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73> CONGRESS, 15T SESSION
BEGINNING MARCH 9, 1933
OFFICIAL
CONGRESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
FOR THE USE OF THE
UNITED STATES CONGRESS
FIRST EDITION
CORRECTED TO
JUNE 3, 1933
UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON : 1933
COMPILED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE
JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING
Office of Congressional Directory, Room 29, Basement of the Capitol
Phone, N Ational 3120, Branch 238
Copies of this publication may be procured from the
Saperintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C., at $1 per copy (cloth)
NOTES
The following changes have occurred in the membership of the Seventy-third
Congress since the election of November 8, 1932:
Name Died Resigned Successor Sworn in
SENATORS
Thomas J. Walsh, Mont......... Nar 2080 cial erin John E. Erickson 1_._____ Mar. 20, 1933
Cordell Hull; Term. Je. ta aicilaana daa Mar. 3,1933 | Nathan L. Bachman 1.__| Mar. 4,1933
Claude A. Swanson, Va________._
Robert B. Howell, Nebr_________
REPRESENTATIVES
Daniel E. Garrett, 8th Tex_._____
John N. Garner, 15th Tex_______.
Lewis W. Douglas, at large, Ariz.
Clay Stone Briggs, 7th Tex_______
Charles H. Brand, 10th Ga_._..__
Mar. 11,1933
Dec. 13,1932
Apr. 29,1933
May 17,1933
Mar. 3,1933
Harry Flood Byrd 1_____
William H. Thompson 1!
Joe HF. Eagle... 1 _..
Milton H. West._.______.
Mar. 4,1933
May 26, 1933
Feb. 17,1933
May 2,1933
1 Appointed by governor to fill vacancy until successor is elected and qualified.
All Washington addresses in the Directory are northwest unless otherwise
indicated.
III
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CONTENTS
A Page
Academy of Sciences, National ..______________ 353
Accounting Office, General . ______________._____ 338
Dutiesof..........aeaisusvast Jani reds 452
Addresses of Members... _._.____._. 651
Adjutant General of the Army, The___________ 306
Administration and Conservation of the Public
Domain, Committee on the__._________ 348
Administration:
ParmCredit...ioo anno an aitingl 341
Dutiosiofc. oe 0 ol Seen 502
Federal Emergency Relief __________________ 342
Boodand Dig... ooo oatmeal 329
GrainPutures. ~~ Coco haan 328
Railroad, United States... 339
Duties of. cosind. on co Abate ual 476
Veterans’... ordlusisg sd olan 343
Daties.of.. core - ATSC. pulmany 483
Advisory Council of the National Arboretum__ 357
Duties of in ia BO 497
Aeronautical Board, the... .. 0s 100 Vac] 345
Aeronautics:
Bureawofs... S200 000 F IEGITOLT pas ruin) 316
Department of Commerce... ____________ 330
National Advisory Committee for___________ 346
Duties-of tiveness abs. SHEL 485
Agricultural Economics, Bureau of. ___.___..___ 328
Agricultural Engineering, Bureau of ___________ 327
Agriculture, Department of ___________________ 323
mtiesief. ST Haan 433
Bureau of—
Agricultural’ Economies: =o... _... 328
Agricultural Engineering __________________ 327
Animatindustry..-. 00 325
Biological Strvey.... =o arid 327
Chomistryand Soils coc ot ond 326
Dairy Industry Tris aa 325
Entomology... = oa 326
Home Beonomies. oo 0 a2 328
Plant Industry. ae 325
Plant Quarantine ==» ooh mon vis 328
Peblie Roads: = c= ro xin be 327
Extension Service. oo Lonnie 324
Food and Drug Administration_____________ 329
Forest Service: rok ee 326
Grain Futures Administration_______________ 328
UD TY ER Re el Ll SE Ser 324
Office of—
Bxperiment Stations. = oC Fa 324
Information. sn Ee a 324
Personnel and Business Administration___ 323
Weather Bureau... ... .. ...0 0 324
Air Corps, Army, office of the Chief of the_____ 309
Alaska Raflroad rr oo oa aE 322
Alaska Railroad, Special Select Committee to
Investigate. cin rer enasanaa naan 182
Page
Alaska Road: Commission... .c.caammanioiZll. 323
Alien Property Custodian... ...cnoooaal 0000 346
Dutlesof.. ilies an 478
Alphabetical list:
Delegates and Resident Commissioners_.____ 154
Representatives. o.oo ccinaanenaasiieTs 147
Senators. irae srr ER ea em et 145
American Battle Monuments Commission. __. 350
Duties of. ron DERI 0 LL IR RE 492
American National Red Cross_________________ 354
Animal Industry, Bureau of __________________ 325
Apportionment of Representatives by States,
under each census. ________._.._....... 238
Arboretum, Advisory Council of the National. 357
Architect of the Capitol:
Arehitect’soflice io. oo. aoa 263
House Office Building....ccovuuuaaiio i Jill 264
Senate Office Building... __.________ 264
Architect of the Treasury, Office of the Super-
vising oR I se SEE 302
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Commis-
slon. oo ahs Srna SRA SSH 350
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission_______ 227
Duties of il ol Fon sRIDI TE 0 449
Army Industrial College, the _________________ 310
Army Medieal Center. 2. 1. 050 0000 307
Army Medical Museum and Library... _______ 307
Army War College, the... 000 LLL 310
Assignment of rooms in the Capitol:
Basement floor and terrace... ______________ 273
Gallery floor. nn a a HI 279
Ground oor. ni an BEES 275
Principal Boor... vin ne JL ISUI 277
Assignments to committees:
Representatives and Delegates -_____________ 203
Senators. nat a 0A SR ak TI 0T 183
Astrophysical Observatory. ______________.____ 352
Attendance on officers, Navy... _________ 317
Attending physician at the Capitol. __________ 264
Attorney General, biography of..______________ 310
Attorney’s Office, United States.______________ 369
B
Bank Board, Federal Home Loan_____________ 357
Barracks, Marine... 5 318
Basement floor and terrace of Capitol:
Assionmentofroomson.. oT. 273
Placramof 2 Erie 272
Battle Monuments Commission, American..__ 350
AD TELA a Sih Mn eben baleen an 492
Bicentennial Commission, The George Wash-
NEO en ere Pe ann 228
Biographies:
Attorney General. o_o 310
Clerk of the House of Representatives. ______ 259
Judges of the United States Court of Cus-
toms and Patent AppealS...e. ooo... 365
VI Congressional Directory
Biographies—continued Page
Justices of the—
Court of Claims of the United States-_.__- 366
Supreme Court of the United States___.____ 361
United States Customs Court... __.____ 367
Postmaster General. ovens navi 311
_ President of the United States... 297
Secretary of—
Agriculture... =... oo a an 323
COMINGICe.  . hanhdininss than as 329
Interior. aaa 318
I ITF Lr ee A ns Sat (pnt El 333
I A Er Re LC SR EG SS EE 313
I ATL Se AL RE 1 GUA a SU A ee 253
State. a a ee a eas 208
EL ee BAe Ee Sn Cot nS 300
Wal ots tas Seat ahi eG a Bibb ae rh 305
Secretaries to the President. ____________ 297
Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and
Resident Commissioners_ _____.._______ 3
Sergeant at Arms of the Senate. ___._._.______ 256
Vice President of the United States-_________ 3
Biological Survey, Bureau of, Department of
Agrieuliure... Corea sate eres 327
Boards:
Aeronantical . ol. oan Cee Gnas 345
Compensation, Navy. coco coeur oa 316
Engineers for Rivers and Harbors__.________ 308
Examination of Dental Officers, Navy__._____ 317
Examination of Medical Officers, Navy___._. 317
Examining, Marine. oo ooe-ove aa 318
Examining, Navy ois sonsaimnsie-n=on 317
Federal Employment Stabilization. ________. 357
Duties of. cum -vsitionstiinan ovatus au 496
Federal Home Loan Bank____.______________ 357
Federal Oil Conservation... ___________ 342
Duties of. ai ca scat deat ew 493
Federal Reserve... ifceomasoasdecdounensn 339
Duties of. oo asim ma ana Dee Arana 463
General, Navy. .: -.o- c5 oe eet eie 316
GeographiC.. cil a le hes hatter, 352
Putissof. tear a Aare wea 489
Indian Commissioners... occas cnaiouaaus 321
Joint, the..... cictecit oO Bsa dreriintmnpnes 345
Library of Congress Trust Fund__..__._____. 268
Mediation (United States) - - cocoa. 344
DUIS Of. id iit- arm abe tee Se 462
Medical Examiners and Naval Examining
{ Board (Medical) ...-niicnsaaass case 316
Naval Consulting. coc- odsen Sons sls sammie 316
Regents, Smithsonian Institution... .________ 352
Retiring, Marine. oo: 88... 0 318
Retiring, Navy. cco oricroaeszara-—eennsrs 317
Shipping, United States_ =. coco... 344
0 LER LE) SR Ee I STR 469
Surveys and Maps of the Federal Govern-
eA. a ia ee Re ee 349
Dna Rete ne ae 488
Tax Appeals, United States. ....cooeeeaaoo-- 341
Duties oli. oe a a Se any 476
Visitors to the Military Academy _._________ 229
Visitors to the Naval Academy. ____________ 229
Vocational Education, Federal... ___________ 343
Duties of cin erare 483
Page
Bridge Commission, Arlington Memorial _____ 227
Budget, Bureau of the (see eiso Federal Co-
ordinating-Servieey. zac o ---_-- 303
Paties of no soa eee aa 396
Building Commission:
Forelon Servis. «oii diner ori ioe naan 346
House Offices oi. rad ai 225
i HS EE EE eh see a 226
Senate OMiee co. i a 225
United States Supreme Court... ._______. 225
Bureaus:
Aeronautics: io iL En 316
Agriealtural Economies. oo doUd 3928
Agricultural Engineering. _______. 327
Animal Industry... 0... Fo Laeaoi nil] 325
Biological Survey... oo. li niin 327
Budget (see also Federal Coordinating
Borvice): cc niin RR 303
Dutled of fi ian aie 396
Censuses c= esa Sn 330
Chemistry-and:Solls. oi i scozaniio Lo. 326
Children’s: =o tran 2aali hga ly 334
Customs. a eT 301
Construction and Repair- ica ooo... 315
Dairy Industry... i. ibs sa rmill 325
Economies, Agricultural. o-oo 327
Engineering, Navy. —-——aaoeoanoinioaie. 315
Engraving and Printing... coo 3 ctoc 302
Entomology. oo oes ronda Sm Bn 326
Ethnology, American: .- fc c-no-coz2at 352
Fisheries. c= 0 a coenment 329
Foreign and Domestic Commerce. .__-_-_- 330
Home Economies. ... coer nite temas toh mes 328
Immigration. a efit tats Suvnadad tac ds 334
Indian ABalrs. aaa 319
Industrial Aleoholocauc i co fo-ionati brani 301
Insalar AfairS.. oc. veh ream rt = rnd 309
Internal Revenue oor oc oo ovunomocn 301
International Catalogue of Scientific Litera-
rie aE i Ee 352
Tabor Statistics... ot eimai 334
Lighthouses: 0 oso er een ernte 331
Medicine ond SUrgeryY c= srrr==mrnn- 316
REE Ss ear 309
Re Ean Se nt eee MEL RE 332
Mint os aa ire oes 301
TTS ae Ea ae 301
Naturalization. cove rcnsesnsms mma 334
Navigation and Steamboat Inspection. ____ 332
Navigation, Navy. 0 ener iran 315
ordnance, Navy. Fees omar 315
Pan American Sanitary. cece 354
Thi aR ER A Se I Se She 491
Plant Industry. oo ser cme ner ~pae 325
Plant Quarantine. oe 328
Public Health Service... coc to. o-oo 302
PablicReads —- ----s- ene eexao 327
I ETL 1 ee rn Se 320
Soils,;Chemistry and. o.oo -oto-ec 326
Standards. a a 331
Supplies'and Accounts. . oo ciorrarens 316,
LE ERR a 324
WOMEN Sees oe Le es oe ee 334
Yards and DOCKS... rs erm =a safe Sena 315,
Contents VII
C Page
Calendar. is Pasa Lh Ee a an v
California Débris Commission_._______________ 308
Campaign Expenditures, Special Committee
to Investigate... ....Jo.tzsh nating] 201
Canal, the Panama... =... lo.iiiiaediingd 345
Capitol:
Architect of the—
Architectlsioffice i. icurna J Snllaiigy 263
House Office Building... ...00.c00 sl. 264
Senate Office Building.......... .. ul lL 264
Basement floor and terrace of—
Assignment of roomson........... oo colli. 273
Piagramiof.....-  Foooedcr opi issiintad 272
Building, history and description of ._ _______ 269
Gallery floor of—
Assignment of roomson.- ..._........ ZC 279
Diggram of... Ji Sosloasoazpie 150310 278
Ground floor of—
Assignment of rooms on. cn... oC C00 275
Diagram of... iad oul Jasin inl 274
Grounds, Commission on Enlarging the_____ 225
Office of—
Architect of. ii. a 80a iL aii ees] 263
Attending physician... cig dicot 265
Congressional Record... ...... no oollo. Coad 263
Officers of the— :
House... dd so aniiisunn ld cihamiatl 259
Senate. sassiin nl Bel HE. Lanalinilll 2563
ROTO oe ET 264
Principal floor of—
Assignment of roomson... --... Li Zilull. 77
Dlngromof ost und Sas ablinwy 276
Railroad ticket office....ccnmvmmudoila idl 264
"Melegraph.offices. _ -oiisnad So sllisi aiid 264
Telephoneexchange..._..._.__ _.__....__.._. 265
Capitol Grounds, Commission on Enlarging
7 pL ER en on CB REE Il 71 225
Cavalry, office of the Chiefof._________________ 306
Census. Burean c-- coc i esl mi 330
Changes in membership of the Seventy-third
Congress sc Sonn ll 0 badest lol 111
Chaplain of the House of Representatives. ____ 259
Chaplainof the Senate... co ill oi un 253
Chaplains, office of the Chief of ..______________ 306
Chemistry and Soils, Bureau of _______________ 326
Chicago World’s Fair Centennial Commission. 359
Chief Coordinator, office of ._._________________ 304
Duliesol.. cic ccialiEcll Jn 397
Chief of—
Ar OOTP. - ov oe donii dp asa ll 555 00S 309
Cavalty... aie nniiailonnd nals 306
Chaplainel conan desis taglinaiion ah - 306
Chemical Warfare Service. _._..___________ 309
Const Artillery. ........Jaeoil adit lnhn 306
Engineers... co. ibxsodiocoibehnS a 309
Field-Artillery.. sii toons en inaeianis 306
PANONEE, sania aia dnen da EL 307
Infantry ads cre. Donel oi ae i linianeit 306
Orgnance..... ieee oanleonn SEL. 310
Chief, Post Office Inspector, Office of ._________ 314
Chief Signal Officer, office of the_______________ 309
Children’s Bureaus i. iil tocumaa. salu 334
Circuit Courts of Appeals of the United States. 364
City post offices oil aniviaisuinii dated 379
Civil'Service Commission... «cme earinoncnaacs 337
DUIS OEE a ceca i a 453
Claims Commissions: Page
German... ol a SII OS] 346
Treipavtite coi oil Sil iii bil. 346
Claims, United States Court of .______________ 366
Dutiesof._ catolineauiod. : LIZ T0000 493
Classification, political, of Congress..._..._.___. 142
Clerk of the House of Representatives (biogra-
phy eel Sienivaeny Cosi agin 259
Clerks to House committees _._____.___________ 261
Clerks to Senate committees... ____________ 254
Club, the Congressional. o = --o.. Loo il 00 355
Coast and Geodetic Survey... ________ 331
Coast Artillery, office of the Chief of .._________ 306
Coast Guard, theo toi nae QU sui 3 302
Colleges:
Army-Industrial... Jii205e0 Ll Son 02 200 310
1. Ny rp ATA I SII FEI Ls fr E140 310
Columbia Hospital for Women.________________ 356
Columbia Institution for the Deaf ____________ 356
Commerce, Department of. ___________________ 329
Duties of... olssiisa ama noi 438
Aeronautics’ Braneh. Solio oll Soo 0000 330
Bureau of—
BISheries. errr Sab EE SHI J 00 331
Foreign and Domestic Commerce. _.______ 330
Lighthonses. ii tie a3 musi JU) 331
1 ba oT SRL RE SEC pl fv eA Li Hl 332
Navigation and Steamboat Inspection_____ 332
Standards... C0000 EGE LE 10 005] 331
TheiCengus ol, oi. BOLLE. OGG. oDd 330
Coast and Geodetic Survey... ooooo..._. 331
Batent Office... Lio alli 00 Sal San 332
Commissions:
Alaska Road ooo iain cee 323
American Battle Monuments. ____....______ 350
Duties of a Lr Er ne] 492
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater. _________ 350
Arlington Memorial Bridge. _-.____.._._.____ 227
Dutiesof. o.oo oo . duimgl avn. 449
California Débris. oo. aio Soo oan oi 308
Chicago World’s Fair Centennial... ______ 359
Civil Service. i. Ebola. 337
Duties of... inl omet ali nls await 453
Employees’ Compensation, United States___ 338
Duties of... leial iui mataamnites 481
Enlarging the Capitol Grounds......._______ 225
Federal Power. oo ie ener rn 342
sn a SS SE 488
Federal Trade. oo ie 340
LP aes abs Tu eee 464
Federal Radiol. Tl Ir 0 ar 342
EE Tn Suen CA el od fat ag 493
EE a bh hte ceradenatia pie ts Belin Li ot 349
OS Of 490
Foreign Service Buildings... _.._____.___ 346
George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial ______ 228
George Washington Bicentennial ____________ 228
House Office’ Building. =. fi toa ivil 225
International Boundary—
United States, Alaska, and Canada________ 347
DUutles:ol. ccna in cin inane ts SEEN 486
United States and Mexico_.._____._.__.__._.. 347
Dutiegiof oie ee LL LAO GT 487
International Fisheries, United States and
CANAAN... weer Sa, LO JSG 348
International Joint. oot. ou ae 347
VIII Congressional Directory
Commissions—continued Page
Interstate Commerce... aa caeeva naa iii 338
Paties ofl i ane ad 455
Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary.._. 229
Migratory Bird Conservation ___.__._________ 228
Mixed Claims, United States and Germany. 346
MississippisBiverc.coo on ara al dns 308
Nashville (Tenn.) Presidents’ Plaza_________ 230
National Capital Park and Planning________ 349
Putiesiof.. ... ..  ceaFteeaonate mn nls 491
National Forest Reservation______.___________ 227
National Memeorial... cio coool oi 350
Duties oficion. i iia aiio rsa ini 495
Navy Yards and Naval Stations.__._________ 345
DE EA TUT rh pt ee Sl me sn 484
Perry’s Victory Memorial... .o..io co 350
Dabiesolu. ic ie SE ah 495
Public Bulldings. cat lasiaaall 200s 226
Public Utilities, District of Columbia________ 378
Puerto Rican Hurricane Relief... _________ 356
DUCE Of i ini er RRL a 496
Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway. .___.____ 350
Puablegolc corm in heii as 489
Senate'Office Building... suulel 225
Supreme Court Building. ________________ 225
Farifl, United States... fesaziia. 340
Patiesols coi iia 79
Tripartite:Clalms. son dac a 2 Sia noin Soeal 346
United States Roanoke Colony. ...__________ 230
United States Section of Inter-American
High. Lo onioanl siiamiawies 347
Commissioners, Board of Indian_. _____________ 322
Commissions and joint committees, congres-
sional cla a 223
Committee assignments:
Bepresentatives. ooo oi ooo BI 202
Senators... aud Li TA a Hs 183
Committee on Conservation of Wild Life Re-
sources, Speelal...o Coad oni ll 182
Committee on Economy, Select. __________ 201
Committee on Printing, Joint_ ________________ 226
Puties ofc ne nian ara 448
Committee on the Conservation and Adminis-
tration of the Public Domain._________ 348
Committee on the Library, Joint. ____________ 226
Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Joint ________ 230
Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean Mail
Contracts; Special... ied 182
Committee to Investigate Campaign Expendi-
fares; Specials co se nena 201
Committee to Investigate Contributions and
Expenses of Senatorial Candidates,
A I Se aa Ue ei 182
Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions on
the Mississippi Flood-Control Project,
Select. «tol euainaadts san toms dianth due 182
Committees:
House—
Assignments to. vis saa nan sun 203
CletRS 10. oo aa aL ORE 261
Meeting days of. .o cis tpsanic inti 202
Membershipof.... coh po omuinil 192
Official stenographers to... ___________ 263
Special andisoleet. o-oo Suc. 201
Committees—continued Page
Senate—
Assignments to. Cc liiio on alae lL SJE 183
Glerksito. 1. io as miei 254
Meeting daysol o.oo Su 0 182
Membership of........ 0030s. 0000 177
Special and select oo oo os soo aig 182
Compensation Board, Navy ________.________.__._ 316
Compensation Commission, Employees’ ______ 338
Dutiesiol......oomm adie SL Sk 481
Comptroller General of the United States
(General Accounting Office) .._________ 338
DUIS 0 cca Ba EE pn 452
Comptroller of the Currency... _______. 301
Comptroller of the Post Office Department_____ 313
Congress:
Library ol oo ie... auiailul Jendaaedioiasd 267
Political classification of oe 0 IU 142
Sesslongiof oc. ooo oi iaoiuiiiaboonlg 233
Congressional:
Apportionment, by States........____Z______ 238
Cabs. Aaa dn BR SR Sm 355
Commissions and joint committees _________ 223
Delegations, by States... coool oli 5 131
Districts, mapsof. =. JL os iu Ioan, 595
Record, office of, at Capitol ..._.________._. 263
Conservation and Administration of the Public
Domain, Committee on the___________ 348
Conservation of Wild Life Resources, Special
Commitiee on. iia. tin soins i 182
Conservation Work, Emergency -______________ 343
Duties of. oto iiian oon 482
Construction and Repair, Bureau of __________ 315
Consalarofficers. oo coc Sie dit iis, 503
Continuous service of Senators. __.____________ 160
Contributions and Expenses of Senatorial Can-
didates, Select Committee to Investi-
Bales a RS STR 182
Coordinating Service, Federal (see also Bureau
ofthe Budget)a io. coat ADH G0 303
Putiesof- rs 20. a Clio INTERES 397
Federal Board of Hospitalization. _________ 303
Permanent Conference on Printing________ 303
Chief Coordinator, Office of. ______________ 303
Dutiesof... otic lua on sl 397
Federal Coordinating Agencies. .____________ 304
Dutiesiolic 2 Uo bad Bani EUs 397
Coordinator for Motor Transport, District
of:-Colambin.. ...cco cea a EIU 304
Federal Purchasing Board... .......-. 0. 304
Federal Real Estate Board. _.______________ 304
Federal Specifications Board... ._________ 304
Federal Standard Stock Catalogue Board._ 304
Federal Statistics Board... ____________ 304
Federal Traffic Board... ....2 00.0.0 304
Forest Protection Board............_ 20 iC. 304
Interdepartmental Board of Contracts and
Adjustments... rae 304
Interdepartmental Board on Simplified
Office: Procedure... cocoa i il 305
Interdepartmental Patents Board. .______ 305
Copyright Office, Library of Congress_________ 267
Corporation counsel’s office, District of Co-
lumbar Ci i SE a EE 367
Corporation, Reconstruction Finance ._....._- 357
Contents IX
Page
Council of National Defense, United States__.___ 345
Butlesof or iis oo. a delaail In mol 8s 476
Courtof Claims... So Loic aun: 366
eS Ol i in a ILENE 493
Court of Impeachment, Senate. ._____________ 239
Courts, District of Columbia:
CourtofiAppesls... 30 ll. 366
Juvenile lini Sl ena ani ln Dandi ag 370
Munielpalss oo aed. weasdsnaall ny 370
Pole it oe aN Lh RE 370
Supreme... mule sii ae TNs RE 369
Courts, United States:
Circuit Courts of Appeals. Li. .o.oll solids 364
TRS a cde He 366
TET TRE CE RRR A SR SS TRE ta 367
Customs and Patent Appeals__.._____________ 365
SIOreIne. os a ae Te LE et 361
Credit Administration, Farma_____._____________ 341
Duties of... poisson SL aninli 186 502
Custodian, Alien Property... __________ 346
Duties of... 5000 gol lnl=S tuorings 478
Customhouse-. ial Low sodiod anda cools 302
Customs and Patent Appeals, United States
Court of... loiichiad il Win leg 365
Customs, Bureann of. ic oeusiilonemasic 301
Customs Court, United States... --.....____. 367
D
Dairy Industry, Bureau of ____________._______ 325
Deaf, Columbia Institution for the_.__._______ 356
Debates, Official Reporters of:
Houses shrsla san nide eran DU nana das 262
Senate. = coiadioaair Bessniandd asin Lo 256
Delegates and Resident Commissioners:
Alphabetical: Het. soli to volgiinnli ise an 154
Assignments to committees. __._____________ 203
Biographies of Sosa dl DeLiir Seidl wail 127
List of, with home post offices and Washing-
toniaddrésses. lou. annual. lisa 660
Rooms and telephones of _.__________________ 287
Service record in Congress... ________._ 173
Noles castfor.. _sicaiipiel suns dl inl 248
Delegations, congressional, by States. _________ 131
Dental Officers, Board for Examination, Navy. 317
Departmental soReitors..... .... oem cei mn mans 311
Departments:
Agriemlbure iio ooo SBR 323
Commerce... Jl. oooh. SR 0nniesly 329
Grr TT ms SL Rn Rs RRS I 1 2 2 318
Justice. oo loo Ra Bn I 310
EADOr. as Se EE rie on I HEINE 333
NAVY... ove S amon del 313
Post Office. . oli 0 SRE 05 311
State. iho LOG Bie an bldg ailing 298
easy... ali dean nn SE 300
War. Lie SR Anais ln 305
Description and history of the Capitol Build-
Ing. ls ae a EE 269
Diagram of the—
Basement floor and terrace of the Capitol_.__ 272
Gallery floor of the Capitol... __...._______ 278
Ground floor of the Capitol. _________________ 274
Principal floor of the Capitol. _______________ 276
Reseating plan of the House... ______.__ 282
Senate Chambeleoeeenvazasresenecrnoromenune 280
Page
Diplomatic and Consular Service. _____________ 503
Director of vehicles and traffic, District of Co-
Iumbia ciao ania 00g 377
Directory.of theiSematel .... i... S00. Glc. 281
District of Columbia:
City.postioffice.. .. Loo Bid Bh ans Fay) 379
Corporation counsel's office... ______.________ 376
Court of Appealsofithel solicaioonn ull 366
Director of vehicles and traffie._____________. 377
Engineer Department... __________________. 377
Eive'department............ sldmuis da 377
Government....... Losi Suisadonl Sug 375
Health department. ot. sii Jens eal a 377
Juvenile court... 10 F000 gil nas 370
Metropolitan police... dosti luai oie eo 378
Municipal court... clot ln sas enn, 370
OMEOrS....cvinni nn imunmassiiot Sinan h 1300S 375
Origin and form of government______________ 371
Pollee comrtioc. iio Losi] Lio asin 370
Public Utilities Commission. _.______________ 378
Recorderofideeds. Lo o05l. lions 370
Register of wills and clerk of the probate
COUP. 0 SE Raa 370
Supreme Court... uit isilel vonadnnd toy 369
Division of Radiation and Organisms__._______ 352
Document room, House of Representatives____ 260
Doorkeeper of the House of Representatives.__ 260
E
Economics:
Bureau of Agricultural... ..._._...._._____ 328
Bureau ofl. Home.......c oie DHEA 328
Economy Committee, Select _______ __________ 201
Education, Office of... ct... GUE 320
Embassies. cca cninmniene bi te EES LE 503
Emergency Conservation Work. ______________ 343
Duties. of... cow... 20 ION Sha BY 482
Emergency Relief Administration, Federal ___ 342
Duties.of oui eda dn soln osaliiin i 502
Employees’ Compensation Commission, United
States ios ioinnarddl. ant bareunn ll 338
Duties of. ...ovnnei tue sian. 0 lied 481
Employment Service, United States_....._____ 334
Employment Stabilization Board, Federal ____ 357
Engineer Department, District of Columbia... 377
Engineer Office, United States.._______________ 308
Engineering, Bureau of Agricultural.__________ 327
Engineering, Bureau of, Navy_________________ 315
Engineers, Office of the Chief of. ______________ 308
Engraving and Printing, Bureau of ____________ 302
Enlarging the Capitol Grounds, Commission
Os cnn mbm SS See ae Nl 225
Entomology, Bureau of. ___..._._.._.___.... 326
Ethnology, Bureau of American_______________ 352
Executive departments... _.__________ 295
Experiment stations, Agricultural Department. 324
Expiration of terms of Senators, by groups-__.-- 157
Extension Service, Department of Agriculture. 324
F
Farm Credit Administration. ________________. 341
Dutiesiof sui. Si tant lignin a its 502
Federal Board for Vocational Education.._____ 343
RIF TH Te Se ee 483
x Congressional Directory
Page
Federal Coordinating Service (see also Bureau
of the Budget). asi foo ceiitaiinanis 303
Dutiesiol. no do ea EE 397
Federal Board of Hospitalization__________ 303
Permanent Conference on Printing________ 303
Chief Coordinator, Office of ___.____._._._____ 303
Dutiesiof.... . es nil Bass aise 397
Federal Coordinating Agencies. ___________.. 304
Dutiesof.... foul ai sala nl Jo 500803 397
Coordinator for Motor Transport, District
of Qolumbin.............5ssiagalis 304
Federal Purchasing Board. ...._______.____ 304
Federal Real Estate Board... _.___._.___. 304
Federal Specifications Board. .____________ 304
Federal Standard Stock Catalogue Board ._ 304
Federal Statistics Board... ___.____._________ 304
Federal TrafficBoard. . —.......... 2.0 304
Forest Protection Board... .__..___..._.. 304
Interdepartmental Board of Contracts and
Adjustmentsca co. tii al 304
Interdepartmental Board on Simplified
Office: Procedure... .... 0c blades 305
Interdepartmental Patents Board... .._.__. 305
Federal Emergency Relief Administration... 342
Duties oft. aaa. So SU in Se. 00 502
Federal Employment Stabilization Board______ 357
103 0 LT Fh dal i Site si ef edge 496
Federal Home Loan Bank Board... ____.._.___ 357
Federal Oil Conservation Board_.______________ 342
DUCE Ofeace ai ri 493
Federal Power Commission. _._____.___________ 342
Dutiesof................. 2850 nay 488
Federal Radio Commission _______.____._____.___ 342
Duties of... oan SA NSE 493
Federal Reserve Board... 2. ls 339
Daties of... dus cadiassans Lonnaas 463
Federal Trade Commission ___________________ 340
Putiesiof=. oo uA aE nen 464
Field Artillery, office of the Chief of. __________ 306
Finance, office of the Chiefof__________________ 307
Finance Corporation, Reconstruction _________ 357
Duties of... vorrei dd S30 E 497
Finance Corporation, War. _..___.____....___.. 340
Dutiesiof 0 0001 0 0Siins JD 477
Fine Arts, Commission of ____________________ 349
Duties of... hii iL lull Tan 490
Fire department, District of Columbia. _______ 377
First Assistant Postmaster General ___________ 312
Pisherjes, Burean of o..ol 3 Gonna 0s 331
Floor leaders, House of Representatives. ______ 259
Folding room of the House... _._.___.________ 260
Folding room of the Senate... ...___ 256
Food and Drug Administration...._...____.__ 329
Foreign and Domestic Commerce, Bureau of. 330
Foreign consular officers in the United States. _. 513
Foreign diplomatic representatives in the
United States io aii 020000 0.000005 503
Foreign Service Buildings Commission________ 346
Foreign Service of the United States___________ 555
Forest Reservation Commission, National ____ 227
FopestiServiee ol on Te 326
Fourth Assistant Postmaster General ____._____ 312
G Page
Gallery floor of Capitol:
Assignment of rooms on... __._.._..._. 279
Diagramme oo oa EO 278
Garden, United States Botanic______.__________ 268
General Accounting Office... i. 338
Dutiesolos... oars i. Sota Th a 452
General Board of the Navy._________________._. 316
General Dispensary, Army ._.___________________ 309
General Lond Office... = 7 nl 319
General Staff, War Department_______________ 305
General Supply Committee. ._.__._.____._______ 302
Geographic Board, United States._.___________ 352
Duties ofc ieee 489
Geological SALVE. oianeiaa a EE 320
George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Com-
TEETH 11 ta SIR Sine Sa Se Ly 1 228
George Washington Bicentennial Commission__ 228
German Claims Commission_._________________ 346
Government of the District of Columbia_______ 375
Government Printing Office....._._______._______ 268
Governors of the States and Territories _______ 249
Grain Futures Administration... ___________ 328
Ground floor of the Capitol:
Assignment.of roomson.......oo.Loi it 00 275
Piagramol.....o iim linlaiiei sae 274
H
Headquarters Marine CorpS.-.ooaeoo_______.___ 317
Health Department, District of Columbia_____ 377
Health, National Institute of... ____________ 302
Highway Special Commissioners, International,
United States and Canada - ...________ 348
Duatiesof ssa ior 0 Lon 30s 493
History and description of the Capitol.._______ 269
Home Economics, Bureau of... __________ 328
Home Loan Bank Board, Federal.._____.______ 357
Home post offices of Senators, Representatives,
and Delegates, with Washington ad-
Aresses. oon ie NRRL SS 649
Home, United States Soldiers’... ______...__ 356
Hospital for Women, Columbia. ____.__________ 356
Hospitals: i
PBreedmen’s.. iin adn uli anadlline 322
Naval. ..on. iain nen oly 317
Btelligabethe. oon Loeaatans SREY 321
House committees:
Assignments to. cana RAS 203
Clerks 0 a Ne 261
Meeting daysol cous aaa. aan 202
Mombership:ol:. oi dal iii rsenaased 162
Official stenographersito.. 2% 263
Special and seleth.cuc- vii mene Baa LS 201
House Office Building, Commission in Control
5 FH oe Le SOE EE a Ce oe 225
House of Representatives:
Miscellaneous officials... o.oo... il 263
Officersiol coor iii aS 259
Personnel of—
Chaplaine tei donasscs dpeonialioieasuas 259
Clerks tocommittees. o.oo i conlloonl 261
Document Room. oo 5 ii iosoo taco 260
Folding BoomM.covevan- pil la unl otiut 260
Contents XI
House of Representatives—continued Page
Personnel of —Continued
Majority Leader......-uon. doc sine otion 259
Minority Leader........coi Loni alia 259
Office of the—
Clerk. ....cuvnuisinn i ar orsbae i fags 259
Doorkeeper.-oi alien ha lean 260
Legislativecounsel.._._ . _ 2:osiioer 263
Sergeant aft Arme...... coroimouicl ign 260
Speaker. «uo: cut Lean ontt Latta Seay 259
Official Reporters of Debates of .__________ 263
POSEIAaston.. io iinet PoiBUET 261
Bpeaker’s Table. is it sendy vasa t loniy 259
Stenographers to committees of ____________ 263
Political classificationof ......__._...____._... 142
Housing Corporation, United States...__._____ 334
Howord University... iota te cia Sos 322
Hurricane Relief Commission, Puerto Rican._ 356
Hydrographic Office of the Navy ______________ 315
I
Immigration, Bureang of:....-0.. ozreicafosoud 334
Impeachment trials by the Senate_____________ 239
Independent offices and establishments. _____ 335
Index, individual. ior. toe condo bn 661
Indian Affairs, Bureau of. ..-.c.- coon bn 319
Indian Commissioners, Board of _.____________ 321
Individaakindey oi. onthe oat be 661
Industrial Alcohol, Bureau of ___.______.______._. 301
Industrial College, Army... .... .0oioaiiali. oz 310
Infantry, office of the Chiefof _____.___________ 306
Information, office of, Agriculture Department. 324
Inland Waterways Corporation_.._____________ 348
Duties ol: feet cue donriil Snieedipnd 492
Inspector General of the Army ________________ 306
Institution for the Deaf, Columbia. ________.___ 356
Insular Aflairs, Bureau of......o.cooeiusnii-e 309
Inter-American High Cominission, United
States Section of. cc coerce mnbwes 347
DUleS of... coin ti side aden sll ta Bina 488
Inferior Department... co. Polos 318
Dutiesof.. —. .......... ceili. Te.ssth 429
Alaska Ballvoad. co. or tops nea to 322
Alaska Road Commission. __________________ 323
Board of Indian Commissioners_..____._____ 321
Bureau of—
Indian Affaire... o..  .  odeasias 319
Reclamation. .... ... coesees ot fone suansian ba 320
Freodmen’s Hospilal. .... -.. oiiairnd 322
General Tand Office... ....... voit 319
Geological SUEVeY....—coceco- dooce dia 320
Howard University... ..-cefi-torecscned 322
National Pork Service... io. f couivococran 321
Officeof Edueation.............. teacsl Leese 320
St. Elizabeths Hospital... oooouioe 321
Porritorial officials... .... oo caoecucvaen funn 322
War Minorals Relief... oon a aoaa 322
Internal Revenue, Bureau of. _____..__________ 301
Internal Revenue Taxation, Joint Committee
Pd 226
International Boundary Commission:
United States, Alaska, and Canada..___._.___ 347
Duties ol... oui ne ba aRcEL fo 486
United States and Mexico ___...__._______.__. 347
DUIS Of. emis SRE Sr ER AE oh ld 487
Page
International Catalogue of Scientific Literature,
Regional Bureau for the United States. 352
International Exchanges, Smithsonian Institu-
Hon uit nein nani 0 ORREE 352
International Fisheries Commission, United
Statessand Canada... ...... i00] 348
International Highway Special Commissioners,
United States and Canada____._______ 348
Duatien.oli ce. om. cameras ft C0 493
International Joint Commission... __.___________ 347
Dutiefiolta tio did ph 486
Interparliamentiary Unfon- 2 C00 ior ins 227
Interstate Commerce Commission. .___________ 338
Duties cag iol a es a 455
Island governments: Guam, American Samoa,
and-Virgin Islands x C 314
J
Joint Board, the... ... ...._.._ AER A IE 345
Joint commissions:
Acquire a Site and Additional Buildings for
the Library of Congress______________ 225
International... ic. ois Aiba aay 347
Duties of......c.... fidsiaoM  baani lo 486
Joint Committee:
On Internal Revenue Taxation... _._____.__ 226
On Printing... eo sais 23000ie Jas 000 226
Duties of... oo ooo So PRR 448
On the Tibrary......---— 280M 000 226
Veterans’ Affairs... 00 i050 0000 230
Judge Advocate General:
ATI. oo. oR DIE BNR, Se] 306
NAVY coe riiosit Tae nor moras eee SIAN 316
Judges and officials of the United States Court
of Customs and Patent Appeals,
residences of... lo cogil luis 366
Justice, Department of... ......_c. 22835000... 310
Puatiesof ici. oo 2dausns salusl S00 411
Departmental solicitors... ol. 311
Justices and officials:
Comt ol OlMmS.... evi en dL LS 367
Supreme Court, United States_.______________ 364
Juvenile court. oo ccoc-ivn oo TIRE 030 370
L
Tabor, Department of. oc ---c22 22 200 333
Duties of... i Bien. BENDS 445
Bureau of—
Immigration. i iors. lela A dal 334
T.0Dhor Statistics. cove SECS 334
Natorslization.....c-coeweoretdaio titer uae 334
Children’s. Bureau. lo. Loaioll. Slice LLL 334
Coneiliation Service... oa. lodioaiu 334
Employment Service, United States...______ 334
Housing Corporation, United States_.______. 334
Women’s: Btirean... .ocel io a nasi... 334
Labor Statistics, Burean.of.._.._ _ Sf ii... 334
Land Office, General. iis cic. t we C Joii zl 319
Legislative Counsel:
HOUBE. oct eran nem aeRO OO 263
Senatelrlcl scoaiunr dC nadoiirane oy Suni 256
Library, Department of Agriculture. __________ 324
Library, Joint Committee on the.___..___._____ 226
XII
Library of Congress: Page
Copyright Officer... saniiaiaD huss 267
Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and A ddi-
tional Buildings for the... ___._.____._ 225
Personnel ofa. co. ....i tea 267
Truss FPandiBoard oo ce dita Danaus 268
Lighthouses, Bureau of.a....oi fou nui... 331
Local addresses of Senators, Representatives,
and Delegates, with home post offices. 64g
M
Mail Contracts, Special Committee to Investi-
gate Air and Ocean: co cuure wnat unas 182
Majority Leader (House), office of... ________.__ 259
Maps of congressional districts __________.____ 595
Morine Barracks. corinne Perna 318
Marine Corps Headquarters... _._._____.._..__... 317
Marine Examining Beard... ......._....._ _.... 318
Marine Retiving Boards. ooo ann 318
Marshal’s office, United States. ___.____.___._.._ 369
Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary Com-
iIssion oo al a 229
Mediation Board, United States... __________ 344
Dutiesof ..zisnco sn oasi Lad... 462
Medical Examiners and Naval Examining
Board:(Medical) _....__.. mois 316
Medical Officers, Board for Examination, Navy. 317
Medical School, Naval... con. Ui il 317
Medicine and Surgery, Bureau of _____________ 316
Meeting days:
House.committees. Ziad lg. 202
Senate committees... ...... ci lA Soann 182
Members’ addresses... oosilu eisai a 651
Members’ rooms and telephones. _____________ 283
Membership:
House'committees... Lx i loaamniie tii oo 192
Senateccommittees.. io coool in 177
Membership changes of the Seventy-third
Congress... Jona ral wen 1x
Memorial Bridge Commission, Arlington______ 227
Dutiesof.-.- o.oo Smolin 449
Memorial Commissions:
National coed ani Seeing 350
Duties of...ceais alin das late 495
Perrys Victory coo ici ana ale 350
PUbesof. vo. cee iii ans ea 495
Merchant Fleet Corporation, United States
Shipping-Board o.oo cans. nea 344
Butiesef........ nina wlge 475
Metropolitan police. =... -.  lofnlidi. 378
Migratory Bird Conservation Commission. .__: 228
Military Academy, Board of Visitors._________ 229
Militia Bavean... co Ra a Sais 309
Mines, Bareanof .L.-. -. oo eaiiN Us 332
Minority Leader (House), office of ____________ 259
Mint, Bureawof the... l0izaa iii S000 301
Miscellaneous officials of the House____________ 263
Mississippi Flood-Control Project, Select Com-
mittee to Investigate Labor Conditions
onthe. oie tn in 182
Mississippi River Commission________________ 308
Mixed Claims Commission, United States and °
TF i ee See I ESE 346
Monuments Commission, American Battle __ 350
Dutiesof ituin Jo Joao i oui 0S 492
Munielpal Court. oil suid oiina Joi. 130 370
Muscle Shoals (Tennessee Valley Authority)... 342
N Page
Narcotics, Bureau of... Bion 02 gid 301
Nashville (Tenn.) Presidents’ Plaza Commis-
lone. Coonan) 230
National Academy of Sciences. _._.___________ 353
National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. 346
Duties of... oni BR SF IIE 485
National Arboretum, Advisory Council of the. 357
National Capital Park and Planning Commis-
Slon... 0 20:00 US TET I000 sina) 349
Dutiesiof iiss. 252800 491
National Defense, Council of. _________________ 345
Duties of il 00 AAU RA IRRORNS 476
National Forest Reservation Commission. ____ 227
National Galleryof Arte’ 00 ca 20 bis 352
National Institute of Health ___.______________ 302
National Memorial Commission_______________ 350
Dutiesofc il 000 J sid a wo Oh aa, 495
National Monument Society, Washington_____ 350
National Museam.....0 Soot oer to 352
National‘ParkeServicei so. =F 321
National Training School for Boys_ ___________ 357
National Zoological: Parle. 5: 710i alma 352
Naturalization, Burean'of 0. 5-0 toy 334
Naval Academy, Board of Visitors. ___________ 229
Naval Consulting Begrd.=l div ein 78 316
Naval Dispensary Lio i baiusp She = 317
Naval Examining Board... 220 “note 317
Naval Hospitglo oo. JD FUSE Iv AiG oo ata 317
Naval Medieal School-. = 220 Sans tins 317
Naval:Observatory. 5 i oh 0a R00 315
Naval Operations, Office of .______._____________ 314
Naval Reliving Board. © =1 27 iba i a 317
Navigation and Steamboat Inspection, Bureau
Olio a ana a det 332
Navigation; Burcawof too 02 t= or tie 315
Navy Department -o0 2 Te ain ae 313
Ditieg ofc a a 419
Attendanceonofficers. LU 0 tL. 317
Board for Examination of—
Dental Officers... 0 BUNT at a 317
Medieal Officers. carol oo ium aring 317
Board of Medical Examiners..._._____________ 316
Bureau of—
Aeronautics. Sl RIGS BRN a aa 316
Constructionsand Repair- =.= i" 315
Engineering: -oooo0 po of i SR 315
Medicine‘'and Surgery. o.oo nr Hae 316
Navigation. oo. oo cfa giiae 315
Ordnance co. tro -3hias dis analy 315
Suppliesand Accounts. _.-__ 316
Yeordsand-Doeeks.. «oo anid Aba is 315
Compensation-Beard. 2.) 770-58 ae 316
General: Board. oo... oo o  zdia On 316
Headquarters Marine Corps... ____________ 317
Island'gzovernments.. coon Fae 314
Marine Barracksci-n oo rina cantik 318
Marine Examining Board... _..___....__._._ 318
Marine Retiving'Board 2 =~ 22 rn 0 318
Naval Consulting Board =. ooo 22 0. 316
Naval Dispensary. io oui 08 in 700 317
Naval Examining Beard. _ oo. ...0 ni Jil 317
Naval. Hospital... ooo 30 20nit 317
Naval Medical School __.__.__.____._._.__.... 317
Naval Retiring Board... 2... 317
Navy yard and station, Washington, D. O_._ 317
Contents XIII
Navy Department—econtinued Page
Office of—
Judge Advocate General oo... ___ 316
Naval Operations. oo uli Lili Donei aio 314
Navy yard and station, Washington, D. C__.__ 317
Navy Yards and Naval Stations, Commission
ONS ks damm EA hE EE he 345
Duties of... 20 Uae ol 484
Newspapers represented in press gallery... __ 587
Notes showing membership changes in this
ST Ty ESE ER nS TL I
0
Observatory:
Astrophysieal os a a a 352
Naval, Sd cL SL See dd S00 HES 315
Office of:
Adjutant General, Aymy............... = 306
Chief Post Office Inspector... ____. 313
Chief Signal:Officer.......Jf. Coo) sianoay) 300
Comptroller of the Currency... _____.___ 301
Comptroller, Post Office Department________ 313
Education... 00D Lorn ase iiss 320
Experiment Stations... __________ 324
First Assistant Postmaster General _________ 312
Fourth Assistant Postmaster General _______ 312
Geological Survey......Q LOST aia] 321
Information, Department of Agriculture_____ 324
Inspector- General, Army... __. __.___.__ 306
Judge Advocate General—
ATINY - oom oem mt tm oe rm da 306
Navy oie RARE I IEE 316
Legislative counsel—
House. i coin GL SIOBIRON TAN 263
Senate. ise PL LE TRIOS 256
Naval Operations... oC c0lU 00 00007 3a 314
Personnel and Business Administration,
Department of Agriculture. .__________ 323
Postmaster of the House... -. ll. ____... 261
Public Buildings and Public Parks of the
National:Capital.. SL 00 000, 1d 349
Duties of tized iil. 492
Quartermaster General _-___.________________ 307
Register of the Treasury... ____________._____ 302
‘Second Assistant Postmaster General _______ 312
Supervising Architect, Treasury. ____________ 302
Surgeon General, Army... __________________ 307
Third Assistant Postmaster General ________ 312
Treasurer of the United States... __________ 301
United States Attorney.__.___________________ 369
Tnited-Stateg marshals oc nr 0 369
Office of the Chief Coordinator. ______________ 304
Pulies'ol rr ven i paid 397
Office of the Chief of:
AIC OrDS 309
Cavalry. eR 306
Chaplaing. Fr 306
Chemical Warfare Service... ________. 309
Coast Artillery 2 TE 306
OT = a 308
Bela Artery re A 306
TTL pri a es go A og a il 307
I ty 306
Ordnance. co ee 308
Officers of the—
ONE rr 259
Senate re 253
Page
Officials, Territorial. ....o.uii. oolbadesil wise 322
Oil Conservation Board, Federal ._____________ 342
Duties of, Side Lon ean im ol 493
Ordnance, Bureau of, Navy... ....... 315
Origin and form of government of the District
of Columbia. coi. ua innit 371
Pr
Pan American Sanitary Bureau ______________. 354
Patiesiofio sey Hea ES 491
Pan American Union. "20 20! adie 353
Dutiesiof — oir aneer eons Staite, 451
Paname'Canal, The LL aly oe 345
Park and Planning Commission, National
Capital oo ne 349
Patios of. 491
Park Service, National......__co0ii ide gin. 321
Patent Appeals, United States Court of Cus-
tomsand. Pe 365
Pent OMCs rrr re rae 332
Perry’s Victory Memorial Commission________ 350
Duties of a re, 495
Personnel and Business Administration, De-
partment of Agriculture... _________ 323
Persons entitled to admission to the press
CEC FE Aiea fetes sede dnl 580
Physician at the Capitol, attending....________ 264
Plant Industry, Bareanof -... 00 325
Plant Quarantine, Bureau of ._._______________ 328
Police:
ET ee le he Re Ln ts en al Sn 264
TE Hp no i, ER Ap 370
D0 Ep 0H EEE Ea des ah ho A ln ds en 378
Political classification of Congress... ..._______ 142
Post Office Department. =.= vn 37 311
Dutiesols tt i a es 415
Chief Post Office Inspector... _________ 313
First Assistant Postmaster General _._______ 312
Fourth Assistant Postmaster General _.______ 312
Office’of the'Comptroller 2... o_o 313
Second Assistant Postmaster General._______ 312
Third Assistant Postmaster General...._.____ 312
Post officeof the Senate. .c.cueane in. 0 256
Postal Telegraph-Cable Co. at Capitol. ._.____ 265
Postmaster General, biography of... _________ 311
Postmaster ofthe House... o... 261
Potomac Parkway and Rock Creek Commis-
BION. Ts 350
Duties ol 489
Power Commission, Federal... ____.____ 342
Pate ol er nr 488
PresidentoftheSenate..-_— ____._._..__ i. 253
President of the United States, biography of... 297
President pro tempore of the Senate___.________ 253
Presidents and Vice Presidents and the Oon-
gresses coincident with their terms._.... 250
Press gallery:
List of persons entitled to admission to_.____ 580
Newspapers represented in... ___________ 587
Rules governing admission to-.._._._________ 579
Principal floor of the Capitol:
Assienmentolroomson: coo li oo 277
05 EE TE TET 1] Bot A 50 55 Sis wp ee Aa 276
Printing, Joint Committee on________________. 226
Dates Of. rh rene 448
XIV Congressional Directory
Page
Property Custodian, Alien... .___.___.... 346
Putlesiof. ini onl Sra Es 478
Public Buildings and Public Parks of the
National Capital, Office of .__.___.___._..__ 349
Duties of. ins on nm rai nas 492
Public Buildings Commission. _.._.____.____.____ 226
Public Domain, Committee on the Conserva-
tion and Administration of the________ 348
Public Health Service, Bureau of ._____________ 302
Public Roads, Bureanof.......... «2. 327
Public Utilities Commission, District of Co-
Tambien W iaas 378
Puerto Rican Hurricane Relief Commission... 356
Duties ee 496
- Q
Quartermaster General... ooo... 307
= R
Radiation and Organisms, Division of. ..__.__. 352
Radio Commission, Federal. ._________________ 342
Dutiesof iii hans hare bans 493
Railroad Administration, United States__..___ 339
Dutlesiol ort i sate ae 476
Bailvead, Alaska... oo 0 ade 322
Rallroad ticket office. ... coos anno ini 264
Reclamation Burean. .- =... ooo coon ‘320
Reconstruction Finance Corporation. ________ 357
Patiesiof oa a ae 497
Recorder of deeds... caveat tata 370
Red Cross, American National. _______________ 354
Regional Bureau for the United States Interna-
tional Catalogue of Scientific Litera-
EEE SRE I De Ee 352
Register of the Treasury... evuov nce evannas= 302
Register of wills o.oo anil. iaots 370
Regular and special sessions of Congress, list of__ 233
Reforestation (Emergency Conservation Work). 343
Relief Administration, Federal Emergency..._ 342
AR ra I Ey A eS a 502
Relief, War Minerals...........aooeioooa nia: 322
Reporters of debate:
ETE RE a ER SE LE 263
SOO Ch ie br ve pari En Ln rts we phe 256
Representatives:
Alphabetical listof oo ove rina aa 147
Apportioned to the several States under each
CORSUSIE. Jo. eee er ate E 238
Assignments of, to committees. ___._________ 203
Blographiesiof...... i ci. cs dn nears 3
List of, with home post offices and Wash-
ington addresses. oom ancie ion 651
Rooms and telephones of... ____.._______._ 287
Service of, showing Congresses in which it has
beentendered.c..oo itn ol 163
Votesgast for. ol io i. i se 241
Reseating plan of the House, diagram of _______ 282
Reserve Board, Federal... .... 339
Duties oli. ida hain saaanea at 463
Resident Commissioners and Delegates:
Alphabetieablst. ooo oa ou 154
Assignments to committees. _______________ 203
Biographiesof ca ee 127
List of, with home post offices and Washing-
0 REE LT Le Ge 660
Page
Resident Commissioners and Delegates—con.
Rooms and telephonesof ___________________ 287
Service record in Congress._.__...__.__________ 173
Votesoastforscatogadas it suiisiinios toons 248
Riverand Harbor Board=. oot Sos zion is 308
Road Commission, Alaska___.__________.. ____ 323
Roads, Bureau of Public... ._.. i 327
Roanoke Colony Commission, United States. 230
Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Commis-
AI Pepa aE Shen be 350
PBatlesol en a 489
Rooms and telephones:
Represenfatives. .......0l...... 70 does 287
Senators... eigen 285
Rules governing admission to press gallery.-__.. 579
S
St. Elizabeths Hospital... = Loti 321
School, Naval Medical. ________.._._______..___. 317
Seatsof Senators i. at sain ir oa 281
Second Assistant Postmaster General __________ 312
Secretaries to: Senators. o.oo iii irae 257
Secretaries to the President, biographies of______ 297
Secretary of—
Agriculture, biography. of... 1... 323
Commerce, biography of... o_o ____.._... 329
Interior, biography. of. suc. tocniiiovanus 318
Labor, biography of... Jucacaiz ticent i ues 333
Navy, biography of. ______ oan] 313
Senate biographyel  _......... ster 253
State, biography eof... .. oleic anit 298
Treasury, biography of... ...... 5 300
War, biography of- =. _ 0 oo. aad 305
Select and special committees:
Air and Ocean Mail Contracts, Investigate... 182
Alaska Railroad, Investigate __.______________ 182
Campaign Expenditures, Investigate... ____ 201
BOONOMY- cocii ci iit ben atin ils 201
Labor Conditions on the Mississippi Flood
Control Project, Investigate __________ 182
Senatorial Candidates, Contributions and
Expenditures of. ..on one: iiait ions 182
Wild Life Resources, Conservation of __.___ 182
Senate:
Dingram-of the floor of ivr Tovey oon -280
DIeCtOrY of is a aban sed tmt Ek 281
Office Building Commission_._________.______ 225
Personnel of— :
Cloplaing =. sora chat eat 253
Clerks to committees. __..__._.___..___.____ 254
Foldingroom:z =... ooo aiaios 256
Office of the—
Yegislativecounsel. ......... .. iio. 256
President ist ni aaa 253
Secrelapwisods 0 oo a 253
Sergeant abt ATMS. oni di 256
Official Reporters of Debates of .__.________ 256
Postoffice 0... oo 256
President protempore.. cao o 253
Secretariesto Senators... __._ 257
Political classificationof 142
Special asssionsiof. ia. o anise 237
Senate committees:
Asslenmenisito. soon. oo il or 183
BE ER EE Re Sn Sa 254
Contents XV
Senate committees—continued Page
Meeting days of... .:... heosuiiaieuaidiis 182
Membership of ........coreinatialodt do anal. 177
Snecial and select... ...caaneo co tieadint 182
Senatorial Candidates, Select Committee to
Investigate Contributions and XEx-
DONSER Of. cv oicisoremansnnaresatnl, 182
Senators:
Alphabetical Msbef.._-.__..--osiisil sdb, 145
Biographies of::oaa cota 2b maci Lali. 3
Continuous serviceof.... oo... L.Coi0 il 160
Expiration of terms of service, by groups-_.... 157
List of, with home post offices and Washing-
ton addresses... inn. aidnsn il Ally 651
Rooms and telephones of ___________________ 285
Secretaries to... lasena lr ater 257
Votes east dor... 5 fetmnaty noone 240
Sergeant at Arms:
House of Representatives... ________________ 260
Senate, biography of ..io Licuii tosnenin 3 256
‘Service:
Employment, Labor Department___________ 334
Extension, Agriculture Department_________ 324
Federal Coordinating... oi. nao. 2nglii 303
Foreign, United States...........ovilln 555
Porest. ...oouon crm isna viii antaits 326
National Park. iceoiiocald teoniian 2 anlepill 321
United States Employment_________________ 334
Service and terms in Congress:
eleoates. Lo oo oo Sneed 173
Representatives. oc .  aesgafiasil 163
Resident Commissioners. __________._________ 173
Senators—
Continuous service«w:.. coo oion® oi 0 160
Expiration of terms... co obinoasase 157
Sessions of Congress, list of .____Sesigil ii 233
Sessions of the Senate, special, list of ___________ 237
Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation,
United States... 2... 344
Dmtlesiol oo. oii 475
Shipping Board, United States________________ 344
Duties of i a Te 469
Smithsenian-Institation>-......... ~~ 351
BP TT Eee ES 450
Board of Regents, personnel of_______________ 352
Establishment, personnel of. ___.__._________ 351
Government bureaus under direction of—
Astrophysical Observatory. ______________ 352
Bureau of American Ethnology... ________ 352
Division of Radiation and Organisms______ 352
International Exchanges... _..._________ 352
National Gallery of Ari... 352
National Museum... =. > 352
National Zoological Park... . 352
Regional Bureau for Scientific Literature._ 352
Soils, Bureau of Chemistry and________________ 326
Soldiers’ Home, United States____._______._____ 356
Solicitors, departmental... ... —.... .... 311
Speaker of the House of Representatives. _____ 259
Speaker, officeofthe. =... 5 =. 259
Speaker’s Table, personnel of _________________ 259
Special and select committees:
House ooo ves ase cae al soe 201
Sengter. So cro eS ee 182
Special sessions of the Senate, dates of. ________ 237
Stabilization Board, Federal Employment. ___ 357
Standards, Bureati of... oC ooo ill 331
Page
State delegations in Congress... _.._______ 131
State Department. o.oo. niin lo oil al 0s 298
Dutiestofiali lo ioeadl ll By Lin Ja 381
States and Territories, governors of the________ 249
Statisticalinformation. -__._.. _............. 231
Steamboat Inspection, Bureau of Navigation
and... ..... Sama RU 332
Stenographers to House committees. ________ 263
Supervising Architect of the Treasury. ________ 302
Supplies and Accounts, Bureau of, Navy______ 316
Supply Committee, General .__________________ 302
Supreme Court:
Building Commission, United States ______. 225
District of Columbia. 0 0 io) 369
nited States. oo coe NEI 361
Biographies of the justices. ________________ 361
Residences of the justices and officials... _ 364
Surgeon General of the Army__._______________ 307
Survey, Coast and Geodetic... ____.._... 331
Survey, Geologleal.. oi ii. ci i vad 320
Surveys and Maps of the Federal Government,
Beard of......... 28 CHEST, SUR] 349
Duties of. ins WEBI 488
T
Tariff Commission, United States. ____________ 340
Duties of cicmencmninannaiana ce R200 479
Tax Appeals, Boardiof........- ..... 3% 341
Dutiesiel orion. S080 0 BER PETE 476
Telegraph offices, Capitol... ______________.. 264
Telephone Exchange, Capitol. ___..___________ 265
Tennessee Valley Authority... _._________ 342
Tercentenary Commission, Massachusetts Bay
Colony. = coi io sani 229
Terms of Senators, expiration of. _____________ 157
Merritorialoffielales sr a 320
The Adjutant General, officeof _______________ 307
Phe Coast Quart Cit ee 303
The Inspector General’s Office. .._.___________ 307
Theldoint Board-—- > CC oi 345
Third Assistant Postmaster General __________ 312
Trade Commission, Federal... __________ 340
£07 UA Dn hh en a LO CS a 464
Training School for Boys, National ___________ 357
Treasurer of the United States, Office of. ______ 300
Treasury Department... >. 2. 300
Buflesol or San re 386
Bureau of—
Customs. = nes ase) 301
Bngravingand Printing... ________ 302
InQusirigi Alcohol... -. 301
Internal Revenue... oo... oo ooo 301
INareohies:. 0 is) a a 301
PuablicHealth Service... -—_._ 302
The Budget (see also Federal Coordinat-
ing Serviee). oni a 303
Dubiesiol cs oo a ei ny 396
Phe Mint ce rarer as 301
Coast Guard, the: oi. iin ives 302
Comptroller of the Currency... ._._._.__. 301
Castomhouse.... 5. ass no) oda Tins 302
General Supply Committee ________________ 302
Office of Supervising Architect _____________ 302
Registérof the Treasury... =... _. 302
Treasurer of the United States... ......-... 301
XVI
Page
Trials by Court of Impeachment, Senate. ._._. 239
Tripartite Claims Commission. ______________ 346
Trust Fund Board, Library of Congress.__.... 268
U
Union, Interparliamentary. .—-. --o__Sui. LL 227
‘Union, Pan Americanac a wiiaiiol satan 353
United States Court of Customs and Patent
Appeals... nina Sanasnen kan mil 365
United States Customs Court... ____________ 367
United States Roanoke Colony Commission_._ 230
United States Section of the Inter-American
High Commission. «Leo Co noi 0 347
Puliesiol. onan. er Tay 488
University, Howard... soil le saiiiansaii, 322
Vv
Vehicles and traffic, District of Columbia,
diveclorofou. sod si somatic nil 377
Veterans’ Administration... oll. 343
Publes of. econ cad BE SEN 483
Veterans’ Affairs, Joint Committee on__._______ 230
Vice President of the United States, biography
ern I a a SA te 3
Vocational Education, Federal Board for._____ 343
Puiies of accion SE 483
Votes cast:
Delegates and Resident Commissioners... 248
Senators and Representatives, 1928, 1930, and
Le Teta Rar TL Lh Sy ed 240
Ww
War College, Army_._.__________ ES 310
War Department... ia maaan 305
Duliesol oes F rina enna 400
Army Industrial College... ociieoaoennee 310
Army Wor College. .z..-ouai ae rian 310
Bureanof Insular Affairs... caro 309
Chief of—
COVA os cae eas anat nese rere 306
ORIDIAINE. cedar nimi nein oF rm a Ara 306
War Department—continued Page
Chief of—continued
CosstArtilflerye ooo SR ET 306
Engineers. ns ed SE REET 308
Field Artillery Loo. io on less 306
Pingnee. . Zool CR LR uEn ha a. 307
Infamy. a SR ET 306
Ordnance. mL. ae ee 308
The Alr- Corpse. oo 0 ris 309
The Chemical Warfare Service. ___________ 309
Chiei'Signal Officer... iio 0 S000 ios 309
GeneraliSiafl =r sorte Sool Blan JU GR 305
Inspector General’s Office... ________________ 306
Judge Advocate General... 2o-2. oC o.. .... 306
Militia Bureau... 0 Slo ouic it JE mE 309
Quartermaster General... ._-._ =o 7007000 307
Sturgeon General... cao ios TEE HEE 307
The Adjutant General... 20 000% 306
War Department General Staff________________ 305
‘War Finance Corporation... __________________ 340
Dutiesiof ia ot ee A 477
‘War Minerals Relief...ol aa. 000 10 322
Washington addresses of Senators, Representa-
tives, and Delegates, with home post
ofiees nan ER a TR 649
Washington City post office... 379
Washington National Monument Society. ____ 350
Washington Navy Yard and Station__________ 317
Waterways Corporation, Inland... ___________ 348
Duties of one 492
Weather Bureall ooo manent L223 2000 324
Western Union Telegraph Co. at Capitol._____ 264
WhitesHousei oo eae as a RT 297
Wild Life Resources, Special Committee on
Conservationof. 2.02 0 oi LL 182
Women’s: Bureal...... oo SE Sra TR 00 334
World’s Fair Centennial Commission, Chicago. 359
Y
Yards and Docks, Bureau of......-ccoanoicoaaa 315
Z
Zoological Park, National... .coccoioaiio-. 352
BIOGRAPHICAL
157297°—T73-1—1ST ED   2 : 1 |
BIOGRAPHICAL*
THE VICE PRESIDENT
JOHN NANCE GARNER, Democrat, of Uvalde, Tex., was elected to the Fifty-
eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth,
Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth,
Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; elected Speaker of the House
December 7, 1931; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress, but resigned, having
been elected Vice President of the United States November 8, 1932.
ALABAMA
(Population (1930), 2,646, 248)
SENATORS
HUGO LAFAYETTE BLACK, Democrat, of Birmingham, was born in Clay
County, Ala., February 27, 1886; attended public school at Ashland, Clay
County, Ala., LL. B., University of Alabama, 1906; lawyer; captain Eighty-first
Regiment Field Artillery, World War; married; elected November 2, 1926,
to the Senate for the full term of six years, and reelected November 8, 1932.
JOHN HOLLIS BANKHEAD, Democrat, of Jasper, was born in Lamar
County, Ala., July 8, 1872; educated in the public schools, University of Ala-
bama, and Georgetown Law School; S. A. E. fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa; admitted
to the bar in 1893; married; elected November 4, 1930 to the United States
Senate for the full term.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo, Mobile, Monroe, Washington, and Wilcox
(7 counties). Population (1930), 272, 633.
JOHN McDUFFIE, Democrat, of Monroeville, Ala., was born September
25, 1883, near River Ridge, in Monroe County, Ala.; he attended the Southern
University, Greensboro, Ala.; graduated at Auburn, Ala., 1904, and at the
University of Alabama Law School, 1908; member of Alabama Legislature, 1907—
1911, and solicitor first judicial circuit of Alabama, 1911-1919; he married Miss
Cornelia Hixon, of Hixon, Ala., October 20, 1915, and they have one child—
Cornelia, 16 years old; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth,
Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Con-
gresses; Democratic Whip of the Seventy-first and Seventy-second Congresses.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baldwin, Butler, Conecuh, Covington, Crenshaw, Escambia,
Lowndes, Montgomery, and Pike (9 counties). Population (1930), 330,677.
LISTER HILL, Democrat, of Montgomery, Ala., where he was born Decem-
ber 29, 1894; was graduated from Starke University School, Montgomery, Ala.,
in 1911; from University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, Ala., in 1914; from the law
school of the University of Alabama in 1915; and from the law school of Columbia
University, New York City, in 1916; took a special course at the law school,
University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor, Mich., in the summer of 1915; was
admitted to the bar of Alabama in 1915 and commenced the practice of law at
Montgomery, Ala., in October, 1916; president of the Montgomery Board of
Education, 1917-1922; served in the Army with the Seventeenth and Seventy-
* Biographies are based on information furnished or authorized by the respective Senators and
Congressmen. 3
4 Congressional Drrectory ALABAMA
first United States Infantry Regiments during the World War, 1917-1919;
elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of
John R. Tyson and served from August 14, 1923, to March 3, 1925; renominated
and reelected without opposition to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; member of Phi Beta Kappa.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Barbour, Bullock, Coffee, Dale, Geneva, Henry, Houston, Lee, Macon,
and Russell (10 counties). Population (1930), 297,574.
HENRY BASCOM STEAGALL, Democrat, of Ozark, was born in Clopton,
Dale County, Ala.; was educated in the common schools, with two years in the
Southeast Alabama Agricultural School, Abbeville, Ala., and graduated from
the law department of the University of Alabama; since graduation has been a
practicing attorney; was county solicitor for a number of yeers; member of the
legislature; State district prosecuting attorney for several years prior to nomi-
nation and election to Congress; member of State Democratic executive com-
mittee; delegate to State party conventions and to the Democratic National
Convention in Baltimore in 1912; is a widower and has three children; was
nominated for Congress June 29, 1914; was elected to the Sixty-fourth Congress
without opposition, and renominated and reelected to the Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth,
Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses; is chairman of the Banking and Currency
Committee of the House.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Autauga, Calhoun, Clay, Coosa, Dallas, Elmore, St. Clair, and
Talladega (8 counties). Population (1930), 264,658.
LAMAR JEFFERS, Democrat, of Anniston, Ala.; son of William Henry
Jeffers, who served in the Confederate Army as captain Company G, Seventh
Regiment South Carolina Cavalry, and Anna Frances (Jenkins) Jeffers; native
of Anniston; received education in public schools, and one year at Alabama
Presbyterian College, at Anniston; with Alabama National Guard, 1904 to 1914,
with the Pelham Guards of Anniston; elected in 1916 to the office of clerk of
circuit court of Calhoun County, taking office in January, 1917; resigned in
May, 1917, to enter the first officers’ training camp; commissioned August
14, 1917, captain of Infantry; assigned to Eighty-second Division, Company G,
Three hundred and twenty-sixth Regiment Infantry; served with that outfit
until wounded October 11, 1918, at St. Juvin, France; decorated with the Amer-
ican distinguished-service cross; promoted to major of Infantry; discharged
July 26, 1920; member Baptist Church, Oxford, Ala.; American Legion; honorary
member Civitan Club, Anniston, Ala.; believer in fraternalism, a member of
several leading fraternities; married Miss Martha Ruth Burton, Oxford, Ala.;
they have one son; made unsuccessful race for Congress in 1920 against Hon.
Fred L. Blackmon; upon the death of Mr. Blackmon, again made race for Congress
nominated April 12, 1921, and elected June 7, 1921, for unexpired period of Sixty-
seventh Congress; reelected to Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Chambers, Cherokee, Cleburne, De Kalb, Etowah, Marshall, Ran-
dolph, and Tallapoosa (8 counties). Population (1930), 273,763.
MILES CLAYTON ALLGOOD, Democrat, of Gadsden, Ala.; was born at
Chepultepee, Ala.; graduate State Normal College, Florence, Ala:; devoted life
to education, farming, and political economy; served as school-teacher, county
tax assessor, farm-extension worker, State auditor of Alabama, and Commis-
sioner of Agriculture and Industries of Alabama. Married Willie Randall Fox
in 1917. Three children—Miles C., jr., Mary Fox, and William David. Elected
to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bibb, Chilton, Greene, Hale, Perry, Shelby, Sumter, and Tuscaloosa
(8 counties). Population (1930), 236,412,
WILLIAM BACON OLIVER, Democrat, is a native of Eutaw, Ala., where he
received his early education. He later attended the University of Alabama,
where he received degrees from both the college of arts and sciences and the school
of law. He has also received the honorary degrees of LL. D. from the Uni-
versity of Alabama and the National Law School, of Washington, D. C. He also
ARIZONA Biographical 5
attended the University of Virginia, and is a member of the honorary scholar-
ship fraternity, Phi Beta Kappa; also a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
In his early manhood he moved to Tuscaloosa, Ala., and entered the practice of
law. From 1898-1909 he was solicitor for the sixth judicial circuit of Alabama.
He resigned the office of solicitor in 1909 to accept a post as dean of the law school
of the University of Alabama, and resigned the deanship in 1913 to become a
candidate for Congress. On his election to the Sixty-fourth Congress he retired
from the firm of Oliver, Verner & Rice to devote his entire time to his congressional
duties; reelected to the Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth,
Sixty-ninth Seventieth, Seventy-first Seventy-second and Seventy-third Con-
gresses.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: Blount, Cuilman, Fayette, Franklin, Lamar, Marion, Pickens,
Walker, and Winston (9 counties). Population (1930), 256,797.
WILLIAM B. BANKHEAD, Democrat, of Jasper, was born April 12, 1874, at
Moscow, Lamar County, Ala.; attended country schools and graduated at the
University of Alabama, A. B., 1893; Georgetown University Law School, LL. B.,
1895; is a lawyer by profession; represented Madison County, Ala., in the legis-
lature, 1900-1901; city attorney of Huntsville for four years; circuit solicitor
fourteenth judicial circuit, 1910-1914; elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress; re-
elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth,
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Colbert, Jackson, Lauderdale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madison, and
Morgan (7 counties). Population (1930), 282,241.
EDWARD B. ALMON, Democrat, of Tuscumbia, was born in Lawrence
County, Ala.; brought up on a farm and educated in the common schools of
Lawrence County and the State Normal College, of Florence, Ala. In 1883 he
received the degree of LL. B. from the University of Alabama, and has practiced
law in Tuscumbia since 1885, except the time he was judge of the circuit court.
In 1898 he was elected judge of the circuit court of the eleventh judicial circuit,
and reelected in 1904 without opposition; was a presidential elector in 1896; has
served in both branches of the Alabama Legislature, having been speaker of the
house, and author of the bill which created the State highway commission in 1911;
is a member of the Methodist Church, Masonic order, Knights of Pythias, Knights
of Honor, Woodmen of the World, and B. P. O. E.; was married in 1887 to Miss
Luie Clopper, of Tuscumbia, and they have two children—Mrs. James A. Ryder
and Clopper Almon; was elected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth,
Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
NINTH DISTRICT.—County: Jefferson. Population (1930), 431,493.
GEORGE HUDDLESTON, Democrat, of Birmingham, was born in Wilson
County, Tenn., 1869; practiced law in Birmingham from 1891 until 1912; mar-
ried Miss Bertha Baxley, 1917; children—Mary, George, John, Jane, and Nancy;
private soldier, Spanish War; Member Sixty-fourth and succeeding Congresses.
ARIZONA
(Population (1930), 435,573)
SENATORS
HENRY FOUNTAIN ASHURST, Democrat, of Prescott; of English and
French ancestry, was born near Winnemucca, Nev., September 13, 1874; attended
the public schools of Flagstaff, Ariz., the Stockton (Calif.) Business College, and
the University of Michigan; is a lawyer by profession; was married in 1904 to
Elizabeth McEvoy Renoe; on March 27, 1912, was elected United States Senator
by the unanimous vote of the First Legislative Assembly of the State of Arizona;
reelected November 7, 1916, November 7, 1922, and November 6, 1928.
CARL HAYDEN, Democrat, of Phoenix, was born at Tempe, Ariz., October 2,
1877; was educated in public schools of Tempe, Normal School of Arizona, and
Stanford University; delegate to Democratic National Convention in 1904;
6 Congressional Directory ARKANSAS
elected treasurer of Maricopa County in 1904, sheriff in 1906; reelected in 1908;
appointed major of Infantry, United States National Army, October 4, 1918;
is married; was elected to the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth,
Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, and Sixty-ninth Congresses; elected a
Member of the United States Senate for the term ending March 3, 1933; re-
elected November 8, 1932, receiving 74,310 votes to 35,737 votes for Ralph H.
Cameron, Republican.
REPRESENTATIVE
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 435,573.
[Vacant.]
ARKANSAS
(Population €1930), 1,854,482)
SENATORS
JOSEPH TAYLOR ROBINSON, Democrat, of Little Rock, was born August
26, 1872; educated in the public schools, the University of Arkansas; admitted to
the bar in 1895; elected to the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas in
1894 and served in the session of 1895; presidential elector for the sixth congres-
sional district of Arkansas in 1900, and selected as electoral messenger; elected
to the Fifty-eighth to Sixty-second Congresses, inclusive; resigned from the
Sixty-second Congress on January 14, 1913, was inaugurated Governor of Ar-
kansas on the 16th of January, 1913, having been elected to that position in
September, 1912, and on January 28, 1913, was elected Senator; took his seat on
March 10, 1913; was reelected in 1918, 1924, and in November, 1930, for the
term ending in 1937; served as chairman of the Minority Conference from 1922-
1933, at which time he became chairman of the Majority Conference.
HATTIE W. CARAWAY, Democrat, of Jonesboro, Ark.; appointed on
November 13, 1931, and elected on January 12, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused
by the death of her husband, Senator Thaddeus H. Caraway; reelected on
November 8, 1932, for the term ending in 1939.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips,
Poinsett, St. Francis, and Woodruff (11 counties). Population (1930), 385,965.
WILLIAM J. DRIVER, Democrat, of Osceola, Ark.; born Oseeola, March 2,
1873; education obtained in the public schools; admitted to bar May 1, 1894;
married June 2, 1897, to Miss Clara Haynes; one son— William J., jr.; served as
representative in Legislature of Arkansas, 1897-1899; judge of second judicial
circuit of Arkansas, 1911-1918; member constitutional convention of Arkansas,
1918; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Cleburne, Fulton, Independence, Izard, Jackson, Lawrence,
Monroe, Prairie, Randolph, Sharp, Stone, and White (12 counties). Population (1930), 218,596.
JOHN E. MILLER, Democrat, of Searcy, Ark.; born near Aid, Mo., May 15,
1888; graduate of Kentucky State University, law department, June 6, 1912,
with degree of LL. B.; admitted to bar July 1, 1912; married October 21, 1914,
ARKANSAS Biographical 7
to Miss Ethel Lucile Lindsey; one daughter, Mary Louise, and one son, John
E., jr.; member of the constitutional convention of Arkansas, 1918; prosecuting
attorney, first judicial circuit of Arkansas, 1919-1922; elected to the Seventy-
second Congress without opposition, and reelected to Seventy-third Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Baxter, Benton, Boone, Carroll, Madison, Marion, Newton, Searcy,
Van Buren, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1930), 170,576.
CLAUDE A. FULLER, Democrat, of Eureka Springs, Carroll County, Ark.,
was born in Prophetstown, Whiteside County, Ill.,, and has lived in Eureka
Springs and vicinity since 10 years of age; lawyer, which profession he has fol-
lowed since admitted to the bar in 1898; extensively engaged in farming; served
in Arkansas Legislature, 1903-1905; prosecuting attorney, 1910-1914; mayor
Eureka Springs, 12 years; presidential elector, and selected as electoral messenger,
in 1916; married Miss May Obenshain; two daughters—Dorothy Fuller, now in
Wellesley College, and Ruth Fuller-Cross; elected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Crawford, Howard, Little River, Logan, Miller, Montgomery,
Pike, Polk, Scott, Sebastian, and Sevier (11 counties). Population (1930), 230,259.
BEN CRAVENS, Democrat, of Fort Smith, Ark., where he was born January
17, 1872; educated in the public schools and attended the military academies at
Louisville, Ky., and Staunton, Va.; graduating from the University of Missouri
Law School with the degree of bachelor of law; attorney at law and cotton grower;
prosecuting attorney of the twelfth judicial district of Arkansas for three terms,
1900-1906; Member of Congress for three terms, but was not a candidate for
reelection; married; elected to the Seventy-third Congress without opposition.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Conway, Faulkner, Franklin, Johnson, Perry, Pope, Pulaski, and
Yell (8 counties). Population (1930), 278,663.
HEARTSILL RAGON, Democrat, of Clarksville, was born in Logan County,
Ark., in 1885, the son of Capt. A. J. and Ann Ragon; married in 1916 to Miss
Mattie Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Smith, of Dumas, Ark., and has
one son, Heartsill Ragon, jr.; educated at Clarksville High School, College
of the Ozarks, University of Arkansas, and Washington and Lee University;
lawyer by profession; representative in the legislature from Johnson County
for two terms, 1911-1913; district attorney for fifth judicial district of Arkansas
for two terms, 1916-1920; secretary Democratic State convention, 1918; chair-
man Democratic State convention, 1920; delegate to Democratic National Con-
vention, 1920; chairman of the Arkansas Democratic campaign committee, 1928;
elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-
second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress; chairman of the
Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Expenditures.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Arkansas, Cleveland, Dallas, Desha, Drew, Garland, Grant, Hot
Spring, Jefferson, Lincoln, Lonoke, and Saline (12 counties). Population (1930), 289,250.
D. D. GLOVER, Democrat, of Malvern, Ark., was born at Prattsville, Grant
County, Ark., January 18, 1868; educated in the schools and colleges of Arkansas;
engaged in agriculture; teacher in public schools for 10 years; lawyer, practicing
in Federal and State courts of Arkansas and in the circuit court of appeals and
Supreme Court of the United States; member of Legislature of Arkansas in 1909
and 1911, prosecuting attorney of seventh judicial circuit of Arkansas for four
years; married; elected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy -third
Congresses.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashley, Bradley, Calhoun, Chicot, Clark, Columbia, Hempstead,
Lafayette, Nevada, Ouachita, and Union (11 counties). Population (1930), 281,173.
TILMAN BACON PARKS, Democrat, of Camden; born on a farm in La-
fayette County near Lewisville, Ark., May 14, 1872; son of Capt. William P. and
Mattie D. Parks; was educated in the common schools of the State, University of
Texas, and the University of Virginia; was admitted to practice law February 2,
1900; was a member of the House of Representatives of the Arkansas General
8 Congressional Directory CALIFORNIA
Assembly in the sessions of 1901, 1903, and 1909, and was presidential elector at
large in 1904 on the Democratic ticket, receiving the highest number of votes
of any elector in that election; was messenger to deliver the electoral vote to
the Vice President at Washington; was temporary chairman of the Democratic
State convention in 1910; was elected prosecuting attorney of the eighth judicial
circuit of Arkansas in 1914, and reelected in 1916; was nominated for Congress
at Democratic primary and elected at the general election on November 2, 1920;
reelected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses; married March 4, 1897, to Fay Newton,
who died in Washington, D. C., August 28, 1926, and has three children— Mrs.
Ann Parks Marshall, Tilman B. Parks, jr. (lawyer, practicing at Camden), and
Josephine Parks; married Mrs. Gertrude Bischoff, of Washington, D. C., Septem-
ber 4, 1930; Baptist, Elk, Mason, Knight of Pythias, and Woodman of the World;
also member El Dorado Lions Club; member of XV Club, El Dorado.
CALIFORNIA
(Population (1930), 5,677, 251)
SENATORS
HIRAM WARREN JOHNSON, Republican, was born in Sacramento, Calif.,
September 2, 1866; was married in the city of Sacramento to Minnie McNeal,
daughter of Archibald McNeal, and of this marriage there are two sons, both
adults—Hiram Warren Johnson, jr., and Archibald McNeal Johnson; resided in
Sacramento until 1902, and then removed to San Francisco;.present residence,
857 Green Street, San Francisco; educated in the public schools of Sacramento
and University of California; by profession, lawyer; elected Governor of Cali-
fornia in 1910; reelected governor in 1914; elected United States Senator in 1916;
reelected in 1922 and again in 1928,
WILLIAM GIBBS McADOO, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif., was born
near Marietta, Ga., October 31, 1863, the son of Judge William Gibbs McAdoo
(LL. D.) and Mary Faith (Floyd) McAdoo; educated at the University of
Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.; honorary A. M., Hamilton College, 1909; LL. D.,
University of North Carolina, 1916, University of Southern California, 1923,
Mercer University, 1927, and Tusculum College, 1927; L. H. D., Lincoln Univer-
sity, 1932; lawyer; conceived system of rapid transit tunnels under the Hudson
River between New York City and New Jersey, and from 1902 to 1913 was
president of the company which constructed and operated them; delegate from
New York to the Democratic National Convention at Baltimore, in 1912, and
supported Woodrow Wilson for the presidential nomination; vice chairman and
acting chairman of the Democratic National Committee in the 1912 campaign,
which resulted in the election of Woodrow Wilson as President and Thomas R.
Marshall as Vice President; appointed Secretary of the Treasury in March, 1913,
and served until December 16, 1918, when he resigned; Director General of the
Railroads of the United States from December 28, 1917, until January 10, 1919,
when he resigned; resumed the practice of law in New York City in 1919; although
he had requested that his name be not presented to the Democratic National Con-
vention at San Francisco in 1920, a movement to draft him was started by his
friends, and he developed the greatest strength for many ballots; in the Demo-
cratic National Convention in New York, 1924, he was the leading candidate for
nearly 100 ballots, the deadlock resulting in the nomination of John W. Davis;
in 1922 he moved to Los Angeles, and is senior member of the law firm of McAdoo
& Neblett; in 1932 was elected Democratic National Committeeman for Cali-
fornia, and was chairman of the California delegation to the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago in 1932; elected United States Senator from California,
November 8, 1932, receiving a total vote of 943,164, his plurality over his Repub-
lican opponent being 273,448; Tallant Tubbs, Republican, received 669,676 votes,
and Robert Shuler, Prohibitionist, received 560,088 votes; married, on November
8, 1885, to Sarah Houston Fleming, who died in February, 1912, and subsequently,
on May 7, 1914, to Eleanor Randolph Wilson, youngest daughter of President
Woodrow Wilson; author of The Challenge (1928) and Crowded Years (auto-
biography, 1931),
CALIFORNIA B rographical 9
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Butte, Colusa, Del Norte, Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Marin, Mendocino,
Sonoma, Sutter, and Yuba (11 counties). Population (1930), 263,748.
CLARENCE FREDERICK LEA, Democrat, of Santa Rosa; born in Lake
County, Calif., July 11, 1874; son of James M. and Elizabeth Lea; attended
common schools, Lakeport Academy, Stanford University, and law department,
University of Denver; admitted to bar, 1898; district attorney of Sonoma
County, 1907-1917; president of the District Attorneys’ Association of Cali-
fornia, 1916-17; married Daisy A. Wright July 18, 1907; has served continuously
beginning with the Sixty-fifth Congress, having been reelected since as nominee
of both the Democratic and Republican Parties.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNnTiEs: Alpine, Amador, Calaveras, Eldorado, Inyo, Lassen, Mariposa,
Modoc, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Tehama, Trinity, and Tuolumne
(18 counties). Population (1930), 165,595.
HARRY LANE ENGLEBRIGHT, Republican, of Nevada City, Calif., was
born in that city January 2, 1884; graduated from the grammar and high schools
of Nevada City, Calif., and attended the University of California; is a mining
engineer by profession and is actively connected with various mining enterprises
in California; from 1911 to 1914 was mineral inspector for the field division of
the General Land Office; engineer for the State Conservation Commission of
California; he is the son of William F. Englebright, deceased, who represented
practically the same district in the Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, and Sixty-first Congresses;
on December 14, 1912, he was married to Miss Marie Grace Jackson, of Nevada
City, Calif.; they have one son, Harry Jackson Englebright; is a member of the
American Mining Congress, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and
from 1925 to 1926 was great sachem of the Improved Order of Red Men for the
State of California; elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress at a special election
August 31, 1926; reelected to the Seventieth Congress November 2, 1926, to
the Seventy-first Congress November 6, 1928, to the Seventy-second Con-
gress November 4, 1930, and to the Seventy-third Congress November 8, 1932,
without opposition.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Napa, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Solano, and Yolo (5 counties).
Population (1930), 332,314.
FRANK HENRY BUCK, Democrat, of Vacaville, Calif.; born on a ranch
near there on September 23, 1887; married and has four children; educated at
Vacaville High School; graduated from University of California, 1908, with degree
of B. L., and from Harvard Law School, 1911, with degree of LL. B.; admitted
to the State bar of California in 1911; fruit grower and shipper; vice president
of the American Fruit & Vegetable Shippers Association (national trade
organization); alternate delegate to the Democratic National Convention,
Houston, 1928; chairman of the California Democratic State Convention, Sacra-
mento, 1932; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiv-
ing 61,694 votes, and defeating Charles F. Curry, jr., Republican, who received
46,887 votes,
FOURTH NITRIC ony oF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 20, 22, 27, and 28. Population
1930), 335,482.
FLORENCE P. KAHN, Republican, of San Francisco, Calif.; elected Feb-
ruary 17, 1925, to the Sixty-ninth Congress to succeed her husband, the late
Hon. Julius Kahn; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—C11Y oF SAN FRANCISCO: Assembly districts 21, 23, 24, 25, and 26. Population
(1930), 298,912.
RICHARD J. WELCH, Republican, of San Francisco; member of California
State Senate from 1901 to 1913 and member of the legislative body of the city
and county of San Francisco from 1916 to 1926; elected to the Sixty-ninth Con-
gress to fill an unexpired term; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses without opposition.
10 Congressional Durectory CALIFORNIA
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTy OF CONTRA COSTA. ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 13, 14,
and 15. Population (1930), 308,897.
ALBERT E. CARTER, Republican, of Oakland, Alameda County, Calif.;
born near Visalia, Tulare County, Calif.; graduated from the San Jose State
Normal School and law department of the University of California; married
Martha Lee Grimsley; elected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
SEV Nn DISTRICT.—ALAMEDA COUNTY: Assembly districts 16, 17, 18, and 19. Population (1930),
td
RALPH R. ELTSE, Republican, of Berkeley, Calif.; born at Oskaloosa, Iowa,
September 13, 1885; educated in the public schools of Oskaloosa; entered Penn
College in 1905 and graduated with M. S. degree in 1909; attended postgraduate
course at Haverford College, Pennsylvania, in 1909, graduating in 1910; received
two years of legal training at the University of California, 1913-14; admitted to
the practice of law in the State of California in 1915, and has followed that
profession up to the present time; married Oma Almona Davies, of Berkeley,
Calif., on August 16, 1915; member of the Republican State Committee of
California, State bar of California, and of the American Bar Association; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 45,944 votes; Frank V. Cornish, Demo-
crat, 32,365 votes; J. Stitt Wilson, Socialist, 22,764 votes.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounmEs: Monterey, San Benito, San Mateo, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz
(5 counties). Population (1930), 324,972.
JOHN J. McGRATH, Democrat, of San Mateo, Calif.; a resident of San
Mateo County for 42 years; educated in the public schools; postmaster of San
Mateo nine years; president of Tri-City (San Mateo, Burlingame, and Hills-
borough) Chamber of Commerce; president of Peninsula Industrial Conference;
elected to the Seventy-third Congress, carrying all counties by largest majority
ever given any Democrat for any office; married to Mary Agnes Kelley, of San
Mateo, Calif., and they have three children—Dr. J. G. McGrath, of New York
City; Mrs. Jose Rey de Castro, of San Francisco; and Miss Maureen McGrath, of
Washington, D. C
NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Fresno, Kings, Madera, Merced, and Stanislaus (5 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 280,317.
DENVER SAMUEL CHURCH, Democrat, of Fresno, Calif., was born at
Folsom, Calif., December 11, 1866; educated in the common schools of California
and was graduated from the Healdsburg (Calif.) College; married Louise Derrick;
three children—Earle J. Church, Fern Church Peckinpah, and Edrie Church
Turner, all living; attorney at law; served as district attorney of Fresno County,
Calif., 1907-1913, and six years as superior judge of Fresno County, 1925-1930,
inclusive; served six years as Representative in the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth,
and Sixty-fifth Congresses of the United States; was again elected to Congress,
November 8, 1932, from the ninth congressional distriet; in this election he
received 50,125 votes, while his Republican opponent, Harry E. Barbour,
received 31,209 votes.
TENTH DISTRICT.—ConnNTiES: Kern, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Tulare, and Ventura (5
counties). Population (1930), 309,768.
HENRY ELBERT STUBBS, Democrat, of Santa Maria, Calif., was born on
March 4, 1881, near Coleman, Coleman County, Tex.; attended public schools
and Phillips University, Enid, Okla.; minister; married; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving 50,390 votes, and Arthur S.
Crites, Republican, 40,794 votes.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES CoUNTY: Assembly districts 42, 43, 47, and 48. Population
(1930), 264,952.
