MA OI00T tle. EN CNPC AC AL AY te ae el Con 2L0EQS O0LTTY hm 0 S3IHvHAIT nsy ae uas )% I a IR WE i AL He agi \ Seca TLE 7 Tr let] 7 14 I Tw 17 fm 7-41 £71 LY (APS SSR Nya p TSR TY Sd Shape EE EE a — ~ = Sa i - Ci abn — oe A Tr ETA ae TR ry EA TIRE eke 67" CONGRESS, 4™ SESSION BEGINNING DECEMBER 4, 1922 OFFICIAL CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY FOR THE USE OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS SECOND EDITION JANUARY, 1923 COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING REE By ELMER C. HESS II This publication is corrected to January 15, 1923. Office of Congressional Directory, Room 29, Basement of the Capitol. Phone, Capitol Branch 238. Copies of the Directory may be purchased from the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, D. C. Price, 60 cents. NOTES. The following changes have occurred in the membership of the Congress since the last issue of the Directory (December, 1922): House.—Hon. Frank C. Millspaugh, of the first district of Missouri, resigned December 5, 1922; Hon. Thomas W. Harrison, of the seventh district of Virginia, - was unseated by vote of the House on December 15, 1922; Hon. William S. Vare, of the first district of Pennsylvania, resigned January 2, 1923; Hon. Nestor Montoya, of New Mexico, died January 13, 1923. All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest unless otherwise indicated. III 74152 NS —0 — aN 1 8 22 NON NN 7 nNOY ——N 6 <== r= 5 1211314 {15 19 120 | 21 26 (27 | 28 | 29 JULY NON — ——Nen AUGUST NOOMNO —Qam SEPTEMBER OCTOBER NOVEMBER DECEMBER —OMNAND —ANN 1 2 3 2 ONO AON 9 16 nANNO rN 16 | 17 8 22123 - 1923 - < =o rN 22 |23|24 1 8 7 1415 NON — ram 14 15 7 6 MAY JANUARY NOONO — Am MARCH 6 13 APRIL JUNE 5 12113 NAN —AaN FEBRUARY 5 12 4 18119 | 20 | 21 Sun| M |Tu| W|(Th| F |Sat|[Sun| M | Tu| W|Th| F |Sat Nt — 0 ANN 25(26)27 (281293031 1811920 | 21 4 11 3 24 |25|26|27(28|29|30]|3 10 | 11 17 Iv CONTENTS. Page Academy of Selonces, Natlonal. co. ro i irri sh wae sR NS een pa See Rab 298 Accounting Office, General: . cue... s.coo de ea TL Cee i en sree ms ean Ae eke . 299 Addresses of Members. oo. coor vi cen ir ins ss snr mr se Besse sre mr SER vets se enn wees epee 483 Adintant General ot Le AYIY ars iseri sven seem et smear rst pnt reas pe seme a 277 Administration: of Grain. Future Trading Act... rs irr nnn sas issn ete 293 ACrONaTHeS Brean Of. Te a eee aie a en ESSE a ee eas ees 285 Naflenal Advisory Committee for... i Cn aes an ana 305 Acrienltmal DepartIONT oo incr ais cares hs errs eee Annie gre es Sn ee iS Se maeis ag ib es 291 Tconomies, Bureau of coos i. ui ae a a ee ee ee ee, 293 © Afr Service Offical the Chief of The... a a ais rs oes spamassassin aps mem ne sets rmime we 279 Alaskan Eneineeting Commission coco ti, ar ae rhea 291 Road Comms Oe. Lt a i ere Sas Sx eR ns SREB sais A am aie se ea 305 Allen Property. CustodiBN. isa. ce -otrssrrnscssocrroesssrnmrsrsns trowsrorroes at es 303 GH Eon Esme aisle eR Cee 385 Alphabetical list of Representatives. . uc. ior foes crane eran mt Re rr tees Se ls Fins in ma Siri a 131 BONA OIS. svi er utie ms smme’s natn Smt Tem tas ale Gare 'e bmn sine Sot ee Em mise iz Seale nis 129 American Ethnology, Bureamof. .. .. cocci ones cnrsnerasnr tsar nara rss rine choses srsae isso vcnrsss 297 NINA Bed Cros8 acai ssv cerrinasiindncnns simmn srt senmn ase carne sma sites 35 sis #3 onan sn 305 AMMA INAuSITY, BUTEA Of sen ewitew reer cnasnmsins ees anomie ns arses sensi teseess stim semanas 292 Apportionment of Representatives, by States, under each census. ........coueeeinneeenarasnnannnn. 172 Arbitration Commission, Pecuniary Claims. ........ cic. coe eesmermrsrrscnsss azn sri sd senna 309 Architect-of the Capitol: Co YL ree 245 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission... ... ooo. oe ee soa 308 Bridge Commission... ...........c.c oan Ct dem hy ee Bee Sat 229 Ariny Medical Musetrmuand LADUarY . cnc. ese cviiein ite cones ner ssn nan soos inte sins So gis 278 EE ET EST Sr Ee SR eR Be 278 WarCollege, Hhe. ou rrp rn rr hr Veen a Same 280 Assignment of rooms on basement floor and terrace of the Capitol... ............. ................. 249 gallery floor of the Capitol... cl i ee reece sa as 255 ground floorof the Capitol... cr rr esse ees taka nee 251 principal floor ofthe Caplio)... iol. iis se a eis senses en ase 253 Assignments of Representatives to committees. ..............c.ccoceeeiesneszssensmsnra rans enemas 208 Senators to COMMUTER... ricco cisterns sir tntnnin sins nts saan donna 187 Astrophysical ObServatory.....eeeeeeeeenaaerannnns a Ee a 297 Attendonce om ofieers, Navy. i. ovr etter ri ciansnre conn cmn sist ia ns soe rms hn Palen t pl ui etn 287 Attending surgeon ofthe Army... oo i. ress irndt eset s wns rsan evn sms whens ners esis sre to ne 278 Attorney General, biography of... o.oo. 280 Basement floor and terrace of Capitol, assignment of rooms On... ...ciooiimiimniiiaiiaaaianann.. 249 dlagram of... ... ee ddd Sait RS RR IRN... 248 Biographies of judges of the United States Court of Customs Appeals.......... i... ............ 403 justices of the Court of Claims of the United States........................coiciaa.. 402 Supreme Court-of the United States. -. ...--.. uc lili luda 399-401 Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commissioners... ............ 3-127 Biography of the Attorney General... cco vrvi cuir vrnidin svn nants sans Sais Sa Seda a Fh amano 280 Clerk ‘of the House of Representatives. to oii iciibnmsainente ss Sh bats a 241 Restmaster General... cori Lr ne rere A SA 281 President of the United States... ius oli vena BN GRRL 271 Secretary ol- Agriculture. ou. io: (is sini iin rissa ss se ae ae 3 wa le a a 201 BEE eR Ee eC SL SH Se Te ee 293 a Ce ee CREE RRC Eg SS RR 295 TE EN SAN ee Oe Ae ke he 1m BOS ah 271 the lnterlor. cr viii rns rd side war te ae 288 NAVY aris co irae te tm bes Rn Te sR 283 BONELESS A a ae 233 ANT | Ae a CS SE a SSR EE SS se UE Ee 272 ES em a rei ae RU ee CER La aa 276 tothe President cis. riety Se SS ee ne AE aia 271 Sergeant at Arms of the Senate. .................. nes sty sw BT RE Bed 235 Vice President ofthe United States... ......ccovivcdisonssnrnmrms vranserlot ties os 3 VI Congressional Directory. Biological Survey, Bureau of, Department of Agriculture... ........ceueeeeoreeaoeoaaaaaaaaaaaanns Board, Federal HOTtICHIEUTAY. . . i. ci nines ones ss dass sana anaes neh bons mmo ons Dam Wns a's Bs aoaie mm ai A BT Er Fe sh pea EU I Er ae es Ea i Ln Ls Insecticide and Pungiclde. . .... 0.. cco scaicae sola germs mrs nar ness wnnnmnnsssnnsmesnnnn EIEN ET IR hee ee aia ie Sl Ne Sl eS ee a ae pa Lr Se ET DE ee rE i de ee Ne ea ee he Untied States Sp DING. os ee COSI BO RO EY eR se RSs a Cee el Se RR CER Sn Se ee SC at is CU Es Rr a ea adi lass d Seana Sissi Bi slide Campa iiised dia set pal Board for Examination ol Dental OT eens. oi es asso sas nat eat san wane nn LYRE TR ROT TE TRS nS as LL Sa TR St Vocational Education, Federal.......cccceeaen..... it he eh of Ingineers for Biversiand Harbors... co hs onine as oie esi pn snny EEE OO TH Te Tr i RR Sep Se pl me te tee eee nS ce eal SOE Medical TD Raliiner eo i ir a Toi rh a oe rd piesa So als 3s AA oles mimimirre sa a oT Road Commissioners for AIaskD. o.oo chron sans s Sanat ies Sm ie me Botonic Garden, United States. ... oot cr. crc. cv acess rrsrosssmnrssemnisuses zs usn oss tives vasssnss= Budget, Bureau of thera. cio. iim iio i an rm aati cr saat stan en mmr OE IE A RR ee ee ee EE ee TR re Burean, Children’s. veer see sn sums vn cuter ts sate R Sr wih SNe a Fes Sk SPN Smee, A Ee A CR CE Si EER CR Re I SE Se Tntermation al Banllary. ca. eras savor eam nde snags sles int an rdnns s nis en nes en A EY LR i i Sr I NE SS er US RRA BureanofAefonauties.. ..-..i. oo 0 0, I eR ah Ee oS Le Aotleultural BeONOMER.. tool... ve oe vines te Sener ete ici 5s aren ok roan pik peo SE EU A RAR SSR Ee a i Se es sae a ek i Te a EE a a Lr i a PR rR RT or Ll Re TA ER EE A ER aR Se he en Le Se (By tre ssid tok adi ite i sa iis side Dee ae ie Sl Se STII EI A Ee a ea Ee ee i a ee TR Construction aNd Repair... i... co --i- cs orev ome: debe tc non sin sg win mwnms simsinitmesvewsnves en BT pe Es Se SOE Sa BE a Ee i i sd el TEL Rl SEE Efficiency, Unifed Sates. oo ro es cua ahnns tons sus Brie soe mvisit salen Sais ew m Ties Engineering (NOVY)... oo oe erie tas swe eme saa sewer kms ss sw swe mesmo Engraving and Printing... ......c.v.cesvevomensnvasmnmresnizsne want snp sma wemn se sone nee ET A Pe Tr ne I I Sa i ne LE Be LS SB eT rr Foreignand Domestic Commerce... -... uc... cous sssamnsmnssnzrsssnms mene -cenavsr=s TOIGTATION. coho in smnmn so sims mini ol SEER SL SP Lui ala aliin + 23 Siw 8 we ais Soi airtel Sitie mates Industrial Housing and Transportation. ........ feces cae cnsme smn snmoesn mee emasene Tosular AAIrS. . cc. oe i oh a Be TU Bee oi Ve sn tin i mai Ee InternationalCatalogue of Scientific Literature. ..........cciiimncniniaiiniime nn aan Labor Statisties. cc. ions IE el Se ee a Thre EER LL LIghtNOnNSes anaes de devia so dnt tion sim 3a bmi 28 Seb wins aide ries wa Smile = ws ww nian Medicine and SULERLY.. .-caus ssaaaniise casa sisn ns sinen sossnnssiinsidns rs EEsiEen SJ Ai sR slew Noturallzollon... coves cies rn essa ssa an a sine Sem Hrs RE FR ma TE FSA iE els = = ie wien we Navigation, COMIMEIee: - --c nx iazsatnssnissnmsnfnsisbindtas sais somsoitnsntosteessennss Ordnance, Navy... ...ccceecueonenamsmssnscanesnsnesssassstidasgonssnsssmanesnensnsnssanen EE ee rE rR TE | Da RE Ee rr) Plan IANS ce oe aan ria at me sm lemie n mr BOE em we a x SR wd Sel en mi Public Health Service vii cri i ci a AS STR ee eA SN See ae Contents. VII Page QBIONAaL.. cicrei ses es snsnss avs sntnnnsins esis iE ere erste visas gunners sdmnsleltis valde es Sie a5 v California DAbris COMMISSION ie ih er ii ns mie ere is mn me wien FURIE in wie min wie wis me wins 279 Capitol; Architect ofthe ........ coil ve tind os ins es a Cat al oe eo 245 basement floor and terrace of, assignment of rooms on... ..... co... i oiiiaiiiiiiiia.. 249 diagramel sl Ca iE rR TR a es 248 galery. floor of, assignent OITOOMS ON. i: Sindee canna er sus snnsr sss vamsnnsinssnnsnsassion 255 diggram ol... i evens cE i en SE ER, cna 254 ground floor of, .a55iSNMent OfTOOMS ON. . oo. .ic vec snus ss von msnbiennaiiselsioilsh cls iv sien so v2 251 ET VT a ee SE I rN A x LL STR es AE 250 history and deseription of... ... ci. iia oa sree tat IL RU SL 247 office OL ATCHITE0L Of ci... . aise sheers sem NO ST OL SO J... 245 Congressional Record... .. iv in trescavrmcisscnsnns sus sdithavilidt Lo coloeiot blew a vues 245 TH HL RR ee 0s SI IRR SB ST Tre Te es OTT OL Na Se 245 principal floor of, assignment ofroomson............—.... nolo CL OL LL. 253 diagramol. ....... i ii acer ane renee or nn dH Rte Sel SLi 252 Cavalry, Officeofthe Chielol. .o.. _...............corcercmsnnrrasinsasesisotimsh sl adeh sc aniisan 276 CENSUS BIILCO - c -eee ev ve sams rnsr sins oo rm nem Pee En sw ¥ Se on went me = SRC te tl atl dl wera wis SToaininie 294 Chaplain of the House of Representatives. .........eciiceneneemeeceennnestiineist stnesiac sean nans 241 Ee CLE SE RTE Li SE ne 233 Chaplains, Office ofthe Chiefol. .......co creer ec rec rsr messmo smn sesso nizrs nr roo Sait sin = = somes sas 277 Chemistry, Burealiof.... cue rere raee rai ate ha ee sane sae Reh rename 292 CGhici Coordinator, Office Of... oi i Ne a TG BE AR ws Sl. 00 273 of Chemical Warfare Service, Office of the. .... PA SEER 12) TT rts LUE EE BI SE 280 Coast Artillery, Office ofthe. .... coer cidonnenn es en LS LCOS... ae 277 Bngineers OTthe ATINY.. oo. Leni ci sma mm bd amt ie n SE Es mb 2 Tiss ol i wie be nia o's 278 Ordnance Ofte ATTN... re ee ssn mon asad on Ie RE Fe Sah Slt lA SS eS a 279 IE hy Ee Ue Nr NE Re A IE TC Lt CR en ol 285 Signal Officer of the ATIIY...... oes ovis rrnens omen smnn ress sar seine dl i Te WL. 279 ChHldren Ss Buren. ie. rr ota roses Sn ms wee sti me Speman Dy TEE Sl APT Sie 296 Gireuit Courts of Appeals of the United States..........cccecnee..oo. holo dle BLL JUL 401 City POSL OffICE. . co cee cncunismnnit mmm mimininie miss ibim 0 nw im mime mn mi walle gieltle Sain lu ieinl® = woainis on =ieiniwin nin iem wn 469 GIVI Bervice COMMISION. £ ccc re smecinioms mmitieisitmesines iy meme Sold sme SOS SESS nls tei = Sielenineib a se 300 AUIS OF. oir cnsn rs sinew tit A a Se Epi Lc 373 Claims Arbitration Commission, PeCUNIATY . . - - .ccci ome c creme minim Sabai a i i a Co ae ai 309 Classification, political, of Congress... .. cae aI eee Sess ns 148 Clerk of the House of Representatives (DIography). ..c.....cocrceveinioe ste diets seen cm ens sienee 241 Clerks to. House COTRMIELEO8. «= io io hit hrs in mein Sins smd mma mosis NE inte sia Lidid ee aeE 242 Senate. COMMITTEES. « cores ice mn mmiimmimissinminminis Sila ow me wine wien oti FE Shee iui Sait late Wa 234 Coast and-CeodaliCSUIVeY. . -. cc cn netics sesame emattm memes nl = Seale dnt aiare sit sanite'n wavs sco ws' 295 Artillery, Office ofthe CHISTOf. . i.e ce oon moins s rm iSien Sim rs mn mn oe Sa ese a 277 EEL 7 Ee RG ee I SS SR Re rR Ts a 275 COHector OF TNE POLl icici can ieisieisinimiiis Sumi wiminmsirin nmin won mie mm = imine le oa pr im 8 ln we re mw ai i lh a 275 College, the ATTY WAT... .euseeeereuatannnensssnnnssmnsanssanssssssmeenaeessshlbinitine tienen ass 280 Colmmbiz Institntionforthe Deal. cue iin ii cir snes rsa sises errs srs sors siete to dein 309 Commerce, DEPIRLtBENL Of. . . occu ine prns seirmimmmmimis es sibs Smt nis Sao inie so ois dof HS HE SE wie wiwiae 293 Commission Alaskan Engineering. ... ... co neiems nan mninsin namin ies Staats Si slid See sain sme 291 Arlington Memorial Amphitheater... .. cco. coe corrcn sms dns tune dh th Sinic = 25 a Ems 308 Bridge... aa ss a ee en OL 229 Bi Brel ES a IG eee i A See SS RIE SR SE 300 Compensation, United States Employees’. .............o och Jaabid naa oilo 303 District Bett. oo i rr rm a He a A Ce SA ed ele Bel Rn SEAS ue Sak 467 Bederal POWEE. -: — casi cin cms ens mens aailis sons Sai liiek ov SS San Ss ELI 307 51 De IER Se EES a a ER en DRS BTL a EAST 301 for the Extension and Completion of Capitol Building. .... oc oooiooiiiinaiiaii ats 228 Grant Memorial... - -. oie Ed iter do dT Sp thi sh tla ios faiiaiiae Tevimetlobe sie SE oe 229 in Conirol ofthe HouseXOfice BHilAing . oor. ae eo Co aR aa a es 228 Senate Office Building... ooo camisetas iad a be ns se 228 International Boundary, United Statesand Canada... ....ccooiioioinniiiaiannan.. 306 MOXICO. ie ssioii vr ets air si Sm ite 306 TInternationaljoint................. I RN I 306 Interatatle COmMMOROR. . rt a re fe ener ar nn Smee See 299 John Ericsson Memorials of roe I a ree enn a 230 Ancol MEIOTIC, oe a en are cr ea ina ses we aps ee eens gn ees A a 229 Meade Memorial, oor rs i sa ar A NI, 229 Misslssipp River fe A se ees Ae de Sy Es 279 National Forest Reservation’ i ud Li i eel es oo SL Fe ve va Sasa 228 Tk Shad BUYTV) Ee SI be Le a Re Fr eS SNe IER RS ce te ERE 304 vif Congressional Directory. Page. Sommissioniof PING ALIS... ci iiss iin ine ans rsa wae See SA 1 308 QUtles. 06 ccc e sci ra tr rns nw SD SIS SA BIDE 392 on Enlarging the Capitol GrondE... - .. .ccuv revive nvervi sve sa reeves valerate oa 228 Memorialto Women of the CIVII War... Joli iit. Rial Din dob. Josanidi.. 229 Navy YVardsand: Naval Stations... 0 00. cn es aia as 305 Quities of. 0. Chios Tn lonsiingivas Wa Soncioaiiss 388 Pecuniary Claims Arbitration. cc veeeve onsen iiansyandh of cop oe 309 Postal Service, JoINt-....cnovesie nina en rad SHG Jaundice. ooo Binns. 230 Buble Buildings. or hii era A SORTER a a 230 PublicUtilitios, DISTRI... cn oes citi cain ar SD SIGE PAD Bite Tania! 467 RockiCreek and Potomac ParEWay- ...c. cone erncnrrnmnsennees es allo kW aniln 307 United StatesiConl. . i... cos. cease ipB St Flan ata. 310 Section:ofInter American High... cocoons cae eee 307 World War. Foreign Debt... co... B00 USES Cpa nial Jsuianig. 310 Commissioner ol BAUEILION. Lol cuca cn cncues dan neenniiunennenma iit gmgadh 0 CE 289 TAIaR ARATE... oo ceviche sehiene san p ene seam ss SHEL TBE te ei 289 IRINA ReVONUG Cis vis conn nin on mons e msmme a se si im mm we MBSE 274 Labor SLatIStIon . ov asie in cena amen eS Sas SE I son nd Un 296 WE LOY Rr RE PE a Se CR SSeS Ee TC BE 296 ISTE AE RR SE DR ME BRR vn: 3 IES SR AEE RR 289 a es Te eR RI NE LS SR A Se Oe SBE 10 5 ele 289 the General Land Office. ..........c.cieiovrcovas bain ite SEY rt Rr 288 War Minerals Belief .......c ocean. 08000 00) sii oar. sa 8l io vuln 291 General ol TIMIGERLION. coca eis cinema OS 30) pitied nh. 296 Commissionsand joint committees, congressional... .......ccevemssesmnvewssibns tees cies thisdsnn 228 Committee assignments of BepresentaliVen-......ive vi views cmminmevis seme bas ale ol wl ain ob uSaadien, 208 I Pe PR eR CNS oe all 187 TITEL AEE Th ed rent man fo Ae LS NS Pe ta 8 Ge RR Ts SF 228 ; Ehe LIDrary Joli: cc ie meme en em mies ties sn ees wa I LEAL] ae 229 Committees.of the House, clerkS 10... co ocooeencvere ood 2 Dadi hatin slneuiti iin ds, 242 117 ET DT A eR ERI Se a es SC SR 195 MEeMDBOLShIPIOL. << oi scr mmr imitate = + SEMEL as Drs 196 Oeil StONOZLEPNOIS 10: ccna ansnsans sR aE Lc Lo ani 245 SONL0,ClOILB 10. ce sina vemaaia nian wus vs Sete TE he wa Sa ELE J Sa AR 234 MESHING AVS Of. i= «tothe President, biography of. cic cis asian sade sss ies TE SB ES TT, 271 Senate committees, assignments to...................... pena a 4 8 wa wn Su a wn ws ee Ly glorks to... or. Re es CC ER (Trg i MST ES a ee ie MENG AAYS Of ci a i er Se Sree we eh Se SRL LU 181 memberaiip Of GS Cr SR A SR NS EE ER 182 Senate, Chaplain of oo rr er i a A A SAA I I BE 233 diagram ol the oor Of... . oi rr rd disdain id an ada wad putes tne sh balm im me 5 256 EE ee Ee SR re Rr pe eR SR SR IR a a 257 FOIA ING TOOT Of. =: 1 Michioan..........: Detroit. Cole, Cyremue.......0. 0... ..c Set dowa lo... Cedar Rapids. Cole; R.CHnt.....c..0. oo. c00s S{Ohio.\...0........ Findlay. Collier; ~Jomes Wee. sooo ices. 8 | Mississippi.....---- Vicksburg. Collins, Ross A .scaresivenes-s- 5 | Mississippi........- Meridian. Colton, Bon B.-2.. 000... ah... Doro Vernal. Connally, Tom... ......00 iva Yi Aexas..../.o. Marlin. Connolly, James J. ............ 5 | Pennsylvania....... Philadelphia. Cooper, Henry Allen............ 1 { Wisconsin. ........} Racine. Cogper, Jon G................ 9f Ohio: rd... Youngstown. Copley, Ira C...0.............. Ha Tilinole. o.oo 0. oon Aurora. Coughlin, Clarence D-.......... 11 | Pennsylvania....... Wilkes-Barre. Crago, Thomas S.............. At L. | Pennsylvania... ....| Waynesburg. Cramton, Lonis C......... 7... 75 Michigan. i a Lapeer. Crisp, Charles Boos ocvciinaiss SF Georgin. uous Americus. Crowther, Frank........:....... 830 "New York:. ......: Schenectady. Cullen, Thomas H...o.ccivvivas 4 | New York......... Brooklyn. Curry, Charles BE... .......0... 3. Californin.........: Sacramento. Dale, Porter T=... ....c-c0 02 2.0 Vermont... -- Island Pond. Dallinger, Frederick W......... 8 | Massachusetts. . . . . Cambridge. Darrow, George P.............. 6 | Pennsylvania. ...... Philadelphia. Davis, Charles R............... 3 {:Minnesoln......--.. St. Peter. Davis, Bot. .oneean.cvc.. iis 5-1 Tennessee-......... Tullahoma. Deal, Josepl'T.eeereeeiiiieiass 2 Virginia, oun 0 Norfolk. Dempsey, S. Wallace. ......... 40-| New York......... Lockport. Denison, Edward E............. 954 MWineier.:.. o. Marion. Dickinson. LJ. _............. Wl Town o.oo Algona. Dominick; FreQ Houesivoiicaiees 3 | South Carolina. .... Newberry. Douglion, Robert L..........%... 8 | North Carolina. .... Laurelsprings. Dowell, Cassius C....... ...... Ttilowal. oo oooh, Des Moines. Drone, Herbert dd ..oceniovvvcnn- TA Florida... -... Lakeland. Drawry, Porte H. .-cccco0 4-0 Viveinin sir oro... Petersburg. Driver; Willem Jecouicieenines 1 | Arkansas. .........| Osceola. Dunbar, James W............. S$: Eindiann. i... New Albany. Dunn, Thomag B.............. 384 Newl York... ..... Rochester. Dupre, H. Qerland..... 0. 2 | Louisiana .........; New Orleans. Dyer, Leonidas C.............. 12 | Missouri....... FIT St. Louis. Echols, Leonard S. ............ 6 | West Virginia. ..... Charleston. Edmonds, George W........... 4 | Pennsylvania....... Philadelphia. Eliott, Richard No.0 co. 0000 CliIndiang. coc Connersville. Ellie, Bdgar@.. t....... 0. 0 51 Missouri. oc... .. Kansas City. Evans, Robert E............... 3 | Nebraska...........| Dakota City. Fairchild, Benjamin Li.......... 24 | New York......... Pelham. Fairfield, TonigW., ..... 0. 12 Indiana i coon Angola, Paoust, Charles ¥....... no... 4 MHssouri... co... St. Joseph. Favret, George K- - ..-. coo. ox 6: Tomistany sco oof Baton Rouge. Fenn, Bo Hart oi oss | 1 | Connecticut........ Wethersfield. Alphabetical Last. 133 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Name Dig- State City ! trict. 2 " or Yous, Simteon Di .........c cu FA Ohlo... Los. Ho Yellow Springs. Fields Vllliam Jo. eens cain 9 | Kentucky.........- Olive Hill. Fish, Hamilton gr. .......... 26.1 New York. ...... Garrison. Fisher, Bubert Bc. inne nnvn-is 10 | Tennessee.......... Memphis. Fitzgerald: Roy G............ .- 34i0hle. vo... cs Dayton. Foch, Benjamin K.......... 17 | Pennsylvania....... Lewisburg. Fordney, Joseph W............ 8: Michigan... ........ Saginaw W. S. Foster, Israel M......... Relimie Ohio nicl Athens. Frear, James:A oo... ..... 0... 16 | Wisconsin. .. ......| Hudson. Pree, Arthur M.o.............. 8: ‘California. ......... San Jose. Ereeman, Richaypd P... ........ 2 | 1Cennecticut....... New London. French, Burtenlli........... 2 Ylildahe Moscow. Frothingham, Louis A.......... 14 | Massachusetts....... Easton. Fuller, Charles. ............. 12 | [Hlinois.. ...| Belvidere. Fulmer, Homplon P. .......... 7 | South Carolina. . . .. Norway. Funk, Franke Flos)... 00h 17 Dhnoiec oc Bloomington. Gahn, Bewy:iQ. 0. ......... MI Ohle. Cleveland. Guellivan, Jomesid.. oo. ven 12 | Massachusetts....... Boston. Garner, John Nose... aoa 150 Fexae.. oo. Uvalde. Gurrett, Dandel B-... ........ .. Stl Toxamz ot .o Houston. Garrett, Pints ues. .ooovnvenins 9 | Tennessee.......... Dresden. Gensman, LM i........0 : 6 | Oklahoma..........| Lawton. Gernerd, Wed. 13 | Pennsylvania....... Allentown. Gifford, Chodes Yi... 5 16 | Massachussetts. .... Cotuit. Gilbert, ‘Ralph TAS Rn 8. Heniucky.......... Shelbyville. Gillett, Frederick H............ 2 | Massachusetts....... Springfield. Glynn, James Poli... ....... 5. Connecticut... ... Winsted. Goldsborough, T. Hl 1 Maryland... ......... Denton. Goodykoontz, Nella,............ 5 | West Virginia. ..... Williamson. Gorman, John... ..........%. Gil lilinole. 0... 4, Chicago. Gould, Normand. «o.oo... 36 | New York......... Seneca Falls. Graham, George S.. ........... 2 | Pennsylvania....... Philadelphia. Graham, William... .: 14 Thinols........... | Aledo, Green, William B.... .....:...: STOW. eee Council Bluffs. Greene, Frank L.. =... “i... YT Vermont............. St. Albans. Greene, William S.............. 15 | Massachusetts. ...... Fall River. Griest W. W........... .. 9 | Pennsylvania....... Lancaster. Gri fin, dntbony dd. ........ 22: New York... ....... New York City. Hadley, Lindley H..'...... ... 2 | Washington......... Bellingham. Hammer, Williom C.........00.. 7 | North Carolina. ....| Asheboro. Hardy, Guy | Ete Wa Che Si eolorade........ Canon City. Hordy, Buus. toi... ........ .. Gilead... ho Corsicana. Haugen, Gilbert No.oeo.......- Plows lL. Northwood. Hawes, Harry IRIS Boreas 11 | Missouri .-| St. Louis. Hawley, WillisC............... ¥: Oregon..........—.. Salem. Hayden, Corl ois overs eee oo AtL. | Avisona.. Phoenix: Hays dw, Doo... 0 4a Missouri... 0... Cape Girardeau. Henry, Dewig. inti... .. S7 New York... .... Elmira. Herrick, Manuel... .......... 8: Oklbhoma.......... Perry. Horsey, Tra GQ... ac... di Mave... Houlton. Hickey, Andrew: ............. 188 Indioma... co... Laporte. Hicks, Frederick C.............. 15f New York. ........ Port Washington. Hill, JohmePhilin. ....... 2 Marviand.... Baltimore. Himes, Joseph H:.............. 6: Ohie. 10,212 | 5 763 | 7,452 | 8,654 | 18 866 Longworth, Nicholas. ....... Ohio... 1 | 33,903 | 27,030 | 57,328 | 24,290 | 20,826 | 40,195 | 99,583 Lore; Balin adacianicnsie ‘Miss... bimini Gh ded Meg in Ba 6, 960 6, 1Specialelection, Nov. 8, 1921, 6 Others. 2 Elected Nov. 7, 1922. 7 Information not furnished by State officials. 3 Farmer-Labor. 8 Independent. 41 Special election, June 7, 1921. % Prohibitionist. > b Socialist. 10 Special election, Feb. 15, 1921, ee — 154 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Vote. : Total Namie. State. Disk Republican. Democratic. oie (1920) 1916 1918 1920 1916 1918 1920 Yate, Robert........ouunnn unin Mass....| 13 | 25,527 | 18,257 | 56,451 | 12,985 | 12,538 | 23,122'{ 79,573 Tatiring, OSCar Rove onw on vn. hd 1] 22,955 | 20,440 | 44,694 | 23,278 | 18,837 | 36.834 | 86,415 Lyon, Homer Li. ...o..nwwve N.C....| 6| 7.520 370211040} 13,337 | 9.575 | 24,174 | 35 214 MeArthur, Clifton: N......... Oreg....| 33583223277 |37,884 | 9,824 | 15,728 | 31,853 | 72,989 Me Clintic, James V... vu... .. Okla... 7 | 7,040 | 6,014 | 17 661 | 17,810 | 11,190 | 21,420 | 43,332 McCormick, Washington J...| Mont....| 1 | 66,974 | 22,308 | 39,729 | 84,499 | 25,530 | 29,688 | 69,417 McDuffie, John... .......... I a 3,721 | 12,978 | 13 143 MeFadden, Louis T 14 | 13,638 | 11,267 | 27,782 | 8,881 | 4,873 | 8,248 | 36,536 McKenzie, John C............ 13 | 28,123 | 20,861 | 48,453 | 12 43 1809 | 10,821 | 69,179 McLaughlin, James C 91 24,624 | 17,624 | 42/992 | 15,726 | 8,317 | 12.095 | 56,347 MeLaughling Joseph t L.|657,945 [527,961 11108538 |439, 881 1264, 065 |466, 564 | 1755359 McLaughlin, Melvin O 4 | 24 05 "041 | 34,384 | 18798 | 14,763 | 20,662 | 55,048 McPherson, Isaac V Blaaz Wah (rm). 17,815 | 33.844 | 79.277 BICSUAIN, JOUR Joos ewe we avr Pe ey ee a 11,312 | 4,069 | 13,436 | 13,436 MacGregor, Clarence 41 | 15,508 | 16,492 | 30,560 | 21,265 | 16,458 | 20,692 | 56,088 MacLaflerty, James H 6 | 56,520 | 59,082 19,787 | 17,721 2 Madden, Martin B........... 1 | 20,390 | 12,580 | 41,907 | 13,380 | 9,776 | 12,308 | 55,204 Magee, Walter W............ 35 | 31,429 | 42,760 | 60,018 | 16,059 | 23,378 | 25,699 | 92,312 Maloney, Robert S........... 7 | 14,350 | 10,754 | 28,009 | 16,597 | 14,437 | 25,691 | 58 811 Mansfield, Joseph J .......... Gl Cyan : 16,453 | 8,696 | 12,311 | 20,978 Mapes, Carl B. ............ 5 | 24,258 | 22,917 | 53,379 | 21,639 | 10,783 | 15,963 | 71 137 Martin, Whitmell P.. 3 TAL EET Ee 6,332 | 2,888 | 4,201 | 4 201 Mead, James BM. . 42 | 16,623 | 15,390 | 21,224 | 15,411 | 16,453 | 22,869 | 47,311 Merritt, Schuyler. 4 | 25,917 | 19,008 | 54,715-| 20,700 | 15,386 | 25,087 | 82,471 Michaelson, M. Al p 7 | 47,514 | 35,428 [110,758 | 37,460 | 26,261 | 34,202 | 158,160 Michener, Bor cons ins 2 | 27,182 | 20,841 | 61,857 | 27,133 | 16,276 | 25,281 | 87,257 MIE, John Fo. cocoa 1 | 38,769 | 23,326 | 51,459 | 35,718 | 20,488 | 11,184 | 90,797 Mills, Ogden Loo. oooremoo oo. N. 17 | 9.764 | 17,839 | 33,659 | 11,213 | 19,593 | 18,345 | 54,32 Mondell, Frank W.._....... Wyo....| At L.| 24,693 | 26,244 | 34,689 | 24,156 | 14,639 | 14,952 | 56,421 Montague, Andrew J. ....... Na. oowes ERE I 10,967 | 3,074 | 20,069 | 20,229 Moore, Allen FP.............. Hoes 19 | 33,162 | 26,259 | 63,124 | 28,870 | 16,474 | 35,210 | 99, 107 Moore, C. Bhs. ...ouuinn ve Ohio....| 15 | 22,934 | 20,063 | 42,419 | 23,221 | 18,169 | 30,326 | 52,745 Moore, R. Walton cen ........ PL rns Sage : 9,168 | 4,501 | 13,142 | 18,342 Moores, Merrill. ............. Ind... ... 7 | 40,862 | 29,714 | 79,782 | 34,732 | 20,284 | 61,893 | 145,281 Morgan, Wm. M............ Ohio....| 17 | 23,705 | 22,499 | 46,968 | 31,749 | 24.436 | 46.675 | 93.643 Morln;, John:M. oun oi ine Bol ens 31 | 20,497 | 14,081 | 29,399 [33,008 | 31,333 | 33,337 | 32,736 Mott, Luther W. ............ N. Y....| 3228744 | 37,068 | 53,249 | 14,323 | 17,742 | 20,085 | 73,334 Mudd; Sydney E............ Md...... 5 | 13,909 | 13,266 | 29,869 | 17,407 | 10,987 | 18,569 | 50,734 Mdrphy, Frank... ...c.. 5. Ohio... 18 | 26,991 | 22 899 | 52,862 | 24,538 | 20,272 | 32,802 | 85,664 Nelson, Adolphus P......... Wis 11 | 22,740 | 16,413 | 38,057 | 8,726 | 12,976 | 16,524 | 44,6581 Nelson, John EB. ....ocv... oii Me 20, 293 20.002:1°'14.930° 1: (2). |..civenn Nelson, John M..ovvmnnnneso. Wis 18,398 | 44,359 | 15,198 | 2,232 | 19,794 | 64,153 Newton, Cleveland A........ Mo... 50,390 (122 100 |........ 30,080 | 65,472 | 199,720 Newton, Walter H.......... Minn... 21,607 | 54,962 | 11,849 | 15,912 | 8.357 | 95,476 Norton, Miner G............ Ohio.... 13,759 | 35,483 | 26,950 | 19,776 | 27,223 | 63,417 0’ Brien, Charles F. X. ...... N.J 6,048 | 20,080 | 17,365 | 17,781 | 34,527 | 64,982 OQ’ Connor, James. .voveuu... 7 rel HE 13] Sr ae pd ei [On 17,939 | 11,060 | 19,716 | 19,716 Ogden, Charles F............ ea 21,783 | 67,436 | 29,204 | 20,703 | 55,037 | 125,516 Oldfield, William A .......... Ark.oo..l: 2] 6,205 |.cs cnn 5 17,256 | 10,775 | 16,080 | 24,217 Oliver, William'B............ EE eset FRE 8 Rei Bee Be eR Se ie hel apes 2,741 | 8,721 8,721 Olpp, Archibald B_......... N.J 4,979 | 30,046 | 15,769 | 14,281 | 23.402 | 54 464 Osborne, Henry Z........... Calif. - 72,773 | 97,469 | 33,225 | 19,725 [120,439 | 117,937 Overstreet, James W.. IS 7 CEN RR El Ce a RI RS Cait i Ld Cee Mp ee 1 ad (5) Paige, Calvin D...... 15,267 | 38,313 | 9,905 | 9,982'| 15,311 | 53,625 Park, Frank...... SR REEL Re ET Es re met IS ts de Lh I nn 5) Parker, James S........ aN 42,035 | 54,313 | 62,134 | 23,139 | 23,663 | 79,316 Parker, Richard W.__....... N.J 9,347 | 32,240 | 13,625 | 10,996 | 20,244 | 54,337 Parks, Tilman B-..o........ FUL REEL bY SIE 7064 | 16,923 | 8,692 | 18,303 | 25,367 Patterson, Francis F., jr..... Na 23,785 | 55,885 | 15,329 | 10,627 | 23,711 | 85,593 Patterson, Roseoe C......... Mo... 20,222 | 50,213 |........ 20,300 | 40,541 | 91,537 Paul TONE: oor srs No. 466 7 10,502 | 3,767 7 25,994 Perkins, Randolph. ......... N.T 18,663 | 54,334 | 18,770 | 15,542 | 25,764 | 81 787 Perlman, Nathan D......... NY. 14,523 | 18,042 | 6,915 | 16,214 (38 515 | 26,557 Petersen, Andrew N......... N.Y 27,393 | 41,399 | 16,575 | 28,882 | 30,212 | 79,409 Porter, Stephen G-.......... Phe os 19,045 | 32,766 | 7,518 {32,360 | 10,749 | 47.119 Porta Baward We evee ives N.C...- 6,028 | 14,084 | 15 305 | 12,853 | 26,470 | 40,554 Bilrigey F.C... .cneieni oun Okla... 9,706 | 31,458 | 19,076 | 13,861 | 29,841 | 64,737 Purndl, Fred S$ ocr oes Ind. 25, 486 | 56,465 | 24, 547 | 18,948 | 42) 766 | 100. 942 CHI PCE... vs ivereee EE res bey ee CIE Ta BL Le a Da PT 6, 69 : Radcliffe, Amos H... veuuee} No Jue. 12,515 | 33,844 | 7,980 | 8,581 | 15,291 | 52 447 Rainey, Jobin W............ fot £11 ene 3 1886 | 21,546 | 18,722 | 15,514 ' 23,230 ' 47,529 1 Socialist. 2 Elected Nov. 7, 1922. 3 Others. 4 Special election, Mar, 20, 1922. 5 Information not furnished by State officials. 6 Prohibitionist. 7 Seated Dec. 15, 1922, by vote of the House of Representatives. Popular Vote. 155 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. Vote. Bi Tots) is- + : voile | Name, State. | iat Republican. Democratic. Cast il (1920). ih 1916 1918 1920 1916 1918 1920 Rainey, Liliug B............. Lv anns 5,622 | 22,970.1........ 7,221 | 23,709 | 46,912 Raker, John. E. ...cu......... 2 | 12,282 143 24 | 30,042 | 28,249 | 26,172 | 26,196 Ramseyer, C. William. ...... 6 | 21,757 | 17,082 | 41,644 | 14,927 | 12,988 | 21,538 | 63,282 Rankin, John E. ............ hn donmelan ive. AE SO 10,400 | 10, 880 Ransley, Harry C........... 3 | 23,753 | 20,099 | 29,075 | 7,611 | 5,046 | 6,991 | 37,772 Rayburn, Sam. ...........l.. 4) 2,043........ 4,883 | 17,785 | 9,758 | 17,795 | 22,678 Reber, John... ..c... oe oc... 12° 19,172 | 13,500 | 26,816 | 11,340°| 9,712 | 21,787 | 48,603 Recce, B..Carroll............. 123,651 | 13,752 | 46,010 770 21 | 2778 | 46,738 Reed, DanielA.............. N.Y... 43 | 27,186 | 35,693 | 52,343 | 11,414 | 11,351 | 13,720 | 70,336 Reed, Stuart F.............. 2: lose svnlns oon 45 TAG lets n aon noieu vo 33,056 | 78,202 Rhodes, Marion E........... M 13: en ones 14,776 | 30,6101. ....... 13,773 | 24,394 | 55,424 Ricketts, Edwin D.......... 11 | 19,022 | 17,608 | 33,524 | 20,144 | 15,287 | 31,359 | 64,983 Riddick, Carl W............. Riordan, Daniel J............ Rogen, Sidney C..... .x.. ou. Robertson, Alice M.......... Robsion,.John:M-............ Rodenberg, William A..:... Rogers, John Jacob.......... Rose, John M Rosenbloom, Benjamin L. .. Rossdale, Albert B.......... Rouse, Arthur Be «........... Rucker, William W.......... Ryan, ThomasiJ...-.onu.ee- N. Sabath, Adolph J. .......... Sanders, Archie D........... N.Y Sanders, Everett. ........... Sanders, Morgan G-. -....... ZF 00)..." 3,149°| 15,169'| 10,183 | 15,575 | 18,724 Sandlin, John. N............. ; eullSbad in POI 0 Ser 8,306 | 5,299 | 10,507 | 10,507 Sehall, Thomas D.. .......... 10 [319,696 | 25,866 | 54,971 | 7,148 | 10,534 | 6,917 | 80,478 Scott, Frank B............c. Mich....| 11 | 24,840 | 16,365 | 41,529 | 14,499 | 8183 |........ 41, 529 Scott, Lom AL... cde ium aniis Sears, William. -.....cue.... Shaw, GUY Ly. ....cuxs civ seninn Shelton, Samuel A... ........ Shreve, Milton W-. ...... les Siegel, Isaae..-.....c...a Nini NE Sinclair, James H-............ Sinnott, Nicholas J.......... Sisson, Thomas U. .......... Slemp, C. Baseom........... Smith, Addisen:T........... Sith, J. M. CG... oni aens Swithwick, Jom H. ......... Snell, Bertrand H. .......... Snyder, Homer P........... Speaks, John C..... Sproul; Elliott W.. Stafford, William H Steagall, Henry B..... Stedman, Charles M. N-C.... 5 | 21,429 | 16,635 | 38,484 | 23,932 | 21,076 | 45,301 | 83,785 Steenerson, Halvor. ......... Minn.... 91 25,429 | 26,303 | 39,122 | 8313 |........ 6,741 | 74,306 Stephens, A. E.B......c.... Ohio....| 229,612 | 25,406 | 47,797 | 28,156 | 21,867 | 41,781 | 90,869 Stevenson, William F........ Be Cooma RO een ee 8,846 | 3,640 | 10,186 | 10,186 Stiness, Walter R............ v1... 2 | 15,784 | 14,710 | 33,801 | 12,207 | 10,914 | 19,004 | 54,124 Stoll, Rip Ho ieee: LhAENT 6 SEE Se . 5 8,68 8,681 Strong, James G............. Kans.... 5 | 29 861 | 29,703 | 38,992 | 32,198 | 18,112 | 16,303 | 56,854 Strong, Nathan Li........... Pa. 27 | 17,702 | 14,804 | 31,209 | 10,751 | 5,686 | 10,814 | 43,738 Sullivan, Christopher D...... N.Y....| 13 | 3,886 {23.502 (24,025 | 5,114 | 6,962 | 8,979 | 13,904 Summers, John W........... Wash... 4 | 33,980 | 17,439 | 37,986 | 21,189 | 13,335 | 11,353 | 70,074 Sumners, Hatton W......... Tox a. 52 879... 4,883 | 24,949 | 6,964 | 19,785 | 24,668 Swank, Br Be. csusvnoringaves Okla.... 512,736 | 9,180 | 31,304 | 17,828 | 13,303 | 35,167 | 69,393 Sweet, Burton E............ Iowa.... 3 | 31,567 | 22,997 | 67,809 | 14,825 | 12,537 [6 1,974 | 69,833 Swing, Philip D........-.... Calif. ...| 11 | 33,765 [717,642 | 59,425 | 42,051 | 45,915 | 22,144 | 81,580 Tague, Pejer Fee vocsinasnss Mass....] 10 3,684 [817,003 | 13,995 | 13,646 | 7,241 | 14,535 | 28,530 Taylor, Chester W.....--..:- Ark in Eee regina (9) 25,911 | 10,443 (9) Sean semis Taylor, Zaword IT... ---..: Oolo-.:5 4 | 13,397 | 11,695 | 20,991 | 30,926 | 22,423 | 25,994 | 46,985 Taylor, Herbert W........~.... NT. = 8 1 18,663 | 12,137 | 41,898 | 15,395 | 12,436 | 27,822 | 70,608 1 Others. 6 Farmer-Labor. 2 Socialist. 7 Prohibitionist. 8 Progressive. 8 Independent. 4 Prohibition-Independent. 9 Special election, Oct. 25,1921. 5Special election, June 28, 1921. 156 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. | Vote. | a Total | Name. State. Dig Republican. Democratic. yore i (1920). | 1916 1918 1920 1916 1918 1920 Savior, J. Will. [Sooo sin Tenn... 2 | 19,839 | 13,868 | 37.722 | 1,175 | 4,879 | 12,436 | 50,459 | Temple, Henry W........... Pa......| 24] 22,89 | 18,851 | 42,402 | 14,679 | 7,398 | 15,405 | 57,812 | Ten Eyck, Peter G........... N.Y....| 28|27,722 | 41,981 | 42,214 | 21,436 | 33,712 | 51,210 | 95,116 I Thomas, Robert Y.,jr..--... Y------ 3 | 21,180 | 16,443 | 35,873 | 22,194 | 18,032 | 36,430 | 72,303 | Thompson, Charles J........ Ohio.... 5 | 20,424 | 19,071 | 40,381 | 22,852 | 17,162 | 25,395 | 65,776 | Thorpe, ROY H_. 277 Nebr) 12008185097) (0) | 168d | 10045) | j nat, JON Ne eernsinn Chat ,995 i Filson John Q,. odie Conn.... 3 5 i Timberlake, Charles B....... Colo-.... 2 | i Eicher TI ees dll 7 | ii Tinkham, George H......... Mass....; 11 il Towner, Horace M.......... Towa.... 8 [| Treadway, Allen T.......... Mass.... 1 | Tucker, Henry St. George. ...| Va...... 10 Turner, Clarence W........... Tenn... 7 i Tyson, John RB. ........ 5. Alal..z. 2 i Underhill, Charles L......... Mass.... i Upshaw, William D......... CEE 5 | Vaile, William N............ Colo..... 1 Ji Vestal, Albert H............ Ind. i. 8 | Vinson, Corl... ....co. csiiven’ Ga...... 10 Voigt, Edward.............. Witonen 2 Volk, Lester D........h..-. N.Y....; 10 Voistead, Andrew J......... Minn.... 7 Walters, Anderson H........ Pat At L. Ward, Charles B............ Ne Yaotaf 27 Ward, Hallell S........- <= N-Cis. d Wason, Edward H.......... NH... 2 Watson, Henry W 8 Weaver, Zebulon. ............ <0 10 Webster, J. Stanley......... Wash... 5 Wheeler, Loren E........... {HEE pds 21 White, Hays B.............. IONS, ... 6 White, Wallace H.,jr.......; Me...... 2 Williams, Quinn... .......... dir re a Williams, Thomas S......... rend 24 Williamson, William ........ S. Dak.. 3 Wilson, Bley J...coov imine da... 5 Wingo, GUS... re ven ions Ark... 4 Winslow, Samuel E......... Mass... 4 Wise, James W..:il.-.. i200 Ga. eaivs 6 Wood, William R........... Ind..... 10 Woodruff, Roy O.......... Michi... 10 ‘Hoods, James P............. Va..:..2 6 Woodyard, Harry C......... W.Va... 4 Wright, William C........... GE ui 4 Wurzbach, Harry M......... Tex... 14 Wyant, Adam-M............ Pa 22 Yates, Richard Otis dire + es 1 Lm At L. Young, George M... ...-. | N. Dak. 2 Zihlman, Frederick N....... 7 ae 6 1 Elected Nov. 7, 1922. 5 Information not furnished by State officials. 2 Other. 6 Special election, May 13, 1922, 3Independent. 7 Socialist. 4 Special election, Mar, 21, 1922, o TERMS OF SERVICE. EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS. Crass I..SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1923, (Thirty-two Senators in this class.) Name. Residence. Ashore, Henry Foronunol ol i inaiiiatas D | Prescott, Ariz. Bayard, Thomas PBR ail Sh... i iii seis D | Wilmington, Del. Caldew» William Mo iain R | Brooklyn, N. Y. Culberson, Charles Al oi. Jo acini D | Dallas, Tex. Trancel Joseph loli fi noi. coc i R | Port Deposit, Md. Yrelinghuysen, Joseph 8... oo clvinnna sian R | Raritan, N. J. Garry, Pater@. Sit ael a da oon faae D. | Warwick, R. I. hole, Frederico us ili ii csivaa R | Portland, Me. Hitcheoek; Gilbert ML in 0 i icin D | Omaha, Nebr. Johnson, Plime Wik. oni = La R | San Francisco, Calif. Jones, Andries. ica... oli faa» D | East Las Vegas, N. Mex. Relloge, Frank Blicin oi o. 0 anni aie R | St. Paul, Minn. Rendvick, John B.. .................. oo. D | Sheridan, Wyo. King Willow HL... ... ................ ---.-| D | Salt Lake City, Utah. LaBollette. BebertM 20. oslo ln iain an R | Madison, Wis. Todoe, Henry Cabot; oo. ....ciispinmavanscrsns R | Nahant, Mass. McCumber, Porter J. ... cove coin va tases R | Wahpeton, N. Dak. MeBollar, Kenneth... os. 0 D | Memphis, Tenn. Melean, George PL 0 son voor R | Simsbury, Conn. MyversrHenwy' bi 0 ra To D | Hamilton, Mont. New, Harry S20. 0 0 ni iso R | Indianapolis, Ind. Paver Caroll BE. J 0 0 R | Hyde Park, Vt. Pittman, Wey. eos. 1 Lt said D | Tonopah, Nev. Poindexter. Miles, o.oo to. i 0 Le ...| R | Spokane, Wash. Pomerene: Allee. o.oo. 00 000 0 as as D | Canton, Ohio. Beed, David A105, 10 Lo ans ioan BR | Pittsburgh, Pa. Reed Sames At. ~ oc 0 0 tie D | Kansas City, Mo. Sutherland Howard... ones cas R | Elkins, W. Va. Swanson, Claude A............ Eat hs aha D- | Chatham, Va. Townsend; Charles 0-11 =... oo. cong R | Jackson, Mich. Trammell, Park. oJ 0. asi ci D | Lakeland, Fla. Williams, John Sharp: = 5... h cca cased D | Yazoo City (star route), Miss. Crass IL.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR. 3, 1925. (Thirty-two Senators in this class.) Ball, LuHeigler.. 0 ib sian idan R Borah, William... ois ina R Brookhart, Smith Wr... .............v....} RB Bumsam, Holm G2... .. nii i as R Copper, Arthur «00, o.oo bie Sisiiiiiises R Colt, LeBaron B.......... FRET ESL En R Couzeng, James ® J. i... . Loi. avin R Dial, Nathaniel Bo... i... noo occu D Bdge Walter BB... lo. ic iaiiiiiiiesi: R Blking, Davin... 500.00 80. La aiage ian vais R Fernald, Barb Ml. 200000... ian; R EIT ne SS OE ae a a) D Harrie, Wiliam) eer on on nasoain. oat ions D Barrison, Pol. .c.o os ines ase vo saan D 1 Elected Nov. 7, 1922. Marshallton, Del. Boise, Idaho. Washington, Iowa. Socorro, N. Mex. Topeka, Kans. Bristol, R. I. Detroit, Mich. Laurens, S. C. Atlantic City, N. J. Morgantown, W. Va. West Poland, Me. Lynchburg, Va. Cedartown, Ga. Gulfport, Miss. 2 Elected Sept. 20, 1921. 3 Appointed by governor. ¢ Elected Nov. 2, 1920. 157 158 ~ Congressional Directory. Crass II..SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR: 3, 1925—Continued: Name. Residence. Heflin, J. Thomas .........¢conis nublii biota. akin Reyes, Homey Wo... vite, McCormiel, Medill... ciiiviiiivisiavoss McNary, Glial... ... cee ni. vn san mins Neldon, Bute... oo... cove ck voone in idsavunsbe son Norris, Gooroe Wooo concave nies Owen Bobertilii . dininns cvs oi oe ee ieee Sirimons, FurntloldaMe cin ove ieee seein oe Stanley, A. Owsley.ueen en... . cere Sterling, Thomas. ead). iddieecaaoniiniioiiin Walsh, Bimidale oui one i ee ccnp nen Walsh) Tomaselli... Juss ca ble ce coe min sme Warren, FraneitB...... cc voile s uni nanan vnginnns Lafayette, Ala. Haverhill, N. H. Chicago, Ill. Salem, Oreg. Alexandria, Minn. fcCook, Nebr. Muskogee; Okla: Denver, Colo. Lake Providence, La: Little Roek, Ark. Texarkana, Tex: Knoxville, Tenn. New Bern, N. € Henderson, Ky. Vermilion; S. Dak. Fitchburg; Mass: Helena, Mont. Cheyenne; Wyo: Crass II1.—SENATORS WHOSE. TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE MAR: 3;.1927. (Thirty-two Senators in this class.) — Brandegee, Branle Be. .cvnii oc ishvnnn naa iviasenns R Broussard, BAIS. if. tall. irene D Cameron, Bolphl eu culovios iblnrnsssonuonisesans R Coraway, BBE eo fi infil abhi dass ssnnnsnsnssons D Comming, MBerh Bt. lath inne s cassis esims sts R Curtis, Charles. ....... Serres ble ies a aisle an wie se pink Rj Dillingham, Willem. ....... ci. 0.7. - 0s Ppa Ernst, Bichnudl De... foil. cil so sd cm iabannns R Fletcher, Dudgeon]. ond uel noc n os ds sme nn iui D George, Walter. ii. cot ines ceseencnsens-o] D Gooding, Branle Lie oh ssn nsinssvanismdans R Horreld, Johnie, iors tah inci sss mass odanis R Jones WesleVe Rr . oivind. olhasiveesorronsnsnsns R I eR a R Benroot, Ievine Li. oui. overhears naomi sine R McKinley, William B......... Sd pe ea R Mover Georoerlle on R Nicholson Samuel... . uh cai sonh sida lite R NOLDEe Tatar eh tea R Oddie, Tathiot Ls i. roan air ine ted B (Rrra, LoS... ars onan ees D Pepper, George Wharton2:. ........... 0cecun..... R Shortridge, SamuebM ver... coh vicerssrnesrnsnnns R Smith, Blligons Bau. oii. cook des vvvns ss snsenses D Soot; Beodail. Jf. cvvmsnit-} oh ticsvesinnssisnses R Spencer, Seldom BE. dont i th ders crn snsnarenes R Stanfield; Robert: Nelson... or. rs ssa reassen R Underwood, O8eniE We. suie bith norasorisorsnsnses D Wadsworth, James Wa eel - ll Dc vr osssrrssasnnns R Watson, Jomtess Bl. ivalit. ch de vovsnssensrnvnss R Weller, OF By, uuvdvinionnid. coh oii vaste ennssssss R Willis, Franle Bo lad. 00.00. . 3h sr esnstasseninss R New London, Conn. New Iberia, La. Phoenix, Ariz. Jonesboro, Ark. Des Moines, Iowa. Topeka, Kans. Montpelier, Vt. Covington, Ky. Jacksonville, Fla. Vienna; Ga. Gooding, Idaho. Oklahoma City, Okla. Seattle, Wash. Fargo, N. Dak, Superior, Wis. Champaign, 111. Concord, N. H: Leadville, Colo. Redfield, S. Dak. Reno, Nev. Salisbury, N. C. Philadelphia; Pa: Menlo Park, Calif. Lynchburg, S.C. Provo, Utah. St. Louis, Me. Portland, Oreg. Birmingham; Ala: Groveland; N. Y. Rushville, Ind. Baltimore, Md. Delaware, Ohio. iElected Nov. 2, 1920. 3 Elected Nov. 7, 1922. aA ges it Congressional Directory: 159 ] CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS. | : Beginning | | ad Name. State. of present | 3 service. i i 1 | Lodge, Henry Cabot. c.coe nnn oui. Massachusetts........... Mar. 4, 1893 | 9 I rer Fanels Br a ant Wyoming, ...... as nih Mar. 4,189 I Nelson, JEnuth....... one - cemenarr ve Minnesota.............. Mar. 4,1895 If 3 If Culberson, Charles A... ..iecionis... 1 Se Mar. 4,1899 I McCumber; Porter J. . .. con orien North Dsltoth. oo. Ls Mar. 4; 1899 I 4.1 Dillingham, William Poe. oor venue. Yoamont... ......ceil Oct. 18,1900 5 § Simmons; Farmifold'M. .............. North Caroling. ........ Mar. 4,1901 6 Overman; Lee SS... iii is North Caroling. .... ..... Mar. 4;1903 I | fn Baad... oo stn 3 iL a SEER Mar. 4;1903" 7 | La Folleite, Robert M.................. Wisconsin. ....... neve Mar. 4,1905 | S| Brondegee, Frank B.e.. oo oven i Connecticut. ......ui.... May 10,1905 i GL Boral, William EB... ... . ..... SCR En nee ee Cit Mar. 41907 10: Owen Bebert L......oc ania bs Qilaloma... ma Dec. 11,1907 Pha Tave Camall orn VOrNont. . ... Jc oriiisne ti Oct. 21,1908 It 2. Cummins, Albert B..........ovecues Towa Yu Jo rigs Nov. 24,1908 i Reicher; Biumean 1... ..... cece Yloridu. o.oo Mar. 4, 1909 H IS Jones, Wedey 1... ............... cc... Washington. ............ Mar. 4,1909 | Smith, Bllisen I. ........... cans? South Carolina. ...... .. Mar. 4;1908 dtl Swoandon, Glande A. ................T. Virginie 20. ven Aug. 11,1910 | Hitcheoek, Gilbert M. ................ Nebraghs....... 0. weit Mar. 4,.1911 | Mclean, George P...........cccienns- Connecticut... .. i: cn. Mar. 4;1911 | verse Bonry 1... o.oo isons Montana... .-.......z.. Mar. 4; 1911 | 15 Poindexter, Miles....... cover. on Washington... ... x... Mar. 4,1911 Pomorana, Alaa... .... iam. Cll... RS. iia, Mar. 4,1911 | Weed, Jame A=... J... 0... ssid sn Missouri s......... a Mar. 41911 Townsend, CharlesE................. Michigan.y .... cermetisin Mar. 4, 1911 tWillisms, John Shiirp. .. .. . coriiaion - Mississippi)... . con sievin sis Mar. 4,1911 Wb Ashurst, Honry Fo... os dhnaias- Arigonas J... SLs, Mar. 27,1912 1 17 MO ROY. ices bmeniire ss Novada. yi... Jan. 29;1913 I ‘ Fei 17 Re SE pate BORON. sahara Jan. 29,1913 | Goll, LeBaron BB .... .. . . ei Rhode Island... -... .i... Mar. 4,1913 | | Norris, George W........ . comnivnss Nebraska. .......c... a Mar. 4,1913 il Ransdell, Joseph E.......covuemwnmi..- Lonislang.......«..... Mar. 4,1913 | By Bobinson, Joseph TT... venmermraio = = Arlene. ol ite ve Mar. 41913 | | Shields, SON Riana oe Tennessee............... Mar. 4,1913 Hl Eterling, Thomas. . .. a... .conommmons South Dakota. ......... Mar. 4.1913 i Kaleh, Thoma... ms Monforles........ ia Mar. 4,1913 | Chrtis, CHWIbNT........... . coiroin Kansae. 2... oi da pinte Mar. 4.1915 | 19 ;:.Underwoed, OscarW................. Alabama... ..... Mar. 4,1915 1 Wadsworth Javies W. jr............. Rew York. .ovoneoron Mar. 4, 1915 | 20-| Fernald, Bert M.........c.cccvurnn.n. Miner coon e Sept. 11,1916 - 21 | Watson, Jowes XL... oi ll conn nil Indien. nL is Nov. 17,1916 | Colder, Willing: RE... oo New York. .......... Mar. 4, 1917 i Prance, Joseph 1... ......-.. font ok Maviond oo. ........... Mar. 4,1917 | Frelinghuysen, Joseph S............. New Jersey....c........ Mar. 4,1917 | Gerry, Pater Go... hoes nas Bhode Island .......... Mar. 4,1917 | Hole, Frederick... ............c.. JEL Maine... 00. io Mar. 4,1917 Johnson, Hiram W.........5.......... California. ........ o.. Mar. 41917 | 929 Jones; Avndrieus A. .................. New Mexico. .......... Mar. 4,1917 | Rolloge, Bramke B.. loo .....0.. Minnesota.............. Mar. 4,1917 | Kendrick John B.. . 0.00.0. 5 Wyoming......... coo Mor. 4.1017 A Kine, William Hl. .......0. 0... ..... Bian... 0... oo Mar. 4, 1917 | : MeRellay, Korneth. ioe... ....o. 0 Ponnesgge.......uo 00 Mar. 4, 1917 | FE Now, Horvv 8... cna Indinng. ooo den 200 Mar. 4,1917 | fe § Sutherland, Howard .-.-.....pvn nn West Virginia.......... Mar. 4,1917 : Trammell, Park... ove. lo os Viotddn 2 sonnei Mar. 4,1917 i" ue. en also served as a United States Senator from the State of Wyoming from Dec. 1, 1890, to | Mar. 4, 1893. | Mr. Curtis also served as Senator from Kansas from Jan. 29, 1907, to Mar. 3, 1913. | | 160 Congressional Directory. CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued. : Beginning =~ Name. State. of present < service. ~ 23 1 Tenveot, Jevine bicons. oni ans Wisconsin... a... Apr. 18,1918 241° Meses, Gers Horo New Hampshire......... Nov. 18,1918 25 | Spencer; Selden P=... 00. i... Missourt, ti ooo on Nov. 21,1918 26 McNary. Charles 12... 0 os Oregon... =... or Dec. 17,1918 Ball To - Heisler? 0... Delaware... io. Mar. 4,1919 Capper, arth. a Te Mar. 4,1919 Dial, Natheniel Bo 00m South Carolina... ....... Mar. 4,1919 Edge, Walter Le New Jersey....cc....... Mar. 4,1919 : Faking Davies i West Virginia. 00 500 Mar. 4,1919 oy || Harris, Wilamd a Georgio... 00. ... Mar. 4,1919 zg Harrison, LL I et A RE Mississippi............ Mar. 4,1919 Keyes, Henry ee New Hampshire......... Mar. 4,1919 McCormick, Medifl. oo co .000 00 5 Winels. oe. Mar. 4,1919 Phipps, Tawrence OC. LL 0” Colorado. a Mar. 4,1919 Stanley, A Owsley... 0... Kentucky. .........s .ns Mar. 4,1919 Walsh, David Joo. ooo Massachusetts........... Mar. 4,1919 28 | Glass, Carter... AT Yheinin. 0. Feb. 2,1920 29 Heflin, J-Thomag. ... 2... Alabama... oo... Nov. 2,1920 So Wille Brant B..... .. Ohle...i.... on Jan. 10,1921 31 Gooding, Rank Biro a Lan Fdaho,. . chin. es Jan. 15,1921 Broussard, Bdwin 8...0.0. oi Louisiana. 00 00 Mar. 4,1921 Comeror, Balph-H .....-............ Arizona 2 oo Mar. 4,1921 Caraway, Fo ie Arkansas: oroacao Mar. 4,1921 Ernst, Bichaed PD... 05 0 Kentucky... .... 5... Mar. 4,1921 Harreld John W. -...: 0... Oklahoma. ............c.] Mor. 4,102] Ladd, Bawinp,. 0 Soudan North Dakota... ....-.. Mar. 4.1921 32 {McKinley, William Ba are note os aes Mar. 4,1921 Nicholson, Samuel D..:. 00... Colorado. = tc. Mar. 4,1921 Norbeck, Peter MEA South Dakota. ......... Mar. 4,1921 Oddie, Tokar Loos... oben Nevada... coee lone te Mar. 4,1921 Shortridge, Samuel M......... ...... Califormin....o...avre: Mar. 4,1921 Stanfield, Robert Nelson ............. Oregol. . .. --- -vesie: Mar. 4,1921 (Weller, Oc. a M aryland Ft 0 Mar. 4,1921 33 Bursem, Holm OO. -. ..-. . _. .... New Mexico. .......... Mar. 11,1921 34 | Pepper, ‘George Wharton... ...1- Pennsylvania. . iw. dan, 10,1922 35 | Reed, David A. nar aca wensl Poymeylvonin io Aug. 16,1922 36 Bayard, Thomas I . Delgware- Nov. 21,1922 37 | George, Walter F . NY Georgiais co... i. Nov. 22,1922 38 Brookhart, Smith W. TOW ea Dec. 2,1922 39 | Couzens, Tomes. .:.. oo apn Michigaw. 0 oa. Dec. - 7,1922 1 Mr. McNary also served as Senator from Oregon from June 8, 1917, to Nov. 5, 1918. 2 Mr. Ball also served as Senator from Delaware from Mar. 3, 1903, to Mar. 3, 1905. 8 Mr. Elkins also served as Senator from West Virginia from Jan. '9 to Jan. 3 1911, Service of Representatives. 161 | CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH BEGINNING OF PRESENT SERVICE. [* Vacancy; tat large.) Di Beginning | Name. State. hi Congresses. of present i : 10%. service. | 23 terms—not con- 1 tinuous. I Cannon, Joseph G.2....| Il..... 18 | 43d, 44th, 45th, 46th, 47th, | Mar. 4,1915 48th, 49th, 50th, 51st, 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 64th, | I 65th, 66th, 67th. | 15 terms—continuous. 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, | Mar. 4,1893 Gillett, Frederick H...| Mass. .. 2 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, | J 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. | | 14 terms—not con- | | I tinuous. | ih Cooper, Henry Allen. .| Wis... 1 | 53d, 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, | Mar. 4,1921 It 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, | | 63d, 64th, 65th, 67th. i 158 terms—continuous. i Butler, Thomas S. .... Pa... 7 | 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, Mar. 4,1897 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ¥: Greene, William S_.._.. Mass...| 15 | *55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, | . 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, | 65th, 66th, 67th. May 31,1898 13 terms—not con- linuous. Mondell, Frank W..... Wyo...| (f) | 54th, 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, Mar. 4, 1899 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. 12 terms—continuous. Fordney, Joseph W....| Mich. . 8 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, A Mar. 4, 1899 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | 66th, 67th. Haugen, Gilbert N..... Towa... 4 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, | Mar. 4,1899 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | 66th, 67th. Rucker, William W....| Mo.... 2 | 56th, 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, | Mar. 4 1899 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | 66th, 67th. 1Speaker of the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses. 24786°—67—4—2p Ep—12 | 162 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Congressional Directory. Dis. Beginning Name. State. |i..t Congresses. of present service. 12 terms—mnot con- tinuous. Parker, Richard Wayne] N.J...| 9 | 54th, 55th, 56th, 57th, 58th, | Mar. 4, 1921 59th, 60th, 61st, 63d, 64th, | 65th, 67th. | 11 terms—continuous. | : | Kitchin, Claude... .... N.C... 2 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1901 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. Pou, Edward W....... N.C... 4 | 57th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4, 1901 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | 67th. | 11 terms—not con- tinuous. Kahn, Julius.......... Calif... 4 | 56th, 57th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4, 1905 : 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. 10 terms—continuous. Campbell, Philip P....| Kans 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, | Mar. 4, 1903 : 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. . Davis, Charles R...... Minn 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, | Mar. 4, 1903 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. | Garner, John N........ Tex....| 15 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, | Mar. 4, 1903 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. Humphreys, B. G..... Miss 3 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, | Mar. 4, 1903 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. Steenerson, Halvor. ...| Minn 9 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, | Mar. 4, 1903 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. Volstead, Andrew J....| Minn 7 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, | Mar. 4, 1903 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. 10 terms—not con- hnuous. Riordan, Daniel J..... N.X 11 | 56th, *59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, | Nov. 6, 1906 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. Rodenberg, William A.| Il..... 22 | b6th, 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, | Mar. 4,1915 62d, 64th, 65th, 66th. 67th. 9 terms—continuous. Bell, Thomas M....... Ga. 9 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, | Mar. 4,1905 65th, 66th, 67th. Clark, Prank... ......}1 Fla 2 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, | Mar. 4, 1905 65th, 66th, 67th. Garrett, Finis J. ......] Tenn 9 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, | Mar. 4,1905 65th, 66th, 67th. Lee, Gotdon.........-. Ga. 7 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, | Mar. 4, 1905 % 65th, 66th, 67th. Madden, Martin B. . I11. 1 | 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, Voter: 4, 1905 65th, 66th, 67th. Service of Representatives. 163 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. | Dis- Beginning Name. | State itict Congresses. of present : service. 9 terms—mnot continuous. Burton, Theodore E.x...| Ohio:..| 22 | 51st, b4th, 55th, 56th, 57th, | Mar. 4,1921 58th, 59th, 60th, 67th. . Fuller, Charles E...... IH. 12 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 64th,| Mar. 4,1915 65th, 66th, 67th. Longworth, Nicholas. .| Ohio... 1 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 64th, | Mar. 4,1915 65th, 66th, 67th. 8 terms—coniinuous. Anthony, D: R., jr....| Kans 1 | *60th; 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th,| May 23, 1907 66th, 67th. Carter, Charles D...... Okla...| 3 | *60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | Nov. 16, 1907 66th, 67th. Hardy, Rufus... .ovue Tex....] 6 | 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | Mar. 4, 1907 66th, 67th. Hawley, Willis C. .... Oreg... 1 | 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | Mar. - 4, 1907 66th, 67th. Johnson, Ben...ve.ovuaf| Ky... 4 | 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | Mar. 4, 1907 66th, 67th. Langley, John W. .... Ky....| 10 | 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | Mar. 4, 1907 66th, 67th. McLaughlin, James C..| Mich... 9 | 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | Mar. 4,1907 66th, 67th. Sabath, Adolph J......| TIL. 5 | 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, | Mar. 4, 1907 66th, 67th. Slemp, C. Bascom. ...| Va. *60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th,| Oct. 14, 1907 : . 66th, 67th. 8 terms—mnot continuous. French, Burton L. ....| Idaho 1 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 62d, 63d 65th, | Mar. 4,1917 66th, 67th. Nelson, John M........ Wis....| 3 | *59th, 60th, 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, | Mar. 4, 1921 65th, 67th. Stafford, William H....| Wis 5 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, 63d, 64th, | Mar. 4, 1921 65th, 67th. Woodyard, Harry €....] W. V 4 | 58th, 59th, 60th, 61st, *64th, | Nov. 7, 1916 65th, 66th, 67th. 7 terms—continuous. Byrns, Joseph W....... Tenn 6 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4, 1909 67th. Cantrill, James C. . ... Ky. 7 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4,1909 67th. Collier, James W. ..... Miss 8 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4, 1909 67th. Dupré, H. Garland..... ba. 2 | *61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th,66th, | Nov. 8, 1910 67th. Griest, W. WW. ...c.ui.): Poiuein 9 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4,1909 67th. Oldfield, William A....| Ark...| 2 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4, 1909 67th. Sisson, Thomas U...... Miss...| 4 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4, 1909 67th. Taylor, Edward T..... Colo. . 4 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th,65th, 66th, | Mar. 4, 1909 67th. Thomas, B. Y., jro.... Ky. 3 | 61st, 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4, 1909 67th. 1Mr. Burton also served in the United States Senate from Mar. 4, 1909, to Mar. 3, 1915. 164 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. 1 Took his seat Feb. 19, 1912, after the admission of Arizona as a State. . Beginnin Name. State. Dis Congresses. of ie service. 7 terms—mnot Continuous. Cockran, W. Bourke...| N. Y...| 16 | 50th, 52d, 53d, ¥*58th, 59th, | Mar. 4, 1921 ; 60th, 67th. Focht, Benjamin K....| Pa..... 17 Bois fie 62d, 64th, 65th,66th, | Mar. 4,1915 67th. 6 terms—continuous. Anderson, Sydney. . ..| Minn. 1 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Byrnes, James F....... S.-C. 2 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. Mar. 4,1911 Copley, Ira C....-- II. ...| 11 | 62d,63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Doughton, Robert tT. NC 8 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Fields, William J. | Ky. 9 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Green, William Ra Towa 9 | *62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th | June 5,1911 Greene, Prank 1... ... Vt. 1 | ¥62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th | May 21,1912 Hayden, COT]. snene-s vi ALL (1) | 62d,'63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Feb. 19,1912 Jacoway, HL. M....... Ark 5 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Linthicum, 3. Chan... Md. 4 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 McKenzie, i 13 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Mott, Luther W........ N.Y 32 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Porter, Stephen G....| Pa..... 29 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Raker, John E........ Calif. . 2 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Rouse, Arthur B....... Ky 6 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Stedman, Charles M....| N. C 5 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4,1911 Towner, Horace M.....| Towa 8 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.| Mar. 4, 1911 6 terms—nol continuous. Crisp, Charles R........| Ga. 3 | *54th, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, | Mar. 4,1913 67th. Smith, I M.C........ Miéh, 3 | 62d, 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, *67th| July 20, 1921 Tilson, John Q.........| Conn 3 | 61st. 62d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. Mar. 4.1915 5 terms—conitnuous. Aswell, James B....... La. 8 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......| Mar. 4,1913 Barkley, Alben W..... Ky. 1 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.. Mar. 4,1913 Britten, Fred A....... I 1... . 9 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......| Mar. 4,1913 Browne, Edward E..... Wis....| 8 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Buchanan, James P....| Tex....| 10 | *63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.....| Apr. §5,1913 Carew, John F.........| N. Y..| 18] 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......| Mar. 4,1913 Cramton, IomisC...... Mich...| 7 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Curry, Charles F.,......| Calif 3 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Dunn, Thomas B...... N..¥ 38 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......| Mar. 4,1913 Edmonds, George W...| Pa..... 4 | 63d, 64th, 656th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Fess, Simeon D........ Ohio “7 | 63d, 64th, 656th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Frear, James A........ Wis 10 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Gallivan, James A.....| Mass 12 | *63d, 64th, 656th, 66th, 67th..... Feb. 1,1914 Graham, George S..... Pr. 2 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Johnson, Albert. .......| Wash 3 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ..... Mar. 4, 1913 Kelley, Patrick H...... Mich 6 | 63d, 64th, 656th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Kennedy, Ambrose....| R. I 3 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Kiess, Edgar R....... Pa. 15 | 63d; 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ..... Mar. 4,1913 Kreider, Aaron S.......| Pa. 18 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ..... Mar. 4,1913 Lazaro, Ladislas....... Ta... 7 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Mapes, Carl Ei ........ Mich... 5 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Montague, Andrew J...| Va....| 3 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Morin, John M........ Pa.....1 31 { 63d, 64th, 65th 66th 67th...... Mar. 4 1913 Service of Representatives. 165 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. | | ; Dis: Beginning | I Name. State. ori Congresses. of present b | + z service. | h : 5 lerms—continuous— ! continued.’ J x Paige, Calvin D....... Mass...| 3 [*¥63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......| Sept.11, 1913 Parke, Frank. ....... %on-np = 212634, 64th, 60th, 66th 67th... .-. Sept.25, 1913 Parker, James S........ N.Y...| 20] 63d,64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...-.. Mar. 4,1913 Quin, Percy E........] Miss...| 7 | 634, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Rayburn, Sam........| Tex....| 4 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Rogers, John Jacob....| Mass... 5 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 Sinnott, Nicholas J....| Oreg...| 2 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4, 1913 Smith, Addison T......| Idaho. 2 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 ~ Sumners, Hatton W....| Tex....| 5 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th,67th...... Mar. 4,1913 i Temple, Henry W..... Pa.....| 24 | 63d,*64th, 65th; 66th, 67th... Nov. 2,1915 Treadway, Allen T..... Mass... 1 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 : Vinson, Cotl..o-. =... Ga....| 10 |*63d,64th,65th, 66th, 67th... ... Nov. 38,1914 | Wingo, Otis. ........... Ark... 4 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 i Winslow, Samuel E....| Mass...| 4 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 | Young, George M. . . .. N.Dak.| 2 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th...... Mar. 4,1913 j 5 terms—not continuous. : i i Crago, Thomas S...... Pa..... (1) | 62d, 64th, 65th, 66th, *67th..... Oct. 10,1921 | Dyer, Leonidas C...... Mo!.... 12 | 62d, 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th... .. Mar. 4,1917 § Tucker, Henry St. | Va....} 10 | blst, 52d, 53d, 54th, *67th..... Mar. 25, 1922 George. 4 terms—coniinuous. Almon, Edward B..... Ala. 2 864th, Gbth, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 Bacharach, Isaac... . .. NJ 91 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4,1915 Black, Bugene.........1 Tex....1 1 { 64th 65th 66th, 67th... ...... Mar. 4,1916 Bowers, George M......| W.Va..| 2 [¥64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... May 9,1915 Cooper, John G........ Ohio...[ 194 64th, 65th, 66th 67th... ...... Mar. 4,1915 Dale, Porter H........ Vib.oo.ls 264th; 65th, 66th, 67th... .... Mar. 4,1915 Dallinger, Frederick W.| Mass...| 8 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th.._...... Mar. 4,1915 Darrow, George P...... Pa....o] 6 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th... ....c Mar. 4, 1915 Dempsey, S. Wallace..| N. Y...| 40 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. _........ Mar. 4,1915 Denison, Edward E...| Ill. ...| 25 [ 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 ! Dowell, Cassius C. .... Towa. . 7-| 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th... ...... Mar. 4, 1915 ; Freeman, Richard P...| Conn. . 2. 64th, 656th, 66th, 67th... .... .. Mar. 4,1915 | Glynn, James P....... Conn. | 54 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th... ...... Mar. 4,1915 Gould, Norman J...... N.Y...| 36 #64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ..... 5. Nov. 2,1915 f Hadley, Lindley H....| Wash..| 2 | 64th, €5th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 Hicks, Frederick C....] N. Y... 1 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 | L Huddleston, George....|-Ala....| 9 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4.1915 | Hull, Harry B...0 .-.. (Towa. 2.1 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ...... .. Mar. 4,1915 Husted, James W...... N.Y..| 25 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th... .... Mar. 4,1915 | Hutchinson, Elijah C..| N. J... 4 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th..... .---1-Mar.: 4,1915 James, W. Frank...... Mich...{ 121 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4,1915 Johnson, Royal C...... S. Dak. 2.| 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 f Kearns, Charles OC... .. Ohilo...} 6: 64th, 65th, 66th, 87th........ Mar. 4,1915 Kincheloe, David H...] Ky....} 2 |:64th, 65th 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 i King, Edward 5... ..| I... 15} 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ...... Mar. 4,1915 | Lehlbach, Frederick R.| N. J...| 10 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... | Mar. 4,1915 McArthur, Clifton N...| Oreg...| 3 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... | Mar. 4,1915 MecClintic, James V. . .| Okla... 7 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 McFadden, TouisT...| Pa..... 14 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ | Mar. 4,1915 Magee, Walter W. .... N.Y..' 3b 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4,1915 166 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. . Beginning Name. State. Lg Congresses. of present service. 4 terms—continuous— continued. Martin, Whitmell P...| La..... 3 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 Moores, Merrill. . .....| Ind. 7 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Mudd, Sydney E...... Md....| 5 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Oliver, William B..... Ala....| 6 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Ramseyer, C. William. | Iowa. . 6 | 64ti:, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4,1915 Schall, Thomas D. .... Minn. .| 10 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4,1915 Seott, Frank D........ Mich. .| II | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Sears, William J. ..... Fl....[ 4} 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Stage], foam. .covoua. N.Y..| 20 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4 1915 Snell, Bertrand H..... N.¥Y.. 31 |*64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Nov. 2,1915 Snyder, Homer P.....| N.Y. .| 33 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4, 1915 Steagall, Henry B..... Ala....!! §& | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 Stiness, Walter R._.... R. I. 2 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Sweet, Burton E.. . .... Towa. . 3 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Tague, Peter F........ Mass...| 10 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 Tillman, John N....... Ark. 3 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th... ...... Mar.” 4,1915 Timberlake, Charles B.| Colo 2 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 tha, George Hol- | Mass 11 1 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th........- Mar. 4,1915 en. Ward, Charles B....... N.¥..| 27 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ......-. Mar. 4,1915 Wason, Edward H... .. NH... 2 64h 65th 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Watson, Henry W..... Pals 8 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4,1915 Wheeler, Loren E. .... TL. 21 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4,1915 Williams, Thomas S...| III. . 24 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 Wilson, Riley J........ Ta. .... 5 { 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th......... Mar. 4,1915 Wise, James W_...... Ga. . 6 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1915 Wood, William R...... Ind.. 10 | 64th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ..._.... Mar. 4,1915 4 terms—mot continuous. Chandler, Walter M...| N.Y..| 19 | 63d, 64th, 65th, 67th.......... Mar. 4, 1921 Kelly, M. Clyde. .....| Pa..... 30 | 634, 65th, 66th, 67th.......... Mar. 4, 1917 Overstreet, James W...| Ga. 1 [*59th, 65th, 66th, 67th. ........ Mar. 4, 1917 3 terms—continuous. Bankhead, William B..| Ala....| 10 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Bland, Oscar E........ Imd....| 2 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Bland, Schuyler Otis. .| Va. ...| T *65th, 66th, 67th...... ........ July 3.1918 Blanton, Thomas L.....; Tex...| 17 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Brand, Charles H...... Ga.l...] 8 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Burroughs, Sherman E.| N. H..| 1 [*65th, 66th, 67th............... June 7,1917 Campbell, Guy E.....| Pa..... 32 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Classon, David G-...... Wig... 9 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4,1917 Connally, Tom. ....... Pex. ..| IT} 65M, 66th, 674k. ........... Mar. 4, 1917 Pominiek, Fred H....[ S.C...] 365th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1918 Drane, Herbert J... .. Fal... X [65th 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Eliott, Richard N..... Ind... 6 65th, 66th, 67th. .............. July 3, 1917 Fairfield, Louis W..... md....! 12 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Fisher, Hubert F...... Fenw..| 10 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Graham, William J....| TH....| 14 | 65th, 66th, 67th. ......c...... Mar. 4, 1917 Griffin, Anthony J....| N.¥..| 22 [*65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 14, 1917 Hersey, Ita G. .couuune Me....! 4 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4, 1917 Treland, €lifiord......| OE....[ 16 | 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4,1917 Jones, Marvin. .......| Tex.. 8 | 65th, 66th, 67th. .............. Mar. 4, 1917 Knutson, Harold...... Minn. .l. 6 405th, 66th 67th... cove ian Mar. 4,1917 Service of Representatives. 167 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Dis- Beginning Name. State. tri Congresses. of present rict. : : Service. 8 terms—coniinuous— continued. Kraus, Milton. .| Ind. 1% 65th. 666h, 67th... cena... Mar. 4,1917 Lampert, Florian. ..... Wis. 6 [#65th, 66th, 67th............... Dec. 2,1918 Larsen, William W. Ga. 12k Goth, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4,1917 Lea, Clarence F. ...... Calif hp Ghth, 66th, 67th... ........ Mar. 4,1917 Little, Edward C..... Kans 2. Gbth, 66th, -67th rr row eeevrie Mar. 4,1917 Mansfield, Joseph i Tex.. 9 565th 66th, 67th. .............. Mar. 4,1917 Merritt, Schuyler Ss | Conn 4 1%65th 66th, 67th ..c....... 0.x ‘Dec. 3,1917 Miller, John F. Wash T- G50h, 66th, 67th. .............. Mar. 4,1917 Nelson, Adolphu as P...| Wis....| 11 Footh, 66th, 67th... ao Dec. 2,1918 Osborne, Henry Z. . o..| Calif 10: 65th, 66th, 67th. ......... cc... Mar. 4, 1917 Purnell, Fred S. ...... Ind. 8-1 65th, 66th, 67th. ............. Mar. 4,1917 Rainey, JohnW...... Hl. . 4 65th, 66th, 67th. ............0 Apr. 16,1918 Reed, Stuart F......... W. Va 3 | 65th, 66th, 67/th............... ar. 4,1917 Rose, John M. ........ Pa..... 19 65th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4,1917 Sanders, Archie D..... N.Y. 39 ¢ 60th 66th, 67th ............... Mar. 4,1917 Sanders, Everett. ..... nd... 5:| Goth, 66th 67th............... Mar. 4,1917 Stevenson, William F..| S. C 5 I 65th, 66tly, G7th..............:. Mar. 4,1917 Strong, N athan?l. .. . | Pa... 27 pObth, 66th, §7th............0.. Mar. 4,1917 Sullivan Christopher D. N.Y..] 13¢065th Goth 67th............. 5. Mar. 4,1917 Vestal, Albert T....... Ind... S| Goth G0, 67th... ........ Mar. 4,1917 Voigt, Edward. ....... Wis. . 24 Goth, 66th, Gith....... .canm es Mar. 4,1917 White, Wallace H., jr..| Me... 2 160th 66th, 67th. .........o.luu Mar. 4,1917 Woods, James P....... Va... 6: "65th, 66th, 67th................. Mar. 1,1919 Wright, William C..... Gas. . 4 [*65th, 66th, 67th............... Jan. 24,1918 Zihlman, Frederick N.| Md... 6: | GBthy, 66th, 67th. .........ccva. Mar. 4,1917 3 terms—mnot continuous. Andrews, William E...| Nebr..| 5 | 54th, 66th, 67th............... Mar. 4,1919 Ellis, Edgar ©. Mo....| 5 | 59th, 60th, 67th Mar. 4,1921 Fairchild, Benjamin TIN. Y. | 20350h Oth GIth. vx. «vais Mar. 4,1921 Garrett, Daniel E...... Tex...| 8(63d,65h,67th............... Mar. 4,1921 London, Meyer........ N.Y..] 12}64th, 65th 67th............... Mar. 4,1921 Rhodes, Marion E..... Mo....] 13} 58th, 66th, G/tl................ Mar. 4, 1919 Ricketts, Edwin D....| Ohio 364th, 66th 87th... anes Mar. 4,1919 Shreve, Milton W..... Pass 25: 63d,66th, 67th. .............. Mar. 4,1919 Walters, Anderson H. .| Pa..... (yt 634, 66th, 67th. .............. Mar. 4,1919 2 terms—continuous. Ackerman, Ernest R..| N.J 006th, 67th... ............ 00 Mar. 4,1919 Barbour, Henry E..... Calif E66, 67¢h. .......... ic sia Mar. 4, 1919 Begg, James T........ Ohio 3-L 60th, 67th... sei a Mar. 4, 1919 Benham, John S_...... Ind.. 4 66th, 7th... iia daa Mar. 4,1919 Boies, William D...... lowa..| 11 66th. §7th..... oie Mar. 4,1919 Bowling, William B...| Ala... S{*06th 67th. .......c..... ia Dec. 29,1920 Box IohnC... ....... Tex . 206th, 67th... i... Mar. 4,1919 Briggs, Clay Stone... .. Tex . 2p OOt CTE... eld Mar. 4,1919 Brooks, Edward S..... Phe 2p o0th, 67th... ovine. suai Mar. 4,1919 Brooks, Edwin B...... TE = ZL Ghth 6TH. .... ocd. .o iii ha Mar. 4,1919 Burdick, Clark........ nal. EhG8th Gehl Mar. 4,1919 Burke, William J...... Peas (Py vp 66th, 67th... ... coo... 3f.uds Mar. 4,1919 Chindblops, Corl RK... TIL ___.[ #0068 78h ....c.00h..eenin- us Mar. 4,1919 S. Dak I | 66th, 67th..... Adu ed wma ss wate Mar. 4,1919 Coisiophemsan, Charles 168 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Name. State. 2 terms—continuous— continued. Cole, RB. Clint......... Ohio.. Crowther, Frank....... N.Y. Cullen, Thomas H..... N.Y... Davis, Ewin L........ Tenn. . Dickinson, Io. J..:.... Towa .. Drewry, Patrick H....| Va.... Dunbar, James W..... Ind..L. Eehols, Leonard S.....| W. Va. Evans, Robert E_..... Nebr. Fish, Hamilton, jr..... N.Y Foster, Israel M-_...... Ohio - Goodykoontz, Wells... .| W.Va Hardy, Guy U........ Colo Hays, Edw. D.......... Mo. Hickey, Andrew J..... Ind. Hoch, Homer... ........ Kans. Hudspeth, C. B........ Tex. Jefferis, Albert W... _. Nebr. Johnson, Paul B...... | Miss_. Jones, EvanJ......... Pa..Yes Keller, Oscar E. ...... Minn Kendall, Samuel A....| Pa..... Kleczka, John C.......| Wis. Lanham, Fritz G...... Tex. Lankford, William C...| Ga... Layton, Caleb R....... Del . Luce, Rober. ......... Mass . Lubring, Oscar R...... Ind... McDutftie, John........ Ala... McLaughlin, Melvin O.| Nebr. McPherson, IsaacV .. .| Mo.... MacGregor, Clarence...| N. Y.. Mead, James M........ N.Y | Michener, Earl C...... Mich|. Moore, C. Ellis........ Ohio. Moore, R. Walton...... Va. .L Murphy, Frank........ Ohio Newton, Cleveland A..| Mo. Newton, Walter H..... Minn O’Connor, James....... Taf Ogden, Charles F...... Ky.l- Patterson, Francis F.,jr| N. J.. Perlman, Nathan D....| N.Y.. Radcliffe, Amos H..... N.J.. Rainey, LiliusB...... Ala Ransley, Harry C...... Pal... Reber, dobn.c........ Paj.... Reed, Daniel A.......| N.Y Riddick, Carl W.......| Mont.. Robsion, John M _..... Ble.s Sinclair, James H...... N. Dak Smithwick, John H....| Fla..._. Stephens, A. E. B..... Ohio.. Stoll, Pilip H......... S.C Strong, Jandes G....... Kang Summers, John W..... Wash.. . Beginning Dis Congr f t irel. gresses. of present \ service. OGEh, OTEh. ae Mar. 4,1919 20RYGoEth 87th... theca Mar. 4,1919 AW 66th, 67ih.. .... 0 ea. Mar. 4,1919 PER OGth, 67th... cic tiie. bn Mar. 4,1919 1066th 67th... ci... Mar. 4,1919 1 ABOOth O74. an ca May 10, 1920 Gh, O7th. ie vr Mar. 4,1919 OBOOth 67h... ieee Mar. 4,1919 SROCth OTth. Mar. 4,1919 20: MO6Ih 87th. . dia iia. As Nov. 2,1920 10866th 67th... 0 aaa nns Mar. 4,1919 BBO G7th. ooo i reel Mar. 4,1919 BABB 67th, oc iia ian Mar. 4,1919 IA eth 67th... ....0 ee. ai. Mar. 4,1919 180th 67th... tes: oD Mar. 4,1919 4EOGth OTth . ol Mar. 4,1919 YOO 87th... aso a | Mar. 4,1919 2066th, 67th... i rier Mar. 4,1919 Gath, 67th. LL... Lu Bl Mar. 4,1919 21 Y06th, 67th... Ree = Mar. 4,1919 AHRO0Eh, OTH. cosh tn shes | July 28,1919 2aleath Gril. 5. lu as Mar. 4,1919 49F 60th, 87th... wavs on. 0 Mar. 4,1919 12 206th, 67th. . ves niin on Apr. 19,1919 1: 66th, 87th. conoid. 0 Mar. 4,1919 SATIRE VL EE SO ee Mar. 4,1919 13. 106th, 67th. . ios vend. i Mar. 4,1919 LJ 606th 67th... - icv. oo... Mar. 4,1919 166th, 67th... Jos sad ull { Mar. 4,1919 ae ELH Ue YL TSR St BR Ee Mar. 4,1919 150 66th,67¢h. oC. ool Maret 4, 1919 AL00th 67th. ia td uu Mar. 4,1919 42 00th GTI. lula Mar. 4,1919 Zleth a7th a Mar. 4,1919 15 F6oth 67th... 0... A Mar. 4,1919 Beth 87th... ooh ens June 3,1919 184 60th G7th. . voi... al Mar. 4,1919 10s a6 67th. .oois. oo ial Mar. 4,1919 Fioath 6th. too... 0000 Mar. 4,1919 TAte60th, 67th. co in June 5,1919 BiEGBth 67th. ch... 000 Mar. 4,1919 1aath 67th. oobi ani ld Nov. 2,1920 406th 87th. ov ci iia cus Nov. 2,1920 71 66th 67ihy. 0... seen Mar. 4,1919 6B 67th. co ol La Oct. 13,1919 3: 1766th, 67th. . oo. «ii assn on as ».| Nov. 2,1920 126th. argh... ......0n0n as Mar. 4,1919 45: 166th 674h. ooo il. non Mar. 4,1919 266th Q7Eh, ool. Laid ol Mar. 4,1919 LV 68Eh G7eh. oo. lo ae lt Mar. 4,1919 Beth 6th. ol. a Mar. 4,1919 S.166th 67th .-.cu. 0... vain. i Mar. 4,1919 2.1 66th, 67th. Joo. 0. luni. Mar. 4,1919 G-Pogth 67th...o.c..... 00 Oct. 30, 1919 Blasth 6th i... co... on. Mar. 4,1919 4:166th, 67th. ..t.... venues Mar. 4, 1919 Service of Representatives. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. 169 Dis 3 Beginning Name. State. | Congresses. of present service. 2 terms—continuous— continued. Tavior, LL. Willie... Tenn 2 [66th 67th. uve... nines Mar. 4, 1919 Thompson, Charles J. .| Ohio BEL 86th, 67th. oc 0 ins a Mar. 4, 1919 Tincher, J. NN... .. Kans 1-0 66th, 67th..~.......... :.... .. Mar 4 1919 Upshaw, William D....| Ga.. 5 68th 67th.......5 8 Loveeusih Mar. 4,1919 Vaile, William N...... Colo 1:-66th, 67th... 000 1 Cpr Mar. 4.1919 Volk, Lester D... .—...; N.Y 10:7%66th, 67th... a0 Nov. 2,1920 Weaver; Zebulon.......| N. C...{ 10.1 66th, 67th... .... / . 0d. on Mar. 4, 1919 Webster, J. Stanley. ...f Wash..j 5 [66th 67th... ............... Mar. 4, 1919 White, Hays B......... Kongo] 666th 67th... rs. 0 00h Mar. 4, 1919 Yates, Bichard........ REC (FY (66th 8th... 0h. a Mar. 4,1919 2 lerms—not continous. | Blakeney, Albers A...0Mal...| zlomb ern iil nl Mar. 4,1921 Chandler, Thomas A...| Okla... 1: 66th, 67th... 00... Mar. 4,1921 Favrot, George K.._... Tai.... = 680th, 67th... ill ah... os Mar. 4,1921 Kindred, Johnd....... Nel... 28d avi) a ot dy Mar. 4,1921 McLaughlin, Joseph....| Pa..... F-(3) [68th 67th... Uli = rio) Mar. 4,1921 TenBychk, Peter G. | N.W...0 28:0 634267 6h 0.10000 soc oii Mar. 4,1921 Woodruff, Roy O..... Mich. ..}: 10:1 824 67th. 0 a iia Mar. 4,1921 1 lerm. Abernethy Charles TL. No. CG ..1 3 P0nh. 0. i fife 00 0H Nov.20, 1922 Andrew, A. Piatt... .. Mags..., 6 *67th. 3:0et.110,1921 Ansorce, Martin O.... ENON. ..0 20 08h 0. builtins 05s Mar. 4,1921 Appleby, T. Frank....| N. J. D0. El SA Mar. 4,1921 Arventz, Samuel 8... Nev....l (Jy 168h.. o. b ne Mar. 4,1921 Atkeson, William O....| Mo... 6 L6zth:. 5 oa ma aA Mar. 4,1921 Becl, Lily. oi Wis Oh, ea i ss Mar. 4,1921 Beedy, Carroll L...... Me... ab Oth: ooo coho 0 hen Mar. 4,1921 Bird, Richard E....... oangoal coB. 07h) aro So mh ee Mar. 4,1921 Bixler, Horna J. ..... Pa. ol 284670h. oid aaa Mar. 4,1921 Bond, Charles G....... NY... Sah fo. ahaa Mar. 4,1921 Brennan, VineentM.. Mich... 13 [67th:. = Lelio... Mar. 4,1921 Brown, Joseph........ Penn... = 3 160th 0 Aid ii vil Mar. 4,1921 Bulwinkle, A. L.... °. NG. 9th 0 Log eared Mar. 4,1921 Burtness, Olger B..... N. Dak ale G7the sho Frit ond a Mar. 4,1921 Cable, John L.......... Ohio... 4 L67Eh. 0. bh lai sob a Mar. 4, 1921 Chalmers) William W..{ Ohio... 9 6nl 0. co cUia liens) Mar. 4,1921 Clague, Frank.......... Minn. | - 2.L67th. OL. 000 Lo TE Mar. 4,1921 Clarke, Jolm D...... .. NeY | 82 46uth. 0... Bal Mar. 4,1921 Clouse, Wynne F...... Temm-.:l 4 ORL. 0 aie Mar. 4,1921 Codd, George P........ Mich Loeiith ovis ae ia ae, Mar. 4,1921 Cole, Cyrenus.........| Iowa 5 [*67th {idly 28.1921 Collins, Ross A........ Miss SAB ou Gin nna Mar. 4,1921 Colton. Don B......... lah. |b Otho 0 Soap do a Mar. 4,1921 Connolly, James J..... Pa... ial SERRE TR ea i Mar. 4,1921 Coughlin, Clarence D..| Pa.....| EEE EE SEES RE (Sie a Mar. 4,1921 Deal, Joseph T......... Ya.... HAE DR Ea IE Mar. 4,1921 Driver, William J_..... Avlero do -DNGTIN Ce co Gul Ta Mar. 4,1921 Faust, Charles Li. ..... Mo. 407th i at ae Mar. 4,1921 Yonw, BE. Hus. 0s ..... Conn . 3 TAR Bl ae BE Mar. 4,1921 . Fitzgerald, Roy G...... Ohio. S6Tth. Ln las Mar. 4,1921 Free, Arthur M......... Cahill SPO7the Loo Bill aoa Mar. 4,1921 Prothincham, Louis A..f Mass...l- 14 F67th............ 00.00 ee, Mar. 4,1921 | | ] | [| | { tr ELS 170 Congressional Directory. SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. ' . Beginning Name. State. Di Congresses. of present service. 1 lerm—continued. Pulmey, Hampton P...1 8. C..of <7 107th... oii at indi ts Mar. 4,1921 | Funk, Frank H........ Ol... BE OF. ini ha seal Mar. 4,1921 Gahn, Harey ©. ...... Ohio... Zhi Gf. 0... cowtihins doninsty Mar. 4,1921 Gensman, L. M. ..._.. Okla...] GEG. ........ em Mar. 4,1921 Gernerd, Fred B....... Pa... IG GRE. .......c ivi nen dda pee | MAY 4,192) Gifford, Charles I, .... Mags ..| 16 67h... ieee | Nov. 20, 1922 Gilbert, Ralph......... By... | 28 efees or... Ff 0... 500 | Mar. 4,1921 Goldsborougle, T. Alan.| Md....| BL 6Tth..........noiunnnnn it | Mar. 4,1921 Gorman, John J........ {EA CLG ol. bal adie Mar. 4,1921 Homer, Willian C...[ N.C...[ F670. ........00cnier.nnnn. uh Mar. 4,1921 Hawes, Harry B.. .... Mo: ol ibs Gdn. nL. Mar. 4,1921 Henry, Lewis......... NX a3 07th... oul sh Apr. 21,1922 | | Herrick, Mammel. .....0Okla. lt 8. 167th. ..........0. cei Mar. 4,1921 Hill, John Philip...... Md... Sart... adn ens Mar. 4,1921 Himes, Joseph H._... Ohio. .|) IG h Ge. .......0 0 Bit... ol ha Mar. 4,1921 Hogan, Michael J...... NX... sBL8HN,. J... slice... bass Mar. 4,1921 Hooker, J. M. Na... BOT. si Jes ee No. TE GT) Huck ‘Winnifred Mason| TI1 .... GEeETit Nov. 20,1922 Hukriede, Theodore W.| Mo... a EE sea Mar. 4,1921 ed SE Nebr..| G8Eh- 00 00. 2 oo. Now. 20,1922 Jeffers, Lamar... ......| Al. ..| 4F6HN.........oovii iu. wh Fue 27, 1021. Ketcham, John C....-. Mich..sl idihoTth, oo. sali Sy Mar. 4,1921 Kirkpatrick, William i. Pat.o: LET SOUR Re SERRE Mar. 4,1921 Kissel, John J.....{... N.Y. 3efbithe... tla Dai he Mar. 4,1921 Kline, Ardolph L. .... N.Y... D6. .o....... 00s desu Mat 4108) Kline, I. Clinton. ..... Pa.l..: EI ON RS MEE Mar. 4,1921 Knight, Charles Li... .. Ohip...| 14 L068... ... 0. 0nd... 00% Mar. 4,1921 Kopp, William F...... Towd. f 1.1 GR8N 4. o.oo te ies Mar. 4,1921 Kunz, Stanley H...... alah Se eim a i. . ad Da Mar. 4, 1921 Larson, Oscar J........ Minn. See. Lea eA Mar. 4,1921 Eswrence, Henry FF... Mo....| 3lefthe ........ ...c0 ........58 Mar. 4,1921 L Leatherwood, Elmer O.| Utah... DERE La a a Mar. 4,1921 Lee, Warren Te NY ool Gl Omth o aS a and Mar. 4,1921 Lineberger, Whiter 2. VCallt 2 olemm o.oo. Mar. 4,1921 Logan, W. Turner.. SoC. albert a Mar. 4,1921 Lowrey, B.G......... Mise... J 2 tanh... oi... 0.00 een Mar. 4,1921 Lyon, Homer L........ NC. 6 i6Hh......c.oneeF iri i0 Mar. 4,1921 Metin) Waghing- | Mont. . IT SSE ae ae § | Mar. 4,1921 ton i MeSwain, John J... .. CHES Sl EL TERNS Se Mar. 4,1921 | Mochailerty James H.| Calif J. 6 P67thy......... 0 i dloais Now. 20, 1922 Maloney, Robert S..... Masel J LOT ..o.. nti. oo Mar. 4,1921 Michaelson, M. Alfred ./ JI... .| FJ [60h cn... ...00i.......0% Mar. © 4,1921 Mills, Ogden L......... N.Y AT othe. oc... nue... me Mar. 4,1921 Moore, Allen F._...... IR) eg SB RE Re Se SE Mar. 4,1921 Morgan, Wm. M...... Obie] A7067le: .... lo... in \ Mar. 4,1921 Nelson, John E....... Me..ool BCH... ... coi ons irven Mar. 27,1922 Norton, Miner G. ..... Ohio}. 20: 6rth........ os ho. i505 Mar. 4,1921 OBrien, Charles PF. X.| N.J.4.| 12 67th... ....... convenes. uo Mar. 4,1921 Olpp, Archibald E..... NI. 1 [6HE.......... ibid, ule iin Mar. 4,1921 Parks, Tilman B....... Ark Ll Tlormthy oo. le Mar. 4,1921 Patters on; Bozeoe C....1 Mo. .1.1 7 16Rth......... dv .0..ss. cise Mar. 4,1921 Paul, John .. Va. 0 DECREE... a Dec. 15,1922 Perkins, Randolph. . NJ.) Sl Ghhs. .... ede i Mar. 4,1921 Petersen, BAe Ww No i N.Y ih Oh Of s ends mass dantive Mar. 4,1921 Pringey, Cn Oklo...! 41 88B...oeeecivdineteininoinh Mar, 4,1921 al | Service of Representatives. pre 171 SERVICE OF MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE, ETC.—Continued. Dis. Beginning Name. State. tricl Congresses. of present | service. 1 term—continued. Rankin, John E.. .... Miss. . Th Mar. 4,1921 Reece, B. Carroll...... Tenn. IY ee AR At LG) Co Mar. 4,1921 Roach, Sidney C....... Mo... GS COh.. cen Mar. 4,1921 Robertson, Alice M- + Okla-- ah Ee Mar. 4, 1921 Bovenbloogy Benjamin | W. Va HE a as ee Mar. 4,1921 Rossdale, Albert B.. FN Yb 28 67... vis eh ied Mar. 4,1921 Ryan, Thomas J....... ied ER hy SORT BS SRE SE SR Mar. 4,1921 Sendo, Moroan G.....pTex....] "8 60th. ...0... 0 i cis.» Mar. 4,1921 Sandlin, John N.......[ La..... TERE LE ANE Se a Mar. 4,1921 Seott, bor A. .........[ Tenn REL oe Or TR EN Se) Mar. 4, 1921 Shaw, Guy L......... TE. v5 AEE IR BEET Si RR Ts Mar. 4, 1921 Shelton, Samuel A... Mo. ...| 36: 6Fth...... ....... ic ian. Mar. 4, 1921 Spexks, Johns... ....0 Ohle..d BF 67... ee. onnatans Mar. 4, 1921 Sproul, Elliott W.....| Hl... RN OR IER SR A SLT Mar. 4, 1921 Swank, B. B.......... Okla. . SLOT, Ll iA ane ead Mar. 4, 1921 Swing, Philip DL...... CR. BC BID. nnn itr cvaden Mar. 4,1921 Taylor, Chester W..... Ark... GOT. oe Pah SS Td Oct. 31, 1921 Taylor, Herbert W....| N, J.. SelB ood a a a Mar. 4,192] Thorpe, Roy H... ....| Nebr. dt aR Gr IER vied Se OF Np ern Turner, Clarence W....| Tenn yARET 7 Ree I Be Now. 20, 1922 Tyson, Jehu BR. ........ Ala. Dr Be ah A a he Mar. 4,71921 Underhill, Charles I....| Mass... UE RE eI Loe Tal enn Ma Mar. 4, 1921 Ward, Hallett S....... N.C BlLoFh. aia, Mar. 4, 1921 Williams, Guinn... ... Tex...| TEROTED...... oo selene dee west May 27 19590 Widliamson, William... | S. Dak Sio7th........ ERROR an Mar. 4, 1921 Wurzbach, Harry M...| Tex.. i a ESR EAI ea Ee SE Mar. 4, 1921 Wyant, Adam M....... Pa...r. ov Ls OR BE RE IEC Mar. 4, 1921 TERRITORIAL DELE- GATES, Baldwin, Henry A....| Hawaii|..... HOTELL vos i sini wnt wae wo ob PE TS, 10D Sutherland, Pan A....| Alaska.|..... LUE SI al a SE TE Mar. 4,1921 RESIDENT €OMMIS- STDNERS. Davila, Felix Cordova.| P. R........ *858h, 66th, 87th ....... ih Aug. 18,1917 De Veyra, Jaime €....| P. I... |..... goth, 66th, 67th... Mar. 4, 1917 Gabaldon, Isauro...... Pr... .... eH ON. as Mar. 4,1920 | | | STATISTICAL. REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH APPORTIONMENT. 293 | 332 357 | 391 CELE RE ok mn RL SES Sl RE a Rs ree sala (2 |2 13 [2 (2 [8B (B12 {8 [2 |B (8, Saiz. 18.12 18 [2 {2 128 IB 18 {3.2/0 |°% E83 | 8s | 28.1 8s |8xs 183] 8x (838383 (4R|8x(|E3 States. S58 | 02 &liec S| 22183 | a3 SI°R|°Z|2=|28 |e DR loE lmX (oR | aR (2B | 22 88 |g8]| R|aB E4822 |8g no | + =| oi a eS =| oR SE en RR © 3 gel IS .H 5] ix © o ES va o >| ® Ba Se TH 8 =| 1S) = 2) E Lo 1H Hf S B 3 oallm (a |B |B |& |8 |& |8 |72 (#2 |B |& |B Algbama... ci coulecan]ideas wewans 1 3 6 7 7 6 8 9 9 10 Len a WERE SRR TO OR Ii [Lr RO Bam EL el Eten] Loa pei eR rl SST oe ea fy 1 Lo die ea Eee ER en Bl SR Ra 1 i 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 CalOPNIG. co. readies cinoenfascesnlonsvarlonorenlos sans nals 2 2 3 4 6 7 8 11 Colorado. i... ci. eid ec dei sa a a a aa 1 1 2 3 4 Connecticut......... 5 7 7 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 Delaware........=..- % 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1] 1 1 i 1 1 ul LE Ee Sl RSS inn Se id a El A i 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 4 GeOorgin. . ou iaceuiisn 3 2 4 6 7 9 8 8 7 od 1041341 12 Sr a re Rp Fl Et a eh Rt BO ol Bl leh nd na fires 1 1 1 2. {1 En TEE ll Re Se Bl PRE 1 1 3 7 9| 14] 19] 20] 22] 251 27 Indians. a eal ih atte is 1 3 7 10 TE ele 130 18h 1g eS 13 y 2 2 6 9 | 11 11 11 11 1 3 7 8 8 3 0 0 9.307" 11 I 21 11 bn Cele 1 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 8 RTE SS Se Lh al ph See 7 7 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 4 .Maryland...... . 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 Massachusetts same 8 14 17 13 13 12 10 11 101-100 124 13°F 14 16 Michigan... aloo dein iadoanleaian 1 3 4 6 O11 11212 13 US nr IRS A Eee PS he MRE RE RS a SR 2 2 3 5 7 9 10 LES ENN BR sre A been nasa led LA 1 1 2 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 8 1 BET er A Te HN Pe Re i pe i 2 5 7 oO 13° 144 15 16 16 Montanaz. rr es Sa a Sr ae ei ea es 1 1 1 2 NOPraskas. rcs lis swale sans teins len sas shes ee alanate say snman shone ns 1 1 3 6 6 6 soi Nee LN Re le nl BR Ee) CS Fe Rm 1 i 1 1 1 1 New Hampshire..... 3 4 5 6 6 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 New Jersey.......... 4 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 7 8| 10 12 Lon a De rn SE Ben len GRR ale BRE Cn Tae I De BCR Se CE ee 1 New York. ..... 0... 6 10 17 27 34 40 34 33 31 33) 34 34 | 37 43 North Carolina...... 5 10 12 13 13 13 9 8 7 8 9 910 10 A TL ES Se aE Ba A ei I ee Ee ee Se BR a 1 i 2 3 0 Ea fe ER 1 6 14 19 21 21 19: +-20: 1:28 {721 121 22 ALA TH Rea ose Dn ne i Sp See ie A Be Si Le Xe a a 5 8 Oregon........«--..- 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 Pennsylvania. ...... 251 24] 27 28| 30 | 32 36 Rhode Island....... 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 South Carolina...... 6 4 7 v 7 7 SOUT DAR Oa. oss ifs ces sale wwe snlwnman nse en alols se vines selon elnseianssnseelsannsioesss 2 2 2 3 Tennessee. .......... 19 8-10-10 1-10" 10 10 Hh Es SAEs a 2 4 6. =11 13} -16 18 I a Ho i 7 Pr Rar ror Er 1 Bu od St oo] He Sn POT ries lose pnd Lio 1 1 2 Vermont... .....-.+ 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 Virginia zo. 200050 13 11 9 10 10 10 10 Washineton..o. 2. los he ts a a sal a asain 1 2 3 5 West Virginian. ol. i i. ida ors eas viles err fama eons nls bas 3 4 4 5 6 ‘Wisconsin... . 3 6 8 9-10-11 11 EIT Th Loh ee El Been Sa FN el Ll Re LS a IG Sr TE EE pe 1 1 i 1 Totals von 65 | 106 | 142 | 186 | 213 | 242 | 232 | 237 | 243 | 435 The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated and is in- cluded in the above table: First—Temnnessee, 1. Second—Ohio, 1. Third—Alabama, 1; Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, 1. Towa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin,2. Seventh—Massachusetts, 1; Minnesota, 2; Oregon,1. Eighth—Illinois,1; Towa, 1; Kentucky, 1; Minnesota, 1; Nebraska, 1; Nevada, 1; Ohio, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Rhode Island, 1; Vermont, 1. Ninth—Alabama, 1; Colorado, 1; Florida, 1; Indiana, 1; Louisiana, 1; New Hampshire, 1; New York, 1; Pennsylvania, 1; Tennessee, 1; Vermont, 1. Tenth—Idaho, 1; Montana, 1; North Dakota,1; South Dakota, 2; Washington, 1; Wyoming, 1. 172 Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Eleventh—Utah, 1. Twelfth—Oklahoma, 5. Sixth—California, 2; Florida,1; Congressional Directory. 173 SESSIONS OF CONGRESS. | c Ses- Date of Date of Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House fi ODETESS. |sion.| beginning. |adjournment. [in days. ° of the Senate. of Representatives. : N 1 aspirate 1 2Mar. 4,1789 | Sept. 29,1789 210 | John Langdon ?of New | Frederick A. Muhlen- i Hampshire. berg, of Pennsyl- | vania. 2 i Jan. 4,1790 | Aug. 12,1790 3 | Dee. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 ods l 1 | Oct. 24,1791 | May 8 1792 197 | Richard Henry Lee, of | Jonathan Trumbull, ii Virginia. of Connecticut. i % |-Nov. 5,1792 | Mar. 2,1793 119 | John Langdon, of New i Hampshire. l | 30. an 1% Dec. 2,1793 | June 9,1794 190 | Ralph 1zard, of South | Frederick A. Muhlen« iq i 3 Carolina. berg, of Pennsyl- i 2 vania. ji 2 | Nov. 3,1794 | Mar. 3,1795 121 | Henry Tazewell, of | Virginia. ! hoo. 1 | Dec. 7,1795 | June 1,1796 § E77 A Mn 1 ie ne Jonathan Dayton, of New Jersey. Samuel Livermore, of : New Hampshire. 2 | Dec. 5,1796 | Mar. 3,1797 89 | William Bingham, of Do. Pennsylvania. i Sth... 0... 1 | May 15,1797 | July 10,1797 57 | William Bradford, of | f Rhode Island. | _ ® | Nov. 18,1797 | July 16,1798 246 | Jacob Read, of South | George Dent, of Mary- Carolina. land. . | Theodore Sedgwick, of | Massachusetts. ii > 3 | Dec. 3,1798 | Mar. 3,1799 91 | John Laurence, of | George Dent, of Mary- 5 New York. land, pro tempore. | James Ross, of Penn- i sylvania. i | Sth... us 1 | Dec. 2,1799 | May 14,1800 164 | Samuel Livermore, of | Theodore Sedgwick, hi New Hampshire. of Massachusetts. f Uriah Tracy, of Con- i necticut. 1 2 | Nov. 17,1800 | Mar. 3,1801 107 | John E. Howard, of 3 Maryland. i 3 James Hillhouse, of i Connecticut. i thoi... 1 | Dec. 17,1801 | May 3,1802 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of | Nathaniel Macon, of i Georgia. North Carolina. i ?% | Dec. 6,1802 | Mar. 3,1803 88 | Stephen R. Bradley, dl of Vermont. | Sthe........ 1 | Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27,1804 163 | John Brown, of Ken- Do. i tucky. i Jesse Franklin, of | North Carolina. Hi 2 | Nov. 5,1804¢ | Mar. 3,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of | Tennessee. { oh. 1 | Dec. 2,1805 | Apr. 21,1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Do. } : Maryland. { 2 | Dec. 1,1806 | Mar. 3,1807 dosti vial | oth... 1 | Oct. 16,1807 | Apr. 25,1808 Err et a LR i 2 | Nov. 7,1808 | Mar. 3,1809 117 | Stephen R. Bradley, | Joseph B. Varnum, of § of Vermont. Massachusetts. i John Milledge, of i Georgia. Se | 11th... 1 | May 22,1809 | June 28,1809 38 | Andrew Gregg, of Do. : i Pennsylvania. ; 2 | Nov. 27,1809 | May 1,1810 156 | John Gaillard, of il : South Carolina. i 3 | Dec. 3,1810 | Mar. 3,1811 91 | John Pope, of Ken- i! tucky. fi | 2thel 1 | Nov. 4,1811 | July 6,1812 245 | William H. Crawford, | Henry Clay, of Ken- ; ‘ of Georgia. tucky. 3 i 2 | Nov. 2,1812 | Mar. 3,1813 22 doo f 3th... 1 | May 24,1813 | Aug. 2,1813 a A RL et Se i I Do. i 2. | Dec. 6,1813 | Apr. 18,1814 134 | Joseph B. Varnum, of i | Massachusetts. | 1 Until within recent years the appointment of election of a President pro tempore was held by the Sen- } ate to be for the occasion only, so that more than one appears in several sessions and in others none were b chosen. Since Mar. 12, 1890, they have served until “the Senate otherwise ordered.’’ i 2 The Constitution (Art. I, sec. 4) provided that the Congress should assemble Mar. 4,1789,and thereafter il ‘in every year * * * on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by law appoint a different i day.” Up to and including May 20, 1820, 18 acts were passed providing for the meeting of Congress on | other days in the year. Since that year Congress has met regularly on the first Monday in December, The first and second sessions of the First Congress were held in New Y ork; subsequently, until the second Su of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting place; since then Congress has convened in /ashington. 8 Elected to count the vote for President and Vice President, which was done Apr. 6,1789, a quorum of | the Senate then appearing for the first time. John Adams, Vice President, appeared Apr.21, 1789, and took his seat as President of the Senate. 174 Congressional Directory. SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued. Cobigress Ses- Date of Date of Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House BESS. | sion. beginning. |adjournment. [in days. , of the Senate. of Representatives. 1360. oon 3 | Sept. 19,1814 | Mar. 3,1815 166 | John - Gaillard, of | Langdon Cheves,! of South Carolina. South Carolina. Hh... 1 | Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29,1816 148... (VI Se Pt Ca ar Henry Clay, of Ken- tueky. 2 | Dec. 2,1816 | Mar. 3,1817 92... (iL vl wt EE PR y 15th... s.. 1 | Dee. 1,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 14:0... (i; ange Do. 2 | Nov. 16,1818 | Mar. 3,1819 108 | James Barbour, of | ] Virginia | gthic...... 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15,1820 162 | John = Gaillard, of Do. South Carolina. 2°'| Nov. 18,1820 | Mar. 3,1821 Bh po AD John: W. Taylor,? of New York. With... 1 | Dec. 3,1821 | May 8;1822 15% fais vs AO i mms wire ot Philip P. Barbour, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1822 | Mar. 3,1823 02%: Liu. od J TINIE CO ORS Re 15TH... ae 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27,1824 NB ee | Henry Clay, of Ken- tucky. 2 | Dec. 60,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 Ee SER Ea a E 19th... 1 | Dee. 5,1825 | May 22,1826 169-| Nathaniel Macon, of | John W. Taylor, of North Carolina. New York. 2 | Dec. 4,1826 | Mar. 3,1827 90: 5a - +1 FR Wih........ 1 | Dec. 3,1827 | Mar. 26,1828 175 | Samuel Smith, of | Andrew Stevenson, of Maryland. Virginia. 2 | Dec. 1,1828 | Mar. 3,1829 a. do. ia. - Ste nean--n 1'| Dec. 17,1829 | May 31,1830 176i 10... - do. fet Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1830 | Mar. 3,1831 88 | Littleton Waller Taze- well, of Virginia. 2 SR 1 | Dec. 5,1831 | July 16,1832 ool dhl a Do. 2°| Dec. 3,1832 | Mar. 2,1833 91 | Hugh Lawson White, of Tennessee. 23h saninn 1 | Dec. 2,1833 | June 30,1834 211 | George Poindexter, of Do. Mississippi. 21 Dec. 1,1834 | Mar. 3,1835 93 | John Tyler, of Vir- | John Bell, of Tennes- ginia. see. bt 11 Eley 1 | Dec. 17,1835 | July 4,1836 211 | William R. King, of | James K. Polk, of . Alabama. Tennessee. 2 | Dec. 5,1836 | Mar. 3,1837 sol dot a 25th. =. =. 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct. 16,1837 43 ln dL rE Do. 2. | Dec. 4,1837 | July 9,1838 afgliii AO ar res res 3 | Dec. 3,1838 | Mar. 3,1839 ER dor. in as eee 26th........ 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 31,1840 >t 2: SF SUGIRY vy wilh SOE ee Robert M. T. Hunter, of Virginia. 2 | Dec. 7,1840 | Mar. 3,1841 BIE lis. tar smd vs saltik Rs i 1 | May 31,1841 | Sept. 13,1841 106 | Samuel L. Southard, | John White, of Ken of New Jersey. tucky. 2 | Dec. 6,1841 | Aug. 31,1842 269 | Willie P. Mangum, of North Carolina. 3 |'Dec. 5,1842 | Mar. 3,1843 sol. ABE : 98h. 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17,1844 1964... AO ie a 4 mil tas ois John W. Jones, of Vir- ginia. 2 | Dec. 2,1844 | Mar. 3,1845 Oil ei AO sss vee ais : 20th....-... 1 | Dec. 1,1845 | Aug. 10,1846 253 | David R. Atehison, of | John W. Davis, of In Missouri. diana. 2. | Dec. 17,1846 | Mar. 3,1847 PEA AB soot anima 0th... ~... 1 | Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14,1848 VL al a 1 TE nt SC Ae a Robert C. Winthrop, of Massachusetts. 2 | Dec. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 90:1....: Osos ins an an Sls... 1 | Dec. 3,1849 | Sept. 30,1850 302 | William R. King, of | Howell Cobb, of Geor- . Alabama. gia. : 2 | Dec. 2,1850 | Mar. 3,1851 gfe ieee B32 aan 1 | Dec. 1,1851 | Aug. 31,1852 275: |. v- AOiis mis canes Loan Boyd, of Ken- tucky. 2.| Dec. 6,1852 | Mar. 3,1853 in AOE asm 330. chan 1 | Dec. 5,1853 | Aug. 17,1854 246 | David R. Atchison, of | Do. Missouri. 2 | Dec. 4,1854 | Mar. 3,1855 90 | Jesse D. Bright, of In- | diana. | Lewis Cass; of Michi- | gan. : th. ...... 1 | Dee. 38,1855 | Aug. 18,1856 260-| Jesse D. Bright, of In- | Nathaniel P. Banks diana: | of Massachusetts. 2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30,1856 104. Ne 3 | Dee. 1,1856 | Mar. 3,1857 93 | James M. Mason, of Virginia. | Thomas J. Rusk, of | Texas. : 1 Elected Speaker, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814. 3 Elected Speaker Nov. 15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Oct. 28, 1820. 8 Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned. eo Congressional Directory. SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued. 175 Ses- Congress Date of Date of Length President pro tempore | Speaker of the House 8resS. | sion. beginning: | adjournment. [indays. of the Senate. of Representatives. 3500... Dec. 7,1857 | June 14,1858 189 | Benjamin Fitzpatrick, | James L. Orr, of South i | of Alabama. Carolina. 2'| Dec. 6,1858 | Mar. 3,1859 ie AOL aint rico ds 36th... 1 | Dec. 5,1859 | June 25,1860 202... dot. ss William Pennington, { : of New Jersey. | Jesse D. Bright, of In- i diana. 2 | Dec. 3,1860 | Mar. 3,1861 93 | Solomon Foot, of Ver- i ont. 37h... 1 | July 4;1861 | Aug: ' 6,1861 LE 1h Ee Ti Sa Galusha A Grow, of Pennsylvania. | 2 | Dec. 2,1861 | July 17,1862 3 Jer rr. { 3 | Dec. 1,1852 | Mar. 3,1863 LEE dos. saan i 38h... {1 | Dec. 7,1863 | July 4,1864 20% fae do. aie Schuyler Colfax, of | | Indiana. : | | Daniel Clark, of New | | | Hampshire. 2 | Dee. 5,1864 | Mar. 3,1865 90:1... 0% iri sie mate steve nis 3oth........ | 1 | Dec. 4,1865 | July 28,1866 237 | Lafayette S. Foster, of | Schuyler Colfax, of | | _ Connecticut. Indiana. 2. Dec. 3,1866 | Mar. 2,1867 92 | CT F. Wade, of io. 40th... 1 Mar 4,1867 | Dec. 2,1867 OT dd st Do. 2 2Dec. 2,1867 | Nov. 10,1868 3455... -- AO Fe rn ee 3 | Dec. 17,1868 | Mar. 3,1869 re AO% oe Site vies Theodore M. Pome | roy, of New York. ast. 1 | Mar. 4,1869 | Apr. 22,1869 37 | Henry B. Anthony, of | James G. Blaine, of | Rhode Island. Maine. 2 | Dec. 6,1889 | July 15,1870 ag9it iL AOS So sais 3 | Dec. 5,1870 | Mar. 3;1871 OE rie vin wm cinders eh ahssaiata a v. = is 2a 00. 1 | Mar. 4,1871 | May 27,1871 47 | Henry B. Anthony, of Do. | | | Rhode Island. 2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10,1872 1905s AOL oe mere 3 | Dec. 2,1872 | Mar. 3,1873 orl... i. Ns ad... i... 1 | Dec. 1,1873 | June 23,1874 204 | Matthew H. Carpen- Do. . ter, of Wisconsin. 2 | Dee. 17,1874 | Mar. 3,1875 Ca Ne Henry B. Anthony, of Rhode Island. dith. ...... 1 | Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15,1876 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of | Michael C. Kerr, of Michigan. Indiana. Samuel S. Cox,’ of | New York, protem- | pore. J Milton Saylor, of ¥ Ohio, pro tempore. 2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 3,1877 90 |r oe AO oc de tsive vie 5 Samuel J. Randall, of 5 Pennsylvania. 45th. .....: 1 | Oct. 15,1877 | Dec. 3,1877 I} Lani bd cl TE a SEA Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1877 | June 20,1878 200 | Thomas W. Ferry, of Michigan. 3 | Dee. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 02 aes ie AOL wn amet sew 40th........ % | Mar. 18,1879 | July 1,1879 106 Aen G. Thurman, of Do. | | io. 2 | Dee. 1,1879 | June 16,1880 199: cas ox [37s IA a SA ee 3 | Dec. 6,18380 Mar. 3,1881 Se TT Thomas F. Bayard, of : Delaware. eh... 1/ Dee. 5,1881 | Aug. 8,1882 247 | David Davis, of Illi- | J. Warren Keifer, of te) 1nois. hio. 2 | Dec. 4,1882 | Mar. 3,1883 90 | George F. Edmunds, | of Vermont. . 1 ee 1 | Dec. 3,1883 | July 17,1884 218.1. 5s Homi ima John G. Carlisle, of | Kentucky. 2 | Dec. 1,1884 | Mar. 3,1885 | Jp d0.. 5. cutie are or 40th... ..... 1 | Dec. 7,1885 | Aug. 5,1886 242 | J en Sherman, of Do. | - hio. 2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3,1887 88 | John J. Ingalls, of Kansas. Sth... 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20,1888 + er A Se Ca Do. 2. | Dee. 3,1888 | Mar. 2,1889 of euane [DT pe Se 1 There were recesses in this session from Saturday, Mar. 3C, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday, July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 21. 2 There were recesses in this session from Monday, July 27, to Monday, Sept. 21, to Friday, Oct. 6, and to Tuesday, Nov. 10. No business was transacted subsequent to July 27. 3 Elected Speaker Mar. 3, 1869, and served one day. 4 Died Aug. 19, 1876. 5 Appointed Speaker pro tempore Feb. 17, May 12, June 19. ¢ Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4. 176 Congressional Directory. SESSIONS OF CONGRESS— Continued. Conoress. kes: Date of Date of Leliath | | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House ETESS. lsjon. | beginning. | adjournment. lin Says) of the Senate. of Representatives. sist... lio] 1 | Dec. 2,1889 | Oct. 1,1890 304 | John J. Ingalls, of Kan- | Thomas B. Reed, of sas. Maine. 2% | Dec. 1,180 | Mar. 3,1891 | - - 93 | Charles F. Manderson, of Nebraska. : 524.7. 1 | Dec. 17,1801 | Aug. 5,1892 25) ll Qo iE Charles F. Crisp, of i % Georgia. 2 | Dec. 5,1892 | Mar. 3,1893 89 | Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. 53d... z 11 Aug. 7,183 | Nov. 3,1803 29: QO tenses Do. 2 | Dec. 4,1803 | Aug. 28,1804 208 |... QOT. or eases 3 | Dec. 3,1894 | Mar. 2,1895 90 | Matt W. Ransom, of North Carolina. Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee. 3 S4th........ 1 | Dec. 2,1895 | June 11,1896 193 | William P. Frye, of | Thomas B. Reed, of : Maine. Maine. 2 { Dec. 7,1806 | Mar. 3,1807 yA Re 0: cas nisi sa iin 85th. ois 1 | Mar. 15,1897 | July 24,1897 13)... CARRS pt le ie Do. 2 | Dec. 6,1897 | July 8,1898 05°. QO: ns vases fens 3 | Dec. 5,188 | Mar. 3,1899 Sul... TR yy ; 56th........ 1 | Dec. 4,189 | June 7,1900 1384... do tol in Dory B. Hendersony of Iowa. 2 | Dec. 3,1900 { Mar. 2,1901 91d... A6. isante 7th... «Jus 1 | Dee. 2,1001 | July 1,1902 Noi ERE ee ae Do. 2.1 Dec. 1,1902 | Mar. 3,1903 Lr Ra fn RR en S8the....... 1 | Nov. 9,1903 {| Dec. 7,1903 204... sel alae J aah G. Cannon, of | inois. 2 | Dec. .7,1903 | Apr. 28,1904 di... Ee Se 3 | Déc. 5,1904 | Mar. 3,1905 Lu Ea QO neers She... 1 | Dec. 4,1905 | June 30,1906 200 |..... do. ln isan Po 2 | Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 2,1907 90 Giese laousaraas 60th... ...: 1 | Dec. 2,1907 | May 30,1908 1Shabe (ne sad mn in Do 2 | Dec. 17,1908 | Mar. 3,190 Sok, do. oooh aeii a. Gist... .... 1 | Mar. 15,1909 | Aug. 5,1909 Mahe 0 i ei Do 21 Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910 2021... vir a r= 3 { Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911 80.4... dO. eta God... 1 | Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22,1911 ME Rr Champ Clark, of Mis- souri. 2 | Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | Bacon,? Bropasges, 3 Curls, 4 Gallinger,? L odge. 3 | Dec. 2,1912 | Mar, 3,1913 92 | Bacon,” Gallinger®.... 63d... to. 11 Apr. 7,1913 | Dec. 1,1913 239 | James P. Clarke, ¢ of Do. Arkansas. 2 | Dec. 1,1913 | Oct. 24,1914 323.0... TB SE 3 | Dec. 7,1914 | Mar. 3,1915 Fel HR pa Ta ae ah 64th___. 1 | Dec. 6,1915 | Sept. 8,1916 278... (ana Cte. Do % | Dec. 4,1916 | Mar. 3,1917 90 | Willard Saulsbury, of Delaware. 63th... 1 | Apr. 2,1917 | Oct. 6,1917 TE at do ara Do. 2 | Dec. 3,1917 | Nov. 21,1918 354... I YSERA ees 3 | Dee. 2,1918 | Mar. 3,1919 LPI OR 1 Te Sr Se | 68th... 1 | May 19, 1919 | Nov. 19, 1919 185 Ae B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett, of Towa. of Massachusetts. 2 | Dee. 1,1919 | June 5,1920 1883. EI a ee 3 | Dee. 6,1920 | Mar. 4,1921 890... i ERs en ie a 87th... 1 | Apr. 11,1921 | Nov. 23,1921 | 10227 |. .. ia i ad Do. 2 | "Pee, 51001 | Sept. 22,1990 1 maga ¥ iigniati thao 3 | Nov. 20, 1022 | Dec. 4,1922 153. Gn ne nS an Con 4 | Dec. 4, 1922 | Sal a ay TE Sa HL re I 1 Resigned as President pro tempore Apr. 27, 191 2 Elected to serve Jan. 11-17, Mar. 11-12, Apr. 8 in 10, May 30 to Yane 1 and 3, June 13 to July 5, Aug. 1-10, and Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912. t Elected to serve May 25, "1912. 1 Elected to serve Dec. 4-12, 1911. s Elected to serve Feb. 12-13, Apr. 26-27, May 7, July 6- 31,Aug. 12-26, 1912. 6 Elected to serve Mar. 25-26, 1912. 7 Elected to serve Aug 27 to "Dec. 15 5,1912, Jan. 5-18 and Feb. 2-15, 1913 #Elected to serve Dec. 16, 1912, to Jan. 4, 1913, Jan. 19 to Feb. 1, and Feb. 16 to Mar. 3, 1913. $Dijed Oct. 1, 1916. 10 Recessed Aug. 24, 1921, until Sept. 21, 1921. 1 The House of R 2eprese ntatives recessed from June 30, 19: 22, until Aug. 15, 1922. Congressional Directory. AN SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE. Year Date of beginning. Date of adjournment. va BARE ee Friday, Mar. 4... ........ Friday, Mar. 4. VE mre Ese Seen Monday, Mar. 4........... Monday, Mar. 4. 1795... Monday, June S........... Friday, June 26. Viena een ty Saturday, Mar. 4..........| Saturday, Mar. 4. i A708 =e ee A Tuesday, Judy 17... .... Thursday, July 19. i 150%: oe he Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Thursday, Mar. 5. 800 cs... Tuesday, Mar. 4. ........} Thursday, Mar. 6. i 1809. cee en Saturday, Mar. 4.......... Tuesday, Mar. 7. i [i ET RSE SEE a Monday,-Mar. 4...........| Monday, Mar. 4. i 1828-0 on To Friday Mar 4.0 oo Wednesday, Mar. 9. | EH EOD at Me Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Tuesday, Mar. 17. ii A887 wea Pe] Saturday, Mar. 4..........| Friday, Mar. 10. i | I ee ee Thursday, Mar. 4........ Monday, Mar. 15. he ER ee sel Tuesday, Mar. 4.........| Thursday, Mar. 20. i | 3849. STE Monday Mar. 5......... Friday, Mar. 23. | EE I ROR a a eR Tuesday, Mar. 4......... Thursday, Mar. 13. ; | WA Friday, Mar. 4. .......... Monday, Apr. 11. | 30 SRL Se IRE a Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Saturday, Mar. 14. re nee ee Fe Tuesday, June 15... ..... Wednesday, June 16. I OI eR TR Sa a Priday, Mov. 4.0000 50 Thursday, Mar. 10. | 880. oo, el Tuesday, June 26........ Thursday, June 28. i Se Ee ate es a ly Monday, Mar. 4...........| Thursday, Mar. 28. | 888 aa Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Saturday, Mar. 14. i DT REE eR SL TA Saturday, Mar. 4..........] Saturday, Mar. 11. [| 1887. cv evade iia Monday, Apr. L... 0... Saturday, Apr. 20. | 3860. = cal a Monday, Apr. 12..........[ Thursday, Apr. 22. | I a Wednesday, May 10....... Saturday, May 27. Ev Ro ena a Santi Los Tuesday, Mar. 4......... Wednesday, Mar. 26. 3895... Friday, Mor. 5. ........0 Wednesday, Mar. 24. TANI BSE Len Monday, Mar. 5...........| Saturday, Mar. 17. 1881 h doy, Mar. 4d... ....0.. Friday, May 20. aa Monday, Oct. 10..........] Saturday, Oct. 29. Bs aa Wednesday, Mar. 4........ Thursday, Apr. 2. 1889. oo... Monday, Mar. 4...........| Tuesday, Apr. 2. SRR RUB RE eas Saturday, Mar. 4..........| Friday, Apr. 15. ABY7. is iin ie Thursday, Mar. 4. . ......| Wednesday, Mar. 10. RL. Monday, Mar. 4........... Saturday, Mar. 9. 1003.5 ads Thursday, Mar. 5... .... Thursday, Mar. 19. 00. a a Saturday, Mar. 4..........| Saturday, Mar. 18. 1900. ess Thursday, Mar. 4. ....... Saturday, Mar. 6. 1933. = = oan Sh, Tuesday, Mar. 4... ....... Monday, Mar. 17. | IGT re Monday, Mar. 5...........| Friday, Mar. 16. I 192%... a, es aa das 5 Yriday, Mar. 4. ........... Tuesday, Mar. 15. | COURT OF IMPEACHMENT. | i The Senate has set as a Court of Impeachment in the cases of the following accused officials, with the : result stated, for the periods named: WILLIAM BLOUNT, a Senator of the United States from Tennessee; charges dismissed for want of jurisdiction, he having previously resigned; Monday, December 17, 1798, to Monday, January 14, 1799. JOHN PICKERING, judge of the United States district court for the district of New Hampshire; removed from office; Thursday, March 3, 1803, to Monday, March 12, 1804. SAMUEL CHASE, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; acquitted; Friday, November 30, 1804, to March 1, 1805. JAMES H. PECK, judge of the United States district court for the district of Missouri; acquitted; | Monday, April 26, 1830, to Monday, January 31, 1831. | WEST H. HUMPHREYS, judge of the United States district court for the middle, eastern, and west- ern districts of Tennessee; removed from office; Wednesday, May 7, 1862, to Thursday, June 26, 1862. ANDREW JOHNSON, President of the United States; acquitted; Tuesday, February 25, 1868, t2 | Tuesday, May 26, 1868. | 1 ERE W. BELKNAP, Secretary of War; acquitted; Friday, March 3, 1876, to Tuesday, August | , . CHARLES SWAYNE, judge of the United States district court for the northern district of Florida; | acquitted; Wednesday, December 14, 1904, to Monday, February 27, 1905. | ROBERT W.ARCHBALD, associate judge, United States Commerce Court; removed from office; Saturday, July 13, 1912, to Monday, January 13, 1913. 24786°—67-4—2p ED 13 | Congressional Directory. PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS. Presidents. Vice Presidents. Service. | Congresses, George Washington. .......... John Adams. Jaa 000 Apr. 30,1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1,2,3,4. John Adams... coun. one Thomas Jeflerson..-........ Mar. 4,1797-Mar. 3,1801 | 5,6, none JOIEETS0N. sui « wn mte ino Agron Bw il a... Mar. 4,1801-Mar. 3,1805 | 7,8. RAR Mie ht Fai George Clinton..............| Mar. 4,61805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9,10. James. Madison... 0 0 inn oo ge anion (died Apr. | Mar. 4,1809-Mar. 3,1813 | 11,12. LS Tht AE Re ay (died Nov. | Mar. 4,1813-Mar. 33,1817 | 13,14. it James Monfoe. ....o...iboaid Daniel D. Tompkins........ Mar. 4,1817-Mar. 3,1823 | 15, i 17,18. John Quincey Adams.......... John C. Calhoun. ........... Mar. 4,1825-Mar. 3, 1829 | 19,20 Andrew Jackson.............. John C. Calhoun (resigned | Mar. 4,1829-Mar. 3,1833 | 21, 22. Dec. 28, 1832, to become | U. S. Senator). | DO. ele erie. «eran Es Martin Van Buren. ......... Mar. 4,1833-Mar. 3,1837 | 23,24 Martin Van Buren............ Richard M. Johnson. ....... | Mar. 4,1837-Mar. 3,1841 | 25,26 William Henry Harrison. .... Jom yler ro. Mar, 4,1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27, 80 rend oa Le eh ee ee Sn SR Re BB SL Sen UE ie | Apr. 6,1841-Mar. 3,1845 | 27,28, James IC. Polk... ... oc... George M. Dallas............ Mar, 4,1845-Mar. 3,1849 | 29, 30, Zachary Taylor. oo. coo Lo. Millard Fillmore = | Mar. 5,1849-July 9,1850 | 31. Millnvd BlIMore: a a Le July 10,1850-Mar. 3,1853 | 31, 32. Franklin Pierce....--c-u.veu-- William R. King (died Mar. 4,1853-Mar. 3,1857 | 33,34. Apr. 18, 1853). | James Buchanan. ............ John C. Breckinridge SEIT {| Mar. 4,1857-Mar. 3,1861 | 35, 36. Abrsham Lincoln... 0. 0. Hannibal Hamlin. _......... | Mar. 4,1861-Mar. 3,1865 | 37,33. Doss ini ee. Sie Andrew Johnson. ........... | Mar. 4,1865-Apr. 15,1865 | 39. Andrew Jonson. . cd td i Se i Sama Rm ee Apr. 15,1865-Mar. 3, 1869 39, 40. Ulysses S. Grant... -:0....:.L Schuyler Colfax. ........---- Mar, 4,1869-Mar. 3,1873 | 41,42, IAI Sd an PL Bl Henry zon (died Nov. | Mar. 4,1873-Mar. 3,1877 | 43, 44. 22, 18 | Rutherford B. Hayes......... William A. Wheeler......... | Mar. 4,1877-Mar. 3,1881 | 45,486. James A. Garfield... .......... Chester A. Arthur........... { Mar. 4,1881-Sept. 19,1881 | 47, Chester A. ATI sr eo es | Sept. 20, 1881-Mar. 3, 1885 | 47,48, Grover Cleveland............. Thomas A. Hendricks | Mar. rd 1885-Mar. 3,1839 49, 50. (died Nov. 25, 1885). { Benjamin Harrison........... Levi BP, Morton... 2... cecewns Mar. 4,1839-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52. Grover Cleveland. ............ Adlai E. Stevenson. . Mar. 4,1803-Mar. 3,1897 | 53,54. William McKinley............ Garret A. Hobart “(died Mar. 4,1897-Mar. 3,1901 | 55, 56. Nov. 21, 1899). RENIN RRS Theodore Roosevelt. ........| Mar. 4,1901-Sept. 14,1901 | 57. Theodore Baosevell ol. on a ee Sept. 14, 1901-Mar. 3,1905 | 57,58. rn Ae Ee a Charles W. Fairbanks.......| Mar. 4,1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59,80. William HH. Ball... ane ei J ay a or man (died | Mar. 4 1909-Mar. 3,1913 | 61,62, v 1912 | Wesley Wilson... .. 5. hens R. Marshall. ....... Mar. 4,1913-Mar. 3,1917 | 63,64. ADEE ar eo LER TY RR Ep J | Mar. 4,1917-Mar. 3,1921 | 65, 66. Ww oa @&. Harding........... Gir Coolidge... -. 2] 4,1921- | 87 Congressional Directory. 179 GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES. : : | Term Vonid | | = % b. ) | | Bovey ad Tors! Capitals. Goveriors, Ag ogee Bx Dlion Salary. | E I STATES. 7 i Years. } Alabama.......... Montgomery. ..... W.W. Brandon....-......: D. 4 | Jan., 1927 | $5,000 Arizong:.......0.. Phono George W. P. Hunt......... D. 2 | Jan., 1925 6, 500 ! Arkansas... co Little Bock. ...... Thomas C. MCRa8. .. nooo... D. 2 | Jan., 1925 5, 000 California. ........ Sacramento....... Friend W. Richardson..... RB. 4 | Jan., 1927 | 10,000 Colorado... ..... Denver... 0... William E. Sweet. .couuen... 1) 2 | Jan., 1925 5, 000 Connecticut. ...... Hartiond.........- Charles A. Templeton...... R. 217 an., 1925 5,000 Delaware. ........ Dover... ok a William D. Denney......... R. 4 | Jan., 1925 4,000 | Florida. 0... 2... Tallahassee. ...... Cary A. Hardee... ......... D. 417 an., 1925 | 26,000 i Georgia. ........-- Atlanta... 0. ..| Thomas W. Hardwick..... D. 2 | June, 1923 | 25,000 4 Tdgho.......c. i Bolger oo. 01. Charles C. Moore.-......... R. 2 | Jan., 1925 5,000 | ingle... voi. Springfield. ....... TeonSmall. oo R. 4 | Jan., 1925 | 12,000 Indiana. .......... Indianapolis ue tamale Warren T. McCray.......... R. 4 | Jan., 1925 8, 000 | down... i. Des Moines........ N.-B. Rendall .......... > RB. 2 (Jan. 1925 5,000 Konsas. co. ov. Popekn,. t.......- Jonathan M. Davis......... D. 2 | Jan., 1925 5, 000 Kentucky.........[ Frankfort... -.. Edwin P. Morrow : B. 4 | Dec., 1923 6, 500 Tooulsiana.<....... Baton Rouge...... John M, Parker. .coee ine. D. 4 | May, 1924 7, 500 Maine... ......«... Angusta...l a.- Percival D. Baxter......... R. 2] Jan., 1925 5,000 Maryland. ........ Annspolis........- Albert C. Ritchie........... D. 4 | Jan., 1924 4, 500 Massachusetts... ... Boston. casi i Channing ¥1.Cox..........-. Be 2 | Jan., 1925 | 10,000 Miechigan.......... Yansing. .......... Alexander J. Groesbeck..... B. 2 | Jan., 1925 5, 000 Minnesota......... St: Paonl...coo.i 0 J... 0. Prens ion ae R. 2:1: an. 1925 7,000 Mississippi ....... Jackson. ial Leo M. Russell ............ D. 417 an., 1924 5,000 Missouri.......... Jefferson City. hm Arthur M. Hyde.-........... R. 4 | Jan., 1925 5,000 Montonn........... Helonpi..oio0ls: Joseph M. Dixon. .........¢ B. 4 | Jan., 1925 7, 500 | Nebrasks......-.. Lincoln... ~.-...: Charles W. Bryan. ........ D. 2d an., -1925 7, 500 | Nevada. .-. cis Carson City....... James J. Scrugham......... D. dul J an., 1927 7,200 | New Hampshire. .| Concord........... Fred H. Brown. ............ D. 2 | Jan., ) 1925 |: 3, 000 i New Jersey....... Trenton........... George Silzer......... Reve D. 3 | Jan., 1926 | 10,000 I New Mexico. ..... Santa Pe... ...... James Hinlde 0 0 Dn, 2 | Jan., 1925 , i NewYork... .... Albany. co Alfred E. Smith.... D. 2 Jan., 1925 | 2 10, 000 | North Carolina. ...| Raleigh........... Cameron Morrison.......... D. 417 an., 1925 5, 000 | North Dakota.....| Bismarck......... B.A. Nestos. ro tooo B. 2d an., 1925 5, 000 ; OO. enone Columbus. . ....... AV. Donshey....oin in... D. 2 Jan. 1925 | 2 10, 000 Oklahoma... .. Oklahoma City. . .| John C. Walton....... MA. ... D. 4 Jan., 1927 |. 4,500 Oregon... 1.0... SAI oie sees Walter M. Pierce........... Di; 4 | J an., 1927 5, 000 Pennsylvania..... Harrisburg.......-. Gifford Pinchot. -........-.. Re 4 | Jan., 1927 | 10,000 Rhode Island..... Providence........ Willlam 8S. Flynn-.......... 0D. 2 | Jan., 1925 8, 000 South Carolina. ...| Columbia......... Thomas G.McLeod......... D. 2 Jan., 1925 5,000 South Dakota..... Pierre a W.H. McMaster... ......... R. 2 | Jan., 1925 3,000 Tennessee. ........ Nashville......... Austin Peay... .... .... = D. 2 Jan., 1925 | 34 000 IN ER a Austin... .......2 PM. Nel D. 2|J an., 1925 4, 000 eh a Salt Lake City....| Charles R. Mabey........... R. 4! 7J an., 1925 6, 000 Vermont... Montpelier........ Redfield Proctor............ 2. 2 | Jan., » 1925 3,000 Virginia... ...... Richmond........ BE. Tee Trinkle...«.......... D. 4 | Feb.,1926 5,000 ‘Washington....... Olympl.....- 2... Nomis B.oHart. 0. eee R. 4 | Jan., 1925 6, 000 West Virginia. .... Charleston. ....... Ephraim F. Morgan......... R. 4 Mar, 1925 | 210, 000 Wisconsin......... Madison. ...:..... Jom J. Blaine.... ..._ i.... Rn. 2 | Jan., 1925 5,000 Wyoming......... Cheyenne. ........ William B. Boss...... ...... D. 4 Jan. 1927 4,000 TERRITORIES. * Alaska coi Juneau... Seolt GC. Bone-.....-........ R 4 | June, 1925 7,000 | Hawajl-........... Honolulu... ..... ‘Wallace R. Farrington ..... R 4 | June, 1925 7,000 i ISLAND POSSES- SIONS. 1 ] Philippines....... Manilg... 2. .on0.. Leonard: Weod i... ... [colores Indefinite. | 20,000 Poric Rico..---.-. San Juan... E.-Mont Belly. oii heft. Indefinite. | 10,000 1 Progressive Democrat. 2 Also use of executive mansion. 8 Also use of executive mansion, and $3,500 for expenses. 4 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate. | | COMMITTEES. MEETING DAYS OF SENATE COMMITTEES. {Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman.) Agricnlinre.ond Forestry... ... iviiiore dis seme soni cen ve Tuesday. Cling ae. Ea ae a mE Thursday. COMMETen, rs i is eid i lean oe Thursday. Digriccob Columbia. 0. a era Wednesday. Judiciary co et aes abana ee sh a NODA AY. Maliiarv Allaive, - on a aaa ae a] Friday. Naval Alloirs oh. i. hhe sinss ca easeih Tuesday. TET LU Se IR BE Bee i SER el Tuesday. Publiclandsand Surveyse. ooo Do 0. LL nl tat Wednesday. 181 182 Congressional Directory. COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE. Agriculture and Forestry. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Charles I. McNary, of Oregon. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. v Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire. Frank RK. Gooding, of Idaho. Edwin F. Ladd, of North Dakota. Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. John W. Harreld, of Oklahoma. William B. McKinley, of Illinois, Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. | Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. | John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming. Pat Harrison, of Mississippi. J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama. T. H. Caraway, of Arkansas. Appropriations. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. vv Frederick Hale, of Maine. Selden P. Spencer, of Missouri. Lawrence C. Phipps, of Colorade. William B. McKinley, of Illinois. Irvine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire, Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Robert I.. Owen, of Oklahoma. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. William J. Harris, of Georgia. Carter Glass, of Virginia. Andrieus A. Jones, of New Mexico. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. William M. Calder, of New York. Joseph I. France, of Maryland. Medill McCormick, of Illinois. Andrieus A. Jones, of New Mexico. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Banking and Currency. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. William M. Calder, of New York. O. E. Weller, of Maryland. Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. Samuel M. Shortridge. of California. Walter E. Edge, of New Jersey. George Wharton Pepper, of Pennsylvania. James Couzens, of Michigan. Robert L.. Owen, of Oklahoma. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming. Carter Glass, of Virginia. Civil Service. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. I. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Samuel D. Nicholson, of Colorado. Robert Nelson Stanfield, of Oregon. Holm O. Bursum, of New Mexico. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama. Walter F. George, of Georgia. Claims. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. V Selden P. Spencer, of Missouri. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey. Harry S. New, of Indiana. Frank R. Gooding, of Idaho. John W. Harreld, of Oklahoma. Richard P. Ernst, of Kentucky. Robert Nelson Stanfield, of Oregon. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Park Trammell, of Florida. : Edwin S. Broussard, of Louisiana. Thomas F. Bayard, of Delaware. Committees of the Senate. 183 Commerce. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Bert M. Fernald, of Maine. William M. Calder, of New York. Irvine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. Charles L.. McNary, of Oregon. Walter E. Edge, of New Jersey. Frank B. Willis, of Ohio. O. E. Weller, of Maryland. L. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. District of L. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. + Davis Elkins, of West Virginia. Frank R. Gooding, of Idaho. Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. O. E. Weller, of Maryland. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Furnifold M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Nathaniel B. Dial, of South Carolina. T. H. Caraway, of Arkansas. Columbia. William H. King, of Utah. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Carter Glass, of Virginia. A. Owsley Stanley, of Kentucky. Thomas F., Bayard, of Delaware. Education and Labor. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Lawrence C. Phipps, of Colorado. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Samuel M. Shortridge, of California. Smith W. Brookhart, of Iowa. Andrieus A. Jones, of New Mexico. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. T. H. Caraway, of Arkansas. James Couzens, of Michigan. Enrolled Biiis. Howard Sutherland, of West Virginia. L. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Nathaniel B. Dial, of South Carolina. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Medill McCormick, of Illinois. Frank B. Willis, of Ohio. Tasker L. Oddie, of Nevada. Smith W. Brookhart, of Iowa. Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Finance. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. y- James BE. Watson, of Indiana. William M, Calder, of New York. Howard Sutherland, of West Virginia. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey. Furnifold M. Simmons, of North Carolina, John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Andrieus A. Jones, of New Mexico. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. James A. Reed, of Missouri. David I. Walsh. of Massachusetts. Foreign Relations. . Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Harry S. New, of Indiana. George H. Moses, of New Hampshire. Frank B. Kellogg, of Minnesota. Medill McCormick, of Illinois. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. | Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Key Pittman, of Nevada. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. James W. Wadsworth, jr., of New York. Walter E. Edge, of New Jersey. 184 Congressional Directory. Immigration. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire. Frank B. Willis, of Ohio. David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania. William H. King, of Utah. William J. Harris, of Georgia. Pat Harrison, of Mississippi. Walter F. George, of Georgia. Indian Affairs. Selden P. Spencer, of Missouri. Charles Curtis, of Kansas. + Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Charles L. McNary, of Oregon. John W, Harreld, of Oklahoma. Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. Edwin F. Ladd, of North Dakota. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming. Interoceanic Canals. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. George Wharton Pepper, of Pennsyl- vania. : David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania. Smith W. Brookhart, of Iowa. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Furnifold M. Simmons, of North Carolina. Park Trammell, of Florida. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Interstate Commerce. Albert B. Cummins, of Towa. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. George P. McLean, of Connecticut. James E. Watson, of Indiana. Frank B. Kellogg, of Minnesota. Bert M. Fernald, of Maine. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey. Davis Elkins, of West Virginia. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama. A. Owsley Stanley, of Kentucky. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Irrigation and Reclamation. Charles L.. McNary, of Oregon. Wesley L. Jones, of Washington. Lawrence C. Phipps, of Colorado. Frank R. Gooding, of Idaho. Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. Tasker L. Oddie, of Nevada. Samuel M. Shortridge, of California. Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Judiciary. Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. William E. Borah, of Idaho. Albert B. Cummins, of Iowa. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Richard P. Ernst, of Kentucky. Samuel M. Shortridge, of California. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. John K. Shields, of Tennessee. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Library. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. James W. Wadsworth, jr., of New York. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. George Wharton Pepper, of Pennsyl- vania. John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Edwin S. Broussard, of Louisiana. Committees of the Senate. 185 Manufactures. Robert M. La Follette, of Wisconsin. Charles L.. McNary, of Oregon. William B. McKinley, of 1llinois. Samuel D. Nicholson, of Colorado. 0. E. Weller, of Maryland. David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania. Smith W, Brookhart, of Iowa. Military James W. Wadsworth, jr., of New York. Francis E. Warren, of Wyoming. Howard Sutherland, of West Virginia. Harry 8S. New, of Indiana. Selden P. Spencer, of Missouri. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. i~ Ralph H. Cameron, of Arizona. Holm O. Bursum, of New Mexico. David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania. Smith W. Brookhart, of Iowa. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio. Andrieus A. Jones, of New Mexico. James A. Reed, of Missouri. Affairs. Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Nebraska. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. | Morris Sheppard, of Texas. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Mines and Mining. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Howard Sutherland, of West Virginia. Tasker L. Oddie, of Nevada. Samuel D. Nicholson, of Colorado. Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. James Couzens, of Michigan. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Naval Affairs. Carroll S. Page, of Vermont. Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Frederick Hale, of Maine. L. Heisler Ball, of Delaware. Joseph 1. France, of Maryland. Samuel D. Nicholson, of Colorado. George Wharton Pepper, of Pennsyl- vania. Tasker L.. Oddie, of Nevada. X James Couzens, of Michigan. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Park Trammell, of Florida. William H. King, of Utah. Patents. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Frank B. Brandegee, of Connecticut. Richard P. Ernst, of Kentucky. Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina. A. Owsley Stanley, of Kentucky. Edwin S. Broussard, of Louisiana. Pensions. Holm O. Bursum, of New Mexico. Porter J. McCumber, of North Dakota. Reed Smoot, of Utah. Davis Elkins, of West Virginia. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. LeBaron B. Colt, of Rhode Island. 0. E. Weller, of Maryland. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. William H. King, of Utah. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Peter G. Gerry, of Rhode Island. Post Offices and Post Roads. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Thomas Sterling, of South Dakota. Joseph I. France, of Maryland. George H. Moses, of New Hampshire. Walter E. Edge, of New Jersey. Davis Elkins, of West Virginia. Lawrence C. Phipps, of Colorado. John W. Harreld, of Oklahoma. Tasker L. Oddie, of Nevada. Robert Nelson Stanfield, of Oregon. Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee. David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts. Nathaniel B. Dial, of South Carolina. J. Thomas Heflin, of Alabama. Edwin S. Broussard, of Louisiana. Walter F. George, of Georgia. 186 Congressional Directory. Printing. George H. Moses, of New Hampshire. Arthur Capper, of Kansas. L- Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Charles E. Townsend, of Michigan. Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida. Joseph E. Ransdell, of Louisiana. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. Privileges and Elections. William P. Dillingham, of Vermont. Selden P. Spencer, of Missouri. James W. Wadsworth, jr., of New York. James E. Watson, of Indiana. Walter E. Edge, of New Jersey. Richard P. Ernst, of Kentucky. Samuel M. Shortridge, of California. Holm O. Bursum, of New Mexico. Atlee Pomerene, of Ohio, James A. Reed, of Missouri. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. William H. King, of Utah. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Public Buildings and Grounds. Bert M. Fernald, of Maine. Francis BE. W arren, of Wyoming. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, of New J ersey. Joseph I. France, of Maryland. Irvine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire. William B. McKimley, of Illinois. John W. Harreld, of ‘Oklahoma, James A. Reed, of Missouri. Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona. Charles A. Culberson, of Texas. j Park Trammell, of Florida. / Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia, Public Lands and Surveys. Reed Smoot, of Utah. George W. Norris, of Nebraska. Miles Poindexter, of Washington. Irvine L. Lenroot, of Wisconsin. Edwin F. Ladd, of North Dakota. Robert Nelson Stanfield, of Oregon, Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota. Holm O. Bursum, of New Mexico. Revision of the Laws. Richard P. Ernst, of Kentucky. Frank B. Kellogg, of Minnesota. Henry L. Myers, of Montana. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Andrieus A. J ones, of New Mexico. John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming. Thomas J. Walsh, of Montana. Nathaniel B. Dial, of South Carolina. Rules, Charles Curtis, of Kansas Knute Nelson, of Minnesota. Frederick Hale, of Maine. George H. Moses, of New Hampshire. Medill McCormick, of Illinois. James E. Watson, of Indiana. Hiram W. J ohnson, of California. Territories and In Harry S. New, of Indiana. George P: Mclean, of Connecticut. Albert B. Cummias, of Towa. Hiram W. Johnson, of California. Medill McCormick, of Illinois. = Frank B. Willis, of Ohio. Edwin F. Ladd, of North Dakota. Lee S. Overman, of North Carolina. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. Oscar W. Underwood, of Alabama. Pat Harrison, of Mississippi. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas. sular Possessions. Key Pittman, of Nevada. Robert L. Owen, of Oklahoma. Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas, : William J. Harris, of Georgia. Edwin S. Broussard, of Louisiana. David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania, Congressional Darectory. 187 ASSIGNMENTS OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES. ASTURET. al eee Indian Affairs. Judiciary. Mines and Mining. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. NE eee EE District of Columbia, chairman. Civil Service. Commerce. Enrolled Bills. Naval Affairs. BAY ShD. or ae Claims. : Distriet of Columbia. BORAT... coe shine n ess Education and Labor, chairman. Foreign Relations. Interoceanic Canals. Judiciary. ED RANDEGRE. io ase eae Library, chairman. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. Patents. BROOKHART .... ec... cc.see---- Education and Labor. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Interoceanic Canals. Military Affairs. BROUSSARD. i oi a Claims. Library. Patents. Post Offices and Post Roads. Territories and Insular Possessions. BumsuM. oo eee Pensions, chairman. Civil Service. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Public Lands and Surveys. Ee RR SL Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate, chairman. Banking and Currency. Commerce. Finance. CAMERON. .ccccransne Saavik District of Columbia. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation, Military Affairs. ENT Se cess. ..Claims, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. District of Columbia. Military Affairs? Printing. - CABAWAY ceva asrascsnt AE] Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Education and Laber. COLT ous oensniasiven neuen» dINoration chairman. Civil Service. Interoceanic Canals. Judiciary. Pensions. 188 Congressional Directory. CovzENa Zia oo nein In Banking and Currency. Education and Labor. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. CULBERSON ........... yu gis Appropriations. : Judiciary. ; Public Buildings and Grounds. f CUMMING. sean cine aninmninsh Interstate Commerce, chairman. Civil Service. Judiciary. Territories and Insular Possessions. CURTIS. oo vevnaanaisnne via.» 016, chairman, | Appropriations. Finance. Indian Affairs. HITS adn DR Se esa gi, Commerce. : Enrolled Bills. : : Post Offices and Post Roads. fis Revision of the Laws. ; ) InaNGmam.. «-....Privileges and Elections, chairman. ; District of Columbia. Finance. Tmmigration. Judiciary. DRE, oa ee Interoceanic Canals, chairman. Banking and Currency. Commerce. Post Offices and Post Roads. Privileges and Elections. BrEmNs.... Slain Sls District of Columbia. Interstate Commerce. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. LEE SR oS arian Revision of the Laws, chairman. Claims. Judiciary. Patents. Privileges and Elections. FERNATD....... roo an Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. O bl : Commerce. Interstate Commerce. FLPrcHER......... sive Snistass Banking and Currency. Commerce. Military Affairs. Printing. Yeance....... er Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Naval Affairs. Post, Offices and Post Roads. Public Buildings and Grounds. FRELINGBUYSEN. . .... 0... ... Claims. Finance. | Interstate Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. GEoren....... ok ERNE (Civil Service. Immieration. Post Offices and Post Roads. Assignments of Senators to Committees. 189 ATH hm eh i Re EE Finance. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Gres. i aa Appropriations. ; Banking and Currency. b District of Columbia. GOODING. 1... paises snssvass Agriculture and Forestry. 2] Claims. | District of Columbia. i Irrigation and Reclamation, iene sl Appropriations. : | Naval Affairs. jg | Rules. : i REID... i ees ies Agriculture and Forestry. Claims. Indian Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. . Eo . Public Buildings and Grounds. ARIE, or evs desea: Appropriations. Immigration. Territories and Insuiar Possessions. Hanmison........voci sc ienisnd Agriculture and Forestry. Immigration. Rules. ELT BE EEA SL Re Agriculture and Forestry. ; Civil Service. i Post Offices and Post Roads. i IITCHCOOK . - . eas rwss cima Banking and Currency. Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. { | JonmNsoN.. cosa saesiek Patents, chairman. Foreign Relations. Immigration. Rules. | Territories and Insular Possessions. } | Jones of New Mexico... ...... Appropriations. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Education and Labor. Finance. Manufactures. Public Lands and Surveys. Jones of Washington........... Commerce, chairman. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. KELIOGG vie. a coacacnasns Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Revision of the Laws. ER ENDRICR strc snneensind Agriculture and Forestry. : Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. Irrigation and Reclamation, Public Lands and Surveys. 190 Congressional Directory. KeyeS.....ocvvnvnuninnn...... Agriculture and Forestry. f Appropriations. Immigration. Public Buildings and Grounds. I | | RIN iil aii vain iino am mie District of Columbia. Immigration. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. LADD. nie se re naan Agriculture and Forestry. Indian Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. / Territories and Insular Possessions, TA Poripren._... erin Manufactures, chairman. Finance. Indian Affairs. Interstate Commerce. I ENBOOR: ier oiansend Appropriations. Commerce. Public Buildings and Grounds. Public Lands and Surveys. ODE si cadens hears a Foreign Relations, chairman, Naval Affairs. McCorMICK. ....... evenaasass..ixpenditures in the Executive Departments, chair- man. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the’ Senate. Foreign Relations. Rules. Territories and Insular Possessions. McCUMBER....cecuviveee....... Finance, chairman. " Foreign Relations. Library. Pensions. MeRervan .....c...onc.. 00> Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate. Civil Service. Education and Labor. Library. Military Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. MeRmiey..... cove aieiee Agriculture and Forestry. Appropriations. Manufactures. Public Buildings and Grounds. Mel maw. oo. co linic. ie Banking and Currency, chairman. Finance. Interstate Commerce. Territories and Insular Possessions. MN ATY encima Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Commerce. Indian Affairs. | Manufactures. Assignments of Senators to Committees. NO BOR oh een eas NOR MIs ae ODI dh mi nama {ETE oe Be Sal ee {2 ITT Lea ee Se aes Printing, chairman. Foreign Relations. Post Offices and Post Roads. Rules. Interstate Commerce. Military Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Judiciary, chairman. Commerce. Printing. Rules. .. Territories and Insusar Possessions, chairman. Claims. : Foreign Relations. Military Affairs. Civil Service. Manufactures. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. . Agriculture and Forestry. Banking and Currency. Mines and Mining. Public Lands and Surveys. . Agriculture and Forestry, chairman. Judiciary. Patents. Public Lands and Surveys. . Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Post Offices and Post Roads. Appropriations. Judiciary. Rules. Appropriations. Banking and Currency. Indian Affairs. Rules. Territories and Insu.ar Possessions. Naval Affairs, chairman. Agriculture and Forestry. Banking and Currency. Interoceanic Canals. Banking and Currency. Interoceanic Canals. Library. Naval Affairs. Appropriations. Education and Labor. Irrigation and Reclamation. Post Offices and Post Roads. 191 192 Congressional Directory. PIMIMAN. .. .o.. ei vee seis. Horaign Rolstions. : Interstate Commerce. Irrigation and Reclamation. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. Territories and Insular Possessions, POINDEXTER. .......ccuee..... Mines and Mining, chairman. Interstate Commerce. Naval Affairs. Public Lands and Surveys. POM RR ENT. «assis Banking and Currency. Foreign Relations. Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. Privileges and Elections. RANSDEL .ccuusmensscivovsness Agriculture and Forestry. Civil Service. Commerce. Interoceanic Canals. Printing. Keep of Missouri........... a Finance. Judiciary. Manufactures. Privileges and Elections. Public Buildings and Grounds. REED of Pennsylvania ........Immigration. Interoceanic Canals. Manufactures. Military Affairs. Territories and Insular Possessions, BOB IR BON ican ceca aia dans Claims. Expenditures in the Executive Departments, Military Affairs. Printing. Rules. Territories and Insular Possessions. SHEPPARD. oe. sei crass Commerce. District of Columbia. Irrigation and Reclamation. Military Affairs. BUIELDE. an. Foreign Relations. Judiciary. SHORTRIDEE..coverrerrions rons Banking and Currency. Education and Labor. Irrigation and Reclamation, Judiciary. Privileges and Elections. MONS vei eee Commerce. Finance. Interoceanic Canals. ITH. se sinc iastaci ened Agriculture and Forestry, Interstate Commerce. Manufactures. - Patents. Assignments of Senators to Committees. SPANTIBLD cee a os SANE Y saa STERLING... co. en cscs SUTHERLAND: ects ee SWANSON. La Ra te POWRSEND: or nsaeaain Public Lands and Surveys, chairman, Appropriations. Finance. Pensions. Indian Affairs, chairman. Appropriations. Claims. Military Affairs. Privileges and Elections. Civil Service. Claims. Post Offices and Post Roads. Public Lands and Surveys. District of Columbia. Interstate Commerce. Patents. Civil Service, chairman. Education and Labor. Immigration. Judiciary. Post Offices and Post Roads. Enrolled Bills, chairman. Finance. Military Affairs. Mines and Mining. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Foreign Relations. Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Post Offices and Post Roads, chairman. Interstate Commerce. Pensions. Printing. PP RAMMEIL. o-oo iaicece scans (Claims. INpERWOOD......--. ones. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. WADSWORTH... occol-cconnonns WaLse of Massachusetts........ Interoceanic Canals. Naval Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. Interstate Commerce. Rules. Military Affairs, chairman. Foreign Relations. Library. Privileges and Elections. Education and Labor. Finance. Pensions. Post Offices and Post Roads. Warsg oi Montana... ......... Indian Affairs. Interoceanic Canals. Irrigation and Reclamation. Judiciary. Mines and Mining. Naval Affairs. Pensions. Privileges and Elections. Public Lands and Surveys. 