Taos County, N. Mex., February 13, 1862; son of Don Juan Jose and Dona Maria M. (Cardenas) Hernandez; educated in private schools of Taos; married Frances Whitlock, of Taos, N. Mex., April 6, 1898; in mercantile business in Ojo Caliente and Tierra Amarilla, N. Mex., since 1889; member Amador & Co., sheep, cattle, and merchandise ranch at Canjilon, N. Mex.-since 1904; clerk probate court Rio Arriba County 1900-1904; sheriff 1905-1907; county collector and treasurer 1908-1911; delegate national Republican convention at Chicago 1912; receiver United States land office Santa Fe, Ñ. Mex., 1912-1914; Member Sixty-fourth Congress (1915-1917) from New Mexico at large; member State council of defense and district board, division 1, New Mexico, under selective-service act; reelected to the Sixty-sixth Congress November 5, 1918, the vote being as follows: B. C. Hernandez, Republican, 23,862; Granville A. Richardson, Democrat, 22,627; Walter B. Dillon, Socialist, 564; home, Canjilon, N. Mex.; office, 1111 North Second Street. Albuquerque, N. Mex.

NEW YORK.

(Population (1910), 9,113,614.)

SENATORS.

JAMES W. WADSWORTH, JR., Republican, of Groveland, Livingston County, N. Y., was born at Geneseo, N. Y., on August 12, 1877; received preparatory education at St. Mark's School at Southbore, Mass.; graduated from Yale 1898; enlisted as private, Battery A, Pennsylvania Field Artillery, and served with that organization in the Porto Rican campaign in the summer of 1898; mustered out at Philadelphia at the close of the war. Returning home, he engaged in live-stock and general farming business near Geneseo, N. Y., and later assumed the management of a ranch in the Panhandle of Texas; married Miss Alice Hay, of Washington, D. C., 1902; elected member of assembly from Livingston County 1904, and reelected 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, and 1909; elected speaker of assembly for the session of 1906, and reelected for the sessions of 1907, 1908, 1909, and 1910; elected United States Senator for the State of New York November 3, 1914, defeating James W. Gerard, Democrat, and Bainbridge Colby, Progressive. His term of service will expire March 3, 1921.

WILLIAM M. CALDER, Republican, of Brooklyn, was born in Brooklyn March 3, 1869; is married; elected in 1904 to represent the sixth New York district in the Fifty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixtythird Congresses; delegate to Republican national conventions of 1908, 1912, 1916, and 1920; elected United States Senator for the State of New York November 7, 1916, receiving 829,314 votes, to 605,933 for William F. McCombs, Democrat. of service will expire on March 3, 1923.

REPRESENTATIVES.

His term

FIRST DISTRICT.-NASSAU AND SUFFOLK COUNTIES. QUEENS COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at boundary line of Nassau and Queens Counties at Central Avenue, along Central Avenue west to Farmers Avenue, north to junction of Long Island Railroad and Old Country Road, to Fulton Street, west to Bergen Avenue, north to Hillside Avenue, east to Grand Avenue, north to boundary line between third and fourth wards, west to Flushing Creek (the boundary line between second and third wards), north to Strong's Causeway, east along Strong's Causeway and boundary line between the second and fourth assembly districts of Queens County, said line being through Ireland Mill Road to Lawrence Avenue, to Bradford Avenue, to Main Street, to Lincoln Street, to Union Avenue, to Whitestone Road, to Eighteenth Street, to the Boulevard, to Long Island Sound; along Long Island Sound and Little Neck Bay to boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties to Central Avenue, the point of beginning. Population (1910), 207,443.

FREDERICK C. HICKS, Republican, of Port Washington, Long Island, N. Y., was born at Westbury, Long Island, March 6, 1872; educated in public schools and at Swarthmore College and Harvard University; has one daughter; defeated for the Sixty-third Congress by 4,893 votes; elected to the Sixty-fourth Congress by 10 majority; elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress by 12,783 majority; elected to the Sixtysixth Congress by 51,000 majority.