WILLIAM E. EVANS, Republican, Glendale, Calif.; born in Laurel County,
Ky.; educated in the public schools and in the Sue Bennett Memorial College,
of London, Ky. Married Cecil Corine Smith, of Los Angeles; one daughter,
CALIFORNIA B rographical 11
Catherine Cecil. Lawyer; delegate to Republican National Convention, 1924;
elected to Congress in 1926 by 40,597 votes over his Prohibition-Democratic
opponent; reelected to each succeeding Congress.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 49, 50, 51, and 53. - Population
(1930), 259,287.
JOHN HENRY HOEPPEL, Democrat, of Arcadia, Calif., was born February
10, 1881, near Tell City, Ind.; graduate of the ‘‘university of hard knocks’;
served in the Army 20 years as an enlisted man and 20 months as an officer;
served in the Spanish-American War and the World War; went to France in
June, 1917, as member of Outpost Company C, Second Field Battalion, Signal
Corps, First Division; transferred to and commissioned in the Air Service; dis-
charged as first lieutenant, October, 1919; past commander of American Legion
(twice), United Spanish War Veterans, and Veterans of Foreign Wars of the
United States; organized a unit of each of these organizations; also organized a
unit of the American Legion Auxiliary; editor of Retired Men’s News, a national
monthly devoted to the interest of officers and men of the united services;
married November 11, 1907, to Miss Annie Seitz, of Evansville, Ind.; three adult
children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—LosS ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 45, 52, 54, and 56. Popula-
tion (1930), 349,686.
CHARLES KRAMER, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born in Paducah, Ky.,
April 18, 1879; attended public and parochial schools in Chicago, Ill.,, De Paul
University, and Illinois College of Law; was admitted to the practice of law in
Chicago in 1904, specializing in Federal courts, and was admitted to the bar of
the State of California in 1917; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving
65,261 votes; Charles H. Randall, 53,449; George D. Higgins, 5,237; scattering, 47.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0s ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 44, 55, 62, and 64. Popula-
tion (1930), 277,613.
THOMAS FRANCIS FORD, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born at St.
Louis, Mo., February 18, 1875, son of Thomas and Ellen (Ferris) Ford; educated
in public and private schools, St. Louis, Mo., and Toledo, Ohio; entered Postal
Service; studied law for two years; engaged in newspaper work; magazine and
literary editor, Los Angeles Times, 1919-1929; special lecturer on international
trade, University of Southern California, 1920-21; publicity director of the Los
Angeles water and power department, 1929-1931; elected to the Los Angeles
City Council in a ‘“‘write-in”’ campaign in 1929, with public ownership and the
curbing of special assessments as the issues; as chairman of water and power
committee of Los Angeles City Council, led the successful fight against the
private power interests who were opposing the development of the city’s power
enterprise, a publicly owned utility that is recognized as an outstanding success;
one of three members of the council’s finance committee, which has passed on the
expenditure of some $50,000,000 of public funds; member of the council’s budget
committee, which brought about radical economies and a lowering of the tax
rate, and of the council's harbor committee, which passes on measures affecting
the city’s $60,000,000 publicly owned harbor, having a traffic exceeded in volume
by only one other harbor in the United States; married Lillian Cope Cummings,
of Los Angeles, on June 21, 1911; one daughter, deceased; author, with Lillian
C. Ford, of The Foreign Trade of the United States, published by Chas. Scribner’s
Sons in 1920 and used in many colleges as a textbook; travel and economic re-
search in Europe, in 1927, and then wrote special articles on European economic
conditions in various publications; listed in Who’s Who in America for the past
10 years; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, by 11,717
majority; vote cast: Thomas I. Ford, Democrat, 47,368; William D. Campbell,
Republican, 35,598; scattering, 53. J
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0S ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 57, 58, 63, and 65. Population
(1930), 299,210.
WILLIAM ISHAM TRAEGER, Republican, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born
February 26, 1880, at Porterville, Calif.; educated in the Porterville grammar
and high schools, Stanford University, and the University of Southern Cali-
fornia; attorney at law; deputy United States marshal, 1903-1906; deputy sheriff
12 Congressional Darectory CALIFORNIA
of Los Angeles County, 1907-1911; deputy clerk of the California State Supreme
Court, 1911-1921; sheriff of Los Angeles County, 1921-1932; served in Spanish-
American and World Wars; married and has two daughters; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress, receiving 67,390 votes, and defeating James Costello, Democrat,
who received 57,518 votes.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 46, 59, 60, and 61. Population
(1930), 296,077.
JOHN F. DOCKWEILER, Democrat, of Los Angeles, Calif.; born September
19, 1895, in Los Angeles, Calif.; attended St. Vincent’s College (high-school de-
partment) and Loyola College, of Los Angeles, graduating from the latter in 1918
with bachelor of arts degree and from the University of Southern California Law
School in 1921 with juris doctor degree; studied postgraduate work and special
oourses at Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Mass., 1921-22; member of Delta
Chi fraternity, Ramona Parlor, and Native Sons of the Golden West, No 109;
attorney at law; admitted to the bar of California, September 6, 1921; member
of the law firm of Dockweiler & Dockweiler, of Los Angeles; married Irene
McManus in 1925; member of various Democratic State committees, clubs, and
organizations, and of the Los Angeles and the American Bar Associations; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress by a plurality of 12,615 votes, receiving 70,333
votes—the largest vote of any congressional candidate of the 20 districts com-
prising California where a contest was held—and defeating Clyde Woodworth,
Republican, who received 57,718 votes.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—Los ANGELES County: Assembly districts 66, 67, and 68. Population
(1930), 234,597.
CHARLES J. COLDEN, Democrat, of San Pedro, Calif.; born on a farm in
Peoria County, Ill., in 1870; parents moved to Nodaway County, Mo., in 1880;
educated in country schools and country colleges; taught school in Missouri and
Towa for five years; editor of country newspapers in northwest Missouri for 10
years; engaged in building residences in Kansas City, Mo., 1908-1912; moved to
San Pedro, Calif., in 1912, and engaged in realty investments; member from
Nodaway County in the Missouri House of Representatives for two terms, 1901
and 1903; president of Board of Regents of Northwest Missouri Teachers’ College,
1905-1908; member and president of Los Angeles Harbor Commission, 1923-1925;
member of Los Angeles City Council for two terms, 1925 and 1927; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 23,852 votes over his Republican
opponent.
EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—Lo0s ANGELES COUNTY: Assembly districts 69, 70, and 71. Population
(1930), 227,070.
JOHN HARLEY BURKE, Democrat, of Long Beach, Calif., was born in
Excelsior, Wis., June 2, 1894; he later moved to Minnesota and then to San
Pedro, Calif., in 1900; has lived in Long Beach since 1909; attended the public
schools in California and graduated from the Long Beach Polytechnic High
School in 1913; also attended the University of Santa Clara and the University
of Southern California College of Law; enlisted during the World War and served
in the Field Artillery; was admitted to the bar of California on March 19, 1917,
and has practiced law in the city of Long Beach for the past 16 years; married
and has five children—Jack, Jeanne, Jerry, Paul, and Rosemary; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress in November, 1932, receiving 48,179 votes; his opponents,
Robert Henderson, Republican, received 33,817 votes, and William E. Hinshaw,
Independent, received 8,399 votes.
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmiEs: Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino (3 counties).
Population (1930), 333,598.
SAMUEL LA FORT COLLINS, Republican, of Fullerton, Calif.; born
August 6, 1895, at Fortville, Ind.; attorney at law, with offices at Santa Ana,
Calif.; served on the Mexican border and overseas, 1917-18; began practice of
law at conclusion of the World War; served six years as assistant district attorney
and as district attorney of Orange County, Calif.; married, and has one son,
Samuel Everett Collins, and one daughter, Jodeane La Fort Collins; elected to
the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 56,889 votes; his nearest opponent, B. Z.
McKinney, Democrat, received 51,796 votes.
COLORADO Biographical 13
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Imperial and San Diego (2 counties). Population (1930), 270,562.
GEORGE BURNHAM, Republican, of San Diego, Calif.; born in London,
England, December 28, 1868; moved to America in July, 1881; educated in the
public schools; was naturalized on becoming of age; married Neva May Ashley
on October 1, 1890, who died June 19, 1927; they had seven children, six of whom
are living; married Florence Kennett Dupee on December 25, 1932; in the mer-
cantile business until 1901, when he engaged in ranching and real estate in Spokane
Wash.; moved to San Diego in 1903 and again engaged in real estate; in 1917 was
vice president of the Southern Trust & Commerce Bank (later the Bank of Ttaly) and of the Bank of America, resigning from the later on May 1, 1932; thirty-third degree Mason and past grand commander of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar of the State of California; past president of San Diego
Chamber of Commerce; past president of San Diego Council, Boy Scouts of America; past president of board of trustees, San Diego Public Library; one of the organizers and vice president of the Panama-California Exposition, built to
celebrate completion of the Panama Canal; honorary commercial commissioner
of China in 1910; director of Knights Templar Educational Foundation of
California; member of board of trustees, San Diego Scientific Library; member of
Cuyamaca Club, La Jolla Beach and Yacht Club, San Diego Club, San Diego
Country Club, Rancho Santa Fe Country Club, and Peter Pan Club; elected to
the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 43,757 votes, and defeating Claude Chandler,
Democrat, who received 43,304 votes.
COLORADO
(Population (1930), 1,035,791)
SENATORS
EDWARD PRENTISS COSTIGAN, Democrat; born in King William County,
Va., July 1, 1874; A. B., Harvard, 1899; began practice of law in Denver, Colo.,
in 1900; married Mabel G. Cory, of Denver; Progressive candidate for Governor
of Colorado in 1912 and 1914; appointed to the United States Tariff Commission by President Wilson, March, 1917; reappointed, September, 1918; resigned, March, 1928; elected to the United States Senate on November 4, 1930, for the 6-year term ending in 1937.
ALVA BLANCHARD ADAMS, Democrat, of Pueblo, Colo.; born at Del
Norte, Colo., October 29, 1875; graduated from Phillips-Andover Academy in 1893, Yale University in 1896, and Columbia Law School in 1899; member of the firm of Adams & Gast, attorneys, Pueblo; attorney for the county of Pueblo,
1909-1911; member of charter convention, city of Pueblo, 1911; member of the board of regents, Colorado State University, 1911-12; city attorney, Pueblo, 1911-1915; chairman of Pueblo County Council of Defense, 1917-18; served in the National Army as major in Judge Advocate General’s department, 1918-19 : married; served as United States Senator, May 17, 1923, to December 1, 1924, under appointment by Governor of Colorado to succeed Senator Samuel D. Nicholson, deceased; elected for full term as United States Senator on November 8, 1932, receiving 226,516 votes, to 198,519 cast for his opponent, Hon. Karl C. Schuyler, Republican,
FIRST DISTRICT.—City AND COUNTY OF DENVER. Population (1930), 287,861
LAWRENCE LEWIS, Democrat, of Denver, Colo.; born in St. Louis, Mo.,
June 22, 1879; third son of Thomas Addison and Melissa Ann (Lewis) Lewis; attended schools, Evanston, Ill., Cambridge, Mass., and Pueblo, Colo.; two years University of Colorado; two years Harvard College (A. B. Harvard, 1901); in business, newspaper and magazine work, Pueblo and Denver, 1901-1906; gradu- - ated Harvard Law School in 1909 (LL. B.); practiced law in Denver since 1909; member Civil Service Commission of Colorado, 1917-18; private, Field Artillery, and officer candidate Camp Zachary Taylor, Ky., 1918; elected to the Seventy- third Congress, receiving 70,826 votes out of a total of 130,160,
14 Congressional Durectory COLORADO
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Cheyenne, Clear Creek, Douglas-
Elbert, Gilpin, Jefferson, Kit Carson, Larimer, Lincoln, Logan, Morgan, Phillips, Sedgwick, Wash-
ington, Weld, and Yuma (19 counties). Population (1930), 302,946.
FRED CUMMINGS, Democrat, of Fort Collins, Colo.; born in New Hamp-
shire; moved to Clinton, Iowa, when 1 year old, then moving to Custer County,
Nebr., in 1879; after completing schooling, engaged in farming and livestock
business; read law and was admitted to the Nebraska bar and practiced; on
leaving Nebraska in 1906 was the owner of one of the largest businesses of hand-
ling livestock (horses and cattle) in northern Nebraska; moved to Fort Collins,
Colo., 26 years ago, and engaged in farming and sheep feeding; served on the city
council of Fort Collins and as director of one of the largest irrigation companies in
northern Colorado; active in the formation of Mountain States Beet Growers
Marketing Association, and has been president or vice president of same since
its incorporation, about 15 years ago; also served as president of the National
Beet Growers Association since it was organized; married, and has three children;
on November 8, 1932, was elected to the Seventy-third Congress, by a vote of
63,399 to 56,516, and carrying 15 of the 19 counties in the second congressional
district, which district had not elected a Democratic Congressman since 1912.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Alamosa, Baca, Bent, Conejos, Costilla, Crowley, Custer, El Paso,
Fremont, Huerfano, Kiowa, Las Animas, Mineral, Otero, Prowers, Pueblo, Rio Grande, Saguache,
and Teller (19 counties). Population (1930), 303,442.
JOHN ANDREW MARTIN, Democrat, of Pueblo, Colo.; born at Cincinnati,
Ohio, April 10, 1868; educated in the public schools of Mexico and Fulton, Mo.;
farmed in Kansas and railroaded in Colorado, 1884-1894; edited La Junta Times
and studied law, 1895-96; admitted to the bar in Colorado in November, 1896,
and commenced the practice of law in Pueblo in April, 1897; member of the
Colorado General Assembly, 1901-2; Pueblo city attorney, 1905-1907 and
1915-1917; elected from the second congressional district to the Sixty-first and
Sixty-second Congresses; retired voluntarily and resumed the practice of law at
Pueblo, Colo., in 1913, and has practiced there since; recruited a volunteer bat-
talion in the World War, in which he enlisted as a private and was commissioned
as major, serving in the Fortieth Division; elected to the Seventy-third Con-
gress, after a lapse of 20 years from his previous service as a Member.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Archuleta, Chaffee, Delta, Dolores, Eagle, Garfield, Grand, Gunni-
son, Hinsdale, Jackson, Lake, La Plata, Mesa, Moffat, Montezuma, Montrose, Ouray, Park, Pitkin,
Rio Blanco, Routt, San Juan, San Miguel, and Summit (24 counties). Population (1930), 141,542.
EDWARD THOMAS TAYLOR, Democrat, of Glenwood Springs, was born at
Metamora, Woodford County, Ill.; son of Henry R. and Anna (Evans) Taylor;
spent his early life on farm and stock ranch in Illinois and Kansas; graduated
from Leavenworth (Kans.) High School in 1881; moved to Leadville, Colo.,
and during the school year of 1881-82 was the first principal of the Leadville
High School; that fall entered the law department of the University of Michigan;
was president of his class, and graduated in 1884, receiving the degree of LL. B.;
returned to Leadville and began the practice of law in partnership with his
uncle, the Hon. Joseph W. Taylor; in the fall of 1884 was elected county super-
intendent of schools of that (Lake) county; in 1885-86 was deputy district
attorney; in 1887 moved to Glenwood Springs, where he has since resided;
for 25 years he was associated in the practice of law with his brother, Charles
W. Taylor; in 1887 was elected district attorney of the northwestern Colorado
judicial district; in 1887-1889 he adjudicated the irrigation water rights of
a large part of western Colorado; in 1896 was elected State senator and reelected
in 1900 and 1904, served 12 years, was president pro tempore of the senate one
term, and was the author of 40 statutes and 5 constitutional amendments
adopted by a general vote of the people; he also served five terms as city attor-
ney and two terms as county attorney of his home town and county; he is a
Scottish Rite Mason, a Mystic Shriner, and an Elk; he organized the bureau of
naturalized citizens at the Democratic national headquarters at Chicago in
1916, and conducted the party campaign throughout the 24 Western States
to secure the votes of foreign-born citizens of 46 different nationalities and
languages; in 1892 was married to Mrs. Durfee, formerly Miss Etta Tabor,
of Council Bluffs, Iowa; has three children—Edward T., jr., and Joseph E., both
practicing attorneys, and Mrs. Irving M. Baker, jr., and a stepson, George H.
Durfee; he has been elected to Congress thirteen consecutive times (1909-1935)—the
Sixty-first to the Seventy-third Congresses, inclusive, being reelected to the latter
on November 8, 1932, by a vote of 40,736 to 20,993 for his Republican opponent.
CONNECTICUT Biographical 15
CONNECTICUT
(Population (1930), 1,606,903)
SENATORS
FREDERIC COLLIN WALCOTT, Republican, of Norfolk, Conn., was born
February, 1869, at New York Mills, N. Y.; attended public schools at Utica and
Andover Academy; graduated from Yale University in the class of 1891; re-
ceived the honorary degree of M. A. from Yale, 1917, Wesleyan, 1929, and D. Se.
from Trinity College, Hartford, 1928; in 1907 married Mary Hussey Guthrie,
of Pittsburgh; has two sons, Alexander Guthrie Walcott and William Welch
Walcott; when the United States entered the war he was chosen to assist Mr.
Hoover in the United States Food Administration, and served until the signing
of the treaty in 1919; was decorated by France with the Legion of Honor and
by Poland with the officer’s cross; retired from active business in 1922; served
two terms in the Connecticut Senate, from 1925 to 1929, and was chairman of
the finance committee and president pro tempore; as president of the Connecti-
cut State Board of Fisheries and Game, and as chairman of the State water
commission, devoted himself to the building up and conservation of the forests,
water resources, and wild life of the State; was elected to the United States
Senate November 6, 1928, for the full term of six years, succeeding the late Senator
George P. McLean, who retired upon the expiration of his term.
AUGUSTINE LONERGAN, Democrat, of Hartford; born at Thompson,
Conn.; educated in Connecticut schools and Yale University; practicing lawyer
in Hartford since 1902; Member of Sixty-third, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, and
Seventy-second Congresses; Democratic nominee for United States Senate in
1920, 1928, and 1932; chairman, in Connecticut, of the Thomas Jefferson Me-
morial Foundation; married Lucy G. Waters, of Washington, and they have four
daughters—Ruth Ellen, Lucy Waters, Ann Yates, and Mary Lee; elected United
States Senator on November 8, 1932, for the term ending in 1939.
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 1,606,903.
CHARLES MONTAGUE BAKEWELL, Republican, of New Haven, Conn.;
born at Pittsburgh, Pa., April 24, 1867, son of Thomas and Josephine (Maitland)
Bakewell; educated in the preparatory department of the Western University of
Pennsylvania (now the University of Pittsburgh); graduated from the University
of California in 1889 with the degree of A. B.; attended Harvard University,
1891-1894, receiving the degree of A. M. in 1892 and Ph. D. in 1894; attended
Universities of Berlin, Strassburg, and Paris, 1894-1896; received honorary degree
of A. M. from Yale University in 1905; married Miss Madeline Palmer, of Wilkes-
Barre, on December 21, 1899, and they have two children—Henry Palmer
Bakewell, who is a lawyer in Hartford, and Mildred Palmer Bakewell; his wife's
father, Henry W. Palmer, was a Member of Congress for a number of years from
Luzerne County, Pa.; member of the American Philosophical Association and
served as president in 1910; is an Elk and a Mason; instructor in philosophy at
Harvard University, 1896-97, at University of California, 1897-98; and at Bryn
Mawr College, 1898-1900; associate professor and professor at University of
California, 1900-1905; accepted the position of professor of philosophy at Yale
University in 1905, which office he has filled from that date; during the World
War served as inspector and historian, with rank of major and deputy commis- -
sioner under the Italian Commission of the American Red Cross in Italy, and
received the Order of the Crown of Italy, and the silver medal of honor from the
Italian Red Cross; served in the Connecticut State Senate from 1920 to 1924,
and was chairman of the educational committee as well as chairman of the com-
mission to revise and codify the educational laws; member of the Connecticut
Pension Commission; member and chairman of the Connecticut State Board of
Healing Arts, 1925-1933; author of Source Book in Ancient Philosophy and
Story of the American Red Cross in Italy; editor and part author, Thomas
Davidson’s The Education of the Wage Earners; also edited Everyman Edition
of William James’ Selected Papers in Philosophy, Emerson’s Poems, and Plato’s
Republic in Scribner’s Philosophy Series; elected as Congressman at Large to
the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 284,490 votes, defeating William M.
Citron, Democrat, who received 282,464 votes.
16 Congressional Durectory DELAWARE
FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNty: Hartford. Population (1930), 421,097.
HERMAN PAUL KOPPLEMANN, Democrat, of Hartford, Conn.; born
May 1, 1880, at Odessa, Ukraine, and moved to Hartford in 1882; educated in the
public schools and attended Hartford High School; publishers’ agent for news-
papers and magazines; married Adeline Augusta Greenstein, of Hartford; member
of city council in 1904 and elected its vice president in 1911; member of Connecti-
cut House of Representatives, 1913-14, and served as State senator, 1917-1920,
sponsoring several acts, most notable being the widows’ aid and children’s de-
pendent act; member of board of the metropolitan district commission, and has
served on other municipal commissions; vice president of the United Synagogues
of ‘America and president of Emanuel Synagogue; member of the Salvation Army
advisory board and a director of Jewish Charities, Old People’s Home, Mount
Sinai Hospital, Children’s Home, and many other welfare, civic, and religious
organizations; affiliated with the Masonic Order, Knights of Pythias, and other
fraternal organizations; honorary member of Veterans of Foreign Wars and
Sins of Disabled War Veterans’ Camp Fund; elected to the Seventy-third
ongress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Middlesex, New London, Tolland, and Windham (4 counties),
Population (1930), 253,099.
WILLIAM LINCOLN HIGGINS, Republican, of South Coventry, Conn.;
born March 8, 1867, at Chesterfield, Mass. ; graduated from Medical Department,
University of the City of New York, 1890, with the degree of M. D.; member of
General Assembly, State of Connecticut, seven terms; State senate, one term;
secretary of state, two terms; elected from second congressional district of Con-
necticut to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.—NEw HAVEN COUNTY: Towns of Bethany, Branford, Cheshire, East Haven,
Guilford, Hamden, Madison, Meriden, Milford, New Haven, North Branford, North Haven, Orange,
‘Wallingford, West Haven, and Woodbridge. Population (1930), 304,736.
FRANCIS T. MALONEY, Democrat, of Meriden, Conn.; born in Meriden on
March 31, 1894; married Martha M. Herzig, of Wallingford, Conn., and they
have four children—Robert, Marilyn, Grace, and Ann; elected mayor of Meriden
for two terms, 1930 to 1933, inclusive; served in the United States Navy during
the World War; on November 8, 1932, was elected a Member of the Seventy-
third Congress, receiving 57,881 votes, and defeating T. A. D. Jones, Republi-
can, who received 55,284 votes.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—County: Fairfield. Population (1930), 386,702.
SCHUYLER MERRITT, Republican, of Stamford, was born in New York
City December 16, 1853; prepared for college at private school in Stamford;
Yale, B. A. 1873; Columbia, LL. B. 1876; since 1877 has been interested in man-
ufacturing and banking; was a member of the Connecticut constitutional con-
vention in 1904, and delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1916;
was elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress at a special election on November 6, 1917,
and reelected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, and Seventy-first Congresses; and again elected to the Seventy-
third Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—LircHFIELD COUNTY. NEW HAVEN CoUNTY: Towns of Ansonia, Beacon Falls,
Derby, Middlebury, Naugatuck, Oxford, Prospect, Seymour, Southbury, Waterbury, and Walcott.
Population (1930), 241,269.
EDWARD WHEELER GOSS, Republican, of Waterbury, Conn.; elected to
the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
DELAWARE
(Population (1930), 238,380)
SENATORS
DANIEL O. HASTINGS, Republican, Wilmington, Del., was born March 5,
1874, near Princess Anne, Somerset County, Md.; moved to Wilmington in 1894,
married; has two children, Mrs. Robert P. Fletcher, jr., and Daniel O. Hastings,
FLORIDA Biographical 17
jr.; is a lawyer, admitted to the bar in 1902; beginning 1905 served as deputy
attorney general, secretary of state, judge of supreme court, city solicitor of
Wilmington, and judge of municipal court; served as proxy to Coleman du Pont
on the Republican National Committee at the Kansas City convention in 1928;
was appointed December 10, 1928, to succeed Senator Coleman du Pont, who
resigned because of ill health; elected November 4, 1930, for the unexpired
term ending March 3, 1931, and for the full term of six years beginning March 4,
1931.
JOHN G. TOWNSEND, Jr., Republican, of Selbyville, Sussex County, Del.,
was born on a farm in Worcester County, Md., May 31, 1871; attended the public
school of that county; moved to Selbyville, Del., in 1895, and has resided there
since, being actively engaged in farming, fruit growing, and banking; was elected
to the State legislature in 1900 and served from 1901 to 1903; elected governor of
the State in 1916, and served from 1917 to 1921; was a delegate to the Republican
National Conventions of 1908, 1924, and 1928; elected to the United States Senate
on November 6, 1928, receiving 63,725 votes, and Thomas F. Bayard, Democrat,
40,828; was married to Jennie Collins, of Worcester County, Md., on July 28,
1890; has six children—Edith M. Tubbs, Julian E., Lyla M., John G., 3d, Paul
L., and Preston C.
REPRESENTATIVE
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 238,380.
WILBUR LOUIS ADAMS, Democrat, of Wilmington, Del., was born at
Georgetown, Sussex County, Del., October 23, 1884, the son of William Dunning
and Sarah Thompson Adams; attended the public school of his native town,
Delaware College, and Dickinson College; studied law at the University of
Pennsylvania, and was graduated in 1907 with the degree of LL. B.; was admitted
to the bar at Georgetown, Del., on October 7, 1907, and has since engaged in the
general practice of the law in Wilmington; Democratic candidate for attorney
general of Delaware in 1924; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving
51,698 votes, Reuben Satterthwaite, jr., Republican, 48,841 votes, and Francis
B. Short, Independent, 10,560 votes.
FLORIDA
(Population (1930), 1,468,211)
SENATORS
DUNCAN U. FLETCHER; born in Sumter County, Ga., January 6, 1859;
moved to Monroe County, 1860; educated in country schools and Gordon Insti-
tute; graduated from Vanderbilt University, June, 1880; began practice of law
in Jacksonville, Fla., July, 1881; admitted to practice in all State and Federal
courts, including United States Supreme Court; LL. D., John B. Stetson Uni-
versity; member Legislature of Florida, 1893; mayor of Jacksonville, 1893-1895
and 1901-1903; chairman board of public instruction of Duval County, 1900
1906; chairman State Democratic executive committee, 1904-1907; nominated
United States Senator in primary election, June, 1908, and unanimously elected
by legislature; renominated in primary election June, 1914, and reelected
November, 1914, by popular vote; renominated in primary election June, 1920,
and reelected November, 1920; renominated in primary election June, 1926, and
reelected November, 1926; renominated, without opposition, in primary election
June, 1932, and reelected November, 1932; was chairman of the United States
Commission and of the American Commission on Rural Credits and Agricultural
Finance, whose work resulted in the Federal farm loan act; chairman, Committee
on Banking and Currency; member of Committees on Commerce, Military
Affairs, Mines and Mining, and Printing; chairman of the Joint Committee on
Printing.
PARK TRAMMELL, Democrat, of Lakeland, Fla.; was educated in the com-
mon schools of Florida; graduated in law at Cumberland University, Lebanon,
Tenn., in May, 1899; practiced law at Lakeland and Tampa; was owner and
157297°—73-1—1ST ED——3
~
18 Congressional Duirectory FLORIDA
editor of a newspaper for some years; was a traveling salesman for two years;
has been a fruit grower for some years; married to Miss Virginia Darby (deceased),
of Lakeland, Fla., 1901; elected mayor of Lakeland, 1899, reelected 1901; elected
member of Florida House of Representatives, 1902; State senator, 1904, for term
of four years; president State senate, 1905; attorney general of Florida, 1909
1913; Governor of Florida, 1913-1917; elected United States Senator by popular
vote in November, 1916, for a term of six years, beginning March 4, 1917;
reelected in the November, 1922, general election for a second term, beginning
March 4, 1923, and again in November, 1928, for a third term, beginning March
4, 1929, and ending in 1935.
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 1,468,211.
WILLIAM JOSEPH SEARS, Democrat, of Jacksonville, Fla., was born Decem-
per 4, 1874, in Smithville, Ga.; shortly afterwards moved to Ellaville, Ga., and
from there to Kissimmee, Fla., in January, 1881. He received early education
in the public schools of Osceola County; graduated from Florida State College,
at Lake City, receiving degree of A. B. in 1895, at which time was senior captain
corps of cadets, and for two months acted as commandant of the battalion in
place of Lieut. Samuel Smoke, United States Army; from Mercer University,
Macon, Ga., receiving degree of B. L. in 1896; and in May, 1911, A. B. degree
was conferred by the University of Florida at Gainesville; admitted to practice
law in Georgia and Florida courts, and in 1905 was admitted to the Supreme
Court of Florida and in 1912 to the Supreme Court of the United States. Eight
years attorney for board of county commissioners, Osceola County, Fla. In
1899 he was elected mayor of Kissimmee, and from 1907 to 1911 served in the
city council; in 1905 was elected county superintendent of public instruction,
and held this office until February 1, 1915; in 1901 married Miss Daisy Watson,
of Raleigh, N. C., and has one son, W. J. Sears, jr. He was elected to the Sixty-
fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and
Seventieth Congresses; two years chairman Committee on Education; and again
elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large.
FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Charlotte, Citrus, Collier, De Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Hernando,
Highlands, Hillsborough, Lake, Lee, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, Sarasota, and Sumter (18 coun
ties). Population (1930), 433,169.
JAMES HARDIN PETERSON, Democrat, of Lakeland, Polk County, Fla.,
was born in Batesburg, S. C., February 11, 1894; graduate of Lakeland High
School and of the college of law of the University of Florida, receiving LL. B.
degree; admitted to the bar in 1914; member of law firm of Peterson, Carver &
Langston, of Lakeland, Fla.; for a number of years specialized in municipal law,
served 16 years as city attorney of Lakeland, and also represented a number of
other cities; for 10% years was prosecuting attorney and solicitor of the criminal
court, Polk County, Fla.; served several terms as chairman of the legislative
committee of the Florida League of Municipalities; special counsel for the de-
partment of agriculture, State of Florida; served in the Navy during the World
War; married and has two children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on
November 8, 1932, receiving 61,381 votes, his Republican opponent, Arthur R.
Thompson, receiving 19,010 votes,
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alachua, Baker, Bradford, Columbia, Dixie, Gilchrist, Hamilton,
Jefferson, Lafayette, Levy, Madison, Marion, Nassau, Suwanee, Taylor, and Union (16 counties),
Population (1930), 205,778.
ROBERT ALEXIS GREEN, Democrat, of Starke, Fla.; born on farm at
New River, Bradford County, Fla., February 10, 1892, the son of William Henry
Green and Mary Emma Andreu-Green; attended rural school and began teach-
ing at age of 16 years; graduated from Lake Butler High School and received
B. S. degree from University of Florida, 1916; high-school principal for many
years; holds life State teachers’ certificate and was vice president Florida Educa-
tional Association, 1918; studied law at Yale University; admitted to bar of
all Florida courts and United States Supreme Court; 1913-1915, messenger
Florida House of Representatives; 1915-1917, assistant chief clerk; 1917-18,
chief clerk; 1918-1920, member of Florida House of Representatives, nominated
GEORGIA Biographical 19
and elected without opposition; elected speaker pro tempore Florida House of
Representatives, 1918; elected and served as judge of Bradford County, Fla.,
1920-1924; nominated for Congress, June, 1924, having a large majority in each
of 16 counties comprising district; elected to Sixty-ninth Congress, carrying
each county in general election; renominated without opposition to Seventieth
Congress and reelected over Republican opponent by overwhelming majority;
renominated without opposition to Seventy-first Congress and reelected by over-
whelming majority; reelected to Seventy-second Congress; was reelected with-
out opposition to Seventy-third Congress,
THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Bay, Calhoun, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden, Gulf, Holmes, Jackson,
Ia Lips, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Wakulla, Walton, and Washington (16 counties). Population
1930), 240,978. :
MILLARD F. CALDWELL, Democrat, of Milton, Fla.; born February 6,
1897; educated in the public schools and attended Carson and Newman College,
University of Mississippi, and the University of Virginia; lawyer; member of
the Florida State Legislature, 1929-1931; served as enlisted man and officer
during the World War; married Mary Rebecca Harwood; had no opposition in
the general election on November 8, 1932, when he was elected a Member of the
Seventy-third Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Brevard, Broward, Clay, Dade, Duval, Flagler, Indian River,
Martin, Monroe, Okeechobee, Orange, Osceola, Palm Beach, Putnam, St. Johns, St. Lucie, Seminole,
and Volusia (18 counties). Population (1930), 588,286.
JAMES MARK WILCOX, Democrat, of West Palm Beach, Fla., was born at
Willacoochee, Ga., May 21, 1890, son of Dr. and Mrs. Jeff Wilcox; educated at
Emory College; received law degree at Mercer University and was admitted to
the bar June 8, 1910; married Christine Helm at Tampa, Fla., November 25,
1914, and is the father of two sons, Mark, jr., 17 years of age, and Joe, 14 years
of age; served as county solicitor of Jeff Davis County, Ga., 1911-1918; junior
member of the law firm of Conyers & Wilcox, of Brunswick, Ga., 1919-1925;
moved to West Palm Beach, Fla., April 1, 1925, and has been a member of the
firm of Winters, Foskett & Wilcox since that date; served as city attorney of
West Palm Beach from June 1, 1928, to March 1, 1933; general counsel for the
Florida League of Municipalities; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on
November 8, 1932.
GEORGIA
(Population (1930), 2,908,506)
SENATORS
WALTER FRANKLIN GEORGE, Democrat, of Vienna, Ga., was born Jan-
uary 29, 1878; was elected on November 7, 1922, to the Senate vacancy caused
by the death of Hon. Thomas E. Watson; reelected on November 2, 1926, and
again on November 8, 1932, for the full term ending in 1939; married Lucy Heard,
1903, and has two sons, Heard F. George and Joseph Marcus George.
RICHARD BREVARD RUSSELL, Jr., Democrat, of Winder, was born
at Winder, Ga., November 2, 1897; graduated from Seventh District Agricultural
and Mechanical School, Powder Springs, 1914; from Gordon Institute, 1915;
and from the University of Georgia, B. L. degree, 1918; practiced law at Winder
Ga. ; single; member of the American Legion; representative from Barrow County
in the General Assembly of Georgia, 1921-1931; speaker pro tempore, 1923-1926;
speaker, 1927-28, 1929-1931, extra session; Governor of Georgia, June 27, 1931,
to January 10, 1933; chairman of the Georgia delegation to the Democratic
National Convention at Chicago in 1932; elected to the United States Senate
on November 8, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the Hon. William
J. Harris, and took his seat January 12, 1933, succeeding the Hon. John S. Cohen,
who had been appointed to fill this vacancy until his successor was elected and
had qualified; term expires in 1937,
20 Congressional Directory GEORGIA
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CounNTiEs: Bryan, Bulloch, Burke, Candler, Chatham, Effingham, Emanuel,
Evans, Jenkins, Liberty, Long, McIntosh, Montgomery, Screven, Tattnall, Toombs, Treutlen, and
Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1930), 328,214.
HOMER CLING PARKER, Democrat, of Statesboro, Ga.; born September
25, 1885, in Baxley, Appling County, Ga., son of William Cling and Sarah Belle
(Mattox) Parker and grandson of Hampton Cling and Catherine (Baggs) Parker
and of Dr. John Homer and Lucinda (Sheffield) Mattox, of Homerville, Ga.;
graduate of Statesboro High School in 1904, and of Mercer University (B. L.
degree) in 1908; practiced law in Statesboro from 1908 (with the exception of
time spent in military service, May, 1917, to December, 1922) until appointed
adjutant general of Georgia on June 28, 1927; married Annie Laurie Mallary,
in Macon, Ga., on November 9, 1910 (died November 15, 1916), and they had
three children—Martha Lewis, Helen Isabel, and William Mallary; married,
Lenore L. Leedom, in Washington, D. C., on October 15, 1922; Baptist, Mason,
Eagle, Elk, Phi Delta Theta; cadet, first officers’ training camp, Fort McPherson,
Ga., May 15 to August 15, 1917; captain of Infantry, United States Army, August
15, 1917, to May 20, 1919; major and judge advocate, May 20, 1919, to Septem-
ber 16, 1920; captain, Judge Advocate General’s Department, Regular Army
(with rank from July 1, 1920), September 16, 1920, to December 7, 1922; major
and judge advocate, Reserve Corps, December 23, 1923, to December 22, 1928;
solicitor, city court, Statesboro, December 12, 1914, to January 1, 1917; mayor
of Statesboro, December 9, 1924, to June 28, 1927, when he resigned; adjutant
general of Georgia, June 28, 1927, to June 27, 1931; brigadier general, adjutant
general’s department, Georgia National Guard, July 12, 1927, to May 31, 1931,
brigadier general (retired) Georgia National Guard since June 27, 1931; elected
to the Seventy-second Congress on September 10, 1931, to fill vacancy caused
by the death of Hon. Charles G. Edwards; reelected to the Seventy-third Con-
gress on November 8, 1932.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Brooks, Calhoun, Colquitt, Decatur, Dougherty, Early,
Grady, Miller, Mitchell, Seminole, Thomas, Tift, and Worth (14 counties). Population (1930),
263,606.
~~ EDWARD EUGENE COX, Democrat, of Camilla, Ga.; born April 3, 1880,
son of Stephen E. and Mary (Williams) Cox; lawyer; received literary and law
education at Mercer University, graduating in law in 1902; married Roberta
Patterson, of Macon, Ga., 1902 (died 1916); two children—Lamar Patterson and
Mary Bennet; judge superior courts Albany circuit 1912-1916; married Grace
(Pitts) Hill, of Cordele, Ga., 1918; one child—Gene; elected to Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Ben Hill, Chattahoochee, Clay, Crisp, Dodge, Dooly, Harris, Hous-
: ton, Lee, Macon, Marion, Muscogee, Peach, Pulaski, Quitman, Randolph, Schley, Stewart, Sumter,
Taylor, Terrell, Turner, Webster, and Wilcox (24 counties). Population (1930), 339,870. §
BRYANT THOMAS CASTELLOW, Democrat, of Cuthbert, Ga., was born
July 29, 1876, on a farm in Quitman County, Ga.; son of W. F. and Mary Gay
Castellow; has one sister, Mrs. L. O. Freeman, of College Park, Ga.; attended
local school until his father’s death in April, 1890; attended Eufaula (Ala.) High
School, Coleman (Ga.) High School, and also Mercer University, Macon, Ga.,
received B. L. degree from University of Georgia in 1897; taught in Coleman
High School one year and then began the practice of law at Fort Gaines, Ga.,
in the summer of 1898, in partnership with KE. R. King; moved to Cuthbert, Ga.,
in 1906; married Miss Ethel McDonald in 1911, who died in May, 1927; has one
daughter, Miss Gertrude; served as captain of Company D, Fourth Infantry,
Georgia State Troops, 1899-1902; solicitor county court of Clay County; served
as judge of county court of Clay County, 1901-1905; referee in bankruptcy for the
western division of the northern district of Georgia, 1906-1912; solicitor general of
the Pataula Judicial Circuit from January 1, 1913, until his resignation on October
7, 1932; nominated on September 14, 1932, to the Seventy-third Congress, from
the third district of Georgia; elected without opposition on November 8, 1932,
to the Seventy-third Congress, and at the same time to fill the vacancy in the
Seventy-second Congress caused by the resignation of Hon. Charles R. Crisp.
GEORGIA Brographical 21
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTIiES: Butts, Carroll, Clayton, Coweta, Fayette, Heard, Henry, Lamar,
Meriwether, Newton, Pike, Spalding, Talbot, Troup, and Upson (15 counties). Population (1930),
261,234.
EMMETT MARSHALL OWEN, Democrat, of Griffin, Ga., was born at
Hollonville, Pike County, Ga.; graduate of Gordon Institute, Barnesville, Ga.,
and University of Georgia Law School; married in 1904 to Miss Alma Jones,
Greenville, Ga., who died in 1928; two children—Mrs. H. B. Floyd, Atlanta,
Ga., and E. M. Owen, jr., Miami, Fla.; represented Pike County two terms in
the Georgia Legislature, 1902-1906; solicitor city court of Zebulon, 1908-1912;
solicitor general Flint judicial circuit, 1913-1923; solicitor general Griffin judicial
circuit, 1923-1933; elected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: De Kalb, Fulton, and Rockdale (3 counties). Population (1930),
414,313.
ROBERT RAMSPECK, Democrat, born in Decatur, Ga., September 5,
1890; educated in public schools of Decatur and Griffin, Ga., and at Donald
Fraser School, in Decatur; received bachelor of law degree at Atlanta Law
School, 1920; served as chief clerk, House Post Office, 1911; secretary to Hon.
William Schley Howard, Member of Congress, 1912; deputy United States
marshal, northern district of Georgia, 1914-1916; chief deputy United States
marshal, 1917-1919; solicitor, city court of Decatur, 1923-1927; city attorney
of Decatur, 1927-1929; represented De Kalb County in General Assembly of
‘Georgia, 1929; married Miss Nobie Clay in 1916; has two children—Dorothy
and Betty Lynn; elected to the Seventy-first Congress October 2, 1929, to fill
unexpired term of Hon. Leslie J. Steele, deceased; reelected to the Seventy-
second and Seventy~third Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTES: Baldwin, Bibb, Bleckley, Crawford, Glascock, Hancock, Jasper,
Jefferson, Johnson, Jones, Laurens, Monroe, Putnam, Twiggs, Washington, and Wilkinson (16 coun-
ties). Population (1930), 281,437.
CARL VINSON, Democrat, of Milledgeville, was born November 18, 1883,
on a farm in Baldwin County; educated at the Georgia Military College at
Milledgeville, Ga.; graduated from Mercer University Law School in 1902;
commenced the practice of law the same year in Milledgeville; solicitor (prose-
cuting attorney) for Baldwin County, Ga., three years; served two terms (1909-
1912) in the General Assembly of Georgia; speaker pro tempore during the term
1911-12; judge of the county court of Baldwin County two years; resigned
November 2, 1914; married; elected to the Sixty-third Congress to fill an unex-
pired term; reelected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Con-
gresses from the tenth district; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress from the
new sixth district.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Bartow, Catoosa, Chattooga, Cobb, Dade, Douglas, Floyd,
Soa Haralson, Murray, Paulding, Polk, Walker, and Whitfield (14 counties). Population (1930),
0,112.
MALCOLM CONNOR TARVER, Democrat, of Dalton, was educated in the
common schools of Whitfield County, Ga., McLellan High School, Dalton, Ga.,
and Mercer Law School, Macon, Ga.; admitted to the bar June 8, 1904; prac-
ticed law at Dalton since that date, with exception of period of service on the
bench; elected to lower house of Georgia General Assembly, 1908; reelected,
1910; elected to Georgia State Senate, 1912; elected judge, superior courts,
Cherokee circuit, Georgia, 1916; reelected 1920 and 1924; wife, Jewell Colclough
Tarver; one son, Malcolm Connor Tarver, jr.; is member of Methodist Episcopal
Church, South; Mason, Odd Fellow, member of Junior Order United American
Mechanics, and several other fraternal organizations; elected to the Seventieth,
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
22 Congressional Durectory IDAHO
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES; Appling, Atkinson, Bacon, Berrien, Brantley, Camden, Charlton,
Clinch, Coffee, Cook, Echols, Glynn, Irwin, Jeff Davis, Lanier, Lowndes, Pierce, Telfair, Ware, and
Wayne (20 counties). Population (1930), 241,957.
BRASWELL DRUE DEEN, Democrat, of Alma, Ga.; born June 28, 1893,
on a farm in Appling County, Ga., son of Samuel Lee and Mary Victoria Deen,
and was the eldest of 10 children; educated in the public schools of Appling
County, Baxley High School, and South Georgia College, McRae, Ga.; graduated
from Emory University in 1922 with B. P. H. degree; taught school in Appling
County for two years and was county superintendent of schools in that county for
one and one-half years, resigning this position to enter service in the World War;
being under weight, he enlisted as a Y. M. C. A. secretary at Fort Caswell, N. C.;
married Miss Corinne Smith, of Lawrenceville, Ga., on July 1, 1918, and they
have three children—Mildred Louise, Braswell, jr., and Walter George Deen;
superintendent of Tennille city schools, 1922-1924; president of South Georgia
Junior College, McRae, Ga., 1924-1927; engaged in farming and real-estate
development in 1927-28; entered the publishing business in 1928; editor and
proprietor of the Alma Times, a weekly newspaper at Alma, Ga.; member of
county Democratic executive committee, 1928-1932; president of the local bank
for three years; nominated for the Seventy-third Congress on September 14, 1932,
receiving 15,612 votes; Hon. W. C. Lankford, Democrat and incumbent, 10,652;
was elected in the general election on November 8, receiving 20,021 votes, and
defeating Dr. H. J. Carswell, Republican, who received 912 votes.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTieEs: Banks, Barrow, Cherokee, Dawson, Fannin, Forsyth, Gilmer,
Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Jackson, Lumpkin, Pickens, Rabun, Stephens, Towns, Union, and
White (18 counties). Population (1930), 218,496.
JOHN STEPHENS WOOD, Democrat, of Canton, Cherokee County, Ga.;
educated in the public schools, the North Georgia Agriculture College at Dahl-
onega, Ga., and the Mercer University at Macon, Ga.; lawyer by profession;
elected as a representative in the General Assembly of Georgia; solicitor general
of the Blue Ridge Judicial Circuit of Georgia and judge of the superior courts of
the Blue Ridge Judicial Circuit of Georgia; married.
TENTH DISTRICT.—CounTties: Clarke, Columbia, Elbert, Franklin, Greene, Hart, Lincoln, Madi-
son, McDuffie, Morgan, Oconee, Oglethorpe, Richmond, Taliaferro, Walton, Warren, and Wilkes
(17 counties). Population (1930), 289,267.
[Vacant.]
IDAHO
(Population (1930), 445,031)
SENATORS
WILLIAM EDGAR BORAH, Republican, of Boise, was born June 29, 1865,
in Wayne County, Ill.; was educated in the common schools of Wayne County,
at the Southern Illinois Academy, Enfield, Ill., and at the Kansas State Univer-
sity, Lawrence; was admitted to practice law September, 1890, at Lyons, Kans.,
and devoted his entire time exclusively to the practice of law until elected to the
United States Senate January 15, 1907; reelected January 14, 1913, November
5, 1918, November 4, 1924, and November 4, 1930,
ILLINOIS Biographical 23
JAMES PINCKNEY POPE, Democrat, of Boise, Idaho; born March 31, 1884,
in Jackson Parish, La., son of Jesse T. and Lou Pope; was educated in the com-
mon schools of Jackson Parish, and was graduated from the Louisiana Poly-
technic Institute, at Ruston, La., in 1906, and from the University of Chicago
Law School in 1909, with the degree of LL. B.; located in Boise, Idaho, in October,
1909; was admitted to the bar, in Idaho, in the following November, 1909; en-
gaged in private practice of the law continuously until his election to the United
States Senate; served as city attorney of Boise during the year 1916, and as
assistant attorney general of Idaho during the years 1917 and 1918; elected
mayor of Boise in April, 1929, and served until February 15, 1933; married
Pauline Ruth Horn on June 26, 1913; two sons, Ross P. and George A.; elected
to the United States Senate on November 8, 1932, receiving 103,020 votes, John
Thomas, Republican, 78,325 votes, and Carl Oliason, Liberty Party, 3,801 votes.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Benewah, Boise, Bonner, Boundary, Canyon, Clearwater,
Custer, Gem, Idaho, Kootenai, Latah, Lemhi, Lewis, Nez Perce, Payette, Shoshone, Valley, and
Washington (19 counties). Population (1930), 189,576.
COMPTON I. WHITE, Democrat, of Clark Fork, Idaho, was born in Baton
Rouge, La., July 31, 1877, the son of John E. White and Roberta (Bowman)
White, of Mississippi and Louisiana stock, respectively; soon after his birth his
parents moved to the ancestral home in Rankin County, Miss.; received his early
education in the private school of Jackson, Miss.; moved to Clark Fork, Idaho,
at the age of 13, and attended the grade schools; entered the Metropolitan Busi-
ness College, of Chicago, and the Gonzaga University, of Spokane, Wash.;
pioneered with his father in reclaiming a farm from the logged-off land and also
in the sawmill business; was in the railway service in the capacity of telegraph
operator, trainman, and conductor, after which he engaged in the agricultural
and lumbering business on his home place at Clark Fork, later becoming in-
terested in mining and as manager of several mining properties; stock raising and
agriculture are now receiving the major portion of his attention; married Jose-
phine Elizabeth Bunn, a school-teacher, in 1915, and they have two children—
Compton I., jr., and Enid Mary, age 12 and 10, respectively; is a member of the
Order of Railway Conductors, Modern Woodmen, Elks, Eagles, Grange, and
Farmers Union; served as a member of the town council and as school trustee,
and has been active in the councils of the Democratic organization in the pre-
cinct, county, and State; was a delegate to the Democratic National Conven-
tions at Houston, in 1928, and at Chicago, in 1932; unsuccessful candidate for
Representative in Congress in 1930, but on November 8, 1932, was elected to
the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 42,784 votes, and defeating Burton L.
French, Republican incumbent, by over 10,000 votes.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Ada, Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Blaine, Bonneville, Butte,
Camas, Caribou, Cassia, Clark, Elmore, Franklin, Fremont, Gooding, Jefferson, Jerome, Lincoln,
FLL Minidoka, Oneida, Owyhee, Power, Teton, and Twin Falls (25 counties). Population
1930), 255,455.
THOMAS C. COFFIN, Democrat, of Pocatello, Idaho, was born in Caldwell,
Idaho, October 25, 1887; graduated from the Phillips-Exeter Academy at Exeter,
N. H., with the class of 1906, and thereafter attended the Sheffield Scientific
School, and the law school of Yale University; commenced the practice of law in
Boise, Idaho, in 1911; mayor of Pocatello, 1931-1933; served in the United
States Navy, aviation branch, during the World War; married, and has one
daughter—Jeanne; elected to the Seventy-third Congress receiving 58,138 votes,
Addison T. Smith, Republican, 46,273 votes, and Goold, Liberty, 900 votes.
ILLINOIS
(Population (1930), 7,630,654)
SENATORS
JAMES HAMILTON LEWIS, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Virginia;
student in school in Georgia; attended the University of Virginia; have lesser de-
grees, universities in Ohio and Texas, and honorary degrees for countries in
Europe; admitted to practice law at the city of Seattle, State of Washington;
24 : Congressional Drrectory ILLINOIS
was member of upper house of legislature, State of Washington; Democratic
Congressman at large for State of Washington; married Rose Lawton Douglas,
of Georgia. Served as officer in Spanish-American War; transferred from State
guard as voluntary officer, first to staff of General Brooke in Cuba, later on staff
of Gen. Fred Grant in Puerto Rico; at end of service mustered out at Newport
News; moved to Chicago, 1903; was selected by mayor and city council of
Chicago as corporation counsel of the city, 1905. Author of treatises of Federal
law, “ Removal of Causes’; also on the law of injunctions. Author of works on
history—particularly of governmental nature—*‘ The Two Great Republics, Rome
and America’’; coauthor with other writers on general subjects of the law of
government and political systems. Was chosen at Democratic primary ballot of
1912 for United States Senator for State of illinois, and the election confirmed by
the legislature of State, electing Lewis as Democrat for Senate, long term, 1913
to 1919; was named by the majority of the United States Senate as Senate
whip—the first whip the Senate allowed itself to adopt as a part of its organi-
zation. As Senator, was designated from time to time in matters with foreign
countries; named by President Wilson delegate to represent Senate at Safety
at Sea Convention at London, 1914. During World War designated to incidental
service in Europe and reporting service to President Wilson; in other instances to
Secretary of War and Secretary of State. Was decorated by foreign countries;
reported in Paris to General Pershing and General Dawes as to matters com-
mitted to his service. At the conclusion of these duties was complimented by
Gen. George Bell, as commanding general; requested as staff aide to perform
war duties; returning on naval ship Mount Vernon, serving with others put in
care of wounded soldiers, the ship was torpedoed at sea; later, crippled, in to
Brest, France. Lewis returned to Illinois and was nominated governor by
convention, confirmed by the primary vote of 1920; was defeated in election
by Republican candidate—afterwards Governor Small. As a Democrat, was
reelected to the United States Senate on November 4, 1930, by popular vote,
taking office on March 4, 1931.
~ WILLIAM H. DIETERICH, Democrat, of Beardstown, Ill.; born March 31,
1876, at Cooperstown, Brown County, Ill.; graduate of Kennedy Normal and
Business College (private), Rushville, Ill.,, and Northern Indiana Law School,
Valparaiso, Ind.; attorney at law by profession; served as city attorney of Rush-
ville, Ill.; treasurer of Rushville union schools; master in chancery, Schuyler
County; county judge, Schuyler County; special inheritance tax attorney from
1913 to 1917; representative in the fiftieth and fifty-first general assemblies of
the State of Illinois; corporal in Company K of Anderson’s Provisional Regi-
ment, Spanish-American War; elected on November 4, 1930, from the State at
large, to the Seventy-second Congress; elected on November 8, 1932, to the
United States Senate for the term ending in 1939; married Nona S. Runkle and
they have two children—Ruth Dieterich Kalthoff, and William J,, of Beardstown.
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 7,630,654.
MARTIN ADLAI BRENNAN, Democrat, of Bloomington, Ill., bachelor;
born September 21, 1879, at Bloomington, where he has always resided; graduate
of local schools and of Wesleyan College of Law, Bloomington, in 1902; served as
presiding judge of the Illinois Court of Claims, 1913-1917; served two terms as
representative in the General Assembly of Illinois, 1921-1923; elected as Con-
gressman at Large from Illinois to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8,
1932; the vote cast for the two major parties for this office is as follows: Martin
A. Brennan, Democrat, 1,675,274; Walter Nesbit, Democrat, 1,655,147; Richard
Yates, Republican, 1,421,221; Julius Klein, Republican, 1,406,771.
WALTER NESBIT, Democrat, of Belleville, Ill., was born in Belleville, May
1, 1878; educated in the grade and night schools; coal miner by trade for 20 years;
held various offices in labor organizations; secretary-treasurer of district No. 12,
Illinois United Mine Workers of America, for last 16 years, 1917-1933; married
and is the father of four children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the
State at large, defeating his Republican opponents by over 200,000 votes.
ILLINOIS Biographical 25
FIRST DISTRICT.—Ciry or Cricaco: Ward 1; ward 2, precincts 1 to 94; ward 4, precincts 1 to 7; ward 11, precincts 40 to 54. Population (1930), 142,916. 1
OSCAR DE PRIEST, born in Florence, Ala., 1871; family moved to Kansas
in 1878; attended public schools in Salina and the Salina Normal School (busi-
ness department); painter and decorator by trade; business in Chicago, real
estate; married; no military service; served two terms as commissioner, Cook
County, Ill.; one term as alderman, city of Chicago; Republican committeeman
of the third ward, city of Chicago; elected Representative in Congress from the
first district of Illinois, November 6, 1928; reelected to the Seventy-second Con-
gress November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress November 8,
1932.
SECOND DISTRICT.—City or CrICAGO: Ward 3, precincts 1 to 58; ward 4, precincts 8 to 67; wards
5 to 8; ward 9, precincts 1 to 20, and that part of 21 east of South Halsted Street, and 22 to 58; ward 10;
ward 17, precincts 53, 54, 70, and 71; ward 19, precincts 52, 56, and 58. Population (1930), 577,998.
P. H. MOYNIHAN, Republican, of Chicago, Ill., was born in Chicago and
attended the public schools there; served four terms as an alderman in the city
of Chicago; Republican committeeman of the tenth ward of Chicago; served
eight and one-half years as chairman and member of the Illinois State Commerce
Commission; has been engaged in the publishing and printing business and at
present is vice president of the Calumet Coal Co. of Chicago.
THIRD DISTRICT.—Crity or CHICAGO: Ward 3, precincts 59 to 63, and 70; ward 9, that part of precinct
21 west of South Halsted Street; ward 13, precincts 5 to 54; ward 14, precincts 24 to 42 and 50 to 53;
ward 15, precincts § to 54; ward 16; ward 17, precincts 1 to 52, 55 to 69, and 72 and 73; ward 18; ward
19, precincts 1 to 51, 53 to 65, and 57. Cook CouNTY: Townships of Bloom, Bremen, Calumet, Le-
mont, Orland, Palos, Rich, Thornton, and Worth. Population (1930), 540,666.
EDWARD A. KELLY, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in the city of Chicago,
April 3, 1892; graduated from the Longfellow School, the Lake High School, and
Orr’s Business College; played professional baseball; employed by the Illinois
Steel Co. as accountant; entered the United States Army during the World War,
served in the American Expeditionary Forces in France, honorably discharged
February 28, 1919; organized the real estate and insurance firm of E. A. Kelly
Co., which bears his name; always active in civie and political affairs in his dis-
trict for the past 20 years; was elected president of the thirty-second ward
Democratic organization when only 23 years old; married Miss Rosemary Eulert,
of Lemont, Ill., and is the father of two sons, Edward A. jr., and Robert J.,
7 and 5 years old, respectively; elected to the Seventy-second Congress on Novem-
ber 4, 1930, receiving 82,748 votes, a plurality of 23,384 over KE. W. Sproul,
Republican, who received 59,364 votes; reclected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 2, precincts 95 to 97; ward 3, precinets 64 to 69; ward
i1, precincts 1 to 39 and 55 and 56; ward 12; ward 13, that part of precinct 1 east of Cicero Avenue, and
precincts 2 to 4; ward 14, precincts 1 to 23 and 43 to 49; ward 15, precincts 1 to 4; ward 21, precincts 7
to 11 and 25 to 27; ward 22, that part of precinct 7 south of T'wenty-second Street, and precincts 18 to 20
and 22 to 42; ward 25, precincts 31 and 37 to 40. Population (1930), 237,139.
HARRY P. BEAM, Democrat, of Chicago; born in Peoria, Ill., November 23,
1892; resided in Chicago since he was 7 years of age; was graduated from high
school, St. Ignatius College, and Loyola University; admitted to practice law
in the State of Illinois in 1916; enlisted in the United States Navy during the
World War; served as commander of the Armour Post American Legion; served
as assistant corporation counsel of the city of Chicago, 1923-1927; member of
Chicago Bar Association, Illinois State Bar Association, and American Bar
.Association; married Miss Marge Brown, of Chicago, June, 1921, and they
~ have one daughter, Betty Jane Beam; elected to Seventy-second Congress on
November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 20, precincts 4 to 14 and 33 to 52; ward 21, precincts 1
to 6, 12 to 24, and 28 to 49; ward 22, that part of precinct 7 north of west Twenty-second Street, and
precincts 8 to 13 and 21; ward 24, precincts 13 to 17 and 41 to 47; ward 25, precincts 26 to 30, 32 to 36,
and 41. Population (1930), 140,481.
ADOLPH J. SABATH, Democrat, of Chicago; born April 4, 1866, in Czecho-
slovakia; lawyer; for 12 years judge of the municipal court of Chicago; married
Mae Ruth Fuerst in 1917; member of Masonic bodies and other clubs and organ-
izations of Chicago, Ill.; elected to the Sixtieth and to all subsequent Congresses.
26. Congressional Directory ILLINOIS
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CIty oF CHICAGO: Ward 13, that part of precinct 1 west of Cicero Avenue, and pre-
cinets 55 to 59; ward 20, precincts 1 to 3; ward 22, precincts 1 to 6 and 14 to 17; ward 23; ward 24, pre-
cincts 1 to 12, 18 to 40, and 48 to 53; ward 25, precincts 1 to 25; ward 27, precincts 1 to 43, 61, and 62;
ward 28, precincts 53 to 57; ward 29; ward 30, precincts 21 to 66; ward 37, precincts 46 to 78. COOK
CouNnTY: Townships of Berwyn, Cicero, Lyons, Oak Park, Proviso, River Forest, Riverside, and
Stickney. Population (1930), 632,834. . !
THOMAS J. O'BRIEN, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born April 20, 1878, in
Chicago, Ill.; educated in high school and took advanced courses in business law
and accounting; married Nettie Kaufer, July 15, 1920; was State representative
in the forty-fourth, forty-fifth, fifty-sixth, and fifty-seventh general assemblies;
was State bank examiner under auditors Brady, Russel, and Nelson; associated
in the accounting business with John S. Weisbach & Co.; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress, receiving 164,187 votes, his opponent, Alfred F. Ruben, Republi-
can, receiving 95,637 votes,
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CIity or CHICAGO: Ward 26, precincts 1 to 7; ward 28, precincts 1 to 52; ward
30, precincts 1 to 20; ward 31; ward 82, precincts 1 to 21; ward 33, precincts 1 to 48; wards 34 to 36; ward
37, precincts 1 to 45; wards 38 to 40; ward 41, that part of precinct 1 south of Devon Avenue, and pre-
cinets 2 to 61; ward 45, preeinet 1; ward 47, precincts 1 to 18; ward 50, precincts 52 to 69. Coox COUNTY;
Townships of Barrington, Elk Grove, Hanover, Leyden, Maine, Norwood Park, Palatine, Schaum-
berg, and Wheeling. Population (1930), 889,349.
LEONARD WILLIAM SCHUETZ, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill., was born in
Posen, Germany, now Poland, November 16, 1887; came to Chicago with his
father when 1 year of age; father died when boy was 10 years of age; went
to work at the age of 10; educated himself, public schools (grammar school
high school, and business college); stenographer and secretary for number of
years; later executive position with Swift & Co., Chicago, for 15 years; past
10 years president and treasurer of Schuetz Construction Co., Chicago, general
contractors and builders; elected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third
Congresses.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 20, precincts 15 to 32; ward 26, precincts 8 to 42; ward 27,
precincts 44 to 60; ward 32, precincts 22 to 47; ward 33, precincts 49 to 51. Population (1930), 138,216.
LEO KOCIALKOWSKI, Democrat, of Chicago, Ill.; born in Chicago, August
16, 1882, in the same district which he was elected to represent and where he.
has always lived; orphaned at an early age, he was forced to work for a living
and an education; worked in various capacities in various business houses; for
16 years worked on expert tax appraisals and on delinquent taxes in office of
treasurer of Cook County, Ill.; member of Iroquois Club, Chicago; not married;
delegate to Democratic National Convention at Houston, Tex., 1928; elected
ward committeeman from ward 33, in 1930, and from ward 32, in 1932; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 30,147 votes, and defeating Peter
Granata, Republican, who received 11,625 votes. :
NINTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 42; ward 43, precincts 10 to 42; ward 44, precincts 1 to
45; ward 46, precincts 12 to 59, Population (1930), 209,650.
FRED A. BRITTEN, Republican, of Chicago; was educated in the public
schools and a business college of San Francisco; has been in the general building
construction business in Chicago, doing work in different parts of the United
States since 1894; represented the twenty-third ward in the Chicago City Council
from 1908 to 1912; elected to the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-
sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TENTH DISTRICT.—City oF CHICAGO: Ward 41, that part of precinct 1 north of Devon Avenue;
ward 43, precincts 1 to 9; ward 44, precincts 46 to 56; ward 45, precincts 2 to 61; ward 46, precincts 1 to 11;
ward 47, precincts 19 to 73; wards 48 and 49; ward 50, precincts 1 to 51. C00 County: Townships of
Evanston, New Trier, Niles, and Northfield, LAKE CoUNty. Population (1930), 577,261.
JAMES SIMPSON, Jr., Republican, of Wadsworth, Ill.; born January 7, 1905,
at Chicago, Ill; educated in public and private schools and attended Harvard
University, specializing in courses in government; started farming in 1928, and
is still actively engaged in farm work; married Ella deT. Snelling, of Boston,
Mass., on January 15, 1931; member of the following clubs: Racquet Club of
Chicago, Saddle and Cycle, Tavern, and Shoreacres; elected to the Seventy-third
Congress, receiving 101,671 votes; Charles H. Weber, Democrat, 100,449 votes;
Ralph E. Church, Independent, 45,067 votes, ;
ILLINOIS Biographical 27
Nm DISTRICT =Oouvmiey Du Page, Kane, McHenry, and Will (4 counties). Population
1930), ,136,
FRANK R. REID, Republican, of Aurora, Ill.; president National Rivers and
Harbors Congress; member Committees on Flood Control, Merchant Marine
and Fisheries, and Revision of the Laws; was born at Aurora, Ill., on April 18, 1879;
educated in the Aurora public schools, University of Chicago, and Chicago Col-
lege of Law; admitted to practice law in Illinois in 1901; has been State’s attorney
and county attorney of Kane County; president Illinois State’s Attorneys’
Association, and assistant United States attorney at Chicago; was member of
the house of the Forty-seventh General Assembly of Illinois, and chairman of
the committee on statutory revision; attorney for the Illinois Police Association;
chairman Kane County Republican central committee; secretary League of Illi-
nois Municipalities; married ana has five children; was elected to the Sixty-eighth
Congress; reelected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second,
and Seventy-third Congresses,
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Boone, De Kalb, Grundy, Kendall, La Salle, and Winnebago
(6 counties). Population (1930), 292,023.
JOHN T. BUCKBEE, Republican, of Rockford, was born in Rockford, Ill,
August 1, 1871; son of Theodore E. and Catherine E. Buckbee; received his
education in the Rockford city schools and later took his technical training in
agriculture and horticulture in Austria, France, Holland, Denmark, Sweden,
Belgium, Italy, and Great Britain; is married and has two daughters; president
of the nationally known H. W. Buckbee Seed Co., of Rockford, Ill.; was elected
on November 2, 1926, to the Seventieth Congress; reelected to Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Carroll, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, and Whiteside
(6 counties). Population (1930), 178,198.
LEO ELWOOD ALLEN, Republican, of Galena, Jo Daviess County, Ill., was
born in Elizabeth, Ill., on the 5th day of October, 1898; graduate of Galena High
School and of the University of Michigan, 1923; attorney at law; during World
War served for 27 months in this eountry and in France as sergeant in the One
hundred and twenty-third Regiment Field Artilley, Thirty-third Division; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 44,645 votes, a majority of 9,738 votes
over his Democratic opponent, Orestes H. Wright.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Mercer, Rock Island,
and Warren (6 counties). Population (1930), 199,104.
CHESTER THOMPSON, Democrat, was born in Rock Island, Ill., September
19, 1893, and has lived in that city all his life; his parents were Charles L. and
Susan Miller Thompson, both of whom came from old-established families of the
community, his father having been both an alderman and a member of the
board of supervisors in his own city and county; was educated in the public
and high schools of Rock Island, and upon finishing his education there, in 1910,
became associated with his father in the plastering contracting business, which,
since his father’s death in 1925, he is still conducting under the name of Charles
L. Thompson Son Co.; was elected treasurer of Rock Island County, in 1922, by
an overwhelming majority of about 11,000 votes, in a normal heavy Republican
county; after completing his term in 1926, he temporarily retired from politics,
but early in 1927 was drafted by his friends to become Democratic candidate
for mayor of the city of Rock Island; was successful in this attempt, and was
the first Democratic mayor of his home city in exactly 30 years; was reelected
mayor in 1929 by the largest majority ever given any candidate for that office,
and in 1931 was reelected for the third time with a still greater majority; was
elected a member of the Democratic State central committee, in 1930, from
the fourteenth congressional district, and served during the Democratic State
primary of 1932, not seeking reelection, due to the fact that he became his party’s
candidate for the nomination of Representative in Congress and did not desire
to seek two offices at the same primary; was unopposed in the primary, and all
factions of his party in the district united bebind his candidacy; is the first
Democratic Congressman elected from the fourteenth district in 20 years, being
28 Congressional Directory ILLINOIS
the first Congressman of either party who resided in the city of Rock Island, the
largest city of the district, in exactly 42 years; married Miss Margaret Flynn, of
Davenport, Iowa, in 1924; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 50,277
votes, defeating his Republican opponent, John C. Allen, who received 43,082
votes. :
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUnNTIES: Adams, Fulton, Henry, Knox, and Schuyler (5 courties).
Population (1930), 213,630.
J. LEROY ADAIR, Democrat, of Quincy, Ill., was born at Clayton, Ill., Feb-
ruary 23, 1887; graduated from the Clayton High School; attended Illinois
College, Jacksonville, Ill., and was graduated from the law department of the
University of Michigan in 1911; attorney at law, also interested in farming and
manufacturing; served as city attorney of Quincy, 1914-1916, and as State's
attorney of Adams County, 1916-1920 and 1924-1928; member of the State
Senate, 1928-1932; married; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving
55,739 votes, and Burnett M. Chiperfield, Republican, 42,255 votes.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bureau, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam, Stark, and Tazewell
(6 counties). Population (1930), 253,713.
EVERETT McKINLEY DIRKSEN, Republican, of Pekin, Ill, born at
Pekin, Iil., January 4, 1896; attended the graded and high schools of Pekin and
the University of Minnesota College of Law; served in the United States Army,
1917-1919; married and has one child; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on
November 8, 1932, receiving 67,948 votes, and defeating E. S. Carr, Democrat,
who received 44,902 votes.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Ford, Livingston, Logan, McLean, and Woodford
(5 counties). Population (1930), 175,353. E
FRANK GILLESPIE, Democrat, of Bloomington, Ill.; born at White Sulphur
Springs, W. Va., April 18, 1869; son of James and Henrietta Gillespie; passed
through the grade schools and attended the Concord Normal School at Concord,
W. Va., for two years, and Central College at Danville, Ind., for one year; taught
in the public schools of West Virginia and was principal of the White Sulphur
Springs High School, 1891; studied law in Central College and in the office of
Attorney General Watts at Charleston, W. Va., and was admitted to the bar
there in 1892; and at Bloomington, Ill., in 1894, and since that time has been
steadily engaged in active law practice; served two years in the legislature of the
State of Illinois; owner of a large farm in central Illinois and profoundly interested
in agriculture; known in the State as a trial lawyer and a platform lecturer upon
economic, literary, and historical subjects; elected to the Seventy-third Congress
from the seventeenth Illinois district, November 8, 1932.
EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clark, Cumberland, Edgar, Iroquois, Kankakee, and Ver-
milion (6 counties). Population (1930), 225,604.
JAMES A. MEEKS, Democrat, of Danville, Ill.; born at New Matamoras,
Washington County, Ohio, and brought to Vermilion County, Ill., when 1 year
old; his parents, Moses and Susan Hackathorn Meeks, were pioneers, settling on
a farm 11 miles southeast of Danville, in the neighborhood of McKendree, where
he grew to manhood, getting his training in debate at the lively literary societies
of the Wingard and other schools; attended Westfield College and Illinois College,
from which he received the degree of A. M.; studied law with Judge E. R. EK.
Kimbrough, a leading Democrat of Illinois, and was admitted to the bar, soon
after forming a partnership with Judge Kimbrough; in 1898 married Frances R.
Pearson, of Danville; master in chancery of the circuit court, 1903-1915; cor-
poration counsel of Danville, 1925-1931; chairman of the county unit of the
State council of defense and chairman of the general executive committee in
charge of all war activities in Vermilion County during the World War; was a
delegate to the last four Democratic National Conventions; on the death of the
nominee he was placed on the ticket as a candidate for Representative in August,
1932, carrying every county in his district—something never done before—and
was elected to the Seventy-third Congress. ; :
ILLINOIS Biographical 29
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Champaign, Coles, De Witt, Douglas, Macon, Moultrie,
Piatt, and Shelby (8 counties). Population (1930), 274,137.
DONALD CLAUDE DOBBINS, Democrat, of Champaign, was born near
Dewey, Champaign County, Ill., March 20, 1878; educated at the University of
Illinois and at the George Washington University; lawyer; married; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress, receiving 73,366 votes, to 53,151 votes for Hon. Charles
Adkins, Republican.
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Brown, Calhoun, Cass, Greene, Jersey, Mason, Menard,
Morgan, Pike, and Scott (10 counties). Population (1930), 158,262.
HENRY T. RAINEY, Democrat, of Carrollton; graduated from Amherst
College, Massachusetts, in 1883, with the degree of A. B.; three years later this
institution conferred upon him the degree of A. M. He graduated from the
law department of Northwestern University, Chicago, Ill., in 1885, receiving
the degree of LL. B. Soon afterwards he was admitted to the bar. Received
the degree of LL. D. from Illinois College in 1931 and from Amherst College,
Massachusetts, in 1932. He practiced law after his graduation, but for a num-
ber of years has been engaged in farming, that being now his only occupation.
He was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-
second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-
ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses,
receiving 48,612 votes, to 27,540 votes for William J. Thornton, Republican;
elected Speaker of the House of Representatives, March 9, 1933.
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNties: Christian, Macoupin, Montgomery, and Sangamon
(4 counties). Population (1930), 233,252. J
J. EARL MAJOR, Democrat, of Hillsboro, I1l., born in Montgomery County,
January 5, 1887; served as State’s attorney of Montgomery County from 1912
to 1920; married Ruth Wafer in 1913, and they have two daughters—Dorothy
Jean and Mildred Ruth; served in the Sixty-eighth, Seventieth, and Seventy-
second Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Bond, Madison, Monroe, St. Clair, and Washington
(5 counties). Population (1930), 344,666.
EDWIN MARTIN SCHAEFER, Democrat, of Belleville, I1l.; born May 14,
1887, at Belleville, Ill.; attended public schools of Belleville; graduate of Western
Military Academy, Alton, Ill.; attended University of Illinois for two years, and
was graduated from Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., with degree of chemi-
cal engineer; married Lorene Kohl, of Belleville, and they have two children—
Edwin M., jr., and Martin W.; member of the Elks; superintendent of plants,
Morris & Co., 1918-1928; chairman of the Democratic county committee of St.
Clair, I11., in 1928 and 1932; elected treasurer of St. Clair County in 1930; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 88,151 votes and defeating Stewart
Campbell, Republican, who received 49,965 votes.
TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Clinton, Crawford, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Jefferson,
Lawrence, Marion, Richland, and Wabash (10 counties). Population (1930), 213,567.
WILLIAM W. ARNOLD, Democrat, of Robinson, was born at Oblong, Craw-
ford County, Ill., October 14, 1877; lived on a farm until 18 years of age; at-
tended Austin College, Effingham, and the University of Illinois, graduating
from the latter institution in 1901 with the degree of LL. B.; admitted to the
practice of law by the Supreme Court of Illinois in October, 1901, and was en-
gaged in the general practice of law in Robinson until elected to Congress; married
in 1909 to Kate Wheeler Busey, of Urbana, and has two children— William Busey,
born October 15, 1911, and Mary Alice, born October 10, 1913; elected to the
Sixty-eighth Congress, reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Clay, Edwards, Gallatin, Hamilton, Hardin, Johnson,
Massac, Pope, Saline, Wayne, and White (11 counties). Population (1930), 161,158.
CLAUDE V. PARSONS, Democrat, of Golconda, Pope County, Ill.; elected to
fill vacancy in Seventy-first Congress; elected to Seventy-second and Seventy-
third Congresses.
30 Congressional Directory INDIANA
TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT. -CouNTIiES: Alexander, Franklin, Jackson, Perry, Pulaski, Randolph,
..» Union, and Williamson (8 counties). Population (1930), 258,341. : ;
KENT ELLSWORTH KELLER, Democrat; born on farm near Ava, IIL;
attended country school and was graduated from Southern Illinois Normal
University, Carbondale, class of 1890; owned and edited the Ava Advertiser;
taught school; founded Ava Community High School; read law; studied in
Heidelberg University; completed law course, St. Louis Law School, passed
bar examination, Mount Vernon, at head of class of 73; practiced one short
year; had tuberculosis very seriously and was compelled to give up law; went
to Mexico; lived outdoors four years; regained health fully; mined there 12 years
successfully; revolutions came and persisted; came home February, 1912; elected
to State senate, forty-fourth district, November, 1912, in largely Republican
district; put forward and accomplished constructive program of legislation; cam-
paigned over 28 States under Democratic National Committee; elected to the
Seventy-second Congress, November 4, 1930, in a district normally overwhelm-
ingly Republican, as the result of a program for the permanent solution of the
unemployment problem; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by the largest
majority ever given a candidate for Congress from the twenty-fifth district.
INDIANA
(Population (1930), 3,238,503)
SENATORS
ARTHUR R. ROBINSON, Republican, Indianapolis, Ind.; born March 12,
1881, at Pickerington, Ohio; graduate Ohio Northern University, University of
Chicago, Indiana Law School; member of American, Indiana State, and Indian-
apolis Bar Associations; thirty-third degree Mason; State senator, Indiana, 1914—
1918; Republican floor leader and president pro tempore; enlisted first officers’
training camp, Fort Benjamin Harrison, May 10, 1917; first lieutenant and cap-
tain, Three hundred and thirty-fourth and Thirty-ninth Regiments Infantry;
promoted to major, Infantry, overseas; judge, superior court, Indianapolis,
Ind.; delegate to Republican National Conventions, 1924 and 1932; entered
United States Senate, by appointment, October 20, 1925; elected, November 2,
1926, for the term ending March 3, 1929; reelected November 6, 1928, for term
expiring in 1935.
FREDERICK VAN NUYS, Democrat, of Indianapolis, Ind.; born at Fal-
mouth, Ind., April 16, 1874, the son of David H. and Katharine (Custer) Van
Nuys; lawyer; Ph. B. from Earlham College, 1898; LL. B. from Indiana Law
School, Indianapolis, 1900; began practice of law at Shelbyville, Ind., 1900;
prosecuting attorney of Madison County, 1906-1910; member of the Indiana
Senate, 1913-1916; president pro tempore of State senate, 1915; chairman of the
Democratic State committee, 1917-18; United States attorney for the district
of Indiana, 1920-1922; married Marie Krug, and they have one son, William
Van Nuys; member of American, Indiana, and Indianapolis Bar Associations;
elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1932, receiving 870,053
votes, to 661,750 for James E, Watson, Republican incumbent.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—County: Lake. Population (1930), 261,310.
WILLIAM THEODORE SCHULTE, Democrat, of Hammond, Ind.; born
at St. Bernard, Nebr., August 19, 1890; graduated from high school and attended
business-training school; engaged in the theatrical profession; married; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 45,473 votes, and defeating Oscar A.
Ahlgren, Republican, who received 42,575 votes.
i i
|
INDIANA Biographical 31
SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Benton, Carroll, Cass, Fulton, Jasper, Kosciusko, Marshall, New-
ton, Porter, Pulaski, Starke, Tippecanoe, and White (13 counties). Population (1930), 260,287.
GEORGE R. DURGAN, Democrat, of La Fayette, Ind., was born January
20, 1872, in West Point, Tippecanoe County, Ind.; educated in the village school;
married, but has no children; merchant; served five terms as mayor of La Fayette;
elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 73,357 votes, and defeating Will R.
Wood, Republican, who received 61,897 votes.
THIRD DISTRICT. Cournes: Elkhart, La Porte, and St. Joseph (3 counties). Population (1930),
9,398. EA
SAMUEL B. PETTENGILL, Democrat, of South Bend, Ind., was born
January 19, 1886, at Portland, Oreg.; spent his boyhood on a farm in Grafton,
Vt.; worked his way through school and college; graduated from Vermont
Academy, Saxtons River, Vt., in 1904; from Middlebury College, Middlebury,
Vt., in 1908, with degree of A. B.; from Yale Law School, New Haven, Conn.,
in 1911, with degree of LL. B.; came to South Bend, Ind., in 1911, where he
has since engaged in the practice of law; married, June 1, 1912, to Josephine
H. Campbell, of Napoleon, Ohio, whose father, Hon. W. W. Campbell, of Ohio,
was a member of the Fifty-ninth Congress; has one daughter, Susan; member
of St. Joseph County, State, and American Bar Associations; member of board
of education, city of South Bend, 1925-1928; elected to the Seventy-second
Congress over Andrew J. Hickey; an uncle, Hon. W. H. Clagett, was a Dele-
gate from the Territory of Montana to the Forty-second Congress, and was
author of the bill for creation of Yellowstone Natioral Park; reelected over
Anew J. Hickey to Seventy-third Congress to represent new third Indiana
istrict. :
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Allen, De Kalb, Lagrange, Noble, Steuben, Wells, and
Whitley (8 counties). Population (1930), 275,523.
JAMES I. FARLEY, Democrat, of Auburn, Ind.; born on a farm near Hamil-
ton, Ind., on February 24, 1871; educated in the public schools of Hamilton and
the Tri-State College of Angola; began business career with the Studebaker Cor-
poration, of South Bend; following this was identified, for 18 years, with the
Auburn Automobile Co., manufacturers, as salesman, succeeding to the positions
of sales manager, vice president, and president, retiring from the latter position
in 1926; was the voting member of the Auburn Automobile Co. in the National
Automobile Chamber of Commerce of New York for 12 years, during which time
was also a member of their national legislative committee; has been looking after
his personal interests, including farm lands, since 1926; never held public office;
elected delegate to the Democratic National Convention, at Houston, Tex., in
1928; married Miss Lotta M. Gramling, and they have three sons and two
daughters; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Blackford, Clinton, Grant, Howard, Huntington, Jay, Miami, Tipton,
and Wabash (9 counties). Population (1930), 258,037.
GLENN GRISWOLD, Democrat, of Peru, Ind.; born January 20, 1890;
lawyer; married November 27, 1913, to Edith Olivia Connally; city attorney
of Peru 1922-1925; prosecuting attorney of Miami County 1926-27; member
Indiana Railroad Commission 1930; elected to the Seventy-second Congress;
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Boone, Fountain, Hamilton, Hendricks, Montgomery, Parke, Putnam,
Vermilion, Vigo, and Warren (10 counties). Population (1930), 278,685.
VIRGINIA ELLIS JENCKES, Democrat; born in Terre Haute, Ind.; attended
Terre Haute grade and high schools; has been a resident of Terre Haute ever
since; paternal ancestors have lived{in Vincennes, Ind., for four generations;
among them was Judge Henry Vander Burg; married Ray Greene Jenckes, 1912,
who died October 29, 1921; has one daughter, Miss Virginia Ray Jenckes; is
secretary of the Wabash Maumee Valley Improvement Association, whose
objectives are navigation, canalization, irrigation, drainage, and flood control of
the Wabash-Maumee area; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, defeating
Courtland C. Gillen, Democrat in office, in primary, and Fred S. Purnell, Republi-
can in office, in the general election. ;
32 Congressional Directory INDIANA
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Clay, Daviess, Gibson, Greene, Johnson, Knox, Martin, Monroe,
“Morgan, Owen, and Sullivan (11 counties). Population (1930), 283,498,
ARTHUR H. GREENWOOD, Democrat, of Washington, was born on a farm
in Steele Township, Daviess County, Ind., January 31, 1880, son of Richard H.
and Eliza J. Greenwood; educated in country schools, Washington High School,
graduating in 1898, and is a graduate of the Indiana University Law School,
Bloomington, class of 1905, degree LL. B.; LL. M. degree George Washington
University, 1925; practiced law in Washington, Ind., since 1905; helped to or-
ganize and was cashier of a successful building and loan association for 18 years;
was county attorney of Daviess County, Ind., for four years; served on Wash-
ington Board of Education six years; served as State’s attorney for the forty-
ninth judicial circuit of Indiana; married Netty B. Small, of Linton, Ind., and
has a family of three children—Ruth, Joseph Richard, and Robert L.; member of
the Baptist Church; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, and Seventy-second Congresses; was caucus chairman of Democratic Party
for the Seventieth Congress; member from the House on George Rogers Clark
Memorial Commission; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Harrison, Perry, Pike, Posey, Spencer,
Vanderburg, and Warrick (10 counties). Population (1930), 281,724.
JOHN WILLIAM BOEHNE, Jr., Democrat, of Evansville, Ind.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bartholomew, Brown, Clark, Dearborn, Franklin, Jackson, Jefferson,
Jennings, Lawrence, Ohio, Orange, Ripley, Scott, Switzerland, and Washington (15 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 257,311.
EUGENE B. CROWE, Democrat, of Bedford, was born in Clark County,
January 5, 1878; reared on a farm in Washington County; schooled in rural
schools and attended academy at Borden, Ind.; taught in county schools; moved
to Bedford, Ind.; engaged in retail furniture business; married Daisy B. Fleenor,
and they have one son, Barney G. Crowe; affiliated with Methodist Episcopal
Church; charter member Bedford Rotary Club; member Benevolent and Pro-
tective Order of Elks, Knights of Pythias, Loyal Order of Moose, and Bedford
Country Club; vice president of Salvation Army Board; vice president of Stone
City Bank; also director of Bedford Rural Loan & Savings Association and of
American Security Co.; past president of Bedford Chamber of Commerce; inter-
ested in farming and banking; member of Democratic State Central committee,
1924-1930; alternate delegate at large for Senator Thomas Taggart at Demo-
cratic National Convention, Houston, Tex., 1928; elected to the Seventy-second
Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress from the new ninth district.
TENTH BDISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Decatur, Delaware, Fayette, Henry, Randolph, Rush, Shelby,
Union, and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1930), 270,571.
FINLY H. GRAY, Democrat, of Connersville, Ind.; born July 24, 1864, in
Fayette County, Ind.; obtained common school education only; began the study
and practice of law alone in Connersville, in 1893; married to Alice M. Green
in 1901; elected mayor of Connersville in 1904, and reelected in 1909; elected a
Member of the Sixty-seeond, Sixty-third, and Sixty-fourth Congresses from the
sixth Indiana congressional district, and again elected in 1932 a Member of the
Seventy-third Congress from the tenth Indiana district.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Hancock and Madison. Marion: Townships of Franklin,
Lawrence, Perry, and Warren, and wards 1, 9, and 10 of city of Indianapolis, with land unincorporated
lying east and south of wards 1, 9, and 10 in Center township. Population (1930), 255,898.
WILLIAM HENRY LARRABEE, Democrat, of New Palestine, Hancock
County, Ind., was born on a farm in Montgomery County, Ind., February 21,
1870; son of Thomas W. and Anna Laura McNamara Larrabee; educated in
public schools, State Normal at Terre Haute, Ind., Central Normal at Danville,
Ind., and Indiana University Sehool of Medicine, Indianapolis, Ind.; taught in
public school six years; physician and surgeon in active practice in New Palestine,
Ind., 33 years; married Audrey Mae Rupkey, November 14, 1907, Indianapolis,
Ind.; member of the Christian Church and National, State, and county medical
societies; thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, Scottish Rite and York Rite
Mason; member of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, Odd Fellows, Knights of
Pythias, Improved Order of Red Men, Indiana Democratic Club, and Greenfield
IOWA Biographical 33
Country Club; elected a member of the city council in 1916; appointed secretary
of county board of health in 1917; elected a representative in the Indiana General
Assembly in 1923; elected to the Seventy-second Congress, and was reelected to
the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, to represent the new eleventh
Indiana district.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—MARION CoUNTY: All except wards 1, 9, and 10 of city of Indianapolis, with
land unincorporated lying east and south of wards 1, 9, and 10 in Center township, and townships of
Franklin, Lawrence, Perry, and Warren. Population (1930), 266,261.
LOUIS LUDLOW, Democrat, of Indianapolis; born on a farm in Fayette
County, Ind., June 24, 1873; when 18 years of age went to Indianapolis to get
work on a newspaper; first employed as reporter on Indianapolis Sun; in 1896,
when a reporter on the Indianapolis Sentinel, married Katherine Huber, society
editor of the same newspaper, and they have four children—Margery, Blanche,
Virginia, and Louis; Washington correspondent of Indianapolis newspapers from
"1901 to 1913 and for Columbus Dispatch since 1913; author of From Cornfield to
Press Gallery, an autobiography; In the Heart of Hoosierland, a story of the
Indiana pioneers; Senator Solomon Spiffledink, a satire on political bunkum; and
America Go Bust, an exposé of governmental bureaucracy; Methodist trustee;
member of Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Delta Chi (national newspaper fra-
ternity) and Society of The Indiana Pioneers; also member and former president
of National Press Club; elected to Seventy-first and Seventy-second Congresses,
and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress. Representative Ludlow was the
first newspaper correspondent in the history of the country to go directly from
the Press Gallery to a seat in Congress.
IOWA
(Population (1930), 2,470,939)
SENATORS
L. J. DICKINSON, Republican, of Algona, Iowa, was born in Lucas County,
Towa, October 29, 1873; descendant of Nathaniel Dickinson, of Hadley, who
settled in Massachusetts in 1630; graduate, Cornell College, Iowa, B. S., 1898,
State University of Iowa, LL. B., 1899; admitted Iowa bar 1899; located in
Algona, Towa, 1899; married, August 21, 1901, to Miss Myrtle Call; two children—
L. Call and Ruth A.; served as county attorney of Kossuth County two terms;
committeeman tenth Iowa district on Republican State central committee, 1914—
1918; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seven-
tieth, and Seventy-first Congresses; elected to the United States Senate on
November 4, 1930; his term of service will expire in 1937. Temporary chairman
Republican National Convention, Chicago, 1932. A lifelong Republican.
LOUIS MURPHY, Democrat, of Dubuque, Iowa; born there November 6,
1875, and since then a continuous resident; third of eight children of John S. (de-
ceased) and Ann Murphy, the former a newspaper editor; educated in public
grade and high schools; newspaper reporter and editor for 20 years; collector of
internal revenue for Iowa 8 years, 1913-1920; income-tax counselor 11 years;
married in 1917 to Ellen Emma McGuire; five children—Charles, Mary, Elinor
Ann, Imelda, and Ellen; nominated in Democratic primary on June 6, 1932, in a
field of five, and elected to 6-year term in the United States Senate on November
8, 1932, receiving 538,422 votes, to 399,929 for Henry Field, Republican, and
43,174 for Senator Smith W. Brookhart, Progressive.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTties: Cedar, Des Moines, Henry, Iowa, Jefferson, Johnson, Lee, Louisa,
Muscatine, Van Buren, and Washington (11 counties). Population (1930), 251,084.
EDWARD CLAYTON EICHER, Democrat, of Washington, Iowa, was born
December 16, 1878, on a farm near Noble, Washington County, Iowa; graduated
from the University of Chicago in June, 1905, receiving the degree of Ph. B.;
admitted to the Towa bar in 1906 and the Illinois bar in 1907; member of Alpha
157297°—73-1—1ST ED——4
34 Congressional Directory 10WA
Delta Phi college fraternity and Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity; lawyer; married
on August 19, 1908, to Hazel Mount; member of governor’s commission to take
Towa soldiers’ vote, 1918; member Washington County, Iowa State, and American
Bar Associations; delegate to Democratic National Convention, 1932; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 55,378 votes, over W. F. Kopp, Repub-
lican, who received 46,738 votes, A. W. Saarman, Socialist, who received 1,122
votes, and F. Jackson, Communist, who received 41 votes.
SECOND DISTRICT.—Counrties: Clinton, Dubuque, Jackson, Jones, Linn, and Scott (6 counties).
Population (1930), 302,946.
BERNHARD MARTIN JACOBSEN, Democrat, of Clinton, Iowa, was born
in Germany, March 26, 1862, son of Boh and Magdelena Jacobsen; moved with
his parents to Clinton when he was 14 years of age; was employed in a brickyard,
sawmill, and later in a mercantile establishment; May 28, 1885, married Miss
Lena Trager, of Clinton, and they have five children— William S., Mrs. Alma Cal-
lender, Alvina, Marvin J., and Mrs. Bernice Soenksen; appointed postmaster
of Clinton by President Wilson in 1914 and served until 1923; president of the
Clinton Thrift Co., which he organized in 1927; director of the City National
Bank; is a thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason, an Odd Fellow, Elk, Eagle,
and a charter member of both the Turner Society and the Clinton Rotary Club;
Lutheran; on November 4, 1930, was elected to the Seventy-second Congress,
having a majority of 5,895 votes over his Republican opponent, F. Dickinson
Letts; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Black Hawk, Bremer, Butler, Franklin, Grundy, Hardin,
Marshall, Tama, and Wright (10 counties). Population (1930), 256,052.