24786°—67—4—2p kp——14 193 194 Congressional Directory. WEILER... dirs WiIirAMs. a Wns. ee Appropriations, chairman. Education and Labor. Military Affairs. Public Buildings and Grounds. .. Finance. Interstate Commerce. : Privileges and Elections. Rules. Banking and Currency. Commerce. District of Columbia. Manufactures. Pensions. Finance. Foreign Relations. Library. Commerce. Expenditures in the Executive Departments. Immigration. Territories and Insular Possessions. Congressional Directory. 195 MEETING DAYS OF HOUSE COMMITTEES. (Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman.) Banking ond Curent... ou. .c oo iicnad anne nesses aston Wednesday. Chimes a ea a me, Friday. Coinage, Weights, and Measures... .............c........ Friday. Disiviet of Columbia. ooo Tb a cra Wednesday. Baueolion on. ini nin eb a ee Sh nd Tuesday. Immigration and Naturalization... .o.... 1... ..... 0. of. Thursday. Indian Allaire. i. 0 i. io Ss sina dw itaia tides sain Thursday. Interstate and Foreign Commerce .........cccevieuinnn... Tuesday and Thursday. Judielary aos bao hiaii th 0h Beg tied doc ve Sd vapors uesday and. Thursday. Labor: 20s enn ie aie hail do santas anette Friday. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. ...................cc.o... Thursday. Milibory AfrE Ee. 1 de ir salman th Ana es Se aaa Tuesday and Thursday. Naval ABadrg.. cc. i iio ash soins anna vn wns a= wesnin Ltiosdayv and: Friday. Penglongs. ri iS ee as en Tuesday. Public Buildingsand Grounds. ........ ccc: cieiev vie salon Wednesday. Pohlie bands. cs ea cs setae: Tuesday. Reform in the Civil Service..........c.civiieue nena. .... Wednesday. Bevisionof the Laws... ............. 2 snes nsiesss 2v oes -- Ved Nesdny, War Cladmeniin ln autiiiadediiidoe svniin or av nuvi Fridays 196 Congressional Directory. | COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE. Accounts. Clifford Ireland, of Illinois. Adolphus P. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Anderson H. Walters, of Pennsylvania. Clarence MacGregor, of New York. Lester D. Volk, of New York. Miner G. Norton, of Ohio. Charles L. Underhill, of Massachusetts. Frank Park, of Georgia. Hampton P. Fulmer, of South Carolina. Joseph T. Deal, of Virginia. Chester W. Taylor, of Arkansas. Agriculture. Gilbert N. Haugen, of Iowa. James C. McLaughlin, of Michigan. Charles B. Ward, of New York. Fred S. Purnell, of Indiana. Edward Voigt, of Wisconsin. Melvin O. McLaughlin, of Nebraska. Carl W. Riddick, of Montana. J. N. Tincher, of Kansas: = Thomas S. Williams, of Illinois. James H. Sinclair, of North Dakota. Edw. D. Hays, of Missouri. Charles J. Thompson, of Ohio. Fred B. Gernerd, of Pennsylvania. Frank Clague, of Minnesota. : John D. Clarke, of New York. Henry A. Baldwin, of Hawaii. H. M. Jacoway, of Arkansas. John W. Rainey, of Illinois. James B. Aswell, of Louisiana. David H. Kincheloe, of Kentucky. Marvin Jones, of Texas. Peter G. Ten Eyck, of New York. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota. Addison T. Smith, of Idaho. Olger B. Burtness, of North Dakota. J % Kissel, of New York. Charles L. Knight, of Ohio. Manuel Herrick, of Oklahoma. A. R. Humphrey, of Nebraska. William D. Upshaw, of Georgia. John C. Box, of Texas. B. G. Lowrey, of Mississippi. Hampton P. Fulmer, of South Carolina. Appropriations. Martin B. Madden, of Illinois. Charles R. Davis, of Minnesota. Daniel R. Anthony, jr., of Kansas.ee Joseph G. Cannon, of Tlinois. ; C. Bascom Slemp, of Virginia. Sydney Anderson, of Minnesota. William R. Wood, of Indiana. Louis C. Cramton, of Michigan. Patrick H. Kelley, of Michigan. Edward H. Wason, of New Hampshire. Walter W. Magee, of New York. George Holden Tinkham, of Massachu- setts. Burton L. French, of Idaho. Milton W. Shreve, of Pennsylvania. . Charles F. Ogden, of Kentucky. William H. Stafford, of Wisconsin. James W. Husted, of New York. Elijah C. Hutchinson, of New Jersey. Robert E. Evans, of Nebraska. L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa. Henry Z. Osborne, of California. Frank Murphy, of Ohio. Joseph W. Byrns, of Tennessee. Thomas U. Sisson, of Mississippi. James P. Buchanan, of Texas. James A. Gallivan, of Massachusetts. James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina. Gordon Lee, of Georgia. Ben Johnson, of Kentucky. Charles D. Carter, of Oklahoma. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. William B. Oliver, of Alabama. Anthony J. Griffin, of New York. Committees of the House. 197 Banking and Currency. Louis T. McFadden, of Pennsylvania. Porter H. Dale, of Vermont. Edward J. King, of Illinois. Frank D. Scott, of Michigan. Adolphus P. Nelson, of Wisconsin. James G. Strong, of Kansas. Leonard S. Echols, of West Virginia. Edward S. Brooks, of Pennsylvania. Robert Luce, of Massachusetts. Clarence MacGregor, of New York. James W. Dunbar, of Indiana. Lester D. Volk, of New York. T. Frank Appleby, of New Jersey. Henry F. Lawrence, of Missouri. E. Hart Fenn, of Connecticut. Isaac Siegel, of New York. Louis W. Fairfield, of Indiana. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. Horace M. Towner, of Towa. Loren E. Wheeler, of Illinois. James P. Glynn, of Connecticut. Henry E. Barbour, of California. Carroll L. Beedy, of Maine. Charles L. Faust, of Missouri. Adam M. Wyant, of Pennsylvania. George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania. Edward C. Little, of Kansas.emw Clifford Ireland, of Illinois. James P. Glynn, of Connecticut. John M. Rose, of Pennsylvania. Oscar E. Keller, of Minnesota. Edgar C. Ellis, of Missouri. Charles L. Underhill, of Massachusetts. John C. Speaks, of Ohio. “ Lewis Henry, of New York. A. R. Humphrey, of Nebraska. Otis Wingo, of Arkansas. Henry B. Steagall, of Alabama. Charles H. Brand, of Georgia. William F. Stevenson, of South Carolina. Eugene Black, of Texas. T. Alan Goldsborough, of Maryland. Census. William W. Larsen, of Georgia. John R. Tyson, of Alabama. Morgan G. Sanders, of Texas. John J. McSwain, of South Carolina. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. John N. Sandlin, of Louisiana. Claims. Henry B. Steagall, of Alabama. John C. Box, of Texas. W. Turner Logan, of South Carolina. A. L. Bulwinkle, of North Carolina. Joseph T. Deal, of Virginia. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Albert H. Vestal, of Indiana. John M. Rose, of Pennsylvania. Clifford Ireland, of Illinois. Florian Lampert, of Wisconsin. John Reber, of Pennsylvania. R. Clint Cole, of Ohio. Frank H. Funk, of Illinois. Wm. M. Morgan, of Ohio. Thomas J. Ryan, of New York. Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts. Henry A. Baldwin, of Hawaii. Clay Stone Briggs, of Texas. Lilius B. Rainey, of Alabama. Ladislas Lazaro, of Louisiana. B. G. Lowrey, of Mississippi. J. M. Hooker, of Virginia. Charles L. Abernethy, 6f North Carolina. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. Merrill Moores, of Indiana. | Arthur B. Rouse, of Kentucky. 198 Congressional Directory. District of Columbia. Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania. Loren E. Wheeler, of Illinois. Stuart F'. Reed, of West Virginia. Frederick N. Zihlman, of Maryland. Florian Lampert, of Wisconsin. Anderson H. Walters, of Pennsylvania. Oscar E. Keller, of Minnesota. Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan. Elliott W. Sproul, of Illinois. Charles I. Underhill, of Massachusetts. Warren I. Lee, of New York. Roy G. Fitzgerald, of Ohio. Joseph Brown, of Tennessee. Christopher D. Sullivan, of New York. Thomas I. Blanton, of Texas. Ralph Gilbert, of Kentucky. William C. Hammer, of North Carolina. Charles F. X. O’Brien, of New Jersey. Stanley H. Kunz, of Illinois. Guinn Williams, of Texas. Education. Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio. * Horace M. Towner, of Iowa. Frederick W. Dallinger, of Massachusetts. Albert H. Vestal, of Indiana. Edward J. King, of Illinois. Daniel A. Reed, of New York. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. Adolphus P. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Clarence D. Coughlin, of Pennsylvania. Samuel A. Shelton, of Missouri. Election of President, Vice Presiden William E. Andrews, of Nebraska. Edwin B. Brooks, of Illinois. Hays B. White, of Kansas. = Daniel A. Reed, of New York. T. Frank Appleby, of New J ersey. I. Clinton Kline, of Pennsylvania. Manuel Herrick, of Oklahoma. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts. William B. Bankhead, of Alabama. Charles H. Brand, of Georgia. B. G. Lowrey, of Mississippi. J. M. Hooker, of Virginia. Henry St. George Tucker, of Virginia. t, and Representatives in Congress. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Hampton P. Fulmer, of South Carolina. A. L. Bulwinkle, of North Carolina. T. Alan Goldsborough, of Maryland. Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama. Elections No. 1. Frederick W. Dallinger, of Massachusetts. John M. Rose, of Pennsylvania. William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois. R. Clint Cole, of Ohio. Oscar R. Luhring, of Indiana. Le J C. B. Hudspeth, of Texas. Ralph Gilbert, of Kentucky. A. L. Bulwinkle, of North Carolina. Herbert W. Taylor, of New Jersey. Elections No. 2. Robert Luce, of Massachusetts. John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey. John L. Cable, of Ohio. Henry F. Lawrence, of Missouri. Foor Brown, of Tennessee. Frank Clark, of Florida. Morgan G. Sanders, of Texas. Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana. Elections No. 3. Cassius C. Dowell, of Towa. Carl R. Chindblom, of Illinois. Clarence D. Coughlin, of Pennsylvania. Miner G. Norton, of Ohio. Warren I. Lee, of New York. Martin C. Ansorge, of New York. Zebulon Weaver, of North Carolina. John C. Box, of Texas. W. Turner Logan, of South Carolina. Committees of the House. Enrolled Bills. Edwin D. Ricketts, of Ohio. Marion E. Rhodes, of Missouri. Herbert W. Taylor, of New Jersey. Martin C. Ansorge, of New York. TLadislas Lazaro, of Louisiana. Thomas I.. Blanton, of Texas. John J. McSwain, of South Carolina. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Edward J. King, of Illinois. Allen F. Moore, of Illinois. J. D. Beck, of Wisconsin. Charles L. Faust, of Missouri. Lewis Henry, of New York. Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina. Morgan G. Sanders, of Texas. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Clarence D. Coughlin, of Pennsylvania. Norman J. Gould, of New York. John E. Nelson, of Maine. Roy H. Thorpe, of Nebraska. Winnifred Mason Huck, of Illinois. Henry B. Steagall, of Alabama. Joseph T. Deal, of Virginia. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Aaron S. Kreider, of Pennsylvania. Henry E. Barbour, of California. William Williamson, of South Dakota. Don B. Colton, of Utah. Alice M. Robertson, of Oklahoma. Charles H. Brand, of Georgia. Chester W. Taylor, of Arkansas. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Stuart I. Reed, of West Virginia. William H. Kirkpatrick, of Pennsylvania. Wm. M. Morgan, of Ohio. Harry C. Gahn, of Ohio. Washington J. McCormick, of Montana. Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia. T. Alan Goldsborough, of Maryland. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Anderson H. Walters, of Pennsylvania. Hays B. White, of Kansas. == J. C. Pringey, of Oklahoma. Andrew N. Petersen, of New York. Joseph H. Himes, of Ohio. Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana. Thomas I. Blanton, of Texas. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Teonard S. Echols, of West Virginia. William F. Kopp, of Iowa. Frank H. Funk, of Illinois. John Kissel, of New York. Robert S. Maloney. of Massachusetts. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. Charles L. Abernethy, of North Carolina. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. James P. Glynn, of Connecticut. James W. Dunbar, of Indiana. William O. Atkeson, of Missouri. Albert B. Rossdale, of New York. Expenditures in the Richard N. Elliott, of Indiana. J. Will Taylor, of Tennessee. Lester D. Volk, of New York. Charles L.. Knight, of Ohio. E. Hart Fenn, of Connecticut. Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi. Guinn Williams, of Texas. State Department. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. W. Turner Logan, of South Carolina. 199 i li | 200 Congressional Directory. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Porter H. Dale, of Vermont. William E. Andrews, of Nebraska. William N. Vaile, of Colorado. B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee. James H. MacLafferty, of California. William B. Bankhead, of Alabama. Henry St. George Tucker, of Virginia. Expenditures in the War Department. Royal C. Johnson, of South Dakota. Clarence MacGregor, of New York. Thomas J. Ryan, of New York. Samuel A. Shelton, of Missouri. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts. Edward B. Almon, of Alabama. Ewin L. Davis, of Tennessee. Expenditures on Public Buildings. John S. Benham, of Indiana. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. Martin C. Ansorge, of New York. Elliott W. Sproul, of Illinois. Benjamin L. Rosenbloom, of West Vir- ginia. : William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois. Charles F. Curry, of California. Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota. Stuart F. Reed, of West Virginia. Oscar R. Luhring, of Indiana. Edgar C. Ellis, of Missouri. Roy G. Fitzgerald, of Ohio. Andrew N. Petersen, of New York. John E. Nelson, of Maine Zebulon Weaver, of North Carolina. John R. Tyson, of Alabama. Flood Control. Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi. Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana. Clay Stone Briggs, of Texas. William J. Driver, of Arkansas. Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama. Foreign Affairs. Stephen G. Porter, of Pennsylvania. John Jacob Rogers, of Massachusetts. Henry W. Temple, of Pennsylvania. Ambrose Kennedy, of Rhode Island. Edward E. Browne, of Wisconsin. Merrill Moores, of Indiana. Ernest R. Ackerman, of New Jersey. James T. Begg, of Ohio. Henry Allen Cooper, of Wisconsin. Theodore E. Burton, of Ohio. Benjamin L. Fairchild, of New York. Hamilton Fish, jr., of New York. Theodore W. Hukriede, of Missouri. J. M. C. Smith, of Michigan. Cyrenus Cole, of Towa. | J. Charles Linthicum, of Maryland. Charles M. Stedman, of North Carolina. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. Tom Connally, of Texas. W. Bourke Cockran, of New York. R. Walton Moore, of Virginia. Immigration and Naturalization. Albert Johnson, of Washington. Isaac Siegel, of New York. J. Will Taylor, of Tennessee. John C. Xleczka, of Wisconsin. William N. Vaile, of Colorado. Hays B. White, of Kansas. == Guy L. Shaw, of Illinois. Robert S. Maloney, of Massachusetts. Arthur M. Free, of California. John IL. Cable, of Ohio. Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois. John E. Raker, of California. Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana. John C. Box, of Texas. Lilius B. Rainey, of Alabama. Commuttees of the House. 201 Indian Affairs. Homer P. Snyder, of New York. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. = Royal C. Johnson, of South Dakota. Frederick W. Dallinger, of Massachusetts. R. Clint Cole, of Ohio. John Reber, of Pennsylvania. Alice M. Robertson, of Oklahoma. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. L. M. Gensman, of Oklahoma. Sidney C. Roach, of Missouri. Washington J. McCormick, of Montana. Olger B. Burtness, of North Dakota. Dan A. Sutherland, of Alaska. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. William J. Sears, of Florida. Zebulon Weaver, of North Carolina. F. B. Swank, of Oklahoma. Ross A. Collins, of Mississippi. Hampton P. Fulmer, of South Carolina. Morgan G. Sanders, of Texas. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Oscar E. Bland, of Indiana. Louis W. Fairfield, of Indiana. Clifford Ireland, of Illinois. William J. Burke, of Pennsylvania. Joseph McLaughlin, of Pennsylvania. Thomas J. Ryan, of New York. Manuel Herrick, of Oklahoma. John C. Speaks, of Ohio. Michael J. Hogan, of New York. Robert S. Maloney, of Massachusetts. Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. William C. Lankford, of Georgia. Otis Wingo, of Arkansas. Morgan G. Sanders, of Texas. Joseph T. Deal, of Virginia. F. B. Swank, of Oklahoma. Insular Affairs. Horace M. Towner, of Iowa. Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. James P. Glynn, of Connecticut. Frederick N. Zihlman, of Maryland. Harold Knutson, of Minnesota. Louis W. Fairfield, of Indiana. John C. Kleczka, of Wisconsin. Edgar R. Kiess, of Pennsylvania. Edgar C. Ellis, of Missouri. Herbert W. Taylor, of New Jersey. L. M. Gensman, of Oklahoma. Carroll L. Beedy, of Maine. Lewis Henry, of New York. James H. MacLafferty, of California. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. : Christopher D. Sullivan, of New York. Benjamin G. Humphreys, of Mississippi. Hallett S. Ward, of North Carolina. W. Turner Logan, of South Carolina. Chester W. Taylor, of Arkansas. Clarence W. Turner, of Tennessee. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Samuel E. Winslow, of Massachusetts. James S. Parker, of New York. Burton E. Sweet, of Iowa. Walter R. Stiness, of Rhode Island. John G. Cooper, of Ohio. Edward E. Denison, of Illinois. Everett Sanders, of Indiana. Schuyler Merritt, of Connecticut. J. Stanley Webster, of Washington. Evan J. Jones, of Pennsylvania. Carl E. Mapes, of Michigan. William J. Graham, of Illinois. Sherman E. Burroughs, of New Hamp- shire. Walter H. Newton, of Minnesota. Homer Hoch, of Kansas. — Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky. Sam Rayburn, of Texas. : George Huddleston, of Alabama. Clarence F. Lea, of California. Paul B. Johnson, of Mississippi. Harry B. Hawes, of Missouri. 202 Congressional Directory. Invalid Pensions. Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. Oscar E. Bland, of Indiana. Edwin D. Ricketts, of Ohio. Edward S. Brooks, of Pennsylvania. John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Adam M. Wyant, of Pennsylvania. Albert B. Rossdale, of New York. Martin C. Ansorge, of New York. Roy H. Thorpe, of Nebraska. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Thomas. H. Cullen, of New York. Charles F. X. O’Brien, of New Jersey. Stanley H. Kunz, of Illinois. Clarence W. Turner, of Tennessee. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Addison T. Smith, of Idaho. Nicholas J. Sinnott, of Oregon. Edward C. Little, of Kansas. — John W. Summers, of Washington. Henry E. Barbour, of California. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. William Williamson, of South Dakota. Samuel S. Arentz, of Nevada. Manuel Herrick, of Oklahoma. A. R, Humphrey, of Nebraska. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. C. B. Hudspeth, of Texas. John E. Raker, of California. Homer L. Lyon, of North Carolina. William B. Bankhead, of Alabama. Judiciary. Andrew J. Volstead, of Minnesota. George S. Graham, of Pennsylvania. Leonidas C. Dyer, of Missouri. David G. Classon, of Wisconsin. William D. Boies, of Iowa. Charles A. Christopherson, of South Da- kota. Richard Yates, of Illinois. Wells Goodykoontz, of West Virginia. Ira G. Hersey, of Maine. Walter M. Chandler, of New York. Israel M. Foster, of Ohio. Earl C. Michener, of Michigan. Andrew J. Hickey, of Indiana. Richard E. Bird, of Kansas. « Albert W. Jefferis, of Nebraska. Robert Y. Thomas, jr., of Kentucky. Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas. Andrew J. Montague, of Virginia. James W. Wise, of Georgia. John N. Tillman, of Arkansas. Fred H. Dominick, of South Carolina. Labor. Frederick N. Zihlman, of Maryland. Norman J. Gould, of New York. Oscar E. Bland, of Indiana. William J. Burke, of Pennsylvania William O. Atkeson, of Missouri. J. D. Beck, of Wisconsin. Charles L. Knight, of Ohio. John E. Nelson, of Maine. ‘John Paul, of Virginia. Eugene Black, of Texas. William D. Upshaw, of Georgia. Ross A. Collins, of Mississippi. George K. Favrot, of Louisiana. Meyer London, of New York. Library. Norman J. Gould, of New York. Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio. Robert Luce, of Massachusetts. Frank Park, of Georgia. Ralph Gilbert, of Kentucky. Commuattees of the House. 203 Merchant Marine and Fisheries. William S. Greene, of Massachusetts. George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania. Frank D. Scott, of Michigan. Wallace H. White, jr., of Maine. Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey. Edwin D. Ricketts, of Ohio. Carl R. Chindblom, of Illinois. Nathan D. Perlman, of New York. Benjamin I.. Rosenbloom, of West Vir- ginia. Harry C. Gahn, of Ohio. Arthur M. Free, of California. William H. Kirkpatrick, of Pennsylvania. Michael J. Hogan, of New York. John Paul, of Virginia. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. Ladislas Lazaro, of Louisiana. William B. Bankhead, of Alabama. Ewin L. Davis, of Tennessee. Thomas H. Cullen, of New York. Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia. Clay Stone Briggs, of Texas. Mileage. John Reber, of Pennsylvania. Samuel S. Arentz, of Nevada. John C. Speaks, of Ohio. Military Julius Kahn, of California... John C. McKenzie, of Illinois. Frank L. Greene, of Vermont. John M. Morin, of Pennsylvania. Harry E. Hull, of Towa. W. Frank James, of Michigan. Charles C. Kearns, of Ohio. John F. Miller, of Washington. Richard Wayne Parker, of New Jersey. Frank Crowther, of New York. Harry C. Ransley, of Pennsylvania. John Philip Hill, of Maryland. Harry M. Wurzbach, of Texas. Louis A. Frothingham, of Massachusetts. Thomas S. Crago, of Pennsylvania. Henry A. Baldwin, of Hawaii. Stanley H. Kunz, of Illinois. George K. Favrot, of Louisiana. Affairs. William J. Fields, of Kentucky Percy E. Quin, of Mississippi. Hubert F. Fisher, of Tennessee. William C. Wright, of Georgia. Philip H. Stoll, of South Carolina. Daniel E. Garrett, of Texas. Mines and Mining. Marion E. Rhodes, of Missouri. Leonard S. Echols, of West Virginia. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. Edwin B. Brooks, of Illinois. Oscar R. Luhring, of Indiana. Samuel S. Arentz, of Nevada. William Williamson, of South Dakota. Don B. Colton, of Utah. James H. MacLafferty, of California. Dan A. Sutherland, of Alaska. Otis Wingo, of Arkansas. Lilius B. Rainey, of Alabama. George K. Favrot, of Louisiana. F. B. Swank, of Oklahoma. Meyer London, of New York. { { | f | 204 Congressional Directory. Naval Affairs. Thomas S. Butler, of Pennsylvania. Fred A. Britten, of Illinois. Sydney E. Mudd, of Maryland. Frederick C. Hicks, of New York. Clifton N. McArthur, of Oregon. George P. Darrow, of Pennsylvania. Milton Kraus, of Indiana. A. E. B. Stephens, of Ohio. Isaac V. McPherson, of Missouri. Clark Burdick, of Rhode Island. Francis F. Patterson, jr., of New Jersey. Ardolph L. Kline, of New York. Philip D. Swing, of California. George P. Codd, of Michigan. A. Piatt Andrew, of Massachusetts. Daniel J. Riordan, of New York. Carl Vinson, of Georgia. James V. McClintic, of Oklahoma. Herbert J. Drane, of Florida. James O’Connor, of Louisiana. Patrick H. Drewry, of Virginia. Patents. Florian Lampert, of Wisconsin. Albert H. Vestal, of Indiana. William J. Burke, of Pennsylvania. Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey. Samuel A. Shelton, of Missouri. Andrew N. Petersen, of New York. Joseph Brown, of Tennessee. Joseph H. Himes, of Ohio. Carroll L. Beedy, of Maine. Ewin L. Davis, of Tennessee. Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia. Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. William C. Hammer, of North Carolina. Guinn Williams, of Texas. Pensions. Harold Knutson, of Minnesota. Anderson H. Walters, of Pennsylvania. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. R. Clint Cole, of Ohio. Guy L. Shaw, of Illinois. Thomas J. Ryan, of New York. J. C. Pringey, of Oklahoma. William F. Kopp, of Towa. Lon A. Scott, of Tennessee. William D. Upshaw, of Georgia. William C. Hammer, of North Carolina. John J. McSwain, of South Carolina. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. Joseph T. Deal, of Virginia. Post Office and Post Roads. Halvor Steenerson, of Minnesota. W. W. Griest, of Pennsylvania. Calvin D. Paige, of Massachusetts. Harry C. Woodyard, of West Virginia. C. William Ramseyer, of Iowa. Archie D. Sanders, of New York. Samuel A. Kendall, of Pennsylvania. Guy U. Hardy, of Colorado. C. Ellis Moore, of Ohio. M. Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania. John C. Ketcham, of Michigan. Roscoe C. Patterson, of Missouri. Archibald E. Olpp, of New Jersey. John J. Gorham, of Illinois. Dan A. Sutherland, of Alaska. Thomas M. Bell, of Georgia. Arthur B. Rouse, of Kentucky. James M. Mead, of New York. John H. Smithwick, of Florida. William B. Bowling, of Alabama. James P. Woods, of Virginia. Printing. Edgar R. Kiess, of Pennsylvania. Albert Johnson, of Washington. William F. Stevenson, of South Carolina. ~ Committees of the House. 205 Public Buildings and Grounds. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. Thomas B. Dunn, of New York. Aaron S. Kreider, of Pennsylvania. Richard N. Elliott, of Indiana. William E. Andrews, of Nebraska. Edwin B. Brooks, of Illinois. J. Will Taylor, of Tennessee. Daniel A. Reed, of New York. Carl R. Chindblom, of Illinois. William F. Kopp, of Iowa. Harris J. Bixler, of Pennsylvania. Miner G. Norton, of Ohio. J. C. Pringey, of Oklahoma. Public Nicholas J. Sinnott, of Oregon. Addison T. Smith, of Idaho. Hays B. White, of Kansas. = William N. Vaile, of Colorado. Henry E: Barbour, of California. John S. Benham, of Indiana. John W. Summers, of Washington. Don B. Colton, of Utah. Olger B. Burtness, of North Dakota. W. M. Morgan, of Ohio. Lon A. Scott, of Tennessee. - Washington y. McCormick, of Montana. Charles L. Faust, of Missouri. Dan A. Sutherland, of Alaska. Frank Clark, of Florida. James C. Cantrill, of Kentucky. Frank Park, of Georgia. William W. Rucker, of Missouri. Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas. George K. Favrot, of Louisiana. Homer L. Lyon, of North Carolina. Lands. John E. Raker, of California. Carl Hayden, of Arizona. Robert L. Doughton, of North Caroline William W. Larsen, of Georgia. William J. Driver, of Arkansas. Ross A. Collins, of Mississippi. Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama. Railways and Canals. Loren E. Wheeler, of Illinois. John S. Benham, of Indiana. Oscar E. Keller, of Minnesota. Nathan D. Perlman, of New York. Harris J. Bixler, of Pennsylvania. Warren I. Lee, of New York. J. D. Beck, of Wisconsin. Elliott W. Sproul, of Illinois. John C. Speaks, of Ohio. Thomas H. Cullen, of New York. William C. Lankford, of Georgia. Hallett S. Ward, of North Carolina. J. M. Hooker, of Virginia. Henry St. George Tucker, of Virginia. Reform in the Civil Service. Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey. Louis W. Fairfield, of Indiana. Addison T. Smith, of Idaho. Martin C. Ansorge, of New York. Frank H. Funk, of Illinois. Joseph H. Himes, of Ohio. I. Clinton Kline, ‘of Pennsylvania. B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee. Winnifred Mason Huck, of Illinois. Eugene Black, of Texas. Homer L. Lyon, of North Carolina. Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama. > Meyer London, of New York. Revision of the Laws. Edward C. Little, of Kansas. Charles E. Fuller, of Illinois. Isaac Siegel, of New York. William H. Kirkpatrick, of Pennsylvania. Adam M. Wyant, of Pennsylvania. Herbert W. Taylor, of New Jersey. Benjamin L. Rosenbloom, of West Vir- ginia. Roy G. Fitzgerald, of Ohio. Rufus Hardy, of Texas. A. L. Bulwinkle, of North Carolina. John R. Tyson, of Alabama. John N. Sandlin, of Louisiana. Henry St. George Tucker, of Virginia. 206 Congressional Directory. Rivers and Harbors. S. Wallace Dempsey, of New York. Richard P. Freeman, of Connecticut. Nathan L. Strong, of Pennsylvania. Amos H. Radcliffe, of New Jersey. Caleb R. Layton, of Delaware. Cleveland A. Newton, of Missouri. Albert A. Blakeney, of Maryland. James J. Connolly, of Pennsylvania. Oscar J. Larson, of Minnesota. M. Alfred Michaelson, of Illinois. William W. Chalmers, of Ohio. Charles G. Bond, of New York. Wynne F. Clouse, of Tennessee. Vincent M. Brennan, of Michigan. Walter F. Lineberger, of California. Thomas B. Dunn, of New York. Cassius C. Dowell, of Iowa. John M. Rose, of Pennsylvania. John S. Benham, of Indiana. John M. Robsion, of Kentucky. John W. Summers, of Washington. John M. Nelson, of Wisconsin. Joseph McLaughlin, of Pennsylvania. Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan. B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee. John L. Cable, of Ohio. Allen F. Moore, of Illinois. John Kissel, of New York. William O. Atkeson, of Missouri. Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. « Bertrand H. Snell, of New York. William A. Rodenberg, of Illinois. Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio. Aaron 8S. Kreider, of Pennsylvania. Porter H. Dale, of Vermont. Royal C. Johnson, of South Dakota. Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota. H. Garland Dupré, of Louisiana. James W. Overstreet, of Georgia. Joseph J. Mansfield, of Texas. | John McDuffie, of Alabama. John J. Kindred, of New York. Tilman B. Parks, of Arkansas. Roads. Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina. Edward B. Almon, of Alabama. William W. Larsen, of Georgia. William J. Sears, of Florida. C. B. Hudspeth, of Texas. John N. Sandlin, of Louisiana. Hallett S. Ward, of North Carolina. Rules. Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina. Finis J. Garrett, of Tennessee. James C. Cantrill, of Kentucky. Daniel J. Riordan, of New York. Territories. Charles F. Curry, of California. Albert Johnson, of Washington. Cassius C. Dowell, of Iowa. Louis T. McFadden, of Pennsylvania. Edward S. Brooks, of Pennsylvania. James G. Strong, of Kansas. & Joseph McLaughlin, of Pennsylvania. Allen F. Moore, of 1llinois. Charles L. Knight, of Ohio. Albert B. Rossdale, of New York. Roy H. Thorpe, of Nebraska. Dan A. Sutherland, of Alaska. Henry A. Baldwin, of Hawaii. Zebulon Weaver, of North Carolina. William C. Lankford, of Georgia. Edward B. Almon, of Alabama. John E. Rankin, of Mississippi. William J. Driver, of Arkansas. : Charles L. Abernethy, of North Carolina. Commuttees of the House. 207 War Claims. Bertrand H. Snell, of New York. Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania. Stuart F. Reed, of West Virginia. James G. Strong, of Kansas. a Daniel A. Reed, of New York. John C. Kleczka, of Wisconsin. Lon A. Scott, of Tennessee. Sidney C. Roach, of Missouri. I. Clinton Kline, of Pennsylvania. Harry C. Gahn, of Ohio. Frank Clark, of Florida. John J. McSwain, of South Carolina. John N. Sandlin, of Louisiana. Charles F. X. O’Brien, of New Jersey. B. G. Lowrey, of Mississippi. Ways and Means. Joseph W. Fordney, of Michigan. William R. Green, of Iowa. Nicholas Longworth, of Ohio. Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon. Allen T. Treadway, of Massachusetts. Ira C. Copley, of Illinois. Luther W. Mott, of New York. George M. Young, of North Dakota. James A. Frear, of Wisconsin. John Q. Tilson, of Connecticut. Isaac Bacharach, of New Jersey. Lindley H. Hadley, of Washington. Charles B. Timberlake, of Colorado. George M. Bowers, of West Virginia. Henry W. Watson, of Pennsylvania. Thomas A. Chandler, of Oklahoma. Ogden L. Mills, of New York. Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina. John N. Garner, of Texas. James W. Collier, of Mississippi. William A. Oldfield, of Arkansas. Charles R. Crisp, of Georgia. John F. Carew, of New York. Whitmell P. Martin, of Louisiana. Peter F. Tague, of Massachusetts. Woman Suffrage. Wallace H. White, jr., of Maine. George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania. John W. Langley, of Kentucky. Guy L. Shaw, of Illinois. Alice M. Robertson, of Oklahoma. Harris J. Bixler, of Pennsylvania. Albert B. Rossdale, of New York. Winnifred Mason Huck, of Illinois. John E. Raker, of California. Frank Clark, of Florida. | Christopher D. Sullivan, of New York. Thomas L. Blanton, of Texas. Chester W. Taylor, of Arkansas. SPECIAL AND SELECT COMMITTEES. | Budget (Select Committee on the). Philip P. Campbell, of Kansas. Martin B. Madden, of Illinois. Willis C. Hawley, of Oregon. Henry W. Temple, of Pennsylvania. George Holden Tinkham, of Massa- | chusetts. Fred S. Purnell, of Indiana. Joseph W. Byrns, of Tennessee. Claude Kitchin, of North Carolina. John N. Garner, of Texas. Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado. William B. Bankhead, of Alabama. Select Committee to Investigate Grover Cleveland Bergdoll. Clifton N. McArthur, of Oregon. Oscar R. Luhring, of Indiana. Ben Johnson, of Kentucky. 208 Congressional Directory. ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES AND DELEGATES TO COMMITTEES. | | ABERNETHY ....ececeue.......Coinage, Weights, and Measures. | | Expenditures in the Navy Department. Territories. ACKERMAN... sonsasesaniwnaionss Foreign Affairs. ALMON:. ners ona nriierins Expenditures in the War Department. | Roads. | | : Territories. | ANDERSON. L J i delve Appropriations. i ANDREW of Massachusetts..... Naval Affairs. ANDREWS of Nebraska......... Election of President, Vice President, and Represent« atives in Congress, chairman. | Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Public Buildings and Grounds. ANBORAE cv vsannsenenaesss ss Tlections No. 3. Enrolled Bills. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Invalid Pensions. Reform in the Civil Service. ANTHONY... ssanesasionansnss Appropriations. | FO EI Neen Aha RE a Banking and Currency. 3 Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. | ARENTZ, cri erbnsnsennsis vidas Irrigation of Arid Lands. | Mileage. I Mines and Mining. ASWELL. oe. ir cicrevseniinana Agriculture. ATRESON. ooo evens oe inne Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Labor. Roads. BACHARACH... visi csaiceas iv Ways and Means. BALDWIN. .... acto veseeesines Agriculture. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Military Affairs. Territories. BANKHPAD.«.o. nn iisinnisnnss Budget (Select). Education. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BARBOUR... .....cou- ge ak a Census. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Public Lands. | Bangiey.... on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. | IP BECR....c. ii Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Labor. Railways and Canals. House Commattee Assignments. 209 BEY. en EY Census. Insular Affairs. Patents. Bede. eae Foreign Affairs. Beth... o.oo... ...... Post Office and Post Roads. Beweam............. 0. a Expenditures on Public Buildings, chairman. Public Lands. Railways and Canals. Roads. Bmp in cana anm adn Judiciary. BITTE. cies ns Public Buildings and Grounds. Railways and Canals. Woman Suffrage. Brad i a eens Banking and Currency. Labor. Reform in the Civil Service. BLAREREY. ican Rivers and Harbors. Biamp of Indiama........-..-.. Industrial Arts and Expositions, chairman. Invalid Pensions. Labor. BraNDp of Virginia............. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. | Merchant Marine and Fisheries. | Patents. BLANTON. ieee eee District of Columbia. i Enrolled Bills. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Woman Suffrage. Borussia i Relics Judiciary. BOND... oie ATTEN Rivers and Harbors. BOWERS....... a Ee Se Ways and Means. BOWING. c2.. roots Post Office and Post Roads. | Box. ices divin iin Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. | Claims. Elections No. 3. Immigration and Naturalization. BRAND cia seve ave 0B IEA Banking and Currency. Education. Expenditures in the Interior Department. BRENNAN... Jove oasis Rivers and Harbors. BRIGGS, oo rues ree Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Flood Control. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BRIT EN... Tem eanan Naval Affairs. Baooxsof inows:.........--. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- | atives in Congress. | Mines and Mining. Public Buildings and Grounds. 24786°—67—4—2p ED 15 210 Congressional Directory. Brooks of Pennsylvania....... Banking and Currency. Invalid Pensions. Territories. Brown of Tennessee........... District of Corumbia. Elections No. 2. Patents. BrowNE of Wisconsin......... Foreign’ Affairs. BUCHANAN... cocoa cans Appropriations. BULWINKLE. ci canscinecave.waaOlaimg. Election o: President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Elections No. 1. Revision of the Laws. BurDIOR.......coneainn he. - Naval Affairs. BUBREE. ... aiee Industrial Arts and Expositions. Labor. Patents. BURROUGHS. ..-..covnrnvanss- Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BD URTNESS. ots asrsrovsisie an Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Indian Affairs. Public Lands. BURION.............5emaded db Foreign Affairs. BUTLER... ives sos ssa sin Naval Affairs, chairman, ByrNEs of South Carolina. ..... Appropriations. Byrn~s of Tennessee............ Appropriations. Budget (Select). CaABLY. .....:.... avon hs Elections No. 2. Immigration and Naturalization. Roads. CavpBELL of Kansas........... Rules, chairman. Budget (Select). Indian Affairs. CAMPBELL of Ponneglvania as H CANNON ....c.uvoninsiivsisonivss Appropriations. CANTBIML. :. cova onnna sn rsds Public Buildings and Grounds. Rules. CArEw........-... aba Ways and Means. GARTER... .. et Appropriations. CHATMERS. ...cvuvunsvnicsvv vw Rivers and Harbors. CHANDLER of New York........ Judiciary. CHANDLER of Oklahoma........ Ways and Means. CHINDBIOM.......... ccc... o- Elections No. 3. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Public Buildings and Grounds. House Committee Assignments. 211 CHRISTOPHERSON...............Judiciary. ! Criaus............ raat Agriculture. CragrofFlorida... .......5.. Elections No. 2. | Public Buildings and Grounds. i War Claims. Woman Suffrage. CLARKE of New York........... Agriculture. CLASSON.... ..... oo... . Judiciary. CLOUSE.......xv0vv2s2n---.-... Rivers and Harbors. | COORIAN. oc. siti Foreign Affairs. CODD. .....-. -. PEE ae Naval Affairs. Core of Towa................. Foreign Affairs. Cormof Olio... ....:os. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 1. Indian Affairs. Pensions. COLIIRR..... cssisiovsvvesinn Ways and Means. CLITA. nev acannnenssnsass -InAlan Allaire. Labor. Public Lands. COLTON acronis iincnnns shuns Expenditures in the Interior Department. Mines and Mining. Public Lands. CONNALLY of TeXa8........e.... Foreign Affairs. ComNoLLY of Pennsylvania. . . . Rivers and Harbors. Coorzr of Ohip.............-. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Cooper of Wisconsin. . ........ Foreign Affairs. COPLEY. ..c..creevossnrsnnansn Ways and Means. COUGHLIN... corrosion Expenditures in the Department of Commerce, chair- Baekion, Elections No, 3. CRABOD .cvuvunnss ns nme saan Military Affairs, CRAMTON. seasons vas nL Appropriations. CRISP... ciceicnnns nian ones Ways and Means. CROWTHER... -- =~ sei sista Military Affairs. CULLEN. convo cnnnnor nmin Invalid Pensions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries, Railways and Canals. 212 Congressional Directory. CUBBY. = i ies Territories, chairman. Flood Control. STN A Tr tee rhe bl Expenditures in the Treasury Department, chairman. Banking and Currency. I Rules. | DALIINGERL oes ves os siinnn Elections No. 1, chairman. Education. Indian Affairs. DABROW...... oan Naval Affairs. Pavey... a Davis of Minnesota... ... ........ Appropriations. Davis of Tennessee... .......... Expenditures in the War Department. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. | Patents. 2 DEAT i ea Accounts. Claims. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. i Industrial Arts and Expositions. | Pensions. | DevesEyY... oo... ieive nian Rivers and Harbors, chairman. | DENISON... nah arene Interstate and Foreign Commerce. | PE VEYBA....icvnrirs cen i DICKINSON .-.. i osuiis-visnnnn-n Appropriations. DOMINICE.....- -ns0-s---------- Judiciary, DOUGHTON.......ccuuez-....... Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Public Lands. Roads. DOWELL... ...e.cuueerene=-=..-. Elections No. 3, chairman. Roads. Territories. | DRANE....o.h. seen Naval Affairs. i PDREWRY ©... i... ia Naval Affairs. Beer... vi. are Flood Control. Public Lands. Territories. DUNBAR... ci ev. iene Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Pony. Roads, chairman. Public Buildings and Grounds. | BUPRE.....: occasion iis .. Rivers and Harbors. | DYER... iar Judiciary. | ECHOLS. s.r cocnesaei arenes Expenditures in the Navy Department, chairman. Banking and Currency. Mines and Mining. House Commattee Assignments. 218 \ EovonNps........ i. 00 dE Claims, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Woman Suffrage. Brymonr...... oa Expenditures in the State Department, chairman. Public Buildings and Grounds. RAR re a Cee ERE Claims. Flood Control. Insular Affairs. EVANS... ns aes Appropriations. BATCH... aeons Foreign Affairs. PATRMEBED. oa. onde Census. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Insular Affairs. Reform in the Civil Service. HH i Res Sl Se Se me a Census. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Public Lands. PAYROT. .. cesarean abot Mileage. Mines and Mining. Public Buildings and Grounds. / FENN... o.ece niin one - «- Donkine'and Currency. Expenditures in the State Department. Bess. Education, chairman. Library. Rules. PImIDs... cian rvnesices = 5+ oo Military Affairs, 107 ati Sa eC RE Foreign Affairs. TEE BE PR Military Affairs. PrZGuERAID. aia District of Columbia. Flood Control. Revision of the Laws. Foone.. oie cis District of Columbia, chairman. War Claims. BORDNEY i. ai aden Ways and Means, chairman. PORTER. auin- i usaniniian Judiciary. BORAR. oie a Ways and Means. FREE. o.oo BE Immigration and Naturalization. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. FrEpwAN. io Usage Rivers and Harbors. PRENGY. i ies Appropriations. FROTHINGHAM....... Nien Military Affairs. 214 Congressional Directory. BULLER... itera Invalid Pensions, chairman. Insular Affairs. Revision of the Laws. POIMER. od. sire ninnth sont Accounts. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Indian Affairs. BONE. ita bas Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Reform in the Civil Service. GABALDON.... . cisaisneis An. ee Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. War Claims. GALIAVAR ..........o.. 000 Appropriations. GAINED rns Budget (Select). Ways and Means. GARRETT of Tennessee.......... Acting Minority Floor Leader. Insular Affairs. Rules. GarrErT of Texas. ... chau. Military Affairs. GENSWAN. ©... es Indian Affairs. Insular Affairs. GUBNEERD.. ii Agriculture. Qreronnt .Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the War Department. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. GBR... i. District of Columbia. Elections No. 1. Library. GILLETT: ii eas ens GINN sinc mes sens Expenditures in the Post Office Department, chair- man. Census. Claims. Insular Affairs. GOLDSBOROUGH. ...cuuueneannn Banking and Currency. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. GOODYEOONTZ == renee a- Judiciary. GORMAN. .;..50. so anbariingg Post Office and Post Roads. BOUT. sens hms aes Library, chairman. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Labor. GrAHAM of Illinois. ............ Interstate and Foreign Commerce. GramaMm of Pennsylvania. ..... Judiciary. House Committee Assignments. . 215 GreENof Town... oo ooreennnos Ways and Means. GREENE of Massachusetts. . .... Merchant Marine and Fisheries, chairman. GREENE of Vermont............ Military Affairs. CuIner.. iy. sPost Office and Post Roads. GRIP... oa Appropriations. HADLEY: ee oe Ways and Means. Hawmen..........oc- ooo: District of Columbia. Patents. Pensions. Hanoy of Colorado... ...-. 5.3 Post Office and Post Roads. Hanoy of Texas. . ov sxsnice sis Expenditures in the Navy Department. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Revision of the Laws. HAUGEN. .5 oo een ts Agriculture, chairman. HAWES... .... a Interstate and Foreign Commerce. HawilEY.. ..... :-......:- 5 Budget (Select). Ways and Means. HAYDEN a Indian Affairs. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Public Lands. LE edn SS Se al ie 0 Ty Agriculture. BENRY ors un ae Claims. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Insular Affairs. HeRBIoR. reir resesrrnns Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Irrigation of Arid Lands. HERSEY. o..... Th Judiciary. Hiorey.. ie nes Judiciary. Hices con Sei Naval Affairs. Huy... oh a Military Affairs. HIMES. ves iran Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Patents. Reform in the Civil Service. Hoole ois Interstate and Foreign Commerce. HOGAN........ceeeeeeeenn...... Industrial Arts and Expositions. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. HOOKER........ucuu..........Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Education. Railways and Canals. es ee i { i il 216 Congressional Directory. HUCK .ccceiveeecieaaann...... Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Reform in the Civil Service. Woman Suffrage. HUDDLESTON....c.cccc.........Interstate and Foreign Commerce. HUDSeRTH.. oi. Elections No. 1. Irrigation of Arid Lands. ! Roads. Boxwwien.: oa Foreign Affairs. | Hur... «o.oo Military Affairs. HumpaREY of Nebraska... .... Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Claims. Irrigation of Arid Lands. HuuvrHREYS 0of Mississippi... .. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Flood Control. Insular Affairs. Husrep.......oi.......--...... Appropriations. HyrlomNsoN...........-...J:- Appropriations. InetAND..-..- 0 Accounts, chairman. Claims. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Industrial Arts and Expositions. JACOWAY...........0naii. oo. . Agriculiure. Jammy... Military Affairs. JEFFERIS of Nebragka.......... Judiciary. JEFFERS of Alabama ........... Election of President, Vice President, and Represent atives in Congress. Flood Control. Public Lands. Reform in the Civil Service. JornsoN of Kentucky.......... Appropriations. Bergdoll Investigation (Select). JornsoN of Mississippi......... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. JomnsoN of South Dakota...... Expenditures in the War Department, chairman. Indian Affairs. Rules. JornsoN of Washington........ Immigration and Naturalization, chairman. Printing. Territories. Jones of Pennsylvania......... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. JoneEsof Toxans. iol. Agriculture. Rann... ...........2880cdil) Military Affairs, chairman. KEABNS............. aus Military Affairs, Kenien................. «2 Claima, District of Columbia. Railways and Canals. KrLLEY of Michigan........... Appropriations. House Committee Assignments. 217 t KELLY of Pennsylvania......... Post Office and Post Roads. | KENDALL.......................Post Office and Post Roads. KenweEnY...... 0 Foreign Affairs. RETomAW... Post Office and Post Roads. Reese. 2. oo Printing, chairman. Insular Affairs. KINCHELOB..................... Agriculture. Bmwowven............. re Rivers and Harbors. RING... ie ea spondimics in the Department of Agriculture, chairman. Banking and Currency. Education. RIREPAYRICK................ Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Revision of the Laws. i Kmsser.............2 0% nn Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Roads. RrcmiN..........2 2 Jin 8 Minority Floor Leader. Budget (Select). Ways and Means. | RIBQZEA ive onn iin 8 Immigration and Naturalization. hi Insular Affairs. 0 War Claims. 1 Kring of New York... ........ Naval Affairs. i Kune of Pennsylvania......... Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Reform in the Civil Service. War Claims. 48H ES UE el Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. | Expenditures in the State Department. | Labor. i Territories. : : | KNUTSON... ce cvainisenines Pensions, chairman. ] | Insular Affairs. | BOPP...v daeibnni sand Expenditures in the Navy Department. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. District of Columbia. BRAUSS Lo on Naval Affairs. j REBIDER. cera ..Expenditures in the Interior Department, chairman. Public Buildings and Grounds. | Rules. A RuNzii... ee cee District of Columbia. | Invalid Pensions. i Mileage. g I i TAMPERT. ae Patents, chairman. | Congressional Directory. esac sscensssssansee sa Lea of California LEATHERWOOD LEE of Georgia LEeE of New York REI BACH ie ooh vir mnstuimt esssesscacsssssssnsocnsnoeoe I | | i 4s ssssssmssasacnssseco en assrscssseassssnsasa ass sss ssesssacsanannac _ rr sss cscsssenes cocoa -anean Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman, Census. Invalid Pensions. Woman Suffrage. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Patents. Public Buildings and Grounds. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Railways and Canals. Territories. Census. Public Lands. Roads. Rivers and Harbors. Banking and Currency. Elections No. 2. Rivers and Harbors. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Enrolled Bills. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Indian Affairs. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Appropriations. District of Columbia. Elections No. 3. Railways and Canals. Reform in the Civil Service, chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. ‘Rivers and Harbors. Foreign Affairs. Revision of the Laws, chairman. Claims. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Claims. Elections No. 3. Expenditures in the State Department. Insular Affairs. Labor. Mines and Mining. Reform in the Civil Service. Ways and Means. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Education. War Claims. Elections No. 2, chairman. Banking and Currency. Library. House Committee Assignments. LURRING a McARTHUR MoCHINTIC ST rere McCormick McKENZIE McLaveHLIN of Michigan McLAvcHLIN of Nebraska, McLAveHLIN of Pennsylvania. . McPHERSON McocSwaIN esesccacecscssscsssssee es MicHAELSON / MiceEENER -Bergdoll Investigation (Select). Judiciary. 219 Elections No. 1. Flood Control. Mines and Mining. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Public Buildings and Grounds. Reform in the Civil Service. Bergdoll Investigation (Select). Naval Affairs. Naval Affairs. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Indian Affairs. Public Lands. Rivers and Harbors. Banking and Currency, chairman. Territories. Military Affairs. Agriculture. Agriculture. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Roads. Territories. Naval Affairs. Census. Enrolled Bills. Pensions. War Claims. Accounts. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the War Department. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Insular Affairs. Mines and Mining. Appropriations, chairman. Budget (Select). Appropriations. Expenditures in the Navy Department. Immigration and Naturalization. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Rivers and Harbors. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Ways and Means. : Post Office and Post Roads. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Rivers and Harbors. 220 Congressional Directory. MuiER.......... 00 Ls Military Affairs. Mus... nai Ways and Means. MONDE... ideas .- Majority Floor Leader. MONTAGUE. .....cueusns saiseasth Judiciary. Moogre of Illinois. . . .......... Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. i Moore oiOhio: .... ........-- Post Office and Post Roads. Moore of Virginia... .......... Foreign Affairs. Moores of Indiana. . . ........Disposition of Useless Executive Papers, chairman. Foreign Affairs. MoRgan.........0c.ccoca en. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the Department of Justice. Public Lands. MORIN... ine tina Military Affairs. MoTri:. ee Ways and Means. MUDD... ans Naval Affairs. Muremy,. oo. oan Appropriations. Newson, AP. (Wis)... .-..... Accounts. Banking and Currency. Education. Newson, J.B. (Me.).........= Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Flood Control. ; Labor. > NELSON, J. M. (Wis.)eeounnn... Elections No. 2. Invalid Pensions. Roads. Newton of Minnesota.......... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. - Newton of Missouri.........-.. Rivers and Harbors. NortoN. ...0. i. lester Accounts. Elections No. 3. Public Buildings and Grounds. OBEN. a ise District of Columbia. Invalid Pensions. War Claims. OQ CONNOR ores vans Naval Affairs. QapEN. ..; = ant *...Appropriations. CIDER. incites os Ways and Means. House Commallee Assignments. Ouver. rr Appropriations. Ih er Ret ee ES Post Office and Post Roads. OSBORNE: «iii nn en iia Appropriations. OVERSTREET. .ccneee coccinea Rivers and Harbors. Paige Te. Post Office and Post Roads. Par oi Georgia... ..........-. Accounts. Library lg Buildings and Grounds. PARKER of New Jersey......... Military Affairs. PARKER of New York.......... Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Pars of Arkansas...........-. Rivers and Harbors. PATTERSON of Missouri......... Post Office and Post Roads. ParreErsoN of New Jersey... ... Naval Affairs. Pavr ro Labor. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. PERKING. 7. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 2. Patents PERIMAN. i ie Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Railways and Canals. PRTERSEN. cies vinnie on Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Flood Control. Patents. PORTER... tei Foreign Affairs, chairman. Pou... ..Juuiageil sorniake Rules. PRINGEY.. ets ins Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. DURBNBIL. artes Agriculture. Budget (Select). QUIN. otras sve StS Military Affairs. RADGUIFPE. =... eeoecooea Rivers and Harbors. RAINEY of Alabama............. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Immigration and Naturalization. Mines and Mining. Bawney ol Wines... ov. os Agriculture. Rager......o-c. 0... nos Immigration and Naturalization. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Public Lands. Woman Suffrage. 221 299 Congressional Directory. BAMSEYHR..... 0... Post Office and Post Roads. RANKIN. =. oh Census. Pensions. Territories. BANSUEY.......o. tenis Military Affairs. RAY BURN. oi. aeons ions Interstate and Foreign Commerce. BEBER.....0i 00 ments. eS Mileage, chairman. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Indian Affairs. RERCE es. eens Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Reform in the Civil Service. Roads. REED of New York.............Education. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Public Buildings and Grounds. War Claims. REED of West Virginia..........Expendituresin the Department of Justice, chairman. District of Columbia. Flood Control. War Claims. BHODES........ car ssssinhe Mines and Mining, chairman. Enrolled Bills. BICKEMS.........c0cunsrsresst Enrolled Bills, chairman. Li Invalid Pensions. : Merchant Marine and Fisheries. BIDDICE. .....00-voncssroonang Agriculture. RIORDAN. CUS. J 0 mel. Naval Affairs. Rules. BOACH. ee vaiseis as Indian Affairs. War Claims. ROBERTSON. . -....ccvivse evois Expenditures in the Interior Department. Indian Affairs. Woman Suffrage. ROBSION .. ....... cealaaiiid. Education. Mines and Mining. Pensions. Roads. ROBENBERG. ./. .ceanounnsrines Flood Control, chairman. Elections No. 1. Rules. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Elections No. 1. Roads. BOSENBLOOM. ..crsvvsvesvssi Expenditures on Public Buildings. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Revision of the Laws. RoesspaTm. aa SANDLIN House Committee Assignments. 223 EE I SOTA TG. cod eesrconsbnescnes Scott of Scott of Michigan... wesivsehs os Tennesse€..ceeeeen.... INO AR. a ieee SINNOTT .Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Invalid Pensions. Territories. Woman Suffrage. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers. Post Office and Post Roads. Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Expenditures in the State Department. Invalid Pensions. Public Buildings and Grounds. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. Expenditures in the War Department. Industrial Arts and Expositions. ; Pensions. Foreign Affairs. Immigration and Naturalization, Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Post Office and Post Roads. Census. Elections No. 2. Expenditures in the Department of Agriculture. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Indian Affairs. Census. Revision of the Laws. Roads. War Claims. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic, chairman. Flood Control. Rules. Banking and Currency. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Pensions. Public Lands. War Claims. Indian Affairs. Roads. Immigration and Naturalization. Pensions. Woman Suffrage. Education. Expenditures in the War Department. Patents. Appropriations. Census, chairman. Immigration and Naturalization. Revision of the Laws. Agriculture. Public Lands, chairman. Irrigation of Arid Lands. 224 Congressional Directory. Stsgon. iol sms indion Appropriations. | BLEMP. 80.0. vuoi Appropriations. : 0 | Sra of Idaho: .........- Irrigation of Arid Lands, chairman. Public Lands. Reform in the Civil Service. 1 SurtH of Michigan............. Foreign Affairs. I Swrrawier. ol A aus Post Office and Post Roads. | SNELL... no ERNE, War Claims, chairman. | Rules. SNYDER, un Tn Indian Affairs, chairman. i SPRARS. Claims. 1 Industrial Arts and Expositions. Mileage. Railways and Canals. SPBODN...... ei District of Columbia. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Railways and Canals. STAPFORD.........or--- «oso: Appropriations. Sr EAGALY. earn Banking and Currency. Claims. Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. STEDMAN.......ciiiiiaannn Foreign Affairs. STEUNERSON... ii Post Office and Post Roads, chairman. STEPHENS... civ vet weir Naval Affairs. STEVENSON. ......cnneiie saves Banking and Currency. Printing. STNESe. Interstate and Foreign Commerce. STOLL... a aa Military Affairs. StroNG of Kansas. ............ Banking and Currency. Territories. War Claims. Strong of Pennsylvania........ Rivers and Harbors. SULLIVAN... oo a District of Columbia. Insular Affairs. Woman Suffrage. SumMERs of Washington. ...... Irrigation of Arid Lands. 1 Public Lands. Roads. SumNERrs of Texas............. Judiciary. SUTHERLAND. .......0...hio 0. Indian Affairs. Mines and Mining. Post Office and Post Roads. Public Lands. Territories. House Committee Assignments. 225 BWARK. i... ae Indian Affairs. Industrial Arts and Expositions. Mines and Mining. SwEr. Co RT Interstate and Foreign Commerce. SWING... Naval Affairs. PaQUE.....cv. viens Ways and Means. Tavior of Arkansas. ........... Accounts. Expenditures in the Interior Department. Insular Affairs. Woman Suffrage. - Tayror of Colorado. ............ Appropriations. Budget (Select). TayLor of New Jersey......... Elections No. 1. Enrolled Bills. Insular Affairs. Revision of the Laws. TavLor of Tennessee. ......... Expenditures in the State Department. Immigration and Naturalization. Public Buildings and Grounds. RP OMPLE., ciara anaes Budget (Select). Foreign Affairs. TEN. EvoR.. ois Agriculture. PHOMAS.. asain Judiciary. THOMPEON. ..... eile sans Agriculture. THORPE ...................... Expenditures in the Department of Commerce. Invalid Pensions. Territories. ILIMAN. i rien Judiciary. IRON cori eer anrnarssnies Ways and Means. TIMBERLAKE. .........- ree Ways and Means. FINCHER cesses Agriculture. TINEHAM..... cvicennsniniess Appropriations. Budget (Select). OWNER. io ia tesa Insular Affairs, chairman. Census. Education. : TREADWAY......... oc. laut Ways and Means. POORER... re arr ees Education. Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Railways and Canals. Revision of the Laws. TURNER... ...... cosine. Insular Affairs Invalid Pensions. SON. aan aue snrdien Census. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Revision of the Laws. Uxpement.....i oon Accounts. . Claims. District of Columbia. 24786°—67-4—2p ED——16 | 226 Congressional Directory. UpSmaw. oc... sna .. Alcoholic Liquor Traffic. Labor. Pensions. VALE. oil sas mwes due Expenditures in the Treasury Department. Immigration and Naturalization. Public Lands. VESTAY,.......u Seiad ae Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman. Education. Patents. VINGON tee ee Naval Affairs. ORY, is coms wie Agriculture. re i ee Accounts. Banking and Currency. Expenditures in the State Department. VV OLSTTAD a=. conan oe Judiciary, chairman. WALTERS. .....00lnllain Accounts. District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Pensions. Warp of New York............ Agriculture. Warp of North Carolina........ Insular Affairs. : Railways and Canals. Roads. ER A aR Appropriations. WATEONL.c....., sen nnnininess Ways and Means. WEAVER... easiness Elections No. 3. Expenditures on Public Buildings. Indian Affairs. Territories. Le EG re) Interstate and Foreign Commerce. Wagsrew.. 0... Railways and Canals, chairman. Census. District of Columbia. Wms of Kansas. .....coconvre.- Election of President, Vice President, and Represent- atives in Congress. Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Immigration and Naturalization. Public Lands. Woamsei Maine... 0... 500. Woman Suffrage; chairman. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Winans of Illinois... ......¢ Agriculture. WirLiams of Texas...... ......District of Columbia. Expenditures in the Post Office Department. Patents. WILLIAMSON ....... cseavasesi Expenditures in the Interior Department. Irrigation of Arid Lands. Mines and Mining. WIIBOR: oo. isis annneenins Elections No. 2. : Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Flood Control. : Immigration and Naturalization. House Commattee Assignments. 227 WINGO. tone eror esses sania Banking and Currency. Industrial Arts and Expositions. { Mines and Mining. WINSLOW. -5. 0 oe iassiis i subiadiigs Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman. WISE... tirade eshinnes Judiciary. Woop of Indiana,.............. Appropriations. WOODRUEE. oo sco. oo District of Columbia. | Roads. | Woops of Virginia. ............. Post Office and Post Roads. | WOODYARD. oo... dosnt ati ns Post, Office and Post Roads. WRI... nee Military Affairs. WUBRZBAGH . o.oo: ic ivninis od Military Affairs. NY ANT sisi canard na Census. | Invalid Pensions. Revision of the Laws. NAMES. an ar Judiciary. NOUNG. AL i Ti ~. Ways and Means. ZIHLMAN. .....ucuviie as Svea ee Labor, chairman. District of Columbia. Insular Affairs i f | 228 Congressional Directory. CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES. COMMISSIGN FOR THE EXTENSION AND COMPLETION OF THE CAPITOL BUILDING. Chairman.— Elihu Root, 31 Nassau Street, New York City. Joseph G. Cannon, Representative from Illinois, The Raleigh. Secretary.—Henry A. Vale, 2415 Twentieth Street. COMMISSION ON ENLARGING THE CAPITOL GROUNDS. Chairman.— : Joseph G. Cannon, Representative from Illinois, The Raleigh. Elliott Woods, Architect of the Capitol, Stoneleigh Court. COMMISSION IN CONTROL OF SENATE OFFICE BUILDING. Chairman.—Lee S. Overman, Senator from North Carolina, The Powhatan. Francis E. Warren, Senator from Wyoming, 2029 Connecticut Avenue. COMMISSION IN CONTROL OF THE HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. Chairman.—Frederick H. Gillett, Speaker of the House of Representatives, 1525 Eighteenth Street. Isaac Bacharach, Representative from New Jersey, The Chaumont. Claude Kitchin, Representative from North Carolina, 1412 Kennedy Street. Architect of the Capitol.—Elliott Woods, Stoneleigh Court. JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING. (Capitol Building, ground floor, west entrance. Phone, Branch 49.) Chairman.—George H. Moses, Senator from New Hampshire, The Altamont. Vice chairman.—Edgar R. Kiess, Representative from Pennsylvania. Arthur Capper, Senator from Kansas, 1100 Sixteenth Street. Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida, 1455 Massachusetts Avenue. Albert Johnson, Representative from Washington, The Albemarle. William F. Stevenson, Representative from South Carolina, 1203 Clifton Street. Clerk.—Ansel Wold, 1522 Varnum Street. Inspector of paper and material (Government Printing Office).— Walter W. Scott, 1812 K Street. NATIONAL FOREST RESERVATION COMMISSION. (930 F Street. Phone, Main 6910.) President.—John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, 2100 Sixteenth Street. Albert B. Fall, Secretary of the Interior, The Wardman Park. Henry C. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, The Wardman Park. John K. Shields, Senator from Tennessee, The Shoreham. Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Willis C. Hawley, Representative from Oregon, The Woodley. : Gordon Lee, Representative from Georgia, The Arlington. Secretary.—W. W. Ashe, 1512 Park Road. 1 For official duties, see p. 362. N Joint Commassions and Committees. 229 LINCOLN MEMORIAL COMMISSION. (Office, Senate Office Building, room 141. Phone, Main 3120, Branch 888.) Chairman.— William Howard Taft, 2241 Wyoming Avenue. Joseph G. Cannon, Representative from Illinois, The Raleigh. Samuel W. McCall, 24 Mount Vernon Street, Boston, Mass. John Temple Graves, special resident commissioner, 1730 P Street. Thomas R. Marshall, Indianapolis, Ind. Nathan B. Scott, The New Willard. Secretary.—Henry A. Vale, 2415 Twentieth Street. Executive and disbursing officer.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. (Office, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460.) GRANT MEMORIAL COMMISSION. (Office, Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460.) Chairman.—Maj. George Mason, president Society Army of the Tennessee. John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, 2100 Sixteenth Street. Frank B. Brandegee, chairman Senate Committee on the Library, 1700 I Street. Executive and disbursing officer.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. MEADE MEMORIAL COMMISSION. (Office, Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460.) Chairman.—John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, 2100 Sixteenth Street. Frank B. Brandegee, chairman Senate Committee on the Library, 1700 I Street. Norman J. Gould, chairman House Committee on the Library. Gifford Pinchot, governor of Pennsylvania, Harrisburg, Pa. Executive officer.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. : COMMISSION ON MEMORIAL TO WOMEN OF THE CIVIL WAR. (Office, Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460.) Chairman.—John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, 2100 Sixteenth Street. Frank B. Brandegee, chairman Senate Committee on the Library, 1700 I Street. Norman J. Gould, chairman House Committee on the Library. Warren G. Harding, president of the American Red Cross. Executive and disbursing officer.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. ARLINGTON MEMORIAL BRIDGE COMMISSION. (Office, Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460.) Chairman.— Warren G. Harding, President of the United States. Calvin Coolidge, Vice President of the United States, The New Willard. Fergenis H. Gillett, Speaker of the House of Representatives, 1525 Eighteenth treet. Bert M. Fernald, chairman Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, Congress Hall. John W. Langley, chairman House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, 2807 Twenty-seventh Street. Executive and disbursing officer.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. JOINT COMMITTEE ON THE LIBRARY. Chairman.—Frank B. Brandegee, Senator from Connecticut, 1700 I Street. James W. Wadsworth, jr., Senator from New York, 800 Sixteenth Street. Porter J. McCumber, Senator from North Dakota, 2360 Massachusetts Avenue. John Sharp Williams, Senator from Mississippi. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee, The Continental. Norman J. Gould, Representative from New York. Simeon D. Fess, Representative from Ohio, Congress Hall. Robert Luce, Representative from Massachusetts. Frank Park, Representative from Georgia. Ralph Gilbert, Representative from Kentucky, Congress Hall. Clerk.—W. Don Lundy, 2639 Garfield Street. 230 Congressional Directory. PUBLIC BUILDINGS COMMISSION. (Phone, Main 3120, Branch 515.) Chairman.—Reed Smoot, Senator from Utah, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. Claude A. Swanson, Senator from Virginia, 2136 R Street. John W. Langley, Representative from Kentucky, 2807 Twenty-seventh Street. ¥ ‘Frank Clark, Representative from Florida, The Tiffany. Elliott Woods, Architect of the Capitol, Stoneleigh Court. dane A. Wetmore, Acting Supervising Architect of the Treasury, 5506 Thirteenth treet. Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 Cal- ifornia Street. Secretary and disbursing officer.—Edward Clark, 2503 Hamlin Street NE. JOHN ERICSSON MEMORIAL COMMISSION. (Office of executive and disbursing officer, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460, Branch 2.) Chairman.—Frank B. Brandegee, Chairman Senate Committee on the Library, 1700 I Street. Norman J. Gould, Chairman House Committee on the Library. Edwin Denby, Secretary of the Navy, 2224 R Street. Executive and disbursing officer.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. LEGISLATIVE DRAFTING SERVICE. SENATE BRANCH. (Room 446, Senate Office Building. Phone, 880.) Draftsman.—Frederic P. Lee, Alta Vista, Bethesda, Md. (Phone, Bethesda 68-W.) Assistant draftsmen.—J. L. Deveney, 21 Eighth Street NE. (phone, Lincoln 5861); Glenn E. McHugh, 3928 Huntington Street (phone, Cleveland 1893); Charles F. Boots, 2827 Twenty-eighth Street (phone, Adams 1337). Clerks.—Martha Noyes, 1539 I Street; Irwin R. Dawson, 926 Fifteenth Street. HOUSE BRANCH. (Room 297, House Office Building. Phone, Main 3120, Branch 592.) Draftsman.—Middleton Beaman, 1862 Mintwood Place. (Phone, Columbia 6618.) Assistant draftsman.—E. C. Alvord, jr., 3928 Huntington Street. (Phone, Cleve- land 1893.) Clerk.—C. Breck Parkman, 1344 Gallatin Street. JOINT COMMISSION ON POSTAL SERVICE. (Created by see. 6 of public law 187, Sixty-sixth Congress (Post Office appropriation act).) Chairman.—Charles E. Townsend, Senator from Michigan, The Burlington. Thomas Sterling, Senator from South Dakota, 2700 Thirty-sixth Street. George H. Moses, Senator from New Hampshire, The Altamont. Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee, The Continental. David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts. Halvor Steenerson, Representative from Minnesota, The Cairo. ' Calvin D. Paige, Representative from Massachusetts, Lafayette Hotel. W. W. Griest, Representative from Pennsylvania, The Washington. Thomas M. Bell, Representative from Georgia, 1401 Columbia Road. Arthur B. Rouse, Representative from Kentucky, George Washington Inn. Postal expert.—Rush D. Simmons, 2869 Twenty-eighth Street. ° Secretary.—E. H. McDermot, 1313 Harvard Street. Assistant secretary.—F. C. Riedesel, 51 D Street SE. JOINT CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE INVESTIGATING NAVAL BASE SITES ON SAN FRANCISCO BAY. Chairman.—L. Heisler Ball, Senator from Delaware, 3244 Thirty-eighth Street. Miles Poindexter, Senator from Washington, 1750 N Street. Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Thomas J. Walsh, Senator from Montana, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Key Pittman, Senator from Nevada. Fred A. Britten, Representative from Illinois, The Wardman Park. Frederick C. Hicks, Representative from New York, Stoneleigh Court, A. E. B. Stephens, Representative from Ohio, The Farragut. Daniel J, Riordan, Representative from New York, The Raleigh. Joint Commissions and Committees. 231 JOINT COMMITTEE ON THE REORGANIZATION OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE BRANCH OF THE GOVERNMENT. (Office of chairman, 404 Winder Building. Phone, Main 8687.) Chairman.—Walter F. Brown, representing the President, The Wardman Park. Vice chairman.—Reed Smoot, Senator from Utah, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. James W. Wadsworth, jr., Senator from New York, 800 Sixteenth Street. Pat Harrison, Senator from Mississippi, 2007 Belmont Road. J. Stanley Webster, Representative from Washington, The Ambassador. Henry W. Temple, Representative from Pennsylvania, 1520 H Street. R. Walton Moore, Representative from Virginia, The Toronto. THE INTERPARLIAMENTARY UNION. President.— William B. McKinley, Senator from Illinois. Vice presidents.—Andrew J. Montague, Representative from Virginia; Halvor Steenerson, Representative from Minnesota; William A. Oldfield, Representative from Arkansas. Treasurer.—Adolph J. Sabath, Representative from Illinois. Secretary.—H. Garland Dupré, Representative from Louisiana. Executive committee.—William B. McKinley, Senator from Illinois, chairman ex officio; Andrew J. Montague, Representative from Virginia; Fred A. Britten, Representative from Illinois; Theodore E. Burton, Representative from Ohio; Henry Allen Cooper, Representative from Wisconsin; William W. Rucker, Rep- resentative from Missouri; William A. Oldfield, Representative from Arkansas; Joseph T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas; Thomas Sterling, Senator from South Dakota; Henry W. Temple, Representative irom Pennsylvania; Halvor Steenerson, Representative from Minnesota; James C. McLaughlin Representa- tive from Michigan; Merrill Moores, Representative from Indiana. Executive secretary. —Arthur Deerin Call, 613 Colorado Building, Washington, D. C. THE CAPITOL. | OFFICERS OF THE SENATE. | (Phone, Main 3120.) PRESIDENT. / President of the Senate.—Calvin Coolidge, The New Willard. Secretary to the President of the Senate.—Edward T. Clark, 1115 Sixteenth Street. Clerks to the President of the Senate.—Ethel E. Peck, E. C. Geisser. Messenger —T. G. Melvin, PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE. President pro tempore of the Senate.—Albert B. Cummins. CHAPLAIN. Chaplain of the Senate.—Rev. J. J. Muir, 1317 Kenyon Street. OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY. GEORGE A. SANDERSON, Secretary of the Senate (Stoneleigh Court), was born at Hamilton, Butler County, Ohio; is a graduate of the United States Naval Acad- emy, but resigned from the naval service to engage in business in Chicago, retiring upon his election as Secretary of the Senate of the United States May 19, 1919. Assistant Secretary.—Henry M. Rose, Clifton Terrace South. Chief Clerk.—Hermon W. Craven, 4709 Piney Branch Road. Reading clerk.—John C. Crockett, The Roosevelt Financial clerk.—Charles F. Pace, 1539 I Street. Assistant financial clexk.—FEugene Colwell, 2221 Second Street. Chief bookkeeper. —James A. White, 1420 Harvard Street. Principal legislative clerk.—H. A. Hopkins, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Minute and Journal clerk.—Charles L. Watkins, Falkstone Courts. Assistant Journal clerk.—Howard C. Foster, The Northumberland. Enrolling clerk.—John C. Perkins, 136 Thirteenth Street SE. Executive clerk.—Walter A. Johnson, 642 East Capitol Street. File clerk.—Michael J. Bunke, 1337 Columbia Road. Printing clerk. —Guy E. Ives, 2113 N Street. Keeper of stationery.—Ferd W. Parker, 181 V Street NE. Assistant keeper of stationery.—Don C. Bartholomew, 1731 I Street. Assistant in stationery room.—Edward B. Eldridge, 2030 Sixteenth Street. Librarian.— Walter P. Scott, The Balfour. First assistant librarian —Ruskin McArdle, The Cecil. Assistant librarian.—Fred J. Williams, 1504 Vermont Avenue. Superintendent of document room.—W. G. Lieuallen, 1634 Hobart Street. First assistant in document room.—John W, Lambert, 439 Kenyon Street. Clerks.—W. L. Van Horn, 612 M Street NE.; Peter M. Wilson, 1767 Church Street; Robert J. Bates, 2431 Ontario Road; Henry H. Gilfry, 313 East Capitol Street; A. R. Richmond, 1318 Park Road; Irving H. Miron, 330 A Street SE.; Harvey W. Schmidt, 1603 Massachusetts Avenue. 233 284 Congressional Directory. CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES. Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, Mabelle J. Talbert, 1858 California Street; assist- ant clerks, Lois Wickham, The Colonial; Marguerite Betzenderfer, The Colonial. Appropriations.—Clerk, Kennedy F. Rea, 3601 Lowell Street; assistant clerks, L. M. Wells, The Calverton; Everard H. Smith, 228 Ascot Place NE.; Helen M. Wells; Rosalie Kaplan, The Northumberland; Mabel S. Heizer, 1508 Crittenden Street; Lacey Laughlin, 3811 Fifth Street; messenger, R. H. Ogle, 750 Gresham Place. Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.—Clerk, Charles W. Hall, jr., 1869 Mintwood Place; assistant clerks, Loretta E. O'Connell, The Wardman Park; Jewel R. Stein, The Wardman Park; John H. Ericksen; Edward D. Fugitt (by resolution), Seat Pleasant, Md. Banking and Currency.—Clerk, W. H. Sault, 21 Sixth Street NE.; assistant clerks, Jia ?, Manning, 725 First Street; Walter Longanecker, Branchville, Md.; . HK. Sault. Civil Service.—Clerk, Jens M. Otterness, 1730 M Street; assistant clerks, Randall M, Oller, 428 Eighth Street NE.; Ethel Petty, E-F Building, Government Hotels; Milton C. Jorgenson, 2700 Thirty-sixth Street. Claims.—Clerk, William H. Souders, 1740 Euclid Street; assistant clerks, Howard F. Brecht, 1030 Perry Street, NE.; Ethelyn E. Souders, 1740 Euclid Street; Edna A. Stewart, 404 Seventh Street NE.; Harry B. Straight, 7 Ross Street, Cottage City, Md. (by resolution). Commerce.—Clerk, James H. Davis, 1357 Jefferson Street; assistant clerks, Hazel E. Jones, The Cairo; Marion P. Cameron, The Cairo; Lulu F. Davis, 1357 Jeffer- son Street. Conference Minority of the Senate.—Clerk, Mrs. Marian E. Martin, 1730 M Street; as- sistant clerks, H. C. Kilpatrick, 1618 Twenty-ninth Street; Elsie Hardy, 1336 South Carolina Avenue SE.; Paul C. Reed, Kappa Alpha House. District of Columbia.—Clerk, Thomas E. Peeney; assistant clerks, Amy R. Piser; Mildred A. Schafer; George T. Faulkner; W. L. Gates (by resolution). Education and Labor.—Clerk, Cora M. Rubin, The Wardman Park; assistant clerks, Grace J. Hileman, 2001 Sixteenth Street; Erma L. Kuhn, E-F Building, Gov- ernment Hotels; Ono M. Healy, Fontanet Courts. Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Wilson C. Hefner, 327 Second Street NE.; assistant clerks, Madelaine Christian, The Roland; Abbie S. Irons, Government Hotels; Viola V. Creque, The Alabama. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, Frank S. Dickson, 1785 Lanier Place; assistant clerks, Adele Harrison, Tudor Hall; Madelaine McAuliffe, Gov- ernment Hotels; Elmer F. Neagle, 44 Quincy Place NE. Finance.—Clerk, Robert W. Farrar, Clifton Terrace East; assistant clerks, Katharine F. Wagner, Briarley Hall; Orlin M. Jones, 124 C Street NE.; Theo. Schlenker; Moses H. Banks, 11 R Street NE.; Mildred T. Larrazola, The Everett; H. Brand; expert for the majority, Katharine M. Coleman; expert for the minority, William W. Leinster. Foreign Relations.—Clerk, Charles F. Redmond, 3436 Brown Street; assistant clerks, Robert H. Norton; Harriet W, Redmond; Louise M. Cruit; Joseph W. Stewart, 1341 A Street NE. (by resolution). Immagration.—Clerk, Henry M. Barry, 2811 Thirty-fourth Place; assistant clerks, Virginia Brown, The Congressional; Mrs. Sarah IL. Barry, 2811 Thirty-fourth Place; Hope Edwards, 1667 Monroe Street. Indian Affairs.—Clerk, George Bartholomaeus, 1812 Vernon Street; assistant clerks, Mildred I. Winch, I-K Building, Government Hotels; Kathryn Smith, I-K Building, Government Hotels; Anna L. Hardesty, The Grant (by resolution); Frances G. Dees. Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, Robert A. Zachary, Cottage Park, Alexandria, Va.;assist- ant clerks, Eleanora S. David, A-B Building, Government Hotels; Margaret G. Boston, 1815 Monroe Street; Paul J. O’ Neill. Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, Paul H. Moore; assistant clerks, H. Clarence Churchman, Y.M. C. A.; George A. Kern, 117 Third Street NE.; Murray D. Smith, 117 Third Street NE. Irrigation and Reclamation—Clerk, Helen K. Kiefer, 4419 Illinois Avenue; assistant clerks, Jessie C. Allen, The Riggs; Alice George, 769 Quebec Place; Mary M. Bradley, 920 East Capitol Street. : Judiciary. —Clerk, Simon Michelet, 2116 Kalorama Road; assistant clerks, George L. Treat, 1340 North Carolina Avenue NE.; Carl W. Bordsen, 312 East Capitol Street; Thomas K. Humphrey, 1 Eighteenth Street SE.; Frances Perry, 227 East Capitol Street. Officers of the Senate. 235 Library. —Clerk, W. Don Lundy, 2639 Garfield Street; assistant clerks, John B. Pettis, The Balfour; Leonard C. Roy, 107 Eighth Street SE.; Edna T. Jullien, 6 West Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Manufactures.—Clerk, Robert M. La Follette, jr., 3157 Eighteenth Street; assistant clerks, Grace OC. Lynch, 1817 Monroe Street; Emil Lusthaus, 3157 Eighteenth Street; Stella R. Kemeys, 2655 Connecticut Avenue. Military Affairs.—Clerk, Raymond E. Devendorf, The Lincoln Apartments; assistant clerks, Gertrude F. Harcourt, G-H Building, Government Hotels; William A. Duvall, 6314 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; A. Lincoln Brown, 131 S Street; P. H. Keneipp, 3501 Fourteenth Street; T. Hudson McKee, 1420 Twenty-first Street. Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Howard M. Rice, Hyattsville, Md.; assistant clerks, Hattie E. Meek, 1358 Otis Place; Nan C. Coffin, 2816 Connecticut Avenue; Dorothy Dougherty, 1474 Clifton Street. : Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Elwin A. Silsby; assistant clerks, Proctor H. Page, 1830 Cali- fornia Street; Marcelle Conway, 1832 Sixteenth Street; Alice E. Casey, 4546 Wisconsin Avenue. Patents.—Clerk, Raymond A. Burr, 414 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistant clerks, Mary A. Connor, 1406 Meridian Place; Stella H. Netherwood, 1827 Jefferson Place; J. F. Cooke. Pensions.—Clerk, John A. Happer, The Wardman Park; law examiner, Alexander K. Meek, 1818 Kalorama Road ; assistant clerks, Edith M. Shipman, 1499 Irving Street; Lucy M. Ringgold, E-F Building, Government Hotels; Clara Bursum, The Capitol Park; Margaret Patterson, Tuxedo Park, Baltimore, Md.; Neva J. Hubbell, 644 E Street NE. Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, Clarence E. Loomis, 116 U Street; assistant clerks, D. G. Sutherland; Virginia L.. Raymond, 2700 Connecticut Avenue; May Simpson, 2375 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Printing.—Clerk, Martha R. Gold, The Albemarle; assistant clerks, George C. Peck, 810 Fifteenth Street; Frances C. O’Neill, The Ferris; Anna D. McConnell, R-S Building, Government Hotels. ; Privileges and Elections.—Clerk, Charles A. Webb, 1432 Ames Place NE.; assistant clerks, Mary H. Reed, 1240 Irving Street; John P. Atkinson, 209 Tenth Street SE. Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Olive Boynton, 301 Maryland Avenue NE.; assistant clerks, Ada L. Staples, V-W Building, Government Hotels; Lena M. Soider, 614 Maryland Avenue NE.; Hazel D. Briggs, 614 Maryland Ave- nue : Public Lands and Surveys.—Clerk, Parley P. Eccles, 33 Eighth Street NE.; assistant clerks, Matthew Cowley, 1812 K Street (by resolution); Ethel S. Johnson, 2521 Connecticut Avenue; Ernest W. Smoot, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. Revision of the Laws.—Clerk, Lee Lamar Robinson, The Highlands; assistant clerks, Louise B. Proctor, 2901 Q Street; Jane Darnall, 1316 Thirtieth Street. Rules.—Clerk, Fay A. Crossley, 624 Maryland Avenue NE.; assistant clerks, Lola Williams, 1461 Girard Street; Florence Caulsen, 1461 Girard Street; Hazel Pen- ning, 624 Maryland Avenue NE. Territories and Insular Possessions.—Clerk, Lester Winter, 642 East Capitol Street; assistant clerks, Alice Mummenhoff, 1357 Euclid Street; Minna F. Chamberlin, L-M Building. Government Hotels; Edna R. Kelly, 1716 Seventeenth Street. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS. DAVID 8S. BARRY, Sergeant at Arms, United States Senate (1816 Jefferson Place), was born at Detroit, Mich., in 1859, and educated in the public schools at Monroe, Mich.; was a page in the Michigan Legislature 1871-1873, and in 1875 was appointed page in the United States Senate on recommendation of Senator Isaac P. Christiancy. Learned stenography and served as amanuensis to various public men and as a clerk in the Treasury and Post Office Departments and the Census Bureau. Began newspaper work in 1879 as Washington correspondent of the Detroit Post-Tribune; served in the Washington office of the Chicago Times and as corre- spondent of the Detroit Evening News and Detroit Evening Journal; in 1887 was appointed on the staff of the Washington bureau of the New York Sun, and in 1889 was made chief of the bureau; resigned in 1904 to become editor in chief of the Provi- dence Journal and was its Washington correspondent in 1919, when elected Sergeant at Arms. In 1908 Mr. Barry was an assistant director of publicity of the Republican national committee, and in 1912 and 1916 the director. TL TR 236 Congressional Directory. Assistant Sergeant at Arms.—Frank Wood worth, 136 Senate Office Building. Assistant doorkeeper.—C. A. Loeffler, 1608 Monroe Street. (Phone, Columbia 3288-W.) Acting assistant doorkeeper.—Thomas W. Keller, 3406 Thirteenth Street. (Phone, Columbia 6040-W.) Assistants on floor of Senate.—Richard F. Field, 1348 East Capitol Street; Edwin A. Halsey, 3704 Thirteenth Street (phone, Adams 2175). Storekeeper.—John J. McGrain, 2219 First Street. (Phone, North 8615.) POST OFFICE. Pons 5 the Senate. —Fred A. Eckstein, 3361 Eighteenth Street. (Phone, Colum- ia 835. Chef clerk.—Herbert H. Prange, 238 Maryland Avenue NE. Money order and registry clerk.—Robert R. Miller, 920 East Capitol Street. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS. Arrive 8.30 and 10.30 a. m., 12.15 and 3.45 p.m. Depart from Senate post office, Senate Office Building and Capitol, 5, 9.30, and 10.30 a. m., 12 m., 1.565, 4.30, and 6 p. m., and upon adjournment. Senate Office Building chutes collected 30 minutes earlier. FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—Leslie L. Biffle, Clifton Terrace South. Assistant foreman.—J. W. Deards, Fontanet Courts. List of Senators and their Secretaries. LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES. (As of December 18, 1922.) 237 Senators. Secretaries. Secretaries’ addresses. Ashurst(Ariz.).... ...-. 00s Ball Del.) no. cin Bayard (Del.)........... os Borah:(Idaho). ......-.:- Brandegee (Conn.)....... Brookhart (Iowa)......... Broussard (1a.)...:. oi Bursum (N. Mex.) ....... Calder (N. V.).......v-=s- Cameron (Ariz.)......... Capper (Kans.). ......... Caraway (Ark.)......-:... Colt (R. 4.) s.inonois Couzens (Mich.).......... Culberson (Tex.)........ Cummins (Iowa).......... Curtis (Kans)... i. i- Dial (8S. C.). ny Pa Dillingham (Vt. Y. frees Edge (NL). s.onnseves:: Fernald Me.) . . Sprains Fletcher (Fla)... France (Md.)--........~-: Frelinghuysen (N. J.)..... George (Gn.).......iivq un Gerey (Rol). oo Glass (Va). Vo. nv. s Gooding (Idaho).......... HaleMe.)..........- =. Hamreld (Okla)... no. Harris(Ga.). .\.....c = Harrison (Miss)).......... Heflin (Ala.)...\.......—-- Hitchcock (Nebr.)....... Johnson (Calif.).......... Jones (N. Mex.).......... Joneg(Wash.)../......... Kellogg (Mion).......L.. Kendrick (Wyo.). . . Keyes (N. H.).......... = King (Utah).. Sein Ladd (N. Dak. Y:. EES La Follette (Wis.). . Lenroot (Wis).......... 5: Lodge (Mass.)............ TA Se (HL)... McCumber (N. Dak.)..... McKellar (Tenn. Je WARES McKinley (I11.)... fs Mclean (Conn.).......-.. McNary {O55 EEA Moses (N-H.)....c.s Maurice H. Lanman....... Thomas E. Peeney... Timothy J. Mooney. . ... Cora Bubin.. .... 0... W. Don Lundy. .......... Roy H. Rankin........... Courtland M. Compton... . John A: Hanper........... Charles W. Hall, jr.. Ershel W. Campbell... ay VW. HU. Souders............ Walter R. Dorsey . Chesley W. Jurney....... Paul H. Moore... cones: Fay Crossley.......... 1... P, H.- McGowan... ........ Charles A. Webb ......... Robert A. Zachary. ...... John W. Fenton, jr....... Lee Lamar Robinson . . . .. Olive Boynton .........-. William 1. Hill... ..... HH. X. Bikey ............. Lewis C. Russell. . ...,... Leonard Way. Rodney E. Soni pte W. T. Ward... El al Fugene Fly... .... 5... J. L. Thornton. ...._... = Luther J. Willis". .". ... Raymond A. Burr........ Fred O. Roth. ne ia Adolph To Giove.. | William A. Anderson. .... Charles C. Wright. . ...... .| Samuel Russell............ Douglas H. McArthur... .. .| Robert M. La Follette, jr.. M.H. Fisher... ..... R.W. Farmar... ........ Milus A. Nisbet. ......... .| Chester A. Willoughby. . . W.H. Sault. ....... H. K. Kiefer. . . .I Martha R. Gold... 226 Ascot Place NE. ...| The Continental. .| 111 Maryland Avenue NE. The Wardman Park. 2639 Garfield Street. 3405 Thirty-fourth Place. 222 Second Street NE. The Wardman Park. ...| 1869 Mintwood Place. .| The Roosevelt. 1740 Euclid Street. Falkstone Courts. 2811 Thirty-fourth Place. ...| 2325 Ashmead Place. .} The Congressional. Y.M.C. A. 624 Maryland Avenue N BE. 1724 Newton Street. 1432 Ames Place NE. Cottage Pk., Alexandria, Va. .| 4316 Fourteenth Street. The Highlands. 301 Maryland Avenue NE. 2900 Fourteenth Street. 3209 Nineteenth Street. 1703 New York Avenue. 1446 Harvard Street. 2416 Thirteenth Street. 1712 Sixteenth Street. 1226 Hamilton Street. The Roland. The Raleigh. The Rochambeau. Clifton Terrace south. 122 C Street SE. 221 B Street NE. 414 New Jersey Avenue SE. 1807 Kilbourne Place. 1357 Jefferson Street. 1740 Euclid Street. 120 B Street NE. 2001 Sixteenth Street. 128 B Street NE. 100 Fourth Street SE. 3157 Eighteenth Street. 1630 Irving Street. 3436 Brown Street. 1785 Lanier Place. Clifton Terrace east. 321 Maryland Avenue NE. Tudor Hall. 21 Sixth Street NE. .| 4419 Illionis Avenue. The Albermarle. 238 LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES—Continued. Congressional Directory. Senators. Secretaries. Secretaries’ addresses. Myers{Mont.).o. i. oc. Nelson (Minn)... .-.... New (Ind.).....nc....0 x. Nicholson (Colo.)------..: Norbeck (S. Dak.). . Nowig(Nebr.)... ..--. = Oddie (Nev.)......---..= Overman (N. C.).. i Owen (Okla). o.oo: PACE VL Jardin fnniciemin ro Pepper (Pay. oe in.a. Phippe(Colo.).cn ios oaeiee Pittman (Nev). ...:v--o Poindexter (Wash. Je Pomerene (Ohio.)... Bansdell (La.). :.5 0 Reed (Mo.). Cai... oc Reed (Pa.). suai ve owe Robinson (Ark.). . 2 Sheppard (Tex.)......... Shields (Tenn.)........... Shortridge (Calif.)........ Simmons (N, C.)...:...~. Smith (S. C.) Smoot (Utah)-. .....0¢ SpenceriMo:).......... Stanfield (Oreg.).......... Stanley (Kv) .come-ns- a Sterling (8. Dak.)...+:-.. Sutherland (W. Va.)...... Swanson (Va.) Townsend (Mich.).. ..... Trammell). ...o0 Underwood (Ala.)......... Wadsworth (N. Y)........ Walsh (Mass. )........-... Walsh (Mont. )....... 15 i Warren (Wyo.)... .--..- Watson (Ind.)..J.... 1.0 Weller (Md). lo ciiicnni i Williams (Miss.).......... Willig (Ohio)... c---: <2 1: .| H. Grady Miller. . Grayce S. Behymer. . .... Simon T. Michelet........ Lester Winter.. rr William J. Donald. . Pra Julian W. Blount...-..... Mabelle J. Talbert... ...... Charles E. Alden......... .| Alfred M. McLean.. ...... Henry G. Thomas. ....... 0 A. SHshy, one. nuns Charles P. Swope......... Denise Barkalow. ........ Edward J. Trenwith...... Howard M. Rice.......... Aarthur P. Black... ..... Robert H. McGimsey. -. .. Hicklin Yates... .o-...-: Esther S. Schucker. ...... Victor T- Russell ......... Harry S. Hall.. = GB. Dodds... ac ra Frank A. Hampton....... William H. Smith... ..... Parley P. Eccles.......... George Bartholomaeus.... LO EE Te ae ie MinnieMahler. ........ ... Jens M. Otterness......... Wilson C. Hefner.......... Archibald Oden. ......... Clarence E. Loomis. ...... Robert R. Tomlin. ..-...... Marian E. Martin. ........ Raymond E. Devendorf... Declan W. Corcoran....... Miles Taylor... BM Wells. 2 cn. in John ¥. Haves... ......... Ethel C. Einstein. ....... Joseph M. Burlew........ Charles A. Jones... _...... The Kensington. 1834 Belmont Road. .| 642 East Capitol Street. 3813 Alton Street. The Cumberland. 1858 California Street. 1440 Kennedy Street. The Congressional. 1908 Biltmore Street. Senate Office Building. 2701 Connecticut Avenue. 2831 Twenty-eighth Street. 500 Third Street. Hyattsville, Md. 1328 N. Carolina Ave. NE. Senate Office Building. 101 B Street NE. P-Q Building, Gov. Hotels. .| Congress Hall. 1220 Eleventh Street. .| 718 East Capitol Street. The Wardman Park Annex. The Congressional. 3819 Keokuk Street. 33 Kighth Street NE. 1812 Vernon Street. 3100 R Street. 72 M Street. 1730 M Street. 327 Second Street NE. 1339 Oak Street. 116 U Street. 314 A Street NE. 1732 M Street. The Lincoln. 331 Senate Office Building. 1007 Otis Place. 1673 Columbia Road. 1359 Ingraham Street. The Grace Dodge. 123 D Street. 1410 M Street. Lust of Secretaries to Senators. 239 \ (As of December 18, 1922,) LIST OF SECRETARIES TO SENATORS. Secretaries. Senators. Secretaries’ addresses. Adame, Bed 0 cnn on. Alden, Charles Fi......... Anderson, William A..... Barkalow, Denise. ....... Barey, Flo, eleven. : Bartholomaeus, George. .. Behymer, Grayce S....... Bilkey, H. E Black, Arthur P. . ....... Blount, Julian W. . ..---. Boynton, Olive. ......... Burlew, Joseph M......... Burr, RaymondA.......- Byrne, James A......-.-. Campbell, Ershel W...... Compton, Courtland M. ... Corcoran, Declan W...... Crossley, Fay, ........5-.. Davis, James BH. .oe:.0c.-- Devendorf, Raymond E. . Dickson, Frank S. ....... Becles, Parley P.-.c.q: Einstein, Ethel C........ Farrar, B. We... ........... Fenton, John W., jr....... Fisher, M. H Fly, Bugene...:.... «.- Gatchell, Willard W._.... Giere, Adolph E. ........ Gold, Martha BB... ...... Hall, Charles W., jr....... Holl, Hurry 8... oo... Hampton, Frank A... ... Happer,Johm A........... Hayes, Jom ¥F........... Heiner, Wilson €......... Hill, William 1... .. Jones, Charles A... ....... Jurney, Chesley W....... Kiefer, H. K..o...c..5... La Follette, Robert M., jr. Lanman, Maurice H...... Loomis, Clarence Ei. . .... Tandy, W. Don. ........ McArthur, Douglas H. ... McGimsey, Robert H. ... McGowan, P. H........ .. McLean, Alfred M........ Mahler, Minnie. .......... Marshall, Rodney E......! Martin, Marian KE. ...... Stanfield (Oreg.). - ....... Qddio (Nev .). . oi o-oo Kendrick (Wyo.).:ceee:ns Phipps (Colo.)........ =. Colt (BR. 1.) eae Spencer (Mo. ).......c0- ... Myers Mont.)....-..-...-. Frelinghuysen (N. J.)..... Pomerene (Ohio).......... Norbeck (S. Dak.)........ Fernald Me.)............ Williame (Miss)... Johnson (Calif)... .... . Gerry (B. 1)... oi. Cameron (Ariz.).......... Broussard (La.)-.. "x: = Walsh (Mase.) Curlis(Bans.).2. =... .. =. Jones (Wash.)..... ot." Wadsworth (N. Y.)........ MeGormick (111)... ..... Shortridge (Calif. )........ : .} Nicholson (Colo.).......... {Couzens (Mich.).........-. Smoot (Utah)... co... ee Wellor (Md.)..-.....:...- McCumber (N. Dak.)..... Elking(W, Va.)........... Yowroot (Wis)... ...... Harrizon (Miss.)........... France (Md). ........... Kellogg (Minn.)........... Moses (N. H.)- c........ Colder (N.. Y.).. ci. cz5ies Shields (Tenn.). . .-.-.... Simmons (N. C.).......... Bursum (N. Mex.)........ Watson (Ind.).......... i Sutherland (W. Va.)..... Fletcher (FIn.)............ Willis (Ohio).............. Culberson (Tex.). ........ McNary (Oreg.)........... La Follette (Wis.)......... Ashurst (Avis)... ......... Townsend (Mich.)........ Brandegee (Conn.)........ Tadd (N. Dak.)......... Ransdell (La.)........... Dial (8. CY)... “7s. ...... Overman (N.C.)......... Stanley (Kv.)... oo. Hide(Me)......0oc...... ."" Underwood (Ala). ....... 3100 R Street. 1440 Kennedy Street. 120 B Street NE. 2831 Twenty-eighth Street. 2811 Thirty-fourth Place. 1812 Vernon Street. The Kensington. 1703 New York Avenue. 1328 N. Carolina Avenue NE. The Cumberland. 301 Maryland Aveneue NE. 123 D Street. 414 New Jersey Avenue SE. 2416 Thirteenth Street. The Roosevelt. 222 Second Street NE. 331 Senate Office Building. 624 Maryland Avenue NE, 1357 Jefferson Street. The Lincoln. 1785 Lanier Place. The Wardman Park Annex. 3813 Alton Place. 2325 Ashmead Place. 33 Eighth Street NE. The Grace Dodge. Clifton Terrace East. 4316 Fourteenth Street. 1630 Irving Street. Clifton Terrace South. 3209 Nineteenth Street. 1740 Euclid Street. The Albemarle. 1869 Mintwood Place. 718 East Capitol Street. The Congressional. The Wardman Park. 1359 Ingraham Street. 327 Second Street NE. 2900 Fourteenth Street. 1410 M Street. The Congressional. 4419 Illinois Avenue. 3157 Eighteenth Street. 226 Ascot Place NE. 116 U Street. 2639 Garfield Street. 100 Fourth Street SE. 345 Senate Office Building. 1724 Newton Street. The Congressional. 72 M Street. The Roland. 1732 M Street. 240 Congressional Directory. LISS OF SECRETARIES TO SENATORS—Continued. Secretaries. Senators. Secretaries’ addresses. Michelet, Simon T....... Miller, H. Grady.......... Mooney, Timothy J. ..... Moore, Pol. Nisbet, Milve A... Oden, Archibald... ...... Otterness, Jens M. ....... Peeney, Thomas E....... Bankin, Roy B-......... Redmond, Bo manly de aed Rice, Howard M. ........ Robinson, Lee Lamar. .... Roth, Fred O Rubin, Cora. =. > - =a Russell, Lewis C.......... Russell, Samuel.......... Russell, Victor T.......-. Saale, WH... Schucker, Esther S....... Stlasby, B.A. oi... con Smith, John W. R....... Smith, William HH... .... Souders, WW. Ho. .....5: Swope, Charles P. ....... Talbert, Mabelle J . ...... Taylor, Miles Thomas, Henry G. Thornton, J. L. reas Tomlin, Robert R........ Trenwith, Edward J . Ward, W.T Way, Leonard. =... .... Webb, Charles A... ..... Welle TM... ... Whifeside, J. G....... .... Williams, Cranston. ...... Willis, Luther J.......... Willoughby, Chester A Winter, Lester.. Wright, Charles o. Yates, Hicklin . Zachary, Robert A.. Nelson Minn.)............ Robinson (Ark.).......... Bayard (Del)... .. =. Cummins (Iowa). . ....... McKellar (Tenn.)......... Swanson (Va). i. oc Sterling (S. Dak. Jer: Ball (Del.).. ES Brookhart (Towa)... em eieen Lodge (Mass. ).. he Poindexter (Wash. ys heey Smith (8. CG)... -......-. Capper (Bans.).-........- Pepper (Pa.).-.-.-....... Norris (Nebr). =o. av; Walsh (Mont.). . he + Owen (Gln). --.......... Heflin (Alo)... .vevs-rn- Trammell (Fla)... ou... Pittman (Nev. )-...-...: Harreld (Okla.) Gooding (Idaho). . Dillingham (ve). Fane Ee Warren (Wyo.)... Caraway (Ark.).. Harris (Ga.) Hitchcock (Nebr.)........ Sd McKinley (T1L.). oo... New (lnd.y -:....... =. J Reyes (N. H.Y........-... Beed Mo.) -..0..ii.-a ry DdseN Ty. 1834 Belmont Road. Congress Hall. 111 Maryland Avenue NE. Y.M. C. A. 321 Maryland Avenue NE. 1339 Oak Street. ..[ 1730 M Street. .| The Continental. 3405 Thirty-fourth Place. -| 3436 Brown Street. Hyattsville, Md. The Highlands. -{ 1807 Kilbourne Place. The Wardman Park. 1446 Harvard Street. 128 B Street NE. 1220 Eleventh Street. 21 Sixth Street NE. P-Q Building, Govt. Hotels. 311 Senate Office Building. 1712 Sixteenth Street. 3819 Keokuk Street. 1740 Eulid Street. 2701 Connecticut Avenue. 1858 California Street. 1007 Otis Place. 1908 Biltmore Street. 122 C Street SE. 814 A. Street NE. 500 Third Street. The Raleigh. 1226 Hamilton Street. 1432 Ames Place NE. .--| 1673 Columbia Road. .| Falkstone Courts. The Rochambeau. 221 B Street NE. Tudor Hall. 642 East Capitol Street. 2001 Sixteenth Street. 101 B Street NE. \ Cottage Park, Alexandria, Va. \) Ma pt Officers of the House. OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE. (Phone, Main 3120.) SPEAKER. The Speaker.—Frederick H. Gillett, 1525 Eighteenth Street. Secretary to the Speaker.—Charles H. Parkman, 1003 Taylor Street NE. Clerk at the Speaker's table. —Lehr Fess, 7127 Chestnut Street. Speaker's clerk.—William A. Reutemann, The Iowa. Messenger at Speaker’s table.—Frank J. Peoples. Messenger.— Virgil H. Franklin, 720 Kastle Place NE. CHAPLAIN. Chaplain of the House.—Rev. James Shera Montgomery, 1731 Columbia Road. FLOOR LEADERS. Majority Floor Leader.—Frank Wheeler Mondell, 2110 O Street. Legislative clerk to Majority Floor Leader.—Frank H. Barrow, 2579 Tunlaw Road. Clerk to Majority Floor leader.—Stella M. Diffenbaugh, 722 Quincy Street. Minority Floor Leader.—Claude Kitchin, 1412 Kennedy Street. Clerk to Minority Floor Leader.—Walter L. Price, 156 A Street NE. Acting Minority Floor Leader.—Finis J. Garrett, 3601 35th Street. OFFICE OF THE CLERK. WILLIAM TYLER PAGE, Clerk of the House of Representatives (220 Wooten Avenue, Chevy Chase), was born in Frederick, Md., October 19, 1868; attended the Frederick Academy and the public schools of Baltimore. Appointed page in the Clerk’s office of the House December 19, 1881, by Clerk Edward McPherson, and has since been continuously in the service of the House of Representatives in many capacities. Republican nominee for Congress, second Maryland district, 1902. Author of “The American’s Creed” and of. ‘‘Page’s Congressional Handbook.” Elected Clerk of the House of Representatives, Sixty-sixth and Sixty-seventh Con- gresses. Chief Clerk.—John H. Hollingsworth, Ashland Avenue, West Hyattsville, Md. (Phone, Hyattsville 196.) Stenographer to Clerk.—Miss Lily McConnell, 320 B Street NE. Assistant Chief Clerk.—Herbert G. Rosboro, The Avondale. Journal clerk.—Ed. M. Martin, 2815 Thirty-eighth Street. (Phone, Cleveland, 996-J.) Reselieg dole E. Chaffee, 722 E Street NE.; Patrick J. Haltigan, 1813 Kalorama oad. Tally clerk.—E. F. Sharkoff, 4010 Marlboro Place. (Phone, Columbia 2402-W.) Chief bill clerk.—George T. Riggs, The Arundel. Disbursing clerk. —Wilber H. Estey, 3013 Eleventh Street. File clerk.—William Hertzler, 516 East Capitol Street. ; Enrolling clerk.—W. H. Overhue, 1242 Columbia Road. (Phone, Columbia 1673.) Stationery clerk.—Harry J. Hunt, 338 Maryland Avenue NE. LIBRARY. Librarian. —John Kimball Parish, 400 B Street NE. OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS. Sergeant at Arms.—J. G. Rodgers, 2924 Macomb Street. (Phone, Cleveland 1144.) Assistant Sergeant at Arms.—A. C. Jordan, 101 B Street SE. Cashier —Kenneth Romney, Fontanet Courts. Assistant cashier—Harry Pillen, 204A Bates Street. Bookkeepers.—John Oberholser, 319 New Jersey Avenue SE.; W. 8S. McGinniss, 222 East Capitol Street. Deputy Sergeant at Arms in charge of pairs—M. L. Meletio, The Tuxedo. 24786°—674 17 BD ED 242 Congressional Directory. OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER. Doorkeeper of the House.—Bert W. Kennedy, Wine Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. (Phone, Hyattsville 107-R.) Special employees.—J. P. Griffin; J. J. Sinnott, 3527 Thirteenth Street; C. A. Cannon. Special messengers.—John O. Snyder, 321 Fifth Street SE.; Wallace D. Bassford, 800 North Carolina Avenue SE.; W. E. Kenney; L.. M. Overstreet. ! Lh pages.—Alvin B. Reichert, 1426 Twenty-first Street; John McCabe, 1102 L treet. Superintendent of the press gallery.— William J. Donaldson, jr. Messengers.—Elnathan Meade; E. W. Scott, The Colonial; D. J. Evans; Clarence J. Ulery; J. A. McMillan, 821 Eleventh Street; A. H. Smith, 111 C Street NE.; Crawford Kennedy, 28 Maryland Avenue SW.; George Keegan, 805 Duke Street, Alexandria, Va.; E. M. Lichty, 210 A Street SE.; George Christiaansen, 102 Seventh Street NE.; E. A. Mooers, 3353 Eighteenth Street; C. C. Dunlap; E. S. Smith, 127 A Street NE.; Chester C. Smith; J. A. Hillmyer, 412 New Jersey Avenue SE. Messengers on the soldiers’ roll.—Burr Maxwell; James H. Shouse; David Beattie, 138 B Street NE.; H. R. Thorpe; M. S. Amos, 125 E Street; Thomas H. McKee, 1420 Twenty-first Street; Joseph Cassiday, 1360 Shephard Street; Aaron H. Frear, 223 Eighth Street NE.; J. E. Richmond, 316 East Capitol Street; James Linahan, 502 B Street NE.; H. T. Duryea, 1214 New York Avenue; L. B. Cousins, 107 Fourth Street NE.; W. C. Allen, 1035 New Jersey Avenue. Messenger to majority room.—W. M. Pickering, 1002 Douglas Street NE. Messenger to minority room.—D. K. Hempstead. ! Majority messenger in. charge of telephones.—T. M. Holt, 136 D Street SE. Minority messenger in charge of telephones.—J. J. Kenah, 719 East Capitol Street. Chief of janitors.—Charles A. Kaschub, 409 House Office Building. FOLDING ROOM. Superintendent.—W. R. Johnson, 234 New Jersey Avenue. Chaef clerk.—Joseph A. Clement, 118 Carroll Street SE. Clerks.—J. C. Newell, Bethesda, Md.; W. S. Schroeder, 120 Maryland Avenue NE.; Roy W. Ives, 623 A Street NE. Foreman.—J. M. McKee, 2123 K Street. (Phone, West 1663.) DOCUMENT ROOM. Superintendent.—Carl G. Malmberg, Riverdale, Md. Assistant superintendent.— Elmer A. Lewis. Special employee.—Joel Grayson, Vienna, Va. Assistant clerks.—W. C. Ladd, 219 Fourteenth Street SE.; Jasper F. Walter. Assistants.—Lawrence L. Goley, 1412 Perry Place; Albert Scolnik, 217 East Capitol Street; John M. Heagy, 323 Maryland Avenue NE.; I. C. Rassau; August Buehne, 4203 Twelfth Street NE.; C. B. Slemp; A. S. Thomas, 17 East Capitol Street; L. S. Williams. CLERKS TO COMMITTEES. Accounts.—Irene J. Knudsen, The Roydon; Wendell E. Cable, auditor, 1810 I Street. Agriculture.—L. G. Haugen, Congress Hall; assistant, : Appropriations.—Marcellus C. Sheild, 3 East Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; assistants, J. C. Pugh, The Wellington; James ¥. Scanlon, 410 A Street NE.; A. Orr, Lyon Park, Va.; J. G. Nettleton, The Westmoreland; Paul A. Malone, 1447 U Street; R. W. Ireland, 1428 R Street; A. K. Barta, 640 Fifth Street NE.; W. R. Donahue, 14 Montgomery Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. : Banking and Currency.—Philip G. Thompson, 2726 Connecticut Avenue; assistant, Regina Thompson. Census.—Benjamin Ladisky, 1447 Monroe Street. Claims.—John Helmus; assistant, William F. Jorgensen. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—Mary E. Nulle. Disposition of Useless Executive Papers.—Goldie D. Hutchins, 128 B Street NE. District of Columbia.—Mary B. Lidy, 1423 R Street; assistant, Ellen W. Focht, 1228 Sixteenth Street. | Officers of the House. 243 Education.—Eva B. Vosburgh, C-D Building, Government Hotels. Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress.—Roy S. Ramsey, 1 425 Second Street. Elections No. 1.—May B. La France, 1717 Seventeenth Street. Elections No. 2.—Robert H. Kempton, 1605 East Capitol Street. | Elections No. 3.—Robert W. Colflesh, The Willard Courts. Enrolled Bills.—Margaret Turton; assistant, L. W. Willis. V 8. Flood Control.—Henry G. Miller. : Foreign A ffairs.—Edmund F. Erk, The Knickerbocker (phone, Columbia 1333-7); agsistant, O. H. Farr, 1440 Kennedy Street. Immigration and Naturalization.—P. F. Snyder, 9 Sixteenth Street SE. (Phone, Lin- coln 4700-J.) Indian Affairs.—H. E. Devendorf, 221 B Street NE.; assistant, William O. Hart, 626 B Street NE. ; Industrial Arts and Ezxpositions.—Josephine Bland, George Washington Inn. Insular Affairs.—H. E. Morrison, The Burlington. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Elton J. Layton, 1705 East Capitol Street; assist- ants, Robert B. Bennett, The Naples; Clara V. Drake, C-D Building, Govern- ment Hotels. Invalid Pensions.—Frank T. Moran, The Willard Courts; assistants, Edwin A. Loop, The Northumberland; James F. Spoerri. Irrigation of Arid Lands.—Gertrude I. Brandon, 218 Ascot Place NE. Judiciary.—Guilford S. Jameson, 209 Thirteenth Street NE.; assistant, Wallace N. Streeter, 338 Maryland Avenue NE. Labor.— Theresa C. Glynn, 1645 Newton Street. Library.—J. C. Shanks. Merchant Marine and Fisheries.—Rene G. de Tonnancour, 4207 Twelfth Street NE. Military Affairs. —Howard F. Sedgwick, Thayer Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; assist- ant, Therese M. Pierson, R-S Building, Government Hotels. Mines and Mining.—M. B. Rhodes, 1312 N Street. Naval Affairs.—Frank A. Byron, 1453 Corcoran Street; assistant, Frank I. Taylor. Patents.—Harry E. Schlerf, 511 Third Street SE. Pensions.—J. Gordon Moore, 17 Third Street NE.; assistant, Frederick T. Johnson, 29 Rhode Island Avenue. Post Office and Post Roads.—M. E. Nordahl, 1903 Fifteenth Street; assistant, Leila B. Fillius, 431 Fifth Street SE. Printing.—Elmer C. Hess, The Southern, Public Buildings and Grounds.—K. G. Langley; assistant, Harry E. Marlowe, 3533 Tenth Street. Public Lands.—George A. Hossick, 1808 Kearney Street NE. Reform in the Civil Service.—Mae R. Brown, 769 Quebec Place. Reovey of the Laws.—Donald C. Little, George Washington Inn; assistant, W. H. ebb. Rivers and Harbors.—Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road; assistant, Ella F. Phalen. Roads.—M. T. Cowperthwaite, 2148 Florida Avenue. Rules.—Harriet Flenner, The Roosevelt; assistant, Helen Campbell. Territories.—Charles F. Curry, jr., George Washington Inn. War Claims.—Edmund W. Booth, jr., 1653 Pennsylvania Avenue; assistant, Averill Strahl, 1323 Quincy Street. Ways and Means.—Clayton F. Moore, Riverdale, Md.; assistant, Alice V. Meeker, 1313 Spring Road; Grace Greenwood, The Roosevelt. POST OFFICE. (Office hours—Daily, 8.30 a. m. to 10 p. m.; Sunday, 9 a. m. to 12m.) Postmaster.—Frank W. Collier, 418 Seventh Street NE. (Phone, Lincoln 507.) Assistant.—G. Roscoe Swift, 202 Twelfth Street SE. OFFICE AT HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. Registry, stamp, and money-order clerk.—F. 1. Veeder, Clarendon, Va.; assistant, Charles O. Young, 310 Third Street. Mail clerks.—Roland M. Fisher, 312 Second Street NE.; H. F. Bresee, 321 First Street SE. Night clerk.—T. C. Meeker, 3404 Twenty-second Street NE. 244 Congressional Directory. BRANCH OFFICE AT CAPITOL. Clerk in charge.—Lois S. Emery, 615 Sixth Street. MAIL DISTRIBUTORS. Day clerks.—C. J. McGinnis, 208 First Street SE.; J. A. Dillon, 413 Varum Street. Night clerks.—J. D. Mottesheard, 128 B Street NE. ; ; L. Hults, 321 First Street SE. MISCELLANEOUS. Delivery and collection messengers.—P. M. Appel, 645 Ninth Street NE.; David W. Barr, 4609 Eighth Street; F. E. Becker, 321 First Street SE.; C. L. Byers, 1820 K Street; E.J. Campbell, 312 Second Street N E.; T. A. Cassara, "22 Evarts Street NE; J.B. Coles, 1702 P Street; W. A. Cox, 312 Second Street NE. ; ; C. J. Delbridge, 1313 Thirteenth Street; BR. G. Denn, 128 E Street; KE. E. Dillon, 1647 Lamont Street; G. M. Eshbaugh, 731 Kentucky Avenue SE.; P. 7. Hamill, 319 Maryland Avenue NE. George Hill; C. N. Hopkins, 112 East Capitol Street; HS. Inwood, 217 East Capitol Street; A. Joerg, 119 Pennsylvania Avenue; H. J. Mitchell, 13 Channing Street NE. ; 0. W. "Morrison, 208 First Street SE.; Charles R. Newman, 3353 Eighteenth Street; George M. Raines, 112 East Capitol Street; William L. Sheridan, 492 Massachusetts Avenue; J. T. Spelman, 2817 Pennsylvania Avenue; Robert J. Wheaton, 1277 New Hampshire Avenue. Janitor.—J. W. Lewis, 5923 Dix Street NE. | li } Custodian.— Mascellaneous Officials. | 245 MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS. CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. (Office in Statuary Hall. Phone, Branch 200.) Clerk in charge at the Cepitol.—W. A. Smith, 3817 Jocelyn Street, Chevy Chase Heights. OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES. SENATE. : Theodore F. Shuey, Congress Hall. John D. Rhodes, 1427 Madison Street. James W. Murphy, 1788 Lanier Place. Assistant. —Edward V. Murphy, jr., 1656 Percy E. Budlong, 1727 First Street. Euclid Street. Daniel B. Lloyd, 1840 California Street. | Congressional Record messenger. —William James R. Wick, 1224 Fairfield Avenue, Madden, 1316 East Capitol Street. Fort Wayne, Ind. (Phone, Lincoln 2496-J.) HOUSE. Fred Irland, 1129 Columbia Road. Assistant. —John J. Cameron, 1830 Park Reuel Small, 521 Butternut Street. Road. Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place. Congressional Record messenger. —Samuel George C. Lafferty, 1600 T Street. Robinson, 670 Maryland Avenue NE. Samuel H. Gray, 1832 Biltmore Street. (Phone, Lincoln 3333.) John D. Cremer, 112 C Street SE. OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES. F. H. Barto, 2021 Park Road. | H. B. Weaver, 1346 Ingraham Street. R. J. Speir, Flower Avenue, Takoma | W. G. Stuart, 1811 Kilbourn Street. Park, Md. | ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL. (Office in basement of Capitol.) Architect.—Elliott Woods, Stoneleigh Court. Chief clerk.—John Welch, 1303 Euclid Street. Supervising engineer.— Arthur E. Cook, 135 Tennessee Avenue NE. Civil engineer.—David Lynn, Hyattsville, Md. Construction draftsman.—August Eccard, 3317 Wisconsin Avenue. Art curator.—Charles E. Fairman, 325 U Street. SENATE OFFICE BUILDING. Custodian.—A. E. Werner, The Haddington. (Phone, Columbia 340.) HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING. CAPITOL POLICE. Captain.—Albert L. de Montfredy, 633 Longfellow Street. (Phone, Columbia 2609.) Lieutenants.—Edward R. Kelly, 116 Carroll Street SE.; Wilmer B. Greene, 12 Third Street NE.; Joseph W. Atwood, 224 Maryland Avenue NE.; H. P. Warner, 211 A Street NE.; Andrew T. Sabol, 228 A Street SE. Sergeants.—Edward Morrissey, 1713 Q Street; Joseph W. Turner, 230 A Street SE.; H. K. Palmer, 105 C Street SE. Special officers.—Sam C. Dorsey; D. L. McDevitt, 1401 Girard Street. Clerk.—Leslie C. Taylor, 14 Evarts Street NE. (Phone, North 4325.) POSTAL TELEGRAPH-CABLE CO. In charge ai Capitol.-—~W. R. Berry, 310 East Capitol Street. (Phone, Lincoln 5497.) THE CAPITOL BUILDING. The Capitol is situated in latitude 38° 53” 20.4’ north and longitude 77° 007 35.7” west from Greenwich. It fronts east and stands on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the Potomac. ORIGINAL BUILDING. Thesoutheast corner stone of the original building waslaid on the 18th of September, 1793, by President Washington, with Masonic ceremonies. It is constructed of sand- stone from quarries on Aquia Creek, Va. The original designs were prepared by Dr. William Thornton, and the work was done under the direction of Stephen H. Hallet, James Hoban, George Hadfield, and B. H. Latrobe, architects. The north wing was finished in 1800 and the south wing in 1811. A wooden passageway con- nected them. On the 24th of August, 1814, the interior of both wings was destroyed by fire, set by the British. The damage to the building was immediately repaired. In 1818 the central portion of the building was commenced, under the architectural superintendence of Charles Bulfinch. The original building was finally completed in 1827. Its cost, including the grading of the grounds, alterations, and repairs, up to 1827, was $2,433,844.13. EXTENSIONS. The corner stone of the extensions was laid on the 4th of July, 1851, by President Fillmore, Daniel Webster officiating as orator. This work was prosecuted under the architectural direction of Thomas U. Walter till 1865, when he resigned, and it was completed under the supervision of Edward Clark. The material used in the walls is white marble from the quarries at Lee, Mass., and thatin the columns from the quarries at Cockeysville, Md. The House extension was first occupied for legislative purposes December 16. 1857, and the Senate January 4, 1859. The value of the Capitol Building and Grounds, October 14, 1911, was as follows: Building, $15,000,000; grounds, $10,400,000; total, $25,400,000. DIMENSIONS OF THE BUILDING. The entire length of the building from Dorth to south is 751 feet 4 inches, and its greatest dimension from east to west 350 feet. The area covered by the building is 153,112 square feet. DOME. The Dome of the original central building was constructed of wood, covered with copper. This was replaced in 1856 by the present structure of cast iron. It was completed in 1865. The entire weight of iron used is 8,909,200 pounds. The Dome is crowned by a bronze statue of Freedom, which is 19 feet 6 inches high and weighs 12,985 pounds. It was modeled by Crawford. The height of the Dome above the base line of the east frontis 287 feet 5 inches. The height from the top of the balustrade of the building is 217 feet il inches. The greatest diameter at the base is 135 feet 5 inches. The Rotunda is 97 feet 6 inches in diameter, and its height from the floor to the top of the canopy is 180 feet 3 inches. . The Senate Chamber is 113 feet 3 inches in length by 80 feet 3 inches in width and 36 feet in height. The galleries will accommodate 1,000 persons. The Representatives’ Hall is 139 feet in length by 93 feet in width and 36 feet in height. The room now occupied by the Supreme Court was, until 1859, occupied as the Senate Chamber. Previous to that time the court occupied the room immediately beneath, now used as a law library. OFFICE BUILDINGS. The value of the Senate and House Office Buildings and Grounds is as follows: Senate Building, $3,732,078; grounds, $746,111; total, $4,478,189. House Building, $3,342,011; grounds, $743,452; total, $4,085,463. 247 ro ~~ ® i / - Le : Pe HOUSE in [To ep SENATE EH ATE § TTR CE \ 6, tee, A tel Ste HR LONI ¢ ly, 207 SS Too ie nye ] | 1715.13 11.9 7 8 a vi 15s rl ol nhalislvy Au = ‘ 36 [34,32 30,28 | 26 | |24 22 rm EE fo lt OS SR EN pd Ld Td bn pelt hl : OE EA a lc 5 J Ht mag J oy ; pre = *fi4072040(] 10U01SS246U0)) B= Prk - 7 > 4 op 1 rene font wr dre BASEMENT AND. TERRACE ad -. I HOUSE WING. TERRACE. Room. 1. Dynamo room. 2. 3. Dynamo room. 5. Dynamo room. 4, 6. Office of Hon. Thomas D. Schall. 7, 9,11, 13, 15, 17. Dynamo rooms. 12. Janitor’s storeroom. 14. Tile room. 16. Women’s toilet. 18. Map room. 19, 21. Dynamo rooms. 20. Men’s toilet. 22, 24, 26, 28. Carpenter shop. 30, 32, 34, 36. Machine shop. 37. Electrician’s storeroom. 38, 39. Storeroom. 40, Plumber shop. BASEMENT, 33. Engineer’s office. 35, 39. Elevators. 37. Kitchen. BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. SENATE SIDE. Room. 21, 23, 25, 29. Architect’s office. 27. Senator Cameron’s room. 31. Subcommittee on Manufactures. HOUSE SIDE. 21. Committee on Enrolled Bills. 23, 25. House Committed on Printing. 27. Clerk’s storeroom. 29. Office of compiler of Congressional Directory. 31. Hon. Harold Knutson’s room (Republican whip}. SENATE WING. TERRACE. Room. 1. Architect’s drafting room. 2, 4, 6. Police headquarters. 3. Senator Stanley’s room. 5. Senator Keyes’s room. 7,9. Storekeeper. 8, 10, 12, 14. Storage rooms. 11. Secretary’s file room. 13. Captain of police. 15, 16, 17, 18. Janitor’s rooms. 19. Senator Broussard’s room. 20. Men’s voilet. BASEMENT. 32, 34. Secretary’s file rooms. 35, 47. Elevators. 37. Employees’ barber shop. 39, 41. Engineers’ room. 43. Kitchen. : § iS ody 3 oe) S = U x. 3 T 72 70 {71 69 | 68 4 [ETH 78379 1H] : {ifn SIA) 107 80 066 Is 39 et Ed ET) 67 { 70 6 268 RTTIGT - py cis gh i5 § pr eo Bf vis 46] 65 a ° 99 3 /00 8/ 42 4 S 701 -d “2 83 84385 == Fe Lp J} Se Pompe E a - °° : — 38) 59 oy ”y > rch Sorter routes OG i oli gd 4 S frp do cso oscnoeceas ve o& oy Cel 8d Sh 4 . 53 eR Sp wwn oR FS ea nn (»® » : V2) ” Yumtnmey palten : 3 LR os’ bd 57 oN “ 55 &: lL pepe N Bh, Ci a i yi] 1 7 S bi | 3 9. 102 ich Slt _—— °c 88 a 3 wi | 31 ff) 32 pe En ies 106 oh 3 SB Tips ea Fash 45 3 57 ~ - H bmn 2) "Te &@ ® mw ; ph >, io =4 IL ERuma W EWwsN » 5 3 : él es @ _ aS oF ro ii iil 2:31 53 |e S eo 3 ad / 62§f 50 pe eo Ss = : ; << EERE ER l SBE EED FEE EAE i 2 GROUND FLOOR HOUSE WING. Room. 1. Committee on Invalid Pensions. 2 3 [subcommittee on Appropriations. 5. 24. 6. 7. Official Reporters of Debates. 8. 9 10 Jspeacer of House. 11, Annex office, Post Office. 12. 13 Joe of Sergeant at Arms. 14 33 15, Barber shop. 16, 23. Hon. Henry Allen Cooper. 17. Clerk’s storeroom. 18, 22. Committee on Accounts. 19. Closets. 20, 21, 30, 32, 34. Restaurant. 25, 28. Elevators. f 27. Office House restaurant. 29, Private dining room. 31. Public restaurant. Jomee of Hon. Claude Kitchin. GROUND FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 68. Senate Committee on the Library. 69. Joint Committee on Printing. 70. 72. House Committee on Reform in the Civil Service. 74. 75. 76. Hon. Nicholas Longworth’s room. 77, 107. Senate Committee on Patents. 78. Senator McCumber’s room. 79. Senator Frelinghuysen’s room. 80. Senator McLean’s room. 81. 82. Storeroom Supreme Court. 83. Senators’ barber shop. 84, 85, 86. The Supreme Court—consultation room. 87. Congressional Law Library. 88. Congressional Law Library, formerly the Supreme Court room. 89, 90, 91, [Office of Doorkeeper of the House. 92,97, id ow of superintendent of folding room. Jon. C. Bascom Slemp’s rooms. 93. Employees’ barber shop. 94, 96. Messengers’ and pages’ cloakroom. 95. House disbursing office. 102, 103, 104, 105, 106. Offices of the Chief Clerk of the House. 99. Hon. Theodore E. Burton’s room. 100. Branch document room. SENATE WING. Room. 35, 67. Committee on Rules. 36, 37, 38, 59, 65. Committee on Appropriations. 39, 40. Committee on the Judiciary. 41. Senator McCormick’s room. 42, 43, 46, 58. Committee on Foreign Relations. 44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 61, 62. Restaurant. 50. Committee on Interoceanic Canals. 51, 60. Elevators. 52. Senator Culberson’s room. 53. Committee on Immigration. 55. Senator Hale’s room. 56, 57. Committee on Finance. 63. Committee on Enrolled Bills. 66. Men’s toilet. 68. ‘Women’s toilet. ‘burpping 101d0) ug I fq PRINCIPAL FLOOR pt §29 nd Senate § YF Chamber | 6496 *40300.42(T 1DUO0LSSUHUO,) HOUSE WING. Room. 1. 2. i; Committee on Appropriations. 4. 5. Hon. Joseph G. Cannon. 6. Closets. 7. 8. Members’ retiring rooms. 9. 10. Office of the majority leader. 11. 2. Cloakrooms. 3. ht 14. 15. Committee on Ways and Means. 16. Library. 17. Elevators. 18. Is peaker . PRINCIPAL FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 40, 41. House document room. 42, 43, 44. Office of the Clerk of the House. 45, 46. Office of the clerk of the Supreme Court. 47. Robing room of the Judges of the Supreme Court. 48. Withdrawing room of the Supreme Court. 49. Office of the marshal of the Supreme Court. 50, 51. Senate Committee on Contingent Expenses. 52. Senator Norris’s room. 53, 54. Senate Committee on Naval Affairs. 55. Senate Committee on Mines and Mining. 56. Senator Swanson’s room. 57. Senator Harrison’s room. 58. Annex office of the House majority leader. 59. House Steering Committee. 60, 61. House Committee on Banking and Currency. 62, 64, 65. Hon. Martin B. Madden’s rooms. 63. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Chamber. SENATE WING. Room. 21 22 23 24 25 26 28 29 31 32 33, 34. Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads. 33 36 37 . Office of the Secretary. . Executive clerk. . Financial clerk. . Chief Clerk. . Engrossing and enrolling clerks. , 27. Committee on Military Affairs. . Closets. 530. Cloakrooms. . The Marble Room. . Room of the Vice President. %, 35. Elevators. . Official Reporters of Debates. . The Senators’ reception room. . Committee on the District of Columbia. Office of the Sergeant at Arms. . Room of the President. ‘burppng jondn) eas ¥46 - Hall of Representatives. "103024 J0UO0LSSIUOU0)) GALLERY FLOOR. HOUSE WING. ommittee on Foreign Affairs. File room. Enrolling room. 8. tPress gallery. 13. 1 Committee on Rules. 13. Ladies’ retiring room. 14. Elevator. 15. Elevator. GALLERY FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL. MAIN BUILDING. Room. 27. Senate library. 28, Senate library—Librarian’s room. 29. Senator New’s room. 30. Senator Overman’s room. 31. 32.3Senate document room. 33. 34. Superintendent of the Senate document room. 35. House Journal, tally, and bill clerks. 37. iouse document room. 39. Clerk’s office. 40. Senate document room. 41. Senator Fletcher’s room. 42. Senator Owen’s room. 43. 47. *Senator Simmons’s rooms. 48. 49 |Committee on Expenditures in the Treasury Depart- 50. ment. 51. Senate minority whip. House Committee on Indian Affairs. PEEZ” tose of Hon. William A. Oldfield. [o1 4 SENATE WING. Room. 14. Committee on Manufactures. 15. 16 committee on Interstate Commerce. 17. Committee on Education and Labor. 8. 9 Committee on Commerce. 20. 21. Press gallery. 28. 22. Women’s retiring room. of ‘lenairman Minority Conference. 25. Committee on Privileges and Elections. 26. Committee on Printing. 27. Elevator. ‘burppng jondn) Geo AS80717 NY3LSIM sn QQ In : 1 = Congressional Directory. NN 7 Ll COAT ROOM SOUTHERN LOBBY COAT ROOM : % D., Ass’t Doorkeeper R., Official Repotters. P., Press Reporters. Sgt. Sergeant at Arms. Act. Ass't Doorkeeper. SENATORS’ LOBBY J. C., Journal Clerk. A., L. C., Legislative Clerk. R. C., Reading Clerk. Sec., Secretary. A.8S., Ass't Secretary. ROOM ETE AS88077 NU3LSYR @ @ i VICE PRESIDENT’S b H00G auvo 4 WOOH NOILd30TY, 8T— ad Ag—F—L9—.98L¥3 DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE. Carvin Cooringe, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate. . Ashurst, Henry F., Arizona. . Ball, L. Heisler, Delaware. . Bayard, Thomas F., Delaware. . Borah, William E., Idaho. . Brandegee, Frank B., Connecticut. . Brookhart, Smith W., Towa. . Broussard, Edwin S., Louisiana. . Bursum, Holm O., New Mexico. . Calder, William M., New York. . Cameron, Ralph H., Arizona. . Capper, Arthur, Kansas. . Caraway, T. H., Arkansas. . Colt, LeBaron B., Rhode Island. . Couzens, James, Michigan. . Culberson, Charles A., Texas. . Cummins, Albert B., Iowa. . Curtis, Charles, Kansas. . Dial, Nathaniel B., South Carolina. . Dillingham, William P., Vermont. . Edge, Walter E., New Jersey. . Elkins, Davis, West Virginia. . Ernst, Richard P., Kentucky. .' Fernald, Bert M., Maine. . Fletcher, Duncan U., Florida. 84. 23. 96. - 48. France, Joseph I., Maryland. Frelinghuysen, Joseph S., New Jersey. George, Walter F., Georgia. Gerry, Peter G., Rhode Island. . Glass, Carter, Virginia. . Gooding, Frank R., Idaho. . Hale, Frederick, Maine. . Harreld, John W., Oklahoma. . Harris, William J., Georgia. . Harrison, Pat, Mississippi. . Heflin, J. Thomas, Alabama. . Hitchcock, Gilbert M., Nebraska. . Johnson, Hiram W., California. . Jones, Andrieus A., New Mexico. . Jones, Wesley L., Washington. . Kellogg, Frank B., Minnesota. . Kendrick, John B., Wyoming. . Keyes, Henry W., New Hampshire. . King, William H., Utah. . Ladd, Edwin F., North Dakota. . La Follette, Robert M., Wisconsin. . Lenroot, Irvine L., Wisconsin. . Lodge, Henry Cabot, Massachusetts. McCormick, Medill, Illinois. . McCumber, Porter J., North Dakota. . McKellar, Kenneth, Tennessee. . McKinley, William B., Illinois. . McLean, George P., Connecticut. . McNary, Charles L., Oregon. . Moses, George H., New Hampshire. . Myers, Henry L., Montana. . Nelson, Knute, Minnesota. . New, Harry S., Indiana. . Nicholson, Samuel D., Colorado. . Norbeck, Peter, South Dakota. . Norris, George W., Nebraska. . Oddie, Tasker L., Nevada. . Overman, Lee S., North Carolina. . Owen, Robert L., Oklahoma. . Page, Carroll S., Vermont. . Pepper, George W., Pennsylvania. 47. . Pittman, Key, Nevada. . Poindexter, Miles, Washington. . Pomerene, Atlee, Ohio. . Ransdell, Joseph E., Louisiana. 71. 12. Phipps, Lawrence C., Colorado. Reed, David A., Pennsylvania. Reed, James A., Missouri. 59. 66. 87. 45. 58. 35. 31. 49. 44. 90. . Sterling, Thomas, South Dakota. . Sutherland, Howard, West Virginia. . Swanson, Claude A., Virginia. . Townsend, Charles E., Michigan. . Trammell, Park, Florida. . Underwood, Oscar W., Alabama. . Wadsworth, James W., jr., New York. . Walsh, David I., Massachusetts. . Walsh, Thomas J., Montana. . Warren, Francis E., Wyoming. . Watson, James E., Indiana. . Weller, O. E., Maryland. . Williams, John Sharp, Mississippi. . Willis, Frank B., Ohio. > Robinson, Joseph T., Arkansas. Sheppard, Morris, Texas. Shields, John K., Tennessee. Shortridge, Samuel M., California. Simmons, F. M., North Carolina. Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina. Smoot, Reed, Utah. Spencer, Selden P., Missauri. Stanfield, Robert N., Oregon. Stanley, A. Owsley, Kentucky. ouds oy) fo fluo LGo 258 Congressional Directory. CIEE ELIT] @L] BL 1] @ 1] —- | 5 = : z id 3 © fi E x, g 5 : 3 — 2 <3 < Ze ct : FE 0 E I a [1 ¥ i, (® ] J = . & 1 & 3 a = [Tig & [TT ® — WEmE = [1 1® [11 [@ wg 1 Members’ Rooms and Telephones. MEMBERS’ ROOMS AND TELEPHONES. SENATORS. (Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol Exchange—Main 3120.) OFFICE BUILDING. CAPITOL, SENATOR. CHAIRMANSHIP, < Tele- = Tele- Room. phone Location. phone. ASHURST. .....| 406 I BL Tai DC EE BALL va 242 816 | District of Columbia. . .c...... Senate floor, east side. . ....... 113 BAYARD. ...... ! 223 FA ENE Ee IRB BE GE Ul rae BOBAH ...... a: 139 878 | Education and Labor........ Gallery floor, west side....... 70 BRANDEGEE... 425 13 LADraArY oo ireesesransons HR Ou building, , basement, west 29 side BROOKHART. .. 347 BROUSSARD.... 447 BURSUM....... 123 CAIDER........ 440 CAMERON..... 127 CAPPER........ 206 CARAWAY. ... 441 Corr... ..-.- 233 COUZENS...... 413 - CULBERSON... 315 Ce Ground floor, north side...... 33 CUMMINS...... 410 178 | Interstate Commerce.......... Gallery floor, west side. ....... 100 CURTIS. . vnc 226 EY LR SE Ce Ra a TR Ground floor, southwest corner. 48 DIAL... anv 328 ea ER CP DILLINGHAM. . 313 93 | Privilegesand Elections Ean... .....c- 247 107 | Interoceanic Canals........... Bren. oo... 344 B00 1. sensi Shader de eS Ses ee TENSE. vedere 231 822 | Revision of the Laws.......... FERNALD...... 240 162 | Public Buildingsand Grounds FLETCHER. .... 337 Ye eR er Ae es FRANCE. ...... 340 RE a Se SI ees FRELINGHUY- 405 4 Ch SR, SEN. GEORGE. ...... 129 Cn EERE eR en De ae GERRY... ...- 408 HE LR A Be LL LEE Grass... i... 330 i Tr tana ssn ae GOODING...... 333 a i ass Pt a we ANT sl 12] yf Re EEE SR HARRELD...... 210 EE ee aa 8 Hannms........ 230 i EE ce GER EIR eS HARRISON..... 443 A ee ae HEFLIN........ 332 THE ee en a ST HrrcHCOCK --... 317 IE Ree RE Si SL JOHNSON. ..... 323 161 Patents. o.oo... oa. Old building, basement, north- 36 west corner. JoNES(N.Mex.) 343 A A EE Sl Be St SIRO SRR by Se i Jonus(Wash.). 445 S39 Commerce... ........5.... Gallery floor, northwest corner 121 KELLOGG. ..... 411 1 Ce ee ae re es Saas als ea KENDRICK.... 232 EE a a Ba eS LE aa ea a in as Kuyes:....... 205 A Ee A a Ee a a een KING. -ceenn-- 342 Er a Se a ras ln ly - TADD....... 0.0 339 i ease a RS sme Sai Dae re Sm - LA FOLLETTE 427 828 Manufactures. .........uc.e..- Gallery floor, southwest corner. 43 LENROOT...... 133 EE ee i a a La aay LODGE. ........ 225 180 | Foreign Relations............. Ground floor, south side....... 41 MCCORMICK. . . 131 832 | Expenditures in Executive | Ground floor, ‘northside. ...... 32 Departments. McCUMBER.... 308 11 | Finance McKELLAR... 248 BIS ina. McKINLEY. . .. 132 LE EG NE McLEAN....... 303 865 | Banking and Currency McNARY. .. 442 167 | Irrigation and Reclamation .. MosESs. ........ 209 VE ER ET a ee -| Gallery floor, northeast corner. 20 Myers. ...o.. 244 i le a ee he NELSON ....... 307 199 Judieciary.......... Ground floor, northwest corner 156 NEW oaieeon. 326 01 |" Territoriesand Insular Posses- 1... oo. i. eriecciine sinners femeassinn sions. NICHOLSON. ... 245 A ee AE ee NORBECK..... 423 EE ES ea NOERIS........ 433 1665: Acricmltnre and Forestry. «oul. oc Je to id sami Salm ter sate ODDIE... 2... 448 0 haa, OVERMAN..... 211 Em NE El ea a 79 OWEN.... .... 228 SUCHE Saeed ne IE Mn EE a Se i aa 18 Pace... Naval Aflaivs. .... oo... Old library space, Senate floor, 57 northwest corner. 260 Congressional Directory. | i SENATORS—Continued. OFFICE BUILDING. CAPITOL. SENATOR. CHAIRMANSHIP. | Tele- = Tele- li Room. phone Location. phone PEPPER........ PHIPPS. . PITTMAN. ..... POINDEXTER. . POMERENE.... RANSDELL. .... REED (Mo).... i REED (Pa).... | ROBINSON..... i SHEPPARD..... | i SHIELDS: -..... | i SHORTRIDGE. .. E i SIMMONS. . .... | SMITH... 0: | SMooT........ 215 825 -Public Lands and Surveys. il ..... citi cries snsinsnsaneol ose cans SPENCER. ..... 422 82 Indian AAS. cit a a a eae | STANFIELD..... 444 dl a eR Ag Sel lL Lae STANLEY...... 147 LE EE eR I En Ld es STERLING...... 437 IS Civil Service or i eee ree a SUTHERLAND. . 321 165 | Enrolled Bills................. Ground floor, northeast corner. 101 SWANSON...... 204 TB i A ed CS i De TS CE 54 TOWNSEND. ... 409 827 | Post Offices and Post Roads. .| Senate floor, southeast corner. 34 TRAMMELL. ... 304 dE ES Ee a a de Le ER UNDERWOOD..}. aceuncfencenann Minority Conference........... Gallery floor, east side......... 37 WADSWORTH. . 432 805 | Military Affairs. .............. Senate floor, northwest corner. *155 WALSH Sass 331 et eo op WALSH(Mont. 421 A SR et nS WARREN ile sesnoslinari aos Appropriations................ Ground floor, west side........ 15 ‘WATSON....... 221 TELE be Ea a EE ae sty Ee Dn ha ‘WELLER....... 227 ND i maa Be a SL RG enn WILLIAMS. . ... 217 1 0 pile elie in el I See es re pe Le LSet WIL. .... 5. 125 EE Sd RR a BP a Oy Fle | Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 261 | REPRESENTATIVES. (Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol Exchange—Main 3120.) OFFICE \ Bonne. CAPITOL. REPRESENTATIVE, DorasAY, OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMISSIONER. Mle Tole- | Room. phone Location. phone. ABERNETHY... lua. 438 LL ea RA AN sb SL iS LR © SE Ca SE a TL ACKERMAN. ..Ci 0.000 306 17950... FRA hates Ini sa SERRE aC AGS ATS Se Lai een AU ATMON i ios sitiin 142 LL El eee Seer Saban Sided nad Ids SER Sa Sen SE DOR el Sa I See Si ANDERSON oo noicinun 390 101 By eed pep Se Serra iad Hn ERR le GS SRS inne ROR aie ANDREW (Mass.)...... 184 A re a i ie eres eee nea. g ANDREWS (Nebr.)..... 295 590: Elections of Presi= fo i ieee: dent, ete. 170 267 216 179 210a 164 255 466a 107 418 427 169 401 434 376 366 Expenditures on Public Buildings. 477 ES re rE en SE SE seis Sd BI AS IR Ea Sais yma al 133 ee bs rae in ee ta ie BLACK isa 518 a i ri era Re ee BLARENEY ooo 134 CL a EE EERE Na ASO Rd Me AR LR BI fe Sl a Be Si Li Branp (Ind.)... ..... 272 574: Industrial Artsiand |. ee eee. Expositions. BLAND (Va). os BLANTON... oo. BOIS. oor rads BOND... oi ui BOWERS... ooo BOWLING. ..........c BOX ei ee: | BRAND i. nee BRENNAN BRIGGS... BRITTEN oa Broogs(lL.).......... BROOKS (Pa.)......... BrowN (Tenn.)....... BROWNE (Wis.)....... BUCHANAN... ........ BULWINELE........... BUBDICE ..... aaa iii Bure. ana BURROUGHS........... | BURTNESS. heres BURTON. eves | BUTTER otis BYRNES (S. C.)c....... ByrNs (Tenn.)---.-.-- \ CABLE... eee Gea CAMPBELL (Kans.)..... CAMPBELL (Pa.)....... CANNON... o.oo CANTRILL. avout) CAREW. ....... 000 8k. CARTER [vo eves CHALMERS... ........... CHANDLER (N. Y.).... ‘CHANDLER (OKla.)..... CHINDBLOM ........... CHRISTOPHERSON ...... CLAGUE.......... = CLARK (Fla.).......... 262 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. OFFICE BUILDING. CAPITOL. REPRESENTATIVE, DLacars OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP, DENT COMMISSIONER. Tele- Tele- Room. phone Location. phone. CLARKE (N. Y.)....... 455 A eT Ey Fe CLARSON oi nas 149 CLOSE, iia 462 COCKRAN.... a ceevinnnns 499¢a CODD... aeanssaaes 114 CoLe(lowa).......--- 288 CoLE (Ohio) 413 COLLIER ...-..-- 531 Cornns......... 399 COLTON. a siavanas 224 CONNALLY (Tex.)...... 538 CoNNOLLY (Pa.)....... 493 COOPER (Ohio). ....... 533 CoorER (Wis.):. ......0.... COPLEN os mn nnn oie sans 314 Territories. ......... Expendituresin the Department of the Treasury. DALLINGER oo. .- { 12 al }Elections WE pee Sr ER CR Shea 1 DARROW... vv oeeicuan- 392 DAVILA... aa: 160 Davis (Minn.)......... 361 DAvis(Tenn.)......... 393 DEAL 447 DEMPSEY 245 DENISON 411 DE VEYRA 148 DICKINSON 250 DOMINICK. ... 205 DOUGHTON... 502 DOWELL 363 DRANE 309 DREWRY 176 DRIVER 532 DUNBAR ae 15 DUNN 154 DUPRE 128 DYER 302 ECHOLS 119 413 | ExpendilureSIn the |. coo... -aooms ms nmsncinninniisns se salons Navy Depart- ment. EDMONDS... ico einmaies 346 { ol Lr LIENERT 0 ae pn LE Ct 10 IA Ut pa eee 296 687 | ExpenditureSinthe |. coc. . coo ihn ccc can sivenee vena) idedenes Department of State. 412 251 512 428 165 260 355 405 407 547 441 126 420 377a District of Columbia. 321 615 | Ways and Means... 416 va BET ase 402 02 Ls ih sar m te a Ras Enea Li a en 1 Bete a Sia 387 a 202 HE a Re Le LS 144 IY Se a BULLER. vo ctinn- 304 604 | Invalid Pensions.... FULMER. ... cc. vcneess 352 088 30... ivscrrnrn ies naninns | Members’ Rooms and Telephones. REPRESENTATIVE S— Continued. 263 REPRESENTATIVE, DELEGATE, OR RESI- DENT COMMISSIONER. OFFICE BUILDING. Room. CHAIRMANSHIP, CAPITOL. Location. GARRETT (Tenn.)..... GARRETT (Tex.)....... GENSMAN ....-..- ay CERNERD eats GOLDSBOROUGH. ...... GOODYKOONTZ. ........ CORMAN: 1. ious GOULD... aor GRAHAM (11.)......... GRAHAM (Pa.)..----.. GREEN (Iowa)......... GREENE (Mass.)...-... GREENE (Vi.)......... Gules. HAMMER. ius HARDY (Colo.)........ HARDY (Tex.)..t.....% HAUGEN HuMPHREY (Nebr.)... HUMPHREYS (Miss.)... HusreD IRELAND Stun iy JACOWAY os JAMES (Mich.)......... JEFFERIS (Nebr.)...... JEFEPERI (Ala). o.oo JOHNSON (Ky.)........ JOHNSON (Miss.)....... JOHNSON (S. Dak.).... JOHNSON (Wash.)..... JONES (Pa). vis JONES (Tex.).. on" KAHN KELLER o KELLEY (Mich.)....... Keriy (Pa): oar KENDALL... ov ous Expenditures inthe Post Office De- partment. Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Expenditures in the War Department. Immigration and Naturalization. 264 Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. REPRESENTATIVE, DELEGATE, OR RESI- DENT COMMISSIONER. CHAIRMANSHIP. Tele- phone. Kunei(N. Y.)--.---.. KLNE(Pa): NIGH... cane nas oes TANEAM onan EARKFORD. LARSEN (Ga.). .-..ccun LArsoN (Minn.)....... T/AWRERCE............ BAYTON. snes LAZARD... cvivennies LEA(CalL) iv. LEATHERWOOD........ MCERENAIE. Co can MCLAUGHLIN ih) McLAUGHLIN (Nebr. McLAUGHLIN (Pa.).... MCPHERSON.-.......... MAGE: ss Moore (TIL)... -...... MOORE (Ohio)......... MoORE(Va.Y. .-...... Expendituresin the Expenditures in the Department of the Interior. Patents... vsti Public Buildings and Grounds. Reform in the Civil Department of Agriculture. Service. rency. ER LE Lk EE EE RE Bid dd ee ——————— te S——— Members’ Rooms and Telephones. 265 REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. OFFICE CAPITOL. pLEERESENTATIVE, Bulbine. ELEGATE, OR RESI- DENT COMMISSIONER. ol CHAIRMANSHIP. Tele ele- : - Room. phere. Location. phone. MooRrEgS (Ind.)........ 340 646 | DISposition-of NT 8e- 1H. . i riot neavesssvmnsasassss sana ner snns less Papers in Ex- ecutive Depart- ments. MORGAN... uvieerin- 448 EAS er At an Rs FE Ee Ce al a SS MORIN... cacao 274 oR A a i Fa EA LE ee I rr MOTE ch cies 515 7 a Te Re a LS al 0 AA re dn NE Cn LRA LR Et LL SS MUDD... soi cue cnesess 370 SE MURPHY avs cvinnasss 475 365 {-Expenditaresinthe {ooo cone oo anna Department of Commerce. NELSON, A. P. (Wis.).. 276 A ie EL a Eh Re ee Tr NELSON,JOHN E.(Me.). 229 ES ERA Len aR Se A RS A Men I BL Tel Se aii NELSON, JOHN M.(Wis)) 311 a Er A RS I EE ES LE A Sh NEwTON (Minn.)...... 503 a a SE RE Be SE ER Tn) HC NEWTON (Mo.)........ 499 FL RD Es al cen Sp ed LB EE ne LE DR ELSE ae LT NORTON O’BRIEN O’CONNOR OGDEN. ....... OLDFIELD.. LIVER... OLD. 5p clans OSBORNE OVERSTREET PAIGE rosie PARK (Ga.) PARKER (N.J.)....... PARKER (NY ).oo oc PARKS (Ark) PATTERSON (Mo.)..... 166 YL Sa Sl Ss el So Ni Ss SER EL Re Ln ER Lei PATTERSON (N. J.).... 490 BOD ra er hE ea rE a pal ae A anaes ea 168a TEE Be Be GL as er ESTE EE AR I LS ts enn Lies fe PERKINS... oo. ov) 248 BB ee PERLMAN. ............ 150 QA rE EG tee A ee PETERSEN... cccceue-. 444 LE A SC Se a CD eR SR SIRE ET IN aig Pho iy Lee Foreign Affairs...... Gallery floor, west corridor...... 230 POU. aie 303 1 PE PE pL Ree Sh LL Su Is SRE SO SR IE SOS Se La a PRINGEY. oi hoo ih 357 HER Ee i se Ba Ee SR See a PUBNFEEL. eae 367 0B ee a ets ee a a I EE es Ll Re Ca i 139 Cn ee SUL AS Be he adie So 0 Se BR IL a Ge Se RADCIIFRE cases 252 ee er ee ea Ee RAINEY (Aln.)-........ 131 7 A Sees ar a EER in Ll ha ee ie SSS Ra RS RR RE RANEY (711). ........ 506 a an SE td SU CI po a lL I RAKER 292 iE Bene eS RC Bee Lh a Seen nS ed Ra lll ta Ee i i RAMSEYER 257 RANKIN 157 RANSLEY 214 RAYBURN 543 REBER 210 REECE 457 REED (N 319 : REED (W 360a 793 | Expendiinresinthe |. .....cceccan eirnesne A ha Department of Justice. RHODES. oo as. 287 585 Minesand Mining. Vc, Co aaa aa RICKETTS.. cceceacccen 284 LEE TO DE LY hae Ee RE Be a a a RIDDICK eciiacasanes. 188 iE be pres Sra tre add Le Ss SRE le Sa . RIORDAN... oie. 496 ERS ale neal ST RAE ra SSPE Sa a pn ea ROACH... easier, 236 HTH MR Seen ae (RSS ATI ReE) hii ca ela in Seba tn LO len ROBERTSON. -aeensens 110a ERIE Rs mee ro EE Se Se CE a i ROBSION cv. ieieras- 516 VV AR RE Ln Esse at a 0a SA RS Ga ee SE EA Lh RODENBERG........... { = } CER LE TS ERE LS Sane a Roques. - oo 498 RS Cn a ar EE SAR LS SR Lp NE Cl Ie Sarees Roe. ies 492 BY i cena d br Le csi a me SEs mw sa Ce ee fa al ROSENBLOOM. ........ 508 AREER as den ie Ria nen ieee nn Lae ROSSDALE. ceca. 374 as ROUSE. Lo eceeuensne 388 TE EER Seek aeho i SEER Ries SL ih ede in ani Sata RUCKER... ch ovene-veees 225 AE RS Sb se BE EE a ie a RYAN. eee arraaenes 499d BR a a ii Se een eT A a SABATH anaes 391 Ub Sr SR le a ee OE Sheds ERE Se ER SANDERS (Ind.)....... SANDERS (N. Y.)...... SANDERS (T€X.)....... SANDLIN Scorr (Mich.)......... Congressional Directory. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. REPRESENTATIVE, DELEGATE, OR RESI- DENT COMMISSIONER. OFFICE BUILDING. CHAIRMANSHIP. CAPITOL. Location. Score (Tenn.).....-.-- Suite (Idaho)......... Smite (Mich.)......... SMITHEWICK vv.vnvvivnnne STRAGATL . oc edsuee STEDMAN... _....... INES, cars se nniens Ly TEE I HE Rae hal STrONG (Kans.)....... STRONGI(Pa.)........- SULLIVAN ..........--- SUMMERS (Wash.)..... SUMNERS (Tex.)...... TAYLOR (Ark.)...onuu- TAYLOR (Colo.)-....... TAYLOR (N. J.)-....... PAYLOR (Tenm.)....... TEMPLE. ... cc PHOMAS, core wnes CINCHER. .......7- = UPSHAW. ......aisvees ALE ees WARD (N.C). WARD(N. XY.) WEAVER, nai Lands. War Claims. ........ Indian Affairs....... Roads. Coinage, Weights, and Measures. 3 qaieiory cons inae Expenditures in the Department of Labor. Railways and Canals Members’ Rooms and Telephones. REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. 267 OFFICE BUILDING. Caprroc, REPRESENTATIVE, DotRa, OR RESI- CHAIRMANSHIP. DENT COMMISSIONER. Tele- : Tele- Room. phone Location. phone WHITE (Kans). .....-. 234 Leas ee eli aU WHITE (Me). .cuavii.. 289 586 | Woman Suffrage. ... WinriaMs (11L.)........ 289a yg AR pe a WILLIAMS (Tex.)...... 172 ERIE TERA WILLIAMSON 473 51TH Phd ele ee EL Se WILSON... ...- 222 Lr a SE eR a WINGO unis. cvmnnsns 541 FAS a ass 226 Lo ania Rnkaalnls WINSLOW... ..... i's 293 460 a and For- eign Commerce. WISE: oles ih aves 527 TB its fe wt wenn d Woon (Ind)... nv-wun- 328 I men BS TA WOODRUFE...cesarecons 185 AY RL SE Woops (Va.)---:.cnaan 389 I RE EY WOODYARD.....--u"ue 468 A RTE he a a WRIGHT soot ook CY BE Ls Ln dik agen WURZBACH. ....connans 421 7 DEE EE RL eR rR SEN WYANT. oo ia anew 260a OBB A a YATES... 208 I BR RR SE I YOUNG.......- 425 7a Ui ei SR aie Sai le TILMAN. ....c.. cums 127 417) Labor ui vate Jane. 268 Congressional Directory. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. (Capitol Hill. Phone, Main 2727.) Librarian of Congress.—Herbert Putnam, The Cosmos Club. Chief Assistant Librarian.—Appleton P. C. Griffin, 2150 Florida Avenue. Chief clerk.—Allen R. Boyd, 1751 Corcoran Street. Secretary.—Jessica I.. Farnum, 5801 Fourteenth Street. Superintendent of reading room.—Frederick W. Ashley, The Roland. Chief assistants in reading room.—John G. Morrison, 1230 Irving Street; Henry E. Lower, 205 East Capitol Street. Reading room for the blind.—Mrs. Gertrude T. Rider, The Portner. Representatives’ reading room.—Hugh A. Morrison, 2302 First Street. Chiefs of division: Bibliography. —Herman H. B. Meyer, 2608 Tunlaw Road. Binding.—Arthur R. Kimball, 1646 Irving Street. Card.—Charles H. Hastings, 3600 Ordway Street, Cleveland Park. Catalogue.—Charles Martel, 300 South Carolina Avenue SE. Classification.—Clarence W. Perley, 2085 Adams Mill Road. Documents.—Henry J. Harris, 1857 Lamont Street. Legislative reference.— Mail and delivery.—Samuel M. Croft, 316 Tenth Street NE. Manuscripts.— Charles Moore, 1712 H Street. Maps and charts.—Philip Lee Phillips, 1308 Twentieth Street. Music.—Carl Engel, 3039 Macomb Street. Order. —William Adams Slade, 1921 I Street. Periodical. —Yale O. Millington, acting chief, 1022 Newton Street NE. Prints.—Richard A. Rice, The Dresden. Semitic.—Israel Schapiro (in charge), 1907 Fifteenth Street. Slavie.—Peter A. Speek (in charge), Virginia Highlands, Alexandria, Va. Smithsonian.—Francis H. Parsons, 210 First Street SE. Law librarian.—Roger Boutell, Pelham Courts. Copyright office: Register, Thorvald Solberg, Glen Echo Heights, Md. Assistant register, William I. Brown, The Ontario. Library Building (custody and maintenance): Administrative assistant and general disbursing officer, Harriet de Krafft Woods, . The Marlborough. : Chief clerk, Wade H. Rabbitt, Mount Rainier, Md. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE. (Corner North Capitol and G Streets. Phone, Main 6840.) Public Printer.—George H. Carter, 1661 Hobart Street. Deputy Public Printer.—John Greene, 41 Rhode Island Avenue. Production manager —Elwood S. Moorhead, 126 Rhode Island Avenue. Chief clerk.—Henry H. Wright, 1250 E Street NE. Secretary to the Public Printer.—Miss Mary A. Tate, 1453 Belmont Street. Purchasing agent.—Ernest E. Emerson, Branchville, Md. Superintendent of accounts.—James K. Wallace, 1322 Monroe Street NE. Superintendent of buildings.—Walter R. Metz, 14 Crescent Place, Takoma Park. Superintendent of documents.—Alton P. Tisdel, The Hawarden. Foreman of printing.—Henry W. Weber, 909 Maryland Avenue NE. Night foreman of printing.—Marion E. Bullock, Riverdale, Md. Foreman of presswork.—Bert E. Bair, 2223 Flagler Street. Foreman of binding.—Martin R. Speelman, 153 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Foreman of plate making.—Edward G. Whall, The Royalton. Storekeeper.—William H. Kervin, 329 Tenth Street NE. Congressional Record clerk (Capitol).—William A. Smith, 3817 Jocelyn Street, Chevy Chase Heights. Captain of the watch.—Charles H. Warner, 1353 Monroe Street. UNITED STATES BOTANIC GARDEN. (West of the Capitol Grounds.) Director.—George W. Hess, Botanic Garden. (Phone, Main 3120, Branch 256.) Assistant director.—Wilmer J. Paget, 211 P Street. (Phone, North 5677-W.) Clerk.—William N. Stiefel, Cherrydale, Va. A ——— APPENDIX EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS MISCELLANEOUS INSTITUTIONS OFFICIAL DUTIES JUDICIARY _— DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR SERVICE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA PRESS GALLERIES MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES MAPS OF CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS INDIVIDUAL INDEX. : EXECUTIVE. THE WHITE HOUSE. (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets. Phone, Main 6.) WARREN G. HARDING, President, of Marion, Ohio, was born in Blooming Grove, Morrow County, Ohio, November 2, 1865; has been a newspaper publisher since 1884; is married; was member of the Seventy-fifth and Seventy-sixth Ohio General Assemblies as senator from the thirteenth district 1899-1903, and lieutenant governor of Ohio in 1904 and 1905; elected to the United States Senate November 3, 1914; he resigned his seat on January 13, 1921, having been elected President of the United States on November 2, 1920. GEORGE B. CHRISTIAN, Jr., Secretary to the President, of Marion, Ohio (2649 Connecticut Avenue), was born in Marion County March 25, 1873; he attended the Marion public schools, and was graduated from the Pennsylvania Military Col- lege at Chester in 1896, with the degree of C. E.; he was married in 1897 to Miss Stella Farrar, of Shelby, Ohio, and they have two children—Warren W. and John F.; he engaged in the limestoneindustry in Marion County until March 4, 1915, when he became private secretary to Senator Warren G. Harding, of Ohio; on March 4, 1921, he was appointed Secretary to the President. Executive clerk.—Rudolph Forster, The Wardman Park. Chief clerk.—Judson C. Welliver, Rockville, Md. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 4510.) CHARLES EVANS HUGHES, Secretary of State (1529 Eighteenth Street), was born at Glens Falls, N. Y., April 11, 1862; attended Colgate University 1876-1878; A. B. Brown University 1881, A. M. 1884; LL. B. Columbia University 1884; (LL. D. Brown 1906; Columbia, Knox, and Lafayette 1907; Union and Colgate 1908; George Washington 1909; Williams College, Harvard, and University of Pennsylvania 1910; Yale University 1915;) admitted to New York bar 1884; prize fellowship Columbia Law School 1884-1887; practiced law in New York 1884-1891, 1893-1906; professor of law 1891-1893, special lecturer 1893-1895, Cornell University; special lecturer, New York Law School, 1893-1900; counsel Stevens gas committee (New York Legis- lature) 1905; counsel Armstrong insurance committee (New York Legislature) 1905-6; special assistant to Attorney General, coal investigation, 1906; nominated for mayor of New York by Republican convention 1905, but declined; elected governor of New York for two terms (1907-8 and 1909-10); resigned October 6, 1910; appointed Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court, May 2, 1910, and assumed duties October 10, 1910; nominated for President of the United States by the Republican national convention at Chicago June 10, 1916, and resigned from the Supreme Court on the same day; received 254 electoral votes for the Presidency, as against 277 for Woodrow Wilson, Democratic nominee; practiced law in New York since January 1, 1917; chairman district board of draft appeals, New York City, 1917-18; special assistant to the Attorney General in charge of aircraft inquiry 1918; appointed Sec- retary of State March 5, 1921. Undersecretary of State.— William Phillips, 3500 Woodley Road. The Assistant Secretary.—Leland Harrison, 1718 H Street. Second Assistant Secretary.—Alvey A. Adee, 1019 Fifteenth Street. Third Assistant Secretary.—Robert Woods Bliss, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue. Director of the Consular Service.—Wilbur J. Carr, The Dresden. Chief clerk.—Ben G. Davis, 110 Cedar Avenue, Takoma Park. Sapo to the Secretary of State. —William H. Beck, 1845 Lamont Street. olicitor.— Economic adviser.— Arthur N. Young, 3512 Thirty-fifth Street. ot 7 i — I Ce i KE Oe OH a ee 272. Congressional Directory. TREASURY Chief of Division of— Far Eastern Affairs.—John Van A. MacMurray, 1831 Twenty-third Street. Mexican Affairs.—Matthew E. Hanna, The Chastleton. Eastern European Affairs.—DeWitt C. Poole, 1707 Nineteenth Street. Near Eastern Ajffairs.—Allen W. Dulles, 2328 Ashmead Place. Latin-American Affairs.—Francis White, 2110 Bancroft Place. | Passport Control.—George L. Brist, 610 M Street NE. (acting). Western European Affairs.—William R. Castle, jr., 1818 R Street. - Publications.—Gaillard Hunt, R. F. D. 71, Falls Church, Va. ; Political and Economic Information.—Prentiss B. Gilbert, 816 Seventeenth Street. Current Information.—Stanley Hawks, The Racquet Club (acting). Chief of Bureau of— Accounts and disbursing clerk.— William McNeir, 1844 Monroe Street. J Appointments.—Miles M. Shand, 3206 Seventeenth Street. Consular.—Herbert C. Hengstler, 2816 Twenty-seventh Street. Diplomatic.—Worthington E. Stewart, 428 Luray Street. Indexes and Archives.—David A. Salmon, 1733 Columbia Road. Editor of Laws of Congress.—Henry L. Bryan, 604 East Capitol Street. Officer in charge of ceremonials.—Charles L. Cooke, The Iroquois. Assistants to the solicitor.-LJoseph R. Baker, 1418 Euclid Street;*Ralph W. S. Hill, 10 Jackson Place; Jacob A. Metzger, 2605 Adams Mill Road;“Green H. Hack- worth, 120 V Street NE. Richard W. Flournoy, jr., 3122 P Street; Willian R. Vallance, 829 Twentieth Street; Alfred B. Haupt, 3707 Springdale Avenue, Baltimore, Md. ’ ; Assistant solicitors.~—Joseph B. Matre, 1215 Tenth Street;”Edgar W. Turlington, 20 Jackson Place; Charles M. Barnes, 1436 Meridian Place; ‘William B. Norris, jr., 1 The Alabama; Benedict M. English, 1447 Clifton Street; Anna A. O'Neill, 1326 New Hampshire Avenue; Edward C. Wynne, 3822 McKinley Street; Chevy Chase; Francis Colt De Wolf, The Roosevelt. ? Translators.—John S. Martin, jr., 1731 F Street; Wilfred Stevens, Wesley Heights. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. (Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 6400.) | i ANDREW W. MELLON, of Pittsburgh, Pa., Secretary of the Treasury (1785 Mas- i sachusetts Avenue), was born in Pittsburgh March 24, 1855; University of Pittsburgh, | class 1873, A. M. 1898; LL. D. 1921; Dartmouth College, LL. D. 1922; banker by profession; resigned as president Mellon National Bank of Pittsburgh March 1, 1921, : i and as executive or director of various financial and industrial corporations, and took | H the oath of office as Secretary of the Treasury on March 4, 1921. He is chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, chairman Farm Loan Board, chairman War Finance [ Corporation, chairman World War Foreign Debt Commission; honorary chairman i United States Section of the Inter American High Commission; chairman Rock Creek 1 and Potomac Parkway Commission; member board of trustees, Postal Savings System. The Undersecretary (in charge of Fiscal Affairs).—S. P. Gilbert, jr., 1819 Q Street; assist- ants, W. N. Thompson, 1362 Perry Place; Roland A. Croxton, 1519 Park Road. Assistant Secretary in charge of Foreign Loans and Railroad Advances.—Eliot Wads- worth, 1534 Twenty-eighth Street. | Assistant Secretary in charge of the Collection of the Revenues.—( Vacant.) Assistant Secretary in charge of Customs, Public Health, Public Buildings, and the Coast Guard. —Edward Clifford, Army and Navy Club; assistants, W. B. Kilpatrick, he Friendship Heights, D. C.; William A. Morris, jr., 1333 D Street NE.; Kath- arine R. Pike, 417 Clifton Terrace West; Mercer Vernon, National Press Club. —ommissioner of the Public Debt.—William S. Broughton, 1819 Q Street. Deputy Commissioner of the Public Debt.—S. R. Jacobs, 1473 Harvard Street. : | Commussioner of Accounts and Deposits.—Robert G. Hand, 3530 Eleventh Street. Wh Chief clerk.—W. G. Platt, 307 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park. : i Private secretary to the Secretary of the Treasury.—John Kieley, 1821 Wyoming Avenue. * - 2 pe 3 — - ol TREASURY Executive Departments. 1973 Chief of Division of— Appointments.—James E. Harper, East Underwood, Chevy Chase, Md. Bookkeeping and Warrants.—M. J. O'Reilly, 4209 New Hampshire Avenue. Customs.—Ernest W. Camp, 1402 Massachusetts Avenue. Deposits.—E. D. Batchelder, 1203 Decatur Street. Loans and Currency.—C. N. McGroarty, Falls Church, Va. Mail and Files.—L. C. Martin, 337 Fourteenth Street NE. Paper Custody. —F. G. Collins, 1413 Hopkins Street. Printing and Stationery.—F. F. Weston, Forest Glen, Md. Public Debt Accounts and Audit.—M. R. Loafman, The Argyle. Savings System.-—Lew Wallace, jr., 3238 R Street. Secret Service.—W. H. Moran, 1840 Mintwood Place. Section of Statistics.—J. H. Riddle, 2006 Columbia Road. A Special Agency Service, Customs.—Nathaniel G. Van Doren, director, 647 East Capitol Street. Disbursing clerk.—J. L. Summers, 1416 N Street. Government actuary.—Joseph S. McCoy, Beltsville, Md. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. (Treasury Department Building.) Comptroller.—D. R. Crissinger, The Somerset. Deputy comptrollers.—Thomas P. Kane, 1931 Calvert Street; Willis J. Fowler, Ham- mond Court. Chief clerk.—John G. Herndon, The Rockingham. : Secretary to the ‘compiroller.—Aubrey B. Carter, Room 214, Treasury Building. TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. (Treasury Department Building.) Treasurer.—Frank White, 5200 Thirteenth Street. Assistant Treasurer.—Frank J. F. Thiel, 3145 Nineteenth Street. Deputy Assistant Treasurer.—H. Theodore Tate, 1453 Belmont Street. Cashier.—Christian S. Pearce, 1503 Newton Street. Chief clerk.—Willard F. Warner, The Concord. NATIONAL BANK REDEMPTION AGENCY. Superintendent. —George O. Barnes, 914 Kearney Street NE. Assistant superintendent.— Michael E. Slindee, The Iroquois. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET. (Treasury Department Building.) Director —Gen. Herbert M. Lord, The Ontatio. 3 Assistant Director.—R. O. Kloeber, 1730 Euclid Street. Assistants to the Director. —Howard Baker, 1931 Biltmore Street; Gordon A. Ramsay, 2101 S Street; Redmond D. Stephens, 1808 I Street; Fred W. Wight, 1734 P “Street; Walter W. Warwick, 6930 Piney Branch Road. Chief of division of estimates.—Donald B. MacLeod, 1819 Ontario Place. Counsel.—Charles W. Collins, 3328 O Street. Executive assistant.—Guy F. Allen, 556 Varnum Street. Chief clerk and assistant.—Charles A. Harbaugh, 2800 Thirteenth Street NE. CHIEF COORDINATOR. (Arlington Building. Phone, Main 6680; Branch 351.) Ga coordinator.—Col. H. C. Smither, United States Army, 1316 New Hampshire venue. Deputy chief coordinator.—Maj. S. G. Brown, United States Army, 2933 Tilden Street. Hzecutive.—Maj. D. A. Robinson, 1318 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistants to chief coordinator.—Capt. H. P. Perrill, United States Navy, 2801 Twenty-eighth Street; Col. F. L. Wells, United States Army, 1416 Twenty-first Street; Lieut. Col. J. C. Rhea, United States Army, 2141 Wyoming Avenue; Lieut. Col. E. O. Saunders, United States Army, The Kenesaw; Lieut. Com- mander Smith Hempstone, United States Navy, 3938 Morrison Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Maj. W. F. Bevan, United States Marine Corps, 3205 Nineteenth Street; Lieut. Commander C. W. Cairnes, United States Coast Guard, The Mon- tello; Capt. R. B. Lovett, United States Army, 2933 Tilden Street; Lieut. Orlo S. Goff, United States Navy, The Wardman Park Annex; B. L. Andrus, 29 Quincy Place NE.; Lieut. W. C. Jahnke, United States Navy, 1311 K Street. Central finance officer. —Maj. S. B. Armat, United States Army, 1700 Oregon Avenue. Central disbursing officer —Capt. F. T. Lord, United States Army, Fort Hunt, Va. 24786°—67-4—2p ED 19 274 Congressional Directory. 1REASURY COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. (Treasury Department Building.) Commissioner.—D. H. Blair, The Wardman Park. Deputy Commassioners.—E. Ww. Chatterton, The Wardman Park Annex; A. C. Holden, 1205 Fifteenth Street; F. G. Matson, 2701 Connecticut Avenue; McKenzie Moss, 2400 Sixteenth Street; Charles R. Nash, 3919 Ingomar Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Prohibition commissioner. 2h Haynes, The Ontario. Assistant prohibition commissioner.—James E. Jones, 3111 Thirty-fourth Street. Solicitor.—Nelson T. Hartson, The Bachelor. Chief clerk.—Jasper N. Baker, 3562 Macomb Street. Appointment clerk.—Robert éC Pollock, 1317 Kennedy Street. DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. (Treasury Department Building.) Director.—F. E. Scobey, The Wardman Park. REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. (Register’s Annex, 119 D Street NE.) Register. —Harley V. Spedusn, 1652 Hobart Street. Assistant register.—F." A. De Groot, 121 Thirteenth Street NE, FEDERAL FARM LOAN BUREAU. (01d Land Office Building.) MEMBERS OF THE BOARD. Chairman (ex officto).—Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury, 1785 Massachu- setts Avenue. Farm Loan Commissioner and executive officer.—Charles E. Lobdell, 1825 Lamont Street. Term expires 1926. (Hattie Martin, private secretary, 2118 O Street.) Robert A. Cooper, 237 Carroll Street, Takoma Park, D. C. Term expires 1924. (Louise G. Rackley, private secretary, 1315 Belmont Street. ) John Guill, jr., 333 Hayes Street, Clarendon, Va. Term expires 1928. (Anne Maloney, ‘private secretary, 2007 O Street. ) C. R. Heflin, assistant secretary, 1409 K Street. FEDERAL LAND BANK CITIES. District No. 1.—Springfield, Mass. [ District No. 7.—St. Paul, Minn. Dastrict No. 2.—Baltimore, Md. District No. 8.—Omaha, Nebr. - District No. 3.—Columbia, S. C. Dustrict No. 9.—Wichita, Kans. District No. 4.—Louisville, Ky. District No. 10.—Houston, Tex. District No. 5.—New Orleans, La. District No. 11.—Berkeley, Calif. Dustrict No. 6.—St. Louis, Mo. District No. 12.—Spokane, Wash. FEDERAL LAND BANK DISTRICTS. District No. 1.—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey. District No. 2. Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia. District No. 8.—North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. District No. 4.—Ohio, Indiana, "Kentucky, and Tennessee. District No. 5 Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. District No. 5 —Illinois, Missouri, and Arkansas. Dustrict No. 7. — Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North ‘Dakots. District No. 8. —Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Wyoming. District No. 9. — Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico. District No. 10.—Texas. District No. 11.—California, Nevada, Utah, and Arizona. District No, 12. — Washington, Oregon, Montana, and Idaho. TREASURY Executive Departments. 275 BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. (Fourteenth and C Streets SW.) Director.—Louis A. Hill, Riverdale, Md. Assistant director.—John P. Perry, 142 R Street N. E. BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE. (Surgeon General’s Office, 3 B Street SE.) Surgeon General.—Hugh S. Cumming, 2219 California Street. Assistant Surgeons General.—M. J. White, 2721 Ontario Road; J. W. Kerr, 2700 Connecticut Avenue; J. D. Long, 1813 Twenty-fourth Street; B. J. Lloyd, 3736 Kanawha Street; A. M. Stimson, 414 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; F. C. Smith, 3740 Kanawha Street; W. F. Draper, The Hammond; W. S. Terriberry, 1618 Eighteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Daniel Masterson, 2112 F Street. HYGIENIC LABORATORY. e (Twenty-fifth and E Streets.) Director —Surg. George W. McCoy, 2618 Garfield Street. THE COAST GUARD. (Darby Building, 508 Fourteenth Street.) Captain commandant.—Capt. William E. Reynolds, 2029 Connecticut Avenue. Ard to the commandant.—Lieut. Commander Frederick C. Billard, 2301 Connecticut Avenue. Inspector.—Commander A. J. Henderson, 2123 California Street. Superintendent of Construction and Repair.—Commander J. M. Moore, 1801 Sixteenth Street. Engineer tn Chief.—Engineer in Chief Quincy B. Newman, The Ontario. Chef of Division of Operations.—Oliver M. Maxam, The Cortland. Chief of Division of Matériel. ——K. J. Minot, 1421 Ames Place NE. SUPERVISING ARCHITECT’S OFFICE. (Treasury Department Building.) Acting Supervising Architect.—James A. Wetmore, 5506 Thirteenth Street. Acting executive officer.—H. G. Sherwood, 1929 Lawrence Street NE. BUREAU OF SUPPLY. (Graham Building, 412-416 Fourteenth Street. Director.—Howard Baker, 1931 Biltmore Street. Assistant Director.—L. C. Spangler, Alexandria, Va., route 2. GENERAL SUPPLY COMMITTEE. (Auditors’ Building, Fourteenth and B Streets SW. Phones, Main 6400, Branch 43, and Main 7427, Branch 80.) Superintendent of supplies.—Kenneth D. McRae, 227 Bryant Street NE. Chief division of property transfer.—Platt H. Birch, 1349 Shepherd Street. Charrman.—A. B. Butrick (representing Treasury Department), The De Sota. James E. Tibbitts (representing Navy Department), Somerset, Md. Metiiang S. Wright (representing State Department), 3764 Patterson Street, Chevy ase. Howard R. Watkins (representing War Department), 309 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. E. R. Dornoff (representing Department of Justice), 1132 Seventh Street NE. W. D. Worley (representing Post Office Department), Riverdale, Md. Lloyd Prather (representing Interior Dapatnont)) Landover, Md. F.E. Moles Sopromniiag Department of Agriculture), 204 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. N. F. Harriman (representing Department of Commerce), The Pentilly. William A. Bevard (representing Department of Labor), 1758 P Street. CUSTOMHOUSE. (1221 Thirty-first Street. Phone, West 243.) Deputy collector in charge.—John D. C. Koogle, 1825 Kilbourne Place. 2176 | Congressional Directory. WAR DEPARTMENT OF WAR. (Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 2570.) JOHN WINGATE WEEKS, of West Newton, Mass. (2100 Sixteenth Street), was born in Lancaster, N. H., April 11, 1860; graduated at the United States Naval Academy in 1881; served in the United States Navy from graduation until 1883; served in the Massachusetts Naval Brigade 10 years; served in the Volunteer Navy during the Spanish-American War; was for three years (1900, 1901, 1902) alderman and two years (1903 and 1904) mayor of the city of Newton; was elected to the Fifty- ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, and Sixty-third Congresses; was elected to the Senate January 14, 1913, to succeed the Hon. Winthrop Murray Crane; received 105 votes for the presidential nomination in the Republican national convention at Chicago June, 1916; this support came from 25 States, and was second only to that of the nominee; his term of service in the Senate expired March 3, 1919; took oath of office as Secretary of War March 5, 1921. Assistant Secretary of War.—J. Mayhew Wainwright, 1719 Nineteenth Street. Assistant and chief clerk.—John C. Scofield, 1844 Columbia Road. Private Secretary to Secretary of War.—John W. Martyn, 2901 Thirty-fourth Street. Clerk to Assistant Secretary.—Thomas J. Burke, 1114 East Capitol Street. Assistant chief clerk.—John B. Randolph, 1707 Q Street. Disbursing clerk.—Sydney E. Smith, 3037 O Street. Principal clerk.—Frank M. Hoadley, 28 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chiefs of division— Cwrlan Personnel.—William D. Searle, 1866 Wyoming Avenue. Mail and Record.—Mary S. Nixon, 1756 Euclid Street. Postal Station.—James G. McFadden, 1824 Fifteenth Street. Printing and Advertising.—Henry C. Lehmann, 1334 Valley Place. Supply.—Albert G. Drane, 1802 Kilbourne Place. Telegraph.—William A. King, 3020 Dent Place. Telephone.—Frank B. Barnes, 8 Quincy Place NE. WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF. (State, War, and Navy Building.) Chief of Staff.—Gen. John J. Pershing, 2029 Connecticut Avenue. Deputy Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. John L. Hines, Fort Myer, Va. Assistant Chief of Staff G—1 (Personnel).—Brig. Gen. Charles H. Martin, 3101 Nine- teenth Street. Assistant Chief of Staff G-2 (Military Intelligence).—Col. William K. Naylor, 1615 Q Street. Assistant Chief of Staff G—3 (Operations and Training).—Maj. Gen. William Lassiter, 2308 California Street. Assistant Chief of Staff G—4 (Supply).—Brig. Gen. Stuart Heintzelman, 2301 Con- necticut Avenue. Assistant Chief of Staff W. P. D. (War Plans).—Brig. Gen. B. H. Wells, 2311 Calvert Street. Secretary of the General Staff.—Lieut. Col. L. D. Gasser, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Chief clerk.—A. Gerhard, 3911 Illinois Avenue. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CAVALRY. (Munitions Building, Twentieth and B Streets.) Chief —Maj. Gen. Willard A. Holbrook, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. Executive.—Col. George Vidmer, The Wardman Park. { Chief clerk.—Axel Hyllen, master sergeant, Cavalry, route 2, Alexandria, Va. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FIELD ARTILLERY. (Munitions Building, second wing, third floor.) Chief—Maj. Gen. William J. Snow, 1818 Nineteenth Street. : Operations assistant.—Lieut. Col. Augustine McIntyre, Ridge and Reservoir Road. Executive assistant.—Maj. Charles S. Blakely, 3401 Porter Street. pr cic SBE I WAR Executive Departments. 217 OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF COAST ARTILLERY. (Munitions Building, rooms 3020, 3022, and 3305.) Chief.—Maj. Gen. Frank W. Coe, The St. Nicholas. Executive assistant.—Lieut. Col. H. C. Barnes, The Brighton. Chief clerk.—Hartley 1. Sanders, Landover, Md., R. 2. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF INFANTRY. (Munitions Building, Nineteenth and B Streets. Phone, Main 2520, Branch 1879.) Chief.—Maj. Gen. Charles S. Farnsworth, 3508 Macomb Street, Cleveland Park. Ezecutiwve.—Col. John H. Hughes, 1808 I Street. Assistant executive.—Maj. William H. Simpson, 1712 H Street. Chef clerk. —William G. Semmig, The Colonial. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CHAPLAINS. (Room 163, State, War, and Navy Building.) Chief —Chaplain John T. Axton, 1916 Seventeenth Street. : Assistants.—Chaplain Julian E. Yates, Vinson House, Fort Myer, Va.; Chaplain John J. Campbell, Holy Cross Academy, 2935 Upton Street. Chief<«clerk.—Augustus S. Bonanno, A. F. C., 1618 H Street. OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL. (War Department Building.) The Adjutant General.—Maj. Gen. Robert C. Davis, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Assistant, The Adjutant General.—Brig. Gen. Benjamin Alvord, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Executive officer—Maj. James A. Ulio, The Albany. Chief clerk.—Thomas A. O’Brien, 3930 Fourteenth Street. OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GENERAL. (Room 122, State, War, and Navy Building.) Inspector General.—Maj. Gen. Eli A. Helmick, 3506 Garfield Street. Ezecutive.—Col. G. LeR. Irwin, The Toronto. Chief clerk.—John D. Parker, The Henrietta. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL. (State, War, and Navy Building.) Judge Advocate General.—Maj. Gen. E. H. Crowder, The Marlborough. Acting Judge Advocate General.—Col. J. A. Hull, 1837 M Street. Executive officer.—Col. H. M. Morrow, 1901 Biltmore Street. Assistants.—Chief Military Justice Division, Col. W. A. Bethel, 1717 Twentieth Street; chief Administrative Law Division, Col. Sherman Moreland, Rutland Courts. Chief clerk. —Edwin B. Pitts, Brentwood, Md. OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER GENERAL. (Munitions Building, Nineteenth and B Streets. Phone, Main 2520.) Quartermaster General.—Maj. Gen. W. H. Hart, The Brighton. 4 Executive officer and chief general administrative division.—Col. F. W. Van Duyne, 423 Upshur Street. Executive assistant.—R. J. Burton, 1430 Spring Road. Assistants.—Brig. Gen. G. F. Downey, chief transportation service, 2328 California Street; Brig. Gen. J. B. Bellinger, chief supply service, Army and Navy Club; o E. S. Walton, acting chief construction service, 3704 Keokuk Street, Chevy Chase. : Chiefs of divisions.—Col. H. C. Whitehead, remount service, The Wardman Park; Maj. Max R. Wainer, personnel division, 100 Kennedy Street NE.; First Lieut. H. J. Conner, acting chief graves registration service, 1204 Kenyon Street. Chief clerk.—Emmet Hamilton, 162 Tennessee Avenue NE. OFFICE OF QUARTERMASTER SUPPLY OFFICER, WASHINGTON GENERAL INTERMEDIATE ; . DEPOT. (Twentieth and C Streets. Phone, Main 2520, Branch 1102.) Quartermaster supply officer.—Col. Henry C. Bonnyecastle, 1659 Harvard Street. i i J 278 Congressional Directory. WAR OFFICE OF CHIEF OF FINANCE. (Munitions Building, Nineteenth and B Streets.) Chief of Finance.—Brig. Gen. Kenzie W. Walker, The Mendota. Assistant Chief of Finance.—Col. Frederick W. Coleman, The Northumberland. Assistant to Chief of Finance.—Z%. Lewis Dalby, 1615 Longfellow Street. Executive officer.— Lieut. Col. Perrin L. Smith, 3308 Nineteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Al Rogers, 441 Park Road. OFFICE OF FINANCE OFFICER, UNITED STATES ARMY, (Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue.) Finance officer. —Maj. Fred W. Boschen, The Wardman Park. OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL. (Munitions Building.) Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. M. W. Ireland, The Wyoming. Executive officer.—Lieut. Col. C. R. Reynolds, 2013 Kalorama Road. Chief clerk.—Bertis B. Thompson, Hartford Court. ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM AND LIBRARY. (Seventh and B Streets SW.) Librarian.—Brig. Gen. R. E. Noble, The Lonsdale. Curator.—Maj. James F. Coupal, The Argyle. ARMY MEDICAL SCHOOL, (462 Louisiana Avenue.) Commandant.—Brig. Gen. W. D. McCaw, 2326 Nineteenth Street. Adjutant.—Lieut. Col. P. L. Jones, The Dresden. OFFICE OF ATTENDING SURGEON, (Munitions Building. Phone, Main 7070.) Attending surgeon.—Lieut. Col. M. A. De Laney, The ‘Somerset. Adjutant.—Capt. O. A. Tandrop, M. A. C., 1433 Meridian Place. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS. (Munitions Building, Twenty-first and B Streets.) Chief.—Maj. Gen. Lansing H. Beach, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Assistants to the Chief of Emgineers.—Civil Division, Brig. Gen. Harry Taylor, 1931 S Street; Military Division, Col. F. C. Boggs, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Claude Lindsey, 1750 Park Road. BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS. (Munitions Building, Twenty-first and B Streets.) Resident member.—Maj. Gordon R. Young, The Wyoming. Members.—Brig. Gen. Harry Taylor, 1931 S Street; Cols. Henry C. Newcomer, 601 Army Building, 39 Whitehall Street, New York City; George M. Hoffmdn, 305 Customhouse, New Orleans, La; John C. Oakes, 608 Army Building, 39 Whitehall Street, New York City; F. C. Boggs, 2400 Sixteenth Street; Maj. Max C. Tyler, The Cordova. Consulting engineer on port facilities.—Capt. F. T. Chambers, United States Navy, 1625 Sixteenth Street. Assistant engineer and secretary.—H. W. Hobbs, 2821 Twenty-seventh Street. Chuef statistician.—A. H. Ritter, 3115 Mount Pleasant Street. Chief clerk.—Harry L. Freer, 4912 Forty-first Street. OFFICE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS, (Lemon Building. Phone, Main 1460.) In charge.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, 1839 California Street. Assistants.—Maj. Douglas L. Weart, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue; Capt. W. L. McMorris, 1768 Lanier Place. Assistant and chief clerk.—E. F. Concklin, 1420 R Street. Superintendent of parks.—Earl G. Marsh, 922 Maryland Avenue NE. aT TT hy WAR Executive Departments. 279 UNITED STATES ENGINEER OFFICE. (Room 250, Old Land Office Building. Phones, Main 7142, 7143, 7144.) In charge.—Maj. Max C. Tyler, The Cordova. Assistant.—Lieut. John R. Hardin, 1314 Farragut Street. Chief clerk.—S. L. Duryee, 129 Sixth Street NE. MISSISSIPPI RIVER COMMISSION. ; (St. Louis, Mo.) President.—Col. Charles L. Potter. Members.—John A. Ockerson, Charles H. West, Edward A. Glenn, Robert L. Faris Col. George M. Hoffman, Lieut. Col. Gustave R. Lukesh. Secretary and disbursing officer.—Capt. Edward N. Chisolm. Chief clerk.—R. N. Duffey. CALIFORNIA DEBRIS COMMISSION. (San Francisco, Calif.) Members.—Col. Herbert Deakyne; Majs. U. S. Grant, 3d; Edward D. Ardery. Cheef clerk.—Elmo A. Brule. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE. (Munitions Building.) Chief.—Maj. Gen. Clarence C. Williams, 1718 H Street. Assistants.—Brig. Gens. William S. Peirce, 1868 Columbia Road; George W. Burr, The Mendota. Chuef clerk.—Nathan Hazen, 2844 Twenty-seventh Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER. (Munitions Building, Nineteenth and B Streets.) Chief.—Maj. Gen. George O. Squier, The Bachelor. Executive officer.—Lieut. Col. C. A. Seoane, Army and Navy Club. Cillian assistant.—Herbert S. Flynn, The Dresden. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE AIR SERVICE. (Munitions Building, Nineteenth and B Streets.) Chief of the Air Service.—Maj. Gen. Mason M. Patrick, 3738 Huntington Street. Assistant Chief of the Air Service.—Brig. Gen. William Mitchell, 1809 Phelps Place. Executive officer.—Maj. W. H. Frank, The Somerset. Chief clerk.—John J. Mullaney, 1321 Monroe Street. Director of aircraft production.—Maj. Oscar Westover, The Somerset. BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS. (Munitions Building, Nineteenth and B Streets.) Chief of bureau.—Maj. Gen. Frank McIntyre, The Wyoming. Assistant to chief of bureau.—Col. Charles C. Walcutt, jr., 1869 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant to chief of bureau.—Maj. William Lay Patterson, Army and Navy Club. Chief clerk.—L. V. Carmack, The Marne. PHILIPPINE GOVERNMENT. (Headquarters, Manila.) Governor General.—Leonard Wood. Vice Governor and secretary of public instruction.—HKugene A. Gilmore. Secretary of the interior.— Teodoro M. Kalaw. Secretary of commerce and communications.— Secretary of justice.—Jose A. Santos. Secretary of finance.— Alberto Barretto. Secretary of agriculture and natural resources.—Rafael Corpus. PORTO RICO GOVERNMENT. (Headquarters, San Juan.) Governor:—E. Mont. Reily. Attorney general.—Salvador Mestre. Treasurer.—Ramon Aboy. Commissioner of the interior.—John A. Wilson. Commissioner of education.—Juan B. Huyke. Commissioner of agriculture and labor.—Leopoldo Feliu. Commissioner of health.—William F. Lippitt. Executive secretary.—Eduardo J. Saldana. Sh Se SS UR BS IE DE 280 Congressional Directory. : JUSTICE DOMINICAN CUSTOMS RECEIVERSHIP. (Headquarters, Santo Domingo City.) General receiver of customs.— William E. Pulliam. Deputy general receiver. —Thomas T. Kelly. HAITIAN CUSTOMS RECEIVERSHIP. (Headquarters, Port-au-Prince.) General receiver of customs.—A. J. Maumus. Deputy general receiver.—W. S. Matthews, jr. MILITIA BUREAU. (Munitions Building.) Chief.—Maj. Gen. George C. Rickards, The Westmoreland. Executive.—Col. E. J. Williams, The Wyoming. Chief clerk.—W. A. Saunders, 1829 First Street. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE CHEMICAL WARFARE SERVICE. (Room 3048, Munitions Building. Phone, Main 2520, Branch 1223 ) Chief. —Brig. Gen. Amos A. Fries, 1748 Corcoran Streef. ~. INLAND AND COASTWISE WATERWAYS SERVICE. (Headquarters, room 2012, Munitions Building. Phone, Main 2520, Branch 1881.) Chief. —Col. T. Q. Ashburn, C. A. C., The Cairo. Assistant chief —Capt. John M. Tuther, Q. M. C., Munitions Building. Chief clerk.—J. W. Jenkinson, 18 Channing Street. WAR CREDITS BOARD. (United States Capitol Building. Phone, Main 3120, Branch 218.) Governor.—M. W. Thompson, 14 Wall Street, New York City. Administrative assistant.—P. G. Thompson, 2726 Connecticut Avenue. THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE. (Washington Barracks.) ~ Commandant.—Maj. Gen. Edward F. McGlachlin, jr., Washington Barracks. Assistant commandant.—Col. George S. Simonds, Infantry, Washington Barracks. Executive officer.—Lieut. Col. Henry Gibbins, Q. M. C., Washington Barracks. Chief clerk.—A. B. Neal, 1328 Eleventh Street. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. (Vermont Avenue and Fifteenth Street. Phone, Main 196.) HARRY M. DAUGHERTY, of Columbus, Ohio, Attorney General (The Wardman Park); born Washington Court House, Ohio, January 26, 1860, son of John H. and Jane A. (Draper) Daugherty; his father died when he was 4 years old; attended the public schools of Washington Court House, Ohio; received his college education at University of Michigan, and was graduated from the law department in 1881 with degree of LL. B.; practiced law in Washington Court House until 1893, when he removed to Columbus, Ohio; in 1902 organized the law firm of Daugherty, Todd & Rarey, of which he was senior member until he severed his connection with same upon being appointed Attorney General of the United States; married Lucie M. Walker, of Wellston, Ohio; has one son and one daughter; served as a member of the General Assembly of Ohio (from Fayette County) from 1890 to 1894—two terms. Solicitor General.—James M. Beck, 1624 Twenty-first Street. Special assistant to the Attorney General.—Warren F. Martin, The Copley Courts. Assistant to the Attorney General. —Augustus T. Seymour, 2714 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant Attorneys General.—William D. Riter, 1460 Spring Road; Rush L. Holland, The Wardman Park; Robert H. Lovett, 1845 Kalorama Road; Mabel Walker Willebrandt, 2001 Sixteenth Street; Albert Ottinger, 2400 Sixteenth Street; John W. H. Crim, The Lee House. - POST OFFICE Executive Departments. 281 Assistant Attorney General, customs division.—William W. Hoppin, 641 Washington Street, New York City. Director Bureau, of Investigation.—William J. Burns, The Wardman Park. Private secretary and assistant to the Attorney General. —K. M. Carroll, The Roosevelt. Chief clerk and administrative assistant.—Sims Ely, The Lafayette. Assistant iy clerk. —Julia B. Rishel, 113 Seventh Street NE. Disbursing clerk.—Don C. Fees, Petworth Gardens. Appointment clerk.—Charles B. Sornborger, 1857 Newton Street. Librarian.—George A. Kearney, 1324 Monroe Street. ; Chief, Division of Mail and Files.—Arthur Robb, 660 Morton Place NE. Chief, Division of Supplies and Printing.—C. R. Sherwood, 21 Bryant Street. Superintendent of prisons.—Heber H. Votaw, 800 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park. Attorney in charge of pardons.—James A. Finch, 3645 Grant Road. Attorney wn charge of titles.—Horace H. Smith, 3435 Quebec Street. General cgent.—John D. Harris, 1410 M Street. : Chief of Division of Accounts.—H. J. McClure, 1664 Columbia Road. DEPARTMENTAL SOLICITORS. Solicitor for the Department of State.— Solicitor of the Treasury.—Richard R. McMahon, 100 B Street NE. Assistants,—Thomas Lack, 3495 Holmead Place; Robert J. Mawhinney, 38 M Street. Chief clerk and chief law clerk.—Francis J. Reinhard, 2001 Sixteenth Street. Solicitor of Internal Revenue.—Nelson T. Hartson, The Bachelor. Solicitor for the Interior Department.—Edwin S. Booth, The Melrose. Solicitor for the Post Office Department.—John H. Edwards, The Burlington. Solicitor of the Department of Commerce.—Stephen B. Davis, jr. Assistant solicitor.—James J. O'Hara, 15 Eighth Street NE. Solicitor for the Department of Labor.—Theodore G. Risley, 1360 Fairmont Street. POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. (Pennsylvania Avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth Streets. Phone, Main 5360.) HUBERT WORK, of Pueblo, Colo., Postmaster General (The Wardman Park), was born in Indiana County, Pa., on July 3, 1860; son of Moses Thompson and Tabitha Logan (Van Horn) Work; was educated at the Indiana (Pa.) State Normal School; student medical department, University of Michigan, 1882-1884; M. D. University of Pennsylvania, 1885; Presbyterian; married Laura M. Arbuckle, of Anderson, Ind., 1887; began practicing medicine Greeley, Colo., 1885; removed to Fort Morgan, Colo., and thence to Pueblo, Colo.; founded Woodcroft Hospital for mental and nervous diseases at latter place, 1896; was president Colorado State Medi- cal Society; was member Colorado State Board of Medical Examiners; was member Colorado State Board of Health (four years as its president); president American Medico-Psychological Society, 1911-12; delegate at large to the Republican National Convention, 1908; chairman Colorado Republican State Committee, 1912; Republi- can national committeeman for Colorado, 1913-1919; when the United States entered the late war he retired from the active practice of medicine and volunteered in the Medical Corps of the Army; was commissioned major, Medical Corps, United States Army, and assigned to staff of Provost Marshal General Crowder, becoming liaison officer between these two branches of the Army, with supervision of the medical features of the draft; was successively advanced to rank of lieutenant colonel and colonel in the Medical Corps, and is now in the Officers’ Reserve Corps, with the rank of colonel; member American Legion; president American Medical Association, 1921-22; First Assistant Postmaster General, April 7, 1921, to March 3, 1922; took oath of office as Postmaster General, March 4, 1922. Private secretary to Postmaster General.—Ebert K. Burlew, 1460 Twentieth Street. Chief clerk.—William M. Mooney, 1433 T Street. Assistant chief clerk.—Thomas J. Howell, Clifton Terrace West. Appointment clerk.—Robert S. Regar, 927 Shepherd Street. Confidential clerk to the Postmaster General.— Special Assistant to Attorney General.—Joseph Stewart, 1812 Lamont Street. Office of Solicitor: : Solicitor.—John H. Edwards, The Burlington. Senior assistant attorney.—Horace J. Donnelly, 1430 V Street. Assistant attorneys.— Walter E. Kelly, 1426 M Street; Calvin W. Hassell, 219 Balti- .more Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; William L. Rhoads, 1740 Euclid Street; Direlle Chaney, 4112 Fourth Street. Law clerk.—Abraham B. Keefer, 2028 First Street. _—n 282 . Congressional Directory. POST OFFIOR Division of Purchesing Agent: Purchasing agent.—Thomas L. Degnan, 1656 Park Road. Chief clerk.—Alfred H. Keim, 144 Kentucky Avenue SE. Division of Post Office Inspectors: Chief inspector.—Rush D. Simmons, 2869 Twenty-eighth Street. Chief clerkb.—Daniel S. Shook, 4023 Fifth Street. OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. First Assistant Postmaster General.—John H. Bartlett, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Frank C. Staley, The Portner. Diwnsion of Post Office Service: Superintendent.—William R. Spilman, 1645 Hobart Street. Assistant superintendents.—Charles F. Trotter, 1641 R Street; John R. Tullis, 2507 North Capitol Street. Dwvision of Postmasters’ Appointments: Superintendent.—Lorel N. Morgan, 3223 Hiatt Place. Assistant superintendents.—Simon E. Sullivan, 230 Wooten Avenue, Chevy Chase Station; Raymond T. Bouton, 1467 Irving Street. Division of Dead Letters: Superintendent.—Charles N. Dalzell, 5 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Second Assistant Postmaster General.—Paul Henderson, Thirty-second Street and Woodland Drive. Chief clerk.—Chase C. Gove, 1221 B Street SE. Division of Railway Adjustments: Superintendent.—William E. Triem, 1626 Hobart Street. Assistant superintendents.—George H. Grayson, Falkstone Courts; Albert E. Barr, 510 A Street NE. Division of Foreign Mavls: Superintendent. —Edwin Sands, 1502 North Capitol Street. Assistant superintendent.—Stewart M. Weber, Mount Rainier, Md. Division of Railway Mail Service: General superintendent.—Walter H. Riddell, The Calverton. Assistant general superintendent.—George F. Stone, 3023 Macomb Street. Chief clerk.—Henry A. Shore, 1364 Otis Place. Division of Air Mail Service: General superintendent.—Carl F. Egge, 2310 Ashmead Place. Chief clerk.—John W. Sutherin, 3724 Northampton Street. OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Third Assistant Postmaster General.—Warren Irving Glover, The Wardman Park. Chief clerk.—Harvey Lovejoy, 1840 Biltmore Street. Superintendents of divisions: Finance.—Paul Freeman, 1214 L Street; assistant superintendent (disbursing clerk), Louis A. Delano, 3823 Legation Street, Chevy Chase. Money orders.—Charles E. Matthews, 1517 Lamont Street; chief clerk, Juliette Ford, 1214 I Street. Classification.— William C. Wood, 2902 Fourteenth Street. Stamps.—Michael L. Eidsness, jr., 1604 Third Street. Registered mails.—C. Howard Buckler, 145 Eleventh Street SE. Postal Savings: Secretary board of trustees.—Lew Wallace, jr., 3238 R Street. Director.— William E. Buffington, 1317 Harvard Street. Assistant director.—Charles 1. Gable, 4426 Ninth Street. Chief clerk.—William T. S. Rollins, 637 Sixth Street NE. OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. Fourth Assistant Postmaster General. —Harry H. Billany, The Portland. Chief clerk. —Harvey R. Nichol, 649 E Street NE. Division of Rural Mails: General superintendent.—George L. Wood, Clifton Terrace South. Assistant superintendent.—Charles L. Davison, 643 E Street NE. Chief clerk.—Albert G. Ruff, 1411 Decatur Street. Division of Motor Vehicle Service: General superintendent.—Thomas G. Mallalieu, The Wellington. Assistant superintendent.—Edward B. Cranford, 47 Rhode Island Avenue. NAVY Executive Departments. 283 Division of Equipment and Supplies: Superintendent. —George Landick, jr., Kensington, Md. Chef clerk.—John W. Haring, 128 W Street. Mail Equipment Shops: Superintendent.—John B. Cady, 378 Eastern Avenue, Takoma Park. OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER. Comptroller.—Charles A. Kram, 6 East Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief clerk.—Terence H. Sweeney, 85 S Street. Expert accountant.—Lewis M. Bartlett, 3770 McKinley Street, Chevy Chase. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY. (Navy Department Building, Potomac Park, Eighteenth and B Streets. Phone, Main 2520.) EDWIN DENBY, of Detroit, Mich., Secretary of the Navy (2224 R Street), son of Hon. Charles and Martha (Fitch) Denby, was born at Evansville, Ind., February 18, 1870; educated in the public schools of Evansville and the University of Michigan; graduated from the latter institution with the degree of LL. B.; was for 10 years in the customs service of China under Sir Robert Hart while his father was United States minister to China; served as gunner’s mate, third class, United States Navy, on the U.S. S. Yosemite in the War with Spain; member of the Michigan House of Repre- sentatives in 1903; Member of the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses (1905-1911); member of the Detroit Charter Commission 1913; member of the law firm of Denby, Kennedy & O’Brien, Detroit; in April, 1917, enlisted as a private in the Marine Corps; served at Marine Corps training camp, Parris Island, S. C., and for a few weeks in France as an observer; December 31, 1920, placed on inactive list as major, United States Marine Corps Reserve; in December, 1920, appointed chief probation officer of the recorder’s court of the city of Detroit and circuit court of the county of Wayne, which position he resigned to become Secretary of the Navy; mar- ried Marion Bartlett Thurber, of Detroit, in 1911, and has two children—Edwin, jr., and Marion, 10 and 7 years of age, respectively; Episcopalian. Assistant Secretary. —Theodore Roosevelt, 1601 Twenty-first Street. Chief clerk.—F. S. Curtis, The Emerson. Special assistant to Secretary.—Joseph A. Carey, Cathedral Mansions. Private secretary to the Secretary.—John B. May, jr., 101 Fourteenth Street NE. Naval aid to Secretary.—Capt. Hayne Ellis, United States Navy, 3000 Woodley Road. Marine aid to Secretary.—Maj. Maurice E. Shearer, U.S. M. C., 2131 Florida Avenue. Aid for navy yards.—Capt. A. L. Willard, United States Navy, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Aid to Assistant Secretary.—Lieut. Commander L. P. Warren, United States Navy, 1302 Eighteenth Street. Confidential clerk to the Secretary.—Owen Rippey, 1364 Kenyon Street. Clerk to the Secretary.—Raymond Eberly, 17 Randolph Place. Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Verne Simkins, 2577 Rhode Island Avenue NE. Confidential clerk to Assistant Secretary.—Dorothy E. Hung, 901 Twentieth Street. Disbursing clerk.—A. H. Hoiland, Falls Church, Va., route 1, box 75. Chief of Appointment Division.—William D. Bergman, 2526 Seventeenth Street. Chief of Division of Records.—Charles T. Ogle, 528 First Street SE. Estimate clerk.—Roy H. Moses, 1377 Quincy Street. OFFICE OF NAVAL OPLRATIONS. (Room 2054, Navy Department Building.) Chief of Naval Operations.—Admiral Robert E. Coontz, The Wardman Park. Aid to the dina) =e Commandar R. S. Crenshaw, 3703 Northampton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant Chief of Naval Operations.—Rear Admiral Ashley H. Robertson, 1870 Wyo- ming Avenue. Chief clerk.—John T. Cuthbert, 1228 Fifteenth Street. WAR PLANS DIVISION. (Room 2064.) Capt. Sinclair Gannon (acting), The Cairo. 284 Congressional Directory. NAVY POLICY AND LIAISON SECTION. (Room 2058.) Capt. Frank H. Clark, The Brighton. SHIP MOVEMENTS DIVISION. (Room. 2601.) Capt. Henry E. Lackey, 2006 Columbia Road. INTELLIGENCE DIVISION. (Room 1058.) Capt. Luke McNamee, 2908 N Street. COMMUNICATION DIVISION. (Room 2613.) Rear Admiral Henry J. Ziegemier, The St. Albans. MATERIAL DIVISION. (Room 2604.) Capt. Edward C. Kalbfus, 1757 K Street. NAVAL DISTRICTS DIVISION. (Room 2706.) Capt. Charles F. Preston, 2633 Connecticut Avenue. SUBMARINE DIVISION. (Room 2707.) Capt. George C. Day, 1811 R Street. INSPECTION DIVISION. (Room 3627.) President.—Rear Admiral Newton A. McCully, 1821 I Street. Recorder.—Commander Reed M. Fawell, 25 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief clerk. —Edward W. Collamore, 837 Allison Street. ‘GUNNERY EXERCISES AND ENGINEERING DIVISION. (Room 3651.) Capt. Chauncey Shackford, 2312 Twentieth Street. BUDGET OFFICE. (Room 2704.) Admiral Robert E. Coontz, budget officer for the Navy Department, The Wardman Capt. Walton R. Sexton, assistant budget officer, The Benedick. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Room 3057, Navy Department Building.) (For answers to questions concerning officers of the Navy, call Main 2520, Branch 348. For answers to questions concerning enlisted men of the Navy, call Main 2520, Branch 243.) Chief —Rear Admiral Thomas Washington, 2022 R Street. Assistant to bureau.—Capt. Richard H. Leigh, 2316 Tracy Place. Chief clerk. —Edward Henkel, 6309 Connecticut Avenue. Clerk to the Naval Academy.—Leonard Draper, 2036 I" Street. NAVY Executive Departments. 285 HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE. (Room 1026, Navy Department Building.) Hydrographer.—Capt. Frederic B. Bassett, jr., The Imperial. Chief clerk.—H. A. Babcock, 20 Randolph Place. NAVAL OBSERVATORY. (Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, West 1634.) Superintendent.—Capt. W. D. MacDougall, Naval Observatory. Assistant to the superintendent.—Capt. Austin Kautz, 1805 Nineteenth Street. Librarian.—W. D. Horigan, 3028 Wisconsin Avenue. Chief clerk.—J. E. Dickey, 1743 P Street. BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. (Room 2030, Navy Department Building.) Chief —Rear Admiral L. E. Gregory, Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy, 2335 Ashmead Place. Assistant to bureau.—Capt. R. E. Bakenhus, Corps of Civil Engineers, United States Navy, 3745 Huntington Street, Chevy Chase. Chief clerk.—E. W. Whitehorne, 713 Nineteenth Street. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. (Room 3147, Navy Department Building.) Chief.—Rear Admiral Charles B. McVay, jr., 2029 Connecticut Avenue. Assistant to bureaw.—Capt. F. L. Pinney, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. Chief clerk.—E. S. Brandt, The Roydon. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. (Room 2005, Navy Department Building.) Chief —Rear Admiral J. D. Beuret, Chief Constructor of the Navy, The Altamon.. Assistant to the bureau.—Capt. Robert Stocker, Construction Corps, United States Navy, The Brighton. Chief clerk.—Henry C. Brunner, 1423 R Street. BUREAU OF ENGINEERING. (Room 2010, Navy Department Building.) Chief —Engineer in Chief John K. Robison, 1642 Twenty-first Street. Assistant to chief of bureau.—Capt. John T. Tompkins, 2840 Twenty-eighth Street. Chief clerk.—Augustus C. Wrenn, 668 West Franklin Street, Baltimore, Md. BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. (Temporary Building No. 5, Twentieth and B Streets.) Paymaster General. —Rear Admiral David Potter, 1832 Jefferson Place. Assistant to the Paymaster General.—Capt. T. W. Leutze, Army and Navy Club. Special assistant.—Clyde Reed, 1030 Park Road. Civilian assistant.—Kirk Holmes, 1813 Newton Street. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. (Room 1017, Navy Department Building.) Chief.—Rear Admiral BE. R. Stitt, Surgeon General United States Navy, 1708 R Street. Assistant to bureau.—Capt. F. I Pleadwell, Medical Corps, United States Navy, The . St. Regis. Chief clerk.—Dr. W. S. Gibson, The Shawmut. BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS. (Room 3242, Navy Department Building.) Chief.—Rear Admiral William A. Moffett, 1628 Nineteenth Street. Assistant chief.—Capt. Henry C. Mustin, 3610 Macomb Street. Chief clerk.—Lane Lacy, 1365 Perry Place. A —— —™. rT I i ys BE BE SR CE SE em 286 Congressional Directory. NAVY OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY. . (Room 2524, Navy Department Building.) Ghii fas General. —Rear Admiral Julian L. Latimer, United States Navy, The ighlands. Anton) Ful Advocate General. —Commander A. Staton, United States Navy, Silver pring, Md. ; Solicitor.— Pickens Neagle, 1858 Park Road. NAVAL CONSULTING BOARD. (Room 1050, Navy Department Building.) President.—Thomas A. Edison. Chairman .— William L. Saunders. Vice chairman.—Benjamin B. Thayer. Secretary.—Thomas Robins, 13 Park Row, New York City. Special duty.—Capt. E. L. Bennett, United States Navy. { COMPENSATION BOARD. (Room 2709, Navy Department Building.) Senior member.—Rear Admiral W. L. Capps, Construction Corps, United States A Navy, 1823 Jefferson Place. : : Chief clerk.—Burhnard S. Leizear, Silver Spring, Md. GENERAL BOARD. (Room. 2741, Navy Department Building.) Admiral R. E. Coontz, The Wardman Park. Rear Admirals W. L. Rodgers, 1266 New Hampshire Avenue; C. S. Williams, Naval War College, Newport, R. I.; Maj. Gen. John A. Lejeune, United States Marine Corps, Marine Barracks; Rear Admirals Joseph Strauss, Hotel Lafay- ette; S. S. Robison, 31 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; W. V. Pratt, Army and Navy Club; Capts. Frank H. Schofield, 1731 Columbia Road; Luke McNamee, 2908 N Street; Lieut. Col. L. C. Lucas, United States Marine Corps, 1943 Biltmore Street; Commander Forde A. Todd, 2036 O Street. Secretary.—Commander M. K. Metcalf, 1925 Sixteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Jarvis Butler, 104 Bradley Road, Thrifton, Va. BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS. (Room. 2534, Navy Department Building.) President. —Capt. James G. Field, Medical Corps, United States Navy, 2818 Cathedral Avenue. Recorder.—Wilbur G. Kramer, 506 Third Street SE. NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD. (Room 2532, Navy Department Building.) President.—Rear Admiral Marbury Johnston, United States Navy, 1811 R Street. | Recorder.— Wilbur G. Kramer, 506 Third Street SE. | NAVAL RETIRING BOARD. | (Room 2532, Navy Department Building.) President.—Rear Admiral Marbury Johnston, United States Navy, 1811 R Street. Recorder.— Wilbur G. Kramer, 506 Third Street SE. | | | : NAVAL DISPENSARY. | | (Rear Ninth Wing, Navy Department Building.) Rear Admiral Cary T. Grayson, Medical Corps, United States Navy, 1600 Sixteenth Street. NAVY Executive Departments. 287 NAVY YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. (Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1360.) Commandant and Superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Capt. J. H. Dayton, United States Navy. Chief clerk.—F. H. Bronaugh, 332 South Carolina Avenue SE. Assistant Superintendent Naval Gun Factory, captain of the yard, engineer officer, aero- nautical officer, navigation officer, and public works officer.—Capt. F. H. Brumby, . United States Navy. Senior inspector.—Capt. J. R. Defrees, United States Navy. Ard to Commandant and Superintendent.—Lieut. Commander J. R. Beardall, United States Navy. y NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL. (Twenty-third and E Streets.) Commander C. S. J. Butler, Medical Corps, United States Navy, 1931 Kenyon Street. NAVAL HOSPITAL. (Foot of Twenty-fourth Street.) Capt. Middleton S. Elliott, Medical Corps, United States Navy, Naval Hospital. ATTENDANCE ON OFFICERS. Commander Allen D. McLean, Medical Corps, United States Navy, 1316 New Hamp- shire Avenue. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF MEDICAL OFFICERS. (Naval Medical School.) President.—Commander C. S. J. Butler, Medical Corps, United States Navy, 1931 Kenyon Street. BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF DENTAL OFFICERS. (Naval Medical School.) Lieut. Commander W. A. Bloedorn, Medical Corps, United States Navy, 2725 Thir- teenth Street. HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS. (Navy Department Building, third floor. Phone, Main 2520.) MAJOR GENERAL COMMANDANT’S OFFICE. Commandant.—Maj. Gen. John A. Lejeune, commandant’s house, Eighth and G Streets SE. Assistant to commandant.—Maj. Gen. Wendell C. Neville, Marine Barracks. Director of operations and training.—Brig. Gen. Logan Feland, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Special assistant to commandant.—Charles A. Ketcham, Hyattsville, Md. Chief clerk.—Herman E. Kittredge, 808 Twenty-second Street. ADJUTANT AND INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT. Adjutant and inspector.—Brig. Gen. Rufus H. Lane, Falls Church, Va. Chief clerk.—Charles L. Snell, 1711 H Street. QUARTERMASTER’S DEPARTMENT. Quartermaster.—Brig. Gen. Charles L. McCawley, 1610 New Hampshire Avenue. Special assistant to quartermaster.—William W. Trail, 430 Randolph Street. Chief clerk.—Tonnis J. Holzberg, 2625 Eleventh Street. PAYMASTER’S DEPARTMENT. Paymaster.—Brig. Gen. George Richards, 1619 Twenty-first Street. MARINE BARRACKS. (Eighth and I Streets SE. Phone, Lincoln 1230.) Commanding.—Maj. Clayton B. Vogel. 98g Congressional Directory. INTERIOR DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) ALBERT BACON FALL, of Three Rivers, N. Mex., Secretary of the Interior - (The Wardman Park), was born November 26, 1861, at Frankfort, Ky.; edu- cated in country schools; taught school and read law when 18 to 20 years of age; racticed law 1889-1904, and from 1904 made a specialty of Mexican law; worked on arm, cattle ranch, and as a miner; became interested in mines, lumber, lands, and railroads; now engaged in farming and stock raising in New 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 Terri- tory; 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; reelected on January 22, 1913, for the term ending March 3, 1919; reelected November 5, 1918, for the term ending March 3, 1925; resigned as Senator to accept appointment as Secretary of the Interior; took oath of office and entered on duty as Secretary March 5, 1921. First Assistant Secretary.—Edward C. Finney, 3536 Edmunds Street. Assistant Secretary.—Francis M. Goodwin, 1915 Calvert Street. Admanastrative assistant.—Charles V. Safford, 15625 Q Street. Assistant to the Secretary.—Morgan R. Brock, 1311 Rhode Island Avenue. Private secretary to the Secretary.—Harry G. Clunn, 1229 Girard Street. Chief clerk.—John Harvey, 1416 Shepherd Street. Solicitor. —Edwin S. Booth, The Melrose. Board of Appeals.—George B. Gardner, Rosslyn, Va., R. F. D. 1; William B. Newman, 729 Otis Place; Alvah W. Patterson, 2847 Twenty-ninth Street. First assistant attorney.—C. Edward Wright, 62 T Street. Chief of Division of— Miscellaneous.—W. B. Acker, 1317 Harvard Street, assistant attorney in charge. Disbursing.—George W. Evans, 918 Nineteenth Street. Appointments, Mails, and Files.—Charles W. Nestler, 638 Fifth Street NE. Publications.—Charles F. Glass, 17 Maple Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. Supplies.—Amos W. Hawk, Thirtieth Street and Bunker Hill Road, Mount Rainier, Md. 2 GENERAL LAND OFFICE. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Commusstoner.— William Spry, 2844 Wisconsin Avenue. Assistant commissioner.—George R. Wickham, 1515 Park Road. Chief clerk.—Frank Bond, 3127 Newark Street. : iL Chief law clerk.—John McPhaul, 1223 Irving Street NE. Board of law review.—Dale K. Parrott, 1319 Kenyon Street; Samuel V. Proudfit, Clifton Terrace East; Alvin D. Hathaway, 117 Sixth Street NE.; Daniel A. Millrick, Clarendon, Va.; William H. Lewis, 1270 Morse Street NE.; Clarence G. Fisher, 4113 Illinois Avenue; William J. Howard, 815 Taylor Street. Appointment clerk.—Herman CO. Gauss, 1322 Emerson Street. Receiving clerk.—George C. Stewart, 800 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Recorder.—Mrs. Mabel P. LeRoy, 1230 Girard Street NE. Chiefs of division: : Accounts.—Clarence 1. Bullion, 4434 Kansas Avenue. Contest. —William J. McGee, 1810 Lamont Street. Drafting.—Ithamar P. Berthrong, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street. Field service.—George E. Hair, 1821 Kenyon Street. Homestead, timber, and stone.—Elmer I. Baldwin, 347 Tennessee Avenue NE. Indian lands.—Frank B. Walker, 1431 Newton Street. Land grant.—George B. Driesbock, 2119 F Street. Mail and files.—Thomas H. Jamison, Seabrook, Md. Mineral. —Posey J. Altizer, 3327 Highland Avenue, Cleveland Park. Patents.—John O'Connell, 2732 Twelfth Street NE. Posting and tract records.—Y von Pike, 1754 Q Street. Public surveys.—Walter T. Paine, 217 A Street SE. Right of way and reclamation.—Frederick R. Dudley, McLean, Va. INTERIOR Executive Departments. 289 OFFICE OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Commissioner.—Charles H. Burke, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant commissioner.—Edgar B. Meritt, 3532 Thirteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Charles F. Hauke, 605 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Private secretary to commissioner.—Lem Towers, jr., 1429 Belmont Street. Chiefs of division: ot Inspection.—F. H. Daiker, 140 Tennessee Avenue NE. Education.—B. S. Garber, 2806 Cathedral Avenue. : . Land. —Dr. W. A. Marschalk, 115 Cedar Street, Cherrydale, Va. Finance.—Hamilton Dimick, 1814 Monroe Street. Purchase.—Walter B. Fry, 4513 Iowa Avenue. Probate.—William R. Layne, The Ontario. BUREAU OF PENSIONS. (Pension Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, Main 5110.) Commiissioner.— Washington Gardner. Deputy commissioner.—Hamlin M. Vandervort, 1200 N Street. Disbursing clerk.—Elmer E. Miller, 303 Eastern Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Chief clerk.—Hays Haymaker, Hyattsville, Md. Assistant chief clerk.—Alfred D. Wilkinson, 423 Massachusetts Avenue. Acting private secretary to the Commissioner.—Fred K. Swett, 1109 I Street NE. Medical referee. —Charles F. Whitney, Silver Spring, Md. Law clerk.—Harry P. Willey, 434 Randolph Street. Chiefs of division: Board of review.—Stephen A. Cuddy, 1324 Monroe Street. Certificate. —Herbert R. C. Shaw, The Hawarden. Finance.—Oscar J. Randall, 4305 Kansas Avenue. Invalid —J. Finney Engle, 706 North Carolina Avenue SE. Record.—John H. Wood, 304 E Street NE. Retirement.—John S. Beach, 719 Otis Street. Special examination.—Merritt L. Dawkins, 234 Eleventh Street NE. Widow.—Edward W. Morgan, 622 Randolph Street. PATENT OFFICE. (Patent Office Building. Phone, Main 6280.) Commuassioner.— Thomas E. Robertson, 6 West Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. First assistant commassioner.— William A-. Kinnan, 1114 Fairmont Street. Assistant commissioner.—Karl Fenning, 3765 Northampton Street, Chevy Chase. Chief clerk.—William I. Wyman, 2415 Twentieth Street. Examiners in chief. —Samuel E. Fouts, 730 Quebec Street; E. S. Henry, 1320 Columbia Road; R. E. Marine, 1915 Calvert Street; F. C. Skinner, 1427 Crittenden Street; Sidney F. Smith, 2238 Cathedral Avenue. Solicitor.—T. A. Hostetler, 3339 Eighteenth Street. Law examiners.—1. P. Disney, 1212 B Street SE.; C. H. Lane, Falls Church, Va. E. Landers, 1328 A Street SE.; M. J. Moore, 111 Tennessee Avenue NE.; G. P Tucker, 802 Massachusetts Avenue NE. ; Examiners of interferences.—W. S. Ruckman, 3414 Mount Pleasant Street; J. H. Carnes, 1657 Thirty-first Street. Classification examiner.—Charles H. Pierce, 1350 Oak Street. bl . BUREAU OF EDUCATION. (Pension*Qffice Building. Phone, Main 5110.) Commassioner.—John J. Tigert, 3753 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase. Chief clerk.—Lewis A. Kalbach, 662 E Street NE Secretary to commissioner.— Theo. Honour, 1723 Willard Street. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Director.— Acting director.—Philip S. Smith, 3249 Newark Street. Chief clerk.—Henry C. Rizer, 1464 Belmont Street. Executive division.—Guy E. Mitchell, chief, 1421 Buchanan Street. Accounts division.—Alvin B. Schwab, acting chief, 1330 Shepherd Street. 24786°—67-4—21 ED 20 290 Congressional Durectory. Geog branch.—W. C. Mendenhall, chief geologist, 9 East Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Water resources branch.—N. C. Grover, chief hydraulic engineer, 1442 Belmont Street. Topographic branch.—C. H. Birdseye, chief topographic engineer, 1362 Oak Street. Land classification board.—Herman Stabler, chief, R. F. D. 1, Bethesda, Md. Mineral Resources of United States Diviston.—G. F. Loughlin, chief, 3214 North- ampton Street. Alaskan Mineral Resources Branch.—Alfred H. Brooks, chief Alaskan geologist, 3100 Newark Street. Library.—Miss J. V. L.. McCord, 1600 Q Street. Publication branch: Editor —G. M. Wood, The Berkshire. Engraving division.—S. J. Kubel, 1000 East Capitol Street. Division of distribution.—Ronne C. Shelsé, Fontanet Courts. RECLAMATION SERVICE. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Darector.—Arthur P. Davis, 2212 First Street. Chief engineer.—F. E. Weymouth, Wilda Building, Denver, Colo. Assistant director.—Morris Bien, 60 Elm Avenue, Takoma Park. Chief counsel.—Ottamar Hamele, 1413 T Street. Chief clerkt.—Charles H. Fitch, 3616 Newark Street, Cleveland Park. Statistician.—Clarence J. Blanchard, The Earlington. BUREAU OF MINES. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Director.—H. Foster Bain, 1430 Thirty-third Street. Assistant director.—A. W. Ambrose, 2844 Wisconsin Avenue. Assistant to the director.—F. J. Bailey, 2517 Hall Place. Chief clerk.—H. E. Meyer, 2505 Champlain Street. ; NATIONAL PARK SERVICE. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Director. —Stephen T. Mather, Cosmos Club. Assistant director.—Arno B. Cammerer, 2024 North Capitol Street. Chief clerk.—B. Leslie Vipond, R. F. D. 2, Chevy Chase, Md. Editor—A. E. Demaray, 1326 Gallatin Street. ST. ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL. (Nichols Avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, Lincoln 1426.) Superintendent.—William A. White, M. D. Administrative assistant to superintendent.—Monie Sanger. First assistant physician and chief executive officer.—Arthur P. Noyes, M. D. Chief clerk.—Frank M. Finotti. Secretary to superintendent.—Arnold W. Barbour. Chief of training school for nurses.—Alice Vaughn, R. N. HOWARD UNIVERSITY. (Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, Columbia 8100.) Patron ex officio.—Albert B. Fall, Secretary of the Interior. President board of trustees.—Justice Stanton J. Peelle, LL. D., The Cairo. President.—J. Stanley Durkee, A. M., Ph. D., D. D. Secretary-treasurer.—Emmett J. Scott, A. M., LL. D. Registrar.—F. D. Wilkinson. BOARD OF INDIAN COMMISSIONERS. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880, Branch 79.) Chatrman.—George Vaux, jr., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Warren K. Moorehead, Andover, Mass. Samuel A. Eliot, Cambridge, Mass. Frank Knox, Manchester, N. H. Daniel Smiley, Mohonk Lake, N. Y. Hugh L. Scott, Princeton, N. J. Alfred E. Smith, New York, N. Y. Clement S. Ucker, Savannah, Ga. Flora Warren Seymour, Chicago, Ill. Secretary.—Malcolm McDowell, Washington, D. C. AGRICULTURE Executive Departments. 291 FREEDMEN’S HOSPITAL. (Sixth and Bryant Streets. Phone, North 754.) Surgeon in chief. —William A. Warfield, M. D. Assistant surgeon.—Thomas E. Jones, M. D. ALASKAN ENGINEERING COMMISSION. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Commussioner.—Col. Frederick Mears, chairman and chief engineer, Anchorage, Alaska. Assistant chief engineer.—William C. Gerig, Anchorage, Alaska. Engineer vn charge supply dwvision.—H. P. Warren, Anchorage, Alaska. Purchasing agent.—Charles E. Dole, room 422, Bell Street Terminal, Seattle, Wash. . Senior clerk.—Howard M. Gillman, jr., 3449 Holmead Place, Washington, D. C. WAR MINERALS RELIEF. (Room 2117, Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880, Branch 128.) Commassioner.—Ira E. Robinson, The Powhatan. Assistant commisstoner.—John Briar, R. F. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. Chief clerk.—Sheridan Ferree, 3465 Macomb Street. Chief engineer.—C. E. Julihn, 2028 F Street. Chief accountant.—William Hugh Dunn, 1752 Euclid Street. Examiners.—Paul S. Black, The New Berne; Richard J. Malone, The Metropolitan. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets. Phone, Main 4650. Private branch exchange con- necting all bureaus except Weather Bureau (West 1640), Forest Service (Main 6910), and Bureau of Public Roads (Main 5333).) HENRY CANTWELL WALLACE, of Des Moines, Iowa, Secretary of Agriculture (The Wardman Park), was born at Rock Island, Il1., May 11, 1866, son of Henry and Nannie (Cantwell) Wallace; B. S. A. Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, Ames, Iowa, 1892, LL. D. 1922; married Carrie May Brodhead, of Muscatine, Towa, November 24, 1887; farmer and breeder of pure-bred live stock, Adair County, Towa, 1887-1891; professor of dairying Towa State College 1893-1895; editor Creamery Gazette and Farm and Dairy 1893-1895; manager and associate editor Wallace's Farmer 1895-1916; editor of same 1916-1921; president and treasurer Wallace’s Pub- lishing Co. and Capital City Printing Plate Co.; director Central State Bank; member United States Live Stock Industry Commission (executive committee) during the war; secretary Corn Belt Meat Producers’ Association 16 years; member National War Work Council, Y.M. C. A.; chairman Iowa War Work Council, Y.M. C. A.; chairman State executive committee, Iowa Y. M. OC. A. 1914-1920; member international committee Y. M. C. A.; member executive committee, Roosevelt Memorial Associa- tion; member Delta Tau Delta, Phi Kappa Phi; Republican; United Presbyterian; Mason; member Prairie, Des Moines, Grant, Golf, and Country Clubs; member Rock Creek Park Commission, National Forest Reservation Commission, Federal Board for Vocational Education, Federal Power Commission, and War Finance Corporation. Assistant Secretary.—C. W. Pugsley, Fontanet Courts. Director of scientific work.—E. D. Ball, The Portner. Admanistrative assistant and budget officer —W. A. Jump, 635 D Street SE. Administrative assistant.—H. M. Bain, Falls Church, Va. Chief clerk.—R. M. Reese, 3016 Dumbarton Avenue. Solicitor.—R. W. Williams, 4229 Ninth Street. Executive assistant to the Assistant Secretary.—H. T. Cronin, 1436 W Street. Press service. —F. M. Russell, 1314 Delafield Place. Ezxhibits.—J. W. Hiscox, 1234 Newton Street NE. WEATHER BUREAU. (Corner Twenty-fourth and M Streets. Phone, West 1640.) Chief. —Charles F. Marvin, 1501 Emerson Street. Assistant chief —Charles C. Clark, 21 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief clerk.—R. Hanson Weightman, 5914 Wisconsin Avenue, Somerset, Md. Forecasting.—Edward H. Bowie, 3702 Keokuk Street; Charles I.. Mitchell, 904 Rit- tenhouse Street. Forecast Division.—Edgar B. Calvert, Florence Courts West. River and Flood Division.—Harry C. Frankenfield, 1735 New Hampshire Avenue. { 292 Congressional Directory. AGRICULTURE BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY. Chief —John R. Mohler, 1620 Hobart Street. Administrative assistant.—Charles C. Carroll, 6801 Sixth Street, Takoma Park. Chief clerk.—J. R. Cohran, 917 Eighteenth Street. Editor.—D. 8. Burch, Conduit Road and District Line. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. Pathologist and physiologist and chief.—William A. Taylor, 1315 Gallatin Street. Physiologist and associate chief. —Karl FF. Kellerman, 2221 Forty-ninth Street. Assistant in charge of business operations.—H. E. Allanson, 117 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Publications.—J. E. Rockwell, 31 S Street. FOREST SERVICE. (Atlantic Building, 928-930 F Street. Phone, Main 6910.) Forester and chief —W. B. Greeley, 219 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Associate Forester.—E. A. Sherman, Forest Glen, Md. BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY. Acting chief —Walter G. Campbell, Rosslyn, Va. Assistant chief —W. W. Skinner, Kensington, Md. Technical administrative assistants.—P. B. Dunbar, 311 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, D. C.; R. W. Balcom, 406 Surrey Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Assistants to the chief —F. B. Linton, 222 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; S. A. Postle, 627 Longfellow Street. Editor —Katharine A. Smith, 1207 Rhode Island Avenue. BUREAU OF SOILS. Soil physicist and chief. —Milton Whitney, Takoma Park, Md. Assistant to the chief.—A. G. Rice, Livingston Heights, Va. Editor.—Charles H. Seaton, Glencarlyn, Va. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY. Entomologist and chief. —L. O. Howard, 1705 Twenty-first Street. Entomologist and associate chief.—C. L. Marlatt, 1521 Sixteenth Street. Entomologist and associate chief.—A. L. Quaintance, Silver Springs, Md. Assistant to the chief.—E. B. O’ Leary, 1203 Connecticut Avenue. Editcr.—Rolla P. Currie, 632 Keefer Place. BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL SURVEY. Biologist and chief.—X. W. Nelson, Cosmos Club. Assistant chief. —W. C. Henderson, 4727 Thirteenth Street. Assistant to the chief—A. B. Morrison, The Marlborough. Assistant in operatrons.—E. J. Thompson, 1339 Newton Street. Editor—W. H. Cheesman, 1525 Twenty-ninth Street. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. Chaef, and disbursing clerk.—A. Zappone, 2222 First Street. Admanastrative assistant.—W. J. Nevius, 1209 Geranium Street. DIVISION CF PUBLICATIONS. Chief.—John L. Cobbs, jr., Clifton Terrace South. Chief editor.—Edwin C. Powell, Woodside, Md. Assistant.—B. D. Stallings, 2620 Thirteenth Street. Chief clerk.—H. J. Demaree, Blenheim Courts. Motion pictures.—Frederick W. Perkins, The Victoria. LIBRARY. Librarian.—Claribel R. Barnett, 1410 Girard Street. Assistant librarian.—Emma B. Hawks, 2622 Thirteenth Street. STATES RELATIONS SERVICE. Director.—A. C. True, 1604 Seventeenth Street. Assistant to the director.—Eugene Merritt, Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Administrative assistants.—Mrs. C. E. Johnston, 1316 Euclid Street; M. E. 2416 Thirteenth Street. . Chief of editorial division.—W. H. Beal, 1852 Park Road. CRE © / EV > 2 COMMERCE Frecutive Departments. 293 BUREAU OF PUBLIC ROADS. (Willard Building, 515 Fourteenth Street. Phone, Main 5333.) Chief.—Thomas H. MacDonald, 4101 Harrison Street. Chief engineer.—P. St. J. Wilson, Florence Courts West. Assistant to the chief.—C. D. Curtiss, 10 West Virgilia Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Editor.—H. S. Fairbank, 2041 East Thirty-second Street, Baltimore, Md. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS. Chief —Henry C. Taylor, East Falls Church, Va. Associate chief.—Leon M. Estabrook, 1026 Seventeenth Street. Assistant chief —Lloyd S. Tenny, 4403 Seventh Street. Director of information.—J. Clyde Marquis, 1409 Webster Street. Administrative assistant.—Frederick J. Hughes, 1825 F Street. Director of marketing research.—W. A. Schoenfeld, Twenty-ninth Street and Bunker Hill Road, Mount Rainier, Md. Chief statistician.—Nat C. Murray, 1650 Irving Street. PACKERS AND STOCKYARDS ADMINISTRATION. Assistant to the Secretary of Agriculture.—Chester Morrill, 1420 Decatur Street. General auditor.—Arthur S. French, The Columbia. : Specialist in marketing live stock.—Howard M. Gore, The Harrington. Specialist in marketing live stock and meats.—Stephen Bray, Del Ray, Va. Consulting specialist wn marketing.—Charles J. Brand, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Attorney.—Bayard T. Hainer; The Cairo. Chief clerk.—George T. Ash, 1706 T Street. ADMINISTRATION OF GRAIN FUTURE TRADING ACT. Assistant to the Secretary of Agriculture.—Chester Morrill, 1420 Decatur Street. Chief clerk.—George T. Ash, 1706 T Street. INSECTICIDE AND FUNGICIDE BOARD. Chairman.—J. K. Haywood, 1729 Lanier Place. Assistant to the chairman.—J. G. Shibley, 1848 Biltmore Street. FEDERAL HORTICULTURAL BOARD. Chairman.—C. L. Marlatt, 1521 Sixteenth Street. Vice chairman.—W. A. Orton, 600 Cedar Street, Takoma Park. Assistant to the chairman.—R. C. Althouse, 3355 Eighteenth Street. FIXED NITROGEN RESEARCH LABORATORY. (American University. Phone, Cleveland 1800.) Director.—F. G. Cottrell, Falkstone Courts. Research on cyanamid and cyanide processes.—Joseph M. Braham, 3519 Lowell Street. Research on. ammonia synthesis.—Alfred T. Larson, 3461 Lowell Street; Royal O. E. Davis, 1422 Webster Street. Research on arc process.—Sebastian Karrer, 3519 Lowell Street. Business manager.—Hugh M. Frampton, The Alban. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania A venue. Phone, Main 5060.) HERBERT HOOVER, of Stanford University, California, Secretary of Commerce (2300 S Street), born West Branch, Iowa, August 10, 1874, son of Jesse Clark and Hulda Randall (Minthorn) Hoover. A. B., Engineering, Stanford University, 1895. In 1899 he married Lou Henry, of Monterey, Calif., and they have two sons. Pro- fessional work in mines, railways, metallurgical works, in United States, Mexico, Canada, Australia, Italy, Great Britain, South Africa, India, China, Russia, etc. 1895-1913. Representative Panama-Pacific Exposition in Europe, 1913-14; chair- man American Relief Committee, London, 1914-15; chairman Commission for Relief in Belgium, 1914-1919; from June, 1917, to July 1, 1919, was United States Food Administrator; member War Trade Council; chairman United States Grain Cor- poration, United States Sugar Equalization Board, Interallied Food Council, Supreme Economic Council, European Coal Council; director various economic measures in Europe during the armistice, including organization of food supplies to Poland, Serbia, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Austria, Rumania, Armenia, Baltic States, etc., 1917-1919; vice chairman President’s Second Industrial Conference, 1920; presi- 294 Congressional Directory. COMMERCE dent American Institute Mining Engineers, 1920; Engineering Council of Feder- ated Engineering Societies, 1921; American Child Hygiene Association, 1921; chairman American Relief Administration, engaged in children’s relief in Europe, 1919- ; European Relief Council, 1920- ; trustee Stanford University, 1911- . Took oath of office as Secretary of Commerce, March 5, 1921. Gold medals: Civic Forum, National Institute of Social Sciences, National Academy of Sci- ences, city of Lille, city of Warsaw, Mining and Metallurgical Society, Western Society of Engineers, Andeffret Prize French Academy. Honorary citizen, Belgium. Free- man, Belgian, Polish, Esthonian cities. Honorary degrees: Brown, Pennsylvania, Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Princeton, Johns Hopkins, George Washington, Dart- mouth, Boston, Rutgers, Alabama, Oberlin, Liege, Brussels, Warsaw, Cracow, Oxford, Rennsselaer, Tufts, Swarthmore, Williams, Manchester, University of Cali- a Author various technical publications. Joint translator ‘Agricola De Re etallica. ; Assistant Secretary.—Claudius H. Huston, The Wardman Park. Solicitor.—Stephen B. Davis, Jr. : Assistant to the Secretary.—David W. Mulvane, The Wardman Park. Chief clerk and superintendent.—E. W. Libbey, 15 R Street NE. Disbursing clerk.—Charles FE. Molster, 1237 Lawrence Street, Brookland, D. C. Private secretary to the Secretary.—Richard S. Emmet, 2019 R Street. Private secretary to Assistant Secretary.—Alfred E. Wild, 928 B Street NE. Confidential clerk to the Secretary.—Mrs. Etta R. Goodwin, 2317 Ashmead Place. Chief of Division of— Appointments.—Clifford Hastings, Franklin Park, Va. Publications.—Thomas F. McKeon, 1352 Otis Place; assistant chief, Charles C. Barton, 2233 Eighteenth Street. Supplies.—Walter S. Erwin, 753 Quebec Place. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. (Building D, Four-and-a-half Street and Missouri Avenue. Phone, Main 2082,) Director.—William M. Steuart, 3725 Morrison Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Assistant to the director.—Joseph A. Hill, 8 Iowa Circle. Chief clerk.—Arthur J. Hirsch, 2032 North Capitol Street. Chef statisticians: Population.—William C. Hunt, 2628 Garfield Street. Agriculture, cotton, and tobacco.— William I. Austin, 1412 Delafield Place. anufactures.—Eugene F. Hartley, 436 Park Road. Statistics of cities.—Starke M. Grogan, The Sherman. Vital statistics.—William H. Davis, M. D., 5314 Forty-first Street, Chevy Chase, D. C. Geographer.—Charles S. Sloane, 1733 T Street. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Director.—Julius Klein, 2141 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant directors.—Oliver P. Hopkins, 1824 Belmont Road; Louis Domeratzky, McLean, Va.; Thomas R. Taylor, 3903 Jocelyn Street. Administrative assistant.—Nicholas Eckhardt, jr., 1212 Holly Street. BUREAU OF STANDARDS. (Pierce Mill Road and Connecticut Avenue. Phone, Cleveland 1720.) . Director.— Acting Director.—F. C. Brown, 3030 Newark Street. Chief metallurgist.—G. K. Burgess, 511 Clifton Terrace. Chemist in charge.—W. F. Hillebrand, 3023 Newark Street. Assistant to director (in charge of office).—Henry D. Hubbard, 112.Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md BUREAU OF FISHERIES. (Office, corner Sixth and B Streets SW. Phone, Main 5240.) Commissioner.—Henry O’Malley, Southbrook Courts. Deputy commissioner.—H. F. Moore, The Concord. Assistant in charge of office.—1. H. Dunlap, 1728 Q Street. i —— LABOR Executive Departments. | 295 BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Commassioner.—George R. Putnam, 2126 Bancroft Place. Deputy commissioner.—John S. Conway, 1749 T Street. Chief constructing engineer.—H. B. Bowerman, 15 West Twenty-ninth Street, Balti- more, Md. Superintendent of naval construction.—Edward C. Gillette, 3343 Seventeenth Street. Chaef clerk.—Thaddeus S. Clark, 1312 Connecticut Avenue. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. (New Jersey Avenue, near B Street SE. Phones, Lincoln 1872 and 1873.) Darector.—E. Lester Jones, 2116 Bancroft Place. © Assistant director.—R. L. Faris, 1346 Harvard Street. Chief clerk.—C. H. Dieck, 901 H Street NE. Chief of Dwvision of— Hydrography and Topography.—W. E. Parker, Kensington, Md. Geodesy.— William Bowie, 1733 Church Street. Charts.—R. S. Patton, 3920 McKinley Street, Chevy Chase. Terrestrial Magnetism.—N. H. Heck, 3507 Northampton Street. : Tides and Currents.—G. T. Rude, 3904 Legation Street, Chevy Chase. Accounts.—J. M. Griffin, 1340 Gallatin Street. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Commassioner.—D. B. Carson, The Roosevelt. Deputy commissioner.—Arthur J. Tyrer, Florence Court. Chaef clerk.—William M. Lytle, 1817 Columbia Road. STEAMBOAT-INSPECTION SERVICE. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Supervising Inspector General.—George Uhler, 1433 Euclid Street. Deputy Supervising Inspector General.—Dickerson N. Hoover, 411 Seward Square SE. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. (Department of I. abor Building, 1712 G Street. Phone, Main 8474.) JAMES JOHN DAVIS, of Pittsburgh, Pa., Secretary of Labor, was born in Tredegar, Wales, October 27, 1873; his father, mother, and their six children immigrated to Pittsburgh in 1881; at the age of 11 began working and learned his trade as a puddler in the iron and steel works at Sharon, Pa.; in 1892 went to work in the iron works at Pittsburgh, Pa.; in 1893 worked in the steel and tin plate mills at Elwood, Ind.; joined the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers of America, was elected to various offices therein, and is still a member in good standing; elected city clerk of Elwood, Ind., in 1898; elected recorder of Madison County, Ind., in 1902; joined the Loyal Order of Moose in 1906; in 1907 became director general of the order, and still holds that office; chairman Moose war relief commission visiting American, French, British, Belgian, and Italian battle fields early in 1918; after the armistice returned to battle fields of Belgium and Germany for relief purposes; married Jean Rodenbaugh 1914 and has two children, aged, respectively, 4 years and 11 months; is president of the American Bond & Mortgage Co., and a member of the Americus Republican and the Pittsburgh Athletic Clubs, of Pittsburgh, Pa.; took oath of office as Secretary of Labor March 5, 1921. Assistant Secretary. —E. J. Henning, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Second Assistant Secretary.—Robe Carl White, Chatham Courts. Soleitor.—Theodore G. Risley, 1360 Fairmont Street. Chief clerk.—Samuel J. Gompers, 2517 North Capitol Street. Disbursing clerk.—George W. Love, 1321 Military Road. Private secretary to Secretary.—Arthur E. Cook, 5302 Forty-first Street. Confidential clerk to Secretary.—Florence B. Wells, 1884 Columbia Road. Private secretary to Assistant Secretary.—Elizabeth V. Husting, 1758 Lanier Place. Private secretary to Second Assistant Secretary.—James F. Nolan, 2310 Ashmead Place. Chief Division of Publications and epphe= fly Smith, Mount Rainier, Md.; assistant, Benjamin R. Sherwood, Mount Rainier, Md. Appointment clerk.—Robert C. Starr, 514 M Street. Librartan.—Laura A. Thompson, The Ontario. ¥ 296 Congressional Directory. LABOR i . : DIVISION OF CONCILIATION. Director of conciliotion.—Hugh L. Kerwin, 632 A Street SE. | Executive clerk.—E. J. Cunningham, Southbrook Courts. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS. i (1712 G Street.) Commissioner of Labor Statistics.—Ethelbert Stewart, 1210 Delafield Place. Chaef statistician.—Charles E. Baldwin, 1359 Oak Street. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION. (1712 G Street.) Commissioner General of Immagration.—W. W. Husband, 3456 Macomb Street. | Assistant Commissioner General of Immaigration.—Irving F. Wixon. | Commissioners of tmmagration.—Robert E. Tod, Ellis Island, New York Harbor; | | John P. Johnson, Long Wharf, Boston, Mass. ; James L.. Hughes, Gloucester, N. J; i Bertram N. Stump, Fort McHenry Reservation, Baltimore, Md.; John H. Clark, | Montreal, Province of Quebec; Roberto H. Todd, San Juan, P. R.; Luther | Weedin, Seattle, Wash.; Edward White, Angel Island, San Francisco, Calif.; William T. Christy, New Orleans, La. CHILDREN’S BUREAU. (Twentieth and D Streets.) | Chief.—Grace Abbott, The Ontario. | Chiefs of divisions: i Hygiene.—Dr. Ella Oppenheimer, 1736 Columbia Road. | Maternity and infant hygiene.—Dr. Anna E. Rude, 1603 Ninteenth Street. E Social service.—Emma O. Lundberg, The Woodward. i Statistical.—Dr. Robert M. Woodbury, 1519 Twentieth Street. Industrial.—Ellen Nathalie Matthews, 2810 Cathedral Avenue. i Editorial. —Katharine F. Lenroot, The Woodward. : i BUREAU OF NATURALIZATION. (1712 G Street.) - | ) Commissioner of Naturalization.—Raymond F. Crist, 3025 Newark Street. ! } Deputy Commissioner of Naturalization.—Thomas B. Shoemaker, 2924 Newark Street, Chief naturalization examiners.—Richard K. Campbell, 1977 Biltmore Street, Wash- ington, D. C.; James Farrell, 437 Post Office Building, Boston, Mass.; Merton A. | Sturges, 1913 Tribune Building, New York, N.Y .; J. C. F. Gordon, Federal Build- ing, SE Hidloiphils, Pa.; Oran T. Moore, Department of Labor, Washington, D. C.; William M. Ragsdale, 402 Federal Building, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Frederick J. Schlot- A feldt, 776-779 Federal Building, Chicago, Ill.; Robert S. Coleman, 314 Federal f Building, St. Paul, Minn.; George A. Crutchfield, 410 Customhouse, St. Louis, Mo. ; John Speed Smith, 408 Federal Building, Seattle, Wash.; M. R. Bevington, | 204 Federal Building, San Francisco, Calif.; Paul Armstrong, 352 Federal Build- { ing, Denver, Colo. : i WOMEN’S BUREAU. | (Twentieth and D Streets.) J Director—Mary Anderson, 3510 Sixteenth Street. : Assistant Director.—Agnes L. Peterson, 3510 Sixteenth Street. UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE. f | (Twentieth and D Streets.) | Director General. —Francis I. Jones, 17 Dupont Circle. ; Assistant Director General.—Charles A. Pearson, 3432 Connecticut Avenue. Director Junior Division.—Mary Stewart, 1712 H Street. BUREAU OF INDUSTRIAL HOUSING AND TRANSPORTATION. (200 New Jersey Avenue.) Director. —Rcobert Watson, The Kenesaw. MISCELLANEOUS. SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. (The Mall. Phone, Main 1811.) Secretary. les D. Walcott, 1743 Twenty-second Street. Assistant secretary.—C. G. Abbot, 2203 K Street. Chief clerk.—H. W. Dorsey, Hyattsville, Md. Accountant and disbursing agent.—W. Irving Adams, 1862 Mintwood Place. Editor.—Webster P. True, 128 Webster Street. THE ESTABLISHMENT. Warren G. Harding. President of the United States; Calvin Coolidge, Vice President. of the United States; William H. Taft, Chief Justice of the United States; Charles E. Hughes, Secretary of State; Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treas- ury; John W. Weeks, Secretary of War; Harry M. Daugherty, Attorney General; Hubert Work, Postmaster General; Edwin Denby, Secretary of the Navy; Albert B. Fall, Secretary of the Interior; Henry C. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture; Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce James J. Davis, Secretary of Labor. BOARD OF REGENTS. Chancellor, Calvin Coolidge, Vice President of the United States; William H. Tait, Chief Justice of the United States; Henry Cabot Lodge, Member of the Sen. ate; A. Owsley Stanley, Member of ‘the Senate; Medill McCormick, Member of the Senate; Frank L. Greene, Member of the House of Representatives: Albert Johnson, Member of the House of Representatives; R. Walton Moore, Member | of the House of Representatives; George Gray, citizen of Delaware (Wilming- ton); Charles F. Choate, jr., citizen of Massachusetts (Boston); ——— citizen of Washington, D. C.; Henry White, citizen of Washington, D. C.; Robert S. Brookings, citizen of Missouri (St. Louis). Ezecutive commattee.—George Gray (chairman), Henry White, GOVERNMENT BUREAUS UNDER DIRECTION OF SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. NATIONAL MUSEUM. Administrative assistant to the secretary im charge of the National Museum.—W. de C. Ravenel, The Ontario. Head curators. —G. P. Merrill, 1422 Belmont Street; Leonhard Stejneger, 1472 Belmont Street; Walter Hough, acting, 1423 Monroe Street. Editor.—Marcus Benjamin, The Highlands. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART. Director.—William H. Holmes, 1454 Belmont Street. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. (Office in Smithsonian Building.) Chief. —J. Walter Fewkes, Forest Glen, Md. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES. Assistant secretary in charge.—C. G. Abbot, 2203 K Street. Chief clerk.—C. W. Shoemaker, 3115 O Street. NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK. (Adams Mill Road. Phone, Columbia 744.) Superintendent.—N. Hollister, 1915 Calvert Street. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY. irector.—C. G. Abbot, 2203 K Street. REGIONAL BUREAU FOR THE UNITED STATES, INTERNATIONAL CATALOGUE OF SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE. Assistant in charge.—Leonard C. Gunnell, Smithsonian Institution. 297 298 Congressional Directory. NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES. (Smithsonian Institution. Phone, Main 1811.) President.—Charles D. Walcott, 1743 Twenty-second Street. Vice president.—A. A. Michelson, University of Chicago, Chicago, Ill. Foreign secretary.-—R. A. Millikan, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. Home secretary.—C. G. Abbot, 2203 K Street. Treasurer.—F. L.. Ransome, 1455 Belmont Street. Assistant secretary.—Paul Brockett, 3303 Highland Place, Cleveland Park, NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL. Chasrman executive board.—J. C. Merriam, 2400 Sixteenth Street. Secretary.—Vernon Kellogg, Cosmos Club. PAN AMERICAN UNION. (FORMERLY INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS.) (Seventeenth between B and C Streets. Phone, Main 6638.) Director General.—L. S. Rowe, Pan American Annex. Assistant Director.—Francisco J. Yénes, The Oakland. Counselor.—Franklin Adams, The Marlborough. Trade adviser.— William A. Reid, 1842 Sixteenth Street. Chief clerk.—William V. Griffin, 1338 Twenty-second Street. Chief statistician.—William C. Wells, Beltsville, Md. Chief accountant.—Lowell Curtiss, 3118 Nineteenth Street. Librarian.—Charles E. Babcock, Vienna, Va. Managing editor.—Isabel K. Macdermott, The Altamont. Spanish translators—E. M. Amores, 1539 I Street; Enrique Coronado, The Sherman. Portuguese translator.—L. Marchant, The Plaza. Assistant statistician.—Matilda Phillips, The Mendota. Chief mail clerk.—W. J. Kolb, 1501 Park Road. Secretary to Director General.—C. M. Litteljohn, 1744 C Street. Secretary to Assistant Director.—Helen L. Brainerd, 2626 Garfield Street. GOVERNING BOARD. Charles E. Hughes, Secretary of State (chairman ex officio), 1529 Eighteenth Street. Beltran Mathieu, ambassador of Chile, 2223 R Street. Federico Alfonso Pezet, ambassador of Peru, The Wardman Park. Augusto Cochrane de Alencar, ambassador of Brazil, 1603 H Street. Rafael H. Elizalde, minister of Ecuador, 1529 New Hampshire Avenue. Jacobo Varela, minister of Uruguay, 1616 Twenty-second Street. Emilio C. Joubert, minister of the Dominican Republic, 1631 Massachusetts Avenue. Emiliano Chamorro, minister of Nicaragua, 1525 Sixteenth Street. Adolfo Ballividn, minister of Bolivia, 1325 Massachusetts Avenue. Francisco Sdnchez Latour, minister of Guatemala, 1721 Q Street. Enrique Olaya, minister of Colombia, The Wardman Park. Ricardo J. Alfaro, minister of Panama, 1719 Rhode Island Avenue. Pedro Manuel Arcaya, minister of Venezuela, 2800 Ontario Road. J. Rafael Oreamuno, minister of Costa Rica, 2201 Massachusetts Avenue. Arturo Padré, chargé d’affaires of Cuba, The Brighton. Felipe A. Espil, chargé d’affaires of Argentina, 1806 Corcoran Street. R. Camilo Diaz, chargé d’affaires of Honduras, The Northumberland. Robert Laraque, chargé d'affaires of Haiti, 1440 R Street. Hector David Castro, chargé d’affaires of Salvador, 1120 Vermont Avenue. Muscellaneous. 299 GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE. (Treasury Building, Phone, Main 6400.) Comptroller General of the United States.—J. R. McCarl, The Somerset. Assistant Comptroller General of the United States.—Lurtin R. Ginn, 1005 L Street. Solicitor.—Rudolph L. Golzé, 1715 Corcoran Street. Administrative assistant.—James L. Baity, The Somerset. Counsel.—John M. Lewis, George Washington Inn. Chuef clerk.—Fred B. Kitterman, 3019 Twenty-fifth Street NE. Chief of investigations.—H. A. A. Smith, 7222 Blair Road. Chief of appointment division.—Eber F. Inbody, Cherrydale, Va. Disbursing clerk.—Carl Collier, The Cecil. Private secretary to the Comptroller General.—Mary G. Gilbert, 1314 Eleventh Street. Chiefs of Division: Treasury Department.—W. M. Geddes, 1313 Columbia Road. War Department.—W. H. Barksdale, 3613 Wisconsin Avenue. Interior Department.—John K. Willis, 1013 Massachusetts Avenue NE. Navy Department.—George McInturff, 719 Upshur Street. State op Other Departments.— William S. Dewhirst, 3906 Morrison Street. Post Office Department.—C. T. M. Cutcheon, 3915 Ingomar Street. Transportation.—E. W. Moore, Kensington, Md. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. (Interstate Commerce Commission Building, Finhieonih Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, Main 7460.) Commissioners: Balthasar H. Meyer, chairman, 3825 Wisconsin Avenue. Charles C. McChord, The New Willard. ; Henry C. Hall, 2238 Q Street. Winthrop M. Daniels, The Altamont. Clyde B. Aitchison, Clifton Terrace West. Joseph B. Eastman, 2325 Twentieth Street. Mark W. Potter, The Wardman Park. John J. Esch, 2852 Ontario Road. Johnston B. Campbell, 3812 Jocelyn Street. Ernest I. Lewis, 16565 Harvard Terrace. Frederick I. Cox, 1714 Nineteenth Street. Secretary.—George B. McGinty, 3919 Fourteenth Street. Assistant secretary.—Alfred Holmead, 1104 Maryland Avenue SW. Assistant to the secretary.—T. A. Gillis, 4014 Twelfth Street NI. Chief clerk and purchasing agent.—T. Leo Haden, 3814 Thirteenth Street. Disbursing clerk.—W. M. Lockwood, 1121 Euclid Street. : Appointment clerk.—John B. Switzer, 227 Willow Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Director of accounts.—Alexander Wylie, 3719 Jenifer Street, Chevy Chase. Director of finance.—Charles D. Mahaffie, The University Club. Chief examiner.—Robert E. Quirk, 1736 Columbia Road. Chief Bureau of Informal Cases.—Arja Morgan, 425 Manor Place. Chief Bureau, of Inquiry.—John J. Hickey, 1808 I Street. Chief counsel.—Patrick J. Farrell, 1436 Clifton Street. Chief Bureau of Locomotive Inspection.—Alonzo G. Pack, 3511 Ordway Street. Director Bureau of Safety.—Wilfred P. Borland, 1806 Kenyon Street. Director of service.—John C. Roth, 2501 Fourteenth Street. Director of statistics.—Max O. Lorenz, 3510 Porter Street. Director of traffic.—W. V. Hardie, 2115 P Street. Acting. director of valuation.—Charles F. Staples, 2035 Park Road. UNITED STATES RAILROAD LABOR BOARD. (608 South Dearborn Street, Chicago, Ill.) Public group: Ben W. Hooper, chairman; G. Wallace W. Hanger, vice chairman; R. M. Barton. Labor group: Albert Phillips, A. O. Wharton, W. L. McMenimen. Management group: Horace Baker, J. H. Elliott, Samuel Higgins. Secretary.—1. M. Parker. Assistant secretary.—Robert I. Cole. Chief statistician.—M. W. Hart. Supervisor of dockets.—H. H. Reed. Disbursing officer.—Earl U. Gray. Chief clerk.—G. O. Dostal. 300 Congressional Directory. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. (Offices, 1724 ¥ Street. Phones, Main 75, 76.) Commiussioners.—President (vacant.) ~ George R. Wales, 3609 Norton Place. Mrs. Helen H. Gardener, 1838 Lamont Street. Chief examiner. —Herbert A. Filer, Kensington, Md. Secretary.—John T. Doyle, 1833 Nineteenth Street. Chaefs of division. : Application.—Dr. Thomas A. Griffin, 2434 Twentieth Street. Appointment.—Dr. Thomas P. Chapman, 3228 Thirteenth Street. Certification clerk.—Bertram A. S. Brande, 121 Third Street NE. Contact representative. —Matthew F. Halloran, Hyattsville, Md. Examining.—James G. Yaden, 4119 Illinois Avenue. Investigation and review.—Henry A. Hesse, 510 A Street SE. UNITED STATES BUREAU OF EFFICIENCY. (Winder Building, Seventeenth and F Streets. Phone, Main 8686.) Chief —Herbert D. Brown, 1811 Lamont Street. Assistant chief and senior accountant.—Harold N. Graves, 6926 Ninth Street. Efficiency ratings.—William H. McReynolds, 1413 Buchanan Street. Accounting.—V. G. Croissant, 4913 Forty-seventh Street. : Statistics.—George C. Havenner, 1745 Minnesota Avenue SE. Labor-saving devices.—Wilson E. Wilmot, 2633 Adams Mill Road. Duplication of work.—Herbert H. Rapp, 2416 Thirteenth Street. Chaef clerk and disbursing clerk.—Miss D. F. Fridley, 628 Lexington Place NE. Librarian.—Gladys E. Weaver, 305 Shepherd Street. : FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD. (Treasury Building. Phone, Main 6400.) MEMBERS OF THE BOARD. Chairman.—Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury (ex officio member), 1785 Massachusetts Avenue. D. R. Crissinger, Comptroller of the Currency (ex officio member), The Somerset. (Private secretary, Aubrey B. Carter, Virginia Highlands, Va.) Governor.— Vice governor.—Edmund Platt, 2339 Ashmead Place. (Private secretary, Joseph L. Durland, 2109 Eighteenth Street.) Adolph C. Miller, 2320 S Street. (Private secretary, D. C. Elliott, 1448 Girard Street.) Charles S. Hamlin, 919 Farragut Square. (Private secretary, J. P. Moore.) John R. Mitchell, 1901 Wyoming Avenue. (Private secretary, R. F. Leonard, The Marlborough. Secretary. —W. W. Hoxton, Rucker Place, North Rosemont, Alexandria, Va. Assistant secretary.— Walter L.. Eddy, 3151 Mount Pleasant Street. General counsel.—Walter Wyatt, 10 Denwood Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Fiscal agent.—W. M. Imlay, 106 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief clerk.—John DeLaMater, 3330 Seventeenth Street. Chief examiner and chief division of examination.—J. F. Herson. Statistictan.—M. Jacobson, 1424 Madison Street. Associate statistician.—E. A. Goldenweiser, 105 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Director division of analysis and research.—W. W. Stewart, 3579 Thirteenth Street. Chief division of bank operations.—E. L. Smead, 216 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief division of Federal reserve issue and redemption.—L. G. Copeland, 1418 Rhode Island Avenue. Supply agent.—Oliver E. Foulk, 3109 Twenty-fourth Street NE. Mauscellaneous. : 301 FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION. & (Temporary Building No. 4, 2000 D Street. Phone, Main 7720.) COMMISSION ERS. Chairman.— Victor Murdock, 1719 Eighteenth Street. John F. Nugent, 2726 Connecticut Avenue. Huston Thompson, Florence Courts West. Vernon W. Van Fleet, 2006 Columbia Road. Nelson B. Gaskill, The Chastleton. : Secretary.—Otis B. Johnson, 4139 New Hampshire Avenue. LEGAL DIVISION. Chief counsel.—William H. Fuller, The Monmouth. Chief examiner.—Millard F. Hudson, The New Berne. ECONOMIC DIVISION. Chief economist.—Francis Walker, 2351 Ashmead Place. EXPORT TRADE DIVISION. Chief —W. F. Notz, 1727 Lamont Street. TRADING WITH THE ENEMY DIVISION. Chief —Margaret R. Wilson, The Calverton. ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION. Assistant secretary.—C. G. Duganne, Chatham Courts. Publications.—J. W. Burdette, 2132 F Street. Chief of personnel.—L. H. Waring, 616 Quebec Place. Librarian.— Thomas P. Ayer, 3033 Sixteenth Street UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD. (Navy Department Building. Phone, Main 5201.) MEMBERS. A.D. Lasker, 1706 Eighteenth Street; T. V. O'Connor, Stoneleigh Court; Meyer Lissner, The Wardman Park; W. S. Benson, The Wyoming; George E. Chamberlain, The Cairo; Frederick I. Thompson, The Wardman Park; E. C. Plummer, The Burlington. Chairman.—A. D. Lasker, 1706 Eighteenth Street. Vice chairman.—T. V. O’Connor, Stoneleigh Court. Assistant to the chatrman.—Ralph V. Sollit, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Secretary.—Clifford W. Smith, Chatham Courts. Disbursing officer.—T. L. Clear, The Army and Navy Club. : General counsel.—Sanford H. E. Freund, The Racquet Club, and Chauncey G. Par- ker, 1301 Seventeenth Street. Assistant secretary.—C. P. Kremer, The Macroft. Chuef clerk.—M. J. Pierce, 5008 Thirteenth Street. Congressional Directory. | UNH'ED STATES SHIPPING BOARD EMERGENCY FLEET i CORPORATION. (Navy Department Building, Phone, Main 5201.) TRUSTEES. | J. B. Smull, W. J. Love, J. W. McIntosh, Sidney Henry, R. V. Sollit, Joseph E. i Sheedy, W. B. Keene. OFFICERS. President.—J. B. Smull, 2501 Massachusetts Avenue. | Vice president and general manager.—W. J. Love, 45 Broadway, New York City. i Vice president.—Joseph E. Sheedy, The Racquet Club. : i Darector+of finance.—J. W. McIntosh, The Northumberland. Director of sales.—Sidney Henry, The Brighton. Director of traffic.—W. B. Keene, The Burlington. Secretary .~—Clifford W. Smith, Chatham Courts. Treasurerv—T. L. Clear, The Army and Navy Club. General counsel.—Sanford H. E. Freund, The Racquet Club, and Chauncey G. Par- ker, 1301 Seventeenth Street. Assistant secretary.—C. P. Kremer, The Macroft. Assistant-to-director of finance.—P. Sinclair, The Lafayette. Charters end’ allocations.—J. A. Robinson, manager, The Wardman Park. Operating «department.—W. E. Griffith, manager, 4625 Ninth Street. Department of maintenance and repair.—Commander R. D. Gatewood, United States Navy, manager, 45 Broadway, New York City. Marine insurance department.—B. K. Ogden, manager, The Ontario. Ship sales department.—J. Harry Philbin, manager, 2625 North Charles Street, Balti- more, Md UNITED STATES RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION. (Hurley-Wright Building. Phone, Main 7940.) Director General.—James C. Davis, 2715 Connecticut Avenue. ; Assistant to the Director General. —E. M. Alvord, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue. Comptroller.—L. J. Tracy, 4312 Fessenden Street. | Director division of liquidation claims.—E. M. Alvord, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue. : Director division of finance.—D. C. Porteous, The Westminster. General solicitor.—A. A. McLaughlin, The Highlands. UNITED STATES COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE. | (Rooms 2541-2551, Munitions Building. Phone, Main 2520, Branch 1021.) THE COUNCIL. Chairman.—The Secretary of War. { The Secretary of the Navy. | The Secretary of the Interior. The Secretary of Agriculture. : The Secretary of Commerce. The Secretary of Labor. Custodian of records.—Col. I. L. Hunt, Quartermaster Corps, United States Army. Librarian.—Miss A. R. Hasse. . THE JOINT BOARD. | (Room 2743, Navy Department Building. Phone, Main 2520.) The Chief of Staff, Army, Gen. John J. Pershing, 2029 Connecticut Avenue. | The Director of Operations and Training Division, General Staff, Army, Brig. Gen. | William Lassiter, 2308 California Street. : The Chief of War Plans Division, General Staff, Army, Brig Gen. B. H. Wells, 2311 Calvert Street. Mscellaneous. We The Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral R. E. Coontz, ardman Park. SS = The Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, Rear Adm A. H. Roberts 70 Wyoming Avenue. : = = The Director, Plans Division, Office of Naval Operations; Capt. Sinclair Gannon, United States Navy (acting), The Cairo. Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 104 Bradley Road, Thrifton, Va. WAR FINANCE CORPORATION. (Treasury Building. Phone, Main 6400.) Chairman.—Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue. Henry C. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, The Wardman Park. Managing director.—Eugene Meyer, jr., 2201 Connecticut Avenue. Term expires May. 17,1924. (Francis L. Fahy, secretary, 1013 Twentieth Street.) Assistant to the managing director.—Floyd R. Harrison, 2700 Connecticut Avenue. Directors. —George R. Cooksey, 1810 Newton Street. Term expires May 17, 1924. Dwight F. Davis, 1520 Eighteenth Street. Term expires May 17, 1926. Fred Starek, 3211 Nineteenth Street. Term expires May 17, 1926. Assistants to the directors.—William Ontjes, The Knowlton; Snelson Chesney, 1843 Irving Street; Ralph P. Merritt, San Francisco, Calif. General counsel.—G. A. Marr, 1827 S Street. Consulting counsel.—Gerard C. Henderson, 1868 Columbia Road. Secretary.—George P. Lynde, The Westminster. Treasurer.—R. Reyburn Burklin, 2700 Ontario Road. ALIEN PROPERTY CUSTODIAN. (Arlington Building, Vermont Avenue and H Street. Phone, Main 1960.) Alien Property Custodian.—Thomas W. Miller, The Racquet Club. General counsel and assistant.—William W. Wilson, 1918 Belmont Road. Managing director.—George E. Williams, 2518 Seventeenth Street. Assistant general counsel.—Sewall W. Abbott, 1742 S Street. Chiefs of bureaus: Trusts.—Clyde R. Painter, 1882 Columbia Road. Law.—J. K. M. Ewing, 1228 Seventeenth Street. Admanistration.—Guild C. Foster, 1737 New Hampshire Avenue. Secretary to the custodion.—Fred H. Wilson, 1775 California Street. UNITED STATES TARIFF COMMISSION. (01d Land Office Building. Phone, Main 3947.) Chairman.—Thomas O. Marvin, of Massachusetts, 2701 Connecticut Avenue. Vice chairman.—William S. Culbertson, of Kansas, 212 Maryland Avenue NE. Commissioners: David J. Lewis, of Maryland. Edward P. Costigan, of Colorado, The Brighton. Thomas Walker Page, of Virginia, 2400 Sixteenth Street. William Burgess, of Pennsylvania, The Kensington. Secretary.—John F. Bethune, Falls Church, Va. UNITED STATES EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION COMMISSION. (Building F, Seventh and B Streets. Phone, Main 6181.) Chairman.—Mrs. Bessie Parker Brueggeman, The Somerset. John J. Keegan, The Shawmut. 3 Charles H. Verrill, 12 East Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Secretary.—S. R. Golibart, jr., 1932 Calvert Street. Medical director—Edward C. Ernst, The Chaumont. Chief statistician.—R. J. Hoage, 2000 H Street. Attorney.—S. D. Slentz, The Monmouth. Chief claim examiner.—John W. Edwards, 1401 Columbia Road. Chief of accounts.—A., H. Gardes, West Falls Church, Va. * rig BY - ) - » wil ff NATIONAERSCREW THREAD COMMISSION. Congressional Directory. (Createdaby public law 201, Sixty-fifth Congress, July 18, 1918.) (Bureau of Standards, Washington, D. C.) Chairman.—F. C. Brown, Acting Director Bureau of Standards, 3030 Newark Street. Vice chairman.—JIieut. Col. E. C. Peck, United States Army. F. O. Wells, American Society of Mechanical Engineers. George S. Case, Society of Automotive Engineers. Earle Buckingham, Society of Automotive Engineers. Ralph E. Flanders, American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Maj. J. O. Johnson, United States Army. Commander J. N. Ferguson, United States Navy. . Commander M. A. Libbey, United States Navy. UNITED STATES VETERANS’ BUREAU. (Arlington Building, Vermont Avenue and H Street.) Director —C. R. Forbes. Executive officer—T. H. Scott, 4113 Fourth Street. General counsel.—Charles F. Cramer, 2314 Wyoming Avenue. Assistant directors: Claims division.—C. E. Mulhearn, R. F. D., Landover, Ardwick, Md. Insurance diviston.—C. A. Penington, 1426 Clifton Street. Medical diviston.—R. U. Patterson, 1757 Lanier Place. Finance diviston.—Harold W. Breining, 1434 Harvard Street. Rehabilitation diviston.—R. I. Rees, The Brighton. Supply division.—C. R. O'Leary, 5511 Thirty-ninth Street. Manager, district offices.—George E. Tjams, 3201 Carlisle Avenue, Baltimore, Md. FEDERAL BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION. | (200 New Jersey Avenue. Phone, Main 7890.) Chafrman.—The Secretary of Labor, James J. Davis. The Secretary of Agriculture, Henry C. Wallace, The Highlands. The Secretary of Commerce, Herbert Hoover, 2300 S Street. The Commissioner of Education, John J. Tigert. : Vice chairman.—Harry L. Fidler, representative of labor. Term expires March 25, 1924. : : Qalvin F. McIntosh, representative of agricultural interests. Term expires July 17, 1925, Edw. T. Franks, representative of manufacturing and commercial interests. Term expires November 26, 1924. ; Director.—J. C. Wright, 4120 Illinois Avenue. Secretary and chief clerk.—E. Joseph Aronoff, 647 E Street NE. (Phone, Lincoln 4224.) THE PANAMA CANAL. (01d Land Office Building. Phone, Main 4294.) General purchasing officer and chief of office.—A. L. Flint, Friendship Heights, Bethesda, Md Chief clerk, purchasing department.—E. D. Anderson, 1420 Crittenden Street. Assistant to the chief of officc.—Ray L. Smith, 1319 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Appointment clerk.—E. BE. Weise, 1346 Jefferson Street. ON THE ISTHMUS. Governor of the Panama Canal.—Col. Jay J. Morrow, United States Army, Balboa Heights, C. Z. : : Engineer of maintenance.—Col. Meriwether L. Walker, United States Army, Balboa Heights, ©. Z. ~~ Muscellaneous. 305 BOARD OF ROAD COMMISSIONERS FOR ALASKA. & (Munitions Building, Twenty-first and B Streets.) President and special disbursing agent.—Maj. James G. Steese, United States Army (retired), Army and Navy Club. Engineer officer.—Maj. John C. Gotwals, Corps of Engineers. Secretary and disbursing officer.—Capt. Pierre A. Agnew, Corps of Engineers. COMMISSION ON NAVY YARDS AND NAVAL STATIONS. (Room 2015, Navy Department Building. Phone, Main 2520, Branch 392.) Commissioners.—Rear Admiral Washington L. Capps (CC.), United States Navy; © Rear Admiral Harry H. Rousseau (CEC.), United States Navy; Capt. Frank T. Chambers (CEC.), United States Navy. AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS. (Seventeenth Street, between D and E Streets. Phone, Main, 5400.) NATIONAL OFFICERS. President.—Warren G. Harding. Vice presidents.—Robert W. de Forest, 30 Broad Street, New York City; William Howard Taft, Washington, D. C. Chatrman.—John Barton Payne, National Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Counselor.—James M. Beck, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C. Treasurer.— Eliot Wadsworth, Treasury Department, Washington, D. C. Secretary.—Miss Mabel T. Boardman, National Red Cross, Washington, D. C. Vice chairman.—James L. Fieser, in charge of domestic operations; Dr. Albert Ross Hill, in charge of foreign operations. CENTRAL COMMITTEE. Appointed by the President.—John Barton Payne, chairman; William Phillips, Under- secretary, to represent the Department of State; Eliot Wadsworth, Assistant Sec- retary, to represent the Prony Department; Maj. Gen. Merritte W. Ireland, Surgeon General, to represent the War Department; James M. Beck, Solicitor General, to represent the Department of Justice; Rear Admiral Edward R. Stitt, Surgeon General, to represent the Navy Department. Elected by the board of incorporators.—Cornelius N. Bliss, jr., New York, N. Y.; Herbert Hoover, Stanford University, Calif. ; Mabel T. Boardman, Washington, D.C.; Mrs. gory Bae Pittsburgh, vi John D. Ryan, New York, N.Y.; George E. Scott, cago, 111. Hlected by the chapter delegates.—Mrs. Frank V. Hammar, St. Louis, Mo.; Judge W. W. Morrow, San Francisco, Calif.; Mrs. August Belmont, New York, N. Y.; Gustavus D. Pope, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Henry P. Davison, Locust Valley, N. Y.; E. B. Douglas, Miami, Fla. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. John Barton Payne, Mrs. August Belmont, Mabel T. Boardman, Herbert Hoover, Maj. Gen. Merritte W. Ireland, Gustavus D. Pope, George E. Scott, Rear Admiral Edward R. Stitt, Eliot Wadsworth. NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS. (Room 2722, Navy Department Building, Seventeenth and B Streets. Phone, Main 1056.) Chairman.—Dr. Charles D. Walcott, 1743 Twenty-second Street. Chairman executive committee.—Dr. Joseph S. Ames, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Dr. William F. Durand, Prof. John F. Hayford, Commander Jerome C. Hunsaker (United States Navy), Prof. Charles F. Marvin, Maj. L. W. McIntosh (United States Army), Rear Admiral William A. Moffett (United States Navy), Maj. So en M. Patrick (United States Army), Dr. David W. Taylor, Orville right. Secretary.—Dr. S. W. Stratton, The Farragut. Executive officer.—George W. Lewis, 6506 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant secretary and special disbursing agent.—John F. Victory, The Argyle. 24786°—67—4—2p Ep———21 -- 306 Congressional Directory. * THE INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION. (Old Land Office Building, Seventh and I Streets. Phone, Main 3764.) UNITED STATES SECTION. Chairman.—Hon. Obadiah Gardner, Rockland, Me. Hon. Clarence D. Clark, Evanston, Wyo. Hon. Marcus A. Smith, Tucson, Ariz. Secretary.—William H. Smith, Washington, D. C. SE CANADIAN SECTION. Chairman.—Hon. Charles A. Magrath, Ottawa, Ontario. Henry A. Powell, K. C., St. John, New Brunswick. Sir William Hearst, K. C. M. G., Toronto, Ontario. Secretary.—Lawrence J. Burpee, Ottawa, Ontario. INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND CANADA. For defining and marking boundary between United States and Canada, except on Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River. (Office, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, 205 New Jersey Avenue SE. Phone, Lincoln 1872.) UNITED STATES SECTION. Commissioner.—E. Lester Jones, 2116 Bancroft Place. Hi Engineer to the commission.—J. H. Van Wagenen, 2001 Sixteenth Street. i Chef clerk and disbursing officer —R. B. Martin, Vienna, Va. CANADIAN SECTION. Commassioner. —J. J. McArthur, Department of the Interior, Ottawa, Canada. | INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED STATES | I AND MEXICO. AMERICAN SECTION. H Commissioner. —George Curry, 633 First National Bank Building, El Paso, Tex. Secretary and disbursing officer.—J. Harrie Cloonan, El Paso, Tex. | Consulting engineer.—Randolph E. Fishburn, El Paso, Tex. MEXICAN SECTION. hi Chief of the Mexican Section.—Federico Ramos, Juarez, Mexico. th Consulting engineer.—Gustavo P. Serrano. i First engineer.— Armando Santacruz, jr. Topographer.—Salvador Cuellar Munoz. Secretary. —Hernandez Ojeda. f BOARD OF SURVEYS AND MAPS OF THE FEDERAL i GOVERNMENT. (Map Information Office, room 1234, Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880, Branch 248.) Chairman.— William Bowie, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. Vice chairman.—A. D. Kidder, General Land Office. Secretary.—C. H. Birdseye, United States Geological Survey. a Mouscellaneous. 307 THE UNITED STATES SECTION OF THE INTER AMERICAN HIGH COMMISSION. (Commerce Building, Nineteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.) Honorary chairman.—Andrew W. Mellon, of Pennsylvania, Secretary of Treasury. Chairman.—Herbert Hoover, of California, Secretary of Commerce. Vice chairman.—Wesley L. Jones, of Washington, chairman of the Committee on Commerce of the United States Senate. Julius H. Barnes, of New York, president Chamber of Commerce of the United States. 0. K. Davis, of New York, secretary of the National Foreign Trade Council. John H. Fahey, of Massachusetts, member of the Senior Council of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States. William O. Hart, of Louisiana, treasurer of the National Conference of Commis- sioners on Uniform State Laws. A. C. Miller, of California, member of the Federal Reserve Board. John H. Puelicher, of Wisconsin, president of the American Bankers Association. Myron W. Robinson, of New Jersey, president of the American Manufacturers’ Export Association. Honorary member. —L. S. Rowe, Director General of the Pan American Union. Acting secretary.—Guillermo A. Sherwell, The Rochambeau. FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880, Branch 345.) Commissioners: John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, chairman, 2100 Sixteenth Street. Albert B. Fall, Secretary of the Interior, The Wardman Park. Henry C. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, The Wardman Park. Executive secretary.—0. C. Merrill, 9 West Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Chief engineer.—Col. William Kelly, United States Army, 2117 O Street. Chief counsel. —Maj. Lewis W. Call, United States Army, Garrett Park, Md. Chief accountant.— William V. King, 1841 Kilbourne Place. Chief clerk.—F. W. Griffith, 909"L Street NE. UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD. Chairman.—Dr. C. Hart Merriam, Department of Agriculture. Secretary.—Charles S. Sloane, geographer, Census Bureau, Department of Commerce. Chairman executive commattee.—Frank Bond, chief clerk General Land Office, Depart- ment of the Interior. Will C. Barnes, Assistant Forester, Forest Service, Department of Agriculture. Sa Prone B. Bassett, jr.; hydrographer, Hydrographic Office; Department of the Navy. Lieut. Col. Bruce Palmer, General Staff, War Department. J. N. B. Hewitt, ethnologist, Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Insti- tution. James McCormick, editor of maps, Geological Survey. James W. McGuire, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. Maj. Lawrence Martin, Division of Western European Affairs, Department of State. John 8S. Mills, editor and assistant chief of division, Department of the Treasury. L. N. Morgan, superintendent Division of Post Office Service, Post Office Depart- ment. George R. Putnam, Commissioner Bureau of Lighthouses, Department of Commerce. Charles E. Young, chief of proof section, Government Printing Office. ROCK CREEK AND POTOMAC PARKWAY COMMISSION. (Created by sec. 22 of the public buildings act of Mar. 4, 1913.) (Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460.) Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury, 1785 Massachusetts Avenue. John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, 2100 Sixteenth Street. Henry C. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, The Wardman Park. Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, executive and disbursing officer, 1839 California Street. George E. Clark, engineer and surveyor, 3501 Fourteenth Street. Congressional Directory. THE COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS. (Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460, Branch 5.) Chairman.—Charles Moore, of Detroit, Mich. Vice chairman.—James L. Greenleaf, New York City. James E. Fraser, New York City. Louis Ayres, New York City. Henry Bacon, New York City. H. Siddons Mowbray, Washington, Conn. Milton B. Medary, jr., Philadelphia. Secretary and executive officer.—H. P. Caemmerer, 943 L Street. WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY. (Organized 1833; chartered 1859; acts of Congress Aug. 2, 1876, Oct. 2, 1888.) Hon. Warren G. Harding, President of the United States, president ex officio. The governors of the several States, vice presidents ex officio. Hon. Willis Van Devanter, Associate Justice, Supreme Court of the United States, © first vice president. Charles C. Glover, second vice president. Theodore W. Noyes, treasurer, 1730 New Hampshire Avenue. Frederick L. Harvey, secretary, 2146 Florida Avenue. (Phone, North 5977.) Charles D. Walcott; Rt. Rev. Alfred Harding, D. D.; ; Herbert Putnam; David R. McKee; Henry White; Robert T. Lincoln; Brig. Gen. William M. Black, United States Army; Hon. Henry Cabot Lodge; Admiral Willard H. Brownson, United States Navy; Hon. Frederick H. Gillett; Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, United States Army. THE CONGRESSIONAL CLUB. (2001 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, North 6717.) (Incorporated by act of Congress approved May 2 1908, Membership composed of women in official life. OFFICERS. President.—Mrs. Joseph S. Frelinghuysen, of New Jersey. First vice president.—Mrs. Wallace H. White, of Maine. Second vice president.—Mrs. James E. Watson, of Indiana. Third vice president.—Mrs. Homer Hoch, of Kansas. Fourth vice president.—Mrs. Frank Briggs, of Maine. Fifth vice president.—Mrs. Frank Kellogg, of Minnesota. Recording secretary.—Mrs. M. Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania. Corresponding secretary.—Mrs. Lindley H. Hadley, of Washington. Treasurer.—Mrs. George M. Young, of North Dakota. Chairman of— Membership committee.—Mrs. Ladislas Lazaro, of Louisiana. Entertainment committee.—Mrs. Frank W. Mondell, of Wyoming. House committee.—Mrs. Howard S. Reeside, of Pennsylvania. Finance commatitee.—Mrs. Luther W. Mott, of New York. Printing committee.—Mrs. Alben William Barkley, of Kentucky. Book committee.—Mrs. Elmer O. Leatherwood, of Utah. Publicity commattee.—Mrs. Everett Sanders, of Indiana. Social secretary.—Miss Julia Rogers. ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION. (Office, Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, Main 1460.) Chairman.—John W. Weeks, Secretary of War, 2100 Sixteenth Street. Edwin Denby, Secretary of the Navy, 2224 R Street. Elliott Woods, Architect of the Capitol, Stoneleigh Court. John McElroy, representing the Grand Army of the Republic, 1412 Sixteenth Street. : Fred. Beall, commander Camp No. 171, United Confederate Veterans of the District of Columbia, 1130 Columbia Road. Grates W. Newton, representing the United Spanish War Veterans, Hartford, onn. : Executive and disbursing officer.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. Muscellaneous. 309 PECUNIARY CLAIMS ARBITRATION COMMISSION. (Under agreement of Aug. 18, 1910, between the United States and Great Britain.) Arbitrator.—Chandler P. Anderson, of New York. Agent.—Fred K. Nielsen, of Nebraska. Counsel and joint secretary.—Marshall Morgan, of Tennessee. NATIONAL HOME FOR DISABLED VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS. (Headquarters office, National Military Home, Ohio.) Branches.—Central, Dayton, Ohio; Northwestern, Milwaukee, Wis.; Eastern, Togus, - Me.; Western, Leavenworth, Kans.; Marion, Marion, Ind.; Pacific, Santa Monica, Calif.; Danville, Danville, 11l.; Mountain, Johnson City, Tenn.; Battle Mountain Sanitarium, Hot Springs, S. Dak. ; Managers.—The President of the United States, the Chief Justice, the Secretary of War (ex officio), Washington, D. C.; Gen. George H. Wood, president National Military Home, Dayton, Ohio; Maj. James W. Wadsworth, first vice president, Geneseo, N. Y.; Col. R. L. Marston, second vice president, Skowhegan, Me.; Capt. W. S. Albright, secretary, Leavenworth, Kans.; Col. Henry H. Markham, Pasadena, Calif.; Capt. John C. Nelson, Logansport, Ind.; Hon. James S. Cather- wood, Hoopeston, Illi. General treasurer. —Col. C. W. Wadsworth. Chief surgeon.—Col. James A. Mattison. Assistant general treasurer. —Col. F. W. Franke. Inspector general.—Col. Charles M. Pearsall. UNITED STATES SOLDIERS’ HOME. (Regular Army.) BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. (United States Saldiers’ Home. Phone, Columbia 750.) Maj. Gen. Tasker H. Bliss (retired), governor of the home. Maj. Gen. M. W. Ireland, Surgeon General. : Maj. Gen. Lansing H. Beach, Chief of Engineers. Maj. Gen. William H. Hart, Quartermaster General. Maj. Gen. Robert C. Davis, The Adjutant General. Col. John A. Hull, Acting Judge Advocate General. Secretary of the board.—Col. William T. Wood (retired). OFFICERS OF THE HOME. (Residing at the home. Phone, Columbia 750.) Governor.—Maj. Gen. Tasker H. Bliss (retired). Deputy governor.—Maj. P. W. West (retired). Secretary-treasurer —Col. Robert H. C. Kelton (retired). Attending surgeon.—Col. H. P. Birmingham (retired). Quartermaster and purchasing officer.—Col. W. C. Babcock (retired). COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF. (Kendall Green. Phone, Lincoln 2450.) Patron ex officio.— Warren G. Harding, President of the United States. President.—Percival Hall, Kendall Green. Directors.—Atlee Pomerene, Senator from Ohio; John E. Raker, Representative from California; Caleb R. Layton, Representative from Delaware; Theodore W. Noyes, Charles H. Stockton, Martin A. Knapp, and Frederic A. Delano, citizens of the District of Columbia; John B. Wight and Ernest G. Draper, citizens of New York; the president and the secretary of the institution. Secretary.—Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, 1748 Lamont Street. Treasurer.—H. Ralph Burton, Union Trust Building. Visitors welcome on Thursdays from 8 a. m. to 3 p. m. Congressional Directory. INTERNATIONAL SANITARY BUREAU. (Pan American Building, Seventeenth between B and C Streets. Phone, Main 6638.) Honorary director.—Dr. Pablo Garcia Medina, Bogota, Colombia. Director.—Surg. Gen. Hugh S. Cumming, United States Public Health Service, Washington, D. C. : Assistant to the director.—Asst. Surg. Gen. J. D. Long, United States Public Health Service, Washington, D. C. Vice director.—Asst. Surg. Gen. J. H. White, United States Public Health Service, Washington, D. C. Secretary.—Dr. Julio Bianchi, Guatemala. Executive clerk.—W. P. Montgomery, Pan American Building, Washington, D. C. Members board of directors.—Dr. J. Llamb{as, director general public health, Buenos Aires, Argentina; Dr. Carlos Chagas, director general public health, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Dr. Juan Guiteras, director general public health, Habana, Cuba; Dr. Luis Razetti, secretary Academy of Medicine, Caracas, Venezuela. SUPERINTENDENT OF THE STATE, WAR, AND NAVY DEPART- MENT BUILDINGS. (Room 1034, Navy Department Building. Phone, Main 2520, Branch 1145.) Commassion in charge.—The Secretary of State, chairman; the Secretary of War; the Secretary of the Navy. ; Superintendent.—Lieut. Col. Clarence O. Sherrill, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, 1839 California Street. Assistant to superintendent.—F. W. Hoover, 4409 Iowa Avenue. Chief clerk.—Bert C. Gardner, 2117 G Street. Assistant superintendent State, War, and Navy Department Building.—Alex. B. Eadie, 2622 Myrtle Avenue NE. Assistant superintendent Potomac Park group.—H. R. Owen, 1377 Massachusetts Avenue SE. Assistant superintendent Mall group.—C. S. McCarthy, 1242 Franklin Street NE. FEDERAL TRAFFIC BOARD. (War Trade Building, Twentieth and B Streets. Phone, Main 2520.) Chairman and coordinator for trafflc.—C. G. Mayo, 2010 Wyoming Avenue. Secretary.—E. B. Kennedy, The Army and Navy Club. WORLD WAR FOREIGN DEBT COMMISSION. (Room 272, Treasury Building. Phone, Main 6400.) Chairman .—Andrew W. Mellon, Secretary of the Treasury, 1785 Massachusetts A venue. Charles E. Hughes, Secretary of State, 1529 Eighteenth Street. Herbert Hoover, Secretary of Commerce, 2300 S Street. Reed Smoot, United States Senator from Utah, 2521 Connecticut Avenue. Theodore E. Burton, United States Representative from Ohio, Stoneleigh Court. Serio iio Wadsworth, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1534 Twenty-eighth treet. UNITED STATES COAL COMMISSION. (Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880.) Chairman. .—John Hays Hammond, 2301 Kalorama Road. Thomas R. Marshall, The Lee House. Samuel Alschuler, Lafayette Hotel. Clark Howell, The New Willard. George Otis Smith, 2137 Bancroft Place. Edward T. Devine, The Lee House. Charles P. Neill, 3556 Macomb Street. Secretary. —Edward Eyre Hunt, 3532 Connecticut Avenue. Chief clerk and disbursing officer.—John J. Madigan, Clifton Terrace West. RIN SRE Muscellaneous. 311 FEDERAL NARCOTICS CONTROL BOARD. (Room 2019, Interior Department Building. Phone, Main 1880, Branch 619.) Members: The Secretary oi State. The Secretary of the Treasury. The Secretary of Commerce. Secretary.—H. A. Hayward, 125 Villa Road, Clarendon, Va. FEDERAL FUEL DISTRIBUTOR. (718 Eighteenth Street. Phone, Main 7940.) Federal Fuel Distributor.—Francis R. Wadleigh, 1104 Vermont Avenue. Assistant.—H. C. Clevenger, The Powhatan. Special assistant.—Charles J. Hepburn, The Racquet Club. District representative.—Lieut, Col. Charles B. Hatch, U. S. M. C., 1510 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Chief clerk.—Francis M. Shore, 1221 Euclid Street. OFFICIAL DUTIES. DEPARTMENT OF STATE. SECRETARY OF STATE. The Secretary of State is charged, under the direction of the President, with the duties appertaining to correspondence with the public ministers and the consuls of the United States and with the representatives of foreign powers accredited to the United States, and to negotiations of whatever character relating to the foreign affairs of the United States. He is also the medium of correspondence between the President and the chief executives of the several States of the United States; he has the custody of the great seal of the United States; and countersigns and affixes such seal to all Executive proclamations, to various commissions, and to warrants for the extradition of fugitives from justice. He is regarded as the first in rank among the members of the Cabinet. He is also the custodian of the treaties made with foreign States, and of the laws of the United States. He grants and issues passports, and exequaturs to foreign consuls in the United States are issued through his office. He publishes the laws and resolutions of Congress, amendments to the Constitution, and proclamations declaring the admission of new States into the Union. UNDERSECRETARY OF STATE. The Undersecretary of State is the principal assistant of the Secretary of State in the discharge of his various functions, aiding in the formulation and execution of the foreign policies of the Government, in the reception of representatives of foreign governments, etc. In matters which do not require the personal attention of the Secretary of State he acts for the Secretary of State, and in the absence of the Secretary of State he becomes the Acting Secretary of State. The Undersecretary of State is charged with the general direction of the work of the Department of State and of the foreign service. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE. The Assistant Secretary of State has charge of all matters pertaining to foreign trade, and supervises the Office of the Economic Adviser. He has supervision over the work of the Division of Far Eastern Affairs and the Division of Russian Affairs. He is the chairman of the board of examiners for the Consular Service. The organization of the Department of State is also in his charge. In the absence of the Secretary of State and the Undersecretary of State he becomes the Acting Secretary of State. SECOND ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE. The Second Assistant Secretary of State is charged with such duties as may be assigned him by the Secretary of State. He has direct supervision over his immediate office (including the reviewing, coordinating, and mailing branch of the office) and over ths Division of Passport Control and the Visé Office. He makes decisions in citizenship and other cases involving complex questions of law and policy. He is con- sulted by the officers of the department upon matters of diplomatic procedure and general questions of international law and policy, particularly when involving the traditional practice of the Department of State. ; THIRD ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE. The Third Assistant Secretary of State is charged with the direction of the work of the Division of Near Eastern Affairs, of the Diplomatic Bureau, of the Bureau of Accounts, and of the Bureau of Appointments; and with matters pertaining to cere- monials and protocols, and international conferences and congresses. He is charged with the presentation to the President of ambassadors and ministers of foreign countries newly accredited to the United States; is chairman of the board of examiners for the ‘Diplomatic Service; and is intrusted with the preparation of the correspondence upon any question arising in the course of the public business that may be assigned to him by the Secretary of State. 313 814 Congressional Directory. STATE OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR OF THE CONSULAR SERVICE. Direction of the Consular Service and of all consular activities in connection with the work of the several bureaus and divisions of the department; charge of consular personnel; censoring, grading, and criticizing of commercial and economic reports; drafting of correspondence on consular trade assistance and reporting; distribution of commercial and economic reports to the Department of Commerce and such other Government departments and organizations and non-Government organizations as may properly receive thera. The director is also the budget officer of the Department of State and 1s charged with the supervision of the preparation of all estimates of appro- priations for the department and for the foreign service and of their presentation to Jongress. He also supervises the expenditures made from the appropriation for ‘Emergencies arising in the Diplomatic and Consular Service.’ OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR. Deals with questions of municipal and international law; handles claims of citizens of the United States against foreign governments and of nationals of foreign countries against the United States; matters pertaining to international extradition; the protec- tion of interests of American citizens in foreign countries; rights of aliens in the United ‘States; international arbitrations; and drafting and interpretation of treaties. h,} OFFICE OF THE CHIEF CLERK. General supervision of the clerks and other employees and of routine departmental matters; purchase of supplies; custody of the property of the department; supervision and assignment of office rooms and space; issuance of passes, when required, to per- sons entitled to enter the building; authentication of applications for automobile licenses of foreign diplomatic officers residing in Washington; correspondence on departmental matters; leaves of absence and sick leave; preparation and custody of efficiency records of the department. The chief clerk signs authentications and such other papers as the Secretary of State may direct. DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN AFFAIRS. General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with China and leased territories, Japan, Siam, the Far East- ern possessions of European nations (in conjunction with the Division of Western European Affairs), and Siberia (in conjunction with the Division of Russian Affairs). DIVISION OF LATIN-AMERICAN AFFAIRS. General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Salvador, Uruguay, and Venezuela. DIVISION OF WESTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, _ political and economic, with Austria, Belgium, British Empire (Canada, the Union of South Africa, British colonies or protectorates not elsewhere enumerated, and, in conjunction with the Far Eastern Division, Australia, New Zealand, India, and other British or European possessions in the Far East), Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France (Morocco), Germany, Hungary, Italy, Liberia, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS. General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with Abyssinia, Afghanistan, Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Egypt, Georgia, Greece, Hedjaz, Mesopotamia, Palestine, Persia, Rumania, Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, Syria, and Turkey. STATE : Official Duties. ~ 315 DIVISION OF MEXICAN AFFAIRS. General supervision, under the secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with Mexico. DIVISION OF EASTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS. General supervision, under the secretaries, of matters pertaining to Russia (in cluding Siberia), and of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic, with Esthonia, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, and Poland. ( OFFICE OF THE ECONOMIC ADVISER Gives advice and recommendations to the department on questions of general economic policy; unifies and coordinates economic matters within the departinent; establishes and maintains liaison with the various economic bureaus in other depart- ments; handles economic cases which have no regional character or which overlap geographical divisions; drafts correspondence on matters falling within the following special fields: Natural resources, finance, foreign commercial policy, commercial treaties and tariffs, transportation and communications. DIVISION OF PASSPORT CONTROL. Examination and adjudication of applications for passports and for registration in consulates of the United States as American citizens; issuance of departmental pass- ports; supervision over the department’s passport agencies in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, New Orleans, and Seattle; direction of clerks of courts who take pass- port applications; custody of applications for passports and registration; correspond- ence regarding citizenship, passports, registration, and right to protection while abroad; issuance of letters of introduction. VISE OFFICE. Matters pertaining to the entry of aliens into the United States with respect to the granting or refusal of visés; correspondence on matters pertaining to visé work; exami- nation of visé applications submitted by American consuls abroad. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. Generalsupervision of the publicationsof the department and of the allocation of the printing fund; custody of the laws, treaties, proclamations, and Executive orders; printing and distribution of the same; : preparation of the volumes of Foreign Relations of the United States and the History ‘of the World War; preparation of the volumes of laws of the United States; management of the library of the department; authentica- tions. The chief of the division is also the editor of the department. DIVISION OF POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC INFORMATION Collection and coordination of political, ethnological, geographical, social, and eco- nomic information; custody of the map collection of the department and the drafting of such special maps as may be required. DIVISION OF CURRENT INFORMATION. > Preparation of news items for the press; receiving and replying to inquiries from newspaper correspondents; preparation and distribution to officials of the department of daily press summaries and special articles; furnishing them with press bulletins, copies of texts, and general information bearing upon foreign relations. DIPLOMATIC BUREAU. General administration of the Diplomatic Service, including matters of personnel, appropriations and expenditures, efficiency records, leaves of absence, rentals, equip- ment and supplies, organization, instruction of diplomatic officers, etc. Correspond- ence relating to the foregoing and to customs courtesies and free entry, letters rogatory, decoration of American citizens by foreign governments, international exchange of publications, diplomatic pouch service between the United States and foreign coun- tries, and the designation of commercial, military, and naval attachés. 316 Congressional Directory. TREASURY CONSULAR BUREAU. General administration of the Consular Service, including matters of personnel, appropriations and expenditures, leaves of absence, allowances, rentals, equipment and supplies, organization, instruction of consular officers, etc. Correspondence relat- ing to the foregoing and to the whereabouts and welfare of Americans abroad, shipping and seamen, settlement of estates of deceased Americans in foreign countries, con- sular protection of American interests and, other than commerce, the general work of consular offices, such as immigration, quarantine, notarial acts, protection of the customs revenues, ete. BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS. Receipt and custody of applications for appointment and of the indorsements of applicants; correspondence relating thereto; designations and other matters pertain- ing to the holding of foreign-service examinations; preparation of nominations to the Senate of diplomatic, consular, and other officers commissioned by the Department of State whose appointment is subject to confirmation by the Senate; issuance of commissions, exequaturs, and warrants of extradition; bonding of consular and other officers accountable to the department for moneys received or expended; prepara- tion of copy for the department register, diplomatic and consular list, mailing list, and pamphlets regarding appointments and promotions in the foreign service; editing and proof reading of the same; personnel matters; oaths of office; custody of the seal of the United States. BUREAU OF INDEXES AND ARCHIVES. Recording and indexing the correspondence of the department; custody of the archives; telegraph, telephone, and cipher communications. BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS. Custody and disbursement of appropriations and indemnity’ funds; correspondence relating thereto; administrative examination of accounts. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY. SECRETARY O¥ THE TREASURY. The Secretary of the Treasury is charged by law with the management of the national finances. He prepares plans for the improvement of the revenue and for the support of the public credit; superintends the collection of the revenue, and directs the Yk of keeping and rendering public accounts and of making returns; grants warrants for all moneys drawn from the Treasury in pursuance of appropriations made by law, and for the payment of moneys into the Treasury. He controls the construction and maintenance of public buildings; the coinage and printing of money; the administration of tine Coast Guard and the Public Health branches of the public service, and furnishes generally such information as may be required by either branch of Congress on all matters pertaining to the foregoing. He is ex officio chair- man of the Federal Reserve Board, created by act approved December 23, 1913, known as the Federal reserve act; ex officio chairman of the Federal Farm Loan Board, created by act approved July 17, 1916, known as the Federal farm loan act; chair- man of the World War Foreign Debt Commission; honorary chairman of the United States section of the Inter American High Commission; chairman Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Commission; member board of trustees, Postal Savings System. UNDERSECRETARY OF THE TREASURY. To the Undersecretary is assigned the general supervision of all matters relating to the fiscal bureaus, offices, and divisions, as follows: The Federal Farm Loan Board; the office of the Comptroller of the Currency; the office of the Treasurer of the United States; the office of the Director of the Mint; the Bureau of the Budget; the Register of the Treasury; the Division of Bookkeeping and Warrants; the Division of Deposits; the Division of Loans and Currency; the Division of Public Debt Accounts and Audit; the Savings Division; the Secret Service Division; the Government Actuary; the Commissioner of the Public Debt; and the Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits. The Undersecretary is also authorized to act, for and by direction of the Secretary of the Treasury, in any branch of the Treasury Department. i TREASURY Official Duties. 517. ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF THE TREASURY. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of foreign loans and railroad advances is assigned the general supervision of all matters pertaining to foreign loans and finance, and pay- ments, advances, and loans to the railroads under the transportation act, 1920, and to the following bureaus and divisions: Bureau of Engraving and Printing; Bureau of Supply; office of the Chief Clerk; the General Supply Committee; Appointment Division; Section of Surety Bonds; Division of Mail and Files; Division of Printing and Stationery; the office of the Disbursing Clerk; and all unassigned business of the department. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of Public Health, Public Buildings, and the Coast Guard is assigned the supervision of those bureaus and the office of the Super- vising Architect. To the Assistant Secretary in charge of Internal Revenue and Customs is assigned the general supervision of all matters pertaining thereto. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk is the chief executive officer of the Secretary, and, under the direc- tion of the Secretary, the Undersecretary, and Assistant Secretaries, is charged with the enforcement of departmental regulations general in their nature; is by law super- intendent of the Treasury Building, and in addition superintends the Winder, Cox, Butler, Auditors’, and Treasury Annex Buildings, and all other Treasury build- ings in the District of Columbia except the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, has direct charge of motor trucks belonging to the department; the direction of engi- neers, machinists, watchmen, firemen, laborers, and other employees connected with the maintenance and protection of the Treasury Building and annexes; the expendi- ture of appropriations for contingent expenses; the administrative control of appro- priations made for Government exhibits at various expositions; handles offers in compromise cases; the custody of the records, files, and library of the Secretary’s office; the custody of all sites for proposed public buildings in Washington; the handling of requests for certified copies of official papers, and the charge of all busi- ness of the Secretary ’s office unassigned. : FISCAL BUREAUS AND OFFICES. COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY. The Comptroller of the Currency is the chief officer of that bureau of the Treasury Department which is charged with the:execution of all laws passed by Congress relating to the issue and regulation of the national currency, generally known as national-bank notes, secured by United States bonds; and ander the supervision of the Federal Reserve Board is also in charge of the issue of circulating notes to Federal reserve banks. In addition to these powers the comptroller exercises general supervision over all national banks throughout the United States, including Alaska and Hawaii, in the matter of their organization and regulation. He is vested with the power to appoint receivers and through the courts to enforce penalties prescribed for violations of the national-bank act. The comptroller, with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, also appoints all national-bank examiners. Under the Federal reserve act he executed and issued the certificates or charters for the Federal reserve banks. The Comptroller of the Currency is ex officio a member of the Federal Reserve Board. Reports of condition of all national banks are made to the comptroller not less frequently than five times a year by the banks, and alse periodically by the national- bank examiners appointed by him. His powers are exercised under the general supervision of the Secretary of the Treasury, but under the law his annual report is made direct to Congress; all other bureaus of the Treasury Department report to Congress through the Secretary of the Treasury. TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES. The Treasurer of the United States is charged with the receipt and disbursement of all public moneys that may be deposited in the Treasury at Washington and in the national-bank depositories; is redemption agent for national-bank notes, Federal reserve bank notes, and Federal reserve notes; is trustee for bonds held to secure national-bank circulation and public deposits in national banks, and bonds held to — 318 Congressional Directory. TREASURY secure postal savings in banks; is custodian of miscellaneous trust funds; is fiscal agent for paying interest on the public debt and for paying the land-purchase bonds of the Philippine Islands, principal and interest; is treasurer of the board of trustees of the Postal Savings System; and is ex officio commissioner of the sinking fund of the District of Columbia. BUREAU OF THE BUDGET. The Bureau of the Budget was created by the act approved June 10, 1921. Under rules and regulations prescribed by the President, the bureau prepares for him the annual budget and such supplemental or deficiency estimates as the President may recommend from time to time to Congress. To this end the bureau has the authority, under the act, ‘‘to assemble, correlate, revise, reduce, or increase the estimates of the several departments and establishments.” (Sec. 207.) The act requires the head of ‘each department and establishment to appoint a budget officer whose duty it is to prepare, under his direction, the departmental estimates of appropriations and such supplemental or deficiency estimates as may be required. (Sec. 214.) This official is a sort of liaison officer between the department and the Bureau of the Budget. The bureau deals directly with them in the routine work of preparing the budget. The estimates are prepared and submitted to the bureau in such form, manner, and detail as the President prescribes. (Sec. 216.) On or before September 15 of each year the head of each department and establishment revises his estimates and sub- mits them to the bureau. (Sec. 215.) The bureau is authorized, when directed by the President, to make detailed studies of the departments and establishments for the purpose of enabling the President to determine what changes should be made, in the interests onomy and efficiency, in ‘‘(1) the-existing organization, activities, and methods of P#isiness of such depart- ments or establishments, (2) the appropriations therefor, (3) the ‘assignment of particu- lar activities to particular services, or (4) the regrouping of services.”” (Sec. 209.) Each department and establishment is required, under regulations by the President, to furnish to the bureau such information as the bureau may from time to time require. Officials of the bureau are given the authority to have access, for the purposes of a, to the books, papers, and records of any department or establishment. ec. 213. The office of chief coordinator was created by Circular No. 15, Bureau of the Budget, July 27, 1921, and the duties of this office were later enlarged by the follow- ing Budget circulars, Nos. 22, 23, 25, 26, 35, 41, 42, 47, 52, 54, and Executive Order No. 3578, dated The White House, November 8, 1921. Subject to general supervision by the Director of the Bureau of the Budget, the chief coordinator handles all questions of coordination arising through the applica- tion of the policies of the President and of the Congress to the routine business activities of the executive branch of Government. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE. The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has general superintendence of the col- lection of all internal-revenue taxes; the enforcement of internal-revenue laws and the national prohibition act; recommendation for appointment of internal-revenue employees; compensation and duties of inspectors, agents, and other subordinate officers; the preparation and distribution of instructions, regulations, stamps, forms, blanks, hydrometers, stationery, etc. DIRECTOR OF THE MINT. The Director of the Mint has general supervision of all the mints and assay offices of the United States. He prescribes the rules, to be approved by the Secretary of the Treasury, for the transaction of business at the mints and assay offices, receives daily reports of their operations, directs the coinage to be executed, reviews the accounts, authorizes all expenditures, superintends the annual settlements of the several insti- tutions, and makes special examinations of them when deemed necessary. All appointments, removals, and transfers in the mints and assay offices are subject to his approval. Tests of the weight and fineness of coins struck at the mints are made in the assay laboratory under his charge. He publishes quarterly an estimate of the value of the standard coins of foreign countries for custom house and other public purposes. An annual report is prepared by the director, giving the operations of the mint service for the fiscal year, printed in the Finance Report of the Secretary of tne Treasury, and giving the statistics of the production of the precious metals in the United States and the world for the calendar year. i ———— a — TREASURY Official Duires. 