SECOND DISTRICT.-QUEENS COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows: Beginning at Central Avenue on boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties, southerly along said line to the Atlantic Ocean, along Atlantic Ocean to Rockaway Inlet and boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties, northeast and north to Atlantic Avenue, east to Morris Avenue, south to Rockaway Road, southeast to Bergen Landing Road, northeast to Van Wyck Avenue, north to Newtown Road, northwest to boundary line between second and third wards of the Borough of Queens, west along said boundary line and boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties, northwest along said boundary line to Newtown Creek, northwest to East River, along East River and Long Island Sound through Powells Cove to point where boulevard intersects Powells Cove, south along boulevard to Eighteenth Street, east to Whitestone Avenue, southwest to Union Avenue, to Lincoln Street, to Main Street, to Bradford Avenue, to Lawrence Avenue, southwest along Lawrence Avenue along the boundary line between second and third wards of the Borough of Queens, the same being the Ireland Mill Road to Strong's Causeway, along Strong's Causeway to Flushing Creek, along Flushing Creek and said boundary line south to boundary between third and fourth wards of the Borough of Queens, east along said boundary line to Grand Avenue, south to Hillside Avenue, west to Bergen Avenue, south to Fulton Street, east to Old Country Road, southeast to Farmers Avenue, south to Central Avenue, and southeast to the point of beginning. Population (1910), 221,206.

CHARLES POPE CALDWELL, Democrat, of Forest Hills, borough and county of Queens, city of New York; was born in Bastrop County, Tex., June 18, 1875; has resided in New York since July 3, 1899; LL. B. University of Texas 1898, LL. B. Yale 1899; is a lawyer; offices 115 Broadway, New York City; married Frances Morrison, of Portsmouth, Ohio; has one child, Charles Morrison Caldwell; was a member of the Democratic national convention at Baltimore in 1912; member Democratic congressional campaign committee; commissioned major 1918, and resigned on signing of armistice; was elected to the Sixty-fourth and Sixty-fifth Congresses, and was renominated by both Democratic and Republican Parties for the Sixty-sixth Congress, and was reelected by a substantial majority.

THIRD DISTRICT.-KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of East River and North Eleventh Street, thence along North Eleventh Street to Berry Street, to North Twelfth Street, to Union Avenue, to Frost Street, to Lorimer Street, to Broadway, to Walton Street, to Throop Avenue, to Lorimer Street, to Harrison Avenue, to Flushing Avenue, to Broadway, to De Kalb Avenue, to Hamburg Avenue, to Stanhope Street, to the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties; thence along said boundary line to Newtown Creek; thence through the waters of Newtown Creek to East River; through the waters of the East River to the point of beginning. Population (1910),

JOHN MACCRATE, lawyer; born Dunbarton, Scotland, March 29, 1885; graduate of Public School 27 and Commercial High School, Brooklyn, and New York University Law School; married to Flora MacNicholl November 23, 1911, and has one son, John, jr.; Republican; entered Democratic and Republican primaries and received both indorsements; unopposed in Republican primaries; opposed by two competitors in Democratic primaries.

FOURTH DISTRICT.-KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of New York Bay and Sixty-third Street, thence along Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Fort Hamilton Avenue or Parkway, to Gravesend Avenue, to Terrace Place, to Eleventh Avenue, to Seventeenth Street, to Terrace Place, to Prospect Avenue, to Fourth Avenue, to Garfield Place, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Avenue or Place, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to Boerum Place, to Dean Street, to Court Street, to Amity Street, to Clinton Street, to Warren Street, to Columbia Street, to Congress Street, to the waters of Buttermilk Channel and East River; thence through the waters of Buttermilk Channel to the waters of New York Bay; thence through the waters of New York Bay to the point of beginning. Population (1910),

THOMAS H. CULLEN, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was born in the district he represents; graduate of St. Francis College, Brooklyn, N. Y.; engaged in the marine insurance and shipping business at 62 William Street, New York City; was elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress by a majority of 15,518.