ALBERT CLINTON WILLFORD, Democrat, of Waterloo, Black Hawk
County, Iowa; born September 21, 1877, at Vinton, Benton County, Iowa;
attended country and town schools, and for a short time Tilford’s Academy, at
Vinton; never graduated from any school only the school of hard knocks; served
as chief engineer of the electric light, power, and water company at Vinton for
8 years; moved to Waterloo in 1906; built and operated an artificial-ice
plant for 3 years; and for the last 25 years has been engaged in the seed,
feed, and coal business; was public-library trustee for 12 years; served on the
Black Hawk County jury commission for 6 years; president of the Iowa Sta-
tionary Engineers for 1 year; served 2 years as president of the Izaak Wal-
ton League of America for Iowa, and has been a National and State director
of the Izaak Walton League for 10 years; president of the Waterloo Baseball Club
for 4 years; member of the A. F. and A. M., thirty-second degree Mason; presi-
dent of the Consistory Club at Waterloo for 1 year; on the court of honor for
the Boy Scouts of America for 15 years, and an active member of that organiza-
tion since its inception in Iowa; married Miss Edna Tharp, September 15, 1898,
and has one son, Berl C. Willford, and one grandson, Berl C. Willford, jr.; on
November 8, 1932, was elected Representative to the Seventy-third Congress,
receiving 48,939 votes; T. J. B. Robinson, Republican, 47,776; am serving my
first term in any elective office; am not a politician, but am in politics—I believe
in a new deal. :
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Allamakee, Buchanan, Cerro Gordo, Chickasaw, Clayton, Dela-
ware, Fayette, Floyd, Howard, Mitchell, Winneshiek, and Worth (12 counties). Population (1930),
240,282. J
FRED BIERMANN, Democrat, of Decorah, Iowa, was born March 20, 1884,
at Rochester, Minn.; graduated from the Decorah High School in 1901; attended
the University of Minnesota for three years; graduated from Columbia Univer.
sity with a bachelor of arts degree in 1905; attended Valder’s Business College
in Decorah in 1906 and Harvard Law School 1907-8; editor and publisher of the
Decorah Journal, 1908-1931; married Miss Adel Rygg, January 25, 1930; during
the World War was a volunteer in the United States Army and served from May,
1917, until June, 1919; of this period 10 months was spent overseas as first lieu-
tenant in the Eighty-eighth Division; postmaster at Decorah, 1913-1923; park
commissioner at Decorah, 1923-1933; for about 20 years was chairman of the
Democratic central committee of Winneshiek County, and for 8 years was a
member of the Democratic State central committee; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving 62,598 votes; his opponent, G. N.
Haugen, Republican, received 42,290 votes.
OWA Biographical 35
FIFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: A ppanoose, Clarke, Davis, Decatur, Jasper, Keokuk, Lucas, Mahaska,
© Monroe, Poweshiek, Ringgold, Union, Wapello, and Wayne (14 counties). Population (1930), 271,679.
LLOYD THURSTON, Republican, of Osceola; born in Clarke County, Towa
March 27, 1880; served in Spanish-American, Philippine, and World Wars;
married; graduate of State University of Towa, 1902; prosecuting attorney
Clarke County four years; State senator four years; elected to sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, from the old eighth
congressional district; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the new fifth
congressional district.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Dallas, Madison, Marion, Polk, Story, and Warren (6 counties).
Population (1930), 287,229. :
CASSIUS C. DOWELL, Republican, of Des Moines; born near Summerset,
Warren County, Iowa; attended the public schools, the Baptist College, Des
Moines, Iowa, Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa, was graduated from the liberal
arts department, Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa, in 1886, and from the
law department of Drake University in 1887, receiving the degree of LL.B.; was
admitted to the bar in 1888 at Des Moines, Iowa, and practiced law in Des
Moines until elected to Congress in 1915; was a member of the Iowa House of
Representatives, 1894-1898, and was elected speaker pro tempore of the house;
served in the State senate, 1902-1912; member of Loyal Order of Moose, Modern
Woodmen of America, Maccabees, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Masons,
Grotto, Consistory, Mystic Shrine, Delta Theta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa, and the
University Church of Christ; married Miss Belle I. Riddle, of Des Moines, Iowa;
elected as a Representative to the Sixty-fourth Congress and to each succeeding
Congress, including the Seventy-third.
SEVENTH BDISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adair, Adams, Audubon, Cass, Fremont, Guthrie, Harrison,
i Montgomery, Page, Pottawattamie, Shelby, and Taylor (13 counties). Population (1930),
74,163.
OTHA D. WEARIN, Democrat, of Hastings, Iowa; born on a farm near
Hastings on January 10, 1903; attended country school, graduating from Tabor
Academy in 1920, and receiving B. A. degree from Grinnell College in 1924;
prior to and since 1924 has been associated with his father in farm work; elected
treasurer of Wearin rural school district in 1926; always been active in farm
organization work; delegate to Iowa State Democratic conventions of 1924, 1926,
1928, and 1930; assistant secretary of Iowa Democratic convention, 1928;
temporary chairman, keynoter, and permanent chairman of Iowa State Demo-
cratic judicial convention, 1930; elected to Iowa State Legislature in 1928 and
reelected in 1930; assistant floor leader of minority party in forty-fourth General
Assembly of Towa; appointed by Governor of Iowa as a delegate to the Inter-
national Mid-West Aeronautics convention in Minneapolis, 1930; while abroad
in 1927 studied farm production and did research work in the International
Institute of Agriculture in Rome; author of An Towa Farmer Abroad; editor of
weekly syndicate An Iowa Farmer in Foreign Fields, and coeditor of weekly
syndicate New Roads in Old Mexico; staff contiibutor to Wallace’s Farmer;
member of Towa State Historical Society, Valley Forge Historical Society;
Grinnell Alumne, and farm organizations; elected to the Seventy-third Congress,
having a majority of 12,878 votes over Charles EE. Swanson, Republican.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Boone, Calhoun, Carroll, Crawford, Emmet, Greene, Hamilton,
Hancock, Humboldt, Kossuth, Palo Alto, Pocahontas, Webster, and Winnebago (14 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 278,701.
FRED C. GILCHRIST, Republican, of Laurens, Towa; educated in common
schools and at Iowa State Teachers College; superintendent town schools;
county superintendent; completed law course State University of Iowa; lawyer;
president school board; member lower house in legislature; member State senate;
married; three children; elected to Seventy-second Congress and reelected to
Seventy-third Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Buena Vista, Cherokee, Clay, Dickinson, Ida, Lyon, Monona,
O’Brien, Osceola, Plymouth, Sac, Sioux, and Woodbury 3 counties). Population (1930), 308,798.
GUY MARK GILLETTE, Democrat, of Cherokee, Iowa, was born there on
February 3, 1879; attended high school at Cherokee and was graduated from
36 Congressional Directory KANSAS
Drake University, Des Moines, with LL. B. degree in 1900; admitted to the bar in
1900 and commenced practice in Cherokee, Iowa; is also interested in agricultural
pursuits; served as prosecuting attorney of Cherokee County, 1907-1909; member
of the State senate, 1912-1916; served as sergeant in the Spanish-American
War and as captain of Infantry during the World War; married Miss Rose
Freeman in 1907, and they have one son 4 years old; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving 61,755 votes, to 50,796 votes for
Ed H. Campbell, Republican.
KANSAS
(Population (1930), 1,880,999)
SENATORS
ARTHUR CAPPER, Republican, of Topeka, was born in Garnett, Anderson
County, Kans., July 14, 1865; received his education in the common schools and
high school of Garnett; learned the printing trade on the Garnett Journal; went
to Topeka in 1884 and secured work as typesetter on the Topeka Daily Capital, of
which he is now owner and publisher; later became a reporter on this paper and
then city editor; in 1891 went to New York and was a reporter on the New York
Tribune, and in 1892 was in Washington as special correspondent; in 1893 started
in business for himself by purchasing the North Topeka Mail, a weekly paper,
which he afterwards combined with the Kansas Breeze; a few years later he
purchased the Topeka Daily Capital and other publications; was president of
board of regents Kansas State Agricultural College from 1910 to 1913; was
elected Governor of Kansas in 1914 and again in 1916; elected United States
Senator at the general election November 5, 1918; reelected November 4, 1924,
the popular vote being: Arthur Capper, Republican, 428,494; James Malone,
Democrat, 154,189; S. O. Coble, Socialist; 5,340, Fred J. Fraley, Independent,
23,266; reelected November 4, 1930; married Florence Crawford (deceased),
daughter of former Gov. Samuel J. Crawford.
GEORGE McGILL, Democrat, of Wichita, Kans., was born February 12, 1879,
in Lucas County, Iowa, and taken by his parents to Kansas in 1884; educated
in the common schools and the Central Normal College of Great Bend, Kans.;
studied law, and on June 2, 1902, was admitted to the bar at Great Bend, Kans.;
practiced law in Wichita since June, 1904; deputy county attorney of Sedgwick
County from 1907 to 1911, and county attorney from 1911 to 1915; temporary
chairman of the Kansas State Democratic Convention in 1924; a delegate at
large from Kansas to the Democratic National Convention in 1928; on Novem-
ber 4, 1930, was elected to the United States Senate for the unexpired term
ending March 3, 1933, caused by the resignation of Charles Curtis; on November
8, 1932, was reelected to the full 6-year term beginning March 4, 1933.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Atchison, Brown, Doniphan, Jackson, Jefferson, Leavenworth, Mar-
shall, Nemaha, Shawnee, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1930), 273,849.
WILLIAM PURNELL LAMBERTSON, Republican, farmer, of Fairview,
Brown County, Kans.; born there March 23, 1880; son of a Civil War veteran;
married, 1908, Floy Thompson, of Republic, Kans.; four children; member of
Kansas House of Representatives, four terms; speaker pro tempore and speaker;
member of Kansas Senate; on State board of administration, board of directors
of National Farmers Union; elected to Seventy-first and Seventy-second Con-
gresses and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress with majority of 25,000.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Allen, Anderson, Bourbon, Douglas, Franklin, Johnson, Linn,
Miami, and Wyandotte (9 counties). Population (1930), 307,466.
ULYSSES SAMUEL GUYER, Republican, Victory Highway, Kansas City,
Wyandotte County, Kans.; born in Lee County, Ill.; son of Rev. Joseph and
Sarah (Lewis) Guyer; attended Lane University, Lecompton, Kans., Western
College, Toledo, Iowa, Kansas University Law School, and Kansas City School
KANSAS Biographical 37
of Law; degrees from Western College, Coe College, of Cedar Rapids, Towa, and
Kansas City School of Law; married Della Alforetta Daugherty, of Yankton,
S. Dak., January 15, 1919; principal of St. John High School and superintend-
ent of schools at St. John, Kans., 1897-1901; admitted to bar at Kansas City,
Kans., 1902; elected judge of city court, 1907-1909; elected mayor of Kansas
City, Kans., 1909-10; member American Bar Association; Scottish Rite Mason;
practiced law in Kansas City, Kans., since 1902; elected to Sixty-eighth Con-
gress to fill unexpired term of the late Hon. E. C. Little, November 4, 1924;
reelected to the Seventieth Congress November 2, 1926, to the Seventy-first
Congress November 6, 1928, to the Seventy-second Congress November 4, 1930,
and to the Seventy-third Congress November 8, 1932,
THIRD DISTRICT.—Counmies: Chautauqua, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Labette, Mont~
gomery, Neosho, and Wilson (9 counties). Population (1930), 265,319.
HAROLD McGUGIN, Republican, of Coffeyville, Kans.; born on a farm near
Liberty, Montgomery County, Kans., November 22, 1893; attended public schools
Liberty, Kans., high school, Coffeyville, Kans., law school, Washburn College,
Topeka, Kans., and Inns of Court, London, England; admitted to Kansas bar in
1914; practiced law since admission to bar at Coffeyville, Kans.; with American
Army in France from December, 1917, to July, 1919, second lieutenant, Adjutant
General’s Department, personnel adjutant Base Section No. 5, at Brest, France;
member of Kansas Legislature, 1927; city attorney, Coffeyville, Kans., 1929;
mayrried to Nell Bird, of Waldron, Ark., February 27, 1921; member of American
Legion, Department of Kansas, I. O. O. F., and B. P. O. E.; elected in 1930 to
represent the third district of Kansas in United States House of Representa-
tives in the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress;
vote in 1932 election: Harold McGugin, Republican, 52,881; E. W. Patterson,
Democrat, 44,910; majority, 7,971.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Chase, Clay, Coffey, Dickinson, Geary, Greenwood, Lyon, Marion,
Years, Osage, Pottawatomie, Riley, Wabaunsee, and Woodson (14 counties). Population (1930),
229,10
RANDOLPH CARPENTER, Democrat, of Marion, Kans.; born at Marion,
April 24, 1894; educated in the common and high schools of Marion; graduated
from the department of law of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, with
degree of bachelor of laws, in 1917, and admitted to the bar of the State of Kansas
in that year; attorney at law and owner of farm land; married Helen Frances
Williams, at Marion, Kans., July 15, 1920, and they have two children—Jeanne
Antoinette, born February 26, 1929, and William Randolph, born May 30,
1932; organized Company M, Third Regiment Kansas Infantry, Kansas National
Guards; second lieutenant in Kansas National Guards, and later being trans-
ferred to Company M, One hundred and thirty-ninth Infantry, Thirty-fiftth Divi-
sion, and promoted to first lieutenant during the Argonne offensive; member of
the board of education of the city of Marion; elected to the Kansas legislature in
1928 and 1930; elected a Member of the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 45,246
votes, and defeating Homer Hoch, Republican, who received 44,621 votes.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Butler, Harvey, McPherson, Sedgwick, and Sumner (5 counties).
; Population (1930), 246,902.
W. A. AYRES, Democrat, of Wichita, Kans., was born at Elizabethtown, IlL.;
moved to Sedgwick County, Kans., in 1881; was admitted to the bar in 1893;
married; has three daughters; was elected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-
sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventiesh, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second
Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Cheyenne, Cloud, Decatur, Ellis, Ellsworth, Gove, Graham, Jewell,
Lincoln, Logan, Mitchell, Norton, Osborne, Ottawa, Phillips, Rawlins, Republic, Rooks, Russell,
Saline, Sheridan, Sherman, Smith, Thomas, Trego, and Wallace (26 counties). Population (1930),
275,301.
KATHRYN O'LOUGHLIN McCARTHY, Democrat, of Hays, Kans.; born
April 24, 1894, at Hays, Kans.; graduate of Hays High School, the State Teachers
College, Hays, Kans., with degree of bachelor of science in education, and the
University of Chicago Law School, with degree of doctor of jurisprudence;
38 Congressional Directory KENTUCKY
attorney; member of Kansas Legislature, 1931; married; on November 8, 1932,
was elected a Member of the Seventy-third Congress, the vote being, Kathryn
O’Loughlin, 62,818; Charles I. Sparks, Republican, 50,242.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounmEes: Barber, Barton, Clark, Comanche, Edwards, Finney, Ford
Grant, Gray, Greeley, Hamilton, Harper, Haskell, Hodgeman, Kearny, Kingman, Kiowa, Lane,
Meade, Morton, Ness, Pawnee, Pratt, Reno, Rice, Rush, Scott, Seward, Stafford, Stanton, Stevens,
and Wichita (32 counties). Population (1930), 283,054.
CLIFFORD R. HOPE, Republican, of Garden City, Kans.; born at Birming-
ham, Iowa, June 9, 1893; has been a resident of Finney County, Kans:, since 1906;
attended Nebraska Wesleyan University, Lincoln, Nebr.; graduate of Washburn
Law School, Topeka, Kans., 1917; admitted to Kansas bar same year; attended
first officers’ training camp, Fort Riley, Kans.; served with the Thirty-fifth and
Eighty-fifth Divisions in the United States and France; member of Kansas House
of Representatives, 1921-1927; speaker pro tempore, 1923; speaker, 1925;
married Pauline E. Sanders, of Topeka, Kans., January 8, 1921; three children—
Edward Sanders (deceased), Clifford R. Hope, jr., and Martha; Presbyterian;
Scottish Rite Mason; Elk; also member American Legion; elected to Seventieth,
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
KENTUCKY
(Population (1930), 2,614,589)
SENATORS
ALBEN WILLIAM BARKLEY, Democrat, of Paducah, Ky., was born in
Graves County, Ky., November 24, 1877; educated in the county schools and in
Marvin College, Clinton, Ky., graduating there in 1897, receiving A. B. degree,
afterwards attending Emory College at Oxford, Ga., and the University of
Virginia Law School at Charlottesville, Va.; is a lawyer by profession, havin
been admitted to the bar at Paducah, Ky., in 1901; was married June 23, 1903,
to Miss Dorothy Brower, of Paducah, Ky., and has three children; was elected
prosecuting attorney for McCracken County, Ky., in 1905 for a term of four
years; at expiration of term was elected judge of the McCracken County court
and served until elected to Congress; was elected to the Sixty-third and all
succeeding Congresses; was chairman State Democratic conventions at Louisville,
Ky., 1919, and at Lexington, Ky., May, 1924; was delegate at large to Demo-
cratic National Conventions at San Francisco in 1920, at New York in 1924, and
at Houston in 1928; elected to United States Senate from Kentucky for term
beginning March 4, 1927; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1933.
MARVEL MILLS LOGAN, Democrat, of Bowling Green, Ky., was born in
Edmonson County, near Brownsville, on January 7, 1875; educated in public and
private schools; taught school for four years, two of which were in a teachers
training college; served as a member of county board of examiners for teachers’
certificates; was admitted to the bar in 1896 at the age of 21; elected chairman of
the Democratic county executive committee of his county on the day he was
21 years of age; practiced law at Brownsville until January 1, 1912; was married
to Miss Della Haydon, of Glasgow Junction, Ky., September 25, 1896, and has
four children; elected chairman of the board of trustees of the town of Browns-
ville in 1897; elected county attorney of Edmonson County in 1901 and served
two years; second assistant attorney general of Kentucky, 1912-13, and first
assistant attorney general, 1914-15; nbminated for the office of attorney general
in Kentucky in 1915 without opposition, and was elected and served until
June 1, 1917, when he resigned; appointed chairman of the first State tax com-
mission of Kentucky to put into effect a new system of taxation, which had been
adopted at a special session of the legislature, and served until November 1,
1918, when he resigned; went to Louisville and engaged in the practice of law,
where he continued until January 1, 1922; located in Bowling Green; practiced
law there until 1926, when he was nominated and elected judge of the court of
appeals, the highest court of the State; served as a member of that court until
January 1, 1931, when he became chief justice, which position he held until the
beginning of his term as United States Senator; elected United States Senator
in 1930 for the term ending in 1937; his opponent was the then Republican
KENTUCKY Biographical } 3 39
Senator John M. Robsion, whom he defeated by a vote: of 336,748 to 309,189;
has been a member of the State board of education, the State board of sinking
fund commissioners, and the State board of printing commissioners; ehairman
of the Democratic State convention at Lexington in 1916: grand sire of the
Sovereign Grand Lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows in 1929 and
1930. :
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LAR GE.—Population (1930), 2,614,589.
FRED M. VINSON, Democrat, of Ashland, Ky., born January 22, 1890, at
Louisa, Ky.; Centre College, Danville, Ky., A. B., 1909, LL. B., 1911; lawyer;
World War; married Miss Roberta Dixon, of Louisa, Ky.; two children; Com-
monwealth attorney, thirty-second judicial district; a Member of the Sixty-
eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Seventieth Congresses; defeated in 1928; Member Seven-
ty-second and Seventy-third Congresses; member Ways and Means Committee.
JOHN YOUNG BROWN, Democrat, of Lexington, Fayette County, Ky., was
born near Geigers Lake, Union County, Ky., February 1, 1900, the son of J. C.
and Lucy Keeper Brown; spent early life on farms near Uniontown, Morganfield,
and Sturgis, Ky.; was graduated from Centre College, Danville, Ky., and from
the law department of the University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky., in 1926;
started the practice of law at Lexington in 1926; elected to the Kentucky House
of Representatives in 1929, where he led fight to set aside Cumberland Falls as a
State park; reelected in 1931, where, as speaker, he led successful fight against
State retail sales tax; married Miss Dorothy Inman, of Somerset, Ky., in 1929,
and they have two children—Dorothy Ann, and Betty Bruce; Methodist; Elk;
Kiwanian; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large, breaking
State administration slate in the primary, and running second on the State’s
ticket of nine successful Democratic Congressmen, with a total of 574,270 votes,
his nearest Republican opponent receiving 391,868 votes.
ANDREW JACKSON MAY, Democrat, of Prestonsburg, was born on Beaver
Creek, Floyd County, Ky., June 24, 1875, the son of John and Dorcas Conley
May; attended the county schools and taught in the common schools of Floyd
and Magoffin Counties for five years, during which time he studied law prepara-
tory to college, later entering Southern University Law School, Tennessee, from
which he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in 1898, and at once taking up
the practice of law, in which he has since been constantly engaged; was ap-
pointed special judge of the Johnson and Martin Counties Circuit Courts by
Gov. William J. Fields, and held one term of court in each county; was married
to Julia Grace Mayo, daughter of John D. and Anna Mayo, July 17, 1901, and
they have three children—Olga, Andrew, and Robert; in 1901 was elected prose-
cuting attorney for a term of four years, at the end of which he was reelected;
has had an active and successful business career, and at present is interested in
coal mining and agricultural affairs; Baptist; elected to the Seventy-second
Congress on November 4, 1930, by a majority of 3,033 votes over his Republican
opponent, Katherine Langley, in a district normally 15,000 Republican; was re-
elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, by a majority of
12,440 votes over his Republican opponent.
BRENT SPENCE, Democrat, of Fort Thomas, Ky.; son of Philip Brent and
Virginia (Berry) Spence; born in Newport, Ky., December 24, 1874; attorney
at law; served as State senator for four years, and city solicitor of the city of New-
port for eight years; elected to the Seventy-second Congress, and reelected to the
Seventy-third Congress.
VIRGIL CHAPMAN, Democrat, Paris, Bourbon County, Ky.; son of James
Virgil and Lily Munday Chapman; born Middleton, Simpson County, Ky.,
March 15, 1895; married June 12, 1920, Miss Mary Adams Talbott, Paris, Ky.;
one daughter, Elizabeth Grimes Chapman, aged 11; graduated, University of
Kentucky, 1918; admitted to practice law, 1917; city attorney, Irvine, Ky.,:
1918-1920; moved law office to Lexington, Ky., 1920, with residence at Paris;
40 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA
active campaigner in organization of tobacco growers’ cooperative marketing
associations in Kentucky and several other States, 1921-22; Member Sixty-ninth
and Seventieth Congresses; nominated for Seventy-first Congress, but defeated
in Republican landslide of 1928; elected to Seventy-second Congress over Re-
publican incumbent; reelected to Seventy-third Congress from State at large.
GLOVER H. CARY, Democrat, of Owensboro, was born at Calhoun, McLean
County, Ky., May 1, 1885; attended the public schools at Calhoun and Owens-
boro, private school of Prof. Wayland Alexander, at Owensboro, and two years
at Center College, Danville, Ky.; read law at Calhoun, Ky., and was admitted
to the bar in June, 1909; was elected representative of McLean County in 1913
and served in the 1914 session of the Kentucky Legislature; reelected and served
in the 1916 session and special session of 1917; elected county attorney of McLean
County in 1917 and served for four years; in 1921 was elected Commonwealth’s
attorney of the sixth judicial district of Kentucky for a term of six years, and in
1927 reelected; was married to Miss Bessie Wayne Miller, daughter of the late
Dr. W. P. Miller, of Calhoun; has 5 children—2 boys and 3 girls; moved to
Owensboro, Ky., March 15, 1926; is a member of the law firm of Cary, Miller &
Kirk; elected on November 4, 1930, to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected
to the Seventy-third Congress.
WILLIAM VORIS GREGORY, Democrat, Mayfield, Ky., was born in Graves
County, Ky.; educated in public and private schools and at West Kentucky
College, and Cumberland University; lawyer by profession; served two terms as
judge of the Graves County court; was United States attorney for the western
district of Kentucky under the administration of President Wilson; refused to
accept appointment as chairman of the Kentucky State Tax Commission; elected
professor of law at Cumberland University in 1925, but declined the position;
member of the Elks, Masons, and other fraternities, including the Alpha Tau
Omega college fraternity; grand master of the Odd Fellows of Kentucky, 1916-17;,
Presbyterian; married; elected to the Seventieth Congress; reelected to the
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
CAP R. CARDEN, Democrat, of Munfordville, Ky.; born in Hart County, Ky.,
December 17, 1866, son of William P. Carden and Frances M. (King) Carden;
married March 7, 1900; wife, Mamie (Hubbard) Carden; two daughters—Mary
E. Carden and Frances McElroy Carden; elected to the Seventy-second Congress
Dovember 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at
arge.
FINLEY HAMILTON, Democrat, of London, Ky.; born June 19, 1886, at
Vincent, Ky.; educated in the public schools and attended Berea College for a
short time; lawyer; served with the United States Army in the Philippine Islands,
in Alaska, and in the World War; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the
State at large, receiving 573,024 votes, a plurality of 181,156 over his nearest
Republican opponent.
LOUISIANA
(Population (1930), 2,101,593)
SENATORS
HUEY PIERCE LONG, Democrat, of New Orleans, was born in Winnfield,
La., August 30, 1893; became a practicing attorney in 1915; has held the offices
of railroad commissioner, public service commissioner, and governor; was elected
in November, 1930, a Member of the United States Senate without opposition;
his term will expire in 1937.
JOHN HOLMES OVERTON, Democrat, of Alexandria, La.; born September
17, 1875, at Marksville, Avoyelles Parish, La., of the marriage of Judge Thomas
Overton ‘and Miss Laura Waddill; graduated from the Louisiana State Uni-
versity and Agricultural and Mechanical College, Baton Rouge, La., in 1895,
LOUISIANA Bb tographical 41
- with the degree of A. B., and from Tulane Law School, in 1897, with the degree
of LL. B.; since graduation has practiced his profession at Alexandria, La.;
married, December 12, 1905, to Miss Ruth Dismukes, of Natchitoches, of which
marriage are the following children—Katharyne, Ruth, John, and Mary Eliza-
beth; elected to the Seventy-second Congress, to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of Hon. James B. Aswell, without opposition, in the general special elec-
tion on May 12, 1931, receiving 4,674 votes, and 7 scattering votes against; was
nominated by the Democratic Party as candidate for United States Senator from
Louisiana in the primary election held September 13, 1932, by a majority of
over 56,000 votes, against the incumbent, Senator Edwin 8. Broussard, and was
elected to the United States Senate without opposition in the general election
held November 8, 1932, for the term ending in 1939. :
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—City ofr NEW ORLEANS: Wards 3 to 9 and 15. PARISHES: Plaquemines and St.
Bernard. Population (1930), 253,548.
JOACHIM OCTAVE FERNANDEZ, Democrat, of 4219 Urquhart Street,
New Orleans, La., was born August 14, 1896, at New Orleans; private-school
education; profession, demurrage and storage tariff expert; married Viola Murray,
of Covington, La., and has four children—Florau, Mercedes, June Rose, and
Joachim O., jr.; elected as delegate to the constitutional convention of the State
of Louisiana in 1921; served in house of representatives, State of Louisiana,
1924-1928; member of the Louisiana State Senate, 1928-1931; elected on No-
vember 4, 1930, to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected on November 8, 1932,
to the Seventy-third Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CIty oF NEW ORLEANS: Wards 1, 2, 10 to 14, 16, and 17. PARISHES: Jefferson,
St. Charles, St. James, and St. John the Baptist. Population (1930), 302,893.
PAUL HERBERT MALONEY, Democrat, of New Orleans, La.
THIRD DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Assumption, Iberia, Lafayette, La Fourche, St. Martin, St. Mary,
Terrebonne, and Vermilion (8 parishes). Population (1930), 230,092. ;
NUMA FRANCOIS MONTET, Democrat, of Thibodaux, La.; born at
Thibodaux, La., September 17, 1892; married to Bonnie B. Jones, of Tuscaloosa,
Ala.; educated in common schools, Louisiana State Normal College; received
LL. B. degree, Tulane University, 1913; admitted to Louisiana bar in 1913, ac-
tively practicing his profession since; secretary-treasurer, city of Thibodaux, La.,
1914; city attorney thereof, 1915; served in house of representatives, Louisiana
Legislature, 1916 to 1920, elected thereto on Progressive ticket; candidate for
attorney general of Louisiana in January, 1924, but was defeated; delegate to
Democratic National Convention, New York City, 1924; delegate to same con-
vention held in Chicago in 1932; acting prosecuting attorney for twentieth
judicial district of Louisiana during fall of 1925; general counsel for Louisiana
Highway Commission from July, 1928, to date of election to Seventy-first Con-
gress; elected as a Democrat to Seventy-first Congress on August 6, 1929, to fill
vacancy created by the death of Hon. Whitmell P. Martin; reelected to the
Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Claiborne, De Soto, Red River, and
Webster (7 parishes). Population (1930), 285,684.
JOHN N. SANDLIN, Democrat, of Minden, Webster Parish; served 6 years as
district attorney and 10 years as judge of the second judicial district of Louisiana;
elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress; member
of Committee on Appropriations.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—ParisgEsS: Caldwell, Catahoula, Concordia, East Carroll, Franklin, Jackson,
Lincoln, Madison, Morehouse, Ouachita, Richland, Tensas, Union, and West Carroll (14 parishes).
Population (1930), 287,585.
RILEY JOSEPH WILSON, Democrat, of Ruston, was born in Winn Parish,
La., November 12, 1871; educated in the public schools of Louisiana and ab
42 Congressional Directory LOUISIANA
Arcadia Male and Female College, Arcadia, La., and Tuka Normal College, Iuka,
Miss., graduating at the latter institution in 1894; was principal of Harrison-
burg High School in 1895 and 1896; while teaching, studied law and was ad-
mitted to the bar of Louisiana, November, 1898, by the supreme court; repre-
sented Catahoula Parish in the Louisiana constitutional convention of 1898, and
also in the legislature from 1900 to 1904; was married to Miss Pearl Barnett, of
Tuka, Miss., June 14, 1899; has three children—two boys and one girl; was editor
of Catahoula News from 1898 to 1904; was elected district attorney of the eighth
judicial district of Louisiana, November, 1904, and reelected to the same office
November, 1908; resigned the office of district attorney, May, 1910, on being
elected judge of the same district to fill out an unexpired term, and was reelected
as judge, November, 1912; was elected a Member of the House of Representa-
tives of the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth,
Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected
to the Seventy-third Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Ascension, East Baton Rouge, East Feliciana, Iberville, Livingston
Pointe Coupee, St. Helena, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, Washington, West Baton Rouge, and West
Feliciana (12 parishes). Population (1930), 294,138.
BOLIVAR EDWARDS KEMP, Democrat, of Amite, La.; son of Judge
William Breed and Elizabeth (Nesom) Kemp; educated under private tutors,
in public schools, and attended Louisiana State University; graduated from
law department of Tulane University, and admitted to bar in 1897; began
practice of law in the twenty-fifth judicial district of Louisiana, in partnership
with father and brother, the late Duncan Stuart Kemp; after death of father
in 1900 became senior member of firm of Kemp & Spiller, and confined practice
to civil law; senior member of law firm of Kemp & Buck; has been active in
promoting development of agricultural and trucking industries of his section
and is interested in several agricultural enterprises and in educational work;
appointed member of board of supervisors of Louisiana State University by
Governor Hall in 1910, which position he still holds under reappointments of
Governors Pleasant, Parker, and Simpson; Episcopalian; member of Boston
Club, and Chess, Checkers, and Whist Club, of New Orleans; married in 1903
to Esther Edwards Conner; has two children—Bolivar Edwards, jr., aged 26,
and Eleanor Ogden, aged 20; September 9, 1924, was nominated by large ma-
jority to represent the sixth Louisiana district in the Sixty-ninth Congress and
was duly elected at the general election; never before a candidate for any political
office; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-
third Congresses without opposition,
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Acadia, Allen, Beauregard, Calcasieu, Cameron, Evangeline,
Jefierson Davis, and St. Landry (8 parishes). Population (1930), 222,495.
RENT: L. DEROUEN, Democrat, of Ville Platte, La., was born near Ville
Platte, Evangeline Parish (then St. Landry), of the marriage of Fabius DeRouen
and Alma DeBaillon; educated in the public and private schools of St. Landry,
St. Charles College, Grand Coteau, La., and graduated at Holy Cross College,
New Orleans, La.; married to Miss Christina Currie, and has four children—
Mrs. V. L. Dupuis, Louis R. DeRouen, Mrs. Albert Tate, and Alvin F. DeRouen;
business man, interested in general merchandising, banking, and farming; rep-
resented Evangeline Parish in the Louisiana constitutional convention of 1921;
never before a candidate for any political office; elected to Seventieth Congress
and reelected to Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses
without opposition,
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PARISHES: Avoyelles, Grant, La Salle, Natchitoches, Rapides, Sabine, Vernon,
and Winn (8 parishes). Population (1930), 225,158.
CLEVELAND DEAR, Democrat, of Alexandria, La., was born on August 22,
1888, at Sugartown, La.; attended the Louisiana State University, 1906-1910,
receiving B. A. degree, and 1912-1914, receiving B. L. degree; attorney at law;
married; during the World War served as first lieutenant in the Field Artillery;
served as district attorney of the ninth judicial district of Louisiana from 1920
to 1933, when he resigned to assume duties in Congress; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress on November 8, 1932, without opposition, receiving 25,644 votes.
MAINE - Brographical - 43
MAINE
(Population (1930), 797,423)
SENATORS
FREDERICK HALE, Republican, of Portland, Cumberland County, Me.,
was born at Detroit, Mich., October 7, 1874; prepared for college at Lawrence-
ville and Groton schools, and graduated from Harvard in 1896; admitted to the
bar in 1899; served in the Maine Legislature in 1905; elected to the United
States Senate in September, 1916, to succeed Senator Charles F. Johnson. He
was reelected in 1922, and again in 1928. His term of office will expire in 1935.
WALLACE HUMPHREY WHITE, Jr., Republican, of Lewiston, was born
in that city August 6, 1877; was educated in the public schools of Lewiston and
graduated from Bowdoin College in 1899. Following his graduation he came to
Washington as assistant clerk to the Committee on Commerce of the Senate,
and later served as secretary to the President of the Senate and as private
secretary to the late Senator Frye, of Maine; he is a lawyer by profession. ‘He
was elected to the House of Representatives for the Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth,
Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, and Seventy-first Con-
gresses, and in September, 1930, was elected to the United States Senate; his
term of service will expire in 1937.
REPRESENTATIVES
bio PINTaICT Conv Cumberland, Oxford, Sagadahoc, and York, (4 counties). Population
1930), 265,989. ;
CARROLL L. BEEDY, lawyer, Republican, of Portland, Me.; elected a
Member of the Sixty-seventh Congress from the first district of Maine in Sep-
tember, 1920, and reelected to all subsequent Congresses.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Androscoggin, Franklin, Kennebec, Knox, Lincoln, Somerset, and Waldo (7 counties). Population (1930), 264,434.
EDWARD CARLETON MORAN, Jg., Democrat, of Rockland, Me.; born
at Rockland, December 29, 1894; graduated 1917 from Bowdoin College, Bruns-
wick, Me.; profession, insurance; Democratic candidate for Governor of Maine
in 1928 and in 1930; World War veteran; married on October 13, 1924, to Miss
Irene Shirley Gushee; one son—Paul Wilson Moran, born March 17, 1926.
Elected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTiES: Aroostook, Hancock, Penobscot, Piscataquis, and Washington (5
counties). Population (1930), 267,000. i
JOHN GREGG UTTERBACK, Democrat, of Bangor, Me.; born in Johnson
County, Ind., July 12, 1872; attended the public school at Franklin; at 17 years
of age was employed in a carriage factory at Indianapolis; started career as a
traveling salesman at the age of 20; has resided and voted in Jackson, Mich.,
Rochester, N. Y., and Winchester, Mass.; located in and established the carriage
business in Bangor in 1905, later becoming one of the automotive industry’s
pioneers; elected as councilman in 1912, as alderman in 1913, and as mayor in
1914; member of the Congregational Church, Rotary Club, Knights of Pythias,
and United Commercial Travelers; president of Bangor Automobile Dealers
Association; chairman of Maine Motor Vehicle Conference Committee; first
president of Katahdin Council, Boy Scouts of America; married and has two -
sons and three daughters; on September 12, 1932, was elected as a Representa-
tive to the Seventy-third Congress, defeating ex-Gov. Ralph O.: Brewster,
Republican, : : :
44 Congressional Directory MARYLAND
MARYLAND
(Population (1930), 1,631,526)
SENATORS
MILLARD E. TYDINGS, Democrat, Havre de Grace, Md.; born at Havre de
Grace, April 6, 1890; attorney at law; graduated from Maryland Agricultural
College in mechanical engineering; studied law at University of Maryland;
admitted to bar 1913; served in World War from April 6, 1917, to June 1, 1919;
promoted through ranks from enlisted man to lieutenant colonel; cited by Gen-
erals Pershing, Morton, and Upton; awarded distinguished-service medal;
speaker of Maryland House of Delegates; State senator, Maryland; elected to
Sixty-eighth and Sixty-ninth Congresses; elected to United States Senate 1926;
reelected 1932.
PHILLIPS LEE GOLDSBOROUGH, Republican, of Baltimore, Md.; born
August 6, 1865, in Princess Anne, Md.; educated in public and private schools;
LL. D. degrees from University of Pennsylvania, University of Maryland,
Washington College, Chestertown, Md., and St. John’s College, Annapolis, Md.;
lawyer; admitted to the Maryland bar in 1886; State’s attorney for Dorchester
County, Md., 1892-1898; comptroller of the treasury of Maryland, 1898-99;
collector of internal revenue, district of Maryland, 1902-1911; Governor of
Maryland, 1912-1915; vice chairman of the board of directors, Baltimore Trust
Co., Baltimore, Md.; Republican national committeeman for Maryland;
married Ellen M. Showell (deceased); has two sons—Phillips Lee Goldsborough,
jr., and Brice Worthington Goldsborough, 2d; elected to the United States
Senate in 1928,
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNtiEs: Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Annes, Somerset, Talbot,
Wicomico, and Worcester (9 counties). Population (1930), 193,658.
THOMAS ALAN GOLDSBOROUGH, Democrat, of Denton, Caroline
County, Md.; born September 16, 1877, at Greensboro, Caroline County, Md.;
A. B., Washington College, Chestertown, Md., 1899; LL. B., University of
Maryland, Baltimore, Md., 1901; lawyer; State’s attorney for Caroline County,
imi elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress and reelected to each succeeding
ongress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Baltimore, Carroll, and Harford. City or BALTIMORE: Wards 15
and 16; ward 25, precincts 1 to 9; wards 26 to 28. Population (1930), 461,419.
WILLIAM PURINGTON COLE, Jr., Democrat, of Towson, Baltimore
County, Md., and also of Fork, Baltimore County, Md., where he owns and
resides on his dairy farm; born in Towson, Md., May 11, 1889; graduated from
Towson High School, Towson, Md., in 1907; graduated from Maryland Agri-
cultural College (now University of Maryland), receiving B. S. degree in civil
engineering in 1910; studied law at the University of Maryland, Baltimore; passed
State bar in 1912, and admitted to practice in the spring of that year; abandoned
practice of law in August, 1917, to enter Fort Myer Training Camp, Fort Myer,
Va., receiving commission as first lieutenant the following December; assigned
to the Three hundred and sixteenth Regiment, Infantry, Seventy-ninth Division,
Camp Meade, Md.; embarked for overseas duties on July 8, 1918, with that
division and participated in all battles with said division; promoted to rank of
captain, in France; returned to the United States after 11 months’ foreign service
and was discharged at Camp Dix; member of Baltimore County, State of Mary-
land, and American Bar Associations; member of board of regents of the Uni-
versity of Maryland, which is also the State board of agriculture; married in
June, 1918, to Edith May Moore, and they have one child—William Purington
Cole, 3d; elected to the Seventieth Congress with a majority of 16,078 over his
opponent, elected to the Seventy-second Congress by a majority of 25,049, and
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by the unprecedented majority of 45,101.
MARYLAND Brographical 45
THIRD DISTRICT.—Crty oF BALTIMORE: Wards 1 to 8; ward 18, precincts 9 to 13; ward 22. Population
(1930), 203,929.
VINCENT L. PALMISANO, Democrat, of Baltimore, was born at Terminese,
Italy, August 5, 1882, the son of Cosimo and Anna Marie (Sansone) Palmisano;
migrated to America with parents; settled in Baltimore in 1887; educated in
parochial schools; at age of 11, employed in box factory; stonemason’s helper at
age of 15; in real-estate business at age of 21; took up study of law and was
admitted to the Maryland bar in 1909; actively interested in Hast Baltimore
politics; elected to Maryland House of Delegates, 1914; elected to the first
branch of the City Council of Baltimore, 1915; reelected, 1919; elected member
of the Democratic State central committee of Baltimore city, 1923; appointed
by Hon. Albert C. Ritchie, Governor of Maryland, as one of the police examiners
for Baltimore city, 1925; married, December, 1919, to Mary Fermes Pessaro,
who was born in Baltimore; elected to the Seventieth Congress; reelected to
the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CitYy oF BALTIMORE: Wards 9 to 14, and 17; ward 18, precincts 1 to 3; wards 19
and 20. Population (1930), 259,467.
AMBROSE JEROME KENNEDY, Democrat, of Baltimore, Md.; born in
Baltimore, January 6, 1893; educated at St. John’s Parochial School, Calvert
Hall College, and Polytechnic Institute; engaged in the brokerage and insur-
ance business; married on August 9, 1910, to Mary E., daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John J. Dailey; was an unsuccessful candidate for the State legislature in
1918; member of the Baltimore City Council in 1922; reelected in 1923 for a 4-year
term; elected to the State senate in 1926; appointed parole commissioner of
the State of Maryland in 1929 and served until his election to Congress; elected
to the Seventy-second Congress on November 8, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused
by the death of Hon. J. Charles Linthicum, and on the same day was elected
to the Seventy-third Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anne Arundel, Calvert, Charles, Howard, Prince Georges, and St.
Marys (6 counties). City oF BALTIMORE: Ward 18, precincts 4 to 8 and 14 to 16; wards 21, 23, and
24; ward 25, precinets 10 to 16. Population (1930), 244,519.
STEPHEN WARFIELD GAMBRILL, Democrat, of Howard County; born
near Savage, Howard County, Md., October 2, 1873; educated at Maryland
Agricultural College, now the University of Maryland, and a graduate of the
law school of the Columbian University of Washington, D. C., now known as the
George Washington University; admitted to the bar in 1897; has practiced law
in the city of Baltimore since 1908; a member of the Maryland State Legislature
in the sessions of 1920 and 1922; a member of the Maryland State Senate in the
session of 1924; elected to the United States House of Representatives, Novem-
ber 4, 1924, to fill vacancy in the Sixty-eighth Congress, and also elected to the
Sixty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second,
and Seventy-third Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, Montgomery, and Washington (5
counties). Population (1930), 268,534.
DAVID JOHN LEWIS, Democrat, of Cumberland, Md., was born on May 1,
1869, in Center County, Pa., near Osceola Mills, the son of Richard Lloyd and
Catherine (Watkins) Lewis; at the age of 9 years went to work in a coal mine
and was employed there until 23 years old; while working in coal mine learned
to read in Sunday school and studied law under Benjamin A. Richmond, Esq.,
and Latin under the Rev, John W. Nott, of Mount Savage, Md.; was admitted
to the bar in 1892, and practiced at Cumberland; on December 19, 1893, married
Florida M. Bohn, of Cumberland; elected a member of the Maryland Senate
and served from 1902 to 1904; Democratic nominee for the Sixty-first Congress
in 1908; was elected to the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, and Sixty-fourth Congresses
and served from 1911 to 1917, representing the sixth Maryland district; defeated
for United States Senator in 1916; appointed a member of the United States
Tariff Commission by President Wilson in 1917 and served to 1925; member
of the Academy of Sciences, Washington, D. C., the Society for Psychical Re-
search, of England, and the fraternal orders of Eagles and Elks; elected to the
Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930, by a majority of 6,071 votes
over the Hon. Frederick N. Zihlman, Republipan; reelected to the Seventy-
third Congress. :
46 C ongressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS
MASSACHUSETTS
" (Population (1930), 4,249,614)
SENATORS
DAVID IGNATIUS WALSH, Democrat, of Fitchburg, Mass., was born in
Leominster, Worcester County, Mass., on November 11, 1872; attended the
public schools of Clinton, Mass.; Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass., A. B.,
1893, LL. D., 1913; Boston University School of Law, LL. B., 1897; from several
universities, LL. D.; lawyer; elected a member of the Massachusetts House of
Representatives, 1900, and reelected, 1901; lieutenant governor, 1913; governor,
1914, and reelected 1915 (yearly terms); delegate at large to the Democratic
National Conventions, 1912, 1916, 1920, 1924, 1928, and 1932; delegate at large
to the Massachusetts constitutional convention, 1917-18; elected as the first
Democrat since before the Civil War to the United States Senate, November 5,
1918, to succeed the Hon. John W. Weeks, his Republican opponent; was de-
feated for reelection to the United States Senate, November 7, 1924, receiving
547,600 votes to 566,188 for his Republican opponent; elected to the United
States Senate, November 2, 1926, to succeed William M. Butler, appointed to
fill the unexpired term of Henry Cabot Lodge, by more than 55,000 plurality;
Jogledind, November 6, 1928, by 124,492 plurality; his term of office expires
in :
MARCUS ALLEN COOLIDGE, Democrat, of Fitchburg, Mass., was born in
Westminster, Worcester County, Mass., October 6, 1865; attended the public
schools, Bryant & Stratton Commercial College, Boston; manufacturer; mayor of
Fitchburg, 1916; member Wilson Campaign Committee, 1916; chairman Demo-
cratic State convention, 1920; delegate to Democratic National Conventions;
treasurer Democratic State committee; member of Massachusetts Democratic
Electoral College, 1929; trustee and vice president Cushing Academy, Ashburn-
ham, Mass.; married Ethel Louise Warren, of Springfield, Vt., 1898; has three
daughters— Mrs. Donald F. Carpenter, Mrs. Robert E. Greenwood, and Helen
Coolidge; elected to the United States Senate, November 4, 1930, to succeed
Senator Frederick H. Gillett, Republican, by a plurality over his opponent, former
Senator William M. Butler, of 112,713; his term of office expires in 1937,
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Berkshire and Franklin. HAMPDEN COUNTY: Cities of Holyoke, and
Westfield; towns of Blandford, Chester, Granville, Montgomery, Russell, Southwick, and Tolland.
HAMPSHIRE COUNTY: Towns of Belchertown, Chesterfield, Cummington, Enfield, Goshen, Green-
wich, Huntington, Middlefield, Pelham, Plainfield, Prescott, Southampton, Westhampton, Williams-
5) and Worthington. WORCESTER COUNTY: Towns of Athol and Royalston. Population (1930),
274,703.
ALLEN TOWNER TREADWAY, Republican, of Stockbridge; Amherst
College; thirty-third degree Mason; granger; Massachusetts House of Repre-
sentatives, 1904; Massachusetts Senate, 1908-1911; president of senate, 1909—
1911, inclusive; elected to the Sixty-third and succeeding Congresses; reelected
to the Seventy-third Congress; member of Ways and Means Committee, House
of Representatives; member of Joint Congressional Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation.
SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMPDEN County: Cities of Chicopee and Springfield; towns of Agawam,
East Longmeadow, Hampden, Longmeadow, Ludlow, West Springfield, and Wilbraham. HAMP-
SHIRE COUNTY: City of Northampton; towns of Amherst, Easthampton, Granby, Hadley, Hatfield,
and South Hadley. Population (1930), 292,066. :
WILLIAM JOSEPH GRANFIELD, Democrat, of Springfield, was born in
Springfield, Mass., December 18, 1889; attended the grammar and high schools
in Springfield, the Williston Academy at Easthampton, Mass., in 1910, and
graduated from the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Ind., in 1913, with
the degree of LL. B.; profession, attorney at law; member of the Common
Council of Springfield in 1915 and 1916; served in the State house of representa-
tives, 1917-1919; delegate to the State constitutional convention of 1918 and 1919;
delegate to the Democratic National Convention at New York City in 1924,
MASSACHUSETTS Biographical fed 47
and at Houston, Tex., in 1928; delegate at large to Democratic National Conven-
tion, Chicago, Ill., 1932; married Jane I. Campbell (deceased, August 28, 1929);
three children—Eleanor Jane, William J., and John Campbell; elected to the
Seventy-first Congress on February 11, 1930, to fill the unexpired term of Hon.
William XK. Kaynor, deceased; reelected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-
third Congresses.
THIRD DISTRICT.—HAMPDEN COUNTY: Towns of Brimfield, Holland, Monson, Palmer, and Wales.
HampsHIRE COUNTY: Town of Ware. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Marlborough; towns of Ashby,
Boxborough, Framingham, Hudson, Maynard, Pepperell, Shirley, Stow, Sudbury, Townsend, and
Wayland. WORCESTER COUNTY: Cities of Fitchburg, Gardner, and Leominster; towns of Ashburne
ham, Barre, Berlin, Bolton, Brookfield, Charlton, Clinton, Dana, Dudley, East Brookfield, Hardwick,
Harvard, Hubbardston, Lancaster, Leicester, Lunenburg, New Braintree, North Brookfield, Oakham,
Oxford, Paxton, Petersham, Phillipston, Princeton, Rutland, Southbridge, Spencer, Sterling, Stur-
= Templeton, Warren, Webster, West Brookfield, Westminster, and Winchendon. Population
1930), 282,230. :
FRANK H. FOSS, Republican, of Fitchburg, Mass.; born in Augusta, Me.,
September 20, 1865; graduate of public school and Kents Hill Seminary, Kents.
Hill, Me.; contractor; served in Fitchburg City Council seven years; mayor
four years; chairman Republican State committee four years; married; elected
to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third
Congresses.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—MIDLESEX COUNTY: Towns of Ashland and Hopkinton. WORCESTER
County: City of Worcester; towns of Auburn, Boylston, Douglas, Grafton, Holden, Hopedale, Men-
don, Milford, Millbury, Millville, Northborough, Northbridge, Shrewsbury, Southborough, Sutton,
Upton, Uxbridge, Westborough, and West Boylston. Population (1930), 288,216.
PEHR G. HOLMES, Republican, of Worcester, Mass., was born in Sweden,
April 9, 1881; attended public schools of Worcester; manufacturer; member of
Common Council of Worcester, 1908-1911; alderman, 1913-14; president of the
board of aldermen, 1915-16; mayor of Worcester, 1917-1919; member of the
governor’s council, seventh Massachusetts district, 1925-1928; married Freda C.
Johnson, and they have two children; elected to the Seventy-second Congress by
a majority of 7,335 votes over his Democratic opponent, David A. Goldstein;
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 10,327 over his Demo-
cratic opponent, John J, Walsh,
FIFTH DISTRICT.—MIppLESEX CoUNTY: City of Cambridge, ward 11; cities of Lowell, Melrose, and
Woburn; towns of Acton, Arlington, Ayer, Bedford, Belmont, Billerica, Burlington, Carlisle, Chelms-
ford, Concord, Dracut, Dunstable, Groton, Lexington, Littleton, Reading, Stoneham, Tewksbury,
Tyngsborough, Westford, Wilmington, and Winchester. Population (1930), 509,888.
EDITH NOURSE ROGERS, Republican, of Lowell; born, Saco, Me., 1881;
graduate Rogers Hall School, Lowell, and Madame Julien’s School, Paris, France;
served overseas, 1917; with American Red Cross in care of the disabled, 1918-1922;
appointed Personal Representative in care of disabled veterans by President
Harding, 1922; reappointed by President Coolidge, 1923, and by President
Hoover, March 28, 1929; presidential elector, 1924; elected to Congress June 30,
1925, to fill vacancy caused by death of husband, the late Representative John
Jacob Rogers; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second
Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 74,459 votes,
against 49,788 for her Democratic opponent.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—Essex County: Cities of Beverly, Gloucester, Haverhill, and Newburyport,
city of Salem, wards 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6; towns of Amesbury, Boxford, Danvers, Essex, Georgetown, Grove-
land, Hamilton. Ipswich, Manchester, Marblehead, Merrimac, Methuen, Middleton, Newbury,
North Andover, Rockport, Rowley, Salisbury, Swampscott, Topsfield, Wenham, and West Newbury.
Population (1930), 255,879.
A. PIATT ANDREW, Republican, of Gloucester; educated at Princeton and
Harvard; assistant professor of economics, Harvard, 1903-1909; expert assist-
ant and editor of publications of National Monetary Commission, 1908-1911;
Director of the Mint, 1909-10; Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, 1910-1912;
served in France continuously for four and a half years during World War, first
with French, later with United States Army; cited by both Armies; promoted
to lieutenant colonel, September, 1918; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress,
September 27, 1921, to fill unexpired term, and to succeeding Congresses; re-
elected to Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 34,655, :
48 Congressional Directory MASSACHUSETTS
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: Cities of Lawrence, Lynn, and Peabody; city of Salem, ward
4; towns of Andover, Lynnfield, Nahant, and Saugus. MIDDLESEX CoUNTY: Towns of North Reading
and Wakefield. SurroLk CouNTyY: City of Revere and town of Winthrop. Population (1930), 312,956,
WILLIAM P. CONNERY, Jr., Democrat, of Lynn, was born on August 24,
1888; attended St. Mary’s School, Lynn; Montreal College, Montreal, Canada;
and Holy Cross College, Worcester, Mass.; received honorary degree of master
of arts, Holy Cross College, 1925; entered theatrical profession as actor and
afterwards became manager; enlisted as a private in Company A, One hundred
and first Regiment United States Infantry, August 23, 1917; served 19 months
in France, taking part in all major operations, engagements, and battles of the
One hundred and first Regiment Infantry, Twenty-sixth (Yankee) Division;
promoted from private to regimental color sergeant for meritorious service
September 25, 1918; honorably discharged April 28, 1919. Was elected to the
Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-ninth and Seventieth Congresses;
reelected to the Seventy-first Congress after receiving both Democratic and
Republican nominations; reelected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to
the Seventy-third Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MippLESEX CoUNTY: City of Cambridge, wards 2 and 3; cities of Everett,
Malden, Medford, and Somerville. Population (1930), 291,783.
ARTHUR DANIEL HEALEY, Democrat, of Somerville, Mass.; born in
Somerville, Mass., December 29, 1899; graduate Somerville Latin School;
attended Dartmouth College for one year; graduate of Boston University Law
School, degree of LL. B.; lawyer, and associated with his brother, Robert T.
Healey, under firm name of Healey & Healey, with offices in Boston; active in
Democratic politics in Massachusetts for 18 years; ex-chairman of Somerville
Democratic city committee; during the World War enlisted on June 9, 1917,
and was assigned to the Quartermaster Corps, Camp Devens, Mass.; promoted
to corporal-sergeant and transferred to Quartermaster Corps Training School,
Camp Johnson, Jacksonville, Fla.; instructor in enlisted men’s school and officers’
training school; later commissioned second lieutenant; past commander of the
Somerville Post of the American Legion; past department judge advocate,
department of Massachusetts, the American Legion; married and has three
children—Robert, 8 years, Arthur D., jr., 7 years, and Elaine, 2 years; elected to
the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 50,287 votes, and his opponent, George
H. Norton, Republican, receiving 48,083 votes.
NINTH DRISTRICT.—MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Cambridge, wards 4 to 10; cities of Newton and
Waltham; towns of Lincoln, Watertown, and Weston. NORFOLK COUNTY: Towns of Brookline and
Wellesley. SuUrroLK COUNTY: City of Boston, ward 22. Population (1930), 298,398.
ROBERT LUCE, Republican, of Waltham, was born in Auburn, Me., Decem-
ber 2, 1862; graduated from Harvard College in 1882; is president of Luce’s
Press Clipping Bureau and a member of the bar; served in Massachusetts House
of Representatives, 1899 and 1901-1908; lieutenant governor, 1912; chairman of
committee on rules and procedure of Massachusetts constitutional convention,
1917-1919; chairman of commissions on cost of living, 1910 and 1916-17; presi-
dent of Republican Club of Massachusetts, 1918; author of Legislative Proce-
dure, Legislative Assemblies, Legislative Principles, and Congress: An Expla-
nation; vice-president American Political Science Association; was elected to the
Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TENTH DISTRICT.—SurroLk County: City of Boston, wards 4, 5, 9 to 12, and 19 to 21. Population
(1930), 276,509.
GEORGE HOLDEN TINKHAM, Republican; born in Boston, October 29,
1870; A. B., Harvard College, 1894; attorney at law; Boston Common Council,
1897-98; Boston Board of Aldermen, 1900-1902; Massachusetts Senate, 1910-
1912; Sixty-fourth (1915) and subsequent Congresses.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—MippLESEX CouUNTY: City of Cambridge, ward 1. SUFFOLK COUNTY:
City of Boston, wards 1 to 3, and ward 8 (precincts 1 to 9); city of Chelsea. Population (1930), 242,310,
JOHN J. DOUGLASS, Democrat, of Boston, Mass.; born in East Boston,
Mass., February 9, 1873; married; two sons, Paul, age 6, and John, age 4 years;
MASSACHUSETTS B 1ographical 49
educated in public schools in East Boston; graduated from Boston College in
1893, with degree A. B.; graduated from Georgetown University Law School in
1896, with degree LL. B.; degree A. M. from Boston College in 1896; admitted
to Massachusetts bar in 1897; has since practiced law at Boston; president of
East Boston Bar Association; was member of Massachusetts House of Repre-
sentatives in 1899, 1900, 1906, and 1913; member of Massachusetts constitutional
convention, 1917-18; honorary member of Maj. P. J. Grady Camp, United
Spanish War Veterans; honorary member of John A. Hawes Post, G. A. R.;
elected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-
third Congresses.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—SurroLk County: City of Boston, wards 6 and 7; ward 8, precincts 10 to 14;
wards 13 to 18. Population (1930), 294,272.
JOHN W. McCORMACK, Democrat, of South Boston; born in Boston;
lawyer; educated in the Boston public schools; admitted to practice law in
Massachusetts in 1913 and the United States district court in 1915; member of
the constitutional convention, 1917-18; member of the Massachusetts House of
Representatives 1920, 1921, and 1922, and the Massachusetts Senate 1923, 1924,
1925, and 1926, the last two years as Democratic leader; Member Seventieth
Congress, filling unexpired term of the late James A. Gallivan; Member Seventy-
first and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to Seventy-third Congress; World
War veteran.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—MIpDLESEX COUNTY: Town of Natick. NORFoLE County: City of
Quiney, towns of Avon, Braintree, Canton, Dedham, Dover, Holbrook, Milton, Needham, Norwood,
Randolph, Stoughton, Westwood, and Weymouth. PrLYMouTE COUNTY: City of Brockton. Popu- lation (1930), 273,059.
RICHARD B. WIGGLESWORTH, Republican, of Milton, Mass.; born in
Boston, Mass., April 25, 1891; graduated from Milton Academy in 1908, Harvard
College in 1912 (A. B.), Harvard Law School in 1916 (LL. B.); admitted to
Massachusetts bar, 1916; assistant private secretary to Hon. W. Cameron Forbes,
Governor General of the Philippine Islands, 1913; served in France during the
World War as captain, Battery KE, and commanding officer, First Battalion,
Three hundred and third Regiment, Field Artillery, Seventy-sixth Division;
office of Secretary of the Treasury as legal adviser to Assistant Secretary in
charge of foreign loans and railway payments and secretary of World War
Foreign Debt Commission, 1922-1924; assistant to agent general for reparation
payments, Berlin, 1924-1927; Paris representative and general counsel for
organizations created under Dawes plan, 1927-28; member of American Bar
Association; Massachusetts Bar Association; Milton Post, American Legion;
Military Order World War; Military Order Foreign Wars; elected November 6,
1928, to the Seventieth Congress for the unexpired term of the late Hon. Louis
A. Frothingham; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy- third Congresses.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—BristoL County: Cities of Attleboro, Fall River, and Taunton; towns
of Berkley, Dighton, Easton, Freetown, Mansfield, North Attleboro, Norton, Raynham, Rehoboth,
Seekonk, Somerset, Swansea, and Westport. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: Towns of Holliston and Sherborn.
NorroLk COUNTY: Towns of Bellingham, Foxborough, Franklin, Medfield, Medway, Millis, Norfolk, Plainville, Sharon, Walpole, and Wrentham. WORCESTER COUNTY: Town of Blackstone. Popu- lation (1930), 278,394.
JOSEPH WILLIAM MARTIN, Jr., Republican, of North Attleboro, Mass. ; born November 3, 1884, at North Attleboro, Mass.; publisher of Evening Chroni- cle, North Attleboro; member Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1912— 1914; member Massachusetts State Senate, 1914-1917; delegate to Republican National Convention, 1916; chairman Massachusetts Street Railway Investi- gating Committee, 1917; chairman Massachusetts Republican Legislative Cam- paign Committee, 1917; Harding-Coolidge presidential elector, 1920; executive secretary Republican State Committee, 1922-1925; in 1924, elected Member of Ine Say aint Congress, and to each succeeding Congress, including the Sev- enty-third.
157297°—73—1—1ST ED 5
50 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket. BRrisToL County: City
of New Bedford: towns of Acushnet, Dartmouth, and Fairhaven. NORFOLK COUNTY: Town of
Cohasset. PLymouTH COUNTY: Towns of Abington, Bridgewater, Carver, Duxbury, East Bridge-
water, Halifax, Hanover, Hanson, Hingham, Hull, Kingston, Lakeville, Marion, Marshfield, Matta-
poisett, Middleborough, Norwell, Pembroke, Plymouth, Plympton, Rochester, Rockland, Scituate,
Wareham, West Bridgewater, and Whitman. Population (1930), 278,951.
CHARLES L. GIFFORD, Republican, of Cotuit (Barnstable), Mass.; born
March 15, 1871; educated in the public schools; taught school 10 years; engaged
in real-estate development and summer hotels; member Massachusetts Legisla-
ture—house of representatives 1912-13, senate 1914-1919; elected to the Sixty-
seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation, August 2, 1921,
of Hon. Joseph Walsh; reelected to the Sixty-eighth Congress, receiving 23,656
votes to 19,709 for James P. Doran, Democrat; to the Sixty-ninth Congress by
36,879 votes to 13,830 received by John H. Backus, Democrat; to the Seventieth
Congress by 35,132 votes to 16,538 received by George F. Tucker, Democrat;
to the Seventy-first Congress by 50,599 votes to 24,267 received by A. E. Boyden,
Democrat; to the Seventy-second Congress by 39,953 votes to 17,467 received
by John D. Bodfish, Independent; to the Seventy-third Congress by 53,066 votes
to 36,5656 received by Thomas H, Buckley, Democrat,
MICHIGAN
(Population (1930), 4,842,325)
SENATORS
JAMES COUZENS, Republican; born, Chatham, Ontario, August 26, 1872;
married; entered the Senate November 29, 1922; reelected in 1924 and again in
1930; term expires in 1937.
ARTHUR H. VANDENBERG, Republican, of Grand Rapids, was born in
that city on March 22, 1884, the son of Aaron and Alpha (Hendrick); educated
in the common schools, later studying law in the University of Michigan; has an
honorary M. A. from his alma mater and an honorary LL. D. from Hope College;
editor and publisher of the Grand Rapids Herald until appointment to the United
States Senate; author of several books dealing with Alexander Hamilton; in 1912
a member of the Grand Rapids Charter Commission; in 1913 chairman of the
Michigan commission which put Zachariah Chandler's statue in the Washington
Capitol; in 1916 and in 1928 was chairman of the Michigan Republican State
convention; from 1912 to 1918 member of the Republican State central committee
of Michigan; married Hazel H. Whitaker, of Fort Wayne, Ind.; his three children
are Arthur, jr., Barbara, and Elizabeth; appointed to the United States Senate
March 31, 1928, elected on November 6, 1928, for the short term and for the long
term ending in 1935, by a majority of 601,000.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—Ciry or DETROIT: Wards 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, and 15, and city of Hamtramck. Popula-
tion (1930), 380,155.
GEORGE G. SADOWSKI, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich., was born in Detroit,
Mareh 12, 1903, the son of Charles and Ludwika (Jurkiewicz) Sadowski; attended
the Ferry School at Detroit, Mich,, and the Foley (Ala.) High School, graduating
from the Northeastern High School at Detroit in 1920, wi from the law college
of the University of Detroit, receiving degree of LL. B. in 1924; in 1928 married
Eleanor Leppek, and they have two daughters—Mary Anne, age 4, and Caroline,
age 2; interested in real-estate subdivision and the building business; secretary
and part owner of the Sunnybrook Golf Club, Utica, Mich.; unsuccessful candi-
date for State senator in 1928, but was elected to that office in 1931, being the
first Democrat in the Michigan Senate in the last 16 years; organizer and president
of the Detroit Democratic Club; chairman of the Wayne County Democratic
committee on clubs and organizations; member of the State central Democratic
committee, and was elected a delegate at large to the Democratic National
Convention at Chicago in 1932; member of the Michigan and Detroit Bar Asso-
| !
MICHIGAN Biographzcal 51
ciations, Polish National Alliance, Polish Falcons, University of Detroit Alumni
Association, Chene Business Association, and the Crusaders; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress, receiving 51,620 votes, and having a majority of 27,448
votes.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Jackson, Lenawee, Monroe, and Washtenaw (4 counties). Pop-
ulation (1930), 260,168.
JOHN CAMILLUS LEHR, Democrat, of Monroe, Mich.; born at Monroe,
Mich., November 18, 1878; educated in public schools of Monroe; graduate of
the law department of the University of Michigan with degree of LL. B.; admitted
to the bar in June, 1900, since which time he has followed the practice of law;
served as city attorney of Monroe, Mich., for three terms, 1918-1922 and 1928-
1930; is vice president and member of the Board of Education of Monroe, and is
great record keeper of the Maccabees in the State of Michigan; married Miss Anna
F. Ryan, of Port Huron, Mich., on April 17, 1907, and they have six children—
Virginia, Marjorie, John C., jr., Thomas, James, and Jeanne; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving 51,592 votes, against
49,257 for Earl C. Michener, Republican; 976 for Harold P. Marley, Socialist;
and 197 for Ira Welsh, Communist.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Branch, Calhoun, Eaton, Hillsdale, and Kalamazoo (5 counties).
Population (1930), 261,506.
JOSEPH L. HOOPER, Republican, of Battle Creek; born December 22, 1877;
married; lawyer; city attorney of Battle Creek; prosecuting attorney of Calhoun
County; elected to Sixty-ninth and succeeding Congresses.
Lh
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Allegan, Barry, Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, and Van Buren (6
counties). Population (1930), 225,111.
GEORGE ERNEST FOULKES, Democrat, of Hartford, Mich.; lawyer,
B. A. degree; farmer; author; served 18 years in the United States Treasury De-
partment, as special agent in charge of field service at New York, El Paso, St.
Paul, and Minneapolis; married; two children, George, jr., and Emma Anne;
elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 46,927 votes, and John C.
Ketcham, Republican, 42,931 votes. :
FIFTH BDISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Kent and Ottawa (2 counties). Population (1930), 295,369.
CARL E. MAPES, Republican, of Grand Rapids; born December 26, 1874;
lawyer; married; has three children; elected to the Sixty-third and succeeding
Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Genesee, Ingham, and Livingston (3 counties). Population (1930),
347,502.
CLAUDE E. CADY, Democrat, of Lansing, Mich., was born May 28, 1878, in
Lansing, Mich., where he has continuously resided; married, and has two chil-
dren, Stanley W. and Clella E. Cady; engaged in the amusement business for
15 years as owner of three theaters in Lansing and with financial interest in other
Michigan cities, and for 17 years in both the wholesale and retail business, being
also interested in a number of Michigan corporations; member of several fraternal
organizations; served as alderman, 1910-1917, and as a member of the Lansing
Police and Fire Commission, 1918-1928; elected to the Seventy-third Congress
on November 8, 1932, receiving 55,478 votes, and defeating Seymour H. Person,
Depanticon, who received 45,818 votes, and Grant M. Hudson, who received
14,541 votes.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmES: Huron, Lapeer, Macomb, Sanilac, St. Clair, and Tuscola (6 coun-
ties). Population (1930), 264,874.
JESSE PAINE WOLCOTT, Repubiican, of Port Huron, Mich., was born
March 3, 1893, at Gardner, Mass.; attended public and high schools of Gardner,
Mass., Detroit Technical Institute at Detroit, Mich., and graduated from the
Detroit College of Law, with degree of LL. B.; during the World War served
52 Congressional Directory MICHIGAN
as second lieutenant Machine Gun Company, Twenty-sixth Intantry, First
Division, and saw active service in France during the Meuse-Argonne offensive;
after the war settled in Port Huron; was elected assistant police judge in 1921,
serving in that capacity until he was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney
of St. Clair County on January 1, 1922; served as assistant prosecutor until he
was elected prosecuting attorney, 1927-1930; district governor, Lions Clubs: of
Michigan, 1925-26; State commander, Veterans of Foreign Wars, 1926-27;
first vice president, Prosecuting Attorneys Association, 1930-31; member of
Masons, Knights of Pythias (past chancellor, Port Huron Lodge, 1922), Odd
Fellows, Moose, B. P. O. E., American Legion, and Veterans of Foreign Wars;
married Grace A. Sullivan February 26, 1927, and they have one son, Jesse Paine,
jr.; elected to the Seventy-second Congress November 4, 1930, by a vote of
42,256; his opponent, a ‘sticker’ candidate, received 2,634 votes; without other
party opposition; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounTies: Clinton, Gratiot, Ionia, Montcalm, Saginaw, and Shiawassee (6
counties). Population (1930), 277,224.
MICHAEL J. HART, Democrat, of Saginaw, Mich., was born at Waterloo,
Quebec, July 16, 1877; engaged in farming and shipping of farm products; un-
successful candidate for Congress in 1930 on the Democratic ticket against
Congressman Bird J. Vincent; elected to the Seventy-second Congress at a
special election held on November 3, 1931, to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of Hon. Bird J. Vincent; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Benzie, Grand Traverse, Lake, Leelanau, Manistee, Mason, Missau-
kee, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, and Wexford (11 counties). Population (1930), 214,318.
HARRY W. MUSSELWHITE, Democrat, of Manistee, Mich.; born on a
farm in Branch County, Mich., May 23, 1868; educated in the public and high
schools; learned the printer’s trade in Coldwater, Mich.; married and has two
daughters—Helen, aged 21 years, and a married daughter, Mrs. C. B. Goshorn,
of Malvern, Pa.; news and feature writer on metropolitan dailies for 20 years;
with Grand Rapids Herald, 1905-1914, as city editor and sports writer; owner,
editor, and publisher of the Manistee (Mich.) Daily News-Advocate, 1915-
1928; supervisor of census for the ninth Michigan district in 1920; reappointed
supervisor of census for the fourth Michigan district in 1930; member and vice
chairman of the Michigan State Hospital Commission, 1927-1932; elected to
the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, by a vote of 40,200, to 36,434
votes for Hon. James C. McLaughlin, Republican Representative for the pre-
ceding 26 years,
TENTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Alcona, Arenac, Bay, Olare, Crawford, Gladwin, Tosco, Isabella,
Mecosta, Midland, Ogemaw, Osceola, Oscoda, and Roscommon (14 counties). Population (1930),
186,738.
ROY ORCHARD WOODRUFF, Republican, of Bay City, Mich.; elected
to the Sixty-third, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alger, Alpena, Antrim, Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Chippewa
Delta, Emmet, Kalkaska, Luce, Mackinac, Menominee, Montmorency, Otsego, Presque Isle, an
Schoolcraft (16 counties). Population (1930), 204,710.
PRENTISS M. BROWN, Democrat, of St. Ignace, Mich., was born there,
June 18, 1889, son of James J. and Minnie Brown; educated in the city schools,
graduating in 1906; went to Albion College, Albion, Mich., graduating in 1911
with A. B. degree; a scholarship in political economy attracted him to the Uni-
versity of Illinois in 1911, and he became secretary to the dean of the graduate
school in 1912; in 1914 he returned to St. Ignace and was admitted to the bar;
practiced law with his father until the latter's death in 1920; alone for a time,
then with Elmer E. Metz, under firm name of Brown & Metz; served as prosecut-
ing attorney from 1914 to 1926; in 1930, on recommendation of the supreme
court, was appointed by the governor a member of the State board of law exam-
iners, and reappointed in 1931 for 5-year term; married, June 16, 1916, to Marion
E. Walker, of St. Ignace, and they have six children—Mariana F., Ruth M.,
James J., Barbara J., Patricia J., and Prentiss M., jr., elected to the Seventy-
third Congress by a vote of 39,261, to 37,311 for Frank P, Bohn, Republican,
1,542 for Eugene Leroy, Socialist, and 336 scattering,
MICHIGAN Brographical 53
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baraga, Dickinson, Gogebic, Houghton, Iron, Keweenaw, Mar-
quette, and Ontonagon (8 counties). Population (1930), 204,608.
W. FRANK JAMES, Republican, of Hancock, Mich.; enlisted as a private in
Company F, Thirty-fourth Regiment Michigan Volunteers, Spanish-American
War; has been treasurer of Houghton County, alderman and mayor of city of
Hancock, and served two terms as State senator in Michigan Legislature; married
Jennie M. Mingay, 1904; has four children—Anne, Frank, Newell, and Jean;
elected to the Sixty-fourth and each succeeding Congress; in the general election
on November 8, 1932, had a majority of 21,089; the majority of Mr. Hoover over
Mr. Roosevelt was 7,254.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CIty or DETROIT: Wards to 4; ward 6, ward 8, and Highland Park city.
Population (1930), 354,135.
CLARENCE JOHN McLEOD, Republican, of Detroit, was born in Detroit,
Mich., July 3, 1895; education received at Detroit Central High School, Univer-
sity of Detroit, and Detroit College of Law, where he received degree of LL. B.;
was admitted to the bar of Michigan, also United States district court, 1919, and
United States Supreme Court, 1925; enlisted in United States Army, 1918; served
in Aviation Ground School at Cornell University; served as sergeant in Military
Intelligence Division, and was commissioned second lieutenant in same; also com-
missioned major in United States Reserve Corps; married Marie Cathrine Posseli-
ous, of Detroit, Mich., May 10, 1920; they have four children—Clarence J., jr.,
Rosemary, Malcolm J., and Eugenia; is practicing law in Detroit, Mich.; elected to
Sixty-sixth Congress November 2, 1920, receiving 72,000 votes against 22,500
votes for James H. Lee, Democrat; was then 25 years old; not a candidate for
Sixty-seventh Congress; elected to Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to Sixty-
ninth Congress by majority of 83,311 votes; reelected to Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses. .
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—City or DETROIT: Wards 17, 19, and 21 and townships of Gratiot and
Grosse Pointe, in Wayne County. Population (1930), 350,212.
CARL M. WEIDEMAN, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich., was born there
March 5, 1898; attended the public schools in Detroit; matriculated at the
University of Michigan in 1914, but left there on account of the World War,
and enlisted in the United States Navy; upon being discharged resumed the
study of law at the Detroit College of Law; admitted to the bar in 1920; received
the degree of LL. B. in 1921 from the Detroit College of Law; member of the
Masonic Order, Odd Fellows, American Legion, Delta Theta Phi, law frater-
nity, and Detroit and American Bar Associations; never ran for public office
before; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 53,789 votes, defeating
Robert H. Clancy, Republican, who received 50,491 votes.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Ciry or DETROIT: Wards 10, 12, 14, and 16, Population (1930), 378,630.
JOHN D. DINGELL, Democrat, of Detroit, Mich.; born at Detroit, Mich.,
February 2, 1894; married Grace B. Bigler, April 27, 1925, and they have two
children—Jokn David, jr., and James Victor; elected to the Seventy-third
Congress from the newly created fifteenth district.
SIXTEENTH BDISTRICT.—Ciry or DETROIT: Wards 18 and 20; townships of Brownstown, Canton,
Dearborn, Ecorse, Grosse Isle, Huron, Monguagon, Nankin, Romulus, Sumpter, Taylor, and Van
Buren; cities of Dearborn, Lincoln Park, River Rouge, and Wyandotte, in Wayne County. Popula-
tion (1930) 318,919.
JOHN LESINSKI, Democrat, of Dearborn, Mich.; born at Erie, Pa., Janu-
ary 3, 1885; moved to Detroit, Mich., at the age of 3 months, and has lived in
Wayne County, Mich., ever since; attended St. Albertus School in Detroit at
age of 4, graduating from there at age of 11, and afterwards attending the St.
Cyril and Methodeusz Seminary in Detroit for two and one-half years and the
Detroit Business University for one year; married and has five children; at
age of 18 entered the building and real estate business, later founding the
Hamtramck Lumber & Supply Co. and the First State Bank of Hamtramck,
now known as the Peoples Wayne County Bank of Hamtramek; in after
54 Congressional Directory MINNESOTA
years founded the Dearborn Lumber & Supply Co., of Dearborn, Mich.; during
the World War assisted in organizing the Polish Army, for which service he
received the Polonia Restituta from the Polish Government; never before a
candidate for public office; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, from a
district normally 85 per cent Republican, by a vote of 43,369, to 36,174 for
Frank P. Darin, Republican.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—OARKLAND CouNty. City oF DETROIT: Ward 22, and townships of
Livonia, Northville, Plymouth, and Redford, in Wayne County. Population (1930) 318,146.
GEORGE ANTHONY DONDERO, Republican, of Royal Oak, Mich.; born
December 16, 1883, in Greenfield Township, Wayne County, Mich.; educated in
the public schools; graduate of Royal Oak High School in 1903, and of the Detroit
College of Law, in 1910, with an A. B. degree; admitted to the bar the same year,
since which time he has practiced law; held various municipal, village, township
and county offices; was first mayor of the city of Royal Oak, Mich., 1921-1923;
assistant prosecuting attorney of Oakland County, 1918-1920; member of the
board of education for 18 years; married to Adele Roegner, June 28, 1913, and they
have three children—Marion E., Stanton G., and Robert Lincoln; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress, receiving 51,918 votes, to 44,325 received by Harry
Mitchell, Democrat, a majority of 7,593.
MINNESOTA
(Population (1930), 2,563,953)
SENATORS
HENRIK SHIPSTEAD, Farmer-Labor, of Minneapolis, was born in the
township of Burbank, Kandiyohi County, Minn., January 8, 1881; elected to the
United States Senate in 1922 for the term ending March 3, 1929; reelected in
1928, polling, 665,169 votes, with a majority of 322,177 votes over his Republican
opponent; had the distinction of receiving over 100,000 more votes than the
gg candidate for President or for governor and carried every county in
the State.
THOMAS D. SCHALL, A. B., LL. B.; Republican; practicing lawyer, Minne-
apolis, Minn. ; married; has three children—Thomas D., jr., Richard, and Padget
Ann; blind; lost sight through electric shock; served five terms in House of
Representatives from tenth district, Minnesota; elected to United States Senate
November 4, 1924; reelected November 4, 1930.
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.— Population (1930), 2,563,953.
MAGNUS JOHNSON, Farmer-Labor, of Kimball, Minn., was born in Varm-
land, Sweden, September 19, 1871; received a common-school education; emi-
grated to the United States in 1891; farmer; married; held several public offices
in Meeker County, Minn., and also held several offices in cooperative organiza-
tions; member of the State house of representatives in 1915 and 1917, and of the
State senate in 1919 and 1921; served as a Member of the United States Senate,
July 16, 1923, to March 3, 1925; elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the
State at large, receiving 388,616 votes, the largest vote of the nine successful
candidates.
PAUL JOHN KVALE, Farmer-Labor, of Benson; born at Orfordville, Wis.,
March 27, 1896; served two years with the American forces during the World
War; married Russell Palmer Burcher, of Newport News, Va., in 1925; elected
to the Seventy-first Congress to fill the unexpired term of his father, Representa-
tive O. J. Kvale, who died September 11, 1929; reelected to the Seventy-second
Congress, and reelected as a Representative at large to the Seventy-third Congress.
MINNESOTA Biographical : 55
HENRY ARENS, Farmer-Labor, of Jordan, Minn., where he has resided since
1890; born November 21, 1873; for the last 27 years has owned and operated a
farm; served four years in the house of representatives of the Minnesota Legis-
lature, 1919-1923, and eight years in the State senate, 1923-1929; lieutenant
governor, 1929-1931; elected as Congressman at large from Minnesota to the
Bovenivsihin Congress, receiving the third highest vote of the nine successful
candidates.
ERNEST LUNDEEN, Farmer-Labor, of Minneapolis, Minn.; born at Beres-
ford, S. Dak., August 4, 1878; son of the Rev. Charles Henry and Christine
(Peterson) Lundeen; B. A. Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., 1901; law
department of the University of Minnesota, 1901-1903; married Norma Ward,
of San Francisco, Calif., February 5, 1919, and has two children, Ernest Ward
and Joan Jessie; lawyer; admitted to the bar in 1906, and began practice in
Minneapolis; member of the Minnesota House of Representatives for two terms,
1910-1914; delegate to the Republican National Conventions in Chicago in 1912
and 1916; Member of the Sixty-fifth (War) Congress, 1917-1919, and voted
against war, against conscription for foreign service, and against war with
Austria; opposed League of Nations and opposed entry into World Court; con-
ducted first congressional referendum on war; editor and publisher of Uncle
Sam; served as private in Company B, Twelfth Regiment Minnesota Volun-
teers, Spanish-American War; held a commission in the Minnesota National
Guard; member national championship rifle team, 1909; member of Delta Sigma
Rho and of the Spanish War Veterans; Mason; Methodist; president of the
American Club, the Washington Club, the Twelfth Minnesota United States
Volunteers Association, and first vice president of the Civil War Veterans
Association; delivered Memorial Day oration at National Cemetery, Arlington,
Va., in 1919, upon invitation of National Grand Army of the Republic; again
elected to Congress, November 8, 1932, receiving 350,455 votes.
THEODORE CHRISTIANSON, Republican, of Minneapolis, Minn., was
born on a farm at Lac qui Parle, Lac qui Parle County, in western Minnesota,
on September 12, 1883; received his education at the University of Minnesota,
from which he graduated in 1906 with the degree of A. B. and in 1909 with the
degree of LL. B.; received honorary degrees of LL. D., from Hamline Univer-
sity, and L. H. D., from Augustana College, Rock Island, Ill.; admitted to the
Minnesota bar in 1909, and practiced at Dawson, Minn., until 1924; married
in 1907 to Miss Ruth Eleanor Donaldson, at Dundas, Minn., and they have
two sons—Robert and Theodore, jr.; owner of the Dawson (Minn.) Sentinel,
which he published for 15 years; member of the Minnesota House of Represent-
atives from 1915 to 1925, and was chairman of its appropriations committee
- from 1917 to 1925; served as Governor of Minnesota three terms, 1925-1931;
elected to the Seventy-third Congress in 1932.
EINAR HOIDALE, Democrat, of Minneapolis, Minn.; born at Tromso, Nor-
way, August 17, 1870; LL. B., University of Minnesota; county attorney, 1900—
1906; judge advocate on General Bobletter’s staff, State militia; married and
has four children; elected Representative at large from Minnesota to the Seventy-
third Congress, receiving 321,949 votes, and being the only Democrat among
the nine successful candidates.
RAY P. CHASE, Republican; born and has always lived at Anoka, Minn.;
educated in Anoka public schools, B. A. University of Minnesota, LL. B. St.
Paul College of Law; married and has two daughters—Lora Lee, and Phyllis
Patricia; in the newspaper business from 1904 to 1915; State auditor and land
commissioner for 10 years; Republican nominee for governor, 1930; elected to
Congress in 1932.
FRANCIS HENRY SHOEMAKER, Farmer-Labor, of. Red Wing, Minn.;
born in Renville County, Minn., April 25, 1889, the son of Francis M. and Regina
(Dreyer) Shoemaker; self-educated, with mother’s assistance; married Lydgia H.
Schneider, of New London, Wis., April 10, 1912, and has one son, Fredric Warren,
born August 5, 1913; editor, writer, traveler, lecturer, farmer, and lifelong stu-
dent of political economy; started speaking and organizing farm organizations
56 C ongressional Directory MISSISSIPPI
at the age of 14; organizer of the Western Federation of Miners, and special
investigator for that organization in the Haywood, Moyer, and Pettibone trial at
Boise City; labor leader on Panama Canal during construction; charter member
and organizer of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party, and helped to organize the
Federated Farmer-Labor Party at Chicago in 1924, being the first man ever to
be nominated for Vice President on the Farmer-Labor ticket, which nomination
he declined; speaker and organizer of steel strike in 1919; and leader of packing-
house strikes in 1920 and of the railway shopmen’s strike in 1922; honorary life
member of 13 international railway unions, in appreciation of services rendered;
organizer for the following farm organizations: American Society of Equity,
National Nonpartisan League, Farmers Cooperative and Educational Union,
Equity Cooperative Exchange, and Progressive Farmers of America; chairman
of the Farmer-Labor Party of Goodhue County, Minn., and member of the State
committee of the Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party; at present on advisory com-
mittees of several farm organizations; editor and publisher of the People’s Voice,
Green Bay, Wis., 1921-1927, and of the Organized Farmer, Red Wing, Minn.,
1928 to the present time; has successfully carried on an active fight and organized
several municipal light and power plants; called the ‘stormy petrel’” of Minnesota
polities; is recognized as an uncompromising fighter against special privilege, and
bas a reputation for tipping over and wrecking political machines; on November
8, 1932, was elected to the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large, receiv-
ing over 317,000 votes.
HAROLD KNUTSON, Republican, of St. Cloud and Wadena; publisher of
Wadena Pioneer Journal. First elected to Sixty-fifth Congress; reelected to each
succeeding Congress.
MISSISSIPPI
(Population (1930), 2,009,821)
SENATORS
PAT HARRISON, Democrat, of Gulfport, Miss., was born at Crystal Springs,
Miss., August 29, 1881; was educated in the public schools of Crystal Springs
and the Louisiana State University; he was married in January, 1905, to Mary
Edwina McInnis, of Leakesville, Miss., and they have three children; was elected
district attorney, and served in that capacity for six years, resigning in September,
1910, to accept the nomination to the Sixty-second Congress; was elected to the
Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses; in 1918
was elected United States Senator for the term ending March 3, 1925; reelected
in 1924 and again in 1930 for the term ending in 1937.
HUBERT DURRETT STEPHENS, Democrat, of New Albany, was born
in New Albany, Union County, Miss., on July 2, 1875; is the oldest child of
Judge Z. M. Stephens and Lethe A. Stephens; received a common-school edu-
cation, graduated in law at the University of Mississippi, and was admitted
to the bar shortly before reaching his majority; was married in 1899 to Miss
Delia Glenn, of Courtland, Miss., and has two sons—Hubert D. Stephens, jr.,
and Marion Glenn Stephens; was elected district attorney in 1907, resigning
that office in April, 1910, to make the race for Congress; was elected to the
Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixty-sixth Congresses
from the second congressional district of Mississippi; was not a candidate for
reelection to the Sixty-seventh Congress; in 1922 was nominated and elected
United States Senator to succeed Hon. John Sharp Williams, who was not a
candidate for reelection; was reelected in 1928 for term ending in 1935.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CountiES: Alcorn, Clay, Itawamba, Lee, Lowndes, Monroe, Noxubee, Oktibbeha,
Prentiss, and Tishomingo (10 counties). Population (1930), 241,605.
JOHN ELLIOTT RANKIN, Democrat, of Tupelo; born in Itawamba County,
Miss., on March 29, 1882, son of Thomas B. and Modest Rutledge Rankin;
educated in the common schools, the high school, and the University of Missis-
MISSISSIPPI Biographical 57
sippi, graduating from the law department of the latter institution in 1910 with
the degree of LL. B.; entered the practice of law at West Point, Miss., in June,
1910, and moved to, Tupelo, Miss., in November of that year, where he has
practiced his profession since that time, during which period he served four
years as prosecuting attorney; an ex-soldier of the World War, member of the
Methodist Episcopal Church, South, the Masonic fraternity, and several other
orders; was married on October 1, 1919, to Miss Annie Laurie Burrous, of West
Point, Miss.; they have one child, a daughter, Annie Laurie, who was born
January 14, 1923; was nominated in the Democratic primaries of 1920 and
elected at the general election on November 2; renominated and reelected to
the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Benton, De Soto, Lafayette, Marshall, Panola, Tallahatchie, Tate,
Tippah, Union, and Yalobusha (10 counties). Population (1930), 219,661.
WALL DOXEY, Democrat, of Holly Springs, Miss.; born at Holly Springs,
Marshall County, Miss., August 8, 1892; married in 1916 to Miss Myrtle Frances
Johnson, of Jackson, Tenn.; one child, Wall Doxey, jr., born January 11, 1926;
member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, Masonic Order, Shriners,
Elks, and Phi Delta Phi (legal fraternity); educated in public schools of Holly
Springs; graduated from University of Mississippi in 1913, A. B. degree, and
from University of Mississippi Law School in 1914, with LL. B. degree; ad-
mitted to bar in 1914, and has since practiced law at Holly Springs; elected
prosecuting attorney of Marshall County in 1915, and reelected without opposi-
tion in 1919; elected district attorney, third judicial district of Mississippi, in
1923, and reelected without opposition in 1927; nominated in the primary of
1928 and elected without opposition November 6, 1928, to the Seventy-first
Congress; reelected to the Seventy-second Congress without opposition; re-
elected to the Seventy-third Congress without opposition.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bolivar, Coahoma, Holmes, Humphreys, Issaquena, Leflore, Quit-
man, Sharkey, Sunflower, Tunica, and Washington (11 counties). Population (1930), 420,969.
WILLIAM MADISON WHITTINGTON, Democrat, of Greenwood, Miss. ;
born at Little Springs, Franklin County, Miss., May 4, 1878; attended public
schools of Franklin County; graduated from Mississippi College, Clinton, Miss.,
in 1898, with degree of A. B.; graduated from University of Mississippi in June,
1899, with degree of LL. B.; taught school for six months in Franklin County,
and began practice of law in Franklin County, Miss., in January, 1900; moved
to Greenwood, Miss., in January, 1904, where he has since been engaged in prac-
tice of profession and farming; is member of Baptist Church, Woodmen of the
World, Elk, Kiwanis Club, and Mason, being a Knight Templar, Scottish Rite,
thirty-second degree, and a Shriner; was married July 20, 1910, to Miss Anna
Ward Aven, of Clinton, Miss.; has three children—Mary Bailey, 21, William
Madison, jr., 18, and Charles Aven, 15; was State senator from 1916 to 1920, and
reelected for 4-year term beginning January, 1924, but resigned to accept the nom-
ination for Congress in August, 1924; nominated for Congress in Democratic
primary August, 1924, was elected to Sixty-ninth Congress without opposition
at general election November, 1924; renominated in the Democratic primary
August 17, 1926, and reelected to the Seventieth Congress without opposition at
the general election November 2, 1926; renominated without opposition and re-
elected to the Seventy-first Congress without opposition at the general election
on November 6, 1928; renominated without opposition in the Democratic pri-
mary on August 19, 1930, and reelected to the Seventy-second Congress without
opposition at the general election on November 4, 1930; renominated in the
Democratic primary on August 23, 1932, and reelected to the Seventy-third
Congress at the general election on November 8, 1932.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Attala, Calhoun, Carroll, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Grenada, Mont-
gomery, Pontotoc, Webster, and Winston (10 counties). Population (1930), 184,266.