319 REGISTER OF THE TREASURY. The Register of the Treasury signs all bonds of the United States, the bonds of the District of Columbia, the Philippine Islands, the city of Manila, the city of Cebu, and the Porto Rican gold loans, and keeps records showing the daily outstanding balances thereof. He receives, examines, records, and files all paid and canceled securities representing the interest and principal of the public debt of the United States, and keeps records of the outstanding principal of such indebtedness. He examines and approves for credit in the public debt account the Treasurer’s monthly report of paid interest coupons, redeemed and purchased securities, and certifies to and transmits such accounts to the Comptroller General of the United States. THE FEDERAL FARM LOAN BOARD. The Federal Farm Loan Board is charged with the administration of the Federal farm loan act. It established the 12 Federal land banks, fixed their respective districts, appointed the temporary directors of each of them, supervises their operations, ap- points their registrars and appraisers, and has power to grant charters to national farm loan associations and joint-stock land banks. It makes appraisal of farm lands and prepares and publishes amortization tables. It supervises the operation of national farm loan associations and joint-stock land banks. It is its duty to disseminate by publications of its own and through the press matter setting forth the advantages to orrowers and investors of the system of loans established by the act. It may author- ize Federal land banks to appoint agents for the making of loans to farmers in locali- ties which fail to form farm loan associations. It has the power to revise and alter rates of interest charged by Federal land banks; to grant or refuse to Federal land banks or joint-stock land banks authority to make any specific issue of bonds; to con- trol charges made to borrowers for expenses incident to the making of loans; to require Federal land banks to meet their obligations to each other; and to exercise such incidental powers as are necessary or requisite to fulfill its duties and carry out the purposes of the Federal farm loan act. BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING. : ~ The Bureau of Engraving and Printing designs, engraves, prints, and finishes all moneys and securities of the Government, embraced under the following: United States notes, bonds, certificates of indebtedness, certificates, national-bank notes, Federal reserve notes, Federal reserve bank currency, internal revenue, postage, thrift, war savings, customs stamps, and Treasury warrants, Treasury drafts and checks, dis- bursing officers’ checks, licenses, passports, commissions, patent and pension certifi- cates, portraits of deceased Members of Congress and other public officers authorized by law, and all postage stamps, moneys, and securities authorized by the Bureau of Insular Affairs for the insular possessions of the Government. MISCELLANEOUS BUREAUS. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE. The act approved August 14, 1912, changed the name of the Public Health and Marine-Hospital Service to the Public Health Service, and considerably increased its powers and functions. The bureau of the service at Washington comprises seven divisions, and the chief clerk’s office, the operations of which are coordinated and are under the immediate supervision of the Surgeon General, The Division of Scientific Research conducts the scientific investigations of the service. Intensive studies of diseases of man, including anthrax, botulism, influenza, malaria, pellagra, plague, pneumonia, tuberculosis, and typhoid fever; of child, school, mental, and industrial hygiene; of public health administration; of mor- bidity; of milk; and of stream pollution and sewage are carried on from special headquarters in the field in cooperation with State and local health authorities. Technical and purely laboratory studies are conducted at the Hygienic Laboratory in Washington, at special field laboratories, and at the leprosy investigation station in Hawaii, the latter being carried on in connection with the medical treatment of lepers. Information thus obtained is disseminated through publications, cor- respondence, lectures, and conferences with health authorities concerning the re- sults of field studies in their jurisdictions. Through the division the department enforces the act of July 1, 1902, to regulate the sale of viruses, serums, toxins, and analogous products, including arsphenamine. The division is in charge of control measures of trachoma, through the establishment of hospitals and clinics, in the Ap- palachian Mountain district and other points where the disease is prevalent. The Surgeon General is required by law to call an annual conference of State and Terri- |. : | 320 Congressional Directory. TREASURY torial health authorities, and special conferences may also be called at any time. For advice in respect to scientific investigations he may convene the advisory board of the Hygienic Laboratory. Through the Division of Foreign and Insular Quarantine and Immigration the i Surgeon General enforces the national quarantine laws and prepares regulations relating thereto and is vested with the administration of the national quarantine stations. In accordance with a specific act of Congress, officers of the United States Public Health Service conduct the medical examination of all aliens entering the United States and its insular possessions. There are a total of 99 quarantine stations inthe United States and its insular possessions, and arriving aliens are given medical | inspection at 85 ports (exclusive of insular possessions). For the purpose of en- forcing the provisions of the United States Quarantine Regulations applicable to vessels departing from foreign ports to the United States, 38 medical officers of the Public Health Service are assigned to 36 American consulates inorder to prevent the transmission of contagious or infectious diseases into the United States. The Division of Domestic Quarantine carries out measures to suppress epidemics, such as plague and typhus fever, and measures to prevent the spread of epidemic | diseases in the United States. The latter includes— 1. Enforcement of the Interstate Quarantine Regulations of the United States. i 2. Development of State departments of health, especially divisionsof communicable diseases and sanitary engineering. 3. Control over water supplies used for drinking and culinary purposes on railroads, vessels, and other interstate carriers. 4. Sanitation of the National Parks in cooperation with the National Park Service. 5. Rural sanitation and measures against trachoma. The Division of Sanitary Reports and Statistics collects and publishes information regarding the prevalence and geographic distribution of diseases dangerous to the public health in the United States and foreign countries. Court decisions, laws, regulations, and ordinances pertaining to the public health are compiled, digested, and published. Its publications contain articles on subjects relating to the public health. The division issues the Public Health Reports (weekly) and supplements to, and reprints from the Public Health Reports. The section on Public Health Education cooperates with State, local, and volunteer health agencies to extend health educational service throughout the United States. This involves the prepara- tion ond distribution of bulletins, stereopticon slides, moving pictures, exhibits, posters, placards, and charts on subjects relating to public health. Through the Division of Marine Hospitals and Relief, hospital care and treatment is provided for beneficiaries at 24 marine hospitals. Medical examination and out- patient treatment is provided at 119 other relief stations of the service. The bene- ficiaries include seamen and officers of registered, enrolled, or licensed merchant vessels of the United States and of the Coast Guard and Lighthouse Service; keepers and assistant keepers of lighthouses and keepers and surfmen of the United States Coast Guard; seamen employed on United States Army transports and other vessels | : belonging to the United States Army, when not enlisted men, including vessels of | the Engineer Corps of the Army; civil employees injured while in the performance of their duty; lepers in accordance with public act No. 299, Sixty-sixth Congress; seamen employed.on vessels of the Mississippi River Commission; officers and crews of vessels of the Bureau of Fisheries and the Coast and Geodetic Survey; patients i for special studies and investigation; and disabled veterans of the World War who i are patients of the United States Veterans’ Bureau. Physical examinations are made of employees of and applicants to the United States Coast Guard to detect color blind- ness in masters, mates, and pilots; patients of the United States Veterans’ Bureau; | [ claimants under the United States Employees Compensation Commission; and appli- j cants for and employees occupying positions in the classified civil service. The medi- | cal evidence of disability in claims for benefits against the United States Coast Guard | is also reviewed. Free medical advice for ships at sea is also furnished for trans- | I ! mission by radio, and courses of instruction in the principles of first aid for the benefit of applicants applying to the Steamboat Inspection Service, Department of Commerce, for original license as master, mate, pilot, or engineer are being inaugurated. Under the supervision of the Surgeon General, the Division of Personnel and Accounts transacts all bureau matters relating to the appointment, promotion, transfer, resignation, or other change in status of service personnel; convenes boards for the exami- nation or discipline of medical officers; and maintains all personnel records. Through the Section of Finance and Accounts of this division all appropriations for the service are Minted, all vouchers covering expenditures examined, and all expenditures recorded. The Division of Venereal Diseases was created by act of Congress in July, 1918, “(1) to study and investigate the cause, treatment, and prevention of venereal dis- a em | i f TREASURY Offictal Duties. 321 eases; (2) to cooperate with State boards or departments of health for the prevention and control of such diseases within the States; and (3) to control and prevent the spread of these diseases in interstate traffic.” The division is organized to carry out the duties assigned to it by the act. Cooperative venereal disease clinics have been established in approximately 475 locations. At these clinics venereally infected persons are receiving modern scientific treatment and are controlled by laboratory methods. State boards of health are being cooperated with by the service in 48 States which have qualified to receive their share of allotments under the act of Febru- ary 17, 1922. A comprehensive Nation-wide campaign for securing the necessary educational publicity regarding the seriousness of venereal diseases is being carried on. Hundreds of various agencies are cooperating with the Public Health Service in the extension of this work. Interstate quarantine regulations to prevent the spread of these diseases in interstate traffic have been promulgated by the Secretary of the Treasury. The general inspection service carries out all special investigations and makes inspections of all activities of the service. The chief clerk has charge of the following: (1) Appointments, Ponoiing, and discipline of the clerical personnel of the bureau. (2) Time records and leaves of absence. (3) Office quarters occupied by the bureau in Washington, and equip- ‘ment therein. (4) Furnishing supplies of stationery and blanks to the bureau and field stations. (5) The official files of the bureau and the receipt and dispatch of mail. (6) The bureau library. (7) Procuring of printing through the Government Printing Office, and supervision of the appropriation therefor. (8) Improvement of office methods. ; COAST GUARD. The Commandant of the Coast Guard is charged by law with the administra- tion of the Coast Guard, under the direction of the Secretary of the Treasury in time of peace and under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy in time of war. Headquarters are located at present in the Darby Building, Fourteenth and E Streets NW. The act of January 28, 1915, provided that the Coast Guard be created in lieu of the then existing Revenue-Cutter Service and the Life-Saving Service, and to be composed of those two organizations. It also provided that it shall constitute a part of the military forces of the United States, and shall operate under the Treasury Department in time of peace and operate as a part of the Navy, subject to Je orders of the Secretary of the Navy, in time of war or when the President shall 80 direct. ; In general, the duties of the Coast Guard may be classified as follows: Rendering assistance to vessels in distress and saving life and property; destruction or removal of wrecks, derelicts, and other floating dangers to navigation; extending medical aid to American vessels engaged in deep-sea fisheries; protection of the customs revenue; operating as a part of the Navy in time of war or when the President shall direct; enforcement of law and regulations governing anchorage of vessels in navigable waters; enforcement of law relating to quarantine and neutrality; suppression of mutinies on merchant vessels; enforcement of navigation and other laws governing merchant vessels and motor boats; enforcement of law to provide for safety of life on navigable waters during regattas and marine parades; protection of game and the seal and other fisheries in Alaska, etc.; enforcement of sponge-fishing laws. To assist the Commandant in conducting the business of his office there are established at headquarters an inspector, having cognizance of matters relating to the inspection of vessels, stations, boats, and all other property, and the following: Division of operations: Having cognizance of matters relating to the operations of the service. Division of matériel: Having cognizance of matters relating to supplies, outfits, equipment, accounts, and the files. Office of construction and repair: Having cognizance of matters relating to the construction of and repairs to the hulls of vessels and boats, stations, wharves, and all other property. fice of engineer in chief: Having cognizance of matters relating to the construc- tion of and repairs to the motive power of vessels and boats and the machinery of all other property. Under the direction of the Commandant statistics are prepared of casualties to vessels of the United States. He is also required to acquaint himself, as far as prac- ticable, with all means employed in foreign countries which may seem to affect advantageously the interests of the Coast Guard, and to cause to be properly inves- tigated all plans, devices, and inventions for the improvement of life-saving apparatus for use at the stations which may appear to be meritorious and available. 24786°—67—4—2D ED 22 i ——h"hHY ae } | I ! ! 322 Congressional Durectory. WAR SUPERVISING ARCHITECT. Subject to the direction and approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, the duties performed by the Supervising Architect embrace the following: Securing cessions from States of jurisdiction over sites and the payment for the same; preparation of drawings, estimates, specifications, etc., for, and the superintendence of the work of, constructing, rebuilding, extending, or repairing public buildings; the care, main- tenance, and repair of public buildings, the direction of the operating force in public buildings, and the supply of furniture, carpets, lighting fixtures, mechanical equip- ment, safes, and miscellaneous supplies for use of custodians’ and engineers’ forces in the care of public buildings. BUREAU OF SUPPLY. The Bureau of Supply has charge of all of the functions in connection with the purchase of material and supplies formerly carried on by offices, divisions, services, and bureaus in the Treasury Department in Washington and in the field, except those of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The bureau further has control over the consolidation and storage of stocks of all stationery, etc., belonging to the department. Accounting for the funds allotted to the bureau for the purchase of material, together with the approval for the payment of vouchers, is also a function of this bureau. GENERAL SUPPLY COMMITTEE. The General Supply Committee was created by the act of June 17, 1910 (36 Stat., 531), in lieu of the Board of Awards provided for in section 3709 of the Revised Statutes as amended, and is composed of officers, one from each of the executive departments, designated by the head thereof. The Superintendent of Supplies, who is appointed by the Secretary of the Treasury, is ex officio secretary of the General Supply Committee, and he conducts all correspondence, supervises the preparation of all contracts, and performs such other duties as the Secretary of the Treasury may direct. It is the duty of the General Supply Committee to make an annual schedule of required miscellaneous supplies for the use of each of the executive departments and other Government establishments in Washington, to standardize such supplies, eliminating all unnecessary grades and varieties, and to solicit bids based upon formulas and specifications drawn up by such experts in the service of the Govern- ment as the committee may see fit to call upon, who shall render whatever assistance they may require, provided that the articles intended to be purchased in this manner shall be those in common use by or suitable to the ordinary needs of two or more such departments or establishments. Every purchase or drawing of such supplies from the contractor is immediately reported to said committee. No disbursing officer may be a member of the committee. By the Executive order of December 3, 1918, and Treasury Department Regula- tions, dated December 10, 1918, the General Supply Committee has direct charge of the transfer and sale of surplus office material, supplies, and equipment in the hands of the executive departments and other establishments of the Government in the District of Columbia, and is required to keep a record of all material received and disposed of by it. The Executive order of August 27, 1919, carrying into effect the provisions of the act of July 11, 1919, designates the General Supply Committee as the central agency to maintain records of all material, supplies, and equipment available throughout the United States Because of the cessation of war activities. To the committee are directed all inquiries from the various governmental establishments regarding the availability of such surplus supplies and equipment. DEPARTMENT OF WAR. SECRETARY OF WAR. The Secretary of War is head of the War Department, and performs such duties as are required of him by law or may be enjoined upon him by the President concerning the military service. He is charged by law with the supervision of all estimates of appropriations for the expenses of the department, including the Military Establishment; of all purchases of Army supplies; of all expenditures for the support, transportation, and maintenance of the Army, and of such expenditures of a civil nature as may be placed by Congress under his direction. : He also has supervision of the United States Military Academy at West Point and of military education in the Army, of the various battle-field commissions, and of the publication of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion. WAR Official Duties. 323 He has charge of all matters relating to national defense and seacoast fortifica- tions, Army ordnance, river and harbor improvements, the prevention of obstruction to navigation, and the establishment of harbor lines; and all plans and locations of bridges authorized by Congress to be constructed over the navigable waters of the United States require his approval. He also has charge of the establishment or aban- donment of military posts; of all matters relating to leases, revocable licenses, and all other privileges upon lands under the control of the War Department; and with the operation of certain transportation facilities on the inland, canal, and coastwise waterways, and the construction of terminal facilities for the interchange of traffic between those transportation facilities and other carriers. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR. The Assistant Secretary is charged with supervising and acting upon the procure- ment and manufacture of supplies and the purchase and lease of real estate, includ- ing licenses for temporary use of land under War Department control; approval of expenditures from funds allotted; the approval of purchase vouchers; requests on the Secretary of the Treasury to issue warrants to disbursing officers; plans for the mobilization of materials and industry for war; claims against the War Department; the sale of surplus supplies, equipment, plants, land, or other facilities; approval of inventory and inspection reports; approval of routine expenditures from the appro- priation ‘Contingencies of the Army’’; approval of expenditures for military posts; authorizing of advertising; use of patent rights by the War Department and Army; matters relating to battle-field commissions; matters relating to national cemeteries; matters relating to river and harbor works; and the activities relating to the National Association for the Promotion of Rifle Practice; and civilian marksmanship. ASSISTANT AND CHIEF CLERK. The Assistant and Chief Clerk of the War Department is the head of the Office of the Secretary of War, and as such has charge of the records and files, and supervision of the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the official mail and correspondence of that office. By law he is authorized to sign such official papers and documents as the Secretary of War may direct, and by direction of the Secretary of War he performs certain of the duties assigned to the Assistant Secretary of War during the temporary absence from the department of the Assistant Secretary. He is charged with supervis- ing and acting upon appointments, promotions, transfers, and separations in the civil service and other matters affecting civilian employees in and under the War Depart- ment in Washington and elsewhere; printing and binding and newspaper adver- tising for the War Department and the Army; expenditures from War Department appropriations for contingent expenses, stationery, rent of buildings, and postage; the War Department telegraph and telephone service, and the War Department post office; allotment of office space assigned for the use of the War Department in the District of Columbia; and performs such other duties as may be required by the Sec- retary of War. WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF. The War Department General Staff is organized under the provisions of the act approved June 4, 1920. The Chief of Staff is the immediate adviser of the Secretary of War on all matters relating to the military establishment and is charged by the Secretary of War with the planning, development, and execution of the Army program. He causes the War Department General Staff to prepare the necessary plans for recruiting, mobilizing, organizing, supplying, equipping, and training the Army for use in the national defense and for demobilization. As the agent, and in the name of the Secretary of War, he issues such orders as will insure that the plans of the War Department are harmoniously executed by all branches and agencies of the military establishment and that the Army program is carried out speedily and efficiently. The War Department General Staff is charged with the preparation of plans as outlined above, including those for the mobilization of the manhood of the Nation in an emergency. It investigates and reports upon questions affecting the efficiency of all branches of the Army and their state of preparation for military operations. As- sisted by an appropriate number of reserve officers (as prescribed in sec. 5, act of June 4, 1920), it formulates all policies and regulations affecting the organization, distribution, and training of the National Guard and the Organized Reserves, and all policies and regulations affecting the appointment, assignment, promotion, and discharge of reserve officers. It performs such other military duties not otherwise assigned by law as may be from time to time prescribed by the President, and 324 Congressional Directory. WAR Pen professional aid and assistance to the Secretary of War and the Chief of tall. The Deputy Chief of Staff assists the Chief of Staff and acts for him in his absence. He reports directly to the Secretary of War in all matters not involving the establish- ment of important policies. In addition to his other duties, he is charged with super- vision over the activities of all the divisions of the War Department General Staff. The War Department General Staff includes the following divisions, each division being under the immediate control of an Assistant Chief of.Staff: Personnel Division (First Division); Military Intelligence Division (Second Division); Operations and Training Division (Third Division); Supply Division (Fourth Division); War Plans Division. For the first four divisions, the abbreviations G-1, G-2, G-3, G-4, respec- tively, are prescribed. The prescribed abbreviation for the War Plans Division is W. P. D. The chiefs of the several divisions of the War Department General Staff will be designated as Assistant Chiefs of Staff; the prescribed abbreviation A. C. of S. is followed by the prescribed abbreviation of the division. The Personnel Division is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Depart- ment General Staff which relate to the personnel of the Army as individuals. Ti is specifically charged with the preparation of plans and policies and the supervision of activities concerning the procurement, classification, assignment, promotion, transfer, retirement, and discharge, in peace and war, of all personnel of the Army of the United States, including the Regular Army, the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, the Officers’ Reserve Corps, and the Enlisted Reserve Corps; measures for conserving man power; replacements of personnel, Army regulations, uniform regu- lations, and such general regulations as especially concern individuals or matters of routine not specifically assigned to other sections; decorations; religious, recreational, and morale work; the Red Cross and similar agencies, with the exception of such part or parts of said agencies as may be wholly devoted to hospital and medical relief work; enemy aliens, prisoners of war, and conscientious objectors, including their security. * The Militery Intelligence Division is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Department General Staff which relate to the collection, evaluation, and dis- semination of military information. It is specifically charged with the preparation of plans and policies and the supervision of all activities concerning: Military topo- graphical surveys and maps, including their reproduction and distribution; the custody of the General Staff map and photograph collection; military attachés, ob- servers, and foreign-language students; intelligence personnel of all units; liaison with other intelligence agencies of the Government and with duly accredited foreign military attachés and missions; codes and ciphers; translations; relations with the press; censorship in time of war. The Operations and Training Division is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Department General Staff which relate to the organization, training, and operation of the military forces not expressly assigned to the War Plans Division. If is specifically charged with the preparation of plans and policies and the supervision of activities concerning: Organization, including Tables of Organization, for all branches of the Army of the United States; assignment of units to higher organizations; so much of Tables of Equipment as relate to the allotment of major items of equip- ment to units and the distribution of such items within units; distribution and train- ing, including educational and vocational training of the Army of the United States, the National Guard, and Organized Reserves; location of units of the Regular Army and Organized Reserves; all drill and service regulations, field service regulations, and General Staff manuals; special service schools and general service schools, including the Army War College, the General Staff School, and the School of the Line; military training in civilian institutions and in civilian training camps; priorities in assigning replacements and equipment and important priorities affecting mobilization; movement of troops; military police. The Supply Division is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Depart- ment General Staff which relate to the supply of the Army, and with the preparation of basic supply plans. It is specifically charged with the preparation of plans and policies and the supervision of activities concerning: Distribution, storage, and issue of supplies; transportation by land and water, including ports of embarkation and their necessary auxiliaries; traffic control; tables of equipment, the quantities and types of military supplies required for the use of the Army and essential to the military program; inventions; leasing of War Department facilities and issuing of revocable licenses; hospitalization and evacuation of men and animals, including such agencies or parts of agencies as may be wholly devoted to hospital and medical relief work; distribution and movement of supply, technical, and labor troops not employed as combat units; property responsibility and accountability; the determi- nation and statement of plans and policies governing the preparation of estimates | | WAR Official Duties. 325 for funds for military purposes and priorities pertaining thereto, and, when necessary with the restatement of such priorities to govern the expenditure of all funds appro- priated; the formulation of policies and projects governing the procurement of real estate in connection with the training, shelter, and housing of troops, and with the storage, distribution, and issue of supplies; policies relative to the procurement, construction, repair, maintenance, and disposition of buildings and all utilities con- nécted therewith. The War Plans Division is charged, in general, with those duties of the War Depart- ment General Staff which relate to the formulation of plans for the use in the theater of war of the military forces, separately or in conjunction with the naval forces, in the national defense. It is specifically charged with the preparation of plans and policies and the supervision of activities concerning: Location and armament of coast and land fortifications; estimate of forces required and times at which they may be needed under various possible conditions necessitating the use of troops in the na- tional defense; the initial strategical deployment; actual operations in the theater of war; consultation with G-3 and G—4 on major items of equipment; peace maneu- vers, terrain exercises, and staff rides involving units higher than a division; and joint Army and Navy exercises. The War Plans Division is so organized as to en- able it, in the event of mobilization, to furnish the nucleus of the General Staff personnel for each of the General Staff Divisions required at the General Head- ouarters in the Field. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CAVALRY. The Chief of Cavalry is under the supervision of the Chief of Staff in all matters relating to his arm, and furnishes the Chief of Staff with information and advice on all questions affecting the Cavalry. He exercises direct supervision and control of the Cavalry School and Boards, and formulates and develops the tactical doctrine of his arm in accordance with the War Department doctrine. By means of the agencies at his disposition he prepares the necessary manuals, training literature, and training memoranda relating to the employment, instruction, and training of his arm and to the care and use of material and equipment. He cooperates with the chiefs of supply services in developing the armament and equipment of his arm and submits to the Chief of Staff such recommendation as to the armament and equipment as may be necessary. He submits to the Chief of Staff recommendations as to the organization of units of his arm, and such recommendations as to the training and instruction of unite of his arm, including units of his arm of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, as he may consider advisable. He confers with the appropriate agencies of the War Department in all matters connected with the organization, training and instruction, equipment, and general administration and efficiency of the personnel and the organ- izations of his arm in the Organized Reserves and the National Guard. He cooperates with the personnel bureau of The Adjutant General’s Office and recommends officers of his arm to be detailed as students at service schools, at technical, professional, and other educational institutions, and for similar duties, and makes recommendations for the appointment, assignment, transfer, examination, and retirement in all cases of officers and warrant officers and, in cases not covered by regulations, of noncom- missioned officers and other enlisted men of his arm. He or his representatives visit such places as may be necessary in connection with the efficiency of his arm. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FIELD ARTILLERY. The Chief of Field Artillery is under the supervision of the Chief of Staff in all matters relating to his arm. He furnishes the Chief of Staff information and advice on all questions affecting his particular arm. He exercises direct supervision and control of the special sérvice schools and the special boards of his arm. He formulates and develops the tactical doctrine of his arm in accordance with the War Department doctrine which requires that the Ariny be trained for offensive combat. He prepares the necessary manuals, training literature, and training memoranda relating to the employment, instruction, and training of his arm, and to the care and use of material and equipment which, after being submitted to the Chief of Staff and approved by the Secretary of War, are distributed by The Adjutant General of the Army to the service for its information and guidance. He cooperates with the chiefs of supply services in developing the armament and equipment of his arm. He submits to the Chief of Staff such recommendations as to armament and equipment as are necessary; recommendations as to the organization of units of his arm; recommendations as to the training and instruction of units of his arm, including units of his arm of the Officers’ Training Corps, as he may consider advisable. He confers with the appropriate agencies of the War Department in all matters connected with the organization, 326 Congressional Darectory. WAR training and instruction, equipment, and general administration and efficiency of the personnel and organizations of his arm in the Organized Reserves and National Guard. He cooperates with the personnel bureau of The Adjutant General’s Office and recommends officers of his arm to be detailed as students at service schools, at technical, professional, and other educational institutions, and for other similar duties, and makes recommendations for the appointment, assignment, transfer, exam- ination, and retirement in all cases of officers and warrant officers and, in cases not covered by regulations, of noncommissioned officers and other enlisted men of his arm. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF COAST ARTILLERY. The Chief of Coast Artillery is charged with the duty of keeping the Chief of Staff advised and informed in respect to all questions affecting the Coast Artillery Corps. He exercises direct supervision and control over the Coast Artillery School, Coast Ar- tillery Board, and the torpedo depot, United States Army, Fort Totten, N. Y. He formulates and develops the tactical doctrine of Coast Artillery in accordance with the War Department doctrine. He prepares the necessary manuals, training litera- ture, and training memoranda relating to the employment, instruction, and training of Coast Artillery, and to the care and use of material and equipment. He cooperates with the chiefs of supply services in developing the armament and equipment of Coast Artillery. He submits to the Chief of Staff recommendations as to the organiza- tion and assignment of units of Coast Artillery, including those of the National Guard and Organized Reserves. He confers with the proper agencies of the War Department in all matters connected with the organization, training, equip- ment, instruction, and general administration and efficiency of the personnel and organizations of the Coast Artillery, including similar units of the National Guard, Organized Reserves, and Coast Artillery units of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps. He cooperates with the personnel bureau of The Adjutant General’s Office and recom- mends officers of the Coast Artillery to be detailed as students at service schools, at technical, professional, and other educational institutions, and for other similar duties, and makes recommendations for the appointment, assignment, transfer, examina- tion, and retirement in all cases of officers, warrant officers, and noncommissioned staff officers and, in cases not covered by regulations, of other noncommissioned officers and other enlisted men of the Coast Artillery Corps. He classifies the regular and reserve commissioned personnel of his arm in accordance with methods prescribed by the Secretary of War. Under direction of the Secretary of War, he has immediate charge of the purchase, manufacture, maintenance, and test of submarine mine matériel and of its distribution to the Coast Artillery Corps. He submits to the Chief of Staff recommendations as to the character, number, and methods of mounting armament deemed necessary in any harbor-defense project. The Coast Artillery Corps will furnish the artillery for all fixed and movable elements of land and coast fortifications, all submarine mines, all railway artillery, all anti- aircraft artillery, and all trench mortar artillery for use with fixed defenses and with armies in the field. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF INFANTRY. The Chief of Infantry is charged with the duty of keeping the Chief of Staff advised and informed on all questions affecting the Infantry. He exercises direct supervision and control over the special service schools and the special boards of his arm. He formulates and develops the tactical doctrine of the Infantry in accordance with the War Department doctrine and prepares the necessary manuals, training literature, and training memoranda relating to the employment, instruction, and training of his arm and of the care and use of material and equipment. He cooperates with the chiefs of supply services in developing the armament and equipment of the Infantry and submits to the Chief of Staff such recommendations as to armament and equip- ment as may be necessary. He submits to the Chief of Staff recommendations as to the organization of Infantry units and also as to their training and instruction, includ- ing units of the Infantry Reserve Officers’ Training Corps. He confers with the appropriate agencies of the War Department in all matters connected with the organ- ization, training and instruction, equipment, and general administration and efficiency of the personnel and organizations of his arm in the Organized Reservesand National Guard. He cooperates with the personnel bureau of The Adjutant General's Office and recommends officers to be detailed as students at service schools, at technical, professional, and other educational institutions, and for other similar duties, and makes recommendations for the appointment, assignment, transfer, examination, and retirement in all cases of officers, warrant officers, and, in cases not covered by regulations, of noncommissioned officers and other enlisted men of the Infantry. He or his representatives visit such places as may be necessary in connection with the efficiency of his arm. . , WAR Official Duties. 327 OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CHAPLAINS. The Chief of Chaplains coordinates and supervises the work of chaplains and develops plans for the moral and spiritual betterment of the Army. He exercises direct supervision over the Chaplins’ School and such projects for the instruction of chaplains as may be considered necessary to secure a properly trained personnel. He investi- gates the qualifications of all candidates for appointments as chaplains. MILITARY BUREAUS. The chiefs of the military bureaus of the War Department are, with the exception of the Chief of the Militia Bureau, officers of the Regular Army of the United States and a part of the Military Establishment. The Chief of the Militia Bureau is appointed by selection from lists of present and former National Guard officers who hold com- missions in the Officers’ Reserve Corps. The Adjutant General is charged with the duty of recording, authenticating, and communicating to troops and individuals in the military service all orders, instruc- tions, and regulations issued by the Secretary of War through the Chief of Staff, or otherwise; of preparing and distributing commissions; of compiling and issuing the Army Register and the Army List and Directory; of consolidating the general returns of the Army; of arranging and preserving the reports of officers of the Army detailed to visit encampments of militia; of compiling and maintaining a list showing the names of officers of the Army on detached service; of managing the recruiting service; of handling matters pertaining to the education and recreation of the soldier; and of conducting correspondence concerning the military service generally, including such as pertains to military training camps, rifle practice, the Officers’ Reserve Corps, the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps, and the Enlisted Reserve Corps. He is vested by law with the government and control, under the direction or the Secretary of War, of the United States Disciplinary Barracks and its branch, and of all offenders sent thereto for confinement and detention; and is charged with the duty of issuing and recording orders from the War Department remitting or mitigating sentences of general prisoners or honorably restoring them to duty. The Adjutant General is also vested by law with the charge, under the Secretary of War, ‘‘of the military and hospital records of the volunteer armies and the pension and other business of the War Department connected therewith”; of publishing War Department regulations, manuals, and miscellaneous documents pertaining to the military service and dis- tributing those publications to the Army; of obtaining, compiling, and keeping con- tinually up to date all available information as to the names, ages, addresses, occupa- tions, and qualifications for appointment as commissioned officers of the Army, in time of war or other emergency, of men of suitable ages who, by reason of having received military training in civilian educational institutions or elsewhere, may be regarded as qualified and available for appointment as such commissioned officers, and of issuing certificates of enlistment in the Enlisted Reserve Corps. He also has charge of the records of the permanent iy Establishment and of all War Depart- ment business pertaining thereto, including the consideration of applications for the congressional medal of honor, the distinguished-service cross, and the distinguished- service medal; for the benefits of the act of Congress approved April 27, 1916, establishing the Army and Navy medal-of-honor roll; for certificates of military serv- ice, and certificates authorizing the purchase of service medals; and for removal of charges of desertion and the issue of discharge certificates to such soldiers finally charged with desertion as are entitled to relief under the terms of existing law. The archives of The Adjutant General’s Office include all military records of the Revo- lutionary War in the possession of the General Government; the records of all organi- zations, officers, and enlisted men that have been in the military service of the United States since the Revolutionary War, including those pertaining to the volun- teer and drafted forces and the National Guard while in the active service of the United States; the records of the movements and operations of troops; the medical and hospital records of the Army; reports of physical examination of recruits and identification records; the records of the Provost Marshal General’s Bureau of the Civil War period; the records of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Aban- doned Lands; a considerable collection of the Confederate records, including those pertaining to the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the Confederate Government; and the records kept by draft boards and State headquarters while operating under the provisions of the selective-service law approved May 18, 1917. The Personnel Bureau of The Adjutant General’s Office is charged. by law, under such regulations as may be prescribed by the Secretary of War, with the operating functions of procurement, assignment, promotion, transfer, retirement, and discharge of all officers and enlisted men of the Army, with the proviso that territorial com- manders and the chiefs of the several branches of the Army shall be charged with 328 Congressional Directory. WAR such of the above-described duties within their respective jurisdictions as may be prescribed by the Secretary of War. The Inspector General, with his assistants, inspects the United States Military Academy; the service schools; garrisoned posts and commands; camps of maneuver and instruction; staff offices at corps area, department, and division headquarters; general hospitals; armories and arsenals; quartermaster, ordnance, medical, torpedo, signal, and engineer depots; recruit depots and recruiting stations; the disciplinary barracks and its branches; and military prisoners in United States penitentiary, Leavenworth, Kans.; ungarrisoned posts; national cemeteries; United States Army transports, cable boats, mine planters, and harbor boats; unserviceable property; money accounts of all disbursing officers of the Army; Soldiers’ Home, District of Columbia, and the headquarters and 10 branches of the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; the National Guard as required by the act of June 3, 1916; also makes such special investigations and such annual inspections of troops as may be ordered, and conducts the survey of business methods and War Department activities. The Judge Advocate General is the official legal adviser of the Secretary of War, the Chief of Staff, the War Department and its bureaus, and the entire Military Establishment. He advises concerning the legal correctness of military administra- tion, including disciplinary action, matters affecting the rights and mutual relation- ship of the personnel of the Army, and the financial, contractual, and other business affairs of the War Department and the Army. The functions of the Judge Advocate General’s Department include not only those of the Judge Advocate General and of his office in Washington but also those of judge advocates serving as staff officers at the headquarters of army, corps area, department, corps, division, and separate brigade commanders, and at the headquarters of other officers exercising general court-martial jurisdiction. ‘The Quartermaster General, under the authority of the Secretary of War, shall be charged with the purchase and procurement for the Army of all supplies of standard manufacture and of all supplies common to two or more branches but not with the purchase or the procurement of special or technical articles to be used or issued ex- clusively by other supply departments; with the direction of all work pertaining to the construction, maintenance, and repair of buildings, structures, and utilities other than fortifications connected with the Army; with the storage and issue of supplies; with the operation of utilities; with the acquisition of all real estate and the issue of licenses in connection with Government reservations; with the transportation of the Army by land and water, including the transportation of troops and supplies by mechanical or animal means; with the furnishing of means of transportation of all classes and kinds required by the Army; and with such other duties not otherwise assigned by law as the Secretary of War may prescribe: Provided, That special and technical articles used or issued excusively by other branches of the service may be purchased or procured with the approval of the Assistant Secretary of War by the branches using or issuing such articles, and the chief of each branch may be charged with the storage and issue of property pertaining thereto: Provided further, That utilities pertaining exclusivly to any branch of the Army may be operated by such branches.” (Sec. 9, act June 3, 1916, as amended by act June 4, 1920.) Executive office.—In charge of administration of Quartermaster General’s Office; investigations; preparation of consolidated war plans; preparation of consolidated requirements; compilation of information on raw products and industrial conditions; general control over appropriations; in charge of matters relating to legislation; pre- pares final drafts of tables of basic allowances and tables of equipment; supervises standardization, including preparation of specifications and drawings for same. Supply service.—Has charge of all duties pertaining to the procurement, storage, and distribution of supplies. Construction service.—Is charged with the construction, maintenance, and repair of all buildings, structures, and utilities of the Army (other than permanent fortifications). Transportation service.—Is charged with the transportation of the Army by land and water. Remount service.—Is charged with the purchase of horses and mules required in connection with the operations of the Army and control of remount depots and stations. General administrative division.— Handles all administrative matters of general nature not assigned elsewhere; prepares proposed orders, circulars, regulations, bulletins, and similar papers for publication and distributes those authorized ; compiles and prepares history of Quartermaster Corps, and annual report of Quartermaster General's Office; acts on and handles all requests for legal advice and interpretation of laws and reviews contracts; handles all claims, and matters pertaining to patents; in charge of the civilian personnel of the Quarter- master General’s Office. Personnel division.—Has charge of all matters pertaining to commissioned, enlisted, and civilian personnel of the Quartermaster Corps. Graves registration service.—Has supervision over all matiers pertaining to cemeteries, in- WAR Official Duties. 329 cluding interments, disinterments, and bringing home of remains of officers, enlisted men, and civilian employees who were killed in action or died in possessions of the United States or in foreign countries. The Chief of Finance is budget officer for the War Department and has responsibility for and authority over the finances of the War Department, including the disburse- ment of all funds, the classification and compilation of all estimates of appropriations, including supplemental and deficiency estimates, to be submitted by the War De- partment, the preparation of the estimates for pay and mileage, and the preparation of such other estimates as may not pertain to other bureaus or services of the War Department. He will have similar responsibility and authority with respect to the administrative examination and recording of money accounts, the auditing of property accounts, and such other duties as may be required by law, regulations, or orders in connection with the expenditure and accounting for funds and property of the War Department. The Surgeon, General is the adviser of the War Department upon all medical and sanitary affairs of the Army. He has administrative control of the Medical Depart- ment; the designation of the stations of the commissioned personnel and civilian employees of the Medical Department and the issuance of orders and instructions relating to their professional duties; the instruction and control of the enlisted force of the Medical Department and of the Army Nurse Corps. The Army Medical Museum, the library of the Surgeon General’s Office, and the general hospitals are under his direct control. ‘ The Chief of Engineers is charged under the direction of the War Department with control in technical matters over all of the Corps of Engineers and with the command of such portions of the corps as are not placed by the War Department under some terri- torial command nor assigned to some tactical unit containing other than Engineer troops. The duties of the Corps of Engineers comprise reconnoitering and surveying for military purposes, including the laying out of camps; the preparation, reproduc- tion, and distribution of military maps of the United States and its possessions, in- cluding cooperation with other Government and private mapping agencies, and in field operations of maps of the theater of operations; selection and acquisition of sites, and preparation of plans and estimates for military defenses; construction and repair of fortifications and their accessories, including submarine mine systems, installation and maintenance of searchlights and electric power and lighting systems, installa- tion of fire-control systems, and the maintenance pertaining to such latter systems which involve structural work ; planning and supervising defensive or offensive works of troops in the field ; military demolitions; military mining; military camouflage; mili- tary bridges; water supply of troops in the field ; examination of routes of communica- tion for supplies and for military movements; and, within a theater of military opera- tions, all general construction and road work, including maintenance and repair (except telegraph and telephone lines), and the construction, operation, and maintenance of all railways, utilities, ferries, canal boats, or other means of inland water transporta- tion. It collects, arranges, and preserves all correspondence, reports, memoirs, estimates, plans, drawings, and models which concern or relate in any way to the several duties above enumerated. The Corps of Engineers is also charged with the development, procurement, storage, and issue of certain classes of supplies and equip- ment. The Corps of Engineers is also charged with the improvement of rivers and harbors; with matters arising under the laws for the protection and preservation of navigable waters, including the establishment of harbor lines, anchorage grounds, and rules and regulations therefor; the establishment of regulations for the use, administration, and navigation of the navigable waters of the United States, and for the navigation of streams on which the floating of loose timber and sack rafts is the principal method of navigation; also with the issuance of permits for the construction, alteration, main- tenance, and operation of bridges, the granting of permits for structures or work in navigable waters; with the removal of wrecks and other obstructions to navi- gation; with questions pertaining to the supervision of the harbor of New York and adjacent waters to prevent obstructive and injurious deposits; with surveying and charting the Great Lakes, the natural navigable waters of the New York State canals, Lake Champlain, the Lake of the Woods, and other boundary and connecting waters between said lake and Lake Superior; with the preservation of Niagara Falls; with public buildings and grounds in the District of Columbia; with the water supply of Washington, D. C.; with the construction of monuments and memo- -rials; and with general supervision of the work of the Board of Road Commissioners for Alaska. The Chief of Ordnance is in charge of the Ordnance Department, whose duties are to design, procure, distribute, and maintain the armament of the field service, including artillery, artillery ammunition, small arms, bombs, and all munitions of 330 Congressional Directory. WAR war which may be required for the fortifications of the Army, the armies of the field, and for the whole body of the militia of the Union. The Ordnance Department performs all the technical engineering work necessary to investigate and construct experimental matériel for the adoption by the Army; prepares the necessary regu- lations for proof, inspection, storing, and for maintaining this matériel, as well as the detailed information necessary for the manufacture of munitions, for inspection of them, and for maintaining reserves prescribed by higher authority. The Chief Signal Officer has immediate charge, under the direction of the Secretary of War, of the development of all signal equipment; of books, papers, and all signal devices, including such meteorological instruments as are necessary for military purposes; of the procurement, preservation, and distribution of such of the before- mentioned supplies as are assigned to the Signal Corps for procurement and dis- tribution by existing orders and regulations; of the coordination of the training of the personnel assigned to signal duties; of the construction, repair, and operation of all permanent military signal lines and equipment not excepted by regulations; the transmission of messages for the Army, by telegraph or otherwise, and of all other duties usually pertaining to military signaling; the direction of the Signal Corps of the Army and the control of the officers and enlisted men and employees attached thereto; of the supply, installation, repair, and operation of military cables, tele- graph and telephone lines, radio and meteorological apparatus and stations not excepted by regulations; of the supply, repair, and operation of field telegraph trains; of the preparation and revision of the War Department telegraph code; of general supervision of military radio operations and the enforcement of regulations concerning the same; of the coordination and standardization of allradio operations and the assignment of call letters, wave lengths, systems, and audible tones; of the pro- curement and supply of photographs and motion pictures directed by the General Staff Corps, and in general of all photographic and cinematographic work of the Army not specifically assigned to other branches. The Chief of the Air Service is charged, under the direction of the Secretary of War, with the duty of procuring, by manufacture or purchase, maintaining, and operating all aircraft, aircraft engines, and aircraft equipment for the Army, including balloons and airplanes, all appliances and facilities necessary to the operation and maintenance of said aircraft; of installing, maintaining, and operating all radio appa- ratus and signaling systems within Air Service activities; of establishing, maintaining, and operating all flying fields, aviation stations, repair and supply depots, etc.; of training and operating organizations, officers, enlisted men of the Air Service, and candidates for aviation service in matters pertaining to military aviation; with the supervision, control, and direction over the Bureau of Aircraft Production—the Bureau © of Aircraft Production functioning only on matters in connection with the cancella- tion of contracts and with the approval or authority for funds. To the Bureau of Insular Affairs, under the immediate direction of the Secretary of War, is assigned all matters pertaining to civil government in the island posses- _ sions of the United States subject to the jurisdiction of the War Department, the Phil- ippine Islands and Porto Rico being the ones so subject at the present time. The bureau is also the repository of the civil records of the government of occupation of Cuba (Jan. 1, 1899, to May 20, 1902), and had assigned to it matters pertaining to the provisional government of Cuba (Sept. 29, 1906, to Jan. 28, 1909). It is charged with the purchase and shipment of supplies for the Philippine Islands and Porto Rico; makes appointments of persons in the United States to the civil service of the Philippines and Porto Rico and arranges their transportation. It gathers statistics of insular imports and exports, shipping, and immigration. Under the convention of February 8, 1907, and the general regulations of the President of the United States issued thereunder, the bureau has immediate supervision and control of the Dominican receivership for the collection of customs revenues and payment of the interest and principal of the adjusted bonded indebtedness of the Dominican Republic, and in some respects acts as the agent in the United States of the receivership. The bureau also exercises immediate supervision of the Haitian customs receivership, under the treaty between the United States and Haiti proclaimed May 3, 1916. Briefly, the bureau looks after the interests of the Philippine Islands and Porto Rico in the ‘United States and is their representative before the executive departments and the public here. It makes studies of questions relating to financial matters, tariffs, nav- igation, land laws, etc.; also to commercial and industrial possibilities, etc., as applied to those islands, and makes such recommendations as may be necessary. The Militia Bureau of the War Department is established by law to facilitate the administration and to promote the development of the National Guard while not in the service of the United States. Itis vested with all the administrative duties (coordi- nating with department and corps area commanders)involving the organization, arma- ment, instruction, equipment, discipline, training, and inspection of the National WAR Official Dutres. 331 Guard; the conduct of camps of instruction of the National Guard and the administra- tive duties connected with the preparation of the National Guard for participation in field exercises and maneuvers of the Regular Army; the mobilization of the National Guard in time of peace; and all matters pertaining to the National Guard not in Federal service, National Guard Reserve, and the unorganized militia of the United States not herein generally enumerated which do not under existing laws, regula- tions, orders, or practice come within the jurisdiction of the General Staff or any division or bureau of the War Department, and which shall not operate to divest any bureau or division of the War Department of duties now properly belonging to it. OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE CHEMICAL WARFARE SERVICE. The Chief of the Chemical Warfare Service is charged with the investigation, development, manufacture, or procurement and supply to the Army of all smoke and incendiary materials, all toxic gases, and all gas defense appliances; the research, design, and experimentation connected with chemical warfare and its material; and chemical projectile-filling plants and proving grounds; the supervision of the training of the Army in chemical warfare, both offensive and defensive, including the neces- sary schools of instruction; the organization, equipment, training, and operation of a gas troops; and such other duties as the President may from time to time pre- scribe. INLAND AND COASTWISE WATERWAYS SERVICE. The Inland and Coastwise Waterways Service is charged with the direction of the duties incident to the development of national inland waterway transportation as delegated to the Secretary of War under the transportation act of 1920. This service supervises the maintenance of barge lines operated by the Government on several important water routes; investigates types-of floating and terminal equipment suitable for various waterways, as well as tariff and interchange arrangements between rail and water carriers and other matters tending to promote and encourage waterway traffic; and in general functions as the official governmental inland waterways bureau. WAR CREDITS BOARD. The board was appointed by the Secretary of War to administer the granting of advances of money to War Department contractors under authority of section 5, public act No. 64, Sixty-fifth Congress, which reads as follows: “Sec. 5. That the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy are authorized, during the period of the existing emergency, from appropriations available therefor, to advance payments to contractors for supplies for their respective departments in amounts not exceeding thirty per centum of the contract price of such supplies: Provided, That such advances shall be made upon such terms as the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, respectively, shall prescribe, and they shall require adequate security for the protection of the Government for the payments so made.” BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS. The Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors is a permanent body created by the river and harbor act of June 13, 1902. To it are referred for consideration and recom- mendation all reports upon examinations and surveys provided for by Congress, and all projects or changes in projects for works of river and harbor improvement upon which report is desired by the Chief of Engineers, United States Army. Itis further the duty of the board, upon request by the Committee on Commerce of the Senate, or by the Committee on Rivers and Harbors of the House of Representatives in the same manner, to examine and report through the Chief of Engineers upon any examinations, surveys, or projects for the improvement of rivers and harbors.” In its investigations the board gives consideration to all engineering, commercial, navigation, and economic questions involved in determining the advisability of undertaking such improvements at the expense of the United States. The work of the board has been extended to include passing upon the plans of local authorities for terminal improvements in order to determine their adequacy under the provisions of section 1 of the river and harbor act of March 2, 1919; advising and assisting local port authorities in planning the layout and equipment of terminal facilities; and the designing of floating plant for use in the prosecution of projects for river and harbor improvement. The statistical division of the board is engaged on the investigations authorized by the transportation act of 1920, with a view to the promotion of water transportation, and the investiga- tions of ports authorized by the merchant marine act to be made in cooperation with the Shipping Board. Its duties also include the compilation. publication, and dis- tribution of useful statistics, data, and information concerning ports and water trans- portation. 332 Congressional Directory. JUSTICE THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE. The Army War College, located at Washington Barracks, is one of the general service schools of the Army, It is the highest unit in the military educational system. Its object is to train ‘selected officers for duty in the War Department General Staff and for high command in accordance with the doctrine and methods approved by the War Department. - : DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. ATTORNEY GENERAL. The Attorney General is the head of the Department of Justice and the chief law officer of the Government. He represents the United States in matters involving legal questions; he gives his advice and opinion, when they are required by the President or by the heads of the other executive departments, on questions of law arising in the administration of their respective departments; he appears in the Supreme Court of the United States in cases of especial gravity and importance; he exercises a general superintendence and direction over United States attorneys and marshals in all judicial districts in the States and Territories; and he provides special counsel for the United States whenever required by any department of the Govern- ment. : , SOLICITOR GENERAL. The Solicitor General assists the Attorney General in the performance of his general duties, and, by special provision of law, in case of a vacancy in the office of the Attorney General, or of his absence or disability, exercises all those duties. Under the direc- tion of the Attorney General, he has general charge of the business of the Government in the Supreme Court of the United States, and is assisted in the conduct and argu- ment of cases therein by the Assistant Attorneys General. He also, with the approval of the Attorney General, prepares opinions rendered to the President and the heads of the executive departments, and confers with and directs the law officers of the Gov- ernment throughout the country in the performance of their duties. When the Attorney General so directs, any case in which the United States is interested, in any court of the United States, may be conducted and argued by the Solicitor General; and he may be sent by the Attorney General to attend to the interests of the United States in any State court, or elsewhere. THE ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL. The Assistant to the Attorney General has special charge of all suits and other matters arising under the Federal antitrust and interstate commerce laws, and per- forms such other duties as may be required of him by the Attorney General. ASSISTANT ATTORNEYS GENERAL. The several Assistant Attorneys General assist the Attorney General in the per- formance of his duties; in the argument of cases in the Supreme Court; and in the preparation of legal opinions. In addition to these general duties, particular subjects are assigned to them, and, under the direction of the Attorney General, they transact.the business arising under these subjects with United States attorneys, other departments, and private parties in interest. The Assistant Attorney General in charge of the interests of the Government in all matters of reappraisement and classification of imported goods in litigation before the several boards of United States General Appraisers and the Court of Customs Appeals is located at 641 Washington Street, New York. The Assistant Attorneys General and the solicitors for several of the executive de- partments, under the provisions of sections 349-350, Revised Statutes, exercise their functions under the supervision and control of the Attorney General. They are the Solicitor for the Department of the Interior, the Solicitor for the Department of State, the Solicitor of the Treasury, the Solicitor of Internal Revenue, the Solici- tor of the Department of Commerce, and the Solicitor of the Department of Labor. THE PUBLIC LANDS DIVISION. This division was created by the Attorney General November 16, 1909. To it are assigned all suits and proceedings concerning the enforcement of the public-land law, including suits or proceedings to set aside conveyances of allotted lands. JUSTICE Official Duties. 333 SOLICITOR FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. The solicitor is the chief law officer of that department. He advises the Secre- tary and Assistant Secretaries upon questions of municipal and international law referred to him, passes upon claims of citizens of the United States against foreign Governments, claims of subjects or citizens of foreign Governments against the United States, and upon applications for the extradition of criminals. The assistant solicitor acts as solicitor in the absence of the latter, and in the division of the work of the office has general charge of extradition and citizenship matters. SOLICITOR OF THE TREASURY. The Solicitor of the Treasury is the chief law officer of that department. His- duties are to advise the Secretary of the Treasury and other officers of that depart- ment upon matters of law arising therein; to approve the bonds of United States Treasurers, collectors of internal revenue, and to examine all contracts of, and official bonds filed in, the Treasury Department. He also examines titles to life-saving station sites, and renders such legal services in connection with matters arising in the administrative work of the Treasury Department as may be required of him by the Attorney General. : SOLICITOR OF INTERNAL REVENUE. A Solicitor of Internal Revenue was added to the Internal Revenue Office corps by the act of July 13, 1866 (14 Stat., 170), but by the act of June 22, 1870 (16 Stat., 162), organizing the Department of Justice, the solicitor was formally transferred to that department. He 1s the law officer and legal adviser of the commissioner. The only duties of his of which mention is made by law are in connection with internal-revenue compromise cases, section 3229, Revised Statutes. SOLICITOR FOR THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT. This solicitor is the chief law officer of that department; when requested he ad- vises the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries upon questions of law arising in the administration of the department; all appeals from the various bureaus are sent to his office for consideration; oral arguments are heard by him in the more important cases, and decisions are prepared under his supervision for the signature of the Secretary and his Assistant; the solicitor is aided in this and his other work by the board of appeals and 25 assistant attorneys. SOLICITOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE. The solicitor is the chief law officer of that department. His duties are to act as legal adviser for the Secretary of Commerce and the chiefs of the various bureaus of said department; to prepare and examine all contracts and bonds entered into or required by the said department; and to render such legal services in connection with matters arising in the administrative work of the Department of Commerce as may be desired by the head of the department or required of him by the Attorney General. SOLICITOR FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. The solicitor is the chief law officer of that department. His duties are to act as legal adviser for the Secretary of Labor and the chiefs of the various bureaus of said department; to prepare and examine all contracts and bonds entered into or required by said department; and to render such legal services in connection with matters arising in the administrative work of the Department of Labor as may be desired by the head of the department or required of him by the Attorney General. CHIEF CLERK AND ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT. Under the general direction of the Assistant Attorney General in charge of ad- ministrative matters, the chief clerk has direct administrative control over the clerical and subclerical forces and the divisions hereinafter enumerated ; responsibility for the enforcement of general department regulations; supervision over and responsibility for the proper maintenance of the operations of the building and space under the control of the department and direction of the engineers, mechanics, watchmen, and other employees connected with such maintenance and operation; supervsion over expenditures from contingent appropriations; supervision over the purchasing and distribution of department supplies in Washington and the supplies for the field force contracted for in Washington; recommendations of additional appointments, promotions, etc., in the clerical and subclerical forces; editing and supervision of 334 Congressional Directory. JUSTICE the publication of the Annual Report of the Attorney General and other publications | of the department and approval of requisitions upon the Public Printer. | The following divisions report immediately to him: The Appointment Clerk’s Office; Division of Mail and Files; Division of Supplies and Printing; the Library; ji Dffine of the Disbursing Clerk; Stenographic Bureau; and Telegraph and Telephone | ice. : | | DISBURSING CLERK. The disbursing clerk disburses from about 40 appropriations, under the direction of the Attorney General, including the salaries of the Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States and the judges of the other United States courts located in the . District of Columbia; the salaries of the officials of the department proper, as well as the salaries and expenses of certain employees stationed in the field; the contingent expenses of the department; supplies for United States courts; and other special and miscellaneous appropriations. He is also authorized and directed by law to with- hold and account for the income tax. APPOINTMENT CLERK. The appointment clerk has charge of all matters relating to applications, recom- mendations, and appointments, including certifications by the Civil Service Com- mission; conducts correspondence pertaining thereto; prepares nominations sent to the Senate; prepares commissions and appointments for the officers and employees of the department in Washington, and for United States judges, attorneys, and marshals and other officers under the department. He also compiles the Register of the De- partment of Justice and matter relating to that department for the Official Register of the United States. | LIBRARIAN. 4 The librarian has general charge and supervision of the library. He is a member of the committee, of which the Solicitor General is chairman, governing the selection . of books to be purchased. He also edits and prepares for publication the. official opinions of the Attorneys General. PRIVATE SECRETARY AND ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL. The private secretary and assistant to the Attorney General, in addition to the usual duties devolving upon such an official, has charge of the approval and recom- mendation to the Attorney General of all classes of authorization requiring the | Attorney General's approval; of consideration and investigation of the qualifications i of all applicants for appointment as United States judge, United States district ( attorney, or United States marshal, including reviewing and collating indorsements [| and holding personal interviews with applicants, Members of Congress, and others favoring or opposing their appointment. Is also charged with the duty of receiving | complaints; initiating investigations and preparing recommendations on same for | the Attorney General where charges were made of misconduct or unfitness for office of United States attorney, United States marshal, and other employees of the depart- | [ ment; and is in charge of publicity for the department. Also reviews, supervises, and makes recommendations to the Attorney General in all matters relating to | questions of general policy in the work of the office. i | DIRECTOR AND CHIEF OF THE BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION. The Director and Chief of the Bureau of Investigation has general supervision of the investigation of offenses against the laws of the United States not otherwise specifically provided for by law, and directs the work of all special agents and accountants of the department whose compensation or expenses are paid from the appropriation ‘ Detection and prosecution of crimes.” SUPERINTENDENT OF PRISONS. | The superintendent of prisons has charge, under the direction of the Attorney General, of all matters relating to United States prisons and prisoners, including the support of such prisoners in both State and Federal penitentiaries, in reform schools, { and in county jails. He has supervision over the construction work in progress at United States penal institutions. The superintendent of prisons is president of the boards of parole for the United States penitentiaries and president of the boards of parole for United States prisoners in each State or county institution used for the confinement of United States prisoners. [| J POST OFFICE Offictal Dutres. 335 ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF PARDONS. The attorney in charge of pardons takes charge of all applications for Executive clemency, except those in Army and Navy cases, these being referred to the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, respectively; of the briefing of the cases and the correspondence in relation to them. ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF TITLES. The attorney in charge of titles prepares opinions upon the title to lands belong- ing to or sought to be acquired by the Government for public purposes and opinions upon all legal matters growing out of the same. He has charge of all proceedings to acquire land under eminent domain, and conducts all the correspondence relating to the above matters. GENERAL AGENT. The office of the general agent has charge, under the direction of the administra- tive Assistant Attorney General, of the Division of Accounts, the field examiners, estimates, deficiencies, and all fiscal matters generally of the department and the courts. Authorizations for the payment of departmental expenses, as well as those of the courts, including office expenses and salaries of deputy marshals, deputy clerks, etc., are prepared in or authorized by the office of the general agent, which also has charge of the approval of leases of court rooms and offices, and the advancement of and accounting for judiciary funds. This office supervises and directs the examination and investigation conducted by the field examiners of the offices and records of Federal courts, which involves the methods of keeping such records, the taxation of costs, the accounting for fees, judg- ments, fines, etc., as well as the accounting for funds of private litigants, and the conduct generally of court officials in connection with the discharge of official duties. The general agent is the budget officer of the Department of Justice, and the estimates of appropriations and deficiencies are prepared under his direction for submission to the Budget Bureau. He has charge of the introduction of testimony before the appropriations committees of Congress with respect to the estimates of the department, and, with other officials of the department, appears before said committees in defense of said estimates. The Division of Accounts, which is in charge of the general agent, operates under and by virtue of specific statutes. The division has charge, among other matters, of the preparation of pay rolls and the examination and audit of all accounts paid from appropriations for the department and the Federal courts, aggregating approxi- mately $18,000,000 per annum. There is compiled in the Division of Accounts the statistical information required by law showing the business transacted in the courts of the United States, including bankruptcy statistics and fiscal reports relating to expenditures for the department and the courts published in the annual report of the Attorney General. Considered as a whole, the office of the general agent is the financial, examining, auditing, and statistical unit of the Department of Justice and the United States courts. POST OFFICE. DEPARTMENT. POSTMASTER GENERAL. The Postmaster General is the executive head of the Federal Postal Service. He appoints all officers and employees of the Post-Office Department, except the four 7 L Postmasters General and the purchasing agent, who are presidential ap- pointees. With the exception of postmasters of the first, second, and third classes, who are likewise presidential appointees, he appoints all postmasters and all other officers and employees of the service at large. Subject to the approval of the Presi- dent, he makes postal treaties with foreign Governments. He awards and executes contracts and directs the management of the Foreign Mail Service. He is the execu- tive head of Postal Savings, and ex officio chairman of the board of trustees. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk of the Post Office Department is charged with the general superin- tendence and assignment of the clerical and subclerical forces of the department and the consideration of applications for leave of absence for such employees; the super- 336 Congressional Directory. POST OFFICE vision of the preparation of estimates of appropriations for the departmental and Postal Service; of advertising; the supervision of requisitions upon the Treasury and the expenditure of the appropriations for the departmental service; the keeping of the journals and order books; the furnishing of stationery supplies for the departmental service; the consideration and signing of requisitions upon the Public Printer for the printing and binding required in the Postal Service and the department, and receiv- ing, and inspecting on receipt, of blanks required in the Post Office Department; the supervision of the receipt and inspection of supplies for the Post Office Department and the Postal Service which are delivered in Washington; general superintendence of the publication and distribution of the Official Postal Guide; the fixing of rates, subject to the approval of the Postmaster General, for the transmission of Government telegrams; the miscellaneous business correspondence of the Postmaster General’s Office, and miscellaneous correspondence of the department not assigned to other offices; the care of the department and other buildings used in connection therewith, and of all furniture and public property therein; and the performance of such other duties as may be required by the Postmaster General. In addition to the duties prescribed above, the chief clerk of the department is required to give careful con- sideration to matters affecting the proper administration of civil-service laws and regulations, it being necessary for him to personally examine reports from the Civil Service Commission from time to time in order to keep thoroughly familiar with the provisions of the law and constant amendments of existing regulations and new regula- tions issued thereunder. Under the efficiency system obtaining in the Post Office Department, which provides for the payment of salaries according to character (or kind), quality, and quantity of work performed and for the elimination of inequalities and injustices and the faithful ®bservance of the spirit and letter of the civil service, the chief clerk of the department is required to review the efficiency ratings of em- ployees at frequent intervals and pass upon same before any changes in the status of employees are made. It is also necessary for the chief clerk to personally examine papers affecting discipline of employees. SPECIAL ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL. The special assistant to the Attorney General is charged with the duty of assisting in the defense of cases against the United States arising out of the transportation of the mails, and in other matters affecting the postal revenues. These include suits in the Federal courts involving claims of the railroads and other contractors for the carriage of the mails; the representation of the Postmaster General and the preparation and presentation of the department’s cases in proceedings before the Interstate Com- merce Commission for the determination by the commission of the basis for adjust- ment of railroad mail pay and the fixing of fair and reasonable rates for the trans- portation of the mails and for services in connection therewith by railroads and urban and interurban electric railway common carriers, and in other matters of petition by the Postmaster General to the commission; the representation of the Postmaster Gen- eral in hearings before the department on orders changing the mode of transporting periodical mail matter and in connection with reviews of such orders by the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia; and the conduct of such matters as may be spe- cially assigned by the Postmaster General. SOLICITOR FOR THE POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. The solicitor is charged with the duty of giving opinions to the Postmaster General and the heads of the several offices of the department upon questions of law arising upon the construction of the postal laws and regulations, or otherwise, in the course of business in the Postal Service; with the consideration and submission (with advice) to the Postmaster General of claims for damage done to persons or property by or through the operation of the Post Office Department, and of all claims of postmasters for losses by fire, burglary, or other unavoidable casualty, and of all certifications by the Comptroller for the Post Office Department of cases of proposed compromise of liabil- ities to the United States, and of the remission of fines, penalties, and forfeitures under the statutes; with the giving of advice, when desired, in the preparation of correspond- ence with the Department of Justice and other departments, including the Court of Claims, involving questions of law or relating to prosecutions or suits affecting or arising out of the Postal Service, and with assisting when desired in the prosecution or defense of such cases, and the maintenance of suitable records of opinions rendered affecting the Post Office Department and the Postal Service; and with the considera- tion of applications for pardon for crimes committed against the postal laws which may be referred to the department; with the preparation and submission (with advice) to the Postmaster General of all appeals to him from the heads of the offices of the POST OFFICE Official Dutves. 337 department depending upon questions of law; with the determining of questions as to the delivery of mail the ownership of which is in dispute; with the hearing and consideration of cases relating to lotteries and the misuse of the mails in furtherance of schemes to defraud the public; with the consideration of all questions relating to the mailability of alleged indecent, obscene, scurrilous, or defamatory matter; with determining the legal acceptability of securities offered by banks to secure postal savings deposits; with the examining and, when necessary, drafting of all contracts of the department; with the enforcement of laws making unmailable matter contain- ing any advertisement of intoxicating liquors or solicitation of an order for such liquors when addressed to places where it is unlawful to advertise or solicit orders for such liquors; with the legal work incident to the enforcement of those provisions of the espionage law which concern the Post Office Department; and with such other like duties as may from time to time be required by the Postmaster General. PURCHASING AGENT. The purchasing agent supervises the purchase of all supplies both for the Post Office Department proper and for all branches of the Postal Service. He reviews all requisitions and authorizations for supplies and, if proper, honors the same. He passes upon the sufficiency and propriety of all specifications for proposals for sup- plies; prepares the advertisements and forms for proposals necessary to the making of contracts for supplies; reviews the reports of the committees on awards and recom- mends to the Postmastér General such action as in his judgment should be taken thereon. CHIEF INSPECTOR. The chiefinspector supervises the work of post-office inspectorsand of the 15 divisions of post-office inspectors. Applications for permission to take the examination for the position of post-office inspector and correspondence in connection with such applica- tions; appointment and promotion of and charges against inspectors should be ad- dressed to him. To his office are referred all complaints of losses in the mails and all reported violations of the postal laws, such as theft and tampering with the mail; forgery of money orders; mailing of poisons, intoxicating liquors, and infernal ma- chines; mailing of indecent, obscene, scurrilous, and defamatory matter; and com- plaints of the fraudulent use of the mails through stock selling or other schemes. To him is charged the preparation and issue of all cases for investigation of any and all phases of the Postal Service. Administrative matters, such as charges against postal employees of all classes except inspectors, establishment of or changes in rural or star routes, should be addressed to the proper bureau of the department and if investiga- tion by an inspector is necessary to a determination of the questions at issue such bureau will make the request for investigation on the chief inspector. To him is charged the custody of money and property collected or received by inspectors and the restoration thereof to the proper parties or-owners, and the consideration and adjust- ment of accounts of inspectors for salaries and expenses. FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. The First Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: Post-office service.—The organization of post offices of the first and second classes; the appointments and salaries of assistant postmasters, supervisory officers, clerks, watch- men, messengers, laborers, printers, mechanics, and skilled laborers at such offices; and of city and village letter carriers; the establishment, maintenance, and exten- sion of city and village delivery and city collection service; allowances for clerk hire and for rent, light, and fuel at such offices, and for mail separations and “‘ unusual ' conditions’’ at fourth-class offices, and for miscellaneous items at first and second class offices, such as labor incidental to cleaning the premises, telephone and water rentals, laundry, towel service, and miscellaneous service items; all matters concern- ing the delivery of ordinary mail, the special-delivery service, and the hours of business at presidential offices, including the duty ofinvestigating by correspon- dence all complaints made to the department with reference thereto; and certain miscellaneous correspondence relating to the service at presidential post offices. Postmasters’ appointments.—The preparation of cases for the appointment of post- masters, the change of name of post offices, and the establishment, discontinuance, and change of site of post offices of the fourth class; the recording of appointments of postmasters, the obtaining, recording, and filing of their oaths and bonds, and the issuing of their commissions; the consideration of charges and complaints against postmasters; the regulation of hours of business at fourth-class post offices. 24786°—67—4—2p ED———23 338 Congressional Darectory. POST OFFICE Dead letters.—The treatment of all unmailable and undelivered mail matter which is sent to it or its respective branches, and to post offices at the several division headquarters of the Railway Mail Service, for disposition; the enforcement of the prompt sending of such matter according to the regulations; the correcting of errors of postmasters connected with the nondelivery of mail matter, and the investiga- tion, by correspondence, of complaints made with reference thereto; the verifica- tion and allowance of claims for credit by postmasters for postage-due stamps affixed to undelivered matter; the examination and forwarding or return of all letters which have failed of delivery; the inspection and return to the country of origin of unde- livered foreign matter; recording and restoration to owners of letters and parcels which contain valuable inclosures; care and disposition of all money, negotiable paper, and other valuable articles found in undelivered matter, and correspondence, both foreign and domestic, relating to these subjects. SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. The Second Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the airplane service and the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: Railway adjustments.—Has charge of the preparation of cases authorizing the trans- portation of mails on railroad, electric car, mail messenger, steamboat, and Alaskan star routes; supervises such service and service by freight or express for the transpor- tation of postal cards, stamped envelopes, and mail equipment; handles cases arising from application of the private express statutes; examines and passes upon reports of the performance of service of the classes above stated and prepares orders for de- ductions for nonperformance of service and for imposition of fines for delinquencies; prepares statements of accounts to be submitted to the General Accounting Office or payment of the amounts due the companies and contractors, and prepares all cor-. respondence relative to these matters. Foreign mails.—Is charged with the duty of arranging all details connected with the transportation of foreign mails; the preparation of postal conventions (except those relative to the money-order system) and the regulations for their execution, as well as the consideration of the questions arising under them, and with the prepa- ration of all correspondence relative thereto; has supervision of the ocean mail service, including the adjustment of accounts with steamship companies for the transporta- tion of mails to foreign countries; supervision of international Parcel Post Service, and Navy mail service. Railway Mail Service.—Is charged with the supervision of the Railway Mail Service and railway postal clerks; prepares cases for the appointment, removal, promotion, and reduction of said clerks; conducts correspondence and issués orders relative ‘to the moving of the mails on railroad trains; has charge of the dispatch and distribu- tion of mail matter in railway postal cars and post offices; conducts the weighing of mails; and attends to all correspondence relative to these matters. Air Mail Service.—Is charged with the supervision of the Air Mail Service and all its employees; prepares cases for the appointment, removal, and promotion of said em- ployees; conducts correspondence, issues orders, and prepares schedules relative to the moving of the mails by airplane; has charge of maintenance and operation and recommends all purchases for this service; operates radio service at headquarters and all stations on the Transcontinental Air Mail Route; and supervises contract service by airplane. THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. The Third Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: Finance.—The financial operations, including the collection and deposit of postal revenues; the distribution of postal funds among the several depositaries so as to equalize, as far as possible, receipts and expenditures in the same section; the pay- ment by warrant of all accounts settled by the auditor; the receipt and disposition of all moneys coming directly to the department; and the keeping of books of account showing the fiscal operations of the postal and money-order services and the regula- tion of box rents and key deposits. Money orders.—The supervision and management of the money-order service, both domestic and international; the preparation of conventions for the exchange of money orders with foreign countries. Classification.—The general control of all business relating to the classification of domestic mail matter and the rates of postage thereon; the determination of the admissibility of publications to the second class of mail matter, their right to con- tinue in that class, including the administration of the law requiring semiannual state- LS m— eo POST OFFICE ~~ Officval Duties. : 339 ments of their ownership, circulation, etc., and the instruction of postmasters rela- tive thereto; also the use of penalty envelopes, the franking privilege, and the limit of weight and size of mail matter. Stamps.—The supervision of the manufacture and issuance to postmasters of postage stamps, stamp books, stamped envelopes, newspaper wrappers, postal cards, and postal savings stamps and cards by the various contractors; and the keeping of the accounts and records of these transactions. The receipt and disposition of damaged and unsalable stamped paper returned by postmasters for redemption and credit. The issuance to postmasters for sale to the public of United States war savings cer- tificate stamps, United States thrift stamps, and United States internal-revenue stamps, and the keeping of accounts in connection therewith. Registered mails.—The supervision and management of the registry, insurance, and collect-on-delivery services; the establishment and control of all registry dispatches and exchanges; the instruction of postmasters and the furnishing of information in relation to these matters; the consideration of all claims for indemnity for injured or lost registered, and certain insured, and C. O. D. mail. Postal savings.—The conduct and management of the administrative office of the postal savings at Washington; the selection and designation of post offices as postal savings depository offices and the supervision of the business transacted at such offices; the management and investment of postal savings funds as the agent of the board of trustees; and the administrative examination of accounts of postmasters and other fiscal agents of the system. FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL. The Fourth Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions, to which are assigned the duties specified: Rural mails.—Has charge of the consideration of all matters pertaining to the rural-delivery service, the star-route contract service (except in Alaska), the appoint- ment and discipline of rural carriers, the preparation of advertisements inviting proposals for the transportation of mails by screen wagons and the service on star routes (except in Alaska), the drafting of orders awarding such service and the preparation of contracts therefor, the fixing of rental of vehicles used in the delivery and collection service, the examination of monthly and special reports of postmasters, and the performance of service and the preparation of orders making deductions and imposing fines for nonperformance of service and other delinquencies on the part of contractors and said carriers. Motor-vehicle service.—Ils charged with the consideration of all matters pertaining to the Government-operated star-route service, the motor-vehicle service in cities, the appointment and discipline of personnel employed in connection with the opera- tion and maintenance of such Government-owned vehicles, including motor cycles, the selection and leasing of garage quarters in connection with the Government- owned vehicles, and the fixing of allowances for light, heat, and such miscellaneous service items as are incidental thereto. : Equipment and supplies.—Is charged with the preparation of specifications for equipment (other than that assigned to the mail-equipment shops) and supplies for the Postal Service; the preparation of requisitions therefor on the purchasing agent; the custody, transportation, and distribution of such equipment and supplies; the conduct of correspondence in connection therewith; the keeping of a record of ex- penditures for equipment and supplies as charged to the proper appropriations; the preparation and revision of post-route maps and the supervision of their printing, issue, and distribution; the preparation of specifications for their manufacture; and the general care of stones and property in the department and in the possession of contractors; also the making of rural-delivery maps and the distribution of parcel-post zone keys and guides; the designing of such equipment as may be deemed necessary; the performing or directing of experimental and research work in connection there- with, and otherwise determining the needs of the service as to style and character of equipment after consultation with the proper bureau officers. : : Mazil-equipment shops.—Is charged with the manufacture and repair of mail bags and other mail containers and attachments, mail locks, keys, chains, tools, machinery, and such other equipment for the Postal Service as may be deemed expedient; the preparation of specifications for the articles named and requisitions on the purchas- ing agent therefor; the keeping of a record of expenditures from the appropriation for ‘‘Mail bags and equipment;” the issuing of letter-box locks, all mail keys, key chains, etc., to postmasters and other officials entitled thereto, and the keeping of records of the receipt and issue thereof; also the conduct of correspondence relating to the foregoing. 340 Congressional Directory. NAVY COMPTROLLER. The Comptroller of the Post Office Department receives and makes the adminis- trative examination of all postal and money-order accounts of postmasters and foreign administrations and the accounts of all money-order depositaries; states the general revenue, expenditure, resource, liability, and appropriation accounts of the Post Office Department and Postal Service; prepares the balance sheets and quarterly and annual financial statements showing the fiscal operations of the Post Office Department and its financial condition at the close of each year; compiles statistics for cost accounting, general statistics, and special reports for the information of the Postmaster General and other officers of the Post Office Department necessary for the efficient administration of the Postal Service. DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY. SECRETARY OF THE NAVY. The Secretary of the Navy performs such duties as the President of the United States, who is Commander in Chief, may assign him, and has the general superin- tendence of construction, manning, armament, equipment, and employment of vessels of war. : ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY. The Assistant Secretary of the Navy performs such duties in the Navy Department as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy or required by law. CHIEF CLERK. As administrative assistant to the Secretary and Assistant Secretary of the Navy, the chief clerk has administrative control over the clerical force and responsibility for the general business operations of the Navy Department, involving supervision over matters relating to the employees of the department; responsibility for the enforcement of departmental regulations general in their nature; supervision over the classification and compilation of estimates of appropriations; supervision over the Navy Department post office; supervision over expenditures from appropriations for contingent and miscellaneous expenses of the department and printing and binding and partial supervision over expenditures from appropriations ‘“ Pay, miscellaneous,’ and “Contingent, Navy”; he has custody of the records and files of the Secretary’s office and supervision of the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the official mail and correspondence of that office; and performs such other duties as may be required by the Secretary or Assistant Secretary of the Navy. OFFICE OF NAVAL OPERATIONS. During the temporary absence of the Secretary and the Assistant Secretary of the Navy the Chief of Naval Operations is next in succession to act as Secretary of the Navy. (Act Mar. 3, 1915.) The Chief of Naval Operations, while so serving as such Chief of Naval Operations, shall have the rank and title of admiral, to take rank next after the Admiral of the Navy. (Act Aug. 29, 1916.) The Chief of Naval Operations, under the direction of the Secretary of the Navy, is charged with the operations of the fleet and with the preparation and readiness of plans for its use in war. (Act Mar. 3, 1915.) This includes the direction of the Naval War College, the Office of Naval Intelligence, the Office of Gunnery Exercises and Engineering Performances, the operation of the Radio Service and of other sys- tems of communication, the operations of the Aeronautic Service, of Mines and Mining, of the Naval Defense Districts, Naval Militia, and of the Coast Guard when operating with the Navy; the direction of all strategic and tactical matters, organi- zation, maneuvers, target practice, drills and exercises, and of the training of the fleet for war; and the preparation, revision, and enforcement of all tactics, drill books, signal codes, and cipher codes. The Chief of Naval Operations is charged with, the preparation, revision, and record of Regulations for the Government of the Navy, Naval Instructions, and General Orders. He advises the Secretary concerning the movements and operations of ves- sels of the Navy and prepares all orders issued by the Secretary in regard thereto, and keeps the records of service of all fleets, squadrons, and ships. He advises the Sec- retary in regard to the military features of all new ships and as to any proposed exten- sive alterations of a ship which will affect her military value, and all features which affect the military value of dry docks, including their location; also as to matters per- | NAVY Official Duties. 341 taining to fuel reservations and depots, the location of radio stations, reserves of ord- nance and ammunition, fuel, stores, and other supplies of whatsoever nature, with a view to meeting effectively the demands of the fleet. In preparing and maintaining in readiness plans for the use of the fleet in war he freely consults with and has the advice and assistance of the various bureaus, boards, and offices of the department, including the Marine Corps headquarters, in matters ? coming under their cognizance. After the approval of any given war plans by the Secretary it is the duty of the Chief of Naval Operations to assign to the bureaus, boards, and offices such parts thereof as may be needed for the intelligent carrying out of their respective duties in regard to such. plans. win oe of Naval Operations is charged with matters pertaining to the operation of aircraft. The Chief of Naval Operations from time to time witnesses the operations of the fleet as an observer. He is ex officio a member of the General Board. \ He is the Budget officer of the Navy Department. ORGANIZATION OF THE OFFICE OF NAVAL OPERATIONS. For administrative purposes, and next in authority to the Chief of Naval Opera- tions, an officer of suitable rank and experience is designated as Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations. The Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations does not admin- ! ister the details of any division. The primary functions of the Office of Naval Operations are: (1) Study and preparation of policies and plans; and (2) The operation and administration of the forces of the Navy in accordance with approved plans. | J The functions of (1) are not administrative, and all work in connection therewith ¢ is carried on by a body known as the planning division, none of whose members are given administrative duties. The administrative divisions are as follows: . Ship movements division. . Intelligence division. Communication division. . Material division. . Naval districts division. Inspection division. Gunnery exercises and engineering performances division. . Files and records division. 00 =I I> UT is LO DO ‘WAR PLANS DIVISION. The War Plans Division is composed, as nearly as personnel conditions will permit, of a body of selected officers who have had training in war staff work. $ The Joint Army and Navy Planning Committee investigate, study, and report upon questions relative to the national defense and involving joint action of the Army and Navy, referred to it by the Joint Army and Navy Board. The naval members are members of the War Plans Division of Operations. : A member of the policy section of the War Plans Division is the liaison officer with State and other departments in routine matters. An officer of the War Plans Division is designated for liaison with the Naval War College. 2 SHIP MOVEMENTS DIVISION. The movements of all naval craft, whether surface, subsurface, or air, not specially designated for training and experimental purposes exclusively, are directed by the Chief of Naval Operations or the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, through the officers charged with the responsibility of supervising the movements of: (1) Fighting craft of the Navy; and (2) All other naval craft. } One of the most important duties in connection with this division is the liaison with the Shipping Board and the merchant marine. INTELLIGENCE DIVISION. (Office of Naval Intelligence.) | The Intelligence Division is charged with the collection of information for the : department and for other naval activities which require it. It publishes and dis- i seminates such information to the Navy and to Government officials requiring it. 342 Congressional Directory. NAVY It cooperates with the other executive departments of the Government in discover- ing and bringing to justice persons engaged in activities against the United States. It directs all naval attachés abroad and is the official channel of communication for all foreign naval attachés in the United States. It is the duty of the Office of Naval Intelligence to keep in close touch with all naval activities, both in and out of the Navy Department. COMMUNICATION DIVISION. (Office of the Director of Naval Communications.) The Director of Naval Communications is charged with the administration, organ- ization, and operation of the entire radio, telegraph, telephone, and cable systems of communications within the naval service, including the operation of the trans-Atlantic radio system and all communications between merchant ships and all shore stations in the United States and its possessions. The foregoing includes the preparation and distribution of all codes, ciphers, and secret calls and commercial accounting. The Director of Naval Communications handles all matters pertaining to radio com- munications in any manner whatsoever, except those relating solely to purchase, supply, test, and installation of apparatus. During war the Director of Naval Com- munications is also chief cable censor, which involves the administration of the organization for censoring all cablegrams from or to the United States and its posses- sions, except the Philippine Islands. The communication office of the Navy Department (a section of the Communication Division) is responsible for the handling of all telegraphic and radio communications to and from the Navy Department. MATERIAL DIVISION. The Material Division keeps in close touch withthose handling the planning and operating end of the work and under their cognizance to administer the material to meet the approved plans and the operating orders for the vessels in question. The Material Division coordinates the work of the navy yards and other industrial establishments of the Navy. It is its duty to anticipate the material needs of the service; to advise the Chief of Naval Operations accordingly. NAVAL DISTRICTS DIVISION. The function of the Naval Districts Division is to form the connecting link between the Office of Naval Operations and the naval districts. It undertakes the routine central administrative work in connection with naval districts except such as logically come under other divisions, and advises the Chief of Naval Operations in regard to matters of policy affecting the naval districts. In war or national emergency the Districts Division has cognizance of the routine commandeering of vessels for the Navy and of the correspondence which such com- mandeering occasions. Upon demobilization its has corresponding duties with such vessels. SUBMARINE DIVISION. This division is charged with the consideration of plans for, and making recom- mendations to the Chief of Naval Operations concerning, the organization and distribution of the submarine forces. Makes recommendations to the Chief of Naval Operations, working in close liaison with the other divisions as to the movements and employment of submarines. It is charged with the consideration, preparation, and issue of the Submarine Manual and Submarine Instructions. Makes recommenda- tions as to the distribution of submarine personnel. Is charged with the consideration and formulation of submarine tactics. INSPECTION DIVISION. (Board of Inspection and Survey.) The activities at present under this division are: (a) Board of inspection and survey; and (b) Joint merchant vessels board. The board of inspection and survey is charged with inspections and trials of newly constructed naval vessels and, at intervals specified by law, with the material inspec- tions of all vessels of the Navy. Tt is in close coordination with the Matériel Division of the Chief of Naval Operations. The joint merchant vessels board is charged with the inspection of privately owned craft and the securing of such data relative to such craft as will determine their suit- ability for military purposes. 4 | i NAVY Official Dutres. 343 GUNNERY EXERCISES AND ENGINEERING PERFORMANCES DIVISION. That division of the Office of Naval Operations which is the Office of Gunnery Exercises and Engineering Performances is charged with the duty of issuing to the service instructions for gunnery and engineering exercises and operations, the col- lection, analysis, and review of data in regard to gunnery and steaming performances of naval craft, and the review of battle inspections of ships for the Chief of Naval operations in connection with the preparation and maintenance of the fleet for war. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The duties of the Bureau of Navigation comprise the issue, record, and enforce- ment of the orders of the secretary to the individual officers of the Navy; the training and education of line officers and of enlisted men (except of the Hospital Corps) at schools and stations and in vessels maintained for that purpose; the upkeep and operation of the Naval Academy, of technical schools for line officers, of the apprentice- seaman establishments, of schools for the technical education of enlisted men, and of the naval home at Philadelphia, Pa.; the upkeep and the payment of the operating expenses of the Naval War College; the enlistment, assignment to duty, and discharge of all enlisted persons. (2) Tt has under its direction all rendezvous and receiving ships, and provides transportation for all enlisted persons under its cognizance. (3) It establishes the complements of all ships in commission. (4) It keeps the records of service of all officers and men, and prepares an annual Navy Register for publication, embodying therein data as to fleets, squadrons, and ships, which shall be furnished by the Chief of Naval Operations. To the end that it may be able to carry out the provisions of this paragraph, all communications to or from ships in commission relating to the personnel of such ships are forwarded through this bureau, whatever their origin. (5) It is charged with all matters pertaining to applications for appointments and commissions in the Navy, and with the preparation of such appointments and com- missions for signature. (6) It is charged with the preparation, revision, and enforcement of all regulations governing uniform, and with the distribution of all orders and regulations of a general or circular character. (7) Questions of naval discipline, rewards, and punishments are submitted by this bureau for the action of the Secretary of the Navy. The records of all general courts-martial and courts of inquiry involving the personnel of the Navy before final action-are referred to this bureau for comment as to disciplinary features. (8) It receives and brings to the attention of the Secretary of the Navy all appli- cations from officers for duty or leave. (9) It receives all reports of services performed by individual officers or men. (10) It is charged with the enforcement of regulations and instructions regarding naval ceremonies and naval etiquette. (11) It shall be charged with the upkeep and operation of the Hydrographic Office, the Naval Observatory, Nautical Almanac, and compass offices. It shall also have charge of all ocean and lake surveys, and ships’ and crews’ libraries; it shall defray the expenses of pilotage of all ships in commission. (12) It shall be charged with the formation of the Naval Reserve and with all matters relating thereto. (13) It is charged with the mission of ‘‘aiding constituted authority in maintain- ing a high morale.” NAVAL OBSERVATORY, BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The Naval Observatory, at Washington, D. C., and the Navy Chronometer and Time Station, at the navy yard, Mare Island, Calif., furnish the country standard time each day both by telegraph and radio, and the adjacent oceans by radio, the former supply- ing that part of the country east of the Rocky Mountains and the latter that part west. The Naval Observatory supervises the outfits of navigational instruments for the naval service and keeps up continuous fundamental observations of the heavenly bodies for the use of the Nautical Almanac Office, which prepares the American Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac and the American Nautical Almanac each year for the use of navi- gatos, surveyors, and others requiring the positions and movements of the heavenly odies. b HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE, BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The Hydrographic Office is charged with marine surveys in foreign waters and with the collection and dissemination of hydrographic and navigational data; the preparation and printing of maps and charts relating to and required in navigation; the preparation of navigator’s sailing directions or pilots, and manuals of instruction 344 Congressional Directory. NAVY for the use of all vessels of the United States and for the benefit and use of navigators generally; the furnishing of the foregoing to the Navy and other public services; and their sale to the mercantile marine and the public at the cost of printing and paper. : BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS. | i | The duties of the Bureau of Yards and Docks comprise all that relates to the design and construction of public works, such as dry docks, marine railways, building ways, ' harbor works, quay walls, piers, wharves, slips, dredging, landings, floating and sta-~ tionary cranes, power plants, coaling plants; heating, lighting, telephone, water, sewer, and railroad systems; roads, walks, and grounds; bridges, radio towers, and all buildings, for whatever purpose needed, under the Navy and Marine Corps. It has cognizance over repairs to the same and provides for general maintenance, except at the naval proving ground, the naval torpedo stations, the naval air stations, the naval training stations, the Naval Academy, the naval magazines, naval hospitals, and marine posts; it designs and makes the estimates for the public works after consulting as to their operating features with the bureau or office for whose use they are primarily intended; it has charge of all means of transportation, such as locomo- tives, locomotive cranes, cars, derricks, shears, motor trucks, and all vehicles, horses, teams, and necessary operators and teamsters in the navy yards and naval stations; it provides the furniture for all buildings, except at the naval magazines, hospitals, the Naval Academy, and marine posts; it provides clerks for the offices of the com- mandant, captain of the yard, and public works officer. In general, the work of \ the bureau is carried out by commissioned officers of the Corps of Civil Engineers, United States Navy, whose major duties comprise the construction and maintenance of the public works of the Navy. BUREAU OF ORDNANCE. The Bureau of Ordnance has cognizance over the upkeep and operation of the } following naval ordnance establishments and of their repair except as otherwise provided in Naval Regulations: (a) Naval Gun Factory. | (b) Naval ordnance plants. (¢) Naval torpedo stations. | (d) Naval proving grounds. (¢) Naval ammunition depots. (f) Naval magazines on shore. (9) Naval mine depots. And of all that relates to the manufacture of offensive and defensive arms and apparatus (including torpedoes and armor), all ammunition and war explosives. It requires for or manufactures all machinery, apparatus, equipment, material, and supplies required by or for use with the above. It determines the interior dimensions of revolving turrets and their requirements as regards rotation. : ‘ As the work proceeds it inspects the installation of the permanent fixtures of the armament and its accessories on board ship, and the methods of stowing, handling, i and transporting ammunition and torpedoes, all of which work shall be performed to its satisfaction. It designs and constructs all turret ammunition hoists, determines the requirements of all ammunition hoists, and the method of construction of i armories and ammunition rooms on shipboard, and, in conjunction with the Bureau - of Construction and Repair, determines upon their location and that of ammu- nition hoists outside of turrets. It installs all parts of the armament and its acces- sories which are not permanently attached to any portion of the structure of the } hull, excepting turret guns, turret mounts, and ammunition hoists, and such other mounts as require simultaneous structural work in connection with installation or removal. It confers with the Bureau of Construction and Repair respecting the arrangements for centering the turrets and the character of the roller paths and their supports. It has cognizance of all electrically operated ammunition hoists; rammers, and { gun-elevating gear which are in turrets; of electric training and elevating gear for gun mounts not in turrets; of electrically operated air compressors for charging torpedoes; and of all range finders and battle order and range transmitters and indicators. BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR. The duties of the Bureau of Construction and Repair comprise the responsibility for the structural strength and stability of all ships built for the Navy; all that relates to designing, building, fitting, and repairing the hulls of ships, turrets, and electric Nga i NAVY Official Duties. 845 turret-turning machinery, spars, capstans, windlasses, deck winches, boat cranes, steering gear, and hull ventilating apparatus (except portable fans); and, after consultation with the Bureau of Ordnance and according to the requirements thereof ag determined by that bureau, the designing, construction, and installation of independent ammunition hoists, the same to conform to the requirements of the Bureau of Ordnance as to power, speed, and control, and the installation of the per- manent fixtures of all other ammunition hoists and their appurtenances; placing and securing armor, placing and securing on board ship to the satisfaction of the Bureau of Ordnance the permanent fixtures of the armament and its accessories as manufactured and supplied by that bureau; installing the turret guns, turret mounts, and turret ammunition hoists, and such other mounts as require simultaneous structural work in connection with installation or removal; also the designing and installing to the satisfaction of the Bureau of Aeronautics all aeronautic accessories that are an integral part of the structure of naval vessels. 3; ho charge of the docking of ships, and is charged with the operating and cleaning of dry docks. It responsible for the care and preservation of ships not in commission. It has cognizance of electric launches and other boats supplied with electric motive ower. P It has charge of the manufacture of anchors and cables; the supplying and fitting of rope, cordage, rigging, sails, awnings, and other canvas, and flags and bunting; it supplies, to the satisfaction of the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, galley ranges, steam cookers, and other permanent galley fittings, and installs and repairs the same. It supplies and installs, in consultation with the Bureau of Engineering, all voice tubes and means of mechanical signal communications. BUREAU OF ENGINEERING. The duties of the Bureau of Engineering comprise all that relates to designing, building, fitting out, and repairing machinery used for the propulsion of naval ships; the steam pumps, steam heaters, distilling apparatus, refrigerating apparatus, all steam connections of ships, and the steam machinery necessary for actuating the apparatus by which turrets are turned. : It inspects all fuel for the fleet. It has cognizance of the entire system of interior communications. It is specifi- cally charged with the design, supply, installation, maintenance, and repair of all means of interior and exterior electric signal communications (except range finders and battle-order and range transmitters and indicators), and of all electrical appli- ances of whatsoever nature on board naval vessels, except motors and their control- ling apparatus used to operate the machinery belonging to other bureaus. 1t supplies and installs all conduit and molding or other means for carrying elec- tric wiring, the plans for such installation being made after consultation with the Bureau of Construction and Repair and being subject to the approval of that bureau. It has charge of the design, manufacture, installation, maintenance, repair, and operation of radio outfits on board ship and on shore and of the upkeep and payment of expenses, other than the pay of enlisted personnel, of operation of radio stations on shore. It has supervision and control of the upkeep and operation of the Engineering ~ Experiment Station. BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY. The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery shall have charge of the upkeep and opera- tion of all hospitals and of the force employed there; it shall advise with respect to all questions connected with hygiene and sanitation affecting the service, and to this end shall have opportunity for necessary inspection; it shall provide for physical examinations; it shall pass upon the competency, from a professional standpoint, of all men in the Hospital Corps for enlistment, enrollment, and promotion by means of examinations conducted under its supervision, or under forms prescribed by it; it shall recommend and have information as to the assignment and duties of all enlisted men of the Hospital Corps; it shall recommend to the Bureau of Navigation the com- plement of medical officers, dental officers, nurses, and Hospital Corps men for hos- pitals and hospital ships, and shall have power to appoint and remove all nurses in the Nurse Corps, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Navy. Except as otherwise provided for, the duties of the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery shall include the upkeep and operation of medical supply depots, medical labora- tories, naval hospitals, dispensaries, technical schools for the Medical, Dental, and Hospital Corps, and the administration of the Nurse Corps. 846 Congressional Directory. NAVY It shall approve the design of hospital ships in so far as relates to their efficiency for the care of the sick and wounded. It shall require for all supplies, medicines, and instruments used in the Medical Department of the Navy. It shall have control of the preparation, reception, storage, care, custody, transfer, and issue of all supplies of every kind used in the Medical Department for its own purposes. The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery is charged with the duty of inspecting the sani- tary condition of the Navy and making recommendations in reference thereto; of advis- ing with the department and other bureaus with reference to the sanitary features of ships under construction and in commission regarding berthing, ventilation, location of quarters for the care and treatment of the sick and injured; of the provisions for the care of wounded in battle; and, in the case of shore stations, of advising in regard to health conditions depending on location, the hygienic construction and care of public buildings, especially of barracks and other habitations, such as camps. It shall advise in regard to water supplies used for drinking, cooking, and bathing purposes, and drainage and the disposal of wastes, so far as these affect the health of the Navy. It shall provide for the care of the sick and wounded, the physical examination of officers and enlisted men, with a view to the selection or retention of those only whose physical condition is such as to maintain or improve the military efficiency of the service if admitted or retained therein, the management and control of naval hos- pitals, and of the internal organization and administration of hospital ships, the in- struction of the personnel of the Hospital Corps and Nurse Corps, and the furnishing of all medical and hospital supplies. It shall advise in matters pertaining to clothing and food so far as bo affect the health of the Navy. It shall safeguard the per- sonnel by the employment of the best methods of hygiene and sanitation, both afloat and ashore, with a view to maintaining the highest possible percentage of the per- sonnel ready for service at all times. It shall adopt for use all such devices or pro- cedures as may be developed in the sciences of medicine and surgery which will in any way tend to an increase in military efficiency. All technical schools which are or may be established for the education of medical and dental officers or members of the Hospital Corps and Nurse Corps shall be under the supervision and control of the Burean of Medicine and Surgery. : BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS. The duties of the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts comprise all that relates to the purchase (including the preparation and distribution of schedules, proposals, con- tracts, and bureau orders and advertisements connected therewith, and the Navy's list of acceptable bidders), reception, storage, care, custody, transfer, shipment, issue of and accounting for all supplies and property of the Naval Establishment except medical supplies (but including their purchase) and supplies for the Marine Corps. The Paymaster General of the Navy has direction of the naval clothing factories and their cost of operation. : He has supervision over requisitions and service covering provisions, clothing, and canteen stocks; allotments under S. and A. appropriations and the accounting for allotments for ships under all appropriations; the preparation and issuance of allow- ance lists for ships of S. and A. material; the disposition of excess stocks accumu- lated at the various yards and the upkeep of naval supply account stock; he recom- mends to the Bureau of Yards and Docks the interior arrangements of storehouses ashore and to the Bureau of Construction and Repair the character of the permanent galley fittings and interior storeroom arrangment of all naval vessels. He has direction of the sale of condemned, salvaged, and scrap, or other materials, and the transfer thereof from point to point. He procures all coal, fuel oil, and gasoline for Navy use, including expenses of transportation, leased storage, and handling the same, and water for all purposes on board naval vessels, and the chartering of merchant vessels for transportation purposes. The Paymaster General of the Navy is charged with the procurement and loading of cargoes of supply ships, colliers, and tankers and with the upkeep and operation of fueling plants. ; He has charge of all that relates to the supply of funds for Navy disbursing officers and the payment for articles and services for which contract and agreement have been made by proper authority. : . The Paymaster General of the Navy is responsible for the keeping of the property and money accounts of the Naval Establishment, including accounts of all manufac- turing and operating expense at navy yards and stations; the direction of naval cost accounting and the audit of property returns from ships and stations. NAVY Offictal Duties. fv He prepares the estimates for the appropriations for freight, fuel, provisions, and clothing for the Navy, the maintenance of the supply, accounting, and disbursing departments at navy yards and stations, and for the pay of all officers and enlisted men of the Navy. He originates the details to duty of officers of the supply corps. BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS. The duties of the Bureau of Aeronautics comprise all that relates to designing building, fitting out, and repairing Naval and Marine Corps aircraft, except that the bureau recommends to each bureau of the Navy Department the nature and priority of experimental development and production of aeronautic material under that bureau’s cognizance. When designs are to be prepared for new types of aircraft the Bureau of Aeronautics has duties, within its cognizance, similar to those assigned to other bureaus of the department. The bureau furnishes information covering all aeronautic planning, operations, and administration that may be necessary to the administration of the Navy Department. The bureau makes recommendations to the Bureau of Navigation for the details of officers for duty in connection with aeronautics, for the distribution in the various ratings of the enlisted personnel required for aeronautic activities, and on all matters pertaining to aeronautic train- ‘ing; to the Major General Commandant, United States Marine Corps, for the details of officers for duty in connection with aeronautics, and for the distribution in the various ratings of the enlisted personnel required for aeronautic activities; also rela- tive to all matters pertaining to aeronautic training. The bureau has cognizance over the policy of the upkeep and operation of: (a) Naval aircraft factories; b) Naval aeronautic experimental stations; ¢) Helium plants, in so far as they come under naval cognizance. The experimental and test work of the other bureaus of the Navy Department affecting aeronautic material is made in accordance with requests of the Bureau of Aeronautics. The installation of ordnance material in aircraft and the repairs of public works utilities at aeronautic shore establishments, as well as their upkeep and operation, are under the cognizance of the Bureau of Aeronautics. OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY, The Judge Advocate General of the Navy shall, in accordance with the statute creating his office, have cognizance of all matters of law arising in the Navy Depart- Bes and shall perform such other duties as may be assigned him by the Secretary of the Navy. The duties of the Judge Advocate General of the Navy shall be to revise and report upon the legal features of and to have recorded the proceedings of all courts-martial - courts of inquiry, boards of investigation and inquest, and boards for the examina- tion of officers for retirement and promotion in the naval service; to prepare charges and specifications for courts-martial and the necessary orders convening courts-martial in cases where such courts are ordered by the Secretary of the Navy; to prepare courts- martial orders promulgating the final action of the reviewing authority in general courts-martial cases, except those of enlisted men convened by officers other than the Secretary of the Navy; to prepare the necessary orders convening courts of inquiry and boards for the examination of officers for promotion and retirement, for the exami- nation of all candidates for appointment as officers in the naval service other than midshipmen, and in the Naval Reserve Force, where such courts and boards are ordered by the Secretary of the Navy, and to conduct all official correspondence relating to such courts and boards. It shall be the duty of the Judge Advocate General of the Navy to examine and report upon all questions relating to rank and precedence, to promotions and retire- ment, and to the validity of the proceedings in courts-martial cases, all matters relat- ing to the supervision and control of naval prisons and prisoners, including prisoners of war; the removal of the mark of desertion; the correction of records of service of the naval personnel; certification of discharge in true name; pardons; the interpre- tation of statutes; references to the general accounting officers of the Treasury; pro- ceedings in the civil courts by or against the Government or its officers; preparation of advertisements, proposals, and contracts; insurance; patents; the sufficiency of official contracts, and other bonds and guaranties; claims by or against the Govern- ment; and to conduct the correspondence respecting the foregoing duties, including the preparation for submission to the Attorney General of all questions which the Secretary of the Navy may direct to be so submitted. 348 Congressional Directory. INTERIOR It shall be the duty of the Judge Advocate General of the Navy to examine and report upon all bills and resolutions introduced in Congress and referred to the depart- ment for report; to draft all proposed legislation arising in the Navy Department; and to conduct the correspondence in connection with these duties. The study of international law is assigned to the Office of the Judge Advocate Gen- eral of the Navy. He shall examine and report upon questions of international law as may be required. He shall be charged, under the special instructions of the Secretary of the Navy, with the searching of titles, purchase, sale, transfer, and other questions affecting lands and buildings pertaining to the Navy, and with the care and preservation of all muniments of title to land acquired for naval uses. HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS. The Major General Commandant of the Marine Corps is responsible to the Secre- tary of the Navy for the general efficiency, discipline, and operations of the corps in all branches of its activities. The headquarters is organized as the office of the Major General Commandant and three staff departments. The assistant to the Major General Commandant has general supervision over recruiting; assignments and complements of officers and enlisted men; constabulary detachments; passports; transportation on naval transports; Marine Corps Institute and post schools (other than military). The director of operations and training, under the Major General Commandant, has cognizance of military intelligence, operations, training, matériel, and aviation. The adjutant and inspector has general supervision of claims of officers and en- listed men, courts-martial, courts of inquiry, investigations, etc.; historical archives; inspections; post exchanges; appointment, examination, promotion, reduction, and retirement of commissioned and warrant officers; military records; discharges; pro- “motion and reduction of noncommissioned officers; casualties; insignia; Marine Corps Reserve. The paymaster has supervision of questions relating to pay, allowances, bonus, gratuities, mileage, travel expenses, allotments, insurance, etc., to officers and en- listed men; deficiency and other estimates for pay, etc. The quartermaster has supervision of matters relating to military supplies for the Marine Corps, including subsistence ashore; construction, material, and labor; pays all expenses of the corps except those pertaining to paymaster’s department; has juris- diction over quarters, barracks, and other public buildings provided for officers and enlisted men, and repairs, alterations, and improvements thereto; vehicles for the transportation of troops and supplies; public animals and their equipment; furnishes means of transportation for movement of troops; prints and issues blank forms for the Marine Corps. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR. , SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the supervision of public business relating to the General Land Office, Reclamation Service, Geological Survey, Bureau of Mines, Office of Indian Affairs, Patent Office, Bureau of Pensions, Bureau of Educa- tion, National Park Service, and certain hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. By authority of the President the Secretary of the Interior has general supervision over the work of constructing the Government railroad in the Territory of Alaska. He also exercises certain other powers and duties in relation to the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii. He is authorized by Executive order of March 20, 1920, to adjust, liquidate, and pay claims against the United States Fuel Administration. The Secretary of the Interior is charged with the adjust- ment of claims filed under the war minerals relief act (sec. b, act of Mar. 2, 1919, 40 Stat., 1274), for losses incurred in producing or preparing to produce manganese, chrome, pyrites, or tungsten during the war. He is a member of the Federal Power Commission under act of Congress approved June 10, 1920, and of the National Forest Reservation Commission under act of Congress approved March 1, 1911. Tr — INTERIOR Official Duties. 349 FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. In the absence of the Secretary, the First Assistant Secretary becomes Acting Secretary. He is charged with the supervision of the business of the General Land Office, including cases appealed to the Secretary of the Interior from decisions of that bureau involving public lands; applications for easements or rights of way for reser- voirs, ditches, railroads, and telephone lines; applications for oil, gas, coal, and potash prospecting permits and leases; selections of public land dnder grants made by Con- gress to aid in the construction of railroads and wagon roads, for reclamation, and for the benefit of educational and other public institutions, etc. The Reclamation Serv- ice and National Park Service are under his supervision; also matters from all bureaus relating to public lands. He is the budget officer of the department. From time to time duties in connection with the affairs of other bureaus of the department are assigned to him. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR. The Assistant Secretary has general supervision over all matters concerning the Patent Office, the Pension Office (including appeals from the decisions of the Com- - missioner of Pensions), Indian Office matters excepting those affecting the disposal of the public domain, the Bureau of Education, Territorial atfairs of Alaska and Hawaii, the execution of contracts and the approval of vouchers covering expenditures of money for St. Elizabeths Hospital, Freedmen’s Hospital, and Howard University; and various miscellaneous matters over which the department has jurisdiction. He also considers proposed legislation pertaining to matters under his supervision. Du- ties in connection with the affairs of other bureaus are assigned to him from time to time. : CHIEF CLERK. As the chief executive officer of the department and the administrative head of the divisions of the Office of the Secretary the chief clerk has supervision over the clerks and other employees of the department, enforces the general regulations of the department, and has supervision of the several buildings occupied by the de- partment. He also supervises the classification and compilation of all estimates of appropriations, and has general supervision of expenditures from appropriations for contingent expenses for the department, including stationery and postage on mail addressed to: postal-union countries. The detailed work relating to corporate sureties on bonds, St. Elizabeths Hospital and Freedmen’s Hospital, Howard Uni- versity, the admission of attorneys and agents to practice and disharments from practice, and miscellaneous matters is done in his office. During the temporary ab- sence of the Secretary and the Assistant Secretaries he may be designated by the Secretary to sign official papers and documents. / COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE. The Commissioner of the General Land Office is charged with the survey, manage- ment, and disposition of the public lands, the adjudication of conflicting claims relat- ing thereto, the granting of railroad and other rights of way, easements, the issuance of patents for lands, and with furnishing certified copies of land patents and of rec- ords, plats, and papers on file in his office. In national forests he executes all laws relating to surveying, prospecting, locating, appropriating, entering, reconveying, or patenting of public lands, and to the granting of rights of way amounting to easements. COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS. The Commissioner of Indian Affairs has charge of the Indian tribes of the United States (exclusive of Alaska), their education, lands, moneys, schools, purchase of supplies, and general welfare. COMMISSIONER OF PENSIONS. The Commissioner of Pensions supervises the examination and adjudication of all claims arising under laws passed by Congress granting pensions on account of service in the Army or Navy rendered wholly prior to October 6, 1917, or under a contract of service entered into subsequent to February 9, 1922; claims for reimbursement for the expenses of the last sickness and burial of deceased pensioners; claims for bounty- land warrants based upon military or naval service rendered prior to March 3, 1855, and claims for annuities, refunds, and allowances arising under the act of May 22, 1920, providing for the retirement of employees in the classified civil service. 350 Congressional Directory. INTERIOR COMMISSIONER OF PATENTS, The Commissioner of Patents is charged with the administration of the patent laws, and supervision of all matters relating to the granting of letters patent for inven- tions, and the registration of trade-marks. He is by statute made the tribunal of last resort in the Patent Office, and has appellate jurisdiction in the trial of interference cases, of the patentability of inventions, and of registration of trade-marks.! LY COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION. The Commissioner of Education has charge of the Bureau of Education, which col- lects statistics and general information showing the conditions and progress of educa- tion in the United States and all foreign countries; advises State, county, and local school officers as to the administration and improvement of schools; issues annually a report, a number of bulletins, and miscellaneous publications; issues biennially a biennial survey of education; has charge of the schools for the education of native children in Alaska; supervises the reindeer industry in Alaska; and administers the endowment fund for the support of colleges for the benefit of agriculture and mechanic arts. The commissioner is a member of the Federal Board for Vocational Education, which has charge of the administration of the acts of Congress providing Federal aid for vocational education in the several States and rehabilitation and reeducation for persons maimed in industry. The commissioner is also a member of the Federal Board of Maternity and Infant Hygiene. DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. The Director of the Geological Survey is charged under direction of the Secretary of the Interior with classification of the public lands and the examination of the geologic structure, mineral resources, and mineral products of the national domain. In conformity with this authorization, the Geological Survey has been engaged in making a geologic map of the United States, involving both topographic and geologic surveys, in collecting annually the statistics of mineral production, and in conducting investigations relating to surface and underground waters. i THE RECLAMATION SERVICE. The Reclamation Service, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, is charged with the survey, construction, and operation of irrigation works in the arid States as authorized by the reclamation act of June 17, 1902, and amendments. The executive officer of the service is the director, who has charge of the work of investi- gating, building, operating, and maintaining the works. DIRECTOR OF THE BUREAU OF MINES. The Director of the Bureau of Mines is charged with the investigation of the methods of mining, especially in relation to the safety of minersand the appliances best adapted to prevent accidents, the possible improvement of conditions under which mining operations are carried on, the treatment of ores and other mineral substances, the use of explosives and electricity, the prevention of accidents, the prevention of waste, and the improvement of methods in the production of petroleum and natural gas, and other inquiries and technological investigations pertinent to such industries. He has charge of tests and analyses of coals, lignites, ores, and other mineral fuel substances belonging to or for the use of the United States; supervises the work of the mine inspector for Alaska; and administers the regulations governing the production of coal, oil, gas, and phosphate from lands mined under Government lease. He also has charge of the Government fuel yards for the storage and distribution of fuel for the use of and delivery to all branches of the Federal service and the municipal government in the District of Columbia and such parts thereof as may be situated immediately without the District of Columbia. DIRECTOR OF NATIONAL PARK SERVICE. The Director of the National Park Service is charged with the duty of administer- ing the national parks and national monuments under the jurisdiction of the Interior Department, including the maintenance, improvement, and protection of the parks and monuments, and the control of the public operators conducting utilities therein for the care and comfort of the visitors. 1 Appeals lie from his decisions to the United States Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia. | § { | Ee een A a AGRICULTURE Official Dutres. : 351 BOARD OF INDIAN COMMISSIONERS. * The Board of Indian Commissioners, created in 1869, is a body of unpaid citizens, appointed by the President, who maintain an office in Washington, for the expenses of which and of travel Congress appropriates. The board is not a bureau or division of any department, but is purposely kept reasonably independent and afforded opportunities for investigation in order that it may freely express an intelligent and impartial opinion concerning Indian legislation and administration. Its legal duties are to visit and inspect branches of the Indian Service, to cooperate with the Com- missioner of Indian Affairs in the purchase and inspection of Indian supplies, and to report to the Secretary of the Interior, to whom and to the President the board acts in an advisory capacity, with respect to plans of civilizing or dealing with the Indians. ow ALASKAN ENGINEERING COMMISSION. The Alaskan Engineering Commission was created under the act of March 12, 1914, which empowered, authorized, and directed the President to locate, construct, operate, or lease a railroad, or railroads, to connect the interior of Alaska with one or more of the open navigable ports on the coast. Authority was also granted to pur- chase existing railroads, to construct, maintain, and operate telegraph and telephone lines, and to make reservations of public lands in Alaska necessary for the purposes of the railroad. For the execution of this work a commission of three engineers was appointed by the President to make the necessary surveys. They were directed to report to the Secretary of the Interior, under whom the President placed the general adminis- tration of the work. After the completion of the preliminary surveys, the President by Executive order selected the route for the railway from the coast to the interior. Construction of the railway was begun in 1915, under the general supervision of the Secretary of the Interior, and is now in progress. WAR MINERALS RELIEF. The War Minerals Relief Commissioner assists the Secretary of the Interior in the adjustment of claims filed under the war minerals relief act (sec.-5, act of Mar. 2, 1919, 40 Stat., 1274, as amended Nov. 23, 1921), for losses incurred in producing or preparing to produce manganese, chrome, pyrites, or tungsten during the war. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. - SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. The Secretary of Agriculture is charged with the work of promoting agriculture in its broadest sense. He exercises general supervision and control over the affairs of the department and formulates and establishes the general policies to be pursued by its various branches and offices. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE. The. Assistant Secretary of Agriculture becomes Acting Secretary in the absence of the Secretary and assists in the general supervision of the work of the department. The Assistant Secretary is especially charged with general supervision of the extension and publication work of the department. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk has general supervision of clerks and employees; of the order of business of the department and of records of the Secretary’s office; and of expend- itures from, appropriations for miscellaneous expenses, rents, etc. He is responsible for the enforcement of the general regulations of the department and is custodian of buildings. SOLICITOR. The solicitoristhe legal adviser of the Secretary and the heads of the several branches of the department. He directs and supervises all law work of the department. 352 Congressional Directory. AGRICULTURE WEATHER BUREAU. The Weather Bureau has charge of the forecasting of the weather; the issue and display of weather forecasts, and storm, cold-wave, frost, and flood warnings; the gauging and reporting of river stages; the maintenance and operation of the United States Weather Bureau telegraph and telephone lines; the collection and transmission of marine intelligence for the benefit of commerce and navigation; the reporting of temperature and rainfall conditions for agricultural interests; and the taking of such meteorological observations as may be necessary to determine and record the climatic conditions of the United States, including investigations in aerology in the aid of aviation, in seismology, and in volcanology. BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY. The Bureau of Animal Industry has charge of the work of the department relating to the live-stock industry. In general it deals with the investigation, control, and eradication of diseases of animals, the inspection and quarantine of live stock, the inspection of meat and meat products, and with animal husbandry and dairying. BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY. The Bureau of Plant Industry studies plant life in all its relations to agriculture. The scientific work of the bureau is divided into 33 distinct groups, over each of which is placed a scientifically trained officer, who reports directly to the chief and associate chief of the bureau. The work of the bureau is conducted on the project plan, the investigations under each of the offices being arranged by group projects consisting of closely related lines of work, which group projects are further divided into projects. FOREST SERVICE. The Forest Service administers the national forests; studies forest conditions and methods of forest utilization; investigates the mechanical and physical properties of woods and the processes employed in the manufacture of forest products; and gathers information concerning the needs of the various wood-using industries and the rela- tion of forests to the public welfare generally. BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY. The Bureau of Chemistry is concerned with analytical work and investigation under the food and drugs act, questions of agricultural chemistry of public interest, and other chemical investigations referred to it by the Government. BUREAU OF SOILS. The Bureau of Soils investigates the relation of soils to climate and organic life; studies the texture and composition of soils in field and laboratory; maps the soils; studies the cause and means of preventing the rise of alkali in the soils of irrigated districts; the relations of soils to seepage and drainage conditions; and the fertilizer resources of the country. BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY. The Bureau of Entomology studies insects in their economic relation to agricul- ture and agricultural products and to the health of man and animals; experiments with the introduction of beneficial insects; makes tests with insecticides and insecti- cide machinery; and identifies insects sent in by inquirers. BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL ‘SURVEY. The Bureau of Biological Survey has charge of the work of the department relating to the control and conservation of wild birds and mammals and the investigation of their relation to agriculture. It studies their food habits and investigates methods of protecting beneficial species and controlling harmful ones; experiments in fur farming; controls injurious mammals in national forests and on other public domain; makes biological surveys of areas, studies the geographic distribution of wild animals and plants, and maps natural life zones; administers Federal laws relating to inter- state commerce in birds and game; regulates the importation of foreign birds and mammals; administers the Federal migratory-bird treaty act; and supervises national mammal and bird reservations. DIVISION OF ACCOUNTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. This division has charge of the disbursement of public funds appropriated for the Department of Agriculture. nT ) | i Bo, + AGRICULTURE Official Dutres. 353 DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. The Division of Publications has charge of the publication work of the department. It edits manuscripts, prepares illustrations, makes indexes, revises proofs, attends to job printing, and directs the distribution of publications. It prepares motion-picture films illustrating the department’s work and results and distributes them to cooperat- ing agencies for educational purposes; also arranges for their sale to commercial houses. LIBRARY. The department library contains 165,000 books and pamphlets, including an exten- sive collection on agriculture, a large and representative collection on the sciences related to agriculture, and a good collection of standard reference books. Periodicals currently received number 3,000. A dictionary catalogue is kept on cards, which number about 450,000. The librarian has charge of the foreign mailing lists. STATES RELATIONS SERVICE. The States Relations Service represents the Secretary of Agriculture in his rela- tions with the State agricultural colleges and experiment stations, under the acts of Congress granting funds to these institutions for agricultural experiment stations and cooperative extension work in agriculture and home economics, and in carrying out the provisions of acts of Congress making appropriations to this department for farmers’ cooperative demonstration work, investigations relating to agricultural schools, farmers’ institutes, and home economics, and the maintenance of agricul- tural experiment stations in Alaska, Hawaii, Porto Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands. BUREAU OF PUBLIC ROADS. The Bureau of Public Roads administers the Federal aid road act, under which the Government cooperates with the States in improvement of post and national forest roads; studies systems of road management and methods of road building, improvement, and maintenance; details engineers to assist local officials in building model roads; ascertains the location, properties, and value of road materials; builds experimental roads to test substitutes for natural road materials; investigates the comparative effects of motor and horse traffic on roads; cooperates with colleges and experiment stations and with State highway officials; exhibits models showing types of roads, culverts, bridges, and road machines; and conducts irrigation and drainage investigations and studies other rural engineering problems. BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS. (Formerly Bureau of Markets and Crop Estimates and Office of Farm Management and Farm Economics.) The Bureau of Markets and Crop Estimates and the Office of Farm Management and Farm Economics were united in one bureau on July 1, 1922, by the act making appropriations for the Department of Agriculture for the fiscal year 1923. This bureau conducts investigations in the costs of production and marketing, farm organi- zation, farm financial relations, farm labor, agricultural history and geography, land economics, and the problems of rural life. The bureau also acquires and dissemi- nates information regarding the marketing and distributing of farm and nonmanu- factured food products, and collects, compiles, summarizes, interprets, and makes public statistical data relating to agricultural production. Studies are made of mar- keting methods, conditions, and costs, and with regard to the standardization, trans- portation, handling, and storage of agricultural products. Demonstrational work is conducted in connection with these studies. Reports are issued by the bureau which contain information on the supply, commercial movement, disposition, and market prices of fruits and vegetables, live stock and meats, dairy and poultry products, and hay, feed, and seed. Information is also secured and published with regard to the supply of and demand for certain agricultural products in foreign countries. Summaries and analyses covering this information are published in the weekly Weather, Crops, and Markets, which embodies current statistics relating to the acreage, yield, condition, and production of crops, numbers of live stock, and value of farm products; also a weekly review of weather conditions, temperature, and precipitation. Other special reports are issued at intervals. A market inspection service on fruits and vegetables is now available at many of the principal producing and receiving centers of the country and on butter at five of the principal terminal markets. Regulatory work is performed in connection with the enforcement of the 24 24786°—67-4—2p ED 854 Congressional Darectory. COMMERCE United States cotton futures act, the United States grain standards act, the standard container act, and in connection with the administration of the United States ware- house act. The chief of the bureau acts as liquidating officer of the wool section of the War Industries Board. Center Market in the city of Washington is also operated by this bureau. PACKERS AND STOCKYARDS ADMINISTRATION. The Packers and Stockyards Administration was created under the act of August 15, 1921, known asthe ‘‘ Packers and stockyards act, 1921,” and assists the Secretary of Agriculture in the enforcement of that law. GRAIN FUTURES ADMINISTRATION. The Grain Futures Administration was created under the act of September 21, 1922, known as ‘‘The grain futures act,”’ and assists the Secretary of Agriculture in the enforcement of that law. INSECTICIDE AND FUNGICIDE BOARD. The Insecticide and Fungicide Board, created December 22, 1910, assists the Sec- retary of Agriculture in the enforcement of the insecticide act of 1910. FEDERAL HORTICULTURAL BOARD. The Federal Horticultural Board, created August 21, 1912, assists the Secretary of Agriculture in the enforcement of the plant quarantine act of August 20, 1912. FIXED NITROGEN RESEARCH LABORATORY. The principal function of the Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory consists in conducting researches on methods of fixing the nitrogen of the atmosphere for agri- cultural, industrial, and military purposes. This includes the improvement of the existing processes (cyanamid, haber, arc, and cyanide), the discovery and develop- ment of new processes, and the study of the transformation of nitrogen compounds from one form to another. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE. SECRETARY OF COMMERCE, The Secretary of Commerce is charged with the work of promoting the commerce of the United States and its mining, manufacturing, shipping, fishery, and transportation interests. His duties also comprise the administration of the Lighthouse Service and the aid and protection to shipping thereby; the taking of the census, and the collection and publication of statistical information connected therewith; the making of coast and geodetic surveys; the collecting of statistics relating to foreign and domestic commerce; the inspection of steamboats, and the enforcement of laws relating thereto for the protection of life and property; the. supervision of the fisheries as administered by the Federal Government; the supervision and control of the Alaskan fur-seal, salmon, and other fisheries; the jurisdiction over merchant vessels, their registry, licensing, measurement, entry, clearance, transfers, movement of their cargoes and passengers, and laws relating thereto, and to seamen of the United States; the regulation of the enforcement and execution of the act of Congress relating to the equipment of ocean steamers with apparatus and operators for wireless communication; the custody, construction, maintenance, and application of standards of weights and measurements; the gathering and supplying of informa- tion regarding industries and markets for the fostering of manufacturing; and the formulation (in conjunction with the Secretaries of Agriculture and the Treasury) of regulations for the enforcement of the food and drugs act of 1906 and the insecticide act i 1910. He has power to call upon other departments for statistical data obtained by them. For the proper accomplishment of any or all of the aforesaid work, it is by law provided that all duties performed, and all the powers and authority possessed or exercised, at the date of the creation of said department, by the head of any execu- tive department in and over any bureau, office, officer, board, branch, or division of the public service transferred to said department, or any business arising therefrom or pertaining thereto, or in relation to the duties and authority conferred by law upon such bureau, office, officer, board, branch, or division of the public service, whether of appellate or advisory character or otherwise, are vested in and exercised by the Secretary of Commerce. . , | \ ¥ ¢ Eon COMMERCE Official Dutres. 355 The act creating the Department of Labor, approved March 4, 1913, changed the name of the Department of Commerce and Labor to the Department of Commerce. Under the terms of this act the Bureau of Labor, Bureau of Immigration, Division of Naturalization, and Children’s Bureau were detached from the Department of Com- merce and Labor and organized as the new Department of Labor. Upon the organization of the Federal Trade Commission, created by the act approved September 26, 1914, the Bureau of Corporations ceased to exist as a bureau of the Department of Commerce and became a part of the Federal Trade Commission, and all pending investigation and proceedings of the former bureau were taken over by the Federal Trade Commission. It is his further duty to make such special investigations and furnish such infor- mation to the President or Congress as may be required by them on the foregoing subject matters, and to make annual reports to Congress upon the work of said department. ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF COMMERCE. The Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secre- tary or may be required by law. In the absence of the Secretary he acts as head of the department. CHIEF® CLERK. The chief clerk is charged with the general supervision of the clerks and employees - of the department; the enforcement of the general regulations of the department; the superintendency of all buildings occupied by the department in the District of Columbia other than those occupied by the Bureau of Fisheries, the Bureau of Standards, and the Coast and Geodetic Survey; the direction of the watchmen, engineers, mechanics, firemen, laborers, and other employees connected with the care and protection of the department’s buildings other than those of the bureaus above mentioned; the supervision of the library and the stock and shipping section of the department; the care of all vehicles employed; the general supervision of all expenditures from the appropriations for contingent expenses and rent; the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail; the custody of the department’s seal and the records and files of the Secretary’s Office; the answering of calls from Congress ° and elsewhere for copies of papers and records; and the discharge of all business of the Secretary’s Office not otherwise assigned. DISBURSING CLERK. The disbursing clerk is charged by the Secretary of Commerce with the duty of preparing all requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations for the Department of Commerce to disbursing clerks and special disbursing agents charged with the disbursement of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relating to the advance and expenditure of all items of appropriations. He has charge of the issuing, recording, and accounting for Government requests for transportation issued to officers of the department for official travel; the audit and payment of all vouchers and accounts submitted from the various offices, bureaus, and services of the department (except the Coast and Geodetic Survey and those services having special disbursing agents); and the general accounting of the depart- ment. APPOINTMENT DIVISION. The Chief of the Appointment Division is charged by the Secretary of Commerce with the supervision of mattérs relating to appointments, transfers, promotions, reductions, removals, and all other changes in the personnel, including applica- tions for positions and recommendations concerning the same, and the correspond- ence connected therewith; the preparation and submission to the Secretary of all questions affecting the personnel of the department in its relations to the civil-service law and rules; the preparation of nominations sent to the Senate and of commissions and appointments of all officers and employees of the department; the preparation - of official bonds; the compilation of statistics in regard to the personnel, including material for the Official Register, and the custody of oaths of office, records pertain- ing to official bonds, service records of officers and employees, correspondence and reports relating to the personnel; reports of bureau officers resnecting the efficiency of employees, and records relating to leaves of absence. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS. ’ The Chief of the Division of Publications is charged by the Secretary of Commerce with the conduct of all business the department transacts with the Government Printing Office; the general supervision of printing, including the editing and prepara- tion of copy, illustrating and binding, the distribution of publications, and the main- 356 Congressional Directory. COMMERCE tenance of mailing lists. The advertising done by the department is in his charge. He also keeps a record of all expenditures for the publishing work of the department and conducts the correspondence it entails. DIVISION OF SUPPLIES. Under the direction of the chief clerk the Chief of the Division of Supplies has per- sonal supervision of all the work incident to the purchase and distribution of supplies for the department proper and for the services of the department outside of Washing- ton, and of the keeping of detailed accounts of all expenditures from the appropriation for contingent expenses of the department. He receives, verifies, and preserves the annual returns of property from the offices and bureaus of the department which are supplied from the contingent appropriation, and examines and reports on the property returns of all other bureaus and services. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. The taking of the decennial census, which covers the subjects of population, agri- culture, manufactures, mines and quarries (including oil and gas wells), and forestry and forest products, is the chief function of the bureau. During the years intervening between decennial censuses, statistics are collected at 10-year intervals in regard to dependent, defective, and delinquent classes; wealth, public indebtedness and expenditures, and taxation; religious bodies; and transportation by water. The census . of agriculture not only forms a part of each decennial census, but is also to be taken in each mid-decennial year. The census of manufactures is likewise included in the decennial census, and in addition has been taken in each mid-decennial year; in the future, however, a biennial inquiry is to be made in regard to the products of manufacturing industries. The censuses of electric light and power plants, street and electric railways, and telephones and telegraphs are taken quinquennially. At biennial intervals the Official Register of the United States is compiled and pub- lished. Annual inquiries are made relating to births, deaths, finances of cities having over 30,000 inhabitants, ‘‘ general” statistics of such cities, and finances of - States. At quarterly intervals the bureau collects and publishes statistics as to stocks of leaf tobacco in the hands of manufacturers and dealers. At monthly intervals statistics are published relating to cotton supply, consumption, and distribution; to cotton seed and its products; and to hides, skins, and leather; and at approxi- mately semimonthly intervals during the ginning season reports are issued showing the amounts of cotton ginned to specified dates. In addition to conducting the vari- ous inquiries specifically provided for by law, the Bureau of the Census from time to time makes such special and miscellaneous investigations as may be ordered by Con- gress, the President, or the Secretary of Commerce. BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE. The Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce is charged by law with the duty of “developing the various manufacturing industries of the United States and markets for their products at home and abroad, by gathering and publishing useful information, or by any other available method.” In carrying out this function of gathering information, advantage is taken of the relations of the bureau with many other branches of the Federal service. Use is made especially of the Consular Service, through the Department of State, to obtain reports on the trade of foreign countries gnd opportunities for the sale abroad of articles produced in the United States. This material is edited in the bureau and distributed to the commercial public by means of the weekly Commerce Reports, and by means of special bulletins and pamphlets and confidential circulars or letters. The bureau directs the commercial attaché service in studies of foreign markets for American goods. The attachés are resident representatives abroad, who devote all their time to the study of commercial problems, and the results of their investiga- tions are published in Commerce Reports or in monograph form. There are attachés at London, Paris, The Hague, Copenhagen, Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, Peking, Tokyo, Rome, Madrid, Mexico City, Santiago, Berlin, Athens, Brussels, Habana, Lima, and Warsaw. There are also resident trade commissioners at Bucharest, Con- stantinople, Johannesburg, Melbourne, Prague, Riga, Shanghai, Vienna, and Vladi- vostok. The bureau is also equipped with a corps of special agents—trained experts in par- ticular lines—who make detailed, specialized investigations that could not be made by ‘nontechnical specialists, such as the commercial attachés and consuls. The reports of these agents are published in Commerce Reports or as monographs. A special staff at the bureau supervises this work. : ¢ — a COMMERCE : Offictal Duties. 357 In connection with its trade promotion work the bureau maintains a Division of Foreign Tariffs, where information in regard to customs tariffs and regulations of foreign countries is compiled in compliance with specific requests, as well as for publication in Commerce Reports and separate monographs. In addition to infor- mation in regard to foreign customs tariffs, the bureau also furnishes information regarding patent and trade-mark laws of foreign countries, consular regulations, treatment of commercial travelers and their samples, pure food and drug laws, em- bargoes, contraband, and similar restrictive measures. Statistical information in regard to United States imports and exports is received by the bureau in monthly and quarterly returns from the collectors of customs, show- ing the articles imported and exported and the countries from which articles are imported and to which articles are exported. These statistics are printed first in the Monthly Summary of Foreign Commerce and widely distributed. Very detailed import statistics are published quarterly. Annual statistics of our foreign trade are published in detail in Commerce and Navigation of the United States. The research division handles the trade statistics of foreign countries. Thus there is concentration of work on United States and foreign trade statistics in the one bureau. The Statisti- cal Abstract of the United States presents in condensed form statements regarding the commerce, production, industries, population, finance, etc., of the United States and a statement of the commerce of the principal foreign countries. Commodity divisions, manned by technical experts, put the resources of the Gov-’ ernment at the disposal of a number of basic industries in the extension of their foreign trade. Services to the following industries are in operation: Agricultural implements, automotive products, electrical equipment, foodstuffs, fuel, iron and steel, leather, lumber, machinery, paper, rubber and rubber products, shoes, textiles, specialties, and transportation. Through these channels the different industries are able to secure Government aid in the solution of their export problems; also valuable information, suggestions, and trade SPDenn sien from the Government’s 600 trade representatives in all parts of the world. Information is also furnished concerning the commercial laws of foreign countries, the taxation of American firms doing business abroad, formalities in connection with bankruptcy proceedings in foreign countries, powers of attorney, etc. An active trade directory of business houses and prospective buyers and agents all over the world is maintained for the benefit of American manufacturers and exporters. Specific opportunities for the sale of goods abroad and similar matters of this character are presented through Commerce Reports and confidential circulars to those American firms whose names are recorded in the Exporters’ Index. : The distribution work of the bureau has been greatly facilitated by the establish- ment of district offices in New York, Boston, Chicago, St. Louis, New Orleans, Manila (P. 1.), San Francisco, and Seattle. These offices expedite the distribution of commercial information and establish closer relations between Government and private agencies interested in the extension of foreign trade. Arrangements have also been made with commercial organizations in other cities to establish cooperative branch offices, which will serve the same pur- poses as the bureau’s own district offices. Such cooperative offices have been estab- lished in Akron, Atlanta, Baltimore, Bridgeport (Conn.), Chattanooga, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dallas, Dayton, El Paso, Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Mil- waukee, Newark, Norfolk and Newport News, Omaha, Pensacola, Philadelphia, Pitts- burgh, Portland (Oreg.), Richmond, Rochester, and Syracuse. BUREAU OF STANDARDS. The functions of the Bureau of Standards are as follows: The custody of the stand- - ards; the comparison of the standards used in scientific investigations, engineering, manufacturing, commerce, and educational institutions with the standards adopted or recognized by the Government; the construction, when necessary, of standards, their multiples and subdivisions; the testing and calibration of standard measuring apparatus; the solution of problems which arise in connection with standards; the determination of physical constants and properties of materials, when such. data are of great importance to scientific or manufacturing interests and are not to be obtained of sufficient accuracy elsewhere; and other investigations as authorized by Congress. The bureau is authorized to exercise its functions for the Government of the United States, for any State or municipal government within the United States, or for any scientific society, educational institution, firm, corporation, or individual within the United States engaged in manufacturing or other pursuits requiring the use of stand- ards or standard measuring instruments. For all comparisons, calibrations, tests, or investigations, except those performed for the Government of the United States or State governments, a reasonable fee will be charged. corer 358 ~~ Congressional Directory. COMMERCE BUREAU OF FISHERIES. The work of the Bureau of Fisheries comprises (1) the propagation of useful food fishes, including lobsters, oysters, and other shellfish, and their distribution to suite able waters; (2) the inquiry into the causes of decrease of food fishes in the lakes, rivers, and coast waters of the United States, the study of the waters of the coast and interior in the interest of fish culture, and the investigation of the fishing grounds of the Atlantic, Gulf, and Pacific coasts, with the view of determining their food resources and the development of the commercial fisheries; (3) the study of the methods of the fisheries and of the preservation and utilization of fisheries products, and the collection and compilation of statistics of the fisheries; (4) the administration of the salmon fisheries of Alaska, the fur-seal herd on the Pribilof Islands, and the care of the native inhabitants of those islands; (5) administration of the law for the protection of sponges off the coast of Florida. BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES. The United States Lighthouse Service is charged with the establishment and maintenance of aids to navigation, and with all equipment and work incident thereto, on the sea and lake coasts of the United States, and on the rivers of the United States so far as specifically authorized by law, and on the coasts of all other territory under the jurisdiction of the United States, with the exception of the Philippine Islands and Panama. The bureau publishes Light Lists and Buoy Lists, giving information regarding all aids to navigation maintained by the Lighthouse Service; it also publishes each week, jointly with the Coast and Geodetic Survey, Notices to Mariners, giving the changes in lights, buoys, etc. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY. The Coast and Geodetic Survey is charged with the survey of the coasts of the United States and coasts under the jurisdiction thereof and the publication of charts covering said coasts. This includes base measure, triangulation, topography, and hydrography along said coasts; the survey of rivers to the head of tidewater or ship navigation; deep-sea soundings, temperature, and current observations along said coasts and throughout the Gulf and Japan streams; magnetic observations and researches, and the publication of maps showing the variations of terrestrial mag- netism; gravity research; determination of heights; the determination of geographic positions by astronomic observations for latitude, longitude, and azimuth, and by triangulation, to furnish reference points for State surveys. ~The results obtained are published in annual reports and in special publications; charts upon various scales, including sailing charts, general charts of the coast, and harbor charts; tide tables issued annually in advance; Coast Pilots, with sailing directions covering the navigable waters; Notices to Mariners (published jointly by Coast and Geodetic Survey and Bureau of Lighthouses), issued weekly and contain- ing current information necessary for safe navigation; catalogues of charts and publi- cations; and such other special publications as may be required to carry out the organic law governing the survey. BUREAU OF NAVIGATION. The Bureau of Navigation is charged with general superintendence of the com- mercial marine and merchant seamen of the United States, except so far as super- vision is lodged with other officers of the Government. It is specially charged with the decision of all questions relating to the issue of registers, enrollments, and licenses of vessels and the filing of those documents, with the supervision of laws relating to the admeasurement, letters, and numbers of vessels, and with the final decision of questions concerning the collection and refund of tonnage taxes. It is empowered to change the names of vessels, and prepares annually a list of vessels of the United States. The commissioner also investigates the operation of the laws relative to navigation, and annually reports to the Secretary of Commerce such particulars as may in his judgment admit of improvement or require amendment. In addition to the above statutory duties the bureau is charged, under direction of the Secretary of Commerce, with the enforcement, through collectors and sur- veyors of customs and radio inspectors, of the navigation and steamboat-inspection laws, and the laws governing radio communication, and the consideration of action to be taken on fines, penalties, and forfeitures incurred under those laws; administrative examination of accounts of collectors, surveyors of customs, and shipping commis- sioners covering fines, penalties, and forfeitures; services to vessels; navigation fees; amounts collected on account of decease of passengers, tonnage-tax collections, refunds; shipment and discharge of seamen, etc. £5 & & LABOR Official Dutres. 359 STEAMBOAT-INSPECTION SERVICE. The Steamboat-Inspection Service is charged with the duty of inspecting vessels, the licensing of the officers of vessels, and the administration of the laws relating to such vessels and their officers for the protection of life and property. The blue prints or drawings of water tube and coil boilers used in vessels of the American merchant marine are passed upon by the board of supervising inspectors, while designs of marine boilers of other types are passed upon by the local inspectors having original jurisdiction. All material subject to tensile strain used in the con- struction of marine boilers is required to be tested by an inspector of the Steamboat- Inspection Service, so that not only is the material but the design of a boiler under the closest scrutiny. The inspectors of hulls look after the examination of the hulls of vessels and of life-saving equipment, such as life-preservers, lifeboats, life rafts, davits, etc., and once at least in each year vessels of the American merchant marine are required by law to be inspected by the Steamboat-Inspection Service, and ex- cursion steamers are reinspected not less than three times during the year in addition to the regular annual inspection. The local inspectors are the officers who examine applicants for licenses for the deck department and engineer department of merchant ships. These examinations are conducted frequently, and at such times as to be most convenient to the applicants for licenses, and, as the result of this close super- vision over the licensing of officers, a very high standard is maintained. The Steam- boat-Inspection Service also is required by law to certificate the able seamen who form the crew of merchant vessels, and the inspectors of the service, together with other Government officers especially detailed for that purpose, also certificate the life- boat men. Not the least important of the work of the local inspectors is the investi- gation of violations of the steamboat-inspection laws. In such instances the boards of local inspectors have quasi judicial authority, and these boards have conferred upon them the authority and the right to suspend or revoke the licenses of officers who have been found guilty of violating these laws, negligence, inattention to duty, etc. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. THE SECRETARY OF LABOR. The Secretary of Labor is charged with the duty of fostering, promoting, and devel- oping the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, improving their working conditions, and advancing their opportunities for profitable employment. He has power under the law to act as mediator and to appoint commissioners of conciliation in labor disputes whenever in his judgment the interests of industrial peace may require it to be done. He has authority to direct the collecting and collating of full and complete statistics of the conditions of labor and the products and distribution of the products of the same and to call upon other departments of the Government for statistical data and results obtained by them and to collate, arrange, and publish such statistical information so obtained in such manner as to him may seem wise. His duties also comprise the gathering and publication of information regarding labor interests and labor controversies in this and other countries; the supervision of the immigration of aliens, and the enforcement of the laws relating thereto, and to the exclusion of Chinese; the direction of the administration of the naturalization laws; the direction of the work of investigating all matters pertaining to the welfare of chil- dren and child life and to cause to be published such results of these investigations as he may deem wise and appropriate. The law creating the Department of Labor provides that all duties performed and all power and authority possessed or exercised by the head of any executive depart- ment at the time of the passage of the said law, in and over any bureau, office, officer, board, branch, or division of the public service by said act transferred to the Depart- ment of Labor, or any business arising therefrom or pertaining thereto, or in relation to the duties performed by and authority conferred by law upon such bureau, officer, office, board, branch, or division of the public service, whether of an appellate or advisory character or otherwise, are vested in and exercised by the head of the said Department of Labor. The Secretary of Labor is also given authority and directed to investigate and report to Congress a plan-of coordination of the activities, duties, and powers of the office of the Secretary of Labor with the activities, duties, and powers of the present bureaus, commissions, and departments, so far as they relate to labor and its conditions, in order to harmonize and unify such activities, duties, and powers, with a view to additional legislation to further define the duties and powers of the Department of Labor, and to make such special investigations and reports to the President or Congress as may be required by them or which he may deem necessary, and to report annually to Congress upon the work of the Department of Labor. 360 Congressional Directory. LABOR ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF LABOR. The Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the Secre- tary or may be required by law. He becomes the Acting Secretary of Labor in the absence of the Secretary. CHIEF CLERK. The chief clerk is charged with the general supervision of the clerks and employees of the department; the enforcement of the general regulations of the department; the superintendency of all buildings occupied by the department in the District of Co- lumbia; the general supervision of all expenditures from the appropriations for con- tingent expenses and rents; the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail; and the discharge of all business of the Secretary’s office nct otherwise assigned. DISBURSING CLERK. The disbursing clerk is charged by the Secretary of Labor with the duty of prepar- ing all requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations for the Depart- ment of Labor to disbursing clerks and special disbursing agents charged with the disbursement of public funds; the keeping of appropriation ledgers relating to the advance and expenditure of all items of appropriations. He has charge of the issu- ing, recording, and accounting for Government requests for transportation issued to officers of the department for official travel; the audit and payment of all vouchers and accounts submitted from the various offices, bureaus, and services of the depart- ment; the general accounting of the department; and the accounting for all naturaliza- tion receipts received under the provisions of the act of June 29, 1906. APPOINTMENT CLERK. The appointment clerk has charge of all clerical work incident to appointments which are made under the jurisdiction of the department. He is also the custodian of oaths of office, bonds of officers, personnel files, and efficiency reports. DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS AND SUPPLIES. The Chief of the Division of Publications and Supplies is charged by the Secretary of Labor with the conduct of all business the department transacts with the Gov- ernment Printing Office; the general supervision of printing, including the editing and preparation of copy, illustrating and binding, the distribution of publications, and the maintenance of mailing lists. All blank books and blank forms and the printed stationery of all kinds used by the bureaus and offices of the department in Washington and the various outside services of the department are in his cus- tody and are supplied by him. The advertising done by the department is in his charge. He also keeps a record of all expenditures for the publishing work of the department and conducts the correspondence it entails. Under the direction of the chief clerk he has personal supervision of all the work incident to the purchase and distribution of supplies for the department proper and for the services of the department outside of Washington and of the keeping of detailed accounts of all expenditures from the appropriation for contingent expenses of the department. He receives, verifies, and preserves the semiannual returns of property from the offices and bureaus of the department which are supplied from the contingent ap- propriation, and examines and reports on the semiannual property returns of all other bureaus and services. BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS. The Bureau of Labor Statistics is charged with the duty of acquiring and diffusing among the people of the United States useful information on subjects connected with labor in the most general and comprehensive sense of that word, and especially upon its relations to capital, the hours of labor, the earnings of laboring men and women, and the means of promoting their material, social, intellectual, and moral prosperity. It is especially charged to investigate the causes of and facts relating to controver- sies and disputes between employers and employees as they may occur, and which may happen to interfere with the welfare of the people of the several States. It is also authorized, by act of March 2, 1895, to publish a bulletin on the condition of labor in this and other countries, condensations of State and foreign labor reports, facts as to conditions of employment, and such other facts as may be deemed of value to the industrial interests of the United States. This bulletin is issued in a number of BE Ee oS LABOR Official Dues. 361 series, each dealing with a single subject or closely related group of subjects, and the bulletin is published at irregular intervals as matter becomes available for publication. By the act to provide a government for the Territory of Hawaii, as amended, it is made the duty of the bureau to collect and present in quinquennial reports statistical details relating to all departments of labor in the Territory of Hawaii, especially those statistics which relate to the commercial, industrial, social, educational, and sanitary condition of the laboring classes. BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION. The Bureau of Immigration is charged with the administration of the laws relating to immigration and of the Chinese exclusion laws. It supervises all expenditures under the appropriation for ‘‘ Expenses of regulating immigration.” It causes alleged violations of the immigration, Chinese exclusion, and alien contract labor laws to be investigated, and when prosecution is deemed advisable submits evidence for that purpose to the proper United States district attorney. CHILDREN’S BUREAU. The act establishing the bureau provides that it shall investigate and report upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life among all classes of our people, and shall especially investigate the questions of infant mortality, the birth rate, orphanage, juvenile courts, desertion, dangerous occupations, accidents, and diseases of children, employment, and legislation affecting children in the several States and Territories. The bureau is also empowered to publish the results of these Hverlirsiions insuch manner and to such extent as may be prescribed by the Secretary of Labor. BUREAU OF NATURALIZATION. The act approved March 4, 1913, creating the Department of Labor, provided a . Bureau of Naturalization, and that the Commissioner of Naturalization, or, in his absence, the Deputy Commissioner of Naturalization, shall be the administrative officer in charge of the Bureau of Naturalization and of the administration of the natu- ralization laws under the immediate direction of the Secretary of Labor. Under the provisions of the act of June 29, 1906, naturalization jurisdiction was conferred upon approximately 3,500 United States and State courts. The duties of the Bureau of Naturalization are to supervise the work of these courts in naturalization matters, to require an accounting from the clerks of courts for all naturalization fees collected by them, examine and audit these accounts, deposit them in the Treasury of the United States through the disbursing clerk of the department, and render an ac- counting therefor quarterly to the Auditor for the State and other Departments, to conduct all correspondence relating to naturalization, and, through its field officers located in various cities of the United States, to investigate the qualifications of the candidates for citizenship and represent the Government at the hearings of petitions fornaturalization. Initsadministration of the naturalization laws the bureau obtains the cooperation of the public school authorities throughout the United States, receives reports therefrom of courses in citizenship instruction, and, acting as a clearing house of information on civic instruction, it disseminates the information received through- out the public-school system. It stimulates the preparation of candidates for citi- zenship for their new responsibilities by bringing them into contact at the earliest moment with the Americanizing influences of the public-school system, and thereby contributes to the elevation of citizenship standards. In the archives of the bureau are filed duplicates of all certificates of maturalization granted since September 26, 1906, as well as the preliminary papers of all candidates for citizenship filed since that date. WOMEN’S BUREAU. This bureau was established as a statutory bureau under act of June 5, 1920, “An act to establish in the Department of Labor a bureau to be known asthe Women’s Bureau.” Its functions are to formulate standards and policies to promote the welfare of wage- earning women, to improve their working conditions, increase their efficiency, and advance their opportunity for Duiinhle employment. The bureau has authority to investigate and report to the department upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of women in industry. The director of the bureau publishes the results of these inves- tigations in the manner and to such extent as the Secretary of Labor may prescribe. This bureau, formerly known as the Women in Industry Service, organized in July, 1918, was established by an appropriation in the act providing for the sundry civil ex- rr — Nr —— 362 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS penses of the Government for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1919, its function being to serve as a policy-forming and advisory body during the war emergency, whose special duty was to develop in the industries of the country policies and methods for the most effective use of women’s services in production, and safeguarding such employment from injurious conditions. This service was continued by appropriation during the Iollowing year and until it became a statutory bureau by the act of Congress above uoted. g UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE. The purpose of the United States Employment Service is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of the United States by so conserving and distributing their industrial activities as to improve their working conditions and advance their opportunities for profitable employment, in harmony with the general good, with the necessities of war, with the just interests of employers, and with the development in practice of the recognized principle of a common responsibility for production and a common interest in distribution. JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING. The Joint Committee on Printing, consisting of three Members of the Senate and three Members of the House of Representatives, was created by the act of August 3, 1846, and its principal duties are set forth in the printing act approved January 12, 1895. That act gave the committee authority ‘‘to remedy any neglect or delay in the public printing and binding.”’ This authority was extended by section 11 of public act No. 314, Sixty-fiftth Congress, empowering the committee ‘‘to adopt and employ such measures as, in its discretion, may be deemed necessary to remedy any neglect, delay, duplication, or waste in the public printing and binding and the dis- tribution of Government publications.’’ The act of 1895 provides that the committee ‘‘shall have control of the arrange- ment and style of the Congressional Record, and, while providing that it shall be substantially a verbatim report of proceedings, shall take all needed action for the reduction of unnecessary bulk.” The committee is also authorized to provide for the publication of an index to the Record. The Congressional Directory, addresses on deceased Senators and Members, statue proceedings, and similar publications are prepared under the direction of the committee. The Superintendent of Documents publishes the index of public documents upon a plan approved by the committee and indexes such single volumes as it shall direct. "The committee is directed by law to establish rules and regulations for the print- ing of documents and reports in two or more editions. Orders for subsequent editions after two years from date of original order must receive its approval. The committee directs whether extra copies of documents and reports shall be bound in paper or cloth, and prescribes the arrangement and binding of documents for depository libraries. The cost of printing any document or report which can not be properly charged to any other appropriation may, upon order of the committee, be charged to the con- gressional allotment. The committee may order additional copies printed of Government publications within a limit of $200 in cost in any one instance. The act of 1895 also provides that the committee shall exercise the following func- tions in regard to the purchase of paper for the public printing and binding: Fix upon standards of quality, receive proposals and award contracts therefor, appoint a member of the board of paper inspection, determine differences of opinion as to quality, act upon defaults, and authorize open-market purchases. The Public Printer is required by law to advertise for bids for material, other than paper, under the direction of the committee, and to make a return to it on all such contracts awarded by him. The committee may authorize the Public Printer to make certain open-market purchases of material, and, by resolution, it has required him to obtain its approval on all purchases of machinery and equipment in excess of $1,000 in any one instance. : Maps and illustration plates for Government publications are purchased under the direction of the committee whenever the probable cost exceeds $1,200; or, whenever the exigencies of the public sevice do not justify advertisement, the committee may authorize immediate contracts for lithographing and engraving. Printing for the Patent Office is required by law to be done under such regulations and conditions as the committee may prescribe. MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties. 363 Section 11 of public act No. 314, Sixty-fifth Congress, requires all printing, binding, and blank-book work for the Government to be done at the Government Printing Office, except such classes of work as shall be deemed by the Joint Committee on Printing to be urgent or necessary to have done elsewhere than in the District of Columbia for the exclusive use of any field service outside of said District. THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. The Smithsonian Institution was created by act of Congress in 1846, under the terms of the will of James Smithson, an Englishman, who in 1826 bequeathed his fortune to the United States to found, at Washington, under the name of the ‘‘Smith- gonian Institution,” an establishment for the ‘‘increase and diffusion of knowledge among men.” The Institution is legally an establishment, having as its members the President of the United States, the Vice President, the Chief Justice, and the Presi- dent’s Cabinet. Itisgoverned by a Board of Regents consisting of the Vice President, the Chief Justice, three Members of the United States Senate, three Members of the House of Representatives, and six citizens of the United States appointed by joint resolution of Congress. The Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution isits executive officer and the director of its activities. Through the Hodgkins fund, the income of $100,000 of which is for the increase and diffusion of knowledge in regard to the nature and properties of atmospheric air in connection with the welfare of man, grants have been made, publications issued, and medals and prizes awarded. The Institution, in cooperation with the Library of Congress, maintains a scientific library which numbers 360,000 volumes, consisting mainly of the transactions of learned societies and scientific periodicals. UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM. The United States National Museum is the depository of the national collections, It is especially rich in the natural history of America, including zoology, botany. geology, paleontology, archeology, and ethnology, and has extensive series relating to the arts and industries, the fine arts, and American history. Under “history” is included the war collections which have been accumulated during the past two years with the cooperation of the War and Navy Departments. This collection em- braces at the present time between thirty and forty thousand objects, such as field guns, machine guns, small arms, tanks, trucks, airplanes and accessories, models of naval vessels, uniforms and insignia of all kinds of the United States soldier and the Allies, engineering and medical apparatus, and a large collection of captured mate- rial of many of the above classes. NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART. The National Gallery of Art contains the George P. Marsh collection of etchings, engravings, and books on art; the Charles L. Freer collection, comprising numerous paintings, etchings, etc., by Whistler and other American artists, and many examples of Japanese and Chinese art; the Harriet lane Johnston collection, including a number of portraits by British masters; the Ralph Cross Johnson collection of paintings by Italian, French, English, Flemish, and Dutch masters; and the William T. Evans collection of paintings by contemporary American artists. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE. The International Exchange Service is the agency of the United States Government for the exchange of scientific, literary, and governmental publications with foreign Governments, institutions, and investigators. It receives and dispatches about 600,000 pounds of printed matter annually. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY. The Bureau of American Ethnology is engaged in the collection and publication of information relating to the American Indians and the natives of Hawaii. ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY. The Astrophysical Observatory investigates solar radiation and other solar phe- nomena. The work of this observatory is carried on partly in Washington and partly at stations on Mount Wilson, in California; Mount Harqua Hala, near Wenden, in Arizona; and on Mount Montezuma, near Calama, Chile. 364 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK. The National Zoological Park has an area of 167 acres, and is located in the Rock Creek Valley, 2 miles north of the center of Washington. Its collection comprises about 1,500 animals. : INTERNATIONAL CATALOGUE OF SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE. The International Catalogue of Scientific Literature publishes an annual classified index to the literature of science. The organization consists of a central bureau in London and 33 regional bureaus established in, and supported by, the principal countries of the world. That for the United States is supported by an annual appro- priation from Congress, administered by the Smithsonian Institution. THE PAN AMERICAN UNION. (Formerly International Bureau of American Republics.) The Pan American Union is the official international organization of all the Republics of the Western Hemisphere, founded and maintained by them for the purpose of exchanging mutually useful information and fostering commerce, inter- course, friendship, and peace. Itissupported through their joint contributions, each nation annually paying that part of the budget of expenses which its population ears to the total population of all the Republics. Its general control reposes in a governing board made up of the diplomatic representatives in Washington of all the Latin-American Governments and the Secretary of State of the United States, the latter being ex officio chairman thereof. Its executive officers are a Director Gen- eral and an Assistant Director, elected by the board. They in turn are assisted by a trained staff of editors, statisticians, compilers, trade experts, translators, librarians, and clerks. It is strictly international in its scope, purpose, and control, and each nation has equal authority in its administration with each other nation. Its activi- ties and facilities include the following: Publication in English, Spanish, Portuguese, with separate editions, of an illustrated monthly bulletin, which is a record of the progress of all the Republics; publication of handbooks, descriptive pamphlets, com- mercial statements, maps, and special reports relating to each country; correspondence covering all phases of Pan American activities; distribution of every variety of infor- mation helpful in the promotion of Pan American commerce, acquaintance, coopera- tion, and solidarity of interests. It also sets the date, selects the place of meeting, and prepares the programs for the regular Pan American conferences and is custodian of their archives. Its library, known as the Columbus Memorial Library, contains nearly 50,000 volumes, including the official publications, documents, and laws of all the Republics, together with a large collection of maps, and 180,000 subject-index . cards. The Union also possesses a collection of 25,000 photographs, lantern slides, and negatives. Its reading room has upon its tables the representative maga- zines and newspapers of Latin America. Both are open to the public for consulta- tion and study. It occupies and owns buildings and grounds facing Seventeenth Street, between B and C Streets, overlooking Potomac Park on the south and the White House Park on the east. These buildings and grounds, representing an in- vestment of $1,100,000, of which Mr. Andrew Carnegie contributed $850,000 and the American Republics $250,000, are dedicated forever to the use of the Pan American Union as an international organization. The Pan American Union was founded in 1890, under the name of the International Bureau of American Republics, in accord- ance with the action of the First Pan American Conference, held in Washington in 1889-90 and presided over by James G. Blaine, then Secretary of State. It was reor- ganized in 1907 by action of the Third Pan American Conference, held in Rio de Janeiro in 1906, and upon the initiative of Elihu Root, then Secretary of State. At the fourth conference, held at Buenos Aires in 1910, its name was changed from the International Bureau of American Republics to the Pan American Union. All com- munications should be addressed to the Director General Pan American Union, Washington, D. C. GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE. The Comptroller General of the United States is charged by law with the settle- ment and adjustment, independently of the executive departments, of all claims and demands whatever by the Government of the United States or against it, and all accounts whatever in which the Government of the United States is concerned, either as debtor or creditor, and is vested with all powers and duties previously con- ferred or imposed by law upon the former Comptroller of the Treasury and the six Auditors of the Treasury Department; also with the duty of keeping the personalledger Ls MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties. 365 accounts of disbursing and collecting officers; of reporting to Congress delinquency in rendering accounts; and of certifying balances, which are final and conclusive, upon the executive branch of the Government. He may provide for payment of accounts or claims adjusted and settled in the General Accounting Office, through disbursing officers of the several departments and establishmentsinstead of by warrant, and prescribes the forms, systems, and procedure for administrative appropriation and fund accounting in the several departments and establishments and for the admin- istrative examination of fiscal officers’ accounts and claims, reporting to Congress upon the adequacy and efficiency of such administrative examination. He appoints, removes, and fixes the compensation of attorneys and other employees in the General Accounting Office, they performing such duties as may be assigned to them by him; all official acts performed by them, when specially designated therefor by the Comp- troller General, having the same force and effect as though performed by the Comp- troller General in person. He makes such rules and regulations as may be necessary for carrying on the work of the General Accounting Office, including those for the admission of attorneys to practice before it, and furnishes, under the seal of said office for use as evidence, copies of records from books and proceedings thereof in accordance with sections 882 and 886 of the Revised Statutes. Upon the application of disbursing officers, the head of any executive department or other independent establishment not under any of the executive departments, the Comptroller General is required to render his advance decision upon any question involving a payment to be made by them or under them, which decision when ren- dered governs in the settlement of the account involving the paymentinquired about. He reviews, on his own motion, any settled account when in the interest of the United States to do so; also reviews, at his discretion, settlements and construction of stat- utes made by the six respective auditing divisions of the General Accounting Office which superseded the former six auditors’ offices, viz., the Treasury Department, War Department, Interior Department, Navy Department, State and Other Depart- ments, and Post Office Department divisions. He superintends the recovery of all debts finally certified by audited settlements to be due the United States exclusive of those arising under the Postal Service, and the preservation of all accounts, with their vouchers, etc., which have been finally adjusted, and countersigns all warrants authorized by law to be signed by the Secretary of the Treasury. It is also the duty of the Comptroller General to investigate at the seat of govern- ment or elsewhere all matters relating to the reczipt, disbursement, and application of public funds and to make recommendations to the President, when requested by him, and to Congress concerning legislation necessary to facilitate the prompt and accurate rendition and settlement of accounts, and concerning such other matters as he may deem advisable in regard to the receipt, disbursement, and application of public funds and economy or efficiency in public expenditures. He makes investi- gations for Congress as to revenue, appropriations, and expenditures, furnishing assistants from his office to Congress for that purpose, and specially reports to Congress every expenditure or contract made by any department or establishment in any year in violation of law. He also reports to Congress upon the adequacy and effec- tiveness of departmental inspection of the offices and accounts of fiscal officers, and, in accordance with law, has access to and examines any books, documents, papers, or records, except those pertaining to certain funds for purposes of intercourse or treaty with foreign nations, of all departments and establishments for the purpose of securing from time to time information regarding the powers, duties, activities, organization, financial transactions, and methods of business of their respective offices. It is also his duty to furnish to the Bureau of the Budget such information relating to expendi- tures and accounting as it may request from time to time. INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION. The original act to regulate commerce, approved February 4, 1887, provided for a commission consisting of five members. By various amendatory and supplementary enactments the powers of the commission have been increased and the scope of the regulating statute materially widened. Among the more important of these enact- ments are the acts of March 2, 1889; the Elkins Act, approved February 19, 1903; the Hepburn Act, approved June 29, 1906; the Mann-Elkins Act of June 18, 1910; the acts of August 24, 1912, and May 29 and August 9, 1917; and the transportation act, 1920. The number of commissioners was increased under the act of June 29, 1906, to 7 members; under the act of August 9, 1917, to 9 members, and under the transpor- tation act, 1920, to 11. members. The commission appoints a secretary (who is its general administrative and execu- tive officer), an assistant secretary, a chief counsel, and such attorneys, examiners, special agents, and clerks as are necessary to the proper performance of its duties. 366 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS The act to regulate © commerce applies to all common carriers engaged in the trans- portation of oil or other commodities, except water, and except natural or artificial gas, by means of pipe lines, or partly by pipe lines and partly by railroad, or partly’ by pipe lines and partly by water, and to telegraph, telephone, and cable companies (whether wire or wireless) engaged i in sending messages from one State, Territory, or District of the United States to any other State, Territory, or District of the United States, or to any foreign country, and to common carriers engaged in interstate trans- portation of passengers or property wholly by railroad (or partly by railroad and partly by water when both are used under a common control, management, or arrangement for a continuous carriage or shipment); also to express companies and sleeping-car. companies, to bridges, ferries, car floats, and lighters, and all terminal and trans- portation facilities used or necessary in the interstate transportation of persons and property, and all instrumentalities and facilities used in connection with the trans- mission of intelligence and messages by the use of electric energy. The act to regulate commerce requires all rates to be just and reasonable and pro- hibits unjust discrimination and undue or unreasonable preference or advantage in transportation rates or facilities. As amended by the transportation’act, 1920, the act provides that whenever in any investigation, including one instituted upon peti- tion of the carriers concerned, there shall be brought i in issue any rate, fare, charge, classification, regulation, or practice made or imposed by any State authority, or by the President, during the period of Federal control, the authorities of the State or States interested must be notified of the hearings in such cases, and the commis- sion may confer and hold joint hearings with the authorities of the interested States. If, after hearing, the commission finds such rate, fare, charge, classification, regula- tlo., or practice causes undue or unreasonable advantage, preference, or prejudice as between persons or localities in intrastate commerce on the one hand and interstate or foreign commerce on the other hand, or any undue, unreasonable, or unjust dis- crimination against interstate or foreign commerce which is forbidden, it is authorized to prescribe the rate, fare, or charge, or the maximum or minimum, or maximum and minimum, thereafter to be charged, and the classification, regulation, or practice thereafter to be observed, in such manner as, in its judgment, will remove such advantage, preference, prejudice, or discrimination. The act as amended prohibits the charging of a higher rate for a shorter than for a longer haul over the same line in the same direction, the shorter being included within the longer haul, or the charging of any greater compensation as a through route than the aggregate of the intermediate rates subject to theact. Itisprovided, however, that the commission may, in special cases, after investigation, authorize carriers to charge less for longer than for shorter distances, and from time to time prescribe the extent to which such carriers may be relieved, subject, however, to the further proviso that in so doing the commission shall not permit the establish- ment of any charge to or from the more distant point that is not reasonably compensa- tory, or authorize a circuitous rail line, because of such circuity, to meet the charges of a more direct line to or from competitive points, and to maintain higher charges to or from an intermediate point on its line where the length of the haul on the peti- tioning line is not longer than that of the direct line between the competitive points, or authorize any such relief because of merely potential water competition not actually in existence. The commission is authorized to require carriers to establish through routes ‘and joint rates, and it may act summarily in itself establishing, temporarily, through routes when, in its opinion, shortage of equipment, congestion of traffic, or other emergency exists. The amended act requires that divisions of joint rates shall be just, reasonable, and equitable, and authorizes the commission, upon complaint or upon its own initiative, after hearing, to prescribe the just, reasonable, and equitable divisions of such rates, and it may require readjustment of such divisions if it finds they have been unjust, ‘unreasonable, or inequitable in the past. The commission is also authorized to require carriers subject to the act to construct switch connections with lateral branch lines of railroads and private side tracks. The act provides that where two or more through routes and through rates shall have been established shippers shall have the right to designate in writing via which of such through routes the property shall be transported to destination. The act as amended February 28, 1920, gives the commission authority over the routing of traffic after it arrives at the terminus or a junction point of a carrier and is to be there delivered to another carrier in cases where routing instructions have not been given by the shipper. Where diversion of routed freight occurs which is not in compliance with an order, rule, or regulation of the commission, the carrier or carriers so diverting the traffic are jointly and severally liable to the carrier deprived of its right to participate in the haul of the ropert P The i as amended February 28, 1920, authorizes the commission, under certain circumstances, upon such terms and conditions, and subject to such rules and regu- MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties. : = 367 = lations as it may think just and reasonable, to permit the pooling of freights of different and competing railroads, and to divide the aggregate or net proceeds of the earnings of such railroads, and to permit the acquisition by one carrier of the control of another carrier in any manner not involving the consolidation of such carriers into a single system for ownership and operation. It requires the commission to prepare and adopt, as soon as practicable, a plan for the consolidation of railway properties of the continental United States into a limited number of systems. It authorizes carriers, t with the approval of the commission and subject to certain restrictions, to consolidate their properties or any part thereof. It authorizes a consolidation of four express companies, and relieves carriers, when permission is so granted, from the restraints of the antitrust laws so far as may be necessary to effect such consolidations. The | commission is required to make rates which will yield the carriers as a whole, or as a / whole in each group or territory designated by the commission, a fair return upon the : aggregate value of the property used by them in serving the public, and to fix such aggregate values from time to time as may be necessary. The rate of return is fixed : at 5} per cent, to which may be added, in the discretion of the commission, not ex- ceeding one-half of 1 per cent for improvements, betterments, or equipment, for the | two years beginning March 1, 1920, and provides for the disposition of any earnings in excess thereof by distributing one half of them to a reserve fund to be established and maintained by the carrier, the other half of such excess to be paid to the commission for the purpose of establishing and creating a contingent fund. The carrier is author- ized to make certain uses of its reserve fund. The contingent fund created by the commission is to be used as a revolving fund to be administered by the commission, out of which loans may be made to carriers, or transportation equipment and facilities purchased by the commission and leased to the carriers, in accordance with pre- scribed terms and conditions. . The commission has jurisdiction, upon complaint or in a proceeding instituted upon its own initiative, and after full hearing, to determine and prescribe reasonable rates, regulations, and practices, including minimum, and maximum and minimum, rates; and also minimum, and maximum and minimum, proportional rates to and from ports, and to award reparation to injured shippers. The transportation act also provides that actions at law by carriers to recover their charges shall be begun within three years from the time the cause of action accrues and not thereafter, and that complaints seeking reparation shall be instituted within two years from the time the cause of action accrues, except that where the carrier begins an action after the expiration of two years for the recovery of charges in respect of the same service, or within 90 days before such expiration, the proceeding before the commission may | | be begun within 90 days after such action by the carrier is begun. The act also | i provides that a cause of action against the carrier shall be deemed to accrue upon delivery or tender of delivery by the carrier of the property involved. The com- mission may also require carriers to cease and desist from unjust discrimination or undue or unreasonable preferences. By the act as amended February 28, 1920, itis provided that an order of the commission shall continue in force until its further f order, or for a specified period of time, according as shall be prescribed in the order, unless modified or set aside by the commission, or set aside by a court of competent | jurisdiction. : Carriers are required to publish and file rates, rules, and regulations applying to ¥ interstate traffic and are prohibited from engaging in interstate transportation unless such rates, rules, and regulations are published and filed. Severe penalties are pro- vided in the statute for failure to observe the rates and regulations shown in the published tariffs. By the act of May 29, 1917, as amended on February 28, 1920, the commission is given extensive jurisdiction over the use, control, supply, movement, distribution, exchange, interchange, and return of locomotives, cars, and other vehicles, including special types of equipment and the supply of trains. : The commission, under an act approved September 22, 1922, declaring a national | emergency to exist in the production, transportation, and distribution of coal and other fuel, is authorized, during the aforesaid emergency, to issue in transportation of coal or other fuel orders for priorities in car service, embargoes, and other suitable measures in favor of or against any carrier, and to take any other necessary and ap- propriate steps for the priority in transportation and for the equitable distribution of coal or other fuel so. as best to meet the emergency. The commission may inquire into the management of the business of all common carriers subject to the provisions of the act to regulate commerce, and may prescribe the accounts, records, and memoranda which shall be kept by the carriers, which shall be open to examination by the commission through its authorized agents or examiners. Carriers are required to file annual reports with the commission and such other reports as the commission may from time to time require. aati ——__. 368 Congressvonal Directory. MISCELLANEOUS By the act of June 18, 1910 (Mann-Elkins law), the jurisdiction of the commission was increased as to through routes and joint rates, freight classification, switch con- nections, long and short hauls, filing or rejection of rate schedules, investigations on own motion, determining reasonable rates, suspension of proposed rates, and other matters. By the transportation act, 1920, the maximum period during which the commission may suspend the operation of proposed schedules is fixed at 150 days, and it is provided that if the proceeding upon suspension is not concluded within that time the proposed schedule shall go into effect at the end of such period, but that the commission may require the carriers to keep account in detail of all amounts received by reason of increases in such rates and charges and, if the decision of the commission be adverse, réquire the carrier or carriers to refund with interest such portions of such increased rates or charges as by its decision shall be found not justified. By act approved August 24, 1912 (sec. 11), a new paragraph was added to section 5 of the act to regulate commerce, by which it is made unlawful after July 1, 1914, for any common carrier subject to the act to regulate commerce to own, lease, operate, control, or have any interest in any competing carrier by water. Jurisdiction is conferred upon the commission to determine questions of fact as to competition, after full hearing, on the application of any railroad company or other carrier, and to extend beyond July 1, 1914, the time during which such ownership or operation of vessels plying elsewhere than through the Panama Canal may continue, when it is found to be in the interest of the public and of advantage to the convenience and commerce of the people and not in restraint of competition. At the same time section 6 of the act was amended by adding a new paragraph conferring upon the commission jurisdiction over transportation of property from point to point in the United States by rail and water, whether through the Panama Canal or otherwise, and not entirely within the limits of a single State, this jurisdiction under certain conditions, including power to establish physical connection between lines of the rail carrier and the dock of the water carrier by directing the rail carrier to make such connection, to establish through routes and maximum joint rates over such rail and water lines, and to determine the conditions thereof, and to determine to what traffic and in connection with what vessels and upon what terms and condi- tions such rates shall apply; and to require rail carriers entering into through routing arrangements with any water carrier to extend the privileges of such arrangements to other water carriers. By the act approved March 1, 1913, as amended by act approved June 7, 1922, amending the act to regulate commerce, the commission is directed to investigate, ascertain, and report the value of all the property owned or used by every common carrier subject to the provisions of the act. The act approved March 4, 1915, which became effective June 2, 1915, as amended August 9, 1916, makes common carriers liable for all loss, damage, or injury to property caused by them, and forbids, with certain exceptions, limitations of liability. As amended February 28, 1920, it is provided that where the loss, damage, or injury occurs while the property is in the custody of a carrier by water the liability of such carrier shall be determined by and under the laws and regulations applicable to transportation by water, and that the liability of the initial carrier shall be the same as that of such carrier by water except in connection with shipments to foreign destina- tions by water carriers whose vessels are registered under the laws of the United States, in which case it is made the duty of the carrier by railroad to deliver such shipments to the vessel as a part of its undertaking as a common carrier, but it is provided in this connection that the rail carrier shall not be liable after its delivery to the vessel. It is further provided that the two-year period for the institution of suits against carriers for loss, damage, or injury shall be computed from the day when notice is given by the carrier to the claimant that the carrier has disallowed the claim or any part thereof. ; The act as amended February 28, 1920, prohibits a carrier from issuing securities or from assuming obligations or liabilities as lessor, lessee, guarantor, indorser, surety, or otherwise, in respect of the securities of others from and after 120 days after the provision takes effect, except after having been authorized by the commission so to do; prescribes the conditions under which the commission may grant authorities to the carriers; the form and contents of applications which shall be made to the commission for such purposes; provides for the giving of notice by the commission of such applications to the governor of each State in which the applicant carrier operates; for hearings by the commission in respect of such applications; that carriers may issue certificates and assume obligations or liabilities without obtaining authority other than that of the commission, and for the issuance by the carrier without the consent of the commission of short-term notes in limited amounts, reports of which are, however, required to be filed with the commission. It is further provided that nothing in the act shall be construed to imply any guaranty or obligation as to such securities on the part of the United States. The act also provides for a right of action in favor of in- | 1 * \ | pn SA CL i - J A am MISCELLANEOUS : Official Duties. 369 vestors or purchasers in good faith and without notice of securities which, if not legally issued, are void, and for penalties against directors, officers, attorneys, or agents of cartiers who knowingly assent to or concur in the issuance of securities, etc., con- trary to the provisions of the commission’s orders or grants of authority. By the act approved August 18, 1922, the commission is required to direct, after notice and hearing, each carrier by rail, subject to this act, to issue at such offices as may be prescribed by the commission interchangeable mileage or scrip coupon tickets. The commission may in its discretion except from the provisions of this amendatory act either in whole or in part any carrier where the particular circum- stances shown to the commission shall justify such exemption to be made. ; As amended February 28, 1920, the act also requires every common carrier b water in foreign commerce whose vessels are registered under the laws of the United States to file with the commission within 30 days after the provision becomes effective, and regularly thereafter as changes are made, a schedule, or schedules, showing for each of its steam vessels intended to load general cargo at ports in the United States for foreign destinations (a) the port of loading, (b) the dates upon which such vessels will commence to receive freight and dates of sailing, (¢) the route and itinerary such vessels will follow and the ports of call for which cargo will be carried. It provides that such carriers by water shall, upon request, state their “neciie rates on any designated commodities and for any scheduled sailing and shall state any port charges not absorbed in the railroad rate to the port. The act provides, also, for the publication and dissemination in compact form, for the information of shippers throughout the country, of the substance of such schedules and the furnishing of such publications to all railway carriers for distribution in such towns and cities as may be specified by the commission. The amended act further provides for the issuance of through export bills of lading, in connection with such water carriers, to the point of destination; that such bills of lading shall name separately the charges to be paid for railway transportation, water transportation, and port charges, if any, not included in the rail or water transporta- tion charges, and that the commission shall, in such manner as will preserve for the carrier by water the protection of limited liability provided by law, make rules and regulations and prescribe the form of such through bills of lading; it provides that the issuance of such through bills of lading shall not be held to constitute ‘an arrange- ment for continuous carriage or shipment” within the meaning of this act. RELATED ACTS AFFECTING INTERSTATE COMMERCE. Elkins Act.—The act of February 19, 1903, commonly called the Elkins law, pro- hibits rebating, allows proceedings in the courts by injunction to restrain departures from published rates, and provides that cases prosecuted under the direction of the Attorney General in the name of the commission shall be included within the expedit- ing act of February 11, 1903. District court jurisdiction act.—The urgent deficiency appropriation act approved October 22, 1913, provided that the Commerce Court should be abolished from and after December 31, 1913, and that the jurisdiction theretofore vested in the Commerce Court under act approved June 18, 1910, be transferred to and vested in the several district courts of the United States. Expediting act.—The act of February 11, 1903, provides that suits in equity brought under the act to regulate commerce wherein the United States is complainant may be expedited and given precedence over other suits, and that appeals from the circuit court (district court) lie only to the Supreme Court. Federal-conirol act.—The act known as the Federal-control act, approved March 21, 1918, provides that the commission shall ascertain and certify to the President the average annual railway operating income, to be used by the President in making agreements for compensation for the use of the transportation systems of the country; that in case the amount of compensation is not adjusted, claims may be submitted to boards of referees appointed by the commission and the finding of such boards shall be a maximum of compensation which may be paid to the carriers; that the President, in executing the Federal-control act may avail himself of the advice, assistance, and cooperation of the commission, its members, and its employees; that the President may initiate rates, fares, charges, classifications, regulations, and practices by filing same with the commission; that the commission shall upon complaint enter upon a hearing and determine the justness and reasonableness of any rate, fare, charge, classification, regulation, or practice initiated by the President, taking inté consid- eration the fact that the railroads are operated under unified control and such recom- mendations as the President may make as to the necessity of increasing railway revenues. > 24786°—67—4—2p Ep——25 370 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS Transportation act, 1920.—The transportation act, 1920, as amended by act ap- proved February 24, 1922, provides for the termination of Federal control and lim- its the powers the President may thereafter exercise under the Federal-control act to those necessary to wind up and settle matters arising out of Federal-control; for the turning over to the Secretary of War for operation and settling up of all matters aris- ing out of Federal control in connection with boats, barges, tugs, and other facilities on the inland, canal, and coastwise waterways acquired by the United States under the Federal-control act, and requiring him to provide terminal facilities for the inter- change of traffic with carriers, and renders the operation of the boats and facilities subject to the provisions of the interstate commerce act to the same extent they would be if not owned by the United States. This act also authorizes the President to advance moneys to the carriers for certain purposes out of the revolving fund created by the Federal-control act, and requires the commission to ascertain and cer- tify to the Secretary of the Treasury the amounts to be thus advanced to the car- riers. It also provides for the appointment by the President of an agent to act as defendant in actions at law, suits in equity, proceedings in admiralty, and before the commission, based on matters arising out of Federal control, and confers upon the commission jurisdiction over all claims for reparation pertaining to the Federal- control period, whether arising in respect of intrastate or interstate traffic; that pending actions, suits, proceedings, and reparation claims shall not abate, but that reparation awards in such cases shall be paid out of the revolving fund; that the period of Federal control shall not be computed as a part of the periods of limitation in actions against carriers or in claims for reparation based on causes of action arising out of matters pertaining to Federal control; and that a judgment in favor of the United States is the only one that may be levied against the property of the car- rier where the judgment is based upon such matters. The transportation act also continues in force until changed by lawful authority all rates, fares, charges, classifications, regulations, and practices in effect on Febru- ary 29, 1920, and prohibits reductions of such rates, fares, and charges prior to Septem- ber 1, 1920, except with the approval of the commission. It provides certain guar- anties of compensation for a period of six months from March 1, 1920, to all carriers which were entitled to the same under the Federal-control act, and which on or before March 15, 1920, filed with the commission a written statement that they accepted the provisions and conditions upon which such guaranties are made. A similar guaranty under the same conditions of acceptance is made to the American Railway Express Co. that the contract between it and the Director General of Railroads shall remain in effect during the guaranty period in so far as the said contract constitutes a guaranty to the express company against a deficitin operating income. It provides for advances to the express company and the carriers to meet operating expenses and fixed charges, and that the commission after the expiration of the guaranty period shall ascertain and certify to the Secretary of the Treasury the amount due any carrier under the guaranty, and the amount of and the times at which such loans or advances shall be made to any carrier. The transportation act also provides for the inspection of carriers’ records by the President or his agents until the affairs of Federal control are concluded, and for the refunding of carriers’ indebtedness to the United States. It also authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury to make new loans to carriers upon cer- tain conditions and upon favorable certification by the commission and creates a revolving fund of $300,000,000 out of which said loans are to be made and out of which certain judgments, decrees, and awards are to be paid. The transportation act also provides a plan for the settlement of controversies between carriers and their employees and subordinate officials through the medium of railroad boards of labor adjustment and a Railroad Labor Board. The latter con- sists of nine members, three of whom, representing the labor group, are to be chosen from not less than six nominees designated by the employees; three, representing the management, are to be chosen from not less than six nominees designated by the carriers. All nominations in both groups are made under rules and regulations pre- scribed by the commission. Three members, representing the public, are chosen directly by the President. All appointments are made by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. Clayton Antitrust Act.—Jurisdiction is conferred upon the commission to enforce certain provisions of the act approved October 15, 1914, to supplement existing laws against unlawful restraints and monopolies in so far as such provisions relate to carriers subject to the act to regulate commerce. The act prohibits, with certain exceptions, carriers from discriminating between purchasers in sales of commodities, and from making leases or sales of commodities and from acquiring stock or capital of other corporations engaged in commerce tending to substantially lessen competition or create a monopoly; makes it a felony for a president or other specified officers to mis- appropriate a carrier’s funds; and, as amended by act approved January 12, 1918, provides that, effective January 1, 1919, no carrier shall have dealings in securities or JE AAT ———— mn iy in MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties. 371 supplies, or contract for construction or maintenance to the amount of more than $50,000 in the aggregate in any one year, with another corporation or organization when, by reason of common officers or otherwise, there exists a community of interest between the carrier and such other corporation or organization, except as a result of free com- petitive bidding under regulations to be prescribed by the commission. The com- mission is further authorized to investigate violations of the act by carriers and to require the guilty parties to cease therefrom, and its findings of fact in such investi- gations shall be conclusive when supported by testimony. Government-aided rawlroad and telegraph act.—Under the act of August 7, 1888, all Government-aided railroad and telegraph companies are required to file certain reports and contracts with the commission, and it is the commission’s duty to decide questions relating to the interchange of business between such Government-aided telegraph company and any connecting telegraph company. The act provides penalties for failure to comply with the act or the orders of the commission. Railway Mail Service pay act.—The act making appropriations for the service of the Post Office Department approved July 28, 1916, empowers the commission to fix and determine fair and reasonable rates and compensation for the transportation of mail matter by railway common carriers and services connected therewith, pre- scribing the method by weight or space, or both, or otherwise. The act making appropriations for the services of the Post Office Department for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1919, empowers the commission to fix and determine fair and reasonable rates and compensation for the transportation of mail matter by urban and interurban electric railway common carriers. Standard time act.—By the act approved March 19, 1918, the commissionis authorized to fix the limits of the standard time zones established for the continental United States and Alaska, having due regard, in doing so, to the convenience of commerce and the junction and division points of common carriers whose movements are to be governed by the standard time of the zones so fixed. Safety-appliance acts.—The act of March 2, 1893, known as the safety-appliance .act, provides that railroad cars used in interstate commerce must be equipped with automatic couplers, and drawbars of a standard height for freight cars, and have grab irons or handholds in the ends and sides of each car; and that locomotive engines used in moving interstate traffic shall be equipped with a power driving-wheel brake and appliances for operating the train-brake system. The act directs the commission to lodge with the proper district attorneys information of such violations as may come to its knowledge. The act of March 2, 1903, amended this act so as to make its pro- visions apply to Territories and the District of Columbia, to all cases when couplers of whatever design are brought together, and to all locomotives, cars, and other equip- ment of any railroad engaged in interstate traffic, except logging cars and cars used upon street railways; and provides for a minimum number of air-braked cars in trains. By act of April 14, 1910, the safety-appliance acts were supplemented so as to re- quire railroads to equip their cars with sill steps, hand brakes, ladders, running boards, and roof handholds, and the commission was authorized to designate the number, dimensions, location, and manner of application of appliances. Accident reports act.—DBy act of May 6, 1910, the prior accident reports law was repealed and a new statute enacted requiring carriers to make full reports of all acci- dents to the commission and increasing the scope of the commission’s authority in making investigations of all accidents resulting to person or the property of the carrier. Hours of service act.—The act of March 4, 1907, makes it the duty of the Interstate Commerce Commission to enforce the provisions of the act wherein it is made unlawful to require or permit employees engaged in or connected with the movement of trains to be on duty more than a specified number of hours in any 24. Ash-pan act.—The act of May 30, 1908, makes it the duty of the Interstate Com- merce Commission to enforce the provisions of the act wherein it is provided that after a certain date no locomotive shall be used in moving interstate or foreign traffic, etc., not equipped with an ash pan which can be emptied without requiring a man to go under such locomotive. Penalties are provided for violations of this act. Transportation of explosives act.—The act of May 30, 1908, as amended by act ap- proved March 4, 1921, directs the Interstate Commerce Commission to make regula- tions for the safe transportation of explosives by common carriersengagedininterstate commerce. Penalties are provided for violations of such regulations. Locomotive and boiler inspection acts.—The act of February 17, 1911, confers juris- diction upon the commission to enforce certain provisions compelling railroad com- panies to equip their locomotives with safe and suitable boilers and appurtenances thereto. By an amendatory act approved March 4, 1915, the powers of the commission to inspect and to prescribe standards of safety for locomotive boilers and appurtenances ihorote was extended to include ‘‘all parts and appurtenances of the locomotive and tender.” 372 Congressional Directory. +MISCELLANEOUS Block signal and automatic train-control safety devices.—The urgent deficiency ap- propriation act approved October 22, 1913, contained an appropriation of $25,000 to enable the commission to investigate and test block signals and appliances for the automatic control of railway trains and appliances or systems intended to promote +1 Safety of railway operation, including experimental tests of such systems and appliances as shall be furnished in completed shape to the commission for investiga- tion and test, free of cost to the Government, in accordance with the provisions of joint resolution approved June 30, 1916, and sundry civil appropriation act approved May 27, 1908. Provision was made in the sundry civil appropriation acts approved August 1, 1914, March 3, 1915, July 1, 1916, June 12, 1917, and July 1, 1918, for con- tinuing the investigation and testing of these systems and appliances. By the amendment approved February 28, 1920, the commission is authorized to require carriers to install automatic train-stop or train-control devices or other safety devices in compliance with specifications upon the whole or any part of the carrier's railroad, but it is provided that any order made by the commission in the premises Shall be issued and published at least two years before the date specified for its ment. : UNITED STATES RAILROAD LABOR BOARD. Section 304 of public law No. 152, Sixty-sixth Congress (the railroad act), provides for a board to be known as the Railroad Labor Board, to be composed of nine mem- bers, to be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, as follows: Three members constituting the labor group, representing the employees and subordinate officials of the carriers; three members constituting the management group, representing the carriers; and three members constituting the public group, representing the public. Any vacancy on the board to be filled in the same manner as the original appointment. The Labor Board shall hear, and as soon as practicable and with due diligence decide, any dispute involving grievances, rules, or working conditions, in respect to which any adjustment board certifies to the Labor Board that in its opinion the ad- justment board has failed or will fail to reach a decision within a reasonable time, or in respect to which the Labor Board determines that any adjustment board has so failed or is not using due diligence in its consideration thereof. In case the appro- priate adjustment board is not organized under the provisions of the act, the Labor Board, (1) upon the application of the chief executive of any carrier or organization of employees or subordinate officials whose members are directly interested in the dispute, (2) upon a written petition signed by not less than 100 unorganized employ- ees or subordinate officials directly interested in the dispute, or (3) upon the Labor Board’s own motion if it is of the opinion that the dispute is likely substantially to interrupt commerce, shall receive for hearing, and as soon as practicable and with due diligence decide, any dispute involving grievances, rules, or working conditions which is not decided as provided by the act and which such adjustment board would be required to receive for hearing and decision under the provisions of the act. The Labor Board, (1) upon the application of the chief executive of any carrier or organization of employees or subordinate officials whose members are directly inter- ested in the dispute, (2) upon a written petition signed by not less than 100 unorgan- ized employees or subordinate officials directly interested in the dispute, or (3) upon the Labor Board’s own motion if it is of the opinion that the dispute is likely sub- stantially to interrupt commerce, shall receive for hearing, and as soon as practicable and with due diligence decide all disputes with respect to the wages or salaries of employees or subordinate officials of carriers not decided as provided in the act. The Labor Board may upon its own motion within 10 days after the decision of any dispute with respect to wages or salaries of employees or subordinate officials of car- riers, suspend the operation of such decision if the Labor Board is of the opinion that the decision involves such an increase in wages or salaries as will be likely to necessi- tate a substantial readjustment of the rates of any carrier. The Labor Board shall hear any decision so suspended, and as soon as practicable and with due diligence decide to affirm or modify such suspended decision. All decisions of the Gi Board shall be entered upon the records of the board, and copies thereof, together with such statement of facts bearing thereon as the board may deem proper, shall be immediately communicated to the parties to the dispute, the President, each adjustment board, and the commission, and shall be given further publicity in such manner as the Labor Board may determine. All the decisions of the Labor Board in respect to wages or salaries and of the Labor Board or an adjustment board in respect to working conditions of employees or subordi- nate officials of carriers shall establish rates of wages and salaries and standards of working conditions which in the opinion of the board are just and reasonable. =e \/ ar MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties. 373 The Labor Board, in case it has reason to believe that any decision of the Labor Board or of an adjustment board is violated by any carrier, or employee or subordinate official, or organization thereof, may upon its own motion, after due notice and hearing to all persons directly interested in such violation, determine whether in its opinion such violation has occurred and make public its decision in such manner as it may determine. CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION. The purpose of the civil service act, as declared in its title, is ‘‘to regulate and improve the civil service of the United States.”” It provides for the appointment of three commissioners, not more than two of whom shall be adherents of the same political party, and makes it the duty of the commission to aid the President, as he may request, in preparing suitable rules for carrying the act into effect. The act requires that the rules shall provide, among other things, for open competitive exami- nations for testing the fitness of applicants for the classified service, the making of appointments from among those passing with highest grades, an appertionment of appointments in the departments at Washington among the States and Terri- tories, a period of probation before absolute appointment, and the prohibition of the use of official authority to coerce the political action of any person or body. The act also provides for investigations touching the enforcement of the rules, and forbids, under penalty of fine or imprisonment, or both, the solicitation by any person in the service of the United States of contributions to be used for political purposes from persons in such service, or the collection of such contributions by any person in a Government building. The retirement act of May 22, 1920, authorizes the commission to issue certificates: permitting the retention of employees beyond retirement age upon official request of the department concerned. The commission is also required to keep such infor- mation concerning individual service as may be deemed necessary to a proper deter- mination of rights under the retirement act, and furnish the Commissioner of Pensions such reports as he shall from time to time request as necessary to the proper adjust- ment of any claim for annuity; and also to keep needful tables and records required for carrying out the provisions of the retirement act, including data showing mor- tality, experience of the employees in the service, and the percentage of withdrawals from the service. : : The commission was organized on March 9, 1883. The first classification of the serv- ice applied to the departments at Washington and to post offices and customhouses having as many as 50 employees, embracing 13,294 employees. The commission then consisted of three commissioners, the chief examiner, secretary, stenographer, and messenger boy. On June 30, 1922, there were 560,863 officers and employees in the executive civil service. Examinations are held in the principal cities throughout the country through the agency of local boards of examiners, of which there are approximately 3,600. The members of these boards are detailed from other branches of the service. During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1922, the commission examined 206,007 persons, and of this number 63,867 were appointed. The present force of the commission consists of 336 clerks and examiners and 40 subclerical employees at Washington and 24 employees in the field service. : The commission also holds examinations in Hawaii, Porto Rico, and the Philippine Islands. Under the rules, it is required to render all practical-assistance to the Philippine Civil Service Board. Appointments of unskilled laborers in the departments at Washington and in the large cities are required to be made in accordance with regulations promulgated by the President, restricting appointments to applicants who are rated highest in physical condition. This system is outside the civil service act, and is auxiliary to the civil- service rules. CHIEF EXAMINER. The chief examiner has supervision of the system of examinations and the procedure of examining boards. The Examining Division and the Application Division are under his supervision. SECRETARY. The secretary is the administrative officer of the commission and has charge of matters relating to the enforcement of the civil service act, rules, and regulations, The Appointment Division is under his supervision. ’ APPLICATION DIVISION. Issues announcements of examinations; distributes information concerning exami- nations; receives and passes upon applications; prepares correspondence respecting admission to examinations; and supervises the holding of examinations by local civil- service boards. It maintains a record of applications. 374 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS EXAMINING DIVISION. Prepares examinations, rates the papers, issues notices of markings, and passes upon the qualifications of applicants. APPOINTMENT DIVISION. Maintains registers of eligibles and issues certifications for appointments; records appointments and changes in the personnel of the executive civil service, and main- tains service records of all employees in the classified service; handles retirement matters, matters relating to reinstatements, transfers, promotions, and irregularities arising under the civil-service law and rules and of Executive orders; and con- * ducts the ie correspondence of the commission, except that relating to appli- cations and examinations. DIVISION OF INVESTIGATION AND REVIEW. Investigates alleged frauds and irregularities in examinations, decides on require- ments in changes of designations of Government employees, conducts oral examina- tions, makes personal investigations in the field, and acts as an appellate board for the consideration and review of ratings on appeal. BUREAU OF INFORMATION. This bureau answers telephonic and personal inquiries regarding dates and places of examinations; supplies applications and other printed matter concerning the examinations; records the names and addresses of persons to be notified of future examinations; and gives general information concerning eligibility and prospects for appointment and relating to reinstatement, transfer, and promotion. UNITED STATES BUREAU OF EFFICIENCY. The duties of the Bureau of Efficiency are to establish and maintain a system of efficiency ratings for the executive departments in the District of Columbia; to investigate the needs of the several executive departments and independent estab- lishments with respect to personnel, and to investigate duplication of statistical and other work and methods of business in the various branches of the Government service. FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD. Generally speaking, the functions of the board are to exercise a broad supervision over the affairs and conduct of 12 Federal reserve banks established in accordance with the terms of the Federal reserve act in different parts of the country and in- vested with authority to discount paper for member banks, issue Federal reserve notes to member banks, and perform the various banking functions described in the act itself. The board has full power to appoint its own staff of employees and officers and to regulate the conditions of their employment. Its support is derived from the several reserve banks from assessments levied by its half yearly pro rata. The board is responsible to Congress and reports annually to that body. Certain functions in connection with the national banking system are also assigned to it under the legis- lation, although the Comptroller of the Currency, who is a member of the board, exercises the same general administrative and supervisory authority over the national banks that has been in his hands in the past. It also passes upon applications under the Clayton Act as amended. : Some of the more important duties of the Federal Reserve Board are set forth in section 11 of the Federal reserve act, which provides that the Federal Reserve Board shall be authorized ‘to examine at its discretion the accounts, books, and affairs of each Federal reserve bank and of each member bank, and to require such statements and reports as it may deem necessary; to permit, or, on the affirmative vote of at least five members of the Reserve Board, to require Federal reserve banks to rediscount the discounted paper of other Federal reserve banks at rates of interest to be fixed by the Federal Reserve Board; to suspend for a period not exceeding 30 days, and from time to time to renew such suspension for periods not exceeding 15 days, any reserve requirements specified in this act; to supervise and regulate through the bureau under the charge of the Comptroller of the Currency the issue and retire- ment of Federal reserve notes, and to prescribe rules and regulations under which such notes may be delivered by the comptroller to the Federal reserve agents apply- ing therefor; to add to the number of cities classified as reserve and central reserve cities under existing law in which national banking associations are subject to the reserve requirements set forth in section 20 of this act; to suspend or remove any \ MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres. 375 officer or director of any Federal reserve bank, the cause of such removal to be forth- with communicated in writing by the Federal Reserve Board to the removed officer or director and to said bank; to require the writing off of doubtful or worthless assets upon the books and balance sheets of Federal reserve banks; to suspend, for the viola- tion of any of the provisions of this act, the operations of any Federal reserve bank, to take possession thereof, administer the same during the period of suspension, and, when deemed advisable, to liquidate or reorganize such bank; to require bonds of Federal reserve agents; to exercise general supervision over said Federal reserve banks; to grant by special permit to national banks applying therefor, when not in contravention of State or local law, the right to exercise fiduciary powers.” FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION. The Federal Trade Commission was created by an act of Congress approved Sep- tember 26, 1914, in which the commission’s powers and duties were defined. The commission is an independent agency, with its five members appointed for a term of seven years each by the President of the United States with the approval of the Senate. No more than three members may be of one political party. Further specific powers are conferred upon this commission by “An act to supple- ment existing laws against unlawful restraints and monopolies, and for other pur- poses,” approved October 15,1914 (commonly known as the Clayton Act); by an act of Congress approved October 6, 1917, known as the trading with the enemy act; and by “An act to promote export trade, and for other purposes,” approved April 10, 1918, known as the export trade act (Webb-Pomerene law). : FUNCTIONS UNDER THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION ACT. The Federal Trade Commission act was intended to supplement previous antitrust legislation. However, the proceedings which the commission is authorized to insti- tute are not punitive and no form of punishment is provided. It is not intended that compensation is to be made for any injuries which may have been suffered. The intent of the act is the prevention of injury to the general public. What the commission is created to deal with is not acts of unfair competition but the use of unfair methods of competition. Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission act states that ‘ anfair methods of com- petition in commerce are hereby declared unlawful” and empowers and directs the commission to prevent ‘persons, partnerships, or corporations, except banks, and common carriers subject to the acts to regulate commerce, from using unfair methods of competition in commerce.’ Whenever the commission shall have reason to believe that any such person, part- nership, or corporation has been or is using any unfair method of competition in commerce, and if it shall appear to the commission that a proceeding by it in respect thereof would be to the interest of the public, it shall issue and serve upon such person, partnership, or corporation a complaint stating its charges in that respect. Provision is made for hearings and the taking of testimony. If the commission shall then be of the opinion that the method of competition in question is prohibited by this act, it shall issue and cause to be served upon the person or organization against whom complaint is made an order to cease and desist from using such unfair method of competition as shown to be sustained by the proof submitted. Provision is made for appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States to enforce, set aside, or modify orders of the commission. The judgment and decree of the court shall be final, except that the same shall be subject to review by the Supreme Court upon certiorari as provided in the Judicial Code. The commission’s procedure, findings, and orders in many cases have been tested out in the Federal courts, and at the present time the commission has been sustained, in whole or in part, in 13 cases. There are still a number of cases in the courts being litigated, and in the Supreme Court writs of certiorari have been granted in a number of cases which will be presented to that court in the near future for final determination. Application for complaint may be made merely in a letter to the Federal Trade Commission. In this letter she writer should make specific charges against the indi- vidual or concern which he believes is practicing unfair methods of competition which he believes to be against the public interest. If this letter appears to set forth a clear case, itis docketed as an application for complaint and is given to an attorney-examiner for inquiry and investigation. This attorney-examiner, following a thorough investi- gation, reports to the chief examiner, who examines the record and makes his recom- mendation to a board of review composed of two lawyers and one economist. This board of review determines whether interstate commerce is involved; whether the 376 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS methods complained of are unfair; whether there is actual competition; and whether itis such as to involve the public interest. The board of review, upon answering these questions, makes its recommendation as to whether or not a formal complaint contain- ing specific charges should be issued. The case is then studied by a commissioner to whom it has been assigned. This commissioner reviews what the investigator, the chief examiner, and the board of review have said, and then in turn makes his recommendation to the commission, which, after discussion, votes as to whether formal complaint should issue. If complaint is ordered issued by a majority vote, the pro- ceeding becomes a public record, and after the respondent has answered the charges in writing the case proceeds to trial. Following the trial and the filing of briefs and oral argument, the commission decides the case and issues either an order to cease and desist or an order of dismissal. If the respondent does not believe the commis- sion’s order is justified he has the right to appeal to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals. : Among the methods of competition thus far condemned by the commission are the following: Misbranding of fabrics and other commodities respecting the materials or ingredi- ents of which they are composed, their quality, origin, or source. Adulteration of commodities, misrepresenting them as pure or selling them under such names and circumstances that the purchaser would be misled into believing them to be pure. Bribery of buyers or other employees of customers and prospective customers to secure new customers or induce continuation of patronage. The payment of bonuses by manufacturers to salesmen of jobbers and retailers to procure their special services in selling their goods, and making unduly large contri- butions of money to associations of customers. Procuring breach of competitors’ contracts for the sale of products by misrepresen- tation or by other means. Procuring the business or trade secrets of competitors by espionage, by bribing their employees, or by similar means. ; : Inducing employees of competitors to violate their contracts or enticing away employees of competitors in such numbers or under such circumstances as to hamper or embarrass them in business. : Making false or disparaging statements respecting competitors’ products, their business, financial credit, etc. : The use of false or misleading advertisements. Making vague and indefinite threats of patent infringement suits against the trade generally, the threats being couched in such general language as not to convey a clear idea of the rights alleged to be infringed, but nevertheless causing uneasiness and fear in the trade. Widespread threats to the trade of suits for patent infringement arising from the sale of alleged infringing products of competitors, such threats not being made in good faith but for the purpose of intimidating the trade. False claims to patents or misrepresenting the scope of patents. Intimidation for the purpose of accomplishing enforced dealing by falsely charging disloyalty to the Government. Tampering with and misadjusting the machines sold by competitors for the pur- pose of discrediting them with purchasers. Trade boycotts or combinations of traders to prevent certain wholesale or retail dealers or certain classes of such dealers from procuring goods. Passing off products or business of one manufacturer for those of another by imita- tion of products, dress of goods, or by simulation of advertising or of corporate or trade names. Unauthorized appropriation of the results of a competitor's ingenuity, labor, and expense, thereby avoiding costs otherwise necessarily involved in production. : Preventing competitors from procuring advertising space in newspapers or periodi- cals by misrepresenting their standing or other misrepresentation calculated to prejudice advertising mediums against them. Misrepresentation in the sale of stock of corporations. ro Selling rebuilt machines of various descriptions, rebuilt automobile tires, and old motion-picture films slightly changed and renamed as-and for new products. Harassing competitors by fake requests for estimates on bills of goods, for cata- logues, etc. : Giving away of goods in large quantities to hamper and embarrass small competitors, and selling goods at cost to accomplish the same purpose. Ti Sales of goods at cost, coupled with statements misleading the public into the belief that they are sold at a profit. ¢ ’ Bidding up the prices of raw materials to a point where the business is unprofitable for the purpose of driving out financially weaker competitors. re ‘ . MISCELLANEOUS ‘Official Duties: 377 Loaning, selling at cost, or leasing for a nominal consideration pump and tank out- - fits to dealers on condition that they be used only for the distribution of the products of the particular manufacturer. Loans or leases of other equipment under similar conditions. : The use by monopolistic concerns of concealed subsidiaries for carrying on their business, such concerns being held out as not connected with the controlling company. Intentional appropriation or converting to one’s own use of raw materials of com- petitors by diverting shipments. : Giving or offering to give premiums of unequal value, the particular premiums received to be determined by lot or chance, thus in effect setting up a lottery. Any and all schemes for compelling wholesalers and retailers to maintain resale prices on products fixed by the manufacturer. ombinations of competitors to enhance prices, maintain prices, bring about sub- stantial uniformity in prices, or to divide territory or business. Under section 6 the Federal Trade Commission derives its authority for making economic investigations. It is provided that the commission shall have power to gather and compile information concerning, and to investigate from time to time, the organization, business, conduct, practices, and management of any corporation en- gaged in commerce, excepting banks, and common carriers subject to the act to regu- late commerce; that it shall require reports and answers to specific questions in the compilation of such information. The commission has already gathered and publivied for the use of the Congress, the departments, and the public, a great deal of information regarding many of the essential industries of the country. Most of the economic inquiries have been made at the request of the Congress or the President, to whom reports have been or are now being made, or were undertaken in cooperation with other departments of the Gov- ernment. , One of the largest tasks of the Economic Division was during the three years of the war period. This was the securing of cost of production data with respect to many of the basic industries, in connection with which information was also generally obtained showing actual prices realized and the facts regarding profits and invest- ments. It has been roughly estimated that the total investment involved in the different industries examined was in the neighborhood of $20,000,000,000, and their annual output was about $30,000,000,000. Embraced in the cost investigations and in the general economic inquiries were the principal mining and quarrying industries, including coal, iron ore, copper, and other nonferrous metals; petroleum, clay, sand and gravel, and various mineral materials; the principal manufacturing industries, including iron and steel and their products, machinery and engines, cement, brick, tile and other mineral building materials, acids, alkalies, and other chemicals, paper and paper products, Tumber and its products, refined mineral oils, glycerin, vegetable oils, meat and its by-prod- ucts, flour and bread, canned vegetables, fruits and fish, textiles and garments, leather and shoes, ete., besides various purely trading activities, such asin coal, grain, hides, wool, rags, cloth, food products, etc. : Eg The commission may (under sec. 6) investigate, from time to time, trade conditions in and with foreign countries where associations, combinations, or practices of manu- facturers, merchants, or traders, or other conditions, may affect the foreign trade of the United States. Further investigatory powers are given to the commission in connection with violations of the antitrust acts and the manner in which final decrees that have been entered in suits to prevent and restrain such violations have been carried out. Pro- vision is made for report thereon to the Attorney General. The commission may make public from time to time such portions of the informa- tion obtained by it as it shall deem expedient in the public interest, except trade secrets and names of customers. Section 7 of the Federal Trade Commission act provides that in any suit in equity brought by or under the direction of the Attorney General, as provided in the anti- trust acts, the court may refer said suit to the commission, as a master in chancery, to ascertain and report an appropriate form of decree therein. Other sections of the act give to the commission authorization for such investiga- tions and the compilation of data, with provision for procedure under the act, and penalties prescribed for refusal of persons, partnerships, or corporations, to furnish such material or to comply with orders of the commission to testify, produce evidence, or file reports as required. : FUNCTIONS OF THE COMMISSION BOTH LEGAL AND ECONOMIC. " It will be seen that under the Federal Trade Commission act the powers and duties of the commission are both legal and economic. Regulatory powers include meas- 378 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS ures for the prevention of unfair competition and in connection with violation of the antitrust laws. Investigatory powersinclude economic studies of domestic industry and interstate and foreign commerce. Such economicinquiries may beinaugurated by the commission on its own initiative, but are more frequently undertaken by direc- * tion of the United States Senate or the House of Representatives, or both. POWERS OF THE COMMISSION UNDER THE CLAYTON ANTITRUST ACT. The commissionis given jurisdiction over violations of sections 2, 3, 7, 8, and 11 of the Clayton Act, which prohibit: (1) Certain discriminations in prices between different purchasers of commodities where the effect of such discrimination may be to substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce. (2) In certain cases, so-called ‘tying contracts,”’ or contracts whereby, as a con- dition of sale or lease, the seller or lessor exacts from the purchaser or lessee an agree- ment that he shall not use or deal in the goods or other commodities of a competitor of the lessor or seller, where the effect of such agreement may be to substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly in any line of commerce. (3) In certain cases, so-called ‘holding companies,”’ or the ownership by one com- pany of the stock of another, where the effect may be to substantially lessen competi- tion, to restrain commerce, or tend to create a monopoly. : (4) So-called ‘‘interlocking directorates” in cases where one person shall at the same time be a director in any two or more corporations engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, other than banks, banking associations, trust companies, and common carriers subject to the act to regulate commerce, if such corporations are or have been competitors, so that the elimination of competition by agreement between them would constitute a violation of any of the provisions of any of the antitrust laws. Procedure under the Clayton Act is identical with that under the Federal Trade Commission act. POWERS UNDER THE TRADING WITH THE ENEMY ACT. The powers conferred upon the President by section 10 of the trading with the enemy act were delegated by him to the Federal Trade Commission on October 12, 1917. In administering this section of the act, the commission considered and took final action upon applications of citizens of the United States for license under letters patent of the United States owned or controlled by enemies. If the action was favorable, the commission prescribed the term of the license, amount of royalty, and conditions of account and payment thereof. It had the power to fix the prices on products made by the licensee when such products had to do with the health of the military and naval forces of the United States or the successful prosecution of the war. The commission, in cooperation with the Army and Navy Patent Board and the Commissioner of Patents, could issue orders of secrecy which enjoined the pub- lication of an invention where a disclosure thereof might be detrimental to the public safety or defense, endanger the successful prosecution of the war, or be of assistance ~ to the enemy. FUNCTIONS OF THE COMMISSION UNDER THE EXPORT TRADE ACT (WEBB-POMERENE LAW). The export trade act authorizes the formation of “associations” entered into for the sole purpose of engaging in export trade, these associations to be exempt from the antitrust laws of the United States, with the proviso that there shall be through the association no restraint of the export trade of any domestic competitor, no enhancing or depression of prices, or substantial lessening of competition within the United States. Section 1 of the act defines ‘export trade” and ‘‘association.”’ Sections 2 and 3 provide exemption from the antitrust laws under certain conditions. Section 4 extends the jurisdiction of the commission under the Federal Trade Com- mission act to ‘unfair methods of competition used in export trade against competi- tors engaged in export trade, even though the acts constituting such unfair methods are done without the territorial jurisdiction of the United States.” Section 5 provides for the filing of papers by such export trade associations with the Federal Trade Commission, and other details of administration. UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD. The United States Shipping Board was created by an act of Congress approved September 7, 1916, entitled “An act to establish a United States Shipping Board for the purpose of encouraging, developing, and creating a naval auxiliary and naval MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres. 379 reserve and a merchant marine to meet the requirements of the commerce of the United States with its territories and possessions and with foreign countries; to regulate carriers by water engaged in the foreign and interstate commerce of the United States, and for other purposes,’ generally known as the shipping act, 1916. It is an inde- pendent establishment of the executive branch of the Government, similar to the Interstate Commerce Commission and Federal Trade Commission, and under the shipping act, 1916, was composed of five members, who chose their own chairman and vice chairman and secretary. The shipping act, 1916, provides for the regulation of the operations of common carriers by water in both interstate and foreign commerce, defines certain terms used in connection therewith, and provides penalties for the violation of its provisions. Carriers are required to file with the board copies of such agreements, or memorandums of oral understandings as each may have with other carriers or persons subject to the act relating to the regulation of rates, pooling of earnings, number and character of sailings between various ports, the volume or character of traffic, etc. Certain conduct by carriers or other persons subject to the actis declared to be unlawful and punishable by penalties set forth in the act. Sworn complaints setting forth violations of the act may be filed with the board by a common carrier by water or other person subject to the act, and a method is provided for the adjudication of such complaints. The board is further empowered to investigate the action of foreign Governments with respect to privileges afforded and burdens imposed on vessels of the United States, and to make a report of the result of such investigations to the President, who is authorized to secure by diplomatic action equal privileges for United States vessels. Methods of enforcing the orders of the board, whether for the performance of certain acts or for the payment of money awarded as damages by the board, are also provided. The act expressly provides that the board does not have concurrent jurisdiction with the Interstate Commerce Commission over acts within the latter’s power or jurisdiction, and that its provisions do not apply to intrastate commerce. The board is further empowered by the shipping act to regulate the sale of a vessel owned by a citizen of the United States to aliens. The board’s approval must be obtained to put a vessel owned by a citizen of the United States under a foreign registry or flag. The board may also organize one or more corporations under the laws of the District of Columbia, for the purchase, operation, lease, charter, or sale of the merchant vessels acquired under the act, and there was placed at the disposal of the board for this purpose a fund of $50,000,000, to be raised through the sale of Panama Canal bonds. Under this authority the board on April 16, 1917, organized the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, all the ‘stock of which has been fully paid up and is now owned by the United States of America through the United States Shipping Board. The board is directed to investigate the relative cost of constructing vessels at home and abroad; to examine the rules under which vessels are constructed at home and abroad; to investigate matters relating to marine insurance, the classification and rating of vessels, and the navigation laws of the United States, and to make such recommendations to Congress as it may deem best for the improvement and revision of such laws. The shipping act, 1916, was amended by an act approved July 15, 1918, which more particularly defined the various terms used and provisions contained in the shipping act, and added eight sections at the end of the act whereby the board was granted more complete control over the use or sale, particularly to aliens, of marine property during the existence of a state of war or any national emergency declared to exist by proclamation of the President, and providing punishment for violations of certain provisions of the act as amended. The shipping act, 1916, as amended by the act approved July 15, 1918, was further amended by the act of June 5, 1920, known as the merchant marine act, 1920, which transferred to the Shipping Board certain specified authority granted during the war by Congress to the President and by him delegated by various Executive orders to the Shipping Board and the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, This act in section 1 sets forth in the following language the general merchant marine policy to be followed by the board in its administration of the merchant marine acquired by the United States as a result of its European war activities: “That itis necessary for the national defense and for the proper growth of its foreign and domestic commerce that the United States shall have a merchant marine of the best equipped and most suitable types of vessels sufficient to carry the greater portion of its commerce and serve as a naval or military auxiliary in time of war or national emergency, ulti- mately to be owned and operated privately by citizens of the United States; and it is hereby declared to be the policy of the United States to do whatever may be neces- sary to develop and encourage the maintenance of such a merchant marine, and, in - so far as may not be inconsistent with the express provisions of this act, the United 380 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS States Shipping Board shall, in the disposition of vessels and shipping property as hereinafter provided, in the making of rules and regulations, and in the administra- tion of the shipping laws keep always in view this purpose and object as the primary end to be obtained.” By this act the membership of the board is increased from five to seven, the section of the country from which they are to be appointed are designated and the President is directed to designate the member to act as chairman of the board, the board electing its vice chairman, General conditions to govern the board in its disposition of vessel property of the United States both to citizens of the United States and to aliens are set forth, and the board is authorized to sell to aliens only when, after diligent effort, it has been unable to sell to American citizens, and then only upon the affirmative vote of not less than five members, with the reasons for such action spread on the minutes of the board. Other duties of the board under the merchant marine act, 1920, are as follows: To investigate and determine what steamship lines should be established and operated between the United States and foreign ports for the development and main- tenance of the foreign and coastwise trade of the United States and an adequate postal service; to sell vessels under its control to responsible citizens of the United States who will agree to maintain .such lines under such terms as the board may deem advisable. To cooperate with the Secretary of War in encouraging the development of ports and transportation facilities in connection with the water commerce over which the board has jurisdiction, to investigate the cause of congestion of commerce at ports and any other matters tending to promote and encourage the use by vessels of ports adequate to care for the freight which would naturally pass through such ports, the result of such investigations to be submitted to the Interstate Commerce Commission for such action as that commission may consider appropriate under existing law in case the board decides that rates, charges, rules, or regulations of common carriers by rail sub- ject to the jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission are detrimental to the promotion and development of such ports. To set aside annually for five years from the approval of the act, from revenues from sales and operations, a construction loan fund of not exceeding $25,000,000, for use in aiding thé construction of vessels of the best and most efficient type for opera- tion on the steamship lines deemed necessary and desirable by the board, no aid from such fund, however, being for a greater sum than two-thirds of the cost of the vessel or vessels to be constructed. To recondition and keep in suitable repair and operate until sold all vessels under its control either directly or through the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, which is. authorized to continue in existence until all vessels are sold regardless of the provision of the shipping act, 1916, limiting the life of said corporation to not to exceed five years after the declaration of peace between the United States and Germany as evidenced by proclamation of the President. To create out of net revenue from operations and sales and to administer an insur- ance fund to insure any interest of the United States in vessels constructed or under construction and in any plants or materials acquired by the board. To continue the operation of housing projects acquired by the United States Ship- ping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation until the interest of the United States in such properties is disposed of consistent with good business and the best interest of the United States. : To take over on January 1, 1921, the possession, control, operation, and develop- ment of the terminal facilities acquired by the President by or under the act entitled “An act making appropriations to supply urgent deficiencies in appropriations for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1918, and prior fiscal years, on account of war expenses, and for other purposes,” approved March 28, 1918. To make all necessary rules and regulations to carry out the provisions of the act, with authority: to request the head of any department, board, bureau, or agency of the Government to suspend, modify, or annul rules or regulations affecting shipping in the foreign trade, except such rules or regulations relating to the Public Health Service, the Consular Service, and the Steamboat-Inspection Service, which have been established by such department, board, bureaw, or agency, or to make new rules or regulations affecting such shipping. ! To approve before issuance rules or regulations thereafter established by any other branch of the Government affecting foreign trade,except rules or regulations affecting the Public Health Service, the Consular Sérvice, and the Steamboat-Inspection Service. \ To approve the type and kind of new vessels to be constructed by citizens of the United States out of trust funds set aside for investment therein in order that the owner of such vessel may be allowed as a deduction for the purpose of ascertaining 55 oo MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres. 381 his net income subject to the war profits and excess profits taxes imposed by Title III of the revenue act of 1918, an amount equivalent to the net earnings of a vessel owned by such person operated in the foreign trade during such taxable year, but two-thirds of the cost of any such new vessel shall be paid for out of ordinary funds or capital of the person having such vessel constructed. : The act further provides that after February 1, 1922, the coastwise laws of the - United States shall extend to its island territories and possessions not now covered thereby, and directs the board to establish adequate steamship service at reasonable rates to accommodate the commerce and passenger travel of such islands, but if such adequate shipping service is not established by February, 1922, the President is directed to extend the period within which such service may be established for such time as may be necessary therefor. 2 The act further provides that all mails of the United States shipped or carried on vessels shall, if practicable, be shipped or carried on American-built vessels docu- mented under the laws of the United States, and directs the board and the Post- master General in aid of the development of an adequate merchant marine to deter- mine from time to time the just and reasonable rate of compensation to be paid for carrying the mails on such vessels. The American Bureau of Shipping is directed to be recognized by all departments, boards, bureaus, or commissions of the Government for the classification of vessels owned by the United States so long as the American Bureau of Shipping is maintained as an organization with no capital stock and paying no dividends. The Secretary of Commerce and the chairman of the board are each directed to appoint one repre- sentative to represent the Government on the executive committee of the American Bureau of Shipping. : The act further provides that not to exceed 16 persons in addition to the crew may be carried on cargo vessels documented under the laws of the United States without thereby subjecting such vessel to the provisions of laws governing passenger vessels. The act further exempts from the provisions of the antitrust laws associations entered into by marine insurance companies for the purpose of transacting marine insurance and reinsurance business in the United States and foreign countries. Section 30 of the merchant marine act, 1920, contains what is known as the ship- mortgage act, 1920, and materially alters the provisions of prior laws and judicial decisions relating to the status of mortgage liens on vessel property. This section creates what is known as a ‘‘preferred mortgage” by providing that mortgages on vessel property, recorded and indorsed in accordance with the provisions of the ship- mortgage act, shall be known as preferred mortgages and that upon the sale of a vessel subject to a preferred mortgage lien by order of a district court in suit brought by one having a maritime lien all preexisting claims in the vessel are terminated and at- tached in like amounts and priorities to the proceeds of the sale except that the lien arising under the preferred mortgage is given precedence over all such claims except. .expenses and fees allowed and costs taxed by the court, and liens for damages arising out of tort, for wages of a stevedore when employed by the owner, operator, master, ship’s husband, or agent of the vessel, for wages of the crew of the vessel, for general average, and for salvage, including contract salvage. The act further provides that such preferred mortgage may be foreclosed by a suit in rem in admiralty, the original jurisdiction of such suits being granted exclusively to the district courts of the United States. The act also regulates transfers of mort- gaged vessels and the assignment of vessel mortgages and rights thereunder, and repeals the maritime lien act, 1910, which, however, is reenacted with amendments to make its provisions consistent with the provisions of the ship-mortgage act, 1920. Section 4530 of the Revised Statutes is amended so as to provide that a seaman ou a vessel of the United States may not make the demand for wages provided for therein more often than once in the same harbor on the same entry. Section 20 of the act of March 4, 1915, relating to suits for damages for personal injuries suffered on board a vessel or in its service is amended so as to extend to sea- men who are given a right of trial by jury in such cases and further provides that where death ensues the personal representative of a deceased seaman 1s authorized to maintain an action for damages at law with the right of trial by jury, in both of which cases statutes of the United States modifying or extending the common law right or remedy in actions for personal injury or death of railway employees are de- clared to be applicable. The act further provides that in the judgment of Congress treaties or conventions to which the United States is a party which contain provisions restricting the right of the United States to impose discriminating customs duties on imports entering the United States in foreign vessels and restricting the right of the United States to im- pose discriminatory tonnage dues on foreign vessels should be terminated and directs the President to give notice to the several Governments parties to such treaties so in 382 Congressional Directory. MISCELLANEOUS treaties for the giving of such notice. The act, by section 38, amends section 2 of the shipping act, 1916, so as to more clearly define within the meaning of the shipping act, 1916, the citizenship of a cor- poration, partnership, or association. force terminating such restrictions at the expiration of the period provided for in such UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD EMERGENCY FLEET CORPORATION. The United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation was incorporated April 16, 1917, by the United States Shipping Board under the authority of section 11 of the act of Congress approved September 7, 1916, generally known as the ship- ping act, 1916. The corporation is capitalized at $50,000,000, divided into shares of a par value of $100 each. All the stock of the corporation is owned by the United States of America, represented by the United States Shipping Board. The object for which the corporation was organized is stated in the articles of incor- poration, as follows: ‘That the corporate name of this company shall be United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, and the object for which it is formed is the purchase, construction, equipment, lease, charter, maintenance, and operation of merchant vessel. in the commerce of the United States, and in general to do and to perform every lawful act and thing necessary or expedient to be done or per- formed for the efficient and profitable conducting of said business, as authorized by the laws of Congress, and to have and to exercise all the powers conferred by the laws of the District of Columbia upon corporations under said subchapter 4 of the incorporation laws of the District of Columbia.” The board of trustees of the corporation consists of seven members. . The general officers consist of a president, vice president and general manager, vice president, director of finance, director of sales, director of traffic, secretary, treasurer, and gen- eral counsel. The proceeds received by the corporation from the sale of its capital stock and appropriations made by Congress have been used for the construction by contract of steel, wood, composite, and concrete vessels for overseas commerce and for the com- pletion of steel vessels over 2,500 deadweight tons capacity requisitioned by direc- tion of the United States Shipping Board on August 3, 1917. By the emergency shipping fund provision of the urgent deficiencies appropria- tion act approved June 15, 1917, as amended by an act approved April 22, 1918, and by an act approved November 4, 1918, certain extensive war powers in connec- tion with the construction, requisition, and operation of vessels were conferred on the President and by him by Executive orders of various dates conferred on the cor- poration. The merchant marine act, 1920, transferred all the power and authority thus delegated to the corporation to the United States Shipping Board, which, how- ever, is authorized to perform such of its duties as it may deem advisable through or by the corporation as its agent. In accordance with the authority granted by section 25 of the merchant marine act, 1920, the United States Shipping Board, by resolution on September 30, 1921, conferred certain powers on the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation. UNITED STATES RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION. By proclamation of the President issued February 28, 1920, under authority of an act of Congress approved February 28, 1920, Walker D. Hines, Director General of Railroads, was authorized, either personally or through such divisions, agencies, or persons as he might appoint, to exercise and perform all of the powers and duties conferred upon the President by the provisions of that act except the designation of the agent under section 206 thereof. In a proclamation dated March 11, 1920, Walker D. Hines, Director General of Railroads, was also designated agent under section 206 of the act. Walker D. Hines, Director General of Railroads, resigned that position, effective May 18, 1920, and by proclamation of the President of the United States John Barton Payne, Secretary of the Interior, was designated to take over and perform all of the duties previously designated to be performed by the Director General of Railroads; the latter resigned and, effective March 28, 1921, James C. Davis was appointed. | | asia. sae Sa A ne ot AE — MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres. 383 The act of February 28, 1920, authorizes the President to adjust, settle, liquidate, and wind up all of the matters, including compensation, and all questions in dispute of whatsoever nature arising out of or incident to Federal control. The act provides that the President shall have the right at all reasonable times until the affairs of Federal control are concluded to inspect the property and records of all carriers whose railroads: J. LeeMurphy......... ... _.| Marc L. Severe | Thomas B. Dawson....... | John F. Feeney | John B-Woaod...........5 Hugh H. Watson......... C Consul. Do. Agent. Do. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Do. Consul. Edward A. Dow.......... Consul. David C. Elkington....... Vice consul. Alert H. Blford co... Agent. Theodore Jaeckel....._.... Consul. Francis H. Styles......... Vice consul. James D. Child... ....... Do. Roy McWilliams. ......... Do. Sam Park. i. Do. Thomas D. Davis ..| Consul. SE eR Vice consul. William W. Corcoran..... Do. John Corrigan, jr... ..-. Consul. Joseph A. Marquis........ Vice consul. | L. Pittman Springs....... Do. Davis B. Lovis... = =. i. Do. Willlam J. Yerby......... Consul Charles A. Pn eit Vice consul. Jom S. Calvert... .. Consul. Shelby F. Strother........ Do. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. _| Agent. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul onsul. Vice consul Do Consul, Vice consul Do: Do. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Do. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Augustus M. Kirby... ... ActonPoulet........ i Vice consul. Do. Consul general. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul general, Consul general. 426 Congressional Directory. FRANCE AND DOMINIONS—GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. FRANCE AND DOMINIONS—CON. St. Senne ERE 0 LL William H. Hunt......... Consul. Ey eR RA Howard C. Pulver. .......| Vice consul. Strasboiirs asa as William J. Pike... .20.. 0 Consul. rs eo EP eh Vice consul. Tahiti, Society Islands. .| Howard F. Withey....... Consul. EEL LN rel Scudder Mersman.........| Vice consul. Tananarive, Madagascar... .... James G. Carter........... Consul. a Re te Allred D..Borri:::o.caness Do. rs a ar ee a Pr ET Vice consul. Tounisy Tus: oo. os si es Harris N. Cookingham....| Consul. RE Charles B. Beylard........ Vice consul. Bigzerty, Tunis............... George P. Waller......... Do. GERMANY Berle. oc. 0 rt. William Coffin.s.s........ Consul general. TE SE ae Bp Maurice Parmelee......... Consul. DO le Tr ea Elliott Verne Richardson. Do. DO SS Orsen N. Nielsen......... Do. Ds i ns ns Se Rudolf E. Schoenfeld... .. Vice consul. OT Joseph G. Groeninger..... Do. Ann aE F. Le Roy Spangler....... Do. SL Te rn a Ra RR Nathaniel P. Davis....... Do. D0 i is ee Albert Forster. ...-........ Do. DOL a irs Te whee Charles L. Turrill........... Do. Bremen Francis R. Stewart. ...... Consul. Om a a Carlton Hurst... .. 2. C.. Vice consul oO William George Roll ...... Do Bremerhaven Albert H. Gerberich....... Do. Breslau "John ds. Kehl : 22... .| Consul. Do. William E. Holland .......| Vice consul. 1 Era SE Le Ra SS J. Howard Wetmore....... Do. Coblenz Francis J. Dyer--:......: Consul. Ee Sa A re IN Clarence E. Macy ......... Vice consul. Cologne. a .ou.. vi slyiosn: Emil Santer ice: oo cass Consul. BO a ee a John J. Ewart... eo. Vice consul. Dot. a William E. Lane.......... Do. EE FER a oes James M. Taylor.......... Do. Presden:. coi oa. oin Louis G. Dreyfus, jr...... Consul. Ly a Se Christian T. Steger........ Vice consul. 1 Ee a Sa Russell M. Brooks Se Do. DO ea John A, Scott... ....-.-0. Do. Frankfort on the Main...... Frederick T'. F. Dumont. .| Consul. TE Se A Se William W. Schott........ Vice consul. DO een. a Basil B. Savard... ......-- Do. Ham Burg. a ee Consul. Pos aa J. Klabhr Huddle.......... Consul in charge. PO Ce hin vie a wa eR Harry J. Anslinger........ Vice consul. DOE iis ins aie Maurice Walk. ........... Do. Do Fred H. Houck... ..en-an- Vice consul. Alfred W. Donegan....... Consul, Sigurd BE. Boll =... Vice consul. Hernando de Soto......... Consul. Dons. Haven... tre. Vice consul. Ry a Consul. Robert D. Murphy........ Vice consul. Albert Halstead, jr........ Do. Mare Smith... .....- a. Do. Cornelius Ferris. .......... Consul. Lewis B. R. Sparks....... Vice consul. Maxwell K. Moorhead. ...| Consul. Erik W.Magnuson....... Vice consul. Curtis T. Everett......... Do. Frank H. Rediker........ Do. Henry H. Baleh........... Consul. aR Te TR ir tod i Vice consul. Premaniis Beri, West Aus- | Alfred E. MorganS........ Agent. tralia Aden, Arabig...:..... a. Raymond Davis.......... Consul. Auckland, New Zealand ...... Karl de G. MacVitty...... Do. EN RE er ER Leonard A. Bachelder..... Vice consul. I ANE ER, George H. Richardson, jr.. Do. Christchurch, New Zealand...| Henry P, Bridge ......... Agent. Dunedin, New Zealand. ...... Harman Reeves........... Do. Bazbodos, Wes, Indies......:- John J. C. Watson........| Consul. Sa a Ee Se William T. Hunt, jr.......| Vice consul. a ,Dominica, West Indies | Henry A. Frampton...... Agent. St. Lucia, West Indies ........ William, Peter: o.oo 000 Do. Belfast, Yond... William P.- Kent: 2: ie: Consul. 10) Ei a a Bae Ab ig tee George H. Barringer. ..... Vice consul. LEB A RR Henry O. Ramsey ........ Do. United States Consular Officers. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. 427 Office. Officer. Rank. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— continued. Belize, British Honduras... .... William W. Early........ Consul. Oi hs a ada ae Pate Jom Hl. Biddle... 0... Vice consul. Birmingham, England........ Jom PB. Jewell. o.oo... Consul. EL A A CR hes Thomas H. Robinson... .. Vice consul. br aA hh 2 Ee Alan Hurd. ooo... 0. Bombay, India...........5.... Thomas M. Wilson ....... Consul. met et ES SU Frederick L. Thomas. ....| Vice consul. Bradiord, Englond......50cn: Wallace J. Young......... Consul. SE a Le se on Abbott C. Martin.........| Vice consul. Bristol, England. .....e..iv.. 0 Robertson Honey. ........ Consul. EL SE Dae Stephen F. Colladay......| Vice consul. Calcutta, India... 2. ......0 Alexander W. Weddell....{ Consul gencral. IR ee Re Rs Harold Shantz. .~......... Vice consul. DOLE iiss a naa ae Robert F. Kelley .......... Do. EN ee Cornwall H. Loomis. ..... Do. Calonry, Alberia.. oo. aaa Samuel C. Reat........... Consul a a oe Henry L. Fitts............| Vice consul. = Faaonion nm A ByattiCox. i ieneesse Agent. Yethbridge.......0...-. 00. Ralph A. Thrall..." Do. Campbellton, New Brunswick.| G. Carlton Woodward..... Consul. ATT rE Ce BR SR Lal pi SR LB Ca ee ee Th Vice consul. Do Re Co Co ae a a dr John B.iBarry. oc... .. 0. Bathurst, New Brunswick....| Claude M. Mersereaul...... Agent. Gaspe, Quebec re se ea Kingsley J. Carter........ Do. Cape Town, Cape of Good HOPO|--vcveeeecneacnnaaenannnnn Consul general. Do a a a eR Eh Chorles J, Plsar........... Consul. SL aa ne ea Arthur H. Cawston.......| Vice consul. Cardi PAIS. . on aes John RB. Bradley.......... Consul. es SA Courtland Christiani......| Vice consul. Chaiielb Prince Ed- George J. Crosby .......... Consul. ward Island. . YL RT Re AS Arthur B. Giroux......... Vice consul. Summerside. ul cide anna Neil Sinclair. ion. 0 ho. gent. Colombo, Ceylon.............. Marshall M. Vance........ Consul. I i ie ee W. B. Templeton Veach..| Vice consul. Cornwall, Ontarios. /cieeanann Thomas D. Edwards...... Consul. RR A IE BREE a Le Gh Cl rT Vice consul. LA ces Siam ss mn wi Ellsworth E. Emigh...... Do. Dublin, prolond . oo n Charles M. Hathaway, jr..| Consul. TT ea eS I LR Re Vice consul. Posiy. ns Ah Harold M. Collins......... Do. PO sei ada Loy W. Henderson....... Do. Donia. Niersisiiniess .4 Richard BR. Willey........ Do. DO estan Ea Re Lucius H. Johnson........ Do. Galway, Irdland.......ccopiex Robert A. Tennant....... Agent. Dundes, Scotland... .... F0 Henry Abert Johnson ....| Consul ram ana nae a es SR SR in Vice consul. Dunferimiinc, Scotland........ Howard D. Van Sant...... Consul. re Te GRO Warren C. Stewart. .......| Vice consul. Durban, Nota) oo. nics. Lewis V. Boyle........... Consul. Ee El Hugh S. Hood............| Vice consul. Edits, Scotland. Hunter Sharp Consul. Sekt. fan ser Ler oa me ey ie Vice icogsul. Fernie, British Columbia, Norton F. Brand..........| Consul. a a ee ER George A. Follett. ........| Vice consul. Fort William and Port Ar= | Dudley G. Dwyre........ Consul. thar, Ontario. i te Le NIELS Sl Harry Irving De Lamater.| Vice consul. Georgetown, Guisng:-.........- Chester W. DaviS......... Consul. at ead Willis G. Harry...........| Vice consul. Eiaeg Dutch Guiana. ..| James S. Lawton.......... Agent. Sint ar a Nee Richard L. Sprague....... Consul. rh Ren F. Maclin Marrow, jr......| Vice consul. Glasgow, Seofland =. ....... George E. Chamberlin. .... Consul. ea aes Edward B. Cipriani......| Vice consul. Halifax) Nova Scotia. .......... Edwin N. Gunsaulus......| Consul general. na LC Conger Reynolds.........| Vice consul. AE RS LT L. Pole Pole gab Do. Arena Nova Scotia. .... Arthur C. Barnaby... Agent. Lunenburg, ‘Nova Scotia. ..... Daniel’ J. Budo. > Do. Hamilion, Bermuda... colo i fe oe aT Consul. Edwin Clay Merrell....... Vice consul. Frederick Joseph Robert- | Agent. son. José de Olivares........... Consul. David Donaldson. ........ Vice consul. Joseph A.McOsker ....... Do. JsJames Ryerson... 0 Agent. William H. Gale.......... Consul general. William J. McCafferty..... Vice consul. Francis O. Seidle.......... Do. 498 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— continued. Hui, England... John H..Grout....-....... Consul. Porat va aE Albert-W Stott... zu: Vice consul. Johannesburg, Transvaal..... George K. Donald Consul. Eran SIS HE John R. Minter. .... .| Vice consul. Bloomionien, Orange Free | Arthur E. Fichardt Agent. Stat Harsch, Indin......... id Avra M. Warren ......... Consul. Ee Vice consul. Kingston, Jomalen. oo eines Charles L. Latham........ Consul. i ER A TA Thomas & Horn.........| Vice consul. Kingston, Ontario. ....-.....+ Felix S. S. Johnson. ...... Consul. LE een ane Alfred P. Lothrop. wee----.| Vice consul. Leeds, England... Percival Gassett.. Consul. a i ar Sw wratel John F. Clafiey...........| Vice consul. Liverpool, England............. Horace Lee SY Shinsioh Consul. Are LA Sea Robert R. Patterson......| Vice consul. ere Li unite ad J. Howard D. West. ...... Do. Lonaoh; Bndbond......oo Robert P. Skinner........ Consul general. essa Ee a Irving N. Linnpell......... onsul. eee a Rede anion Leslie E. Reed............ Do. (ra eR ts Sate Maurice C. Pierce......... Do. FT SS Sa a Eliot B. Coulter........... Vice consul. Bo. end Charles L. De Vault....... Do. I el ar ee a Howard Donovan......... Do. Dore i, William N. Carroll........ Do. |RSS Russell H. Rhodes. ....... Do. Po ary Ollis B. Ferguson. ........ Do. Dz ARR aR BS William C. Young........ Do. Le ea] Frank H. Larned. ........ Do. Loi Ontario.....occ cous G. Russell Taggart........ Consul. OF i ee Charles E. B. Payne. ..... Vice consul. Madras, India. i ina Ee Rene Consul. AURIS Hooker A. Doolittle ......| Vice consul. Malta, Maltese Islands. ........ Mason Mitchell............ Consul. aia He 5 a aa a we SN ma YS Ee ay Sm a Vice consul. Manchester, England. ........ Ross E. Holaday.-....----: Consul. CES UE Re Lael Francis Wells. ............| Vice consul. daeesia SER n a ee James M. Hill .......o.... 0. MID irne. Australia.......... Thomas Sammons. ....... Consul general. DG EA ee RE Ee a Vice consul. D0. viiniani ss tas Ses Harn Austin R. Preston, jr..... Do. DO hs ee ‘William A. Dunlap....... Do. Moncton, New Brunswick..... Bertil M. Rasmusen.......| Consul. EST Ba SR ESR Edward A. Cummings. ...| Vice consul. Newcastle, New Brunswick... Robert A.N. Jarvis....... Agent. Montreal, Quebet...e.coue..... Albert Halstead........... Consul general. Do. ne iy H. Merle Cochran. Consul. DO i i arctan isan John C. Moomaw.. .| Vice consul. Le SN EB ea a Do. Po: or ae iia Claude R. Michels Do. Nairobi, Kenya, Africa. ........ William L. Jenkins. ...... Consul. ese Oscar Thomason..........| Vice consul. Nasa, N. P., Bahamas....... Lorin A. Lathrop......... Consul. I Richard F. Boyce.........| Vice consul. Neweasie; N. BW, Australi. iio cts ns oa Du eo nari Consul. Fm La ER SS Walter T. Costello... .....| Vice consul. Brine Queensland. ........ Robert Henry Tanner..... Agent. Niagara Falls, Ontario....... i James B. Milner........... Consul. Does oo aa rei, Francis M. Sack .......... Vice consul. Newmghanm, England. Calvin M. Hitch...........| Consul. ee a Herbert C. Biar...... .| Vice consul. Do Le er ee Arthur A. Gunning. g Do. Ottawa, Ontarle.... ....... John G. Foster--........- Consul general. DoS ac a Gilson G. Blake, jr.....-.. Vice consul. Do 0 fo Horace M. Sanford........ Do. DOs. ae di GF svn vem bn William Clarke Vyse...... Do. Penang, Straits Settlements Renwick S. MeN iece...... Consul. Sis a i a ees Vice consul. Plymouth, England ........... Ralph C. Busser..-....... Consul. SS a Bernard F. Hale. .........| Vice consul. Port Elizabeth, Cape of Good | Monnett B. Davis........ Consul. al e. 3 °r Se Richard R. Callahan ...... Vice consul. Ras Jona; Cape of Good | George C. Starkey......... Agent. Prescott, Syatario eR a Frank C. Denison......... Consul. Re RR a Patrick James McAndrews | Vice consul. Prine, Rupert, British Colum- | Ernest A. Wakefleld...... Consul. bia White Horse, Yukon Territory | D. August Muirhead...... Agent. Quebec, Quebec BEST E. Haldeman Dennison. ..| Consul. 1 Te AR Du a [Hugh 8. Miller......... «...| Vice consul. Unated States Consular Officers. 429 GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS—GREECE. | | | | | Office. Officer. Rank. | | | GREAT BRITAIN AND DOMINIONS— continued. J Queenstown, Irefand.......... John A. Gamon..........- Consul. Pos. cosine io John S. Richardson, jr....| Vice consul. I Limerick, Ireland ............- John 3 Dinan... ieee Agent. { | Rangoon, India... .0. oak James P. Moffitt.......... Consul. | DG. iit ores ita Howard B. Osborn........ Vice consul. | Regina, Saskatchewan ......... Jesse H. Johnson.......... Consul. | ot i a rats E. Eugene Herbert........| Vice consul. i Riviere du Loup, Quebec...... Lawrence P. Briggs ...... Consul. { Ee hy Garcia D.Ingells.......... Vice consul | | St. Jo oh, New Brunswick... ... Henry S. Culver.......... Consul. ! au Ng Co ne] Edward H. Carter. ....... Vice consul. | St. Johns, Newfoundland......| James S. Benedict... ..... Consul. | ine Ra RTs Timothy V. Hartnett. ....| Vice consul. | St. Stephen, New Brunswick..| Alonzo B. Garrett......... Consul. ste bir ee sree John C. Mooman..........| Vice consul. i rn New Brunswick. .| Frederick C. Johnson..... Do. | St. Leonards, New Brunswick .| Alphonse P. Labbie. ...... Agent, | | Sarnia, Oniagiod oro oi Henry W. Diederich. ..... Consul. Me Dy aan Raymond C. Hafey . -..... Vice consul. i Sault Ste. Marie, Oniptio.. 2b... 0 oren Consul. | Eee SRTESTAY § SE lL Ase for EdwinJ. Collis. .......... Vice consul. Shefneid, England............: William J. Grace.......... Consul. tie a Ta RTA Rice K. Evans............| Vice consul. | Sherbrooke Quechee... a0 Edward L. Adams Consul. | sansa ian ea es Reh Ray Marchand-........... Vice consul. ! Bene Junction, Quebec. . Hoel S. Beebe...-......... Agent. ! Singapore, Straits Settlements.| Ernest L. Harris. ......... Consul general, Pe Peter H. A. Flood ........ Vice consul. \ B05 ose iesnnn as r Wade Blackard........... Do. Do id sohn:XH. Lord. ......x.n. Do. Southampton, England. ..... John M. Savage........... Consul. D0 re a ae Roy E. B. Bower......... Vice consul. DO i insane hh F. Willard Calder......... Do. Jersey, Channel Islands....... Albert E. Ereaut......... Agent. Stoke-on-Trent, England... ..| William F. Doty.......... Consul. a ee ET SL RR a te Vice consul. Swann, Wales... on Arthur B. Cooke.......... Consul. es rs eae ae a Paul F. Darcy............| Vice consul. Syd ney, Australia... .........: Henry P. Starrett......... Consul. REE BRS TURE BT Es RBS eae Romeyn Wormuth....... Do. ER SS IR He a Se A P. Harley Moseley. ....... Vice consul. ) Svd ney, Nova Scotia........... Charles M. Freeman.......| Consul. ‘Toronto, Ontario. ............. Chester W. Martin. ....... Consul. D0. a lea. J. Franklin Points. ....... Vice consul. Dod di io sa Frederick A. Bohne. ...... Do. North Bay, Ontario........... Harold S. Tewell.......... Do. Peterborough, Ontario. ...| Charles ¥. Leonard. ...... Agent. : Trinidad, West Indies. ........ Henry. D.Baker.......-.: Consul Do Alexander W. MacKenzie.| Vice consul. Do Alfredo L. Demorest...... Do. Brighton, Island of Trinidad ..| Marc de Verteuil.......... Agent. Grenada, West Indies. ........ John McGilehrist.......... 0. Vancouver, British Columbia. .| Frederick M. Ryder....... Consul general. DB hr TI David C. Kerr... .... vo... Vice consul. 1 Se Nova Scotia....... Port Hawkesbury,Nova Scotia Alonzo A. Martell......... Jeremiah Philpot.......... Vice consul. Agent. Do. Ocean Falls, British Columbia.| Hugh E. Burdon.......... Agent. Victoria, British Columbia. . . . . Robert Brent Mosher... .. Consul. Bo. oo ol Robert M. Newcomb...... Vice consul. ! Comherlond.......c..o. George W. Clinton. ....... Agent. | NonalnG.. oc. iar Archibald C. Van Houten. * Do. | Wellington, New Zealand...... David F. Wilber.......... Consul ‘general. | 9 a a rae ant i Tea John E. Moran............. ! Marshall I. Mays......... Alfred A. Winslow ....... Edwin N. Gunsaulus, jr... Vice consul. D Vice consul. 0. Consul general. Winnip Manitonn. cee. --- Joseph I. Brittain......... Consul general. et Tl ra LL Roger N. Davis...........| Vice consul. | Tr Ontario. i eaten Rupert H. Moore.......... Agent. | Yarmouth, Nova Scotia.....-. John N. MeCunn..... .. Consul. {ee MS be La SRE Se ES a Vice consul. Annapolis Royal.............. Jacob M. Owen........... Agent. | Liverpool, Nova Scotia........ Jason M. Maek............ Do. | | GREECE. : Athens.......................L Will L. Lowrie............ | Consul general. | Dose: aie aia ar John G. Erhardt.......... Consul. | Lee ER William P. George. -...... Do. Dea Constantine M. Corafa..... Do. | Bol oN William R. Morton........ LoDo 430 Congressional Directory. GREECE—ITALY AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. GREECE—continued. Patras. .......--.a.c..c-o- George K. Stiles........... Consul. RHE Lt SB SR Manson Gilbert. ...coeea.. Vice consul. Kalamata. sii Sotioris Carapateas....... Agent. Saloniki Leland B. Morris......... Consul. Doms ir an Sidney E. O’Donoghue...| Vice consul. 1D Te A RR Se John W. Henderson ...... Do. Docc... a Adam Beaumont......... Do. GUATEMALA. Guatemala. ................... Arthur C. Frost. .... .-... Consul. DO a oe a aes] Nelson: R. Park... 000... Vice consul. I ES BR Henry T. Dwyer-......... Do. Puerto Barrios... ..........---: Wallace C. ARN ey Do. San Jose de Guatemals.. .....-|c.eee evecare ane smnmmsis sama. Agent. HAITI. Cans Haltlenn aii Damon C. Woods......... Consul. ne pe Se ss wa wn es Clarence C. Woolard. . ..-.| Vice consul. Gonaives emovewvessse J. William Woél Agent. Port de Paix...... Charles Abegg...... : Do. Port a1 Prince. Zicivsoonre ile forint boas asses mes Consul. A SR Hl Robert Dudley Longyear.| Vice consul. LB ThE SpE SE en William H. Brown........ 0. ANRCAYes. a sees Albert F. Guizmer........ Agent. Jeremie... cies, St. Charles Villedrouin.... Do. St.Mave ot Francis A. Fitzpatrick. ... Do. HONDURAS. Celba a... i arisen Alexander K. Sloan....... Consul. D0e cisco ce inic cis animaine nine Derrill H. McCollough..... Vice consul. EEE Ne Bl CEE SR eae Stanley L. Wilkinson... .. Do. TE TE I SO NE ee, Robert C. Purdy.......... Do. BONACET-~=>-vs=2snsnnsvsinene- Sandy Kirkconnell........ Agent. PCT UOC OTLeS. sae slsnn vrans oso wenas es ies nasal seta roms Consul. ri EEE re el PRR TR) Knox Alexander... Vice consul. Dos inn. scat en eins Ray H. Miller . . 0. San PedroSula.... ........-: i M. Mitchell, j jr. Agent. Tegucigalpa... ..ccoauueean.. aa Robert LL. Keiser io co Consul. D0 ci i as min Ee Vice consul. Amapala.. i.e tne sine Br Po Fre AA on rok A Agent. HUNGARY Baddpest.. rae ed Consul. id he Sten wep Edwin Carl Kemp........ - Do. Si nl Mog ahs le Se Digby A. Willson......... Vice consul. LTT i, Br a it Walter S. Reineck........ Do. DO nr ahaa Richard C. Beer........... Do. IRAQ (MESOPOTAMIA) Bagdad... «ona. oo La eS ase Consul. Bre Re SE Thomas R. Owens........ Do. Do: as in ie as | pan Ts RE Ha Re IRS Vice consul. ITALY AND DOMINIONS Catania. ...-c i iad ent Carl RB. 1L00D.. + -.-. oes Consul. DS He SS PR ES George P. Wilson. ........ Vice consul. Flotence: ..- = cornea. W. Roderick Dorsey. ..... Consul. ET i rt ra DIOL Frederick W. Baldwin. ...| Vice consul. DOs om Le a ae Earl Brennan .:........... Do. Genoa. i. sii iaiiiaa ny 5 ohn Ball ii RI Consul ‘general, ES es Wo:CaPunk . =.2,. sani Consul. Poo ern an rani Angelo ah ea ad Vice consul. Dos. ini tiie William P. Shockley...... Do. 15]) Phir ag ge RE SE SL TTL Jameés M. O’Brien ........ Do. Lucien Memminger. ...... Consul. Franklin C. Gowen........| Vice consul. Benjamin F. Chase........| Consul. George L. Brandt. ........ Do. E. Kilbourne Foote....... Vice consul. Clarence Carrigan......... Consul. Harry L. Troutman....... Vice consul, R. Flournoy Howard..... «Do. Sylvie QC. Leoni. = =. Do. Homer M. Byington. ..... Consul. Howard K. Travers....... Vice consul. Julian'C. Dorr... rot, Do. Alfred T. Nester.......... Do. Walter W. King.......... Do. Harold McClelland. ....... Do. Herbert F. Pearson....... Do. Edward I. Nathan........ Consul. United States Consular Officers. ITALY AND DOMINIONS—MEXICO. 431 Office. Officer. Rank. ITALY AND DOMINIONS—CON. Leroy Webber............ Vice consul. ‘Walter J. Linthicum...... Do. Robert B.Leary.......... Do. Francis B. Keene. ........ Consul general. Leon Dominian........... Consul. H.Barle Russell... ..... Do. James M. Bowecock........ Vice consul, Ralph A. Boernstein...... Do. “ Elion N, Gage... ...... Do. Joseph E. Haven......... Consul. Edwin N. Atherton....... Vice consul. Richard G. Monges.--...... Do. i i br CA A Fa nd Consul. Dana GC. Sycks.........-: Do. Prank DP. Smith. ......-- Vice consul. James B. Young... ...... Consul. JAPAN. J. Frank Deming.......... Laurence E Salisbury. ... Harold J. Newton......... E. Clark Creager.......... Harmon L. Broomall... .. Laurence E. Salisbury. ... Henry B, Hitchcock ..... Tevin'C. Correll... .. 2... Irvin'C.-Correll...:.. Harry F. Hawley ......... Ransford S. Miller........ FosterM.iBeck...7--i. = Taihoku, Taiwan.............. Harvey T. Goodier........ Yokohama ... ... ee rh eae ra PEN Ee Max D. Kirjassoff....~... a FEE AT he Teo D. Sturgeon: ....... | se a Le a Pal B Jenks. nine n | A SAN SE ei Edward Russell Kellogg. . LB re A Sam J. Wardell........... Be. William G. McCarthy. .... D0, as Leo D. Sturgeon .......... LATVIA. LL Tee LS St al a Se John P.Hurley.:.:2..... .. RR rR he a Charles H. Heisler......... DG el Bari L., Packer... ....... ee Te et a Carl Birkeland. ........... LIBERIA. Monrovia: ... . _. ...00.. Solomon Porter Hood... .. D0, aaa rah ama dam wnt Richard C. Bundy........ LITHUANIA. ROY. roiss or gmiien ana Clement S. Edwards....... DO i rei ae Jurgen H. L. Lorentzen.... IRI EB Jay Walker. ....... oo e.. MEXICO. Acapulco, Guerrero. ........... George A. Bucklin........ Ee Harry K. Pangburn....... Aguascalientes, Aguascalientes| Lee R. Blohm....___...._.. RRR pa Sh EA Harold G. Bretherton..... Chihuahua, Chihuahua....... W. M. Parker Mitchell.... Re lS SE RE Harry B..Ott =... 5.5. Parra CRAIN a ra a a a a ee Ciudad Juarez, Chibualiug. .. [ci caer. coi cis ihassan sees 0 at aa ae John'W. Dye. ..>. oo er ah me Oscar C. Harper.........-- Ensenada, Lower California....| Leighton Hope ........... ER Re I ES i LSS Re Sn EY EE Sha lao Frontera, Tabssco.............. Robert. Rankin. ........ Guadalajara, Jalisco........... Andrew J. McConnico..... 0d a Anthony Sherman........ Guaymas, Sonora ............. Bartley F. Yost. .......-.» Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Do. Do. Do. Interpreter. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Interpreter. Consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Consul general. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Interpreter. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Do. Consul general. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Agent. Consul. Do. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Congressional Directory. MEXICO—NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS. Office. Officer. Rank. MEXICO—continued. John A. McPherson....... Vice consul. Harold C. Wood.......... 0. NS SR RE aE Bs Consul. Siphon B. Aguirre. ...... Vice consul. Gilbert R. Willson........ Consul. Henry G. Krausse........ Vice consul. William E. Chapman..... Consul. 2 Ete a a a Vice consul. Harold Frederic Jones... .. Agent. A SR i oe Consul. Henry C. von Struve...... Do. Charles W. Doherty....... Vice consul. Claude I, Dawson......... Consul general. Thomas D. Bowman...... Consul. Edward P. Lowry. ....... Vice consul. Laurence P. Sours. ....... Do. Edwin B. Adams.......... Do. William O. Jenkins. ...... Agent. Paul. Hester ..o....5 Consul George D. Fitz Simmons. .| Vice consul. Henry C. A. Damm ..... Consul. Leo: lalrelren oo. vei Vice consul. Ho Prieta, Sonora..... 0... William W. Young........ Agent. Cananea, Sonora... Jeptha M. Gibbs.......... Do. Nuievo Laredo, Tamaulipas. ...0. cove li vada Consul. Harry L. Walsh..........: Consul. ‘William P. Blocker....... Consul. Ellis A. Bonnet... ....... Vice consul. 0. Gaylord Marsh......... Consul. Herman E. Gimler........ Vice consul. eT os Sls ae Ro ST Consul. George E. Seltzer.......... Vice consul. ETE AER I Consul. Fred. R. Robinson.....:.: Do. Earl Wilbert Eaton....... Vice consul, A A ER SA EN aR Consul. Potosi. 9 Rh eS COANE Walter F. Boyle.......... Do. i Aid Einar T. Anderson........| Vice consul. Tanioico, TampBEpas. os ror rT a Consul general. DO. ai in a James B. Stewart......... Consul. EE RR George P.Shaw........... Vice consul. 1B id LS a Willard L. Beaulac.... Do. 3 Ee UR a Clarence A. Miller......... Do. Lobos, Vera Cruz. .....:....-. ‘Donald A. Mathers........ Agent. Tuxpam Vera Cruz. ...... Albert J. Hoskins......... Do. Torreon, Cohan. eo Chester Donaldson........ Consul. es A Eh aE ET ee ee Ra Vice consul. Vera Crug, VeraCruz.......... John Q. Wood..:......... Consul. ea ee a a Willys A, Myers..........| Vice consul. MOROCCO Casablanca.................... Robert R. Bradford....... Consul. D0. i ne Charles A. Bay.........-.. Vice consul. Tangier... i iii. Joseph M. Denning. ....... Consul general, DO... isi ei Charles'T. Graham......... Vice consul. NETHERLANDS AND DOMINIONS Amsterdam ............0. 5. Frank W.Mahin.......... Consul. D0. snares sn es Clark P. Kuykendall...... Vice consul. a lei Albert M. Doyle........... Do. er a J. Stanford Edwards....... Do. Batavia,Java................ Charles L.. Hoover......... Consul. 0 AERP NT Ralph H. Tompkins. ..... Vice consul. LATE Herbert W. Wier. .......: Do. Curagao, West Indies.......... Bradstreet S. Rairden..... Consul. RRR Tree tn Re Sei Ha Vice consul. Medes, Sumatra... co. 00 Cart O. Spammer... ..co-usx Consul. Rotterdam. ..................... George E. Anderson....... Consul general. DIO. cei tits sana George D. Hopper........ Consul. A Re SRR Vice consul Es oe Ee SR a Sydney B. Redecker...... Do. DY ne Randolph F. Carroll. ..... Do. D0. nites ir Eugene Nabel............. Do. TheHagne.... ....... Soin ‘Anders C. Nelson... ...... Do. Blushing... oi. Pieter FB. Auer............ Agent. Luxemburg, Luxemburg..... Desiré Derulle...........- Do. Soerabaya, Java............... Parker W. Buhrman... .. Consul. I eRe Hugh Charles McCarthy...| Vice consul. a United States Consular Officers. 438 NICARAGUA—RUMANIA. | Office. Cfficer. Rank. NICARAGUA. ‘William 'W. Heard........ Consul. Thomas W. Waters....... Vice consul. Harold Playter............ Consul. Ra ak Henry H. Leonard........| Vice consul. Matosilon FEE TERS I | William H. De Savigny...| Agent. NORWAY { Bergen ph Lp Ee Do Sg George N.Iftt.... cots Consul. re tk Se RS Ernest T. Hodge..........| Vice consul. Chilaiania A EIT SE Alban G. Snyder.......... Consul general, ET EE BS Harry Edwin Carlson. .... Vice consul. LR Rr TRA Re Lo TE James J. Foley............ Do. Stavanger EES es EER Robert S. S. Bergh........ | Consul. LP ph Re a Fe SR Ee | Peiiiof C. Sigmond....... Vice consul. j . PALESTINE. Jerusalem... on ool a ei EIT, Consul. SR Ie ea George C. Cobb........... Vice consul. PANAMA COON. Julius D. Dreher.......... Consul. Oe hte tines sis Conn s Odin G. Loren..........:- Vice consul. Boecasidel Toro... ............; Wiley McMaster Denby gent. PaNANIR. co ed Tia E S ELe ags Consul general. EE i To Ch Pr PE GEOrge Orr... cov. wuiies Consul. EE Ae Ss ee Harry D. Myers.......... Vice consul. PARAGUAY Asuncion...... ........... .. 5 Harry Campbell cc........ Consul. D0 ri ne Sees ta se te a lS dE Ee mat es «PEL Lice Vice consul ] PERSIA. ! Teheran... Consul. {VISE SS Ri a a Do. PERU. i Callao=Ldma: i aT esis anni tan satansis Consul. D0. is ns Teal Claude E. Guyant......... Do. D0 a ea Floyd S. Jones............. Vice consul. D0. an aaa Walter C. Hoer... 8 Do. ~ 10 Ee AR Se re rae | William D. Smith, jr. Felis Do. ATOOUHDD cos cv. Tisha cunnnnenn Louis S. Blaisdell ......... Agent. 12 0r0Ya... 00 rosie, Clyde A. Warne........... Do. Mollendo............ Thomas Orams........... Do. LL OE Rr RS SE RT A a Charles B. G. Wilson... .. Do. SAloverry in Ci Thomas P. Curry......... Do. POLAN WarSaw............ ieee. Leo J. Keena.............. Consul general. Do. as ae Louis H. Gourley.......... Consul. Vo, ii ai Donald R. Heath......... Vice consul. Bos ee Robert Y. Jarvis... .... Do. Do i arial Sabin J. Dalferes.......... Do I SE a a A] ‘Walter J. Pawlak......... Do | Doo PE Monroe H. Kline.......... Do l PORTUGAL AND DOMINIONS. Fumchal._....... -......... = Stillman W. Eells.........| Consul. ishone... oo os W. Stanley Hollis......... Consulgeneral. LBL Ba SRS RRC H. Tobey Mooers......... Vice consul. 5 Pm te RR RG SE Hernan C. Vogenitz....... Do. SaoVicente,CapeVerdelIslands| J. B. Guimaraes........... Agent. Loanda, Angola Sane Reed Paige Clark......... Consul. DO an Julian L. Pinkerton Vice consul. LoutencoMarques, East Africa} Cecil M. P.Cross.......... Gong, Th Ee ES Sl Ae BRA EE AS IR aT 0. OPOIO-.cos oi einai inats Samuel H. Wiley......... Do. ER a TST Vice consul St. Michaels, AZOroR. i Drew Linard........... = Consul. Se TaN 1 or hots ae SU an IL Vice consul. NE te A len Archie William Childs. .... Do. Horta, Fayal, AzoreS.......... Reginald S Castleman.... Do. RUMANIA. Bucharest... ..... ........... Ely BE. Polmer........ 0... Consul. p PO ieee ees Donald F, Bigelow....... Vice consul. Bo... Edward Caffery........... Do. D0 ie John Skelton Ww illiams, Jr] Do. D0. eet John E. McAndrews......| Do. Constantza .................. Richard B. Haven... .....} Do. 24786°—67—4—2 434 Congressional Drrectory. SALVADOR—SYRIA. Office. Officer. Rank. SALVADOR. San Salvador.................. Lynn W. Franklin........| Consul. SERBS, CROATS, AND SLOVENES, KINGDOM OF. Kenneth S. Patton........ Consul. Edward M. Groth......... Vice consul. Henry R. Brown.......... Do. Brigg A. Perkins... Do. Joseph F'. McGurk. Consul. SPAIN AND DOMINIONS. Barcelong....................... TACOS. oii nine ns mins BHDAO. ii. ices BRE Las OS alos .| William P. George. H. rT Sea pyr Maurice P. Dunlap........ CarlC. Hansen. ........... Ralph J. Totten..........x Frank Anderson Henry.. Thomas W. Chilton. _..... V. Winthrope O’Hara..... Hiram A. Boucher........ C.Austin Castle.......... y Joseph Charles Mares. ..... Albion W. Johnson...... Ceesar Franklin Agostini. . § Henry M. Wolcott........ Johm 1, Holler... .:....-.. Percy G. Kemp.........;.. Fred C.Slater............. George C. Arnold, jr....... Julian F'. Harrington ...... Leonard G. Dawson....... "William C. Burdett. .... Edward E. Silvers. . Raymond Phelan. . Julian C. Greenup.... Valencia.......... .| Robert Harnden. ......... BO. es Manuel J. Codoner........ Do. ee Harold L. Schamberger.. Aleanier o.oo... Ls Henry W. Carey.....-.-.. Vigo... -...... Ci Henry T. Wilcox......---. Once shina te mee ons intl nse sR a Tl Se SWEDEN Goteborg: . o.oo. ives Walter H. Sholes.......... DO. ieee ea Herbert W. Carlson....... Malino tie io sn i Ene Sh a Gerhard H. Krogh........ Stockholm... .-.. ......... Dominic TI. Murphy....... D0. ‘Walter A. Leonard........ BDO ne Robert F. Fernald......... D0 neni eee William L. Peck.......... DO: cei as tee RR Per Torsten Berg.......... SWITZERLAND. Basel... cco ioivinvnannen «+ Philip Helland... |... M0. nes een George L. Fleming........ DO, atc mms vias wwe sie ‘W. Helmuth Mathee...... BOING... vinci cman Thornwell Haynes. ....... PO. os sei see i H. Armistead Smith...... CeNBYA ii aaives ves nnes Snail Lewis W. Haskell......... Bol. el ees Robert B. Macatee........ LOMSHNNI0 iowa inns iain winds winnie Fletcher Dexter......-.... St. Qala ed Gebhard Willrich......... IE pe ASS Se Mare T. Greene........... Zurieh....... 0. George H. Murphy........ Are a EN ee Ee James R. Wilkinson....... 11 y Sr Se a Charles W. Allen......... THCOTNC Ss oie sivas sin James J. Murphy, jr....... SYRIA Lt AR a Jesse B. Jackson. ......... LR RRS Se ee Thomas R. Flack......... Beirut... ©... ......... 0... Paul Knabenshue......... a Sr NR el Charles 'T. Hearin.....-. .- Do ass Frederick O. Bird......... Damascus, .................... Charles E. Allen.......... Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. onal general. Consu Be. Do. Vice consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Horace Remillard. ........ C Vice consul. onsul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. ..| Vice consul. ..| Consul. .| Vice consul. D 0. Consul. Vice consul. 0. -| Agent. Consul. - Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Consul. 0. Vice consul. D 0. Consul. Viee consul. D 0. Consul. Vice consul. Consul. Vice consul. D 0. Consul. Vice consul. Consul general. Vice consul. Do. Consul. Consul. Vice consul. Consul in charge. Vice consul. Do Consul in charge. United States Consular Officers. 435 URUGUAY—OFFICES NOT ELSEWHERE LISTED. Office. Officer. Rank. Montevideo... ................-- David J. D. Myers........ Consul. eer Ee Raymond H. Geist ....... Vice consul. { 10 RR Bes UR ie Sherwood H. Avery Do. DOL wl ints pants dnnis Robert L. Jennison....... Do. DOs snntiin eis davaniass Howard C. Tinsley........ Do. VENEZUELA. Caracas,a.. clos. ater i ak Thomas W. Voetter....... Consul. Dou. Tn. AREA Arthur L. Williams....... Vice consul. La Guaira.............. 500000. ooo lumina mid 40 0. ! Dosuia. ros dibval duin Samuel J. Fletcher........ Vice consul. H Ciudad Bolivar... ............ William Dalton Hender- | Agent. son. «Maracaibo. .i.cina. dag. John O. Sanders.......... Consul. SOEUR RE CT ET 2 ST HRS SRR i ae Vice consul. Puerto Cabello................ William P. Garrety....... Consul. Do... Lands. small George R. Phelan......... Vice consul. j I OFFICES NOT ELSEWHERE : LISTED. 3 | ADI, Woslolm Somes... a aia Consul. Eee Rh SR TN Quincy F. Roberts........ Vice consul. | Constantinople... ........._. Gabriel Bie Ravndal...... Consul general. D0. ii crn nas oes nae es Oscar SS. Heizer. ........0 Consul. D0 ce nm atts Sadie tnn Harold R. Foss. ........ Do. | Ee er Mare ter tea Silat Maynard B. Barnes....... Vice consul. Do ar Edwin A. Plitt~.......... Do. 11 Re TE Bay an an A James H. Keeley, jr...... Do. Po. ieee Robert W. Imbrie......... Do. 1 Poa, ai Thomas Jefferson Murphy. Do. | Smyrna, Smyrna District... ... George Horton... .... Consul general in charge. | 15 Pris iis imei gle A. Wallace Treat.......... Vice consul, | D0 nat ne James LL. Park... ... i... Do. i Vladivostok, Sibe S. Pinkney Tuck ..... ..| Consul. | Do... 24s Rollin R Winslow........| Vice consul. 1 Do... Charles H. Stephan....... Do. | IT ee SE Ra Frederick S. Pray ........ Do. | 10a To Sand Millard L.Thomas........ Do. | Chita cla a Edward B. Thomas. ...... Do. CONSULAR ASSISTANTS. | | Harbert C. Biar....... re SE pe Nottingham. [ Leonard N. Green ......-cvc--ss-= Washington, | James GQ, Finley... 00. i. Lille. | Jobn'J. Mucclo... co... ccat- oon Washington. Herbert 8. Bursley................ Sofia. | Christian M. Ravndal............. .Vienna. ® INTERPRETERS. | (Promoted from corps of student interpreters.) Howard Bucknell.................. Canton. Laurence E. SaliSbury............. Kobe. i Maxwell M. Hamilton ............ Canton. WH. Gilbert ing. ol. Coes Shanghai. 8 Carl D. Meinhardt................. Changsha. David C. Berger......... 4... % Tientsin. i Flavius J. Chapman, 3d........... Harbin. Irvin GC. Correll... .....co-escanie- Nagasaki. | Harman L.. Broomsall.............. Kobe. 1.60 DD. STUIZeon. ...cu ee cnniorcsinson Yokohama. | STUDENT INTERPRETERS. | CHINA. | Robert T.acy Smyth............... Peking. Edwin PF, Stanton...............-..: Peking. i George Atcheson, jr............... Peking. Harry BE. Stevens... 5... cues eking. | Culver B. Chamberlain............ Peking. | Z JAPAN. William. Nason :. >". > t.. =. Tokyo. | | i CONSULS GENERAL AND CONSULS TEMPORARILY UNASSIGNED OR TEMPORARILY ASSIGNED TO THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE. ! Ralph H. Bader... ..c.oon ilar - Unassigned. Edwin. Neville... .....L......: Department. | George F. Bickford................ Unassigned. Edward J, Norton... ... i-aeeres on Department. | Charles C. Broy.......u. sesno=svi-- Unassigned. Mahlon Fay Perkins.............. Department. | Hamilton C. Claiborne... .......... Department. Lowell C. Pinkerton. ......--.5-... Department. Felix Cole cori. deioment asta - Department. DeWitt C. Poole... ...........---.. Department. | Hassell H. Dick. ..c.uiniinsith- 30 - Department. John Randolph... ...i:.-L. Department. | J. Preston Doughten. ............. Department. Donald D. Shepard... 0. oor. Department. | Samuel W. Honaker.............. Unassigned. Frederick Simpich..... . > ...... Department. J Douglas Jenkins... ...Department. TdearC.Soflle. .. 0... 0 5h Department. y | John D. Johnson... ...Department. Addison E. Southard. .. Department. { Harry: M. Lakin. o. ca. coos. Department. Nathaniel B. Stewart... -...Department. | PraCy Lai uides ii - - wonsrmaisnii- Department. North Winship... i... io .--=- Unassigned. | Fronk GC. Lee: ............3aadivr.. Department. Evan BE. Yeung......c.. od... Unassigned. i Dong. G. Munro. . cee ooo. conve snins- Department. 436 Congressional Directory. FOREIGN CONSULS IN THE UNITED STATES. ARGENTINA—BELGIUM. Regidence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ARGENTINA. Mobile, Ala............. G. Russell Ladd...... Vice consul...... .. Los Angeles, Calif.......| James M. Sheridan... |..... oh San Francisco, Calif... . Apalachicola, Fla....._.. Pensacola, Fla... ....... Savannah, Ga.......... Chicago, Til... 20 New Orleans, La... . Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass........... Pascagoula, Miss........ St. Louis, Mo........... New York, N. Y...... Philadelphia, Pa...... _. anila, P. IT SanJuan, P.R... Port Arthur, Tex....... Newport News, Va. __. Noriolk, Va.......:.. AUSTRIA. Chicago Tl. ovn New York, N. Y....... BELGIUM. Birmingham, Ala....... Mobile,Ala............ Santos Gofi.... i... Boutwell Dunlap. .... William W. Pooser.... J. Harris Pierpont..... Agustin Mariano Ojeda. . John W. Thomas... .. Antenor Gerez........ Alfred Le Blane... .... Juan L. Dantzler..... |... - Gustavo von Brecht... Ernesto C. Perez... .. Santiago O. Leguiza- mon. Guillermo P. Wilson... José Florentino Fer- nandez. Sergio Ramirez... ... Christopher S. Flana- gan. H.C. leslie.s...... Ludwig Kleinwichter. Friedrich Fischerauer. V.G.Nesbit:.".... 7. Vice consul........ Sr oLrS isin Vice consul ....... Consul general... Vice consul..... oa a G0... 0 ost Consul general in charge of con- sulate. Consul general. . .. Consul... ..2.li3 For Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washing- ton, Wyoming, and the Philip- ine Islands. California. Also in St. Joseph. For Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin. For Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Ten- nessee, and Texas. Maryland. Mississippi. .| United States, except the States included in the jurisdiction of the consulate general of San Francisco. Philippine Islands. Porto Rico. With jurisdiction also in Newport News. For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michi- gan, Minnesota, Missouri, Mon- tana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Da- “kota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming; Alaska, Hawaii, Philippine Islands, Vir- gin Islands, and Porto Rico. For Alabama, Connecticut, Dela- ware, Florida, Georgia, Ken- tucky, Maine, Maryland, Massa- chusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsyl- vania, RhodeIsland, South Caro- lina, Tennessee, Vermont, Vir- ginia, and West Virginia. Counties of Bibb, Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Clay, Cleburne, Col- bert, Cullman, Dekalb, Etowah, Fayette, Franklin, Jackson, Jef- ferson, Lamar, Lauderdale, Law- rence, Limestone, Madison, Ma- rion, Marshall, Morgan, Pickens, Randolph, St. Clair, Shelby, Talladega, Tuscaloosa, Walker, and Winston. Counties of Autauga, Baldwin, Barbour, Bullock, Butler, Cham- bers, Chilton, Choctaw, Clarke, Coffee, Conecuh, Coosa, Coving- ton, Crenshaw, Dale, Dallas, Elmore, Escambia, Geneva, Greene, Hale, Henry, Houston, Lee, Lowndes, Macon, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, Momgomers, Perry, Pike, Russell, Tallapoosa, ‘Wilcox. umter Washington, and Consuls in the United States. 487 BELGIUM. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. BELGIUM—continued. San Francisco, Calif....| J. Sithon.............. Consul.........-.-. Alaska, Arizona, California, Ha- ; waii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Denver, Colo. .......... Fl. Mignolet... ........ dogs. Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyo- ming. Jacksonville, Fla... .... JF. Bland........... | Vice consul....... For Florida. Pensacola, Fla.......... H. Hilton Greene..... foi doi. es. 3 Atlanta, Ga--.........L H.L.DeGive........ Consal............ Georges except southeastern eorgia. : Savannah, Ga.......... | BE. W. Rosenthal...... lacs IE SRE nes Counties of Appling, - Berrien, Brooks, Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Camden, Clinch, Coffee, Colquitt, } Charlton, Chatham, Columbia, Decatur, Dodge, Dooly, Echols, Effingham, Emanuel, Glascock, ! Glynn, Hancock, Houston, Ir- | win, Jefferson, Johnson, Laurens, { i | Los Angeles, Calif....... CheWinsel...........: Vice consul....... Arizona and southern California. Liberty, Lowndes, McDuffle, McIntosh, Mitchell, Montgomery, Pierce, Pulaski, Richmond, Screven, Tattnall, Telfair, Thomas, Twiggs, Ware, Warren, ‘Washington, Wayne, Wilcox, ‘Wilkinson, and Worth. Honolulu, Hawaii... Vi Lappe. ........vets Vice consul....... E : Chicago, igang C. Vermeren. ......... ons. ...o. Illinois (except the Moline consular : district) and Indiana. | Moline, 11. ............. C. De Voghelaere....... Vice consul....... For the counties of Adams, Brown, Bureau, Calhoun, Fulton, Han- | | cock, Henderson, Henry, Knox, McDonough, Mercer, Peoria, Pike, Rock Island, Schuyler, Stark, and Warren in Illinois, andin Iowa the counties of Adair, Adams, Appanoose, Cass, Clarke, t) Davis, Decatur, Des Moines, Fre- | mont, Henry, Jefferson, John- son, Keokuk, Lee, Louisa, Lucas, Madison, Mahaska, Marion, : | | | | i | Mills, Monroe, Montgomery, Muscatine, Page, Pottawatta- mie, Ringgold, Scott, Taylor, Union, Van Buren, Wapello Warren, Washington, an ‘Wayne. Dubuque, Iowa........ XPrim... So... 20 Consul............ For Iowa, except the Moline (Ill.) - consular district. Louisville, Ky.......... Louis Hermann. ...... Acting vice consul.| Kentucky, except the counties of Boone, Kenton, and Campbell. New Orleans, La....... M.Ulser.. icine Consul............ Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missis- | sippi, Missouri, Nebraska, New | Mexico. North Dakota, Okla- homa, South Dakota, Texas, | and Wyoming. Baltimore, Md.......... | J. G. Whiteley........ lec... do... on Delaware and Maryland. | Boston, Mass........... | Thomas H. Robbins. .{..... do. ...... 5 Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- | shire, and Vermont. Detroit, Mich........... RP Boeye.... Laon G0... ... 0 Michigan. Minneapolis, Minn...... 0. E. Safford......... feats do... 00000 Minnesota. Kansas City, Mo........ G.Mignolet........... bores: Qo... 0s Kansas and Kansas City, Mo. St.Louis, Mo... ...... M. Seguin. z........... [os dois Missouri, except Kansas City. | : Omaha, Nebr........... Lh. I.Nolan... o.... 1... do. .......... Nebraska, North Dakota, and | { | South Dakota. i New York, N. Y....... P. Mali. | Honorary consul | For the United States, except the ! 5 general. districts of the consuls in New i Johnston Mali......... Honorary vice Orleans and San Francisco. | consul. I Léon J. Garcey........ Consular agent... .. | Cincinnati, Ohio........ LoAcAnl-.... cc. .Congal.. 0.008 For the southern part of Ohio, in- | G.A. Aerts... | Viceconsul....... cluding the counties of Darke, ] i Madison, Franklin, and Muskin- gum. In Kentucky, the counties ; of Boone, Campbell, and Kenton. Cleveland, Ohio........ Homer McKeehan....| Consul............ For the northern counties of Ohio. * Oklahoma City, Okla...| Mont F. Highley.._._. | Vice consul. ...... Arkansas and Oklahoma. Portland, Oreg......... SHIM a | Honorary consul | daho, Oregon, and Washington. . | __ genera FO. oH. Iabbe........: | Vice consul. ...... | 438 Congressional Directory. il BELGIUM—BRAZIL. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. BELGIUM—continued. Philadelphia, Pa....... E. De Mey........... Consgl............. Counties of Adams, Bedford,Berks, Blair, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon, Center, Clinton, Chester, Colum- bia, Cumberland, Dauphin, Del- aware, Franklin, Fulton, Hunt- ingdon, Juniata, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh, Lu- zerne, Lycoming, Mifflin, Monroe, Montgomery, Montour, North- ampton,Northumberland, Perry, Pike, Potter,Philadelphia,Schuyl- kill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susque- hanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming, and York. Pittsburgh, Pa......... Pajpidier to... o.oo lac. IT Been Counties of Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Cambria, Cam- eron, Clarion, Clearfield, Craw- ford, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Law- rence, McKean, Mercer, Somer- set, Venango, Warren, Washing- : ton, and Westmoreland. Manila, P. 1.0 .co.. 0 P. Verstraeten........|..... by Philippine Islands. Porto: Ricozi(Habana oli... decide. inn esisnnsnn Consul general. ...| Porto Rico, St. Croix, St. John, and uba). : St. Thomas. Mayaguez, P. R........ A. Bravo. .........kx Vice consul....... Departments of Mayague: and i Aguadilla. Ponce, P. Reason vakiooliade. de... ooneielaa. ls d0.4.. 0 i Deparment of Guayama and once. SanJnan, PuR..oo. 0 J: B.Saldafla.........| Consal............ Departments of Arecibo, Bayamon, and Humacao, and the island of Vieques. Charleston, S. C........ B.RButledge...........[....- do... ........-. North Carolinaand South Carolina. Memphis, Tenn... .... P..S«MeDonsld........|....dozi........¢.. Galveston, Tex......... M.H. Royston........|-.... Q0see irae Texas. Norfolk and Newport | P.J. André Mottu....|..... dostc ..onn News, Va. Richmond, Va......... Fred E. Nolting ...... cies Qs: ose siammmnn Virginia and West Virginia. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- | E. Van Beverhoudt...|..... 0.3 ene St. Croix, St. John, and St, lands. Thomas. Seattle, Wash. ......... R. Auzias de Turenne.|..... B05. vriiaes on Washington. JeHertogs......-...... Viceconsul....... Green Bay, Wis........ M. J. Heynen......... Consil............ Wisconsin. B LIVIA. Mobile, Ala............. T. G. McGonigal...... Honorary vice consul. Los:Angeles, Califo al. viuinni. f Lisvaas Honorary consul. . San Diego, Calif. ....... Philip Morse.......... Consul... .......- San Francisco, Calif. ...| Alberto Palacios......|.....d0. ccuuueunna. Chicago, Wend... Manuel Soria Galvarro | Honorary consul. . New Orleans, La. ...... Gregorio Garret....... Consol... ..... Baltimore, Md.......... Raymond M. Glacken.|..... do-i. eee Boston, Mass........... Arthar P. Cashing... .|..... his poh me Kansas City, Mo........ Edwin R. Heath...... Honorary consul. . St. Louis, Mo. via... 0: Arnold George Stifel. .|..... do......... 253 New York, N. Y....... Carlos Gumucio....... Consul general. ... Philadelphia, Pa....... Wilfred H. Schoff..... Honorary consul. . Norfolk, Va..... gE John: D. Leitch........ Vice consul. ...... Seattle, Wash.......... Nemesio Menacho..... Consul..........& BRAZIL. Mobile, Ala........o5. Timon Gile McGoni- | Vice consul....... = gal. San Francisco, Calif i. ic.ciiiducon nn vninnnennus Consul........... Ludwig Mathias Hoef-| Vice consul. ...... er. ! Eugene Gesvret....... Commercial agent. I Panama, Canal Zone..| Jorge Domingo Arias | Consul............ i Feraud. Fernandina, Fla... .... John Brown Gordon | Viceconsul....... all. Jacksonville, Fla. ...... JoeL XH Tucker........[. 0. do. cei at Pensacola, Fla.......... Vicente: Vidal.......[...0u: do......adous Brunswick; Qa. ii ola oeonibit. onan ici Commercial agent. Savannah,Ga.......... W. Gordon Rossignol..|..... do... Honolulu, Hawaii...... Antonio DanielCastro.| Consul............ Hawaii. Chicago, I... ......... Pedro Nunes de S4....|.....d0............. Paul Stuart Winslow.| Vice Consul....... Donald L. Derrom....| Consular agent.... Louisville, Ky.......... George R. Washburne.| H OROrarY vice consul. Consuls in the United States. 439 4 BRAZIL—CHILE. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. BRAZIL—continued. New Orleans, La. ...... Vietor: Ferreira da {Consul............ Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Flor- Cunha. ida, Georgia, Louisiana, Missis- l : Soni New Mexico, Oklahoma, | and Texas. Baltimore, Md.......... Luiz Magalh es Ta- |..... doi. oobi un | vares. | Leon du Bois......... Vice consul........ | Boston, Mass........... Jayme Mackay d’Al- |..... do.cevisaifits. meida. Pedro Mackay d’Al- | Commercial agent. i meida. | Gulfport, Miss.......... Gabriel Bruner Dantz-| Vice consul........ i er. ! William Ross. ........ Commercial agent. Pascagoula, Miss........ ManuelRos. .......... Vice consul........ i Andrew Gray......... Commercial agent. ! 8t. Louis, Mo........... Eduardo Porto Osorio | Consul.......... - | Bordini. | Jerome Joseph Schot- | Commercial agent. | ten. ! Bullalo, NoX ha i) aS Re A es Consul. ......i.50 ! Now York, N.Y. ..... Helio Lobo......:.o--. Consul general. ...| Alaska, Colorado, Connecticut, Jo#o Carlos Muniz... .. Deputy consul....| Delaware, District of Columbia, Gabriel de Andrade...{ Viceconsul....... Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, 1 i Maryland, Massachusetts, Michi- gan, Minnesota, Montana, Ne- i braska, Nevada, New Hamp- | shire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, | West Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. : | Cleveland, Ohio ....... Honorary vice | consul. Philadelphia, Pa....... Vice consul........ Manila PU. ......... Consul ..c;...cn nae San Juan, P. R......... Vice consul........ Albert Edward Lee. ..| Commercial agent. Charleston, 8. C........ Robert G. Rhett, jr....| Vice consul........ Galveston, Tex......... Fred M. Burton.......|.c... IE Port Arthur, Tex....... Christopher Stephen |..... B05. nin Flanagan. Richard Patrick Flan- | Commerical agent. agan. Norfolk and Newport | Francisco Garcia | Consul general..... News, Va. Pereira Ledo. John D, Gordan ...... Vice consul........ Richmond, Va.......... Flaugh Carter Laf- | Consul............ erty. [ St. Thomas, Virgin Is- Goon 1 PH [od doul. Suan lands. Seattle, Wash .......... Neal H. Bagley........ Vice consul........ BULGARIA. NewYork, N.V....... Theconsular- affairs |... ..L.. .. 0... | of Bulgaria are in charge of the lega- tion at Washing- CHILE. ton. San Francisco, Calif....| Marcos Garcia Hui- | Consul... ........ dobro. CanalZone.:-.......... Juan Antonio Rios...| Consul general.... Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... J. WW, Waldron: i...ncx Consul. ...:.....ux Cileago, Yh... MH Ee, dp ons ani New Orleans, La. ...... Domingo Petia Toro...|..... doo... ae Baltimore, Md.......... Augusto Errazuriz O. _|..... 00. rms Boston, Mass........... Herndu Besa Moutt...|..... do... a, Detroit, Mieh........... Luis Guzmén Aguirre. |..... do. .0 Srna Stents Moo hee i [miele sain Newark, N.J........... Federico Tonkin...._ .|..... d40...co as Buffalo, Na Y... joove Alfredo vonder Heyde.|..... dD. 5c i eens New York, N.Y... .... G8isv0 Munizaga | Consulgeneral....| United States. arela, Cincinnati, Ohio........ Tomé4s Alfredo Page...| Consul............ Ohio. Portland, Oreg......... Antonio R. Véjar......|..... qo. Philadelphia, Pa.......| Reeves K. Johnson...._|..... do. Lalu Manila, PY So. 00 A. Malvehy.. li LUH0aL do. in Sin San Juan, P. RR: .. ...... Luis Sanchez Morales. |..... dot SiR 00 Norfolk, Va .s........-. Carlos Lavandero.....|..... dolio told Also in Newport News. Seattle, Wash a mae Lucio Alberto Villegas |..... dos Daa. JR Washington. 440 Congressional Directory. CHINA—CUBA. Residence. Name Rank. Jurisdiction. CHINA. San Francisco, Calif. ...| Koliang Yih. ......... Consul general. ... Panama, Canal Zone. . . Honolulu, Hawaii...... New York, N.-.Y...... Portland, Oreg.-........ Manila, P. I Seattle, Wash... ....... COLOMBIA. Mobile, Ala............. Berkeley, Calif. ........ Los Angeles, Calif. ..... San Francisco, Calif. . .. Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass......... te Detroit, Mich......... Te Gulfport, MisS.e..cccua. St. Louis, Mo........... Nework, N. J..000000 0 Buffalo, N.Y..........| L New York, N.Y... ..% Rochester, N. Y........ Cincinnati, Ohio........ Philadelphia, Pa... Ponce, P.R....... SanJaoan, Po. RB......... Chattanooga, Tenn..... Norfolk, Va: .......... St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash.......... Milwaukee, Wis. ....... COSTA RICA. Mobile, Ala............. Los Angeles, Calif... ... San Diego, Calif........ San Francisco, Calif.... Meriden, Conn.......... Chicago, TH... ........ New Orleans, La. ...... Baltimore, Md ......... Boston, MasS........... St. Louis, Mo........... Poledo,Ohlo........... Philadelphia, Pa....... San Juan, P. Fort Worth, Tex....... Galveston, Tex......... Neorlolk, Va. ........... Milwaukee, Wis........ CUBA. Mobile, Ala............. Los Angeles, Calif... ... San Francisco, Calif. ... Washington, D.C...... Juming C. Suez....... Tan Shueh Hsu....... Ziang-ling Chang ..... Chain Kwang-Shi..... Moy Back Hin........ Chow Kwo Hsien..... Joe Tang Li Goon Dip........ =x. Juan Lilorca Marti..... Carlos Bramsby....... Fortunato Pereira Gamba. Miguel Calero... ....... Alvaro Rebolledo..... Jorge E. Cavelier...... Diego José Fallon. .... Oscar D. Heilbron. ... zuela. Fabriciano Vélez Po- sada. John L. Newkirk, jr... Escipién Canal. ....... Palmer D. Brong..... Truman G. McGonigal Thomas D. Nettles.... Carlos Enrique Bo- bertz. Jorge Orozco Casorla. . Francisco Villafranca Carazo. Berthold Singer....... Julio Aguilar Soto..... John Marshall Quin- tero. William A. Riordan... Mario Sancho Jiménez. J. Rafael Oreamuno. .. Modesto Huete Sgenz . Felipe Molina Larios. . Timoteo Daca Seydel. . Francisco Ramirez de Arellano. John M. Petrilli....... ‘Harry Reyner........ Eduardo Azuola Au- bert. Andrés Jiménezy Ruz. José S. Saenz y Macho. Gabrielde la Campa y Cuffi. Cayetano de Quesada Honorary ¢ Vice consul Vice consul Vice consul Honorary ¢ Honorary Consul..... Consul..... y Soccarrés. Osis trast Consul general. . . . Consul general. . . . Viceconsul......: onsul. . Consul general... . Vice consul. ...... Consul... .0 OASHE .e e ra onsal...o... Roberto Forero Vélez.| C 1 Enrique NaranjoM...|..... do. iui Arthur P. Cushing. ...! Vice consul ‘William J. Griffiths. ..| C R.P.Serrano......... In charge of con- sulate. Alfonso Sanchez S....| Consul... .......... wW.daFlon........ Vice consul José Marig Arango G..| Consul general. ... Rafael del Castillo..... Vice consul SEA Qos oo or Consul. 7%... . = Consul... oaais. Consul............ Consol... ....... onsul. . cin do. vice- Honorary consul. . Consul 0300000. Honorary consul. . Maine, For the Philippine Islands. Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, and Rhode Isl and. Alsoin Newport News. / Consuls wn the United States. CUBA—CZECHOSLOVAKIA. 441 Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. CUBA—continued. Fernandina, Fla........ Jacksonville, Fla. ...... Key West, Fla......... Miami Fla... .......... Pensacola, Fla.......... Tampa, Fla. ...... niin Atlantis, Ga...-........ Brunswick, Ga... Savannah, Ga.......... Chicago, Tl... .o......... Louisville, Ky.......... New Orleans, La....... Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass. ii Detroit, Mich........... Gulfport, Miss.......... Kansas City, Mo........ St. Louis, MO........... New York, N.Y....... Philadelphia, Pa....... Arecibo;P. R..... 0000 Ponce,iP Rot. 0 San Juan, P.R..... & Charleston, S.C........ Chattanooga, Tenn. .... Galveston, Tex......... Newport News, Va..... Norfolk, Va_............ St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. CZECHOSLOVAKIA. Chicago, 1............. Omaha, Nebr........... New York, N.Y....... Cleveland, Ohio........ Pittsburgh, Pa......... Augustus Oswald Bailey. Julio Rodriguez Embil Domingo J. Milord y Vazquez. Miguel Caballero y Valdés. Gabriel A. Amenabar y Cabello. Angel A. Solano y Garcia. William McLane Coo- lidge. Francisco P. Cabal- lero y T4pany. Richard P.Cane...... José R. Cabrera y Zun- zunegui. Eduardo L. Desver- nine. Federico Sanchez y Guerra. Archibald Ogilvie Thompson. Clarence S. Palmer... Luis Sturla y Cambiaso Felipe Taboada vy Ponce de Leon. Augusto Aguilera y Requeijo. Pedro E. Desvernine y Zequeira. Higinio J. Medrano y Polanco. Pedro P. Pérez y Blanco. Jacinto J. Luis... 0... Fernando Alemé4n y Valleé. Eugenio Dominguez y Torres. José Caminero y Shel- on. José M. Gonzalez y Rodriguez del Rey.. Bernard Eugene Jen- nings. Eduardo Patterson y Jauregui. Pedro Firmat y Ca- brero. José A.Munozy Riera Frederic Valdemar Alphonse Miller. Jaroslav Smetanka.. .. Stanley Serpén........ Borivoj Prusik . ...... Bohuslav BartoSovsky Honorary consul. . Honorary consul. . Consul. .....5.. Consul... 20000 Honorary consul. . Consul. Oiler: sill escsccemcesccccacane Consul -........~... Consul general. ... Consul. ...... 000 Consul... [00700 Honorary consul. . Consul 275,54 Consular agent.... Consul............ “tes qo. 5 es Acting consul. .... Also in Port Tampa. United States. Also over Wilmington, Del. Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Lou- isiana, Missouri, Oklahoma, Tex- as, and Wisconsin, : Alaska, Arizona, California, Colo- rado, Hawaii, fdaho ,Towa, Kan- sas, Minnesota, Montana, Ne- braska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, Philip- pine Islands, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, and Wyo- ming. Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Mas- sachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Caro- lina, Rhode Island, South Caro- lina, Vermont, Virginia, and the Virgin Islands. aaah Alabama, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Ohio, and en- nessee Pennsylvania and West Virginia, 442 Congressional Directory. DANZIG, FREE CITY OF—DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. DANZIG (FREE CITY OF). (The diplomatic and consular representa- tives of Poland have charge of the interests of the Free City of Danzig in the United States.) DENMARK. Mobile, Ala-............ Los Angeles, Calif. ..... San Francisco, Calif. . . . Denver, Colo... ....... Pensacola, Fla.......... Savannah,Ga-......... Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... Chicaco, IlL......-...... Detroit, Mich........... St. Paul, Minn. ......... St. Leuls, Mo........... Omaha, Nebr........... New York, N. Y....... Grand Forks, N. Dak... Portland, Oreg. ........ Philadelphia, Pa. ...... Manila, CO. 1T-........... Humacao, P. R....----- Mayaguez, P. R. Ponce, P. RB _.... Sa San: Juan,;P. R......... Charleston, S.C........ Galveston, Tex......... Port Arthur, Tex......: Salt Lake City, Utah... Newport News, Va..... Norfolk, Va...... i000 St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Seattle, Wash... ...... DOMINICAN REPUBLIC. Mobile, Ala..c. 00a San Francisco, Calif... . Colon, Canal Zone...... Panama, CanalZone.... Chicago, TU. .00.%.. 00 New Orleans, La....... Baltimore, Md... Boston, Mass....a.uo0. Kansas City, Mo........ New York, N.Y....... Thomas Cunningham Thomsen. Julius Frederik Ras- mussen. Carl McKenzie Oerting Oscar Emil Meisner Wolff Reeh. Christian Hedemann. . Reimund Baumann .. Thorkil Hofmann- Olsen. Ingemann Olsen. ..... Holger A. Koppel..... James J. Kelly........ Frank V.Lawson..... Georg Bech.......... Mads Henningsen..... Lanris Thomas Arns- ov. Marinus Rasmussen... Henry Harkson....... Mathias Moe. ......... Victor Caddel Kauf- feldt. Antonio Rolg........: of Albert Brave.......... .| Albert Armstrong, jr.. Thomas mouth. James M. Seignious. . . Hans Kofoed Guld- mann. G. I. Way- Allan R. Hoffman. ... Walter Knox.......... Pe HsV. Taub. i. Henning Plaun....... T..T. Gronlund:. ..... T. G. McGonigal...... John Barneson........ Joshua Jesurum Hen- riquez. Mauricio Benjamin Fidanque. Frederick W. Job..... Jacintho Fernandes, jr. William A. Riordan. . Arthur C. Granville... R. W. Lightburne. . .. Manuel de J. Camacho. Vice consul........ pa do.... cata Acting consul. .... Vice consul........ a don In charge of vice consulate. Acting vice consul. Consul... 5002. Vice consul........ Vice consul....... oan 40. Acting vice consul. Consulzre. In charge of consu- late general. Consul -.......... Acting vice consul. Vice consul........ Honorary consul. . Honorary vice consul. Honorary consul. . Vice consul........ Honorary consul . . Vice consul........ Honorary vice con- sul. Vice eonsul....... Consul general. ... Alabama. Arizona, California, Idaho, Ne- vada, and Oregon. Colorado. Florida. Hawaii. Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Loui- siana Mississippi, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. Maryland. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Michigan. Minnesota. Missouri. Nebraska. Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Caro- lina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. North Dakota and South Dakota. Oregon. Pennsylvania. Porto Rico. South Carolina Utah. Virginia. Virgin Islands. Alaska and Washington. United States. Consuls tn the Unated States. 443 DOMINICAN REPUBLIC—FRANCE. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC— continued. Wilmington, NaC. soieseln i 0 hi Viceconsul........ Philadelphia, Pa....... Rodman Wanamaker.| Consul............ Aguadilla, P. R........ Eduardo Fronteras....| Vice consul........ Arecibo, PR =i 10 ae Fernando Alemén.....| Honorary vice consul. Arroyo, P. Bo... José Gonzalez. ..... Ee UTE doi dn Guanieca, P.R.......-.. Enloe L. Lowry.......|..... doi. oie la Humneao, P.R.......-. José Méndez ..........[... .. dolar oo da Mayaguez, P. R........ EP Rousset. ... 00. Honorary consul. . Ponee, BiB... ... Ramén Almonte. ..... Consul. Loom... Blas'C. Silvg. = oc Vice consul. ..... SanJuan, P.R......... Sécrates Nolasco. ..... Consul general. ...| Porto Rico. Beaumont, Tex........ Pori Worth, Tex. .-...: Galveston, Tex......... Norfolk, Va............. St. Thomas, Islands. ECUADOR. San Francisco, Calif. . .. Chicago lr. 0.000, New Orleans, La....... New-York, N. Y....... Philadelphia, Pa....... FINLAND. - San Francisco, Calif. . . . CanalZone...... ..ceats Boston, Mass, .......... Calumet, Mich.......... Duluth, Minn........... Roberts, Mont.......... New. York, N.Y........ Ashtabula Harbor, Ohio Portland, Oreg......... Seattle, Wash.......... FRANCE. Birmingham, Ala....... Mobile, Ala............. Los Angeles, Calif. ..... San Diego, Calif........ San Francisco, Calif. . .. Denver, Colo... .... 25: Pensacola, Fla.......... Tampa, Fla... .... i. Savannah, Ga... ....... Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... Chicago, Tl... .. =x) Louisville, Ky....... .. Baton Rouge, La....... New Orleans, La. ...... Portland, Me. .......... Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass........... Detroit, Mich........... St.Paul, Minn... ...... Gulfport, Miss. ......... Kansas City, Mo........ St. Louis, Mo....... Gin Buffalo, N.Y=........... New York, N.Y ...... Cincinnati, Ohio........ Harry Reynor......... Emile A. Berne....... Honorary vice consul. Honorary consul. . Honorary vice consul. Vice consul........ Honorary consul. . Manuel Cabeza de Vaca| Consul general. . .. Pag Abt UT TN RE LEE Congul.; 0:7 7% Ismael Aviles Mejia...[..... lh cp a Gustavo R. de Ycaza..| Consul general. . .. Luis A. Mata.......... Consul. oo ..... Jarl Arthur Lindfors. .| Vice consul Ramon Arias-Feraud,jr| Consul John Alfred Anderson.| Vice consul .. Charles Jackola........|..... do, on... oes Carl Henrik Salminen.|. _ _. Goi coern il Albert Budas......:.:. Eero Hagan........... Charles Johan Potti.. . Johw Saari. -..00 hc. Louis Sentous, jr...... Frank Grandier....... Hippolyte Charles Ju- lien Neltner. A. Bourquin.......... George Westerby Howe Ernest W. Monrose. . . Alexis Nicolas. ........ Auguste Marques. .. .. Antonin Barthélemy. . Louis Thouluyre Du- gazon. Charles Louis Claude Marie Paul Barret. Ernest le Beaufort le Prohon. Léonce Rabillon...... Joseph J. Flamand. ... Joseph Belanger....... Mare Francois Eugéne Seguin. Charles P. Franchot .. Gaston Ernest Liebert. Theodore Alphonse Christen. eas dott inna Consul general. ... Consul.~. Viceconsul....... Consul general. . . . Consular agent. . .. Se yi ad Honorary consul. . Consul. ........0... Consul general. . .. Consular agent... . AT do... Consul general. . . . Consular agent.... Norfolk and Newport News. Arizona, California, Colorado, Ha- waii, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming. For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kan- sas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minne- sota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Geoi- gia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Okla- homa, Tennessee, and Texas. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. 444 Congressional Directory. FRANCE—GREAT BRITAIN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. FRANCE—continued. Portland, Ques; PEE Charles Henri Labbé..| Consular agent.... Philadelphia, Pa...:... Maurice Emile Au- | Vice consul........ Delaware, Maryland, North Caro- guste Paillard. lina, Pennsylvania, South Caro- : lina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Pittsburgh, Pa... Aimé Jules Jean-Bap- | Consular agent... tiste Létevé. Manila Bo, Vl. Ale. so sn str wn inant Consul..........5 Eugéne Elie Lefranc. . Andre:Orsini.........: Antoine Quilichine.. .. Dominique Francois Auguste Forcioli. Yves Louis Napoléon du Courthial. ...| Ch. Petit Le Brun.... -| Jean Baptiste Adoue.. -..| Jean Marie Romagny.. St. Thomas, Virgin Ts- lands. Seattle, Wash. ......... Tacoma, Wash......... GERMANY. Mobile, Ala............. San Francisco, Calif. . . . Pensacola, Fla......... Chicago, TI. ........ rr New Orleans, La....... St. Louis, Mo........... New York, N. Y....... GREAT BRITAIN. Birmingham, Ala....... Mobile, Ala............. Skagway, Alaska....... Douglas, Ariz........... Los Angeles, Calif. ..... San Diego, Calif. ....... San Francisco, Calif... . Denver, Colo........... Hartford, Conn... Washington, D.C...... Jacksonville, Els... ... Key West, Fla......... Miami, Fla..........-.. P. A. Drouilhet....... Alfred Sanner......... René Raoul Denizet.. Léon Huttinot........ Vacher Corbiere....... Alphonse C. Marcon- nier. Robert B. DuMont... Kurt Ziegler. ......... Gerhard Rolfs ..._.... Rudolph Steinbach. .. Hans von Ungelter.... Hugo Mundt.......... Karllang... ~...nn.- Erich Kraske......... Cyrus Pittman Orr.... George Hermann Miller Alexander Baird, jr... Thomas Arthur Os- borne. JA. Heap... oasis Gerald Campbell...... Edward Henry Gerald Shepherd. Henry Brockholst Livingston. Donald Charles Cam- eron Grant. Harry Crebbin........ William Lester Urqu- hart. Samuel Chaves Law- rence. ‘Walter Mucklow ...... George L.. Wright..... 'W. J. H. Taylor....... In charge of vice consulate. Consular agent... In charge of con- sulate. Consul general. . .. In charge of con- sulate. Consul general. . .. Consul general... .. Consul... ov eiias Vice consul....... Sets Ais cles Consul general. . . . Vice consul....... Acting vice consul. Vice consul........ ala Oe inn Acting vice consul. Consul... ..5...-.- Proconsul-........ Viee consul........ F. H, Jenkins......... Porto Rico. Also for Newport News and Ports- mouth. Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Wash- ington, and Alaska. ; For Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. For Illinois (except the counties of * Madison, Monroe, and St. Clair), Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minne- sota, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wiscon- sin, and Wyoming. For Alabama, - Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Ten- nessee, and Texas. For Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Kentucky, Missouri, New Mex- ico,and Oklahoma, and in Illinois the counties of Madison, Monroe, and St. Clair. For Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island , Vermont, Vir- ginia, and West Virginia. Alaska. District of Los Angeles. Arizona, California, Nevada, and Utah. Consuls in the United States. 445 GREAT BRITAIN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. GREAT BRITAIN—contd. ~- Pensacola, Fla.......... William Dodson Howe] Vice consul ....... Tampa, Fla. ooo... 5. Peter Taylors... ot... do hr Brunswick, Ga......... Andrew Miller Ross...|..... i Fiat pa pe Parien, Ga... ...c = Robert Manson. ......|..... dos tcc Savannah, Ga.......... Arthur Montague | Consul............ Georgia, North Carolina, and Brookfield. South Carolina. Joseph Thomas Roche.| Vice consul. ...... Honolulu, Hawaii...... William Massy Royds.| Consul............ Hawaii. Chicago, om Horace Dickinson | Consul general. ...| Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Michi 30, Nugent. Minnesota, Nebraska, North RK. Jopson..... .| Acting viceconsul.| kota, South Dakota, 2 nid Boa Charles Sillery at a0: rr. and Wyoming. ale John Garnett Lomax..|..... do; a New Orleans, La. ...... Charles Braithwaite | Consul general. ...| Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Wallis. Mississippi. Winn Edw ard Bel- | Vice consul........ Roderick William |..... RE a ba Mackay. Agr Henry William]... .. 40 es willhin Percy Taylor | Proconsul......... Portland, Me....... ....| John Bernard Keating Consul... bls: All the ports of entry in Maine. Baltimore, Md.......... Hugh Alexander Ford |..... dei. Maryland, Virginia, and West Vir- James Guthrie........ Vice consul........ ginia. . Boston, Mass........... Edward Francis Gray.| Consul general. ...| Maine, M assachusetts, New Hamp- J id Arthur Bran- | Vice consul........ shire, Rhode Island, and Ver- mon Artonr Herbert Mar- |..... LR | : low. Detroit,Mich............ Howard G. Meredith..| Consul... ........ | Duluth, Minn. ......... Colin Thomson. ...... Viceconsul....... Minneapolis, Minn......| William J. Wright....| Acting vice consul Gulfport, Wis Archibald Ogilvi e | Vice consul. . ..... Thompson. Kansas City, Mo........ Resnalo Thomas Da- |..... BOT Send | : vidson. | St. Louis, Mo........... Godfrey Edward Proc-| Consul... .......... Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Ken- ter Hertslet. tucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, and | William Keene Small.| Vice consul....... Tennessee, and the city of Fast Clifford Greenhouse...| Proconsul......... St. Louis, TIL. | Omaha, Nebr... ...... Majiow Alexander | Vice consul ....... Hal | Buffalo, N. ¥........... Wiliam Henry James |..... do. ones ole. New York, N.Y....... Henty Gloster Arm- | Consul general... .| Connecticut, New Jersey, and New strong. York. Frederick Watson.....| Consul............ | Lewis Fdward Ber- |..... Go. rt nays. Leonard A. H. Parish.| Vice consul....... John Bowering .. 5... l..... do... .... Robert John Robin- | Acting vice consul | son. Francis E. Evans.....|....- 40: iceinias | Harold E. Beard.....|..... doi. John Penmordam |..... do... ol Maine. | John Cockburn Curtis. |..... qo... 0 Wilmington, N.C... .. Walter Payne Sprunt.| Vice consul. ...... €incinnati,;Ohle........|.- <..... ans Ye do... was | Cleveland, Ohio........ Horatio Fitzroy Chis- |..... 0 | holm. | Astoria, Oreg. ... —.. .. Bd Mackay |... QO, | herr Portland, Oreg...-..... John Philip Trant.: 2 Consul.. ......,. Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, | and Washington. | Philadelphia, Pa... .... W. H. M. Sinclair..... Consul general. . . .| Delaware Ohio,and Pennsylvania. Edward Waring Wil- | Vice consul........ son. Theodore Harold Fox.|..... Qo. hrs Guy Henry Naylor....|..... do...c.o Mcinroy Este Vibert .|..... do... vi Samuel Robert Manley| Acting vice consul Pittsburgh, Pa......... Charles Edward Eard- | Consul. ......._.: ley Childers. | t | 1 li 446 Congressional Directory. GREAT BRITAIN—GREECE. Residence. Name. Jurisdiction. GREAT BRITAIN—contd. Cebu, P-lou.. aioe Guy Walford. ........ Acting vice consul Yollo. 2. L............. Alexander McCulloch Stewart. Geoffrey Whitfeld | Acting vice consul Sinclair. Manila, BP. 1... ..... Thomas Joseph Har- | Consul general. . ..| The Philippine Islands. Zamboanga, Mindanao. Arecibo, P. Ri. ........ Arroyo de Guayama.... Humaecao, P. R........ Mayaguez, P. R........ Ponce, P.R............ San Juan, P. R......... Providence, R.I....... Charleston, S.C. ....... El Paso, Tex. .vc.rn-ve Galveston, Tex......... Laredo, Tex............ Port Arthur, Tex....... Newport News, Va..... Norfolk, Va Richmond, Va.......... Frederiksted, Virgin Igs- lands. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Grays Harbor, Wash... Port Townsend, Wash.. Seattle, Wash.......... Tacoma, Wash......... GREECE. San Francisco, Calif. ... Denver, Colo. .......-... Washington, D.C...... Chicago, Wl. ..-.......- New Orleans, La....... Boston, Mass-........-- Detroit, Mich.o......... Kansas City, Mo........ rington. Montague Bentley Talbot Paske Smith. George Pearson Paton. Paul Dalrymple Butler Alexander R. Ovens.. Eric Henry de Bunsen. Clive Kingcome. ...... John Nowell Side- bottom. William James Adam. William Henry Au- gustus Denton. James R. Noble....... Antonio Roig. .....-.. Thomas Boothby, jr. - Fernando Miguel Toro Arthur Henry Noble. . Henry Joseph Church Dubois. James Cuthbert Roach Osborne Walter Bor- rett. John Elliot Bell. ...... Samuel Wythe Barnes Thomas O’Conner-..... William Edward Courtenay Crossland. Robert Crozier Thompson. Barton Myers......... Arthur Ponsenby Wil- mer. Robert Lorin Merwin. Charles Bertram Stew- art. George Philip Recke.. Oscar Klocker........ Bernard Pelly..:...... George Henry Lygon Murray. John Frederick Lyon. . Constantin Panago- poulos. Nikias Calogeras... ... S. Koundouriotis...... Panayiotis Armyriotis. Leonidas Crysantho- poulos. di Acting vice consul Acting vice consul In charge of con- Vice consul........ In charge of con- In charge of con- Porto Rico. New Mexico and Texas. St. Thomas. pervisory jurisdiction Fajardo, Humacao, and Naguabo. With jurisdiction also in Beau, mont, Orange, and Sabine. For the islands of St. Croix and For Arizona, California, Nevada, and the Hawaiian Islands. Su- over Alaska, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washing- ton, and Wyoming. The legation of Greece at Washing- ton has consular jurisdiction over the District of Columbia, the ad- Maryland. Wisconsin. Supervisory joining section of Virginia, and For Illinois, Indiana, Towa, and juris- diction over Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, and South Dakota. For Alabama, Arkansas, Louisi- ana, Mississippi, and Oklahoma. Supervisory jurisdiction over Florida, Georgia, North Carolina South Carolina, Tennessee, and Texas. mont. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, Rhode Island, and Ver- For Kansas and Kansas City, Mo. Consuls in the United States. GREECE—HONDURAS. 447 San Francisco, Calif. . .. Pensacola, Fla.......... Chicago, Ill .c.u. ic. ise Kansas City, Kans. .... Louisville, Ky.......... New Orleans, La. ...... Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, MasS........... Gulfport, Miss. ......... St. Louis, Mo.........a% Jersey City, N. J........ New York, N.Y...... Philadelphia, Pa...... San Juan, P. R Providence, R. I........ Galveston, Tex......... St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash... ........ HAITI. New York, N.Y. Chester, Pa. ............ Mayaguez, P. R........ Ponce, P. R St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. HONDURAS. Mobile, Ala............. Los Angeles, Calif... ...; San Francisco, Calif. . Washington, D.C Jacksonville, Fla. ...... "| Henri Gardére. ....... Rodolfo E. Sandoval. . Gregorio Cardoza.. .... Vicente J. Vidal....... Julio J. Brower........ Harry R. Hurlbut. ... Edwin R. Heath...... ] Shirley M. Crawford... J. Dolores Magoreteess Carlos Waldheim, jr.. C. Morton Stewart, j Jz. A. C..Garcis........... Virgilio Rodriguez Beteta. Hinardo Aguirre Ve- lasqu Delfino fhe cai a Carlos Vere............ Eduardo G. Kelton... J. Merrow David M. de Castro... Adolfo Bracons........ B. Preston Clark...... Eugene Le Bossé...... Ernest Leys........... Charles Vére.......... Cyril Daniel........... Philip Gomez......... Benjamin Urbizo Vega Manuel F. Rodriguez. . Armando Lépez Ulloa. James Samuel Eas- Tampa, Fla... ......... consul. Consul general. ... Consul:.....c. 2s. - Honorary vice consul. Consul general. . .. Vice consul........ Consul general. ... Vice consul........ Honey consul genera, Consul general. . .| Honorary vice consul. Vice consul........ Honorary consul general. Consul general. . .. Vice consul........ Honorary consul. . Consul. ...... sows Honorary consul. . Consii)e. ii crue consul Consul. ..........: Honorary consul. . .| Consul general. ... Consul... o.asne sais dO... .oiual Honorary consul. Consul general. ... Vice consul. Honorary vice consul. Honorary consul.. Vice consul. . ..... Consul. cues ons Vice pens eee Coney general. . Honorary vice consul. Cotisul general. . Congul.. a... oa Vice consul. . ..... terby. R. Calvin McNab. .... Honorary consul.. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. GREECE—continued. St. Louis, Mo........... Hector M. Pesmazo- | In charge of con- | Missouri. glou. sulate. New York, N. Y.......| George Dracopoulos...|..... do...oeai 000 For Connecticut, northern New Jersey, and New York. Super- visory jurisdiction over Dela- ware, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia. Philadelphia, Pa... i-cnosisecdoanid i Consul... ..... Pennsylvania and the southern section of New Jersey. Salt Lake City, Utah...| Stylian Staes.........|..... d0...c.0. 0000 Norfolk, Va... ........ Constantin Mosropon: Vice consul........ Virginia (except the section ad- los. . joining the District of Columbia) - and West Virginia. Seattle, Wash.......... Christo Lilliopoulos...| Consul............ Oregon, Washington, and the Ter- ritory of Alaska. GUATEMALA. Mobile, Ala... i. ...i...i. Guillermo Valenzuela.| Consul............ Los Angeles, Calif. ..... C. E. Bgberts. ........ Vice consul........ . San Diego, Calif. .......| Ormond W. Follin....| Honorary vice Illinois. Kansas. Maryland. -| Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, and Vermont. Missouri. Includes Galveston, Tex,, and Mo- bile, Ala Virgin Islands, 448 Congressional Directory. HONDURAS—ITALY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. HONDURAS—continued. Chicago, IH... ....;..... Julio J. Brower ....... Honorary consul general. New Orleans, La....... Eusebio Toledo Lépez.| Consul general. ... Boston, Mass... Zoi. ce. ii. ses v anc anne Honorary consul. . Kansas City, Mo. ...... Gabriel Madrid Her- |..... dos suse néndez. St. Louis, Mo. ...0.000. Rafael Martinez. ...... In charge of con- | Missouri. sulategeneral. New York, N. Y.......| Armando Lopez Ulloa.| Consulgeneral. ... Emilio V. Soto........ Honorary vice consul. San Juan, P.R....;.... Waldemar E. Lee..... Honorary consul. . Galveston, Tex......... H.H. Haines.........}..... AO 5 vis iis HUNGARY. Chicago, M................ Stephen Schefbeck...| Consul............ For Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indi- ana, Towa, Kansas, Louisiana, the counties embraced in the northern peninsula of Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Ok=- lahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wis- consin, and Wyoming. Alaska, Howl, and the Philippine Is- ands. New York, N.Y....... Charles Winter........ Consul general ....| For Alabama, Connecticut, Dela- : ware, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, : and Porto Rico. Cleveland, Ohio........ Alexander Reutter de | Consul............ For Kentucky, the counties em- Kaltenbrunn. braced in the southern peninsula of Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee, : : Virginia, and West Virginia. Pittsburgh, Pa........ Louis Adexy: ol Elie do. onl For Pennsylvania. ITALY. Birmingham, Ala..... ..| Paolo Giacopazzi...... Consular agent.... Los Angeles, Calif. ..... Chevalier Enrico Piana|..... AO vse ee San Francisco, Calif. ...| Vincenzo Fileti.......| Consul............ Arizona, California, and Nevada. Denver, Colo... ...... Gualtiero Chilesotti.. | Consul general... | Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, New Roberto Ferrari....... Vice consul. ......| Mexico, North Dakota Oklaho- ma, South Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming. Trinidad, Colo.......... Gnsonpe Maio... . 5. Consular agent... . Hartford, Conn......... Michele Riccio........|..... 40: vuoi. New Haven, Conn...... Pasquale de Cicco.....|..... doi... oil Nicola Mariani........ In charge of con- sular agency. ‘Wilmington, Del....... Giuseppe de Stefano. .| Consular agent....| Delaware, and in Pennsylvania the counties of Berks, Bucks, Ches- ter, Delaware, Lancaster, Leba- non, Montgomery, and York. ‘Washington, D.C...... Salvatore Floria.......| Consul............ : Key West, Fla. ........ W.J. HH. Taylor..." Consular agent... Pensacola, Fla.......... Angelo Solari..........|..... 40.0 canniiids Tampa, Fla ......... ...! Chevalier Viti Mariani.|..... do.........050 Savannah, Ga.......... Mose Cafiero”.. >. SiToqCih dol cnn .| Georgia. Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... William John Davies..| Acting consul. .... Chicago, 1N............. Leopolo Zunini....... -| Consul general. ... Count Giulio Bolognesi.| Consul. ........... Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Giuseppe Dall’Agnol...| Vice consul....... Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Springfield, T1l.......... Giovanni Maria Picco.| Consular agent.. Indianapolis, Ind.......| Annibal Salaroglio....|..... O0acs canscnns Vincenzo Lapenta.....| In charge of .con- sular agency. Frontenac, Kans. ...... Raffaele Purgatorio. ..| Consular agent.... Jonlsville, Ky... ood ll... ionic oil ens on dec Hammond, La......... LuigiScala..:c........ In charge of con- sular agency. So tidiik, i i i Eg Consuls in the United States. : 449 ITALY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ITALY—continued. New Orleans, La....... Shreveport, La. ........ Portland, Me.:...-..... Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass. .......... Lawrence, Mass. ....... Springfield, Mass. ...... Worcester, Mass........ Detroit, Mich........... Duluth, Minn. ......... Gulfport, MisS-......... Vicksburg, Miss. ....... St. Louis, Mo-.... =... Butte, Mont...........- Omaha, Nebr........... Newark, N. J... ..-...... Trenton, N.J...=..2:. Albuquerque, N. Mex. . Albany, N.Y. ...~... Buffalo, N.Y........... New York, N.Y....... Rochester, N..Y........ Yonkers, N. Y........... Cincinnati, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio. ....... McAlester, Okla ....... Portland, Oreg......... Altoona, Pa. -..o-mes Manila, P.1.........-c Memphis, Tenn......... Fort Worth, Tex....... Galveston, Tex......... Port Arthur, Tex....... Salt Lake City, Utah... Chevalier Guglielmo Silenzi. Chevalier Carlo Papini. Antonio Vinti......... Alberto Saracco....... Vervena Gaspare...... Giovanni Schiaffino... Marquis Agostino Fer- rante di Ruffano. Giuseppe Caterini..... Tommaso de Marco... Consul.......... Consular agent. ... Er 05. Michelangelo De Felice]... .. do... Chevalier Pietro Car- diello. Attilio Castigliano..... Nino Enrico Piaggio. . Andrea Bucei......... Alessandro Broletti. .. Carlo Trucano...-...... Sebastiano Salerno... . Francesco Santomas- simo. Felice Ronca.......... Francesco Fracearoli. . Germano Placido Bac- celli. Michele Caboni........ Temistocle Bernardi. . Chevalier Ubaldo Rochira. Paolo Alberto Rossi... Cesare Sconfietti. ..... Carlo Mariotti. .. : Carlo Ginocchio....... Chevalier Nicola Cerri. Giovanni Battiste Tua Alberto B. Ferrera.... Paolo Sterbini......... Orazio Rico........... Chevalier Natali. Chevalier Luigi Sillitti. Chevalier Guido Di Vincenzo. Chevalier Telesio Lucci. Giuseppe Chevalier Fortunato Tiscar. Carlo Gaetano Ghezzi. Giacamo Antonio Caino. G. P. de Rinaldis..... Ciro Malatrasi......... .| Mariano Vervena...... Carlo Mauro........... Giovanni Galella..... Attilio Ortolani....... Chevalier Clemente Nicolini. Fortunato Milano..... Fortunato Anselmo... 24786°—67—4—2p xp———30 ER AOR ote sinters Acting consular agent. Consular agent.... SZ dor es In charge of con- sular agency. Consular agent. ... Seria Q0s eens Acting consular agent. Consular agent. ... Eg QOL in Consul general. . .. Vice consul....... In charge of con- sular agency. Consular agent.... In charge of con- sular agency. Consal............ Vice consul........ Consular agent. ... Honorary consul. . Consular agent.... Consul ...........0% (C'cnsular agent... roa 313 Pr SRG ee In charge of con- sular agency. Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennes- see, and Texas. Maryland, except Allegany, Gar- rett, and Washington Counties. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, and Vermont. Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island. -| Westchester County. Oklahoma. Adams, Bedford, Blair, Cambris, Center, Clearfield, Clinton, Cum- berland, Franklin, Fulton, Hunt- ingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder, Somerset, and Union Counties. Cameron, Clarion, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Forest, McKean, Potter, Venango, and Warren Counties. Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, Pennsylvania South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia. Allegheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler, Fayette, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Lawrence, Mercer, Washington, and Westmoreland Counties. Bradford, Carbon, Columbia, Dau- phin, Lackawanna, Lehigh, Lu- zerne, Lycoming, Monroe, Mon- tour, Northampton, Northum- berland, Pike, Schuylkill, Sulli- van, Susquehanna, Tioga, Wayne, and Wyoming Counties. Porto Rico. North Carolina and South Carolina. 450 Congressional Directory. ITALY—JAPAN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ITALY—continued. Norfolk, Va.......ow.... Richmond, Va.......... St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash. ......... Spokane, Wash......... Clarksburg, W. Va. .... Northfork, W. Va...... Milwaukee, Wis... .-:-: JAPAN. Mobile, Ala.... ........ Los Angeles, Calif. ..... San Francisco, Calif. . .. Panama, 0.7." Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... Chicago, ........c.... New Orleans, La....... Boston, MasS........... St. Louis, Mo......--... Arturo Parati......... Arturo Parati......... Rodolfo Leviti........ Alberto Alfani... ..... Giuseppe Plastino..... Biagio Merendino. .... G. Battista La Manca. Angelo Cerminara..... Henry H. Clark. ...... Ujiro Oyama ......... Shichitaro Yada....... Kisaku Ichikawa ..... Keiichi Yamasaki... .. Kadzue Kuwashima .. Consular agent. ... In charge of con- sular agency. In charge of con- sular agency. Consular agent.... Honorary consul. . Consul .....:-)--. Consul general... . Consul general... . Consul. =. vrene-m-x Accomac, Alexandria, Alleghany, Amelia, Amherst, Appomattox, Bedford, Botetourt, Brunswick, Campbell, Caroline, Charles City, Charlotte, Craig, Culpeper, Din- widdie, Elizabeth City, Essex, Fairfax, Franklin, Fauquier, Floyd, Gloucester, Greensville, Halifax, Sontl) Isle of Wight, James City, King George, King and Queen, King William, Lan- caster, Loudoun, Lunenburg, Madison, Mathews, Mecklen- burg, Middlesex, Montgomery, Nansemond, New Kent, Norfolk, Northumberland, Nottoway, Patrick, Pittsylvania, Princess Anne, Prince Edward, Prince George, Prince William, Rappa- hannock, Richmond, Roanoke, Rockbridge, Sou th ampton Spotsylvania, Stafford, Surry, Sussex, Warwick, Westmore- land, and York Counties. Albemarle, Augusta, Bath, Buck- ingham, Chesterfield, Clarke, Cumberland, Fluvanna, Freder- ick, Goochland, Greene, Hanover, Henrico, Highland, Louisa, Nel- son, Orange, Page, Powhatan Rockingham, Shenandoah, and Warren Counties. For the Virgin Islands. Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington, except the jurisdic- tion of the consular agency at Spokane, and Alaska. For the counties of Benton, Doug- las, Grant, Okanogan, and Ya- kima. West Virginia (except McDowell and Wyoming Counties). Boone, Cabell, Clay, Fayette, Greenbrier, Jackson, Kanawha, Lincoln, Logan, Mercer, Mason, Mingo, Monroe, McDowell, Po- cahontas, Putnam, Raleigh Roane, Summers, Wayne, an ‘Webster Counties, W. Va.; and in Virginia the counties of Bland, Buchanan, Carroll, Dickenson, Giles, and Grayson. Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura Counties in California, and the States of Arizona and New Mexico. California (except the Los Angeles consular district), Colorado, Ne- vada, and Utah. Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Indi- ana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin. Consuls tn the Unated States. 451 JAPAN—MEXICO. | Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. : JAPAN—continued. New York, N. Y....... Kyo Kumazaki......| Consul general....| Connecticut, Delaware, District of \ Columbia, Florida, Georgia, i : : Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, | New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania,Porto Rico, Rhode Island,’ South Carolina, Ver- mont, Virginia, and West Vir- | ginia. Portland, Oreg........- Yenji Takeda......... Const)... ...... Idaho (except that part included in theconsular district of Seattle), Oregon, and Wyoming. Philadelphia, Pa....... J. Franklin McFadden | Honorary consul. . Manila; P..T....cunvens- Tsunezo Sugimura. ...| Consul general. ...| Philippine Islands and the Island Kuragoro Aibara...... Viceconsul....... of Guam. Galveston, Tex......... Jail, Longhen. .. oc. -« Honorary consul. . Seattle, Wash.......... Hiroshi Saito... .~ 3... Consal-......-+=-- Alaska,Montana,and Washington; and the counties of Boise, Bon- ¥ ner, Custer, Idaho, Kootenai Latah, Lemhi, Nez Perce, and \ LATVIA. Shoshone in Idaho. | New York, N..Y....... Arthuriale.......... Consul... .ocess LIBERIA. Mobile, Ala.........;0n- George W. Lovejoy...| Consul............ San Francisco, Calif. ...| Oscar Hudson.........|..... 0 an New Orleans, La.......| L. H. Reynolds....... Vice consul........ Baltimore, Mi Ernest Lyon.......... Consul general. ... St. Loais, Mo........... Hutchins Inge........ Consul. ......:... Jersey City, N. J........ Albert W. Minick..... Vice consul....... New York, N. Y.......| Edward G. Merrill..... PITRE Hale ge a B.B. Memriil.......... Viceieonsul:.--..-= Philadelphia, Pa....... Thomas J. Hunt...... Consult ry Robert C. Moon....... Viceconsal........ Manila, P.T..-c......o R..Summers........-- Congil.....ovoeves Galveston, Tex......... JB. Gibson... .... if. An le eenvots LUXEMBURG. Chicago, Jl. ..:-. .....- Plorre Kransz......... Congnl.... 70. auen For Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Ohio, | Eugene Huss ......... Viceconsul....... and Wisconsin. i Minneapolis, Minn . .... Emile Ferrant ........ Congr ob For Idaho, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Soufh Dakota, and Wyoming. | New York, N..Y....... Michel Hellinckx......[.--.. dati. ie For Connecticut, Maine, Massa-~ Harry Krombach..... Vice consul ....... chusetts, New Hampshire New | : Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, | , and Vermont. | MEXICO. : / Douglas, Ariz........... Hermenegildo Valdes.| Consul............ For Cochise County. Jurisdiction includes consular agency at Naco. Nace, Alig. .< cc... hs Ladislao Lopez Mon- | Vice consul. ...... i tero. | WER rr ei rea a Me ete Consal........ ... For the counties of Santa Cruz and . Pima, except the cities of Ro- t wood-Ajo and Tucson. Phoenix, Ariz.......-.. Roberto E. Quiroz....|..... dos, ines For the counties of Coconino, Gila, Maricopa, Mojave, Pinal, and | Yavapai. | Rowo0d-AlJ0, ATIZ- -. incase seas ns nan fein 2 do = ain For Rowood-Ajo. } EE TR Vi eee denen: Sl ie Lot SRE Sl Stn ASH | Ce dos in Sa Yuma; Ariz... ........:. Adolfo Perez. ..>..... Viececonsal: =. | Calexico, Calif.......... Manuel G. Paredes....| Consul............ For Imperial County in California | and Yuma County in Arizona. Jurisdiction includes the consu- lar agency at Yuma, Ariz. Los Angeles, Calif. ...... Gustavo Luaders.....--|----- do... aa For the counties of Inyo, Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernar- dino, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura. San Diego, Calif. ....... Jose Farrel. ..... coe Viceconsul....... For Riverside and San Diego Counties. 452 Congressional Directory. MEXICO. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. MEXICO—continued. San Francisco .Calif....| Jose Garza Zertuche...| Consul general. ...| Consular jurisdiction includes the > Francisco I. Ramirez. .| Viceconsul....... State of Nevada, and in California Penver, Colo........... Jacksonville, Fla... .__. Baltimore, Mqd.......... Boston, Mass_.......... Detroit, Mich. ........ Kansas City, Mo....... St. Louis, MO-.......... Albuquerque, N. Mex. . New York, N.¥....... Philadelphia, Pa....... Pittsburgh, Pa... .<. Monin. PX. cot brins Brownsville, Tex....... Corpus Christi, Tex..... Manuel Esparza....... Raoul G. Dominguez. . Salvador E. Portillo. . . Jose Lorenzo Sepul- veda. Arturo M. Elias. ...... Juan A. Marshall... _. C Felipe Garcia Trevifio. Roberto Garcia. ...... Rafael Calvo y Arias. . Alonso Mena Brito. ... Alfredo Serratos ...... Francisco B. Salazar... Faustino Roel........ Arturo Alcocer........ Luis R. Sanchez. ...... Eduardo Soriano Bravo. Hector Villatoro...... Juan A. Saenz........ Juan Maxemin........ Gustavo P. Gaxiola... Cipriano Villanueva Garza. Lisandro Pefia........ Consul... .....n::- Consul general. . .. onsul.. ene Vice consul. ...... Consul. ov... Consul. .....o.ioi Consul general... .. onsls cao Consal.......-.... the counties of Alameda, Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Co- lusa, Contra Costa, Del Norte, Eldorado, Fresno, Glenn, Hum- boldt, Kings, Lake, Lassen, Madera, Marin, Mariposa, Men- docino, Merced, Modoc, Mono, Monterey, Napa, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, San Benito, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma, Stanislaus, Sutter, Te- hama, Trinity, Tulare, Tuol umne, Yolo, and Yuba. Indi rect jurisdiction over the consu lates at Calexico, Los Angeles Salt Lake City, San Diego, an Seattle; the honorary consulates at Honolulu and Manila; and the consularagency at Yuma, Ariz. For Colorado and Wyoming. For Florida, except Tampa, and Georgia. ; For Tampa. For the Hawaiian Islands. ; For Illinois, Indiana, and Wis- consin. For Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Ten- nessee. Indirect jurisdiction over the consulates at Jackson- ville, Fla., Kansas City, Mo., Port Arthur, Tex., and St. Louis, Mo.; also the honorary consulates at Beaumont, Tex., and Tampa, Fla. For Delaware and Maryland. For Boston. For Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota. For Iowa, Minnesota, and Mis- souri. For the counties of Apache and Navajo in Arizona, and in New Mexico the counties of Bernalillo, Colfax, McKinley, Mora, Rio Arriba, Sandoval, San Juan, San Miguel, Santa Fe, Socorro, Taos, Torrance, and Valencia. For Connecticut, Maine, Massa- chusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Indirect juris- diction over the’ consulates at Baltimore, Cleveland, Chicago, Norfolk, and Philadelphia; also * the honorary consulates at Bos- ton, Pittsburgh, and St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. For Pennsylvania, except Pitts- burgh. Tor Pittsburgh. For Philippine Islands. For the counties of Cameron, Hi- dalgo, Kenedy, Starr, and Wil- lacy. Jurisdiction includes the consular agencies at Hidalgo and Rio Grande. For the counties of Arkansas, Bee, Brooks, Calhoun, Goliat, Jim Wells, Kleberg, Live Oak, Nue- ces, Refugio, San Patricio, and Victoria. Consuls in the United States. 458 MEXICO. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. ~ MEXICO—continued. Dallas; Tex. oaiiic nl Alejandro Lubbert....| Consul...cceeeue... For the counties of Anderson, Archer, Armstrong, Baylor, Bosque, Bowie, Briscoe, Calla- han, Camp, Cass, Childress, Clay, Collin, Collingsworth, Coman- che, Cooke, Coryell, Cottle, Cherokee, Dallas, Delta, Denton, Dickens, Donley, Eastland, Ellis, | Erath, Falls, Fannin, Foard, | Franklin, Freestone, Grayson, Gregg, Hall, Hamilton, Harde- man, Harrison, Hackell, Hen- derson, Hill, Hood, Hopkins, Hunt, Jack, Johnson, Jones, Kaufman, Kent, King, Knox, Lamar, Limestone, Marion, Mc- Lennan, Montague, Morris, Mot- ley, avarro, Palo Pinto, Panola, Parker, Rains, Red River, Rockwall Rusk, Shackel- ford, Somervell, Smith, Stephens, \ Stonewall, Tarrant, Throck- morton, Titus, Upshur, Van Zandt, Wichita Wilbarger, 5 Wise, Wood, and Young. Del Rio, Bex oon | a ade i anus CER | I Sr san For the counties of Crockett, Sut- ton, Terrell, and Valverde. Baglo Pass, ex. (oui. ii hen massa mnn ohn aes 3 Ly Ph Seen SS ol For the counties of Dimmit, Ed- Luis Vargas Vera. ..... Vice consul... .... wards, = Kinney, Maverick, | Uvalde, and Zavalla. : El Paso, Tex........... F. Alfonso Pesqueira..| In charge of con- | Consular jurisdiction includes the sulate general counties of Graham and Greenlee provisionally. in Arizona; thecounties of Chaves, LL ARE Reet Consul. .........5% “Curry, Dona Ana, De Baca, k Alberto Ruiz Sandoval] Vice consul........ Eddy, Grant, Guadalupe, Hidal- : go, Lea, Lincoln, Luna, Otero, Quay, Roosevelt, Sierra, and Union in New Mexico; the coun- | ties of Andrews, Bailey, Borden, | Carson, Castro, Cochran, Crosby, Culberson, Dallam, Dawson, Deaf Smith, Ector, El Paso, Fisher, Floyd, Gaines, Garza, i Gray, Hale, Hansford, Hartley, | Hemphill, “Hockley, = Howard, Hudspeth, Hutchinson, Lamb, i Lipscomb, Loving, Lubbock, Lynn, Martin, Midland, Mitchell, i : Moore, Nolan, Ochiltree, Old- i ham, Parmer, Potter; Randall, Reeves, Roberts, Scurry, Sher- man, Swisher, Taylor, Terry Ward, Wheeler, Winkler, and | Yoakim in Texas. Indirect ju- { : risdiction over the consulates at | Albuquerque, N. Mex., Denver, Colo., Douglas, Ariz. Marfa, Tex., | Nogales, Ariz., Phoenix, Ariz., i and Tucson, Ariz.; the consular | agency at Naco, Ariz.; and the ! honorary consulate at Rowood- } 3 Ajo, Ariz. | Galveston, Tex......... GermanMeadey Fierro| Consul............ Joaquin G. Rodriquez.| Vice consul........ Hidalgo, Tex... ...-...-. Alfonso -Pesquera j..... do. Alanis. Houston, Tex.......... Emilio Ochoterena...|..... do....... 538 For the counties of Austin, Bra- zoria, Brazos, Burleson, Colo- / rado, Fort Bend, Galveston, | of Grimes, Harris, Houston, Jack- | son, Lavaca, Lee, Leon, Liberty, | Madison, Matagorda, Montgom- 1] ery, Polk, Robertson, San Jacin- | to, Trinity, Walker, Waller, | - ‘Washington, and Wharton. Ju- risdiction includes the consular agency at Galveston. | Laredo, Tex............ Ismael M. Vazquez....| Consul............ | Bartolo Zamora....... Vice consul........| For the counties of Duval, Jim Hogg, La Salle, McMullen, Webb, and Zapata. } w 454 Congressional Directory. MEXICO—NETHERLANDS. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. MEXICO—continued. Maria, Pex... J. 00.00 Francisco Zubiate. .... Consul. ....0adds For the counties of Brewster, Coke, Crane, Glasscock, Irion, Jeft Davis, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Runnels, Sterling, Tom Green, and Upton. Port Arthur, Tex....... Guillerm o Prieto |..... do... For the counties of Angelina, Cham- { Laurens. bers, Hardin, Jasper, Jefferson Alfonso Pesquera | Viceconsul........ (except Beaumont), Nacog- Alanis. doches, Newton, Orange, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler. Rio Grande, Tex...... :| Renato Cantu Lara...| Consul............ > San Antonio, Tex. ..... Eduardo Ruiz..-....... Consul general. . ..| Consular jurisdiction includes the Salt Lake City, Utah... Norfollc, Va... a8. 555: St. Thomas, Virgin Isl- ands. Seattle, Wash.......... Milwaukee, Wis........ MONACO. San Francisco, Calif. . . . New York, N.Y....... NETHERLANDS. Mobile: Ala............. Los Angeles, Calif...... San Diego, Calif. ....... San Francisco, Calif. ... Denver; Colo: ........cx Jacksonville, Fla. ...... Pensacola, Fla.......... Pampa, Bla: ........; Savannah, Ga.......... Honolulu, Hawaii...... Chicago, Tlc.icois. . ines Orange City, Iowa...... New Orleans, La....... Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass......: ER Grand Rapids, Mich.... Minneapolis, Minn...... Gulfport, Miss.......... Ismael Margana Juan E. Anchondo.... Angel Casarin......... George Levi........... A.J. Valenzuela. ..... E. P. Kirby Hade..... Ray P. Saffold........ PaulFaller. .......... Palmer Pillans........ F. J. Zeehandelaar. ... J. H. Delvalle......... . A. van Coenen Torchiana. Baron H. W. van Till.. AaZelus cine... J. R. van Julsingha Blinck. W. H. Teasdale ...... H.M. von Holt....... Chalfllay 4.0... i. R.-H. Mottu.......... JeHBeurs.......-.:. Consul ............ Consul 5........... Consul general. . .. In charge of vice consulate. Consuli........... Consul general. . .. Viceconsul....... Consul.....-..... counties of Atascosa, Bandera, Bastrop, Bell, Bexar, Blanco, Brown, Burnet, Caldwell, Cole- man, Comal, Concho, Dewitt, Fayette, Frio, Gillespie, Gon- zales, Guadalupe, Hays, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr, Kimble, Lampas- sas, Llano, Mason, Medina, Me- nard, Milam, Mills, McCulloch, Real, San Saba, Schleicher, Travis, Williamson, and Wilson. Indirect jurisdiction over the con- sulates at Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Dallas, Del Rio, Eagle Pass, Houston, and Laredo in Texas, and Oklahoma City, Okla.; also the consular agencies at Galveston, Hidalgo, and Rio Grande, Tex. For Idaho, Montana, and Utah. For North Carolina, South Caro- lina, and Virginia. For the Virgin Islands. For Oregon and Washington. Alabama. Arizona and that part of California south of Inyo, Kern, and San Luis Obispo Counties, except the counties of Imperialand San Diego. Imperialand San Diego Counties. Alaska, Arizona, California, Colo- rado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. Florida east of the Apalachicola River. Florida west of the Apalachicola River. Georgia. Hawaiian Islands. Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. .| Towa. Alabama, Florida west of the Ap- alachicola River, Louisiana, and Mississippi. - Delaware and Maryland. Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp- shire, Rhode Island, and Ver- mont. Michigan and Minnesota. Minnesota. Mississippi. — Consuls 1n the United States. 455 NETHERLANDS—NORWAY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. | NETHERLANDS—CON. | Kansas City, Mo. ...... George Mignolet.......| In charge of con- | Towa, Kansas, Missouri (west of i / sulate. 93d° oflongitude), Nebraska, and i | Oklahoma. Il St. Louis, Mo........;.. WW. A.J. M. van Wa-| Consul............ Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri | terschoot van der (east of 93d° of longitude), and A Gracht. Tennessee. i New York, N.Y ..-.... D. J. Steyn Parvé..... In charge of consu- | Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, | : late general. Maryland, Massachusetts, New | D. J. Steyn Parvé..... Consul; .... ov. Hampshire, New Jersey, New | York, North Carolina, Pennsyl- if vania, Rhode Island, Vermont, | Virginia, and West Virginia. Ii Portland, Oreg......... Anthony H.Metzelaar | Vice consul........ Oregon. i Philadelphia, Pa....... A.P.vander Burch...| Consul............ Pennsylvania. il | Gehl, Pol od G:Wallord ...... Vice consul. ...... For the Island of Cebu. | Voile, P. 1. H. Walford. c=. .:..00 do... 0. 0 For the Island of Panay. | Manila, P.J...........- P. XK. A. Meerkamp | Consul general....| PhilippineIslands. | van Embden. I | : Vice consul........ il Mayagiiez, P.R........ (0) a0 ..| West coast of Porto Rico. | Ponce, P.R............| Ernesto Moringlane...|..... do... South coast of Porto Rico. | San juan, RP. RB. -.... TB Lee. tial do Lo nil Bl Porto Rico. i Charleston, S. C........ J.-L. C. Diemes...-.... Consuls tous For Georgia, South Carolina, and 1 Florida, east of the Apalachicola River, f Galveston, Tex......... Oe Sein... ...a do....c coats Galveston and suburbs. I Port Arthur, Tex....... py. Wilkingzo...-o.5 do... ....o00 Texas Loseopt Galveston and | suburbs). Ogden, Utah..........0 E. Neuteboom........ Vice consul........ Utah. I Newport News, Va..... 0. D. J. Luening..... {> == domi isl City of Newport News. | Norfolk, Va........ deg J.P. A. Mottu..2-::: Consul. Goole North Carolina and Virginia (ex- | cept city of Newport News). if St. Thomas, Virgin Is- | W.P.M.van Eps.....|..... do. ..ciilil St. Croix, St. John, and St. if lands. Thomas. i Seattle, Wash........... J.C. J. Kempees.......|..... Er Washington and Alaska. i 1 NICARAGUA. | | Calexico, Calif. ......... Arturo Pallais......... Consul... ....0. | Los Angeles, Calif. lo rs ase re dos Hd Ii San Francisco, Calif. ...| Fernando Chamorro | Consul general. ...| California, Oregon, and Wash- | Chamorro. ington. HI Panama, C. Z........:.- Marco E. Velasquez. ..|..... do’. niicaes The Canal Zone. il Chicago, Nl .%....... =i: Berthold Singer....... Consul general.... Hl Alexander Singer...... Vice consul. ...... i Kansas City, Kans. .... Edwin R. Heath......| Consul general. ... Hi New Orleans, La.......| Agustin Bolafios |..... do............| Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mis- | Chamorro. sissippi, and Texas. | Renato Lacayo.-....... Vice consul........ if Boston, Mass........... David Sequeira. . -.... Consil.--......00% | Minneapolis, Minn... ... PrStewart. i... do............| Minnesota and the adjacent terri- i tor | Kansas City, Mo........ Willis Wood .. =... .2|...-- Ao. eens y St.Louis, Mo. -........ Rodolfo José Gutiérrez. Consul general. . .. | | Now, York, N. Y..:.... Toribio Tegerino.....|..... dora 2 Virgilio Lacayo. .. ....| Viceconsul....... i Cineinnatl, Ohio... ae Consul... -....-: if Jorge F. Salinas....... Vice consul. ...... i Philadelphia, Pa. ......| Lorenzo Guerrero | Consul general. . .. ii Potter. i Desiderio Romén | Viceconsul........ 0 Kleim. tl 4 LEH DR ER Se Ee aie nee Sel IS Consul general... .. it ) 1gnacio Garcia Rojas..| Viceconsul....... 0 Fort Worth, Tex. ...... John M. Petrilli....... Consul: = .5....... ii Hoaston, Tex.........- Sidney J. Browning... .|..... Joi sore 20 ill Norfolk, Va... ool... Charles M. Barnett....|..... doi .u 00 | St. Thomas, Virgin Is- | David M. de Castro...|..... doz tiem rion ) lands. i Seattle, Wash.......... W.L.Kennedy.......|..... dosent kad i | NORWAY. i Mobile, Als............. John Bunyan Oliver. .| Vice consul.......| Alabama. i Juneau, Alaska......... William Britt-...... |... do. cor 3i x Southern part of Alaska. i Nome, Alaska. ......... Carl Joys Lomen......]|--... Nh Ta Northern part of Alaska. Los Angeles, Calif. ...... Bernhard Wold.......|..... Qo seas Los Angeles. ] San Diego, Calif. ....... John Engebretsen.....|..... i San Diego. i i] 456 Congressional Directory. lands. NORWAY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. NORWAY—continued. San Francisco, Calif. :..] Nils Voll ............. Consml........n... Arizona, California, Colorado, Henry Lund, jr....... Vice consul. ...... Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, the Territory of Alaska, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming, : Ancon, Canal Zone... .. Thomas Jacome.......|..... do... For Ancon. Cristobal, Canal Zone...| David Smith Webster. Consul. ........... Denver,Colo........... Viggo Kgede Baer- | Vice consul....... Colorado. resen. Washington; iD Cr cul. atin ca deco asic i nalea sn nneisnas cna nennnns Thelegation of Norway has general : supervision over consular mat- ters throughout the United States. Fernandina, Fla........ Nathaniel B. Borden..| Vice consul....... Fernandina. Jacksonville, Fla.......| Walter Mucklow......|..... do... on Jacksonville. Key West, Ma.........| William John Hamil- |..... do... Key West and Miami. ton Taylor. : Pensacola, Fla.......... Eric Alexander Zelius.|..... i Fr pa, Florida (except the ports of Fer- nandina, Jacksonville, Key West, Miami, and Tampa). Tampa, Fla. ...........| Barton Hewitt Smith.|..... AO ce veiieimoremres Tampa. Savannah, Ga.......... Einar Storm Trosdahl.|..... AO. Georgia. Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... Frederick L. Waldron.| Consul. ...| Hawaii. Chicago, Wl. ..d.. 0.0%. OlntBernts-..........[-.... 40. ia. Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, lowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Okla- homa, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. Decorah, lowa.........; Trond Stabo.......... Vice consul........! Towa. New Orleans, La....... William Waller Young |..... do... eass Louisiana. > Portland, Me... .....c. John Bernard Keating |..... 0. canainsia Maine. Baltimore, Md. ........ Arthur Frederick |..... do... ian Maryland. Sidebotham. : Boston, Mass. .......... Carl Wilhelm Eman- | In charge of vice | Massachusetts. uel Andre Johans- consulate. son. Petrolt, Mich cob. ns lobe i beast one 31 ER a ‘ Michigan. St.Paul, Minn. ........ Engebreth Hagbarth | Consul... ........ Minnesota, North Dakota, and Hobe. South Dakota. Gulfport, Miss.......... Olus John Dedeaux...| Viceconsul........ Mississippi. St. Louis, Mo.......... Johan Guldbrand Bor-|..... do a ond Missouri. resen. Great Falls, Mont. . J. daisies ecaanesnalonias doi... i... Montana. Omaha, Nebr........... A.L.Undeland.......[-...5 doi co ssioan Nebraska. Newark, N.J........... Johan Randulf Bull...|..... Go....:q..4 .| New Jersey. Buflalo,N.Y......... ri Sven Ih. M.B. Kiel- |..... TERRE Buftalo. and. . New York, N.Y........| Hans Heinrich Theo- | Consul general....| Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, dor Fay. Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Anders Haug ......... Vice consul . ...... Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Porto Rico, Rhode Island, South Caro- lina, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, and: the Virgin Islands. Niagara Falls, N. Y._..| Job Morten August |..... QO. Niagara Falls. Stillesen. ‘Wilmington, N.C...... Walter Smallbones...|..... do... ol North Carolina. Grand Forks, N. Dak..| Ingvald Andreas Berg.|..... do... on North Dakota. Cleveland, Ohio... Charles Farrand Tap- |..... do............ Ohio. in. Portland, Oreg......... Anthon Amundsen |..... AO. sais Oregon. : Eckern, Philadelphia, Pa........ Mathias Moe..........|..... do... Pennsylvania. Cebu, PT. in... Guy Walford... .......]. =u. dO. see. oos Cebu. Noite; P.1....c--.. a Tone Hugh Wolseley |..... 0 onic Iloilo. rice. Manila, P. I. .........0. Harold M. Pitt........ Consul: in... rovse Philippine Islands. SanJuan, P.R..... | Wademyr Edward |..... do. ck Porto Rico. ee. Charleston, S. C........ Chr.J. Larsen ........ Vice consul........ South Carolina. Sioux Falls, S. Dak ....| NielsQliver Monserud.|..... dos ise inues South Dakota. Galveston, Tex......... John: W. Focke.......J..... do. i... Texas (except the harbors of Port Arthur and Sabine Pass). Port Arthur, Tex....... John Robert Adams..|... .do............ Port Arthur and Sabine Pass. Salt Lake City, Utah...| John M, Hansen ......[..... do. .......= Utah. Newport News, Va..... Lynwood Ruff Holmes|..... do... ........2 Newport News, Va. Norfolk, Vo... =... Anders Williams. .....|..... do. .....-...: St. Thomas, Virgin Is- | Carl Gustav Thiele ...| Consul............ Consuls in the United States. NORWAY—-PARAGUAY. 457 San Diego, Calif........ San Francisco, Calif. : Denver, Colo............ Pensacola Ra... Atlanta, Ga Rn dr TR Hilo, Aiwall oo : Honolulu, Hawaii...... Chicago, OF Lexington, Ky. .o.-.--¢ New Orleans, La....... Baltimore, Md......... Boston, Mass........... Gulfport, MisS.......... Kansas City, Mo ....... St. Louis, Mo.....-..... Philadelphia, Pa....... Aguadilla, P.R........ San J an, PR... Fort Worth, Tex. ...... Galveston, Tex......... Norfolk, Va. A St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Puget Sound, Wash. ... Seattle, Wash. ......... PARAGUAY. Mobile, Ala............. San Francisco, Calif . . Chicago, I11 Indianapolis, Ind....... New Orleans, La....... Boston, Mass. ea ca Kansas City, Mo St. Louis, Mo............ Newark N. J... ...- New York, N.Y....... Cincinnati, Ohio........ Philadelphia, Pa....... Alexander Morrice.. .. Francisco Jiménez. . .. José E. de Ycaza...... Edwin L. Apperson... LeopoldoJ. Castellanos John Auer Jones. J.-B. Guarg........... Augusto Hm sey Antonio Navarro E... George Hamilton...... Ernesto de la Ossa.. .. Nathan Eisenmann... Francis W. Burr...... William Volmerhaus. . Melvin Maynard John- son. Alfred R. Shrigley.... Max Rowland ........ Belisario Porras, jr... Carlos Carbone, jr... .. Wilfred H. Schofl. .... Jorge Silva y Sip Manuel de J. Vidal. . Charles Vére.......... TL... Rogers. .......... A.A. Van Alstyne.... W.E.Barrett.......... John D. Leiteh........ Isaac Paiewensky..... Harry S. Garfield. .... Adolfo Bracéns....... Elliott G. Rickarby... Max Clements Richter Alberto W. Holmes. . Charles E. Coffin...... James Lloveras....... Eben Moore Flagg. .. Juan Walker William Wallace White Philip Ronde. . Wallace White, ir-. was Irwin F. Westheimer Rodman Wanamaker. Reese M. Fleischmann Honorary consul. . Consul............. Honorary vice con- sul, Consul.<......-.-. Sf Honorary consul. . Consul... ......— Honorary consul. . Vice consul........ Consul. or. oo Consul general. ... Viee eonsul....... Honorary vice con- sul. Consul... ......05 Acting vice AY Consal.......c... Vice consul....... Honorary consul. . Consul... ......... Consul general . ... Vice consul ....... Honorary vice con- 8 ul. Honorary consul. . Gonsal.....o:s-53- s Viceconsul....... Honorary consul. . Viceconsul....... Hy ilonorary consul. . Consul...........- Viceconsul....... Consul... ........; -| Honorary consul. . Viceconsul....... Conga). ...- coca Sone general . . Vice consul....... Residence. Name. Rank. ~ Jurisdietion. NORWAY—continued. Port Townsend, Wash..| Oscar Klocker. ah =. Viceconsul......: Counties of Chehalis, Clallam, Is- } land, Jefferson, Kitsap, Mason, Pacilc, San Juan, and Wahkia- um Seattle, Wash.......... Thomas Samuel Hunt-|..... do. vi For Washington, except the Port . ington Kolderup. Townsend district. Milwaukee, Wis........ Oil. Rove... .....l..... AOE aa Wisconsin. PANAMA, Mobile, Ala.............. AH. Diy... aa Vice consul ....... Julio Zambeta. ....... Consular agent. ... Los Angeles, Calif.......| Antonio Orfila........ Vice consul........ ih .| Connecticut,Maine,Massachusetts, New Hampshire New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. .| Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Michi- For Missouri, Now J ersey, Ohio, ennsylvania, and Wisconsin. | i | 458 Congressional Dairectory. PARAGUAY—POLAND. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. PARAGUAY—continued. Newport News, Va..... Jorge N. Wise......... Honorary vice con- sul. Norfoll:, Vai to... Carlos Barrett......... Consnl.........v.n Norfolk and Newport News. Richmond, Vaan MAD Hoo... .....-. Viceconsul....... Seattle, Wash.......... Erastus Brainerd... .. Consal. .:.. ones PERSIA. Son Praneiseo, Calif li... scien on Consil.. nissan Chicago, Tl... J.......... Albert H. Putney. .... Honorary consul..| For the District of Columbia, Illi- Marshall Solberg. .... Honorary vicecon-| nois, Indiana, Michigan, and x sul. Wisconsin. St. Louis, Mo............. Milton Seropyan...... Viceconsul....... New York, I Err rat BLE St Sn eb agate Sap Consulgeneral. . .. Philadelphia, Pai nn Haig Herant Pakra- | Viceconsul....... dooni. PERU. . Mobile, Ala............. Charles H. Brown..... Honorary vice con- su Los Angeles, Calif. ..... fluete Ion y Porta.| Honorary consul. . San Diego, Calif. ....... B. J. Louis, ory wit i dos rt at San Francisco, Calif. . . Chicago, I11 New Orleans, La....... Toledo, Ohio dnl ns Philadelphia, Pa....... Manila, P Mayaguez, P. R........ SanJusn,P.R......... Charleston, S.C........ Newport News, Va Norio, Va... .--....cn St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash. ......... POLAND. Chicago, TI... >... ..... Detroit, Mich... -..... St. Louis, Mo........... RG M. Cavero. . Carlos J. Monsalve.. .. Guillermo Espantoso . Antonio D. Castro. ... César Coronel Zegarra,. Victor Pezet.......... Carlos Alberto Oyague y Pfliicker. 0.G.H. E. Kehrhahn. Alejandro Guillermo Riveros. E. R.deMoney.-...... Eduardo Higginson. .. Hugo E. Varga....... Charles Soot Rowley . Manuel Domingo Der- teano. Manuel Fuentes ...... Antonio Maria Barreto Guillermo H. Moscoso. Benito Zalduondo y Echevarria. Alberto Pérez Sdez... Eduardo Espantoso Cossio. Zygmunt Nowicki. . .. George Barthel de Weydenthal. Wladyslaw Kozlowski. Consul general . . Honorary vice con- sul. Consul general... . Viceconsul....... Consgnl........ 5% Sonat general . . Consul...... .s-d=- Honorary consnl. . Cons iT vr oo EN AO Honorary consul. . Consulgeneral. . .. Honorary consul. . Honorary consul. . Honorary vice con- sul. Consular, as Conga. suse on- Consui general. . .. Consul... Viceconsul. ...... Florida and Georgia. .| For the States of Alabama, Ar- kansas, Lecuisiana, Mississippi, and Texas. For the United States. North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee. For the State of Washington. Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Califor- nia, Colorado, Idaho, Tllinois, In- diana, Towa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, "Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Ore- gon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Michigan and Ohio. For Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, New Mexico, Okla~ homa, and Texas. Consuls in the Unated States. POLAND—PORTUGAL. 459 Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. POLAND—continued. Bufialo, N.Y ison . NewYork, N. ¥Y....... Pittsburgh, Pa......... PORTUGAL. Fresno, Calif............ Los Angeles, Calif...... San Francisco, Calif. ... Panama, C.Z.... ...... Washington, D.C...... Key West, Fla. ........ Pensacola, Fla.......... Tampa,Fla. ...c....0-. Brunswick, Ga......... Savannah, Ga.......... Hilo, Hawaii Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... Maui, Hawaii........... Chieago, I... ......... Stanislaw Manduk.... Stefan Grotowski...... Anthony Roman...... Zdzislaw Kurnikowski Abilio Gomes da Silva Reis. Mario do Nascimento. - Manoel Teixeira de Freitas. José Agustin Arango. . José Guilherme Piodella. “Leo Francis Pallardy. Rosendo Torres. ...... “José Augusto Mon- teiro Osorio. “Francisco de Paula Brito, jr. Luis Rodrigues Gaspar Enos Vincent......... S. Chapman Simms. . . Frederick Charles Har- Vice consul ....... Consul general. . . Vice consul........ Consul...... oda. Vice consul........ Consul... .. oon Vice consul........ Consal. ....ic00 In charge of con- sulate. Vice consul........ wood. For Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont. In New York, the counties of Allegany, Broome, Cayuga, Cattaraugus, Chautau- qua, Chemung, Chenango, Clin- ton, Cortland, Delaware, Essex, Erie, Franklin, Fulton, Genesee, Hamilton, Herkimer, Jefferson, Lewis, Livingston, Madison, Monroe, Montgomery, Niagara, Oneida, Onondaga, Ontario, Os- wego, Orleans, Otsego, Saratoga, Schoharie, Schuyler, Seneca, St. Lawrence, Steuben, Tioga, Tompkins, Warren, Washington, ‘Wayne, Wyoming, and Yates. For Alabama, Connecticut, Dela- ware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Jersey, North Carolina, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Virginia. In New York, the counties of Albany, Columbia, Dutchess, Greene, Kings, Nas- sau, New York, Orange, Put- nam, Queens, Rensselaer, Rich- mond, Rockland, St. Lawrence, Schenectady, Suffolk, Sullivan, Ulster, and ‘Westchester. In Pennsylvania, the counties of Bradford, Berks, Bucks, Chester, Carbon, Columbia, Dauphin, Delaware, Lackawanna, Lancas- ter, Lebanon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Monroe, Montour, Montgomery, Northampton, Northumberland, Pike, Philadelphia, Schuylkill, Susquehanna, Sullivan, Wayne, and Wyoming. Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia. In Pennsylvania, the counties of Adams, Alle- gheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Bed- ford, Blair, Butler, Cambria, Cameron, Center, Clarion, Clear- field, Clinton, Crawford, Cum- berland, Elk, Erie, Fayette, Forest, Franklin, Fulton,Greene, Huntingdon, Indiana, Jefferson, Juniata, Lawrence, Lycoming, McKean, Mercer, Mifflin, Perry, Potter, Snyder, Somerset, Tioga, Union, Venango, Warren, Wash- ington, Westmoreland,and York. San Francisco and its consular dis- trict. For the Canal Zone. Hilo and its district. Maui and its district. 460 Congressional Directory. PORTUGAL—SALVADOR. Residence. Name. . Rank. Jurisdiction. PORTUGAL—continued. New Orleans, La....... Luiz da Costa Car- | Consul............ valho. Baltimore, Md.......... Adelbert W. Mears....| Vice consul........ ; : Boston, Mass........... Eduardo Rodriguesde | Consul............ Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Carvalho. New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Camillo Camara....... Vice consul........| Boston. Fall River, MasS..c...-- Carlos Alberto S§ Mi- |..... dos. ees Fall River and its consular dis- randa. trict. Lowell, Mass. .cccauann. José dos Santos Trigosq|..... do----.........| Lowelland its district. New Bedford, Mass..... Antonio Madureira....|..... 3 Re Now Seaand and its consular dis- rict. Gulfport, Miss.......... John Paoli... ......ccc]-nse- do... ..... Gulfport and its district. New York, N.Y....... Jorge da Silveira | Consul general....| All the States except California, Duarte d’Almeida. - Connecticut, Maine, Massachu- Euclides Goulart da | Vice consul........ setts, Nevada, New Hampshire, Costa. Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, José da Rocha Prista..|..... 0: ae sas and Washington. laden, Pa... ..- 3:1. de Macedo, jr.....1..... 0} sr nes ‘Philadelphia and its district. Manila, P.X. no... ....... John. W. Ferrier.......{ Consul............ Philippine Islands. San Juan, P. R......... José Maria Lomba.....|..... Oivnnioniinrosi Esteban Garcia | Vice consul........ Cabrera. Providence, R. I........| Gilberto Vieira da |..... 3 [1 FARE For Providence and its district. Silva Marques. Galveston, Tex. ........ Frank Clow Johnson. .|..... 40. ices Newport News and. lc......oveucr-vaneranssafavaes do;.. 2. Norfolk, Va. M. BE. Trepuk......... Consal.-.......... St. Thomas, Virgin Ts- lands. RUMANIA. Chicago, TN........0.0.. Indianapolis, Ind....... New York, N.Y Cleveland, Ohio........ Pittsburgh, Pa......... RUSSIA. Mobile, Ala............ Nome, Alaska ......... San Francisco, Calif ... Pensacola, Fla. ....... Savannah, Ga ......... Honolulu, Hawaii ..... Chicago, LA Boston, Mass........... Portland, Oreg......... Philadelphia, Pa. ...... Pittsburgh, Pg......... SALVADOR. Los Angeles, Calif. ..... Ivan C. Popovici...... Alic. J. Lupear...... {57 T. Tileston Wells. .... Jean U. Koree......... Alexander Gabor...... Samuel A. McClung... Murray Wheeler. ..... Nikolai Bogoyav- lensky. George Romanovsky.. Ambrose Gherini...... "Jean Chpiganovitech. .. Antoine Volkoff....... Charles Faweett....... Joseph A. Conry...... Michel Oustinow...... Peter A. Routsky..... Baron O. A. Korff.... Dimitri T. Florinsky.. "Nikolai Bogoyav- lensky. Roberto E. Tracey.... Honorary vice- consul. Vice consul........ Consul general. . .. Vice consul........ Vice consul........ Consul general. . .. Acting consul. .... Vice consul........ Sn (Er pa Consular agent... Consul general.... Vice consul........ Consul:........00. Consul general. . .. Acting consul. .... Vice consul........ Acting vice consul. a, TR Et Consul general. . .. Honorary consul. . Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wis- consin, and all States west of the Mississippi River. Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Virginia. For Ohio. Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Also consul general at Seattle. Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, and the Territory of Hawaii. Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Okla- homa, South Dakota, and Wis- consin. Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, and Vermont. District of Columbia, Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia. Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Wash- ington, and yoming. Also consul general at Nome, for _ Alaska. San Francisco, Calif. . .. Juan Delgado Prieto.. Consml...........- Consuls tn the Unated States. 461 SALVADOR—SPAIN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. SALVADOR—continued. Chicago, TH... ... ... Berthold Singer....... Honorary consul New Orleans, La. ...... Leonilo Montalvo. .... onsul.... 0... St. Louis, Mo........... Rafael Garcia Escobar |..... 40... New York, N. Y....... Pio Romero Bosque, jr.| Consul general... . Philadelphia, Pa. ...... LR de J e su s | Honorary consul... ayo. KINGDOM OF THE SERBS, CROATS, AND SLOVENES. San Francisco, Calif. . . .| DragichaStanoyevitch| Vice consul ....... Alaska, Arizona, California, Colo- rado, Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, - Montana, Nebraska, New Mex- ico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, the Philippines, Porto Rico, South’ Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, and Wyo- ming. Chicago, Tll.............. Bojidar Pouritch ..... Consal............ Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Towa, Zharko Tomashevich.| Vice consul Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Tennessee, and Wisconsin. New York, N. Y....... Pavle Karovitch...... Consul general... .| For Alabama, Connecticut, Dela- ware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Mary- land, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Is- land, South Carolina, Vermont, SIAM. Virginia, West Virginia, and the : Virgin Islands. San Francisco, Calif....| Henry G. W. Dinkel- | Consul............ spiel. Martin J. Dinkelspiel. .| Vice consul........ Chicago, Tl... .... ou uen Milward Adams....... Consal........ ec. New York, N. Y....... F. Warren Sumner....| Consul general. ... John C. Harland. ..... Vice consul....... SPAIN. Mobile, Ala............. Juan Llorca y Marti... Honorsry vice | Alabama. consul. Los Angeles, Calif. ..... Antonio Orfila........|..... } | RPA | For the counties of Imperial, Orange, Riverside, San Bernar- : dino, and San Diss San Francisco, Calif... .| José Jimeno Aznar...| Consul........ ----| Alaska, Arizona, California (except Arturo Brand......... Honorary vice the counties of Imperial, Orange consul. Riverside, San Bernardino, an San_ Diego), Montana, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming. Fernandina, Fla.. Ricardo Noallas County of Nassau. Key West, Fla. Pensacola, Fla.. Tampa, oa Brunswick, G8..ccee... Savannah, Ga.......... Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... Boise, Idaho............ Chicago, Il1.............. New Orleans, La. ...... Baltimore, Md.......... Boston, Mass........... Detroit, Mich. .......... Gulfport, Miss.......... St. Louis; Mo.......0:x. New York, N.Y....... Domingo J. Milord.. J. Garriaga. .... ...oe0 Alejandrino Nistal y Casas. Rosendo Torras....... José Maria Martinez y de Pons. José Maria Sempere y Olivares. Delfin Vila........ HE Giuseppe Schiaffino... Pedro Mackay de Al- meida. Luis James Rosen- berg. José Alvarez Hernan- eZ. Alejandro Berea y Rodrigo. Mariano Vidal Tolos- ana. Manuel de Soler....... Cincinnati, Ohio........ nsul Honorary vice consul. Consul... 0.00 Honorary vice consul. Vice consul........ Honorary vice consul. d Consals i... ‘Consul general.... Vice consul....... Honorary vice consul. County of Monroe. County of Escambia. Florida, except Nassau, Monrose, and Escambia Counties. Glynn County. Georgia, except Glynn County. Hawaii. Idaho. Illinois. Louisiana and South Carolina. Maryland. Massachusetts. Detroit. Mississippi. Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Mis- souri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Tennessee. | Connecticut, Maine, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Ohio. 462 Congressional Dairectory. SPAIN—SWEDEN. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. SPAIN—continued. | Portland, Oreg......... Antonio Rafael Vejar . Honorary vice | Oregon. | consul. i Philadelphia, Pa....... Emilio de Motta 'y | Consul............ For the counties of Philadelphia, | Ortiz. Chester, and Delaware in Penn- | Enrique de Jesis | Honorary vice sylvania, and Delaware, District | : Mago. consul. of Columbia, and North Carolina. | [ Pittsburgh, Pa. ...... José Corriols y Sala. ...|..... do..r oc... Pennsylvania, except the counties of Philadelphia, Chester, and I Delaware. . Cebu, Be X.ooten seams Cristobal Garcia.......|..... Goro Cebu, Leyte, Bohol, and Samar. olor ses od José Reguera.......... Honorary consul..| The Provinces of Antigue, Capiz, Iloilo, Negros Occidental, and Negros Oriental. Manhils, P. 1.000 00 Vicente Palmaroli y | Consul general. ...| General jurisdiction over the Phil- : Reboulet. ippine Archipelago. Special ju- Alberto de la Guardia | Vice consul ....... risdiction over the Batanes and Ojea. Babuyanes Islands, Luzon, Min- José Ledesma Reina |..... do-it doro, Guam, and the territory of the Philippine Archipelago, ex- cept the consular district of Toilo. Aguadilla, P.R........ Juan Casellas. ........ fonoaty vice | Aguadilla and its district. j consul. [ Arecibo, PR..L.. 0k. Alberto Burckhart y |..... dors endro ti. Arecibo, Barceloneta, Camuy, i Tejada. Ciales, Hatillo, Manati, Morovis, Sushradillan Utuado, and Vega | aja. Humaeao, B. BR a terns annem ean do... oa. Humacao,Ceiba, Fajardo, Luquillo, Naguabo, Piedras, Yabucoa,Hato Grande or San Lorenzo, and | i Juncos. | Mayaguez, P. R........ Benigno Rodriguez |..... do. uals Mayaguez, Anasco, Las Marias, li Campoamor. Cabo Rojo, San German, Hormi- il gueros, Lajas, Sabana Grande, | i and Maricao. i Ponet, . 0... ......... Florencio Suarez. ....._|..... dori Rig District of Ponce. ! San Juan, P.R........: Ernesto Freirey Maria | Consul............ Porto Rico and Vieques. i Mariano José Miranda | Vice consul....... | del Monte. il Vieques, P. R.........~ Avelino Portela Roldn Flousrary vice | Vieques and its district. | consul. i Brownsville, Tex....... Emilio C. Forto.......[....: dood Se Cameron County. | El Pago, ex... ... oh. cor vise ail, Vice consul........ El Paso County. i Galveston, Tex......... Andrés Iglesias y Ve- | Consul............ New Mexico and Texas, except J ayos. Cameron and El Paso Counties. | Eduardo Sevilla y | Honorary vice | Montoliu. consul. i Noriolk;, Vai... 2. Arthur C. Humphreys. |..... SEE AAG al Virginia. ] i Thomas, Virgin Is- | Isidro de Lugo. .......|..... doc... on. Virgin Islands ands. Seattle, Wash: ".. .... John Wesley Dolby ...|..... AO nian ‘Washington. Clarksburg, W. Va..... Biagio Merendino.....|..... QO SL a West Virginia. SWEDEN. Mobile, Ala... ici Robert Bennett Turner| Vice consul -...... | Ketchikan, Alaska.....| A. R. Larson..........|..... dio. cian Los Angeles, Calif. ..... Gottlieb Eckdahl..... |... .. doinuniait ais San Diego, Calif... Nils Malmberg........|..... 40. sei San Francisco, Calif. ...| Carl Edvard Waller- | Consul............ Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, stedt. Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and | Fredrik Westerberg...| Vice consul....... ‘Washington. Denver, Colo........... Walter Anders Peter- |..... Joi Goinlin son. Jacksonville, Fla....... John G. MeGiffin.....|..... door uy Pensacola, Fla.......... Charles MecKenzie- |..... do. oh Oerting. Savannah, Ga.......... Aage Georg Schroder. .|..... do. osiiindns Honolulu, Hawaii. ..... Christian J.Hedemann|..... do.14. 6k vais Territory of Hawaii. { Chieago, IN... ..u.cnnee Carl Otto David von | Consul............ Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, In- Dardel. diana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Gustaf Bernhard An- | Vice consul....... Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, i : derson. Nebraska, New Mexico, North | Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South : Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyo- i ming. | Sioux City, Iowa....... Gustavus Nelson Swan. .... doz. unin { New Orleans, La....... George Plant... ....[--:. qo i Baltimore, Md.......... Emory H. Niles.......|....0 doin Jabs i Boston, MasS........... Carl Wilhelm Eman- |..... do. coi uel Andre Johansson. Detroit, Mich........... Carl Berger Parsons...|..... dor in Minneapolis, Minn...... Theophilus Ludvig|..... doses tint. Imanuel Wessén. Consuls wn the United States. 463 SWEDEN—TURKEY. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. SWEDEN—continued. Kansas City, Mo........ A. Hawkinson........ Vice consul ....... Missoula, Mont......... John: Dahlgren........{..... do ity taxis Omaha, Nebr........... Peter August Edquist.|..... doe rnd i Jamestown, N. Y....... Carl Alfred Okerlind..|..... dois aeraias New York, N.Y ....... Grand Forks, N. Dak.. Cleveland, Ohio........ Oklahoma City, Okla... Portland, Orez......... Philadelphia, Pa. ...... Manila, PY. Ponce, P. Ru... .. 0... San Juan, P. R......... Galveston, Tex. .....-.: Salt Lake City, Utah... Norfolk, Va........o.. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Seattle, Wash.......... SWITZERLAND. San Francisco, Calif. ... Denver, Colo........... Washington, D. C...... Chicago, IN....-....... New Orleans, La........ St. Louis, Mo........... Now York, N. Y..--... Cincinnati, Ohio........ Portland, Oreg. ......... Philadelphia, Pa....... Manila, RP. 1... ...----. Galveston, Tex. ........ VirginIslands.......... Seattle, Wash.......... TURKEY. (Tha diplomatic and consular representa- tives of Spain have charge of Turkish interests in the United States.) Olof Herman Lamm. . Andrew Isidor Wid- lund. Herman J. Nord...... Eben Leonard Aurelius Elof Valdemar Lidell.|. Maurice A. Hogeland.. Carl Orton... 2:0. Waldemar Edward Lee. Charles Fowler........ Frank L. Malmstedt.. Joseph John Carlson. . Axel Holst. or oo Andrew Chilberg.. he John Frepler....5. Guillaume Schwyter. . Paul Weiss. ........ .. Ernest Buhler......... Carl Ferdinand Bertschinger. Paul U.Thalman..... Gaston Dubois........ Louis H. Junod....... Henri Escher..... . Ch. Fehlmann Emile Frederic Glaser. Paul O. Branden- berger. Charles Vuilleumier. .. Otto Gmir........-.- Albert Sidler......... Consul general... . Vice consul....... AEA] TRE a Lei) Acting vice consul Consul... ....... Viceconsul........ Consul... .. 0... Vice consul........ had dos ori cies dot 2a ral Consul........-%.. .| Viceconsul........ Honorary vice consul. Consul... .......5" Honorary consul.. Honorary vice consul. Consul... 0. Honorary consul. . Congal.... A Honorary vice consul. Acting consul. .... Consul in charge of consulate. Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New Ham p s hire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennes- see, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, and West Virginia, Philippine Islands. Island of Porto Rico. For the Virgin Islands. California and Nevada. Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. The legation of Switzerland in Washington has charge of con- sular matters in the District of Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia. Iowa, Northern Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Montana, North Da- kota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyoming. Alabaina, Arkansas, Florida, Geor- gia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Southern Illinois, Kansas, Mis- souri, and Nebraska. .| Connecticut, Maine, Massachu- setts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, Vermont, and the Virgin Islands. .| Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee. Idaho and Oregon. Delaware, New Jersey, and Penn- Sylvania. For Oklahoma and Texas. : Swissinterests are under the juris- diction of the Swiss consulate at New York. Alaska and Washington. 464 Congressional Durectory. URUGUAY—VENEZUELA. Residence. Name. Rank. Jurisdiction. URUGUAY. Mobile Alas = oi Nori mp es Vice consul........ Los Angeles, Calif. ..... San Francisco, Calif. . ... California. Jacksonville and Fer- nandina, Fla. Pensacola, Fla... ...... Vicente J. Vidal.......| Commercial agent. Brunswick, Clones dns Rosendo Torras....... Vice consul........| Brunswick and Darien. Savannah, Ga.......... Ramon Esteve........ Congul......3..v< Pedro Baste.......... Vice consul....... Chicago, IN: .... 5c. Royale Carlos Le- | Consul............ ret. New Orleans, La....... Henry L. Lange.......]..... do... SE TER NER Vice congsul....... Portland, Me........... James E. Marret....... Consul... Baltimore, Md.......... Augusto Francisco |..... AO. seine vn mans Pablo du Pont. Attleboro, Mass.........| Justo Alonso Freire...| Vice consul..... Boston, Mass........... William A. Mossman..| Consul............ Pascagoula, Miss........| Manuel. Ros... .... Vice consul........| Biloxi, Gulfport, and Pascagoula. Kansas City, Mo........| Gabriel Madrid Her- {..... 0. ec tnnss-- nandez. St. Louis, Mo...-........ F. Ernest Cramer... .. Consul... 000 Ahany, N.Y. i coves Guillermo A. Saxton. .| Vice consul..... .. New York, N.Y....... José Richling..........| Consul general....| For the United States. César C. Guadencio...| Consul... ......... : Philadelphia, Pa........ Pittsburgh, Pa......... Mayaguez, P. R. Ponce, Pe B......o..... San Juan, P.R......... Galveston, Tex......... Port Arthur, Tex....... Newport News, Va..... Norfolk, Va............. Richmond, Va.........: Frederiksted, Virgin Is- ands. Seattle, Wash... ...... VENEZUELA. Mobile, Ala... =n... Los Angeles, Calif. . .... San Francisco, Calif. . .. Canal Zone. ............ Jacksonville, Fla. ...... Chicago, 1... ......... New Orleans, La....... Cincinnati, Ohio........ Oklahoma, Okla... .._.. Philadelphia, Pa...._.. Arecibo, BP. R........0.c Mayaguez, P. R........ San Juan, P. R Fort Worth, Tex....... Galveston, Tex......... Norfolk and Newport News, Va. St. Thomas, Virgin Is- lands. Henry H. Jeanings.... Rodman Wanamaker. . William Meyer... _..... Guillermo H. Moscoso. Carlos Armstrong.. ... Mn] Mendia Mora- es. Manuel Gomez Lopez. Enrique Schroeder... . Roberto Crozier Thompson. Aubrey G. Bailey. .... Thomas Ramsay...... Adolfo Bracons........ Diego Bustillos ....... Virgilio Capriles....... ‘Miguel Toro R........ Alfredo Olavarria.. ... Augusto Francisco Du ont. Ernesto Hurtado...... Alirio Parra Marquez. . Pedro Rafael Rincones Nicolas Veloz. ...._... WwW. Pp. Whitlock... .... Humberto Tragorri. Sebéstian Bonet..... _. Vicente Barletta. ..... J. M. Ontiveros. ...... Juan Eugenio Medina. LD. Bogors......... Robert Bornefeld. .... R. Baldwin Myers. ... Seattle, Wash....._.... Augusto Dietz... .... pe S. Malling-Holm... .. .. Se Vice consul........ Honorary consul. . re dos oie Consul....... Tape Honorary consul.. Consul general. . .. Honorary consul. . nin AOccvirnn sens Consul general. . . . Vice consul........ Honpraty consul.. Honorary consul. . Consul... ...<. Vice consul........ Honorary consul. . Guayama and Ponce. .| Arecibo, Bayamon, and Humacao, For the island of St. Croix. For Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Towa, Kansas, Kentucky, Lou- isiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Ne- braska, Ohio, Oklahoma, Ten- nessee, Texas, and West Virginia. For the Virgin Islands. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. DISTRICT GOVERNMENT. (District Building, Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street. Phone, Main 6000.) Commissioner.—Cuno H. Rudolph (president of the board), The Dresden. (Private secretary, Harry F. Allmond, 1437 Fairmont Street.) Commassioner.—James F. Oyster, 2460 Sixteenth Street. (Private secretary, Ralph A. Norton, 442 Massachusetts Avenue.) Engineer Commissioner.—Col. Charles Keller, United States Army, 1870 Wyoming Avenue. (Private secretary, James I. Martin, 323 Thirteenth Street SE.) Assistants to Engineer Commussioner.—Maj. F. S. Besson, United States Army, 3159 Eighteenth Street; Maj. Raymond A. Wheeler, 11 Newlands Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Capt. John E. Wood, United States Army, 1901 I Street. Secretary to the board.—Daniel E. Garges, 121 Twelfth Street NE. DISTRICT OFFICERS. Alienist.—Dr. D. Percy Hickling, 1304 Rhode Island Avenue. Assessor.— William P. Richards, 1457 Harvard Street. Assistant assessor.—C. M. Davis, 2012 I Street. Board of assistant assessors of real estate.—Alexander McKenzie, 4408 Fourteenth Street; Fred D. Allen, 1409 Fifteenth Street; L. S. Johnson, 716 Shepherd Street. Board of assistant assessors of personal property.—Charles A. Russell, 1728 Willard Street; John T. Bardroff, 1412 Euclid Street; F. A. Gunther, 3204 Twenty- second Street NE. Special assessment clerk.— William H. De Shields, 123 Fifth Street NE. Auditor.—Daniel J. Donovan, 3578 Thirteenth Street. Chief clerk.—Simon McKimmie, 903 Allison Street. Boards: Anatomical. —Dr. F. A. Hornaday, secretary-treasurer, The Rochambeau. Uritierayllony Joy Edson, president; George S. Wilson, secretary, 7601 Georgia venue. Childrens’ guardians.— William W. Millan, president; Mrs. Walter S. Ufford, sec- retary; Mrs. Ella H. West, agent, 2519 Fourteenth Street. Dental examiners.—Howard P. Cobey, president, The Champlain; Dr. W. H. Barn- hard, secretary, 1225 New York Avenue. Educairon ( Thirteenth and K Streets).—Dr. Abram Simon, president, 2802 Cathedral Avenue; Dr. F. W. Ballou, superintendent of schools, The Marlborough; Stephen Elliott Kramer, assistant superintendent, 1725 Kilbourne Place; Garnet C. Wil- kinson, assistant superintendent, 406 U Street; H. O. Hine, secretary, 3204 High- land Place, Cleveland Park. Examiners veterinary medicine.—John Pollard Turner, president; F. W. Grenfell, secretary, 1916 H Street. Medical examiners— Regular. —Edgar P. Copeland, president, Stonleigh Court. Felectic.—L. D. Walters, president, 1334 G Street NE. Homeopathic—G. C. Birdsall, president, 1832 Kalorama Road. Medical supervisors.—G. C. Birdsall, president; Edgar P. Copeland, secretary, Stoneleigh Court. Mingmum wage.—Jesse C. Adkins, Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; John L. New- bold, The Wardman Park; Ethel M. Smith, 2852 Ontario Road; Elizabeth le, secretary, Stoneleigh Court; Elna Anderson, assistant secretary, 2506 treet. : Nurses’ examining.—Miss Margaret Hutchinson, president, 1337 K Street; Mary ~ Graham, secretary, 1337 K Street. Pharmacy.—Augustus C. Taylor, president, 150 C Street NE.; W. T. Kerfoot, sec~ retary, Seventh and I. Streets. Plumbing.—Peter C. Schaefer, president, 139 B Street SE.; Samuel Tapp, secretary, 133 V Street. : Trustees of Industrial Home School.—F. W. McReynolds, president, 3241 R Street. 24786°—67—4—2p Ep——31 465 466 Congressional Directory. Boards—Continued. Trustees National Training School for Boys.—George A. Sterling, superintendent. Trustees Public Library (Ninth and K Streets).—Theo. W. Noyes, president; George F. Bowerman, librarian, 2852 Ontario Road. Trustees of National Training School for Garls.—Mrs. O. L. Veerhoft, president, 604 Aspen Street; Mrs. Fannie French Morse, superintendent. Bureau of Information.— William Tindall, 1310 Rhode Island Avenue. Collector of taxes.—C. M. Towers, 243 Twelfth Street NE. Deputy collector of taxes.—W. D. Clark, jr., 118 Thirteenth Street NE. Chaef clerk arrears division.—J. T. Petty, 3331 O Street. Coroner.—Dr. J. Ramsey Nevitt, 1820 Calvert Street. Corporation counsel.—Francis H. Stephens, 1714 Summit Place. Assistants.—Robert L. Williams, 1428 Chapin Street; Ringgold Hart, 428 Eighth Street NE.; William H. Wahly, 2633 Adams Mill Road; George P. Barse, 1365 B Street SE.; James C. Wilkes, 2319 North Capitol Street; F. W. Madigan, Chevy fiom, Md.; Lewis B. Perkins, 1819 G Street; Thomas G. Walsh, 2037 First treet. Disbursing officer.—James R. Lusby, 1305 Tenth Street. Deputy.—Kenney P. Wright, Clifton Terrace East. Electrical engineer.—W. B. Hadley, 3031 Seventh Street NE. Engineer department.—Roland M. Brennan, chief clerk, 11 R Street NE. Engineer of bridges.—David E. McComb, The Portner. Engineer of highways.—C. B. Hunt, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue. Flour commissioner.—Ralph L. Galt, president, First Street and Indiana Avenue. Gallinger Municipal Hospital.—Dr. E. W. Patterson, superintendent. Inspectors of— sphalt and cements.—J. W. Dare, 1878 Monroe Street. Boilers.—E. F. Vermillion, 137 Thirteenth Street NE. Buildings—John P. Healy, 1802 U Street. Plumbing.—A. R. McGonegal, Clarendon Avenue, Clarendon, Va. Municipal architect.—A. 1.. Harris, 1505 Lamont Street. Penal institutions: W. H. Moyer, general superintendent. W. L. Peake, assistant superintendent, jail. M. M. Barnard, assistant superintendent, reformatory. H. H. Green, assistant superintendent, workhouse. Permit clerk, engineer department.—H. M. Woodward, 1407 Thirty-first Street. Purchasing officer—M. C. Hargrove, 1603 O Street. Sanitary engineer.—J. B. Gordon, 2817 Q Street. Superintendents of— Bathing beach.—F. J. Brunner, 1226 Lawrence Street NE. District Building.—Maj. F. S. Besson. Assistant superintendent.—E. P. Brooke, 1605 Thirtieth Street. Home for Aged and Infirm.—W. J. Fay, Blue Plains. Industrial Home School (colored).—Leon L. Perry, Blue Plains. Insurance.—Burt A. Miller, The Roosevelt. Deputies.—H. S. Nichols, 1717 Lamont Street; T. M. Baldwin, jr., 3137 Eight- eenth Street NE. License bureau.— Wade H. Coombs, 3313 O Street. Municipal lodging house.—A. H. Tyson, 312 Twelfth Street. Playgrounds.—Mzrs. Susie Root Rhodes, 1004 Park Road. Roads.—L. R. Grabill, Takoma Park, Md. Streets.—H. N. Moss, 1790 Lanier Place. Street cleaning and collection service.—T. L. Costigan, 1523 Park Road. Supervisor city refuse.—Morris Hacker, 1825 Adams Mill Road. Trees and parking.—Clifford Lanham, 101 Alabama Avenue SE. 3 Tuberculosis Hospital (Fourteenth and Upshur Streets).—Dr. Joseph Winthrop Pea- body. Water Sirians] . S. Garland, 3803 Huntington Street. Weights, measures, and markets.—George M. Roberts, 316 Maryland Avenue NE. Surveyor.—M. C. Hazen, 1839 Sixteenth Street. Veterinary surgeon.—F. W. Grenfell, 1916 H Street. 2 Washington Asylum and Jail (Nineteenth and C Streets SE.).—J. A. Gannon, visit- ing physician, 1915 Biltmore Street. Water registrar.—G. W. Wallace, 2015 N Street. i : Zoning commission.—The Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the Architect of the Capitol, and the officer in charge of public buildings and grounds. Execu- tive officer, Maj. R. A. Wheeler, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, District Building. District Governmeni. 467 FIRE DEPARTMENT. Chief engineer —George S. Watson, 3928 Fourteenth Street. Deputies.—Andrew. J. Sullivan, 1506 Wisconsin Avenue; P. W. Nicholson, 5504 Thirteenth Street. 5 Battalion chief engineers.—James Keliher, 33 S Street; T. O’Connor, 912 Twenty- third Street; P. R. Davis, 1361 Monroe Street; J. J. Hanlon, 1345 Florida Avenue; C. W. Gill, 201 I Street; C. A. Kreamer, 3110 N Street; J. Carrington, 353 I Street SW.; C. E. Schrom, 1314 Maryland Avenue NE. Fire marshal.—L. V. Seib, 1303 Shepherd Street. Chief clerk.—E. R. Pierce, The Linville. Superintendent of machinery.—O. E. Fearn, 607 North Carolina Avenue SE. HEALTH DEPARTMENT. Health officer.—Dr. William C. Fowler, 2322 First Street. Assistant health officer.—Dr. George M. Boteler. Chief clerk and deputy health officer—Arthur G. Cole, 4121 Seventh Street. Chief of bureau of preventable diseases.—Dr. John T. Sprague, 1625 Sixteenth Street. Chief sanitary inspector.—Charles R. Holman, 314 East Capitol Street. Chief food inspector.—Dr. Reid R. Ashworth, 3228 Warder Street. Chief of bureau of vital statistics.—Dr. Albert C. Patterson, The Chastleton. Chemast.—Dr. T. M. Price, 1811 Irving Street. Serologist.—W. F. Landon, 713 Nineteenth Street. Bacteriologist.—John E. Noble, 1204 Eighteenth Street. oe medical and sanitary inspector. of i Joseph A. Murphy, 1425 Chapin treet. Poundmaster.— Walter R. Smith, Takoma Park, Md. METROPOLITAN POLICE. Major and superintendent.—Daniel Sullivan, 625 Princeton Street. Assistant superintendents.—H. G. Pratt, 147 Randolph Place; Charles A. Evans, 39 Florida Avenue. Chaef, also property, clerk.—Edwin B. Hesse, 506 A Street SE. Police surgeons.—Dr. W. H. R. Brandenburg, 1416 R Street; Dr. James J. Kilroy, 103 I Street; Dr. Daniel L. Borden, 2337 Ashmead Place; Dr. C. J. Murphy, 1 Thirteenth Street NE. Harbor master.—Russell Dean, 2520 Raleigh Street SE. Sanitary officer.—E. L. Phillips, 1443 Belmont Street. Inspector of pharmacy.—R. A. Sanders, 39 Quincy Street. Police headquarters.—Inspectors A. J. Headley, 217 Ninth Street SW.; W. H. Harri- son, 3282 M Street; W. S. Shelby (acting), The Berkshire. Detective headquarters.—C. L. Grant, 62 Bryant Street. PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION. © Executive secretary.— Walter C. Allen, 1800 K Street. General counsel.—Francis H. Stephens, 1714 Summit Place. Accountant.—E. V. Fisher, 1607 Thirtieth Street SE. Engineer.—R. G. Klotz, 1506 Columbia Road. i Inspector of gas and meters.—Elmer G. Runyan, 1651 Harvard Street. Chief clerk.—E. J. Milligan, Clinton, Md. RENT COMMISSION. Chairman.—A.. Leftwich Sinclair, 1519 Lamont Street. Mrs. Clara Sears Taylor, The Montana. William F. Gude, 3800 New Hampshire Avenue. Secretary.— Waldo E. Chapman, 1525 Oak Street. Attorney.—Chapin Brown, 1507 Twenty-second Street. ORIGIN AND FORM OF GOVERNMENT. The District of Columbia was established under the authority and direction of acts of Congress approved July 16, 1790, and March 3, 1791, which were passed to give effect to a clause in the eighth section of the first article of the Constitution of the United States, giving Congress the power— “To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever over such district (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular States and the accept- ! 468 Congressional Directory. | ance of Congress, become the seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like authority over all places purchased, by the consent of the legislature of the State in which the same shall be, for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dockyards, and other needful buildings.’” | | The seat of Government of the United States was first definitely named by the following clause in the act entitled ‘‘ An act providing a permanent form of govern- ment for the District of Columbia,’’ approved June 11, 1878, as follows: ‘That all territory which was ceded by the State of Maryland to the Congress of the United | States, for the permanent seat of Government of the United States, shall continue i to be designated as the District of Columbia” (20 Stat., 102), although it had been | incidentally mentioned as such in several preceding statutes. It embraces an area of 69.245 square miles, of which 60.01 square miles are land. | The river boundary is high-water mark along the Virginia shore of the Potomac’ iver. The local government of the District of Columbia is a municipal corporation hav- ing jurisdiction over the territory which ‘‘was ceded by the State of Maryland to the N Congress of the United States for the permanent seat of the Government of the United i States.” (20 Stat., 102.) This government is administered by a board of three commissioners having in general equal powers and duties. (20 Stat., 103.) Two of these commissioners, who must have been actual residents of the District | for three years next before their appointment and have during that period claimed ! residence nowhere else, are appointed from civil life by the President of the United | States and confirmed by the Senate of the United States for a term of three years each and until their successors are appointed and qualified. i The other commissioner is detailed from time to time by the President of the United | States from the Engineer Corps of the United States Army, and shall not be required to perform any other duty. (Ib.) This commissioner shall be selected from among i the captains or officers of higher grade having served at least 15 years in the Corp of ! Engineers of the Army of the United States. (26 Stat., 1113.) Three officers of the same corps, junior to said commissioner, may be detailed to assist him by the President of the United States. (28 Stat., 246.) The senior officer of the Corps of Engineers of the Army who shall for the time | being be detailed to act as assistant (and in case of his absence from the District or i disability, the junior officer so detailed) shall, in the event of the absence from the District or disability of the commissioner who shall for the time being be detailed from the Corps of Engineers, perform all the duties imposed by law upon said commissioner. (26 Stat., 1113.) One of said commissioners shall be chosen president of the board of commis- sioners at their first meeting, and annually and whenever a vacancy shall occur. “ (20 Stat., 103.) : : The commissioners are in a general way vested with jurisdiction covering all the - ordinary features of municipal government and are also ex officio the Public Utilities Commission of the District of Columbia. (37 Stat., 974.) The expenditures of the District of Columbia are based upon estimates annually prepared by the commissioners and submitted by them to Congress through the Bureau of the Budget. To the extent to which it shall approve of said estimates; Congress shall appropriate a proportion out of the Treasury of the United States, The remainder of the amount of such approved estimates shall be levied and assessed upon the taxable property and privileges in said District other than the property of the United States and of the District of Columbia. (Act approved June 11, 1878; 20 Stat., 104.) At present the relative proportions are 40 per cent out of the Treasury of the United States and 60 per cent out of the revenues derived from taxation of private property and privileges. ‘All taxes collected shall be paid into the Treasury of the United States, and the same, as well as appropriations to be made by Congress as aforesaid, shall be disbursed for the expenses of said District, on itemized vouchers, which shall have been audited and approved by the auditor of the District of Colum- bia, certified by said commissioners, or a majority of them.” (Ib., 105.) ; ; Congress has by sundry statutes empowered the commissioners to make building regulations; plumbing regulations; to make and enforce all such reasonable and usual police regulations as they may deem necessary for the protection of lives, limbs, health, comfort, and quiet of all persons, and the protection of all property within the District, and other regulations of a municipal nature. . District Government. 469: WASHINGTON CITY POST OFFICE. (Corner Massachusetts Avenue and North Capitol Street (adjoining Union Station). Phone, Main 7272.) Postmaster.—Merritt O. Chance, Ridge Road. Secretary to the postmaster.— William C. Gilbert, 4210 Seventh Street. Bookkeeper.—Clarence W. Nohe, 1822 Monroe Street. Examiners of stations.—Harry D. Sherwood, 1332 Harvard Street; Edgar Church, 614 Maryland Avenue NE. a Assistant postmaster.—W. H. Haycock, Tunlaw Road and Jewett Street. Postal cashier.— Franklin C. Burrows, 311 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Money-order cashier.—Philip Ottérback, 25625 Ontario Road. Superintendent of mails.—Clarence E. Schooley, 1766 Lanier Place. Assistant superintendents of mails.—Frederick Sillers, 1349 Otis Place; Sidney G. Bursley, 4910 Arkansas Avenue; Fred D. Riggles, 35 Rhode Island Avenue; George E. Smith, 534 Fourth Street NE.; Charles R. Williams, Brentwood, Md. Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of registry section.—E. A. Heilig, 1401 Girard Street. : Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of carriers.—John H. Muirhead, 68 R Street. Superintendent of motor vehicles.—Hiram B. Jones, 2122 Decatur Place. Classified stations. Station. Superintendent. Location. Anagostin iii. ci rare IE RANT As sa 2810 Nichols Avenue SE. ATE ies PF. R-Roberls.......o..: 3220 Seventeenth Street. Brightwood-........c Anthony Lehr.......... Georgia and Colorado Avenues. Brookland... cio ne I.E. Barnard. . ........ Twelfth and Monroe Streets NE. Centrale oo a vais G. C. Bondurant........ 820 Fourteenth Street. Chevy Chase................ C. F. Knockey.......... Connecticut Avenue, Kirk and Lenox. Clarendon.......... eae ee LB. TaD... ciara 1 East Washington Avenue. Columbia Boal... ..-. == S.-W. Trunnell.......... 1775 Columbia Road. Connecticut Avenue. .......| H.E. Riley............. 1220 Connecticut Avenue. Decatur Street. ..... Yas YB. Price.......c.ohe 1401 Decatur Street. Ls Aen tela Lo al B.N.Harper....-...--- Land Office Building. Florida Avenue............. H.W. Page...........o. Connecticut and Florida Avenues. Fourteenth Street........... HH. P.Breown........... 1400 Fourteenth Street. Friendship... c-o--octccanss C. B. Hurley... ..oau.- 4511 Wisconsin Avenue. Georgetown... co iee Cloyd Tavenner........ 1215 Thirty-first Street. H Street. ..... verre C. Pennington... ...... 800 Eighth Street NE. Navy Department.......... W. S. Thompson........| Nineteenth and B Streets. Northeast... 5. J. H..Simmons.......... 703 Maryland Avenue NE. Park Road... coca nveen- J. W. Murphy..-......- 1413 Park Road. Pennsylvania Avenue....... George L. Tait.......... Post Office Department Building. UR LiL iE eb W.M. Barclay.......... 484 Pennsylvania Avenue. Seventh Street.............. H.T. McCuen..«.....-- 1118 Seventh Street. Soatheaste....5.....0n.. oe: W.P. BRobey.........n; 640 Pennsylvania Avenue SE. Southwest... ..ooeaeo C. L. Maxwell.......... 416 Seventh Street SW. Takoma Park..............- M.D. Finch............ 6818 Fourth Street. PICOSULY cos sev eoie anon inns J-W.Coller. ... cu. United States Treasury. Truxton Oirele.....s......-- R.S. Ashford... ........ 1538 North Capitol Street. TBool... eis HW.Klotz........... 1438 U Street. Waller Read. ............-. AG Turner... vas Walter Reed Hospital. West Eng io... H.W, Ransdell ........ 1716 Pennsylvania Avenue. Woodley Road.............. D. G. Miller.........-.-. The Wardman Park. Woodridge... :....... =. B. W. Turmer....;....=- 2103 Rhode Island Avenue NE. PRESS GALLERIES. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED. (Phones: House Press Gallery, Main 1246; Senate Press Gallery, Main 99.) Paper represented. Name. Akron Beacon-Journal:.......... i. aoe. Laurence M. Benedict....... Akron. Evening Times...c...0 coi lie. Ralph G. Sucher...........: ZTE Ee vee Spr Sena he ie Bi stata Amarillo Dajly-News........:o-L.. iii. Anaconda Standard... i, oc. a ai. Arkansas Democrat, Little Rock............ Associated Newspapers: ..........ueeenensen ASSOCIted I PYCSS So. sls s an eee same Atlanta Constitution, ............. cvececinen Atlanta Georgian and American............. IE id Be Te de a a Le eg Baltimore Evening NewS. .................. Charles O. Gr dley......... CharlesP. Hunt. con ::: John Page. soi iv Harry J. Brown. cco... Charles S. Hayden.......... Herbert Corey..........c0 1G. Probert. ncaa. Bond P. Geddes... ......... Richard W. Simpson........ E.RossBartley............. Jom. Sater... .... James L. Williams. ......... Byron Priee... 0h eae Panl FB. Houpert........-... Stephen T. Early a Clinton Coffin. 7... .. 0. We. lL. Brackart..... 0. George H. Manning. ........ Theodore Tiller... ......... Prancis:P. Daily......... ... JohmCarson: =. ........... Henry M, Hyde... nT CroneisiP. Pally ....... ... Baltimore Post. Tr wine. Sas ia C.CYLyon...... nn Baltimore Sun... =.....io iii I. Fred Essary.......00..o Johm W. Owens: ............ SidByans on na Bellingham Herald... -...................... Edward B.JohnS........... Berlina Tageblatt, Berlin.................. BE. J. Glaser, ....... 2.0. .C Billings Gazette... a coe... i oi. ol) J. Arthur Mattson........... Birmingham Age-Herald.................... Hugh W. Roberts........... Birmingham News: ...... =... ooo 0k Alfred J. Stofer.............. BIMINCHam Poste. co iee dre sins sans Robert Talley--.. ........... BOISE SIaleSMAN. . ....nescnemcncrioneionnees Harry J. Brown... 000 Boston Advertiser............ LLL William P. Flythe......... Boston Evening Transeript................. William E. Brigham Theodore G.JosSlin.......... Bogton:Qlohe- 0. C. ... i a Charles S. GroveS........... Boston Herald BuffaloCommerelal. Ss... o.oo BullaloCoRrier i. ete aes Buffalo Evening NewS.............ccuu..... Bufiaslo Expresso 00 oo 0 0 aa Bull oes. rors canoe anes C. V. Newspaper Serviee.................... Cedar Rapids Gazette... ....... 0c... Contra] News... ines srr nnnriane es Chicago Abendpost--......... ....c veces Chicago Daily Hide and Tallow ............. Bobert B. Choate.........0c. Edward E. Whiting......__. Robert: L. Norton......... Henry Saydam....... . John 8. Billings, jr...--.... AD. Falrbairn. 00 00 00 George W. Summers. ....... Alfred H. Kirchhofer...... Theodore Tiller. ............ Emmet Dougherty.......... LA Crawiord.. co 0 BnSt A, noir = oe AM. Jamieson... William T..Saffell.......... Hunter Osborne. .......... K. Foster Murray ........... David FB. St. Clatr.........-. Erich P. Lindemann ....... To MM. Tomw.............-.. Office. 45 Wyatt Building. 720 Albee Bui'ding. 720 Albee Building. 608 Fourteenth Street. 1106 Eighth Street. 916 Woodward Building. 45 Wyatt Building. 809 Munsey Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. .| Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. Star Building. The Raleigh. 427 Homer Building. 408 EvansBuilding. 45 Wyatt Building. 439 Munsey Building. 1416 New York Avenue. 1416 New York Avenue. 439 Munsey Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 1416 New York Avenue. 1416 New York Avenue. 1416 New York Avenue. 41 Home Life Building. National Press Club. 500 Davidson Building. 45 Wyatt Building. 1322 New Dork Avenue. 916 Woodward Building. 626 Bond Building. 81 Home Life Building. 81 Home Life Building. 307 Albee Building. 93 Home Life Building. 93 Home Life Building. 908 Union Trust Building. 93 Home Life Building. 901 Colorado Building. 901 Colorado Building. 635 Munsey Building. 45 Post Building. 304 Albee Building. 408 Evans Building. 616 Colorado Building. 1731 L Street. 514 Woodward Building. 323-324 Bond Building. 323-324 Bond Building. 323-324 Bond Building. 323-324 Bond Building. 323-324 Bond Building. 725 Bond Building. National Press Club. 443 House Office Paine 517 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 63 Home Life Building. 471 Sn rm 472 Congressional Directory. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. Chicago Dally News..........o ... Loni. Chicago Evening Post.......ccoceneeieinnnnn Chicago Herald and Examiner... ............ Chicago Journal of Commerce............... Chicago Tribune: cia... Christian Science Monitor, Boston........... Cincinnati Enquirer... ck ocoe ean nina a TT Bir E A TT RE a SR Cincinnati Times-Star. .-. aucune cecennenes Cleveland NewS......... Cleveland Plain Dealer.. Cleveland PressS....vovsesaaresacnssnonananas Coltmbus Citizen cc. cs ens caesarean Columbus Dispatch. ..-........ ............ Consolidated Press Association. ............. Cosmopolitan Service.....«v..- vo. neo Daily Marine Record (New York).......... Daily Metal Trade... oeveseinooe naan Daily News Record (New York)............ Dally Oklahoman... o.oo. cones io vanes as Dallas Evening Journal..................... Das NeW ce rises en Davenport DemMOCIAl.civensinennnnesoins nnn Davenport Imes. te. tie cise rs Day, NeW YOIK. occa hiols ima onss Dayton Dally News........-..... 0... Denver Post... nee re sn anna sans Des Moines Daily News. ...c.ccovneeneun..... Des Moines Register... ..ccac.-t.ivennanee ove Detroit Free Press.......... Aree eee DOlrOl NeWBrte constr sess sons ssrorerons Douglass International... .................... Dubuque Times-Journal.................... EehodePavis, o.oo. 0.0 0. Bi Paso Post soi: ooo tii. a es Exchange Telegraph Co.(Ltd.), London, Eng. Federated Press... oc iene inners Port Worth Press. co... icici v rece evis Fort Worth Becord... co.cc oni seins Fresn0 Bee. c.cic vn vrere sah oss sonnet Grand Rapids Evening Press. .............. Great Falls Tribune... .o............. ..... Greensboro Daily News..................... Greenville (S.C) News..................... Harrisburg Patriob... oan. or as Havas NeWS. ASONCY . ovine . Haverhill Evening Gazette................. HelenaIndependent. oii von. o. ian: Honolulu Star-Balletin.....-......... Houston Post... 05. cca -nrs a ae ineienensae Houston Press. .-....oonn nani Indianapolis News Indianapolis Star... oo: ao Loin. Indianapolis Times. . cz-.ccsiceneevenoncnces International News Service......ooeeeeen.... Jackson Citizen-Patriot...........c.cc... eae Leroy T.Vernon............ Harry B. Gauss. ............ Edward B.Clark............ George W. Hinman, jr...... Yee EllmaXer.............. Arthur S. Henning.......... Grafton S. Wileox........... BB: mith. oo oon Cora Richy =i. .c vein Nelson M. Shepard.......... Arthur M. Hachten......... Walker S. Buel............. James I,. Wright............ Yeo RB Back on. is TeoB. Sark... i... Herfoan Tane.. .... .... Edwin C. Boehringer........ John CG. Atchison... ........- doe. Baker... .......c.o... Emmet Dougherty......... JohnaSmre. co... Jay.G. Hayden........... Karl W. Miller............... Charles P. Hunt... .....% Emmet Dougherty.......... Richard Eaton.............. Frank B. Piske. =" = Pal Hanna... oo... Homer Joseph Dodge. ...... Richard Boeckel.._... ...... Negley D. Cochran.......... Bascom N. Timmons........ Leo A. McClatchy........... Mark L.. Goodwin... ........ Lee Bllmaker. .. ... Robert. Bemy.-_.......... ; Henry L. Sweinhart..._.... William G. Gavin .........: J. Arthur Mattson.......... Joseph R. Farrington....... Robert M. Gates............ Robert Talley .... James P. Hornaday. . = Mark Thistlethwaite........ Everett C. Watkins......... Mark Foote........ Ne CO | ...; 1322 New .| 33 Wyatt Building. 51 Home Life Building. 51 Home Life Building. 610 Munsey Building. 626 Bond Building. 913 Munsey Building. 42 Wyatt Building. 42 Wyatt Building. 42 Wyatt Building. 921 Colorado Eng. 921 Colorado Building. 921 Colorado Building. 32 Post Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 16 Post Building. 7 .| 421 Colorado Building. 38 Post Building. 38 Post Building. 1322 New York Avenue, - -1322 New York Avenue, 903 District Bank Building. Evening Star Building, Evening Star Building, Evening Star Building, Munsey Building. 650 Munsey Building. 84 Home Life Building. 4 505 Union Trust Building. { 505 Union Trust Building. ] 505 Union Trust Building. i | International Building. 43 620 Albee Building. 620 Albee Building. 514 Woodward Building. 514 Woodward Building. Sf 1412 Taylor Street. . y 44 Post Building. j 903 District Bank Building. 1322 New York Avenue, : 514 Woodward fale 302 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 302 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 302 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. 903 Colorado Building. 903 Colorado Building. 608 Fourteenth Street. 514 Woodward Building. 10 Jackson Place. 1322 New York Avenue. 1422 F Street. 1422 F Street. 234 Maryland Building. 234 Maryland Building. 63 Home Life Building. 63 Home Life Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 44 Post Building. 201 Albee Building. 620 Albee Building. 927 Colorado Building. 623 Albee Building. 603 District Bank Building. 229 Bond Building. 821 Albee Building. 821 Albee GRRL 93 Home Life Building. 501% Fourteenth Street. 511 Meiropsliian Bank Bldg. ork Avenue. 33 Wyatt Building. 45 Post Building. 1322 New York Avenue. Munsey Building. | Munsey Building. | Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building Munsey Building | Munsey Building. 927 Colorado Building. Newspapers Represented in Press Galleries. 473 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Japan Advertiser (Tokyo, Japan) .......... Jewish Daily Forward? ol. Jewish World (Cleveland)............ Johnstown Tribune. ............... Jornal do Brazil (Rio de Janeiro) 3 KansasiCityJournal 000. oo. oo Kansas CIS ar. i ar see aaa KonsasCity. Phmes.. Jc.00 00 oo. ocean KnoxvilleNews volo iii fanaa Kokusai News Agency... oo... .ovnnavmns La Democracia (San Juan, P.R.).......... La Prensa (Buenos Aires).........ccceuen... 1a PrensaNew York)... ooo. oo... S.C... La Prensa, SaniAntonio’. ee... ina iil Yexington Herald. coon a oo. i coasi T.ondon Morning Post... aen.na cea anas London: Times. coo ie i dina iis Los Angeles Examiner. ........oo.ooouaa.... Los AngelesTimes. ii. .ooeeicc on ns: Louisville Courier-Journal................... Louisville Evening Post.........ccoeeauoo..e Louisville Pimes oo don i icici Lynehburg Newszooo i 000 Civ McClure Newspaper Syndicate Macon Telegraph... .......... = Manchester Union... il. 50. creer ni ivinns Memphis Commercial Appeal............... Memphis News Scimitar.................... MemphistPress. ofl 0.0. trees Milwaukee Sentinel..........ccccavueeean ts MinneapolisJoarnalis. ... i... oen viii Minneapolis News... 0 coca k Minneapolis Tribune. .... te i eee Mobile Register. ion. 0 nis Muskogee Times-Demoerat.................. National Catholic Welfare Council News Service. Nashville Tennessean -......ccccceeeenuin.. Newark Evening News. ......coccceceana.-. Newark StarEagle.... J. . cccooeiceae neni New Bedford Standard................... £2 New Haven Journal-Courier. ............... New OrleansTtem... (i. ov. cninanneeaass New Orleans Times-Picayune............... Newport Dally: News... ...coecevnannocn.- Novspaner Enterprise Association.......... New York Ameriean..... loo. vae inna New York Commercial. .......coucueeenune... New York Evening Post. .......ceoenuuunass New York Evening Telegram New York Evening World New York Herald New York Herold. oi. ning New York Jewish Morning Journal.......... New York Journal of Commerce New York Morning Telegraph. ............. New York Staats Zeitung .....ccoc......... New York Sun Frederic William Wile. ..... Benjamin Meiman.......... poss. 7 Gottlieb... ........ siaCharles B. Hunt... ..... I .| 3536 Thirteenth Street. Elmer Murphy .............0 George Pierce Torbett....... Manoel de Oliveira Lima. ... Henry L. Sweinhart........ John Pages. uae George Ww, Summers........ Sir Maurice A. LOW......... Willmott Harsant Lewis. ... George Griswold Hill........ John Goldstrom............. R. Bo Armstrong.......--.-- William L. Daley........... re: Ball, il. noon W. Russell Briney .......... LounisTudlow............... W. Russell Briney.......... George W. Combs........... Frank H. Simonds... .| Hugh W. Roberts. .......... Mrs. George F. Richards. ... Robert M. Gates............ Robert Talley... ... is Bascom N. Timmons........ H.C Stevens. «canis PloragiG. Orr. ...c.connnnin es Hugh W. Roberts........... Tom Bverritt. .. cocci Wo. CG: Murphy<.isiiaiisinis John'D. Erwin.......~..... John P. Coakley. -.......... Buckley: S. Griffin.......... Mrs. George F. Richards ... J-Fred Wssary-.....:...-..: Paul Wooton..............-: Horry’ B. Humt. o.oo nn H. H. Stansbuary....-....-. Winder R. Harris........... Arthur W. Crawford........ Harold Phelps Stokes....... Theodore Tiller... ......... = John D. Erwin......... Donald A. Craig H.E.C. Donald McGregor........... A.J. Montgomery........... Ralph A. CollinS............ Henry E. Sargent........... J.D. Mothershed............ George T. Odell... .... 0. George A. Schreiner... ...... Maurice B. Judd............ Isaac Qrese.’ io iii R. V. Oulahan Office. 619 Bond Building. 1308 Randolph Street. 945 Pennsylvania Avenue. 608 Fourteenth Street. 45 Wyatt Building. 37 Post Building. 37 Post Building. 37 Post Building. 37 Post Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 2308 Nineteenth Street. P.O. Box 1541. 3536 Thirteenth Street. 821 Albee Building. 1106 Eighth Street. 45 Post Building. 1150 Connecticut, Avenue. 503 Albee Building. 38 Post Building. 626 Bond Building. 604 Hibbs Building. 604 Hibbs Building. 723 Bond Building. 723 Bond Building. 903 District Bank Building. 723 Bond Building. 723 Bond Building. 1416 New York Avenue. 1716 N Street. 500 Davidson Building. George Washington Inn. 511 Metropolitan Bank Bldg, 920 Colorado Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 44 Post Building. 44 Wyatt Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 201 Albee Building. 500 Davidson Building. International Building. 1312 Massachusetts Avenue. 1312 Massachusetts Avenue, 205 Munsey Building. 904 Colorado Building. 420 Colorado Building. 330 Munsey Building. George Washington Inn, 1416 New York Avenue. 611 Colorado Building. 622 Albee Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 626 Bond Building. 626 Bond Building. 44 Wyatt Building. 92 Home Life Building. 408 Evans Building. | 20-22 Wyatt AE. .| Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building George A. Schreiner......... Capital Park Hotel. Louis S. Gottlieb... ......... 945 Pennsylvania Avenue. Reuben A. Lewis, Jr........ 1419 G Street. 1419 G Street. 1419 G Street. 40 Wyatt Building. Capital Park Hotel. 439 Munsey Building. 439 Munsey Building. 717 Albee Building. 717 Albee Building. 717 Albee Building. 717 Albee Building. 717 Albee Building. 717 Albee Building. 717 Albee Building. | i 474 Congressional Directory. NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. New York/Bribune indi bl. bv. cas lion New York World Norfolk Post oti i rei ee ee vnnnmmmnminins Norfolk Virginian-Pilot. caine neue ueuaons. North Adams Transeript..c.c. cnn ioniiss Omaha Bee: Juli sods Loot du cia i douiinds Oregon Journal, Portland..... Eras rr Oshkosh Northwestern....................:. Paris{ France Herald ol. oo. oo... mie Pawtucket Evening Times. ................. Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger. ....... Philadelphia Inquirer... ci. ....... iu 0.00 Philadelphia North American... ............ Philadelphia Public Ledger. ................ Philadelphia Reeords.-. cia... .. cc. coninnes Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph.._.......... Pittsburgh Dispatel. coos. iniaiiase. Pittsburgh Gazette Times................... ELA TE Hr ER a Pittsburgh Press. .... Portland News ...... Portland Oregonian Portland Telegram, oo. tov oor 2a Presse Mondiale News Service. ............. : Providence Evening Bulletin. .............. ProvideneceJournal..i.aceio i. cineennes anes Raleigh News and Observer................. Beuter’s(iid.), London. ........... ..5m Richmond News-Leader..........co......... Richmond Times Dispateh.................. Roanoke BImes. . coo. coed... duns natss Rochester Post. Express...........c...cu-.-- St. Louis Globe-Democrat St. Louis Post-Dispateh.. co vo. civenncacne Ste Looms Sar. cor a Si. crannies SL Paul NOWS. i sre il ha ad oe meee cali Saginaw News-Courler. &. ii... .iiiinsnnss Salt Lake Lnibanec tuted. il... cod niacin. San Antonio Express... ...........c.ec-t San Antoniofdght ooo. co. iat San: Diego Sun: 0 ves wil en Sandasky Registers cai. ii. aera San Francisco Daily News San Francisco Examiner.......... Savannah Morning News ........ceeeeeuannn. Scripps Newspaper Alliance................. Seattle Post-Intelligencer..................... Seattle Star, coccinea es Spokane Spokesman-Review................ Springfield (Ohio) Daily News.............. Springfield (Ohio) Sun: con... a aaa Springfield Bepublican:.....c.o.. eae: Springfield Unions... oc. pi vena veree-cne- Superior elegram caiie.o 0 enr one satis ‘Tacoma Newsribune ..................... RR aCOmYY TINGS. or ris ED iT bons coronas “Robert Barry... w..i-ic.n. George F. Authier.......... WaG McMurchy--......... CarkBmithi oa Angus McSween............. Charles R. Michael.......... Samuel W. Bell............ Norman W. Baxter......... Constance Drexel. .......... Joseph R. Farrington....... John D.Bywin.... co... .... Henvy Hall: ........;. George Gail: ool. i Robert M. Ginter........... Theodore A. Huntley. -..... Johm Vy Hanlon.............. Prank Jd slaylor........c.. ChorlesC. Hart. ............ RB Armstrong... .....-.. Richard Eston. .....-...-.. Ashmun N. Brown.......... Ashmun N. Brown.......... Robert M. Lynn............ 3, Fre@Bssary. .......-.o. George H. Manning. ........ Elmer E. Reynolds......... Charles P. Keyser.....-.:--: Charles G. Boss. ........ es Charles S. Hayden. ......... Edgar Markham............ Flora@G. Our. ............. Edgar Markham ............ Leo A. McClatchy .......... MarkiFoote:..........c.. =. Harry J. Brown...........-- Winfield Jones. ............. Charles 8. Hayden W.H.Porterfield........... B.Badehns]. ...........x.. W. H. Porterfield........... Jamvs R. Nourse........... K. Foster Marray........... H.oN Rickeys.. oo... William Philip Simms. ..... rank J, Taylor... ..... 585 Cole BE. Morgan. ..........5. W. H. Porterfield........... W.W.Jermane. ...........: Ashmun N. Brown......... Laurence M Benedict........ 3 Willlam G. Gavin, ......... William P. Kennedy........ George Pierce Torbett...... James 1. Wright ........... Franke, Taylor............ Gilson Gardner.............. Winifred Mallon............ 5714 Woodward Building. 514 Woodward Building. 514 Woodward Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. 20-22 Wyatt Building. -| 20-22 Wyatt Building. 1322 New York Avenue. National Press Club. 502 Hibbs Building. 101 District Bank Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 2633 Adams Mill Road. 20 Wyatt Building. Munsey Building. 502 Hibbs Building. 501% Fourteenth Street. 1006 Munsey Building. 1006 Munsey Building. 40 Wyatt Building. 40 Wyatt Building. 501% Fourteenth Street. 501% Fourteenth Street. 501% Fourteenth Street. 501% Fourteenth Street. 501% Fourteenth Street. 205 Munsey Building. 86 Home Life Building. 47 Post Building. 38 Post Building. 47 Post Building. 32 Post Building. 421 Colorado Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 201 Albee Building. 604 Hibbs Building. 10 Jackson Place. 607-608 Hibbs Building. 607-608 Hibbs Building. 622 Albee Building. 502 Hibbs Building. 603 District Bank Building. 204 Star Building. 427 Homer Buirding. 1416 New Ycrk Avenue. 427 Homer Building. 217 Park Ave.,Takoma Park. 34 Wyatt Building. 23 Wyatt Building. 72 Home Life Building, 514 Woodward Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 514 Woodward Building. 201 Albee Building. 927 Colorado Building. 916 Woodward Building. 1400 Pennsylvania Avenue. 45 Wyatt Building, 1322 New York Avenue. 41 Home Life Building. 1322 New York Avenue, 626 Bond Building. National Press Club. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 626 Bond Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 905-906 Colorado Building 923 Colorado Building. 607-608 Hibbs Building 201 Albee Building. 44 Post Building. 45 Wyatt Building. 93 Home Life Building. Star Building. P. O. Box 1541. 38 Post Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 710 Bond Building. 42 Wyatt Building. Newspapers Represented in Press Galleries. 475 NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued. Paper represented. Name. Office. roy Recoil cn i. tne wis seme ais ee ed ir ee an eR Pe Sat oe i Tulsa World t Universal Service. ..... Washington Herald Washington News Washington Post... 2. ool. hn a Washington Times Western Newspaper Union Westminster Gazette Wheeling Register... ..... casas Wilmington (Del.) Every Evening Wilmington (Del.) Morning News Winston-Salem Journal........... BLS ey Winston-Salem Sentinel.................... Wisconsin News (Milwaukee). .............. Women’s Wear JohniP. Conkley............ Negley D. Cochran ......... Laurence M. Benedict. ..... A.B. Heiss, .uudioei Gey 8 Stanley H. Smith es AD, Fairbairn. .......5. .«. Charles A. Hamilton... ..... Bascom N. Timmons........ Raymond Clapper.......... Clayton Whitehill.......... Herbert W. Walker......... Lawrence C. Martin......... James T. Kolbert Panl BR. Mallon......co...-- As Bradiord......-....... Thomas L. Stokes.......... William'J. Losh...c........ Thomas GC. Hull....... .....- M. H. McIntyre:..... occ George Durno........c.. 5..2- ‘H. H. Stansbury.......:.... BS R008a..... i. cess ier Matthew F. Tighe.......... Charles A. Hamilton........ Joh Bovle oto. ons! Henry. RE. Bland ..........;. Charles J. Sterner N.O.Messenger............ G. Gould Lincoln........... William P. Kennedy Alfred J. Clarke J. Russell Young.... J.Cloyd Byars... ........:. Coleg GID3ON. cron ay- John A. Kennedy........... John J. W. Riseling......... Lowell Mellett... __.._.. Re Harold Keats... ....0....:. Robert Pritchard ........... Albert Whiting Fox......... Frank I. Whitehead Harry N. Price FG. R. Brown... certs Aubrey E. Taylor Harvey L.CoDb. ........... Vincent Callahan Joseph Edgerton............ Cleland C. McDevitt. ....... Harry Gusack Robert H. May. ............ Edward B. Clark Richard Baton... co... ... George W. Summers. ....... Frank W. Lewis............ George W. Combs Frank 'W. Lewis. ...... David F. St. Clair Ralph G.Sncher-...._...... John C. Atchison ........... Roberta V. Bradshaw ...... Mrs. George F. Richards... .. J.J. Marrinan.. oo... 420 Colorado Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 45 Wyatt Building. 505 Colorado Building. 505 Colorado Building. 635 Munsey Building. 616 Colorado Building. 44 Post Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue, 1322 New York Avenue, 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 626 Bond Building. 626 Bond Building. 626 Bond Building. 616 Colorado Bullding. 1422 F Street. 1422 F Street. 1422 F Street. Eleventh and Pa. Avenue. Eleventh and Pa. Avenue. Eleventh and Pa. Avenue. Eleventh and Pa. Avenue. Eleventh and Pa. Avenue. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. 1322 New York Avenue. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Post Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. Munsey Building. 610 Munsey Building. 10 Jackson Place. 45 Post Building. 205 Munsey Building. 1416 New York Avenue. 205 Munsey Building. 443 House Office Building. 720 Albee Building. 505 Union Trust Building. 505 Union Trust Building. George Washington Inn. 720 Albee Building. House Press Gallery: William J. Donaldson, jr., superintendent, 8730 Brandywine Street. William J. McEvoy, assistant superintendent, 933 N Street. Senate Press Gallery: James D. Preston, superintendent, 4724 Fifteenth Street. William J. Collins, assistant superintendent, 3026 O Street. 476 Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the f designates those whose daughters accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them.] Name. Paper represented. Residence. *Albort, Charles S............ * Armstrong, R.B............ ¥* Atchison, JomC............ 2Benty, H.C a Bean, Bodney.:.-.... 0. %*Bell, Samuel W.._...... __.. Pell. Tlie. oo os ots Benedict Laurence M......... Billings, Johtr 8. jr; ot. *Boeckel, Richard. .... * Boehringer, Edwin C i Boyle, John................. Bradford, A. 1... 0... Bradshaw, Roberta V......... * Brigham, William E..._..... Briney, W. Russell ............ *Britton, Edward E.......... *Brown, Ashmun N........ ri Brown, GO. Bo ans # Brown, Harry J... ool. *Bruckart, W. L..... HAR in ant HL EC re * Buel, Walker Sc... cok. Byars, J. Cloyd... 2050 Callahan, Vincent F...._._... *Campbell, J. Bart............ *0arson, John J. co... ...: #Choate, Robert B............ *Clapper, Raymond.......... *| Clark, Edward B........... Clark, Kenneth W..... Clarke, Alfred J... *Coakley, John P. wd Cobb, Harvey | ik Se *tCochran, Negley D......... Coffin, Clinton... ...cc- *Collins, Panl’V o.oo Collins; Ralph A: ........... *Colver, William B ......... = *Combs, George W..coo.o..... Concha A Hr *Connor, Frank W............ *Oorey, Herbert. .............- *Craig, Donald A... .......... *Crawford, Arthur W......... | Crawiord, W.A.............5 Dally, PrancisiP............ Daley, William Li............. Davis, Maxine. ...........:.:. * Dodge, Homer Joseph....... *Dougherty, Emmet.......... Drexel, Constance............ Duarno, George... can *Early, Stephen T..-......... Edgerton, Joseph............. * Easton, Edward C........... Eaton, Richard... ........... ..| Federal Trade Information Service........ .{ International News Service............... -..| Newark Star Eagle, Toledo Blade NewYork World oo. rrr Los Angeles Times, Portland Telegram. ... Daily News Record (New York), Women’s ‘Wear. International News Service........... — Omaha Beer. or as Daily News Record (New York).......... Philadelphia Public Ledger... ............ Associated Press... or a. = Philadelphia Public Ledger.............. Louisville Courier Journal................ Toledo Times, Springfield (Ohio) Sun, Akron Beacon-Journal. Brooklyn Daily Eagle... ................. Daily MetalTrade. =... .... ras Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph Co., London, England. United Press Associations.......cccoun.... Women Ss Wear... tesa nas Boston Evening Transcript. .............. Louisville Times, Louisville Courier Journal. ; Raleigh News and Observer, Greenville (S.C.) News. Providence Journal, Providence Bulletin, Seattle Times. Washinglon POSt.-.c ccs ase srrosnrsis sans Boise Statesman, Anaconda Standard, Salt Lake Tribune. Associated Press ree a New York Herald. =. 2.5. ao Cleveland Plain Dealer.................... Washington Herald. =. sot. ee los Washington Times... .. 0... caoc International News Service................ Baltimore Evening Sun......c.cconeee..... Boston Herald. eee ress United News. ...... rE A Chicago Evening Post, Western News- paper Union. 3 Washinglonm Star... tee. aa. Washington Imes... cas nena Port Worth Press... ro. Associated Press = Philadelphia Record New York Herald... .0. oun KnoxvilleNews.-... .... . oC = Lynoabme News, Wilmington Morning News, Richmond Evening Dispatch, Wilmington (Del.) Evening Journal. Associated Press ooo oa aon New York World, Oshkosh Northwestern. Associated Newspapers .................. New York Herald, Paris Herald .......... New York Commercial... ...-....... i... Coniral Newel 8 ar ou bi, aa Baltimore American, Baltimore News. ... Tos Angeles Times... ... asses rrr Detroit Free Press. -- oes Federal Trade Information Service........ Davenport Democrat, Cedar Rapids Ga- zette, Dubuque Times-Journal, Water- loo Courier, Muscatine Journal. Philadelphia Public Ledger............... United Press AssociationS.....c.ceceaeenn-- Associated Press... a Washington Times... ... -caeserser= Philadelphia IOQITOr or ss re rs Westminster Gazette, Echo de Paris, Press Mondiale News Service. The Hawarden. 2026 Hillyer Place. Southbrook Courts. Munsey Building. 2429 Ontario Road. Northbrook Courts. : 109 Clifton Terrace East. 1315 Belmont Street. Hotel Gordon. Willard Courts. 1808 I Street. 3803 Alton Place. 1430 Chapin Street. 2301 Cathedral Avenue. 1408 New Hampshire Ave. 3333 Thirty-fifth Street. 2850 Connecticut A venue. 928 Fourteenth Street. The Benedick. 2115 P Street. 723 Bond Building. 901 Twentieth Street. 2947 Macomb Street. 1809 Twenty-fourth Street. 6412 Ridgewood Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. Northbrook Courts. 3611 Wisconsin Avenue. 1355 Longfellow Street. Alcove Heights, Arlington, a. 1729 North Capitol Street. Clarendon, Va. 2 Leland St., Chevy Chase, Md : 1438 Spring Road. The Potomac. Alexandria, Va., R.F.D. 2. The Albany. 709 Allison Street. ‘Wardman Park Hotel. Chastleton Apartments. 2047 Park Road. 5030 Forty-first Street. 3303 Eighteenth Street. 5915 Thirty-third Street Star Building. 3415 Oakwood Terrace. The Chastleton., 207 Fourteen-and-a-half Street NE. Woodside. Place, Chevy Chase, Md. 928 Fourteenth Street. 1310 New Hampshire Ave. Copley Courts. 1625 Varnum Street. 1517 O Street. 1466 Spring Place. The Lee House. 1322 New York Avenue. _| 409 Rock Creek Church Road. 1006 Munsey Building. Shoreham Hotel. Persons Entitled to Admission to Press Galleries. 477 MEMBERS OF PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued. Name. Paper represented. Residence. * | Eland, Henry E........... Wall Street Journal... ............... cca s The Mintwood. *¥Ellmaker, Le... ccocuueenn- Hams Patriot, Chicago Journal of | 1721 Twenty-first Street. ommerce, *Erwin,Jom D............... *| Fssory, J. Fred... ...... Evans, Sid....0.. 00. 0 *¥Everitt, Pom... i. ai. * Valrbairn, AD: .....o.... *PFarrington, Joseph R........ * Told, Carter........0...ais.. Fiske, Frank B......0........ Flythe, William P........ 0. *Hootey; Mark... 0. oo... %* Pox, Albert: W.........--x.- Frontz, Harry Wee.o-veenaones *Gableman, Edwin W........ *Gardner, Gilson... ..0... * Gates, Robert M............. Gauss, Harry B.......c.-.~.. *Gavin, William G........... * Geddes, Bond P............. Gibson, C. Leo.......-.....--% * Gilbert, Clinton W..._.._._. * Ginter, Robert M............ * Glaser, F. L.... 0. - : Goldstrom, John........ * Goodwin, Mark Li........... * Gottlieb, Louis S............ # Gregg, Isaac. ................. Gridley, Charles O............ Griffin, Bulkley S.<...... 1... * + Groves, Charles S.......... Gusack, Harry... 0. oo... Hachten, Arthur W........... Hall, Henrys... cull... *Hollam, H.C oa oo + Hamilton, Charles A........ | Hanlon, Johm'Vi.. .......... Hanno, Poul. Fi. *Hard, William... 3..c. 5 * Harris, Winder R * Hart, Charles C Haupert, Pant VF... 0... .. * Hayden, Charles S........... * Hayden, Jay G......... . * Herd, A000 *4 Heiss, A. B........ # Henning, Arthur S.. #*Hildebrand, W. A..... *Hill, George Griswold. . 5 Hinman, George W.,jr........ * Holloman, James A.......... *Holmes, George R............ * Hood, Edwin M............. * | Hornaday, James P ....... Hulen,: B.D... a Hull, Thomas C.. ...i5 0a... * Hunt, Charles P ®Hunt, Harry Bio... ans * Huntley, Theodore A......... Hutchinson, William XK *Hyde, Henry M.............. ecsssaa .| Berlina Tageblatt....... ..... .| International News Service. ...| Traffic World, Chicago .| Chicago Tribune.......... .| London Times, Pittsburg Dispatch Nashville Tennessean, Philadelphia Rec- ord, New York Evening World, Chat- tanooga News. Memphis Commercial Appeal, Houston ost. Chicago Daily News...........eeeiuaenen- Boston Traveler, Springfield Republican, Salem Evening News, Haverhill Even- ing Gazette. : Associated: Presy. oor rs a Washington Herald... ... . 0.0 ous Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger Pittsburgh Gazette Times cemasn Tos Angeles’ Examiner... .......- cca Dallas Evening Journal, Dallas News, Galveston News. New York Jewish Morning Journal, Jew- ish World, Cleveland. New York Bum... os ai aos Akron-Evening Times... .... ............. New Bedford Standard................... Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph ........... Providence Tribune, Pawtucket Times, North Adams Transeript. Buffalo Times, Troy Times, Utica Ob- 308 Falkstone Courts. Baltimore Sun......c.ceeeeveencnaan-...:.| 3121 Newark Street. BaltimoreSun. oot... oh... 0h. a.-- Daily Oklahoman, Muskogee Times- | Woodmont, Md. Democrat. : Troy Record, Buffalo Commercial......... 1450 Girard Street. Philadelphia Public Ledger, Honolulu | 3603 Norton Place. Star Bulletin. ! ; New YOrkETribune......- 2... oeeasenaws-- The Highlands. Frehange Telegraph Co., London, Eng- | Ballston, Va. and. Boston Adverfiser-=. ih. aes The Marne. Grand Rapids Press, Saginaw News, | 3404 Rodman Street. Jackson Citizen Patriot, Flint Journal, Bay City Times, Muskegon Chronicle. Washington Pest...... 0. Px... ores 1515 Webster Street. United Press Associations. ............... The Benedict. Cincinnati Enquirer... .....: oe oooenens The Pentilly. Er Paso Pest. ot i R. F. D. 2, Mount Vernon Road, Alexandria, Va. 1346 Park Road. 1825 Vernon Street. 2100 N Street. 1336 Meridian Place. 516 A Street NE. 1610 I Street. 1769 Columbia Road. | Glen Echo, Md. 1361 Irving Street. The Roydon. 615 Irving Street. Alexandria, Va. 1826 Lamont Street. 1704 Lamont Street. 2104 O Street. Munsey Building. 3039 Macomb Street. 1032 Lamont Street. server. Pittsburgh Press: oo oo 0. 0 sat Pederated Press... ........ce0eacinuns FEE Cosmopolitan Service... .....caeena....... New York American Portland Oregonian, Minneapolis Tribune, | Spokane Spokesman-Review, Boise Cap- | ital News. Associated Press... oon i oon 0 San Antonio Light, Arkansas Democrat, Kansas City Journal, Fort Worth Star- Telegram. Detroit News Greensboro Daily News. ................. Chicago Herald and Examiner Atlanta Constitution... ................. International News Service..cec...c....... Associated Press. ...... uireanaaiann.... Indianapolis News Associated Press. a aes United Press Association... .............. Douglass International, Johnstown (Pa.) Tribune, Altoona Mirror. Newspaper Enterprise Association. ....... Pittshargh- Post. iv oi D8 ew International News Service Baltimore Evening Sun .................. “tse maicasnaias tana asan * Jamijeson, A. M.............. Central News.” ii Lo SL iin | | The Farnsboro. 1310 Eighteenth Street. 1607 Twenty-eighth Street. | 3800 Fourteenth Street. 1712 Sixteenth Street. 3034 P Street. 45 Wyatt Building. 2324 Twentieth Street. 3319 R Street. 3035 Newark Street. 2737 Cathedral Avenue. 1277 New Hampshire Ave. 826 Connecticut Avenue, 2121 Twentieth Street. The Raleigh. 1757 K Street. 1226 Fairmont Street. 1419 Newton Street. 1725 Seventeenth Street. 1322 New York Avenue. 2603 Brentwood Road, Wood- ridge. The Hollies, Falls Church, Va, 6928 Ninth Street. 1621 XK Street. The Burlington, 1495 Newton Street. i ! J | i i 1 478 Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION —Continued. Name. Paper represented. Residence. *¥l Johns, HW. B.....s cbc -- * Jones, Winfield.............. * Joslin, Theodore G-.......... * Judd, Maurice B............ ReRKarger, Gus J............ *+ Keats, Harold... cco. .- Kennedy,John A.............. * Kennedy, William P * Kent, Russell........ i Keyser, Charles P.. Kirchhofer, Alfred H * Klein, Alfred. ........ 53 %* Knorr, Ernst A............... *Rolbert, J. MB... icf. «| Sohne WeWaisiamite Lewis, Reuben A., jr......... * Lewis, Willmott Harsant.... *Lima, Manoel de Oliveira. .. * Lincoln, G. Gould........... Lindemann, Erich P.......... * | Linz, Clarence Li........... *Losh, William J............. Low, dir A. Maurice. .-....... * Ludlow, Louis.............. *Lynn, Robert M............. * Lyon, C. Co ...0f vient aide ¥McClatchy, Leo A. .avaunenn.. McDevitt, Cleland C. McGahan, PaulJ...... £5 * McGrath, Justin ...ceceenn.. McGuire, Mason.........--.... * + McMurchy, W.G.......... * McSween, ANgUS..caeuuue--- * MacGregor, Doneld.......... Mallon, Paul R ....cccinaa.: Mallon, Winifred.............. *Manning, George H.......... *Markham, Edgar...cceeee..-. Marrinan, J.J... icon sess... *Martin, Lawrence C.......... *Martin, Lorenzo W.......... Matison, J. Arthur.........-.. Messenger, N. O...c......... *Michael, Charles R.nnrnnnnnn. ¥Mixter, Paul... ..ccoeve atze- Montgomery, A. J. Morgan, Cole ....cecinesess- *Morris, Charles E. ...c....... * Mothershed, J. D............ *Munger, T. Te ha * Murphy, W.. OC-.ccivavsanes- *| Murray, K. Foster. ......... *Nesbitl, TJ. B....reeeciosnssn- *Nevin, John Edwin.......... %Nicolson, C. Be. vceeeseenncss ...| Memphis News Scimitar. ................. ..| St. Louis Globe-Democrat................. .| Buffalo Evening News .... _-| Philadelphia Inquirer. . Seattle Times... ... 1c botall snsud sie bianingns Sandusky Register, Bellingham Herald. . . San Antonio BXPress....... cocacessias sas" Boston Evening Transcript............... New York Sun... i.icecenidi dai tiistee.s Cincinnati Thnes-Siar. .. . olive meine -- Washington Daily News. ....oeceeeeenann- Washington Herald. .........c0-a040..0.% ‘Washington Star, Springfield Union....... Day; New. York... J. vdeniesd asst tn nit nn Con aI NOWE sien cases nnn Pais stdan en United Press Associations................ Federated Press. . oo. eo. idei he daisies Washington MINES... oui cd iuaiin bn ans Chicago Daily Hide and Tallow. ........ ie Daily Marine Record, New York......... Consolidated Press Association............ Wilmington Every Evening, Winston-Sa- lem Journal. New York Journal of Commerce.......... London Pimes ois vlse se aiade ns Jornal do Brazil, Rio de Janeiro; La Prensa, Buenos Aires. Washington Slay... Sodinev ot ainhnor => Chicago Abendpost...........6c0esee---- Newport Daily News, Providence News, Newburgh News, Daily Garment News. United Press Associations........oeeeeaae- London Morning Post........-Lo.. viii... Columbus Dispateh, Ohio State Journal, Denver Post, Louisville Evening Post, Savannah Press. Richmond News Leader...c..aceeeancaaas Indianapolis Times, Baltimore Post, Nor- fs Post, Evansville Press, Terre Haute ost. Sacramento Bee, Fresno Bee.............. Washington Times. .....e-eathett soiiint N.C. W. C. News Service New York Tribane..--..-coa=i-ou-dubna-- Omaha News... oi suai sorb alnitta Philadelphia North American........:.... New York Herald..... ico soo dia0ii.. United Press Associations ..........c..... Theo News, New York...........covaua-o- Roanoke Times, Atlanta Georgian and American, Bridgeport Post. St. Paul Dispateh, St. Paul Pioneer Press. . ‘Worcester Telegram... ...coovevenannnenns. United Press Association .......xvsusaaess Louisville Times, Charleston Gazette... .. Billings Gazette, Great Falls Tribune, Hel- ena Independent . Daily Missoulian. Washington TIMES: -.....sann-b aniiisninens Jewish Daily Forward....ccooueainuainan.. Washington News... ... c.f 000 Washington Evening Star................. New York Times, Philadelphia North American. New YorEWorld oJ... oa eas isavinses Associated Press. . fu iil. coven cin neianes Detroit News. ........... ES Gla Saas | Detroit Free Press. . New York Herald....... Seattle Post-Intelligencer Pion Daily News, Springfield Daily ws ews. New York Journal of Commerce........... ASEoCiated Press. cocci si cavarnenscansiiiine. Kokusai News AgeNCY.c.cusaacscansnnan po N.C. W.C. News Service..o.uuueasaaanaan Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Charleston News and Courier, Savannah Morning News. Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times..... Consolidated Press Association. ........... Detioll Pree Pross. . ii. onan sanaes Berwyn, Md. 1421 Columbia Road. 3660 Park Place. 202 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. ¢ Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 2700 Connecticut Avenue. 1810 Kalorama Road. 1775 Church Street. 2405 First Street. The Colonial. 1620 Decatur Street. 3417 Porter Street. 1412 Taylor Street. 1433 'T Street. 31 Bradley Lane. 1310 Eighteenth Street. 814 Connecticut Avenue. 2408 California Street. 3563 Sixth Street, 34 West Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 1454 V Street. The St. Mihiel. 1819 Nineteenth Street. 3536 Thirteenth Street. 1808 R Street. 635 Tenth Street NE. 1316 New Hampshire A venue. The Connecticut. 1908 I Street. 1713 IT Street. 1359 Park Road. The Northumberland. Munsey Building. 1525 1 Street. 1320 Emerson Street. 511 Sixth Street SE. 1339 Quincy Street. Hotel Roosevelt. The Bachelor. 1305 Potomac Street. The Woodward. 4909 Thirteenth Street. 225 Hon Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. 640 Morton Street. 3314 Seventeenth Street NT, The Argyle. 1317 Rhode Island Avenue. 1308 Randolph Street. 3308 N Street. Hammond Court. The Kennesaw. 3215 R Street. 1227 New Hampshire A veniie. The Brunswick. 1632 Thirtieth Street. .| 1917 I Street. 2809 Ontario Road. The Savoy. 822 Connecticut Avenue. 2308 Nineteenth Street. Rutland Court. 1918 Biltmore Street. Clarendon, Va. Barcroft, Va. Persons Entitled to Admission to Press Galleries. 479 MEMBERS OF PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued. Name. Paper represented. Residence. *Norton, Robert L............ %* Nourse,James R.........-=- *Odell, George T......ccn...i. Orr, Blora: GQ .....c0 nies - Osborne, Hunter.............. 20ulahan, BV. ............5 Owens, Jom W....5........ Page, John. =.=. 0. PAYNE A. Wei tach iinaes- ¥|Plummer, Nixon S.......... pie Porterfield, We. ie *Price, ay ty BeSeplerieEy ou * Pritchard, Robert......-.... | *Probert, 1. C..............\.. *Remy, Robert.c..cus. ci ovs- *Reynolds, Elmer E.......... Reynolds, H. K............... [{Richards, Mrs. George F..... *Rickey, Harry N............. Rigby, Cora... .. eH..." Riseling, John J. W........... *¥Roberts, Hugh W............ *Roberis, Roy A. ............ *Rogers, Harry Li. .<........i A Lg Nae *| Ross, Charles G............. Rothchilds, Louis............. Ruth, Carls... iu .c00. dui *Sack, Leo... ceil Safiel), William T............. %*St. Clair, David F............ #Sargent, Hemry E............ *Schreiner, George A ..... Sons Seibold, Lonis-............... *Shepard, Nelson M........... *¥Simms, William Philip. ..... *Simonds, Frank B.. 0 . Simpson, Kirk Loo... :...0. *Simpson, Richard W......... *Sinnott, Arthur J............ N Small; Robert... .......... “ASmith, Carl. .........oai.. Smith, Hal Fo oo. oo AMmith, R.B-. ..a #Smith, Stanley H............ Snare, John... ..ooial... nea Speers, Leland C.............. Stansbury, H.H...........-. *Sterner, Charles J............ Stevens, BH. Cao eee. oe Stevenson, Thomas. .......... [Stoler, Alfred J............... *Stokes, Harold Phelps....... Stokes, Thomasl,............. Bucher, Ralph G5... .....= Summers, George W.......... Suter, JolnP.............:.. Suydam, Henry ......... #Sweinhart, Henry L *alley, Robert. ......c...... *Taylor, Aubrey E............ DU I IA eR a ate Loe tS ia is ete San Francisco Examiner.................. New York Morning Telegraph. .......... St. Paul News, Minneapolis News, Des Moines News, Omaha News, Denver Express. Control NEWS. 2 cou iri smite sna NeW York TINGS: ovis felts sleion sin ioie ou Baltimore: Sun... .c sc. cen fo meitiiis sin Amarillo Daily News; La Prensa, San Antonio. Associated Press... il. noon. New. York World Cc. oie nes i csbinnia San Francisco Daily News, San Diego Sun, Sacramento Star Los Angeles Record, Spokane Press, Portland News. Associated Press... cine sense ssh Washington. Post... . ..... =. fa jose % Washington Daily News.................. Associated Press... ol. a aides Havas News ACONCY . irenicctereneii- Rochester Post Express. .......cceeeeh.... International News Service................ Worcester Gazette, Manchester Union, Lowell Sun, Portland Express, Norwich Bullevin, Waterbury American. Scripps Newspaper Alliance. .............. Christian Science Monitor. ....eeeceeeen..- Washington Herald... ..... .......%. Birmingham Age-Herald, Mobile Register, Macon Telegraph, Columbia State. Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times. .... International News Service................ Universal Service: i... ou. cn. ina. Daily. News Record................ 0 cnveu- Cleveland News... .. oui... isin. Cleveland Press, Cincinnati Post, Toledo News-Bee, Columbus Citizen, Akron Press, Youngstown Telegram. Cental News. i... vitae Winston-Salem Sentinel, Charlotte News.. New York Journal of Commerce .......... New York Staats Zeitung, New York Herold. Scripps Newspaper Alliance MeClure Newspaper Syndicate. ........... Associated: Press ori. a Associated Presi. 0... oo ool on ewark Evening NewsS...........cue...... Consolidated Press Association............ Oregon Journal, Portland... .............. New York'Times. .. oo. on oar, New York Tribune, Des Moines Register, Davenport Times. New York TImes :- i, ....00. ae New York American, Universal Service. . WallStreet Journal. ...................... Minneapolis Journal Now-YorkiHerald.. oo, oo. 00 Birmingham News................... 0... New York Evening Post. ................. United Press Associations. ............... Y Akron Evening Times, Youngstown Vin- dicator, Wisconsin News. Wheeling Register, Buffalo Courier, Lexington Herald, Muskogee Phoenix. Associated Press, ..... 4 0 cui. ini ov Brooklyn Daily Eagle................... -| Havas News Agency, La Prensa (New York). Memphis Press, Houston Press, Okla- homa News, Birmingham Post, Dallas Dispatch. Washingion Posb......a..e. teint od 2844 Wisconsin Avenue. 3210 Northampton Street. 2011 I Street. Gordon Hotel. 323 Bond Building. 1316 New Hampshire A venue. 3206 Northampton Street. 1106 Eighth Street. 4729 Thirteenth Street. 2904 Ordway Street. 2827 Twenty-seventh Street. Chateau Thierry. .| 1417 Park Road. 1227 Shepherd Street. Homsang Farms, Olney, Md. The Sherman. 217 Park Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. The Harrington. George Washington Inn. The Wardman Park. 2019 Hillyer Place. 3608 Park Place. 1475 Columbia Road. 3022 Macomb Street. 531 Eighteenth Street. The Marne. 5 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 505 Union Trust Building. 1862 Mintwood Street. 3309 Woodley Road. 323 Bond Building. 627 Seventh Street. The Capitol Park. Shoreham Hotel. 1725 Kenyon Street. The Montello. 3108 P Street. 1619 Irving Street. 1205 Fifteenth Street. 3007 Thirty-fourth Street. 1723 S Street. 2633 Adams Mill Road. 2400 Sixteenth Street. R. D. 1, Alexandria, Va. 209 Spruce Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Silver Spring, Md. 1808 1 Street. 3912 Jenifer Street. 1203 D Street NE. 1224 Eighth Street. 2013 G- Street. 1740 Park Road. 1732 Jigen Street. + M.C. A, The Chateau Thierry. 2112 F Street. 1642 Monroe Street. 2100 G Street. 2007 O Street. 1417 Park Road. | | 480 Congressional Directory. MEMBERS OF PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued. Name. Paper represented. Residence. HP avior, Prank J... _._.. *Thistlethwaite, Mark......... ¥Phurston, Ellioty..--........ Tighe, Matthew F......._... *Tiller, Theodore. ............ Timmons, Bascom N......... Torbett, George Pierce........ #Rravis, Bdmunds:_ oi... #Tucker, Glenn [20 0. il. *Underwood, John J.......... *Vernon, Leroy A BSR Ee “Walker, Herbert W -........ ‘Watkins, Everett C........... Wek, YPadl... all *} Whitehead, Frank Insco.. Whitehill, Clayton SAAR YI *Whiting, Edward E.......... *Wilcox, Grafton'S...-...-- Shes *Wile, Frederic William. ...... *Williams, James Li........... Williamson .S. Tr... oi. .a *Wisner, G. Franklin. ........ EW 00d, LEWIS. ic. waren. >I Wooton, Paul...........---- *¥Wright, James L.......-.....- Young, J. Rassell. ........... Scripps Newspaper Alliance............... Indianapolis News... .c...carccnsrenr res ~ New Yor World. res Universal Service, . 5... han Atlanta Journal, Buffalo Express, New York Evening Telegram. Fort Worth Record, Milwaukee Sentinel, Houston Chronicle, Tulsa World. Superior Telegram, Ta Democracia (San Juan, P. BR.) Austin Statesman... . le. NeW Yor World. a eran ALE Mr hee a ra a Se a ee Chicago Dally News... =... reece United Press Associations................. Indianapolis Star. os ees Era Reuter’s (Litd.), London...............::. Associated Press: cs a ae es C.V. Newspaper Service. .......ccceue.... J"Washinston'Pogt. .................... 7 Chicas Tribune... ees vatican ons Japan Advertiser (Tokyo, Japan) ......... ASSOCIATE Press. .. occ nvm nes New York Times... oo .ccesrermre tvs New York Herald... . +. .......... Now York Times... i... a. ie New Orleans Times-Picayune............. Cleveland Plain Dealer, Tacoma News Tribune. Washington Star... ... cca eee sns 206 Columbia Avenue, Glen Echo, Md. 3904 Kansas Avenue. 1812 K Street. 1309 Irving Place. 3409 Mount Pleasant Street. The Ebbitt. The Ebbitt. 2113 N Street. The Ambassador. 2922 Newark Street. 2310 Cathedral Avenue. 2012 O Street. 2848 Twenty-eighth Street. 1300 Harvard Street. 1757 Euclid Street. 2029 P Street. 1816 Kalorama Road. Hotel Arlington. The Chastleton. 3313 Sixteenth Street. Falkstone Courts. 1808 I Street. 912 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Wardman Park Hotel. The Sherman. Clifton Terrace West. 1204 K Street. | Rules Governing Press Galleries. 481 ’ . RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES. 1. Persons desiring admission to the press galleries of Congress shall make applica- tion to the Speaker, as required by Rule XXXV of the House of Representatives, and to the Committee on Rules of the Senate, as required by Rule VI for the Regulation of the Senate Wing of the Capitol; and shall state in writing the names of all news- papers or publications or news associations by which they are employed, and what other occupation or employment they may have, if any; and they shall further declare that they are not engaged in the prosecution of claims pending before Congress or the departments, and will not become so engaged while allowed admission to the gal-- leries; that they are not employed in any legislative or executive department of the Government, or by any foreign Government or any representative thereof, and that they are not employed, directly or indirectly, by any stock exchange, board of trade, or other organization, or member thereof, or brokerage house, or broker, engaged in the buying and selling of any security or commodity or by any person or corporation i having legislation before Congress, and will not become so engaged while retaining | membership in the galleries. Holders of visitors’ cards who may be allowed tempo- | rary admission to the galleries must conform to the restrictions of this rule. ! 2. The applications required by the above rule shall be authenticated in a manner that shall be satisfactory to the standing committee of correspondents, who shall see that the occupation of the galleries is confined to bona fide correspondents of reputable standing in en business, who represent daily newspapers or newspaper associations requiring telegraphic service; and it shall be the duty of the standing committee, at their discretion, to report violation of the privileges of the galleries to the Speaker, or to the Senate Committee on Rules, and pending action thereon the offending i correspondent may be suspended. 3. Persons engaged in other occupations whose chief attention is not given to news- i paper correspondence or to newspaper associations requiring telegraphic service shall not be entitled to admission to the press galleries; and the Press List in the Congres- sional Directory shall be a list only of persons whose chief attention is given to tele- graphic correspondence for daily newspapers or newspaper associations requiring telegraphic service. 4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges of the galleries. 3 5. The press galleries shall be under the control of the standing committee of corre- | spondents, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the Senate Committee on Rules. Approved: FrepErICK H. GILLETT, Speaker of the House of Representatives. Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate. RoBERT BARRY, Chairman. | CHARLES S. ALBERT. Gus J. KARGER. 1 Roy A. ROBERTS. Arraur S. HENNING, Secretary. 1 1 - I Ea Standing Committee of Correspondents. 24786°—67—4—2p Ep——32 MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES. NAME, HOME POST OFFICE, WASHINGTON RESIDENCE, AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS. [The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { designates those whose unmarried daughters in society accompany them; the | designates those having other ladies with them.] THE SENATE. *CaLviNn CooripGE, President, The New Willard. ||AtBERT B. CUMMINS, President pro tempore. Rev. J. J. Muir, D. D., Chaplain of the Senate, 1317 Kenyon Street. *GEORGE A. SANDERSON, Secretary, Stoneleigh Court. *Henry M. RosE, Assistant Secretary, Clifton Terrace South. *tDavip S. BARRY, Sergeant at Arms, 1816 Jefferson Place. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name. Home post office. Washington residence. fu Page. *|Ashurst, Henry F..........| Prescott, Ariz ......| 1602 K Street........... 6 *Ball, I. Heisler... chica Marshallton, Del....| 3244 Thirty-eighth St... 15 Bayard, Thomas F......... .. Wilmington, Del ...| The Lee House. ........ 15 *Borah, William E........... Boise, Idaho. ...... 2139 Wyoming Avenue. 21 Brandegee, Frank B.......... New London, Conn.| 1700 I Street............ 14 Brookhart, Smith W.._...._.. Washington, Iowa. .| 3405 Thirty-fourth Place. 30 *Broussard, Edwin S..._..... New Iberia, La..... 1850 Mintwood Place... 38 Bursum, Holm O_.dicl ied, Socorro, N. Mex....| The Capitol Park....... 69 *Calder, William M........... Brooklyn, No¥ .c.i. The New Willard....... 69 *Cameron, Ralph H......... Phoenix, Ariz. .... The Knowlton ......... 6 *||Capper, Arthur.............| Topeka, Kans...... 1100 Sixteenth Street... 33 ¥||||Caraway, T. H............] Jonesboro, Ark..... 1835 Irving Street....... 6 IlIll|Colt, LeBaron B.......... Bristol, B. J... 2223 Massachusetts Ave.| 101 Couzens, James;.}.. J. hig Detroit, Mich...... The New Willard....".. 49 *+|Culberson, Charles A...... Dallog, Tex...) 2400 Sixteenth Street...| 108 Il/]Cummins, Albert B........ Deg Moines, Jowaol, i conoid 30 *¥Cuartis, Charles. ...o.l0 G0 Topeka, Kans. ..... 1830 Belmont Road... .. 32 *+1Dial, Nathaniel B.........| Laurens, S. C....... 1852 Kalorama Road....| 102 Dillingham, William P. ..... Montpelier, Vt.....| The Portland........... 114 *Edge, Walter E.L. 0 wo. ii Atlantic City, N. J.| 1626 Rhode Island Ave. 65 {Blkins, Davis... coil, 28 Morgantown, W. Va.| 1626 K Street........... 120 Ernst, Richard P.c.lseivi Covington, Ky. .... 2400 Sixteenth Street. . 35 Fernald, Bert M..............| West Poland, Me...| Congress Hall........... 41 *|||| Fletcher, Duncan U...... Jacksonville, Fla. ..| 1455 Massachusetts Ave. 16 *France, Joseph I........... Port Deposit, Md...| The New Willard....... 42 *Frelinghuysen, Joseph S....| Raritan, N. J....... 1013 Sixteenth Street...| 65 George, Walter FF... Lou. Ai Vienna, Ga od wi The Powhatan......... 18 %Gerry, Peter. Guoiioon onl: oc Warwick RT. co 1727 Massachusetts Ave.| 101 ®Glass, Carter... solani ad Lynchburg, Va..... The Raleigh ........... 116 ¥Gooding, Frank R...........| Gooding, Idaho..... 2400 Sixteenth Street... 21 Hale, Frederick... 0. Jo. Portland, Me....... 1001 Sixteenth Street... 41 *Harreld; John WL. o..l iL Oklahoma City, Okla] The Raleigh. .......... 91 Harris, William Jc. 00.0 oil Cedartown, Ga. ....| 2400 Sixteenth Street. . . 18 *Huorrison, Pat... 0.0. 52 Gulfport, Miss...... 2007 Belmont Road... .. 54 Heflin, J. Thomas. cll. ad Lafayette, Ala...... Congress Hall........... 3 *+ Hitchcock, Gilbert M. ..... Omaha, Nebr. ..... 2225 R Street. . i... inal *Johnson, Hiram W.........| San Francisco, Calif.| Calvert Manor, River- | 8 dale, Md. | 483 484 Congressional Directory. THE SENATE—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name. Home post office Washington residence Biog- = ; * [raphy Page. *Jones, Andrieus A........... Ry Las Vegas, N. | 2400 Sixteenth Street. . . 69 ex. #1 ones, Wesley Li. ......... Seattle, Wash. ..... TheCairo............:} 119 *Relloge, Frank B........... St. Paul, Minn......| 1701 Nineteenth Street.. 51 *+| Kendrick, John B. . ......| Sheridan, Wyo......| 2400 Sixteenth Street ..| 125 *Keyes, Henry W............ Haverhill, N. H....| 2400 Sixteenth Street. .. 64 aX Bing, William H..... ...... Salt Lake City, Utah| 2122 Bancroft Place.....| 113 Aladd, Edwin FP... ...... Fargo, N. Dak...... 121 Willow Avenue, 84 Takoma Park. *La Follette, Robert M. . .... Madison, Wis... ....| 3157 Eighteenth Street .| 122 *{Lenroot, Irvine L.......... Superior, Wis.......| The Woodward. ....... 123 |[Liodge, Henry Cabot.........| Nahant, Mass. ..... 1765 Massachusetts Ave. 44 McCormick, Medill. ........ Qhieago, T1......... 1801 F Street... .....-.. 22 *tMcCumber, Porter J. ...... Wahpeton, N. Dak .| 2360 Massachusetts Ave. 84 ||IMcKellar, Kenneth.........| Memphis, Tenn.....| The Continental........ 106 ||||McKinley, William B...... Champaign, I11. . . .| 1736 Massachusetts Ave. 22 *McLean, George P...........| Simsbury, Conn....| 1520 New Ham pshireAve 14 McNary, Charles L. . ........ Salem, Oreg. . .....| The New Willard....... 93 *Moses, George H. . . ........| Concord, N. H......| The Altamont......... 64 *tMyers, Henry L............ Hamilton, Mont....| The Gordon............ 60 Nelson, Tonto, wonton Alexandria, Minn. .| 649 East Capitol Street.. 51 Now, Harry 8S... ll. Indianapolis, Ind...| 1869 Wyoming Avenue.. 27 Nicholson, Samuel D..._..... Leadville, Colo..... The Wardman Park .... 12 ¥Norbeck, Peter.............. Redfield, S. Dak....| 25630 Thirteenth Street..| 105 *4Norris, George W........... McCook, Nebr... .. 3300 Ross Place, Cleve- 61 land Park. *QOddie, Tasker Li. ........... Reno, Nev. .......| 2310 Connecticut Ave .. 63 *I|Overman, Lee S......... Salisbury, N. C.....| The Powhatan. ........ 82 *+Owen, Robert L...._........| Muskogee, Okla. ...| 1901 Wyoming Avenue. 90 Page, Carroll 8.0. .uo. Li Hyde Park, Vt..... The Franklin Square. ..| 115 *Pepper, George Wharton. . .. Philadelphia, Pa. ..| The Powhatan... ._..... 94 *¥Phipps, Lawrence C. . ......| Denver, Colo....... Single Oak, Cathedral 12 Avenue. Dittman Rey... .o-o...... Tonopah, Nev. .of...........o00diins 63 *Poindexter, Miles. .......... Spokane, Wash... .. 1750 N Street. ......... 119 *Pomerene, Atlee... ......... Canton, Ohio. . ....| The Highlands.......... 85 *Ransdell, Joseph E.......... LakeProvidence,La.| 1724 M Street.......... 38 *Reed, David A... ...........| Pittsburgh, Pa..... The New Willard... .... 94 *Reed, James A............. .| Kansas City, Mo. . .| 1956 Biltmore Street..... 56 *||Robinson, Joseph T. . .....| Little Rock, Ark. ..| Congress Hall._......... 6 *Sheppard, Morris............ Texarkana, Tex..... 1814 Nineteenth Street..| 109 *Shields, John K............. Knoxville, Tenn....| The Shoreham. ........ 106 Shortridge, Samuel M......_. Menlo Park, Calif...| The Wardman Park .... 8 *Simmons, Furnifold M. ..... New Bern, N. C...| The Raleigh. .......... 82 Smith, Ellison D............ Lynchburg, 8. C...| The Franklin Square... 102 *Smoot, Reed...... .......... Provo, Utah........ 2521 Connecticut Ave...| 113 *||Spencer, Selden P..........| St. Louis, Mo. . ....| The Brighton. ......... 57 *+Stanfield, Robert Nelson. ..| Portland, Oreg. ....| 2400 Sixteenth Street. .. 93 *||Stanley, A. Owsley. ....... Henderson, 5 . ..| 1681 Thirty-first Street . 35 *+Sterling, Thomas. . ........ Vermilion, S. Dak..| 2700 Thirty-sixth Street.| 105 *{{Sutherland, Howard.......| Elkins, W. Va..... The Wyoming ......... 22 120 Swanson, Claude A........... Chatham, Va....... 2136 BR Street. ....-...-. 116 ¥||Townsend, Charles E....... Jackson, Mich...... The Burlington ........ 48 Trammell, Park. 0 00 clo Iakeland, Pla... ool... i iiiie soon 16 *¥Underwood, Oscar W........ Birmingham, Ala....| 2000 G Street........... 3 *1Wadsworth, James W., jr. . .| Groveland, N.Y ....| 800 Sixteenth Street... 69 Walsh, David I... .......... Pitchbure Moms. fo eee] 25 Members’ Addresses. 485 THE SENATE—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) : Name. Home post office. Washington residence. Loi Page. Walsh, Thomas d............ Helena, Mont. ..... 2400 Sixteenth Street. .. 60 ¥Warren, Francis E. .......... Cheyenne, Wyo. ...| 2029 Connecticut Ave ..| 125 *|Watson, James E. ......... Rushville, Ind...... 2127 California Street... 27 ¥Weller, UO. Bi... 00a Baltimore, Md. . . .. The Wardman Park.... 42 Williams, John Sharp........ Yogoo. City (star |... coco. cov 54 route), Miss. | Willie, Prank B............. Delaware, Ohio. ...| George Washington Inn. 86 486 Congresstonal Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. *iF'repeErICK H. GmLeTT, Speaker, 1525 Eighteenth Street. *F[[IIWiLLiam TYLER PAGE, lerk, 220 Wooten Avenue, Chevy Chase. *Rev. James SEERA MontcoMERY, D. D., Chaplain, 1731 Columbia Road. *JoserH G. RopaERS, Sergeant at Arms, 2924 acomb Street. *7||BErtr W. KENNEDY, Doorkeeper, Wine Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. *FraNk W. CoLLIER, Postmaster, 418 Seventh Street NE. (For Office R and Teleph , See pp. 259-267.) Name Home post office Washington residence. Biog g : ? raphy. Page. * Abernethy, Charles L ......| New Bern, N.C....| The Raleigh. ......._.. 83 *IJAckerman, Ernest R...... Plainfield, N. J..... The Wardman Park. ... 67 *Almon, Edward B.......... Tuscumbia, Ala....| George Washington Inn. 5 ¥|Anderson, Sydney.......... Lanesboro, Minn....| The Maycroft.......... 52 Andrew, A. Piatt. .0........ Gloucester, Mass ...| The Racquet Club ..... 46 Vanden William E....... Hastings, Nebr... .. 1225 Fairmont Street. . . 62 nsorge, Martin C...........| New York, N. Y...| The Chastleton......... 76 ¥tAnthony, Daniel R., jr..... | Leavenworth, Kans.| 2140 Wyoming Avenue. 33 Appleby, T. Frank .......... \ Asbury Park, N.J..| The Wardman Park.. 66 *|Arentz, Samuel S......... Simpson, Nev... .. The Logan. . 64 *||l|Aswell, James B.......... Natchitoches, La-..| The N orthumberland. . . 40 ||Atkeson, William O......... Butler, Mo. 107 Maryland Ave. NE. 57 Bacharach, Isage............ Atlantic City, N 'N.J..| The Chaumont.......... 66 |Bankhead, William B .| Jasper, Ala. .......| 2310 Connecticut Ave.. 6 arbour, Henry BE. .......... Fresno, Calif........ Congress Hall........... 10 *iBarkley, Alben W ......... Paducah, Ky... 1760 Euclid Street.. .... 35 Beck, J.D. vs..o. Viroqua, Wis........ SEL a Bee 124 *|| Beedy, Cavell Boone: Portland, Me....... 1353 Oak Street........ 41 *4Beoo Jomes T.............. Sandusky, Ohio....| Fontanet Courts........ 88 * Bell, Thomas M.. ........... Gainesville, Ga. . . .| 1401 Columbia Road. ... 20 *||Benham, John S..........| Benham, Ind. .....| 421 New Jersey Ave. SE. 28 Bivd, Richard B............. Wichita, Kans...... : sine 35 *iBixler, Haris J. 5 cu... Johnsonburg, Pa... | Lafayette Hotel. 99 *Black, Eugene.............. Clarksville, Tex....| 1500 Webster Street. .... 109 Blakeney, Albert A... ..... 0 Ten Hills, Md... |. cov oon. 42 *{Bland, Oscar E............ Linton, Ind. .| George Washington Inn. 27 *||Bland, Schuyler Otis....... Newport News, Va..| 1719 Irving Street... .. 116 *{Blanton, Thomas L......... Abilene, Tex. ..... 1929 Kenyon Street. ...| 112 *Boies, William D. .......... Sheldon, Iowa...... Congress Hall........... 22 Bond, Charles G............. Brooklyn, N. Y..... Congress Hall. . 73 Bowers, George M......_..._. Martinsburg, W. Va. The Shoreham. ........ 121 *itBowling, William B. ...... Lafayette, Ala...... Congress Hall........... 4 *1Box, John C.c............n Jacksonville, Tex. ..| 1313 Kennedy Street. ..| 109 Brand, Charles ©. ........ .« Athens, Ga..... .... The Washington ....... 20 *Brennan, Vincent M......... Detvortt, Mich... ..-.l. 06. o.oo Bt 51 ||| Briggs, Clay Stone sc. -.... Galveston, Tex... .. 2400 Sixteenth Street...| 110 *Briften Fred Al:........... Chicage, 1ll......... The Wardman Park.... 24 *t|| Brooks, Edward S........ York, Pac.......... Congress Hall........... 98 Brooks, Edwin B.. .-....... Newton, 1l......... > ae 26 Brown, JoseDh....i =vuivnee- Chattanooga, Tenn. . The Washington . 107 *|[ Browne, toad Eni. Waupaca, Wis...... 7 West Underwood St., 124 Chevy Chase, Md. Buchanan, James P.........| Brenham, Tex. ....} The Driscoll........... 111 *Bulwinkle, A. Li ......~... Gastonia, N-C...... The:-Driscoll. .......... 84 Burdick, Clark............. Newport, R. I. ....| The Lee House. ....... 101 Puke William J... .......... Pittsburgh, Pa...... Congress Hall........... 94 *Burroughs, Sherman E._.... Manchester, N. H. ..| 1847 Kalorama Road.. 64 *Burtness, Olger B. . ........ gang Forks, 5 Congress Hall........... 85 ak. Cleveland, Ohio. ...l Stoneleigh Coit. PRUETT 90 ||IBurton, Theodore E.... Members’ Addresses. 487 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name Home post office Washington residence. Biog- . . raphy. Page. *¥Butler, Thomas S..........| West Chester, Pa...| The Burlington......... 96 *| Byrnes, James F........... Aiken, 8. Q.o00L 0 2949 Newark Street. . . . 103 *Byrns, Joseph W...0 oo 0a) Nashville, Tenn..... Congress Hall .......... 107 *Cable, John IT... lil loiiod Lima, Ohio.........| 1524 Eighteenth Street. . 86 *+Campbell, Guy BE... ........ Crafton, Pa... oii! 5611 Fourteenth Street..| 101 *1t||Campbell, Philip P...... Pittsburg, Kans.....| Mount Vernon Place, 34 Alexandria, Va. T||Cannon, Joseph G.......... Danville, TH......... The Raleigh. 26 *Cantrill, James C............ Georgetown, Ky..... The Tent Square. . 37 *Carew, John FB... . 000. (0. New York, N.Y....| The Continental... ..... 76 *++Carter, Charles D.. .| Ardmore, Okla......| Congress Hall.. : 91 7) (Chalmers, William W.. .| Toledo, Ohio........| Congress Hall.. . 87 *+Chandler, Thomas A.. :| Vinita, Okla... 2400 Sixteenth Street. . 91 Chandler, Walter Mo 05 New York, N.Y -| Congress Hall oil. 76 *Chindblom, Carl R.......... ican, I olvall 1901 Fifteenth Street.. 24 *Christopherson, Charles A....| Sioux Falls, S. Dak.[ Congress Hall.. ........| 105 *Clague; Frank... 00... 0. ‘Redwood Falls, Minn| The “Avondale - ........ 52 ¥||Clark, Yank Gainesville, Fla.....| The Tiffany............ 17 ome, John D.cicli oll] Prager, NOY oindid University Club......... 80 Classon, David G.............. Oconto, Wis.........| 137 C Street SE.. 124 *Clouse, Wynne F............. Cookeville, Tenn...| 1633 Q Street.. 2-107 *Cockran, W. Bourke..........| New York, N. Y..... 1615 Rhode Island Ave. . 75 ¥Codd, George P... ci. 000. Detroit, Mich.......| The Burlington.. 35 49 oe, Cyrenus.. ic... .0.0. Cedar Rapids, Iowa.| The Wardman Park _._. 31 ole, R. Clint. heeds o| Findlay i Ohio. C0 The Congressional. ..... 87 Collier, Janes Wo .L.-v oie. Vicksburg, Miss..... Congress Hall... ....... 56 *lCollins, Ross:A....0. 0.0. Meridian, Miss......| 1524 Twenty-eighth St.. 56 % Colton, Don B.Lalleoiiial Vernal, Utah....... Congress Hall .......... 114 *Connally, Tom... 0... 0... Marlin, Tex.........| The Wardman Park ....] 111 *Connolly, James d.......ic) Philadelphia, Pa... oo... ale 95 *Cooper, Henry Allen.........| Racine, Wis.. -| The Rochambeau....... 123 *Cooper, John G0. .i 0. [00 Youngstown, Ohio. .| The Driscoll ........... 89 *Copley, Ira C...ca. ayn) Aurora; TW “oil 2301 Wyoming Avenue.. 24 Coughlin, Clarence D......... Wilkes-Barre, Pa....| The Washington........ 96 *+1Crago, Thomas S..........| Waynesburg, Pa....| The Wardman Park.... 94 ¥Cramton, Louis 0.0 cou... Lapeer, Mich....... 1829 Irving Street........ 50 wy Crisp, Charles Ro. .....cuil Americus, Ga.. i ‘Congress Hall. ....... i 18 *Crowther, Frank. ooo. 0... Schenectady, N.Y Congress Hall......._... 79 ¥Cullen, Thomas H..o.ll ol. Brooklyn, N. Y..... The Washington........ 71 tl|Curry, Charles F............| Sacramento, Calif....| George Saupsnad Inn. 9 *tDale, Porter H..............| Island Pond, Vi..... 144 B Street NE. fo lls Dallinger, Ivederick W........| Cambridge, Mass... of... ..... . Loe. 46 *Darrow, George P........... Philadelphia, Pa....| The Raleigh............ 96 Davis, Charles B....0 0, . 01. St. Peter, Minn..... The Rochambeau.. | 52 ~i1Davis, Bwin b.. cao lal. Tullahoma, Tenn. ..| 2139 Wyoming Avenue.. 107 *|| Deal, Joseph T..00 00 000 Noriolk, Va. cou]... oon i ae 116 empsey, S. Wallace.........| Lockport, N. Y...... The Shoreham.. 81 Dope Edward BE. .o. Marion, 10. .00000 0 Congress Hall. . Ee: 27 Dickinson, Toad nnd Algona, Towa........| 1870 Wyoming Avenue. 32 Dominick, Pred Ti iuonnil Newberry, S. C.....| The Washington........ | 103 *Doughton, Robert L.........| Laurelsprings, N. C .| Clifton Terrace South. ..| 84 Dowell, Cassius C............. Des Moines, Iowa...| Congress Hall... .._.... | 31 *Drane, Herbert J............ Lakeland, Fla...... Congress Hall... ....... 17 *Drewry, Patrick H...........| Petersburg, Va......| The Continental........| 117 *Driver, William J....000.h Osceola, Ark........| Congress Hall........... 7 ¥Dunbar, James W... oo... New Albany, Ind...| Congress Hall... ......... 28 *Dunn, Thomas B.-..........| Bochester, N.V..... The New Willard...... 80 [lIDupré, H. Garland........ New Orleans, La....| 1410 Girard Street.......| 39 *tDyer, Leonidas C.......... St. Louis, Mo........ Lafayette Hotel........ 59 488 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Haugen, Gilbert N........... ° . Biog- Name. Home post office. Washington residence. raphy : Page. ¥Echols, Leonard S.... ...... Charleston, W. Va..| 1805 Irving Street... . .. 122 Edmonds, George W......... Philadelphia, Pa. ..| Congress Hall.......... 95 *Elliott, Richard NN. ooou nl Connersville, Ind...| Congress Hall._._....... 28 *|| Ellis, "Edgar PECTS CON ab Kansas City, Mo.... Congress Hall.. as 57. *t| Evans, Robert E.......... Dakota City, Nebr. .| 1870 Wyoming Avenue. . 62 *Fairchild, Benjamin L....... Pelham, N. Y.......| The Wyoming.......... 78 *t|| Fairfield, Louis W........ Angola Ind... Col aa 30 Faust, Charles I. . ou... lL. St. Joseph, Mo...... The Washington........ 57 *Favrot, George K.. o.oo... Baton Rouge, La....| 2400 Sixteenth Street.. 40 *Fenn, CTR EE Wethersfield, Conn. | 1625 Sixteenth Street. . 14 *Foss, Simeon D............. Yellow Springs, Ohio| Congress Hall. . : 87 Fields, William J. ........... Olive Hill, Ky..... : 37 *Fish, Hamilton, jr.......... Garrison, N. Y..... 2319 Ashmead Place... . 78 *Fisher, Hubert B00. ool Memphis, Tenn..... 2230 California Street...| 108 *i1| Fitzgerald, Boy:G.... lc. Dayton, Ohio....... Congress Hall. ......... 86 t||Focht, Benjamin Basie. Lewisburg, Pa...... 1228 Sixteenth Street... 97 “ Fordney, Joseph W._...... Saginaw (W. 8.), | 3821 Jenifer Street, 50 Mich. Chevy Chase. *4tFoster, Israel M........... Athens, Ohio....... The Woodley........... 88 *|Frear, James A. ........... Hudson, Wig.ouaua. The Somerset........... 124 *Free, Arthur M...........0 San Jose, Calif. .... 3609 Thirty-fourth Street 10 *+Freeman, Richard P........ New London, Conn.| 2115 P Street............ 14 *Prench, Burton L.--.... 2:0 Moscow, Idaho......| 1882 Ontario Place...... 21 *Frothingham, Louis A....... Easton, Mass... ....| 2139 R Street.......... 48 *Fuller, Charles E........... Belvidere, 111. ..... The National.......... 24 *Fulmer, Hampton P........ Norway, S. C.......| Congress Hall.......... 105 *+1|| Funk, Frank H.......... Bloomington, Til. ..| The St. Albans... .... 25 *Gahn, Harry C..c0l coool) Cleveland, Ohio..... -| Congress Halll odo. 90 Gallivan, James Ac. onl Boston, Mass. ....... The Washington........ 47 *Garner, Ton NN. Uvalde, Tex........ Congress Hall........... 112 *++1 [| Garrett, Daniel E........ Houston, Tex. ..... The Northumberland... 111 *tGarrett, Finis J............. Dresden, Tenn. . ...| 3601 Thirty-fifth Street.] 108 *Gensman, LoMooa lon Lawton, Okla. ..... -| Congress Holl. iit 92 *Gernerd, Fred B............ Allentown, Pa...... The Washington. 96 *QGifford, Charles L..........| Cotuit, Mass........ sf: Cjonpress Hall.. SE 48 *\Gilbert, Ralph............. Shelbyville, Ky....| Congress Hall........... 357 *tGillett, Frederick H........ Springfield, Mass....| 1525 PHig hteenth Street. . 45 Glynn, James Po... cousin. Winsted, Conn.......| The Driscoll. +o: 15 *Goldsborough, T. Alan. ..... Denton, Md... The Driscoll: =o... 5. 42 *Goodykoontz, Wells. ........ Williamson, W. Va..| The Raleigh. .......... 122 Gorman, John J... 0... 0. Chicago, TEE IE ae ae 23 Gould, Normand. ........... Seneca, alls, N.Y A... .....cocaita ll Sa 80 History George:S. i. ois Philadelphia, Pa....| The Powhatan......... 95 raham, William J._._......_. Aledo, TH. .-.0:5.. 1 212 Willow Avenue, 25 Takoma Park, Md. Green, William R........... Council Bluffs, Iowa] The Portner . ll 32: *|| Greene, Frank Lo... 00, St. Albans, Vt...... The Driscoll. 0... 0 115 Greene, William S. .......... Fall River, Mass. . ..| 142 Twelfth Street SE.. 48 oy WW i oa Lancaster, Pa....... The Washington........ 96 *Griffin, Anthony J........... New York, N. Y....| The Congressional...... 77 *Hadley, Lindley H......... Bellingham, Wash. .| Congress Hall........... 119 *||Hammer, William C........ Asheboro, N.C. .... The Driscoll. .z co. .% 84 Hardy, Guy U........ 00. Canon City, Colo. ..| The Washington. . 13 *1{Hardy, Rufns......0....... Corsicana, Tex...... 1310 New Hampshire 110 Avenue. Northwood, Iowa. ..| Congress Hall........... 31 Members’ Addresses. 489 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name. Home post office. Washington residence. Biog- raphy. Page, Howes, Hay Bo. ............ St. Louis, Mo. .....| The Occidental........ 59 Hawley, Willig Gt ie ne Salem, Oreg. ......| The Woodley........... 93 * Hayden, Carl........ esis Phoenix, Ariz... 0 1901 Columbia Road. ... 6 *tHays, Pw D.. . Cape Girardeau, Mo.| The Mendota............ 59 *Henry, Lowis..............| Flmiva, N.'Y......}| The Wardman Parke .... 80 Herrick, Manuel-...........0 Paxy, Okla... i 0 ai TS 92 *|| Hersey, Fra Qi Houlton, Me. ...... 517 Cedar Street, Ta- 41 koma Park. : Hickey, Andrew J............ Laporte, Ind. ...... Congress Hall. _........ 30 *| Hicks, Frederick C......_.. Pol vo lagi, Stoneleigh Court. ...... 70 Hill Jolm Philip”... . Baltimore, Md... ... 1312 Sixteenth Street... 43 *Himes, Jowph Ho... Canton, Ohio.......| 1627 New Hampshire 89 Avenue. loch, Homer... cu Marion, Kans. .....| Congress Hall.......... 34 *+Hogan, Michael J.......... Brooklyn, N.Y.....| 130 B Street NE ..... .. 72 *Hooker, 3M... 0. ...-: Stuart, Va... ..... = The Driscoll... 2000 00, 117 *+tHuck, Winnifred Mason... . Chicago, Im: .| Congress Hall. . : 22 *| Huddleston, George........ Birmingham, “Ala... iL Massachuse tts Ave. 5 Huiode, 1 EL EERE El Paso, Tex........ 3723 Livingston Street..| 112 ukriede, Theodore W...... Warrenton, Mo...... Fontanet Courts........ 58 *| Hull, Harry Ecco Williamsburg, Towa.| The Wardman Park . 31 [ol Augustin R......| Broken Bow, Nebr.| 638 East Spl Street . 63. *Humphreys, Benjamin Go Greenville, Miss....| Congress Hall. ......._. 55 *Husted, James W........... Peekskill, NY |The New Filiad. 78 *Hutchinson, Elijah... Trenton, Nao. The Raleigh. .......... 66 *+Ireland, Clifford............ Peoria; TI. 00.5 The Wardman Park.... 25 *Jacoway, H. M............. Dardanelle, Ark....| Congress Hall... _..... 7 * J) ames, W.Brank......: Hancock, Mich... .. 3322 Seventeenth Street 51 eiferis, Albert W.......... Omaha, Nebr. . ....| 2219 California Street... 62 en Famer, 00TH Anniston, Ala ..... The Shawmut. ......... 154 *3J ohnson, Albert... 0... Hoquiam, Wagh....| The Albemarle......... 119 Johnson, Ben... .o -... Bardstown, Ky..... The Calverton........... 36 *Johngon, Poul B...-........ Hattiesburg, Miss. ..| The Driscoll... 56 *J ohnson, Royal C......... Aberdeen, S. Dak. .| 3309 Seventeenth Street| 105 Jones, Band... .. il Bradford, Pa iE Congress Hall .......... 98 Jones, Marvin... ..... ..:. Amarillo, Tex....... Congress Hall. . 113 Kahn, Julies oo Ture San Francisco, Calif.| 2700 Connecticut Avenue 9 *Kearns, Charles C............ Batavia, Ohio. ..... George Washington Inn. 87 +Keller, Oscar B.....-c.. St. Paul, Minn...... 3406 “Quebec Street. . . . 52 #+| Kelley, Patrick H.-C Lansing, Mich....... 1619 BR Street... U0 50 #Jlcily; M.Clyde—.—. -... Edgewood, Pa...... 3730 McKinley Street..| 100 ¥'Kendall, Samuel A... ...... Meyersdale, Parl The Highlands.......... 98 ennedy, ‘Ambrose. ......... Woonsocket, R. I...]|. Sai 102 *i Ketcham, Jom CO... .... 0 Hastings, Mich. .... 4607 Fifteenth Street... 49 *Kiess, Edgar BR. Eset Williamsport, if eh NEES ws SE Sl Th 97 *Kincheloe, David BH. 10. Madisonville, Ky...| 2151 California Street. .. 36 *|| Kindred, fond Astoria, N. yi Congress Hall... ...... 70 ¥ | King, Bdward J.......... Galesburg, Ill....... Tudor Hall. ........... . 25 irkpatrick, William H. ..... Easton, Pa... 0.0 The Chastleton.......... 99 Kissel. John.................. Brooklyn, N.Y.....| 404 Sixth Street SE.. 70 ¥| Kitchin, Glande... 0 Scotland Neck, N.C.| 1412 Kennedy Street. . 82 leczkn, John C=. =. =.=. Milwaukee, Wis. ...| The Capitol. . POSE ER be line, Ardolph L.... 5... Brooklyn, NY The Washington. big 71 Kline, Tinton... Sunbury, Pa........ Congress Hall. bot 97 *K night, Charles 1, . Akron Ohio... .% Lafayette Hotel........ 88 490 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name. Home post office. Washington residence. Bris ; Page. Knutson, Harold... o. ...- St. Cloud, Minn....| The Roland............. 53 | Kopp, William F.......... Mops Pleasant, | The Brighton.......... 30 owa. Rrang, Milton. ......5. cin 0.00 Peru, Tod. ...:5. 1222 Sixteenth Street. .. 29 *1Kreider, Aaron S........... Annville, Pa....... Congress Hall... ........ 97 *Runz, Stanley H. .......... Chicago, TH ....oh ited cies Des Freie mre 24 *+Lampert, Florian.......... Oshkosh, Wis. . ....| 344 Eleventh St. SE...| 124 *iLangley, John W. ......... Pikeville, Ky...... 2807 T'wenty-seventh St. 37 *lanham, Fritz. G:. .... 0. oi Fort Worth, Tex. ..| Congress Hall ........... 111 ¥Lankford, William C........ Douglas, Ga........ 1701 Euclid Street...... 20 *Larsen, William W.......... Dublin, Ga......-.5 1329 Park Road. .:..:.: 21 Larson, Oscar J. o.oo. ..00 Duluth, Minn. ..... 2603 Mozart Place.. .... 53 *¥Lawrence, Henry F.......... Cameron, Mo....... Clifton Terrace East. ... 57 *lLoyion, Caleb B...0..-.-.-: Georgetown, Del... .| 1435 Euclid Street...... 16 *+ ||| Lazaro, Ladislas......... Washington, La. ...| Falkstone Courts. ...... 40 *Lea, Clarence F............ Santa Rosa, Calif. ..| Congress Hall........... 8 *tLeatherwood, Elmer O..... Salt Lake City,Utah.| Congress Hall... _...... 114 Leo, Gordon .iceu doses sn vis Chickamauga, Ga...| The Arlington ......... 19 Lee, Warren 1. ... 0. ..0000 Brooklyn, N. Y..... i at a ea 72 *Lehlbach, Frederick R...... Newark, N. J. .....| 1801 Sixteenth Street. .. 68 ® | |Lineberger, Walter F'..... Long Beach, Calif. .| 3028 Newark Street... .. 10 * ll Linthicum, J. Charles. . . ..| Baltimore, Md...... Then aT rT OY 43 * || Little, Edward C.......... Kansas City, Kans. .| George Washington Inn. 33 *Logan, W, Turner... .....-.: Charleston, S. C....| The Portland.......... 103 London, Meyer............... New York, N. Y:..:{ Congress Hall... ......... 74 *Longworth, Nicholas. ....... Cincinnati, Ohio. ..| 1736 M Street........... 86 *ilowrey, B.iG.......0 ai Blue Mountain, Miss| 502 Second Street SE. .. 54 Tuce, Robert... Ji.05 cocuial Waltham, Mass =. .cl. 0 0 oooh tian qe TL, 47 *Luhring; Oscar Ri... ou). Evansville, Ind. ...| 2009 Belmont Road .... 27 Lyon, Homer:L..c.o.0...0. 5 Whiteville, N. C....| Congress Hall.......... 83 *McArthur, Clifton N........ Portland, Oreg. .... 1801 Sixteenth Street. .. 93 *+1McClintic, James V....... Snyder, Okla......: Falkstone Courts. ...... 92 *McCormick, Washington Jay.| Missoula, Mont. .... The Roosevelt ......... 61 *IMcDuffie, John..... ...... = Monroeville, Ala. ..| Congress Hall........__. 3 *| McFadden, Louis T........ Comber, Pa. sil. a tie as 97 *¥McKenzie, John C........... Elizabeth, 111. ..... The Arlingion ..t.... 25 McLaughlin, James C........ Muskegon, Mich... .| George Washington Inn. 50 *McLaughlin, Joseph......... Philadelphia, Pa. ..| The Raleigh. .......... 95 McLaughlin, Melvin O....... York, Nebr. ....:::: 2957 Mills Avenue NE. . 62 *tMcPherson, Isaac V........ Aurora, Mo... ..; The Roosevelt ......... 60 *|McSwain, John J. ......... Greenville, S. C....| George Washington Inn.| 103 MacGregor, Clarence.......... Builalo,; N.Y.....: Congress Hall..._.._.... 81 *MacLafferty, James H......| Oakland, Calif..... Congress Hall... ........ 9 *| Madden, Martin B.......... Chicago, IN........oz 3201 Woodland Drive. .. 23 *Magee, Walter W............ Syracuse, N. Y..... The Brighton. :.:....-. 80 *| Maloney, Robert S......... Lawrence, Mass. tail... oss ch ipmntaie » 46 *11|[Mansfield, Joseph J ...... Columbus, Tex..... The Northumberland...| 111 Mapes, Corl BB. LU occas! Grand Rapids, Mich.| 2818 Connecticut Ave... 50 *|| Martin, Whitmell P........ Thibodaux, La... .. The Parkwood......... 39 Mead, James M.............. Bufialo, NAY cove ol orb te tee 81 *tMerritt, Schuyler........... Stamford, Conn..... 1822 Nineteenth Street. . 15 *Michaelson, M. Alfred....... Chicago, Jl. ........ The Roosevelt. ........ 24 *Michener, Earl C........... Adrian, Mich....... Congress Hall........... 49 Miller, John F........00 ans Seattle, Wash. _.... Congress Hall........... 119 Mills, Ogden L....... cones. New York, N. Y....| 2725 Q Street........... 75 Newcastle, Wyo....| 2110 O Street........... 125 *t|[Mondell, Frank W......... Members’ Addresses. 491 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name Home post office Washington residence. Biog- : 3 raphy. Page. *Montague, Andrew J........ Richmond, Va.....| The Avondale.......... 157 *Moore, Allen FP... 0. Monticello, T11...... The Wardman Park .... 26 *Moore, C. Ellis. Goll susie Cambridge, Ohio. ..| George Washington Inn. 89 ||[Moore, R. Walton. ......... Pairfax, Va... loo. The Toronto ...coi cul 118 vores, Merrill... an iivivs Indianapolis, Ind ..| 1920 I Street............ 29 *+||Morgan, William M ....... Newark, Ohio...... 214 Eighth Street NE .. 89 Morin, John M- (Joo. 5 of Pitisburgh, Pa. i... Congress Hall ........... 100 *Mott, Luther W.. oo. 00. ou Oswego, N. Y..... 1625 Sixteenth Street. . . 80 Mudd, Sydney I. ........... La Plata, Md. George Washington Inn. 43 *Murphy, Frank. -....| Steubenville, Ohio . Congress Hall........... 89 *+ Nelson, Adolphus Bio il Grantsburg, Wis. . :i"Congress Hall .......0.. «= 125 Nelson, John FE. .........0.00 Augusta, Me. ...... .| Congress Hall oo0i 00 41 *++|| Nelson, John Mandt...... Madison, Wis....... 114 Maryland Avenue...| 123 M [Rowion, Cleveland A. ....| St. Louis, Mo. 1932 Biltmore Street. . .. 58 + Edo Walter H....0.. ..c Minneapolis, Minn. .| 2844 Wisconsin Avenue. 53 No Miner. 1. Cleveland, Ohio. ...| The Harrington........ 90 Oo’ Brien, Charles F..X.... uc Jersey City, N.J...| The Raleigh... ...ii.. 68 0’Connor, James. i. soon New Orleans. Laan ls. 0 ama 39 *QOgden, Charles F..._..._.... Louisville, Ky...... Congress Hall... ...... 36 *Qldfield, William A......... Batesville, Ark... .. The, Victoria L. caililé.. 7 pA Oliver, William B. ...| Tuscaloosa, Ala..... 1827 Wypating 4 Avenue. 5 Olpp, Archibald BE... ...... West Hoboken, N. J. |. . 68 Osborne, Henry Z. ... ......... Los Angeles, Calif. . Congress Hall ai 11 *Qverstreet, James W......... Sylvania, Ga. ..... 3434 Brown Street... ... 18 %Paige, CalvimD roa bavi wid Southbridge, Mass ..| Lafayette Hotel. ....... 45 Pork Pronk. tiov.voe. ud Sylvester, Ga. canll-vinaees io fds dhe hai « 18 arker, James 8... 0. cou. a. Salem, N./Y....... 1717 Massachusetts Ave. 79 *Parker, Richard Wayne. .... Newark, N. J 1723 Rhode Island Ave.. 67 *Parks, THman B...ii.0. 50 Hope, Ark.......... | Congress Hall . 3) 8 *+t Patterson, Francis F., jr...| Camden, N. J...... The Raleigh 3; .....th 5 66 Patterson, Roscoe C.......... Springfield, Mo. 3327 Eighteenth Street. . 58 Paul, J ohn. . we -5 oat ok $0.) Harrisonburg, Va...| The Raleigh YF sianin 118 *Perkins, Randol ee Woodcliff Lake, N.J. .| 1870 Wyoming Avenue.. 67 Perlman, 'Nathan .-.--| New York, N. Y...| The Continental........ 74 *Petersen, Andrew N......... Brooklyn N.7Y .. .{ Congress Hall. .... 73 t||Porter, Stephen G.......... Pittsburgh, Pa...... 1500 1 Street. ..vuctos 100 Pou, Edward W... ...o.o..un Smithfield, N. C....| The Shoreham. ........ 83 *Pringoy, J. C... inovuiiu Chandler, Okla... .. Congress Hall.......... 91 %Purnell, Fred S. ..c.i.iiL 0 Atties: Ind i pada 0 oat varie 29 HilQuin, Perey BE... .... McComb, Miss...... 2647 Woodley Road. . .. 56 *i||Radcliffe, Amos H. ...... Paterson, N. J... ..| 1719 Connecticut Ave.. 67 Rainey, John-W......b.. 5 ai Chicago, TH ool clli Lo ir si ses 23 Rainey, Lillue B, . iol ciasune Gadsden Alois doanli hin enn sis sndtid, 5 *|||Raker, Jom E.........: Alturas, Calif....... 1801 Sixteenth Street. .. 9 *¥Ramseyer, C. William. . . ...| Bloomfield, Iowa...| The Chastleton......... 31 *Rankin, Jom BE. i coins Tupelo, Miss... ..... George Washington Inn. 54 *++Ransley, Harry: C..5 anna Philadelphia, Pa. ..| The Washington........ 095 Payburn, Sam... ........... Bonham, Tex...... 1812 IK Street... oo. 2. 110 Reber, John. ...... ... = > anal Pottaville, Pa. ..0. | The Burlington... ..... 96 Reece. B. Carroll... .... Butler, Tenmr oasesll os 000 A sahil 106 %*Reed, Daniel A............| Dunkirk, N. ¥.....{i Congress Hall.......... 81 * Reed, Stuart F. ........... Clarksburg, W. Va..| Pelham Courts. ........ L121 *Rhodes, Marion E.......... Potosi, Mo. ........ 1627 Nineteenth Street. | 59 Ricketts, Edwin D.......... Logan, Ohio. ....... The Garland. . 4 88 HiRiddick, Cart W....... i... Lewistown, Mont. ..| 3011 Dent Place. i 61 t{Riordan, Daniel J... 1. ix. New York, N.. Yi.:[:The Baleigh. Zr ori. - 74 *Roach, Sidney O........... Linn Creek, Mo... ..| 3327 Eighteenth Street. .| 58 Muskogee, Okla. ...| George Washington Inn. 91 ||[Robertson, Alice M......... 492 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) . . Biog- Name. Home post office. Washington residence. His : Page. *Rabgion, John M........... Barbourville, Ky. ..| 106 C Street SE......... 38 *Rodenberg, William A. ..... East St. Louis, I11..| 3601 Macomb Street....| 26 *Rogers, John Jacob. ........ Lowell, Mass....... 1155 Sixteenth Street. . . 46 Bose, John Mois 0. Luis Johnstown, Pa. ....| Congress Hall........... 98 Rosenbloom, Benjamin L. . ..| Wheeling, W. Va...| The Raleigh. .......... 121 ||Rossdale, Albert B.........} Bronx, N. Y....... George Washington Inn. 77 *Rouse, Arthur B... 0... 2 Burlington, Kyi: George Washington Inn. 36 *| Rucker, William W........ Keytesville, Mo..... 408 A Street SE......... 57 Ryan, Thomas Jefferson. . .... New York, N. Y...| The Raleigh........... 75 %Sabath, Adolph J....../.. 0. Chicago, Hl. Jn af acs ccs SLL 23 Sanders, Archie D........... Stafford, N. Y.....| The Burlington......... 81 *Sanders, Everett. ..........| Terre Haute, Ind...| 1800 K Street.......... 28 *tSanders, Morgan G......... Canton, Tex. . .....| 3402 Sixteenth Street... 110 *||Sandlin, John N........... | Minden; La... 00 Congress: Hall. .c..... 40 *Schall, Thomas D. ...| Minneapolis, Minn..| Berwyn, Md............ 53 *Scott, Frank D. ............ Alpena, Mich....... The Wardman Park 50 Scott, Ton Ar oie Savannah; Ten. J. [5 -iseeaa snd did o0, 108 Sears, William J.............. Kissimmee, Fla.....| Congress Hall........... 17 *Shaw, Guy L. ....| Beardstown, Ill. ...| Congress Hall........... 26 *fShelton, Yael ALL Marshfield, Mo. .... 240 First Street SE... ... *Shreve, Milton W........... Brie, Pal. .0.0 0 000 Congress Hall... ...... 99 *Siegel, A Ces R aa New York, N. Y...| The Continental........ 76 Sinclair, James H............ Kenmare, NiDak fe verne renin 85 Sinnott, Nicholas J... ....... Pho Dollor OT08. oh vient TE 93 Sisson, Thomas TU... 0.0... Winona, Miss....... Congress Hall. _......... 55 Slemp, C. Bascom............ Big Stone Gap, Va..| The Wardman Park ....| 118 Smith, Addison T........-. Twin Falls, 1daho..| The Roosevelt.......... 22 *||Smith, SM. Cia Charlotte, Mich. ...| Congress Hall.......... 49 *tSmithwick, John H........ Pensacola, Fla. .... 3721 Livingston Street . 17 *+tSnell, Bertrand H. .| Potsdam, N.Y 2400 Sixteenth Street. .. 79 *Snyder, Homer P. ....| Little Falls, N.Y...| The New Willard....... 80 *Speaks, John C......0........ Columbus, Ohio. .".| Congress Hall _.......... 88 1Sproul, Elliott W............ Chicago, HL... 000 1760 Euclid Street. ..... 23 Stafford, William H.......... Milwaukee, Wis odo a aan 124 T1Steagall, Hoy B......... Ozark, Ala. . ......| 601 North Carolina Ave 4 Stedman, Charles M.......... Greensboro, NOL le: cu ve sneesasniiidl Un 83 *Steenerson, Halvor... 0.0 Crookston, Minn. . .| The Cairo. Ta 53 *{Stephens, A BAB... Lis North Bend, Ohio..| The Farragut. hE 86 *|l|Stevenson, William F..... Cheraw, S.C... ... 1203 Clifton Street... ... 104 *||Stiness, Walter R.......... Cowesett, BR. 100. ; EAE age iS) Stoll, Philip Hi una by Kingstree, 8.0. 0k Congress hl. oll 104 *1Strong James G......... Blue Rapids, Kans.| The Wardman Park. . 34 *Strong, Nathan L.. oi. - Brookville, Pa. ....| Congress Hall_.......... 99 Sullivan, Christopher D...... New Yorls, N.Y iil. io oni ad 00H 74 *+Summers, Johm'W. oo Walla Walla, Wash. |. eanA20 Sumners, Hatton W._......... Dallas, Tex. ....... Congress Hall = 110 *Swank, TB nan Norman, OkKla...... George Washington Inn. 92 Sweet, Burton E............. Waverly; Town. oi... vee nos 0000 31 *Swing, Philip D...i...... El Centro, Calif.....| Congress Hall.......... 11 ¥Pague, Pater FP. ............ Boston, Mass. ...... The Occidental... .... 47 ll Taylor, Chester W......... Pine Bluff Ark... oui. nase 8 +Taylor, Edward T......... Glopwoad Springs, | Congress Hall. ......... 13 olo. *Taylor, Herbert W. ...| Newark, N.J......| Congress Hall.......... 67 Tayior, J. Will... cli. Gil Lafollette, Tenn....| 516 A Street NE.......| 107 Temple, Henry W._......... Washington, Pa.....| 1520 H Street........... 99 *Ten Eyck, Peter G. ........ Albany, N. Y.. .| The Washington. . .... 79 Thomas, Robert Y., jr........ Central City, Ky. . {The Drigeoll: 7.10. 0000 36 Thompson, Charles J Defiance. Ohio... coool ae. 87 Members’ Addresses. 493 THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name. Home post office Washington residence. Biog- poet 5 raphy Page. Thorpe, Roy H..............| Lincoln, Nebr...... 504 Third Street SE.... 62 *7|| Tillman, on Nit Fayetteville, Ark...| Congress Hall. ......... 7 *Tilson, John Q..... uv. ous New Haven, Conn..| Geor, ge Washington Inn. 15 *Timberlake, Charles B... .. -| Sterling, Colo....... Congress Hall....._..... 13 *tTincher, IN Molietg Lodge, Congress Hall... 35 ans. [ITinkham, George Holden....| Boston, Mass. ...... The Arlington. ........ 47 *tTowner, Horace M......... Corning, Iowa. .... The Mendota. . 32 *Treadway, Allen T.......... Stockbridge, Mass. .| 2400 Sixteenth Street. 45 *tTucker, Henry St. George. .| Lexington, Va..... The Powhatan......... 118 *Turner, Clarence W......... Waverly, Tenn... .. Congress Hall..........[| 108 *4|| Tyson, John R. -.--; Montgomery, Ala...| The Driscoll. . ......... 4 *41 Underhill, Charles L...... Somerville, Mass. . .| Congress Hall........... 47 *+1||Upshaw, William D...... Atlanta, Gos The Potomac........... 19 *Voile, William N.. ......... Denver, Colo....... 1748 N Street.......... 12 Siem Albert Ho oo. 0 Anderson, Ind. Congress Hall. .......... 29 inson, Carl................| Milledgeville, Ga. ..| 4 Primrose Street ,Chevy 20 Chase, Md. Voigt, Edward... nic Sheboygan, Wis... George Washington Inn.| 123 Volk, Vester D= .....Los cl Brooklyn, N. Y.. The Continental........ 73 +Volstead, Andrew J. ....... Granite Falls, Minn.| The Brighton. . .......: 53 % | Walters, Anderson H....... Johnstown, Ts... Congress Hall........... 95 Ward, Charles B............. Debruce, N.Y......| The New Willard. ..... 78 *Ward, Hallett 8... oo... Washington, N. C. .| The Brighton.......... 82 So Woson, Edward H.C... Nashua, N. H...... Congress Hall. . 65 **Waison, Homry W........... Langhorne, Pa...... 1626 M assachusetts Ave. 96 *Weaver, Zebulon............ Asheville, N. C..... 3314 Mount Pleasant St. 84 *|| Webster, J. Stanley ........ Spokane, Wash... .. The Ambassador. ......| 120 heeler, Loren E. . . .......| Springfield, Ill......} Congress Hall....._..... 26 2 White, Haye B............. Mankato, Kans. ...| 131 C Street SE......... 34 2H White, Wallace H., jr......| Lewiston, Me. ..... 2011 Wyoming Ave... .. 41 lame, Guinn........... Decatur, Tex...... Congress Hall. ......... 111 *+ Williams, Thomas S. ......| Louisville, I1l...... Fontanet Courts........ 27 *|| Williamson, William. . .. .. Oacoma, S. Dak....| 1319 Farragut Street..... 106 *Wilson, Riley J............. Harrisonburg, La. ..| The Sherman.......... 40 * Wingo, Ofte... ..... ilo De Queen, Ark..... 1619 R Street .......... 7 *Winslow, Samuel E......... Worcester, Mass. ...| 2342 Massachusetts Ave. 46 Wise, James W............... Fayetteville, Ga. . .| George Washington Inn. 19 Wood, William B..... 0... La Fayette, Ind....| Congress Hall. ......... 29 *Woodrufl, Roy Q............ Bay City, Mich... .. 1725 Seventeenth Street. 50 ods Ts Poi oon Roanoke, Va....... The Highlands.......... 117 oodyard, Harry C..o.....c Spencer, W. Va. ...| 1721 Lamont Street. . . . 121 *| Wright, ‘William Co tive: Newnan, Ga.......| Congress Hall........... 19 *Wurzbach, Harry M.......... Seguin; Tex....... Congress Hall... ........ 112 *Wyant, Adem M.-C Greensburg, Pa. . ..| The Wardman Park.... 98 11 Yates, Richard ........... Springfield, Ill......| The Wardman Park.... 22 *Young, George M_.__........ Valley City, N. Dak.| 1830 Sixteenth Street. . 85 *Zihlman, Frederick N...... Cumberland, Md. ..{ The Wardman Park.... 44 494 Congressional Directory. THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued. DELEGATES. (For Office Rooms and Telephones, see pp. 259-267.) Name Home post office Washington residence Boge 2 p ’ 8 " |raphy. Page. *tBaldwin, Henry A........ Paia, Hawaii... ....| The Wardman Park....| 126 *Sutherland, Dan A.......... Juneau, Alaska. .... 200 A Street SE........ 126 RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS. *Davila, Felix Cordova....... Mamati, B.R....... 4001 Fourteenth Street... 127 *De Veyra, Jaime C........... Manila, P, L........ 2616 Connecticut Ave.. 3 126 Gabaldon, Isauro............- Nueva Ecija, P. I..| 2940 Newark Street. .... 126 UNOFFICIAL LIST OF MEMBERS OF THE SIXTY- EIGHTH CONGRESS. SENATE. [Republicans in roman (53); Democrats in italic (42); Farmer-Labor in SMALL CAPITALS (1).] Alabama.—Oscar W. Underwood and J. Thomas Heflin. Arizona.— Henry F. Ashurst and Ralph H. Cameron. Arkansas.— Joseph T. Robinson and T. H. Caraway. California.—Hiram W. Johnson and Samuel M. Shortridge. Colorado.—Lawrence C. Phipps and Samuel D. Nicholson. Connecticut.—Frank B. Brandegee and George P. McLean. Delaware.—L. Heisler Ball and Thomas F. Bayard. Florida.—Duncan U. Fletcher and Park Trammell. Georgia.— William J. Harris and Walter F. George. Idaho.—William E. Borah and Frank R. Gooding. Illinois.—Medill McCormick and William B. McKinley. Indiana.—James E. Watson and Samuel M. Ralston. Towa.—Albert B. Cummins and Smith W. Brookhart. Kansas.—Charles Curtis and Arthur Capper. Kentucky.—A. Owsley Stanley and Richard P. Ernst. Lowisiana.—Joseph E. Ransdell and Edwin S. Broussard. Maine.—Bert M. Fernald-and Frederick Hale. Maryland. —O. E. Weller and William Cabell Bruce. Massachuseits.—Henry Cabot Lodge and David I. Walsh. Michigan.—James Couzens and Woodbridge N. Ferris. Minnesota.—Knute Nelson and HENRIK SHIPSTEAD. Mississtppi.—Pat Harrison and Hubert D. Stephens. Missouri.—James A. Reed and Selden P. Spencer. Montana.— Thomas J. Walsh and Burton K. Wheeler. Nebraska.—George W. Norris and Ralph B. Howell. Nevada.—Key Pittman and Tasker L. Oddie. New Hampshire.—Gerorge H. Moses and Henry W. Keyes. New Jersey.—Walter E. Edge and Edward I. Edwards. New Mexico.—Andrieus A. Jones and Holm O. Bursum. New York.—James W. Wadsworth, jr., and Royal S. Copeland. North Carolina.—Furnifold M. Simmons and Lee S. Overman. North Dakota.—E. F. Ladd and Lynn J. Frazier. Ohio.—Frank B. Willis and Simeon D. Fess. \ Oklahoma.—Robert L. Owen and J. W. Harreld. Oregon.—Charles I.. McNary and Robert Nelson Stanfield. Pennsylvania.—George Wharton Pepper and David A. Reed. Rhode Island.—LeBaron B. Colt and Peter G. Gerry. South Carolina.— Ellison D. Smith and Nathaniel B. Dial. South Dakota.—Thomas Sterling and Peter Norbeck. Tennessee.—John K. Shields and Kenneth McKellar. Texas.— Morris Sheppard and Earle B. Mayfield. Utah.—Reed Smoot and William H. King. Vermont.—William P. Dillingham and Frank L. Greene. Virginia.— Claude A. Swanson and Carter Glass. Washington.—Wesley L. Jones and C. C. Dill. West Virginia.—Davis Elkins and M. M. Neely. Wisconsin.—Robert M. La Follette and Irvine L. Lenroot. Wyoming.—Francis E. Warren and John B. Kendrick. Sixty-seventh Congress. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. : Boia in roman (223); Democrats in italic (206); Independent in SMALL CAPS (1); Farmer-Labor in MAN CAPS (1); Socialist in ITALIC CAPS (1); vacancies (3). Those marked * served in the Those marked t served in a previous Congress. Whole number, 435. ALABAMA. DELAWARE. 1. * John McDuffie, Monroeville. At Large. 2. *John R. Tyson, Montgomery. ne 3. *Henry B. Steagall, Ozark. William H. Boyce, Dover. 4. *Lamar Jeffers, Anniston. : 5. * William B. Bowling, Lafayette. FLORIDA. 6. * William B. Oliver, Tuscaloosa. 1. * Herbert J. Drane, Lakeland. 7. M. C. Allgood, Allgood. . 2. * Frank Clark, Gainesville. 8. Fwand B Fam, Tonle 8. *John H. Smithwick, Pensacola. 9. *George Huddleston, Birmingham. 4. *William J. S jt] 3 10. *William B. Bankhead, Jasper. Wegtam of, Seer, Rimitortos GEORGIA. ARIZONA. 1. R. Lee Moore, Statesboro. At Large. 2. *Frank Park, Sylvester. * Carl Hayden, Phoenix. 3. *Charles R. Crisp, Americus. 4. *Willvam C. Wright, Newnan. ARKANSAS. 5. *William D. Upshaw, Atlanta. ; 6. *J . Wise, Fayetteville. 1. *William J. Driver, Osceola. 3 i So e 2. * William A. Oldfield, Batesville. 8. Charles J. Brand. Athos, 3. *John N. Tillman, Fayetteville. 9. * Thomas M. Bell, Gainesville. 4. *Otis Wingo, De Queen. 10. *Carl Vinson, Milledgeville. 3. Heoo Rajon, Salone 11. *William C. Lankford, Douglas. . L. E. Sawyer, Hot Springs. * Wills : e ET B Turks, oe 12. Wom, Larsen, Dublin. IDAHO. CALIFORNIA. 1. *Burton L. French, Moscow. 1. *Clarence F. Lea, Santa Rosa. yi tes ih SE BSB Robes, Altar 2. *Addison T. Smith, Twin Falls. 3. *Charles F. Curry, Sacramento. ILLINOIS. 4. *Julius Kahn, San Francisco. : : 5. [Vacancy.]! 1. *Martin B. Madden, Chicago. 6. James H. MacLafferty, Oakland. 2. [Vacancy.]? : 7. *Henry E. Barbour, Fresno. 3. *Elliott W. Sproul, Chicago. 8. ¥*Arthur M. Free, San Jose. 4. * John W. Rainey, Chicago. 9. *Walter F. Lineberger, Long Beach. 5. * Adolph J. Sabath, Chicago. 10. *Henry Z. Osborne, Los Angeles. 6. James R. Buckley, Chicago. 11. *Philip D. Swing, El Centro. 7. *M. Alfred Michaelson, Chicago. 8. *Stanley H. Kunz, Chicago. COLORADO. 9. *Fred A. Britten, Chicago. 1. *William N. Vaile, Denver. 10, 0B Gnd) Chic: d o . f ; : 2. »Charles B. Timberlake, Sterling. 12. *Charles E. Fuller, Belvidere. 3. *Guy U. Hardy, Canon City. 13. *John C. McKenzie, Elizabeth. 4. *Edward T. Taylor,Glenwood Springs. | 14° *William J. Graham. Aledo. 15. *Edward J. King, Galesburg. SONY qo: 16. William E. Hull, Peoria. 1. *E. Hart Fenn, Wethersfield. 17. *Frank H. Funk, Bloomington. 2. *Richard P. Freeman, New London. | 18. William P. Holaday, Georgetown. 3. *John Q. Tilson, New Haven. 19. *Allen F. Moore, Monticello. 4. *Schuyler Merritt, Stamford. 20. tHenry T. Rainey, Carrollton. 5. Patrick B. O'Sullivan, Derby. 21. J. Earl Major, Hillsboro. 1 Caused by death of Hon. John I. Nolan, November 18, 1922. % 2 Caused by death of Hon. James R. Mann, November 30, 1922. 496 Unofficial List of Members. 497 ILLINOIS—continued. 22. Edward E. Miller, East St. Louis. 23. William W. Arnold, Robinson. 24. *Thomas S. Williams, Louisville. LOUISIANA. . *James 0’ Connor, New Orleans. *H. Garland Dupré, New Orleans. . *Whitmell P. Martin, Thibodaux. 25. *Edward E. Denison, Marion. At Large. *Richard Yates, Springfield. Henry R. Rathbone, Kenilworth. INDIANA. William E. Wilson, Evansville. Arthur H. Greenwood, Washington. Frank Gardner, Scottsburg. Harry C. Canfield, Batesville. . *Everett Sanders, Terre Haute. . *Richard N. Elliott, Connersville. . *Merrill Moores, Indianapolis. . *Albert H. Vestal, Anderson. . *Fred S. Purnell, Attica. . *William R. Wood, Lafayette. . Samuel E. Cook, Huntington. . *Louis W. Fairfield, Angola. . *Andrew J. Hickey, Laporte. S © 00S TA LOI 24786°—67-4—2p xp———83 0 NO Uti LOO = = COO = SO UU LO DO = * John N. Sandlin, Minden. *Riley J. Wilson, Harrisonburg. . *George K. Favrot, Baton Rouge. . *Ladislas Lazaro, Washington. . * James B. Aswell, Natchitoches. MAINE. . *Carroll 1.. Beedy, Portland. . *Wallace H. White, jr., Lewiston. . *John E. Nelson, Augusta. *Ira G. Hersey, Houlton. MARYLAND. *T. Alan Goldsborough, Denton. Millard E. Tydings, Havre de Grace. . *John Philip Hill, Baltimore. . *J. Charles Linthicum, Baltimore. . *Sydney E. Mudd, La Plata. . ¥Frederick N. Zihlman, Cumberland. MASSACHUSETTS. 1. *Allen T. Treadway, Stockbridge. IOWA. 2. *Frederick H. Gillett, Springfield. 3. *Calvin D. Paige, Southbridge. 1. *William F. Kopp, Mount Pleasant. 4. *Samuel E. San ong Worcester. 2. *Harry E. Hull, Williamsburg. 5. *John Jacob Rogers, Lowell. 3. T. J.B. Robinson, Hampton. 6. *A. Piatt Andrew, Gloucester. 4. *Gilbert N. Haugen, Northwood. 7. William P. Connery, jr., Lynn. 5. *Cyrenus Cole, Cedar Rapids. 8. *Frederick W. Dallinger, Cambridge 6. *C. William Ramseyer Bloomfield. 9. *Charles L. Underhill, AR : 7. *Cassius C. Dowell, Des Moines. 10. *Peter F. Tague, Boston. 8. *Horace M. Towner, Corning. 11. *George Holden Tinkham, Boston. 9. *William R. Green, Council Bluffs. 12. * James A. Gallivan, Boston. 10. *L. J. Dickinson, Algona. 13. *Robert Luce, Waltham. 11. *William D. Boies, Sheldon. 14. *Louis A. Frothingham, Easton. 15. *William S. Greene, Fall River. KANSAS. 16. Charles L. Gifford, Barnstable. T. “ponle] R. Anthony, jr., Leaven- MICHIGAN. worth. : 2. *Edward C. Little, Kansas City. a Ley, Debate. 3. W. H. Sproul, Sedan. Sn Bl ichener Han. * Vi - . . . . , . 4. *Homer Hoch, Marion. ry “ pun, Onaglotee = 5 *James G. Strong, Blue Rapids. : Cn Stoo, aNITRaS: - hr: : . *Carl E. Mapes, Grand Rapids. 6. *Hays B. White, Mankato. Cant M. Bad Eni Ione 7. *J. N. Tincher, Medicine Lodge. I ase, fash Jansing R.. FT William A. Ayres, Wichita, > x *louis 0. Cramton, Lapeer. = ae Te shal : : Bird J. Vincent, Saginaw. 1. * Alben W. Barkley, Paducah. - (Frank D. Scott, Alpena. 2. *David H. Kincheloe, Madisonville. - *W. Frank James, Hancock. 3. *Robert Y. Thomas, jr., Central City. - Clarence J. McLeod, Detroit. 4. *Ben Johnson, Bardstown. : 5. Maurice H. Thatcher, Louisville. To 6. * Arthur B. Rouse, Burlington. 1. *Sydney Anderson, Lanesboro. 7. * James C. Cantrill, Georgetown. 2. *Frank Clague, Redwood Falls. 8. *Ralph Gilbert, Shelbyville. 3. *Charles R. Davis, St. Peter. 9. *Walliam J. Fields, Olive Hill. 4. *Oscar E. Keller, St. Paul. 10. *John W. Langley, Pikeville. 5. *Walter H. Newton, Minneapolis. 11. *John M. Robsion, Barbourville. 6. *Harold Knutson, St. Cloud. 498 ; Congressional Directory. | | MINNESOTA—continued. : NEW JERSEY—continued. 7. 0.J. KvaLg, Benson. 7. George N. Seger, Passaic. 8. *¥Oscar J. Larson, Duluth. 8. Frank J. McNulty, Newark. 9. KNUD WEFALD, Hawley. 9. tDanvel F. Minahan, Orange. 10. *Thomas D. Schall, Minneapolis. 10. *Frederick R. Lehlbach, Newark. 11..1Jokn J. Eagan, Weehawken. MISSISSIPPI. 12. *Charles F. X. O’Brien, Jersey City. ’ 1. *John E. Rankin, Tupelo. 2. *B. G. Lowrey, Blue Mountain. ly Gi 3. *Benjamin G. Humphreys, Greenville At Large. 4. Jeff Busby, Houston. 5. *Ross A. Collins, Meridian. John Morrow, Raton. i 6. T. Webber Wilson, Laurel. i 7 Percy E. Quin, McComb City. NEW YORK. 8. *James W. Collier, Vicksburg. 1. Rober: li: Baden, Westiry: 3. George W. Lindsay, Brooklyn. 1. 1M. A. Romjue, Macon. 4. *Thomas H. Cullen, Brooklyn. 2. Ralph F. Lozier, Carrollton. 5. Loring M. Black, jr., Brooklyn 3. Jacob L. Milligan, Richmond. 6. Charles I. Stengle, Brooklyn. | 4. *Charles L. Faust, St. Joseph. 7. John F. Quayle, Brooklyn. 7 5. Henry L. Jost, Kansas City. 8. tT Willvam E. Cleary, Brooklyn. \ ‘6. tC. C. Dickinson, Clinton. 9. tDavid J. O’ Connell, Brooklyn. 7. 1Samuel C. Major, Fayette. 10. Emanuel Celler, Brooklyn. 8. *Sidney C. Roach, Linn Creek. 11. *Daniel J. Riordan, New York City. 9. Clarence Cannon, Troy. 12. Samuel Dickstein, New York City. 10. *Cleveland A. Newton, St. Louis. 13. iy D. Sullivan, New York ; | 11. *Harry B. Hawes, St. Louis. Cit 12. *Leonidas C. Dyer, St. Louis. 14. *N ation D. Perlman, New York City. | 13. J. Scott Wolff, Festus. 15. John J. Boylan, New York City. 14. James F. Fulbright, Doniphan, 16. *W. Bourke Cockran, New York Tity. : 15. Joe J. Manlove, Joplin. 17. *Ogden L. Mills, New York City. : 16. {Thomas L. Rubey, Lebanon. 18. * John F. Carew, New York City. 19. [Vacancy.]! MONTANA. 20. THe H. La Guardia, New York = ity : | lm a Maou 21. Royal H. Weller? New York City. - scott Leavitt, Great Falls. 29. *dnihony ¥; Grifin, New York City. 23. Frank Olwer, Bronx. | Nrnhas 24. tJames V. Ganly, Bronx. 1. John H. Morehead, Falls City. 25. J. Mayhew Wainwright, Rye. 3 2. W. G. Sears, Omaha. 26. *Hamilton Fish, 2. Garrison. j 3. Edgar Howard, Columbus. 27. *Charles B. Ward, Debruce. i 4. *Melvin O. McLaughlin, York. 28. Parker Corning, Bethlehem. J | 5. tA. C. Shallenberger, Alma. 29. *James S. Parker, Salem. i 6. Robert G. Simmons, Scottsbluff, 30. *Frank Crowther, Schenectady. | 31. *Bertrand H. Snell, Potsdam. NEVADA. 32. *Luther W. Mott, Oswego. 33. *Homer P. Snyder, Little Falls. At Large. 34. Hom D St Fraser. . 35. alter W. Magee, Syracuse. , Charles F. Richards, Reno. 36. John Taber, 2 7 NEW HAMPSHIRE. 37. Gale H. Stalker, Elmira. 38. Meyer Jacobstein, Rochester. 1. William N. Rogers, Sanbornville. 39. *Archie D. Sanders, Stafford. 2. ¥*Edward H. Wason, Nashua. 40. *S. Wallace Dempsey, Lockport. 41. *Clarence MacGregor, Buffalo. 1 NEW JERSEY. 42. * James M. Mead, Buffalo. = g : | 1. nals F. Patterson, jr., Camden. 43. "Daniel A. R eed, Dunkirk. 2. *Isaac Bacharach, Atlantic City. (ORT 3. Elmer H. Geran, Matawan. a hehe Bs 4. Charles Browne, Princeton. 1. *Hallett S. Ward, Washington. 5. *Ernest R. Ackerman, Plainfield. 2. *Claude Kitchin, Scotland Neck. 6. *Randolph Perkins, Woodcliff Lake. 3. Charles L. Abernethy, New Bern. 1 Caused by the death of the Hon. Samuel Marx, November 29, 1922. \ 2 Contest. Recount. : 3 | Unofficial List of Members. 499 | NORTH CAROLINA—continued. PENNSYLVANIA—continued. 14. + Martin L. Davey, Kent. 15. *C. Ellis Moore, Cambridge. 16. John McSweeney, Wooster. RHODE ISLAND. 4. *Edward W. Pou, Smithfield. 9. *Henry W. Watson, Langhorne. ] 5. *Charles M. Stedman, Greensboro. 10. *William W. Griest, Lancaster. 6. * Homer L. Lyon, Whiteville. 11. Laurence H. Watres, Scranton. | 7. *William C. Hammer, Asheboro. 12. tJohn J. Casey, Wilkes-Barre. | 8. *Robert L. Doughton, Laurelsprings. | 13. George F. Brumm, Minersville. ’ 9. *A4lfred L. Bulwinkle, Gastonia. 14. William M. Croll, Reading. 10. *Zebulon Weaver, Asheville. 15. *Louis T. McFadden, Canton. 16. *Edgar R. Kiess, Williamsport. NORTH DAKOTA. 17. Herbert W. Cummings, Sunbury. 1. *Olger B. Burtness, Grand Forks. 3 Town. ; co Moat iu mon. | : 2. *George M. Young, Valley City. Bh LL \ 3. *James H. Sinclair, Kenmare 20. George M. Wertz, Johnstown. : : : ; 21. J. Banks Kurtz, Altoona. OHIO. 22. Samuel I. Glatfelter, York. ) 23. William I. Swoope, Clearfield. 1. *Nicholas Longworth, Cincinnati. 24. *Samuel A. Kendall, Meyersdale. 2. *A. E. B. Stephens, North Dend. 25. *Henry W. Temple, Washington. 3. *Roy G. Fitzgerald, Dayton. 26. Thomas W. Phillips, jr., Butler. 4. *John L. Cable, Lima. 27. *Nathan IL. Strong, Brookville. 5. *Charles J. Thompson, Defiance. 28. *Harris J. Bixler, Johnsonburg. | : 6. *Charles C. Kearns, Batavia. 29. *Milton W. Shreve, Erie. ! 7. Charles Brand, Urbana. 30. Everett Kent, Bangor. : 8. *R. Clint Cole, Findlay. 31. *Adam M. Wyant, Greensburg. | 9. {Isaac R. Sherwood, Toledo. 32. *Stephen G. Porter, Pittsburgh. 10. *Israel M. Foster, Athens. 33. *M. Clyde Kelly, Swissvale. | 11. Mell G. Underwood, New Lexington. | 34. *John M. Morin, Pittsburgh. | 12. *John C. Speaks, Columbus. 35. James M. Magee, Pittsburgh. | t 13. *James T. Begg, Sandusky. 36. *Guy E. Campbell, Crafton. | | 17. *W. M. Morgan, Newark. 1. *Clark Burdick, Newport. 18. *Frank Murphy, Steubenville. 2. Richard 8. Aldrich, Warwick. 19. *John G. Cooper, Youngstown. 3. Jeremiah E. O’Connell, Providence. 20. {Charles A. Mooney, Cleveland. J 21. TRobert Crosser, Cleveland. ; SOUTH CAROLINA. i 22. *Theodore E. Burton, Cleveland. : : *W. Turner Logan, Charleston. OKLAHOMA. . TEverett B. Howard, Tulsa. . TWilliam W. Hastings, Tahlequah. . *Charles D. Carter, Ardmore. tTom McKeown, Ada. *F. B. Swank, Norman. Elmer Thomas, Medicine Park. . *James V. McClintic, Snyder. M. C. Garber, Enid. OREGON. . *Willis C. Hawley, Salem. . *Nicholas J. Sinnott, The Dalles. Elton Watkins, Portland. 00 ~I OD UT LO hO H LOND = PENNSYLVANIA.! . *William S. Vare, Philadelphia. . *George S. Graham, Philadelphia. . *Harry C. Ransley, Philadelphia. . *James J. Connolly, Philadelphia. George A. Welsh, Philadelphia. *George P. Darrow, Philadelphia. . *Thomas S. Butler, West Chester. = 00 OOH ON State redistricted. . *George W. Edmonds, Philadelphia. © © 00 ~T > TT LO BO = jay . *James F. Byrnes, Aiken. . * Fred H. Dominick, Newberry. *John J. McSwain, Greenville. . *Walliam F. Stevenson, Cheraw. A. H. Gasque, Florence. . *Hampton P. Fulmer, Norway. SOUTH DAKOTA. . *Charles A. Christopherson, Sioux Falls. . *Royal C. Johnson, Aberdeen. . *William Williamson, Oacoma. TENNESSEE. . *B. Carroll Reece, Butler. . *J. Will Taylor, La Follette. S. D. McReynolds, Chattanooga. . Cordell Hull, Carthage. * Ewin L. Davis, Tullahoma. * Joseph W. Byrns, Nashville. Ww. C. Salmon, Columbia. Gordon Browning, Huntingdon. . * Finis J. Garrett, Dresden. . *Hubert F. Fisher, Memphis. 500 Congressional Directory. ! | | TEXAS. VIRGINIA—continued. | 1. *Bugene Black, Clarksville. 8. *R. Walton Moore, Fairfax. 2. *John C. Box, Jacksonville. 9. George C. Peery, Tazewell. | 3. * Morgan G. Sanders, Canton. 10. *Henry St. George Tucker, Lexington. - 4. *Sam Rayburn, Bonham. . | 5. * Hatton W. Summers, Dallas. WASHINGTON. 6. Luther A. Johnson, Corsicana. . 1 7- *Clay Stone Briggs, Galveston. > Chis i oats 8. “Daniel E. Garrett, Houston. 3. *Albert Johnson, Hoquiam. ® 9. * Joseph J. Mansfield, Columbus. ns Aan 3 : 4. *John W. Summers, Walla Walla. 10. * James P. Buchanan, Brenham. 5. 23. Stanley Webster. Spokans 11. *Tom Connally, Marlin. Dulles oy pep : 12. * Fritz GQ. Lanham, Fort Worth. TIA. 13. *Guinn Walliams, Decatur. Rony 14. *Harry M. Wurzbach, Seguin. 1. *Benjamin L. Rosenbloom, Wheeling. 15. * John N. Garner, Uvalde. 2. R. BE. L. Allen, Morgantown. 16. *C. B. Hudspeth, El Paso. 3. *Stuart F. Reed, Clarksburg. 17. * Thomas L. Blanton, Abilene. 4. G. W. Johnson, Parkersburg. 18. * Marvin Jones, Amarillo. 5. Thomas J. Lilly, Hinton. 6. J. Alfred Taylor, Fayetteville. UTAH. WISCONSIN. 4 1. *Don B. Colton, Vernal. > ; 2. *Elmer O. Leatherwood, Salt Lake | 1. *Henry Allen Cooper, Racine. City. 2. *Edward Voigt, Sheboygan. 3. *John M. Nelson, Madison. VERMONT. 4. John C. Schafer, Wauwatosa. : = 5. 1 VICTOR L. BERGER, Milwaukee. 1. Frederick G. Fleetwood, Morrisville. | ¢. orion Lampert, Oshkosh. Lid 2. *Porter H. Dale, Island Pond. 7. “Joseph D. Beck, Viroqua. : 8. *Edward E. Browne, Waupaca. | VIRGINS. 9, Mil V ; Schuetder, Appleton. 1. *Schuyler Otis Bland, N t News. | 10. *James A. Frear, Hudson. 9. * Jose ’ 7 or evel h Hubert H. Peavey, Washburn. 3. *Andrew J. Montague, Richmond. 3 4. *Patrick Henry Drewry, Petersburg. WYOMING. 5. *J. M. Hooker, Stuart. At Large. 6. Clifton A. Woodrum, Roanoke. 7. *Thomas W. Harrison, Winchester. Charles E. Winter, Casper. | | ak Maps of Congressional Districts. ALABAMA. Q ; LAMAR o a © com 0 mm 0 wm 0 wpm 0 of PICKENS WASHINGTON { midealbndded MOBILE FRANKLIN St mlelinid +> #, 3 ) QREENE ¢ bey 4 CHILTON © Sr cn da ~ T ! | > LAUDERDALE 4 | 3 “ : § Limestone | ] : ~~ is ve 0 i MADISON ( JACKSON coLeert Tu, 8 i \ j CO La Via} o | ; LAWRENCE . > / MORGAN $ MAREHALL i DEKALB / i : i i / AW ti CHEROKEE : WINSTON cuLLman ae sd § ETOWAH \ 5 i / Ee Ean Se ~° BLOUNT {p= nN, g J gl y “, vd - ! res CALHOUN 1 ST. CLAIR + WALKER 0 cy : » owe ./CLEBURNE T™ FAYETTE i JEFFERSON TUSCALOOSA SHELEY 5 A Ng a [] . COOBA kraLLAPOOSA] CHAMBERS I Ie ELMORE AUTAUGA AWARD ©, MONTGOMER LOWNDES COFFEE er PALS ovo emo HOUSTON GENEVA — no En So [=] >» re m - a_— mem ey ESCAMBIA ] ; § 501 BALDWIN 502 Congressional Directory. ARIZONA. (One at large.) Z : | § | i I | ~~ yi | { promod rd MOHAVE =~. 4 ! 3 : NAVAJO ! Sw. APACHE i fx amons Lom i ¢ YAVAPAI i | | } | gi=_.} | a TE eo me — oR oo mma — \ I \ : | om bet § QILA 1 vd \ ; dons | © Ss ps a | & I : \ sent PL & _—_— \. A) \& | PINAL \ QRAHAM Ne | \ EE N PIMA i | oacHIse Pe -j j ne santa crUZ | | 4 { UNION \ { ' 7 = i | ~ i i BENTON { carrowL . S FULTON i CLAY Fy | 800NE | yacion < BAXTER i RANDOLPH Fi Ethel 7 \ | i 3 rem d i~ ~ ri mT be TAN i bn : hn SI { ETT { 1ZARD sdare GREENE i MADISO i ite Y { i LAWRENCE : N x \ J Y . WABHINGTON ¢ ; | 3 7 i RER on fe : i 7 NEWTON seacy Ulery, | bpmrenay of A . i . STONE ~ reli us deh oo i 4 L ? i FA) % 7 CRAIGHEAD ‘ A H wl oo. ._DINDEPENDENCE / | MISSISSIPPI i 5 i eto a vt meri =i 4 « } VAN BUREN : FUACKSON Jounson ciesurne Loo 0.) ; POINSETT. | = y T=}. POPE i to “ ! fe) fre i = Bhagne Ek Ty i conway j cross ; SEBASTIAN | i ; / : WHITE lcriTTENDEN] 2 fe orl ) FAULKNER WOODRUFF iron ae seam co ee “ bee lr . Q HEE oT YELL / / r ~~ .— ST.FRANCIS | PERRY \ ire i A | few (=) SCOTT 4 J a tot amr ums mas se et S PULASKI ) | = Q - * Lonoke § PRAIRIE LEE 5 Jd ! { | PHILLIPS Jf wn 2 PETG Ue Li i Y : > { l | JEFFERSON ARKANSAS apd Soli oN ; hr 5 {(HowARD! Ke c—— | 06 [a PN L 7 >, : . on / y SEVIER | | J oo rl i & ~ ) DALLAS \ ! Ru) ~ ? { \ I uUNCOLN | bes s. h y . CLEVELAND | 2 IVR 3 be = Pa @ . 7 DESHA ° LITTLE RIVER | i DREW MILLER i CHICOT § COLUMBIA ASHLEY | | i $ €0g 504 Congressional Directory. CALIFORNIA. : b Tat i © 8IBKIYO i | u MODOC ! “ i b \ i 1 | ’ aoa celia - ra “ i Pf JS SHASTA LABSEN b TRINITY 2 2 * )) 2 rn Rod 1 TUOLUMNE § mono 2 3) °° 5 or? . * o—o w= Pl. — & a Ss oo Qo 0 2 came | LNT & 15 | INYO IJ Tulse / : J Kinas { Je ee wes — KERN @8AN BERNARDINO ANTA 8 cL BARBARA | ; AvoELES iT 9 — %, \ 2 RIVERSIDE \ EN d |MPERIAL AN DIEGO T T : ! T T ! ™ 1 | sepawick | 3 i Ba - MOFFAT od / JACKSON foi ropa i i WELD i | PHILLIPS mrs ALL BF wis VA i ACM Ga cy | Rn : | rm ee ae i i ! | ] Ty | i MORGAN | i ; pa GRAND ! | i N RIO BLANCO I [ : Sg wy ] YUMA Q red eee { r = pn Em | i ADAMS 12 WASHINGTON | [7 ett mtn { [\ } | i ! EAGLE AE NE ia | = : ARAPAHOE y : GARFIELD | hats Denver — —————— — — torre ee Ti LT ME : = Q / ce’ | : | o . (=) - . DOUGLAS » ELBERT | i KIT CARSON S In PITKIN i | | ~ SEEN SR { Lake u i i o ES MESA Ke J = ol Ta mee — ee 3 i - p pg ! = H 1 = [va] - Jp oEiva | d i_._._j LINCOLN > % 1 1 °) EL PASO i CHEYENNE - I ES GUNNISON X i 3 ! i vu i Qo S os nee see a a? . \ ! . ° =v MONTROSE 1 : FREMONT | . ] KIOWA =) CUR No i ! CROWLEY | Ta pera i ve Wi Ik NS : PUEBLO i he | i i 2 . ~g ° 1 SAN Maes Xn a; AinsDALE | SAQUACHE % CUSTER i 3 i “i i ' h ) fd wt hy \, ™ Jd 1 | BENT | PROWERS Q ot cM / -— . RUE H OTER0 i 5, Li } WE * “Pe ! { i ° DOLORES ; Sea Pat SO i | { 8AN sua NEL ] 4 HUERFANO ¢ i BR ih 7 1 ! aLamosa Fy / Lemme mle i i RIO GRANDE { Ga | 7 i / 1 i id $ ar i MONTEZUMA / A — od A» i BACA J LAPLATA ! 2 LAS ANIMAS i i I ARCHULETA CONEJOS \ Sosynad 1 i | i / i i \ { cog Ot i << 1d | S ; oo ame == { | | TOLLAND i WinDHAM 1 { HARTFORD \ CITCHFIEL| ; ye | * Hartford vJ on “ey 7 2 9 a S . p— 4 =~0 oo, oe a SS % : \ o = I ad es? [V3 s 2 X? pi \ Z . ¢ oe 3 = vu Jd i NEW LONDON a 3 MIDDLESEX \ = aQ =, w= “fi4030243(] JOUO FAIRFIELD 4 J aan aa ET a a eS Maps of Congressional Districts. DELAWARE (One at large.) NEW CASTLE * Dover | KENT eam irs is oP SUSSEX 507 508 Congressional Directory. FLORIDA. - CI H pd NASSAU 5 i iy = aansoen J Pg 2 7 I a = ! WALTON ¢ NG ON ome 7 S Ss! \ HAMILTON \ 4 S y* } FET - LEONE & ) MADISON \ =. ; «| R & Lemar] Ll: sh & L yf ¢ Suet & tpakenff OUVA- GC i BAY 3 il & 7 Air ¢ my, _.f % ] 3 i "{ a : | S78 N\wakua f # 2 : %, [$e =n gam Sd > JAVLOR N.® Lo (BRADFORDY CLAY NA ] 8 —— . NA Jen i %, t J FRANKLIN \ & FNS fe CTT J / © { p i } & 4 ALACHUA (>) Fra { 7 EINELLAS ~§ DE §0TO PALM BEACH BROWARD Maps of Congressional Districts. 509 GEORGIA. CHATTOOGA/ 5 st ~l — ob iL a 4 ( 4 J DAWSONY % 3 4 { “HALL BANKS \, A “FLOYD J gaRTOW [| CHEROKEE ForsYTH] Pr 3 z g ' EX fC ncrsON A wr, Re vo vate NY > 1 x / L J awinnerT \ BARROW cm —pautoinal HARALSONZ PFU 1" Ton! DEKAL STEWART wee SUMTER ee R § — ( Sn j ob 3 Town BUN 3 { + foo .—. FANNIN 3 : RA OADES 22) La 7; > & x Ed A union Sd f a * ) esp EIN J WALKER i ae Naif } | . / bg ET aumer \ fo” yrely HABER cine ~. 