FIFTH DISTRICT.-KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Bergen Street and Nevine Street, thence along Nevine Street to Atlantic Avenue, to Bond Street, to Fulton Street, to Hudson Avenue, to De Kalb Avenue, to Washington Park or Cumberland Street, to Myrtle Avenue, to Spencer Street, to Willoughby Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to Lafayette Avenue, to Bedford Avenue, to Dean Street, to New York Avenue, to Park Place, to Nostrand Avenue, to Eastern Parkway, to New York Avenue, to Sterling Street, to Flatbush Avenue or Washington Avenue, to Malbone Street, to Ocean Avenue, to Parkside Avenue, to Parade Place, to Caton Avenue, to Coney Island Avenue, to Beverly Road, to East Ninth Street, to Avenue C or Avenue C west, to West Street, to Fifteenth Avenue, to Thirty-seventh Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Forty-first Street, to Thirteenth Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Thirty-ninth Street, to Fort Hamilton Avenue or Parkway, to Gravesend Avenue, to Terrace Place, to Eleventh Avenue, to Seventeenth Street, to Terrace Place, to Prospect Avenue, to Fourth Avenue, to Garfield Place, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Avenue or Place, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to the point of beginning. Population (1910),

JOHN B. JOHNSTON, Democrat; born Glascow, Scotland, July 10, 1883; educated at public schools of Long Island City and Brooklyn; attended New York Law School; is a lawyer by profession; resident of Brooklyn since 1895; elected to Sixtysixth Congress, receiving 31,677 votes, to 23,589 for George A. Green, his Republican opponent.

SIXTH DISTRICT.-KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of Nostrand Avenue and Lafayette Avenue; thence along Lafayette Avenue to Bedford Avenue, to Dean Street, to New York Avenue, to Park Place, to Nostrand Avenue, to Eastern Parkway, to New York Avenue, to Sterling Street, to Flatbush Avenue or Washington Avenue, to Malbone Street, to Ocean Avenue, to Parkside Avenue, to Parade Place, to Caton Avenue, to Coney Island Avenue, to Beverly Road, to East Ninth Street, to Avenue C or Avenue C west, to West Street, to Fifteenth Avenue, to Thirty-seventh Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Forty-fourth Street, to Fifteenth Avenue, to Fiftieth Street, to Sixteenth Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Nineteenth Avenue, to Forty-seventh Street, to Washington Avenue or Parkville Avenue, to Gravesend Avenue, to Foster Avenue, to East Seventeenth Street, to Avenue I, to Flatbush Avenue, to East Thirty-fourth Street, to Avenue J, to Schenectady Avenue, to Glenwood Road, to East Forty-sixth Street, to Farragut Road, to Schenectady Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to Ralph Avenue, to Church Avenue, to East Ninety-first Street, to Linden Avenue, to Rockaway Parkway, to Church Avenue, to East Ninetyeighth Street, to Lott Avenue, to Thatford Avenue, to Livonia Avenue, to Osborn Street, to Dumont Avenue, to Thatford Avenue, to Sutter Avenue, to Howard Avenue, to Pacific Street, to Ralph Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Utica Avenue, to Pacific Street, to Schenectady Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Sumner Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Green Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue, to the point of beginning. Population (1910),

FREDERICK W. ROWE, Republican, of Brooklyn, New York City, was born at Wappingers Falls, Dutchess County, N. Y., March 19, 1863; graduated from De Garmo Institute 1882, and from Colgate University in 1887 with degree of A. B.; received degree of A. M. from Colgate University in 1890; LL. D. 1918; married S. Loraine Meeker at Marshalltown, Iowa, in 1894, and has one son; admitted to the New York bar in 1889 and continued from that time in the active practice of law, first at 186 Remsen Street, Brooklyn, and then at 257 Broadway, New York City, until 1904; since 1904 has devoted his time largely to development of real estate in Brooklyn; is president of Frederick W. Rowe & Co. (Inc.); was first president of the Brooklyn

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