JEFF BUSBY, Democrat, of Houston, Miss., was born in Tishomingo County,
Miss.; B. S. of G. R. C. College, Henderson, Tenn.; LL. B., University of Mis-
sissippi; prosecuting attorney of Chickasaw County, 1912-1920; married; was
nominated for Congress in the Democratic primary August 15, 1922; elected to
Sixty-eighth Congress November 7, 1922; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth,
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
58 Congressional Directory MISSOURI
FIFTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Olarke, Jasper, Kemper, Lauderdale, Leake, Neshoba, Newton, Scott;
Simpson, and Smith (10 counties). Population (1930), 244,562.
ROSS A. COLLINS, Democrat, of Meridian; born Aprit 25, 1880, at Collins-
ville, in Lauderdale County, Miss.; preliminary education in city schools of
Meridian, and in 1894-95, the Mississippi Agricultural and Mechanical College;
A. B., Kentucky University (now Transylvania University); LL. B., University
of Mississippi; LL. D., Transylvania University, 1930; admitted to bar and
practiced law at Meridian, 1901-1912; married Alfreda Grant, of Meridian, 1904;
they have two children—Jane, aged 17, Melvin, aged 12; elected attorney general
of Mississippi, 1911; reelected without opposition in 1915; candidate for Governor,
1919; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress; reelected to Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Covington, Forrest, George, Greene, Hancock, Harrison, Jackson,
Jefferson Davis, Jones, Lamar, Lawrence, Marion, Pearl River, Perry, Stone, and Wayne (16 counties).
Population (1930), 284,457.
WILLIAM MEYERS COLMER, Democrat, of Pascagoula, Miss., was born
at Moss Point, Jackson County, Miss., February 11, 1890; educated in the public
schools, at Moss Point, McHenry, and Gulfport, Miss., and Millsaps College,
Jackson, Miss.; taught school from 1914 to 1917; admitted to the bar in 1917,
at Purvis, Lamar County, Miss., and has practiced law at Pascagoula since 1919;
served as attorney of Jackson County, Miss., 1921-1927, and as district attorney
(Jackson, Harrison, Hancock, Stone, and George Counties, Miss.) from 1928,
until his resignation, in 1933, having been elected to Congress; during the World
War served as a private, and was honorably discharged as regimental sergeant-
major; married Miss Ruth Miner, of Lumberton, Miss., to which union three
boys were born—Billy, jr., Jimmy, and Tommy; Mason, Methodist, Elk, Wood-
man of the World, Rotarian, American Legion, Forty and Eight, and Pi Kappa
Alpha; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving
22,831 votes.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Adams, Amite, Claiborne, Copiah, Franklin, Hinds, Jefferson,
Tanoint DS aien Pike, Rankin, Walthall, Warren, Wilkinson, and Yazoo (15 counties). Popula-
tion (1930), ,301.
RUSSELL ELLZEY, Democrat, of Wesson, Miss., was born March 20, 1891;
the son of William Judson Ellzey, a farmer, and Alice McPherson Ellzey, who
was reared on a farm at Union Church, Jefferson County; married Miss Ruth
Ratcliff, the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. M. D. Ratcliff, of McComb, Miss., and is
the father of a 4-year old son, Clyde Lawrence Ellzey; was reared on a farm in
Lincoln County, where he attended the rural schools of that community;
graduated from Mississippi College with an A. B. degree in 1912; later, was a
summer student at the University of Chicago; for 18 years he taught school in
Copiah and Lincoln Counties, and at one time served as superintendent of
education in Lincoln County, and for the past 10 years has been president of
the Copiah-Lincoln Junior College; in 1917 he volunteered his services for the
World War, and served 18 months in American camps and in France; is a Mason,
a member of the Baptist Church, and a Rotarian; was overwhelmingly elected
on March 15, 1932, to the Seventy-second Congress, to fill the unexpired term
of the lamented Percy E. Quin; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by a
majority of 8,927 over a very worthy opponent.
MISSOURI
(Population (1930), 3,629,367)
SENATORS
ROSCOE C. PATTERSON, Republican, was born in Springfield, Mo.,
September 15, 1876; married; one son; educated in public schools of Springfield,
Mo., Drury College, University of Missouri, and Washington University, St.
Louis, Mo.; graduated from the law department of Washington University
with the degree of LL. B. in June, 1897; admitted to the Missouri bar Sep-
tember 15, 1897, and engaged in the general practice of law at Springfield until
December 21, 1925; elected prosecuting attorney of Greene County (two terms)
MISSOURI B 1ographical 59
from January 1, 1903, until January 1, 1907; member of the Republican State
committee from the seventh congressional district of Missouri from 1912 until
1920; chairman of Republican State conventions which met in St. Louis in 1918
and in Kansas City, May 5, 1920; member Sixty-seventh Congress; presidential
elector at large from Missouri in 1924; appointed by President Calvin Coolidge
United States attorney for the western district of Missouri, December 21, 1925;
for a term of four years; resigned as United States attorney February, 1929;
elected United States Senator November 6, 1928, for a term of six years.
BENNETT CHAMP CLARK, Democrat, of St. Louis County, Mo., was
born at Bowling Green, Mo., January 8, 1890, the son of Champ and Genevieve
(Bennett) Clark; attended the public schools at Bowling Green and Washington,
D. C.; graduated from Eastern High School, Washington, D. C., in 1908, Univer-
sity of Missouri, with A. B. degree, in 1912, and George Washington University,
with LL. B. degree, in 1914; parliamentarian of the United States House of Repre=-
sentatives, 1913-1917; attended first officers training camp at Fort Myer, Va.,
in 1917, receiving commission as captain; elected lieutenant colonel, Sixth Regi-
ment Missouri Infantry, and served as lieutenant colonel of that regiment, which
later became the One hundred and fortieth Regiment United States Infantry,
until September, 1918; Assistant Chief of Staff, Eighty-eighth Division, from
September, 1918, to March, 1919, and of Thirty-fifth Division, from March,
1919, until discharged in May, 1919; promoted to colonel of Infantry in March,
1919; one of the 17 charter members and an incorporator of the American Legion,
and chairman of the Paris caucus, which formally organized the Legion; past
national commander of the American Legion; past commander of the Thirty-
fifth Division Veterans’ Association and ex-president of the National Guard
Association of the United States; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars;
practiced law in St. Louis since discharge from the Army; active in Democratic
politics all his life, having attended every Democratic National Convention since
1900; parliamentarian of the Democratic National Convention in 1916; delegate
at large and member of the resolutions and platform committee of the Houston
Convention in 1928; vice chairman of the Democratic regional headquarters at
St. Louis in 1928; member of Second Presbyterian Church of St. Louis; member
of Masonic and Odd Fellows orders, Missouri Athletic Club, and the St. Louis,
Mo., and American Bar Associations; married on October 2, 1922, to Miss Miriam
Marsh, the daughter of the late Hon. Wilbur Marsh, of Waterloo, Iowa, treasurer
of the Democratic National Committee during the presidential campaigns of
1916 and 1920, and they have three sons—Champ, and the twins Marsh and
Kimball; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1932, for the term
commencing March 4, 1933, but was subsequently appointed to the Senate on
February 3, 1933, by Gov. Guy B. Park, to fill the unexpired term caused by the
resignation of Hon. Harry B. Hawes,
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 3,629,367.
JOHN J. COCHRAN, Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo.; born August 11, 1880;
lawyer; secretary to Hon. William IL. Igoe and Hon. Harry B. Hawes, who
represented St. Louis in Congress for 14 years; secretary to the late Senator
William J. Stone, being with the Senator at the time of his death; during the
period of his service with Senator Stone was also secretary of the Foreign Rela-
tions Committee of the Senate; married; elected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth,
Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; candidate at large for nomination
and election to Seventy-third Congress; in primary with 56 Democratic candidates
received next to highest number of votes polled for any candidate; in election
received 1,013,824 votes, leading 13 Democratic candidates, receiving 9,654 more
votes than Hon. James R. Claiborne, who finished second, and 404,556 more
votes than Hon. L. C. Dyer, who led Republican candidates; chairman, Committee
on Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
JAMES R. CLAIBORNE, Democrat, of St. Louis, Mo.; born June 22, 1882,
at St. Louis, Mo.; educated in the St. Louis public schools, and graduated from the
University of Missouri in 1907; lectured in law school of St. Louis University on
torts, evidence, and other subjects, over a period of 10 years; lawyer, giving
60 Congressional Directory MISSOURI
special attention to trial work in both State and Federal courts; married Miss
Louise Minnis, of St. Louis, November, 1919, and they have two children—
Martha Ann Claiborne and James R. Claiborne, jr.; Democratic candidate for
judge of the circuit court, eighth judicial district, in 1924; elected as Representa-
tive at large from Missouri to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 1,004,170
votes, the second highest vote of all the successful candidates.
JOSEPH B. SHANNON, Democrat, of Kansas City, Mo.; born at St. Louis,
Mo., March 17, 1867; educated in public schools of St. Louis and Kansas City,
Mo.; admitted to bar in Missouri and entered upon the practice of law in
Kansas City, Mo., in 1905; chairman Democratic State committee in 1910;
delegate to the Democratic National Conventions at Denver in 1908, at Balti-
more in 1912, at San Francisco in 1920, at New York in 1924, at Houston in
1928, and at Chicago in 1932; member of the Missouri constitutional convention
of 1922-23; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-
third Congress from the State at large; chairman of the Special Committee to
Investigate Government Competition with Private Enterprise.
CLYDE WILLIAMS, Democrat, of Hillsboro, was born on a farm in Jefferson
County, Mo., October 13, 1873; attended the country schools, the De Soto High
School, the State Normal School at Cape Girardeau, and was graduated from
the University of Missouri in 1901, receiving the degrees of A. B. and LL. B.;
prosecuting attorney of Jefferson County from 1902 to 1908; practiced law in
southeast Missouri continuously since 1901; married to Lola Marsden, of Vie-
toria, Mo., April 26, 1905; has two daughters, Eleanor Doyne and Merle Lee,
and one son, Evan Duane; elected to the Seventieth Congress by a majority of
574 over Charles E. Kiefner, and to the Seventy-second Congress by a majority
of 3,255; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
CLARENCE CANNON, Democrat, of Elsberry; born April 11, 1879, at Els-
berry, Mo.; was graduated from La Grange College (now Hannibal-La Grange
Junior College), William Jewell College, and Missouri University; B. S., A. B.,
A. M., LL. B,, LL. D.; admitted to State and Federal bars and entered the prac-
tice of law at Troy, Mo.; married; two daughters; parliamentarian of the House
of Representatives under Democratic and Republican administrations; volun-
teered for World War; delegate to State and National Democratic conventions;
parliamentarian of the Democratic National Conventions at San Francisco,
1920, New York, 1924, Houston, 1928, and Chicago, 1932; editor of two editions
of the Manual and Digest of the House of Representatives, 1916 and 1918;
author of A Synopsis of the Procedure of the House, 1919, of Procedure in the
House of Representatives, 1920, of Cannon’s Procedure, 1928 (published by
resolutions of the House), and of two editions of the Convention Parliamentary
Manual (published, 1928 and 1932, by the Democratic National Committee);
author of treaties on parliamentary law in Encyclopaedia Britannica; editor and
compiler of the Precedents of the House of Representatives by act of Congress;
received honorary degree of LL. D., conferred by William Jewell College, 1930,
and Culver-Stockton College, 1932; elected to Sixty-eighth and succeeding
Congresses. In state-wide election held November 8, 1932, led in largest number
of counties in the State and received highest number of votes cast for any con-
gressional candidate on any ticket outside of St. Louis.
FRANK HOOD LEE, Democrat, of Joplin, Mo.; born March 29, 1875, near
De Sota, Johnson County, Kans.; his parents moved to Vernon County, Mo.,
in 1876, and settled near Virgil City; his father, Daniel Marion Lee, was a Con-
federate soldier; educated at country school at Virgil City, Vernon County, Mo.;
lawyer; married Miss Allie King, of Marshall, Mo., and is the father of seven
children—MTrs. Dorothy Lee Steinert; Katherine B.; Alfred X., married; Marion
'S.; Harold H.; Frank H., jr.; and Mary Virginia Lee, the youngest, aged 15 years;
member of the State legislature in 1915 and 1917; Democratic nominee for
Representative in the United States Congress in 1922 and 1930, never being
defeated in a primary; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, from the State at
large, receiving a popular vote of 997,448, being sixth highest of the successful
13 Democrats elected—the highest Republican received 609,268 votes.
MISSOURI Biographical 61
JAMES EDWARD RUFFIN, Democrat, of Springfield, Mo., was born on a
farm near Covington, Tipton County, Tenn., July 24, 1893; accompanied his
parents to Aurora, Mo., in 1905, where he attended the grade schools; graduated
from the Aurora High School, in 1912, and from Drury College, Springfield, Mo.,
in 1916, with the degree of A. B., and was a tackle on the mythical all-Missouri
Valley football team during his senior year; after teaching a year at Nickerson
College, Nickerson, Kans., he entered an officers’ training camp, and served
overseas with the First and Thirty-fifth Divisions; graduated from the law
school of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., in 1920, with the degree of
LL. B.; commenced the practice of law in Springfield, Mo., in 1920; single; served
as assistant city attorney of Springfield, 1926-1928; president of Greene County
(Mo.) Bar Association, 1931; is holding his first elective office; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, from the State at large.
RALPH FULTON LOZIER, Democrat, of Carrollton, was born on a farm in
Ray County, Mo., January 28 1866; attended country schools; graduated from
the Carrollton High School at the age of 17 years; taught country schools for
three years, reading law at night; admitted to the bar in October, 1886; president
of Missouri Bar Association, 1912-13; member of the American Bar Association;
married Iowa Carruthers, of Bloomfield, Towa, February 24, 1892, who died
“January 22, 1929; has two sons, Lue C. and Ralph, jr.; elected to the Sixty-
eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third
Congresses.
JACOB L. MILLIGAN, Democrat, of Richmond, was born March 9, 1889;
educated in the Richmond public schools; attended the law department of the
University of Missouri, 1910-1914; admitted to the bar, 1913; married; enlisted
in the Sixth Regiment Missouri Infantry April 8, 1917; served as captain of
Company G, One hundred and fortieth Regiment Infantry, Thirty-fifth Divi-
sion, from August 4, 1917, to May 15, 1919; embarked for France April 23,
1918; returned April 28, 1919; was elected to fill a vacancy in the Sixty-sixth
Congress on February 14, 1920; again elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and
reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second
Congresses.
REUBEN TERRELL WOOD, Democrat, of Springfield, Mo., was born on a
farm near Springfield, August 7, 1884, of Virginia parents; received his education
in the public schools of Springfield, and under the tutorship of his father, who was
a graduate of the University of Virginia, and his mother, who graduated from
Piedmont Female Academy near Cobham, Va.; at an early age he entered the
cigar industry; elected president of the Missouri State Federation of Labor in
1912 and served in this capacity for 20 consecutive years; also served as chairman
of the legislative committee of the Missouri Federation of Labor and attended
every session of the Missouri General Assembly from 1913 to 1933, sponsoring
legislation in the interests of the wage earner, farmer, and small business man;
led the continuous fight for the enactment of the Missouri workmen’s compen-
sation law, from 1915 until its final passage in 1925, and the subsequent ratifi-
cation, by vote of the people in the general election of 1926; served in the capacity
of national legislative representative of the United Brotherhood of Maintenance
of Way Employees during the session of the Sixty-sixth Congress, from October,
1919, to April, 1920, sponsoring legislation in the interest of the railway employees;
during the World War was a member of the State advisory board for Missouri of
the United States Fuel Administration and was a member of the Missouri divi-
sion of the United States Food Administration; was elected Congressman at
large in the general election of November 8, 1932, to the Seventy-third Congress,
receiving 994,569 votes, and with a majority of 385,301 over his nearest Repub-
lican opponent, L. C. Dyer.
MILTON ANDREW ROMJUE, Democrat, of Macon, was born December 5,
1874, at Love Lake, Macon County, Mo., and grew to manhood on a farm near
the above-named place; received his education in the public school, in the Kirks-
ville State Teacher’s College, and at the University of Missouri at Columbia,
Mo.; received the degree of LL. B. at the University of Missouri in 1904, where
he was graduated with the highest honors of his class; was elected judge of the
62 Congressional Directory : MONTANA
probate court of Macon County, Mo., in 1906, and served for eight years, having
been elected by the highest number of votes on the Democratic ticket at each
election; elected a second term without opposition of any party; his father,
Andrew Jackson Romjue, was born in Scotland County, Mo., in 1840, and came
of Kentucky parentage; his mother, Susan E. (Roan) Romjue, was born in
Randolph County, Mo., her father having been a native of Caswell County,
N. C., and her mother, Matilda Sears, of Virginia stock; he has served four years as
chairman of the central Democratic committee and has frequently been a delegate
to State Democratic conventions; was married to Maude Nickell Thompson on
July 11, 1900, and has one son, Lawson Rodney Romjue, now 25 years of age;
was elected to the Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth,
Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; was reelected to the Seventy-third
Congress as a Representative at large; was the director of organization in the
Democratic State headquarters during the campaign of 1932, and at the general
election terminating this campaign the entire State and National Democratic
tickets carried Missouri by the largest majorities ever recorded in the history of
the State; during the time he was not serving as the judge of the court, to which
he was elected, he has been actively engaged in the practice of his profession—
the law—and in the management of his farming interests in his native county;
was one of a delegation of 12 Congressmen to meet and welcome President Wilson
at New York upon his return to the United States from the Peace Conference in
Europe, July 8, 1919; member of Baptist Church and following fraternal orders:
Masonic (thirty-second degree), Elks, and Woodmen (both Modern Woodmen
and Woodmen of the World).
RICHARD M. DUNCAN, Democrat, of St. Joseph, Mo., was born near
Edgerton, Platte County, Mo., on November 10, 1889, the son of Richard F.
and Margaret Meloan Duncan; attended the country public schools of Platte
County and was graduated from the Christian Brothers College of St. Joseph,
Mo., in 1909; married Miss Glenna Davenport, in St. Joseph, June 4, 1913, and
they have one son, 18 years of age; served as deputy circuit clerk of Buchanan
County, Mo., 1911-1917; was admitted to the practice of law in St. Joseph in
1916; member of the law firm of Kranitz & Duncan, of St. Joseph; served as city
counselor of St. Joseph, 1926-1930; unsuccessful Democratic candidate for Rep-
resentative in Congress from the fourth Missouri district in 1928; was elected to
the Seventy-third Congress from the State at large in 1932.
CLEMENT CABELL DICKINSON, Democrat, of Clinton, Henry County,
~ Mo., was born December 6, 1849, in Prince Edward County, Va.; graduated
from Hampden Sidney College, Virginia, in June, 1869; taught school thereafter
in Virginia, Kentucky, and Missouri; located at Clinton, Mo., in September,
1872; studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1875; was elected prosecuting
attorney of Henry County, Mo., in 1876, and served three terms of two years
each; was Democratic presidential elector in 1896; was elected to the Missouri
House of Representatives in 1900 and served one term of two years; was elected
to the State Senate of Missouri in 1902 and served one term of four years. In
1907 was appointed a member of the board of regents of the State Normal School
at Warrensburg, Mo., for a term of six years; was elected to the Sixty-first
Congress from the sixth congressional district of Missouri at the special elec-
tion on February 1, 1910, to fill the unexpired term of David A. De Armond,
deceased, and took his seat February 7, 1910; again elected to the Sixty-second
Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses,
MONTANA
(Population (1930), 537,606)
SENATORS
BURTON KENDALL WHEELER, Democrat, of Butte, was born at Hudson,
Mass., February 27, 1882; educated in the public schools; graduated from the
University of Michigan; entered the practice of law at Butte in 1905; married
Lulu M. White in 1907; has six children; elected to the State legislature in 1910;
served five years as United States district attorney; elected United States Senator
in 1922; reelected in 1928.
NEBRASKA Biographical 63
JOHN E. ERICKSON, Democrat, of Kalispell, Mont., was born at Stoughton,
Wis., March 14, 1863; educated in the public schools at Eureka, Kans.; graduated
from Washburn College, Topeka, Kans., in 1890; admitted to the bar in 1892
at Eureka, Kans.; commenced the practice of law at Choteau, Mont., in 1893;
served three terms as county attorney of Teton County, Mont.; elected for
three terms as district judge of the eleventh judicial district of Montana; elected
Governor of Montana in 1924; reelected in 1928 and 1932; appointed United
States Senator on March 13, 1933; married Miss Grace Vance, June 27, 1898;
has three children—two sons and a daughter.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Beaverhead, Broadwater, Deerlodge, Flathead, Gallatin, Granite,
Jefferson, Lake, Lewis and Clark, Lincoln, Madison, Mineral, Missoula, Powell, Ravalli, Sanders,
and Silver Bow (17 counties). Population (1930), 211,918.
JOSEPH P. MONAGHAN, Democrat, of Butte, Mont.; born in that city
March 26, 1906; educated in public schools of Butte, Mont.; graduated from
Mount St. Charles (Carroll College), Helena, Mont., in 1928 with an A. B.
degree; studied law at the University of Montana and was admitted to practice
of law June 2, 1931; served in the Twenty-first Legislature of the State of Mon-
tana; member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, No. 240, of Butte,
and member of Kappa Sigma fraternity; elected to the Seventy-third Congress
by about 18,000 majority.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Big Horn, Blaine, Carbon, Carter, Cascade, Chouteau, Custer,
Daniels, Dawson, Fallon, Fergus, Garfield, Glacier, Golden Valley, Hill, Judith Basin, Liberty,
McCone, Meagher, Musselshell, Park, Petroleum, Phillips, Pondera, Powder River, Prairie, Richland,
Roosevelt, Rosebud, Sheridan, Stillwater, Sweet Grass, Teton, Toole, Treasure, Valley, Wheatland,
Wis, and Yellowstone (39 counties), and part of Yellowstone National Park. Population (1930),
25,688.
ROY E. AYERS, Democrat, of Lewistown, Mont.; born November 9, 1382,
on a stock ranch in central Montana, son of George W. Ayers, a pioneer livestock
rancher of the State; spent his early life on a ranch; attended country schools
and was enrolled in the first class of the Lewistown High School when it was
organized; graduated from Valparaiso University, Valparaiso, Ind., with degree
of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar and commenced practice; served as county
prosecuting attorney; was elected district judge, and was at that time the young-
est judge in America who could inflict the death penalty; was reelected judge a
second and third time, and served until his resignation, to reengage in private
practice; member of the Montana State Board of Education; chairman of the
exemption board of his county during the period of the World War; delegate at
large from Montana to the Democratic National Convention at San Francisco
in 1920; in addition to his official and professional duties has also been con-
tinuously engaged in livestock and ranching since his majority; now operates a
livestock ranch in central Montana; is both a York Rite and Scottish Rite Mason;
was married in 1905 to Miss Ellen Simpson, the daughter of a pioneer Montana
rancher, and they have three children, all grown; was elected to the Seventy-
third Congress by a majority of 10,200 votes.
NEBRASKA
(Population (1930), 1,377,963)
SENATORS
GEORGE W. NORRIS, Republican, of McCook, Nebr., was born in San-
dusky County, Ohio, July 11, 1861, and his early life was spent on the farm
where he was born; his father died when he was a small child, his only brother
was killed in the War of the Rebellion, and his mother was left in straitened
circumstances; was compelled to work out among the neighboring farmers by
the day and month during the summer and attended district school during the
winter; afterwards taught school and earned the money to defray expenses for a
higher education; attended Baldwin University, Berea, Ohio, and the Valparaiso
University; studied law while teaching and afterwards finished the law course
in law school; was admitted to the bar in 1883; removed to Nebraska in 1885;
was three times prosecuting attorney, twice by appointment and once by election,
64 Congressional Directory NEBRASKA
refusing a second nomination for the position; was elected district judge of four-
teenth district in 1895 and reelected to the same position in 1899, which position
he held when nominated for Congress; was elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-
ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-second Congresses; was elected to the
Senate for the term beginning March 4, 1913; reelected in 1918, in 1924, and in
1930; his present term will expire in 1937.
WILLIAM HENRY THOMPSON, Democrat, of Grand Island, Nebr.; born
in Perrysville, Ohio, December 14, 1853; son of Eli and Eliza (Kirby) Thomp-
son; received a common school education and special private instruction;
attended Upper Iowa University, Fayette, Iowa, 1872-1875; LL. B., State Uni-
versity of Iowa, 1877; married Nettie I. Hutchinson, of West Union, Iowa,
September 7, 1879; began practice at Brush Creek (now Arlington), Iowa;
settled at Grand Island, Nebr., 1881; an organizer and director of the State
Bank of Grand Island; city attorney of Grand Island, 1887-88; Democratic
candidate for Congress, 1890; delegate at large to Democratic National Conven-
tions, 1892-1908, inclusive; member of the board of trustees of Grand Island
College (Baptist), 1893; mayor of Grand Island, 1895-1898; member of Demo-
cratic National Committee, 1896-1900, 1920-1924; Democratic candidate for
governor of Nebraska, 1902: member of capitol commission for erection of new
State capitol; judge of Supreme Court of Nebraska, by appointment, April, 1924
to January, 1925, and by election, January, 1925, for a term of six years; appointed
United States Senator, May 24, 1933, to fill vacancy caused by the death of the
late Senator Robert Beecher Howell; Presbyterian.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CounTies: Butler, Cass, Gage, Johnson, Lancaster, Nemaha, Otoe, Pawnee,
Richardson, Saunders, and Seward (11 counties). Population (1930), 269,428.
JOHN HENRY MOREHEAD, Democrat, of Falls City, Nebr.; born on a
farm near Columbia, Lucas County, Iowa; engaged in school teaching, farming,
mercantile business, and banking; twice treasurer of Richardson County; mayor
of Falls City; State senator; twice governor; elected to represent the first con-
gressional district in the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
Skgovy DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Douglas, Sarpy, and Washington (3 counties). Population (1930),
55,479.
EDWARD RAYMOND BURKE, Democrat, of Omaha, Nebr., was born at
Running Water, S. Dak., November 28, 1880; educated in the public schools;
received A. B. degree from Beloit College, Beloit, Wis., in 1906, and LL. B.
degree from Harvard Law School in 1911; lawyer; during the World War served
as second lieutenant in the Air Service; married Henrietta Flinn; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress, receiving 51,728 votes, and Malcolm Baldrige, Repub-
lican, 44,209 votes.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Antelope, Boone, Boyd, Burt, Cedar, Colfax, Cuming, Dakota,
Dixon, Dodge, Greeley, Holt, Knox, Madison, Merrick, Nance, Pierce, Platte, Stanton, Thurston,
Wayne, and Wheeler (22 counties). Population (1930), 291,595.
EDGAR HOWARD, Democrat, of Columbus, Nebr.; Member of the Sixty-
eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses
and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress. :
FOURTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Adams, Chase, Clay, Dundy, Fillmore, Franklin, Frontier, Furnas,
QGosper, Hall, Hamilton, Harlan, Hayes, Hitchcock, Jefferson, Kearney, Nuckolls, Perkins, Phelps,
Polk, Redwillow, Saline, Thayer, Webster, and. York (25 counties). Population (1930), 290,318.
ASHTON C. SHALLENBERGER, Democrat, of Alma, Nebr., was born at
Toulon, I1l.; attended the public schools of Toulon and the University of Illi-
nois; moved to Nebraska, where he engaged in banking and stock raising;
married Eliza Zilg, of Spring Green, Wis., and they have three children; served
as Governor of Nebraska from 1908 to 1910; elected as Representative from the
fifth eongressional district to the Fifty-seventh, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-
eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to the
Seventy-third Congress.
NEVADA Biographical 65
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Arthur, Banner, Blaine, Box Butte, Brown, Buffalo, Cherry, Chey-
enne, Custer, Dawes, Dawson, Deuel, Garden, Garfield, Grant, Hooker, Howard, Keith, Keyapaha,
Kimball, Lincoln, Logan, Loup, McPherson, Morrill, Rock, Scotts Bluff, Sheridan, Sherman, Sioux,
Thomas, and Valley (32 counties). Population (1930), 271,143.
TERRY McGOVERN CARPENTER, Democrat, of Scottsbluff, Nebr.; born
at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, March 28, 1900; attended Cedar Rapids High School;
newsboy until 16 years of age; moved to Scottsbluff, Nebr., in 1916, and held
various positions with a railroad company; engaged in wholesale candy and
tobacco business, 1922-23; moved to Long Beach, Calif., and was employed in
several capacities and as manager of the municipal gas and water department;
returned to Scottsbluff in 1927 and was engaged in the garage business for two
years; in 1930 opened a cut-rate gasoline filling station, but while temporarily
forced out of business by big operators, managed to refinance and start again,
and as the depression grew worse his business flourished and he added coal, oils,
ete.; married Hazeldean Carruthers, February 1, 1930, and they have one son,
Terry, jr., 2 years old; unsuccessful candidate for mayor of Scottsbluff in 1931;
received the Democratic nomination in field of seven candidates and was elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, defeating Robert G. Simmons, Republican incum-
bent, by 4,386 votes; is actively fighting the power trusts and power monopolies
and hag tried to have more effective regulatory rate commissions set up.
NEVADA
(Population (1930), 91,058)
SENATORS
KEY PITTMAN, Democrat, of Tonopah, Nev.; born in Vicksburg, Miss.,
September 19, 1872; son of William Buckner Pittman and Catherine (Key)
Pittman; educated by private tutors and at the Southwestern Presbyterian
University, Clarksville, Tenn.; LL. D., Southwestern Presbyterian University
and George Washington University; commenced practice of law at Seattle, Wash.
in 1892; was in the Northwest Territory and Alaska from 1897 until the fall of
1901; was one of the committee that formulated the ‘‘consent’” form of govern-
ment for Nome; was first prosecuting attorney at Nome, Alaska; went to Tonopah,
Nev., in January, 1902; never ran for any office except that of United States
Senator; elected 1912 for unexpired term of four years; reelected 1916, 1922, and
November 6, 1928, to serve until 1935; secretary Senate Democratic caucus 1913
to 1917; Democratic conference nominee for President pro tempore of the Senate
for the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, and
Seventy-second Congresses; secretary committee on platform and resolutions of
Democratic National Convention of 1924; chairman committee on platform and
resolutions of Democratic National Convention of 1928; selected by convention
to officially notify Gov. Alfred E. Smith of his nomination as candidate of the
Democratic Party for Presid@nt of the United States; elected President pro
tempore of the Senate, March 9, 1933.
PATRICK A. (PAT) McCARRAN, Democrat, born Reno, Nev., August 8,
1876; lawyer; educated public schools of Reno; University of Nevada (M. A.);
legal education private tutors; member Nevada Legislature, 1903; represented
Nevada in irrigation congress, 1903; district attorney, Nye County, Nev., 1906
1908; associate justice, 1913-1916, and chief justice, 1917-18, Supreme Court of
Nevada; member of Nevada State Library Commission, 1913-1918; member
Nevada State Board of Parole Commissioners, 1913-1918; president Nevada
State Bar Association, 1920-21; chairman Nevada State Board of Bar Examiners,
1931-32; member bar of California, Utah, and Arizona; vice president American
Bar Association, 1922-23; author of many standard legal opinions, leading cases
on water, mining, corporation, divorce, criminal law, and civil procedure under
the code (Nevada Reports, 35 to 42); married August, 1903; five children; elected
to United States Senate November 8, 1932; term of office will expire in 1939;
- legal residence, Reno, Nev.
157297°—173—-1—1sT ED———6
66 Congressional Directory NEW HAMPSHIRE
REPRESENTATIVE
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 91,058.
JAMES GRAVES SCRUGHAM, Democrat, of Reno, Nev., was born at
Lexington, Ky., graduated from the University of Kentucky, receiving bachelor
and master degrees in engineering; Governor of Nevada, 1923-1927; publisher
of the Nevada State Journal, 1927-1932; served as State engineer, 1919-1923;
member of the Nevada Public Service Commission, 1919-1923; member and
chairman of the State tax commission, 1923-1927; member of and Nevada signa-
tory to the Colorado River Compact Commission, under chairmanship of Herbert
Hoover in 1922; State chairman of the Democratic Party, 1928-1930; commis-
sioned major, United States Army, 1917; promoted to rank of lieutenant colonel
in 1918; one of the incorporators of the American Legion, 1919; commander of
the Nevada Department, American Legion, 1919, and national vice commander,
1920-21; married, two children; member: Sigma Chi, Tau Beta Pi, Phi Kappa
Phi, Mason, Elk; elected to represent the State at large in the Seventy-third
Congress by a vote of 24,999 to 16,133 votes cast for his Republican opponent.
NEW HAMPSHIRE
(Population (1930), 465,293)
SENATORS
HENRY WILDER KEYES, Republican, of Haverhill, was born at Newbury,
Vt., in 1863; graduated, degree of A. B., Harvard University, 1887; also recipient
of B. S. and LL. D. degrees, New Hampshire University, and A. M., Dartmouth;
member of New Hampshire House of Representatives, 1891 1895, 1915-1917;
member New Hampshire Senate, 1903-1905; treasurer State license commission,
1903-1915; chairman State excise commission, 1915-1917; Governor, 1917-1919;
elected to the United States Senate November 5, 1918; twice reelected, November
4, 1924, and November 4, 1930; married Frances Parkinson Wheeler and has
three sons; is a farmer, and president of the Woodsville (N. H.) National Bank;
his term of office will expire in 1937.
FRED H. BROWN, Democrat, of Somersworth, N. H.; born at Ossipee, N. H.,
April 12, 1879; attorney at law; mayor of Somersworth, 1914-1922; United States
attorney for the district of New Hampshire, 1914-1922; Governor of the State of
New Hampshire, 1923-1925; member of New Hampshire Public Service Com-
mission, 1925-1933; married; on November 8, 1932, was elected to the United
States Senate by a vote of 98,766 to 96,649 for George H. Moses, Republican.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Belknap, Carroll, Rockingham, and Strafford. HILLSBORO COUNTY:
City of Manchester; towns of Bedford, Goffstown, Merrimack, Hudson, Litchfield, and Pelham.
MERRIMACE CouNTY: Towns of Allenstown, Canterbury, Chichester, Epsom, Hooksett, Loudon,
Northfield, Pembroke, and Pittsfield. Population (1930), 228,493.
WILLIAM NATHANIEL ROGERS, Democrat, of Sanbornville, was born
in Sanbornville, January 10, 1892; educated in the public schools; Brewster Free
Academy, Wolfeboro, N. H.; ; Dartmouth College; and University of Maine Col-
lege of Law, receiving degree of LL. B. in 1916; admitted to the bar of New
Hampshire in 1916; member of the law firm of Demond, Woodworth, Sulloway
& Rogers, Concord, N. H.; member of the legislative committee, New Hamp-
shire Bar Association, 1920-1922; member of the New Hampshire House of
Representatives in 1917, 1919, and 1921; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress in
1922; elected to the Seventy-second Congress at a special election held on January
5, 1932, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Fletcher Hale; reelected
to the Seventy-third Congress.
NEW JERSEY Brographical : 67
SECOND DISTRICT.—Counties: Cheshire, Coos, Grafton, and Sullivan. HILLSBORO COUNTY: City
of Nashua; towns of Amherst, Antrim, Bennington, Brookline, Deering, Francestown, Greenfield,
Greenville, Hancock, Hillsboro, Hollis, Liyndeboro, Mason, Milford, Mont Vernon, New Boston,
New Ipswich, Peterboro, Sharon, Temple, Weare, Wilton, and Windsor. MERRIMACK COUNTY:
Oities of Concord and Franklin; towns of Andover, Boscawen, Bow, Bradford, Danbury, Dunbarton,
Henniker, Hill, Hopkinton, Newbury, New London, Salisbury, Sutton, Warner, Webster, and Wil-
mot. Population (1930), 236,800.
CHARLES WILLIAM TOBEY, Republican, of Temple, N. H., was born at
Roxbury, Mass., July 22, 1880; attended public schools and Roxbury Latin
School; received honorary degrees of master of arts from Dartmouth College and
doctor of laws from University of New Hampshire; business experience has been
in insurance, agriculture, banking, and manufacturing; married and has four
children; member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, 1915-16,
1919-20, and 1923-24; and served as speaker, 1919-20; member of the State
senate, 1925-26, and served as president, 1925-26; Governor of New Hampshire,
1929-30; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 50,156 votes, and Jere-
miah J. Doyle, Democrat, 44,459 votes.
NEW JERSEY
(Population (1930), 4,041,334)
SENATORS
HAMILTON F. KEAN, Republican; born February 27, 1862, at ¢Ursino,”
Union Township, Union County, N. J., in which township he now resides;
graduate of St. Paul’s School, Concord, N. H.; married Katharine Taylor Win-
throp; banker and farmer; elected to the Union County Republican committee
in 1884, and reelected continuously until 1906, during which time he served as
secretary and as treasurer; in 1900 was elected chairman of this committee; in
1905 was elected a member of the New Jersey Republican State committee from
‘Union County and served until 1919, when he was elected to the Republican
National Committee from New Jersey, serving until January 6, 1928; was elected
delegate at large to the Republican National Convention at Chicago in 1916;
which nominated Charles Evans Hughes for President; unsuccessful candidate
for the nomination for United States Senator in 1924; at the Republican primary
, elections in 1928 was nominated by a plurality of 29,589, receiving 167,029 votes;
Stokes, 142,123; Frelinghuysen, 137,440; Feickert, 26,029; Gray, 24,959; elected
to the United States Senate on November 6, 1928, receiving 841,752 votes, to
608,623 for Senator Edward I. Edwards, Democrat.
W. WARREN BARBOUR, Republican, of Locust, Monmouth County, N. J.;
born Monmouth Beach, Monmouth County, N. J., July 31, 1888; married
Elysabeth C. Carrére, on December 1, 1921; children, Elysabeth, Warren, and
Sharon; appointed on December 1, 1931, by Gov. Morgan F. Larson, to fill the
vacancy caused by the death of Senator Dwight W. Morrow; elected November
8, 1932, to term expiring in 1937.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—Counmies: Camden, Gloucester, and Salem (3 counties). Population (1930),
359,948. a
CHARLES A. WOLVERTON, Republican, of Camden (Merchantville), N. J.;
born October 24, 1880, at Camden, N. J., his parents being Charles S. Wolverton
and Martha Wolverton; educated in the public schools of Camden, graduating
from Camden High School June 24, 1897; studied law at the University of
Pennsylvania Law School, graduating June 13, 1900, with the degree of LL. B.;
admitted to the bar of the State of New Jersey at the November term, 1901;
married June 25, 1907, to Sara May Donnell, M. D., daughter of John Knox
Donnell and Anna Donnell; there is one child, Donnell Knox Wolverton; in 1903
revised and compiled the ordinances of the city of Camden; 1904 to 1906 was
assistant city solicitor of Camden; 1906 to 1913 was assistant prosecutor of
Camden County; from 1913 to 1914, special assistant attorney general of New
Jersey; from 1915 to 1918, member of New Jersey House of Assembly from
Camden County; in 1918 was speaker of the New Jersey House of Assembly;
1917 to 1919, associate Federal food administrator for Camden County; in 1920,
68 Congressional Directory NEW JERSEY
alternate delegate at large, Republican National Convention at Chicago; 1918 to
1923, prosecutor of the pleas of Camden County; elected to the Seventieth
Congress in November, 1926, receiving a majority of 32,532; reelected to the
Seventy-first Congress in November, 1928, receiving a majority of 72,799;
reelected to the Seventy-second Congress in November, 1930, receiving a majority
of 59,307, and to the Seventy-third Congress in November, 1932, receiving a
majority of 35,115.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTiEs: Atlantic, Cape May, and Cumberland (3 counties). Population
(1930), 224,204.
ISAAC BACHARACH, Republican, of Atlantic City, was born in Philadelphia,
Pa., January 5, 1870; elected to the Sixty-fourth Congress and reelected to the
Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth,
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Monmouth and Ocean. MippLESEX County: Cities of New Bruns-
wick and South Amboy; boroughs of Helmetta, Jamesburg, Milltown, Sayreville, South River, and
Spotswood; townships of Cranbury, East Brunswick, Madison, Monroe, Plainsboro, North Bruns-
wick, and South Brunswick. Population (1930), 266,337,
WILLIAM H. SUTPHIN, Democrat, of Matawan, N. J.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Burlington and Mercer (2 counties). Population (1930), 280,684.
D. LANE POWERS, Republican, of Trenton, N. J.; born in Philadelphia, Pa.,
July 29, 1896; educated in the public schools of Philadelphia, Pa.; graduated from
the Pennsylvania Military College at Chester, Pa., with degree of C. E., in 1915,
and receiving degree of bachelor of military science in 1921; married and has one
girl, Elane, 9 years old; president of the Edwell Corporation, Trenton, N. J.;
enlisted as a private in April, 1917, and was discharged as first lieutenant in April,
1919; served three terms in the New Jersey State Legislature, 1927-1930; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 51,794 votes, to 40,705 votes for his
Democratic opponent, Monell Sayre.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Morris and Somerset. MIDDLESEX COUNTY: City of Perth Amboy;
boroughs of Carteret, Dunellen, Highland Park, Metuchen, Middlesex, and South Plainfield; town-
ships of Piscataway, Raritan, and Woodbridge. Population (1930), 301,726.
CHARLES AUBREY EATON, Republican, of North Plainfield, Somerset
County; elected to Sixty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—UNION County. Population (1930), 305,209.
DONALD H. McLEAN, Republican, of Elizabeth, N. J.; born at Paterson,
N. J., March 18, 1884, the son of Alexander and Annie Thompson McLean; edu-
cated in the public schools and privately; married Edna H. Righter, November,
1909, and they have two sons—Donald H. McLean, jr., and Edward Righter
McLean; lawyer, practicing at Elizabeth, N. J., and being a member of the firm
of Whittemore and McLean; appointed page in the United States Senate by Vice
President Garret A. Hobart in December, 1897; served as private secretary to
United States Senator John Kean, of New Jersey, from 1902 to 1911; graduated
from George Washington University Law School in 1906 with degree of bachelor
of laws; admitted to practice in District of Columbia, New Jersey (counselor), and
United States Supreme Court; special master in chancery of New Jersey; assistant
prosecutor of the pleas of Union County, N. J., 1918-1923; served as chairman of
the Union County Republican Committee and as secretary of the Republican State
committee; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUuNTIES: Hunterdon, Sussex, and Warren. BERGEN County: Cities of Gar-
field and Hackensack; boroughs of Allendale, East Paterson, Emerson, Fairlawn, Franklin Lakes,
Glen Rock, Hillsdale, Hohokus, Lodi, Maywood, Midland Park, Montvale, Oakland, Oradell, Para-
mus, Park Ridge, Ramsey, Riverside, Saddle River, Upper Saddle River, Waldwick, Westwood,
Woodcliff Lake; townships of Hohokus, Lodi, Ridgewood, Rivervale, Rochelle Park, Saddle River,
Washington, and Wyckoff. Passaic CouNTY: Borough of Ringwood and township of West Milford.
Population (1930), 259,379.
RANDOLPH PERKINS, Republican; lawyer; offices at Jersey City, N. J.;
is married and has five children; member of New Jersey Legislature, 1906-1907;
NEW JERSEY Biographical 69
mayor of Westfield, N. J., 1903-1905; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress,
November 2, 1920; reelected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—PAssaic County: Cities of Clifton, Passaic, and Paterson; boroughs of Bloom-
ingdale, Haledon, Hawthorne, North Haledon, Pompton Lakes, Prospect Park, Totowa, Wanaque,
and West Paterson; townships of Little Falls and Wayne. Population (1930), 299,190.
GEORGE N. SEGER, Republican, of Passaic; born in New York City, Janu-
ary 4, 1866; moved to Passaic, 1899; mayor, 1911-1919; director of finance,
1919-1923; president New Jersey State League of Municipalities, 1912-1914;
elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second,
and Seventy-third Congresses.
NINTH DISTRICT.—BERGEN CouUNTY: City of Englewood; boroughs of Alpine, Bergenfield, Bogota,
Carlstadt, Cliffside Park, Closter, Cresskill, Demarest, Dumont, East Rutherford, Edgewater, Engle-
wood Cliffs, Fairview, Fort Lee, Harrington Park, Hasbrouck Heights, Haworth, Leonia, Little Ferry,
Moonachie, New Milford, North Arlington, Northvale, Norwood, Old Tappan, Palisades Park,
Ridgefield, Rockleigh, Rutherford, Tenafly, Teterboro, Wallington, and Wood Ridge; townships of
Lyndhurst, Overpeck, and Teaneck. HupsoN CouNTY: Town of Guttenberg and township of North
Bergen. Population (1930), 267,663.
EDWARD A. KENNEY, Democrat, of Cliffside Park, Bergen County,
N. J.; born in Clinton, Mass., August 11, 1884, son of Thomas H. and Elizabeth
Gertrude (Moriarty) Kenney ; graduate of Clinton High School in 1902; attended
Williams College, graduating with degree of A. B., in 1906; studied law at New
York University receiving degree of LL. B. on graduation in 1908; admitted to
the bar of the State of New York, as attorney and counselor, in 1908, and began
the practice of law in New York City; married Elizabeth Jane Linkletter of
Dorchester, Mass., in 1910; admitted to the bar of the State of New Jersey, as
attorney, in 1917, and extended the practice of his profession to New Jersey at
Jersey City; member of legal advisory draft board in 1917; admitted as counselor
at law of New Jersey in 1920; judge of recorder’s court, of Cliffside Park, 1919—
1923; attorney for Cliffside Park Board of Education, 1921-1923; chairman,
Housing Commission of Cliffside Park, 1922-23; is a practicing lawyer with
offices in New York City and Jersey City; member of Elks, Red Men, Delta
Chi fraternity, and various bar associations and organizations; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress by the following vote: Edward A. Kenney, Democrat,
53,822; Joseph W. Marini, Republican, 52,932; Edward J. Ryan, Independent,
4,610; Henry J. Cox, Socialist, 1,690.
TENTH DISTRICT.—Essex County: Oity of Newark, wards 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 11, and 15; borough of Glen
Ridge, towns of Belleville, Bloomfield, and Nutley. HupsoN OoUNTY: Borough of East Newark;
towns of Harrison and Kearny. Population (1930), 295,297.
FRED A. HARTLEY, Jz., Republican, of Kearny, N. J.; born February 22,
1903, at Harrison, N. J., the son of Fred A. Hartley and Frances Hartley; edu-
cated in the public schools of Kearny and Rutgers University; married Hazel
Lorraine Roemer, daughter of Rudolph J. and Lila Roemer; there are three
children—Henry Allen, Frances, Lorraine, and Fred Jack; was appointed on the
library commission of Kearny in 1923; elected municipal commissioner in 1924;
chairman of Republican county committee in 1925; reelected commissioner in
1926; served as fire and police commissioner during two terms; elected to Seventy-
first Congress; reelected to Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—EsSsEX CouNTy: City of Newark, wards 3, 6, 7, 13, and 14; cities of East Or-
ange, Orange; town of West Orange; village of South Orange. Population (1930), 292,284.
PETER A. CAVICCHIA, Republican, of Newark, N. J.; born in Italy, May
22, 1879; came to America at age of 9; graduated, American International Col-
lege (formerly French American College), Springfield, Mass., with A. B. degree
in 1906, and received honorary LL. D. degree from same in 1929; received LL. B.
degree from New York University in 1908; served law clerkship with Hon.
Franklin W. Fort; admitted to New Jersey bar in 1909; married Annabelle
Auger, of Springfield, Mass., in 1909, and they have three children; appointed
supervisor of transfer inheritance tax for Essex County, N. J., in 1917, by Gov.
Walter E. Edge; member Board of Education of Newark for 13 years, and served
70 Congressional Directory NEW MEXICO
as president two years; trustee of Mercer Beasley School of Law, Newark, and
professor of law; elected to the Seventy-second Congress from ninth district;
reelected to Seventy-third Congress from eleventh district.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—EssEx County: City of Newark, wards 9, 10, 12, and 16; boroughs of Caldwell,
Essex Fells, North Caldwell, Roseland, Verona, West Caldwell; towns of Irvington, Montclair; town-
ships of Caldwell, Cedar Grove, Livingston, Maplewood, and Milburn. Population (1930), 304,935.
FREDERICK R. LEHLBACH, Republican, of Newark, was born in New
York City, January 31, 1876; removed to Newark in 1884, where he has since
resided; graduated from Yale College, 1897; studied law in New York Law School
and was admitted to the New Jersey bar in February, 1899, and has practiced
his profession in Newark ever since; in 1899 he was elected a member of the
Newark Board of Education; served three terms as member of the General
Assembly of New Jersey in the years 1903, 1904, and 1905; in April, 1908, was
appointed assistant prosecutor of Essex County, which position he resigned in
1913; in 1908 married Frances KE. Martin, of Newark; was elected to the Sixty-
fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seven-
tieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to the. Seventy-
third Congress.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—HuUDSON CouNTY: City of Bayonne; city of Jersey City, wards 1, 4, 5, 6,
7,8, and 9. Population (1930), 289,795.
MARY TERESA NORTON, Democrat; born in Jersey City, N. J.; graduate
of Jersey City schools and Packard Business College, New York City; married
Robert F. Norton in 1907; for many years president of Day Nursery Association
of Jersey City; 1920, appointed to represent Hudson County on the Democratic
State committee, elected following year and chosen vice chairman, which position
she has since held; served since 1920 as vice chairman of the Hudson County
Democratic committee; 1923, was the first woman of the Democratic Party to be
elected freeholder in Hudson County and in State; as freeholder was successful
in having legislation enacted for the erection of a maternity hospital in Hudson
County, the first of its kind in this country, now known as the Margaret Hague
Maternity Hospital; in 1924, 1928, and 1932 elected delegate at large to the
Democratic National Conventions; also in 1924 elected to the House of Repre-
sentatives, and has been reelected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses; received the first and only degree of doctor
of laws ever conferred by St. Elizabeth’s College, the oldest women’s college in
New Jersey, in recognition of service in weifare and government; and Mrs. Norton
is the first woman to be elected to Congress from the Democratic Party, the first
to be appointed chairman of a congressional committee, the important Committee
on the District of Columbia; and the first woman to act as chairman of a State
committee, to which she was appointed during the campaign of 1932.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—HupsoNn County: City of Hoboken; city of Jersey City, wards 2, 3, 10,
11, and 12; city of Union City; towns of Secaucus and West New York, township of Weehawken.
Population (1930), 294,683.
OSCAR L. AUF DER HEIDE, Democrat, of West New York; born in New
York City, December 8, 1874, is in real estate and insurance business at West
New York; elected to the Sixty-ninth Congress; reelected to the Seventieth,
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
NEW MEXICO
(Population (1930), 423,317)
SENATORS
SAM GILBERT BRATTON, Democrat, Albuquerque, N. Mex.; born at
Kosse, Limestone County, Tex., August 19, 1888; educated in public schools of
Texas and admitted to practice of law when 21 years of age; moved to Clovis,
N. Mex., in 1915 and engaged in practice of law; in 1918 was elected judge of
fifth judicial district of New Mexico for term of six years, beginning January 1,
1919; in 1922 elected associate justice of Supreme Court of New Mexico; resigned
NEW YORK : Biographical 71
as district judge to aceept position of associate justice and after serving 21 months
of such term resigned to accept nomination for United States Senate; elected in
1924 to the United States Senate for term of six years, beginning March 4, 1925;
was 36 years of age at time of election and qualification in Senate; reelected in
November, 1930, for a term of six years, beginning March 4, 1931.
BRONSON CUTTING, Republican, of Santa Fe; editor and publisher; born
June 23, 1888, at Oakdale, Long Island, N. Y.; son of William Bayard and
Olivia Peyton (Murray) Cutting; educated at Groton School, Groton, Mass.,
and at Harvard University (class of 1910); Phi Beta Kappa; moved to New
Mexico in 1910; president of New Mexican Printing Co. from 1912 to 1918 and
of Santa Fe New Mexican Publishing Corporation since 1920; publisher of
Santa Fe New Mexican and El Nuevo Mexicano; treasurer, 1912-1914, and
chairman, 1914-1916, of Progressive State central committee of New Mexico;
commissioned captain of Infantry, United States Army, August 5, 1917; assistant
military attaché, American Embassy, London, 1917-18; awarded British military
cross; regent of New Mexico Military Institute, 1920; chairman of board of
commissioners of the New Mexico State Penitentiary, 1925; national executive
committeeman, 1919-20, department commander, 1923-24, and department
adjutant, 1925-1927, of the American Legion of New Mexico; appointed by
Gov. Richard C. Dillon on December 29, 1927, to fill vacancy in the Senate
caused by death of Senator Andrieus A. Jones, and served until December 7,
1928, when his successor qualified; elected November 6, 1928, by a majority of
18,153 votes, for the term of six years beginning March 4, 1929.
REPRESENTATIVE
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 423,317.
DENNIS CHAVEZ, Demoerat, of Albuquerque, N. Mex.; born at Los Chavez,
Valencia County, N. Mex., April 8, 1888; attended public schools of Albuquerque;
graduate of law school, Georgetown University, 1920, with LL. B. degree; mar-
ried and has three children; served as clerk of the United States Senate, 1918-19;
member of New Mexico Legislature; practicing law at Albuquerque; elected to
the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by a
majority of 41,859, the largest majority ever given a candidate in the State of
New Mexico.
NEW YORK
(Population (1930), 12,588,066)
SENATORS
ROYAL S. COPELAND, Democrat, of New York City, was born at Dexter,
Mich., November 7, 1868; graduated from the Dexter High School; attended
the Michigan State Normal College; graduated from the University of Michigan
with the degree of doctor of medicine; has degree of master of arts from Lawrence
University; doctor of laws from Syracuse and Oglethorpe Universities; is a Fellow
of the American College of Surgeons; served as health commissioner of New York
Ty from 1918 until he entered the Senate; is married and has one son, Royal
S. Copeland, jr.; was elected to the United States Senate, November 7, 1922;
reelected, November 6, 1928. His term of service will expire in 1935. :
ROBERT F. WAGNER, Democrat, of New York City; born June 8, 1877;
Nastatten, Province Hessen Nassau, Germany; grammar school, high school,
graduate of the College of the City of New York, and of New York Law School;
widower; lawyer; member of New York Assembly from 1905 to 1908, inclusive;
member of New York Senate from 1909 to 1918; chairman of the New York State
Factory Investigating Commission, 1911; lieutenant governor, 1914; eight years
Democratic leader in New York Senate; justice of supreme court from 1919 until
October, 1926; assigned to the appellate division, first department, of the supreme
court, 1924-1926; resigned to become candidate for United States Senator;
Slontad for the term expiring March 8, 1933; reelected for the term expiring in
EEE
72 ~ Congressional Directory NEW YORK
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 12,588,066.
ELMER E. STUDLEY, Democrat, of Flushing, Long Island, N. Y.; born
September 24, 1869, and raised on a farm at East Ashford, Cattaraugus County, N. Y.; attended and taught district and high schools; graduated from Springville High School, New York, and from Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y., receiving the degree of A. B. in 1892 and LL. B. in 1894; reporter on Buffalo newspapers, under Samuel G. Blythe, city editor, 1894-95; admitted to the bar of the State of
New York in 1895 from the law office of Daniel N. Lockwood, at that time a Representative in Congress from Buffalo, and practiced law from 1895-1898; served in the New York National Guard as enlisted man and as commissioned officer of the line, 1894-1898; in the war with Spain was commissioned first lieutenant in the Two hundred and second Regiment New York Volunteer Infantry, serving with it in Cuba in 1898 and 1899, and until mustered out on April 15, 1899; enrolled as major in the United States War Register in 1905, the War Register then being the United States Officers’ Reserve Corps; following the war with Spain removed to Raton, N. Mex., engaging in the practice of law until 1917, at which time he returned to New York; was married in New York City in 1906 to Louise Knapp Foster, who died in 1924; served one session in the Térri- torial Legislature of New Mexico in 1907, and was a member of the New Mexico Territorial Statutory Revision Commission that same year; district attorney of Colfax and Union Counties, N. Mex., 1909-10; member of the New Mexico State Board of Water Commissioners, 1913-1915; candidate for presidential elector
for Theodore Roosevelt, Progressive Party, in 1912, from New Mexico; delegate
to Progressive National Convention in Chicago in 1916; resumed the practice of law in New York in 1917; deputy attorney general of the State of New York in 1924; United States commissioner for the eastern district of New York, 1925-26; member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States and of the United Spanish War Veterans; in 1930 was elected department commander of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the State of New York, serving one year; member of the Cornell Club of New York, and of the Army and Navy Club of America, of New York City, N. Y.; Scottish Rite Mason (thirty-second degree and Shriner)
and Elk; widower; elected Representative at large from the State of New York
to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 2,363,627 votes.
JOHN FITZGIBBONS, Democrat, of Oswego, N. Y., was born on July 10, 1868, at Glenmore, Oneida County, N. Y.; attended the common schools; began career as railroad trainman in 1885; legislative representative, Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen of New York State, 1896-1914; referee, New York State Labor Bureau, May, 1914, to February, 1915; resigned to return to position as legislative representative of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen of New York; held this position until January 1, 1933; granted leave of absence to take up duties in Congress; served as alderman of the fourth ward, city of Oswego, April, 1908, to December, 1909; mayor, city of Oswego, 1910-11 and 1918-1921; former Democratic State committeeman from Oswego County; and present chairman of the Democratic county committee of Oswego County; married Miss Nellie M.
Stone on January 24, 1900; elected as a Congressman at large on November 8,
1932, the vote being: John Fitzgibbons, Democrat, 2,333,787; Elmer E. Studley, Democrat, 2,363,627; Nicholas H. Pinto, Republican, 1,756,343; Sherman J. Lowell, Republican, 1,740,325.
FIRST DISTRICT.—NASSAU AND SUFFOLK COUNTIES. QUEENS COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at boundary line of Nassau and Queens Counties at Central Avenue, along Central
Avenue west to Farmers Avenue, north to junction of Long Island Railroad and Old Country Road,
to Fulton Street, west to Bergen Avenue, north to Hillside Avenue, east to Grand Avenue, north to
boundary line between third and fourth wards, west to Flushing Creek (the boundary line between
second and third wards), north to Strong’s Causeway, east along Strong’s Causeway and boundary
line between the second and fourth assembly districts of Queens County, said line being through
Ireland Mill Road to Lawrence Avenue, to Bradford Avenue, to Main Street, to Lincoln Street, to
Union Avenue, to Whitestone Road, to Eighteenth Street, to the Boulevard, to Long Island Sound;
along Long Island Sound and Little Neck Bay to boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties
to Central Avenue, the point of beginning. Population (1930), 637,022.
ROBERT LOW BACON, Republican, of Old Westbury, Long Island, N. Y.,
was born July 23, 1884, at Jamaica Plain, Boston, Mass.; A. B., 1907, Harvard College; LL. B., 1910, Harvard University Law School; United StatesiTreasury
NEW YORK Biographical 73
»
Department, 1910-11; investment-banking business, 1911-1922; former member
of New York State Republican committee; delegate to Republican National Con-
vention, 1920; Plattsburg Military Training Camp, 1915; Texas-border service
with New York National Guard, 1916; served in the Field Artillery, United
States Army, during World War, from April 24, 1917, to January 2, 1919; dis-
tinguished-service medal; served in the United States Reserve Corps since
discharge from active service in 1919, at present holding rank of colonel of
Field Artillery; married, and has three children; has served on the following
committees of the House of Representatives—Merchant Marine and Fisheries,
Radio, Claims, Immigration and Naturalization, Insular Affairs, Census, War
Claims, Education, Library, and Appropriations; also Board of Visitors to the
Naval Academy, 1924 and 1929; member of the Massachusetts Bay Colony
Tercentenary Commission and of the Yorktown Sesquicentennial Commission;
trustee National Roosevelt Memorial Association; Member of the Sixty-eighth,
Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, and
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—QUEENS COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at Central
Avenue on boundary line between Queens and Nassau Counties, southerly along said line to the
Atlantic Ocean, along Atlantic Ocean to Rockaway Inlet and boundary line between Kings and Queens
Oounties, northeast and north to Atlantic Avenue, east to Morris Avenue, south to Rockaway Road,
southeast to Bergen Landing Road, northeast to Van Wyck Avenue, north to Newtown Road, north-
west to boundary line between second and third wards of the Borough of Queens, west along said
boundary line and boundary line between Kings and Queens Counties, northwest along said bound-
ary line to Newtown Creek, northwest to East River, along East River and Long Island Sound through
Powells Cove to point where boulevard intersects Powells Cove, south along boulevard to Eighteenth
Street, east of Whitestone Avenue, southwest to Union Avenue, to Lincoln Street, to Main Street,
to Bradford Avenue, to Lawrence Avenue, southwest along Lawrence Avenue along the boundary
line between second and third wards of the Borough of Queens, the same being the Ireland Mill Road
to Strong’s Causeway; along Strong’s Causeway to Flushing Creek, along Flushing Creek and said
‘boundary line south to boundary between third and fourth wards of the Borough of Queens, east
along said boundary line to Grand Avenue, south to Hiliside A venue, west to Bergen Avenue, south
to Fulton Street, east to Old Country Road, southeast to Farmers Avenue, south to Central Avenue,
and southeast to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 776,425.
WILLIAM FRANK BRUNNER, Democrat, of Rockaway Park, Long
Island, N. Y. :
THIRD DISTRICT.—Kings County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the
intersection of East River and North Eleventh Street, thence along North Eleventh Street to Berry
Street, to North Twelfth Street, to Union Avenue, to Frost Street, to Lorimer Street, to Broadway,
to Walton Street, to Throop Avenue, to Lorimer Street, to Harrison Avenue, to Flushing Avenue,
to Broadway, to-De Kalb Avenue, to Wilson Avenue, to Stanhope Street, to the boundary line of
Kings and Queens Counties; thence along said boundary line to Newtown Creek; thence through
the waters of Newtown Creek to East River; through the waters of the East River to:the point of
beginning. Population (1930), 187,953.
GEORGE W. LINDSAY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born and has con-
tinuously resided in the district he represents; educated in the public schools of
the district; active in local, State, and National affairs since he attained his
majority, but did not seek elective office until 1919; chosen to represent the
thirteenth assembly district of Kings County in the New York State Assembly
of 1920; declined renomination; appointed deputy temement-house commissioner
for Brooklyn and Queens County in 1921; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—KinGs OouNTy: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the
intersection of New York Bay and Sixty-third Street; thence along Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue,
to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to
Fort Hamilton Avenue or Parkway, to Gravesend Avenue, to Terrace Place, to Eleventh Avenue,
to Seventeenth Street, to Terrace Place, to Prospect Avenue, to Fourth Avenue, to Garfield Place, to
Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Avenue or Place, to Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to Boerum Place,
to Dean Street, to Court Street, to Amity Street, to Clinton Street, to Warren Street, to Columbia
Street, to Congress Street, to the waters of East River; thence southerly through the waters of the
East River to the waters of New York Bay; thence through the waters of New York Bay to the point
of beginning. Population (1930), 211,826.
THOMAS H. CULLEN, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y., was born in the dis-
trict he represents; educated in the parochial schools and graduate of St. Francis
College, Brooklyn, N, Y,
74 Congressional Directory NEW YORK
FIFTH DISTRICT.—KINGS COUNTY: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the
intersection of Bergen Street and Nevins Street; thence along Nevins Street to Atlantic Avenues, to
Bond Street, to Fulton Street, to Hudson Avenue, to De Kalb Avenue, to Washington Park or Cum-
berland Street, to Myrtle Avenue, to Spencer Street, to Willoughby Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue,
to Lafayette Avenue, to Bedford Avenue, to Dean Street, to New York Avenue, to Park Place, to
Nostrand Avenue, to Eastern Parkway, to New York Avenue, to Sterling Street, to Flatbush Avenue
or Washington Avenue, to Malbone Street, to Ocean Avenue, to Parkside Avenue, to Parade Place,
to Caton Avenue, to Coney Island Avenue, to Beverly Road, to East Ninth Street, to Avenue C or
Avenue C West, to West Street, to Fifteenth Avenue, to Thirty-seventh Street, to Fourteenth Avenue,
to Forty-first Street, to Thirteenth Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Thirty-ninth
Street, to Fort Hamilton Avenue or Parkway, to Gravesend Avenue, to Terrace Place, to Eleventh
Avenue, to Seventeenth Street, to Terrace Piace, to Prospect Avenue, to Fourth Avenue, to Garfield
Place, to Fifth Avenue, to St. Marks Avenue or Place, tec Fourth Avenue, to Bergen Street, to the
point of beginning, Population (1930) 246,215.
LORING M. BLACK, Jr., Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born in New York
City, May 17, 1886; graduate of New York public schools and Fordham Uni-
versity (B. A., 1907, and M. A. 1914); studied law at Columbia University and
admitted to the bar of the State of New York in 1909; member New York State
Senate 1911-12, and 1919-20; married to Beatrice M. Eddy, daughter of Gen.
John G. Eddy, New York National Guard.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—KINGS County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the
intersection of Nostrand Avenue and Lafayette Avenue; thence along Lafayette Avenue to Bedford
Avenue, to Dean Street, to New York Avenue, to Park Place, to Nostrand Avenue, to Eastern Park-
way, to New York Avenue, to Sterling Street, to Flatbush Avenue or Washington Avenue, to Malbone
Street, to Ocean Avenue, to Parkside Avenue, to Parade Place, to Caton Avenue, to Coney Island
Avenue, to Beverly Road, to East Ninth Street, to Avenue O or Avenue C West, to West Street, to
Fifteenth Avenue, to Thirty-seventh Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Forty-fourth Street, to Fif-
teenth Avenue, to Fiftieth Street, to Sixteenth Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Nineteenth Avenue,
to Forty-seventh Street, to Washington Avenue or Parkville Avenue, to Gravesend Avenue, to Foster
Avenue, to East Seventeenth Street, to Avenue I, to Flatbush Avenue, to East Thirty-fourth Street,
to Avenue J, to Schenectady Avenue, to Glenwood Road, to East Forty-sixth Street, to Farragut Road,
to Schenectady Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to Ralph Avenue, to Church Avenue, to East Ninety-
first Street, to Linden Avenue, to Rockaway Parkway, to Church Avenue, to East Ninety-eighth
Street, to Lott Avenue, to Thatford Avenue, to Livonia Avenue, to Osborn Street, to Dumont Avenue,
to Thatford Avenue, to Sutter Avenue, to Howard Avenue, to Pacific Street, to Ralph Avenue, to
Atlantic Avenue, to Utica Avenue, to Pacific Street, to Schenectady Avenue, to Fulton Street, to
Sumner Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Green Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue,
to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 452,275.
ANDREW L. SOMERS, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—KiNgs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at
the intersection of the waters of Buttermilk Channel, East River, and Congress Street; thence along
Congress Street to Columbia Street, to Warren Street, to Clinton Street, to Amity Street, to Court
Street, to Dean Street, to Boerum Place, to Bergen Street, to Nevins Street, to Atlantic Avenue, to
Bond Street, to Fulton Street, to Hudson Avenue, to De Kalb Avenue, to Washington Park or Cum-
berland Street, to Myrtle Avenue, to Spencer Street, to Willoughby Avenue, to Nostrand Avenue,
to Flushing Avenue, to Harrison Avenue, to Lorimer Street, to Throop Avenue, to Walton Street,
to Broadway, to Lorimer Street, to Frost Street, to Union Avenue, to North Twelfth Street, to Berry
Street, to North Eleventh Street, to the waters of East River; thence through the waters of East
River to the waters of Buttermilk Channel, to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 205,043.
JOHN J. DELANEY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—KINGs County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the
intersection of Sutter Avenue and Williams Avenue; thence along Williams Avenue to Blake Avenue,
to Pennsylvania Avenue, to Hggeman Avenue, to New Jersey Avenue, to Vienna Avenue, to Penn-
sylvania Avenue, to the waters of Jamaica Bay; thence southerly through the waters of Jamaica Bay
to a point east of Duck Point marsh; thence southerly and easterly to the boundary line of Kings and
Queens Counties; thence southerly and westerly along said boundary line, south of Barren Island, to
the Atlantic Ocean; thence through the waters of the Atlantic Ocean to the waters of Gravesend Bay;
through the waters of Gravesend Bay to the Narrows and New York Bay; through said waters to
Sixty-third Street; thence along Sixty-third Street to Third Avenue, to Sixty-fifth Street, to Sixth
Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Seventh Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Fort Hamilton Avenue or
Parkway, to Thirty-ninth Street, to Twelfth Avenue, to Fortieth Street, to Thirteenth Avenue, to
Forty-first Street, to Fourteenth Avenue, to Forty-fourth Street, to Fifteenth Avenue, to Fiftieth
Street, to Sixteenth Avenue, to Forty-ninth Street, to Nineteenth Avenue, to Forty-seventh Street,
to Washington Avenue or Parkville Avenue, to Gravesend Avenue, to Foster Avenue, to East Seven-
teenth Street, to Avenue I, to Flatbush Avenue, to East Thirty-fourth Street, to Avenue J, to Sche-
nectady Avenue, to Glenwood Road, to East Forty-sixth Street, to Farragut Road, to Schenectady
Avenue, to Clarendon Road, to Ralph Avenue, to Church Avenue, to East Ninety-first Street, to
Linden Avenue, to Rockaway Parkway, to Church Avenue, to East Ninety-eighth Street, to Lott
Avenue, to Thatford Avenue, to Livonia Avenue, to Osborn Street, to Dumont Avenue, to Thatford
Avenue, to Sutter Avenue, to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 799,407.
PATRICK J. CARLEY, Democrat, of Brooklyn, was born .in County Ros-
common, Ireland, in 1866, emigrated to the United States at an early age, apd
was naturalized October 28, 1892; educated in the public schools; engaged in the
NEW YORK Biographical 75
building business for past 25 years in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, present place of
business being 510 Eighty-fourth Street; president and treasurer of the P. J.
Carley Building Co. (Inc.) and president of P. J. Carley & Sons (Inec.); active
in civic affairs; director of Bay Ridge Memorial Hospital; member of Brooklyn
Chamber of Commerce; trustee of Fort Hamilton Savings Bank and of the Bay
Ridge Chamber of Commerce; first vice president of the Kingsboro National
Bank of Bay Ridge; formerly a volunteer fireman of the old town of New Utrecht,
Brooklyn, also is member of numerous other charitable and fraternal organiza-
tions; is married and has eight children, seven of them being married, one of his
sons, John P., being a veteran of the World War; never before held public office;
was elected to the Seventieth Congress at the general election in 1926, receiving
62,091 votes, to 30,548 for George W. Criss, Republican, and 8,526 for W. M.
Fiegenbaum, Socialist; reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
NINTH DISTRICT.—KINGS AND QUEENS CouUNTIES: That portion within and bounded by a line
beginning at the intersection of the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties and Stanhope Street;
thence along Stanhope Street to Wilson Avenue, to De Kalb Avenue, to Broadway, to Hopkinson
Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Broadway, to Jamaica Avenue, to Alabama Avenue, to Atlantic
Avenue, to Williams Avenue, to Blake Avenue, to Pennsylvania Avenue, to Hegeman Avenue, to
New Jersey Avenue, to Vienna Avenue, to Pennsylvania Avenue, to the waters of Jamaica Bay;
thence southerly through the waters of Jamaica Bay to a point east of Duck Point marsh; thence
southerly and easterly to the boundary line of Kings and Queens Counties; thence northerly and
westerly along said boundary line of said counties to the point where said line is intersected by the
center line of Atlantic Avenue; thence along Atlantic Avenue, in the county of Queens, to Morris
Avenue, to Rockaway Plank Road, to Bergen Landing Road, to Van Wyck Avenue, to Newtown
Road, to the boundary line of the second and fourth wards in the said county to the boundary line of
Kings and Queens Counties; thence westerly and northerly along said line to the point of beginning;
Population (1930), 370,457.
STEPHEN A. RUDD, Democrat, of Brooklyn, N. Y.; born in Brooklyn, N. Y.,
December 11, 1874; married to Martha Lindsay; four children—Martha L.,
Stephen J., Lindsay H., and Roy H.; lawyer; studied law at Brooklyn Law
School and St. Lawrence University; alderman, city of New York, 1922-1931;
elected to the Seventy-second Congress, at a special election held February 17,
1931, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. David J. O'Connell; re-
elected to the Seventy-third Congress. g ®
TENTH DISTRICT.—KiNes County: That portion within and bounded by a line beginning at the
intersection of Nostrand Avenue and Flushing Avenue, thence along Flushing Avenue to Broadway,
to Hopkinson Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Broadway, to Jamaica Avenue, to Alabama Avenue,
to Atlantic Avenue, to Williams Avenue, to Sutter Avenue, to Howard Avenue, to Pacific Street, to
Ralph Avenue, to Atlantic Avenue, to Utica Avenue, to Pacific Street, to Schenectady Avenue, to
Fulton Street, to Sumner Avenue, to McDonough Street, to Lewis Avenue, to Greene Avenue, to
Nostrand Avenue, to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 217,015.
EMANUEL CELLER; born in Brooklyn, N. Y., May 6, 1888; attended the
public schools; was graduated from the Boys’ High School of Brooklyn, in 1906,
from Columbia College, New York City, in 1910, and from the Columbia Uni-
versity Law School, New York City, in 1912; admitted to the bar and com-
menced practice in New York City in 1912; delegate to the Democratic State
conventions in 1922 and 1924; elected as a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth Congress,
November 7, 1922; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Sev-
enty-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; member of the Committee on the
Judiciary; married and has two daughters; home address is 303 McDonough
Street, Brooklyn, N. Y,
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—RIcHMOND COUNTY. NEW YORK County: Bedloes Island, Ellis Island,
Governors Island, and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at East River and
Market Street, along Market Street to Henry Street, to Catherine Street, to East Broadway, along
East Broadway to Chatham Square, to Worth Street, to Baxter Street, to Oanal Street, to Varick
Street, along Varick Street and Seventh Avenue to Christopher Street, to Bleecker Street, to West
Eleventh Street, to West Fourth Street, to Bank Street, to Greenwich Avenue, along Greenwich
Avenue to Seventh Avenue, to West Fourteenth Street, to Hudson River; thence around southern
oa of Manhattan Island, along East River to Market Street, the place of beginning. Population
1930), 218,545.
ANNING 8S. PRALL, Democrat, of West New Brighton, Staten Island;
appointed a member of the New York City Board of Education, January 1, 1918,
and was three times elected its president, serving during the years 1919, 1920,
and 1921; appointed a commissioner of taxes and assessments for the city of
76 Congressional Directory NEW YORK
New York on January 1, 1922; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress on November
6, 1923; reelected to the Sixty-ninth Congress on November 4, 1924, to the
Seventieth Congress on November 2, 1926, to the Seventy-first Congress on
November 6, 1928, to the Seventy-second Congress on November 4, 1930, and to
the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK County: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at the
East River and Market Street, thence along Market Street to Henry Street, along Henry Street to
Catherine Street, along Catherine Street to East Broadway, along East Broadwayto Chatham Square,
along Chatham Square to Worth Street, along Worth Street to Baxter Street, along Baxter Street to
Canal Street, along Canal Street to Essex Street, along Essex Street to Grand Street, along Grand
Street to Clinton Street, along Clinton Street to East Houston Street, along East Houston Street to
the East River, thence along the Fast River to Market Street, and to the point of beginning. Popula-
tion (1930), 90,671.
SAMUEL DICKSTEIN, Democrat, of New York City, was born on February
5, 1885; graduated from the public schools of the city of New York; attended the
New York Law School; admitted to the bar in February, 1908; practicing such
profession with offices in New York City; special deputy attorney general of the
State of New York, 1911-1914; member of the board of aldermen, 1917, repre-
senting the fourth aldermanic district; member of the New York Assembly,
representing the fourth assembly district, New York County, 1919-1922; mem-
ber of the American Bar Association, State Bar Association of New York, New
York County Lawyers Association, and New York Criminal Bar Association;
honorary member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; member of the New York
Democratic county committee; member of Grand Street Boys’ Association,
Associated Travelers, and many Jewish welfare and religious organizations, as
well as civic, social, and fraternal organizations, including Paul Revere Lodge
No. 929, F. & A. M.; Noble, Mystic Shrine, Mecca Temple; B. P. O. Elks No. 1,
New York City; was elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventv-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at
East Houston and Clinton Streets, thence along East Houston to Avenue B, to East Fourth Street, to
Broadway, along Broadway to West Third Street, to Sixth Avenue, along Sixth Avenue to West Wash-
ington Place, along West Washington Place to Seventh Avenue and Varick Street, to Canal Street,
along Canal Street to Essex Street, to Grand Street, to Clinton Street, along Clinton Street to East
Houston Street, the point of beginning. Population (1930), 111,696.
CHRISTOPHER D. SULLIVAN, Democrat, of New York City, was born
in that city in 1870; was educated at St. James Parochial School and St. Mary’s
Academy; is in the real-estate business, with offices at 270 Broadway, New
York City; was nominated and elected to the State senate in the year 1906, and
was reelected in the years 1908, 1910, 1912, and 1914, and served until the end
of the year 1916, when he was nominated and elected to Congress; as a member
of the State senate he was chairman of the committee on miscellaneous corpora-
tions, and served on the following committees: Revision, trades and manufac-
tures, public health, labor and industry, and privileges and elections; in 1916,
as Democratic candidate, he was indorsed by the Independence League and was
elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at
East River and East Fourteenth Street, and running thence along East and West Fourteenth Street
to Seventh Avenue, along Seventh Avenue to Greenwich Avenue, along Greenwich Avenue to Bank
Street, to West Fourth Street, along West Fourth Street to West Eleventh Street, to Bleecker Street,
along Bleecker Street to Christopher Street, to Seventh Avenue, to West Washington Place, to Sixth
Avenue, along Sixth Avenue to West Third Street, to Broadway, to East Fourth Street, to Avenue B,
to Bast Houston Street, to East River, along East River to East Fourteenth Street, and to the point of
beginning. Population (1930), 119,794.
WILLIAM IRVING SIROVICH, Democrat, of New York City, was born at
York, Pa., in 1882; A. B., College of the City of New York, 1902; M. D., College
of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, 1906; fellow of the American
College of Surgeons, 1924; elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-
second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress,
NEW YORK Biographical 77
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK COUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at the
Hudson River and West Sixty-second Street, thence easterly along West Sixty-second Street to Amster-
dam Avenue, along Amsterdam Avenue to West Sixtieth Street, along West Sixtieth Street to Colum-
bus Avenue, along Columbus and Ninth Avenues to West Fifty-Afth Street, along West Fifty-fifth
Street to Eighth Avenue, along Eighth Avenue to West Thirty-eighth Streot, along West Thirty-
eighth Street to Seventh Avenue, along Seventh Avenue to West Fourteenth Street, along West Four-
teenth Street tothe Hudson River, and thence along the Hudson River to West Sixty- second Street,
the point or place of beginning. Population (1930), 121,675.
JOHN J. BOYLAN, Democrat, of New York City; was born in the district
he represents; educated in public schools and the De La Salle Institue, Man-
hattan College; engaged in real-estate business; member of New York Assembly,
1910-1912, and New York Senate, 1913-1922; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-
ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to
the Seventy-third Congress; member of Committee on Appropriations.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK County: Welfare Island (Blackwells), and that portion of the
county bounded as follows—Beginning at the East River and East Sixty-third Street and running
westerly along East Sixty-third Street to Third A venue, along Third Avenue to East Sixty-first Street,
along East Sixty-first Street to Lexington Avenue, along Lexington Avenue to East Sixty-second Street,
along East Sixty-second Street to Park Avenue, along Park and Fourth Avenues to East Fourteenth
Street, along East Fourteenth Street to the East River, and along the East River to East Sixty-third
Street, the place of beginning. Population (1930), 142,496.
JOHN J. CONNOR, Democrat, of New York City; was born November 23,
1885; graduated from the public schools; A. B., 1908, Brown University; LL.
1911, Harvard University Law School; admitted to the bar in 1910; active in
the general practice of law in New York City and active in Democratic political
affairs; delegate to party conventions; in 1915 elected secretary to the Demo-
cratic minority in New York State constitutional convention; in 1920 elected to
New York Assembly, served three terms; member of the judiciary committee of
the assembly; legislative secretary of the child-welfare commission; vice chair-
man of the committee to investigate the exploitation of immigrants; member of
the committee to revise the corporation laws; married and has four sons; member
of a number of fraternal organizations, clubs, bar associations, and societies, in-
cluding the Manhattan Club, Downtown Athletic Club, National Democratic
Club of New York City, Phi Kappa fraternity, and the Benevolent and Protective
Order of Elks; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by
the death of the Hon. W. Bourke Cockran; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seven-
tieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses. Member
of the Rules Committee.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK County: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at
West Eighty-sixth Street and the Hudson River, thence easterly along West Eighty-sixth Street to
Central Park west, along Central Park, west to West Ninety-ninth Street, thence across and through
Central Park to Fifth Avenue and East ‘Ninety- ninth Street, along East N inety-ninth Street to Lexing-
ton Avenue, along Lexington Avenue to East Seventy-third Street, along East Seventy-third Street
to Third Avenue, along Third Avenue to East Sixty-first Street, along East Sixty-first Street to Lexing-
ton Avenue, along Lexington Avenue to East Sixty-second Street, along East Sixty-second Street to
Park Avenue, along Park and Fourth Avenues to East Fourteenth Street, along East Fourteenth
Street and West Fourteenth Street to Seventh Avenue, along Seventh Avenue to West Thirty-eighth
Street, along West Thirty-eighth Street to Eighth Avenue, along Eighth Avenue to West Fifty-fifth
Street, along West Fifty-fifth Street to Ninth Avenue, along Ninth and Columbus Avenues to West
Sixtieth Street, along West Sixtieth Street to Amsterdam Avenue, along Amsterdam Avenue to West
Sixty-second Street, along West Sixty-second Street to the Hudson River, and along the Hudson
River to West Eighty-sixth Street, the point or place of beginning. Population (1930), 207,648.
THEODORE A. PEYSER, Democrat, of New York City, was born in Charles-
ton, W. Va., February 18, 1873; attended public schools; engaged in the life-
insurance business; single; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 36,397
votes, and Ruth Pratt, Republican, 29,776 votes.
EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—NEw YORK CouUNTY: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning
at the East River and East Sixty-third Street, thence westerly along East Sixty-third Street to Third
Avenue, along Third Avenue to East Seventy-third Street, along East Seventy-third Street to Lexing-
ton Avenue, along Lexington Avenue to East Ninety-ninth Street, along East Ninety-ninth Street to
the East River, and along the Bast River to East Sixty-third Street, the point or place of beginning.
Population (1930), 144,945.
MARTIN J. KENNEDY, Democrat, of New York City; born in New York
City; Mr. Kennedy served as chairman of the local school board from 1918 to
1924; elected a State senator at a special election held in January, 1924; was re-
elected in the fall of 1924, 1926, and 1928; Member of Congress since 1930; is
engaged in the insurance business at 511 Fifth Avenue, New York City,
78 Congressional Directory NEW YORK
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—NEwW YORK County: That portion bounded as follows—Beginning at
the North River and the west end of West One hundred and twenty-fifth Street, east across Riverside
Park to West One hundred and twenty-fifth Street, to Fifth Avenue, south and across Mount Morris
Park to Fifth Avenue, to East One hundred and sixteenth Street, east to Madison Avenue, south to
East One hundred and tenth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, south to East Ninety-ninth Street, west
across Central Park to West Ninety-ninth Street and Central Park West, south to West Eighty-sixth
Street, west to the North River, and to the point of beginning. Population (1930), 259,334.
SOL BLOOM, Democrat, of New York City; born in Pekin, Ill., March 9, 1870;
real-estate and construction business; director, United States George Washington
Bicentennial Commission; honorary member of Veterans of Foreign Wars; mem-
ber and director of many clubs and institutions; thirty-second degree Mason and
Shriner; Elks; Moose; Red Men; and I. O. B. B.; is married, and has one daughter,
Vera Bloom; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—NEW YORK CoUNTY: Randalls Island, Wards Island, and that portion
of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at Fifth Avenue and East One hundred and twentieth
Street, to Park Avenue, south to East One hundred and eighteenth Street, east to Second Avenue,
south to East One hundred and seventeenth Street, east to the East River, to East Ninety-ninth Street,
west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One hundred and tenth Street, east to Madison Avenue, north to
East One hundred and sixteenth Street, west to Fifth Avenue, north to East One hundred and twenti-
eth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1930), 150,523.
JAMES J. LANZETTA, Democrat, of New York City, was born December
21, 1894, in New York City; attended New York City public schools; graduate of
Stuyvesant High School, 1913; Columbia University, 1917, with degree of me-
chanical engineer; Fordham University, school of law, 1924, with degree of
bachelor of laws; admitted to the bar of the State of New York, January, 1925;
engaged in the practice of law; served in the United States Army, during the
World War, from September, 1917, to July, 1919, with the Three hundred and
second Regiment Engineers and First Air Service Mechanics Regiment, and
was overseas from February, 1918, to July, 1919; member of the board of alder-
man of New York City from January, 1932, to March, 1933; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress, receiving 16,447 votes, and defeating Fiorello H. La-
Guardia, Republican, who received 15,227 votes.
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—NEW YOrRK CoUNTY: That portion beginning at the intersection of
Fifth Avenue and West One hundred and twenty-fifth Street, and running thence westerly along
West One hundred and twenty-fifth Street to the Hudson River, and thence along the Hudson River
to Spuyten Duyvil Creek, thence through Spuyten Duyvil Creek and the Harlem River and along the
boundary line between New York and Bronx Counties to Eighth Avenue, thence southerly along
Eighth Avenue to West One hundred and forty-fiftth Street, along West One hundred and forty-fifth
Street to the Harlem River, and along the Harlem River to Fifth Avenue, and along Fifth Avenue to
West One hundred and twenty-fifth Street, the point or place of beginning. Population (1930), 381,212,
JOSEPH A. GAVAGAN, Democrat, of New York City; lawyer; elected to
the Seventy-first Congress on November 5, 1929; reelected to the Seventy-second
and Seventy-third Congresses.
TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—BRONX COUNTY: North Brothers Island, Rikers Island, South
Brothers Island, and that portion of the county bounded as follows—Beginning at Jerome Avenue
and the Harlem River, thence along Jerome Avenue to East One hundred and sixty-first Street, along
East One hundred and sixty-first Street to Melrose Avenue, along Melrose Avenue to East One hun-
dred and fifty-seventh Street, along East One hundred and fifty-seventh Street to Third Avenue,
along Third Avenue to East One hundred and fifty-sixth Street, along East One hundred and fifty-
sixth Street to St. Anns Avenue, along St. Anns Avenue to East One hundred and forth-ninth Street,
along East One hundred and forty-ninth Street to the East River, thence along the East River, Bronx
Kills, and the Harlem River to Jerome Avenue, the place of beginning. NEW YORK COUNTY: Beginning
at the Harlem River and East One hundred and seventeenth Street and thence westerly along East One
hundred and seventeenth Street to Second Avenue, along Second Avenue to East One hundred and
eighteenth Street, along East One hundred and eighteenth Street to Park Avenue, along Park Avenue
to East One hundred and twentieth Street, along East One hundred and twentieth Street to Fifth Ave-
nue, thence through Mount Morris Park and along Fifth Avenue to the Harlem River, and along the
Harlem River to West One hundred and forty-fifth Street, along West One hundred and forth-fifth
Street to Eighth Avenue, along Eighth Avenue to the Harlem River, thence along the Harlem River
to East One hundred and seventeenth Street, the place of beginning. Population (1930), 210,138.
ANTHONY J. GRIFFIN, Democrat, county of the Bronx and New York
City; was born in the city of New York, son of James A. Griffin and Mary Ann
(Zeluiff) Griffin; educated in the public schools, City College, and Cooper Union;
after several years’ experience at surveying and engineering turned to law, and
while studying in the office of Gen. Daniel E. Sickles took the law course at the
New York University, graduating with honors as prize essayist of the year;
admitted to the bar in 1892, and has been in general practice ever since; married
NEW YORE Biographical 79
Katherine Crosson Byrne, of Bronx, N. Y.; member of the Twelfth and Sixty-
ninth Regiments, National Guard of New York ; in the latter he organized Com-
pany F, which he commanded during the Spanish-American War; active in civie
movements in the Bronx for many years; in 1906 established and edited The
Bronx Independent; elected to the New York Senate in 1910 and again in 1912;
served successively as chairman of the following committees—Military affairs,
labor and industry, and codes; appointed by Governor Dix member of widows’
pension fund commission, which drew up the law now on the statute books;
appointed by Mayor Gaynor member of the commission which revised the
municipal court act of the State of New York; served in New York State constitu-
tional convention of 1915; elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress at the special
election March 5, 1918, and to each subsequent Congress; member of Appropria-
tions Committee, subcommittee on State, Justice, Commerce, and Labor, and
chairman, subcommittee on Permanent Appropriations.
TWENTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—BroNX COUNTY: That portion beginning at the Harlem River and
Jerome Avenue, thence along Jerome Avenue to East One hundred and sixty-first Street, along East
One hundred and sixty-first Street to Melrose Avenue, along Melrose Avenue to East One hundred and
fifty-seventh Street, along East One hundred and fifty-seventh Street to Third Avenue, along Third
Avenue to East One hundred and fifty-sixth Street, along East One hundred and fifty-sixth Street to
St. Anns Avenue, along St. Anns Avenue to East One hundred and forty-ninth Street, along East
One hundred and forty-ninth Street to Prospect Avenue, along Prospect Avenue to Freeman Street,
along Freeman Street to Southern Boulevard, along Southern Boulevard to Pelham Avenue, along
Pelham Avenue to Bronx River, along the Bronx River to the city line, along the city line to the
Hudson River, along the Hudson River to Spuyten Duyvil Creek, thence through Spuyten Duyvil
Creek to the Harlem River, and along the line separating New York and Bronx Counties to Jerome
Avenue, the point or place of beginning. Population (1930), 688,454.
FRANK OLIVER, Democrat, of the Bronx, was born October 2, 1883, in
New York City. He was educated at Morris High School, Fordham University,
and New York Law School. He is a lawyer, married, and has one son; elected to
the Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—BRrRONX COUNTY: City Island, Harts Island, High Island, Hunters
Island, Middle Reef Island, Rat Island, Twin Island, The Bluezes, and Chimney Sweep, and that
portion of the county bounded as follows: Beginning at the boundary line between the city of New
York and the city of Mount Vernon, along said boundary line to Long Island Sound, along Long Island
Sound to the East River, to One hundred and forty-ninth Street, along East One hundred and forty-
ninth Street to Prospect Avenue, along Prospect Avenue to Freeman Street, along Freeman Street
to Southern Boulevard, along Southern Boulevard to Pelham Avenue, along Pelham Avenue to the
Bronx River, along the Bronx River to the boundary line between the city of New York and the city
of Mount Vernon, the place of beginning. WESTCHESTER COUNTY: Cities of Yonkers and Mount
Vernon and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1930), 672,121.
JAMES M. FITZPATRICK, Democrat, of New York City (Bronx); was born
in West Stockbridge, Mass. ; was educated in the public schools; married; engaged
in real-estate business; elected to the board of aldermen from the twenty-seventh
district, New York City, in 1919, and reelected in 1921, 1923, and 1925; resigned
February 28, 1927; was elected to the Seventieth Congress, and reelected to the
Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Rockland and Westchester, except the cities of Mount
Vernon and Yonkers and the towns of Eastchester and Pelham. Population (1930), 352,210.