8 J cn fein a i comer) > Mee 5 /% GORDON So ee Ne =e — Ng : #§ PICKENS ne 7 \, HANCOCK ~ \ ALOWIN) AC \ JEFFERSON ™ WASHINGTON , ~. od 7) 72 "JENKINS ’ N, WILKINSON‘) \ HOUSTON Pp i o, LAURENS 3 °\, \ “ DODGE of xe) {WHEELER a i STER} SN > Aon wea’ je ~4 crisp TELFAIR Quit | y + — 4 a 1 | TERREL i en sed TABEN HILL f © RANDOLPH \ 1 TURNER Snort me 0 H : up | IRWIN, COFFEE CLAYE catnoun ) DOUGHERTY i WORTH i 8 Ha H Shieh 8 a i eet’ > Nectar} i i 5, = / c0 eariy | anen = Loermen § ATKINSON, or” PIERCE | oLYNN Se ; : pi L. 7 a => A 7 MITCHELL 3 H 4 WARE 1 Fi i mer VV 7 coLQuITT COOK '~ \ i 2. \ No : 4 A 2 N SN deme -—— -— ane ) \ i, } 2 TT hp Rie) Sei : 4 i 3 : ‘CLINCH i / n i \_ LOWNDES ¢ Nod CAMDE DECATUR i SHADY \ Piouns 3 sroons. |) ra Y i CHARLTON ) : 4 - i i 2 ( ~. Slt i i \ y ECHOLS Dec B Nes 3 1 : 5 510 * BOUNDARY Rew temee’s suns 8 we BONNER rE £9 NEZ PERCE { ~. OWYHEE - ren 8 met semen 8 tem meme By nN VALLEY IN = it Congressional Directory. IDAHO. CUSTER J » BLAINE om, i a A) Ren aE : - i i 0! Ly ! . od i > BONNEVILLE a. i. i , ; 2] JEROME Ny ; “ POWER YW aannock yo eed Fe CLARK - eo FREMONT + MADISON ¢,. (CN | Top I~ . a, RE mint |vEFFERSON ne BINGHAM - Lo. rte -— . yo 3 | h ty CARIBOU \.~ or \ 7) | ~~ | i 3 : TWIN FALLS } — oA, + ==—s, BEAR jw ! CASSIA + JT) ake ! ! | ONEIDA FRANKLIN | | } i | | | ! I ILLINOIS. { : (Two at large.) | | i Maps of Congressional Districts. 511 | | * MARSHALL L : . Es ' LIVINGSTON # PEORIA f/ WOODFORD A Hep Ogg ; So, Fo © em © ON °° Wy Png, Laan] : | & roQuos [] d BEd 18 4 N es ee I'd i 17 isis | Nd a : MCLEAN . : LO FULTON & TAZEWELL § c - # nancock] oP Fo 3 i H 2 | . S$ > i ° / 3 DEWITT CHAMPAIGNE & ¥ | SCHUYLER g# iPIATT| Fg etary ; Ys yr om Bis eee oP Springfield * MACON il pr —_ _MORGANE SANGAMON 3 °- /j- poucias /. ’% | 14 EDAAR i i ceed TC — mo | | ; LN Gl i ee CHRISTIAN “ev %{ COLES 1 = ; : LE A a = ] ranooLpHl perry S$ : I FRANKLINE YX ¢ PULASKI ; : i 512 Congressional Directory. INDIANA. | | [] LA Ten i ¢ «tire Sm fom mse i NOBLE | pekaLB HOWARD Ap | CLINTON i TIPTON 9 MARION 2 of © WAYNE HELBY JERE) hate & j > FRANKLIN BH come © crsen. : | [PECATU [] . all LJ Lo : J 1 ‘RANDOLPH ! BOONE Costa | ¥ 1 nn [3 a aw] i Nd & j Swirzer f HE Ka ken JEFFERSON knox {pAviess! & BX... < jo = ea lh . oo re ORANGE| L2- CLARK . 3 Ns DUBOIS bowen — TY. by v2 ° “4 : { §X+arricoN | | | ¥8—a% Ag—F—L9—,98L¥C v 1] 1 I 1] ° o [| ° . L] i y < ¥ LYON : osceora foickinson EMMET | ! <5 WORTH f mircuery ! nowaro! & : a Sp | H fas . | 1 & | ALLAMAKEE 0 cs © cos © fen @ azn mmo Fail -— 0 enn @ . . 1 i * kossuTH | foie Tammy “l EN : sioux | osrien | cay BeaLo aLtd { HANCOCK } cove | 3 Cw il CE | i o GORDO | Ly i ' in : Te ® ute 0 ey Pom 0 ads 0 anes 0 cw © offs @ ee © Dam © 3 a ase i 1 j ! BUENA i [ pres] ei i PLYMOUTH CHEROKEE} o& |HumsoLoT WalCHs SrRANRtan } auTiER § SREVER i = { + VISTA & k=] 0- 4 ) 3 i I] Biimtendentiot XT IEE SCEP RIN LN | i samm 0 anne i & i | Ss i a u ¥ |BUCHANAN.DELAWARE] DUBUQUE 2 : : hE L &£ i Q WOODBURY | ia | sac fcaumoun|weBsTER pon HARDIN § GRUNDY 2.4 i i i iy . ie ei od J i Waa ) S v oo pai gs 3. i i . JACKSON = a] produit he = + § NONA me : CRAWFORD + canroL | GREENE BOONE § STORY massuath) YAMA | SENTON J (HNN i rm. 0 foe o 3 ; i ! 1 . | | way CLINTON 2 2 PY LJ ] gr -p » Se. i it. : 7 : b CEDAR =’ New . 2 HA 1d Q . 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AVOYELLES H 4 - LV WEST ] | . + ard bh SNEeemuA) ey har \ wagHinaToN | i . “ - | FELICIANA Muetenaj \ { A 3 | BEAUREQARD Ya [EVANGEL INEY POINTE Jf" 7 my | | % ’ COUPEE j ST fr ti FY H y _j ST. LANDRY / V BATON ¢ Lo = ; 3 = eo 1s\ROUGE [ko ny — \ H * TN. BATON * 2 LIVINGSTON Lomond be pT 1 Vex, JRE HO Ly . , E, ACADIA "a, CALCASIEU h 04, Rs, 3 y rg g \IBERVILLE {rscension, rb Pp TT - CAMERON “YRovck J R < Baton Rouge x s \.Z BERNARDS TERREBONNE Maps of Congressional Districts. 517 | : MAINE. | | AROOSTOOK | rm rm | | | bs | | | ( ! } 4 PISCATAQUIS | : 2 i ¢ \ fa ® ERY | } 1 + | f/f § SOMERSET # 5 — ) { ! : \ ™\{ | ; { PENOBECOT : od \ eer : : \ FRANKLIN § a 3 i I . : g - | i ' \ WASHINGTON thes 3S y | } cf \ 3 a S ; : HANCOCK \ \ ~ —, i ; p \ AV | Jj WALpbo \ | OXFORD i _& KENNEBeEC [ ASS "OF 2 ~ % Augusta zg Fm, £5, / S : i % | eh, ~7 0» . 4 A e : | / 8 @ pu | [od VaR £ [sag [Linconp | \ TL 2) 9 » ! 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FB IONIA | od | Re’ & {CLAIR < ie — a ed rE ee) | hy Lansing S1%%, o, t ALLEGAN :BARRY[EATONE Or | & Mol [ 4735S E > = } VAN § KALA . i ALH H . unenMAZOOK ALHOUNpIACKSON, Ro Ng AND 18 — ST =e c . ) > ST. ol © | CASS |, ceri x i ENAWEE! H 1 v2 SS | Maps of Congressional Districts. 521 lJ MINNESOTA. KiTrson | ROSEAU i a Rs | | MARSHALL, i 4 mgs wa + ws BELTRAMI KOOCHICHING | | PENNINGTON { ————— { ipfsoeme 17] gra] Ei is 3 i i 3 Lim . POLK =>. 13 9 5 ITASCA aT. Lowa —c mime mim Jef 7, = i i > Phe wes wees” . I & 1 i NORMAN so. 2 {= | . int H H 1 tw 522 et es moet mm Vee wn ol fi BECKER oF i Gass CLAY | 6 i = i ed 7 an a pif nd «l t 5 i Lh \ £ { AITKIN CAR &F i H 3 . OTTERTAIL ! Ea promt; & | ro bee PINE ' TooD | t | : MORRISON | RANT jo0vanas i Ee RE Bl r i i \ senTON i ; “=srtevens! POPE STEARNS ( ar Cs, L. “SHERBURNE i Ely Ar os ne Bm 5 Pe i ) NG SWIFT HENNEPIN = PART OF N= — — 2g 19 & LYON & \. YELLOW MEDICINE REDWOOD ee) PIPE ' ROCK | NOBLES | | | IRE pp HS : : stone | MURRAY | cotton | Tr, ol _.1. 0 won| an Shy] dome mt oe te ince b4 a 1 — 2) PRE BROWN 1 i ! : JACKSON | mARTIN {FARIBAULT | FREEBORN i tower | FILLMOR i zw 3 i H jBLUE EARTH ASEoARTEaLY DODGE 522 Congressional Directory. MISSISSIPPI. p. > MARSHALL | I TIPPA SRR he OE soT0 Lf T¥ToNg ALCORN | s dpa, § & & [| TATE 3 I aa i i | TuncAy ih iy 1 ! - Sons Q ——_ | i PANOLA LAFAYETTE | J coaroma [| auiTman | , Po ame 2 PONTOTOC | mv) J | | i L YALOBUSHA | * sys sve w Ji td i + § TALLAHATCHIE i ll | [me ey SALHOUN cinaSan ] noR i A BOLIVAR 3 om] GRENADA 4 r ii \ ! ou a. . | ~ Ha Se — | We | FFloweri ; | WEBSTER i | = He | LEFLORE § i = i ‘ LOY nT ! 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WARREN f L..y SCOTT | NEWTON | LAUDERDALE HINDS J RANKIN BY y. » CLAIBORNE f : SIMPSON i COPIAH S fae Spey El : A JEFFERSON fe, . | | : ; A mid JONES | WAYNE : | } Lincoun DCSE i , ADAMS i FRANKLIN | il LF a] nite satel EE ¥. » ye et i i GEORGE PEARL RIVER | Sion fit | Sis rd | er [] JACKSON 4 HARRISON HANCOCK , T | Bt H a] WORTH i PUTNAM 1 | Wi UN MERCER j scoTLano HARRISON : reer nen QENTRY SULLIVAN ADAIR § GRUNDY i KNOX Lewis ] DAVIESS 2 | \ DEKALB LINN MACON ¥ 0. sHELBY | FIL iii 2 i CALDWELL] il CLINTON Fy nib 4 {CHARITON | monroe = Ite CARROLL stil fe] RAY : cay = | AUDRAIN : , (7) 5 SALINE {HOWARD comer () &] uncon S & 1 LAFAYETTE J BOONE i i Sa == JACKSON y Ch tant is v= Xerapee’ 3 cooper IN, © i wAmRew ler. chanies 3 ™ / \ on” ™ | S JOHNSON PETTIS fmm. — Fite) din i) S i ! 3 4 som case. 3 7 Lpuirgsy is Jefferson City 1 [2] Q —- ~ J. fp) 9 _ fl C4 osace $ ; FRANKLIN 0 3 ey MORGAN Ft ) =e od) mena r feetecis’d i () @ BENTON § i | ! va) Aves 2 C3 rn Ame MILLER MARIES ; =} SS. i reer = S { o7. ciam CAMDEN {CRAWFORDRWASHING TON] Lo Q bs 3 HICKORY PHELPS } ° ro— ! : PULASKI + cm ocho mms FRANCOIS™. 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WASHOE °° [ ! | [ : IN ge — MINERAL hS NYE HUMBOLDT ELKO SE rat lr N | Lr ns hr i) PERSHING / \ / ; \ = fil fi oT LANDER | EUREKA ) \ | : CHURCHILL ) i } i | i WHITE PINE / i | % aL oD my mir ~ i >, > SN N RS het LINCOLN - SS > SE 5 CE—— S tem— Em 0 Seam tm mm mm me 527 = =< < 2 LY - E— CT © CEE © CE— © S— GE— — C— esm— © S * = (&) | 5 >, 2 { XR . Rg) | = \ $009 ges 0) as! WR Ta SIR RT Ee eR i, SRR CTR Je Tans ag EE re | S [5] ~. | . Sy, | & Ba ! ——, $ p= Nps ra i f > < \ i w 5 | g = 3 SL Via, tz i 2 3 odin, 1 3 S = \ od TIRES mE 9, 128 NA@vs- hE Ss 2 \ " GERD QS Z ry bas ForEzE eee SIE =! < =. 5 & \ BS ws So - S “——— i = See. I~) } Tre / My, Si p / 1/9 : Ry: N %, | ‘~~. [J o [ SE ® ) ® =, a), | es tr es gs 2 —_ 528 Congressional Directory. NEW JERSEY. WARREN MERCER Trenton Rat & BURLINGTON % | \\ CAMDEN < No \ GLOUCESTER '~ ~ 7 CUMBERLAND Maps of Congressional Districts. NEW MEXICO. 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PECOS 7 1 j SCHLEICHER Si (w) i & i JEFF DAVIS guney i : ial k " = +=s=k, CROCKETT afta ee EE LLANO 3 ! = ~ i ; ir ON Sk § 14 } QQ Sr (i H HARTLEY i MOORE i"inson i i SUTTON i KIMBLE ! = 3S 2 -} i i i tomtom emis mim dm GILLESPIE 4 > i PRESIDIO i OLDHAM j pores Loanson 1 ea J pede Renn > & ! | i BREWSTER AL VERDE EDWARDS f AR Ww ~, [} & I d REAL jeAnoEnA S DEAF SMITH |RANDALI DONLEY 5 | » ” = J { OK i H ) | ' 1 : : i KINNEY . j UVALDE ; MEDINA Q, PARMER | CASTRO | SWISHER | SRISCOE] nT SI i 4 i J. i 1 +, 3 | i AoKsoNY”’ > E : , : fs } i il 1% i , | zavaua i rrio [uaTaconor y = 1 ' ag A 1 i 2 ie Lame | HALE | FLovp Morey, oradl =H Ri SO I «x ! 1 1 ! Foro : + ! > yf 1 MH i, Le i ommit | Kz 3 i v PNR ac | 3 itasae x. 2® HockLEYLUBBOCK crosay! % | Kina 1 KNOX S Tu." of & I) CS | | I %; . L ad frthitir) SERRA h od rota) pain (ve) 7 I ! } i >i \ 5 . YOAKUM| TERRY | LYNN | GARZA | KENT | &% {HASKELL WEBS {rill : : <0 i ¢ DUVAL | L pbemgek L Rit EE : i | i QAINES | DAWSON soroe scum] FISHER | te TR EI 7 starr / Z. / HIDALGO 542 Congressional Directory. BOX ELDER YOOELE 2 RICH i J, 1] N Fld Rs © WEBER 4 J S jd Cd MORGAN , _f* 4 \ SUMMIT DAGGETT =o cm -— 7 — 3 Sor? pj ( SALT LAKE 4 =e [J > oy = J~-~ L) | DUCHESNE ’ UINTA ( UTAH fae a A N CARBON 7 rn i © nice 4 ie Se Sar hai 5 \ tn 4 ; ) = TAREE ON SR ~~ Cr ere ‘4 SANPETE 2 MILLARD in a es | 7 i x EMERY { GRAND = SEVIER 2 > — — be > Mone ® w—— © — C tt Ria we ek i i feb "BEAVER N pure r WAYNE S : mt itso i te 0 an lls 2 Tr = etn © er = — — Y—— — — — > — = ] WASHINGTON J i QARFIELD smd 4 BAN JUAN KANE J Maps of Congressional Districts. 543 VERMONT. | 7 | J \ PRANKLIN Y / ORLEANS : / . . a-— =, < / = Ts rl ov > ESSEX Nn il ; od ¢ A LAMOILLE / S \ wi / < CHITTENDEN =; CALEDONIA Pp ay, i | / | i 3 WASHINGTON i | Montpelier | ’ ~~ — ARIES ~ i rd . r ADDISON / -. 2 | ~~ - - bat | ~~, re vr ~~. \ , RUTLAND WINDSOR on» ED 0 EPO GEM 0 So jh TOURS mo BENNINGTON WINDHAM | I | | WISE i” cme ary rd scorr 3 LOUDOUN “~~. el ol, / eat oo > ER WE \83~Y = N /STA FFORD 3 ORANGEfSpPOTT SYLVANIA/ i, . LOUISA Nk oN Ly Gs { /; : ‘il ALLEGHANY / ROCKBRIDGE { NELSON ANOVER™'\, iL oS A LaniisTen ie, J iy PP poocruaar ~~. PINS MN, 2, / / ~ Ke. a N \ Me, I~ A BUCKINGHA em vf NEW A. ~--€ | AMHERST X PIRND> we lily, A ouAMATHEWS plo ed —— Richmond BrARLES AL cl genie AMELIA > Ry GILES RK \BUGHANAN 1 3 i Te \DICKEN Aa TAZEweLL C BLAND j.~ A_owar & DINWIDDIE i Vs IZABETH CITY SONY J in ; ol \ ~ [Trad os ee APULASKIY FRANKLIN CHARLOTTE NL LT fl RUSSELL A Ter [ ey I : ~~ UNENBURG] 4 Sz SUSSEX } i i \, smyTH 7} , 5 lerrreve | ERY Bia, NICH n \, PRINCESS : Col : — - VANIA | . BRN ek 2 INoRrFoLK) ANNE § vo i) CARROLL Al | | HAuFAX |, WICK | Su T : ) WASHINGTON “me=~’ PATRICK i MECKLENBURG) 1&3 { GRAYEON A $ HENRY ! ! JOS ‘VINIDJAIA 144 9) 018S24DUO0 “A000. (OU ans ho \ 1 i] BR | i J =~ ™, WHATCOM : z N { \ & IN A i S | ® a 0° © Em ¢ em 0 wm © os 0 wn En 0 cme — 4 i J PEND J | bY OKANOGAN L ( i OREILLE = ] Seagre \ team \ | 1) ih ., ! \ STEVENS i H 7 on Te ~- [3 = = \ \ BR ISLAN 1 * 3 = \ i SNOHOMISH ; | grind i pt Fm pS j eames ay A i] S) J CHELAN / 0 Ye JN <= J Ly) Ney < EEE BR ERY le i i ie ( ~" boucLas | ; b> I) =] y : 2 | SPOKANE =) KITSAP : ] LINCOLN ! [0)) 3 KING / : nn = i MASON : — z i - S omar 3 Al a 2. HARBOR | A Nm, . lc { GRANT i i S adi 4" Olympia 3 ( . { = S h * 0 PIERCE N., i l ADAMS § WHITMAN o S | THURSTON \ Sa 0 1 mrt 4 2 ~~ ce—— me A om ty i 1 K e j~b—--3 = om aio a . meme J SO r= { NLL FA it \ Ch ! 7 : i 1 1 GARFIELD Y, SS PACIFIC i Lewis | y FRANKLIN { i i oo 3 . : YAKIMA H | ! oS a ld a { Pd | coLumaia 1 ! iy Jai ! Ey i SI La ig os cowurz | j BENTON \ WALLA WALLA [i 1 | SKAMANIA . H 1 Yond o all i om © dum 0 Cm ® PE tts | p i i - KLICKITAT CLARKE i : ! 5 24 | | 2) 44 PLEASANTS MINERAL : Rs HAMPSHIRE J - { LEws Yaimer™ ‘VINIDIEIA LSHM Har by NICHOLAS \, *fid00943(] JOUOLSSILHUO)) 4 PA hl & J oo / { 8 Ne 2 MONROE — D . 4 g MCDOWELL BS MERCER “4 Maps of Congressional Districts. 5417 WISCONSIN, | Y ; | ear | | DOUGLAS a i | | : i iL, : Ee — tasanoymon . Eo 1 Tn [ i L mpd VILAS BURNETT iwasHBuRN; SAWYER i foe TT le orence Fo il i be utr |e: ae | pr — rd | ONEIDA § FOREST | i bm me my } 9 i POLK BARRON BE tn ga [i i Seem ave ¢ i 5 | LINCOLN d 3 i + MARINETTE | J f LANGLADE ; i TE — a TAYLOR 5 t-y = Bi pan wy ¢ ST CROIX [ | CHIPPEWA renner Fare > f& DUNN i OCONTO Sy — aie = I i Fr a Br MARATHON . SHAWANO PIERCE | EAU CLAIRE CLARK ] Sa i p= — FERN | i | { /T &f | | | Taree sia ! 8: | 2 | S f i i Sf 7 S| | J BUFFALO A Pj te. —.§ wooo {onvace [ 4pach OUTAGAMIE sews IC i ~ . i. a il VAY A 3 | & # uackson | Le heen | | dif Os < | oC, y Le a i's mom J J oO & ot |< J 5 ! WAUSHARA oF | S We ; = : ( aoams | | | To, MONROE | JUNEAU) ou | > 4 | So. + ; ol | > VERNON i= i § coLumela : sauk § : | oobce So | FiomLaND 3 : & I 2 of Ad Lo=~. ds 8 i } * Madison | | DANE L—- : EFFERSON = |] 1owa 3 i GRANT. fe fem t I = i i RACINE i LAFAYETTE , GREEN ROCK feashonvol_s msm z | | | KENOSHA | a ! i i cous 548 Congressional Directory. WYOMING. (One at large.) NIOBRARA. o c—- CEE © GE—0 CENO O Sm © CROOK WESTON aw dow © ts ® pen w Se «Buy was & 4 wy 1 = CAMPBELL CONVERSE ——mrem semen op emac em e e e SHERIDAN NATRONA Nils on tls md ie © WASHAKIE - ey BIGHORN A HOT SPRINGS FREMONT PARK bX poms © Cues ous © em © c—- o w—. PARK YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL LINCOLN om chum © CED + Goes © Gee A LEW 0 OWS © CES aint HORI, WE Ed SWERIWATER TS SEmn eam © @ICGD © GND © MIE SEES ® GEES © WH © ENS © Gm 6 mI © me . i | J J | | | | | ] [ i I | i | UINTA i "VIASV'IV "$7028 Jou0Issaubuo)) fo sdopy MAUI (bap Is. KAUAI HAWAN' HAWAII 1a ‘IIVMVH On () S “A401. 10U0SSILIUO)) N | Maps of Congressional Districts. 551 | | i | | | ] | PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. | | | | | l i i i i \ | { ! | | il i ¥ 3 | i A ! i i i | | | | / ) : L / Xsan Nh: : i 3 AGUADILLAN i Ug j ’ Th | ARECIBO ) BAYAMON J Xo pd Bi i i rar rd hi i ~~ Pad l] ils 48 -—_ dh ea I adh Reg A ; 2 rt ; fr HUMACAO 5 \ os BN \; MAYAGUEZ _~ hia % “ | i A Pan / PONCE _AGUAYANMA YT M ! / Mo i 2 : i "O0I¥ OLYOd 6494 *fid039240(] (DU0188246U0)) INDIVIDUAL INDEX. (Alphabetical list of Members of Congress with their addresses, pp. 483-494.) The following is a list of the names and addresses of persons given in the Directory who are located in Washington for official purposes, but whose names are not otherwise alphabetically arranged: Page. Abbot, C. G., 2203 K St.: Assistant Secretary Smithsonian Insti- LA] ThE eG SA shen Sl JER Director Astrophysical Observatory. .... International Exchanges....... RE Cha National Academy of Sciences........... Abbott, Grace, chief of Children’s Bureau, The Ontario. ....... org SN BT Sl Adams, Franklin, Pan American Union, The Marlboroaghs coi... soni eas Adams, W. Irving, accountant and disburs- ing agent, Smithsonian Institution, 1862 Mintwood-Place.. oi . iii. ess Adee, Alvey A., Second Assistant Secretary, State Department, 1019 Fifteenth St....... Adkins, Jesse C., District minimum-wage board, Quincy St. ,Chevy Chase, Md...... Agacio, B., Sefior Don Federico, Chilean Embassy, The Roosevelt... ......c....... Agelet y Garriga, Sefior Don Jaime, Spanish Embassy, The Wardman Park............ Agnew, Capt. Pierre A., Board of Road Com- missioners fopcAlaskn 0. ooo 0 5 Aitchison, Clyde B., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, Clifton Terrace West....... Akira Omi, Mr., Japanese Embassy........ Albright, Capt. W. 8., secretary National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers... . Alfaro, Ricardo J., 1719 Rhode Island Ave.: Panaman minister... ~. co... Governing Board, Pan American Union. Alai, Mirza Hussein Khan, Persian minister. Allanson, H. E., Bureau of Plant Industry, 117 Maple Ave., Takoma Park, Md Allen, Fred D., office of District assessor,1409 PifteenthSt co. 0. nani Alvord, Brig. Gen. Benjamin, Office of The Adjutant General, 2400 Sixteenth St....... Alvord, E. C,, jr., House Legislative Draft- ing Service, 3928 Huntington St........... Alvord, E. M., United States Railroad Ad- ministration, 1316 New Hampshire Ave... Ambrose, A. W., Bureau of Mines, 2844 Wis- CONS AVE... ian sees Amos, M. S., office of Doorkeeper of House, po I Ls ae Ce ARs SR LE Anderson,. Chandler P., Pecuniary Claims Arbitration Commission, United States and GrootBritain 0 > 0 oe 412 305 414 298 242 309 304 465 403 296 412 273 244 414 298 293 293 409 245 554 Austin, William L., Bureau of the Census, 12 0elafieid Place: . aa Axton, Chaplain John T., Chief of Chaplains, Army, 1916 Seventeenth St Ayer, Charles M., assistant clerk, United States Court of Customs Appeals, 1529 COBCOLANY Sl. ol rion rns ems rim fie Taine Ayer, Thomas P., Federal Trade Commis- sion, 3033 Sixteenth St Ayerza, Mr. Hector, Argentine Embassy, 1600 New Hampshire Ave Ayres, Louis, Commission of Fine Arts, New York CY rahe smi en me at Babcock, Charles E., Pan American Union, Vienna, Va Sg ph A SE Sa St Sh LES SBT + Babcock, H. A., Hydrographic Office, 20 Randolph CRE Baal Oe a Babcock, Col. W. C., United States Soldiers’ 1 TTR Sei Seu at dunn 5 USS Bacharach, Isaac, member Commission in Control of House Office Building, The Cha RON at nil nail oh» tiers Se mic i8 ein re Bacon, Honey, Commission of Fine Arts, New York Cit Bailey, F. PL RC RT a! Bailey, Jennings, District Supreme Court, 1844 Columbia Road Bain, H. Foster, Director Bureau of Mines, 1430 Thirty-third Sl are 2 mn ea ean mini Bain, H. M., administrative assistant, De- partment of Agriculture, Falls Church, Va. Bair, Bert E., Government Printing Office, 2293 Flagler Br st oor cnt eee Baity, James L., General Accounting Office, HG SBOIEISeh. + aos ns mnie mi miele onan Bakenhus, Capt. R. E., Bureau of Yards and Docks, 3745 Huntington St., Chevy ORABe.. Co ro oo cn be he eet aR Baker, Charles S., United States attorney’s office, 2701 Connecticut Ave......cocouu... Baker, Horace, United States Railroad Labor Board Baker, Howard, 1931 Biltmore St.: Bureau of the Budget..... .. Director, Bureau of Supply Baker, Jasper N., Office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 3562 Macomb St Baker, Joseph R., ‘assistant to the Solicitor, State Department, 1418 Euclid St Balcom, R. W., Bureau of Chemistry, 406 Surrey St. , Cliovy Chase. i. . vier sash Baldwin, Charles B , Bureau of Labor Sta- tistics, OnE re Lae Baldwin, Elmer I., General Land Office, 347 Tennessee Ave. N E Baldwin, T. M., jr., District deputy super- intendent of insurance, 3137 Eighteenth J.; Bureau of Mines, 2517 Hall St., N Ball, E. D., Director of Scientific Work, Department of Agriculture, The Portner.. Ball, L. Heisler, Joint Committee Investigat- ing Naval Base Sites, etc., 3244 Thirty- eighth Bt... ........cccoeeneieanennvenen. Ballivian, Adolfo, 1325 Massachusetts Ave.: BolVInn IINISOT so rvs oo rs Governing Board, Pan American Union. Ballou, Dr. F. W., superintendent District schools, The Marlborough.................. Banks, Moses HH Maly Committee on Finance, 11 R St.N Barber, Orion M. SH United States Court of Customs Appeals, The Wardman Park. Barberis, Sefior Don Juan, Legation of Ecua- dor, 2008 Sixteenth St... cL... a. 0h oo. Bar bour, Arnold W., St. Elizabeths Hos- 216571 ENS mal ton cu SS mie ete LL Dat Ss Bircaot, John T., District board of assistant assessors of personal property, 1412 Euclid S Barkley, Mrs. Alben W., chairman of printing committee of the Congressional Club Barksdale, W. H., division chief, General Accounting Office, 3613 Wisconsin Ave. . Barnard, Job, retired justice, District Su- preme ‘Court, Falkstone Courts...........- Barnard, M., assistant superintendent District reformator Barnes, Charles M., Assistant Solicitor, De- partment of State, 1436 Meridian Place. ... Page. 294 407 298 Congressional Directory. Page, Barnes, Frank B., director of telephones, War Department, 8 Quincy Place NE... .....-. 276 Barnes, George 0., superintendent National Bank Redemption Agency, 914 Kearney A ee Ee I 273 Barnes; Lieut. Col. H. C., Office of the Chief of Coast Artillery, The Brighton ie 277 Barnes, Julius H., United States Section of the Inter American High Commission. . 307 Barnes, Will C., United States Geographic Board... i a as aman nia 307 Barnett, Claribel R., librarian, Department of Agriculture, IO CITard Be series 299 Barnhard, Dr. W. H., District board of den- tal examiners, 1225 New York Ave. ....... 465 Baré6n, Dr. J 0sé T., Cuban Legation, 2008 Six- teenth St. . 408 Barr, Albert 3, “Office of the Second Assist- ant Postmaster General, 510 A St. NE... 282 Barr, David W., House post office, 4609 Eighth ae NS ST aR a 244 Barrow, Frank H., legislative clerk to Major- ity Fl oor Teader, House, 2579 Tunilaw ir) ep Teal SE ee SE 241 Barry, David 8., Sergeant at Arms of Senate (biography), 1816 Jefferson Place... ....... 235 Barry, Henry M., Senate Committee on Im- migration, 2811 Thirty- -fourth Place. ...... 234 Barry, Mrs. Sarah L., Senate Committee on Immigration, 2811 Thirty-fourth Place. . 234 Barse, George P. , assistant District corpora- tion counsel, 13058 BL Bien 466 Barta, Adolf k, House Committee on Ap- propriations, 640 Fifth St. NE... ....cni-- 242 Bartholomaeus, George, Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, 1812 Vernon St......... 234 Bartholomew, Don C., assistant keeper of stationery, Senate, VRIE ala 233 Bartlett, J ohn HH, First Assistant Postmaster General, 2400 Sixteenth St. ...oeeeueeen... 282 Bartlett, Lewis M., Office of the Comptroller, Post Office Department, 3770 MeKinley St., Chevy Ghose. Voit oe ofr. 283 Barto, F. H., official stenographer to House committees, 2021 Park Road~-.> =i J 245 Barton, Charles C., assistant division chief, Dopartment of Commerce, 2233 Eighteenth ont rai oe as apa El i Barton, R. M., United States Railroad Labor Bond. iE aes 299 BartoSovsky, Dr. Bohuslav, Legation of Czechoslovakia, Lafayette Hotel... ....... 408 Bassett, Capt. Frederic B. ,jr., The Imperial: Hydrographic Office... oa 285 United States Geographic Board........ 307 Bassford, Wallace D., office of Doorkeeper of House, 800 North Carolina Ave, 3 242 Batchelder, E. D., division chief, Treasury Department, 1203 Decatur 8. ns eran 273 Batchelder, Léna M., Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, 614 Mary- land Ave. NI oo. cr. as sem sassensiais 235 Bates, Robert J., office of Secretary of the Senate, 2431 Ontario Road......c.......... 233 Beach, J ohn S., Bureau of Pensions, 719 Otis A Bl reel a rat aS ‘ Beach, Mal, Gen. Lansing H., 2400 Six- teenth § Chief Engineers, ATMY...c.-viiage-i-n 278 United States Soldiers’ Home. .......... 309 Beach, Morgan H., Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, 1412 Hopkins Place.. 404 Beal, W. H., States Relations Service, 1852 cel Ten Sai Esa Cee 292 Beall, Fred., member Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, 1130 Columbia BOO. cisions ne visser ve ie worm aig st asad 308 Beaman, Middleton, House Legislative Draft- ing Service, 1862 Mintwood Place........... 230 Beardall, Lieut. Commander J. R., Washing- ton Navy Yard and Station............... 287 Beattie, David, office of Doorkeeper of House, 8B St NE. = on eh Ta 242 Beck, James M., 1624 Twenty-first St.: Solicitor General, Department of Justice. 280 American National Red Cross. .......... 305 Beck, William H., secretary to the Secretary of State, IST AMOnE BE eer se 271 Individual Index. Page. Bk F. E., House post office, 321 First St. Bedoya, Dr. Santiago F., Peruvian Embassy, 27260 Connecticut Ave... oc o-oo. Beeche, Seiior Don Gonzalo H.: Costa Rican Legation... oo ooo 000 Salvadorian Legation.................... Beeche, Seftor Dr. Don Octavio, 2201 Massa- chusetts Ave.: Costa Rican ministers: orion aie Legationiof Salvador... ...... i 5 Bell, Thomas M., Joint Commission on Pos- tal Service, 1401 Columbia Road........... Bellinger, Brig. Gen. J. B., Office of Quarter- aie General, Army, "Army and Navy Cn A aay eh Belmont, Mrs. August, American National Red Cross, New York Cit Er Sr 0% I Bendix, Herr Ludwig, German Embassy, 11 Broadway, New York City i. A Benjamin, Marcus, National RINE The HH ighlana. oo Tor a rae Bennett, Capt. E. L., Naval Consulting Board zi Ber Abo rR a le Bennett, Robert B., House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce, The Naples. ke Fn bl I, Benson, Admiral W. S., member United States Shi ing Board, The Wyoming. . Bergman, illiam D., Chief of Appoint- ments Division, Navy Department, 2526 Seventeenth St... iii oo sascian iiss Berry, W. R., Doge Telegraph-Cable Co., 310 East Capitol 8 Berthrong, SE P., division chief, Gen- eral Land Office, 5207 Thirt -eighth St. . Besson, Maj. F. 8. , 3159 Eig teenth St.: Assistant to Engineer Commissioner. . Superintendent District Building...... Bethel, Col. W. A., Office of the Tudors Ad- vocate General, Army, 1717 Twentieth St. Bethell, Maj. Gen. H. X., British Embassy, TIS SIR teotith Bhi ior. dosti es Bethune, John F., United States Tariff Com- ‘ mission, Falls Church, Va Betzenderfer, Marguerite E., Senate Commit- toon Agriculture and For estry, The Colo- initia Gate vase nap eReu ce align Beuret, Rear Admiral J. D., Chief of Bureau of Construction and Repair, The Altamont. Bevan, Maj. W. F., Office of Chief Coordi- nator, oy, 4205 Nineteenth St...... Bevard, William A, General Supply Com- mittee, {ET SA Re eet a es Bevington, M. R., Bureau of Naturalization, 204 Federal Building, San Francisco, Calif. Bianchi, Dr. Julio, International Sanitary rele lean Lay Bibesco, Prince A., Rumanian niinister..... Bien, Morris, Reclamation Service, 60 Elm Ave, Takoma Parle: 00, boii 00 Biffle, Leslie L., superintendent Senate fold- ing room, Clifton Terrace South. .......... Bilbrey, Joseph H., United States attorney’s office, 1227 N St Billany, Harry H., Fourth Assistant Post- master General, The Portland. ............ Billard, Lieut. Commander Frederick C., Office of the Coast Guard, 2301 Connecti- CHE AYE. os veeres reir Aa EEO 0 Birch, Platt H., General Supply Committee, 1349 Shepherd St. Birdsall, G. C., 1832 Kalorama Road: District board of medical examiners. District board of medical Supervisors. - Birdseye, C. H., 1362 Oak St.: Geological Survey PT RR SMR La Board of Surveys and Maps of the Fed- eral Government... oir enbos sons Birmingham, Col. H. P. (retired), United States Soldiers’ Home. ..........-......... Black, Paul S., Office of War Minerals Re- lief, Pho NOW BOIliO.s. ttre dnd - Black, Maj. Gen. William M., Washington National Monument Society. i Ais ats Hit Blair, D. H., Commissioner of Internal Rev- "enue, The "Wardman Park................ Blakely, Maj. Charles S., Office of Chief of Fiel ‘Artillery, 3401 POFter St............- 413 408 413 408 413 465 466 277 555 Page. Blanchard, Clarence J., Reclamation Service, The Barlington. 2. Lut 2 vo pi os Blanchet, Mr. Albert, Haitian Legation, Stone- leigh Carl... eee Blanco, Mr. Enrique Dolz, Cuban Legation. Bland, Josephine, Housé Committee on In- dustrial Arts and Expositions, George Washington Inn Bliss, Cornelius N., jr., American National Red Cross, New York Cifyr 1 a weg Bliss, Robert Woods, Third Assistant Secre- tary of State, 1785 Massachusetts Ave.... Bliss, Maj. Gen. Tasker H. (retired), gov- ernor, United States Soldiers’ Home, RR : Bloedorn, Lieut. Commander W. A., Board for Examination of Dental Officers, Navy, 2725 Thirteenth Street. .......=. 25... Boardman, Miss Mabel T., American Na- tional Red Cross, W ashington, D.C Boggs, Col. F. C., 2400 Sixteenth St.: Office of Chief of Engineers. ......>... Board of Engineers for Rivers ond Har- Bojsen, Mr. Anker Konow, Danish Lega- tion, 1927 ParR Road. coe. rn. secant. aid Bonanno, Augustus S., A. F. C., Office of "the Chief of Chaplains, 1618 H St Bond, Frank, 3127 Newark St.: Chief clerk, General Land Office......... United States Geographic Board........ Bonet, Mr. P. A., Cuban Legation, The Avondale SR TS RR i, SRLS eben LEY So Bonnycastle, Col. Henry C., quartermaster supply officer, Army, 1659 ‘Harvard St.. Booth, Edmund W., jr., House Committee on War Claims, 1653 Pennsylvania Ave.. Booth, Edwin s., Solicitor for the Interior Department, The Melrose 28 Booth, Fenton W., judge, Court of Claims (biography), 1752 Lamont St............ Boots, Charles I'., Senate Legislative Draft- ing Service, 2827 Twenty-eighth St. ....... Borden, Dr. Daniel L. , office nf Metropolitan police, 2337 Ashmead Place................ Bordsen, Carl W., Senate Committee on the J udiciary, 312 Bast Capitol'St......0 Borland, Wilfred P., Interstate Commerce Commission, 1806 Kenyon St.............. Boschen, Maj. Fred w., Finance Officer, Army, The'Wardman Park. .............. Boston, Margaret G., Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals, 1815 Monroe St. ...... Boteler, Dr. George M., District assistant healthoffieor..0.7 J fo 5. 0a = vs Boutell, Roger, law librarian, Congressional Library, Pelham Courts... C.-L. 20.0. Bouton, Raymond T,, Office of the First As- sistant Postmaster General, 1467 Irving St. Bowerman, George F., librarian, Public Library, 5852 Ontario Road. .............. Bowerman, H. B., Bureau of Lighthouses, op West Twenty-ninth St., Baltimore, Bowie, Edward H., Weather Bureau, 3702 Keokuk Bt. ng Bowie, William, 1733 Church St.: Coast and Geodetic SUTVEY. ul. tel il Board of Surveys and Maps of the Fed- eral Government. ..... lent. ae Boyd, Allen R., chief clerk, Congressional Library, 1751 Corcoran St.............%.. Boyer, Mr. Jean, French Embassy........ Boynton, Olive, "Senate Committee on Pub- I Buildings and Grounds, 301 Maryland TO NL I ts Lor iol Bradley, Mary M., Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation, 920 East Cap- ol Sti aida ae Lh, ada Braham, Joseph M., Fixed Nitrogen Re- search’ Laboratory, 3519 Lowell St......... Brainerd, Helen L., Pan American Union, 2690 GOrBOIl Bhece tate ies nr ie aes Brand, Charles J., Packers and Stockyards Administration, 2400 Sixteenth St......._. Brand, H. , Senate Finance Committee. ..... Brande, Bertram A. S., Civil Service Com- mission, II Third St. NE... 290 410 408 243 305 271 282 268 409 293 234 556 - Page. Brandegee, Frank B., 1700 I St.: Chairman Joint Committee on the Li- DLA Yh sve fits imi SE wt See we Commission on Memorial to Women of the CIvib War. oon his Grant Memorial Commission............. Meade Memorial Commission.......... John Ericsson Memorial Commission. . .. Brandeis, Elizabeth, District minimum- wage board, Stoneleigh Court... ........... Brandeis, Louis D., Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court (biography), Stone- Abin lene Seat Waa SA Saige Brandenburg, Dr. W. H. R., office of Metro- politan police, 1216 R St... ........... : Brandon, Gertrude I., House Committee on Irrigation of Arid Lands, 218 Ascot PI. NE. Brandt, E. S., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, The Boydont tl ft Bray, Stephen, Packers and Stockyards Ad- ministration; Del Ray, Va. ............... Brecht, Howard F., Senate Committee on Claims, 1030: Perry St. NBL... oii Breining, Harold W., United States Veterans’ Bureau, 1434 Harvard St... .........., Brennan, Roland M., chief clerk, District engineer department, 11 R St. NE. ...... Brenner, Dr. Ernest, Swiss Legation, The Wardman Park. on. i Solio Bresee, H. F., House post office, 321 First YRS DYER I TE nL SS RE Briar, John, Assistant Commissioner War Minerals Relief, R. F. D. No.1, Alexandria, AAT SR Tl SS CE SCRA Tk ee ne A lan Se Bridge, Maj. C. E. D., British Embassy, 2208 Massachusetis Ave... iL... il, Briggs, Mrs. Frank, fourth vice president, . “Congressional Club. c=. 0 sii] Briggs, Frank H., marshal, United States Court of Customs Appeals, The Wardman Park oo. conten nn SIRs Briggs, Hazel D., Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds, 614 Mary- land Ave, NBL. Lio moi ol iain Brist, George L., division chief, State Depart- ment, 610 M St. NE. (acting).............. Britten, Fred A., The Wardman Park: Interparliamentary Union............... Joint Committee Investigating Naval Base Sites, ele: or fai iba vo Brock, Morgan R., assistant to the Secretary Interior Department, 1311 Rhode Island Broderick, Mr. John Joyce, British Em- bassy, 1601 Sixteenth St...cc.. oo... Bronaugh, F. H., Washington Navy Yard and Station, 332 South Carolina Ave. SE. . Brooke, E. P., assistant superintendent Dis- trict Building, 1605 Thirtieth St........... Brookings, Robert S., Regent of Smithsonian Institution, St. Louis, Mo... ...-..-.... Brooks, Alfred H., Geological Survey, 3100 Newark St ee keen Brooks, Hon. H. W., British Embassy, 2129 BaneroltiPlace .-—... o0 c Broughton, William S., Commissioner of the . Public Debt, Treasury Department, 1819 Brown, A. Lincoln, Senate Committee on Military Affairs 1381'S SUZ... oT. Brown, Chapin, District Rent Commission, ¥507 Twenty-second St... ..o... .. oo. Brown, F. C., 3030 Newark St.: Acting Director Bureau of Standards.. National Screw Thread Commission... . Brown, Commander H. A. British Embassy, 3 East Lennox St., Chevy Chase.......... Brown, Herbert D., Chief United States Bureau of Efficiency, 1811 Lamont St...... Brown, Mae R., House Committee on Re- formin the Civil Service, 769 Quebec Place. Brown, Maj. S. G., deputy chief coordinator, Bureau of the Budget, 2933 Tilden St..... Brown, Virginia, Senate Committee on Im- migration, The Congressional.............. 294 304 Congressional Directory. Page. Brown, Walter F., chairman Joint Committee on the Reorganization of the Administra- tive Branch of the Government, The Ward- man Park. oie ol sa te baa Brown, William L., Library of Congress, The Ontario. iio. ovis ive a Brownson, Admiral Willard H., Washington National Monument Society............... Bruce, Joseph C., United States attorney’s office; 1619 Hobart St... coil i Brueggeman, Mrs. Bessie Parker, United States Employees’ Compensation Commis- sion, The Somensel si tivity inet. tences Bruggmann, Dr. Charles, Swiss Legation, 1005 NaSbi ot vnn lin vise vise mins si S LS Tos Brun, Mr. Constantin, Danish minister, 1605 Twenty-second Sb... oo Lot ith ius Buckingham, Earle, Society of Automotive Engineers, National Screw Thread Com- Buckler, C. Howard, Office of the Third As- Sa Postmaster General, 145 Eleventh AS SE a Tr Buehne, August, House document room, 4203 Twelfth St. NE... ei, Buenavista, Sefior J. Alvarez de, Peruvian Embassy, The Wardman Park... ....___. Buffington, William X., Office of Third Ante Postmaster General,1317 Harvard Buggelli, Signor Guido, Italian Embassy, .. Bullion, Clarence L., division chief, General Land Office, 4434 Kansas Ave............. Bullock, Marion E., Government Printing Office, Riverdale, Md. ....i.............. Bunke, Michael J., file clerk of Senate, 1337 Columbia Road. is.oodis co oui tod. Bunnag, Mr. Chring, Siamese Legation... .. Bunnag, Mr. Chuer, Siamese Legation, 2300 Kalorama Road....-...... oa a Burch, D. S., Bureau of Animal Industry, Conduit Road and District Line... __...... Burdette, J. W., Federal Trade Commis- Sion, 2102: St Burgess, G. K., Bureau of Standards, 511 Clifton Terrace. oo... osname ism bh Burgess, William, United States Tariff Com- missioner, The Kensington ............... Burke, Charles H., Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1870 Wyoming Ave................ Burke, Moncure, assistant clerk, District Court of Appeals, S009 W St... ..0ooa Burke, Thomas J., clerk to Assistant Secre- tary of War, 1114 East Capitol St.......... Burklin, R. Reyburn, War Finance Corpora- tion, 2700 Ontario Road . ......c.ceaaeoo..l Burlew, Ebert K., private secretary to the Postmaster General, 1460 Twentieth St.. Burns, William J., Director Bureau of In- vestigation, Department of Justice, The Wardman DoT... tee ors os odeneroinaie Burnside, Waldo, juvenile court, Hyatts- ¥illle, Md. .....0 et viii Burpee, Lawrence J., International Joint Commission. .... is: i dv S i aaa dane Burr, Brig. Gen. George W., Office of the Chief of Ordnance, The Mendota.......... Burr, Raymond, Senate Committee on Pat- ents, 414 New Jersey Ave. SE............ Burrows, Franklin C., city post office, 311 Takoma Ave., Takoma Park, Md.......... Bursley, Sidney G., city post office, 4910 Ar- KANSAS AVE. revere svinsnsnssnneensiooomys 285 Individual Index. Page. Bursum, Clara, Senate Committee on Pen- slons, The Capitol Park... o.oo 0: oC Burton, H. Ralph, Columbia Institution for the Deaf, Union Trust Building........... Burton, R. J., Office of Quartermaster Gen- eral, Army, 1430 Spring Road. ............ Burton, Theodore E., Stoneleigh Court: meaty Union iene. nus World War Foreign Debt Commission... Butler, Commander C.S.J.,1931 Kenyon St.: Naval Medical School cee. cennouaen.... Board for Examination of Medical Offi- COL Tani som saa ss stn we SRE F bin Saw Butler, Jarvis, Thrifton, Va.: General Board, Navy. cc. -vacoseavonse The Joint Board. c...o. - sro sews nensons Butler, Pierce, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biography), The Shoreham......... Buirick, A. B., General Supply Committee, Phe De Both... ici sansa Byers, C. L., House post office, 1820 K St... Byron, Frank A., House Committee on Naval Affairs, 1453 Corcoran St......cccc.. Cable, Wendell E., House Committee on Accounts, ISI0 Eye St. o.oo oene ean vem Cady, John B., Office ofthe Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, 378 Eastern Ave., PakomB PAIK. . iv sei snssommn ssa tinse Caemmerer, H. P., Commission of Fine ARS 0 BL ee es ra aias arena ana Cairnes, Lieut. Commander C. W., Office of Per Coordinator, Treasury, The Mon- HEE ai Nt Tap LE gh LE Call, Arthur Deerin, Interparliamentary Union, 613 Colorado Building SE ST Call, Maj. Lewis W., Federal Power Com- mission, Garrett Park, Md ......ccceu.ouee Calvert, Edgar B., Weather Bureau, Flor- once Comte West i. ooo. io vnivinernsinnss Bales i es enh Campbell, John J., Office of the Chief of Chaplains, Army, 2935 Upton St........... Campbell, Johnston B., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, 3812 Jocelyn St............. Campbell, Richard K., Bureau of Naturaliza- ton, 1077 BUtmore St... v. sic ro oases re uw Campbell, Walter G., Acting Chief Bureau of Chemistry Rosslyn, Va... a. lhas Cannon, C. A., office of Doorkeeper of TE a I a Sa Cannon, Joseph G., The Raleigh: Commission on Enlarging the Capitol YOUNIS. So ran senses Ss Member Lincoln Memorial Commission. . Member Joint Commission for the Exten- sion and Completion of the Capitol BIg tae Capper, Arthur, member Joint Committee on Printing, 1100 Sixteenth St............ Capps, Rear Admiral Washington L., 1823 Jefferson Place: Commission on Navy Yards and Naval SANS... Ne. Compensation Board, hie Department Cardenas, Sefior Don Juan Francisco de, Spanish Embassy, 1603 Euclid St.......... Carey, Joseph A. special assistant to Secre- tary of the Navy, The Cathedral Mansions. Carmack, L. V., Bureau of Insular Affairs, Phe Marne. nasal sata ort ri Carneckis, Mr. Valdemaras, Lithuanian Legation, ¥O25 BSE. io a 0 tiie Ones J. H., Patent Office, 1657 Thirty-first t 235 231 310 286 303 410 244 228 229 228 228 305 286 . bbI Page. tates attor- S ney’s office, 220 Fourth St. SE Carroll, Charles C., Bureau of Animal Indus- try, 6801 Sixth St., Takoma Park.......... Carroll, K. M,, private secretary and assist- ant tothe Attorney General, The Roosevelt. Carson, D. B., Commissioner Bureau of Navi- gation, The Roosevelb. .cuvems inv nnusbioes Carter, Aubrey B., secretary to Comptroller OL COLIONICY cit ha cus soins was ia ais Cartier de Marchienne, Baron de, Belgian ambassador, 1780 Massachusetts Ave. . .... Case, George S., National Screw Thread COMMISSION oi. oes coins maim sin sso min tm a Cassiday, Joseph, office of Doorkeeper of House, 1360:Shephard St......cuecveecn.n- Castle, William R., jr., division chief, State Department, 18180 Strano siiorss enrens Cagtro, Dr. Don Hector David, 1120 Vermont i ve.: Legation of Salvador... ......ceveussseve Governing Board, Pan American Union. Catalani, Commander Giuseppe, Italian Embassy, 1301 Sixteenth St .............. Catherwood, James S., National Home for Pjsabled Volunteer Soldiers, Hoopeston, Caulsen, Florence, Senate Committee on Rules, 1461 Girard St... ....2. i.e iaisen Ceccato, Signor G. B., Italian Embassy -... Celesia di Vegliasco, Signor Andrea Geisser, Ttalian Embassy, 1409 Thirtieth St........ Céspedes, Dr. Carlos Manuel de, Cuban minister, 2630 Sixteenth St............... Chaffee, A. E., reading clerk of House, 722 E EN re ae Chagas, Dr. Carlos, International Sanitary Bureau, Rio de Janerio, Brazil. ........... Chamberlain, George: E., member United States Shipping Board, The Cairo........ ‘Chamberlin, Minna F., Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Possessions, L-M Building, Government Hotels. ....... Chambers, Capt. F. T. Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors 1625 Sixteenth St. . Chambers, Capt. Frank T., civil engineer, Commission on Navy Yards and Naval Btablonget oc. cette. Stevens Chambrun, Count Charles de, French Em- DASA ow sath Sete ors od Ee Hen 4 2+ wig are 0 aisle Chamorro, Sefior Don Diego M., jr.,legation OF NICATAOU: = tii ei aes Sa See Chamorro, Emiliano, 1525 Sixteenth St.: Ministerof Nicaraguac.......oii. cove. Governing Board, Pan American Union. Chance, Merritt O., city postmaster, Ridge Rondo sso a an rn Sh in. Chaney, Direlle, assistant attorney, Post Office Department, 4112 Fourth St........ Chapman, Dr. Thomas P., Civil Service Com- mission, 3228 Thirteenth St. ......c.ceen.... Chapman, Waldo E., secretary District Rent Commission, 1525 Oak St... acu uuoeanensn Chatterton, E. W., office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue, The Wardman Park BNNOT LL ois masters ar han ss we bas Cheesman, W. H., Bureau of Biological Sur- vey, 1525 Twenty-ninth St................ ChiosnsYy Snelson, War Finance Corporation, AS Arving Bi... veer essa shiots Chilton, Mr. Henry Getty, British Embassy, SIZ RSG. i CLG ase nl Chisolm, Capt. Edward N., Mississippi River Commission. Ls dais cet isies Choate, Charles F., jr., Regent of Smithso- nian Institution, Boston, Mass............. 413 298 235 410 412 2908 558 Congressional Directory. : Page. Christiaansen, George, office of Doorkeeper of House, 102 Seventh St. NE............... 242 Christian, George B., jr., Secretary to the 3 President (biography), 2649 Connecticut AVE Aen Ss 271 Christian, Madelaine, Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills, The Roland... ............. 234 Christie, Wing Commander M. G., British Embassy, 2400 Sixteenth St. .............. 409 Christy, William T., Bureau of Immigra- tion, New Orleans, sla i... or cw 0 296 Church Edgar, city post office, 614 Maryland Ave, NEL, LE Anansi 469 Churchman, H. Clarence, Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce, ¥, M. C. A....... 234 Churién, Seftor Don Luis, Venezuelan Lega- tion, 2800°Ontario Road:... nr = J. 00 414 Clark, Alexander H., United States Court of Customs Appeals, 22 Westmoreland Ave., Takoma Parle, MA a onl ray 404 Clark, Charles C., Assistant Chief Weather Bureau, 21 West Irving St., Chevy Chase, Md alee se U0 291 Clark, Clarence D., International Joint Com- mission, Evanston, Wyo: ..C ll oon. 306 Clark, Edward, Public Buildings Commis- sion, 2503 Hamlin St. NE. .......... 0... 230 Clark, Edward T., secretary to the Presi- dent of the Senate, 1115 Sixteenth St..... 233 Clark, Frank, Public Buildings Commission, The Tiffany. bo lv) v0 Ln Se 230 Clark, Capt. Frank H., Policy and Liaison Section, Navy, The Brighton.............. 284 Clark, George E., Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Commission, 3501 Fourteenth St. 307 Clark, John H., commissioner of immigra- tion, Montreal, Province of Quebec. ....... 296 Clark, Thaddeus S., Bureau of Lighthouses, 1312 Connecticut-Ave... i... c. cui: 0.00: 295 Clark, W. D., jr., District deputy collector of taxes, 118 Thirteenth St. NE........... 466 Clear, T. L., Army and Navy Club: United States Shipping Board.......... 301 Emergency Fleet Corporation.......... 302 Clement, Joseph A., House folding room, 118 Carrol Bl res esas 242 Clevenger, H. C., office of Federal Fuel Dis- tributer, The Powhatan... sar isri scr 311 Clifford, Edward, Assistant Secretary of Treasury in charge of Customs, Public Health, Public Buildings, and the Coast Guard, Army and Navy Club............. 272 Cloonan, J. Harrie, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico, HY Page, Bex l UAT Sia 20 ini ih, 306 Clunn, Harry G., private secretary to the Sec- retary of the Interior, 1229 Girard St....... 288 obbs, John L.,jr., Chief Division of Publi- cations, Agriculture, Clifton Terrace South 292 Cobey, Howard P., president District board of dental examiners, The Champlain....... 465 Cochrane, Allister, Official Reporter, House, 2638 Woodley Place RRA ER a HEE 245 Cochrane de Alencar, Dr. Augusto, 1603 H St.: Ambassador-of Brazil... ...olii lon Al 407 Governing board, Pan American Union. 298 Coe, Maj. Gen. Frank W., Chief of Coast Ar- tillery, The St. Nicholas - o.o...eevenenn... 277 Coffin, Nan C., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining, 2816 Connecticut Ave......... 235 Cogswell, Theodore, office of 1egister of wills, 1005 New Hampshire Ave.......c.......... 405 Cohran, J. R., Bureau of Animal Industry, O17 Bighteenth 8%. F057 0, ch. 0 0c Luan 202 Cole, Arthur G., District health department, 4121 Seventh St img. isl dodo Wo. Hols 467 Cole, Robert F., United States Railroad La-~ rt ET a I Se SR A hl, 3 299 Coleman, Col. Frederick W., Assistant Chief of Finance, Army, The Northumberland. 278 Coleman, Katharine M., Senate Committee ON BINGNCE -.- i vasis omansnnnsnns ness ose 234 Coleman, Robert S., Bureau of Naturaliza- tion, 314 Federal Building, St. Paul, Minn. 296 Coles, J. B., House post office, 1702 P St. .... 244 Colflesh, Robert W., House Committee on Elections No. 3, The Willard Courts....... 243 Collamore, Edward W., Inspection Division, NAVY, S30 ANSON St... co cs rasan 284 Page. ales Carl, General Accounting Office, The Collins, Charles W., Bureau of the Budget, 228 OSE i err Rh gt Collins, F. G., division chief, Treasury De- partment, 1413 Hopkins St... .............. Ei William J. , Senate press gallery, 3026 Colwell, Eugene, assistant financial clerk, Senate, 2221 Second St.................... Concklin, E. F., Office of Public Buildings and Grounds, 1420 BR St. cL is Conner, First Lieut. H. J., office of Quarter- master General, Army, 1204 Kenyon St.... Connor, Mary A., Senate Committee on Patents, 1406 Meridian Place. ............. Coy, John S., Bureau of Lighthouses, 1749 Conway, Marcelle, Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, 1832 Sixteenth St........... Cook, Arthur E., offite of Architect of the Capitol, 135 Tennessee Ave. NE........... Cook, Arthur E., private secretary to Secre- tary of Labor, 5302 Forty-first St.......... Cooke, Charles L., officer in charge of cere- ‘monials, State Department, The Iroquois.. Cooke, J. F., Senate Committe on Patents... Cooksey, George R., Director War Finance Corporation, 1810 Newton St......ccuaeunn. Coolidge, Calvin, The New Willard: Vice President of United States (biog- 13] EE Re AA Ei we President of the Senate.........cceuee..- Regent of Smithsonian Institution....... Member Smithsonian Institution........ Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission . Coombs, Wade H., District superintendent of licenses, 3318 OR 2 A eee paeee Coonty Admiral Robert E., The Wardman ark: Chief of Naval OperationS......ceeeee-.- The Joint Board... ...c-csssscosioncsones General Board, NAVY exes exs =asmeennss= Budget officer, NaVy.ceow-vr-snssseesces Cooper, Henry Allen, Interparliamentary Union, The Rochambeau.....-cuocanauannn Cooper, Robert A., Federal Farm Loan Bu- reau, 237 Carroll St., Tacoma Park......... Copeland, Edgar P., Stoneleigh Court: District board of medical examiners. .... District board of medical supervisiors... . . Copeland, L. G., Federal Reserve Board, 1418 Rhode Island Ave... oor io. 0 Coronado, Enrique, Pan American Union, The Shermans... J scores was mein som Coronado, Sefior Don José Maria, Co- lombian Legation, The Sherman.......... Cortes, Sefior Carlos Echeverri, Colombian LOCATION ooh Santo w sans ts swith plat Kw se Costantini, Count D. A., Italian Embassy.. Costigan, Edward P., United States Tariff Commissioner, The Brighton Een ten Costigan, T. L., District superintendent of street cleaning, 1523 Park Road... ......... Cottrell, F. G., Director of FiXed Nitrogen Research Laboratory, Falkstone Courts. . - Coupal, Maj. James ¥., Army Medical Mu- seum and Library, The Argyle............ Cousins, L. B., office of Doorkeeper of House, 07 Bomrth St. NE i aera nnn Cowley, Matthew, Senate Committee on Public Lands and Surveys, 1812 K St...... Cowperthwaite, M. T., House Committee on Roads, 2148 Florida Ave........ccvunn.. Cox, Frederick I., Interstate Commerce Com- missioner, 1714 Nineteenth St ............ Cos A., House post office, 312 Second St. Craigie, Mr. R. Leslie, British Embassy, 2340 MassachusSelis AVe. i oto reve cman sien Cramer, Charles F., United States Veterans’ Bureau, 2314 Wyoming Ave................ Cranford, Edward B., Office of Fourth As- sistant’ Postmaster. General, 47 Rhode Island Aves: ii ns, aT eee ef The Craven, Hermon W., Chief Clerk of Senate, 4700 Piney Branch’ Boad......-...-----c.- 299 243 273 273 405 233 278 277 235 295 408 411 Individual Indes. Page. Crenshaw, Commander R. S., office of Naval Operations, 3703 Northampton St., Chevy Chase; Muti ic - focus die. ie ure Creque, Viola V., Senate Committee on En- rolled Bills, The Alabama. .....ccceeuenn.. Crim, John W. H., Assistant Attorney Gen- eral, The Leg HoUSe. cu -ci.vusmianmsresuss Crissinger, D. R., The Somerset: Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury Department: [oivitt iin cus vades mas Federal Reserve Board............cc.o..- Crist, Raymond F., Commissioner of Natural- ization, 3025 Newark St.......c.cecuan..... Crockett, John C., reading clerk, Senate, The Roosevelt. on. Shans Sat sais Croft, Samuel M., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 316 Tenth St. NE........ Croissant, V. G., United States Bureau of Efficiency, 4913 Forty-seventh St.......... Cronin, H. T'., executive assistant tothe As- sistant Secretary of Agriculture, 1436 W St. Cropley, C. Elmore, deputy clerk, United States Supreme Court, 3033 Sixteenth St.. Crossley, Fay A.," Senate Committee on Rules, 624 Maryland Ave. NE............. Crowder, Maj. Gen. Enoch H., Judge Advo- cate General, Army, the Marlborough..... Croxton, Roland A., assistant to the Under- secretary (in charge of Fiscal Affairs), Treas- ury Department, 1519 Park Road -........ Cruit, Louise M., Senate Committee on For- elgieRelations i... codon yi gadis Crutchfield, George A., Bureau of Naturali- zation, 410 Customhouse, St. Louis, Mo. Cuddy, Stephen A., Bureau of Pensions, 1324 1 Frnt EO en Ce Te a a Culbertson, William §S., vice chairman, United States Tariff Commission, 212 Maryland Avei NE... ool... 08.000. Cumming, Surg. Gen. Hugh S., 2219 Cali- fornia St: Bureau of the Public Health Service... . .. International Sanitary Bureau........... Cummins, Albert B., President pro tempore ofthe Senate,v-Lisil Teragioi ani ni ou Cunningham, E. J., Labor Adjustment Serv- ice, Department of Labor, Southbrook pee gC a a UT Currie, Rolla P., Bureau of Entomology, 632 Keefer Place. ooii i ibebon orion ving. vs Curry, Charles F., jr., House Committee on the Territories, George Washington Inn... Curry, George, International Boundary Com- mission, United States and Mexico, 633 First National Bank Building, El Paso, Curtiss, C. D., Bureau of Public Roads, 10 West Virgilia St., Chevy Chase, Md........ Curtiss, Liowell, Pan American Union, 3118 Nineteenth 86: cobra. has dil 0 Cutcheon, C. T. M., division chief, General Accounting Office, 3915 Ingomar St... ..... Cuthbert, John T., Office of Naval Opera- fions, 1228 Fifteenth St... oo. nil... Daiker, F. H., Office of Indian Affairs, 140 Tennessee Ave: NB... Jacminiaii an Dalby, Z. Lewis, Office of Chief of Finance, 1615 Mongfellow: Stee 2 Sui nnyuuiic sa sies D’ Alte, Viscount, Portuguese minister...... Dalzell, Charles N., office of the First Assist- ant Postmaster General, 5 West Irving St., Chevy Chase, Md. ..o:.. st... capeliice. Se Daniels, Winthrop M., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, The Altamont.............. David, Eleanora S., Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals, A-B Building, Gov- crnment Hotels: uc ci vay rransirtt 245 283 234 280 27% 300 275 310 296 278 413 282 299 466 235 280 297 234 559 Page. Davis, Arthur P., Director of Reclamation Service, 2212 First St...oo.ceneivan iin 290 Davis,Ben G., chief clerk State Department, 110 Cedar Ave., Takoma Park............. 271 Davis, C. M., assistant assessor of District, 2 Bh. haus i tre SR 465 Davis, Dwight F., War Finance Corporation, 1520 Eighteenth St.............. cota. l 303 Davis, Herbert L., auditor District Supreme Court, 1241:Glrar@ Bria. 0 JS die edie 40% Davis, James C., Director General, United States Railroad Administration, 2715 Con- peeticut Ave. Ln vind la LS ka 302 Davis, James H., Senate Committee on Com- merce, 1357. Jefferson Str. iu. oi io hin 234 Davis, James J., The Shoreham: Secretary of Labor (biography).......... 295 Council of National Defense. ............ 302 Member of Smithsonian Institution...... 297 Chairman Federal Board for Vocational BAUCALION vn oa Fa aie Sata a ed dl 304 Davis, Lulu F., Senate Committee on Com- mezee,: 1357 Jefferson Soi: Joo oh: = at ois 234 Davis, 0. K., United States Section of the Inter American High Commission........ 307 Davis, P. R., District fire department, 1361 Monroe St. alld an aL ia atl 467 i Maj. Gen. Robert C., 2400 Sixteenth The Adjutant General... ..0. 00 277 Commissioner, United States Soldiers’ TT ee ef ER I Ln LR 309 Davis, Royal O. E., Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory, 1422 Webster St. . ............ 293 Davis, Stephen B., jr., Solicitor of the De- partment of Commerce.................. 281,294 Davis, William H., M. D., Bureau of the Cen- sus, 5314 Forty-first St., Chevy Chage..... 294 Davison, Charles L., Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, 643 E St. NE 282 Davison, Mrs. Henry P., American National Red Cross, Locust Valley, N. Y........... 305 Dawkins, Merritt L., Bureau of Pensions, 234 Eleventh St.INE. Lo aie Seis 289 Dawson, Irwin R., Senate Legislative Draft- ing Service, 926 Fifteenth St.............. 230 Day, Capt. George C., Submarine Division, Navy SIL R Sb. oo iri sion annie is, 284 Day, William R., Associate Justice, Supreme Court (retired ss see re 401. Dayton, Capt.J. H., Washington Navy Yard Le anQ BIatION o.oo Si chris rene 287 Deakyne, Col. Herbert, California Débris Commission... 0 oo a di. 279 Dean, Russell, District harbor master, 2520 Ralolel St SE. ene 467 Deards, J. W., Senate folding room, Fonta- CURL BEAR Reem psi Se eats 236 Debavadi, Khun, Siamese Legation, 1979 BIIMere SL, ci oe seme al 414 Dees, Frances G., Senate Committee on In- AIAN ATTAIN on, sents rip nt am fer te aE 234 De Forest, Robert W., vice president Ameri- can National Red Cross, 30 Broad St., New XY Or Clyro incites ns natn sales a 305 Defrees, Capt. J. R., Washington Navy Yard and SIation. .. a... ve sms tara an = ms sma 287 Degnan, Thomas L., purchasing agent, Post Office Department, 1656 Park Road....... 282 De Groot, F. A., Assistant Register of the Treasury, 121 Thirteenth St. NE ...._..... 274 DeLaMater, John, Federal Reserve Board, 3330: Seventeenth Sb... icv. coos via tev me wis 300 De Laney, Lieut. Col. M. A., Office of the Surgeon General, Army, The Somerset. 278 Delano, Frederic A., Columbia Institution for the Deals aint: tar cic id alae - Sriutl m3 309 Delano, Louis A., Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, 3823 Legation St., Chevy Case. doco. iiiotil. Jiviuin sh tivness 282 Delbridge, C. J., House post office, 1313 Thir- 5 Tr 244 Demaray, A. E., National Park Service, 1328. Gallatin BE... oan bene. 290 Demaree, H. J., Division of Publications, Department of Agriculture, Blenheim COUNTED. isa vons i nmin stan a sla Sala Sais Sth ws 292 560 Congressional Directory. Page. De Montfredy, A. L., captain Capitol police, 633 Longfellow St Denby, Edwin, 2224 R St. : Secretary of the Navy (biography)...... Council of National Defense. ............ Member of Smithsonian Institution...... Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Com- John Ericsson Memorial Commission... . Denn, R. G., House post office, 128 E St.... De Shields, William H., District special as- sessment clerk, 123 Fifth St. NE........... De Toro, Sefior Don Santiago, Chilean Em- ly LE SA PH Er LI Ii Devendorf, H. E., House Committee on In- dian Aflairs, 220 B.St. NB... ona... Devendorf, Raymond E., Senate Committee on Military Affairs, The Lincoln Apart- TIENT « oe Sasi ssa nn ss Eesti a We die imia ee Deveney, J. L., Senate Legislative Drafting Service, 21 Eighth St. NE_................ Devine, Edwar T., United States Coal Com- mission, The Lee House .................. Dewhirst, William S., division chief, General Accounting Office, 3906 Morrison St. . ..... De Wolf, Francis Colt, assistant solicitor, State Department, The Roosevelt... ...... Diamantopoulos, Mr. C., Greek Legation.. Diaz, Sefior Don R. Camilo, The Northum- berland: ; Honduran Legation =... - zecse mais mows Governing Board, Pan American Union. . Dickey, J. E., Naval Observatory, 1743 P St. Dickson, Frank S., Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments, 1785 Lanier Place... -. ; itera ivi nreaenns Dieck, C. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey, NE. = oc ciires Dieckhoff, Dr. Hans Heinrich, German Em- Dassys 1828 K St Diego-Fernandez, Don Salvador, Mexican DOSE ou - ole onan Swain ns Te sin way wn Wi Diffenbaugh, Stella M., clerk to Majority Floor Leader, House, 722 Quincy St..... Dillon, E. E., House post office, 1647 Lamont Dimick, Hamilton, Office of Indian Affairs, EB er ER SE Disney, I. P., Patent Office, 1212 B St. SE... Dole, C. E., Alaskan Engineering Commis- sion, room 422, Bell St. Terminal, Seattle, Wad ore in asc usrragEey Domeratzky, Louis, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, McLean, Va......... Donahue, W. R., House Committee on Ap- propriations,14 Montgomery Ave., Takoma Park, Md eee rene rene wae Donaldson, William J., jr., superintendent 289 289 242 House press gallery, 3730 Brandywine St. 242,405 Donnelly, Horace J., senior assistant attor- ney, Post Office Department, 1430 V St.... Donovan, Daniel J., District auditor, 3578 ER TL ey a Dornoff, E. R., General Supply Committee, 132 8eventh St, NE i cries Dorsey, H. W., chief clerk, Smithsonian In- stitation, Hyattsville, Md. ............... Doney Sam C., Capitol police. ............. Dostal, G. O., United States Railroad Labor TL A ee LR i Nn lB Dougherty, Dorothy, Senate Committee on Mines and Mining, 1474 Clifton St......... Douglas, E. B., American National Red Cross, Miami Bla. ot Downey, George E., associate justice, Court of Claims (biography), 1868 Columbia Ron ve BH On SL Eee Downey, Brig. Gen. George F., Office of Quar- termaster General, 2328 California St...... Doyle, John T., Civil Service Commission, 1833 Nineteenth 8f.. .-..cco oo cnenssin. hn Dracopoulos, Mr. George, Greek Legation, - 183% Connecticut Ave... -...... 0. 0o. Drake, Clara V., House Committee on Inter- state and Foreign Commerce, C-D Build- ing, Government Hotels... ... RRS 281 465 275 297 245 299 235 305 402 277 300 410 Page. Drane, Albert G., division chief, War De- partment, 1802 Kilbourne Place........... 275 Draper, Ernest G., Columbia Institution forthe Dent. og iota Jo lion ti] 309 Draper, Leonard, Bureau of Navigation, Navy, 2006-F Bb. i fis seta ticinis 284 Draper, W. ¥., Assistant Surgeon General, Bureau of the Public Health, The Ham- mond. coi. ne ea a De 275 Driesbock, George B., General Land Office, ARLE Sei re SE Se aes RT 288 Drutzu, Mr. S., Rumanian Legation, 1833 3 mene «ue we Niele AS to me ART 413 Dudley, Frederick R., division chief, General Land Office, McLean, Va..............l.. 288 Duffey, R. N., Mississippi River Commission. 279 Duganne, C. G., Federal Trade Commission, ~Chatham: Courts... lucas iil cnr 0. 301 Dulles, Allen W., division chief, Department of State, 2328 Ashmead PI................ 272 Dumont, Col. George A. L., French Embassy, 2622 Connecticut Ave. o.oo... i . uaa... 409 Dunbar, P. B., Bureau of Chemistry, 311 Cumberland Ave., Chevy (hase, D.C. .... 292 Dunlap, C. C., office of Doorkeeper of House. 242 Dunlap, I. H., Bureau of Fisheries, 1728 Q St. 294 Dunn, William Hugh, Office of War Minerals Relief, 1752. Buelld St... cdi... nn 290 Dupré, H. Garland, Interparliamentary nion; 1410 Girard St .- a: Sil. onan. 231 Durand, Dr. William F., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. ............... 305 Durkee, J. Stanley, A. M., Ph. D., D. D., Boward University. ..-....... 0c 1.0.0 290 Durland, Joseph L., Federal Reserve Board, 2100 EIehioonth She. cic enter ass seria 300 Duryea, H. T., office of Doorkeeper of House, 1214. New York Ave. ...cov..cciecnan-is 242 Duryee, S. L., United States Engineer Office, 120 Sixth St NE i a. =. 279 Dutton, Robert W., deputy recorder of deeds, 1721 Kilbourne Plage... oo. i... .0.L. 405 Duvall, William A., Senate Committee on Military Affairs, 6314 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Ma LU 000s 235 Eadie, Alex. B., office of Superintendent State, War, and Navy Building, 2622 MyrtleAvee NB Jas oo. SRD. 310 Eastman, Joseph B., Interstate Commerce Commissioner, 2325 Twentieth St.......... 299 Eberly, Raymond, clerk to the Secretary of the Navy, 17 Randolph Place.......... 283 Eccard, August, office of Architect of Capitol, 3317 Wisconsin Ave............... 245 Eccles, Parley P., Senate Committee on Public Lands and Surveys, 33 Eighth St. NEC ra ia ea AE ai] 235 Eckhardt, Nicholas, jr., Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, 1212 Holly St... 294 Eckstein, Fred A., Postmaster of the Senate, 3361 BighteenthiSt. Ll J. To ci ee ene 236 Eddy, Walter L., Federal Reserve Board, 3151 Mount Pleasant St... ica ciate a 300 Edison, Thomas A., Naval Consulting Board. 286 Edson, John Joy, District Board of Chari- {Ie BST pes a SERS ARSE re SS Se 465 Edwards, Hope, Senate Committee on Immi- gration, 1667 Monroe St.................... 234 Edwards, John H., Solicitor for the Post Office Department, The Burlington....... 281 Edwards, John W., United States Em- ployees’ Compensation Commission, 1401 Columbia Road. = Sil i od... 303 Egge, Carl F., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General, 2310 Ashmead Place. 282 Eidsness, Michael L., jr., Office of the Third Aovvan Postmaster General, 1604 Third Bien vay sear USER BRE ei 2 1 282 Eldridge, Edward B., assistant in stationery room, Senate, 2030 Sixteenth St............ 233 Eliot, Samuel A., Board of Indian Commis- sioners, Cambridge, Mass. .....ccoueuen.... 290 Elizalde, Dr. Rafael H., 1529 New Hampshire Ave.: Ecuadorian minister. Soo Joi 00 Loa. 409 Governing Board, Pan American Union. 298 Elliot, J. H., United States Railroad Labor Board iow in in Sn TR AR 299 Individual Index. Page. Elliott, D. C.. Federal Reserve Board, 1448 Gard Sb... ce i a Elliott, Capt. Middleton S., Naval Hospital. Ellis, Capt. Hayne, naval aid to Secretary, 3000 Woodley Road... oc. cici a. vas Ely, Sims, chief clerk, Department of Justice, Phe Lafayetie. ... i covviiicicevacs Emerson, Bertrand, jr., United States attor- ney’s office, 1343 Clifton St. ............... Emerson, Ernest E., Government Printing Office, Branchville, Md yoey, Lois S., House post office, 615 Sixth Emmet, Richard S., private secretary to Sec- retary of Commerce, 2019 R St............ Engel, Carl, division chief, Library of Con- gress, 3039: Macomb. St.c........on veneer. Engle, J. Finney, Bureau of Pensions, 706 North Carolina Ave. SE................... English, Benedict M., Assistant Solicitor, State Department, 1447 Clifton St......... Entezam, Abdullah Khan, Persian Legation Ericksen, John H., Senate Committee to Audit and Control Contingent Expenses. . Erk, Edmund F., House Committee on For- eign Affairs, The Knickerbocker........... Ernst, EdwardC., United States Employees’ Compensation Commission, The Chaumont. Errdzuriz, Sefior Don Augusto, Chilean EIDassy ee ieee Erwin, Walter S., division chief, Department of Commerce, 753 Quebec Place... ......... Esch, -John J., Interstate Commerce Com- missioner, 2852 Ontario Rd ............... Eshbaugh, G. M., House post office, 731 Kentucky Ave. a eed Espil, Mr. Felipe A., 1806 Corcoran St.: Argentine Embassy... ian ao Governing Board, Pan American Union. . Estabrook, Leon M., Bureau of Agricultural Economics, 1026 Seventeenth St. ......... Estey, Wilber H., disbursing clerk of House, 3013 leventh Sto... o.oo. iia Ewing, J. K. M., office of Alien Property Custodian, 1228 Seventeenth St Ezekiels, Jeannette, juvenile court, The Boogevell. ou. oo en BR a ' Fahey, John H., United States Section of the Inter American High Commission......... Fahy, Francis L., War Finance Corporation, 1013 Twentieth: St. co 0 Fairbank, H. S., Bureau of Public Roads, 2s East Thirty-second St., Baltimore, Fairman, Charles E., office of Architect of the'Capitol, 325 USL... J. v0 iio Fall, Albert B., The Wardman Park: Secretary of the Interior (biography). --. Council of National Defense. .....ccouu... Howard University (patron ex officio)... National Forest Reservation Commission Federal Power Commission.............. Falorsi, Signor Vittorio, Italian Embassy... Faris, Robert L., 1346 Harvard St.: Coast and Geodetic Survey ....ceceeae..- Mississippi River Commission. .......... Farnsworth, Maj. Gen. Charles S., Chief of In- fantry, 3508 Macomb St., Cleveland Park... Farnum, Jessicd L., secretary, Congressional Library, 5801 Fourteenth St............... Farr, O. H., House Committee on Foreign Affairs, 1440 Kennedy St.................. Farrar, Robert W., Senate Committee on Fi- nance, Clifton Terrace East....cceuuuaaen.. Farrell, James, Bureau of Naturalization, 437 Post Office Building, Boston, Mass.--..... Farrell, Patrick J., Interstate Commerce Commission, 1436 Clifton St............... Faulkner, George T., Senate Committee on the District of Columbia...cceeeeennn... 24786°—67-4—2p Fp—— 37 300 287 283 281 272 412 561 Page. Fawell, Commander C. Reed M., Inspection Division Navy, 25 West Irving St., Chevy Fees, Don C., disbursing clerk, Department of J ustice, Petworth Gardens....c..co.a.... Feland, Brig. Gen. Logan, Marine Corps, 2400 SIXTOOIII RL, i longs deers moss ss Fenning, Karl, Patent Office, 3765 North- ampton St., Chevy Chase... Cv naa Ferguson, Commander J. N., National Screw Thread Commission, United States Navy. Fernald, Bert M., Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission, Congress Hall ................ Fernandez, Sefior Ldo. Don Ramiro, Guate- malan Legation, 1526 Varnum St... ....... Ferree, Sheridan, Office of War Minerals Relief, 3465 Macomb St... ..... 0... 0 Ferrer, Lieut. Commander Gabriel, Spanish Embassy, The Wardman Park. ........... Fess, Lehr, clerk at Speaker’s table, 7127 ChesinT AL. cee vurwnrn nde nin = sina des Fess, Simeon D., Joint Committee on the Library, Congress Holl, 4... i.. ous nga. Fewkes, J. Walter, Chief Bureau of American Ethnology, Forest Glen, Md............... Fidler, Harry L., vice chairman Federal Board for Vocational Education.......... Field, Capt. James G., president Board of Medical Examiners, Navy, 2818 Cathedral TRI CoRR TL Field, Richard F., office of Sergeant at Arms of Senate, 1348 East Capital St... ....._.. Ll James L., American National Red Te ES SE a eR OR Filer, Herbert A., Civil Service Commission, Kensington, Md... fo oo Aron Fillius, Leila B., House Committee en the fo Office and Post Roads, 431 Fifth St. Finch, James A., attorney in charge of par- So Department of Justice, 3645 Grant ER RR NE IRS TR I Finney, Edward C., First Assistant Secretary, Interior Department, 3536 Edmunds St... Finotti, Frank M., St. Elizabeths Hospital. . Fishburn, Randolph E., International Boun- dary Commission, United States and Mex- Fisher, E. V., District Public Utilities Com- - mission, 1607 Thirtieth St. SE. ..cooeen.... Fisher, Roland M., House post office, 312 Second St NBL... den cession Fitch, Charles H., Reclamation Service, 3616 Newark St.,Cleveland Park............... Flanders, Ralph E., National Screw Thread Commission... oi. anemone sae nsss Flenner, Harriet, House Committee on Rules, The Roosevelt... ... 0... series nes Fletcher, Duncan U., Joint Committee on Printing, 1455 Massachusetts Ave......... Fliess, Capt. Enrique, Argentine Embassy, 250 West Fifty-seventh St.,New York City. Flint, A. L., chief of office of Panama Canal, Friendship Heights, Bethesda, Md. ....... Flournoy, Richard W., jr., assistant to the solicitor, State Department, 3122 P St .... Flynn, Herbert S., Office of Chief Signal Offi- cer, Army, The Dresden. .ooeeseneneenion Focht, Ellen W., House Committee on the District of Columbia, 1228 Sixteenth St.... Fontaine, Jean de, Belgian Embassy........ Forbes, é. R., Director United States Vet- rans’ Bureall. cL sid pea se Ford, Juliette, Office of Third Assistant Post master General, 1214 I St.................. Forster, Rudolph, executive clerk, White House, The Wardman Park ....cceeeue..... Foster, Guild C., office of Alien Property Custodian, 1737 New Hampshire Ave...... Foster, Howard C., assistant Journal clerk of Senate, The Northumberland............. 284 242 407 304 282 271 303 233 562 Congressional Directory. Page. Foulk, Oliver E., Federal Reserve Board, 3109 ‘Twenty-fourth St. NE rays, Samuel E., Patent Office, 730 Quebec Fowler, William C., District health officer, bY A OI Si ES a Fowler, Willis J., Office Comptroller of the Currency, Hammond Court. ..........e... Frampton, Hugh M., Fixed Rirogen Re- search A Loh The Alba Frank, Maj. W. H., Office of Chief of the Air i ly The Bomerset.. ............. Franke, Col. TF. W., National Home for Dis- abled Volunteer Soldiers. .................. Frankenfield, Harry C., Weather Bureau, 1735 New Hampshire VO a Franklin, Virgil H. Frise to Speaker of House, "720 Kastle Place NE............... Franks, Edw. T., Federal Board for Voca- Freer, Harr 5 Board of alin for Rivers an Harbors 4912 Forty-first S¢.. Frelinghuysen, Mrs. 5 oseph §S., president Congressional Club.’ . ein ahiadin French, Arthur S., Packers and Stockyards Administration, The Columbia ..... ..... Freund, Sanford H. E., The Racquet Club Emergency Fleet Corporation Pa wig a d United States Shipping Board..... Fridley, Miss D. F., United States “Bureau of Efficiency, 628 Lexington Place NE.... Fries, Brig. Gen. Amos A., Chief of Chemi- cal Warfare Service, 1748 Corcoran St...... Li Arthur G., District recorder of _ 934 Fugitt, Edward D., Senate Committee to Audit and Control Contingent Expenses, Seat Pleasant, Md ........ ono viviemonns Fujii, Maj. Yoji, Japanese Embassy, 1415 Chapin Shy fie) ceil, cos = ak vn vied tain sho Fuller, William H., Federal Trade Com- mission, The Monmouth 8 nmr maa a Gable, Charles L. , Office of Third Assistant Postmaster General, 4426 Ninth St...... Galt, Ralph L., president District flour com- missioners, First St. and Indiana Ave..... Galvao Bueno, Mr. Americo de, Brazilian Embassy, Stoneleigh Conn or Gana-Serruys, Don Oscar, Chilean Embassy, The Wardman Parle. rr evs dasa ston Gannon, J. A., visiting physician, Washing- ton Asylum and J ail, 1915 Biltmore St..... Gannon, Capt. Sinclair, The Cairo: War Plans Divi ision, Navy (acting) .. Thegoeint Board =o id Garber, B. S., Office of Indian Affairs, 2806 A IRE i Gardener, Mrs. Helen H., yl Service Com- missioner, 1838 Lamont 8 SA a Gardes, A. H., United States Emplo ees’ Compensation Commission, West Falls Chute, Vn: oo een ia niin, Gardner, Bert C., office of Superintendent State, War, and Navy Department Build- ings, 2117 d Ba rr i ee a id Gardner, George B., board of Anpens, In- fer Department, ‘R.F.D.No.1 , Rosslyn, i Obadiah, chairman, International Joint Commission, Rockland, Me.......... Gardner, Washington, Commissioner of Pen- Song. a Ba SE Re ha Garges, Daniel E., secretary to District Board of Commissioners, 121 Twelfth St. NE..... Garland, J. S., District superintendent of water department, 3803 Huntington St.. Garrett, Finis J., Acting Minority Floor Leader, House, 3601 Thirty-fifth St ....... Gaskill, Nelson B., Federal Trade Commis- sioner, The Chastloton... os 411 283 303 289 310 Page. Gasser, Lieut. Col. L. D., General Staff, War Department, 2400 Sixteenth St........._.. Gates, W. L., Senate Committee on the District of Columbia... .creeane-iis Gatewood, Commander R. D., Emergenc ost Corporation, 45 Broadway, New Sr Gauss, Herman C., General Land Office, TE Emerson St 1.0 tea Geddes, Right Hon. Sir ay British ambassador a ER PRR SE LE ER George, Alice, Senate Committee on Irrigation and Reclamation, 769 Quebec Place........ Gerhard, A., General Staff, War Department, BOUT TUNGIETATE sae re ge Gerig, William C., Alaskan Engineering Com- mission, Anchorage, Alasla oo a Geshkoff, "Mr. Theodore, Bulgarian Legation, 1821 YoROrSOTL PIACD. « oe ox oes on cena nes os Gibbins, Lieut. Col. Henry, Army War College, ‘Washington Barracks... ......... Gibson, Dr. W. S., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, The Shawmtite so ees aes Gilbert, Mary G., General Accounting Office, BD ovontl Ble. thorns sr bi Gilbert, Prentiss B., division chief, State De- partment, 816 Seventeenth St............. Gilbert, Ralph, Joint Committee on the Library Congress 10 Brathan Selena Gilbert, ve: , jr., Undersecretary of the Treasury, & ‘charge of Fiscal Affairs, 1819 hs Se Snips AY ore hE A Pe Gilbert, William C., city post office, 4210 BOVINE ois cp agile oss witmminle viaing ins o's Gilchrist, William, United States attorney’s office, 1607 LATNONE Bs: oe reese rns Gilfry, Henry H., office of Secretary of Senate, 313 East Capitol Sl. thas Salida sisi vavaide Gill, C. W., District fire department, 201 I St. Gillett, Frederick H.,: 1525 Eighteenth St.: Speaker Of HIOUSE i. . oo este ade sa as Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission. Commission in Control of House Office Building: ves ines avhn ssa teh swiss Washington National Monument Asso- CIabiON: ooh sms sai Ph sd ees ban Gillette, Edward C., Bureau of Lighthouses, 3343 Seventeenth St............... .. uu. - Gillis, T. A., Interstate Jormercs Commis- sion, 4014 Twelfth St. Gillman, Howard M., jr., LR Dogince:. ing Commission, 3449 Holmead Place... ... Ginn, dns. R., General Accounting Office, YDS LBL. . tuo codirescs ios asd did Given, Ralph, office United States attorney, 3716 Morrison St. , Chevy Chase. ........... Glass, Charles I. , division chief, Interior De- partment, 17 Maple Ave. , Hyattsville, Md. Glenn, Edward A. , Mississippi River Com- mission, St. Louis, MOi0; eit insusssiiaiis Glover, Charles C., Washington National Monument Society freee dps he oR ee Glover, Warren Irving, Third Assistant Post- master General, The Wardman Park... .. Glynn, Theresa Cc, House Committee on La- bor, OE NOWION BE: aes tr snes Godjevac, Mr. Slobadan, Legation of Serbs, Croats,and Slovenes, 1519 Connecticut Ave. Goff, Lieut. Orlo 8., Office of Chief Coordi- nator, Treasury, The Wardman Park An- Gold, Martha R., Senate Committee on Print- ing, The Albemarle ods. Goldenweiser, E. A., Federal Reserve Board, Golibart, S. R.,ir., Gnited States Employees’ Compensation Commission, 1932 Calvert St. Golzé, Rudolph L., General Accounting Office, 1715 Coreoran St... . .sinrst cuits Gom ers, Samuel J., chief clerk, Department of Labor, 2517 North Capitol Ds | | Individual Index. Page. Goodwin, Mrs. Etta R., confidential clerk to : tinny of Commerce, 2317 Ashmead RAR EA El Si Ls Gordon, J. C. F., Bureau of Naturalization, Federal Building, Philadelphia, Pa........ Gordon, Peyton, United States attorney, The Wardman Park. =70 ooo, alias, Gore, Howard M., Packers and Stockyards Administration, The Harrington......... Gotwals, Maj. John C., Board of Road Com- migsionersifor Alaska... ... 0 i. senaacees Gould, Norman J. : Meade Memorial Commission............ Commission on Memorial to Women of the CivilkWar. i. 0. Lal ola ns Joint Committee on the Library......... John Ericsson Memorial Commission. ... Goutésha, Mr. Vladimir, legation of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. . i i... 0.00 Gove, Chase C., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General, 1221 B St. SE._....... Grabill, L.. R., District superintendent of roads, Takoma Park, Md Gracie, Samuel de Sousa Leao, Brazilian Embassy, 1912 Sunderland P1............. Graeffe, Mr. Egbert, Belgium Embassy, 2012 Kalorama Road = 5) nl Balls Hi FIN Graham, Mary, District nurses’ examining host ABSTECSE 20 Loli eis Graham, Samuel J., judge, Court of Claims, 1889:Columbia Road. . Loi aan. oo L200, Graves, Harold N., United States Bureau of Efficiency, 6926 Ninth St. ................. Graves, John Temple, Lincoln Memorial Commission, 1730 St... 0... aoa. Caan Gray, Earl U., United States Railroad Labor Board Sl J SR iL Ses Gray, George, chairman executive commit- tee and Regent of Smithsonian Institution, Wilmington, Del... si..oit ition snails Gray, Samuel H., Official Reporter, House, 1832 BIHMOIE SE. ees nn ns sin ge snide anne Grayson, Rear Admiral Cary T. (Medical Corps, U. S. N.), Naval Dispensary, 1600 Sixteenth Bt... 0... 0. i Lr, Grayson, George H., Office of the Second Assistant Postmaster General, Falkstone Grayson, Joel, House document room, Vi- CIB V A ove vari mints aiuiin ities wipes oan sia Greeley, W. B., Chief Forest Service, 219 Elm St., Chevy Chase, Md. ......c......... Green, Frank Key, marshal of United States Supreme Court, 2907 Q St. . ...ceueuvnaaase Green, H. H., assistant superintendent Dis- trict workhouse. (i. tou solos niin Greene, Frank L., Board of Regents, Smith- sonian Institution, The Driscoll. .......... Greene, John, Deputy Public Printer, 41 Rhodedsian@ Ave... ... 0 oui. 000 Greenleaf, James L., vice chairman Com- mission of Fine Arts, New York City.... Greenwood, Grace, House Committee on Ways and Means, The Roosevelt.......... Gregory, Rear Admiral L. E., Chief Bureau of Yards and Docks, 2335 Ashmead Place. Grenfell, F. W., 1916 H St.: District board of examiners of veterinary medielne. © Li Lo RU TG Distriet veterinary surgeon.............. Griest, W. W., Joint Commission on Postal Service, The Washington.................. Griffin, Appleton P. C., Chief Assistant Li- brarian of Congress, 2150 Florida Ave...... Griffin, J. M., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 1340: Gallatin Shon al. di. Griffin, J. P., office of Doorkeeper of House. . . Griffin, Dr. Thomas A., Civil Service Com- mission, 2434 Twentieth St................ 294 288 466 296 404 465 466 242 563 Page. Griffin, William V., Pan American Union, 1338 Twenty-second St. ................... Griffith, F. W., Federal Power Commission, 0001 SE INTE ol ise RE Griffith, W. E., Emergency Fleet Corpora- Hom, NWSE. Grogan, Starke M., Bureau of the Census, TheSherman.... oi. oil iat a] Grover, N. C., Geological Survey, 1442 Bel- MORASS es a Eh Gude, William F., District Rent Commis- sion, 3800 New Hampshire Ave............ Guérin, Mr. Hubert, French Embassy, A auSeer Sr Guerra, Seilor Don Servando Barrera, Mex- ican Embassy, The Chastleton............ Guidoni, Lieut. Col. Alessandro, Italian Em- bassy, The Woodward... ....... a 0.cio- Guill, John, jr., Federal Farm Loan Bureau, 333 Hayes St., Clarendon, Va.............. Guiteras, Dr. Juan, International Sanitary Bureaw, Habana, Cuba.......... 0. 00. Gunnell, Leonard C., assistant in charge of Regional Bureau for United States, Inter- national Catalogue of Scientific Literature, Smithsonian’ Institution.................. Gunther, F. A., District board of assistant assessors of personal property, 3204 Twenty- seeond Bt NE oN Hachiro Arita, Mr., Japanese Embassy, The Portland: ou isvi oar Ln. oa AS Hacker, Morris, supervisor of disposal of city refuse, 1825 Adams Mill Road.............. Hackworth, Green H., assistant to the Solici- tor, State Department, 120 V St. NE...... Haden, T. Leo, Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 3814 Thirteenth St................ Hadi Khan, Khatiblou, Persian Legation. . Hadley, Mrs. Lindley H., corresponding secretary of Congressional Club, 5.0557 Hadley, W. B., District electrical engineer,. 3031 Seventh St. NB. coos... .. 00... Hainer, Bayard T., Packers and Stockyards Administration, The Cairo................ Hair, George E., General Land Office, 1821 Hall, Henry C., member Interstate Com- merce Commission, 2238 Q St............ Hall, Percival, president Columbia Institu- tionforthe Deaf... ... .... con i. 0... Hamill, P. J., House post office, 312 Maryland Aye NB. Gr a nd ss Hamilton, Emmet, Office of Quartermaster General, Army, 162 Tennessee Ave. NE... Hamilton-Gordon, A. H., British Embassy, 3147 Sixteenth St... .. 0... oh Hamlin, Charles S., Federal Reserve Board, OI Barron Sq... aL le Hammar, Mrs. Frank V., American National Red Cross, St. Louis, Me..............L... Hammond, John Hays, chairman United States. Coal Commission, 2301 Kalorama Road. oh RE DR OY Hand, Robert G., Commissioner of Accounts and Deposits, Treasury Department, 3530 Eleventh St... i co ol us oo Bion Hanger, G. W. W., United States Railroad Labor Board. o.oo ta neh a eat bh Hanlon, J. J., District fire department, 1345 Florida Ave. Hanna, Matthew E., division chief, State Department, The Chastleton.............. Hanssen, Capt. C. Froelich, Norwegian Lega- Happer, John A., Senate Committee on Pen- sions, The Wardman Park... . i. ....... Harbaugh, Charles A., Bureau of the Budget, 2800 Thirteenth St. NE 307 302 294 290 467 409 412 411 274 310 297 299 412 wi oe Page. Harcourt, Gertrude F., Senate Committes on Military Affairs, G-H Building, Gov- ernment Hotels: of. oni LU Lk Hardesty, Annie L., Senate Committee on Indian Affajrs, The Grant................. Hardie, W. V., Interstate Commerce Com- mission; UB PR 8hi on ant a Hardin, Lieut. John R., United States Engi- neer Office, 1314 Farragut St .<............ Harding, Rt. Rev. Alfred, D. D., Washing- ton National Monument Society........... Harding, Warren G.: President of the United States (biog- DAY)... Re ST President ex officio Washington National Monument Sociely.......ccccvveann... Patron ex officio Columbia Institution for Member of Smithsonian Institution...... Commission on Memorial to Women of the Civil War... oi san eat Chairman Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission... oii. hi bi. es President American National Red Cross. Hardison, Robert, judge of police court, 2017 Nineteenth St... 0 oa ig oa iui ag Hardy, Elsie, Conference Minority of the Senate, 1336 South Carolina Ave. SE....... Hargrove, M. C., District purchasing officer, LT Se A Ee LS Ee Haring, John W., office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, 128 W St............ Harper, James E., division chief, Treasury Department, East Underwood, Chevy Chase, Md: .oo J tl nia anon Harriman, N. F., General Supply Commit- tee, The Pentilly mori. Lis ona Harris, A. L., municipal architect of District, VB LATORE Bhs. os oe choi sores taia at Harris, Henry J., division chief, Congressional Harrison, Floyd R., War Finance Corpora- tion, 2700 Connecticut Ave................ Harrison, Leland, Assistant Secretary of State, I7ISH Sto ia ne oi aay Harrison, Pat, Joint Committee on the Re- organization of the Administrative Branch of the Government, 2007 Belmont Road... Harrison, W. H., District Metropolitan police, rE TE Fe RR EO Le nS SR RT Hart, David A., United States attorney’s office, 1924 Seventeenth St... ............. Hart, M. W., United States Railroad Labor Board... oo. rae Alma a Re ny Hart, Ringgold, assistant District corporation counsel, 428 Eighth St. NE................ Hart, Maj. Gen. W. H., The Brighton: Quartermaster General, Army........... United States Soldiers’ Home. . ......... Hart, William O., House Committee on In- dian Affairs, 626:B St. NE......... oh... Hart, William O., United States Section of Inter American High Commission ........ Hartley, Eugene F., Bureau of the Census; 436 Park Road of. 0 nani. sion Hartson, Nelson T., Solicitor of Internal Revenue, The Bachelor................. 274 Harvey, Frederick L., secretary Washington National Monument Society, 2146 Florida ANC. a RE dL Sold Harvey, John, chief clerk Interior Depart- ment, 1416 Shepherd St............. 000... Hasse, Miss A. R., United States Council of NationglDefenge i... ..... clita Hassell, Calvin W ., assistant attorney, Post Office Department, 219 Baltimore Ave., Takoma Park, Md... inn. Hastings, Charles H., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 3600 Ordway St., Cleveland 0 HR ele Ne Se el Sr re Hastings, Clifford, division chief, Department of Commerce, Franklin Park, Va.......... 235 234 299 279 308 564 Congressional Directory. Page. Hatch, Lieut. Col. Charles B., office of Fed- eral Fuel Distributor, 1510 Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa: 2 or ris eons 311 Hatsutaro Haraguchi, Maj. Gen., Japanese Embassy, The Portland. i: ooo on 411 Hathaway, Alvin D., General Land Office, N7SIxth 8 NB ian 288 Haugen, L. G., House Committee on A gri- culture, Congress Hall ..................... 242 Hauke, Charles F., Office of Indian Affairs, 605 MassachusettsAve.NE................ 289 Haupt, Alfred B., assistant to the Solicitor, State Department, 3707 Springdale Ave., Baltimore, Md. 3. co vireo has 272 Havenner, George C., United States Bu- reau of Efficiency, 1745 Minnesota Ave.SE. 300 Hawk, Amos W ., division chief, Interior De- partment, Thirtieth St. and Bunker Hill Road, Mount Rainier. Md.................. 288 Hawks, Emma B., assistant librarian, De- Diriment of Agriculture, 2622 Thirteenth IE Sa he A SRR aii A in ae rhe 02 Hawks, Stanley, division chief, State De- partment, The Racquet Club............. 272 Hawley, Willis C., member National Forest Reservation Commission, The Woodley... 228 Hay, James, judge, Court of Claims (biogra- Phy); Fhe Cecil. i ivdice ici snuns sins «si 403 Haycock, W. H., city post office, Tunlaw Road ond Jewett Stoo. oui o ni whan 469 Hayford, Dr. John F., member National Ad- visory Committee for Aeronautics......... 305 Haymaker, Hays, Bureau of Pensions, Hy- attsville Md uu oii aa es 289 Haynes, R. A., Prohibition Commissioner, TheOntario- sau st irmaesi ha ne 274 Hayward, H. A., Federal Narcotics Control Board, 125 Villa Road, Clarendon, Va.... 310 Haywood, J. K., Insecticide and Fungicide Board, 1729 Lanier Place. =... .i...w.. od. 293 Hazen, M. C., District surveyor, 1839 Six- teenthSt no vioul age ari sens 466 Hazen, Nathan, Office of the Chief of Ord- nance, Army, 2844 Twenty-seventh St..... 279 Headley, A. J., office Metropolitan police, 217 Ninth: St 8Weos coat bile onlaly. on 467 Heagy, John M., House document room, 323 Maryland Ave. NE... .....t.ui.oe. 242 Healy, John P., District inspector of build- Ings, 1802 UBF. occa. ic cine eas 466 Healy, Ono M., Senate Committee on Edu- cation and Labor, Fontanet Courfs........ 234 Hearst, Sir William, K. C. M. G., Interna- tional Joint Commission, Toronto, Ontario. 306 Heck, N. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 8507 Northampton St... =... Soa 295 Heeren, Seilor Don Arturo, Spanish Em- DABEY coin see AL aS ee 414 Heffernan, Bernard D., United States attor- ney’s office, 111 Third St. NE............. 404 Heflin, C. R., Federal Farm Loan Bureau, I ag a Es TE Rn a 274 Hefner, Wilson C., Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills, 327 Second St. NE......... 234 Heilig, IB. A ., city post office, 1401 Girard St.. 469 Heilmann, Mr. M., French Embassy, 2600 TidensAve sci. coisa re vay 409 Heintzelman, Brig. Gen. Stuart, General Staff, War Department, 2301 Connecticut Te se ON EE BSR Te Se 276 Heizer, Mabel S., Senate Committee on Ap- propriations, 1508 Crittenden St........... 234 Helmick, Maj. Gen. Eli A., Inspector Gen- eral, Army, 3506 Garfield St............... 277 Helmus, John, House Committee on Claims. = 242 Hempstead, D. K., messenger to Minority Roomy, HOUSE... ta thi en ee as iit 242 Hempstone, Lieut. Commander Smith, Office of Chief Coordinator, Treasury, 3938 Morri- son St., Chevy Chase, Md................. 273 Henderson, Commander A. J., Office of the Coast Guard, 2123 California St... .... .... 275 Henderson, Gerard C., War Finance Corpora- tion, 1868 Columbia Road---: 0... i 0: 303 Henderson, Paul, Second Assistant Post- master General, Thirty-second St. and Woodland Drive... cco. onicieteneinen sions 282 tthe fh cmp Ri oh ———— Individual Index. Henderson, W. C., Bureau of Biological Sur- vey, 4727 Thirteenth St... coeeane.as.. Hengstler, Herbert C., bureau chief, State Department, 2816 Twenty-seventh St...... Henkel, Edward, Bureau of Navigation, Navy, 6309 Connecticut Ave............... Henning, E. J., Assistant Secretary of Labor, 2701 Connecticut - Ave. oi. ...ciiiicanrasme Monree St... oi Rie. Henry, Sidney, Emergency Fleet Corpora- tion, The Brighton... over evwssies mint Hepburn, Charles J., office of Federal Fuel Distributor, The Racquet Club........... "Herndon, John G., Office Comptroller of the Currency, The Rockingham. .............. Herrera Salcedo, Sefior Don Alfonso, Mexican Embassy, The Ambassador. .............. Herson, James F'., Federal Reserve Board... Hertelendy, Mr. Andor de, Hungarian Lega- tion, 1954 Columbia Road........cc...... Hertzler, William, file clerk of House, 516 Bast Capliol St... co cme ce nse Hess, Elmer C., House Committee on Print- ing, The Southern. i... int ote. cauvs Hess, George W., director United States Botanic Garden. 2... ui nvacs nas sana aes Hesse, ain B., Metropolitan police, 506 A BS rr rs ne rR ere - Hesse, Henry A., Civil Service Commission, 510 A St. SE Hewitt, J. N. B., United States Geographic Board Hickey, John J., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 1808 I St Hickling, Dr. D. Percy, District alienist, 1304 Rhode Island Ave. ...i. ci rcrvensns Hicks, Frederick C., Joint Committee In- vestigating Naval Base Sites, ete., Stone- 1eigNICOUrt. . cc soem As ac spas Higgins, Samuel, United States Railroad Labor Board se ce tees Higginson, Sefor Eduardo, Peruvian Lega- tion, 42 Broadway, New York City........ Hileman, Grace J., Senate Committee on Education and Labor, 2001 Sixteenth St... Hill, Dr. Albert Ross, American National Red Cross... .. or oes Hill, George, House post office. ............. Hill, Joseph A., Bureau of the Census, 8 Towa Cirelesr: ee i inns Hill, Louis A., Director Bureau of Engraving and Printing, Riverdale, Md.............. “Hill, Ralph W. S., assistant to the solicitor, Department of State, 10 Jackson Place. ... Hillebrand, W. F., Bureau of Standards, 3023 Newark Bt Hillmyer, John A., office of Doorkeeper of House, 412 New Jersey Ave. SE. .......... Hine, H. O., District board of education, 3204 Highland Pl., Cleveland Park......... Hines, Maj . Gen. John L., War Department General Staff, Fort Myer, Va............. Hirsch, Arthur J., Bureau of the Census, 2032: North Capitol:Sts ~- 1 FF oo Hiscox, J. W., Department of Agriculture, 12834 Newton St NE. > 0 0 oor Hitz, William, associate justice, District Su- preme Conrt, 1901 N Sp... oii oo... Hoadley, Frank M., principal clerk, War Department, 28 West Kirke St., Chevy Chase, Md Hoage, R. J., United States Employees’ Compensation Commission, 2000 H St. .... Hodges, Henry W., clerk, District Court of Apenls, 208 CO Ot ssh erases Hoehling, Adolph A., associate justice, Dis- trict Supreme Court, 5 Newlands St., Chevy Chase, M3: Cr 0 ee Page. 412 300 . 305 44 275 565 Page. Hoffman, Col. George M., 305 Customhouse, New Orleans, La.: Bord of Engineers for Rivers and Har- ER EO SE Mississippi River Commission........... Hoiland, A. H., disbursing clerk, Navy De- partment, route 1, box 75, Falls Church, Va. Holbrook, Maj. Gen. Willard A., Chief of Cavalry, 1870 Wyoming Ave.....cccauu.... Holden, A. C., Office of Commissioner of In- ternal Revenue, 1205 Fifteenth St........ Holland, Rush L., Assistant Attorney Gen- eral, The Wardman Park... .....c..ci.... Hollingsworth, John H., Chief Clerk of House, Ashland Ave., West Hyattsville, Hollister, N., superintendent National Zoo- logical Park, 1915°Calvert Si .x. oh suion ena Holman, Charles R., District health depart- ment, 314 East Capitol St.....ceecnannnn.. Holmead, Alfred, assistant secretary Inter- state Commerce Commission, 1104 Mary- land Ave. SW Holmes, Kirk, Bureau of Supplies and Ac- Newiohi Bt. ns. ees 136 D St. Holzberg, Tonnis J.,quartermaster’s depart- ment, Headquarters Marine Corps, 2625 EloVenthuBl. ic ci vores sanmssthannemoas Hong Nien Tong, Mr., Chinese Legation... .. Honour, Theo., Bureau of Education, 1723 Wild BL os cer rein ses sie Hooper, Ben W., United States Railroad Labor Board... hin saci ers ene Hoover, Dickerson N., Steamboat-Inspection Service, 411 Seward Square SE............. Hoover, Frank W., State, War, and Navy Department Building, 4409 Towa Ave...... Hoover, Herbert, 2300 S St.: Secretary of Commerce (biography)...... Council of National Defense............ Member of Smithsonian Institution... ... Member Board for Vocational Education United States Section of the Inter Ameri- can High Commission.......cc.ca-o--- ‘World War Foreign Debt Commission... Federal Narcotics Control Board......... American National Red Cross. ...eee.... Hopkins, C. N., House post office, 112 East CE ere EN a Ses Hopkins, H. A., principallegislative clerk of Senate, 2701 Connecticut Ave............. Hopkins, Oliver P., Bureau of Foreign and . Domestic Commerce, 1824 Belmont Road. Hoppin, William W., Assistant Attorney General, customs division, Department on : ustice, 641 Washington EH ew York Hope abdaiasbasnedis shine dedi Horigan, W. D., Naval Observatory, 3028 WISCONSIN AVE, vo. cera caneormnssmeins Ep Hornaday, Dr. F. A., District anatomical board, The Rochambeatl....... vex aes-=ae= Hossick, George A., House Committee on Public Lands, 1808 Kearney St. NE. ..... Hostetler, T. A., Patent Office, 3339 Eigh- TOORIITEL. ie Hough, Walter, National Museum, 1423 Monroe St To Office Department, Clifton Terrace OR rae ee ts eRe as ag a Howry, Charles B., retired judge, Court of Cline, 1728 Bf Hoxton, W. W., Federal Reserve Board, Rucker Place, North Rosemont, Alex- YATE EE DRA rire sient Sag Ln SUR REE LORS 278 279 280 287 408 566 Congressional Directory. Page. Hubbard, Henry D., Bureau of Standards, 112 Quiney St., Chevy Chase, Md.......... Hubbell, Neva J., Senate Committee on Pen- gong, 644 Bb NR. cs iii aaranae Hubrecht, Dr. J. B., Netherlands Legation, Mount Eagle, Alexandria, Va............. Hudson, Millard F., Federal Trade Commis- gion, The New Berne. .................0. 0 Hughes, Charles Evans, 1529 Eighteenth St.: Secretary of State (biography)-.......... Member of Smithsonian Institution...... Governing Board, Pan American Union. . World War Foreign Debt Commission... Federal Narcotics Control Board......... Hughes, Frederick J., Bureau of Agricultural Teonores; 1825 St... inci ran iiase Hughes, James l.;, Bureau of Immigration, Gloteester IN; J. Jf tes senate ara Hughes, Col. John H., Office of Chief of Infan- ae he eR tie ps Sas de an Hull, Col. J. A., 1837 M St.: Office of the Judge Advocate General, ATIVE rat ad a Te Humphrey, Thomas K., Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 1 Eighteenth St. SE. .... Hung, Dorothy E., confidential clerk to gia Secretary of Navy, 901 Twentieth Hunsaker, Commander Jerome C., National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. ..... Hunt, C. B., District engineer of highways, 1316'New Hampshire Ave................. Hunt, Edward Eyre, secretary United States Coal Commission, 3532 Connecticut Ave... Hunt, Gaillard, division chief, State Depart- ment, R. F. D. 71, Falls Church, Va...... Hunt, Harry J., stationery clerk of House, 338 Maryland Ave. NE....oseeeennnnnsen- Hunt, Col. I. L., United States Council of National Defense... . .... cr ceccoenr Hunt, William C., Bureau of the Census, 2628 SULIT BI eee Waal ute Rn Ear ed Husband, W. W., Commissioner General of Immigration, 3456 Macomb St............. Husting, Elizabeth V., private secretary to Ap Secretary of Labor, 1758 Lanier CL bs Se ane Ena ce SE I Huston, Claudius H., Assistant Secretary of Commerce, The Wardman Park........... Hutchins, Goldie D., House Committee on Disposition of Useless Executive Papers, 128 B St. NE Hutchinson, Margaret, District nurses’ exam- ing board, 1337 K St Hyllen, Axel, Office of the Chief of Cavalry, route No. 2, Alexandria; Va. .............- Ijams, George E., United States Veterans’ Bureau, 3201 Carlisle A ve., Baltimore, Md. Imlay, W. M., Federal Reserve Board, 106 Raymond St., Chevy Chase, Md........... Inbody, Eber F., General Accounting Office, Cherrydale, Va... on re aut corms Inwood, H, S., House post office, 217 East Copal Bb... ne et in ea aot ie Ireland, Maj. Gen. M. W., The Wyoming: Surgeon General, ATmy.....ccecueeuen-n American National Red Cross..........- Commissioner, United States Soldiers’ Irons, Abbie S., Senate Committee on En- rolled Bills, Government Hotels... ......... Irwin, Col. G. Le R., Office of the Inspector General, Army, The Toronto.............. Ives, Guy E., printing clerk of the Senate, IN i hr Ives, Roy, House folding room, 623 A St. NE. Jacobs, 3. R., Deputy Commissioner of the Public Debt, Treasury Department, 1473 ASE Se Pe Jacobson, M., Federal Reserve Board, 1424 Madison St... =..--=-srsnvescesrasnonvensecns 294 235 278 305 Page. Jahnke, Lieut. W. C., Office of Chief Coordina- tor, Treasury, ILL IK St C. .. oases Regent, Smithsonian Institution. ....... Johnson, Ethel S., Senate Committee on Public Lands and Surveys, 2521 Connecti- CAE oC eee Johnson, Frederick T., House Committee on Pensions, 29 Rhode Tdand Ave... Johnson, Maj. J. O., National Screw Thread COIISS ON ree Johnson, John P., Bureau of Immigration, Long Wharf, Boston, Mass... oo... ...:. Johnson, L. S., District board of assistant assessors of real estate, 716 Shepherd St.... Johnson, Otis B., Federal Trade Commission, 4139 New Hampshire Ave.....cccceuean... Johnson, W. R., superintendent House fold- ing room, 234 New Jersey Ave............. Johnson, Walter A., executive clerk of Senate, 642 Bast Capitol St... oes eee Johnston, Mrs. C. E., States Relations Serv- leo, 1316 Mucha Sts... veer menntors Johnston, Rear Admiral Marbury, 1811 R St.: Naval Examining Board ............... Naval Retiring Board ...........->--0-- Jones, E. Lester, 2116 Bancroft Place: International Boundary Commission, United States and Canada ............ Director Coast and Geodetic Survey. .... Jones, Francis I., United States Employment Service, 17 Dupont Circle ................. Jones, Hazel E., Senate Committee on Com- meres, The Calne: ot. arr. nds date min Jones, Hiram B., city post office, 2122 Deca- ger AE al I EE Ce papa Jones, James E., Office of Commissioner of In- ternal Revenue, 3111 Thirty-fourth St..... Jones, Orlin M., Senate Committee on Fi- nance, 124 C St.NE. eos c iis oewiernion Jones, Lieut. Col. P. L., Army Medical School, The Dresden.........vvceeuuun.... J ones, Thomas E., M. D., Freedmen’s Hos- DUAL Li eriiaivains Sone swe e e wine mea ee Jones, Wesley L., United States Section of the Inter American High Commission. ... Jordan, A. C., office of Sergeant at Arms of House, 10 BSE. SB. oi. seh, carne Jorgenson, Milton C., Senate Committee on. Civil Service, 2700 Thirty-sixth St......... J orgensen, William F., House Committee on ANS. a tae SR ha sui Joubert, Licdo. Emilio C., 1631 Massachusetts Ave.: ve.: Minister of the Dominican Republic.... Governing Board, Pan American Union. Julihn, C. E., Office of War Minerals Relief, MET Scientia ee. Aidt Jullien, Edna T., Senate Committee on the 1ibuary, 6 West Kirk St., Chevy Chase, Jump, W. A., administrative assistant and Budget officer, Department of Agriculture, RR ES I EE a Te i ae Jusserand, Mr. J. J., French ambassador... ... Kalbach, Lewis A., Bureau of Education, Navy, ATO St. or Td amen Kane, Thomas P., Office Comptroller of the Curreney, 1931 Calvert St.................. Kaplan, Rosalie, Senate Committee on Ap- propriations, The Northumberland....... Karavongse, Phya Prabha, Siamese min- ister, 2300 Kalorama Road ............... Karrer, Sebastian, Fixed Nitrogen Research Laboratory, 3519 Lowell St............c... 243 288 280 412 244 228 297 235 243 304 296 465 301 242 233 292 286 286 306 295 409 298 109 Individual Index. Page. Rog, Charles A., office of Doorkeeper of OUIBE: Coes ssvs nnvsmnivns instar as tots Kautz, Capt. Austin, Naval Observatory, 1305: Nineteenth St... 00 ne iis Kearney, George A., librarian, Department of Justice, 1324 Monroe St ......ccue...... Keefer, Abraham B., law clerk, Post Office Department, 2028 First St................. Keegan, George, office of Doorkeeper of House, 805 Duke St., Alexandria, Va...... Keegan, John J., United States Employees’ Compensation Commission, The Shawmut Keene, W. B., Emergency Fleet Corporation, The Burlington... ci ol 0a lia Keim, Alfred H., division of purchasing agent, Post Office Department, 144 Ken- tacky: Ave. BB... 0 0. BolT Ta Kine James, District fire department, 33 Keller, Col. Charles, Engineer Commissioner, District Board of Commissioners, 1870 Wyo- mingAve... o.0 T Keller, Thomas W., Assistant Doorkeeper of ~ Senate, 3406 Thirteenth St Kellerman, Karl F., Bureau of Plant Indus- try, 2221 Forty-ninth St. ....ccoccaiannna. Kellogg, Mrs. Frank, fifth vice president, CongressionalClub............ ic. Kellogg, Vernon, National Research Council, Cosmos Club. 5-0 al. Sai papoiins Kelly, Edna R., Senate Committee on Terri- tories and Insular Possessions, 1716 Seven- TENS. seis su salins snr se ra vninonne asleils P Kelly, Walter E., assistant attorney, Post Office Department, 1426 M St.............. Kelly, Col. William (U. S. A.), Federal Power Commission, 2117 O St Kelton, Col. Robert H. C., secretary-treas- urer, United States Soldiers’ Home...... Kempton, Robert H., House Committee on Elections No. 2, 1605 East Capitol St...... Kemeys, Stella R., Senate Committee on Manufactures, 2655 Connecticut Ave....... Kenah, J. J., office of Doorkeeper of House, 719. Bast Capitol Sl. co. nis. cua sans Keneipp, P. H., Senate Committee on Mili- tary Affairs, 3501 Fourteenth Kennedy, Bert W., Doorkeeper of House, Hyattsville, Ma. .... 50 cvnmanstdaoasinsinn Kennedy, Crawford, office of Doorkeeper of - House, 28 Maryland Ave.SW............. Kennedy, E. B., Federal Traffic Board, Army and Navy:CliD.......ccvvi sae Ges Aeeaagondt Kenney, W. E., office of Doorkeeper of Kerfoot, W. T., District pharmacy board, Seventhand I. Sts... ..0. i. seen ndevons Kern, George A., Senate Committee on Inter- state Commerce, 117 Third St. NE........ Kerr, J. W., Assistant Surgeon General, Bu- reau of the Public Health Service, 2700 Con- re SE Se Kervin, William H., Government Printing Office, 320- Tenth St. NB _~..............: Kerwin, Hugh L., Director of Labor Adjust- ment, Department of Labor, 632 A. St. SE. Ketcham, Charles A., Headquarters Marine Corps, Hyattsville, ES Ene aa ware Keyes, Henry W., 2400 Sixteenth St.: Joint Committee Investigating Naval Base Silene. oi. i iin nin rs National Forest Reservation Commission Kidder, A. D., Board of Surveys and Maps of the Federal Government.........cca...... Kiefer, Helen K., Senate Committee on Irri- gation and Reclamation, 4419 Illinois Ave. Kieley, John, private secretary to the Secre- tary of the Treasury, 1821 Wyoming Ave.. Kiess, Edgar R., vice chairman Joint Com- ittee on GE IT A eae sae mi 242 285 281 307 235 567 Page. Kilpatrick, H. C., Senate Conference of the Minority, 1618 Twenty-ninth St........._. Kilpatrick, W. B., assistant to Assistant Secretary of Treasury in charge of Customs Public Health, Public Buildings, and Coast Guard, Friendship Heights, D.C......... xy or James J., District police surgeon, Kimball, Arthur R., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 1646 Irving St.............. Kincheloe, Charles F., auditor Court of EC CR aly King, William A., division chief, War De- partment, 8020 Dent Place................. King, William V., Federal Power Commis- sion, 1841 Kilbourne Place................. Kinnan, William A., Patent Office, 1114 Fair- IIHR nds one pn le Sol pane dy Gr Kitchin, Claude, 1412 Kennedy St.: Commission in Control of House Office LE I ee AR i CB a Minority Floor Leader, House. ......... Kitterman, Fred B., General Accounting Of- fice, 3019 Twenty-fifth St. NE............. Kittich, Dr. Zhivoin, legation of Serbs, Croats, and. Slovenes.....0.... 0c... ......; Kittredge, Herman E., Headquarters Marine Corps, 808 Twenty-second St.............. Kivikoski, Judge Bruno, Finnish Legation, ‘Phe Wardman Park... Klein, Julius, Bureau of Foreign and Domes- tic Commerce, 2141 Wyoming Ave........ Kleinschmidt, Fred C., assistant clerk, Court of Claims, The Dumbarton. ............... Kloeber, R. O., Assistant Director Bureau of the Budget, 1730 Euclid St.............. Klotz, R. G., Public Utilities Commission, 1506: Columbia Road... ......5..0c.ns-= Knaebel, Ernest, reporter United States Su- preme Court, 3707 Morrison St............. Knapp, Martin A., Columbia Institution. for theDeaf oo oo. 00... Sat hen aay Knox, Frank, Board of Indian Commission- ers; Manchester, No HL... 0 iceraa-- Knudsen, Irene J., House Committee on Ac- counts, The RoYdoN.. oon csr sscsssavssne Kolb, W. J., chief mail clerk, Pan American Union, 150 Park'Road.-........-...o-ees- Koogle, John D. C., deputy collector of port, 1825: Kilbourne Place... ......acnsrsa uns: Kram, Charles A., Comptroller for Post Office Department, 6 East Irving St., Chevy Cage, Ma. ares Kramer, Stephen Elliott, assistant superin- tendent of District schools, 1725 Kilbourne Kramer, Wilbur G., 506 Third St. SE.: Naval Examining Board................ Naval Retiring Board ..................... Board of Medical Examiners..:........... Kreamer, C. A., District fire department, BIN Oc assomnr aan n tens nates Kremer, C. P., The Macroft: Emergency Fleet Corporation. .......... United States Shipping Board........... Kubel, S. J., Geological Survey, 1000 East STITH ED Shi die a Ben Ese Kuhn, Erma L., Senate Committee on Educa- tion and Labor, E-F Building, Government BO RR a Kurz, Dr. Rudolf, legation of Czechoslo- vakia; 2027 Park Road... .cpeeenensesnnss Kuriyama, Mr. Shigeru, Japanese Embassy, 1316 New Hampshire Ave......c.c..n..... Kwapiszewski, Michael, legation of Poland, 2400 Sixteenth: St... 0. laa. eeaaaans Lack, Thomas, Assistant Solicitor of the Treasury, 3495 Holmead Place............. Lackey, Capt. Henry E., Ship Movements Division, Navy, 2006 Columbia Road..... Lacy, L.ane, Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, 18365. Perry Pingo. J oe or a ees eon Ladd, W. G., House document room, 219 Fourteenth BE. 8H... 0 one seca scan Ladisky, Benjamin, House Committee on the Census, 1447 Monroe St. ............... Lafferty, George C., Official Reporter, House, TLE Sa i re Se Rn 234 568 Congressional Directory. Page. La Follette, Robert M., jr., Senate Commit- tee on Manufactures, 3157 Eighteenth St .. La France, May B., House Committee on Elections No. 1, 1717 Seventeenth St....... Lagerberg, Mr. J. de, Swedish Legation, DIET ES Cie ree a re Ee Lambert, John W., Senate document room, LT A LS eB SR Landers, E., Patent Office, 1328 A St. SE.... Landick, George, jr., Office of the Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, Kensington, Landon, W. F., District health department, 713 Nineteenth St... -. i ..cliiom. dermeios Lane, C. H., Patent Office, Falls Church, Va. Lane, Brig. Gen. Rufus H., adjutant and in- spector, Marine Corps, Falls Church, Va... Langkjaer, Mr. Svend, Danish Legation..... Langley, John W., 2807 Twenty-seventh St.: Public Buildings Commission. . -c....... Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission. Langley, K. G., House Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds... ...5..cu. coon sme Lanham, Clifford, District superintendent of freee and parking, 101 Alabama Ave. 4 Laos, Sefior Mariano A., Peruvian Embassy, 1111 Boylston St., BOStON...cx iss ... ... Meeker, A. V., House Committee on Ways and Means, 1313 Spring Road.............. Meeker, T'. C., House post office, 3404 Twenty- seeond Bt NB reser meen Meletio, M. L., office of Sergeant at Arms, House, The Tuxedo... coli vesennnrn» Mellon, Andrew W., 1785 Massachusetts Ave.: Secretary of the Treasury (biography)... Member of Smithsonian Institution...... Chairman Federal Reserve Board........ Federal Farm Loan Bureau............. United States Section of the Inter- American High Commission........... War Finance Corporation................ Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway COMMISSION. rs, rr see rma World War Foreign Debt Commission... Federal Narcotics Control Board........ Meloy, F. E., General Supply Committee, 204 Raymond St., Chevy Chase, Md....... Melvin, T. G., office of the President of the STE Ts asda aint ed sein Bena neil Mendenhall, W. C., Geological Survey, 9 East Lenox St., Chevy Chase, Md.......... a Meritt, Edgar B., Assistant Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 3532 Thirteenth St......... Merriam, Dr. C. Hart, chairman United States Geographic Board.................. Merriam, J. C., National Academy of Sciences, AOD been th Bt 2 a is Merrill, G. P., National Museum, 1422 Bel- EES ee de eR Sa Merrill, O. C., Federal Power Commission, 9 West Melrose St., Chevy Chase, Md.,.... Merritt, Eugene, States Relations Service, Shepherd St., Chevy Chase, Md............ Merritt, Ralph P., War Finance Corporation, San Francisco, Calif... ri. 0. Metcalf, Commander M. K., General Board, Navy, 1925: Sixteenth St................-.. Metz, Walter R., Government Printing Office, 14 Crescent Place, Takoma Park... Metzger, Jacob A., assistant to the Solicitor, State Department, 2605 Adams Mill Road. Meyer, Balthasar H., chairman Interstate Commerce Commission,3825 Wisconsin Ave Meyer, Eugene, jr., War Finance Corporation , 2021 Connecticut Ave... ................ Moyer, H. E., Bureau of Mines, 2505 Cham- PRI Br a ii Meyer, Herman H. B., division chief, Con- gressional Library, 2608 Tunlaw Road..... Michelet, Simon, Senate Commitiee on the Judiciary, 2116 Kalorama Road............ Michelson, A. A., National Academy of Sci~ ences, Uhiversity of Chicago, Chicago, Ill. . Millan, William W., District Board of Chil- dren’s Guardians... ot ooo oon Miller, A. C., United States Section of the Inter American High Commission........ Miller, Adolph C., BL a CR Ri a Miller, Burt A.., District superintendent of insurance, The Roosevelt .................. Miller, Elmer E., Bureau of Pensions, 303 Eastern Ave., Takoma Park, Md Miller, Henry G., House Committeeon Flood Controls sr. a ain Miller, Robert R., Senate post office, 920 BagbtCapltol BE. Miller, Thomas W., Alien Property Custo- disfi; Racquet Club: C.... 0 ee ida Milligan, E. J., District Public Utilities Commission, Clinton, Md... .......ocee-... Millikan, National Academy of Sciences, Pasadena, Calif.................. Millington, Yale O., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 1022 Newton St. NE....... Millrick, Daniel A., General Land Office, Clarendon, Va... on ie np nw sivie smein 2 Mills, John S., United States Geographic Minot, K. J., Office of the Coast Guard, 1421 Ames P1. NE Miron, Irving; H., office of Secretary of Sen- ole AGE 307 Page. Mitchell, Charles L., Weather Bureau, 904 ; Rittenhouse St. tr ee a, 291 Mitchell, Guy E., Geological Survey, 1421 Buehenan Sl ae 289 Mitchell, H. J., House post office, 13 Chan- a Ee EES 244 Mitchell, John R., Federal Reserve Board, 100 Wyoming Ave. don to 300 Mitchell, Brig. Gen. William, Assistant Chief ofthe Air Service, Army, 1809 Phelps Place. 279 Moffett, Rear Admiral William A., 1628 Nine- teenth St. : National Advisory Committee for Aero- DY A Os en aa a Lh 305 Chief of the Bureau of Aeronautics. ..... 285 Mohler, John R., Chief of Bureau of Animal Industry, 1620 Wobart St... 292 Moling, Walter H., auditor Court of Claims, 1658 ued St 403 Molster, Charles E., disbursing clerk, Depart- ment of Commerce, 1237 Lawrence St., Brookland, D. C...:........ ois isie me STE 294 Mondell, Frank W., Majority Floor Leader, House, 2110. 0:8. cc. i esmseim sien wen 241 Mondel, Mrs. Frank W., chairman of enter- tainment committee, Congressional Club. 308 Montague, Andrew J., Interparliamentary Union, The Avondale. ......c...ceemeen nin 231 Montgomery, Rev. James Shera, Chaplain of House, 1731 Columbia Road. .............. 241 Montgomery, W. P., International Sanitary Bureau, Pan American Building. ......... 310 Mooers, E. A., office of Doorkeeper of House, 3535 Bir Ont I Bl ec ces reins 242 Mooney, William M., chiefclerk, Post Office Depariment, 1433 T St............. 00... x. 281 Moore, Charles, division chief, Library of Congress, 1712 St... ......ccoodih vas mass» 268 Moore, Charles, chairman Commission of Fine Arts, Detroit; MICH. [. io: te nvsoin. oooh smicies 308 Moore, Clayton F., House Committee on Ways and Means, Riverdale, Md.......... 243 Moore, E. W., General Accounting Office, Kensington, Md... ooo. cool april 299 Moore, H. F., Deputy Commissioner Bureau of Fisheries, The Concord. ........0no ot. 294 Moore, J. Gordon, House Committee on Pen- gions, 17. Third St, NE... no. oc tn .o. 243 Moore, Commander J. M., Office ofthe Coast Guard, 1801 Sixteenth 8t.................. 275 Moore, J. P., Federal Reserve Board........ 300 Moore, M. J., Patent Office, 111 Tennessee AVENE rd isl LE Ne 289 Moore, Oran T., Bureau of Naturalization, Washington, D.C gir ado is 296 Moore, Paul H., Senate Committee on Inter- state Commerce... coliai. ttn aul 234 Moore, R. Walton, The Toronto: Joint Committee on the Reorganization of the Administrative Branch of the GOVOINMICHE Lo ore ona iie io siete ti ba 231 Board of Regents, Smithsonian Insti- tation as. eR aR 297 Moorehead, Warren K., Board of Indian Com- missioners, Andover, MasS................ 290 Moores, Merrill, Interparliamentary Union, ORT ERE ee pT 231 Moorhead, Elwood S., Government Printiag Office, 126 Rhode Island Ave............. 268 Morales, Lieut. Di6genes, Legation of Vene- gual, 3428. Mi Bt os sa To ei 414 Morales, Sefior Don Rodolfo V., Honduran Legation, Woolworth Building, New York Ciby Lo i i ad ahi a le 410 Moran, Frank T., House Committee on Invalid Pensions, The Willard Courts..... 243 Moran; W. H., division chief, Treasury De- partment, 1840 Mintwood Place. .......... 273 Moreland, Col. Sherman, Office of Judge Advocate General, Army, Rutland Courts. 277 Morgan, Arja, Interstate Commerce Commis- sion 425 Manor Place: . o.oo re: 299 Morgan, Edward W., Bureau of Pensions, 622 Randolph Sl, es 289 Morgan, Lorel N., 3223 Hiatt Place: Office First Assistant Postmaster General. 282 United States Geographic Board......... 307 571 i i { { ! 572 Congressional Directory. Page. - Morgan, Marshall, Pecuniary Claims Arbitra- tion Commission... i in fuses Morito, Morishima, Mr., Japanese Embassy . Morrill, Chester, 1420 Decatur St.: Administration of Grain Future Trading Morrison, A. B., Bureau of Biological Survey, Phe Marlborotghl. io. oi iv dae swine are wing wd Moses, George H., The Altamont: Chairmar Joint Committee on Printing. . Joint Com.nission on Postal Service... .. Moses, Roy H., estimate clerk, Navy Depart- ment, 1377 Quincey Sto: ooh soi RT Moss, H. N., District superintendent ofstreets, 1790. Lanier-Places. co. uo. eran erase es Moss, McKenzie, Office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 2400 Sixteenth St...-... Mott, Mrs. Luther W., chairman of finance committee of Congressional Club.......... Moanin, J. D., House post office, 128 B Muir, Rev. J. J., Chaplain of Senate, 1317 ReNYON Sb. or. vie is danse ins sh walla Muirhead, John H., Washington city post office; 68 BR St. oni eine vias Mulhearn, C. E., United States Veterans’ Bureau; Landover, Md... .i...... 0000 Mullaney, John J., Office of the Director of Air Service, Army, 1321 Monroe St........ Mulvane, David W., assistant to Secretary of Commerce, The Wardman Park........... Mummenhoff, Alice, Senate Committee on Territories and Insular Possessions, 1357 Baca Bl. ca eesnisinnn mbm tats ahs Munizaga-Varela, Sefior Don Gustavo, Chil- ean Embassy, 280 Broadway, New York Murdock, Victor, chairman Federal Trade Commission, 1719 Eighteenth St........... Murphy, Dr.C.J., office of Metropolitan police, IL Thirteenth St. NE... ...- 0 wai. Murphy, Edward V., jr., Assistant Official Reporter, Senate, 1656 Euclid St........... Murphy, James W., Official Reporter, Senate, 1788. Lanier Place... occ). . ob cian. ud Murphy, Dr. Joseph A., District health de- partment, 1425 Chapin St Murray, Charles B., United States attorney’s office, 418 Seward Square SE ............. Murray, Nat C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco- nomics, 1650Irving St... 0a Mustin, Capt. Henry C., Bureau of Aero- nautics, 3610 Macomb St... ....... ... 5... Nakayama, Mr. Shoici, Japanese Embassy, ThePottland. oo i toc ann viru vias Nafio, Mr. F¥., Rumanian Legation, 1607 Awenty-thir@ St..c. conor cece rinse 411 293 293 245 Page. Nash, Charles R., Office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 3919 Ingomar St., Chevy OBB Er aston sae rare ves Naylor, Col. William K., War Department eneral Staff, 1615 Q St... nou onan Neagle, Elmer F., Senate Committee on Ex- penditures in the Executive Departments, 44 Quincy Place NE. ...... ci. odi oa Neagle, Pickens, Office of the Judge Advocate General, Navy, 1858 Park Road ........... Neal, A. B., Army War College, 1328 Fleventn Br. oir cisinacs ras memrn sine Negri, Sefior Don Manuel Y. De, Mexican Embassy, TheChastleton.... ......-...... Neill, Charles P., United States Coal Commis- sion, 3550 Macomb 8t.:. cos oraie cn oie Nelson, E. W., Bureau of Biological Survey, Cosmos CD. ci... cis rsrss nse dssarains Nelson, Capt. John C., National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers................ Nestler, Charles W., division chief, Interior Department, 638 Fifth St. NE.............. Netherwood, Stella H., Senate Committee on Patents, 1827 Jefferson Place............... Nettleton, J. G., House Committee on Appro- priations, The Westmoreland.............. Neville, Maj. Gen. Wendell C., Marine Corps, Marine Barracks... i orn ei. cain Nevitt, Dr. J. R., District coroner, 1820 Cal- AL TAL Eee eR hain Ne a Nevius, W. J., Division of Accounts and Dis- bursements, Agriculture, 1209 Geranium St. Newbold, John L., District minimum wage board, The Wardman Park................ Newcomer, Col. Henry C., Board of Engi- neers for Rivers and Harbors, 601 Army Building, 39 Whitehall St., New York 8 i ae See pe ASE een aie eg Nop, J. C., House folding room, Bethesda Newman, Charles R., House post office, 3353 BEighteenthiSh. uo eas arn snrininsiss sinluwnin Newman, Quincy B., Office of the Coast Guard, The ONtarTio: cucu rnrincocsmsin cme Newman, William B., board of appeals, In- terior Department, 729 Otis Place. ........ Newton, Charles W., Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commission, Hartford, CONIIL Li tii swe os eis mei nie side nial n 34 wom Nichol, Harvey R., Office of Fourth Assist- ant Postmaster General, 649 E St. NE.... Nichols, H. S., District deputy superintend- ent of insurance, 1717 Lamont St......... Nicholson, Philip W., District fire depart- ment, 5504 Thirteenth St... ... se Nielsen, Fred K., Pecuniary Claims Arbitra- tion Commission . Jo. co -si si a Nielsen, Roger, Danish Legation, The St. Noho. Te ea Nishi, Mr. Iwao, Japanese Embassy, 165 Broadway, New York City-.........ccuo... Nixon, Mary S., division chief, War Depart- ment, 1756 Buelid St. . oo... Noble, John E., District health department, 1204 Eighteenth Sh... oo css on Noble, Brig. Gen. R. E., Army Medical Museum and Library, The Lonsdale....... Nohe, Clarence W., city post office, 1822 Monessen Nolan, James F., private secretary to Second ASistany Secretary of Labor, 2310 Ashmead BOB ih ahr seme i ea ae Nordahl, M. E., House Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads, 1903 Fifteenth St... Norris, William B., jr., Assistant Solicitor, State Department, The Alabama.......... Norton, Ralph A., secretary to District Com- missioner, 442 Massachusetts Ave.......... Norton, Robert H., Senate Committee on Forcien Relations... oo cvi. soos eens Notz, W. F., Federal Trade Commission, Tr Lament St ia a il Noyes Arthur P., M. D., St. Elizabeths Hos- £1811 pmsl Sinai Se eee Nor Martha, Senate Legislative Drafting Service, 1539 I St 274 276 234 286 Individual Index. ==Page Noyes, Theodore W., 1730 New Hampshire Ave.: Dire: Columbia Institution for the Te ER PEA SS sa) aa District board of trustees, Public Library. Washington National Monument So- CIEL i St Nugent, john F., Federal Trade Commis- sioner, 2726 Connecticut Ave... ............ Nulle, Mary E., House Committee on Coin- age, Weights, and Measures-........ccouo.. Oakes, Col. John C., Board of Engineers for Rivers and Harbors, 608 Army Building, 39 Whitehall St., New York City ......... Oberholser, John, office of Sergeant at Arms of House, 319 New Jersey Ave. SE......... (O’Brien, Thomas A., Office of The Adjutant General, Army, 3930 Fourteenth St........ Ockerson, John A., member Mississippi River Commission ; O’Connell, John, division chief, General Land Office, 2732 Twelfth St. NE. .............. O’Connell, Loretta E., Senate Committee to Audit and Control Contingent Expenses, TheWardman Park... 0... ie... O’Connor, T., District fire department, 912 Twenty-third St O’Connor, T. V., vice chairman United States Shipping Board, Stoneleigh Court... Ogden, B. K., Emergency Fleet Corporation, Re Ona OL ee Ogle, Charles T., Chief Division of Records, Navy Departmend, 528 First St. SE....... Ogle, R. H., Senate Committee on Appropria- tions; 750iGresham Place...) > o 0 ..] O’Hara, James J., Assistant Solicitor, Depart- ment of Commerce, 15 Eighth St. NE...... Ohashi, Mr. Chuichi, Japanese Embassy, PhedAllstom, Soin, 0 or oe Ojeda, Hernandez, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico... . Olaya, Dr. Enrique, The Wardman Park: Colombian minister..........0.....0..... Governing Board, Pan American Union. . Ojdfield, William A., Interparliamentary Union, The Vicor... co i. ee O’ Leary, C. R., United States Veterans’ Bu- rean, 5511 'Thirty-ninth St... 0.0... O’Leary, E. B., Bureau of Entomology, 1203 CONNECT ICUL AYO ec ee ans onrsaes anes O’Leary, James J., United States attorney’s office, 5 Ross St., Cottage City, Md....... Oller, Randall M.., Senate Committee on Civil Service, 428 Eighth St. NE................ O’Malley, Henry, Commissioner of Fisheries, SottNbrook COUtS. cc a ean mesic renee O’Neill, Anna A., Assistant Solicitor, State Department, 1326 New Hampshire Ave.... O’Neill, Frances C., Senate Committee on Printing, The Yerpis 0 loo O’Neill, Paul J.,Senate Committee on Inter- oceanic Canals. oo co os ie Ontjes, William, War Finance Corporation, The Rnowlion ........ = nl Oppenheimer, Dr. Ella, division chief, Chil- dren’s Bureau, 1736 Columbia Road........ Oreamuno, J. Rafael, Governing Board, Pan American Union, 2201 Massachusetts Ave. . O’Reilly, M. J., division chief, Treasury De- partment, 4209 New Hampshire Ave...... Orr, Arthur, House Committee on Appro- priations, Lyon Park, Va... -.....0. ... Orton, W. A., Federal BEorticultural Board, 600 Cedar St., Takoma; Park............... Osami Nagana, Capt., Japanese Embassy, 1422 Massachusetts Ave... ................. : Osorio, Sefor Felipe, Peruvian Embassy... . vis Mary, judge municipal court, 1414 Otterback, Philip, city post office, 2525 On- - tario Road Otterness,Jens M., Senate Committee on Civil Service, A I30 MM St... ae. Ottinger, Albert, Assistant Attorney Gen- eral, 2400 Sixteenth 8... coo Overhue, W. H., enrolling clerk of House, 1242 Columbia Road 466 308 301 242 278 241 217 279 288 234 467 301 302 283 234 281 411 306 408 298 231 304 292 404 234 294 = 272 235 234 303 296 298 273 242 573 Page. Overman, Lee S., member Commission in Control of Senate Office Building, The Powhatan Owen, H. R., office Superintendent State, War, and Navy Building, 1377 Massachu- Sotts Ave ST... nea a Oyster, James F., District Commissioner, 2400 Sixteenth St Pus C. F., financial clerk, Senate, 1539 Padréy Almeida, Dr. Arturo, The Brighton: Cuban Legation . uoaiia. iit leioes Governing Board, Pan American Union. Page, Proctor H., Senate Committee on Naval Affairs, 1330. California St......c.o.c..4. 0 Page, Thomas Walker, United States Tariff Commissioner, 2400 Sixteenth St........... Page, William Tyler, Clerk of the House thiozraphy), 220 Wooten Ave., Chevy ase Paget, Wilmer J., United States Botanic Garden, 20 P St... oe sh vanes Paige, Calvin D., Joint Commission on Postal Service, Lafayette Hotel............. ..... Paine, Walter T., division chief, General Land Office, 217 A RE BE on so une. wats Painter, Clyde R., Office of Alien Property Custodian, 1882 Columbia Road. .......... Palmer, Lieut. Col. Bruce, United States Geographic Board oo... .....o... sane: Palmer, H. K., Capitol police, 105 C St. SE. Panaretoff, Mr. Stephan, Bulgarian minister, 1629 Sixteenth St Parish, John Kimball, librarian of House, Za EES MLE eR a es se Tae Park, Frank, Joint Committee on the Li- Rp aR eres ron Als fe RRS Parker, Chauncey G., 1301 Seventeenth St.: United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation........... Parker, Ferd W., keeper of stationery, Sen- ale ASL VY St NE a seen Parker, John D., Office of Inspector General, The: Henvialla., oo oa tL Parker, L.. M., United States Railroad Labor Board re ae aaa: Parker, W. E., Coast and Geodetic Survey, Kensington, Md............cu.es cin isiea Parkman, C. Breck, House Legislative Draft- ing Service, 1344 Gallatin Bt = es Parkman, Charles H., secretary to Speaker of House, 1003 Taylor St. NE ............. Parrott, Dale K., General Land Office, 1319 Kenyon St a ae Parsons, Francis H., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 210 First St. 8K. ......... Patrick, Maj. Gen. Mason M., 3738 Hunting- ton St.: Chief of the Air Service, Army........... National Advisory Committee for Aero- EE a a Ss Rt Patterson, Dr. Albert C., District health de- partment, The Chastleton...»...ccu....... Patterson, Alvah W., board of appeals, In- terior Department, 2847 Twenty-ninth St.. Patterson, Dr. E. W., superintendent of Gal- linger Municipal Hospital Patterson, Margaret, Senate Committee on Pensions, Tuxedo Park, Baltimore, Md... Patterson, R. U., United States Veterans’ Bureau, 1757 Lanler-Place ..........-...... Patterson, Maj. William Lay, Bureau of In- sular Affairs, Army and Navy Club....... Patton, R. S., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 3920 McKinley St., Chevy Chase........... Payne, John Barton, American National Red ross, Washington, D.C... on... all... Peabody, Dr. Joseph Winthrop, superintend- ent District Tuberculosis Hospital. ........ Pearce, Christian S., Office Treasurer of the United States, 1503 Newton St............ Pearsall, Col. Charles M., National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers 228 242 268 307 245 301 302 574 Page. Pearson, Charles A., United States Employ- ment Service, 3432 Connecticut Ave Peake, W. L., assistant superintendent Dis- trict penal institutions Peck, Lieut. Col. E Thread:iCommission................. 0.x Peck, George C., Senate Committee on Print- ing, S10. Fifteenth St... ......0. oii 0% Peck, Ethel E., clerk to the President of the Senate... i ese a a Lae Peelle, Stanton J., The Cairo: Retired chief justice, Court of Claims. ... President board of trustees Howard Uni- VOLSILY. ce ca RSS OEE Peeney, Thomas E., Senate Committee on the District. of Columbia....... ......... Peirce, Brig. Gen. William S., Office of the Chief of Ordnance, 1868 Columbia Road. ... Pellas, Sefior Don Silvio, Nicaraguan Lega- im 311 West Seventy-fifth St., New York By al a Ea a As a a meh a A Pelényi, Mr. John, Hungarian Legation, HOO Sixteenth BL. 0.0L, sa ie Pena, Hugo V. de, Uruguayan Legation, 1801 Sixteenth St........ Sry Lem Penington, C. A., United States Veterans’ Bureau, 1428 Clifton St. ............ccevecs. Penning, Hazel, Senate Committee on Rules, 624 Maryland Ave. NE Peoples rank J., messenger at Speaker’s A a est arhnss Perkins, Frederick W., Division of Publica- tions, Department of Agriculture, The nae elt ha Perkins, John C., enrolling clerk of Senate, 136 Thirteenth St. SH 0... renee Perkins, Lewis B., 1819 G St.: District assistant corporation counsel... . Juvenile COUTL oc is s-nanv dons sinmanvaless Perley, Clarence W., division chief, Congres- sional Library, 2085 Adams Mill Road..... Perrill, Capt. H. P., Office of Chief Coordi- nator, Treasury, 2801 Twenty-eighth St.. Perry, Frances, Senate Committee on the Judiciary, 227 East Capitol St............. Perry, John P., Assistant Director Bureau of Engraving and Printing, 142 R St. NE.... Perry, Leon L., Industrial Home School (col- ored), Ber Plaine i ee Pershing, Gen. John J., 2029 Connecticut ve.: Chief of War Department General Staff.. The Joint Board..-. ....u iv siuie swsliesose Peter, Mr. Mare, Swiss minister, 2622 Six- teeth Bt. at Sah caine Peterson, Agnes L., Women’s Bureau, 3510 I te mh EE Pettis, John B., Senate Committee on the Library, The Balfolr..........cceecis-un Petty, J. T., chief clerk District arrears divi- CTE TE OH a a Pezet, Sefior Don Federico Alfonso, The Wardman Park; Peruvian ambassador.................... Governing Board, Pan American Union. Phalen, Ella F., House Committee on Rivers and HarDors. olathe an sili as Philbin, J. Harry, Emergency Fleet Corpora- tion, 2625 North Charles St., Baltimore, Md. Phillips, Albert, United States Railroad Tabor Board: oc. ott rissa ae ah anes Phillips, E. L., Metropelitan police, 1443 Bel- t Phillips, Philip Lee, division chief, Congres- sional Library, 1308 Twentieth St.......... Phillips, William, 3500 Woodley Road: Undersecretary of State.........cu..n.... American National Red Cross. .......... Pickering, W. M., messenger, House majority room, 1002: Douglas St. NE... ........ ...2 Pierce, Charles H., Patent Office, 1350 Oak St. SE R., District fire department, The TR HS RE Se 296 466 304 235 233 403 290 234 279 412 410 414 304 235 241 292 233 466 405 268 273 234 275 466 276 302 414 296 235 234 466 413 298 243 302 299 467 298 268 271 305 242 289 Congressional Directory. Page. S Piérola Souza, Sefior Carlos N. de, Peruvian Easy rE eee Pierson, Therese M., House Committee on Military Affairs, R-S Building, Govern- ment Hotels... suai tr LT Pih Min-Yu, Mr., Chinese Legation.......... Pike, Katharine R., assistant to Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in charge of Cus- toms, Public Health, Public Buildings, and Coast Guard, 417Clifton Terrace West. Pike, Yvon, division chief, Generali Land Office, 1752:Q: 8%. o.oo Se ase le Pillen, Harry, office of Sergeant at Arms of House, 204A Bates 8... .............00. Pinchot, Gifford, member Meade Memorial Commission, Harrisburg, Pa a Shalt Pinney, Capt. F. L., Bureau of Ordnance, Navy, 1870 Wyoming Ave................. Piser, Amy R., Senate Committee on the Dis- trickof Columbia... ooo Lo, Pitney, Mahlon, Associate Justice, Supreme Court (retired. 71: Sha i 0 al Pittman, Kev, Joint Committee Investigat- ing Naval Base Sites, ete.............0. Pitts, Edwin B., Office of Judge Advocate General, Army, Brentwood, Md........... Platt, Edmund, vice governor Federal Re- serve Board, 2339 Ashmead Place......... Platt, W. G., chief clerk, Treasury Depart- ment, 307 Takoma Ave., Takoma Park. ... Pleadwell, Capt. F. L., Bureau of Medicine and Surgery, The St. Regis...............} Plessen, Baron Leopold, German Embassy, VSIA Bl cise ttn nnn sm sin iid ia ns oo Plummer, E.C., member United States Ship- ping Board, The Burlington............._. . Poindexter, Miles, Joint Committee Investi- gating Naval Base Sites, etc., 1750 N St... Pollock, Robert C., Office of Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 1317 Kennedy St...._.. Pomerene, Atlee, director Columbia Institu- tionforthe Deal... ..ucma. vai nils ian ol Poole, DeWitt C., division chief, State De- partment, 1707 Nineteenth St... .......... Pope, Gustavus D., American National Red Cross, Detroit, Mich. i: ...0 0... Porteous, D. C., United States Railroad Ad- ministration, The Westminster........... Postle,S. A., Bureau of Chemistry, 627 Long- IeHowBL ee iis Potter, Col. Charles L., president Mississippi River Commission... i... .0o.. cconiins Potter, Rear Admiral David, Paymaster General, Navy, 1832 Jefferson Place........ Potter, Mark W., Interstate Commerce Com- missioner, The Wardman Park ........... Powell, Edwin C., Division of Publications, Agriculture, Woodside, Md................ Powell, Henry A., International Joint Com- pT DE Rs ee ST Prada; Dr. Alfredo Gonzalez, Peruvian Em- ON I Et Prange, Herbert H., Senate post office, 238 Maryviand Ave. NE_.. ....0 0 00. oes Prather, Lloyd, General Supply Committee, Landover, MA... ...:. iil. sain deocistus Pratt, H. G., District Metropolitan police, 147 Randolph PInee. i. . cfc icnuas: Sdounnss Pratt, Rear Admiral W. V., General Board, Navy, Army and Navy Club.............. Prem, Sefior Ldo. Don Marcial, Guatemalan Legation. .....:i.., SOT ER CL TS Ba Presmont, Arthur N., United States attor- ney’sioffice, The Portner.....-. ao... na. 301 309 413 243 408 Individual Index. Page. Puelicher, John H., United States Section of Inter-American High Commission. ........ Pugh, J. C., House Committee on Appropria- tions, The Wellington. .................... 2 Pugsley, C. W., Assistant Secretary of Agri- culture, Fontanet Courts... ................ Pulliam, William E., Dominican customs recelvershipsal. cool oil a a Putnam, George R., 2126 Bancroft Place: Commissioner of Lighthouses............ United States Geographic Board......... Putnam, Herbert, The Cosmos Club : Librarianiof Congress. s.......... i... Washington National Monument Society Quaintance, A. L., Bureau of Entomology, Silver Springs, Md... oo no Quintanilla, Sefior Don Luis, Mexican Em- bassy, The Ambassador.................. Quirk, Robert E., Interstate Commerce Com- mission, 1736 Columbia Road.............. Rabbitt, Wade H., Congressional Library, Mount Rainier, Md. =. coc 0 ie Jo Rackley, Louise G., Federal Farm Loan Bureau, 1315 Belmont 8%. ................. Radziwill, Prince Albert, Polish Legation... Ragsdale, William M., Bureau of Naturaliza- ton, 402 Federal Building, Pittsburgh, erates reat ee Te a Raines, George M., House post office, 112 East Capitol Bb: clinch i Raker, John E., director, Columbia Institu- tionor theiDeaf...... Lo i il. avs. Ramos, Federico, International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. . Ramsay, Gordon A., Bureau of the Budget, AL] Ee EE RR Sle Th MT RE PU Ramsey, Roy S., House Committee on Elec- tion of President, Vice President, and Rep- resentatives in Congress, 425 Second St... Randall, Oscar J., Bureau of Pensions, 4305 Kansas Ave... ..... 0. Ba nih Randolph, John B., assistant chief clerk, War Department, 1707 Q St............... Ransonfe, F. L., National Academy of Sci- ences, 1455 Belmont St. ..........0....~.. Rapp, Herbert H., United States Bureau of Efficiency, 2416 Thirteenth St...._ ........ Rassau, I. C., House document room........ Ravenel, W. de C., National Museum, The Ontario... Baio sb sania aloiin Raymond, Virginia L., Senate Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads, 2700 Con- NECHCHL AVE. . Cio oh issn sede Razetti, Dr. Luis, International Sanitary Bu- reau, Caracas, Venezuela............. ..... Rea, Mrs. Henry R., American National Red Cross, Pittsburgh, Pa... . lle Rea, Kennedy F., Senate Committee on Ap- propriations, 3601 Lowell St... ........_. Redmond, Charles F., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, 3436 Brown St.......... Redmond, Harriet W., Senate Committee on Foreign Relations... . 0h oi Reed, Clyde, Bureau of Supplies and Ac- counts, 1030 Park Road... 0 iii. Reed, H. H., United States Railroad Labor yr i RE BSS Reed, Mary H., Senate Committee on Privi- leges and Elections, 1240 Irving St......... Reed, Paul C., Conference Minority of the Senate, Kappa Alpha House............. Rees, R.1., United States Veterans’ Bureau, The Brishion..............0 eno = Reese, R. M., chief clerk Department of Agri- culture, 3016 Dumbarton Ave.............. Reeside, Mrs. Howard S., chairman of house committee of Congressional Club........... Regar, Robert S., appointment clerk, Post Office Department, 927 Shepherd St....... Reichert, Alvin B., office of Doorkeeper of House, 1426 Twenty-first St. Reid, William A., Pan American Union, A842 Sixteenth St. 5... oi a Reinhardt, Francis J., Office of Solicitor of the Treasury, 2001 Sixteenth St........... 235 307 242 201 280 295 307 268 308 292 412 299 268 274 413 296 244 309 306 273 243 289 276 298 300 242 297 235 310 305 234 234 234 285 299 235 234 304 291 308 281 242 298 281 575 Page. Reutemann, William A., clerk to Speaker of House, The Towa. «coc nissdi, sub ascioie 241 Reynolds, Lieut. Col. C. R., Office of the Surgeon General, Army, 2013 Kalorama rE re a RE asa 278 Reynolds, Capt. William E., Office of the Coast Guard, 2029 Connecticut Ave........ 275 Rhea, Lieut. Col. J. C., Office of Chief Coordi- nator, Treasury, 2141 Wyoming Ave....... 273 Rhoads, William L., assistant attorney, Post Office Department, 1740 Euelid St.......... 281 Rhodes, John D., Official Reporter, Senate, 1497 Madison St2. ooo. ini sulin eal 245 Rhodes, M. B., House Committee on Mines and-Mining; A312 N 86. cio. cia tn 243 Rhodes, Mrs. Susie Root, District superin- tendent of playgrounds, 1004 Park Road.. 466 Riafio y Gayangos, Seftor Don Juan, Spanish ambassador, 2620 Sixteenth St............. 414 Rice, A. G., Bureau of Soils, Livingston Helohts, Va. sree 292 Rice, Howard M., Senate Committee on Mines and Mining, Hyattsville, Md........ 235 Rice, Richard A., chief of division, Library of Congress, The Dresden. ...... ........0 268 Richards, Brig. Gen. George, paymaster, Ma- rine Corps, 1619 Twenty-first St. .......... 287 Richards, William P., District assessor, 1457 Harvard. St... oi ane Loa Son 465 Richmond, A. R., office of Secretary of Sen- ate, 1818 Park Road . oc. coo con iieciins: 233 Richmond, J. E., office of Doorkeeper of House, 316 East Capitol St................. 242 Rickards, Maj. Gen. George C., Chief Militia Bureau, The Westmoreland ............... 280 Riddell, Walter H., Office of the Second As- sistant Postmaster General, The Calverton. 282 Riddle, J. H., division chief, Treasury Depart- ment, 2006 Columbia Road ................ 273 Rider, Mrs. Gertrude T., reading room for the blind, Congressional Library, The POrNer, anil a a an 268 Riedesel, Frederick C., Joint Commission on Postal Service, 51 D St. SE....c......cunvi 230 Riesser, Dr. Hans E., German Embassy, 1702 Sixteenth St... covds.ne cies. Sint 409 Rigal, Capt. de Vaisseau, Jean F. J. E., French Embassy, 1501 Eighteenth St...... 409 Riggles, Fred D., city post office, 35 Rhode Toland AVE. (oh reins th 469 Riggs, George T., chief bill clerk of House, The Arandel: ol. cis nse dra se 241 Ringgold, Lucy M., Senate Committee on Pensions, E-F Building, Government Hoteles dn ee 235 Riordan, Daniel J., Joint Committee In- vestigating Naval Base Sites, etc., The Ralelonl a id re Sew th see 230 Rippey, Owen, confidential clerk to the Secretary of the Navy, 1364 Kenyon St... 283 Rishel, Julia B., assistant chief clerk, Department of Justice, 113 Seventh St. NE. 281 Risley, Theodore G., Solicitor for Department of Labor, 1360 Fairmont St......._...... 281,295 Riter, William D., Assistant Attorney Gen- eral, 1460 Spring Road.........coe0 cores Ritter, A. H.,Board of Engineersfor Rivers and Harbors, 3115 Mount Pleasant St...... 278 Rizer, Henry C., Geological Survey, 1464 Bel- mont Bt col ia. TCA SRR FR 289 Robb, Arthur, Chief Division of Mail and Files, Justice, 660 Morton Place NE....... 281 Robb, Charles H., associate justice, District Court of Appeals, The Rochambeau. ...... 404 Roberts, George M., District superintendent of weights, measures, and markets, 316 Maryland Ave. NEw ooo... sali oh. ul 466 Robertson, Rear Admiral Ashley H., 1870 Wyoming Ave. : ssistant Chiefof Naval Operations. .... 283 The Joint Beard. ..to uss... di. i 303 Robertson, Thomas E., Commissioner of Patents, 6 West Melrose St., Chevy Chase, Mao re al ule an, 289 Robins, Thomas, Naval Consulting Board, 13 Park Row, New York City aie 286 Robinson, Maj. D. A., Office of Chief Coor- dinator, Treasury, 1318 Massachusetts Ave. 273 | 576 Congressional Directory. Page. Robinson, Ira E., Commissioner War Miner- als Relief, The Powhatan.................. Robinson, J. A., Emergency Fleet Corpora- tion The Wardman Park. ...........0.... Robinson, Joseph T., Interparliamentary Union, Congress Hall........ oda SEL in Robinson, Lee Lamar, Senate Committee on Revision of the Laws, The Highlands...... Robinson, Myron W., United States Section of the Inter American High Commission. . Robinson, Samuel, Congressional Record messenger, 670 Maryland Ave. NE....._... Robison, John XK., Bureau of Engineering, Navy, 1642 Twenty-first St................ Robison, Rear Admiral S. 8., General Board, AE 31 West Irving St., Chevy Chase, Rodgers, J. G., Sergeant at Arms of House, 2024 Macomb Sb. oh Rodgers, Rear Admiral William L., Gen- eral Board, Navy, 1266 New Hampshire 48 Parl Road. cir na Rogers, Miss Julia, social secretary, Congres- glonalClubil sl Sota sr alan To Rolandi Ricci, Senator Vittorio, Italian ambassador, The Wardman Park.......... Rollins, William T. S., Office of Third Assist- ant Postmaster General, 637 Sixth St. NE. Romney, Kenneth, office of Sergeant at Arms of House, Fontanet Courts. ......... Roosevelt, Theodore, Assistant Secretary of Navy, 1601 Twenty-first St................ Root, Elihu, member Joint Commission for the Extension and Completion of the Capi- tol Building, 31 Nassau St., New York Roth, John C., Interstate Commerce Commis- gion, 2501 Fourteenth St... ovis ines. Rouse, Arthur B., Joint Commission on Postal Service, George Washington Inn... Rousseau, Rear Admiral Harry H., Com- mission on Navy Yardsand Naval Stations. Rowe, L. S., Pan American Annex: Director General Pan American Union. . United States Section of the Inter Amer- ican High Commission. ............... Roy, Leonard C., Senate Committee on the Library, 107 Eighth St. ST... .......... Rubin, Cora M., Senate Committee on Educa- tion and Labor, The Wardman Park...... Rucker, William W., Interparliamentary Union, 408: A-St. SWF 2.00 Ruckman, W. S., Patent Office, 3414 Mount A esi i a ee dae Rude, Dr. Anna E., division chief, Children’s Bureau, 1603 Nineteenth St................ Rude, G. T., Coast and Geodetic Survey, 3904 Legation St., Chevy Chase............ Rudolph, Cuno H., president Board of Dis- trict Commissioners, The Dresden.._...... Ruff, Albert G., Office of Fourth Assistant Postmaster General, 1411 Decatur St...... Runyan, Elmer G., District Public Utili- ties Commission, 1651 Harvard St......... Russell, Charles A., office of District assessor of personal property, 1728 Willard St...... Russell, F. M., Department of Agriculture, 1314 Delafield Place... . .....o..ooveennnens Ryan, John D., American National Red Cross; New York City: canis roa Ryder, M. E., States Relations Service, De- partment of Agriculture, 2416 Thirteenth St. Sabath, Adolph J.,Interparliamentary Union, Irving St i nai na Gn Andrew T., Capitol police, 228 A St. 286 Page. Saburi, Mr. Sadao, Japanese Embassy, 1321 Sanchez, Lieut. Commander Joaquin, Span- ish Embassy, The Wardman Park......... Sanders, Mrs. Everett, chairman ofpublicity committee of Congressional Club........... Sanders, Hartley I., Office of the Chief of Coast Artillery, Landover, Md............ Sanders, R. A., District inspector of phar- macy, 39° Quiney St... 0 0 Sanderson, George A., Secretary of the Senate (biography), Stoneleigh Court............. Sands, Edwin, Office of the Second Assist- woodt. coer al eae Sanger, Monie, St. Elizabeths Hospital. ..... Santacruz, Armando, jr., International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico! cosh iii,. J SPER LR Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, Mr., Chinese minister, Nineteenth and Vernon Sts................ Sault, C. E., Senate Committee on Banking aNAOUTIONeY i i ane taeda Sault, W. H., Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, 21 Sixth St. NE............ Saunders, Lieut. Col. E. O., Office of Chief Coordinator, Treasury, The Kenesaw...... Saunders, A., Militia Bureau, 1829 i Un TA I Re re aR Lae an UT Saunders, William L., Naval Consulting Board. rs devising dana Sak Scanlon, James F'., House Committee on Ap- propriations, 410 A St. NE... .............. Schaefer, Peter C., president District plumb- ing board, 139.B St. 8E.......... 0... Schafer, Mildred A., Senate Committee on District of Columbia... o.oo. 0 Schapiro, Israel, division chief, Congressional Library, 1907 Fifteenth St.._.............. Schlenker, Theo., Senate Committee on Finanee. ...o 0. iaa as van sees Schlerf, Harry E., House Committee on Patents, 511 Third St. 8E......... lil. Schlotfeldt, Frederick J., Bureau of Natu- ralization, 776-779 Federal Building, Chi- Cao, Iles cc i a i ana Schmidt, Harvey W., office of Secretary of Senate, 1603 Massachusetts Ave........... Schoenfeld, W. A., Bureau of Agricultural Economics, Twenty-ninth St. and Bunker Hill Road, Mount Rainier, Md............ Schofield, Capt. Frank H., General Board, Navy, 1731 Columbia Road................ Schooley, Clarence E., office of city postmas- ter, 1766. Lanter PL oo. oud 0h on, Schroeder, W. S., House folding room, 120 Maryland Ave. NB... .......... 00 Schrom, C. E., District fire department, 1314 Maryland Ave. NE.................. Schwab, Alvin R., Geological Survey, 1330 Shepherd St. on. erie vores de sed Scobey, F. E., Director of the Mint, The Wardman Park... 0 Lol 0a Scofield, John C., chief clerk, War Depart- ment, 1844 Columbia Road.....c..caa..... Scolnik, Albert, House document room, 217 Bast Capitol St. -........c....o0 ii de, Scott, E. W., office of Doorkeeper of House, Colonial Apartments... ... 0... 25.0 Scott, Emmett J., secretary-treasurer How- ard University. 5. J iors it. suas Scott, George E., American National Red Cross, Chicago, Ill... ........... 0... 3h Scott, Hugh L., Board of Indian Commis- sioners, Princeton, N. J... 2. ...o.. 0.00 Scott, Nathan B., Lincoln Memorial Com- mission, The New Willard. ................ Scott, T. H., United States Veterans’ Bureau, 4113 Pourth-St: Fi sins. Lo ahiusiiin 405 290 465 nd Individual Index. Page. Scott, Walter P., librarian of Senate, The Ballon TE 233 So Walter W., Joint Committee on Print- PAN REE a eae os 228 So e, William D., division Cit; ‘War De- partment, 1866 eS Te ns 276 Seaton, Charles H ureau of Soils; Glen- Ly Sn Pe A rT TR aa PE 292 Beprug, 2 A., clerk police court, 5320 Colo- AAO A Ve. As 405 Sedgwick, Rowand F., House Committee on Military Affairs, Thayer Ave., Silver Spring Mas od ee 243 Seib, L. V., District fire marshal, 1303 Shep- A SA a 467 Bey Charles F'., juvenile court, 1626 Swann . ase ae et SE AE 05 Sellers, Miss Kathryn, judge, juvenile court, 1620 8wannSt, oo a ae a 405 Sélys de Fanson, Mr. F. de, Belgian Em- bassy, The Brighton... ................... 407 Semmig, William G., Office of the Chief of Infantry, The Colonial SB dls ey 277 Seoane, Lieut. Col. C. A., Office of Chief Sig- nal Officer Army, Army and Navy Club.. 279 Seriére, Jonkheer, E. G. de, Netherlands Legation, The Wardman Park............ 412 Serrano, Gustavo P. , International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico. . 306 Sexton, Capt. Walton R., assistant Budget officer, Navy, The Benedick .............. 284 Seya, Mr. C. Touis, Latvian Legation, 2304 MA SaCtIROttS A VO. Lees ine ris ivteesnesnn 411 Seymour, Augustus T.,assistant to the At- torney ‘Gene. a ,2714 Cathedral Ave sy Ee 280 Seymour, Flora "Warren, Board of Indian ommiSsioners, Chicago, Hl...