CHARLES DUNSMORE MILLARD, Republican, of Tarrytown, West-
chester County, N. Y., was born in Tarrytown, N. Y., December 1, 1873; educated
at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., Brown University, Providence, R. I., New
York Law School, New York City; admitted to the bar on May 2, 1898, and
since that time has been in active practice in New York City and Westchester
County, N. Y.; was president of Westchester County Bar Association, 1927-28;
member of the Westchester County Board of Supervisors since 1907 and chairman
of that board, 1916-17 and 1927-28; for 23 years supervisor of the town of Green-
burg; Republican State committeeman from the fourth assembly district of
Westchester County; married Miss Ethel Lee Williams, of New York City,
July 15, 1902; one daughter, Ethel Lee Millard; elected to the Seventy-second
Congress and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—OounNties: Dutchess, Orange, and Putnam (3 counties). Population (1930), 249,589.
HAMILTON FISH, Jr., Republican, was born at Garrison, Putnam County,
N. Y., on December 7, 1888; graduated from Harvard University in three years,
80 Congressional Directory NEW YORK
with a cum laude degree; captain Harvard football team; served three terms in
the New York Assembly, 1914-1916; commissioned captain of Colored Infantry
(Fifteenth New York Volunteers), later known as the Three hundred and sixty-
ninth Regiment Infantry; took active part in Battle of Champagne July 15, and
general offensive September, 1918; decorated with the croix de guerre; subse-
quently major of Infantry, Fourth Division, army of occupation; chairman of
subcommittee at first American Legion convention, in 1919, that wrote the
preamble to the American Legion constitution; appointed chairman, by Presi-
dent Coolidge, in 1928, of Advisory Committee on Veterans’ Preference; ap-
pointed chairman of special House committee, in Seventy-first Congress, to
investigate activities of the communists in the United States; married, Sep-
tember 24, 1921, to Grace, daughter of Alfred Chapin, former Democratic mayor
of Brooklyn, N. Y.; was elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress to fill the vacancy
caused by the resignation of Hon. Edmund Platt; reelected to the Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-
third Congresses.
TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Columbia, Greene, Schoharie, Sullivan, and Ulster
(5 counties). Population (1930), 202,519.
PHILIP ARNOLD GOODWIN, Republican, of Coxsackie, Greene County,
N. Y., born in Athens, Greene County, N. Y., January 20, 1882; graduated from
high school in 1900 and business school in 1902; engaged in the steel bridge
building business, 1902-1916; became owner of lumber company of J. H. Good-
win & Son in 1916; director and president of the National Bank of Coxsackie;
vice president of the Coxsackie Milling & Supply Co.; founder and president of
Goodwin-Griswold (Inc.), Albany, N. Y.; president of the Coxsackie Chamber of
Commerce, the Coxsackie Hose Company No. 3, Firemen’s Benefit Association,
the Coxsackie Red Cross Society, the Greene County Historical Society, and
president of the board of trustees of the First Methodist Episcopal Church; district
deputy, Greene-Ulster district, Free and Accepted Masons; trustee of the Heer-
mance Memorial Library; married Miss Eva M. Jeune, and they have a son and
a daughter—John H. and Jean E.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on
November 8, 1932, receiving 52,099 votes, defeating Clifford L. Miller, Democrat,
who received 46,154 votes.
TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—ALBANY COUNTY. RENSSELAER COUNTY: City of Troy, wards
1 to 4 and 6 to 12. Population (1930), 252,280.
PARKER CORNING, Democrat, of Albany, N. Y.; married; is a manufac-
turer; was elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and
Seventy-second Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
TWENTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Saratoga, Warren, and Washington. RENSSELAER
County: City of Troy, wards 5 and 13 to 17. Population (1930), 223,424.
JAMES S. PARKER, Republican, of Salem, was born at Great Barrington,
Mass., June 3, 1867; prepared for college in the public schools of his native town,
and completed his education at Cornell University; in 1888 removed to Salem,
Washington County, N. Y., where he has since made his home; after finishing
his course at Cornell taught for several years at St. Paul’s School, Concord,
N. H.; for the last 15 years has been engaged in farming at Salem, N. Y.; repre-
sented Washington County in the assembly in 1904, 1905, 1908-1912; was
elected to the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Fulton, Hamilton, Montgomery, and Schenectady (4 counties).
Population (1930), 235,586.
FRANK CROWTHER, Republican, Schenectady, N. Y.; D. M. D., Harvard
Dental College, 1898; New Jersey State Assembly, 1905-6; Middlesex County
Board of Taxation, 1906-1909; president common council of Schenectady, N. Y.,
1917-18; elected to the Sixty-sixth and each succeeding Congress; member of
Ways and Means Committee.
NEW YORK Biographical 81
THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clinton, Essex, Franklin, and St. Lawrence (4 counties).
Population (1930), 217,300.
BERTRAND H. SNELL, Republican, of Potsdam; born in Colton, St. Law-
rence County, N. Y., December 9, 1870; attended public schools there until
1884, when he entered the State normal school at Potsdam, N. Y.; graduated
from the State normal school in 1889; after taking postgraduate course at the
normal, he entered Amherst College in the fall of 1890, graduated in 1894; LL. D.,
1929; married Miss Sara L. Merrick, of Gouverneur, N. Y., June 3, 1903; two
daughters—Helen 1. and Sara Louise; director Northern New York Trust
Co., at Watertown, N. Y.; director Gould Pumps (Inc.), Seneca Falls, N. Y.;
president board of trustees of Clarkson College, at Potsdam, N. Y.; a member
of the Republican State committee from the second assembly district of St.
Lawrence, member of executive committee of Republican State committee;
delegate from thirty-first congressional district to Republican National Conven-
tions at Chicago in 1916 and 1920, at Cleveland in 1924, and delegate at large at
Kansas City in 1928; delegate to and permanent chairman, Republican National
Convention in Chicago, 1932; was elected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-
sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTES: Jefferson, Lewis, Madison, and Oswego (4 counties)
Population (1930), 216,456.
FRANCIS D. CULKIN, of Oswego, Republican; lawyer; married; elected to
Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIBLY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Herkimer and Oneida (2 counties). Population (1930)
5,169.
FRED J. SISSON, Democrat, of Whitesboro, N. Y.; born at Wellsbridge, N. Y.,
March 31, 1879; graduated from Unadilla High School in 1900, and received the
degree of A. B. from Hamilton College in 1904; admitted to the bar in 1911 and
has been engaged in general law practice, especially trial work, ever since; married
Grace McCormick in 1912, and they have five children; corporation counsel for
the city of Utica in 1914; member of Oneida County Bar Association, New York
State Bar Association, Democratic Club of Oneida County, Masonic Club of
Whitesboro, Isaac Walton League, Utica Fish and Game Protective Associa-
tion, and New York State Fish, Game, and Forest League; also a member of the
Board of Education of Whitesboro, N. Y., since 1925, and its president for five
years; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 53,427 votes; Frederick
M. Davenport, Republican, 52,398 votes; Otto L. Endres, Socialist, 1,119 votes.
THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Broome, Chenango, Delaware, and Otsego (4 counties).
Population (1930), 269,560.
JOHN DAVENPORT CLARKE, Republican, of Fraser, Delaware County,
N. Y.; born in Hobart, Delaware County, N. Y.; educated in schools of Dela-
ware County ; graduated from Lafayette College, Easton, Pa., 1898; took post-
graduate courses in economics and history at Colorado College; studied law in
New York Law School, and graduated from Brooklyn Law School in 1911;
worked for the Oliver Iron Mining Co. (mining department of the Carnegie Steel
Co.); assistant to secretary of mines of the United States Steel Corporation,
from its formation to 1906; since then secretary and treasurer of other mining
companies; practicing lawyer; purchased farm in native county of Delaware in
1915, and has been actively engaged in agricultural pursuits; director of the
Dairymen’s League; chairman, two years, of the observances of National Forest
Week in the State of New York; president New York State Forestry Association
{(Inc.) two years; vice president New. York Conservation Association; vice presi-
dent New York State Forestry Association; married; has one son; introduced
Clarke-McNary hill that became a law and established national reforestation
policy of the United States, now being cooperated under in 41 States, also in
Hawaii and Puerto Rico; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Seven-
tieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; delegate to
Republican National Conventions, Kansas City, 1928, Chicago, 1932.
157297°—173-1—18T ED——T
82 Congressional Durectory NEW YORK
THIRTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES; Cortland and Onondaga (2 counties). Population (1930)
15. th
CLARENCE E. HANCOCK, Republican, of Syracuse; born in that city
February 13, 1885; Wesleyan University (B. A., 1906), New York Law School
(LL. B., 1908); corporation counsel, Syracuse, 1926-27; served with First New
York Cavalry, Mexican border, 1916-17; Twenty-seventh Division, World War,
1917-1919; married in 1912 Emily W. Shonk, of Plymouth, Pa.; one son, John
S., born 1914; elected at general election, 1927, to the Seventieth Congress;
reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIRTY-SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Cayuga, Ontario, Seneca, Wayne, and Yates (5 counties).
Population (1930), 210,853.
JOHN TABER, Republican, of Auburn, was born in that city May 5, 1880;
educated in the public schools, Yale University (B. A., 1902) and New. York
Law School; admitted to New York bar in 1904; married April 13, 1929, to
Gertrude J. Beard; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and reelected to each
succeeding Congress, including the Seventy-third.
THIRTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Chemung, Schuyler, Steuben, Tioga, and Tompkins
(5 counties). Population (1930), 237,230.
GALE H. STALKER, Republican, of Elmira; born November 7, 1889, at
Long Eddy, N. Y.; married Miss Helen B. Rutledge, Liberty, N. Y., June 5,
1912; two daughters—Helen Lucile and Norma Gale; engaged in lumber and
banking business; elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIRTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—MONROE COUNTY: The towns of Brighton, Greece, Henrietta,
Irondequoit, Mendon, Penfield, Perinton, Pittsford, Rush, and Webster; the city of Rochester, wards
1 to 10 and 12 to 14; ward 15, districts 1, 2, and 6 to 8; wards 16 to 18; ward 20, districts 1 and 2; wards 21
to 23. Population (1930), 327,072.
JAMES L. WHITLEY, Republican, of Rochester; lawyer; born at Rochester;
attended public schools and Rochester Free Academy; was graduated from
Union University, department of law, in 1898, degree LL. B.; enlisted in the
Seventh Battery, United States Volunteers, Spanish-American War; was assistant
corporation counsel, city of Rochester, N. Y., 1900-1901; chief examiner of Civil
Service Commission, 1902-1904; member of the New York Assembly, 1905-1910;
member State senate, 1918-1928; author of Law of Arrest, Law of Bills,
Notes, and Checks; member of United Spanish War Veterans, Sons of Veterans,
Masonic bodies, Odd Fellows, Elks, bar association; married to Ora M. Marker
and has two sons, George A. and James L., jr.; elected to the Seventy-first and
Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Genesee, Livingston, Orleans, and Wyoming. MONROE
CouNTY: The towns of Chili, Clarkson, Gates, Hamlin, Ogden, Parma, Riga, Sweden, Wheatland;
the city of Rochester, ward 11; ward 15, districts 3 to 5; ward 19; ward 20, districts 3 to 10; ward 24.
Population (1930), 236,396.
JAMES W. WADSWORTH, Republican, of Geneseo, Livingston County,
N. Y., was born at Geneseo, N. Y., on August 12, 1877; received preparatory
education at St. Mark’s School at Southboro, Mass.; graduated from Yale
University in 1898; enlisted as private, Battery A, Pennsylvania Field Artillery,
and served with that organization in the Puerto Rican campaign in the summer
of 1898; mustered out at Philadelphia at the close of the war; returning home,
he engaged in livestock and general farming business near Geneseo, N. Y., and
later assumed the management of a ranch in the Panhandle of Texas; married Miss
Alice Hay, of Washington, D. C., in 1902; elected member of assembly from
Livingston County 1904, and reelected 1905, 1906, 1907, 1908, and 1909; elected
speaker of assembly for the session of 1906, and reelected for the sessions of 1907,
1908, 1909, and 1910; elected United States Senator for the State of New York
November 3, 1914, defeating James W. Gerard, Democrat, and Bainbridge
Colby, Progressive; reelected November 2, 1920, for the term ending March 3,
1927, defeating his Democratic opponent, Hon. Harry W. Walker, by more than
500,000 plurality; was defeated for reelection in 1926, by Robert F. Wagner,
NORTH CAROLINA Biographical 83
Democrat, and R. W. Christman, Independent Republican, by a plurality of
116,000 votes; elected to the House of Representatives November 8, 1932, to
represent the thirty-ninth New York congressional district defeating David A.
White, Democrat, and Ernest R. Clark, Law Preservation, by a plurality of
15,000 votes.
FORTIETH DISTRICT.—N1AGARA CoUuNTY. ERIE COUNTY: Towns of Grand Island and Tonawanda;
city of Tonawanda; city of Buffalo, wards 16 to 25; ward 26, districts 1 to 11. Population (1930), 405,109.
WALTER GRESHAM ANDREWS, Republican, of Buffalo, N. Y.; born
July 16, 1889, at Evanston, Ill.; attended the Buffalo schools, Lawrenceville
Academy, and Princeton University; served on the Mexican border and was in
France with the One hundred and seventh United States Infantry, Twenty-
seventh Division; wounded in action; awarded American distinguished-service
cross; supervisor of the Fifteenth Federal Census for the seventh district of
New York State, 1929-30; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to
the Seventy-third Congress.
FORTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ERIE CoUNTY: Towns of Alden, Amherst, Cheektowaga, Clarence,
Elma, Lancaster, Marilla, and Newstead; the city of Buffalo, ward 5, districts 1 and 2; ward 8; ward
9, districts 1 to 9; wards 10 to 15; ward 26, districts 12 to 14; ward 27. Population (1930), 258,163.
ALFRED FLORIAN BEITER, Democrat, of Williamsville, N. Y., was
born in Clarence, N. Y., July 7, 1893; attended the common schools, the Wil-
liamsville High School, and the Niagara University for three years; engaged in
the general merchandising business until three years ago, when he sold his
business and has since devoted all his time to his official duties as supervisor
of the town of Amherst; elected supervisor of the town of Amherst in 1929 and
reelected in 1931; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932,
receiving 97,277 votes, Edmund F. Cooke, Republican, 42,743 votes, and Robert
A. Hoffman, Socialist, 2,280 votes..
FORTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—Erie County: Towns of Aurora, Boston, Brant, Colden, Collins,
Concord, East Hamburg, Eden, Evans, Hamburg, Holland, North Collins, Sardinia, Wales, and
West Seneca; the city of Lackawanna; the city of Buffalo, wards 1 to 4; ward 5, districts 3 to 13; wards
6 and 7; ward 9, districts 10 and 1I. Population (1930), 248,465.
JAMES M. MEAD, Democrat, Buffalo, N. Y.; born Mount Morris, Living-
ston County, N. Y., December 27, 1885; married Alice M. Dillon August 25,
1915; has one child, James M., jr.; elected supervisor Erie County, 1913; mem-
ber of State assembly, 1914-1917; elected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Con-
gresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress; chairman of Committee
on the Post Office and Post Roads.
FORTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Allegany, Cattaraugus, and Chautauqua (3 counties).
Population (1930), 236,880.
DANIEL ALDEN REED, Republican, of Dunkirk, N. Y., was born Septem-
ber 15, 1875, at Sheridan, Chautauqua County, N. Y.; educated at distriet
school, Sheridan, N. Y., Silver Creek High School, Silver Creek, N. Y., and
Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.; attorney at law; married, and has two children;
elected to the Sixty-sixth Congress November 5, 1918; reelected to Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Sev-
enty-third Congresses. Member of Committees on Education and Public Build-
ings and Grounds.
NORTH CAROLINA
(Population (1930), 3,170,276)
SENATORS
JOSIAH WILLIAM BAILEY, Democrat, of Raleigh, N. C.; born in Warren-
ton, N. C., September 14, 1873; parents moved to Raleigh, N. C., in 1877; edu-
cated at Raleigh (N. C.) public schools, Raleigh Male Academy, Wake Forest
(N. C.) College, A. B. 1893; editor Biblical Recorder, 1893-1907; member State
84 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA
board of agriculture, 1896-1900; studied law under Prof. S. F. Mordecai, of
Trinity College, and in Wake Forest College Law School, 1907-8; admitted to
the bar in 1908; elected elector at large, 1908; United States collector of internal
revenue, North Carolina, 1913-1921; member North Carolina Constitutional
Commission in 1915; married Edith Walker Pou in 1916; trustee, University of
North Carolina, 1930; elected United States Senator in 1930 by vote of 323,620
to 210,547 for opponent, George M. Pritchard; term will expire in 1937.
ROBERT RICE REYNOLDS, Democrat, of Asheville, N. C., where he was
born on June 18, 1884; was educated in the public schools of Asheville, Weaver-
ville College, and the University of North Carolina, 1902-1906, where he was
captain of the varsity track team, member of the varsity football team, and
associate editor of the Tarheel; obtained law license in 1907; secretary of the
Buncombe County Democrat Executive Committee in 1908; elected prosecuting
attorney for the fifteenth North Carolina district in 1910, serving four years,
being the first Democratic solicitor ever elected in that district; traveled around
the world several times and is the author of two travel books, Wanderlust and
Gypsy Trails; presidential elector on the Democratic ticket in 1928; unsuccessful
candidate for lieutenant governor in 1924, running second, and declining to
enter a run-off primary; unsuccessful candidate for United States Senator in
1926; president of the Roosevelt Motor Clubs of America in 1932; Methodist,
Beta Theta Pi, Loyal Order of Moose, Junior Order of the United American
Mechanics, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; vice president of the Ameri-
can Automobile Association; married Eva Brady; three children—Frances,
Robert, jr., and Mary Bland; was nominated for United States Senator on July
2, 1932, receiving the largest majority ever given a candidate for a major office
in a Democratic primary in North Carolina; elected on November 8, 1932, to
the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Lee S. Over-
man for the term expiring March 3, 1933, and on the same day was elected for
the full term expiring in 1939.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Beaufort, Camden, Chowan, Currituck, Dare, Gates, Hertford, Hyde,
Sonn, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Pitt, Tyrrell, and Washington (14 counties). Population (1930),
224,768.
LINDSAY CARTER WARREN, Democrat; born at Washington, N. C.,
December 16, 1889; son of Charles F. and Elizabeth Mutter (Blount) Warren;
attended the Bingham School, Asheville, 1903-1906; University of North Caro-
lina, 1906-1908; law school, University of North Carolina, 1911-12; admitted to
the bar February, 1912; chairman Democratic executive committee, Beaufort
County, 1912-1925; county attorney, Beaufort County, 1912-1925; State senator,
1917-1919; president pro tempore State senate, 1919; member code commis-
sion, compiling the consolidated statutes, 1919; representative from Beaufort
County in general assembly, 1923; trustee, University of North Carolina, 1921-
1925; chairman Democratic State convention in 1930; appointed by Governor
Gardner on June 17, 1931, as a member of the Constitutional Commission of
North Carolina; delegate at large to the Democratic National Convention in
1932; elected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second
Congresses and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bertie, Edgecombe, Greene, Halifax, Lenoir, Northampton, Warren,
and Wilson (8 counties). Population (1930), 276,795.
JOHN HOSEA KERR, Democrat, of Warrenton, was born at Yanceyville,
N. C.; son of Capt. John H. Kerr, of the Confederate Army, and Eliza Katherine
(Yancey) Kerr; was a student in the celebrated Bingham School and graduated
from Wake Forest College, North Carolina, with degree of A. B.; studied law and
was admitted to the bar; moved to Warrenton and entered upon the practice of
his profession; married Miss Ella Foote, of Warrenton, and they have two sons—
John Hosea and James Yancey; elected solicitor of the third district and served
11 years; while solicitor was elected judge of the superior court and served 7
years; while serving on the bench was nominated for Congress to succeed Hon.
Claude Kitchin, deceased, and was elected at a special election held November
6, 1923, only 1 vote being cast against him; the third member of the same family
NORTH CAROLINA Biographical 85
by the name of John Kerr elected to the House of Representatives; his great
uncle—John Kerr—and his son, Judge John Kerr; reelected to the Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, and Seventy-first Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-second Con-
gress by vote of 1,124 Republican and 15,987 Democratic; reelected to the
Seventy-third Congress by an increased majority, receiving 34,325 votes, and
his Republican opponent 1,430 votes.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Carteret, Craven, Duplin, Jones, Onslow, Pamlico, Pender, Sampson,
and Wayne (9 counties). Population (1930), 226,465.
CHARLES LABAN ABERNETHY, Democrat, of New Bern, N. C., was
born at Rutherford College, N. C.; educated at Rutherford College and Univer-
sity of North Carolina; in 1893 moved to Beaufort, N. C., where he founded the
Beaufort Herald, and afterwards studied law at the University of North Caro-
lina; was licensed to practice law, September, 1895; has been a member of the
State Democratic executive committee; presidential elector in 1900 and 1904;
was appointed by Gov. R. B. Glenn solicitor of the third judicial district, which
district was afterwards changed to the fifth, and held that position for nearly
12 years; was married to Minnie M. May, of Farmville, Pitt County, N. C,,
and has one son, Charles Laban Abernethy, jr.; elected without opposition to
the Sixty-seventh Congress to fill an unexpired term; reelected to the Sixty-
eighth Congress by the largest majority ever received in the district by a candi-
date; reelected to the Sixty-ninth Congress by an increased Democratic major-
ity; relected to Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third
Congresses.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chatham Franklin, Johnston, Nash, Randolph, Vance, and Wake
(7 counties). Population (1930), 322,346.
EDWARD WILLIAM POU, Democrat, of Smithfield, was born at Tuskegee,
Ala., September 9, 1863; was educated at the University of North Carolina;
was chairman of the executive committee of his county in 1886; married Carrie
H. Ihrie in 1887; was presidential elector in 1888; was elected solicitor of the
fourth judicial district of North Carolina in 1890, 1894, and 1898; while serving
his third term as solicitor was elected to the Fifty-seventh Congress; was re-
elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-
third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-
ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, and to the
Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 34,974 over L. P. Dixon, Republican,
being the largest majority ever received by Mr. Pou.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Caswell, Forsyth, Granville, Person, Rockingham, Stokes, and Surry
(7 counties). Population (1930), 293,799.
FRANKLIN WILLS HANCOCK, Jr., Democrat, of Oxford, N. C., only
son of Franklin Wills Hancock and Lizzie Hobgood Hancock; born November 1,
1894; received early education at Oxford graded schools and Horner Military
Academy, and completed education at University of North Carolina; licensed to
practice law in August, 1916; chairman Democratic executive committee of
Granville County, 1924; presidential elector, 1924; elected, without opposition,
to State senate, 1926, and to State house of representatives, 1928; coauthor of
educational bill bearing his name; is an ex-service man, Mason, Shriner, member
of Kappa Alpha fraternity, and member of Baptist Church; married Miss Lucy
Osborn Landis, 1917, and is father of six children—three boys and three girls;
elected to the Seventy-first Congress, November 4, 1930, to fill the unexpired
term of Maj. Charles Manly Stedman, deceased, and at the same time was
elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alamance, Durham, Guilford, and Orange (4 counties). Population
(1930), 263,517.
WILLIAM BRADLEY UMSTEAD, Democrat, of Durham, N. C.; born near
Mangum’s store, in Mangum Township, Durham County, N. C., May 13, 1895;
son of John W. and Lulie Lunsford Umstead; graduated from the University
of North Carolina with A. B. degree in 1916; served with the Three hundred
and seventeenth Machine Gun Battalion, Eighty-first Division, American
86 Congressional Directory NORTH CAROLINA
Expeditionary Forces, during the World War; studied law at Trinity College,
1919-1921; licensed to practice law in 1920, and began practice in July, 1921;
prosecuting attorney of Durham County Recorders Court, 1922-1926; solicitor
of the tenth judicial district, 1927-1933: married Miss Merle Davis, of Ruther-
ford County, N. C., in 1929; member of the Methodist Church; was elected to the
Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 19,931 votes over W. I. Ward, Republican.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bladen, Brunswick, Columbus Cumberland, Harnett, New
Hanover, and Robeson (7 counties). Population (1930), 268,579.
J. BAYARD CLARK, Democrat, of Fayetteville, N. C.; elected to the Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Anson, Davidson, Davie, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, Rich-
mond, Scotland, Union, Wilkes, and Yadkin (12 counties). Population (1930), 316,614.
J. WALTER LAMBETH, Democrat, of Thomasville, N. C.; born January
10, 1896, at Thomasville; son of John W. and Daisy (Sumner) Lambeth; A. B.,
Trinity College (N. C.), 1916; Harvard Graduate School, 1916-17; during the
World War served with the American Expeditionary Forces; elected to the State
senate in 1921; elected to the Seventy-second Congress, November 4, 1930;
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress. «
NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Cabarrus, Caldwell, Iredell, Rowan,
Stanly, and Watauga (9 counties). Population (1930), 262,213.
ROBERT L. DOUGHTON, Democrat, Laurel Springs, N. C.; farmer and live-
stock raiser by occupation; appointed member of the board of agriculture of
North Carolina in 1903, serving in same position for six years; elected member
of State senate in 1908; served as director of State’s prison from 1909 to 1911;
elected to Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-
seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second
Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by 21,724 majority,
carrying each and all of the counties comprising the district by large majorities.
TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Avery, Burke, Catawba, Cleveland, Gaston, Lincoln, Madison,
Mecklenburg, Mitchell, and Yancey (10 counties). Population (1930), 414,808. ;
A. L. BULWINKLE, Democrat, of Gastonia, N. C.; born April 21, 1883;
educated in the schools of Gaston County; studied law under private instructor
and at the University of North Carolina; lawyer, senior member of law firm of
Bulwinkle & Dolley; prosecuting attorney municipal court of city of Gastonia,
1913-1916; nominated as senator for the general assembly by the Democratic
Party, 1916, but withdrew on account of military service on the Mexican border;
captain, First Infantry, North Carolina National Guard, 1909-1917; major,
commanding Second Battalion, One hundred and thirteenth Field Artillery,
Fifty-fifth Field Artillery Brigade, Thirtieth Division, 1917-1919, American
Expeditionary Forces, married Miss Bessie Lewis, Dallas, N. C., 1911; two
children—Frances McKean and Alfred Lewis; served on various committees of
the Democratic Party from 1904-1920; member of the American Legion, Mason,
and other fraternal organizations; member of North Carolina and American Bar
Associations; Lutheran; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third
Congress from the tenth congressional district.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Buncombe, Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Henderson,
on, McDowell, Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania (13 counties). Population
1930), 300,392.
ZEBULON WEAVER, Democrat, of Asheville, was born May 12, 1872, at
Weaverville, Buncombe County, N. C.; graduated at Weaver College and studied
law at the University of North Carolina; was admitted to bar in September,
1894, and practiced law in Asheville, N. C.; was elected to House of Representa-
tives of North Carolina and served in sessions of 1907 and 1909; twice elected
NORTH DAKOTA Biographical 87
State senator for the thirty-sixth district and served in sessions of 1913 and 1915;
married Miss Anna Hyman, of New Bern, N. C.; they have five children; elected
to the Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Sev-
entieth Congresses; was defeated for reelection, in 1928, to the Seventy-first
Congress by about 300 votes; was again elected to the Seventy-second Congress
by a majority of 11,740; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by more than
25,000 majority,
NORTH DAKOTA
(Population (1930), 680,845)
SENATORS
LYNN J. FRAZIER, Republican, of Hoople, N. Dak.; was born in Steele
County, Minn., December 21, 1874, the son of Thomas and Lois B. Frazier;
his parents were natives of Rangeley, Me., and became early western pioneers,
first in Minnesota and later in the northern part of the Red River Valley in North
Dakota; they settled in Pembina County, near the present town of Hoople, in
1881; he attended the rural district school and then high school at Grafton,
and was graduated in 1892; also from Mayville State Normal School, 1895; and
B. A., University of North Dakota, 1901; married Lottie J. Stafford, of Crystal,
N. Dak., November 26, 1903, and they have five children; upon leaving college
returned to the family homestead, and at once took up the management of the
farm for his widowed mother; remained actively engaged in farming until 1916,
when indorsed for governor by the Nonpartisan League and elected on the
Republican ticket; reelected governor in 1918 and again in 1920; in March, 1922,
was indorsed by the Nonpartisan League for United States Senator and nominated
on the Republican ticket in the primaries and elected November 7, 1922, and
reelected November 6, 1928.
GERALD P. NYE, Republican, Cooperstown, N. Dak.; born in Hortonville,
Wis., December 19, 1892; published papers at Hortonville, Wis., Creston, Iowa,
Fryburg and Cooperstown, N. Dak.; candidate in 1924 in second North Dakota
district for Congress; appointed to succeed Dr. E. F. Ladd in Senate November
14, 1925; elected in 1926 to short term and long term; elected in 1932 to term
ending in 1939; married Anna M. Munch, three children.
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 680,845.
JAMES HERBERT SINCLAIR, of Kenmare, N. Dak.; a resident of North
Dakota since 1883; served two terms in the State legislature; elected to the Sixty-
sixth Congress as a Nonpartisan Republican; reelected to the Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-
third Congresses.
WILLIAM LEMKE, Non-Partisan, elected on the Republican ticket, of Fargo,
N. Dak., was born at Albany, Minn., August 13, 1878, son of Fred and Julia
Lemke; educated in public schools and at the University of North Dakota;
received B. A. degree in 1902; studied law, University of North Dakota and
Georgetown University Law School, Washington, D. C.; received LL. B., Yale
University, 1905; member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity; married Isabelle
McIntyre, April 16, 1910, and they have three children; engaged in the practice
of law at Fargo, 1905; member national executive committee National Non-
Partisan League, 1917-1921; chairman Republican State committee, 1916-1920;
attorney general of North Dakota, 1921; had charge of preparing the laws estab-
lishing the industrial program in North Dakota; has been connected with practi-
cally every farm organization in the Northwest, as attorney or as an active
member, including the Farmers’ Union and the Cooperative Exchange; elected
to the Seventy-third Congress as a Representative at Large.
88 Congressional Directory OHIO
OHIO
(Population (1930), 6,646,697)
SENATORS
SIMEON D. FESS, Republican, of Yellow Springs, Ohio; born near Lima,
Ohio, December 11, 1861; member of Methodist Episcopal Church and Masonic
(thirty-third degree) fraternal order; an editor and author; professor of history,
Ohio Northern University, 1889-1897; dean of college of law, 1897-1900; vice
president Ohio Northern University, 1900-1902; graduate student and lecturer,
University of Chicago, 1902-1907; president of Antioch College, Yellow Springs,
Ohio, 1907-1917; vice president Ohio constitutional convention, 1912; elected to
Sixty-third and four succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1913-March 3, 1923); did
not seek renomination, having become a candidate for Senator; elected to the
United States Senate in 1922 by a majority of 50,601; reelected in 1928 by a
majority of 505,853; chairman Republican National Congressional Committee,
1918; delegate to Republican National Conventions in 1924 and 1932; temporary
chairman Republican National Convention in 1928; chairman Republican Na-
tional Committee, 1930-1932; is at present vice chairman of George Washington
Bicentennial Commission; chairman George Rogers Clark Commission; chairman
Joint and Senate Committees on the Library; member of Library of Congress
Trust Fund Board; Republican whip of Senate.
ROBERT JOHNS BULKLEY, Democrat, of Cleveland, was born in Cleve-
land, October 8, 1880, graduated from Harvard College with the degree of A. B.
in 1902; studied law at Harvard Law School and in Cleveland; received the
degree of A. M. from Harvard University in 1906; married Miss Katharine Pope
at Helena, Mont., February 17, 1909 (Mrs. Bulkley died July 17, 1932); has one
son, Robert Johns, jr., and one daughter, Katharine; engaged in the practice of
law; elected to the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses (1911-1915); dele-
gate to Democratic National Conventions at Baltimore in 1912 and at St. Louis
in 1916; during World War served successively as head of legal department of
General Munitions Board, Emergency Fleet Corporation, and War Industries
Board; elected to the United States Senate November 4, 1930, to fill the vacancy
caused by the death of Senator Theodore E. Burton; reelected on November 8,
1932, for a full term.
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 6,646,697.
CHARLES VILAS TRUAX, Democrat, of Bucyrus, Ohio; born on a farm in
Wyandot County, Ohio, February 1, 1887; educated in the public schools of
Sycamore, Wyandot County, Ohio; farmer; married; served six years as director
of agriculture, Ohio; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 1,206,631
votes, and having a majority of 98,070 over his nearest Republican opponent.
STEPHEN M. YOUNG, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio.
FIRST DISTRICT.—HaAMILTON CoUNTY: City of Cincinnati, wards 1 to 6; ward 7, except precincts
A and C; wards 8 and 9; ward 10, except precincts I, K, L, N, and O; ward 11, precincts A, P, Q, T;
and U; ward 12, precincts A, N, P, Q, and V; wards 13 and 14; ward 15, except precincts A and B,
ward 16, precincts D, G, K, O, P, Q, R, 8S, T, U, V, W, X, and Z-east; ward 23, precinct T; ward 24,
precincts A, B, C, H, I, and J; townships of Anderson, Columbia, Symmes, and all of Millcreek except
the city of St. Bernard. Population (1930), 296,533.
JOHN BAKER HOLLISTER, Republican, 1831 Keys Crescent, Cincinnati,
Ohio; born in Cincinnati, Ohio, November 7, 1890; educated at Cincinnati public
schools and St. Paul’s School, Concord, N. H.; graduated Yale College, A. B., 1911;
University of Munich, Germany; graduated Harvard Law School, LL. B., 1915;
attorney at law, member of the firm of Taft, Stettinius & Hollister; served two
full terms as member of the Cincinnati Board of Education, 1921-1929; attended
first officers’ training camp, Plattsburg, May, 1917; commissioned first lieuten-
ant, later captain; instructor Heavy Artillery School, Fort Monroe; went overseas
in command of Battery B, Forty-sixth Artillery; later in command of Third
Battalion of that regiment; on detached service with American Relief Adminis-
OHIO ~ Buographical 89
tration under Herbert Hoover, January to June, 1919, in Poland and Lithuania;
married, August 15, 1917, Ellen West Rollins, of Boston, Mass.; elected to the
Seventy-second Congress at a special election held on November 3, 1931, to fill
the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Nicholas Longworth; reelected to the
Seventy-third Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—HAMILTON County: City of Cincinnati, ward 7, precincts A and C; ward 10,
precincts I, K, L, N, and O; ward 11, except precincts A, P, Q, T, and U; ward 12, except precincts
A, N, P, Q, and V; ward 15, preeincts A and B; ward 16, precincts A, B, C, E, F, H, I, J, L M, N Y, and Z-west; wards 17 to 22; ward 23, except precinct T; ward 24, precincts D, E, F, G, K, i, and “MM:
wards 25 and 26; townships of Colerain, Crosby, Delhi, Green, Harrison, Miami, Springfield, Syca-
more, and Whitewater; and the city of St. Bernard in Millcreek Township. Population (1930), 292,823.
WILLIAM E. HESS, Republican, of Cincinnati, was born in Cincinnati, Ohio,
February 13, 1898; educated in the Cincinnati public schools, University of
Cincinnati, and Cincinnati Law School; admitted to the practice of law in 1919;
member at large of Cincinnati City Council, 1922 to 1926; ex-service man;
married Stella Ostendorf in 1927; Member of the Seventy-first and Seventy
second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouUNTES: Butler, Montgomery, and Preble (3 counties). Population (1930), 410,020.
BYRON B. HARLAN, Democrat, of Dayton, Ohio, was born in Greenville,
Ohio, in 1886; moved to Middletown in 1890 and to Dayton in 1894; admitted
to practice law in 1909; graduated from the University of Michigan, college of law (LL. B.), in 1909, and arts college (A. B.), in 1911; married in 1914 to Sada B. Shaw, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Walter Shaw, and they have three children—Richard, aged 17, Bruce, 15, and Eleanor, 13; served as assistant prosecuting attorney of Montgomery County, Ohio, from 1912 to 1916; member
of Methodist Church; president of the Ohio Federated Humane Societies; elected
to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNmEs: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Miami, and Shelby (6 counties). Population (1930), 236,783. .
FRANK LE BLOND KLOEB, Democrat, of Celina, Ohio; born at Celina, Ohio; grandson of Francis C. Le Blond, former Member of the House of Repre- sentatives; attended Ohio State University and the University of Wisconsin; graduate of the law school of Ohio State University; lawyer; admitted to the bar in May, 1917; enlisted in the United States Navy and served during the World War; commissioned ensign, serving on the U. S. S. Satilla and W. M. Irish; served two terms as prosecuting attorney of Mercer County, Ohio, J anuary, 1921, to January, 1925, being nominated and elected for both terms without opposition on either Republican or Democratic tickets; married Florence Root, of Milwaukee, Wis., September 2, 1930; elected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—Counmks: Defiance, Fulton, Henry, Paulding, Putnam, Van Wert, and Williams (7 counties). Population (1930), 159,679.
FRANK C. KNIFFIN, Democrat, of Napoleon, was born April 26, 1894, in Williams County, Ohio; lawyer (1919); married February 8, 1917, to Miss Florence Fichter, of Lawrenceburg, Ind., and they have two children—Frank C. Kniffin, jr., and Robert Kniffin; elected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Adams, Brown, Clermont, Highland, Pike, and Scioto (6 counties) Population (1930), 190,828.
JAMES G. POLK, Democrat, of Highland, Ohio, was born on a farm in Penn Township, Highland County, Ohio, October 6, 1896; son of William Alexander Polk and Amy Isyphena (Ockerman) Polk; attended village school at High- land and at New Vienna, Ohio, graduating from the latter high school in 1915; graduated from the agricultural college of Ohio State University in 1919, after having been called for military service at Camp Sherman in the fall of 1918; principal of New Vienna High School, 1919-20; superintendent of schools, New Vienna, 1920-22; graduated from Wittenberg College, 1923, with degree of master of arts; principal of Hillsboro High School, 1923-1928; at present is
90 Congressional Directory OHIO
farming in Fairfield Township, Highland County, Ohio; married March 26,
1921, to Mary Smith, of Canton, Ohio, and they have four children—Martha
Jean, William A., Helen Ruth, and Lois May; member Kappa Phi Kappa,
National Educational Fraternity, Masons, Grange, American Legion, Kiwanis,
B. P. O. E., and Methodist Episcopal Church. Has the distinction of being the
first Democrat ever elected to Congress from the sixth district as now con-
stituted; one of the very few Members of Congress whose sole occupation is
farming; elected to the Seventy-second Congress with a majority of 3,858 over
his Republican opponent; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress with a major-
ity of 11,245.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Champaign, Clark, Clinton, Fayette, Greene, Logan, Madison,
Union, and Warren (9 counties). Population (1930), 286,374. 3
LEROY TATE MARSHALL, Republican, of Xenia, Ohio, was born near
Bellbrook, Greene County, Ohio, on November 8, 1883; educated in the public
schools of Greene County, Ohio; graduated from Cedarville College, at Cedar-
ville, Ohio; taught school four years; elected clerk of courts, Greene County,
Ohio, for two terms, 1909-1913; served two terms in the Ohio State Senate,
1925-1928; was chairman of the Greene County Republican organization for
12 years, 1920-1932; admitted to the bar in 1915 and has engaged in the practice
of law since that time; married Miss Nelle C. Turnbull, and they have two
children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932, receiving
65,064 votes, and Aaron J. Hallaron, Democratic opponent, 57,715 votes.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CounmEs: Crawford, Hancock, Hardin, Marion, Morrow, and Wyandot
(6 counties). Population (1930), 182,329.
BROOKS FLETCHER, Democrat, of Marion, Ohio; editor-publisher; served
in Sixty-ninth and Seventieth Congresses, and again elected to the Seventy-third
Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiES: Lucas and Ottawa (2 counties). Population (1930), 371,818.
WARREN JOSEPH DUFFEY, Democrat, of Toledo, Ohio, was born in
Toledo, January 24, 1886; married and has three sons and three daughters;
received A. B. and A. M. degrees from St. John’s University, Toledo, Ohio, and
LL. B. degree from the department of law of the University of Michigan, of
Ann Arbor; attorney; member of Lucas County, Ohio State, and American Bar
Associations; member of the eightieth General Assembly of Ohio, 1913-14;
member of Toledo City Council, 1917-18; elected as a Representative to the
Seventy-third Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Athens, Gallia, Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, and Vinton (6 counties).
Population (1930), 171,054.
THOMAS A. JENKINS, Republican, of Ironton; born in Jackson County,
Ohio; married; graduate Providence University and Ohio State University;
admitted to bar in 1907; elected prosecuting attorney Lawrence County, Ohio,
two terms; elected to State Senate of Ohio in 1922; elected to Sixty-ninth, Sev-
entieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Fairfield, Hocking, Perry, Pickaway, and Ross (5 counties).
Population (1930), 168,281.
MELL G. UNDERWOOD, Democrat, New Lexington, Ohio, was born at
Rose Farm, Ohio, January 30, 1892; reared on farm; educated and taught in
public schools; Ohio State University Law School; lawyer; elected prosecuting
attorney, Perry County, 1916; served two terms; married Flora E. Lewis, of
Cadiz, Ohio, and has three children—Mell G., jr., Max L., and Linda Lou;
elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first and Seventy-
second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—County: Franklin. Population (1930), 361,055.
ARTHUR P. LAMNECK, Democrat, of Columbus, Ohio, was born at Port
Washington, Ohio, March 12, 1880; has lived in Columbus since 1907, and has
been actively engaged in business and civic affairs during this time; married and
OHIO = Biographical 91
has two children—a son and a daughter; holds a commission as captain in the
United States Army in the Reserve Corps; elected to the Seventy-second Congress
on November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounmiEs: Erie, Huron, Sandusky, Seneca, and Wood (5 counties).
Population (1930), 213,825.
WILLIAM LOUIS FIESINGER, Democrat, of Sandusky, Ohio; born at
Willard, Huron County, Ohio; educated in public schools. of Norwalk, Ohio;
LL. B. Baldwin-Wallace University; lawyer; city solicitor, Sandusky, Ohio,
1903-1909; judge, common pleas court, Erie County, Ohio, 1925-1931; married
Maude Nelles; two children—Mrs. Wade Wenton Dauch and Lois Fiesinger,
and granddaughter, Mary Lois Dauch; elected to the Seventy-second Congress;
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Lorain, Medina, Portage, and Summit (4 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 525,696.
DOW W. HARTER, Democrat, of Akron, Ohio, was born in Akron, Summit
County, January 2, 1885; educated in the public schools of Akron and graduated
from Akron High School; attended the University of Michigan, and later was
graduated from the law school of that university; first assistant prosecuting
attorney of Summit County, 1914-1916; member of the General Assembly of
Ohio, 1919-20; was appointed United States commissioner at Akron by the late
Judge D. C. Westenhaver, of the United States Court, serving in this capacity
for a period of eight years; member of the Episcopal Church of Our Savior;
married and has two sons, the older being in his freshman year at Kenyon College
and the younger a student of the Akron public schools; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Guernsey, Monroe, Morgan, Muskingum, Noble, and Wash-
ington (6 counties). Population (1930), 198,291,
ROBERT THOMPSON SECREST, Democrat, of Senecaville, Ohio, was born
January 22, 1904, in Noble County, near Senecaville, the sor of Ralph W. and
Amelia Thompson Secrest; graduated from Senecaville High School, 1922;
graduated from Muskingum College with the degree of A. B., 1926; principal
of Senecaville High School, 1926-1930; superintendent of schools, Murray City,
Ohio, 1931-32; elected to Ohio State Legislature from Noble County in 1930;
married Virginia Bowden, of Cadiz, Ohio, November 28, 1929, and they have
two daughters—Nancy Ann and Mary Jane; elected to the Seventy-third
Congress on November 8, 1932; he and Governor White, of Ohio, share the honor
of being the only two Democrats elected from the fifteenth district since the
Civil War, and Mr. Secrest is the only man of either party ever to carry all six
counties in the same election; the vote was, Robert T. Secrest, Democrat,
50,313; C. Ellis Moore, Republican, 38,113; and Joseph H. Ewing, Independent,
444.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNmES: Holmes, Stark, Tuscarawus, and Wayne (4 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 353,727.
WILLIAM R. THOM, Democrat, of Canton, Ohio; born July 7, 1885, in
that city, the son of Louis and Katherine M. Thom; graduated from Canton
High School in 1903, devoting the next five years to newspaper reporting for
Canton newspapers; special student in Adelbert College of Western Reserve
University, at Cleveland, Ohio, 1909-1911; graduate of Georgeton Law School,
Washington, D. C.,; 1916; admitted to the bar of Ohio, January, 1917, and since
then a practicing lawyer in Canton; served in Washington as secretary of J. J.
Whitacre, a Member of the Sixty-second and Sixty-third Congresses from the
old eighteenth Ohio district, consisting of Stark, Columbian, and Mahoning
Counties; reporter for the United Press in the House of Representatives Press
Gallery, 1915-16; member of the Canton Park Commission for the last 12 years;
member of First Reformed Church, of Canton, Ohio; elected to the Seventy-
$id Congress, receiving 67,670 votes, to 63,609 for C. B. McClintock, Re-
publican,
92 Congressional Directory OHIO
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Ashland, Coshocton, Delaware, Knox, Licking, and Rich-
land (6 counties). Population (1930), 237,061. :
CHARLES WEST, Democrat, of Granville, was born at Mount Vernon, Ohio,
January 12, 1895, son of William H. and Clara Kunkel West; educated in the
public schools of Mount Vernon, was graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University,
and later spent three years in graduate study at Harvard University, in prepara-
tion for the degree of Ph. D.; was American vice consul at Naples, Italy, during
the administration of Woodrow Wilson; was instructor of government at Har-
vard University and the College of Wooster; since 1924 has been professor of
political science at: Denison University; was married January 3, 1920, to Anna
May Deardoff, of Lebanon, Ohio; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; re-
elected to the Seventy-third Congress.
EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT .—CouNTIES: Belmont, Carroll, Columbiana, Harrison, and Jefferson
(5 counties). Population (1930), 304,411.
LAWRENCE E. IMHOFF, Democrat, of St. Clairsville, Ohio; born at Round
Bottom, Ohio, December 28, 1895; educated in rural schools and the St. Clairs-
ville High School; enlisted at the beginning of the World War as a private and
served in the Fifth Regiment, United States Marines; wounded three times in
the second battle of the Marne; after the war attended the Ohio State University;
clerk of courts of Belmont County, 1921-1925; probate judge of Belmont County,
1925-1933; studied law, was admitted to the bar January, 1930; married Miss
Martha Elizabeth Korn, of Wheeling, W. Va., September 1, 1923, and they have
one child—Patricia Ann, 6 years old; elected to the Seventy-third Congress,
Living 55,438 votes, his Republican opponent, Frank Murphy, receiving
55,010 votes.
NINETEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Ashtabula, Mahoning, and Trumbull (3 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 427,566.
JOHN G. COOPER, Republican, of Youngstown, Ohio; after serving two
terms in the lower house of the General Assembly of Ohio from Mahoning County,
was elected to the Sixty-fourth Congress in 1914, and reelected to the Sixty-fifth,
Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses; is a member of the House Com-
mittee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce. \
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—City or CLEVELAND: Wards 1 to 4; ward 5, precincts F, M, and V; wards
7 and 8; ward 9, precincts A to H; wards 10, 21, 23, and 24; ward 25, except part of precinct I; and ward
31, except precinct D. Population (1930) 301,964.
MARTIN L. SWEENEY, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio; born April 15, 1885,
in Cleveland; educated in the parochial and public schools; graduated, June,
1914, from Cleveland Law School of Baldwin Wallace College, with degree of
LL. B.; member of Ohio Legislature, 1913-14; in the general practice of law at
Cleveland from 1914 to 1923; elected judge of the Municipal Court of Cleveland,
November, 1923, and served as judge for eight years; married and has four
children; elected to the Seventy-second Congress at the special election held on
November 3, 1931, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Charles A.
Mooney, receiving 34,826 votes, his Republican opponent, D. Hayden Parry,
receiving 14,500; delegate to the Democratic National Convention, June, 1932;
Roolosied to the Seventy-third Congress, November 8, 1932, receiving 52,738
votes.
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—Ci1Y oF CLEVELAND: Ward 5, precincts A to E, G to I, and N to U;
ward 6; ward 9, precincts I to M and P to Y; ward 11, precincts A to E; wards 12 to 16; ward 17, pre-
cincts D to Q; ward 18, precincts T to V; ward 19, part of precinct CC; wards 28 and 29; ward 30, pre-
cinets A to Li and Q and R; and ward 31, precinct D. Population (1930), 322,901.
ROBERT CROSSER, Democrat, of Cleveland, Ohio, was born at Holytown,
Lanarkshire, Scotland, and moved to Cleveland, Ohio, with his parents in Sep-
tember, 1881; attended the public schools at Salineville, Ohio, graduating from the
high school in 1893; entered Kenyon College, Gambier, Ohio, in September, 1893,
and graduated in June, 1897, with the degree of A. B. (M. C. L., honorary, June,
1929) ; entered the law school of Columbia University in October, 1897, remaining
OKLAHOMA Biographacal 93
part of a year, and the Cincinnati Law School in October, 1898, graduating from
the latter in June, 1901, with the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the bar of
Ohio in June, 1901, and entered upon the practice of law in Cleveland in Septem-
ber, 1901; was a member of the State house of representatives 1911-12, and was
the author of the municipal initiative and referendum bill passed by the legislature
in 1911; was elected a member of the fourth constitutional convention of Ohio,
which convened at Columbus on January 9, 1912, and adjourned August 26, 1912,
serving as chairman of the initiative and referendum committee, and was the
author of the initiative and referendum amendment to the constitution; was
elected to the Sixty-third Congress from the State at large; reelected to the Sixty-
fourth Congress from the twenty-first Ohio district, and reelected to the Sixty-
fifth Congress; again elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Geauga, Lake, and that part of Cuyahoga County
outside the city of Cleveland; the city of Cleveland, ward 9, precincts N, O, Z, AA, and BB; ward 11,
precincts F to W; ward 17, precincts A to C; ward 18, precincts A to S; ward 19, precincts A to DD,
except part of CC; wards 20 and 22; ward 25, part of precinct I; wards 26 and 27; ward 30, precincts M
to P; and wards 32 and 33. Population (1930), 633,678.
CHESTER C. BOLTON, Republican, of Lyndhurst, suburb of Cleveland,
Ohio; born in Cleveland, September 5, 1882; A. B., 1905, Harvard University;
M. C. L. (honorary), 1930, Kenyon College; married; has three children; Ohio
National Guard and World War service; member Ohio Senate, 1923-1928;
delegate to Republican National Convention, 1928; elected to Seventy-first,
Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
OKLAHOMA
(Population (1930), 2,396,040)
SENATORS
ELMER THOMAS, Democrat, of Medicine Park, was born on a farm in
Putnam County, Ind.; educated in the common schools; worked on farm, public
works, and taught school to pay way through Central Normal College, Danville,
and through De Pauw University, Greencastle, where he was graduated in 1900
with the degree of A. B.; studied law and was admitted to the bar in Indiana;
moved to Oklahoma in 1900 and located at Lawton, where he practiced law and
became interested in business; married Edith Smith, September 24, 1902; has one
son, Wilford; elected to Oklahoma Senate at statehood, 1907; reelected 1908, 1912,
and 1916; president pro tempore 1910-1913; chairman of Democratic State con-
vention 1910; resigned from State senate 1920 to enter campaign for Congress;
was Democratic nominee in 1920 but was defeated in the election; renominated
and elected in 1922 to Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-ninth Con-
gress; elected to the United States Senate in 1926 and reelected for the term
beginning March 4, 1933; member of Phi Delta Theta college fraternity; is an
Elk, Mason, and Shriner.
THOMAS PRYOR GORE, Democrat, of Oklahoma City, was born in Webster
County, Miss., December 10, 1870; his parents were Tom M. Gore and Carrie
E. Gore, nee Wingo; attended a local school at Walthall, Miss., and graduated
from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., 1892;
received degree of doctor of laws from that institution in 1921; moved to Texas
in 1896 and to Oklahoma in 1901; married Nina Kay, December 27, 1900; served
one term in the Territorial senate; delegate at large from the State of Oklahoma,
to the Democratic National Conventions at Baltimore in 1912, at Houston in
1928, and at Chicago in 1932; appointed by President Wilson as a member of the
Rural Credit Commission, 1913; elected to the United States Senate, by the legis-
lature, December, 1907; drew the short term, expiring March 3, 1909; reelected
by Oklahoma Legislature January, 1909; reelected for a third term in 1914; re-
tired from the Senate March 3, 1921; again elected to the United States Senate,
November, 1930, defeating the then incumbent, W. B. Pine, Republican; his
term of service began March 4, 1931, and will expire in 1937,
94 Congressional Directory OKLAHOMA
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 2,396,040.
WILL ROGERS, Democrat, of Moore, Okla., was born at Bessie, Oklahoma
Territory (now Oklahoma), December 12, 1898; received a B. S. degree in govern-
ment, B. A. degree in English, and a master’s degree in education, the former
two degrees were taken at Central State Teachers’ College at Edmond, and the
latter at the Oklahoma University at Norman; is a school teacher by: profession;
has been engaged in educational work in Oklahoma for the past 15 years, having
been superintendent of schools at Cheyenne, Rush Springs, Chattanooga, and
Moore; offered his services during the World War, when only 18 years of age, but
the war was ended before he saw any service; married and has one daughter,
Nell; elected from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress by the follow-
ing vote: Will Rogers, Democrat, 467,644; R. A. Howard, 171,415; George E.
Taylor, Independent, 2,027; R. J. Shive, Independent, 1,016.
FIRST DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Craig, Delaware, Mayes, Nowata, Osage, Ottawa, Pawnee, Rogers,
Tulsa, and Washington (10 counties). Population (1930), 404,981.
WESLEY ERNEST DISNEY, Democrat, of Tulsa, Okla.; born in Shawnee
County, Kans., son of Wesley Disney and Elizabeth Matney Disney; attended
the common schools of Kansas; graduate of Kansas University, 1906; admitted
to the bar in Kansas in 1906 and to Oklahoma bar in 1908; practiced law at
Muskogee, Okla., from 1918 to 1923, thereafter at Tulsa; married Anna Van
Sant, of Muskogee, September 22, 1910; has two sons— Wesley Van Sant and
Ralph Willard; served as county attorney of Muskogee County, 1911-1915, and
was known as a vigorous prosecutor of public and private offenders, removing
and convicting sheriff, clerk, mayor, treasurer, and commissioners for malfea-
sance in office; member of Oklahoma House of Representatives, 1919-1923,
where he was author of tax measures; chairman of board of managers and
directed successful impeachment of governor in 1923; trial lawyer and interested
in various business enterprises, particularly oil and agriculture; elected to the
Seventy-second Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Adair, Cherokee, Haskell, McIntosh, Muskogee, Okmulgee, Se-
quoyah, and Wagoner (8 counties). Population (1930), 238,281.
WILLIAM W. HASTINGS, Democrat, of Tahlequah, Okla.; attended the
Cherokee Male Seminary, graduating therefrom in 1884, and from the law
department of Vanderbilt University in 1889, being one of the class representa-
tives; in 1896 married Lulu Starr; of this union there are three children—Lucile
Ahnawake, Mayme Starr, and Lillian Adair; has lived in what is now Oklahoma
all his life. He is a Cherokee Indian by blood; was attorney general for the
Cherokee Nation from 1891 to 1895; represented the Cherokee Nation in wind-
ing up its tribal affairs before the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes and
the departments at Washington since 1890; was national attorney for the Cherokee
Tribe from 1907 to June 30, 1914; was a delegate at large to the Democratic
National Convention at Baltimore in 1912; was elected to the Sixty fourth, Sixty-
fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
THIRD DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Atoka, Bryan, Carter, Choctaw, Latimer, Le Flore, Love, McCur-
tain, Marshall, Pittsburg, and Pushmataha (11 counties). Population (1930), 287,397.
WILBURN CARTWRIGHT, Democrat, of McAlester, was born on a farm
in Meigs County, Tenn., son of J. R. Cartwright and Emma Baker-Cartwright;
moved with his family to the Choctaw Nation, Indian Territory, at the age of
12; farmed, cleared land, and followed public works; worked his way through
common schools at Wapanucka, Okla., high school at State normal, Ada, Okla.,
State teachers college, Durant, Okla.; received his LL. B. at State university,
Norman, Okla., in 1920, with supplementary work in the University of Chicago;
profession, teacher and lawyer; admitted to the State bar in 1917; taught in
rural, village, and city schools in Coal, Atoka, and Pittsburg Counties; member
of summer faculty, State teachers college, Durant, Okla.; elected to the State
legislature, 1914, and reelected in 1916; elected State senator from Coal, Atoka,
OKLAHOMA Biographical 95
and Bryan Counties in 1918 for a term of four years; ex-service man; married,
1920, Miss Carrie Staggs, piano instructor in University of Oklahoma, daughter
of T. H. Staggs, of Enid, Okla.; has two children—Doralyn Emma, born February
27, 1927, and Wilburta May, born May 13, 1928; was vocational advisor for
disabled ex-soldiers in 1921 and 1922 and made his home in McAlester, Okla.;
served as chairman of the board of regents for the State school of mines at
Wilburton, Okla., 1923-1926; defeated Charles D. Carter in the primary of 1926
and elected to the Seventieth Congress; was reelected to the Seventy-first Con-
gress by 17,6561 majority, to the Seventy-second Congress by a majority of
30,226, and to the Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 48,865.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Coal, Creek, Hughes, Johnston, Lincoln, Okfuskee, Pontotoc,
Pottawatomie, and Seminole (9 counties). Population (1930), 360,468.
TOM D. McKEOWN, Democrat, of Ada, Pontotoc County, was born in
South Carolina, June 4, 1878, the son of Theodore B. and Nannie B. McKeown;
admitted to the bar of the Supreme Court of South Carolina on June 3, 1899;
moved to Ada, Okla. (then Indian Territory), January, 1901; married Miss
Anna Sanders January 9, 1902; was a member of the first State bar commission
of the State of Oklahoma; was district judge of the seventh district of Oklahoma
from 1911 to 1915; was presiding justice of the fifth division of the supreme
court commission from June 1, 1915 to 1916; member of American Bar Asso-
ciation, National Press Club, and Ada Country Club; elected to the Sixty-fifth,
Sixty-sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second,
and Seventy-third Congresses.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounrtiEs: Cleveland, Garvin, Logan, McClain, Murray, Oklahoma, and Payne
(7 counties). Population (1930), 376,738.
FLETCHER B. SWANK, Democrat, of Norman, Okla.; son of Wallace Swank
and Melinda Swank (nee Wells); was reared from early boyhood to manhood
near Beef Creek, Indian Territory (now Maysville, Okla.); worked on the farms
and ranches of the Indian Territory until he moved to Cleveland County; was
educated in the common schools, Noble Academy, University of Oklahoma, and
graduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.
in 1909, with the degree of LL. B.; was admitted to the practice of law the
same year; taught school, and in 1902 was elected superintendent of schools of
Cleveland County and served until statehood, November 16, 1907; in 1910 was
elected county judge of Cleveland County and served four years; in 1914 was
elected district judge of the fourteenth judicial district of Oklahoma; reelected in
1918 without opposition; resigned as district judge September, 1920, after being
nominated to Congress; married December 30, 1914, to Miss Ada Blake, of
Norman, Okla., and they have two sons, Fletcher B. Swank, jr., age 17 years,
and James Wallace Swank, age 10 years; elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress,
and was reelected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Seventieth Congresses;
again elected to the Seventy-second Congress, and reelected to the Seventy-third
Congress, with a majority of 28,518 votes.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Blaine, Caddo, Canadian, Comanche, Cotton, Grady, Jefferson,
Kingfisher, and Stephens (9 counties). Population (1930), 263,164.
JED JOHNSON, Anadarko, Democrat; born in Ellis County, Tex., July 31,
1888; son of La Fayette D. and Evalyn Carlin Johnson; married Beatrice Lugin-
byhl, Chickasha, Okla., 1925; two daughters, Jedolyn Jean and Joan; educated
at Oklahoma University and 1’Université de Clermont, France; served in Amer-
ican Expeditionary Forces as private in Company L, Thirty-sixth Division;
worked in civil service; as salesman; editor Cotton County newspaper; admitted
to practice of law, 1918; engaged in law practice, Chickasha and Anadarko;
admitted to practice before United States Supreme Court; State senator seven
years, representing fifteenth and seventeenth districts; delegate from United
States Congress to Twenty-fourth Annual Peace Conference, Interparliamentary
Union, Paris, France, 1927; attended similar world peace conference at Geneva,
Switzerland, 1929; delegate from Oklahoma, Tenth Annual Convention American
Legion, Paris, 1927; elected to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
96 Congressional Directory OREGON
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Beckham, Custer, Dewey, Ellis, Greer, Harmon, Jackson, Kiowa,
Roger Mills, Tillman, and Washita (11 counties). Population (1930), 240,944.
JAMES V. McCLINTIC, Democrat, of Snyder, Okla. The first ter itl
tive from the seventh congressional district of Oklahoma; reelected to the Sixty-
fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Alfalfa, Beaver, Cimarron, Garfield, Grant, Harper, Kay, Major,
Noble, Texas, Woods, and Woodward (12 counties). Population (1930), 224, 067.
ERNEST WHITWORTH MARLAND, Democrat, of Ponca City, Okla.,
was born on May 8, 1874, at Pittsburgh, Pa.; : graduated from the University of
Michigan with the degree of LL. B. in 1893; married Miss Lyde Roberts; entered
the petroleum oil business in 1895 and was actively. engaged in it as a producer,
refiner, and marketer until 1929; organized the Marland Oil Co. (now the Con-
tinental Oil Co.) in 1917, and served as chairman of its board of directors, 1917
to 1928, and president from 1917 to 1928; engaged as an independent oil pro-
ducer and royalty owner since 1928; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on
November 8, 1932, receiving 51,404 votes, defeating M. C. Garber, Republican,
who received 31, 677 votes; this district has always heretofore been represented
in Congress by a Republican Representative.
OREGON
(Population (1930), 953,786)
SENATORS
CHARLES L. McNARY, Republican, of Salem, Oreg.; born on a farm near
that city, June 12, 1874; educated in Salem public schools and attended Stanford
University; dean of Willamette College of Law, 1908-1913; received degree of
doctor of laws from Williamette University; by profession a lawyer; associate
justice of Oregon Supreme Court, 1913 and 1914; chairman Republican State
central committee, 1916-17; appointed by Governor Withycombe, May 29, 1917,
to fill unexpired term of Senator Harry Lane, deceased; term of office expired
general election, November 5, 1918; appointed, December 17, 1918, by Governor
Withycombe to fill vacancy caused by resignation of Hon. F. W. Mulkey, who
had been elected to fill short term ending March 3, 1919; elected November 5,
1918, for 6-year term beginning March 4, 1919; reelected November 4, 1924,
for 6-year term beginning March 4, 1925; reelected November 4, 1930, for 6-year
term beginning March 4, 1931; term expires in 1937.
FREDERICK STEIWER, Republican, of Portland, Oreg.; born October 13,
1883, at Jefferson, Marion County, Oreg.; educated in public schools; graduate
of Oregon State College and University of Oregon; lawyer; district attorney,
1913-1916; State senator, 1917; served in World War August, 1917, to March,
1919; member of Sixty-fifty Artillery after September 1, 1918; married, Decem-
ber 12, 1911, to Frieda Roesch, of Pendleton, Oreg., and has two children—
Elisabeth and Frederick Herbert; elected to the United States Senate November
2, 1926; reelected November 8, 1932, for 6-year term, beginning March 4, 1933.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Clackamas, Clatsop, Columbia, Coos, Curry, Douglas,
Jackson, Josephine, I.ane, Lincoln, Linn, Marion, Polk, Tillamook, Washington, and Yamhill (17
counties). Population (1930), 432,572.
JAMES W. MOTT, Republican, of Salem, Oreg.; lawyer; born in Clearfield
County, Pa., November 12, 1883; came to Salem, Oreg., with parents, Dr.
William S. and Willetta M. Mott, in 1890; attended Salem publie schools, Uni-
versity of Oregon, and Stanford University; A. B., Columbia University, New
York, 1909; LL. B., Willamette University, Salem, 1917; commenced practice
of law at Astoria, Oreg., in 1917; enlisted in the Navy in 1918, returning and
resuming practice in 1919; elected city attorney of Astoria in 1920; elected
representative from Clatsop County in the Oregon Legislature in 1922; reelected
PENNSYLVANIA Biographical 97
in 1924 and in 1926; returned to Salem, establishing law office there in 1929;
elected representative from Marion County in the Oregon Legislature in 1930;
appointed corporation commissioner of Oregon by Gov. Julius L. Meier in 1931;
married to Miss Ethel L. Walling, of Polk County, Oreg., in 1919, and they have
two daughters—Frances Anne and Dorothy May; elected to the Seventy-third
Congres Yosaiving majority over Democratic opponent, Harvey G. Starkweather,
0 ,377 votes.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Baker, Crook, Deschutes, Gilliam, Grant, Harney, Hood River,
Jefferson, Klamath, Lake, Malheur, Morrow, Sherman, Umatilla, Union, Wallowa, Wasco, and
Wheeler (18 counties). Population (1930), 182,973.
WALTER MARCUS PIERCE, Democrat, of near La Grande, Oreg., was born
on a farm near Morris, Ill., May 30, 1861; attended country school and Morris
Academy; taught school; moved to Oregon in 1883 and taught school and served
as county school superintendent and county clerk; operated wheat farms; at-
tended Northwestern University from which he received the degree of LL. B.
in 1896; practiced law for 10 years; engaged in banking and power and light
business; since 1907 has operated stock and wheat farm; in Oregon State Senate
two terms, 1902-1906 and 1916-1920, with special interest in legislation on roads
and education; Governor of Oregon, 1923-1927; Democratic National Committee-
man from Oregon, 1932-1936; member of Board of Regents of Oregon State
College, 1905-1927; married Cornelia Marvin, State librarian of Oregon; has
six children by former marriage; elected to Seventy-third Congress, receiving
30,219 votes, against 25,169 for Robert R. Butler, Republican; 5,133 for Hugh
E. Brady, Independent; 1,258 for O. D. Teel, Socialist; and 937 for P. F. Schnur,
Socialist-Labor.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUuNTY: Multnomah. Population (1930), 338,241.
CHARLES H. MARTIN, Democrat, of Portland, Oreg.; born on a farm near
Albion, Ill., graduated from West Point in class of 1887; after serving through
the various grades in the Regular Army was retired as a major general on
October 1, 1927, and took up residence in Portland, his adopted home; had
active service with combat troops in the Spanish-American War, Philippine
insurrection, Boxer campaign in China, and was a division commander in the
World War; awarded the distinguished-service medal and two citations for
bravery in action; assistant chief of staff, United States Army, from 1922 to
1924; commanded Panama Canal Department from 1925 to date of retirement;
married Louise J. Hughes, of Portland, Oreg., in 1897, and has three children,
all grown; elected to Seventy-second Congress, receiving 49,316 votes, against
35,483 for Hon. Franklin F. Korell, Republican; the Republican majority in the
district in 1928 was 46,000; reelected to Seventy-third Congress on November 8,
1932, receiving 74,397 votes, against 40,650 for Homer D. Angell, Republican.
PENNSYLVANIA
(Population (1930), 9,631,350)
SENATORS
DAVID AIKEN REED, Republican; born December 21, 1880, at Pittsburgh,
Pa.; married; B. A., Princeton, 1900; LL. B., University of Pittsburgh, 1903;
practiced law at Pittsburgh, 1903-1917; chairman of Pennsylvania Industrial
Accidents Commission, 1912-1915; major Three hundred and eleventh Regiment,
Field Artillery, 1917-1919; practiced law at Pittsburgh since 1919; member
American Battle Monuments Commission since 1923; delegate, London Naval
Conference, 1930; appointed to the United States Senate on August 8, 1922,
to fill vacancy caused by death of Hon. William E. Crow, and elected November
7, 1922, to fill unexpired term and also for the full term; reelected November 6,
- 1928, for term expiring in 1935.
JAMES JOHN DAVIS, Republican, of Pittsburgh, elected to the United
States Senate on November 4, 1930, for the term ending March 3, 1933; re-
elected November 8, 1932, for the term ending in 1939.
157297°—73—1—1sST ED——8
98 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CitY OF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 1 to 6, 26, 39, and 48. Population (1930), 286,462.
HARRY C. RANSLEY, Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa., was born February
5, 1863, at Philadelphia, Pa.; was educated in public and private schools; he
was married March 31, 1902, to Harrie A. Dilks, and they have one daughter,
Mrs. William A. Clementson, 2d; he is a member of the firm of Dunlap, Mellor
& Co., dealers in oils and naval stores, Philadelphia; he was a member of the
Pennsylvania Legislature, 1891-1894; and for 16 years was a member of the
Select Council of Philadelphia; during 8 of these years he was president of that
body; delegate to the Republican National Convention of 1912; he was sheriff
of Philadelphia County, 1916-1920; was chairman of the Republican city com-
mittee, 1916-1919; Member Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, and reelected to the
Seventy-third Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—Ci1TY oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 7 to 10, 24, 27, 30, 36, and 44. Population (1930),
247,068.
JAMES MONTGOMERY BECK, Republican, of Philadelphia; born in
Philadelphia, July 9, 1861; graduated Moravian College, Bethlehem, Pa., 1880;
LL. D., Muhlenberg College, Moravian College, University of Pennsylvania, Uni-
versity of Pittsburgh, University of Michigan, McGill University, Lafayette
College; D. Lit., Franklin and Marshall; married Lilla, daughter of James
Mitchell, of Philadelphia, 1890; admitted to bar of Philadelphia, 1884; to bar of
New York City, 1903; to bar of England, 1922; United States attorney, eastern
district of Pennsylvania, 1896-1900; Assistant Attorney General, United States,
1900-1903; Solicitor General, United States, 1921-1925; officer, Legion of Honor
(French); commander, Order of the Crown (Belgium); commander, Order of
Polonia Restituta (Polish); member Pennsylvania Society Sons of Revolution;
corresponding member Société de Gens de Lettres, of France, and fellow of
Royal Historical Society, London; honorary bencher of Gray’s Inn, England;
fellow of American Philosophical Society; past president and gold medalist,
Pennsylvania Society of New York; author of The Evidence in the Case, War and
Humanity, The Reckoning, The Passing of the New Freedom, The Constitution
of the United States, Vanishing Rights of the States, May It Please the Court,
and Our Wonderland of Bureaucracy; elected to Congress November 8, 1927, to
fill a vacancy; reelected on November 6, 1928, November 4, 1930, and November
8, 1932. ;
THIRD DISTRICT.—C1TrY oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 to 20, 25, 31, 37, and 45. Popula-
tion (1930), 298,461.
ALFRED M. WALDRON, Republican, of Philadelphia, Pa., was born Sep-
tember 21, 1865, in the present third congressional district, Philadelphia, where
he still resides; educated in the public schools of Philadelphia; is a widower, and
has two daughters; engaged in the insurance business; member of Philadelphia
Select Council during the terms of Mayors Blankenburg and Smith; delegate to
the Republican National Conventions of 1924, 1928, and 1932; is a member of the
Republican Central Campaign Committee; elected in November, 1932, to the
Seventy-third Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CiTY oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 15, 28, 29, 32, 38, and 47. Population (1930),
274,376.
GEORGE WASHINGTON EDMONDS, Republican, of Philadelphia, was
born at Pottsville, Pa., February 22, 1864; educated in the public schools and
the Central High School; graduate (Ph. G.) of Philadelphia College of Pharmacy;
is in the wholesale coal and lumber business, and during the past five years has
been manager of the Port of Philadelphia Ocean Traffic Bureau, an association
of the commercial bodies of that city for the advancement of the interests of the
port; member of the Common Council of Philadelphia, 1896-1902; is married;
was a Member of the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-
seventh, and Sixty-eighth Congresses; elected to the Seventy-third Congress
by a vote of 43,086, to 36,198 polled by W. J. O'Rourke, Democrat, his opponent.
PENNSYLVANIA Biographical 99
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CI1tY oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 23, 33, 35, 41, and 43. Population (1930), 269,564.
JAMES J. CONNOLLY, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in that city;
is married and has four children; financial secretary of the Republican city
committee of Philadelphia; elected to the Sixty-seventh and each succeeding
Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CitYy oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 34, 40, and 46. Population (1930), 291,720.
EDWARD LOWBER STOKES, Republican, of Philadelphia, was born in
that city September 29, 1880; was educated at St. Pauls School, Concord, N. H.;
spent seven years as a clerk in the Girard Trust Co., Philadelphia, at the expira-
tion of which time established the firm of Edward Lowber Stokes & Co., dealers
in high-grade bonds; elected to the Seventy-second Congress at a special election
held on November 3, 1931, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon.
George S. Graham, receiving 34,188 votes, and Hill, Democrat, 1,809; reelected
to the Seventy-third Congress as a representative of the sixth congressional
district of the State of Pennsylvania.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CI1ty oF PHILADELPHIA: Wards 21, 22, and 42. Population (1930), 283,310.
GEORGE POTTER DARROW, Republican, of Philadelphia; born in Water-
ford, Conn., February 4, 1859; attended the common schools of New London
County, Conn.; was graduated from Alfred University, New York, in 1880;
president of the twenty-second sectional school board of Philadelphia for three
years; member of city council of Philadelphia, 1910-1915; elected to the Sixty-
fourth and each succeeding Congress. : :
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CouNty: Delaware. Population (1930), 280,264.
JAMES WOLFENDEN, Republican, of Upper Darby, was born in Carding-
ton, Delaware County, Pa., July 25, 1889; received a common school and aca-
demic education; is a manufacturer; elected, as a Republican, to the Seventieth
Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. Thomas S. Butler;
reelected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Bucks and Lehigh (2 counties). Population (1930), 269,620.
HENRY WINFIELD WATSON, Republican, of Langhorne; born in Bucks
County, Pa.; attorney at law; elected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth,
Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Chester and Lancaster (2 counties). Population (1930), 323,511.
J. ROLAND KINZER, Republican, of Lancaster, was born on a farm in East
Earl Township, Lancaster County, Pa., March 28, 1874; attended the public
schools; graduated from Lancaster (Pa.) High School in 1891 and Franklin and
Marshall College, Lancaster, Pa., in 1896; member of Lancaster County bar
since 1900; married Bertha Snyder, of Lancaster, Pa.; Chi Phi fraternity;
Lutheran; county solicitor, 1912-1923; delegate to the Republican National
Convention at Kansas City in 1928; elected to the Seventy-first Congress on
January 28, 1930, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Hon. W. W. Griest;
reelected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTY: Lackawanna. Population (1930), 310,397.
PATRICK J. BOLAND, Democrat, of Scranton; son of Fanny and Christo-
pher T. Boland, prominent contractor; educated in parochial schools and St.
Thomas College; member of firm of Boland Bros., general contractors; elected
to council, school board, and county commissioner of Lackawanna County;
nominated on all tickets for Congress in May, 1930, and elected to the Seventy-
second Congress without opposition in November, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-
third Congress without opposition.
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Luzerne. Population (1930), 445,109.
C. MURRAY TURPIN, ‘Republican, ‘born March 4, 1878; native and life-
long resident of Kingston, Pa.; graduate Kingston High School; Wyoming
Seminary, department of business; and University of Pennsylvania (D. D. 8.);
100 | Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA
prior to entering college was carpenter, grocery clerk, and steamboat captain;
member Clerks’ and Boatmen’s Unions; active in community affairs; served 4
years as borough chairman community welfare association; served 6 years as
member of board of education, 4 years as burgess of Kingston, and 4 years as
prothonotary, Luzerne County; upon the death of Congressman Casey, was
elected to the Seventy-first Congress at special election, June 4, 1929; reelected
to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses; was volunteer in war with
Spain, corporal Company F, Ninth Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry; following
the war was commissioned second lieutenant, first lieutenant, and captain of
Pennsylvania National Guard by Gov. William ‘A. Stone, before casting first vote,
being youngest captain in State at the time; member of Pennsylvania State
Society for Crippled Children, United Sportsmen of Pennsylvania, Wilkes-Barre
Wyoming Valley Chamber of Commerce, Kiwanis Club, and Wyoming Valley
Automobile Club; also member of Ancient Mystic Order of Samaritans of the
United States and Canada, Psi Omega fraternity, Independent Order of Odd
Fellows, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Fraternal Order of Eagles,
Loyal Order of Moose, Patriotic Order Sons of America, Veteran Firemen’s Asso-
ciation, Junior Order United American Mechanics, and United Spanish War
Veterans; served two terms as president of Kingston ‘Business Men’s Association;
permanent president of West Side Veterans’ Association, composed of members of
the Grand Army of the Republic, United Spanish War Veterans, American Legion,
and Veterans of Foreign Wars; honorary member of the following organiza-
tions: Rural Letter Carriers Association, Patriotic Order of Americans, Veterans
of Foreign Wars, Roma (Italian) Citizens Club, Adams County (Pa.) Veterans’
Association; Daughters of America, and of Lavina Derr Tent, Daughters of
Union Veterans; distinguished service certificate, American Legion; descendant
of veterans of Revolutionary War, War of 1812, Mexican, and Civil Wars;
married, 1907, to Anna V. Manley, of Wilkes-Barre (now deceased); four chil-
dren were born to Doctor and Mrs. Turpin.
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Northumberland and Schuylkill (2 counties). Population
(1930), 364,009.
GEORGE FRANKLIN BRUMM, Republican, of Minersville, was born at
Minersville, Pa., son of Charles Napoleon and Virginia Brumm, the former
having represented his constituency in eight different Congresses; received his
preliminary education in the common schools of Minersville, Washington, and
Pottsville; graduate of University of Pennsylvania (B. S., 1901); upon gradua-
tion took up the study of law in Pittsburgh, at the same time being employed in
the insurance business; graduate of law school of the University of Pennsylvania
(LL. B., 1907); was admitted to the Pennsylvania bar in January, 1908, and
practiced law as a profession since that time; is not married; entered the military
service of the United States in 1916 as a private and served as a corporal in
Company C, Pennsylvania Engineers, on the Mexican border; during the World
War was attorney for the conscription board and was a member of the speakers’
bureau, Three-Minute Men Association; in 1918 ran for the nomination for
Congress from the twelfth congressional district and, while nominated, was
counted out; in 1920 again ran for the nomination and was beaten by a small
majority through the interjection of a third candidate, who took 2,000 votes from
the Brumm support; in 1922 was nominated and elected to the Sixty-eighth Con-
gress, receiving 23,218 votes to 19,305 for Charles F. Ditechey, Democrat, and
1,341 for Cornelius F. Foley, Socialist; in 1924, reelected to the Sixty-ninth
Congress, receiving 35,737 i to 14, 637 for Thomas J. Butler, Democrat, and
1,075 for W. Grant Mengel, Socialist; in 1928 elected to the Seventy-first Con-
gress, receiving 46,486 votes to 37 243 for Bernard O’Hare, Democrat; in 1930,
reelected to the Seventy-second Congress, receiving a majority of 43,676 votes;
in 2922 reelected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving a majority of 92,065
votes.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTY: Berks. Population (1930), 231,717.
WILLIAM E. RICHARDSON, Democrat, of Reading, Pa.; born in Exeter
Township, Berks County, on the Daniel Boone homestead, September 3, 1886,
the son of Charles M. and Elizabeth Snyder Richardson; at an early age moved
to Bernville, Berks County, where he was reared; attended the public schools;
member of last class to graduate under Woodrow Wilson at Princeton University,
where Wilson was one of his professors; graduated from Princeton University,
A. B.,in 1910, and from Columbia University, LL. B., in 1913; at present engaged
PENNSYLVANIA Biographical 101
in the practice of law in Reading, Pa.; served with Squadron A, New York Cavalry, on the Mexican border; Section I, Ambulance Americaine, in Belgium and France, 1915; commissioned in Cavalry at Fort Myer, Va., and fought in major engagements of World War as a machine gunner, first with the Eightieth Division and later with the Seventh Machine Gun Battalion, Third Division; married to Mary Eckert Potts, and they have two children; elected to the Seventy- third Congress, having a majority of 6,500 votes over his Republican opponent.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bradford, Columbia, Montour, Pike, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Wayne, and Wyoming (8 counties). Population (1930), 205,084.
LOUIS T. McFADDEN, Republican, of Canton, was born in Troy, Pa., July 25, 1876; farmer; elected to the Sixty-fourth Congress with 2,934 plurality, the Sixty-fifth with 4,757 plurality, the Sixty-sixth with 6,394 plurality, the Sixty- seventh with 19,028 majority, the Sixty-eighth with 8,901 majority, the Sixty- ninth with 15,043 majority, the Seventieth with 11,101 majority, the Seventy-first with 47,422 majority, the Seventy-second with 18,152 majority; renominated and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress by Republican, Democratic, and Prohibi- tion Parties, with 68,410 majority.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNTIES: Cameron, Clinton, Lycoming, McKean, Potter, and Tioga (6 counties). Population (1930), 235,574. :
ROBERT F. RICH, Republican, of Woolrich, Clinton County, Pa. ; born June 23, 1883, at Woolrich, Pa.; married, and has four daughters; educated at Dickinson Seminary, of which he is president of the board of trustees, and Williamsport Commercial College, Williamsport, Pa.; Mercersburg Academy,
Mercersburg, Pa., of which he is a member of the alumni council; Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa., of which he is a member of the board of trustees; Phi Kappa Psi fraternity; general manager and treasurer of the Woolrich Woolen Mills, which recently celebrated its one hundredth anniversary; director, secre- tary, and treasurer of the Chatham Water Co., of Woolrich; director and treasurer of the Pearce Manufacturing Co., Latrobe, Pa.; director and secretary of the Oak Grove Improvement Co., Avis., Pa.; president of the State Bank of Avis ; director of the Lock Haven Trust Co., of Lock Haven, member of the board of trustees of Lock Haven Teachers College, Lock Haven, Pa., and of the board of trustees of Lock Haven Hospital; member of the Union League, of Philadelphia; thirty-third degree Mason; delegate to the Republican National Convention, 1924; elected a Member of the Seventy-first and Seventy-second Congresses on November 4, 1930; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CouUNn1Y: Montgomery. Population (1930), 265,804.
J. WILLIAM DITTER, Republican, of Ambler, Montgomery County, Pa., was born September 5, 1888, in Philadelphia, Pa.; graduated from Temple Uni- versity with degree of LL. B.; lawyer; member of the Montgomery County and Pennsylvania Bar Associations; married, September 2, 1913, to Mabel Sylvester Bearné, and they have two children—Mabel Bearné and J. William, jr.; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 59,693 votes, as against 32,706 votes cast for his Democratic opponent.
EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bedford, Fulton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder, and Union (8 counties). Population (1930), 198,269.
BENJAMIN K. FOCHT, Republican, of Lewisburg, was born in New Bloom- field, Pa., the son of a Lutheran minister who was an orator and author of note; was educated at Bucknell University, Pennsylvania State College, and Susque- hanna University; editor of the Saturday News, published at Lewisburg, since 18 years of age; is now president of the Saturday News Publishing Co.; served as an officer of the National Guard of Pennsylvania; was given the degree of A. M. by Susquehanna University in 1906; member of various fraternal organizations; is married to Edith F., daughter of the late Henry G. Wolf, and had three chil- dren—two daughters, Ellen W. and Edith Virginia, the latter deceased, and a son, Brown; served three terms in the Pennsylvania Assembly and four years in the Pennsylvania State Senate; was State water supply commissioner, and deputy secretary of the Commonwealth; is author of important legislation in Pennsylvania; was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, and Sixty-seventh Congresses; and again elected to the Seventy-third Congress,
102 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA
NINETEENTH BISTRICT.—CounTties: Cumberland, Dauphin, and Lebanon (3 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 300,570. .
ISAAC H. DOUTRICH, Republican, of Harrisburg, Pa.; born December 19,
1871, on a farm near Middletown, Dauphin County, Pa.; son of Eli and Caroline
Doutrich; educated in the public schools of his home district and Elizabeth-
town, Pa.; graduated from Keystone State Normal School, Kutztown, Pa.;
engaged in retail clothing business, operating stores in Orwigsburg, Middletown,
Schuylkill Haven, Phoenixville, Pottsville, and Harrisburg; now president of
Doutrich & €o.’s retail clothing stores in Harrisburg; married Miss Lena Erb,
of Palmyra, Pa.; one son and one daughter; first public office, city councilman
in Harrisburg, in charge of parks and public property; appointed to fill vacancy
caused by death and to which he was later elected for full term; resigned that
office, March 1, 1927, to assume duties as a Member of Congress, to which he was
elected, November 2, 1926; Member Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-
second Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
TWENTIETH DISTRICT.—CounTIES: Clarion, Elk, Forest, Mercer, Venango, and Warren (6 coun-
ties). Population (1930), 277,067.
THOMAS CUNNINGHAM COCHRAN, Republican; born in Sandy Creek
Township, Mercer County, November 30, 1877, soon afterwards removing to
Mercer, where he has been practically a lifelong resident; prepared for college at
Mercer High School, from which he was graduated in 1896; after teaching a year
in the public schools, entered Westminster College, completing the classical
course with the degree of A. B., summa cum laude, in 1901; the following year
he taught Greek and constitutional law in Mercer Academy, and then began
further study of law in the office of his father, the late W. H. Cochran, Esq.;
admitted to the bar in 1903, and served as district attorney of Mercer County
from 1906 to 1909; member of the Mercer County Bar Association, Pennsylvania
Bar Association, and American Bar Association; married, 1906, to Miss Olive
Belle Pierson, of Vienna, Ohio; they have three sons and two daughters; elected
to the Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TWENTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Carbon, Monroe, and Northampton (3 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 260,970.
FRANCIS E. WALTER, Democrat, of Easton, Pa.; born May 26, 1894, at
Easton, Pa.; received degree of B. A. from George Washington University and
LL. B. from Georgetown University; attorney at law; Northampton County
solicitor, 1928-1933; during the World War was in the Air Service of the Navy;
married; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 39,996 votes; William
R. Coyle, Republican, 34,189; Simon R. Hartzell, Socialist, 1,675.
TWENTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Adams, Franklin, and York (3 counties). Population
(1930), 269,273.
HARRY L. HAINES, Democrat, of Red Lion, Pa.; born at Red Lion, Feb-
ruary 1, 1880; attended public schools in Red Lion, also business college at York,
Pa.; cigar manufacturer for more than 20 years; served as head of local chapter
of American Red Cross since 1917; elected burgess of Red Lion in 1921, and
again elected in 1925 and 1929; married and has five children; elected to the
Seventy-second Congress and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THEN Yan DISTRICT.—CounTiES: Blair, Centre, and Clearfield (3 counties). Population
(1930), 272,861.
J. BANKS KURTZ, Republican, of Altoona, Pa., was born on a farm in Dela-
ware Township, Juniata County, Pa.; attended the public schools of his native
township, and then taught in them two years; received his collegiate education
at Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa. (A. M.); graduate of Dickinson Law School
(LL. B.); began the practice of law at Altoona, where he still practices; served
two terms as district attorney of Blair County; was Blair County chairman of
committee of public safety and council of national defense during the World
War; married Jennie Stockton, of Washington County, Pa. (who died April 8,
1932), and has one daughter, Dorothy Stockton Kurtz, and one son, Jay Banks
Kurtz; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seven-
tieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
PENNSYLVANIA Brographical : 103
TWENTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—CounTtiEs: Fayette and Somerset (2 counties). Population
(1930), 279,306.
JOHN BUELL SNYDER, Democrat, of Perryopolis, Pa.; born on a farm in
Upper Turkeyfoot Township, Somerset County, Pa., July ’30, 1879; attended
country school and taught school in native township; graduated from Lock
Haven Teacher's College; principal of schools at Stoyestown, Rockwood, and
Berlin, Somerset County, 1901-1906; attended Harvard University and Columbia
University summer sessions; principal of Perry Township Union High School,
1906-1912; married and has one daughter; western Pennsylvania district manager
of The Macmillan Company, educational publishers, 1912-1932; member of
Board of Education of Perry Township, Pa., and secretary of County School
Directors. Association, 1922-1932; member of National Commission of One
Hundred for Study and Survey of Rural Schools in the United States, 1922-1924;
legislative representative for Pennsylvania school directors in Harrisburg during
sessions of State legislature, 1921-1923; founder and organizer of the Pennsyl-
vania Inter-High School Literary, Debate, and Musical League; elected a Repre-
sentative to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 32,785 votes, and defeating
Samuel A. Kendall, Republican, by over 5,000 votes.
TWENTY-FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Greene and Washington (2 counties). Population (1930),
246,569. {
CHARLES I. FADDIS, Democrat, of Waynesburg, Pa.; born in Loudenville,
Ohio, June 13, 1890, attended the public schools of Greene ‘County, Pa., and was
graduated from Waynesburg High School in 1909; attended Waynesburg College,
1909-1911, and Pennsylvania State College, 1911- 1915; was graduated from the
agricultural department of Pennsylvania State College in 1915 with B. S. degree;
served in the Pennsylvania National Guard on the Mexican border, 1916; entered
officers’ training camp, August, 1917; commissioned captain of Infantry November,
1917; served during the World War with the Forty-seventh Regiment United
States Infantry and the Fourth Ammunition Train; saw service in all major
offensives in France; rose to rank of lieutenant colonel of Infantry; served in the
Army of Occupation in Germany; decorated with Purple Heart; joined Officers
Reserve Corps, 1924; promoted to colonel of Infantry Reserves, 1930; attended
special course Command and General Staff School, Fort Leavenworth, Kans.,
1930; married Jane Morris, 1917; four children; engaged in general contracting
and broker of oil and gas properties; elected to the Seventy-third Congress on
November 8, 1932, receiving 36,781 votes; Henry W. Temple, Republican, 27,351;
Frank Silvis, Socialist, 1,446.
TWENTY-SIXTH DISTRICT: —COUNTIES: Beaver, Butler, and Lawrence (3 counties). Population
(1930), 326,800.
J. HOWARD SWICK, Republican, of Beaver Falls; born in New Brighton, Pa.,
August 6, 1879; attended public schools, Piersol’s Academy, Geneva College,
and graduated "from Hahnemann Medical College at Philadelphia in 1906;
following interneship at Children’s Homeopathic Hospital, Philadelphia, and
Homeopathic Hospital, Pittsburgh, practiced medicine continuously at Beaver
Falls, Pa., until election to the Seventieth Congress, with the exception of
18 months spent in the Medical Corps, United States Army, during the World
War, 12 of which were with the American Expeditionary Forces; now holds a
commission as lieutenant colonel in the Officers Reserve Corps; member of the
Col. Joseph Thompson Post, American Legion, Beaver Falls, Harry L. McBride
Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, New Castle, Pa., Parian Lodge No. 622 F. &
A. M., Harmony Chapter No. 206 R. A. M., Beaver Valley Commandery, Knights
Templar, A. A. S. R., Valley of New Castle, Syria Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S,,
Pittsburgh, Sojourners, Washington, D. C,, Knights of Pythias, Lions Club, and
Chamber of Commerce, Beaver Falls, Pa.; member of the Methodist Episcopal
Church; married Miss Esther LeEthel Duncan, 1906; one child living—J. Howard
Swick, jr.; elected to the Seventieth and each succeeding Congress.
TWENTY-SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Armstrong, Cambria, Indiana, and Jefferson (4 coun-
ties). Population (1930), 409,953.
NATHAN LEROY STRONG, a Representative from Pennsylvania; born in
Summerville, Jefferson County, "Pa.; ancestors came to America in 1630; de-
scendant of a signer of the A of Independence; attended public school;
telegraph operator and railroad agent; read law, admitted to the bar, to the
104 Congressional Directory PENNSYLVANIA
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania and the Supreme Court of the United States;
district attorney for Jefferson County, 1895-1901; engaged in developing mineral
lands in Jefferson and Armstrong Counties, which caused the building of a rail-
road through the congressional district he represents; elected as a Republican to
the Sixth-fifth to Seventy-third Congresses, inclusive, 1917-1935; member of the
Committee on Rivers and Harbors since March 4, 1919, and now actively work-
ing for the improvement of inland waterways in Pennsylvania, particularly the
Allegheny, Kiskiminetas, and Conemaugh Rivers, which flow through or border
Armstrong, Cambria, and Indiana Counties in said congressional district; director
Pittsburg & Shawmut Railroad; director Brookville Title & Trust Co.; director
Peoples Bank of Ford City; president Mohawk Mining Co.; president Allegheny
River Improvement Association; president Brookville Park Association; president
Jefferson County Agricultural Association; member Pennsylvania Society of
New York, Pennsylvania Society of Washington, D. C., Kittanning Country
Sy Pine Crest Country Club of Brookville; Mason, Shriner, Elk, and Knight
of Pythias.
TWENTY-EIGHTH DISTRICT.—County: Westmoreland. Population (1930), 294,995.
WILLIAM MARKLE BERLIN, Democrat, of Greensburg, Pa., was born
near Delmont, Pa., March 29, 1880; married and has three children; elected to
the Seventy-third Congress November 8, 1932, receiving 43,619 votes, and Adam
M. Wyant, Republican, 32,177 votes.
Tr NTY-NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTies: Crawford and Erie (2 counties). Population (1930),
57. 8,
CHARLES N. CROSBY, Democrat, of Meadville, Pa.
THIRTIETH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY County: City of Pittsburgh, wards 21 to 27; boroughs of
Aspinwall, Avalon, Bellevue, Ben Avon, Ben Avon Heights, Bradford Woods, Edgeworth, Ems-
worth, Etna, Glenfield, Haysville, Leetsdale, Millvale, Osborne, Sewickley, Sharpsburg, and West
View; townships of Aleppo, Franklin, Hampton, Harmar, Indiana, Kilbuck, Leet, McCandless,
Marshall, O’Hara, Ohio, Pine, Reserve, Richland, Ross, Sewickley, Sewickley Heights, Shaler, and
and West Deer. Population (1930), 265,235.
JOSHUA TWING BROOKS, Democrat, of Sewickley, Pa., was born in Edge-
worth, February 27, 1884; attended the public school in Sewickley, Pa.; grad-
uated from Yale College, Ph. B., 1908; after graduating from college was con-
nected with the Carnegie Steel Co. and the Franklin-Park Foundry Co. until
the World War; married Ruth Walker, daughter of Hay Walker, jr., of Pitts-
burgh, and has two daughters—Bertha Bennett Brooks and Ruth Walker Brooks;
during the World War served in the quartermaster division, in Washington,
D. C., purchasing steel products for the United States Army; returned to Pitts-
burgh after the war and continued in the steel business as treasurer of the Wood-
ings Forge & Tool Co. until 1928, at which time he entered business for himself
as head of the Pittsburgh Sales Co., distributors of railway supplies and steel
products; elected to the Seventy-third Congress by a vote of 35,186 against
35,046 for Edmund F. Erk, Republican; 2,553 for Sarah Z. Limbach, Socialist;
1,159 for Robert Hervey, Prohibition; and 585 for Edward A. Glenn, Peoples.
THIRTY-FIRST DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of McKeesport; boroughs of Bracken-
ridge, Braddock, Chalfant, Cheswick, East McKeesport, East Pittsburgh, Edgewood, Elizabeth,
Forest Hills, Glassport, Liberty, North Braddock, Oakmont, Pitcairn, Port Vue, Rankin, Spring-
dale, Swissvale, Tarentum, Trafford City (first district), Turtle Creek, Verona, Versailles, Wall,
Wilkinsburg, and Wilmerding; townships of Braddock, East Deer, Elizabeth, Fawn, Forward, Frazer,
Harrison, Lincoln, North Versailles, Patton, Penn, Plum, South Versailles, Springdale, Versailles,
and Wilkins. Population (1930), 312,312.
CLYDE KELLY, Republican, of Edgewood; elected to the Sixty-third, Sixty-
fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-
first, and Seventy-second Congresses; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 1 to 6, 9 to 11, and
15. Population (1930), 213,060.
MICHAEL JOSEPH MULDOWNEY, Republican, of Pittsburgh, Pa., was
born in Philadelphia, Pa., August 10, 1889; graduated from the Duquesne Uni-
versity in 1908; member of the Pennsylvania State Legislature, 1925-1929;
served as member of the Pittsburgh City Council, 1930-1933; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932,
RHODE ISLAND Biographical 105
THIRTY-THIRD DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY COUNTY: City of Pittsburgh, wards 7, 8, and 12 to 14;
wards 16 to 20; ward 28. Population (1930), 282,119.
HENRY ELLENBOGEN, Democrat, of Pittsburgh, Pa., was born on April
3, 1900; graduated from the University of Vienna, Austria, and from Duquesne
University, of Pittsburgh, Pa., with the degrees of A. B. and LL. B.;is an attorney
at law, engaged in the general practice of law; in December, 1927, he married
Rae Savage, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and has one child, Naomi Ruth; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress.
THIRTY-FOURTH DISTRICT.—ALLEGHENY County: City of Pittsburgh, wards 29 to 32; cities of
Clairton and Duquesne; boroughs of Brentwood, Bridgeville, Carnegie, Castle Shannon, Coraopolis,
Crafton, Dormont, Dravosburg, Greentree, Heidelberg, Homestead, Ingram, McDonald, McKees
Rocks, Mount Oliver, Munhall, Oakdale, Rosslyn Farms, Thornburg, Wes: Elizabeth, West Home-
stead, and Whitaker; townships of Baldwin, Bethel, Collier, Crescent, Findley, Jefferson, Kennedy,
Mifflin, Moon, Mount Lebanon, Neville, North Fayette, Robinson, Scott, Snowden, South Fayette,
Stowe, and Upper St. Clair. Population (1930), 301,584.
MATTHEW A. DUNN, Democrat, of Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pa.;
born in Braddock, Allegheny County, Pa., August 15, 1886; attended schools in
Pittsburgh and in Myersdale, Somerset County, Pa.; while a boy he sold news-
papers; at the age of 12 lost the sight of his left eye through an accident, and
again, at the age of 20, while wrestling in the Newsboys Home in Pittsburgh,
lost the vision of his other eye; became a student in the Pittsburgh and Over-
brook (Philadelphia) schools for the blind, graduating from the latter in 1909;
resumed business as a newsdealer, also as broker with the Birmingham Fire
Insurance Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., with which company he is still connected as an
agent; married; was elected to the Pennsylvania Legislature in 1926, and reelected
in 1928 and 1930; on November 8, 1932, was elected to the Seventy-third Con-
gress on the Democratic, Independent, and Jobless tickets, receiving 40,651 votes,
and defeating the Hon. Guy Campbell, Republican, who received 36,101 votes;
Mary B. Lehner, Socialist, who received 3,191 votes; and Thomas M. Heard,
Prohibitionist, who received 1,575 votes.
RHODE ISLAND
(Population (1930), 687,497)
SENATORS
JESSE HOUGHTON METCALF, Republican, educated in the schools of
Providence; degree of A. M. conferred upon him by Brown University, 1921;
married; president of the Rhode Island Hospital; trustee of the Rhode Island
School of Design, of Providence, and member of the board of trustees of Brown
University, of Providence, R. I.; elected November 4, 1924, to unexpired term
of the late LeBaron Bradford Colt, and also for the full term commencing March
4, 1925; reelected November 4, 1930, for full term.
FELIX HEBERT, Republican, of West Warwick; born in Canada, December
11, 1874; educated in public schools of the town of Coventry, parish school of St.
Jean Baptiste, West Warwick, and La Salle Academy, Providence; lawyer;
admitted to practice in 1907; justice of the district court of the fourth judicial
district of the State of Rhode Island, 1909-1929; deputy insurance commissioner
of the State of Rhode Island, 1900-1917; member and secretary of Providence
County Courthouse Commission; member of citizens’ committee of the town of
West Warwick to attend the departure of soldiers during the World War; trustee
Nathanael Greene Homestead Association of Rhode Island; member executive
committee, Republican State Central Committee of Rhode Island; married
September 18, 1900, to Virginia Provost, of Ware, Mass., and has four children;
elected United States Senator from Rhode Island at the election on November
6, 1928, for the term of six years beginning March 4, 1929.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bristol and Newport. PROVIDENCE County: City of Providence,
representative districts, 1-7; cities of Central Falls, Pawtucket, Woonsocket; towns of Cumberland,
East Providence, and Lincoln. Population (1930), 341,016.
FRANCIS B. CONDON, Democrat, of Central Falls, was born in that city No-
vember 11, 1891; graduated from Central Falls High School in 1910 and from
Georgetown University Law School in 1916 with degree of LL. B.; degree of
106 Congressional Directory SOUTH CAROLINA
LL. M. in 1917; admitted to the District of Columbia bar in 1916 and the Rhode
Island bar in the same year; married; served in Rhode Island House of Repre-
sentatives, 1921-1926, inclusive; Democratic floor leader, 1923-1926; served in
the Army during the World War; past department commander, American Legion
of Rhode Island; elected on November 4, 1930, to fill the unexpired term in the
Seventy-first Congress of Hon. Jeremiah E. O’Connell, and on the same day
elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CounTieEs: Kentand Washington. PROVIDENCE County: City of Providence,
representative districts 8 to 25; City of Cranston; towns of Burrillville, Foster, Glocester, Johnson,
North Providence, North Smithfield, Scituate, and Smithfield. Population (1930), 346,481.
JOHN MATTHEW O'CONNELL, Democrat, of Westerly, R. I., was born
in Westerly, August 10, 1872; graduated from Westerly High School in 1890;
was principal of a grammar school, 1892-1902; graduated from Philadelphia
Dental College (now a branch of Temple College), with degree of D. D. S., in
1905; valedictorian of class of 1905; practiced dentistry, with office in Westerly,
since 1905; married in 1907, and has one son; during the World War was attached
to Headquarters Sanitary Train, Twelfth Division, serving 16 months; now a
major in the Dental Reserves; served as representative in the general assembly,
1929-1932; elected to the Seventy-third Congress by nearly 13,000 majority,
over Thomas P, Hazard, Republican.
SOUTH CAROLINA
(Population (1930), 1,738,765)
SENATORS
ELLISON DuRANT SMITH, Democrat, of Lynchburg, S. C., was Lorn at
Lynchburg, Sumter (now Lee) County, S. C., the son of Rev. William H. and
Mary Isabella McLeod Smith; was prepared for college at Stewart’s School in
Charleston, S. C.; finished the freshman class at the University of South Carolina;
the next session entered Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C., from which insti-
tution he graduated in 1889; was a member of the State legislature from Sumter
County, 1896 to 1900; was one of the principal figures in the organization of the
Southern Cotton Association at New Orleans in January, 1905; was made field
agent and general organizer of this movement, in which capacity he served from
January, 1905, to June, 1908; was nominated for United States Senator at the
primary election in September, 1908, receiving at that time the largest vote ever
given for this office in his State, and elected the following November; was re-
elected in 1914, 1920, 1926, and again in 1932; his term of service will expire in
1939; elected chairman Interstate Commerce Committee at the end of five
weeks’ deadlock between the Republicans, Democrats, and Progressives in the
United States Senate; 32 ballots were cast, he being the Democratic candidate,
and receiving the vote of every Democrat save one on every ballot (1923-24);
is chairman of Senate Committee on Agriculture and Forestry and is ranking
Democrat on Senate Committees on Interstate Commerce, Manufactures, and
Patents, and member of Naval Affairs and Privileges and Elections Committees;
shares with Senator Fletcher of Florida the honor of being dean of the Democratic
Senators; married; 4 children—2 sons and 2 daughters.
JAMES FRANCIS BYRNES, Democrat, of Spartanburg, S. C., was born in
Charleston, S. C., May 2, 1879; moved to Aiken, S. C., and while residing there
served as court reporter, solicitor of second judicial circuit of South Carolina,
and Representative in Congress from second congressional district from 1911-1925;
married Maude Perkins Busch, of Aiken, S. C.; in 1925 retired from Congress and
began practice of law at Spartanburg; elected to United States Senate November
4, 1930; term expires in 1937.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Allendale, Beaufort, Berkeley, Charleston, Clarendon, Colleton,
Dorchester, Hampton, and Jasper (9 counties). Population (1930), 260,439.
THOMAS SANDERS McMILLAN, Democrat, of Charleston; born on farm
near Ulmers, Allendale County, S. C., November 27, 1888, son of James Carroll
and Mary Cave McMillan; attended country schools near Ulmers; entered
SOUTH CAROLINA ~~ Brographical 107
Orangeburg Collegiate Institute, at Orangeburg, S. C., in fall of 1904, graduating
June, 1907; won competitive scholarship to University of South Carolina in 1908
from Barnwell County; entered university in fall of 1908 and graduated with
degree of A. B. and L. I. in June, 1912, taking junior law work in senior academiec
year; returned in fall of 1912 to complete law course, graduating with degree of
LL. B. in June, 1913; moved to Charleston in 1913; opened law offices with firm
of McMillan & Heyward; elected to House of Representatives of South Carolina
in 1916 and served for eight years continuously; elected speaker pro tempore for
term of 1921-22 and elected speaker 1923-24, declining reelection to general
assembly in summer of 1924; married to Clara Eloise Gooding, of Hampton
County, S. C., daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Gooding, December 14, 1916; five
children—Thomas Sanders, jr., James Carroll, William Gooding, Edward Webb,
and Robert Hampton; member of Citadel Square Baptist Church, Charleston,
S. C.; Mason, past master Pythagorean Lodge No. 21, F. A. A. M., South Caro-
lina, member of Scottish Rite bodies and Shriner; engaged in farming operations;
elected to Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-
third Congresses.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aiken, Bamberg, Barnwell, Calhoun, Lexington, Orangeburg, °
Richland, and Sumter (8 counties). Population (1930), 338,668.
HAMPTON PITTS FULMER, Democrat, of Orangeburg, son of James Riley
and Marthenia Fulmer, was born near Springfield, S. C., June 23, 1875; educated
in the public schools of the county, Springfield High School, and graduated at
Massay’s Business College, Columbus, Ga., in 1897; was married to Miss Willa
E. Lybrand, of Wagener, Aiken County, S. C., October 20, 1901; has three
children—MTrs. Charles Gordon Smith (New York City), Mrs. Rev. John Benson
Sloan (Georgia), and Mrs. William T. Reed (Washington, D. C.); farmer;
proprietor of the Barnes farm; president Farmers Warehouse Co. of Norway,
S. C.; is a Baptist, Mason, Woodman; member Junior Order United American
Mechanics; was elected a member of the South Carolina House of Representa-
tives, 1917-18, leading the ticket with 13 in the race and 5 to be elected; reelected,
1919-20; served on the ways and means committee; was elected to the Sixty-
seventh Congress over Hon. Ed. C. Mann, who was serving the unexpired term
of Hon. A. Frank Lever, resigned, who had served the seventh district for 18
years; renominated in the Democratic primary with ex-Lieut. Gov. Andrew J.
Bethea and John J. McMahan, insurance commissioner of South Carolina,
opposing; reelected to the Sixty-eighth Congress in the general election over
J. C. Etheredge, Independent; was nominated to the Sixty-ninth Congress over
State Senators L. A. Hutson and Dr. D. M. Crosson, and reelected in the general
election without opposition; renominated over Dr. Daniel R. Sturkie and Earnest
M. DuPree, retired business man, in the primary, and elected to the Seventieth
Congress without opposition; renominated over Earnest DuPree in the primary,
receiving 20,000 votes to his opponent DuPree’s 8,000, and reelected to the
Seventy-first Congress without opposition; renominated over Dr. Daniel R:
Sturkie in the primary, receiving 26,000 votes to his opponent Sturkie’s 7,000
and reelected to the Seventy-second Congress without opposition; renominated
over ex-Congressman A. Frank Lever in the primary, receiving 5,000 majority,
and reelected to Seventy-third Congress over Dallas A. Gardner, Republican;
author of the United States standard cotton grading act, passed by the Sixty-
seventh Congress, standardizing the grading of American cotton, which has been
accepted by all foreign countries, same now being a world standard in grading
cotton; author of United States veterans’ hospital bill, which was carried in the
omnibus, hospital bill, authorizing $1,300,000 for a veterans’ hospital, which is
now operating, being located at Columbia, S. C.; vice chairman of the Committee
on Agriculture.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Abbeville, Anderson, Edgefield, Greenwood, McCormick, Newberry,
Oconee, Pickens, and Saluda (9 counties). Population (1930), 291,053.
JOHN CLARENCE TAYLOR, Democrat, of Anderson, S. C., was born on
March 2, 1890, the son of L. W. and Rosa Ella Taylor; was educated at Fruitland
Institute, Hendersonville, N. C., and the University of South Carolina; was
elected clerk of court and register of deeds for Anderson County in 1920, which
position he held until elected to Congress in 1932; married Evelene Brown on
December 1, 1920, and has two sons—John C. jr., and Lee Brown Taylor;
lawyer, farmer, and copublisher of Anderson Daily Mail and Anderson Daily
Independent; World War veteran.
108 Congressional Directory SOUTH CAROLINA
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Greenville, Laurens, Spartanburg, and Union (4 counties). Popu-
lation (1930), 306,346.
JOHN J. McSWAIN, Democrat, of Greenville, S. C., was born at Cross Hill,
in Laurens County, S. C., May 1, 1875; is a son of Dr. E. T. McSwain and
“Janie McGowan McSwain; his childhood was spent on the farm, where he worked
as a farm hand and attended the country school; later was prepared for college
by the Rev. A. M. Hassell and at Wofford College Fitting School; entered South
Carolina College in September, 1893, and graduated June, 1897; while teaching
school, read law and took a correspondence course in law and was able to take only
a portion of the law course at the University of South Carolina; was admitted to
practice law upon examination by the supreme court; began the practice of law
at Greenville, S. C., in 1901, and continuously and actively practiced law there
until the declaration of war against Germany in 1917; shortly thereafter, at the
age of 42 years, he entered the first training camp, Fort Oglethorpe, Ga., and upon
completion of the course of instruction was recommended for a commission as
captain in the National Army, Infantry branch; he entered the service in January,
1918, and was ordered to Camp Beauregard, La., and there assigned to Company
A, One hundred and fifty-fourth Regiment Infantry; he commanded that company
until after the armistice was signed; was discharged March 6, 1919; immediately
returned to Greenville and resumed the practice of law; in the general primary for
Congress, 1920, he was nominated on the first ballot over three opponents and was
elected to the Sixty-seventh Congress, November 2, 1920, without opposition;
reelected to the Sixty-eighth Congress over M. P. Norwood, Republican; reelected
to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third
Congresses; is a Methodist, Mason, Odd Fellow, and Elk; married Sarah C.
McCullough, April 26, 1905, and they have two children.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUunTIES: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, and
York (7 counties). Population (1930), 235,093.
JAMES PRIOLEAU RICHARDS, Democrat, of Lancaster, S. €.; born at
Liberty Hill, Kershaw County, S. C., August 31, 1894, the son of Norman Smith
Richards and Phoebe Gibbes Richards; worked on a farm and attended country
schools of Kershaw County until 17 years of age; attended Clemson College for
two years, where he had a scholarship, and then entered the University of South
Carolina, graduating in law in 1921 after being out of college for several years;
began the practice of law in Lancaster, S. C., September, 1921, and has practiced
there since that date; elected judge of probate of Lancaster County in 1922, and
reelected in 1926 and 1930; while serving third term was elected to the Seventy-
third Congress; volunteered as private at Camp Styx, 8S. C., in 1917, a few days
after war was declared, and served throughout war in this country and France
with Trench Mortar Battery, Headquarters Company, One hundred and eight-
eenth Regiment Infantry, Thirtieth Division, as private, corporal, and sergeant,
and was commissioned as reserve second lieutenant in February, 1919, being dis-
charged March 31, 1919; married on November 4, 1925, to Katharine Hawthorne
Wylie, of Lancaster County, and they have two children—Richard Evans, born
January 18, 1927, and Norman Smith, born October 6, 1932; member of the
Masons, American Legion, and Junior Order United American Mechanics.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Darlington, Dillon, Florence, Georgetown, Horry, Lee, Marion,
Marlboro, and Williamsburg (9 counties). Population (1930), 307,166.
ALLARD H. GASQUE, Democrat, of Florence, S. C., was born in Marion (now
Florence) County, S. C., March 8, 1873, the eldest son of Wesley and Martha
W. (Kirton) Gasque; attended country schools three to four months each year
and worked on farm during the remainder of the year until 18 years of age;
worked on farm and taught in country schools until 23 years old; entered Uni-
versity of South Carolina at that age, graduating in 1901 with A. B. degree;
taught one year as principal in Waverly Graded School, Columbia, S. C.; elected
superintendent of education of Florence County, 1902, and served continuously
for 20 years, resigning that office after being elected to Congress; served as
president of State Teachers Association, and also of State County Superintend-
ents Association; for 8 years a member State Democratic executive committee;
4 years county chairman Democratic Party; 10 years city chairman Democratic
executive committee; Knight Templar, thirty-second degree Mason, and Shriner;
member Junior Order United American Mechanics, Odd Fellow, Elk, Knight of
Pythias; member Baptist Church; married in 1908 to Miss Bessie M. Hawley,
of Richland County, S, C,, to which union has been added four children—Eliza-
TENNESSEE Brographical 109
beth, Doris, John Allard, and Thomas Nelson; defeated three opponents in
primary election and elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress in general election
without opposition; reelected to the Sixty-ninth Congress without opposition;
reelected to the Seventieth Congress without opposition; defeated two oppo-
nents in primary for renomination to Seventy-first Congress by a vote of 21,800
to 7,400 for both opponents; reelected in general election without opposition;
reelected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
SOUTH DAKOTA
(Population (1930), 692,849).
SENATORS
PETER NORBECK, Theodore Roosevelt Republican, of Redfield, S. Dak.;
son of Rev. George and Karen (Kongsvig) Norbeck; born in Clay County,
Dakota Territory, August 27, 1870; raised on a farm; well driller by occupation;
is married and has four children; served three terms as State senator, one term
as lieutenant governor, two terms as governor; first elected to the United States
Senate in 1920; delegate to and member of resolutions committee of the Repub-
lican National Convention which met in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1924; also delegate
to the 1928 Republican National Convention at Kansas City; reelected United
States Senator in 1926; reelected for a third term as United States Senator in
1932 for the term expiring in 1939.
WILLIAM JOHN BULOW, Democrat, of Beresford, S. Dak.; born January
13, 1869, in Clermont County, Ohio; graduated from the University of Michigan
in 1893 with degree of LL. B.; engaged in the practice of law at Beresford; elected
to the State senate; served as county judge in Union County and as State’s
attorney and mayor at Beresford; elected governor in 1926, and reelected in
1928; Sloezed to the United States Senate on November 4, 1930; term expires
in 1937.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Aurora, Beadle, Bon Homme, Brookings, Brown, Brule, Buffalo,
Campbell, Charles Mix, Clark, Clay, Codington, Davison, Day, Deuel, Douglas, Edmunds, Faulk,
Grant, Hamlin, Hand, Hanson, Hughes, Hutchinson, Hyde, Jerauld, Kingsbury, Lake, Lincoln,
McCook, McPherson, Marshall, Miner, Minnehaha, Moody, Potter, Roberts, Sanborn, Spink,
Sully, Turner, Union, Walworth, and Yankton (44 counties). Population (1930), 524,769.
FRED H. HILDEBRANDT, Democrat, of Watertown, S. Dak.; born August
2, 1882, at West Bend, Wis.; educated in public and high schools; married;
passenger train conductor; elected a representative in the South Dakota Legis-
lature and served during 1922-23; chairman of the South Dakota Game and Fish
Commission, 1927-1931; was elected as a Representative to the Seventy-third
Congress, receiving 110,047 votes, and defeating the Hon. C. A. Christopherson,
Republican incumbent, who received 92,062 votes, and three other candidates.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Armstrong, Bennett, Butte, Corson, Custer, Dewey, Fall River,
Gregory, Haakon, Harding, Jackson, Jones, Lawrence, Lyman, Meade, Mellette, Pennington, Perkins,
annem Stanley, Todd, Tripp, Washabaugh, Washington, and Ziebach (25 counties). Population
, 168, 080.
THEO. B. WERNER, Democrat, of Rapid City, S. Dak.; married Ellen
Louise Marshall, and they have two daughters—Marguerite and Helen Mae;
was postmaster, commissioner, and mayor of Rapid City; is editor and publisher
of the Guide; was elected to the Seventy-third Congress by a majority of 7,773
over his Republican opponent.
TENNESSEE
(Population (1930), 2,616,556)
SENATORS
KENNETH McKELLAR, Democrat, of Memphis; born in Richmond, Dallas
County, Ala.; B. A., M. A., LL. B,, and LL. D. (honorary), 1918, University of
Alabama and by Tusculum College; lawyer; bachelor; Presbyterian; thirty-
110 Congressional Directory TENNESSEE
second degree Mason; Shriner; Odd Fellow; and a member of the Delta Kappa
Epsilon fraternity; presidential elector, 1904; delegate to Democratic National
Convention, 1908; elected, November 9, 1911, to the Sixty-second Congress;
reelected to the Sixty-third and Sixty-fourth Congresses; nominated as a Demo-
cratic candidate for United States Senator in a state-wide primary on Novem-
ber 20, 1915, by a plurality of 3,000, and December 15, 1915, by a majority of
21,727 votes in the run-off; elected to the United States Senate on November 7,
1916, by a majority of 25,498, and took his seat March 5, 1917; elected as dele-
gate at large to the Democratic National Convention at San Francisco in 1920;
renominated for United States Senate by a majority of 55,065 and reelected by
a majority of 80,323 for the term expiring March 3, 1929; renominated for a
third term in the Senate by a majority of 55,828, and reelected by a majority
of 55,070 for the term expiring in 1935; elected national committeeman for
Tennessee February 23, 1933.
NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN, Democrat, of Chattanooga, Tenn., was born
in Chattanooga, August 2, 1878, son of Dr. Jonathan Waverly and Eva D.
Bachman; attended Southwestern University, Central University, Washington
and Lee University, University of Virginia (LL. B.), and University of Chatta-
nooga (LL. D.); married Pearl McMannen Duke, January 7, 1904, and they
have one daughter— Mrs. Thomas A. McCoy, of Asheville, N. C.; served as
city attorney of Chattanooga, 1906-1908, circuit judge (Chattanooga), 1908—
1912, and associate justice of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, 1918-1924;
appointed to the United States Senate on February 28, 1933, to fill the unex-
pired term of Senator Cordell Hull.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—Counmks: Carter, Claiborne, Cocke, Grainger, Greene, Hamblen, Hancock,
nih Joferem, Johnson, Sevier, Sullivan, Unicoi, and Washington (14 counties). Population
1930), 333,746.
B. CARROLL REECE, Johnson City; member of bar; Republican; born
December 22, 1889; reared on farm; educated in Watauga Academy, Carson and
Newman College, New York University, and University of London; LL. D.,
“Cumberland University; married Louise Despard Goff, 1923; daughter, Louise
Despard Goff Reece, born 1928; assistant secretary and instructor in New York
University, 1916-17; director of the School of Commerce, Accounts, and Finance
of New York University and instructor in economics (day division), 1919-20;
member, board of directors of Lincoln Memorial University; enlisted May, 1917,
and served in the American Expeditionary Forces October, 1917, to July, 1919,
with the Twenty-sixth Division, which was at the front 210 days; commanded
Third Battalion, One hundred and second Regiment Infantry; decorated with
distinguished-service cross, distinguished-service medal, and eroix de guerre with
palm, and cited for bravery by Marshal Petain, Generals Edwards, Hale, and
Colonel Lewis; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seven-
Jou, and Seventy-first Congresses; and again elected to the Seventy-third
ongress.
SECOND BDISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Cumberland, Knox, Loudon,
MeMinn, Monroe, Morgan, Roane, Scott, and Union (12 counties). Population (1930), 379,612.
J. WILL TAYLOR, Republican, of La Follette, Tenn.; elected to the Sixty-
sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
Fooond, and Seventy-third Congresses. Republican national committeeman for
ennessee.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bledsoe, Bradley, Grundy, Hamilton, Marion, Meigs, Polk, Rhea,
. Sequatchie, Van Buren, Warren, and White (12 counties). Population (1930), 295,760.
SAM D. McREYNOLDS, Democrat, of Chattanooga; son of Isaac S. and
Addie McReynolds; born on a farm in Bledsoe County, Tenn., near Pikeville;
lawyer by profession; served on the bench for nearly 20 years; was married on
March 9, 1910, to Mary C. Davenport, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. B.
Davenport, of Chattanooga, and they have one child, a daughter, Margaret; was
nominated for Congress by the Democrats in the August, 1922, primary; was
elected to the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-
second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
TENNESSEE Biographical 111
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Bedford, Clay, Cannon, Coffee, De Kalb, Fentress, Franklin,
Jackson, Lincoln, Marshall, Moore, Overton, Pickett, Putnam, Rutherford, Smith, and Wilson a7
counties). Population (1930), 281, 198.
JOHN RIDLEY MITCHELL, Democrat, of Cookeville, was born September
26, 1877, on a farm in Overton County, Tenn. ; siigig, resident of Putnam County
was graduated from Peabody Normal College, Nashville, Tenn., in 1896, and a
the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn. RE 1904; is a
lawyer by profession; was presidential elector, fourth district of Tennessee,
in 1904, served as member of State Democratic executive committee for four
years; “private secretary to Hon. C. E. Snodgrass, Member of Congress, from
1899 to 1903; assistant attorney general, fifth circuit, 1908 to 1918, when nomi-
nated and was elected without opposition as attorney general for fifth circuit
of Tennessee, and served until May 1, 1925, when appointed judge of the fifth
circuit; nominated and elected judge in 1926 for eight years, serving until March
1, 1931; unmarried; nominated by the Democratic Party in August, 1930, for
Congress and elected to the Seventy-second Congress in November, 1930, without
opposition; renominated on August 4, 1932, by the Democratic Party, and
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress,
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Davidson, Macon, Montgomery, Robertson, Stewart, Sumner, and
Trousdale (7 counties). Population (1930), 343,328.
JOSEPH W. BYRNS, Democrat, of Nashville, was born near Cedar Hill,
Robertson County, Tenn., and lived on a farm until early manhood; attended
schools of his native county; was graduated from the law department of Vander-
bilt University, Nashville, and is a lawyer by profession; was married to Miss
Julia Woodard, of Nashville, in 1898; has one son, Joseph W. Byrns, jr.; was
three times elected a member of the lower house of the Tennessee Legislature;
was unanimously chosen speaker of that body in 1899; was elected to the Ten-
nessee State Senate in 1900; was a Democratic presidential elector in 1904;
was elected to the Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth,
Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first,
and Seventy- second Congresses, and reelected to the Seventy-third Congress; is
chairman of the Democratic National Congressional Committee; chairmen. of the
Committee on Appropriations in the Seventy-second Congress.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTiES: Cheatham, Dickson, Giles, Hickman, Houston, Humphreys, Law-
rence, Lewis, Maury, Perry, Wayne, and Williamson (12 counties). Population (1930), 194,915.
CLARENCE W. TURNER, Democrat, of Waverly, Humphreys County,
Tenn., was born and reared on a farm near Clydeton, Tenn.; attended public
schools of Humphreys County and preparatory school at Edgwood, Dickson
County, Tenn.; B. S. degree, National Normal University, Lebanon, Ohio; B. A.
and LL. B. degrees, Northern Indiana Normal College, Valparaiso, Ind.; ; member
of Masonic lodge and of the Presbyterian Church; owner and editor of Waverly
Senator for several years; chairman of Democratic executive committee of
Humphreys County for 15 years; elected to State Senate of Tennessee, 1900,
1909, and 1911; married Mrs. Nell Rust Cowen, December 18, 1919; delegate to
Democratic National Conventions at San Francisco in 1920 and at Chicago in
1932; served as mayor and as city attorney of Waverly, Tenn.; elected to the
Sixty-seventh Congress on November 7, 1922, to fill unexpired term of Hon. L. P.
Padgett, deceased; elected county judge of Humphreys County, October, 1920,
and resigned January, 1933, having been elected to the Seventy-third Congress
on November 8, 1932.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Benton, Carroll, Chester, Decatur, Fayette, Hardeman, Hardin,
Henderson, Henry, McNairy, and Madison (11 counties). Population (1930), 240,422.
GORDON BROWNING, Democrat, of Huntingdon, is a native of Carroll
County, Tenn.; graduate of the high school at Milan, Tenn., of Valparaiso Uni-
versity, Valparaiso, Ind., and of Cumberland University Law School, Lebanon,
Tenn. ; began the practice of law at Huntingdon in March, 1915; enlisted in the
Army in June, 1917, commanded a battery in the One hundred and fourteenth
Regiment Field Artillery, Thirtieth Division, through all its engagements in
France; resumed the practice of law after being discharged in 1919; ¢lected as
a Democrat to the Sixty-eighth and each succeeding Congress; married Miss Ida
Leach, of Huntingdon.
112 Congressional Directory TEXAS
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Crockett, Dyer, Gibson, Haywood, Lake, Lauderdale, Obion,
Tipton, and Weakley (9 counties). Population (1930), 241,093. ‘
JERE COOPER, Democrat, of Dyersburg, was born July 20, 1893, in Dyer
County, Tenn.; son of Joseph W. and Viola May Cooper; educated in public
schools of Dyersburg and Cumberland University, graduating with the degree of
LL. B.; engaged in the active practice of law in Dyersburg since 1915, except
two years while in the Army; serving as city attorney for eight years; enlisted in
Second Tennessee Infantry, National Guard, in May, 1917, and on July 23, 1917,
was commissioned first lieutenant; on October 24, 1917, was transferred with
company to Company K, One hundred and nineteenth Infantry, Thirtieth Divi-
sion, and served with this regiment throughout period of World War, going
through all its engagements in France and Belgium; on July 9, 1918, promoted
to captain and served for a while as regimental adjutant, One hundred and nine-
teenth Infantry; discharged from the Army on April 2, 1919, after serving prac-
tically a year with the American Expeditionary Forces; returned to Dyersburg
and resumed the practice of law; elected State commander of American Legion
of Tennessee in 1921, and national executive committeeman of American Legion
in 1922; married to Miss Mary Rankley, December 30, 1930; Mason, Knight
Templar, Shriner, Maccabee, Kappa Sigma; member of Cumberland Presby-
terian Church; elected to Seventy-first Congress; renominated and reelected to
Seventy-second Congress without opposition; reelected to Seventy-third Congress.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CounTtY: Shelby. Population (1930), 306,482.
EDWARD H. CRUMP, Democrat, of Memphis; born on a farm near Holly
Springs, Marshall County, Miss.; public-school education; early life—farmer,
clerk in country store, and printer; lived in Memphis, Tenn., since 1891; married
Bessie Byrd McLean, of Memphis; three sons—Edward Hull, jr., Robert M.,
and John; business—investment banking, mortgage loans, real estate, manufac-
turing, and farming; elected delegate to Democratic State convention in 1902
and again in 1904; elected member of city government, board of public works,
1905; elected fire and police commissioner, 1907; sponsored present commission
government of Memphis and Shelby County, 1909; elected three times mayor of
Memphis, 1909, 1911, and 1915; elected delegate to Democratic National Con-
vention, Baltimore, 1912; elected four terms as county trustee (treasurer), 1916,
1918, 1920, and 1922; elected delegate at large Democratic National Conven-
tions, New York, 1924, and Houston, 1928; elected Democratic state committee-
man, 1926; Regent, Smithsonian Institution; elected delegate Democratic Na-
tional Convention, Chicago, 1932; elected to Seventy-second Congress; reelected
to Seventy-third Congress, receiving 40,001 votes to opponent, S. A. Godsey,
2,873 votes. :
TEXAS
(Population (1930), 5,824,715)
SENATORS
MORRIS SHEPPARD, Democrat, of Texarkana, was born May 28, 1875, at
Wheatville, Morris County, Tex.; was graduated from the University of Texas,
academic department, 1895, law department, 1897, and from Yale Law School,
1898; LL. D. (honorary), Southern Methodist University; began the practice of
law at Pittsburg, Tex., in 1898, and located at Texarkana in 1899, where he
continued to follow his profession; elected in October, 1902, to the Fifty-seventh
Congress to fill out the unexpired term of his father, the Hon. John L. Sheppard,
deceased; elected to the Fifty-eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-
second Congresses; nominated for United States Senator from Texas at the Demo-
cratic primaries on July 27, 1912, to succeed Senator Joseph Weldon Bailey, who
was not a candidate for return to the Senate, and elected by the legislature
January 29, 1913, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the resignation of Senator
Bailey, whose term would have expired March 3, 1913; and was also elected on
the same day for the full term beginning March 4, 1913; reelected in 1918, 1924,
and 1930; present term of service expires in 1937. aes Ls
TOM CONNALLY, Democrat, of Marlin, Falls County, son of Jones and Mary
BE. Connally; born in McLennan County, Tex., August 19, 1877; A. B., Baylor
University; LL. B., University of Texas; enlisted man, Second Regiment Texas
REY
RT
———
TEXAS Biographical 113
Volunteer Infantry, Spanish-American War; member of the Twenty-seventh and
Twenty-eighth Texas Legislatures; prosecuting attorney of Falls County, 1906
1910; married Miss Louise Clarkson, 1904; elected to the Sixty-fifth Congress
and reelected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and
Seventieth Congresses; elected United States Senator for the term beginning
March 4, 1929; captain and adjutant, Twenty-second Infantry Brigade, Eleventh
Division, United States Army, 1918,
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 5,824,715.
GEORGE B. TERRELL, Democrat, of Alto, Tex., was born at Alto, December
5, 1862, son of Sam Houston and Juliar Butler Terrell; received his education in
the public schools, the Sam Houston Teachers’ College, Huntsville, Tex., and the
Baylor University, Waco, Tex.; married Miss Allie Turney, of Jacksonville, Tex.,
and they have five children—three boys and two girls, all grown; taught school
for 15 years in early manhood; is engaged in general farming and stock raising;
served on the State teachers’ examining board, two years, 1897 and 1902, and on
the State textbook commission in 1903 to select textbooks for the public schools
of the State; was presidential elector on the Parker ticket in 1904; served as a
member of the Texas Legislature for 16 years; elected commissioner of agriculture
of Texas in November, 1920, and reelected for five successive terms, retiring in
1931; was nominated for Representative at Large in the Democratic primaries in
1932, over a field of 12 opponents, and elected to the Seventy-third Congress in
the November election, over F. A. Blankenbeckler, his Republican opponent,
receiving 798,647 votes, against 60,905 votes for his opponent, a majority of
737,742 votes.
STERLING PRICE STRONG, Democrat, of Dallas, Tex.; born August 17,
1862, near Jefferson City, Mo.; educated in the public schools of Montague
County, Tex.; graduated from Eastman’s National Business College, Pough-
keepsie, N. Y.; married; traveling salesman; served as county clerk of Montague
County for eight years, 1896-1904, and as county and district clerk of Hale
County, Tex., for four years, 1889-1893; elected to the Seventy-third Congress
from the State at large, receiving 798,545 votes.
JOSEPH W. BAILEY, Jr., Democrat, of Dallas, Tex.; born December 15,
1892, at Gainesville, Cooke County, Tex.; graduated from Princeton University
with degree of B. S. in 1915, and from the University of Virginia with degree of
B. L. in 1919; served in the Three hundred and fourteenth Regiment of Field
Artillery with the American Expeditionary Forces; on November 8, 1932, was
elected Representative at Large from Texas to the Seventy-third Congress.
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Bowie, Camp, Cass, Delta, Franklin, Hopkins, Lamar, Marion,
Morris, Red River, and Titus (11 counties). Population (1930), 255,452.
WRIGHT PATMAN, Democrat, of Texarkana, Tex.; born near Hughes
Springs, Cass County, Tex., August 6, 1893; has resided in Texas all his life;
finished high school at Hughes Springs, 1912; received LL. B. degree, Cumber-
land University, 1916; assistant to prosecuting attorney of Cass County, 1916-17;
United States Army, 1917-1919; married Miss Merle Connor, of Winnsboro,
Tex., February 14, 1919; they have four children—all boys; served four years
as a member of the Texas Legislature; district attorney for five years of the fifth
judicial district of Texas; elected to the Seventy-first Congress and succeeding
Congresses; is a Baptist; thirty-second degree Scottish Rite Mason; member
of the American Legion, the Disabled American Veterans of the World War,
although not privileged to serve overseas during the war by reason of a service-
connected disability, and an honorary member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Angelina, Cherokee, Hardin, Harrison, Jasper, Jefferson, Nacog-
Ta Newton, Orange, Panola, Sabine, San Augustine, Shelby, and Tyler (14 counties). Population
(1930), 430,881."
MARTIN DIES, Democrat, of Orange, Tex.; son of Hon. Martin Dies, de-
ceased, who represented the second district for 10 years, and Olive M. Dies; born in
Colorado, Mitchell County, Tex., November 5, 1901, where his parents were
9 157297°—73-1—1ST ED
114 Congressional Directory TEXAS
living temporarily on account of the ill health of his father; lived four years on
farm in Hunt County, and attended Greenville public schools and Wesley College
during these four years; graduated from Beaumont High School; attended Cluster
Spring Academy and University of Texas; graduated from National University
at Washington, D. C., with degree of LL. B.; admitted to bar at age of 19, and
engaged in law practice in Marshall, Tex., for nearly two years; moved to Orange
on January 1, 1922, and became junior member of the firm of Dies, Stephenson
& Dies; since admission to bar engaged in general practice; married in 1920 to
Miss Myrtle McAdams, of Greenville, Tex., and they have two children—Martin,
jr., and Robert M.; nominated in 1930 primary by majority of 7,400, and elected
at general election without opposition to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected
at general election without opposition to the Seventy-third Congress.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Gregg, Henderson, Kaufman, Rusk, Smith, Upshur, Van Zandt, and
Wood (8 counties). Population (1930), 251,668. :
MORGAN G. SANDERS, Democrat, of Canton, Tex.; born on a farm in Van
Zandt County, Tex.; married Miss Noma Tull, of Canton, Tex.; has been engaged
in the practice of law since 1901; was elected to the twenty-eighth Legislature
of Texas from Van Zandt County in 1902; reelected in 1904, serving in the
twenty-ninth legislature; in 1910 was elected prosecuting attorney of Van Zandt
County, and reelected in 1912; in 1914 was elected district attorney of the seventh
judicial district of Texas, voluntarily retiring at the expiration of first term and
again engaging in the general practice of law; elected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-
eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third
Congresses.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Collin, Fannin, Grayson, Hunt, and Rains (5 counties). Popula-
tion (1930), 209,316.
SAM RAYBURN, Democrat, of Bonham, Tex., was born January 6, 1882, in
Roane County, Tenn., son of W. M. and Martha Waller Rayburn; is a graduate
of the East Texas College; studied law in the University of Texas; is a lawyer
by profession; served six years as a member of the Texas Legislature, the last
two years as speaker of the house of representatives; was elected to the Sixty-
third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-
ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses, and was re-
elected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Dallas, Ellis, and Rockwall (3 counties). Population (1930), 387,285.
HATTON W. SUMNERS, Democrat, of Dallas, Tex., was elected to the Sixty-
third and succeeding Congresses.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Brazos, Freestone, Hill, Leon, Limestone, Madison, Milam, Navarro,
and Robertson (9 counties). Population (1930), 284,744.
LUTHER A. JOHNSON, Democrat, of Corsicana; born in Navarro County,
Tex., October 29, 1875; son of E. Wiley and Fannie L. Johnson; educated in
Corsicana public schools and Cumberland University of Lebanon, Tenn.; married
Miss Turner Read, of Corsicana, in 1899, and has three children—Mary Frances
(now Mrs. J. M. McGee), Luther A., jr., and Turner Read (now Mrs. Don F.
MacKenzie) ; served as county attorney of Navarro County, 1898-1902; as dis-
trict attorney, thirteenth judicial district, composed of Freestone, Limestone, and
Navarro Counties, 1904-1910; member of law firm of Callicutt & Johnson from
1914 until elected to Congress in 1922; delegate to the Democratic National
Convention at St. Louis in 1916; chairman Democratic State convention, Fort
Worth, 1920; nominated without opposition and elected to Sixty-eighth Con-
gress; reelected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Anderson, Chambers, Galveston, Houston, Liberty, Montgomery,
Polk, San Jacinto, Trinity, and Walker (10 counties). Population (1930), 228,658.
[Vacant.]
TEXAS Biographical 115
LL DISTRICT. ~Cousups: Fort Bend, Grimes, Harris, and Waller (4 counties). Population
: 4 $] *
JOE HENRY EAGLE, Democrat, of Houston, Tex., was born at Tompkins-
ville, Ky., January 23, 1870; at 14 years of age received first-grade county teach-
er’s certificate; taught writing schools each winter to earn money with which to
go through college, graduating at 17 years of age at Burritt College, Spencer,
Tenn.; moved to Texas in 1887 and taught school six years, becoming superin-
tendent of city schools, Vernon, Tex., at 19, on competitive examination; read
University of Virginia law course while pursuing the teaching profession, and
admitted to the bar in 1893; elected city attorney of Wichita Falls in 1894, resign-
ing in 1895 to move to Houston, where he has since lived; from 1896 to 1911,
inclusive, devoted himself exclusively to his profession, representing the largest
business enterprises then in Texas; severed that connection in order to serve in
Congress; elected to the Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixty-sixth
Congresses; was a member of the Banking and Currency Committee, and in that
capacity took an active part in framing and passing the Federal reserve act and
the rural credits act; voluntarily retired from Congress in 1921; elected, January
28, 1933, to fill the unexpired term in the Seventy-second Congress and to the
Seventy-third Congress, receiving 25,201 votes, the other 33 candidates receiving
20,185 votes.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Brazoria, Calhoun, Colorado, De Witt, Fayette, Goliad, Gonzales,
Jackson, Lavaca, Matagorda, Refugio, Victoria, and Wharton (13 counties). Population (1930).
257,775.
JOSEPH JEFFERSON MANSFIELD, Democrat, of Columbus; was elected
to the Sixty-fifth and each succeeding Congress.
TENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Austin, Bastrop, Burleson, Caldwell, Hays, Lee, Travis, Washing-
ton, and Williamson (9 counties). Population (1930), 269,615.
JAMES P. BUCHANAN, Democrat, of Brenham, Tex.
ELEVENTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Bell, Bosque, Coryell, Falls, Hamilton, and McLennan (6
counties). Population (1930), 236,755.
OLIVER HARLAN CROSS, Democrat, of Waco, was born July 13, 1870, in
Green County, Ala.; educated at the University of Alabama, receiving the degree
of bachelor of arts in 1891; taught school at Union Springs, Ala., 1891-92;
attended the law school of the University of Alabama, 1892-93; admitted to
practice at Silver City, N. Mex., 1893, and lived in Deming; moved to McGregor,
Tex., 1894, and practiced law; elected city attorney of McGregor, April, 1895;
removed to Waco, December, 1896, and served in the twenty-sixth Legislature of
Texas from McLennan County; served as assistant district attorney, under Hon.
Cullen Thomas, from 1898 to 1902; was elected district attorney in 1902 and
served to 1906; practiced law until 1917, at which time he retired from the
practice of law and looked after his farming interests; was elected to the Seventy-
first Congress to succeed Hon. Tom Connally, who had been elected to the
United States Senate; reelected to the Seventy-second and Seventy-third Con-
gresses; married Miss Mary Watt, of Waco, Tex., in 1907,
TWELFTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Erath, Hood, Johnson, Parker, Somervell, and Tarrant (6 coun-
ties). Population (1930), 280,228.
FRITZ GARLAND LANHAM, Democrat, of Fort Worth, Tex.; born in
Weatherford, Tex.; attended Weatherford College, Weatherford, Tex., Vanderbilt
University, and the University of Texas; attorney at law; is married; was elected
to the Sixty-sixth Congress, at a special election held to determine a successor to
the Hon. James C. Wilson, resigned; reelected to the succeeding Congresses.
116 Congressional Directory TEXAS
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Archer, Baylor, Clay, Cooke, Denton, Jack, Montague,
Throckmorton, Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, and Young (12 counties). Population (1930), 260,364.
WILLIAM DODDRIDGE McFARLANE, Democrat, of Graham, Tex.; born
July 17, 1894, at Greenwood, Ark., son of R. W. and Maggie H. McFarlane;
holds A. B. and LL. B. degrees; World War veteran; married Miss Alma Carl at
San Antonio, Tex., December 25, 1923; has four children—Mary Ellen, W. D., jr.,
Betty Ann, and Bobbie Frances; lawyer; served four years in the Texas House
of Representatives, 1923-1927, and four years in the State senate, 1927-1931;
thirty-second degree Mason, Shriner, member of the Knights of Pythias Lodge,
American Legion, Forty and Eight, and the Methodist Church; elected to the
Seventy-third Congress.
FOURTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Aransas, Bee, Bexar, Blanco, Comal, Guadalupe, Karnes,
Kendall, Nueces, San Patricio, and Wilson (11 counties). Population (1930), 476,731.
RICHARD M. KLEBERG, Democrat, of Corpus Christi, was born near
Kingsville, Kleberg County, Tex.; educated in the public schools and was grad-
uated from the University of Texas; elected to the Seventy-second Congress at
a special election held on November 24, 1931, to fill the vacancy occasioned by
the death of Hon. Harry M. Wurzbach; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FIFTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Atascosa, Brooks, Cameron, Dimmit, Duval, Frio, Hidalgo,
Jim Hogg, Jim Wells, Kenedy, Kinney, Kleberg, La Salle, Live Oak, McMullen, Maverick, Medina,
Starr, Uvalde, Webb, Willacy, Zapata, and Zavala (23 counties). Population (1930), 370,877.
MILTON H. WEST, Democrat, of Brownsville, Tex., was born near Gonzales,
Gonzales County, Tex., June 30, 1888; educated at the West Texas Military
Academy, San Antonio, Tex.; at the age of 22 years enlisted in Company C of
the famous Frontier Battalion of the Texas Rangers, serving through 1911 and
1912, when he resigned to study stenography and then law in the office of Judge
James A. King, of Floresville; was admitted to the bar in 1915, and began the
practice of law at Floresville in partnership with Judge King; in 1917, when the
exigencies of the war cast upon him partial responsibility of caring for his father’s
family, as well as his own, he removed to Brownsville and became associated in
the practice of law with the late Judge James B. Wells; has since been a member
of the Brownsville law firms of Yates & West; Canales, Davenport & West; and
Davenpart, West & Ransome; served as district attorney for the twenty-eighth
judicial district of Texas from 1922 to 1925, and as assistant district attorney
from 1927 to 1930; represented Cameron County in the Texas Legislature, 1930-
1933; elected to the Seventy-third Congress at a special election held on April 22,
1933, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. John N. Garner.
SIXTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Andrews, Bandera, Brewster, Coke, Crane, Crockett, Cul-
berson, Ector, Edwards, El Paso, Gillespie, Glasscock, Howard, Hudspeth, Irion, Jeff Davis, Kerr,
Kimble, Loving, Martin, Mason, Menard, Midland, Mitchell, Pecos, Presidio, Reagan, Real, Reeves,
Schleicher, Sterling, Sutton, Terrell, Tom Green, Upton, Val Verde, Ward, and Winkler (38 counties).
Population (1930), 363,869.
ROBERT EWING THOMASON, Democrat, of El Paso, was born near
Shelbyville, Tenn.; son of Dr. Ben R. and Susan Hoover Thomason; moved to
Gainesville, Tex., when 1 year old; educated in public schools, graduate of South-
western University, Georgetown, Tex., and of the law school of the University of
Texas; prosecuting attorney at Gainesville for four years; moved to El Paso in
1911; member of State legislature for four years, and unanimously elected speaker
of house of representatives, thirty-sixth legislature; mayor of El Paso, 1927-1931;
married and has a son and daughter; elected to the Seventy-second and
Seventy-third Congresses.
SEVENTEENTH DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Brown, Burnet, Callahan, Coleman, Comanche, Concho,
Eastland, Jones, Lampasas, Llano, McCulloch, Mills, Nolan, Palo Pinto, Runnels, San Saba, Shackel-
ford, Stephens, and Taylor (19 counties). Population (1930), 327,317.
THOMAS LINDSAY BLANTON, Democrat, of Abilene; educated in public
schools and University of Texas; district judge eight years; defeated Hon. J. M.
Wagstaff for Taylor County’s congressional candidate in preferential primary,
February 5, 1916, then defeated Congressman W. R. Smith and Hon. R. N.
Grisham for election to Sixty-fifth Congress in old sixteenth district, then em-
bracing 59 counties; after redistricting was reelected in 1918 from new seven-
teenth district, defeating Hon. Oscar Callaway (former Congressman), Hon.
William G. Blackmon, and Hon. Joe Adkins; again defeated Grisham in 1920;
again defeated Hon. Oscar Callaway, and also Ernest G. Albright, Prof. N. S.
Holland, Hon. W. J. Cunningham, and Hon. Joseph B. Dibrell, jr., in 1922;
again defeated Albright in 1054; defeated Judge J. R. Smith in 1926, carrying
all 19 counties; ran unsuccessfully for United States Senate in 1928, carrying
79 counties against field of six candidates, finishing 12 years in Congress on
UTAH : Biographical 117
March 3, 1929; defeated widow of Hon. R. Q. Lee in special election May 20,
1930, for the unexpired term in the Seventy-first Congress; renominated in
Democratic primary July 26, 1930, over Hon. Venus Earl Earp, district com-
mitteeman of American Legion, by majority of 23,000 votes; reelected to Seventy-
second Congress in general election November 4, 1930, without opposition;
defeated District Attorney Joe H. Jones in Democratic primary July 23, 1932,
and had no opposition November 8, 1932, for reelection to Seventy-third
Congress.
EIGHTEENTH DISTRICT.—COUNTIES: Armstrong, Bailey, Borden, Briscoe, Carson, Castro,
Childress, Cochran, Collingsworth, Cottle, Crosby, Dallam, Dawson, Deaf Smith, Dickens, Donley,
Fisher, Floyd, Foard, Gaines, Garza, Gray, Hale, Hall, Hansford, Hardeman, Hartley, Haskell, Hemp-
hill, Hockley, Hutchinson, Kent, King, Knox, Lamb, Lipscomb, Lubbock, Lynn, Moore, Motley,
Ochiltree, Oldham, Parmer, Potter, Randall, Roberts, Scurry, Sherman, Stonewall, Swisher, Terry,
Wheeler, and Yoakum (53 counties). Population (1930), 511,378.
MARVIN JONES, Democrat, was born near Valley View, in Cooke County,
Tex.; son of Horace K. and Dosia Jones; was graduated from Southwestern
University with A. B. degree and from University of Texas with LL. B. degree;
was appointed to membership on the board of legal examiners for the seventh
supreme judicial district of Texas; served 14 years as the Texas member of the
Democratic national congressional campaign committee; enlisted man, Company
A, Battalion 308, Tank Corps, United States Army, 1918; elected to the Sixty-
fifth and each succeeding Congress.
UTAH
(Population (1930), 507,847)
SENATORS
WILLIAM H. KING, Democrat, of Salt Lake City, was born in Utah; attended
the public schools, the B. Y. Academy, and the State university; spent nearly three
years in Great Britain, and upon returning began the study of law; was graduated
from the University of Michigan in 1888 and entered upon the practice of law in
1900; was elected to various State offices, including the Legislature of Utah, in
which he served three terms, one term being president of the upper body; served
as associate justice of the Supreme Court of Utah, beginning in 1904; was elected
to the Fifty-fifth Congress; declined renomination and was candidate for the
United States Senate; a deadlock ensued and no one was elected; a vacancy
occurring, was elected as Representative to the Fifty-sixth Congress; was unani-
mous choice of his party for the Fifty-eighth and Fifty-ninth Congresses, but the
State was Republican; nominated by the Democratic legislative caucus in 1905 -
and 1909 for the United States Senate; has been delegate to various Democratic
National Conventions; was unanimous choice of his party for Senator, and in
November, 1916, was elected by more than 24,000 majority for a term of six years;
reelected November, 1922, and again on November 6, 1928, for a term of six years.
ELBERT DUNCAN THOMAS, Democrat, of Salt Lake City, Utah; born at
Salt Lake City, June 17, 1883; graduated from the University of Utah, with A. B.
degree, in 1906; received the degree of Ph. D. from the University of California in
1924; professor of political science, University of Utah, in 1919; served as major,
Inspector General’s Department, United States Reserve Corps, 1918-1924;
chairman of military affairs, University of Utah, 1917-1922; married Miss Edna
Harker in 1907, and they have three daughters—Chiyo, Esther, and Edna
Louise; elected to the United States Senate on November 8, 1932, receiving
116,909 votes, and Reed Smoot, Republican, 86,066 votes.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Beaver, Box Elder, Cache, Carbon, Daggett, Duchesne, Emery, Gar-
field, Grand, Iron, Juab, Kane, Millard, Morgan, Piute, Rich, San Juan, Sanpete, Sevier, Summit,
Uintah, Wasatch, Washington, Wayne, and Weber (25 counties). Population (1930), 241,290.
ABE MURDOCK, Democrat, of Beaver, Utah, was born at Austin, Lander
County, Nev., July 18, 1893; attended the public schools of Beaver and did his
high-school work in the Beaver Academy, Murdock Academy, and the Salt Lake
City high schools; received his legal education at the University of Utah, but had
to leave school prior to receiving a degree; continued reading law in his father’s
office and working for him as a stenographer until he passed the bar examination
in the fall of 1922, and was admitted to practice before the courts of Utah; lawyer,
118 Congressional Directory VEEMONT
engaged in the general practice; served three terms as county attorney of Beaver
County, Utah, 1923-24, 1927-28, 1931-32; four terms as city attorney of Beaver,
1925-1932; four years as attorney for the Board of Education of Beaver, 1928-
1932; one term as city councilman of Beaver; married and has six children;
elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 47,774 votes, and Don B. Colton,
Republican, 44,827 votes.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CoUNTIES: Davis, Salt Lake, Tooele, and Utah (4 counties). Population (1930)
Te i : 6,
J. W. ROBINSON, Democrat, of Provo, Utah, was born in Coalville, Summit
County, Utah; received the bachelor of arts degree from the Brigham Young
University, Provo, Utah, in 1908; taught school for a number of years, being
principal of the Uinta Academy, at Vernal, and the Wasatch High School, at
Heber; was graduated from the University of Chicago in 1912, receiving the de-
gree doctor of jurisprudence; since that time he has been in the active practice
of law in the State of Utah, practicing in both the State and Federal courts;
from 1918 to 1921 he served as county attorney of Utah County; during the World
War was food administrator for Utah County; in 1924 was the Democratic con-
vention’s choice for attorney general of the State of Utah; was married to Birda
Billings, a native of Provo, Utah, in 1906, and they have four children—two boys
and two girls; was elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932,
receiving 62,400 votes, and his opponent, Judge Frederick C. Loofbourow,
receiving 46,919 votes. :
VERMONT
(Population (1930), 359,611)
SENATORS
PORTER HINMAN DALE, Republican, of Island Pond, was born at Island
Pond, Vt., March 1, 1867; attended Vermont schools and Eastman Business Col-
lege; studied in Philadelphia and Boston and two years with the Shakespearean
scholar and actor, James E. Murdoch; was instructor in Bates College; studied
law with his father, the late George N. Dale, and was admitted to practice in
the Vermont courts in 1896 and the United States courts in 1900; is a director
in several business enterprises; served in the State militia and as colonel on the
staff of Governor Grout; was chairman of the Republican State conventions in
1898 and 1920; was chief deputy collector of customs, port of Island Pond, and
resigned when elected to the Vermont Senate, of which he was a member in 1910
and 1912, serving on the judiciary committee, the committee on education, and
as chairman of the committees on Federal relations, banks, and the joint com-
mittee on temperance; was appointed judge of the Brighton municipal court by
Governor Mead in 1910; was member of the Republican State committee for
several years; is married and has two sons and two daughters. Elected to the
Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, and Sixty-eighth Congresses.
Resigned to become a candidate for the Senate. Elected to the United States
Senate November 6, 1923, for the unexpired term of the late Senator Dillingham,
ending March 3, 1927; reelected November 2, 1926, and again on November 8,
1932, for the term of six years.
WARREN ROBINSON AUSTIN, Republican, of Burlington, Vt., was born
at Highgate Center, Vt., November 12, 1877; University of Vermont, 1899,
Ph. B., 1932, LL. D.; admitted to Vermont bar in 1902, Circuit Court of the
Second Circuit of the United States in 1906, Supreme Court of the United States
in 1914, District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of New
York in 1919, Circuit Court of Appeals of Second Circuit in 1931, and United
States Court for China in 1917; State’s attorney, Franklin County, Vt., 1904;
chairman Republican State convention, 1908; mayor of St. Albans, Vt., 1909;
United States commissioner, 1907-1915; Congress of the Mint, 1912; delegate to
Republican National Convention in 1928; trustee University of Vermont, since
1914; president Vermont Bar Association, 1923; attorney for negotiators in
China of loans to Chinese Government for building of national railways and recon-
struction of Grand Canal and other projects, 1916-17; married, 1901, Mildred
Mary Lucas; children—Warren Robinson Austin, jr., and Edward Lucas Austin;
elected to the United States Senate on March 31, 1931, to fill out the unexpired
term of Senator Frank L. Greene ending in 1935,
VIRGINIA Biographacal 119
REPRESENTATIVE
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 359,611.
ERNEST WILLARD GIBSON, Republican, of Brattleboro, Vt.; son of
William L. and Saville Stowell Gibson; was born in Londonderry, Vt., December
29, 1872, educated in the common schools, Black River Academy, of Ludlow,
Vt., and Norwich University (B. S., A. M,, and LL. D.); lawyer; served as
deputy clerk United States courts; in both branches of Vermont Legislature
and president pro tempore of the senate; judge of the municipal court; State’s
attorney of Windham County; secretary civil and military affairs; delegate
to Republican National Convention of 1912; enlisted in the Vermont National
Guard in 1899, rose to the rank of colonel and retired in 1908; returned to the
service in 1915 as captain of Infantry, and served during the Mexican border
trouble and two years during the World War; was overseas; colonel of the One
hundred and seventy-second Regiment, Infantry, from August 5, 1921, to No-
vember 1, 1923; married November 25, 1896, to Grace Fullerton Hadley, who
died April 26, 1925, and has three children living; one son, Frank Hadley, has
deceased; religious preference, Episcopalian, and is trustee of diocese of Vermont;
vice president Norwich University, elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress; re-
elected to the Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and
Seventy-third Congresses.
VIRGINIA
(Population (1930), 2,421,851)
SENATORS
CARTER GLASS, Democrat, of Lynchburg, was born in that city; educated
in private and public schools and in the newspaper business; owns the morning
and afternoon papers of the city; member of the Virginia Senate, 1899-1903, and
the Virginia constitutional convention, 1901-2; eight years member of board of
visitors of University of Virginia; has honorary LL. D. degree of Lafayette Col-
lege, Easton, Pa., Washington and Lee University, Virginia, and the University
of North Carolina; is a member of Phi Beta Kappa of William and Mary; was
elected to the Fifty-seventh and all succeeding Congresses, including the Sixty-
sixth; resigned seat in Congress, December 16, 1918, to accept appointment as
Secretary of the Treasury in President Wilson’s Cabinet; resigned as Secretary
of the Treasury on February 2, 1920, to qualify as Senator from Virginia by
appointment of the governor; elected to Senate November 2, 1920, for balance
of term expiring March 3, 1925; reelected on November 4, 1924, for full term
expiring March 3, 1931, and again on November 4, 1930, for the term ending in
1937, each time practically without opposition at the primary or the general
election.
HARRY FLOOD BYRD, Democrat, of Berryville, Va., was born at Martins-
burg, W. Va., June 10, 1887, son of Richard Evelyn and Eleanor Bolling (Flood)
Byrd; educated in the public schools of Winchester, Va., and at Shenandoah
Valley Academy there; entered business at age of 15 as newspaper publisher,
farmer, and apple grower; in 1915 elected to Senate of Virginia, in which he served
until he was elected Governor of the Commonwealth for the term 1926 to 1930;
appointed to the United States Senate by Gov. John Garland Pollard on March
4, 1933, for the unexpired term of Claude A. Swanson, resigned.
REPRESENTATIVES
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 2,421,851.
CLIFTON ALEXANDER WOODRUM, Democrat, of Roanoke, was born at
Roanoke, April 27, 1887; son of Robert H. and Anna T. Woodrum; educated in
the public schools of Roanoke; studied law at Washington and Lee University,
and was licensed to practice, June 19, 1908; located in Roanoke, and in 1917 was
elected Commonwealth attorney; served in this capacity until August, 1919,
when he was unanimously chosen to occupy the bench of the hustings court
of the city of Roanoke, where he presided until April 10, 1922, when he resigned
and entered the race for the Sixty-eighth Congress against James P. Woods,
120 Congressional Drrectory VIRGINIA
Democrat, incumbent; was elected to Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to the
Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, and Seventy-second Congresses without
opposition; reelected from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress; was
married in 1905 to Miss Lena Hancock, of Bedford County; has two children—
Clifton A., jr., aged 22, and Martha Anne, aged 16; member of Green Memorial
Methodist Church of Roanoke; thirty-third degree Mason; past potentate Kazin
Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S.; and member of various other fraternal orders.
ANDREW JACKSON MONTAGUE, Democrat, of Richmond city, born in
Campbell County, Va.; received a public and private school education, then
entered Richmond College and graduated in several of its academic schools in
1882; taught for two years; studied law at the University of Virginia, graduat-
ing therefrom with the degree of B. L. in June, 1885, and began the practice of
law in October; appointed by President Cleveland United States attorney for
the western district of Virginia, 1893; attorney general of Virginia for four years
commencing January 1, 1898; Governor of Virginia for four years and one
month, beginning January 1, 1902; delegate at large to Democratic National
Convention in 1904; LL. D., Brown University and University of Pennsylvania;
Phi Beta Kappa of College of William and Mary; American delegate to Third
Conference of American Republics at Rio de Janeiro in 1906; delegate to Third
International Conference on Maritime Law at Brussels in 1909 and 1910; some-
time dean of law school of Richmond College; president American Society for
Judicial Settlement of International Disputes for year 1917; president American
Peace Society for 1920-1924; author, Life of John Marshall, Secretary of State
(in American Secretaries of State and their Diplomacy), Volume II; president
American group of the Interparliamentary Union, 1930; elected to the Sixty-
third, Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-
ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
SCHUYLER OTIS BLAND, Democrat, of Newport News, Va., was born
May 4, 1872, in Gloucester County, Va.; lawyer; member of Kappa Alpha fra-
ternity, southern order, and of Phi Beta Kappa society; was elected to Sixty-
fifth Congress for unexpired term, and reelected to the Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh,
Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-
third Congresses; married Miss Mary Putzel, of Newport News, Va.
THOMAS G. BURCH, Democrat, of Martinsville, Henry County, Va.; born in
Henry County, July 3, 1869; banker; educated in public schools of county;
member State board of agriculture, 1910-1913; member board of visitors, State
normal school at Radford, Va., 1913-1915; United States marshal, western dis-
trict of Virginia, 1914-1921; member of board of visitors, the Virginia School
for the Deaf and the Blind, 1922-1931; member of commission to simplify and
reorganize State government, 1927; member of the State transportation and
public utility advisory commission, 1929; member of State board of education,
1930 and 1931; elected to the Seventy-second Congress, November 4, 1930;
reelected to the Seventy-third Congress, November 8, 1932.
A. WILLIS ROBERTSON, Democrat, of Lexington, Va., was born May 27,
1887, in Martinsburg, W. Va.; educated in the public schools of Lynchburg and
Rocky Mount, Va.; B. A. and LL. B., University of Richmond; member of Pi
Kappa Alpha fraternity and other fraternal orders; admitted to the bar in 1908;
member of State senate for six years, 1916-1922; Commonwealth’s attorney for
Rockbridge County for six years, 1922-1928; chairman of commission of game
and inland fisheries for six years, 1926-1932; during the World War served in the
United States Army from August, 1917, to June, 1919; married Gladys C. Willis,
and they have two sons—A. Willis Robertson, jr., and Marion Gordon Robertson;
elected as a Representative at Large from Virginia to the Seventy-third Congress
on November 8, 1932.
HOWARD WORTH SMITH, Democrat, of Alexandria; born at Broad Run,
Va., February 2, 1883; graduated from Bethel Military Academy in 1901;
B. L. University of Virginia in 1903; admitted to the bar in 1904, and practiced
law until 1922, when accepted appointment as judge of the corporation court
of Alexandria; resigned this position in 1928 to accept appointment as judge of
the sixteenth judicial circuit of Virginia; resigned as judge in 1930 to run for
Congress; Commonwealth’s attorney of Alexandria from 1918 until he resigned
WASHINGTON Biographical : 121
to accept appointment on the bench in 1922; during World War served as assistant
general counsel to Alien Property Custodian; is director and president of the
Alexandria, National Bank; trustee and vice president of National Florence
Crittenton Mission; engaged in farming and dairying; member of the Maryland-
Virginia, Milk Producers Association; is married and has two children—Howard
Worth Smith, jr., and Violett Adelaide Smith; member of the Episcopal Church;
belongs to the fraternal orders of Elks, Masons, and Odd Fellows; elected to the
Seventy-second Congress by the following vote: Howard W. Smith, Democrat,
11,201; Dr. F. M. Brooks, Republican, 2,742; and John M. Daniel, Independent,
184; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress as a Member at Large from the
State of Virginia.
PATRICK HENRY DREWRY, Democrat, of Petersburg; member of the
State senate from 1912 to 1920; elected without opposition, April 27, 1920, to
fill the unexpired term of Hon. Walter Allen Watson, deceased, in the Sixty-
sixth Congress, and reelected to the Sixty-seventh, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth,
Seventieth, Seventy-first, Seventy-second, and Seventy-third Congresses.
COLGATE WHITEHEAD DARDEN, Jr., Democrat, of Algonquin Park,
Norfolk, Va.; born February 11, 1897, in Southampton County, Va.; graduated
from the University of Virginia with degree of B. A., and from Columbia Uni-
versity with M. A. and LL. B. degrees; Carnegie Fellowship, Oxford University;
married; lawyer; served in the Air Service United States Marine Corps, 1918-19;
member of General Assembly of Virginia, 1930-1932; elected a Representative
from the State at large to the Seventy-third Congress.
JOHN WILLIAM FLANNAGAN, Jr., Democrat, of Bristol, was born on a
farm in Louisa County, Va., February 20, 1885; educated in the public schools
of Louisa County, Va., and was graduated from Washington and Lee University
in 1907, with LL. B. degree; elected Commonwealth’s attorney of Buchanan
County, Va., in 1916; married Frances Deel Pruner, of Mendota, Washington
County, Va., in 1910, and they have 3 children—2 boys and 1 girl; elder, Central
Presbyterian Church, Bristol, Va., and teacher of men’s Bible class in same
church; trustee, Grundy Presbyterian School, Grundy, Va.; has law office at
Clintwood. Dickenson County. Va., where he lived for years and where he still
spends most of his time; elected to the Seventy-second Congress over Hon.
Joseph C. Shaffer by a majority of 6,558, the largest majority received by a
candidate for Congress in the ninth district for the past 50 years, the vote being
Flannagan, 32,802, and Shaffer, 26,244; reelected from the State at large to the
Seventy-third Congress,
WASHINGTON
(Population (1930), 1,563,398)
SENATORS
CLARENCE C. DILL, Democrat, of Spokane, was born near Fredericktown,
Knox County, Ohio, September 21, 1884; attended country schools and gradu-
ated from Fredericktown High School, 1901; taught country school two years;
graduated from Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, 1907; newspaper
reporter on Cleveland Press and Cleveland Plain Dealer; taught in high school,
Dubuque, Iowa, and in Spokane, Wash.; admitted to the bar in State of Washing-
ton, 1910; served in office of prosecuting attorney for Spokane County, 1911-1913,
and as secretary to Gov. Ernest Lister one year; elected to House of Representa-
tives in 1914, reelected in 1916, and defeated in 1918; practiced law in Spokane;
married Rosalie Jones, of Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, N. Y., March 15,
1927; elected to the United States Senate, 1922 and 1928; in 1928 election Herbert
Hoover received 335,844 votes and Alfred Smith 156,772, and Clarence C. Dill
a 261,524, and his opponent, Kenneth Mackintosh, 227,415; term expires
in 1935.
BOMER TRUETT BONE, Democrat, of Tacoma, Wash., was born in
Franklin, Ind., January 25, 1883; became a practicing attorney in 1911; elected
to the State Legislature of Washington, 1923; elected United States Senator, 1932.
122 Congressional Directory WASHINGTON
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—Kirsap County. KING County: City of Seattle. Population (1930), 396,359.
MARION A. ZIONCHECK, Democrat, of Seattle, Wash.
SECOND DISTRICT.—Counrties: Clallam, Island, Jefferson, San Juan, Skagit, Snohomish, and
Whatcom. Xing County: Precincts of Avondale, Bothell 1 and 2, Broadview, Foy, Greenwood,
Haller Lake, Hollywood, Juanita, Kenmore, Lake City, Lake Forest, Maple Leaf, Meadow Point,
Morningside, North Park, North Trunk, Oak Lake, Ravenna, Richmond, Woodinville, and Wood
land. Population (1930), 236,238.
MONRAD C. WALLGREN, Democrat, of Everett, Wash., was born in Des
Moines, Iowa, April 17, 1891; moved, with his parents, to Galveston, Tex., in
1894, and to Everett, Wash., in 1901; attended the Everett public schools, busi-
ness college, and graduated from the Washington State School of Optometry in
1914; married Miss Mabel C. Liberty, in Everett, September 8, 1914; enlisted in
the Washington National Guard February, 1917, as a private in the Coast Artil-
lery Corps; commissioned as a second lieutenant at the Coast Artillery School,
Fort Monroe, Va., and during the World War served in the Sixty-third Regiment
Coast Artillery Corps and later as instructor in heavy field artillery at coast
defenses of Puget Sound; was honorably discharged March 19, 1919; served in the
Washington National Guard as adjutant of the third battalion in 1921-22; has
been actively engaged in the retail jewelry and optical business for 20 years in
the State of Washington; served as president of the Washington State Retail
Jewelers’ Association in 1921-22; affiliated with the Blue Lodge, Knight Templars,
Elks, Rotary, Eagles, American Legion, and Forty and Eight; national amateur
18.2 balk-line billiard champion in 1929; on his first political venture was elected
to the Seventy-third Congress, winning by a plurality of 18,200 votes, being the
first Democratic Representative to be elected from the second congressional
district of Washington.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Clark, Cowlitz, Grays Harbor, Lewis, Mason, Pacific, Skamania,
Thurston, and Wahkiakum (9 counties). 235,372.
. MARTIN F. SMITH, Democrat, of Hoquiam, Wash.; born in Chicago, Ill.,
May 28, 1891; lawyer; member of the American Bar Association for the past 16
years; married on May 28, 1929, to Margaret Genevieve Manty, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Manty, of Hamilton, Mont., and they have two children—
Margaret Louise, aged 3 years, and Marian Eleanor, 18 months old; served as
municipal judge of Hoquiam, 1914-1917; member of Hoquiam City Council,
1926-1928; mayor of Hoquiam, 1928-1930; gained wide prominence in the last
political campaign and was the organizer and president of the first Roosevelt-
for-President Club in Washington; principal speaker and guest of honor at a
banquet in Portland, Oreg., when the Roosevelt-for-President League in that
State launched its activities; elected to the Seventy-third Congress, being the
first Democrat elected as a Representative from the third Washington district,
and receiving 38,713 votes, to 28,397 for his fellow-townsman, Hon. Albert
Johnson, Republican Representative for the last 20 years.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Asotin, Benton, Columbia, Franklin, Garfield, Grant,
Kittitas, Klickitat, Walla Walla, Whitman, and Yakima (12 counties). Population (1930), 209,433.
KNUTE HILL, Democrat, of Prosser, Wash., was born on a farm near Creston,
I11., on July 31, 1876; graduated from Red Wing (Minn.) Seminary in 1893, and
received an LL. B. degree from the law department of Wisconsin University in
1906; married Helen Jensen, of Kilbourn, Wis., June 30, 1908; has resided in
Prosser, Wash., since May, 1911; practiced law, farmed, taught school, and lec-
tured since graduation from college; is a Progressive Democrat, and a member
of the Masonic fraternity, Eastern Star, and the Grange; elected as Democratic
representative to the State legislature from Benton County (strongly Republican)
in 1926, and reelected with increased majorities in 1928 and 1930; on November
8, 1932, was elected a Representative to the Seventy-third Congress, carrying
every one of the 12 counties in the district, and receiving 41,708 votes, as against
32,360 for John W. Summers, Republican.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Chelan, Douglas, Ferry, Lincoln, Okanogan, Pend Oreille, Spokane,
and Stevens (8 counties). Population (1930), 250,064.
SAMUEL B. HILL, Democrat, of Waterville; married; one child; educated
in public and private schools and the University of Arkansas; graduate of law;
prosecuting attorney two terms for Douglas County, Wash.; judge of superior
WEST VIRGINIA Biographical 123
court, Washington, seven years; elected to Sixty-eighth Congress at a special
election, September 25, 1923, and reelected to each succeeding Congress; member
Ways and Means Committee.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—County oF PIERCE. KiNG County: All that part not included in districts 1
and 2. Population (1930), 235,930.
WESLEY LLOYD, Democrat, of Tacoma, Wash.; born July 24, 1883, at
Arvonia, Kans.; lawyer, having been admitted to the bar in 1906; married and
has three children; elected a Member of the Seventy-third Congress, receiving
44 573 votes; John T. McCutcheon, Republican, 32,760 votes; Tom Martin,
Liberty, 11.554 votes; August Toellner, Independent, 102 votes.
WEST VIRGINIA
(Population (1930), 1,729,205)
SENATORS
HENRY D. HATFIELD, Republican; member of the county court, Mec-
Dowell County, 1904-1908; member of the State senate, 1908-1912; lieutenant
governor, 1911-12, and Governor of West Virginia, March 4, 1913, to 1917;
residence, Huntington, W. Va.
MATTHEW M. NEELY, Democrat, of Fairmont, was born at Grove, Dod-
dridge County, W. Va.; parents, Alfred Neely and Mary (Morris) Neely; served
in the West Virginia Volunteer Infantry throughout the Spanish-American War;
was graduated from the academic and law departments of West Virginia Uni-
versity; was admitted to the Marion County bar in 1902, and since that time
has been continuously engaged in the practice of law at Fairmont; was married,
October 21, 1903, to Miss Alberta Claire Ramage, of Fairmont; they have two
sons—Alfred R. Neely and John Champ Neely, and one daughter, Corinne Neely;
was mayor of Fairmont, 1908, 1910; clerk of the House of Delegates of West
Virginia, 1911-1913; was elected to the Sixty-third Congress, October 14, 1913, to
fill an unexpired term; reelected to the Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixty-
sixth Congresses; elected United States Senator in 1922; unsuccessful candidate
for reelection in 1928; again elected to the United States Senate in 1930 for the
term expiring in 1937.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—CoOUNTIES: Brooke, Hancock, Marion, Marshall, Ohio, Taylor, and Wetzel
(7 counties). Population (1930), 273,185.
ROBERT LINCOLN RAMSAY, Democrat, of Follansbee, W. Va.; born in
Durham, England, March 24, 1877, son of John and Elizabeth (Lumsdon)
Ramsay, and was brought to America, when 4 years old, to New Cumberland,
W. Va.; attended the schools of Hancock County, W. Va., and was graduated
from the West Virginia University in 1901 with the degree of LL. B.; began the
practice of law in New Cumberland in 1901, being associated with John R.
Donhoe; continued the partnership until 1905, when he removed to Wellsburg
and practiced alone; senior member of the firm of Ramsay & Wilkin, of Wellsburg,
since 1917; city attorney of Follansbee, 1905-1930; served two terms as prose-
cuting attorney of Brooks County, 1908-1912 and 1916-1920; appointed governor
at large, by Gov. Howard M. Gore, on the first board of governors for West
Virginia University; married Miss Edna Brindley, of Wellsburg, on February 12,
1908, and they have two children—Charlotte, teacher of Latin in Parsons (W. Va.)
High School, and Robert, jr., a student at West Virginia University; member of
the Christian Church and an Odd Fellow; elected to the Seventy-third Congress,
receiving 58,060 votes, Carl G. Bachmann, Republican, 55,023 votes, and Henry
L. Franklin, Socialist, 933 votes.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Barbour, Berkeley, Grant, Hampshire, Hardy, Jefferson, Mineral,
Mongigs, Morgan, Pendleton, Preston, Randolph, and Tucker (13 counties). Population (1930),
248,230.
JENNINGS RANDOLPH, Democrat, of Elkins, Randolph County, W. Va.;
born at Salem, W. Va., March 8, 1902, the son of Ernest Randolph and Idell
(Bingman) Randolph; attended public schools of Salem and was graduated from
124 Congressional Directory WEST VIRGINIA
Salem Academy in 1920 and from Salem College with a bachelor of arts degree
and cum magna laude in 1924; following graduation became a member of the
editorial staff of the Clarksburg Daily Telegram and later was associate editor of
the West Virginia Review, at Charleston; head of the department of public
speaking and journalism at Davis and Elkins College since 1926, also acting as
director of athletics and publicity for that Presbyterian institution; during a
part of the summer of 1929 was a lecturer with the Redpath Chautauqua; in
1931 was elected district governor of the Lions Clubs of West Virginia; was
married February 18, 1933, to Miss Mary Katherine Babb, of Keyser; member
of the National Press Club, the University Club of Washington, the Newspaper
Club of New York City, and the Lions Clubs; unsuccessful candidate for Congress
in 1930 against Frank L. Bowman, Republican, losing by 1,111 votes; on Novem-
ber 8, 1932, was elected a Member of the Seventy-third Congress, defeating
Frank L. Bowman by 7,501 votes.
THIRD DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Braxton, Clay, Doddridge, Gilmer, Harrison, Lewis, Nicholas,
Ritchie, Upshur, and Webster (10 counties). Population (1930), 225, 634.
LYNN SEDWICK HORNOR, Democrat, of Clarksburg; born November 3,
1877, in Clarksburg, W. Va.; graduated from Clarksburg High School; engaged
in natural-gas production; elected to the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to
the Seventy-third Congress. :
FOURTH DISTRICT.—Counmies: Cabell, Calhoun, Jackson, Mason, Pleasants, Putnam, Roane,
Tyler, Wirt, and Wood (10 counties). Population (1930), 256,988.
GEORGE WILLIAM JOHNSON, Democrat, of Parkersburg, W. Va., was
born near Charles Town, Jefferson County, W. Va., in the Shenandoah Valley;
son of George Dallas and Ann Elizabeth (Henry) Johnson, farmers; reared on the
old homestead farm, Violet Knoll; educated in the common schools of the county,
and attended Shepherd College State Normal School, Shepherdstown, W. Va.;
later entered the University of West Virginia and graduated with the degrees of
A. B. and LL. B.; began the practice of law in Martinsburg, W. Va., in the law
firm composed of former United States Senator Charles J. Faulkner and Col.
Stuart W. Walker; later removed to Parkersburg and has practiced there ever
since; has served as a member of the board of regents of the State normal school;
referee in bankruptey of the United States district court of West Virginia; general
counsel to the West Virginia Public Service Commission; married Mary A.
McKendree (daughter of Maj. George and Irene (McComas) McKendree), who
was the nominee on the Democratic ticket for Congress (short term) in 1930;
of this union there are two children, Mildred Elizabeth and George McKendree
Johnson; elected to the Sixty-eighth Congress and was a member of the Agricul-
ture Committee.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—CouNmEs: Lincoln, McDowell, Mercer, Mingo, Monroe, Summers, Wayne, and Wyoming (8 counties). Population (1930), 293,826. : ;
JOHN KEE, Democrat, of Bluefield, W. Va., was born at Glenville, Gilmer
County, W. Va., August 22, 1874, the son of Jasper N. and Louisa Campbell Kee;
educated at Glenville State Normal School and at the law school of the West
Virginia University; lawyer; assistant counsel of the Virginian Railway, 1902-
1910; in professional practice at Bluefield, 1910-1916; special legal work in Mexico,
1916-1918; engaged since in practice of profession at Bluefield; member of the
State senate, 1923-1927; married September 7, 1926, to Mrs. Maude Elizabeth
Frazier, of Roanoke, Va.; nominated for Congress, on the Democratic ticket,
on May 20, 1932, and at the ensuing general election defeated the then incumbent,
Hugh Ike Shott, of Bluefield; Mr. Kee received 61,277 votes, and his opponent
received 56,355 votes; member of the law firm of Kee & Lubliner, of Bluefield;
member of the Christ Episcopal Church, Bluefield.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Boone, Fayette, Greenbrier, Kanawha, Logan, Pocahontas, and
Raleigh (7 counties). Population (1930), 431,342.
JOE L. SMITH, Democrat, of Beckley, was born May 22, 1880, at Marshes,
Raleigh County, W. Va.; parents, Hulett A. and Angeline (McMillion) Smith;
attended the public schools; engaged for 20 years in the printing and pub-
lishing business, owning and editing the Raleigh Register at Beckley; has been
active in politics, and was four times elected mayor of Beckley, being the incum-
WISCONSIN Biographical 125
bent thereof when elected to Congress; member of the West Virginia Senate,
sessions 1909 and 1911; married, September 9, 1914, to Christine Carlson, of
Annapolis, Md., and they have two sons—Joe L., jr., and Hulett C.; he is presi-
dent of the Beckley National Exchange Bank; affiliated with the Masons and
Elks; Presbyterian Church; elected to the Seventy-first Congress, November 6,
1928, from the sixth congressional district of West Virginia, defeating BE. T.
England, Republican, by a majority of 228 votes; the total vote was England,
67,617, Smith, 67,845; reelected to the Seventy-second Congress, defeating Fred
O. Blue, Republican, of Charleston, by a majority of 18,952, and to the Seventy-
third Congress by a majority of 23,426 over J. O. Lakin, Republican, of Charleston.
WISCONSIN
(Population (1930), 2,939,006)
SENATORS
ROBERT M. LA FOLLETTE, Jr., Republican (Progressive), Madison, Wis.;
born February 6, 1895; elected to the United States Senate on September 29,
1925, to fill the unexpired term of his father, Robert M. La Follette; on Novem-
ber 6, 1928, reelected, the total vote being: W. H. Markham, Independent, a
regular Republican, 81,302; Robert M. La Follette, jr., Republican, 635,376;
his term expires in 1935.
F. RYAN DUFFY, Democrat, was born at Fond du Lac, Wis., June 23, 1888,
and lives to-day in the house of his birth; was educated in the public schools,
graduating from the Fond du Lac High School; also graduated from the Univer-
sity of Wisconsin, College of Letters and Science, in 1910, and from the College of
Law in 1912; practiced law continuously at Fond du Lae, except for 25 months’
service in the Army during the World War; married, January 26, 1918, to Louise
Haydon, of Springfield, Ky., and they have four children; elected a United States
Senator on November 8, 1932, receiving 610,236 votes, and defeating John B.
Chapple, Republican, who received 387,668 votes.
REPRESENTATIVES
FIRST DISTRICT.—Counmes: Green, Kenosha, Racine, Rock, and Walworth (5 counties). Popu- lation (1930), 280,628. 3
GEORGE W. BLANCHARD, Republican, of Edgerton, Wis.; born January
26, 1884, at Colby, Wis.; attended the University of Wisconsin, receiving B. A.
degree in 1906 and LL. B. degree in 1910; married; lawyer; city attorney of
Edgerton from 1913 until his resignation in December, 1932; member of the
Wisconsin Assembly in 1924; elected to the State senate in 1926 and again in 1930;
elected to the Seventy-third Congress on November 8, 1932.
SECOND DISTRICT.—CouNmEs: Columbia, Dane, Dodge, Jefferson, and Waukesha (5 counties).
Population (1930), 284,475.
CHARLES WILLIAM HENNEY, M. D,, F. A. C. S., Democrat, of Portage,
Columbia County, Wis.; born in Dunlap, Iowa, February 2, 1885, son of George
Elbridge and Sarah Jane (Hanigan) Henney; reared on a farm; attended district
school and Denison Normal School, Denison, Iowa, 1903; taught district school
for three terms; entered Fremont Normal School, Fremont, Nebr., 1905; gradu-
ated in pharmacy, 1906; entered Northwestern University, Chicago, 1906, and
graduated in 1910; interne, Cook County Hospital, Chicago, 1910-1912; regis-
tered to practice medicine in Iowa, Montana, and Wisconsin; married Margaret
Elizabeth Tierney in 1915; admitted by examination to Fellowship in the Amer-
ican College of Surgeons in 1927, and attended clinics in Europe that same year;
member of Columbia County, Wisconsin State, American, and International
Clinics Medical Associations; president of Columbia County Medical Society,
1928-1930; chief of staff of St. Savior’s Hospital, Portage, Wis., 1926-27; division
surgeon of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railway Co., 1914-1933;
member of Portage City Park Commission, 1925-1933; elected to the Seventy-
third Congress by a vote of 63,091, his nearest competitor, John B. Gay, Republi-
can, receiving 47,193 votes.
126 Congressional Directory WISCONSIN
THIRD DISTRICT.—CounTiEs: Crawford, Grant, Iowa, Juneau, La Crosse, Lafayette, Monroe,
Richland, Sauk, and Vernon (10 counties). Population (1930), 274,488. :
GARDNER R. WITHROW, Republican, of La Crosse, was born in La Crosse,
Wis., October 5, 1892; was educated in the grade schools and high school of
that city, and after two years of legal training entered the train service of the
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad Co.; member of the Wisconsin Assembly
in 1926-27 and served as State legislative representative for the railroad'brother-
hoods from 1928 to 1931; elected on November 4, 1930, to the Seventy-second
Congress; reelected to the Seventy-third Congress.
FOURTH DISTRICT.—MiILWAUKEE COUNTY: City of Milwaukee, wards 3, 4, 5, 8, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17,
23, 24, and 27; cities of Cudahy, South Milwaukee, Wauwatosa, and West Allis, towns of Franklin,
Sod, Lake, Oak Creek, and Wauwatosa, and village of West Milwaukee. Population (1930),
53,521.
RAYMOND J. CANNON, Democrat, of Milwaukee, Wis.; born August 26,
1894, in Ironwood, Mich.; his father and mother died when he was 6 months of
age; spent his early life in home for dependent children; graduated from high
school, and at the age of 17 taught school for one year; worked his way through
Marquette University Law School by playing professional baseball; graduating
at the age of 21 he was then admitted to the bar; has developed the largest law
practice of any lawyer in the State of Wisconsin, and has the reputation of trying
more jury cases during the past 15 years than any other lawyer in the State,
being also recognized as one of the leading lawyers in the Middle West; in 1928
he was suspended from the practice of law because of his success in winning large
verdicts against corporations and insurance companies; in the primary election
he received more votes than his seven opponents combined; and on November 8,
1932, he was elected to the Seventy-third Congress, receiving 63,622 votes, while
Congressman John C. Schafer, Republican, received 23,229, and Walter Pola-
kowski, Socialist, received 24,306.
FIFTH DISTRICT.—MILwAURKEE County: City of Milwaukee, wards 1, 2, 6, 7, 9, 10, 13, 15, 18, 19, 20,
21, 22, 25, and 26, towns of Granville and Milwaukee, and villages of Fox Point, River Hills, Shorewood,
and Whitefish Bay. Population (1930), 371,742.
THOMAS O'MALLEY, Democrat, of Milwaukee, Wis.; born March 24, 1901,
in Milwaukee; educated in the public schools of Milwaukee, Loyola High School
of Chicago, and attended Loyola College, majoring in arts and sciences; took a
postgraduate course in commerce and economics at the Y. M. C. A. College of
Liberal Arts, Chicago, Ill.; publicity director, sales promotion, and advertising
counsel; author and editor; delegate to National Conference on Street and High-
way Safety, Washington, D. C.; honorary member of International Association
of Chiefs of Police; widower, with one child; elected a Member of the Seventy-
third Congress, receiving 57,294 votes, and defeating his nearest opponent by a
plurality of 24,735 votes.
SIXTH DISTRICT.—CountIiES: Calumet, Fond du Lac, Ozaukee, Sheboygan, Washington, and
Winnebago (6 counties). Population (1930), 268,533.
MICHAEL K. REILLY, Democrat, of Fond du Lae, Wis.; born in the town
of Empire, Fond du Lac County, Wis.; educated in country school, Oshkosh
Normal, and University of Wisconsin—college of letters 1894, law 1895; un-
married; member of law firm of Reilly & Cosgrove; Member of the Sixty-third
and Sixty-fourth Congresses, 1913-1917; elected on November 4, 1930, to fill
the unexpired term of Hon. Florian Lampert, deceased, in the Seventy-first
Congress, and the full term for the Seventy-second Congress; reelected to the
Seventy-third Congress.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.—CouNTIES: Adams, Green Lake, Langlade, Marathon, Marquette, Portage,
Shawano, Waupaca, Waushara, and Wood (10 counties). Population (1930), 276,625.
GERALD JOHN BOILEAU, Republican, of Wausau, Wis., was born at
Woodruff, Wis., January 15, 1900; attended Minocqua High School; enlisted in
the United States Army during the World War, and served 18 months, 12 months
of which was with the American Expeditionary Forces; graduated from Mar-
uette University law school in 1923; four years district attorney of Marathon
ounty; delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1928; married to
Monica McKeon, of Superior, Wis., in 1925, and they have two children; elected
to Seventy-second and Seventy-third Congresses.
WYOMING Biographical 127
EIGHTH DISTRICT.—Counties: Brown, Door, Florence, Forest, Kewaunee, Manitowoc, Mari-
nette, Oconto, and Outagamie (9 counties). Population (1930), 300,734.
JAMES FREDERIC HUGHES, Democrat, of De Pere, Wis.; born at Green
Bay, Wis., August 7, 1883, son of James and Emma Hughes; graduated from
West Green Bay High School in 1901; married Emma Lou Adams in 1913, and
they have one son—James Hughes, jr.; member of the De Pere Board of Educa-
tion; served as chairman of the eighth Wisconsin Democratic congressional
committee, 1928-1932; member of the Democratic State central committee,
1920-1924; elected delegate to the Democratic National Conventions at San
Francisco in 1920, and at Houston, Tex., in 1928; associated as western repre-
sentative of the F. B. Stevens (Inc.); elected to the Seventy-third Congress,
defeating George J. Schneider, Republican opponent, by a vote of 53,414 to
51,887.
NINTH DISTRICT.—CouNmies: Barron, Buffalo, Chippewa, Clark, Dunn, Eau Claire, Jackson,
Pepin, Pierce, St. Croix, and Trempealeau (11 counties). Population (1930), 283,588.
JAMES A. FREAR, Republican, of Hudson, Wis.; born in that city; gradu-
ated from the National Law University; city attorney, Hudson; district attor-
ney, three terms; Wisconsin Assembly, 1902; State senate, 1904; secretary of
state, three terms; elected to the Sixty-third and all subsequent Congresses.
TENTH DISTRICT.—CountiEs: Ashland, Bayfield, Burnett, Douglas, Iron, Lincoln, Oneida, Polk,
Price, Rusk, Sawyer, Taylor, Vilas, and Washburn (14 counties). Population (1930), 244,672.
HUBERT HASKELL PEAVEY, Republican, of Washburn, was born January
12, 1881, at Adams, Minn.; educated in high school and preparatory college;
mayor of Washburn for three terms; member Wisconsin Assembly, 1913-1915;
editor and publisher of weekly newspaper; raised a company of volunteers for
the Wisconsin National Guard in May, 1917, and was commissioned captain in
June, 1917, serving 17 months with the Thirty-second Division in the American
Expeditionary Forces during the World War; is married and has four chil-
dren; defeated opponent in primary election in 1922 by 5,318 votes and had no
opposition in general election for the Sixty-eighth Congress; reelected to Sixty-
ninth Congress by 48,234 votes, against 13,455 for Democratic opponent; re-
elected to Seventieth Congress, receiving 31,105 votes out of a total of 44,347
cast; reelected to Seventy-first Congress, receiving 56,586 votes out of a total of
68,540; reelected to Seventy-second Congress without opposition; reelected to
Seventy-third Congress by majority of more than 16,000.
WYOMING
(Population (1930), 225,565)
SENATORS
JOHN B. KENDRICK, Democrat, of Sheridan, was born in Cherokee County,
Tex., September 6, 1857; was educated in the public schools; went to Wyoming
in 1879; settled in the new State and engaged in stock growing, which business
he has followed ever since; was elected State senator in 1910 and served in the
eleventh and twelfth State legislatures; was elected governor of the State in
1914 and served until February, 1917, resigning to take his seat in the United
States Senate; reelected to the Senate in 1922 for the term ending March 3,
1929, and again in 1928 for the term ending in 1935.
ROBERT D. CAREY, Republican, of Careyhurst; born in Cheyenne, Wyo.,
August 12, 1878; was educated in the public schools of Cheyenne, Hill School
(Pottstown, Pa.), and Yale University; A. B., 1900; engaged in livestock growing
and farming; Governor of Wyoming, 1919-1923; elected to fill the unexpired
term of the late Francis E. Warren, and for a full term commencing March 4,
1931; his term of service will expire in 1937.
128 Congressional Directory PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
REPRESENTATIVE
AT LARGE.—Population (1930), 225,565.
VINCENT CARTER, Republican, of Kemmerer, was born in St. Clair, Pa.,
November 6, 1891; received early education in public schools of Pennsylvania
and then took a course in science and law; lawyer; deputy attorney general of
Wyoming, 1920-1923; member of Wyoming Board of Charities and Reform for
six years; former member of Wyoming Farm Loan Board and Wyoming Land
Board; chairman, State purchasing board; State auditor, 1923-1929; former
captain of Wyoming Cavalry; served in Marine Corps during the World War;
married; one son, and one daughter; elected to the Seventy-first, Seventy-second,
and Seventy-third Congresses.
ALASKA
(Population (1930), 59,278)
DELEGATE
ANTHONY JOSEPH DIMOND, Democrat, of Valdez, Alaska; born at
Palatine Bridge, N. Y., December 30, 1881, son of John P. and Emily Sullivan
Dimond; prospector and lawyer; United States Commissioner at Chisana, Alaska,
1913-14; special assistant United States attorney for the third judicial division
of Alaska, at Valdez, 1917; mayor of Valdez, Alaska, 1920-1922, 1925-1932;
member of senate, Alaska Territorial Legislature, at biennial sessions of 1923,
1925, 1929, and 1931; member for Alaska of General Counsel of American Bar
Association; married Dorothea Frances Miller, at Valdez, Alaska, February 10,
1916, and they had three children, Marie Therese, John Henry, and Anne Lillian,
all bornin Alaska;elected as a delegate to the Seventy-third Congress on November
8, 1932, receiving 9,949 votes, and defeating James Wickersham, Republican, who
received 3,820 votes.
HAWAII
(Population (1930), 368,336)
DELEGATE
LINCOLN LOY McCANDLESS, Democrat, of Honolulu, Hawaii, was born
in the State of Pennsylvania, town of Indiana, September 18, 1859; educated in
the public schools of West Virginia; located in Hawaii on February 15, 1882, and
has since been identified with Hawaii's agricultural development, at present being
engaged in ranching; served in the legislature of the Republic of Hawaii as rep-
resentative, 1898-1900, and in the legislature of the Territory of Hawaii as
senator, 1902-1906; in 1904 married Elizabeth Janet Cartwright, of New York;
on November 8, 1932, was elected Delegate to the Seventy-third Congress,
receiving 29,431 votes, a majority of 2,414 over his Republican opponent, Victor
Houston, who received 27,017 votes.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
(Population (1928), 12,604,100)
RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS
PEDRO GUEVARA, Nationalist; lawyer; was born in Santa Cruz, Laguna
Province, February 23, 1879; received early education in Ateneo Municipal
and San Juan de Letran, Manila, from which he graduated at the head of his
class in 1896, receiving A. B. degree; studied law at La Jurisprudencia and was
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Biographical 129
admitted to the Philippine bar in 1909; married Isidra Baldomero, of San
Felipe Neri, Rizal; has one son, Pedro, jr., mechanical engineer; joined the
forces fighting against Spain and, in 1897, took an important part in promoting
the peace agreement of Biak-na-bato, but shortly thereafter, the revolution
having again broken out, he rejoined the Filipino forces, remaining in service
throughout the Spanish-American War and the Philippine insurrection, being
one of the leaders of the Filipino forces at the battle of Mabitac, Laguna
Province, attaining the rank of lieutenant colonel; served on the military staff
which conferred with General Summers for a definite settlement of peace, which
was accomplished; with the signing of the peace agreement he accepted a posi-
tion in the organization created for the purpose of maintaining peace, serving
five years; resigned to enter the field of journalism, becoming editor of Soberania
Nacional, a newspaper devoted to the cause of Philippine independence; was
at different times city editor of Vida Filipina, La Independencia, Los Obreros,
and El Hijo del Siglo; also served as special correspondent of El Ideal and El
Debate; served as head of the Marine Union of the Philippines; in 1907 was
municipal councilor of San Felipe Neri; in 1909 was elected representative of
the second district of Laguna and reelected in 1912; was elected to the senate
in 1916 from the fourth district, which comprises the city of Manila and the
Provinces of Laguna, Rizal, and Bataan, and reelected in 1919; while serving
in the Philippine Legislature was the author of many important laws; has
always been deeply interested in educational development in the Philippines,
being chairman of the senate committee on public instruction and member of the
board of regents of the University of the Philippines; before his election as
Philippine Resident Commissioner, served as chairman of the committee on
finance of the Philippine Senate, and of the Philippine Bar Delegation, which
represented the islands in the International Bar Conference of the Far East held
in Peking, China, in 1921; member second Philippine Independence Mission to
the United States in 1922; member of the District of Columbia bar and admitted
to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States; elected Resident
Commissioner to the United States March 4, 1923, to March 4, 1926; reelected
to March 4, 1929, to March 4, 1932, and to March 4, 1935.
CAMILO OSIAS, Nationalist; educator, author, political leader, social worker;
first Filipino division superintendent of schools; former member of directorate of
the bureau of education; president of the National University; formerly sena-
tor from the second senatorial district, comprising the Provinces of La Union,
Pangasinan, and Zambales; was born in Balaoan, La Union, P. I., March 23,
1889; studied in his town, in Vigan (Ilocos Sur), in San Fernando (La Union),
and continued in America, being appointed government student to the United
States in 1905; was graduated from the Western Illinois State Teachers College,
Macomb, Ill., in 1908; attended the University of Chicago for two summer ses-
sions; resided in the city of New York, 1908-1910, and obtained his bachelor of
science in education from Columbia University and his professional diploma in
educational administration and supervision from the Teachers College of New
York City; on his return from America, via Europe, he was assigned as teacher
in the high school, San Fernando, La Union, in 1910; supervising teacher, Bac-
notan, San Juan, and San Fernando, 1910-1914; married Ildefonsa Cuaresma;
academic supervisor of city schools, Manila, 1914-15; first Filipino superin-
tendent of schools, assigned to Bataan and later to Mindoro, 1915-16; assistant
chief, academic division, bureau of education in 1916; superintendent of schools
for Tayabas in 1917; second assistant director of education, 1917-1919; first
assistant director of education, 1920-21; member of the first Philippine mission
to the United States, 1919-20; secretary-treasurer and first vice president, Philip-
pine Amateur Athletic Federation, 1918-1929; head of Philippine Delegation,
once to Japan, and twice to China; professorial lecturer, University of the
Philippines, 1919-1921; president National University, December 1, 1921, to the
present time; doctor of laws; was awarded the Columbia University medal for
service, October, 1929; author of the series of eight Philippine readers used in
the Philippine public schools, Education in the Philippines Under the Spanish
Régime, Rizal and Education, Barrio Life and Barrio Education, Our Educa-
tion and Dynamic Filipinism, ete.; senator from the second senatorial district,
June, 1925, to February 7, 1929, being credited with the largest majority ever
obtained by a Filipino elective official; elected Resident Commissioner from the
Philippines to the United States Congress from March 4, 1929, to March 3, 1932;
reelected to March 3, 1935.
157297°—73-1—1sT ED——10
130 Congressional Directory PUERTO RICO
PUERTO RICO
(Population (1930), 1,543,913)
RESIDENT COMMISSIONER
SANTIAGO IGLESIAS, Coalitionist, of Puerto Rico, was born in Coruna,
Spain, February 22, 1872; attended the common public schools up to the age of
12 to learn cabinet making; in 1901 was appointed by Samuel Gompers as general
organizer of the American Federation of Labor for the district of Puerto Rico and
Cuba; in 1898 founded the Free Federation of Workingmen in Puerto Rico;
elected to the senate of the Puerto Rican Legislature in 1917 and reelected every
four years up to 1932, when he was elected Resident Commissioner to the United
States Congress; served as secretary of the Pan American Federation of Labor
since 1925; has been active in organizing the workingmen of Puerto Rico and
other Pan American countries under the auspices of the American Federation of
Labor; founded and edited three labor papers—Porvenir Social, 1898-1900;
Union Obrera, 1903-1906; Justicia, 1914-1925; published the first volume of a
historical sketch of many activities of his life; married in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico,
in 1902, and has 11 children; elected to the Seventy-third Congress by a vote of
208,226, to 170,162 for Benigno Fernandez, Liberal, and 5,254 for Julio Medina
Gonzalez, Nationalist,
STATE DELEGATIONS
131
STATE DELEGATIONS
[Democrats in roman; Republicans in italic; Farmer-Labor in SMALL CAPS]
ALABAMA
SENATORS
Hugo L. Black. John H. Bankhead.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 9]
1. John McDuffie. 4. Lamar Jeffers. 7. William B. Bankhead.
2. Lister Hill. 5. Miles C. Allgood. 8. Edward B. Almon.
3. Henry B. Steagall. 6. William B. Oliver. 9. George Huddleston.
ARIZONA
SENATORS
Henry F. Ashurst. Carl Hayden.
REPRESENTATIVE
[Vacant, 1]
At large—[Vacant.]
ARKANSAS
SENATORS
Joseph T. Robinson. Hattie W. Caraway.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 7]
1. William J. Driver. 4. Ben Cravens. 7. Tilman B. Parks.
2. John E. Miller. 5. Heartsill Ragon.
3. Claude A. Fuller. 6. D. D. Glover.
CALIFORNIA
SENATORS
Hiram W. Johnson. William Gibbs McAdoo.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 11; Republicans, 9]
1. Clarence F. Lea. 8. John J. McGrath. 15. William I. Traeger.
2. Harry L. Englebright. 9. Denver S. Church. 16. John F. Dockweiler.
3. Frank H. Buck. 10. Henry E. Stubbs. 17. Charles J. Colden.
4. Florence P. Kann. 11. William E. Evans. 18. John H. Burke.
5. Richard J. Welch. 12. John H. Hoeppel. 19. Samuel L. Collins.
6. Albert E. Carter. 13. Charles Kramer. 20. George Burnham.
7. Ralph R. Eltse. 14. Thomas F. Ford.
133
134 Congressional Directory
COLORADO
SENATORS
Edward P. Costigan. Alva B. Adams.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 4]
1. Lawrence Lewis. 3. John A. Martin. 4. Edward T. Taylor.
2. Fred Cummings.
CONNECTICUT
SENATORS
Frederic C. Walcott. Augustine Lonergan.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 2; Republicans, 4]
At large—Charles M. Bakewell
1. Herman P. Kopple- 2. William L. Higgins. 4. Schuyler Merritt.
mann. 3. Francis T. Maloney. 5. Edward W. Goss.
DELAWARE
SENATORS
Daniel O. Hastings. John G. Townsend, jr.
REPRESENTATIVE
[Democrat, 1]
At large— Wilbur L. Adams
FLORIDA
: SENATORS
Duncan U.: Fletcher. Park Trammell.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 5]
At large— William J. Sears
1. J. Hardin Peterson. 3. Millard F. Caldwell. 4. J. Mark Wilcox.
2. R. A. Green.
GEORGIA
SENATORS
Walter F. George. Richard B. Russell, jr.
REPRESENTATIVES
| Democrats, 9; vacant, 1]
1. Homer C. Parker. 5. Robert Ramspeck. 9. John S. Wood.
2. B. BE. Cox. 6. Carl Vinson. 10. [Vacant.]
3. Bryant T. Castellow. 7. Malcolm C. Tarver.
4. BE. M. Owen. 8. Braswell Deen.
IDAHO
SENATORS
William E. Borah. James P. Pope.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 2]
1. Compton I. White. 2. Thomas C. Coffin.
State Delegations
ILLINOIS
SENATORS
William H. Dieterich:
REPRESENTATIVES
J. Hamilton Lewis.
[Democrats, 19; Republicans, 8]
tl At large—Martin A. Brennan; Walter Nesbit. :
Oscar De Priest.
135
{1 10. James Stimpson, jr. 19. D. C. Dobbins.
2. P. H. Moynihan. 11. Frank R. Reid. 20. Henry T. Rainey.
3. Edward A. Kelly. 12. John T. Buckbee. 21. J. Earl Major.
4. Harry P. Beam. 13. Leo E. Allen: 22. Edwin M. Schaefer.
5. Adolph J. Sabath. 14. Chester Thompson.: = 23. William W. Arnold.
6. Thomas J. O’Brien. 15. J. Leroy Adair. 24. Claude V. Parsons.
7. Leonard W. Schuetz. 16. Everett M. Dirksen. 25. Kent E. Keller.
8. Leo Kocialkowski. 17. Frank Gillespie.
9. Fred A. Britten. 18. James A. Meeks.
INDIANA
SENATORS
Arthur R. Robinson. Frederick Van Nuys.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 12]
9. Eugene B. Crowe. 1. William T. Schulte. 5. Glenn Griswold.
2. George R. Durgan. 6. Virginia E. Jenckes. 10. Finly H. Gray.
3. Samuel B. Pettengill. 7. Arthur H. Greenwood. 11. William H. Larrabee.
4. James I. Farley. 8. John W. Boehne, jr. 12. Louis Ludlow.
IOWA :
SENATORS
L. J. Dickinson. Louis Murphy.
REPRESENTATIVES : i
[Democrats, 6; Republicans, 3]
1. Edward C. Eicher. 4. Fred Biermann. 7. Otha D. Wearin.
2. Bernhard M. Jacobsen. 5. Lloyd Thurston. 8. Fred C. Gilchrist.
3. Albert C. Williford. 6. Cassius C. Dowell. 9. Guy M. Gillette.
KANSAS
SENATORS
Arthur Capper. George McGill.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 3; Republicans, 4]
1. W. P. Lambertson. 4. Randolph Carpenter. 7. Clifford R. Hope.
2. U.S. Guyer. 5. W. A. Ayres.
3. Harold McGugin. 6. Kathryn O’Loughlin
McCarthy.
KENTUCKY
SENATORS
Alben W. Barkley. M. M. Logan.
REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE)
[Democrats, 9]
Fred M. Vinson.
John Y. Brown.
Andrew J. May.
Brent Spence.
Virgil Chapman.
Glover H. Cary.
Cap R. Carden.
Finley Hamilton.
William V. Gregory.
136 Congressional Directory
LOUISIANA
SENATORS
Huey P. Long. John H. Overton.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 8]
1. Joachim O. Fernandez. 4. John N. Sandlin. 7. René L. DeRouen.
2. Paul H. Maloney. 5. Riley J. Wilson. 8. Cleveland Dear.
3. Numa F. Montet. 6. Bolivar E. Kemp.
MAINE
SENATORS
Frederick Hale. Wallace H. White, jr.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 2; Republican, 1]
1. Carroll L. Beedy. 2. Edward C. Moran, jr. 3. John G. Utterback.
MARYLAND
. SENATORS
Millard E. Tydings. Phillips Lee Goldsborough.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 6]
1. T. Alan Goldsborough. 3. Vincent L. Palmisano. 5. Stephen W. Gambrill.
2. William P. Cole, jr. 4. Ambrose J. Kennedy. 6. David J. Lewis.
MASSACHUSETTS
SENATORS
David I. Walsh. Marcus A. Coolidge.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 5; Republicans, 10]
1. Allen T. Treadway. 7. William P. Connery, 11. John J. Douglass.
2. William J. Granfield. jr. 12. John W. McCormack.
3. Frank H. Foss. 8. Arthur D. Healey. 13. Richard B. Waiggles- |
4. Pehr G. Holmes. 9. Robert Luce. worth.
5. Edith Nourse Rogers. 10. George Holden Tink- 14. Joseph W. Martin, jr.
6. A. Piatt Andrew. ham. 15. Charles L. Gifford.
MICHIGAN
SENATORS
James Couzens. Arthur H. Vandenberg.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 11; Republicans, 6]
1. George G. Sadowski. 7. Jesse P. Wolcott. 12. W. Frank James.
2. John C. Lehr. 8. Michael J. Hart. 13. Clarence J. McLeod.
3. Joseph L. Hooper. 9. Harry W. Mussel- 14. Carl M. Weideman.
4. George Foulkes. white. 15. John D. Dingell.
5. Carl E. Mapes. 10. Roy O. Woodruff. 16. John Lesinski.
6. Claude E, Cady. 11. Prentiss M, Brown. 17. George A. Dondero.
State Delegations 137
MINNESOTA
SENATORS
HENRIK SHIPSTEAD. Thomas D. Schall.
REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE)
[Democrat, 1; Republicans, 3; Farmer-Labor, 5]
MAGNUS JOHNSON. ErNEST LUNDEEN. Ray P. Chase.
( Paon J. KvaLg. Theodore Christianson. Francis H. SHOEMAKER.
HENRY ARENS. Einar Hoidale. Harold Knutson.
MISSISSIPPI
SENATORS
Pat Harrison. Hubert D. Stephens.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 7]
1. John E. Rankin. 4. Jeff Busby. 7. Russell Ellzey.
2. Wall Doxey. 5. Ross A. Collins.
3. William M. Whitting- 6. William M. Colmer.
ton.
MISSOURI
SENATORS
Roscoe C. Patterson. Bennett Champ Clark.
REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE)
[Democrats, 13]
John J. Cochran. Frank H. Lee. Milton A. Romjue.
James R. Claiborne. James E. Ruffin. Richard M. Duncan.
Joseph B. Shannon. Ralph F. Lozier. Clement C. Dickinson.
Clyde Williams. Jacob L. Milligan.
Clarence Cannon. Reuben T. Wood.
MONTANA
SENATORS
Burton K. Wheeler. John E. Erickson.
REPRESENTATIVES .
[Democrats, 2]
1. Joseph P. Monaghan. 2. Roy E. Ayers.
NEBRASKA
SENATORS
‘George W. Norris. William H. Thompson.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 5]
1. John H. Morehead. 4. Ashton C. Shallenber- 5. Terry M. Carpenter.
2. Edward R. Burke. ger.
3. Edgar Howard.
138 Congressional Directory
NEVADA
SENATORS
Key Pittman. Pat McCarran.
REPRESENTATIVE
[Democrat, 1]
At large—James G. Scrugham
NEW HAMPSHIRE
SENATORS
Henry W. Keyes. Fred H. Brown.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrat, 1; Republican, 1]
1. William N. Rogers. 2. Charles W. Tobey.
NEW JERSEY
SENATORS
Hamalton F. Kean. W. Warren Barbour.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 4; Republicans, 10]
1. Charles A. Wolverton. 6. Donald H. McLean. 11. Peter A. Cavicchia.
2. Isaac Bacharach. 7. Randolph Perkins. 12. Frederick R. Lehlbach.
3. William H. Sutphin. 8. George N. Seger. 13. Mary T. Norton.
4. D. Lane Powers. 9. Edward A. Kenney. 14. Oscar L. Auf der
5. Charles A. Eaton. 10. Fred A. Hartley, jr. Heide.
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NEW MEXICO
SENATORS
Sam G. Bratton. Bronson Cutting.
REPRESENTATIVE
[Democrat, 1]
At large—Dennis Chavez
NEW YORK
SENATORS
Royal S. Copeland. Robert F. Wagner.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 29; Republicans, 16]
At large—Elmer E. Studley; John Fitzgibbons
. Robert L. Bacon. 15. John J. Boylan. 30. Frank Crowther.
William F. Brunner. 16. John J. O'Connor. 31. Bertrand H. Snell.
George W. Lindsay. 17. Theodore A. Peyser. 32. Francis D. Culkin.
Thomas H. Cullen. 18. Martin J. Kennedy. 33. Fred J. Sisson.
van.
Loring M. Black, jr. 19. Sol Bloom. 34. John D. Clarke.
Andrew L. Somers. 20. James J. Lanzetta. 35. Clarence E. Hancock.
John J. Delaney. 21. Joseph A. Gavagan. 36. John Taber.
. Patrick J. Carley. 22. Anthony J. Griffin. 37. Gale H. Stalker.
. Stephen A. Rudd. 23. Frank Oliver. 38. James L. Whitley.
. Emanuel Celler. 24. James M. Fitzpatrick. 39. James W. Wadsworth.
. Anning S. Prall. 25. Charles D. Millard. 40. Walter G. Andrews.
. Samuel Dickstein. 26. Hamzlton Fish, jr. 41. Alfred F. Beiter.
. Christopher D. Sulli- 27. Philip A. Goodwin. 42. James M. Mead.
28. Parker Corning. 43. Danzel A. Reed.
. William I. Sirovich. 29. James S. Parker.
|
i
State Delegations. 139
NORTH CAROLINA
SENATORS
Josiah W. Bailey. Robert R. Reynolds.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 11]
1. Lindsay C. Warren. 5. Frank Hancock. ° 9. Robert L. Doughton. : 2. John H. Kerr. 6. William B. Umstead. 10. Alfred L. Bulwinkle. 3. Charles L. Abernethy. 7. J. Bayard Clark. 11. Zebulon Weaver. 4. Edward W. Pou. 8. J. Walter Lambeth.
NORTH DAKOTA
SENATORS
Lynn J. Frazier. Gerald P. Nye.
REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE)
[Republicans, 2]
James H. Sinclair. William Lemke.
OHIO
SENATORS
Simeon D. Fess. Robert J: Bulkley.
REPRESENTATIVES
| [Democrats, 18; Republicans, 6]
| At large—Charles V. Truax; Stephen M. Young
| 1. John B. Hollister. 9. Warren J. Duffey. 17. Charles West. 2. William E. Hess. 10. Thomas A. Jenkins. 18. Lawrence E. Imhoff. 3. Byron B. Harlan. 11. Mell G. Underwood. 19. John G. Cooper. 4. Frank L. Kloeb. 12. Arthur P. Lamneck. 20. Martin L. Sweeney. 5. Frank C. Kniffin. 13. William L. Fiesinger. 21. Robert Crosser. | 6. James G. Polk. 14. Dow W. Harter. 22. Chester C. Bolton. 7. L. T. Marshall. 15. Robert T. Secrest.
| 8. Brooks Fletcher. 16. William R. Thom.:
| OKLAHOMA
|
| SENATORS
| Elmer Thomas. Thomas P. Gore.
| REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats 9]
| At large— Will Rogers
| 1. Wesley E. Disney. 4. Tom D. McKeown. 7. James V. McClintic. | 2. William W. Hastings. 5. Fletcher B. Swank. 8. E. W. Marland. 3. Wilburn Cartwright. 6. Jed Johnson. :
E OREGON
: SENATORS
Charles L. McNary. Frederick Steiwer.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 2; Republican, -1]
1. James W. Moti. : 2. Walter M. Pierce. 3. Charles H. Martin.
140 Congressional Directory
PENNSYLVANIA
SENATORS
David A. Reed. James J. Davis.
REPRESENTATIVES
: [Democrats, 11; Republicans, 23]
1. Harry C. Ransley. 13. George F. Brumm. 24. J. Buell Snyder.
2. James M. Beck. 14. William XE. Richard- 25. Charles I. Faddis.
3. Alfred M. Waldron. son. 26. J. Howard Swick.
4. George W. Edmonds. 15. Louis T. McFadden 27. Nathan L. Strong.
5. James J. Connolly. 16. Robert F. Rich. 28. William M. Berlin.
6. Edward L. Stokes. 17. J. William Ditter. 29. Charles N. Crosby.
7. George P. Darrow. 18. Benjamin K. Focht. 30. J. Twing Brooks.
8. James Wolfenden. 19. Isaac H. Doutrich. 31. Clyde Kelly.
9. Henry W. Watson. 20. Thomas C. Cochran. 32. Michael J. Muldow-
10. J. Roland Kinzer. 21. Francis E. Walter. ney.
11. Patrick J. Boland. 22. Harry L. Haines. 33. Henry Ellenbogen.
12. C. Murray Turpin. 23. J. Banks Kurtz. 34. Matthew A. Dunn.
Jesse H. Metcalf.
RHODE ISLAND
SENATORS
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 2]
Felix Hebert.
1. Francis B. Condon. 2. John M. O’Connell.
SOUTH CAROLINA
1. Thomas S. MeMillan.
2.
1.
2.
3.
Ellison D. Smith.
Hampton P. Fulmer.
Peter Norbeck.
1. Fred H. Hildebrandt.
Kenneth McKellar.
B. Carroll Reece.
J. Will Taylor.
Sam D. McReynolds.
SENATORS
James F. Byrnes.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 6]
3. John C. Taylor.
4. John J. McSwain.
SOUTH DAKOTA
SENATORS
5.
6.
James P. Richards.
Allard H. Gasque.
William J. Bulow.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 2]
TENNESSEE
SENATORS
2. Theo. B. Werner.
Nathan L. Bachman.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 7; Republicans, 2]
4.
5.
6.
J. R. Mitchell.
Joseph W. Byrns.
Clarence W, Turner.
7
8.
9.
Gordon Browning.
Jere Cooper.
Edward H. Crump.
|
|
State Delegations 141
TEXAS
SENATORS Morris Sheppard. Tom Connally.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 20; vacant, 1]
At large—George B. Terrell; Sterling P. Strong; J oseph W. Bailey, jr.
1. Wright Patman. 7. [Vacant.] 13. W. D. McFarlane. 2. Martin Dies. 8. Joe H. Eagle. 14. Richard M. Kleberg. 3. Morgan G. Sanders. 9. Joseph J. Mansfield. 15. Milton H. West. 4. Sam Rayburn. 10. James P. Buchanan. 16. R. Ewing Thomason. 5. Hatton W. Sumners. 11. O. H. Cross. 17. Thomas L. Blanton. 6. Luther A. Johnson. 12. Fritz G. Lanham. 18. Marvin Jones.
UTAH
’ SENATORS William H. King. Elbert D. Thomas.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 2]
1. Abe Murdock. 2. J. W. Robinson.
VERMONT
SENATORS Porter H. Dale. Warren R. Austin.
REPRESENTATIVE
[Republican, 1]
At large—Ernest W. Gibson
VIRGINIA
SENATORS
Carter Glass. Harry Flood Byrd.
REPRESENTATIVES (AT LARGE)
[Democrats, 9] .
Clifton A. Woodrum. Thomas G. Burch. Patrick H. Drewry. Andrew J. Montague. A. Willis Robertson. Colgate W. Darden, jr. Schuyler Otis Bland. Howard W. Smith. : John W. Flannagan, jr.
WASHINGTON
SENATORS
Clarence C. Dill. Homer T. Bone.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 6]
1. Marion A. Zioncheck. 3. Martin F. Smith. 5. Samuel B. Hill. 2. Monrad C. Wallgren. 4. Knute Hill. 6. Wesley Lloyd.
WEST VIRGINIA
SENATORS
Henry D. Hatfield. Matthew M. Neely.
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats, 6]
1. Robert L. Ramsay. 3. Lynn S. Hornor. 5. John Kee.
2. Jennings Randolph. 4. George W. Johnson. 6. Joe L. Smith.
142 Congressional Directory
WISCONSIN
SENATORS I
Robert M. La Follette, jr. F. Ryan Duffy.
REPRESENTATIVES |
[Democrats, 5; Republicans, §]
1. George W. Blanchard. 5. Thomas O’Malley. 9. James A. Frear. i
2. Charles W. Henney. 6. Michael K. Reilly. 10. Hubert H. Peavey.
3. Gardner RB. Withrow. 7. Gerald J. Boileau.
4. Raymond J. Cannon. 8. James Hughes.
WYOMING
SENATORS
John B. Kendrick. Robert D. Carey.
REPRESENTATIVE
[Republican, 1j
At large— Vincent Carter
ALASKA
DELEGATE
Anthony J. Dimond
HAWAII
DELEGATE
Lincoln L. McCandless
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS
Pedro Guevara. Camilo Osias.
PUERTO RICO : |
RESIDENT COMMISSIONER |
Santiago Iglesias
CLASSIFICATION
SENATE HOUSE |
Democrats. = 60 Democrats io 310
Bepublieans... 35°F Republieans. 117
Barmer-Tabor. -:: + oo Yi Parmer-Iabor. 0 o .. 5
Yaeant. oo te 3
Total ioc. od i. 96 Potal. Sidizdf a oF Dag 435
ALPHABETICAL LIST
143
aa
Sr
ALPHABETICAL LIST
Alphabetical list of Senators, Representatives, Delegates, and Resident Commission-
ers, showing State and district from which elected, city of residence, and political
alignment
SENATORS
[Democrats in roman (60); Republicans in italics (35); Farmer-Labor in SMALL CAPS (1); total, 96]
Name State City
Adams, Alva Boao oo ooo oo Colorado... Pueblo.
Ashurst, Henry: Boz... .. Avizonn,. oo. Prescott.
Austin, WarreniBdi. oo... Nerment. Burlington.
Bachmon, Nathan XL... ._......... Tennessee. Chattanooga.
Bailey, Josiah Wo... lel North Carolina______ Raleigh.
Bankhead, John. ooo. Alabang... Jasper.
Barbour, WacWarren.. .... ici: New Jersey... ____ Locust.
Barkley, Alben Wl... .-..3icaa Kentucky... Paducah.
Black, HugolL lool bo on Alabama... Birmingham.
Bone, HomeniT. io... ules Washington... Tacoma.
Borah, Willie: Bor eee 2 ddahel tr... Boise.
Bratton, Sam: Goo oo. New Mexico... Albuquerque.
Brown, Fred Hoot. oo .a nn New Hampshire ____ Somersworth.
Bulkley, Robert-J. cree Ohloh ol Cleveland.
Bulow, WilllamaJi oo. chic South Dakota.._.___._._ Beresford.
Byrd, Harry Floodt - i. -- - .auioas Virgin... ee ions Berryville.
Byrnes, James: Bo ... South Carolina______ Spartanburg.
Capper, Anlbtiralidod vc ncniannins Kansas so. Topeka.
Caraway, Hattie W. ~~... Arkansas oo... Jonesboro.
Carey, Boberti Do. 1h canine nid Wyoming... Careyhurst.
Clark, Bennett: Champ... ... Masser. one Clpdon, R..B.-Dx
0:1
Connally, Tomauccl-L... sudilius Mexadi Lain Marlin.
Coolidge, Marcus AL... .:l... Massachusetts. _ ____ Fitchburg.
Copeland, Boyal 8... .... LL NewYork: .....-- New York City.
Costigan, Edward 2... . Colorado... =. ..... Denver.
Couzensy James ool -vvvva du Michigan... Birmingham.
Cutting; Bross. oc vnc u sso ud New Mexico....____ Santa Fe.
Dale, Povtenillcadine-vcanco us Vermont... Island Pond.
Davis Jomesledal ao lona a Pennsylvania... ____. Pittsburgh.
Dickinson; Lio Jasail oon ih gwatbiooa bn Algona.
Dieterich, William H..._..______.. Ilinciss: Lv Beardstown.
Dill, Clarenge Qi oi- mooie ne Washington. ........ Spokane.
Duffy. Fr Byanaeaidol ooo cao ds Wiseonsin. i Fond du Lac.
Erickson, John BE... _.___i.. Montana. =... Kalispell.
Fess, Simeon Dail. io cublonis @hjelll: Yellow Springs.
Fletcher, Duncan JL... Blovidi b .o Jacksonville.
Frazier, Lynpdaleh bo oie ee North Dakota._..____ Hoople.
George, Walter Pol... .. Georgial..  .ouon Vienna.
Clase Carter 0 aL, Virgin Lynchburg.
Goldsborough, Phillips Lee______ ___ Maryland =... Baltimore.
Gore; Thomas Po... 0... 0 Oklahoma. ....... Oklahoma City.
Hale, Frederick. ooo: oovosi ll Maine eos 0. Portland.
Harrison, Pat... 0. -- .. ... Mississippi... -. Gulfport.
Hastings, Daniel 0. .. =: ave i Delaware... ...... Wilmington.
Hatfield, Henry Doosan nue ‘West Virginia... Huntington.
Hayden, Carl _ o_o. a... ul Arizona... 0... aan Phoenix.
Hebert; Pelz. res nea ia Rhodellsland.. . __. West Warwick.
Jolnson, Hirom We .o ono 2an vo Califormia_t=- San Francisco.
Kean, Homillon Bo cia io... New Jersey... “Ursino,”? - Union
County.
157297°—T73—1—1ST ED   145
146 Congressional Directory
SENATORS—Continued
Name State City
Kendrick, Jom B... ...... ..... Wyoming... ..... Sheridan.
Reyes Hemry W._.... ... ....... 8 New Hampshire ____ North Haverhill.
King, William H_.___.___ _._.. tal. oo oil Salt Lake City.
La Follette, Robert M., jr__________ Wisconsin_ _________ Madison.
Lewis, J. Hamilton. ...cccevonnun Minolges veces Chicago.
Yoram, ML. Mis Kentucky... ___.. Bowling Green.
Lonergan, Augustine_____________ Connecticut... _... Hartford.
Yonge, Huey P___ oc. aes Lounisiona. ____._. ..__ New Orleans.
McAdoo, William Gibbs._________ California... .. Los Angeles.
McCarran, Patios Lo... Nevado... Reno.
MeGlll, George... | Bansas oo... Wichita.
McKellar, Kenneth... ........... Denese. oui Memphis.
McNary, “Chaorlestl). 3 Oregon ...civvev un Salem.
Meicalf, Jasse Hii. ........c0lu1s Rhbode Island... ..-. Providence.
Murphy, Tounigasiis.. Sowa iii Dubuque.
Neely, Matthew M______________ West Virginia... .. Fairmont.
Norbeolk, Petepsigs South Dakota_______ Redfield.
Norris, George WIG. ee Nebraska... McCook.
Nye, Gerald BILel 00) North Dakota._.____. Cooperstown.
Overton, Jom JB. 08)... Louisiana... omnis Alexandria.
Patterson; Boscoe C-.. oao 557% ab BOER Kansas City.
Pittman, Key O00. |... 01020 Nevadal cece Tonopah.
Pope, JamesiPiay3lt | Idaho). eft Boise.
Reed, David’ Ai) 10g eee D200 4 Pennsylvania... Pittsburgh.
Reynolds, Robert RR... cco. North Carolina______ Asheville.
Robinson, AritburiB........ .. S000; Indians. ice Indianapolis.
Robinson, Joseph... ooo... Avkansas........ co... Little Rock.
Russell, Richard Bl, jr. 2 Georgia... coors Winder.
Schall, ThomostDii 2d... ......3 Minnesota... woo Minneapolis.
Sheppard, Morris... oo... 1000 TE SESE Dl Texarkana.
Suresreap, Henmix_ Minnesota. _._...._.. Miltona.
Smith, Ellison! Del |... South Carolina______ Lynchburg.
Steiwer, Frederick... 1900 Oregon lowe Portland.
Stephens, Hubert D.. .........._ J Mississippi... New Albany.
Thomas, Elbert DS... ooo taht a Salt Lake City.
Thomags Bieri eee Oklaborme............ Medicine Park.
Thompson, William H..._____. 00 Nebraska. «eee Grand Island.
Townsend Job Q.; 97. ce iin Delaware... Selby ville.
Trammell SPoarkeri id... 28 Blovlda..... ics Lakeland.
Tydings, Millardi BL... Maryland... . Havre de Grace.
Vandenberg, Arthur H....._._._____ Michigan... os Grand Rapids.
Van Nuys, Frederick_.__._________ Inldishal cco Indianapolis.
Wagner, Robert P10 NewYork... oi... New York City.
Walcott, Prederici Cry. id Connecticut. ...... Norfolk.
WalsheDaviddo iol... Massachusetts. _ ____ Clinton.
Wheeler, Burten' KX... Nontana... Butte.
White, Wallace H., Jr ........ . . 2 500% Mone i Auburn.
a \
3
EN
Ba
—
GS
ES
r Alphabetical List 147
REPRESENTATIVES
[Democrats in roman (310); Republicans in italics (117); Farmer-Labor in SMALL CAPS (5); vacant (3);
total, 435]
Dis- ; Name iric State City
Abernethy, Charles Li________ 3 | North Carolina____| New Bern.
4 Adair, J.sleroy. co. 1... ..._ 15: livols....... Quincy.
| Adams, Wilbur L.. .___ At L. | Delaware_________ Wilmington.
Aen, LieOsl eens s erases 134s inoise. Galena.
Allgood, Miles Cs... ... 5i3Alabams............ Gadsden.
Almon, Edward B,... _... _._ 8S xAlnbama... Tuscumbia.
Andrew, A Fiat. one. .o 6 | Massachusetts____| Gloucester.
Andrews, Waller Ge. 40 1 New. York... _.. __ Buffalo.
Anens, Henpy nor 2 02. At L..|- Minnesota... Jordan.
Arnold, William W.__________ 23.;sMnolss... Robinson.
: * Auf der Heide, Oscar L._____ 14 | New Jersey .........- West New York.
4 Ayers, Roy B....._.. _.. .... 2. Montana... .. Lewistown.
Avresy Wo A. ust... SisKansag.......___. Wichita.
Bacharach, Isautestss. enw 2 | New Jersey_______ Atlantic City.
8 Bacon, Bobert. li-vn. co... IgsNew- York... Old Westbury.
Bailey, Joseph Wilt... evant Abdi] Texas. dco Dallas.
: Bakewell, Charles M__.____.__| At L. | Connecticut. _____ New Haven.
Bankhead, William B________ 74 Alabama._._.__ Jasper.
Beam, Harry Poot 2... dilollinols.. 0. o_o Chicago.
Beek, Joes Moor... = 2 | Pennsylvania_____ Philadelphia.
Beedy, Cartollds co... .... Lh Maine. uaa. Portland.
Beiter, Alfred. F. .o............ 41a «New York... ..... Williamsville.
Berlin, Willlam M.:........__. 28 | Pennsylvania. ____ Greensburg.
§ Biermann, Fred... dilslownos do is Decorah.
i Black, Loring M.,«jr.. 54; New York. _.__.. Brooklyn.
| Blanchard, George W_________ 1s Wisconsin. ____. Edgerton.
y Bland, Schuyler Otis. ______._ At L.{sVirginin.......... Hampton.
B Blanton, Thomas L........... 1. iTexae. .... ..... Abilene.
Bloom, Sol. cbunptiners vans 19.iNew York... New York City.
Bochme, John W.,ijr. Sidndiana. ...._ Evansville.
Boileow,; Gadd Jan. o.oo... 7ijz Wisconsin... .... Wausau.
Boland, Patrick Jc... v-- 11 | Pennsylvania. ____ Scranton.
Bolion, Chester Co. ..... cen. Zr ONO. wnt cnn Lyndhurst.
Boylan, John.Jd. i’... .. ca : 15. New York. ....__ New York City.
Brennan, Martin A.__.._.____ At.L.#lllinels............. Bloomington.
J Britten, Fred. ots ous oo Ounlllinole.i ata. Chicago.
i Brooks, J. Twingo... .........- 30 | Pennsylvania. ____ Sewickley.
Brown,.John.Young......... At L. | Kentucky......._ Lexington.
Brown, Prentiss M.............. 11. {sMichigan..... _... St. Ignace.
{ .- Browning, Gordon... ....... 7 | Tennessee_ _..____._ Huntingdon.
Brumwm, George. Fvic mi vor eno... 13 | Pennsylvania. ____ Minersville.
Brunner, William F_________ 2: New York. .. __..__ Rockaway Park.
Buchanan, James P_________ I0cTexagsa. ©... i: Brenham.
Buek, Frank Hour... SelCalifornia. . ...... Vacaville.
Buckbee, Job Lotto nv ve cn 12. Tlinols. on ae a Rockford.
Bulwinkle, Alfred L_____.____ 10 | North Carolina_.___| Gastonia.
i Burch, Thomas Gc... ... Ab L.sbeVirginia. oi... Martinsville.
Burke, Edward R_._________ 2d Nebraska.......... Omaha.
Burke, JohnH... .. ... .... 131 California. ....... Long Beach.
Burnhom, George.cs vm = - 20: California. . .....: San Diego.
Bushy, Jolt. i cwaii mnvanas- 4 | Mississippi-_.._____ Houston.
I Byrns, Joseph W.ois- -.---- Ji Tennessee... _.... Nashville.
8 Cady, Claude EB... ...... OG: Michigan... ...._ Lansing.
Caldwell, Millard F._ ________ SolriPlovida oo... Milton.
Cannon, Clarence. __________ At Lj Missouri... ...... Elsberry.
Cannon, Raymond J... ... 4 |iWisconsin. .__.... Milwaukee.
| |
{
:
148 Congressional Directory
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Dis-   Name rich State City
Carden, Cap-B.....ccwewomws At L. Kentucky. .uuona- Munfordville.
Carley, Patrick J......cov vee SU New York... ... Brooklyn.
Carpenter, Randolph________ A angng. ooh Marion.
Carpenter, Terry M__________ 5 Nebraska... ..-..- Scottsbluff.
Corer, Albert’ BE... oe 6 California... Oakland.
Carier, Vineeplhis o_o ooo .c ACRE Wyoming... -<:. Kemmerer.
Cartwright, Wilburn_________ S4Oklahoma... >=: McAlester.
Cary, Glover He... ...... .- AVL Kentucky... --- Owensboro.
Castellow, Bryant T_________ Si Georgin.. o-oo % Cuthbert.
Covicolia, Peter A... oz: 11 | New Jersey_______ Newark.
Celler, Emanuel... .._....-. 104: New York... .-~: Brooklyn.
Chapman, Virgilo._.-....... AL)" Kentueky---..--- Paris.
Chase; Bay PP... .. . ....1 At L.'! Minnesota... Anoka.
Chavez, Dennis... ..... At L. | New Mexico______ Albuquerque.
Christianson, Theodore_ _ _ __ _- ACE Minnesota... Minneapolis.
Church, Denver S___.._....._ 9 'California........ Fresno.
Claiborne, James R_________ At Missouri. =. St. Louis.
Clark, J. Baysrd:.. o-oo: 7 | North Carolina____| Fayetteville.
Clarke, John D0 ooo) 34-New York... . .. Fraser.
Coeliran, John JL... --- AVL. "Missouri... .... St. Louis.
Cochran, Thomas C...- === -:= 20 | Pennsylvania_____ Mercer.
Coffin, Thomag'C......... 2/1 2% dado... Pocatello.
Colden, Charles Jno occ 171 California ---...- San Pedro.
Cole, William'P., jr...----.. 2: i Morviand--- ~~ Towson.
Collings, Ross* A... 20 5 | Mississippi-._..--- Meridian.
Collins, Samuel’'L......«--=-_-- 19° :California--- = Fullerton.
Colmer, William’'M......___. 64 Mississippt---- Pascagoula.
Condon, Francis B........__. 1 | Rhode Island._____ Central Falls.
Connery, William P., jr. ____ 7 | Massachusetts____| Lynn.
Connolly, James J: = -z----= 5 | Pennsylvania_____ Philadelphia.
Cooper,’ Jere. 50... .cocca:c 8 | Tennessee ______._ Dyersburg.
Cooper, John Ql... z:¢ 10M Ohio. noes Youngstown.
Corning, Parker: ©... ._..- 28:0: New York. --..- Albany.
Cox, FE. Bio 080. AI 2 Coeorgin.. oc =z: Camilla.
Cravens, Ben: 00000. --.... ACh Avkeansag ---__.: Fort Smith.
Crosby, Charles N__________ 29 | Pennsylvania. ___._ Meadville.
Crogs, QO HUNOGIS 0 oo 18 i Mewagls ooo o0 Waco.
Crosser, Robert... ...._. 2WHOhio. .... ca=-zz Cleveland.
Crowe, Eugene B___________ 9 indiana. oo Bedford.
Crowther, Frank. o.. ----.-:: 30° NewYork... __-. Schenectady.
Crump, Bdward WB: ..-.-----: 9 “Tennessee. ---_-__ Memphis.
Cullin, Francis’ Ds... ---. = - 32 |New York... -.. Oswego.
Cullen, Thomas H........ $5 New-York. .-..... Brooklyn.
Cummings, Fred. _.._.__... 2: Colorado.--_---_- Fort Collins.
Darden, Colgate W., jr______ At Yo Virginia... -_-_: Norfolk.
Darrow, George Pr — =.= 7 | Pennsylvania.___.. Philadelphia.
Dear, Cleveland: i. ___----.: S$ Louisiana. .-...-.- Alexandria.
Deen, Braswell 20... CUO 85 Georgian. _-o-----. Alma.
Delaney, John Joti... ..: 7‘ New York...._ «~~ Brooklyn.
De Priest, Oger... c----- == fe linole. oo ocaz Chicago.
DeRouen, René L______._____ 7 -Touiglana. ---- = Ville Platte.
Dickinson, Clement C.______ AVL. Missouri. ..------- Clinton.
Dickstein, Samuel _....._.___ ¥2' “New York... ....: New York City.
Dies, Martini / 2. =... Pons... casio Orange.
Dingell, John'DitL 15:0 Miechigan.----...- Detroit.
Dirksen, Everett M_._ _.._-_-__ Yo: llnols....- =~ Pekin.
Disney, Wesley BH. __________ ¥ "Oklahoma. ----_-_ Tulsa.
Ditier, "Williams. =z --z== 17 | Pennsylvania_ ____ Ambler.
Dobbin, D.C..-. ......... 19 Hineois............ Champaign.
Dockweller, John PF... .._ 16. California... Los Angeles.
Alphabetical List
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
149
Name Dis-
riot State City
Dondero, George A________
Doughton, Robert Li______
Douglass, John Jo... ____
Douirich, Isaoc Hs...
Dowell, Cassius:Ci..........
Doxey, Wall...L lL. _ ____.
Drewry, Patrick H_______
Driver, William J________
Duffey, WarrendJ.._.__.__.
Duncan, Richard M______
Dunn, Matthew A_______
Durgan, George R_______
Eagle, Joe Hi _.___
Paton, CharleséALL
Edmonds, George W_______
Eicher, Edward C________
Ellenbogen, Henry. ______
Elizey, Russell.
Elise, Ralph B.oud.. o -- -
Englebright, Harry L______
Boans, William E__ _ .____
Faddis, Charles I________
Farley, James 1 01 ©
Fernandez, Joachim O____
Fiesinger, William L______
Fish, Hamilton, 31 - ---. -
Fitzgibbons, John. ....._.
Fitzpatrick, James M_____
Flannagan, John W., jr
Fletcher, Brooks. ________
Focht, Benjamin K_______
Ford, Thomas Xo) _. __.
Foss, Frank H cl... ..
Foulkes, George. _________
Freory James Ais...
Fuller, Claude A_________
Fulmer, Hampton P______
Gambrill, Stephen W_____
Gasque, Allard H________
Gavagan, Joseph A_______
Gibson, Ernest Wi. _______
Gifford, CharlesiLZ. - .
Gilchrist; Fred Co. . -....
Gillespie, Frank... _______
Gillette, Guy M_________
Glover, D.iDug 0)...
Goldsborough, T. Alan___
Goodwin, Philip A________
Goss, Edward W__ ______._
Granfield, William J______
Gray, Finly Hoo...
Green, Robert A_________
Greenwood, Arthur H____
Gregory, William V______
Griffin, Anthony J_______._
Griswold, Glenn... _...
Guyer, U:-Bloido oo.
Haines, Harry Li. ___..
Hamilton, Finley. ___.____
Hancock, Clarence E______
18
a 14
od 3
Talis 43 Miehigan,.
— 9
1334 3
= 2
FETs | 5
6
Hod Vo Michigan...
ie io} 9 | North Carolina____
Sr 11 | Massachusetts. ___
Den 19 | Pennsylvania_____
le 6 Th ir Era
nite 2 | Mississippi_...._--
SoalidAt de Virginia. _
ere LW Arkansas...
La ENR ie
New Jersey _______
Pennsylvania_ _ ___
Towa:
Pennsylvania_ _ ___
Migsigsippl.....
California...
California. 7...
California...
Pennsylvania_____
miso =.
ow
DO
=
Ft
ES
OT
=
DD
SJ
J
00
=
i
OT
00
NO
ef ALTA Virginia. LoCo
ul ${Ohio_....._. ro
Pennsylvania__ ___
California
Massachusetts _ __
Wisconsin.=—
Arkansas =
South Carolina____
Maryland...
South Carolina____
Ea: 15 | Massachusetts_ ___
pucks, Sil Iowa Frc oo
lia 1: linolg Zoo
Eh g9shilowa ico
er! Gul Arkansasi o_o oC
Tee! dp Maryland.
ry 292 New York. >>
“ite SifiIndiana_ ooo.
Aili 243 Kankng. oo
Sn 22 | Pennsylvania_____
esi To) Kentucky. —
Tey 35 New York=._....
Royal Oak.
Laurel Springs.
Boston.
Harrisburg.
Des Moines.
Holly Springs.
Petersburg.
Osceola.
Toledo.
St. Joseph.
Mount Oliver,
Pittsburgh.
La Fayette.
Houston.
Plainfield.
Philadelphia.
Washington.
Pittsburgh.
Wesson.
Berkeley.
Nevada City.
Glendale.
Waynesburg.
Auburn.
New Orleans.
Sandusky.
Garrison.
Oswego.
New York City.
Bristol.
Marion.
Lewisburg.
Los Angeles.
Fitchburg.
Hartford.
Hudson.
Eureka Springs.
Orangeburg.
Laurel.
Florence.
New York City.
Brattleboro
Cotuit.
Laurens.
Bloomington.
Cherokee.
Malvern.
Denton.
Coxsackie.
Waterbury.
Springfield.
Connersville.
Starke.
Washington.
Mayfield.
New York City.
Peru.
Kansas City.
Red Lion
London.
Syracuse.
150 Congressional Directory
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Dis-   Name trict State City
Hancoel,; Frankel... 5 | North Carolina____| Oxford.
Harlan; Byron:B..._..._.oils SE Ohle. oto... Dayton.
Hart, Michaeb Jed... iliz Sif Michigan... Saginaw.
Harter, Dow-W..... Llu IE O0he: Akron.
Horley, Bred A397 eee eee 10 | New Jersey._______ Kearny.
Hastings, William W________ 2 Oklahoma... Tahlequah.
Healey, Arthur D..... . 8 | Massachusetts____| Somerville.
Henney, Charles W.__..______ 2: Wiseongin.....-.. Portage.
Hess, William Bos eve - 21100... mie Cincinnati.
Higgins, WilliamL 21 Connecticut... South Coventry.
Hildebrandt, Fred H...... cil 1 | South Dakota_____ Watertown.
Hill, Knute di... 4 | Washington_______ Prosser.
Hill, Lister... .c0 2:4 Alabama... .... Montgomery.
Hill, SomuebBo 5 | Washington... Waterville.
Hoeppel, John H_..__.__._._._ .: 12:4 Colifornin........... Arcadia.
Hoidale, Einar... .... cou At L.oV Minnesota... Minneapolis.
Hollisterg John Bi... ...... ¥diOhio. en... Cincinnati.
Holmes, PehrGLlia. ol 4 | Massachusetts____| Worcester.
Hooper, Joseph Li... ....... 3 Michigan... Battle Creek.
Hope, Clifford Boo... ep Ransas:l  ...... Garden City.
Honor Lynn: Sal... 3 | West Virginia_____ Clarksburg.
Boward, Bdehp-) 3:1) Nebraska... Columbus.
Huddleston, George. ________ 9-11 Alabama... Birmingham.
Hughes, James... 81 Wisconsin... De Pere.
Imhoff, Lawrence E_________ 18:{iO0Ohlo.... oo... St. Clairsville.
Jacobsen, Bernhard M_______ 2lowa oa oo Clinton.
James, W.- Frank \ _. ........ 12: Michigan... Hancock.
Jeflers, lamar a oo... Ll Alnbama._.C._ ...._. Anniston.
Jenckes, Virginia EB... .... GY Indiana] Terre Haute.
Jenkins, ThomasiA..... ovo. -- WY Ohloh ona af Ironton.
Johnson, George W.._._..____.. 4 | West Virginia_____ Parkersburg.
Johnson, Jedliiuc) nll 6:1: Oklahoma. - Anadarko.
Johnson, TLuther-A_ G3 Pekag. ui oo Corsicana.
JOHNSON, MAGNUS. ______.___ At L. | Minnesota... Kimball.
Jones, Mavvini oll L. .. _ _. ISH lokam. ee eee Amarillo.
Kahn, Florence PL: ~~. 4 California... San Francisco.
ReesJohmo cond oo oo. 5: West Virginia... Bluefield.
Keller, Kent: Bo. 2ils 250 lliholy. < Ava.
Kelly, Clyde muses =. 31 | Pennsylvania_____ Edgewood.
Kelly, Edward ALL... soils Sopililihols.. o_o... Chicago.
Kemp, Bolivar B__...... .... 6 | Louisiana... Amite.
Kennedy, Ambrose J________ 4: Maryland... ..-.. Baltimore.
Kennedy, Martin J... ..... 18 New York. ......- New York City.
Kenney, Edward A... .. .9 | New Jersey .---___ Cliffside Park.
Kerr, John Huei =o... 2 | North Carolina____| Warrenton.
Kinzer, J.>.Rolond i eee ioe 10 | Pennsylvania... ___ Lancaster.
Kleberg, Richard M 14: Texas. oo Corpus Christi.
Kloeb, Frankl... 4H Ohio... 0 Celina.
Kuoiffin, FrankrC.). BY Ohle.. as Napoleon.
Knutson; Harold... ....--...5 At L. | Minnesota________ St. Cloud.
Kocialkowski, Leo. ____.__ SV Iinois. eee Chicago.
Kopplemann, Herman P_____ 1 | Connecticut--____ Hartford.
Kramer, Charles... .... 13: i}! California. we Los Angeles:
Kurtz, JoBanksi ll een 23 | Pennsylvania_____ Altoona.
Kvaie, Paor/J. 2... At L.:|' Minnesota... Benson.
Lamberisony, Wile... cae 5 Koneag a Fairview.
Lambeth, J. Walter_________ 8 | North Carolina____| Thomasville.
Lamneck, Arthur P_________ 12: 00h soi Columbus.
Lanham, Fritz CG... - cu 12901 Tekas.. maa Fort Worth.
Lanzetta, James J...c oo _-- 20: | New York..omoun-- New York City.
Alphabetical List
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
151
Dis- a Name iric State City
Larrabee, William H________ 1. bindlang........... New Palestine.
Yea, Clarence ®_...0........ 11 Californin. Santa Rosa.
lee Prank Hc = 0 Ab LL, vMisgouri . - 01 Joplin.
Lehlbach, Frederick R_.______ 12 | New Jersey._______ Newark.
Yehy, JohniC. risen 2-1-Michigan__.....__ Monroe.
Lembo, William oo oon cai At L. | North Dakota____| Fargo.
Lesinshi, John, .-.. _ 16 dr Miehivon, "77 Dearborn.
Tews, David J. o.oo. G:aMaryiand_ Cumberland.
Lewis, Lawrence. oe ___ 11 Colorado... Denver.
Lindsay, George W... _______ S.uNew Yorlc ~~~ Brooklyn.
Yiovd, Wesley soon inaa a 6 | Washington_______ Tacoma.
Yozier, BAIDH Foi At I. «Missouri... Carrollton.
Lute, BoD ota aol 9 | Massachusetts. ___| Waltham.
Yudlow, Louis. anc omnena 12. -Indiana._......... Indianapolis.
LuNDREN, ERNEST. vee At L. | Minnesota________ Minneapolis.
McCarthy, Kathryn Bs Kahsasd, oi 0 Hays.
O’Loughlin.
MeClintie, James V._._.______ 7.Oklahoma = 1 Snyder.
McCormack, John W________ 12 | Massachusetts____| Dorchester.
MeDuflie, Johtiz ota on ai 1 i<Alabama......... Monroeville.
McFadden, Louts T__________ 15 | Pennsylvania_____ Canton.
MeVParlane, W.. D........ = 13 eas. Graham.
McGrath, Jom J... 2 8.1 Californian... .... San Mateo.
McGugin, Harold... ~~~. SiyIAnnsas. Coffeyville.
McKeown, Tom D.......... 4 | Oklahoma _._____._ Ada.
McLean, Donald H.. -.. --. .. 6 | New Jersey. ___.___ Elizabeth.
MeLeod, Clarence df... - - 13: Michigan... .. _. Detroit.
McMillan, Thomas S________ 1 | South Carolina_.___| Charleston.
McReynolds, Sam D________ 3 | Tennessee. ..._.____ Chattanooga.
McSwain, Jom J... =. _ 4 | South Carolina____| Greenville.
Major, J. Earl... _._ .. 21. Allinois 3... ___ Hillsboro.
Maloney, Francis T_________ 3 | Connecticut______ Meriden.
Maloney, Paul H...... —.o- 2.4ilouisiana. = __ New Orleans.
Mansfield, Joseph J_________ 0. less. nena Columbus.
Mapes, Corl Beccurn eae 5. \+Miechigan.... Grand Rapids.
Morlohd BB. W.. a 8S |:Oklshoma,... ....... Ponca City.
Marshall, Li Tons eo niin Ono. odo oy Xenia.
Martin, Charles Hl... ._~____ {Oregon ..--...._. Portland.
Martin, Johw'A__ oc ....__.. SariColorado......-. Pueblo.
Martin, Joseph W.; 37... 14 | Massachusetts. ___| North Attleboro.
May, Andrew J... ......... At L. | Kentucky... ____ Prestonsburg.
Mead, James M.____________ 42 | New York. ______ Buffalo.
Meeks, James A____________ 133 0inois,; =. Danville.
Merritt, Schayler com en ones 4 | Connecticut. _____ Stamford.
Millard, Charles D...... ....._.. 25 |New: York. ....._. Tarrytown.
Miller, John ¥_._...._. -... 2: Arkansas... Searcy.
Milligan, Jacob Lio ---___ At-L..| Missouri... .... Richmond.
Mitchell, Joni R 4 ; Tennessee________ Cookeville.
Monaghan, Joseph P________ 1.\:Montona........._ Butte.
Montague, Andrew J________ ALL. "Virginia... Richmond.
Montet, Numa ¥............ S:{louisiana... __.._. Thibodaux.
Moran, Edward C., jr-______ 2h Maine _T-_ Rockland.
Morehead, John Ho _________ 1. Nebragka: = ~~~ Falls City.
Mott, James Warn. oo. LatOregon,......_ Salem.
Moynihan oe Hoo so oo 24 Illinois... ..... Chicago.
Muldowney, Michael J_______ 32 | Pennsylvania_____ Pittsburgh.
Murdock, ADE rao oi Ya Ulah_. _... 5. Beaver.
Musselwhite, Harry W_______ 9. (Michigan... __.__.__ Manistee.
Neshit, Walter. oi = 0.7 AL L.i{1lineis;..._ 3: Belleville.
Norton, Mary T.-..c 13 | New Jersey._.._____ Jersey City.
O’Brien, Thomas J... Gf Inols. oo ol Chicago.
152 Congressional Directory
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Name Die State City
O Connell, John M .......... 2 | Rhode Island_____ Westerly.
O'Connor,’ Jon J... == 16: New York... New York City.
Oliver, Frank... _.: i: 2S i- NewYork New York City.
Oliver, Willlam B-____—_.__.% O52 A\gbama.. 0 Tuscaloosa.
O'Malley, Thormmg..... >> Hi Witcongin. Milwaukee.
Owen, B. M __c__ _._ ... ... dxCeorgla.. Griffin.
Palmisano, Vincent L....___. Sus Maryland. oo. 0 Baltimore.
Parker, Homer C_.....— 2 LY -Qeorgia.i. Statesboro.
Parker, James: So ini 29 | New York. _.-. Salem.
Parke, Torn B___ = 7 Arkansas. Camden.
Parcong, Claude VV. _ =o. Ninel. i 2 Golconda.
Patan, Weight... =o Yas Tegas oo nL Texarkana.
Peavey, Hubcit H ..innn 2000 10 (= Wisconsin... ___-_ Washburn.
Perkins, Randolph... — ~~ 7 iNew Jersey... __.._ Woodeliff Lake.
Peterson, J. Hardin..-- — Ic Morida. ~ Lakeland.
Pettengill, Samuel B._.._____ Sr Indiana 1. Ll South Bend.
Peyser, Theodore A... ...-..- 17 |New York... - New York City.
Pierce, Walter M .__ __._____ rN Oregon. = 10 La Grande.
Polk, Jomes §,. ------ 0 GC: Ohio i "Tr Highland.
Pou, Edward W.-... c 4 | North Carolina____| Smithfield.
Powers, D. Lanes ec <—~-oa""l 4 | New Jersey _-__.__. Trenton.
Proll, Anning’S__ =... 11 New York —_._.. Staten Island.
Bagon, Heartsill ©... Bel Arkansag._ "CL "7 Clarksville.
Rajney, Henry Tol. ...2 20 Hinole: oo. 2 Carrollton.
Ramsay, Robert: L, ._.o- 1 | West Virginia_____ Follansbee.
Ramspeck, Robert... ___: Sa Ceorgin. 1 ll. Decatur.
Randolph, Jennings. _ _______ 2 | West Virginia_____ Elkins.
Rankin, John. {Mississippi Tupelo.
Ropsleys Haury C.- l iiinn 1 | Pennsylvania ____ Philadelphia.
Rayburn, Samo. ooo i lexae. oC Bonham.
Reece, B. Carroll Le. =i 000 1 Tennesses____-___ Johnson City.
Reed, Durdel A ooo ioin soon 45% New York. -_ ~~ Dunkirk.
Reid, rank Bol oasis 1 -Tilinols. . .o- ~~~ -2 Aurora.
Reilly, Michael KK... =.=. =: 6 Wisconsin... Fond du Lac.
Bich, BoE «or ioooann=a 16 | Pennsylvania. ____ Woolrich.
Richards; James’ P. ..__--__._ 5 | South Carolina____| Lancaster.
Richardson, William E_______ 14 | Pennsylvania_____ Reading.
Robertson; A. Willis.._.____. AE A Vhinia.  -- Lexington.
Robinson, J. W..r 4--00. 0 os Utahe oC Provo.
Rogers, Edith Nourse_________ 5 | Massachusetts. ___| Lowell.
Rogers Willy = loinc At’. Oklahoma. _--.___ Moore.
Rogers, Willlam N__.---_.._.: 1 | New Hampshire___| Sanbornville.
Romjue, Milton A .-.--..: AYE Missouri. ooo oC Macon.
Rudd, Stephen A .--__.... OY -"Now Yorke --_2.- Brooklyn.
Ruffin, James B._-.._ .--..-: At LL (Missouri. -=-.- = Springfield.
Sabath, Adolph ¥__- co... Sl linels. os _ 0 Chicago.
Sadowski, George G_________ = Michiean. ~~" Detroit.
Sanders, Morgan G.__________ St Pemme.. 2-2 Canton.
Sandlin, Jom N_--_--_-..-C At Tonigiana. ~~~": Minden.
Schaefer, Edwin M__________ CLE BIR TE LG te Belleville.
Schuetz, Leonard W_________ Fh lifoly. io Chicago.
Schulte, William 'l_-._-_--.. Yi lndiana. f= Hammond.
Scrugham, James G..________ APL "Nevada -----_-_: Reno.
Sears, William ¥__- .-...-_- AYE I Plopida. a coo. Jacksonville.
Secrest, Robert PF... oo...- 15 Ohjos. oo Senecayville.
Seger, George’ Nor vicnanens 8 | New Jersey._______ Passaic
Shallenberger, Ashton C_____ 4’ "Nebraska. _-.._--_ Alma.
Shannon, Joseph B__________ At EL Missouri oC Kansas City.
SHOEMAKER, Francis H______ AT Vi Minnesota. ----_ Red Wing.
Simpson, James, 37 eee wnna-- 100 Tlinoisy. = -->-=<¢ Wadsworth.
Alphabetical List
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
153
Dis- : Name iriot State City
SincloirsJames tl .L... oo ai ie At L. | North Dakota____| Kenmare.
Sirovieh, William 1... ..._. Jos 14: New York... _ .o.L New York City.
Sisson, Fred Jor .L 0 Sif New York... Whitesboro.
Smith, Howard WW. .._.._.__._ At Li Virginia... Alexandria.
Smith, Joe Lagat: 6 | West Virginia_____ Beckley.
Smith, Mortine Fer +. 3 || Washington_._____ Hoquiam.
Snell, BerirondsH 3 to co 3) New York... Potsdam.
Snyder, JsBuelloe: co _- 24 | Pennsylvania_____ Perryopolis.
Somers, Andrew L_.________ 6:{iNew York... _.. _. Brooklyn.
Spence: Bremte 32 1... At L.t Kentueky.. Fort Thomas.
Stalker, Cale -.03.L. . .... .. 37%; New York __.._.._.. Elmira.
Steagall,: Henry Bo... __. Sip Alabama. ._ Ozark.
Stokes, Eduard Lgl. —------- 6 | Pennsylvania_____ Philadelphia.
Strong, Nathan isi iio. 27 | Pennsylvania_____ Brookville.
Strong, Sterling PP»... ____ Ab Lib Pexass. o_o. Dallas.
Stubbs, Henry Bato... os 10° California. _. Santa Maria.
Studley, Blmer B_ At LL. New York: Flushing.
Sullivan, Christopher D______ 13:{ New York... New York City.
Sumners, Hatton W_________ Dl Poxag irc: procs Dallas.
Sutphin, Willlam BH _~. 3 New Jersey. _.__ Matawan.
Swank, Pletcher B-.-. =. ~~ 51 Oklahoms. =. - Norman.
Sweeney, Martin L__________ 2000ho..___...-1 Cleveland.
Swick, J:iHoword. ..... cerns 26 | Pennsylvania_____ Beaver Falls.
Taber, Jol =. =F = a0 New York. 1 Auburn.
Tarver, Malcolm C__.___.___ 7 Ceorgin_——rma Dalton.
Taylor, Edward T..oaouao 4+ Colorado. ocd. ci. Glenwood Springs.
Taylor, Joh CV m1 3 | South Carolina____| Anderson.
Paglons J. 200 2 a 2] Tennessee. ._...... Knoxville.
Terrell, George B........ .. .. AVL. (Texas. oad oo Alto.
Thom, Williim R* + -- ~~ 1G Ohigr > ~>=2 Canton.
Thomason, B. Ewing... HE SAITO Bde Ces El Paso.
Thompson, Chester__________ kT vole. 202 ee Rock Island.
Thurston, Llogl va towcaivicn ns Slelown... oanaenn Osceola.
Tinkham, George Holden ______ 10 | Massachusetts____| Boston.
Tobey, Charles Wo. ........: 2 | New Hampshire___| Temple.
Tracger, William I. ...... =. 15( California... ._.. Los Angeles.
Treadway, Alen T-. _oo. . 1 | Massachusetts____| Stockbridge.
Truax, Charles V_._. AL -Obio............ Bucyrus.
Turner, Clarence W_________ 6 | Tennessee. __.____. Waverly.
Turpin, C. Murray... ........ 12 | Pennsylvania... Kingston.
Umstead, William B_________ 6 | North Carolina____| Durham.
Underwood, Mei CG... .. HE Oho: oo New Lexington.
Utterbaek, John CG. ........ Sy Maine... . Bangor.
Vinson; Carl... ... .. 6 Georgln... ....... Milledgeville.
Vinton, Fred M.............. At, | Kentucky... ...... Ashland.
Wadsworth, James W________ 39 | New York. .._ __.. Geneseo.
Waldron, Alfred M.._........ 3 | Pennsylvania_____ Philadelphia.
Wallgren, Monrad C........ 2 | Washington_______ Everett.
Walter, Francis BE... 21. | Pennsylvania __. Easton.
Warren, Lindsay C__________ 1 | North Carolina____| Washington.
YVatson, Horry W............ 9 | Pennsylvania. ___._ Langhorne.
Yearin, OthaD_-....... ... Ty town.. i Hastings.
Weaver, Zebulon. ......._.._. 10 | North Carolina..__| Asheville.
Weideman, Carl M__________ 14 Michigan... .. Detroit.
Velch, Rickard J ono. 5 (California... ... San Francisco.
Werner, Theo. B......_i 2 |: South Dakota... Rapid City.
Mest, Charles. =. >... Wl Ohio: oo Granville.
West, Milton H._.»___.___. 13 Tezns........ Brownsville.
White, Compton I... _..._.. Yioldaho oo. ot Clark Fork.
Yobitley, James L............. 38 | New York________ Rochester.
154 Congressional Directory
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Dis- ; Name riot State City
Whittington, William M_____ 3 { Mississippi... ..... Greenwood. Wigglesworth, Richard B_____ _ 13 | Massachusetts____| Milton. Wilcox, JoMark J... ....C 4 Florida, ooo West Palm Beach. Willlord, Albert C. ......... Bi Town Lo oasis Waterloo. Williams, Clyde: pind AtL. I Missouri... Hillsboro. Wilson, Bileys Ju. L000 5 Louisiana... Ruston. Withrow, Gardner BR... 3: Wiseongin. ~~ La Crosse. Wolcott ,vdesse Pr. Lo. on bilils 7°: Michigan... Port Huron. Wolfenden, James... co. 8 | Pennsylvania. ____ Upper Darby. Wolverton, Charles A_________ 1 | New Jersey.._____ Merchantville. Wood, John Sl... 9: |: Georgia. own Canton.
Wood, Reuben! DL... ooo ACL Missouri... o Springfield.
Woodruff, Boy O- ........L0L 10°: Michigan.......... Bay City.
Woodrum, Clifton ‘A... .50LL AVL Virginia. ooo Roanoke.
Young, Stephen M__________ ACLS OO. Cleveland.
Zioncheck, Marion A... .._.._ 1 | Washington_______ Seattle.
DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS
Territory or
Name Title insular possession City
Dimond, Anthony J_____ Delegate... Alaska... _._ Valdez.
Guevara, Pedro! _______ Res. Com_| Philippine Islands_| Santa Cruz, La-
guna.
Iglesias, Santiago... ___ Res. Com_| Puerto Rico....__. San Juan.
McCandless, Lincoln L.._| Delegate. _| Hawaii___.________ Honolulu.
Osias, Camilo! ___. ... ._ Res. Com_| Philippine Islands_| Balaoan, La Union.
1 Nationalist.
TERMS OF SERVICE
155
TERMS OF SERVICE
EXPIRATION OF THE TERMS OF SENATORS
Group I.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1935
[32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 14; Republicans, 17; Farm-Labor, 1]
Name Party Residence
Ashurst, Henyy'P_ .. 0 oe  1 ol
Austin, Warren Bal oc. oue obo oi
Byrd; Harry Blood 2.euat vor ona cca
Connally, Tome, 5 mer h ah i boa tn min
Copeland, Royal 8S... to 1 00
Cuttlog, Bronson. cont ond 0
DIL Clarenee Cos. avi sia arin
Youu, Simeon Dov suewt woe boo
Pravier, dln Jw ou and 0 0
Goldsborough, Phillipgdee. oi ood
Hale, Brederiel. ou toooe od ois oad
Hatfield, Henry: Doon ooe odo ne
Hebert, Felix. wv. oaaseal ue. doi vaio:
Johnson, Hiram W-.. w hoe bo ooo
Kean, Hamilion Bio. d co
Kendrick, Jor B.oovad ae i000
King, Williaa |_,_ op lone oe oun 0 t
Ia Polletie, Hobert M., Jr... pena. oo
MeRellar, Kenneth. oo hoop duviniv ve.
Patterson, Roscoe C.o. ti.
Pitman; Wey 10. boa"
Reed David-A orem oa
Robinson, Arthur B ... ...... .  az-cms is
Shipstead. Henrik. oo... oan oo a
Stephens, Hubert D.......... ...  .. .. 2
Thompson, William Hs... .... ... .....
Townsend, John G., Ivo... ...
Trammell, Pave... .._....
Yondenberg, Arthur 0... ___.._ _..
Walcott, Frederic CO... .... Co...
Walshe David LL... ee aaa
Wheeler, Burion, K. ........... ........z.
HOUR
UORWUOU
HoxExxNomogmgoou=xU
a te
wlwl--B--Rel-"Reliv)
Prescott, Ariz.
Burlington, Vt.
Berryville, Va.
Marlin, Tex.
New York City, N. Y.
Santa Fe, N. Mex.
Spokane, Wash.
Yellow Springs, Ohio.
Hoople, N. Dak.
Baltimore, Md.
Portland, Me.
Huntington, W. Va.
West Warwick, R. I.
San Francisco, Calif.
“Ursino,”
County, N. J.
Sheridan, Wyo.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Madison, Wis.
Memphis, Tenn.
Springfield, Mo
Tonopah, Nev.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Miltona, Minn.
New Albany, Miss.
Grand Island, Nebr.
Selbyville, Del.
Lakeland, Fla.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Norfolk, Conn.
Clinton, Mass.
Butte, Mont.
Union
1 Elected Mar. 31, 1931.
2 Appointed by governor Mar. 4, 1933.
3 Appointed by governor May 24, 1933.
157
158 Congressional Directory
Group IIL.—SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1937
[32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 19; Republicans, 13]
Name Party Residence
Bulow, William'J 0k al iia seni
Bynes, James 0. LCi
CappergArthues Led
Carey, Robert D... i... i. ier.
Coolidge, Morea A... b.... a ioc ooh
Costigan, Edward Pf -.1 itor —r
Glass, Carter eb  rweeanan a.
Gore, Thomas PP.  . _.l- aaL
Harrisons Pal 0-2 dr Fn
Hashines Daniel Oc IL > oo
Keyes, Honry Wl
Lewis, J. Hamilton... 1 = iT a
Logan, MoM rsh
Vong Huey Blo ee se carrie nems
McNary; Charles U7 Loni
Mateo, Jesse WE. 2 VT
Neely, Matthew M___ _ .c_ os
Norris, Ceorge-W. oda eons
Robinson, Joseph Tor -L oo ci IIe
Russell, Bichmrd B.. jr.2.
Schall, Phomas B.-L. eres
Sheppatd, Morris C.-C. Ta.
White, Wallace IL. Jr Lain   = Hol-"Relvl-"Roli--§--Avivivl--§--Aviviviwl--A--Relvi--}-Avivivi--}-Rulciw/
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Raleigh, N. C.
Jasper, Ala.
Locust, N. J.
Boise, Idaho.
Albuquerque, N. Mex.
Beresford, S. Dak.
Spartansburg, S. C.
Topeka, Kans.
Careyhurst, Wyo.
Fitchburg, Mass.
Denver, Colo.
Birmingham, Mich.
Algona, Iowa.
Kalispell, Mont.
Lynchburg, Va.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Gulfport, Miss.
Wilmington, Del.
North Haverhill, N. H.
Chicago, Ill.
Bowling Green, Ky.
New Orleans, La.
Salem, Oreg.
Providence, R. I.
Fairmont, W. Va.
McCook, Nebr.
Little Rock, Ark.
Winder, Ga.
Minneapolis, Minn.
Texarkana, Tex.
Auburn, Me.
1 Appointed by governor Feb. 28, 1933.
3 Appointed by governor Dec. 1, "1931; Socied Nov. 8, 1932.
3 Appointed by governor Mar. 13,
4 Elected Nov, 8, 1932.
Terms of Service 159
Group III.—.SENATORS WHOSE TERMS OF SERVICE EXPIRE IN 1939
[32 Senators in this group: Democrats, 27; Republicans, 5]
Name Party Residence
Adams, Alva Ba
Barkley Alben Wo ~~ ea
Blacks Huger: 2 ooo moan orn La
Bone, Homer Pc .c- 0 rn
Brown ilired Hr rr =m a
Bulldey; Robert J = ~~~" or i
Caraway, Hatfle Wo -Crer tien) ni ated
Clark, Benpeti Champ -o2 2 ~~ =
Dale; Porter U..-- ocr eee
Davie, Jamegid oo. ---resa nis Corn
Dieterich: WilllamH _~ —----—~—"_ ~~
Dully, 0. Ryan. == = a
Rletcher, Dumean UU --=-
Qeorge, Walter Boo. ei a
Havden, Carl. lo ran
Lonergan, Augustine > co - =  f  a
McAdoo, Wiliam Gibbs - A... _..
McCarran, Pater mono oat ere vr
McGill, George... oc i aie
Murphy, Cots i oo il
Norbeck, Poter i. i ok
Nye, Gerald PL i aaa
Gverton, John == 0 i oer
Pope, domes Pr oo a nea a
Reynolds, Bobert-B-- - -...  ....
Smith, Bilson... 7
Steiwer, Brederlele.. => 0
Thomas, Elbert Dr > =~
Thomas, Elmer x 4
Tydings, Milllarde B= == eae
Nan Nuys, Frederick, .  _. _.._. ..:
Waocner, Robert B.C. a al   Doo
oon
ooo
ooo
ogo
URE
OOO
OO
O00
Pueblo, Colo.
Paducah, Ky.
Birmingham, Ala.
Tacoma, Wash.
Somersworth, N. H.
Cleveland, Ohio.
Jonesboro, Ark.
Clayton, Mo., R. F. D.
No. 1.
Island Pond, Vt.
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Beardstown, Ill.
Fond du Lac, Wis.
Jacksonville, Fla.
Vienna, Ga.
Phoenix, Ariz.
Hartford, Conn.
Los Angeles, Calif.
Reno, Nev.
Wichita, Kans.
Dubuque, Iowa.
Redfield, S. Dak.
Cooperstown, N. Dak.
Alexandria, La.
Boise, Idaho.
Asheville, N. C.
Lynchburg, S. C.
Portland, Oreg.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
Medicine Park, Okla.
Havre de Grace, Md.
Indianapolis, Ind.
New York City, N. Y.
160 Congressional Directory
CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS
Beginning
Rank Name State of present
service
T{"Borah, William BE. .......cuuia. Idaho... ap Mar. 4, 1907
Fletcher, Duncan U.. ........ Florida...
2 iy FllisonD..-cpenccis South Carolina______ f Mar ons
8 -Achursl, Henry Pool oo as Arizona. .i.00 0 Mar. 27, 1912
Pitman, Bey... anol ooo Nevada... 0b. 751
3 [rn Morris. or ciis vacua Texas... i grik fgan. 29 1018
orrlz, George. W.. oro vvinua Nebragks,.... 5
5 le goseph Doc toiica Arkansas... 00 Mar ds012
Hale; Brederiele top oii ocn Maine... he
Rendrick, Jom B..on...on Wyoming... iL
6 _ Ging, Willlam IL. ._............ Ctah i... 0 0s Mar. 4, 1917
MeKellar, Kenneth_..___________ Tennessee... _._____
Trammell Pavle. 1... Blorida... ois.
7 (Johnson, Hiram iW _..... ....-._._ California. Li = Mar. 16, 1917
8 | McNary, Charles L.1_ __________ Oregont......o- =i: Dee. 18, 1918
Capper, Arthur... «pw colicacon. Kansas... ...00 ib.
9 fac 500 EE rs SO Mississippi... io. Mar. 4, 1919
Keyes, Henry Wi... or wniiwannan New Hampshire_____
10 Glags, Catlore, to-aop cabin oie Virginia... 5 G08, Feb. 2, 1920
11 | Norbeck, Peter... conve icucoza- South Dakota._______ Mar. 4, 1921
124 Reed, David A... . . co ion Pennsylvania__ _____ Aug. 8, 1922
13 |"George, Walter PF... loco Georgin,.. ...2 nL. Nov. 22, 1922
14 | Couzens, Jomes. ce -- Michigan. 20. x Nov. 29, 1922
Copeland, Royall. cc. -1 New York...» 2...
Dill. Clarence C.. .. cocaine Washington_____.___
Yess, Simeon 1)... =. 1 =. Ohio. 1... oo. 0m
¥5 K Oragzier, Lynnd .. --cpicdiccinens North Dakota... ..- Mar. 4, 1923
Shipgtead, Henrik... n-ne cnas Minnesota... =z.
Stephens, Hubert D_.._________ Mississippi... -1
Wheeler, Burton K..c---vvesam- Montana. .......2i 5
¥6 i Dale, Porter IL. i. op-dean aria Vermont... ..-- : -2= Nov.  7,1923
17.0 Meteal, Jesse HH. ..cr-vinvcacaa Rhode Island. .._.__-_ Nov. b5,1924
Bratton, Sam C.J... i... New Mexico. ______._
13 Ly Thomas Doo——or ons Minnesota "== Moz, 41083
19 | La Follette, Robert M., jr_______ Wisconsin... ........ Sept. 30, 1925
20: Robinson, Arthur B............ Indiana. ci wien ais Oct. 20, 1925
2 Nye, Gers dP... . _... North Dakota. ___-_ Nov. 14, 1925
22 1 Walsh, David 1.2... Massachusetts. _ ____ Dec. 6, 1926
Barkley, Alben’ VW. _............ Kentucky...
Black, Huge LL... Alabang... an =
Hayden, Carl... ........... . . Arizona... a...
23 |i Steiwer, Frederick... .. Oregon... .... ans Mar. 4, 1927
Thomas, Blmer. .._. _.._ -. .._.. Oklhhoma......----
Tydings, Millard BE... .... Maryinnd. ...----..:
(Wagner, Robert ¥_ _. _._.__.._._ New York... .. J
1 Mr. McNary also served in the Senate from May 29, 1917, to Nov. 5, 1918.
2 Mr, Walsh also served in the Senate from Mar, 4, 1919, to Mar, 3, 1925.
Terms of Service 161
CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued
Beginning
Rank Name State of present
service |
24 | Vandenberg, Arthur H_.________ Michigan... iii esd Mar. 31, 1928
25 | Hastings, Daniel O23. ..... 0 | __ Delaware. coos Dec. 10, 1928
Connally, Tom. .cclwidoatl 1x Texas... ... 71% sem )
Cutting, Bronson-%...0-v=bt-n-- New Mexico____.___
Goldsborough, Phillips Lee______ Marviand i. CL eed
Hatfield, Henry D... . copuibil-L-- West Virginia_______
28 { Hebert, Pelix._ ......oekesa dl L.- Rhode Island. ______ Mar. 4, 1929
Kean, Hamilton F..ivwne3-1-- New Jersey. -oui---
Patterson, Roscoe Coola Missouri. cue dl-<
Townsend, John G., jr. 04. __ Delaware. _ ___.__..
Walcott, Frederic C... c-cd. -- Connecticut _______
Bulkley, Robert J.5.ooniciicn do ~~ Ohio... ... tL axlol
27 (Carey, Robert DS... _odebi- Wyoming... . Swope Dee. 1, 1930 |
MeGill, George 7... ibd Lo. Kansas... il. seadis |
28 | Davig,/ James J.2... . cil Pennsylvania_______ Dec. 2, 1930
Bailey, Josiah W._...oscolf North Carolina._._____
Bankhead, John H _oi.eid Alabama ceili ue |
Bulow, William J... col. .ol. South Dakota._____._
Byrnes, James Uo South Carolina______ |
Coolidge, Marcus: A. oi coinae Massachusetts. _____ |
Costigan, Edward P.._..._.._.. ColoTad0 mcm oie ivi 4
29 Dakar To J 23000 10 R000 10 U2 Fowats ii JU) Gill 2h Mar, 4 1051 |
Gore, Thomas PO... io oo. Jl. Oklvhoms...cononna
Lewis, J. Homilton 10. _.=_ Tlinolas oo .. .o
Yogan, MM. MM... 0... Kentucky... ooo
Neely, Matthew M.11___________ West Virginia_______ |
White, Wallace I. jr... Maine... ........ J
80 | Ausiin, Warren R.12_.__.____._.._ Yormont. ....-ivuons Apr. 1, 1931
31] Coraway, Hattle W.BB___.. 0... Arkansas... .... ... Nov. 13, 1931
32 | Barbour, W. Warren%______. ___ New Jersey....wvuw- Dec. 1, 1931
Bil long, Huon P. ........  .L....: Joulsiana........... Jan. 25, 1932
34 |-Boynolds, Boberti R18... ..._. North Carolina______ Dec. 5, 1932
35 { Russell, Richard B., jr. 00 _.___... Georgln. Jan. 12, 1933
36 | Clark, Bennett Champ 7_______. Missouri__ Feb. 4, 1933
3 Appointed Dec. 10, 1928, and elected Nov. 4, 1930, to fill unexpired term of Senator Coleman du Pont.
4 Mr. Cutting also served in the Senate from Dec. 29, 1927, to Dec. 6, 1928.
8 Elected Nov. 4, 1930, to fill unexpired term of Senator Theodore E. Burton.
6 Elected Nov. 4, 1930, to fill unexpired term of Senator Francis E. Warren.
7 Elected Nov. 4, 1930, to fill unexpired term of Senator Charles Curtis.
8 Elected Nov. 4, 1930, to fill vacancy caused by refusal of Senate to seat Hon. William S. Vare.
9 Mr. Gore also served in the Senate from Dec. 11, 1907, to Mar. 3, 1921.
10 Mr. Lewis also served in the Senate from Mar. 26, 1913, to Mar. 3, 1919.
11 Mr. Neely also served in the Senate from Mar. 4, 1923, to Mar. 3, 1929.
12 Elected Mar. 31, 1931, to fill unexpired term of Senator Frank L. Greene.
13 Appointed Nov. 13, 1931, and elected Jan. 12, 1932, to fill unexpired term of Senator T. H. Caraway.
14 Appointed Dec. 1, 1931, and elected Nov. 8, 1932, to fill unexpired term of Senator Dwight W. Morrow.
15 Elected Nov. 8, 1932, to fill unexpired term of Senator Lee S. Overman.
18 Elected Nov. 8, 1932, to fill unexpired term of Senator William J. Harris.
17 Appointed Feb. 3, 1933, to fill unexpired term of Senator Harry B. Hawes; Mr.Clark had previously
been elected for the full term commencing Mar. 4, 1933. |
157297°—73—1—1ST ED——12
162 Congressional Directory
CONTINUOUS SERVICE OF SENATORS—Continued
Beginning
Rank Name State of present
service
Adams, Alva BB. Cool... Colorado. Lo. 200
Bachman, Nathan L.2%_ _________ Tennessee. _._______
Bone, Homer T._.....20 |. Washington_________
Brown, Fred HH. 007 iL 0. Lo New Hampshire ____
Byrd, Harry Flood #0 J 0... Virgindaltiul 2 0807
Dieterich, William H___________ Tinofs. 0 21020
Duffy, ¥. Ryan... 0... Wisconsin... _______
37 | Lonergan, Augustine. _ _________ Connecticut. _______ Mar. 4, 1933
McAdoo, William Gibbs________ California. Jo 00 Ji
MeCarran, Pat... 202000 Lo Nevada. .... ....00
Murphy, Louis. JU 00 0G. Yoweri uaa l JILL
Overlon, JohnH. .....0U0. 0 .. Louisiana.....00 001
Pope, James Po... Ulilicl i... Idaho. _.... 2. 2130
Thomas, Elbert D....0oll Tah. ee. S300
Van Nuys, Frederick. __________ Indiang......... 0208
38 | Erickson, John E.2t LL ..... Montana... J. 00000 Mar. 13, 1933
39 | Thompson, William H.22________ Nebraska. Ji... 00 May 24, 1933
18 Mr. Adams also served in the Senate from May 17, 1923, to Nov. 30, 1924.
19 Appointed Mar. 4, 1933, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Cordell Hull.
20 Appointed Feb. 28, 1933, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Claude A. Swanson.
21 Appointed Mar. 13, 1933, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Thomas J. Walsh.
2 Appointed May 24, 1933, to fill the unexpired term of Senator Robert B. Howell.
Terms of Service 163
CONGRESSES IN WHICH REPRESENTATIVES HAVE SERVED, WITH
BEGINNING OF PRESENT SERVICE
[*Elected to fill a vacancy; {unseated by contested election] I
|
Name State or Congresses (inclusive) pine i
17 terms, consecutive
Pou, Edward W..._...... N.C. 4 | 57th to 73d. - tase Mar. 4, 1901
15 terms, not consecutive
Rainey, Henry T_.__.___._ Lior 20 | 58th to 66th and | Mar. 4, 1923
68th to 73d.
14 terms, consecutive
Sabath, Adolph J_______. BLoCl 5-| 60th’ to 73d... .0 Mar. 4, 1907
13 terms, consecutive
Byrns, Joseph W.........: Tenn... 5 6lsbito 73d... ...... Mar. 4, 1909 |
Taylor, Edward T....__¢ Colo... 4: Gleb to 73d... 1 = Mar. 4, 1909
12 terms, consecutive
Doughton, Robert L_____ NO: {62d to 73... Mar. 4, 1911
11 terms, consecutive
Britten, Fred A.....__.iC MM. 9:63di0: 73d... ee Mar. 4, 1913
Buchanan, James P______ Tex. 110: 63d to 73d........- Apr. 5,1913
Frear, James A... :0. lc. Wis: Li 9 | 63d 40734... Mar. 4, 1913 |
Mapes, Carl BE... _.... Mich. _ 5: 68d 10i73d. .......-- Mar. 4, 1913 [
Montague, Andrew J_____ Va... LL AtL.| 63d1073d......L Mar. 4,1913 |
Parker, James S________. Nav. (20 63dt0 73d ......... Mar. 4,1913 |
Rayburn, Saw. i... .... Tex... 4.1 63d to 73d....50u0.0 Mar. 4,1913
Sumners, Hatton W______ Te3. 0s 5-1 63d-1073d....unue Mar. 4,1913
Treadway, Allen T....... Mass. 1: 63d do 73d......ax- Mar. 4,1913
Yingon, Corl. |... . Cn. ns 6. ¥63d4 to. 73d... Nov. 3,1914
11 terms, not consecutive
Dickinson, Clement C____| Mo____|At L. | *61st to 66th, 68th | Mar. 4, 1931
: to 70th, 72d, and
73d. 10 terms, consecutive
Almon, Edward B________ Ala 8 | 64th to 73d.____._____ Mar. 4, 1915
Bacharach; Isase........2 NJ. 2 | 64th to 73d._____--__ Mar. 4, 1915
Qooper, John G...... ...=.2 Ohio... 191 64th to 73d. ......° Mar. 4, 1915
Darrow, George P_._____ Pa... 7 | 64th to 73d... .--. Mar. 4, 1915
Dowell, Cassius C_______ Town... : 6. 64thto73d......... Mar. 4, 1915
Huddleston, George______ Ala... 9. | 64thit073d........-. Mar. 4, 1915
James, W. Frank ________ Mich..{ 12 | 64th to 73d... ..:. Mar. 4, 1915
Lehlbach, Frederick R.. .{N.J:L_| 12. ({64thto 73d. __.___. Mar. 4, 1915
McClintie, James V______ Okla.___ 7! 64th'to 73d. --~-.. Mar. 4, 1915
McFadden, Louis R______ Pa... 15 64th to 73d... .....-... Mar. 4, 1915
Oliver, William B________ Ala Co 6 | 64th to 73d____._____ Mar. 4, 1915
Snell, Bertrand H________ N'Y... 311 *64thto 78d--..-:-. Nov. 2,1915
Steagall, Henry B.._____. Ala... 3 ]:64th to 73d... ... Mar. 4, 1915
Tinkham, George Holden_| Mass __| 10 | 64th to 73d_._._._.__._ Mar. 4, 1915
Watson, Henry W._.______ Pi... 9.1 64th to. 73d... - ..... Mar. 4, 1915
Wilson, Riley J... -.....—- La..... Dl 6dthto73d.......... Mar, 4,1915
164
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Congressional Directory
Name State Diss Congresses (inclusive) Tint
10 terms, not consecutive
Kelly; Clyde... o.oo. Pa... 31 | 63d and 65th to 73d_| Mar. 4, 1917
9 terms, consecutive
Bankhead, William B_____ Ala __. 7 {65th to 73d. us -nanul Mar. 4, 1917
Bland, Schuyler Otis__-___ Va..iiz AtY..| *65th to 73d._..--.--¢ July 2,1918
Blanton, Thomas L.....: Tex.....} (17 { 65th to *71st, 72d, | May 20, 1930
and 73d.
Griffin, Anthony J_.______ N.Y 22 | *65th t073d....-.1- Mar. 5,1918
Jones, Marvin... ..._._.. Tox....| 18 65th t0.73d.._.....-- Mar. 4, 1917
Knutson, Harold... - Minn. jAtL.| 65th to 73d... ----- Mar. 4, 1917
Lea, Clarence F__________ Calif ___ 1 (Gothen 73d. oc] Mar. 4, 1917
Mansfield, Joseph J______ Teéx.loL 9 | 65th 73d. ------2 Mar. 4, 1917
Strong, Nathan L_..___._. Pa... on 27 } 65th to 73d..ccines- Mar. 4, 1917
Sullivan, Christopher D...| N. Y...l 13 { 65th {0 73d.-..-~~-- Mar. 4, 1917
9 terms, not consecutive :
Ayers, WaiAl oii unm Kans_..| <5 | 64th to 66th and | Mar. 4, 1923
68th to 73d.
Crosser, Robert... ....... Ohio._.| 21 | 63d to 656th and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923
to 73d.
Hastings, William W_____ Okla._.._ 2 | 64th to 66th and | Mar. 4, 1923
68th to 73d.
8 terms, consecutive
Crowther, Frank____.._.... N.Y... 0i66thio73d. nv Mar. 4, 1919
Cullen, Thomas H_______ NY. 41 66th to 73d... .--. Mar. 4,1919
Drewry, Patrick H__..___ VS Atl.) *66th to 73d... ... Apr. 27,1920
Fish, Hamilion, jr... ..... N.Y...| 26 | *66th to 73du vous Nov. 2, 1920
Lanham, Fritz G...__._.. Tex....t 12 4: *66th to 73d... ian Apr. 19, 1919
Tuce, Bobert...c..-0a0%- Mass: ! : 9 66thto73d. oan Mar. 4,1919
MeDuffie, John........--- Alyn. 17 66thto 73d... ..... Mar. 4, 1919
Mead, James M._______._._ N.Y...| 42! 66th to 73d..2L500 Mar. 4,1919
Ransley, Harry C........ Pas i: 1] *66thto 73d. ....:L.} Nov. 2,1920
Reed,:Daniel A... ..-.-& N.Y... | 43 | 66th to 73d._.-__--___-_ Mar. 4, 1919
Sinclair, James H.________ N.Dak_|At 1. 66th to 73d... ___.__ Mar. 4, 1919
Taylor, J. Will... .-. .-.L Tenn. _ 2 [ 66th t073d.-...-iL- Mar. 4,1919
8 terms, not consecutive
Focht, Benjamin K______ Pa... 18 | 60th to 62d, 64th to | Mar. 4, 1933
67th, and 73d.
McKeown, Tom D_______ Okla,___ 4 | 65th, 66th, and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923
to 73d.
Merritt, Schuyler... ...} Conn... 4 | *65th to 71st and 73d_| Mar. 4, 1933
Romjue, Milton A_______ Mo.____|At L. | 65th, 66th, and 68th | Mar. 4, 1923
to 73d.
Sears, William J.._.._-___| Fla....|At L. | 64th to 70th and 73d.| Mar. 4, 1933
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Terms of Service 165
Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) TL Rg
8 terms, mot consecutive—
continued
Shallenberger, Ashton C__| Nebr._..| 4 | 57th, 64th, 65th, 68th | Mar. 4, 1931
to 70th, 72d, and
73d.
Weaver, Zebulon. _______ N.C... 10 | 65th to 70th, 72d, | Mar. 4, 1931
and 73d.
Woodruff, Rey C........ Mich. _| 10 | 63d and 67th to 73d.| Mar. 4, 1921
7 terms, consecutive
Abernethy, Charles L____| N. C___ 3. 67thito 73d _._ = Nov. 7,1922
Andrew, A. Piatt._____._.. Mass. - 6 *67th 10.734. -- £1 ~~ Sept. 27, 1921
Beedy, Carroll L_________ Me. __. 11 67thto?3d. ....11- Mar. 4, 1921
Colling, Ross: A... ......- Miss___ 5. 67th to-73d__. .._.x. Mar. 4, 1921
Connolly, James J_.____. Pia ih Sn O7ihto.-73d.. Mar. 4, 1921
Driver, William J__.____. Ark... 1.1 G7th te, 73d... .. zz. Mar. 4, 1921
Fulmer, Hampton P_____ S.C... 2.1 67th t0:73d. Mar. 4, 1921
Gifford, Charles L_ _____. Mass... (15) 67th io 73d... ....: Nov. 7,1922
Goldsborough, T. Alan___| Md____ 1 Giinto 73d... .... Mar. 4, 1921
Jeffers, Lamar.________.. Als. .c 41 %67th t0.73d.......- June 17,1921
MeSwain, John J... _.. S.C a 44 67thilo.73d. ..... .. Mar. 4, 1921
Parke . Tilman B......__; Ark... 14 87thio 73d... Mar. 4, 1921
Perkins, Randolph______. N.J.- 7:1 67th to 13d... .. Mar. 4, 1921
Rankin, John B-_.____- ; Miss _ 1 1.67th to.73d.. .. i... Mar. 4, 1921
Sanders, Morgan G______ Tex 31 67hio73d ___.._.. Mar. 4, 1921
Sandlin, John N_........ Ia... 4 | 67th to 73d... uous Mar. 4, 1921
7 terms, not consecutive
Edmonds, George W_____ Pe ums 4 | 63d to 68th and 73d | Mar. 4, 1933
McLeod, Clarence J______ Mich__| 13 | *66thand 68thto73d_| Mar. 4, 1923
Milligan, Jacob L........ - Mo____|At L.| *66thand 68thto73d.| Mar. 4, 1923
6 terms, consecutive
Allgood, Miles C_________ Als. 5 163th 10 73d... ue Mar. 4, 1923
Arnold, William W_______ I... 28 [ 68th10734..... Mar. 4, 1923
Bacon, Ropert. L.......... Ne Vv... 1 63thio73d.......... Mar. 4, 1923
Black, Loring M., Jr... . N.Y. 168th to 73d... unre Mar. 4, 1923
Bloom; Solis. via NoXYo OF 194 *68th to-73d.... S502 Mar. 4, 1923
Boylan, John“J... .... Nayoith 13 | 68thite 93d... ...o Mar. 4,1923
Browning, Gordon. ______ Tenn__. 7 {768th to 73d.... .... Mar. 4, 1923
Bushy, Jefiols [oon Miss__ _ 4 | 65th to?3d Mar. 4, 1923
Cannon, Clarence________ Mo... JAt L.{ 68th t0'73d.......-.- Mar. 4, 1923
Celler, Emanuel. ____.___ N.oY ale 10 | 68th to Wad. 2 Mar. 4, 1923
Connery, William P., jr___| Mass__. 7 | 68th to: 73d... .__:% Mar. 4, 1923
Corning, Parker. ......... N.Y 28 | 68th 10:73d- meee Mar. 4, 1923
Dickstein, Samuel. _ ____. NoY...f° 12] 68th toi73d. Mar. 4, 1923
Gambrill, Stephen W_____ Md. LL 5 | *¥68th to 73d-._-.--__ Nov. 4, 1924
Gasque, Allard H...._.... 8, QC. 6 63th toi73d..c..in: Mar. 4, 1923
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Congressional Directory
Name State hs Congresses (inclusive) mm
6 terms, consecutive—con.
Gibson, Ernest W_______ Vito AtL, *0Sthte 73d... Nov. 6, 1923
Greenwood, Arthur H____| Ind____.| 7 | 68thto73d_-_______ Mar. 4, 1923
Hil, Lister... Pl aah Al C2168 hto 73d... Aug. 14, 1923
Hill, Samuel Boo. __ Wash. | 5 | *68th to 73d._...... Sept. 25, 1923
Howard, Edgar. o> 00 Nebr Yt 3 | 68th to 73d -----_.._ Mar. 4, 1923
Johnson, Luther A_______ Tex... GL68thio 73d. i... Mar. 4, 1923
Kerr;Jon’H_ 2.0.0) Neel 2 zeSthto 73d Nov. 6, 1923
Kurtz, J Banke: oo... Pa... 231 6Sth to 78d. cv... Mar. 4, 1923
Lindsay, George W______ N.Y 3° 63thte 73d... ..... Mar. 4, 1923
Yozier, Ralph Foot Mo (ALT. 68th io 73d... Mar. 4, 1923
McReynolds, Sam D_____ Tenn | S:0SthTo 78d... Mar. 4, 1923
Morehead, John H_______ Nebr? Yl esihinBd cot Mar. 4, 1923
©’ Connor, John J---:-_.. NYY 116 | 268th to 78d =--o=-: Nov. 6, 1923
Oliver, Frank.c....-.... Noy los Sch 10 78d ooo Mar. 4, 1923
Peavey, Hubert H_______ Wiz. 10 |i68thto73d ...---.. Mar. 4, 1923
Prall Anning 8... NY ‘Vay esihto73d. Nov. 6, 1923
Ragon, Heartsill.____.___ Ark. 5 .68thio?3d. ~~ -- Mar. 4, 1923
Beid, Prank R.._....... uo. 11 {i6Sthiio 73d ~~. -_ Mar. 4, 1923
Seger, George N________. N.d- 8 1:68thto73d. ~~~. Mar. 4, 1923
Stalker, Gale Hl. _.-... N'Y | 37 68thto73d. = _ Mar. 4, 1923
Taber, John _ wean: N.Y | 36 63thto78d. -—----- Mar. 4, 1923
Underwood, Mell G______ Ohio___{ i111 [| 6Sth1o 73d =. Mar. 4, 1923
Woodrum, Clifton A___.___ Yo... AtY., 63thto 73d. ------- Mar. 4, 1923
6 terms, not consecutive
Bulwinkle, Alfred L_.____ N.C...| 10| 67th to 70th, 72d, | Mar. 4,1931
and 73d.
Clarke Joh D.. cunvurs N.Y___| 84 | 67th, 68th, and 70th | Mar. 4, 1927
to 73d.
Bagle, Joe HH >... ocu.-- Tex__..| 863d to 66th, *72d, | Jan. 28, 1933
and 73d
Reece, B. Carroll... __-... Tenn... 1 | 67th to 71st and 73d.| Mar. 4, 1933
Swank, Fletcher B_______ Okla___ 5 | 67th to 70th, 72d, | Mar. 4,1931
and 73d.
5 terms, consecutive
Auf der Heide, Oscar Li___| N. J___| 14 | 69th to 73d..---__-_ Mar. 4, 1925
Carter, Albert E_________ Calif ___ 6; 69thio73d.. Mar. 4, 1925
Cochran, John J.......... Mo... [AtL. *69th to. 73d._.__-__.-_ Nov. 2,1926
CoxiB. Boll ha Gal. i. 2 60thio?ad.  --. Mar. 4, 1925
Douglass, John J... Mass: 11 | 69th toi73d. ...----- Mar. 4, 1925
Eaton, Charles A________ N. Ji: 5] 69thto73d. .. -- --- Mar. 4,1925
Englebright, Harry L_._..| Calif___ 2 *60th t073d__.__%.- Aug. 31, 1926
Foss, Frank _____.___.. Mass3 "31 60thto73d........- Mar. 4,1925
Green, Robert A______.-- Fla... 2: 69thto.73d..-----L& Mar. 4, 1925
Hooper, Joseph L______-- MichiZ* 38 | *69th1t0/73d....-4-a- Aug. 18,1925
Jenkins, Thomas A___--- Ohio fp 10 | 69th to 734... Mar. 4,1925
Kahn, Florence P......... Calif... 41 69h 10 73d. cmv ennn Mar, 4, 1925
Terms of Service 167
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) ois hd
b terms, consecutive—con.
Kemp, Bolivar E_______._ ET 6. 60th 073d... ..-= Mar. 4,1925
McMillan, Thomas S_____ SHC.iC 169th to73d... ... Mar. 4,1925
Martin, Joseph W., jr____| Mass __.| 14 | 69th to 73d.________ Mar. 4, 1925
Norton, Mary T...- Loz: NJ. Leh 18) 69thite 73d. 22 Mar. 4,1925
Rogers, Edith Nourse____| Mass __ 8 36nhite 73d. June 30, 1925
Somers, Andrew L_______ N.Y iC 6il 6th to: 73d... - Mar. 4, 1925
Thurston, Tloyd..... 1%. Towa___ 55 60h 10i73d. Mar. 4,1925
Warren, Lindsay C______ N.C. Li 6Rhio73d. Mar. 4,1925
Welch, Richard J________ Calif ___ B.{ *69th to 73d... Aug. 31, 1926
Whittington, William M__| Miss___ 3.1 60thio?3d. Mar. 4, 1925
5 terms, mot consecutive
Brumm, George F_______ Pail. ol 13 | 68th, 69th, and 71st | Mar. 4, 1929
to 73d.
Guyer, U.S... Kans_ _ 2 | *68th and 70th to | Mar. 4, 1927
73d.
Lewis, David J... come Md.___| 6 | 62d to 64th, 72d, and | Mar. 4, 1931
73d.
Reilly, Michael K...... Wig. co. 6 | 63d, 64th, *71st to | Nov. 4, 1930
73d.
Vinson, Fred’ M.... Ky.._._|AtL.| *68th to 70th, 72d, | Mar. 4, 1931
and 73d.
4 terms, consecutive
Beck, James M._________._ Pa... 9. 270th 10:734. = Nov. 8, 1927
Buckbee, John T__ __.___ Tc 12 | 70th to73d. —...--- Mar. 4, 1927
Carley, Patrickid_ N.Y S| 70th to: 73d... Mar. 4, 1927
Cartwright, Wilburn_____ Okla... 3 70thito 73d... Mar. 4, 1927
Cochran, Thomas C______ LR 20, 70th to. 73d... :- Mar. 4, 1927
Culkin, Francis D......... N.Y. ... 32. *70thto:78d. . -_ --5- Nov. 6, 1928
DeRouen, René L________ | Fn a 7: %70th t0,73d__ . . - --- Aug. 23, 1927
Doutrich, Isaac HB... .. Pac. .u 19:| 70th fo 3d. ._-.-. = Mar. 4, 1927
Evans, William E________ Calif. |. 11: 70th{o. 73d... --- Mar. 4, 1927
Fitzpatrick, James M.._._{ N.Y...| 24 70th to. 73d... Mar. 4, 1927
Gregory, William V______ Kyo. AGL. 70th to 73d... =x Mar. 4, 1927
Hancock, Clarence E_____ NY... 35. *70thto 73d... - --- Nov. 8, 1927
Hope, Clifford BR... Kans. _ 7:1: 70th-to.93d.. ...- .-- Mar. 4, 1927
Johnson, Jedsot Okla___ 6. 70th te 3d... Mar. 4, 1927
McCormack, John W_____ Mass, | 12: *70th:t0.73d. Nov. 6, 1928
Palmisano, Vincent L__,_| Md____ 3 1 70thto73d.. . _..-.. Mar. 4, 1927
Sirovich, William I_______ N.Y: | 141 70thte73d. . ...--- Mar. 4, 1927
Swick, J. Howard. ........ Pao... 26:1 70th to 73d... ....- Mar. 4, 1927
Tarver, Malcolm C______ Ga. Lil 7: 70th toi73d.. ou. Mar. 4, 1927
Wigglesworth, Richard B_| Mass__| 13 | *70th to 73d.___-___ Nov. 6, 1928
Wolfenden, James.________ Py....0 8| *70thito 73d. _ ~~. Nov. 6, 1928
Wolverton, Charles A....] N, J... 1 70th 30: 93d... --nunn- Mar, 4, 1927
168 Congressional Directory
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Beginning of           Name State Congresses (inclusive) present service
4 terms, mot consecutive
Chapman, Virgil... ..__.! Ry. .| 69th, 70th, 72d, and | Mar. 4, 1931
73d.
Church, Denver S_______ Calif ___ 63d to 65th and 73d__| Mar. 4, 1933
Cravens, Ben... ........¢ Ark] 60th to 62d and 73d_| Mar. 4, 1933
Cray, Finlyil._..._ __ __.! Ind.J.C 62d to 64th and 73d__| Mar. 4, 1933
Majors J. Banl... Tite). cian 68th, 70th, 72d, and | Mar. 4, 1931
73d.
3 terms, consecutive
Bolton, Chester C____.__ Ohio... ist to 73d. oc Mar. 4, 1929
Brunner, William F______ NY... Tig 10-730 cnn Mar. 4, 1929
Carter, Vincent... ....._. Wyo._._. +L ZI to 78d. Mar. 4, 1929
Clark, J. Bayard i. Luz. N.C... Zi Tist to 73d... i. Mar. 4, 1929
= Condon, Prancis B___..__ RET. 1 Bristle 73d. Nov. 4,1930
Cooper, Jere. _ oo lui. Tenn __ 8 | 7istt073d 1 Mar. 4, 1929
Crosz, 0. H.-L io Tex:fy | 11 7st to 73d =. -x- Mar. 4, 1929
De Priest, Oscar_____..._ J 11S 1 71st t0i73d- Mar. 4, 1929
Poxey, Wall. Lo... Miss. - 24 7ist to 78Q. ~~. Mar. 4, 1929
Fuller, Claude A_________ Ark 0 3| 7st to 73d. 2. Mar. 4, 1929
Gavagan, Joseph A______ N.No. 21 | # st to 73d =... Nov. 5, 1929
Glover; DD... Lilo oli Ark iid 6 | 7st 0734 ~~ Mar. 4, 1929
Goss, Edward W________ Conn. _ Bi 7st lo 73d: ni Nov. 4, 1930
Granfield, William J_____ Mass - - 2: | 71st to 73d. ating Feb. 11, 1930
Hancock, Prank... .. N.C. (5: %lsito 73d. .- Nov. 4, 1930
Hartley, Fred A., jr-.---- NJ. -. Qi 7st to 73d = = Mar. 4, 1929
Hess, William E___ ___.__ Ohio___ 20 7lstto 78d T- Mar. 4, 1929
Kennedy, Martin J______ N.Y... ist to 73d... Mar. 11, 1930
Kinzer, J. Roland... Pa sto 73d Jan. 28, 1930
Kvale, Paul J.Lo, Minn. _ J 2lstto 73d. = Oct. 16, 1929
Lambertson, W. P_..._.. Kang... Zist to 73d. =. Mar. 4, 1929
Tudlew, Louis... - Ind... Tlgbto 73d. Mar. 4, 1929
Montet, Numa F_______._ i Era ist io 73d Aug. 6, 1929
Parsons, Claude V. 0 "Fist to 73d... Nov. 4,1930
Paiman, Wricht Tox... Tetite 73d... i Mar. 4,1929
Ramspeck, Robert_______ On. isto 73d. Oct. 2,1929
Rich, Robert Fi... Plies *Ist to: 73d. Nov. 4, 1930
Smith, Joe L-= -.— _ W.Va _ Tlstteo 73d Mar. 4, 1929
Turpin, C.-Muviay.._-__ A Mistto 3d... -. June 4, 1929
Whitley, James L_______. N.Y. Ito y3d. ~~ Mar. 4, 1929
3 terms, mot consecutive
Cole, William P., jr... Md... 70th, 72d, and 73d__ | Mar. 4, 1931
Delaney, John J. ___ NY *65th, *72d, and 73d_.| Nov. 3, 1931
Fletcher, Brooks. ________ Ohio___ 69th, 70th, and 73d__| Mar. 4, 1933
Martin, John A...) Colo___ 61st, 62d, and 73d___| Mar. 4, 1933
Rogers, William N_______ NH 68th, *72d,and 73d... Jan. 5, 1932
Williams, Clyde. ceo ---- Mo... .| 70th, 72d,and 73d...| Mar. 4, 1931
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Terms of Service 169
Name State Dis- Congresses (inclusive) Beginning of
trict present service
2 terms, consecutive
Andrews, Walter G______ NY | 40| 72d andi73d.....U 1d Mar. 4,1931
Beam; Harvy P....._...._ 0: Me 4/1. 72d and 73d... ..L Mar. 4, 1931
Boehne, John W., jr_____ hindi Si) 72d and 734... ... 11. Mar. 4, 1931
Boileau, Gerald J_.__.___ Wig... 73. 72d and 73d... . . - - .- Mar. 4, 1931
Boland, Patrick J________ Pa... Hi 72d andi 73d. al Mar. 4, 1931
Burch, Thomas G.... 1. Vai Li AtL. | 72d.and 73d..... i. Mar. 4, 1931
Carden, Cap'R.._____Di Ky... [AtL'] 72d and'73d......_ Mar. 4, 1931
Cary,iGlover H.....___.. Ky... (AtL | 72d and 73d... .oalil Mar. 4, 1931
Castellow, Bryant T_____ Ga... LL 3} *72dand 73d........ Nov. 8, 1932
Cavicchia, Peter A_______ NJ. 11] 72d and 73d...8 10¢ Mar. 4, 1931
Chavez, Dennis... _______ N.Mex_ (AtL.| 72dand 73d..______ Mar. 4, 1931
Crowe, Eugene B________ Ind: j.o 91 72d. and73d.......- Mar. 4, 1931
Crump, Edward H_______ Tenn. _ Ol 92d and 73d... Mar. 4, 1931
Dies, Martin... _.. Tex... 2 | 72d and 73duualioiee Mar. 4, 1931
Disney, Wesley E________ Okla___ 1 | 72d ond 73d... Mar. 4, 1931
Ellzey, Russell. . _.____ __ Miss__ _ 7. *72d ond 73d... Mar. 15, 1932
Fernandez, Joachim O____| La_____ 17 72d and 78d. oo -- Mar. 4, 1931
Fiesinger, William L_____ Ohio. .] 113 {72d and 73d... ... Mar. 4, 1931
Flannagan, John W., jr...| Va_.._.. AtL. 72d ond 73d... ..... Mar. 4, 1931
Gilchrist, Fred C__.  ____ Iowa.___ Si 2dand 73d... _.. Mar. 4, 1931
Griswold, Glenn... ...__. Ind... 5:1 72d andi73d. _.... ax Mar. 4,1931
Haines, Harry L._. __._.. Pa __..i. 22::72d andi 78d... ..J- Mar. 4, 1931
Harlan, Byron:B Ohio. __ orl 72d andi73d... Mar. 4, 1931
Hart, Michael J. _______. Mich._ _ 8:H1%¥72d.and 73d _..... Nov. 3, 1931
Hollister, John B. . ....... Ohio. __ 1 | *72d.and 73d... ... . .- Nov. 3, 1931
Holmes, Pehr G... ........ Mass... 4::72d and'73d....--_ 4 Mar. 4, 1931
Hornor, Lyan'S_______ __ W. Va_ 3i|,72d. and 73d. . iL Mar. 4, 1931
Jacobsen, Bernhard M___| Iowa.___ 2. 72dand73d. ...... Mar. 4, 1931
Keller, Kent E__________ LE 25:1 72d andi 73d... .- 34. Mar. 4, 1931
Kelly, Edward A_______._ HM. ...5 B11 72dandi73d. nud Mar. 4, 1931
Kennedy, Ambrose J_____ Md. _.. 4 | ¥72d.and 73d. J... Nov. 8, 1932
Kleberg, Richard M______ Tex... 14:|:%72d and 73d... J. == Nov. 24, 1931
Kuiffin, Frank C.........| Ohio. 5:| 72d andi 73d... ... =: Mar. 4, 1931
Lambeth, J. Walter______ N.C..t 8:{:72d andi 73d... nui Mar. 4, 1931
Lamneck, Arthur P______ Chio....{ 12/1] 72d.and 73d... _. Mar. 4, 1931
Larrabee, William H_____ Ind ..t 18 | 72d andi73d. ._. ... Mar. 4, 1931
McGugin, Harold________ Kans. _ 81 72dand 73d. ....-9- Mar. 4, 1931
Maloney, Paul H._..._._.. 1a. 5 2:i 72dand)73d.......... Mar. 4, 1931
Martin, Charles H_______ Oreg..... 3:{ 72d and 73d. .....o- Mar. 4, 1931
May, Andrew d........... Ky o{AtL.) 72d.amd 73d........] Mar. 4, 1931
Millard, Charles D_______ N.Y.o.f 25| 72d andi78d.....5-L= Mar. 4, 1931
Miller, John/E. . ......... Ark. js 2 | 72d and’ 73d... 1. Lue Mar. 4, 1931
" Mitchell, John R.__.__..._. Tenn-z} 4 | 72d.andi 73d. . dala Mar. 4,1931
Parker, Homer C_______._ Ga... 1 | *72d.and 73d... .00 = Sept. 10, 1931
Pettengill, Samuel B____._ Ind i: 372d and 73d... -... Mar. 4, 1931
Polk, James GCG... .. .... Ohio___ 6 | 72dand 73d... i. Mar. 4, 1931
Rudd, Stephen A... ... N.Y.o 9: *72d and 73d... .c Mar. 4, 1931
170
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Congressional Darectory
Name State Diy Congresses (inclusive) Goginnmet
2 terms, consecutive—con.
Schuetz, Leonard W_____ mM... 7 72d and 73d... 21 Mar. 4, 1931
Shannon, Joseph B_______ Mo:-21{AtL.] 72d and 73d... .. Mar. 4, 1931
Smith, Howard W_______ Vout AtL. 72d and 73d......_. Mar. 4, 1931
Spence, Brent... -....c Ry... JAtL.] 72d and 73d. .....__ Mar. 4, 1931
Stokes, Edward L_______ Pa hh 6 | *72d and 73d....... Nov. 3, 1931
Sutphin, William H______ NJ. 31 72d and’ 73d... .. Mar. 4,1931
Sweeney, Martin L___.___ Ohio} 201 *72d and 73d. _..... Nov. 3, 1931
Thomason, R. Ewing_____ Tex: :} 16 1/72d and 73d_...__.. Mar. 4, 1931
West, Charles. ...._...... Ohio. } 17 | 72d and’ 73d ......... Mar. 4, 1931
Withrow, Gardner R_____ Wis____ B[ 2dandi73d......L.¢ Mar. 4,1931
Wolcott, Jesse P_________ Mich. %t72diand 73d... Mar. 4, 1931
Wood; John S..........1: Ca... 9 | 72d and 73d. .....i. Mar. 4, 1931
2 terms, not consecutive
Johnson, George W______ W. Va._ 41 68thand 73d. .-....- Mar. 4, 1933
Lundeen, Ernest_________ Minn__|Atl.| 65th and 73d... -- Mar. 4, 1933
Turner, Clarence W______ Tenn _ _ 6. | 67th and 73d. =. Mar. 4,1933
1 term
Adair, J. Leroy... . ES 15: 73d ois) Mar. 4, 1933
Adams, Wilbur L________ Deli AL 73d. 0 acon Mar. 4, 1933
Allen, Leo EB... ____ 0 SECIS 1B Bil. ligase Mar. 4, 1933
Arengy Henry... 000 Minn lAG YL. 73d. aaa, Mar. 4, 1933
Ayers, Roy B_......._ 0. Mont.__ 21 Blain saa Mar. 4, 1933
Bailey, Joseph W., jro____ Tex WALL) 18d aca nan cad Mar. 4, 1933
Bakewell, Charles M_____ Conn ALLL] 73d ao oof Mar. 4, 1933
Beiter, Alfred F_________ NY ost 141 | 73d8VCL on DILL Mar. 4, 1933
Berlin, William M_______ Pali: pL A CE EE Mar. 4, 1933
Biermann, Fred... .__.___ Towa___ 4 | 73d. rah Mar. 4, 1933
Blanchard, George W____| Wis____ Yi 73d. eo Mar. 4, 1933
Brennan, Martin A__.____ | § 1 EARN AtTL 73d.20 anni A0 Mar. 4, 1933
Brooks, J:iTwing._........ Pa... 80 | 78d. aia Mar. 4, 1933
Brown, John Young...___ Ry. opAtL.) 73d... ....... 0000 Mar. 4, 1933
Brown, Prentiss M_______ Mich =| 13] 73d. 0.00 Mar. 4, 1933
Buck, Frank H.........0; Calif... 3 Bd. illo. i BE Mar. 4, 1933
Burke, Edward R_._______ Nebr. _ 2 73duiea Lo... U0 Mar. 4, 1933
Burke, JohndH. ........0 Calif in} 118 | 78d. nl acaac nas Mar. 4, 1933
Burnham, George... ______ Calif] 20 | 73diilcaccaaaails Mar. 4, 1933
Cady, Claude E.......... Mich. 6'h73d. i aici Mar. 4, 1933
Caldwell, Millard F______ Flal_ | BAL ii aaa 00 Mar. 4, 1933
Cannon, Raymond J_____ Wig... 4] 13d. acacincon Mar. 4,1933
Carpenter, Randolph_____ Kansill 4 | 73Quc0. o.oo. 0 Mar. 4, 1933
Carpenter, Terry M._._____ Nebr. _ 5 73d.Leeii il Mar. 4, 1933
Chase, Ray'P |. ..... ..0% Minn JAG) 73d.20s oi. io Mar. 4, 1933
Christianson, Theodore... Minn_ _|At L.| 73d________________ Mar. 4,1933
Claiborne, James R.__... Mo. iu ALL] 73d naicacacie Mar. 4, 1933
Terms of Service 171
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Name State Dis Congresses (inclusive) ogi
1 term—continued
Coffin, Thomas Co... Idaho. _ 2 73diic...Haniiaal Mar. 4,1933
Colden, Charles J________ Califo ssl Y7 (73d. rem t Mar. 4, 1933
Collins, Samuel L_._...... Oolifces| WY T73d7 2... ln Mar. 4, 1933
Colmer, William M______ Missiesl {ONL 73d. 008 een Mar. 4, 1933
Crosby, Charles N_______ Pa. 204 730000. aia Mar. 4, 1933
Cummings, Fred____.____._ Colo___ ip 7BALL A nnd Mar. 4, 1933
Darden, Colgate W., jr___| Va_____ ALL T3000. ieee Mar. 4, 1933
Dear, Cleveland... _____ Ia 2 Br TE pk BCC Mar. 4, 1933
Deen, Braswell __________ On 300 S730. 0. ee Mar. 4,1933
Dingell, John D......... Mich.o:] 36 78duced. wooo id Mar. 4, 1933
Dirksen, Everett M______ TW he. 16:0 73d Mar. 4, 1933
Ditter, J. William... _... Pa. = 171 73d eal oo SL Mar. 4, 1933
Dobbins, D.C........... NL. es Wi 73d). naa Mar. 4, 1933
Dockweiler, John F______ Califprs + 16} 73dd. 4a. HLH] Mar. 4, 1933
Dondero, George A______ Mich. oo] 137 (73d... Dols Mar. 4, 1933
Duffey, Warren J._.___.. Ohio___ OLB dl. |. a Mar. 4, 1933
Duncan, Richard M______ Mo. AGT 73d.0dl eee Mar. 4, 1933
Dunn, Matthew A_. __.__ Pa... Se 73d HE timid Mar. 4, 1933
Durgan, George R_______ Ind. is 2 78d.000 des Mar. 4, 1933
Eicher, Edward C________ Jowa__. RB 1 AIR RR 1 Mar. 4, 1933
Ellenbogen, Henry. _____ Pa. ii 33:1 73dwsl) o.oo Mar. 4, 1933
Elise, Ralph: R.... ...... Califa GF 1784001. ..........F Mar. 4, 1933
Faddis, Charles I________ Pa... 251 73d... Lass Mar. 4, 1933
Parley, James 1__..___._... Ind... AL 13ddalll aaa Mar. 4, 1933
Fitzgibbons, John... ._.._. No XY ojaedod 738d... Hoa Mar. 4, 1933
Ford, Thomas FF... _..... Calithef W730 1 aa Mar. 4, 1933
Foulkes, George. ___.____._ Mich. _ 44 784. iL uni Mar. 4, 1933
Gillespie, Frank. ________ TW. ne 73d. 3... Hh Mar. 4, 1933
Gillette, Guy M_________ Yoware) ( O73... 20) Mar. 4, 1933
Goodwin, Philip A_______ No¥ooy ‘271.734. al) ae Mar. 4, 1933
Hamilton, Finley......... Ry. 5A LL. 73d... aa 0iU Mar. 4, 1933
Harter, Dow:W.........-- Ohio YW 78d 1 K........ Lay Mar. 4, 1933
Healey, Arthur D________ Mass. 81 73daeni) Mar. 4, 1933
Henney, Charles W______ Wis... SOTA A a Mar. 4, 1933
Higgins, William L_______ Conn. _ L784 HO SRR 1 Mar. 4, 1933
Hildebrandt, Fred H_____ SB. Dakd A | 73d... ......33u0 Mar. 4, 1933
Hill, Knute... ....... Washoy 473d. 7........0 5% Mar. 4, 1933
Hoeppel, John H________ Calif: (12 73d. .00. 0. dius! Mar. 4, 1933
Hoidale, Einar.........w- Minn fA6L. | 73d. ol... li Mar. 4, 1933
Hughes, James... ...... Wis.ost S( Y8dieiil sic. Mar. 4, 1933
Imhoff, Lawrence BE.____..| Ohlo.o| 18::78d.0.000 .._ ._..._ Mar. 4, 1933
Jenckes, Virginia E______ Ind. 2c OnA73d 1M ... Mar. 4, 1933
Johnson, Magnus__..._.._ Minn SAV L. | 73ddacil |... ag Mar. 4, 1933
Keo, John sa... ..... W. Va § 073d. HL... M.0 Mar. 4, 1933
Kenney, Edward A_______ N.Jiz 01 73d. Juli... -.. Tn Mar. 4, 1933
Kloeb, Frank L........... Ohio... 41 73d. 00s... tl ea Mar. 4, 1933
Kocialkowski, Leo__.____ m. B178dai80 ooo ll Mar, 4,1933
172 Congressional Directory
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Name State Di Congresses (inclusive) yng
1 term—continued
Kopplemann, Herman P__| Conn__ 1 7Bal80 Mar. 4, 1933
Kramer, Charles... ........ Califo) 13 | 78400 Foo bd Mar. 4, 1933
Lanzetta, James J________ N.Yoo) 20 (73d 20 ue oh Mar. 4, 1933
Lee, Prank dH .... .. ... ... Mo. At. 78d 00 i BE Mar. 4, 1933
Yehr, Jom C. ........cc.. Mich _ _ 278d. aD Mar. 4, 1933
Lemke, William.......... N.Dak)JAtL.| 73d0.00 ooo Mar. 4, 1933
Yesingki, Jolin. ........ Michi] «16:0 734.070 HH... 0 9 Mar. 4, 1933
Lewis, Lawrence_________ Colo___ 1 | 78d. loot Mar. 4, 1933
Yloyd; Wedley........... Wash __ 6 | P3d. Nt nen Mar. 4, 1933
McCarthy, Kathryn | Kans. _ 8 | PBA ely Mar. 4, 1933
O’Loughlin.
McFarlane, W. D........ Tex Do) 1 13 | 78d 0h ion UE Mar. 4, 1933
MeGrath; John J......... Califo SL 78d) iii Mar. 4, 1933
McLean, Donald H______ N.J.5o Bf IBIS on UE Mar. 4, 1933
Maloney, Francis T______ Conn. _ 4 CEASE ee Mar. 4, 1933
Marland E/W._____._. Okla.___ Bil 43d anne nb] Mar. 4, 1933
Marshall: 1/7... ......... Ohio___ 70984. 50 eg. 3 Mar. 4, 1933
Meeks, James A________. 4) BOR 110 18 | 78d..0 0 Jocucoioiinl Mar. 4, 1933
Monaghan, Joseph P_____ Mont__ A Mar. 4, 1933
Moran, Edward C.,jr_._._| Me____ 2 BdENOL Lo] Mar. 4, 1933
Mott, James W.__..______ Oreg___ | 73d.. aoLE Mar. 4, 1933
Moynihan, P. H.. .. __._. Th. lx. (73a) Sasa Mar. 4, 1933
Muldowney, Michael J___| Pa_____ 82 | 7T3d.-8 cocacaozll Mar. 4, 1933
Murdock, Abe... ....... Utah. | 73d il aaa Mar. 4, 1933
Musselwhite, Harry W___| Mich___ REEVE A ASR EER Ri Mar. 4, 1933
Nesbit, Walter. .._._...___ SR £264 Atl) 734.080 aan) Mar. 4, 1933
O’Brien, Thomas J_______ Ih..oc i Bd ER CREE ee Mar. 4, 1933
O’Connell, John M_______ R.1.0o 2 73d nana Mar. 4, 1933
O’Malley, Thomas... .___ Wis. 8 | 7345380 cocecoaoc. Mar. 4, 1933
Owen, BEML... _.. Ga. lio Se REAM EEA Mar. 4, 1933
Peterson, J. Hardin______ Fla_... 13078d. fel donna 08 Mar. 4, 1933
Peyser, Theodore A______ N.Y (WE 73d lo caannns Mar. 4, 1933
Pierce, Walter M________ Oreg___ AEE Tt LAC mE eh Mar. 4, 1933
Powers, D. Lane._..______ N. Jos df IBA 2 daca ILE Mar. 4, 1933
Ramsay, Robert L._....... W. Va_. 1 73dil0 aan Mar. 4, 1933
Randolph, Jennings. _____ W. Va._ 8 I o0 i nl SR SIRE LL Mar. 4, 1933
Richards, James P__..... Sa B| 734.000 jacana g Mar. 4, 1933
Richardson, William E_._.| Pa___._ Y4 | 73d: doco Mar. 4, 1933
Robertson, A. Willis_____ Va... bu AtLA73d 00 ocsccni Mar. 4, 1933
Robinson, 4 W.__.......... Utah... 2 | 73d. 3LY donc oan, Mar. 4, 1933
Rogers, Willl _...__._.... Okla 2 ALT. | 73di80 Jucoaeadt Z Mar. 4, 1933
Ruffin, James BE... .___._. Mo. Si 3AtL. | 73d. il ncaa 20 Mar. 4, 1933
Sadowski, George G______ Mich___ VP 73di0l aan Mar. 4, 1933
Schaefer, Edwin M______ J 22 | 734. cians Mar. 4, 1933
Schulte, William T_______ Ind. lis 1 73d. ee 2) Mar. 4, 1933
Scrugham, James G______ Nev Co {At 734000 oir Mar. 4, 1933
Secrest Robert T........ Ohio i 1151 73d. ~h caca nll Mar, 4, 1933
Terms of Service 173
SERVICE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Name State Sa Congresses (inclusive) am
1 term——continued
Shoemaker, Franels Ho... Minn. .AtL. | 78d... «oc oii. Mar. 4, 1933
Simpson, James, jr.______ EE V0: 73d isso ls Mar. 4, 1933
Sigson, Fred J... ol N.Y... 330 73d..t. Lo . lighd Mar. 4, 1933
Smith, Martin ¥___= ____ Wash__ Sl Yad re Se Mar. 4, 1933
Snyder; J. Buell... Pa. ..-- 2 Eel Dena ee Sa Mar. 4, 1933
Strong, Sterling P_.__._._._ Tox... ALL: 78d «ooo ncf nas Mar. 4, 1933
Stubbs, Henvy Bl. 2... Calit. | 100 73d... oo ca. Mar. 4, 1933
Studley, Elmer E________ N.Y AML 73d es Mar. 4,1933
Taylor.dohn Coca... 5.C... S734 i. aon Mar. 4, 1933
Terrell, George B_.______ Tox clAV L784... oi. Mar. 4, 1933
Thom, William BR... . Ohio... "16 1 73d... Mar. 4, 1933
Thompson, Chester. _____ THs Nagendra Mar. 4, 1933
Tobey, Charles W_______ N.H.. 21 73d. 5 oni Mar. 4, 1933
Traeger, William I_______ Callf-- 4 15:678d 0 i of oe Mar. 4, 1933
Truax, Charles Vc. Ohio... (ADL 73d oa id Mar. 4, 1933
Umstead, William B_____| N. C__._ BA-73d re Mar. 4, 1933
Utterbaek, John G......... Me... GE ER ee Mar. 4, 1933
Wadsworth; James W.. | N.Y. | 30 | 73d... . -.. .... Mar. 4, 1933
Waldron, Alfred M______ Poo... TARYN CC Ls Mar. 4, 1933
Wallgren, Monrad C_____ Wash __ 23d: or Mar. 4, 1933
Walter, Francis E________ Pa... WML 8d ae Mar. 4, 1933
Wearin, Otha D..._._... Towa___ FRET RAR ele Mar. 4, 1933
Weideman, Carl M______ Mich ..it14 {1 73d... ol. Mar. 4, 1933
Werner, Theo! B.-L S. Dak._ Tod Mar. 4, 1933
West, Milion H.... ....- exe.) 15 0 873d _-. e Apr. 22,1933
White, Compton I_______ Idaho__ BEY. aaa Mar. 4, 1933
Wilcox, J. Mark lg &Bde to ra) Mar. 4, 1933
Willford, Albert C_______ Towa___ i 3d ae -i Mar. 4, 1933
Wood, Beuben T. _.._.___ Mo.- AVL 73d... Mar. 4, 1933
Young, Stephen M_______ Ohlo: ALT 73d... oo Mar. 4, 1933
Zioncheck, Marion A_____ Wash__ 1 4.78d. oo Mar. 4, 1933
TERRITORIAL DELEGATES
Dimond, Anthony J______ Alagka | ° rein I se a Mar. 4, 1933
McCandless, Lincoln L___| Hawaii_|_____ ode ats Mar. 4, 1933
RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS
Guevara, Pedvo- {PT |... 6Sthto 73d... ...... Mar. 4, 1923
Iglesias, Santiago. _______ PB Tot. oo as Mar. 4, 1933
Oglas, Camilo... _ I RE kes a is to 78d... Mar. 4, 1929
COMMITTEES
STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE
Agriculture and Forestry
Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina.
John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming.
Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana.
Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma.
George McGill, of Kansas.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
William J. Bulow, of South Dakota.
Hattie W. Caraway, of Arkansas.
Homer T. Bone, of Washington.
Louis Murphy, of Iowa.
George W. Norris, of Nebraska.
Charles L. McNary, of Oregon.
Arthur Capper, of Kansas.
Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota.
Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota.
Henry D. Hatfield, of West Virginia.
Bronson Cutting, of New Mexico.
James P. Pope, of Idaho.
Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota.
Appropriations
Carter Glass, of Virginia.
Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee.
John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming.
Royal S. Copeland, of New York.
Carl Hayden, of Arizona.
Sam G. Bratton, of New Mexico.
Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma.
James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina
Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland.
Richard B. Russell, jr., of Georgia.
Marcus A. Coolidge, of Massachusetts.
Alva B. Adams, of Colorado.
Pat McCarran, of Nevada.
Frederick Hale, of Maine.
Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire.
Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota.
Frederick Steiwer, of Oregon.
Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota.
Porter H. Dale, of Vermont.
L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa.
John G. Townsend, jr., of Delaware.
Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming,
John H. Overton, of Louisiana.
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate
James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina.
John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming.
Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland.
Banking an
Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida.
Carter Glass, of Virginia.
Robert F. Wagner, of New York.
Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky.
Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio.
Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Edward P. Costigan, of Colorado.
Robert R. Reynolds, of North Carolina.
James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
William Gibbs McAdoo, of California.
John G. Townsend, jr., of Delaware.
Phillips Lee Goldsborough, of Mary-
land.
d Currency
Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota.
Phillips Lee Goldsborough, of Mary-
land.
John G. Townsend, jr., of Delaware.
Frederic C. Walcott, of Connecticut.
Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming.
James Couzens, of Michigan.
Frederick Steiwer, of Oregon.
Hamilton F, Kean, of New Jersey.
Alva B. Adams, of Colorado.
Civil Service
William J. Bulow, of South Dakota.
Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee.
Walter F. George, of Georgia.
M. M. Logan, of Kentucky.
Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia.
William H. Dieterich, of Illinois.
Porter H. Dale, of Vermont.
Hamilton F. Kean, of New Jersey.
Wallace H. White, jr., of Maine.
Roscoe C. Patterson, of Missouri.
175
176   Congressional Directory
Claims
Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina.
Park Trammell, of Florida.
Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi.
Hugo L. Black, of Alabama.
Marcus A. Coolidge, of Massechusetts.
M. M. Logan, of Kentucky.
Arthur Capper, of Kansas.
John G. Townsend, jr., of Delaware.
Wallace H. White, jr., of Maine.
Frederic C. Walcott, of Connecticut.
Warren R. Austin, of Vermont.
Commerce
Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi.
Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida.
Morris Sheppard, of Texas.
Royal S. Copeland, of New York.
Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio.
Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina.
Hattie W. Caraway, of Arkansas.
Bennett Champ Clark, of Missouri.
Louis Murphy, of Iowa.
John H. Overton, of Louisiana.
Charles L. McNary, of Oregon.
Hiram W. Johnson, of California.
Porter H. Dale, of Vermont.
Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota.
Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan.
Roscoe C. Patterson, of Missouri.
Wallace H. White, jr., of Maine.
District of Columbia
William H. King, of Utah.
Carter Glass, of Virginia.
Royal S. Copeland, of New York.
Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland.
Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
J. Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Pat McCarran, of Nevada.
Robert R. Reynolds, of North Carolina.
Education
David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts.
Royal S. Copeland, of New York.
Park Trammell, of Florida.
Hugo L. Black, of Alabama.
Louis Murphy, of Iowa.
Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah.
John E. Erickson, of Montana.
Arthur Capper, of Kansas.
Hamilton F. Kean, of New Jersey.
Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming.
Warren R. Austin, of Vermont.
James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania.
James Couzens, of Michigan.
and Labor
William E. Borah, of Idaho.
Jesse H. Metealf, of Rhode Island.
Frederic C. Walcott, of Connecticut.
Robert M. La Follette, jr., of Wisconsin.
James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania.
Enrolled Bills
Hattie W. Caraway, of Arkansas.
Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut.
Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments
J. Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois.
Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi.
Robert F. Wagner, of New York.
Frederick Van Nuys, of Indiana.
Daniel O. Hastings, of Delaware.
Hamilton F. Kean, of New Jersey.
Phillips Lee Goldsborough, of Mary-
land.
Finance
Pat Harrison, of Mississippi.
William H. King, of Utah.
Walter F. George, of Georgia.
David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts.
Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky.
Tom Connally, of Texas.
Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Edward P. Costigan, of Colorado.
Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina.
Bennett Champ Clark, of Missouri.
William Gibbs McAdoo, of California.
Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia.
Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut.
David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania.
James Couzens, of Michigan.
Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire.
Robert M. La Follette, jr., of Wisconsin.
Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island.
Daniel O. Hastings, of Delaware.
Frederic C, Walcott, of Connecticut.
Committees of the Senate 177
Foreign Relations
Key Pittman, of Nevada.
Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas.
Pat Harrison, of Mississippi.
Walter F. George, of Georgia.
Hugo L. Black, of Alabama.
Robert F. Wagner, of New York.
Tom Connally, of Texas.
J. Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois.
Nathan L. Bachman, of Tennessee.
Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah.
Frederick Van Nuys, of Indiana.
F. Ryan Duffy, of Wisconsin.
James P. Pope, of Idaho.
William E. Borah, of Idaho.
Hiram W. Johnson, of California.
Arthur Capper, of Kansas.
David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania.
Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio.
Robert M. La Follette, jr., of Wisconsin.
Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan.
Arthur R. Robinson, of Indiana.
Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota.
Immigration
Marcus A Coolidge, of Massachusetts.
William H. King, of Utah.
Royal S. Copeland, of New York.
Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi.
George McGill, of Kansas.
Richard B. Russell, jr., of Georgia.
Hiram W. Johnson, of California.
Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire.
David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania.
Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota.
Henry D. Hatfield, of West Virginia.
Roscoe C. Patterson, of Missouri.
Indian Affairs
Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana.
Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona.
John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming.
Sam G. Bratton, of New Mexico.
Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma.
William J. Bulow, of South Dakota.
William H. Thompson, of Nebraska.
Interoceanic Canals : |
Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
Park Trammell, of Florida.
Bennett Champ Clark, of Missouri.
Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota.
Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota.
Robert M. La Follette, jr., of Wisconsin.
Frederick Steiwer, of Oregon.
Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota.
Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota.
Felix Hebert, of Rhode Island.
W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey.
Interstate Commerce
Clarence C. Dill, of Washington.
Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina.
Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana.
Robert F. Wagner, of New York.
Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky.
Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia.
William H. Dieterich, of Illinois.
Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut.
Huey P. Long, of Louisiana.
Fred H. Brown, of New Hampshire.
William H. Thompson, of Nebraska.
157297°—T73—-1—1sT ED——13
James Couzens, of Michigan.
Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio.
Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island.
Hamilton F. Kean, of New Jersey.
Daniel O. Hastings, of Delaware.
Henry D. Hatfield, of West Virginia.
Wallace H. White, jr., of Maine.
178
Irrigation and
Sam G. Bratton, of New Mexico.
Morris Sheppard, of Texas.
John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming.
Key Pittman, of Nevada.
Clarence C. Dill, of Washington.
Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona.
John H. Bankhead, of Alabama.
Alva B. Adams, of Colorado.
James P. Pope, of Idaho.
Pat McCarran, of Nevada.
John H. Overton, of Louisiana.
Congressional Directory
Reclamation
Charles L. McNary, of Oregon.
Hiram W. Johnson, of California.
John G. Townsend, jr., of Delaware.
Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming.
Bronson Cutting, of New Mexico.
Judiciary
Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona.
William H. King, of Utah.
Hubert D. Stephens, of Mississippi.
Clarence C. Dill, of Washington.
Sam G. Bratton, of New Mexico.
Hugo L. Black, of Alabama.
Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia.
Huey P. Long, of Louisiana.
Frederick Van Nuys, of Indiana.
Pat McCarran, of Nevada.
William E. Borah, of Idaho.
George W. Norris, of Nebraska.
Arthur R. Robinson, of Indiana.
Daniel O. Hastings, of Delaware.
Felix Hebert, of Rhode Island.
Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota.
Warren R. Austin, of Vermont.
Library
Alben W. Barkley, of Kentucky.
Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee.
Elmer Thomas, of Oklahoma.
Hattie W. Caraway, of Arkansas.
Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio.
Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota.
W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey.
Manufactures
Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio.
Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina.
Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana.
Morris Sheppard, of Texas.
Edward P. Costigan, of Colorado.
Richard B. Russell, jr., of Georgia.
Fred H. Brown, of New Hampshire.
John H. Overton, of Louisiana.
Military
Morris Sheppard, of Texas.
Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida.
Hugo L. Black, of Alabama.
J. Hamilton Lewis, of Illinois.
Marcus A. Coolidge, of Massachusetts.
M. M. Logan, of Kentucky.
Robert R. Reynolds, of North Carolina.
Nathan L. Bachman, of Tennessee.
F. Ryan Duffy, of Wisconsin.
Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah.
Charles L. McNary, of Oregon.
Jesse H. Metealf, of Rhode Island.
Robert M. La Follete, jr., of Wisconsin.
Bronson Cutting, of New Mexico.
W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey.
Affairs
David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania.
Bronson Cutting, of New Mexico.
Roscoe C. Patterson, of Missouri.
Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming.
L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa.
Warren R. Austin, of Vermont.
W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey.
Mines and Mining
M. M. Logan, of Kentucky.
Key Pittman, of Nevada.
Carl Hayden, of Arizona.
Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida.
William J. Bulow, of South Dakota.
James P. Pope, of Idaho.
Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah.
John E. Erickson, of Montana.
Arthur R. Robinson, of Indiana.
Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota.
Roscoe C. Patterson, of Missouri.
Henry D. Hatfield, of West Virginia.
James J, Davis, of Pennsylvania.
- Commattees of the Senate 179
Naval Affairs
Park Trammell, of Florida.
David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts.
Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland.
Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina.
George McGill, of Kansas.
Richard B. Russell, jr., of Georgia.
Homer T. Bone, of Washington.
Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia.
William H. Dieterich, of Illinois.
Frederick Hale, of Maine.
Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island.
Phillips Lee Goldsborough, of Mary-
land.
Hamilton F. Kean, of New Jersey.
James J. Davis, of Pennsylvania.
Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire.
Hiram W, Johnson, of California.
Patents
Robert F. Wagner, of New York.
Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina.
Clarence C. Dill, of Washington.
Park Trammell, of Florida.
George W. Norris, of Nebraska. :
Phillips Lee Goldsborough, of Mary-
land.
Felix Hebert, of Rhode Island.
Pensions
George McGill, of Kansas.
Burton K. Wheeler, of Montana.
David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts.
Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio.
Augustine Lonergan, of Connecticut.
Elbert D. Thomas, of Utah.
Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota.
Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota.
Arthur R. Robinson, of Indiana.
Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota.
Post Offices and Post Roads
Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee.
Park Trammell, of Florida.
Carl Hayden, of Arizona.
George McGill, of Kansas.
Josiah W. Bailey, of North Carolina.
William J. Bulow, of South Dakota.
James F. Byrnes, of South Carolina.
M. M. Logan, of Kentucky.
Fred H. Brown, of New Hampshire.
John E. Erickson, of Montana.
Porter H. Dale, of Vermont.
Thomas D. Schall, of Minnesota.
Lynn J. Frazier, of North Dakota.
Felix Hebert, of Rhode Island.
Arthur Capper, of Kansas.
Robert M. La Follette, jr., of Wisconsin.
W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey.
James J, Davis, of Pennsylvania.
Printing
Carl Hayden, of Arizona.
Duncan U. Fletcher, of Florida.
David I. Walsh, of Massachuettts.
Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan.
L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa.
Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota.
Privileges and Elections
Walter F. George, of Georgia.
William H. King, of Utah.
Ellison D. Smith, of South Carolina.
Sam G. Bratton, of New Mexico.
Tom Connally, of Texas.
Robert J. Bulkley, of Ohio.
Thomas P. Gore, of Oklahoma.
M. M. Logan, of Kentucky.
Nathan L. Bachman, of Tennessee.
Fred H. Brown, of New Hampshire.
F, Ryan Duffy, of Wisconsin.
Daniel O. Hastings, of Delaware.
Felix Hebert, of Rhode Island.
Warren R. Austin, of Vermont.
Frederic C. Walcott, of Connecticut.
L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa.
180   Congressional Directory
Public Buildings and Grounds
Tom Connally, of Texas.
Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona.
Park Trammell, of Florida.
Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland.
David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts.
Huey P. Long, of Louisiana.
William Gibbs McAdoo, of California.
Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire.
Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio.
L. J. Dickinson, of Iowa.
Warren R. Austin, of Vermont.
W. Warren Barbour, of New Jersey.
Henrik Shipstead, of Minnesota.
Public Lands
John B. Kendrick, of Wyoming.
Key Pittman, of Nevada.
Henry F. Ashurst, of Arizona.
Robert I. Wagner, of New York.
Clarence C. Dill, of Washington.
Sam G. Bratton, of New Mexico.
John KE. Erickson, of Montana.
William H. Thompson, of Nebraska.
and Surveys
Peter Norbeck, of South Dakota.
Porter H. Dale, of Vermont.
Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota.
Bronson Cutting, of New Mexico.
Frederick Steiwer, of Oregon.
Robert D. Carey, of Wyoming.
Rules
Royal S. Copeland, of New York.
Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas.
Pat Harrison, of Mississippi.
Kenneth McKellar, of Tennessee.
Matthew M. Neely, of West Virginia.
Hugo L. Black, of Alabama.
Alva B. Adams, of Colorado.
Harry Flood Byrd, of Virginia.
Territories and
Millard E. Tydings, of Maryland.
Key Pittman, of Nevada.
Carl Hayden, of Arizona.
William H. King, of Utah.
Joseph T. Robinson, of Arkansas.
Bennett Champ Clark, of Missouri.
Robert R. Reynolds, of North Carolina.
Homer T. Bone, of Washington.
Frederick Hale, of Maine.
Porter H. Dale, of Vermont.
David A. Reed, of Pennsylvania.
Frederick Steiwer, of Oregon.
Felix Hebert, of Rhode Island.
Insular Affairs
Hiram W. Johnson, of California.
Arthur R. Robinson, of Indiana.
Gerald P. Nye, of North Dakota.
Jesse H. Metcalf, of Rhode Island.
Arthur H. Vandenberg, of Michigan.
Bronson Cutting, of New Mexico.
Charles L. McNary, of Oregon.
SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE SENATE
Select Committee to Investigate Campaign Expenditures of Presidential and
Vice Presidential Candidates, and Candidates for the United States Senate
Chairman.—Sam G. Bratton, Senator from New Mexico.
John G. Townsend, jr., Senator from Delaware.
Robert D. Carey, Senator from Wyoming.
Tom Connally, Senator from Texas.
M. M. Logan, Senator from Kentucky.
Clerk.—W. C. Hefner.
Special Select Committee to Investigate the Alaska Railroad
Chairman.—[Vacant.]
John B. Kendrick, Senator from Wyoming.
Homer T. Bone, Senator from Washington.
Warren R. Austin, Senator from Vermont.
Secretary.—|[Vacant.]
Commuttees of the Senate 181
Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean Mail Contracts
Chairman.—Hugo L. Black, Senator from Alabama.
William H. King, Senator from Utah.
Pat McCarran, Senator from Nevada.
Warren R. Austin, Senator from Vermont.
Wallace H. White, jr., Senator from Maine.
Special Committee on Conservation of Wild Life Resources
(Room 400, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 1139)
Chazrman.— Frederic C. Walcott, Senator from Connecticut.
Vice chairman.—[Vacant.]
Key Pittman, Senator from Nevada.
Charles L. McNary, Senator from Oregon.
Peter Norbeck, Senator from South Dakota.
Bennett Champ Clark, Senator from Missouri.
Secretary.—Carl D. Shoemaker.
Select Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions on the Mississippi Flood-
Control Project
Chairman.—Robert F. Wagner, Senator from New York.
Hubert D. Stephens, Senator from Mississippi.
Gerald P. Nye, Senator from North Dakota.
MEETING DAYS OF SENATE COMMITTEES
(Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman)
Bamking and Currency oc er er Tuesday.
Claime. i Wednesday.
Commerce... o.oo. ian oat Thursday
Interstate Commerce oo entre aire Tuesday
Judliemey. rT Monday.
NMillinrvoAllalrs os Friday.
Naval Allaire. rer cme roan First and third Wednesday.
Pensions... ne ae i a ae ih aie Tuesday.
ASSIGNMENTS OF SENATORS TO COMMITTEES
182
Appropriations.
Banking and Currency.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Rules.
Judiciary, chairman.
Indian Affairs.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Claims.
District of Columbia.
Judiciary.
Military Affairs.
Privileges and Elections.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Select Committee on Alaska Railroad.
Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean
Mail Contracts.
Foreign Relations.
Military Affairs.
Privileges and Elections.
Claims, chairman.
Commerce.
Finance.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Banking and Currency.
District of Columbia.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Interoceanic Canals.
Library.
Manufactures.
Military Affairs.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Library, chairman.
Banking and Currency.
Finance.
Interstate Commerce.
Claims.
Education and Labor.
Foreign Relations.
Judiciary.
Military Affairs.
Rules.
Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean
Mail Contracts, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Naval Affairs.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Select Committee on Alaska Railroad.
Senate Commattee Assignments 183
Bona. een Education and Labor. |
Foreign Relations.
Judiciary. |
BRATION. cone emda n nme Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman.
Appropriations.
Indian Affairs.
Judiciary.
Privileges and Elections.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Select Committee on Campaign Expenditures,
chairman.
Brows. ot... oa Interstate Commerce.
Manufactures.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Privileges and Elections.
Buiginy......-cocancnat Manufactures, chairman.
Banking and Currency. |
Commerce.
Pensions.
Privileges and Elections.
|
BUILOW. ..- nei aisles Civil Service, chairman. |
Agriculture and Forestry.
Indian Affairs.
Mines and Mining. ]
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Byno curr aia Finance.
Naval Affairs.
Rules. |
Byer BS... cnn hnd Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the |
Senate, chairman. |
Appropriations.
Banking and Currency.
Post Offices and Post Roads. | |
|
CAPPER ci mammemmn mms Agriculture and Forestry.
Claims.
District of Columbia.
Foreign Relations. |
Post Offices and Post Roads.
CARAWAY.  iivaicniannnn Enrolled Bills, chairman. |
Agriculture and Forestry.
Commerce.
Library. \
CAREY. caiman Appropriations.
Banking and Currency.
District of Columbia.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Military Affairs.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Select Committee on Campaign Expenditures.
CEARE., ao aa Commerce. J
Finance. |
Interoceanic Canals. |
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Special Committee on Conservation of Wild Life
Resources.
CONNALLY. onmaaana anand Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman. |
Finance. \
Foreign Relations.
Privileges and Elections.
Select Committee on Campaign Expenditures.
Congressional Directory
- en mw ww ww
Immigration, chairman.
Appropriations.
Claims.
Military Affairs.
Rules, chairman.
Appropriations.
Commerce.
District of Columbia.
Education and Labor.
Immigration.
Banking and Currency.
Finance.
Manufactures.
Banking and Currency.
District of Columbia.
Finance.
Interstate Commerce.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Manufactures.
Military Affairs.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Appropriations.
Civil Service.
Commerce.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Rules.
District of Columbia.
Education and Labor.
Mines and Mining.
Naval Affairs.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Appropriations.
Military Affairs.
Printing.
Privileges and Elections.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Civil Service.
Interstate Cominerce.
Naval Affairs.
Interstate Commerce, chairman,
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Judiciary.
Patents.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Foreign Relations.
Military Affairs.
Privileges and Elections.
Education and Labor.
Mines and Mining.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Public Lands and Surveys.
FRAZIAR. . cvnna
Harrizlp.. ne
HAYDEN coven
Senate Committee Assignments 185
Na Foreign Relations.
Interstate Commerce.
Library.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
RCI Banking and Currency, chairman.
Commerce.
Military Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
Printing.
El Agriculture and Forestry.
Indian Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
Pensions.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
SEER Privileges and Elections, chairman.
Civil Service.
Finance.
Foreign Relations.
a Appropriations, chairman.
Banking and Currency,
District of Columbia.
ma Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the
Senate.
Banking and Currency.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Naval Affairs.
Patents.
emer Interoceanic Canals, chairman.
Banking and Currency.
District of Columbia.
Finance.
Privileges and Elections.
nem wh Appropriations.
Naval Affairs.
Rules.
EE Finance, chairman.
Foreign Relations.
Rules.
amas Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Finance.
Interstate Commerce.
Judiciary.
Privileges and Elections.
SER Agriculture and Forestry.
Immigration.
Interstate Commerce.
Mines and Mining.
BSN Printing, chairman.
Appropriations.
Mines and Mining.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
186 Congressional Directory
Heusen Interoceanic Canals.
Judiciary.
Patents.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Privileges and Elections.
Rules.
SOINGON = = einem sion Commerce.
Foreign Relations.
Immigration.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Naval Affairs.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
RAN. nee rane Banking and Currency.
Civil Service.
District of Columbia.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Interstate Commerce.
Naval Affairs.
RENDRICE ee ns Public Lands and Surveys, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Appropriations.
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the
Senate. :
Indian Affairs.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Select Committee on Alaska Railroad.
Reyes Lon iond Jd 08 Appropriations.
Finance.
Immigration.
Naval Affairs.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
RING. cnr era District of Columbia, chairman.
Finance.
Immigration.
Judiciary.
Privileges and Elections.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean
Mail Contracts.
TaPlovverre. Education and Labor.
Finance.
Foreign Relations.
Indian Affairs.
Manufactures.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
| ATTA RE ee ERE Expenditures in the Executive Departments, chair-
man.
District of Columbia.
Foreign Relations.
Military Affairs.
JOGAN cov menam nnn Mines and Mining, chairman.
Civil Service.
Claims.
Military Affairs.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Privileges and Elections.
Select Committee on Campaign Expenditures.
Senate Commattee Assignments 187
LoNpRGAN Co. . Enrolled Bills.
Finance.
Interstate Commerce.
Pensions.
LONG... ctw amie ns aan Interstate Commerce.
Judiciary.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
|
MeAPOD. =... ~---- Banking and Currency. |
Finance.
Public Buildings and Grounds. |
MCOARBAN oi Appropriations.
District of Columbia. ]
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Judiciary.
Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean
Mail Contracts.
MeOGuav. oo. eens Pensions, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Immigration.
Naval Affairs.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
McRuruam:. - ___..o. ... Post Offices and Post Roads, chairman:
Appropriations.
Civil Service.
Library.
Rules.
MoNany.. ____ Agriculture and Forestry.
Commerce.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Manufactures.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Special Committee on Conservation of Wild Life
Resources.
MeTCALr. nin: Education and Labor. |
Finance.
Interstate Commerce.
Manufactures. ]
Naval Affairs.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
MURPHY... oman Agriculture and Forestry.
Commerce.
Education and Labor.
NUBLY am Civil Service.
Interstate Commerce.
Judiciary.
Rules.
Nomewor.__-.. ......... Agriculture and Forestry.
Appropriations.
Banking and Currency.
Indian Affairs. H
Library. |
Public Lands and Surveys.
Special Committee on Conservation of Wild Life
Resources.
NORRIS... naive Agriculture and Forestry.
Judiciary.
Patents.
188 Congressional Directory
ET SE Appropriations.
Commerce.
Immigration.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Select Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions
on the Mississippi Flood-Control Project.
OY EON ee ne Appropriations.
Commerce.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Manufactures.
PATTERSON. cmon ana asan Civil Service.
Commerce.
Immigration.
Military Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
PI MIAN enim ban Foreign Relations, chairman.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Mines and Mining.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Special Committee on Conservation of Wild Life
Resources.
POPE enema Agriculture and Forestry.
Foreign Relations.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Mines and Mining.
ITH oe hh Sl li Cut ELE Finance.
Foreign Relations.
Immigration.
Military Affairs.
Rules.
RY NOLDS eee emne—mie Banking and Currency.
District of Columbia.
Military Affairs.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
RoBinsoN of Arkansas_.___ Foreign Relations.
Rules.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
RosinsonN of Indiana_____._ Foreign Relations.
Judiciary.
Mines and Mining.
Pensions.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
RUSERLL. nara Appropriations.
Immigration.
Manufactures.
Naval Affairs.
SOWALL. ie. Indian Affairs.
Interoceanic Canals.
Judiciary.
Pensions.
Post Offices and Post Roads.
SUPPPARD. wn vam semana Military Affairs, chairman.
Commerce.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Manufactures.
Senate Commattee Assignments 189
SHIPRIEAD.. . cena Agriculture and Forestry.
Foreign Relations.
Pensions.
Printing.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
TYE BER a LE LE al CE Agriculture and Forestry, chairman.
Interstate Commerce.
Manufactures.
Naval Affairs.
Patents.
Privileges and Elections.
SIBIWER. heath ois Appropriations.
Banking and Currency.
Indian Affairs.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Rules.
HELE Eo Sl Commerce, chairman.
Claims. |
Expenditures in the Executive Departments. |
Immigration. |
Judiciary.
Select Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions
on the Mississippi Flood-Control Project.
TroMAs of Oklahoma.__.___ Agriculture and Forestry. i
Appropriations. {
Indian Affairs. !
Library.
Traomas of Ulah.. ~~ Education and Labor.
Foreign Relations.
Military Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
Pensions.
FT BOMPSON. hse aimmmne Indian Affairs.
Interstate Commerce.
Public Lands and Surveys.
I OWNEEND ace cmman cannes Appropriations. {
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the A
Senate. |
Banking and Currency. |
Claims.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Select Committee on Campaign Expenditures.
TRAMMELL. -nnsnmenen~== Naval Affairs, chairman. :
Claims. |
Education and Labor. {
Interoceanic Canals. |
Patents. {
Post Offices and Post Roads.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
PP YDINGS... erm neem evan Territories and Insular Affairs, chairman.
Appropriations. |
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the
Senate.
District of Columbia.
Naval Affairs.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Congressional Darectory
VANDENBERG Commerce.
Enrolled Bills.
Foreign Relations.
Printing.
Territories and Insular Affairs.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Foreign Relations.
Judiciary.
Patents, chairman.
Banking and Currency.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Foreign Relations.
Interstate Commerce.
Public Lands and Surveys.
Special Committee to Investigate Labor Conditions
on the Mississippi Flood-Control Project, chair-
man.
Banking and Currency.
Claims. .
Education and Labor.
Finance.
Privileges and Elections.
Special Committee on Conservation of Wild Life
Resources, chairman.
Education and Labor, chairman.
Finance.
Naval Affairs.
Pensions.
Printing.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Indian Affairs, chairman.
Agriculture and Forestry.
Interstate Commerce.
Manufactures.
Pensions.
Civil Service.
Claims.
Commerce.
Interstate Commerce.
Special Committee to Investigate Air and Ocean
Mail Contracts.
STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE
Accounts
Lindsay C. Warren, of North Carolina.
John J. Cochran, of Missouri.
Mell G. Underwood, of Ohio.
Edward C. Moran, jr., of Maine.
Sterling P. Strong, of Texas.
Charles Kramer, of California.
Edwin M. Schaefer, of Illinois.
James Wolfenden, of Pennsylvania.
Vincent Carter, of Wyoming.
Leo E. Allen, of Illinois.
Donald H. McLean, of New Jersey.
Agriculture
Marvin Jones, of Texas.
Hampton P. Fulmer, of South Carolina.
Wall Doxey, of Mississippi.
D. D. Glover, of Arkansas.
John R. Mitchell, of Tennessee.
Cap R. Carden, of Kentucky.
John W. Flannagan, jr., of Virginia.
Harry P. Beam, of Illinois.
James G. Polk, of Ohio.
Richard M. Kleberg, of Texas.
Fred Cummings, of Colorado.
Frank H. Buck, of California.
John G. Utterback, of Maine.
Walter M. Pierce, of Oregon.
Fred Biermann, of Iowa.
George Foulkes, of Michigan.
Einar Hoidale, of Minnesota.
Lincoln L. McCandless, of Hawaii.
Santiago Iglesias of Puerto Rico.
John D. Clarke, of New York.
Clifford R. Hope, of Kansas.
J. Roland Kinzer, of Pennsylvania.
Gerald J. Boileau, of Wisconsin.
Fred C. Gilchrist, of Towa.
Ray P. Chase, of Minnesota.
Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire.
L. T. Marshall, of Ohio.
Appropriations
James P. Buchanan, of Texas.
Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado.
William B. Oliver, of Alabama.
Anthony J. Griffin, of New York.
John N. Sandlin, of Louisiana.
W. A. Ayres, of Kansas.
Ross A. Collins, of Mississippi.
William W. Hastings, of Oklahoma.
Clarence Cannon, of Missouri.
Clifton A. Woodrum, of Virginia.
William W. Arnold, of Illinois.
John J. Boylan, of New York.
Tilman B. Parks, of Arkansas.
Charles L. Abernethy, of North Caro-
lina.
Louis Ludlow, of Indiana.
William J. Granfield, of Massachusetts.
Thomas L. Blanton, of Texas.
Michael J. Hart, of Michigan.
Thomas S. McMillan, of South Caro-
lina.
Glover H. Cary, of Kentucky.
Bernhard M. Jacobsen, of Iowa.
John Taber, of New York.
Robert L. Bacon, of New York.
Richard B. Wigglesworth, of Massachu-
setts.
James H. Sinclair, of North Dakota.
Clarence J. McLeod, of Michigan.
Lloyd Thurston, of Iowa.
Florence P. Kahn, of California.
John T. Buckbee, of Illinois.
J. Howard Swick, of Pennsylvania.
Chester C. Bolton, of Ohio.
W. P. Lambertson, of Kansas.
Edward W. Goss, of Connecticut.
D. Lane Powers, of New Jersey.
J. William Ditter, of Pennsylvania.
191
192   Congressional Directory
Banking and Currency
Henry B. Steagall, of Alabama.
T. Alan Goldsborough, of Maryland.
Anning S. Prall, of New York.
Jeff Busby, of Mississippi.
Michael K. Reilly, of Wisconsin.
Frank Hancock, of North Carolina.
Clyde Williams, of Missouri.
Wesley E. Disney, of Oklahoma.
0. H. Cross, of Texas.
Brent Spence, of Kentucky.
Denver S. Church, of California.
Prentiss M. Brown, of Michigan.
Fred J. Sisson, of New York.
James I. Farley, of Indiana.
James A. Meeks, of Illinois.
Herman P. Kopplemann, of Connecti-
cut.
Robert Luce, of Massachusetts.
Carroll 1. Beedy, of Maine.
Edward L. Stokes, of Pennsylvania.
John B. Hollister, of Ohio.
Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan.
Peter A. Cavicchia, of New Jersey.
James W. Wadsworth, of New York.
James Simpson, jr., of Illinois.
Census
Ralph F. Lozier, of Missouri.
John E. Rankin, of Mississippi.
John H. Kerr, of North Carolina.
William H. Larrabee, of Indiana.
William L. Fiesinger, of Ohio.
Lynn S. Hornor, of West Virginia.
Edward H. Crump, of Tennessee.
Brooks Fletcher, of Ohio.
J. Mark Wilcox, of Florida.
Sterling P. Strong, of Texas.
Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana.
Finley Hamilton, of Kentucky.
Matthew A. Dunn, of Pennsylvania.
William M. Colmer, of Mississippi.
J. Roland Kinzer, of Pennsylvania.
William E. Hess, of Ohio.
Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania.
Samuel L. Collins, of California.
William Lemke, of North Dakota.
Civil Service
Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama.
William I. Sirovich, of New York.
Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia.
Russell Ellzey, of Mississippi.
Edward C. Eicher, of Iowa.
Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia.
John D. Dingell, of Michigan.
Frank Gillespie, of Illinois.
Wilbur L. Adams, of Delaware.
John Fitzgibbons, of New York.
Francis E. Walter, of Pennsylvania.
Virginia, E. Jenckes, of Indiana.
Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana.
Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey.
Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont.
Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachu-
setts.
James L. Whitley, of New York.
Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire.
Francis H. Shoemaker, of Minnesota.
Committees of the House 193
Loring M. Black, jr., of New York.
J. Bayard Clark, of North Carolina.
Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia.
Samuel Dickstein, of New York.
Fletcher B. Swank, of Oklahoma.
Russell Ellzey, of Mississippi.
Ambrose J. Kennedy, of Maryland.
William R. Thom, of Ohio.
John Young Brown, of Kentucky.
Martin I'. Smith, of Washington.
William T. Schulte, of Indiana.
Thomas J. O’Brien, of Illinois.
E. M. Owen, of Georgia.
Edward C. Eicher, of Iowa.
Francis E, Walter, of Pennsylvania.
Claims
U. S. Guyer, of Kansas.
George N. Seger, of New Jersey.
Alfred M. Waldron, of Pennsylvania.
George W. Blanchard, of Wisconsin.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures
Andrew L. Somers, of New York.
John J. Douglass, of Massachusetts.
Bolivar E. Kemp, of Louisiana.
John J. Cochran, of Missouri.
William H. Larrabee, of Indiana.
William L. Fiesinger, of Ohio.
Martin Dies, of Texas.
Fletcher B. Swank, of Oklahoma.
Compton I. White, of Idaho.
Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska.
J. Leroy Adair, of Illinois.
Abe Murdock, of Utah.
Terry M. Carpenter, of Nebraska.
William M. Berlin, of Pennsylvania.
James G. Scrugham, of Nevada.
Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey.
Lloyd Thurston, of Iowa.
Harold McGugin, of Kansas.
Ralph R. Eltse, of California.
Alfred M. Waldron, of Pennsylvania.
Disposition of Useless Executive Papers
Robert A. Green, of Florida.
District of Columbia
Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey.
Vincent L. Palmisano, of Maryland.
Wright Patman, of Texas.
Loring M. Black, jr., of New York.
J. Bayard Clark, of North Carolina.
Lynn S. Hornor, of West Virginia.
Byron B. Harlan, of Ohio.
Ambrose J. Kennedy, of Maryland.
Thomas J. O’Brien, of Illinois.
Carl M. Weideman, of Michigan.
E. M. Owen, of Georgia.
Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia.
Virginia E. Jenckes, of Indiana.
Theo. B. Werner, of South Dakota.
James G. Scrugham, of Nevada.
157297°—73-1—1ST ED——14
Gale H. Stalker, of New York.
James L. Whitley, of New York.
Gardner R. Withrow, of Wisconsin.
Michael J. Muldowney, of Pennsyi-
vania.
Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois.
George Burnham, of California,
194 Congressional Directory
Education
John J. Douglass, of Massachusetts. James L. Whitley, of New York.
Loring M. Black, jr., of New York Albert E. Carter, of California.
Vincent L. Palmisano, of Maryland. James M. Beck, of Pennsylvania.
René L. DeRouen, of Louisiana. P. H. Moynihan, of Illinois.
Martin J. Kennedy, of New York. L. T. Marshall, of Ohio.
William H. Larrabee, of Indiana. Charles M. Bakewell, of Connecticut.
Russell Ellzey, of Mississippi.
Brooks Fletcher, of Ohio.
Braswell Deen, of Georgia.
Joseph W. Bailey, jr., of Texas.
James Hughes, of Wisconsin.
William M. Berlin, of Pennsylvania.
John Lesinski, of Michigan.
Kathryn O’Loughlin MecCarthy, of
Kansas.
Frank Gillespie, of Illinois.
Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress
Patrick J. Carley, of New York. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts.
Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama. Gardner R. Withrow, of Wisconsin.
Ralph F. Lozier, of Missouri. Theodore Christianson, of Minnesota.
Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma. George A. Dondero, of Michigan.
Brooks Fletcher, of Ohio. ;
J. Leroy Adair, of Illinois.
Henry Arens, of Minnesota.
Elections No. 1
J. Bayard Clark, of North Carolina. John B. Hollister, of Ohio.
Claude A. Fuller, of Arkansas. Clarence E. Hancock, of New York.
Homer C. Parker, of Georgia. Samuel L. Collins, of California.
Joseph W. Bailey, jr., of Texas.
Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana.
Milton H. West, of Texas.
Elections No. 2
Joseph A. Gavagan, of New York. Joseph L. Hooper, of Michigan.
John J. Douglass, of Massachusetts. U. S. Guyer, of Kansas.
Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska. Thomas C. Cochran, of Pennsylvania.
Walter Nesbit, of Illinois.
William B. Umstead, of North Carolina.
Raymond J. Cannon, of Wisconsin.
Elections No. 3
John H. Kerr, of North Carolina. Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts.
John McDuffie, of Alabama. Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey.
Ben Cravens, of Arkansas. James W. Wadsworth, of New York.
Alfred F. Beiter, of New York.
E. M. Owen, of Georgia.
Enrolled Bills
Claude V. Parsons, of Illinois. Oscar De Priest, of Illinois.
James J. Lanzetta, of New York. Frank H. Foss, of Massachusetts.
Charles J. Colden, of California. George F. Brumm, of Pennsylvania.
Charles N. Crosby, of Pennsylvania.
Commuattees of the House 195
Expenditures in the Executive Departments
John J. Cochran, of Missouri.
Allard H. Gasque, of South Carolina.
Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana.
William M. Whittington, of Mississippi.
Glenn Griswold, of Indiana.
Lindsay C. Warren, of North Carolina.
William R. Thom, of Ohio.
Randolph Carpenter, of Kansas.
J. Twing Brooks, of Pennsylvania.
Edwin M. Schaefer, of Illinois.
Francis E. Walter, of Pennsylvania.
Edward C. Eicher, of Iowa.
A. Willis Robertson, of Virginia.
Wilbur L. Adams, of Delaware.
Joseph W, Bailey, jr., of Texas.
Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts.
Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania.
John B. Hollister, of Ohio.
Edward L. Stokes, of Pennsylvania.
George W. Blanchard, of Wisconsin.
Philip A. Goodwin, of New York.
Flood Control
Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana.
William M. Whittington, of Mississippi.
Fletcher B. Swank, of Oklahoma.
Glenn Griswold, of Indiana.
Edward H. Crump, of Tennessee.
Homer C. Parker, of Georgia.
Ben Cravens, of Arkansas.
Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska.
James R. Claiborne, of Missouri.
Cleveland Dear, of Louisiana.
Otha D. Wearin, of Iowa.
Edwin M. Schaefer, of Illinois.
Monrad C. Wallgren, of Washington.
Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio.
Frank R. Reid, of Illinois.
Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania.
Harry L. Englebright, of California.
James L. Whitley, of New York.
Ray P. Chase, of Minnesota.
Charles W. Tobey, of New Hampshire.
Ernest Lundeen, of Minnesota.
Foreign Affairs
Sam D. McReynolds, of Tennessee.
Sol Bloom, of New York.
Luther A. Johnson, of Texas.
J. Walter Lambeth, of North Carolina.
Stephen A. Rudd, of New York.
Bryant T. Castellow, of Georgia.
Finly H. Gray, of Indiana.
John A. Martin, of Colorado.
Frank L. Kloeb, of Ohio.
Millard F. Caldwell, of Florida.
William E. Richardson, of Pennsyl-
vania.
Thomas F. Ford, of California.
John Kee, of West Virginia.
Guy M. Gillette, of Iowa.
Charles W. Henney, of Wisconsin.
Martin A. Brennan, of Illinois.
Lawrence E. Imhoff, of Ohio.
Hamilton Fish, jr., of New York.
Joseph W. Martin, jr., of Massachu-
setts.
Charles A. Eaton, of New Jersey.
George Holden Tinkham, of Massa-
chusetts.
George F. Brumm, of Pennsylvania.
Leo E. Allen, of Illinois.
Charles M. Bakewell, of Connecticut.
Eg Nourse Rogers, of Massachu-
setts,
196   Congressional Directory
Immigration and Naturalization
Samuel Dickstein, of New York.
John H. Kerr, of North Carolina.
Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama.
Mell G. Underwood, of Ohio.
Vincent L. Palmisano, of Maryland.
Eugene B. Crowe, of Indiana.
Martin Dies, of Texas.
William M. Colmer, of Mississippi.
Carl M. Weideman, of Michigan.
A. Willis Robertson, of Virginia.
E. M. Owen, of Georgia.
William T. Schulte, of Indiana.
James J. Lanzetta, of New York.
Charles Kramer, of California.
Milton H. West, of Texas.
Lincoln L, McCandless, of Hawaii.
J. Will Taylor, of Tennessee.
Charles D. Millard, of New York.
Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania.
William I. Traeger, of California.
William L. Higgins, of Connecticut.
Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois.
Indian Affairs
Edgar Howard, of Nebraska.
Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma.
Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia.
Samuel Dickstein, of New York.
Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico.
Will Rogers, of Oklahoma.
Roy E. Ayers, of Montana.
Thomas O’ Malley, of Wisconsin.
Henry E. Stubbs, of California.
Randolph Carpenter, of Kansas.
Knute Hill, of Washington.
Abe Murdock, of Utah.
Theo. B. Werner, of South Dakota.
Frank H. Lee, of Missouri.
Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska.
Hubert H. Peavey, of Wisconsin.
Oscar De Priest, of Illinois.
Fred C. Gilehrist, of Iowa.
Samuel L. Collins, of California.
Theodore Christianson, of Minnesota.
Ernest Lundeen, of Minnesota.
Insular Affairs
John McDuffie, of Alabama.
Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia.
Ralph F. Lozier, of Missouri.
Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma.
William H. Larrabee, of Indiana.
John D. Dingell, of Michigan.
Leo Kocialkowski, of Illinois.
Charles Kramer, of California.
Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio.
A. Willis Robertson, of Virginia.
John Young Brown, of Kentucky.
James J. Lanzetta, of New York.
J. Buell Snyder, of Pennsylvania.
James G. Scrugham, of Nevada.
Santiago Iglesias, of Puerto Rico.
Carroll L. Beedy, of Maine.
Lloyd Thurston, of Iowa.
Joseph L. Hooper, of Michigan.
Richard J. Welch, of California.
Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont.
George F, Brumm, of Pennsylvania.
Francis H. Shoemaker, of Minnesota.
Commuttees of the House 197
Interstate and Foreign Commerce
Sam Rayburn, of Texas.
George Huddleston, of Alabama.
Clarence F. Lea, of California.
Robert Crosser, of Ohio.
Parker Corning, of New York.
Jacob L. Milligan, of Missouri.
Alfred L. Bulwinkle, of North Carolina.
Virgil Chapman, of Kentucky.
Paul H. Maloney, of Louisiana.
William P. Cole, jr., of Maryland.
Samuel B. Pettengill, of Indiana.
Edward A. Kelly, of Illinois.
KE. W. Marland, of Oklahoma.
Edward A. Kenney, of New Jersey.
George G. Sadowski, of Michigan.
Joseph P. Monaghan, of Montana.
Francis T. Maloney, of Connecticut.
James S. Parker, of New York.
John G. Cooper, of Ohio.
Carl E. Mapes, of Michigan.
Charles A. Wolverton, of New Jersey.
James Wolfenden, of Pennsylvania.
Pehr G. Holmes, of Massachusetts.
Schuyler Merritt, of Connecticut.
B. Carroll Reece, of Tennessee.
Invalid Pensions
Mell G. Underwood, of Ohio.
Ralph F. Lozier, of Missouri.
Andrew L. Somers, of New York.
Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia.
Edgar Howard, of Nebraska.
Kent E. Keller, of Illinois.
Martin J. Kennedy, of New York.
J. Buell Snyder, of Pennsylvania.
Edward C. Eicher, of Iowa.
Finley Hamilton, of Kentucky.
George R. Durgan, of Indiana.
John Lesingki, of Michigan.
Robert L. Ramsay, of West Virginia.
Oscar De Priest, of Illinois.
Charles D. Millard, of New York.
Albert E. Carter, of California.
George A. Dondero, of Michigan.
George W. Blanchard, of Wisconsin.
Francis H. Shoemaker, of Minnesota.
Irrigation and Reclamation
Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico.
Miles C. Allgood, of Alabama.
Allard H. Gasque, of South Carolina.
Charles H. Martin, of Oregon.
Terry M. Carpenter, of Nebraska.
Compton I. White, of Idaho.
Roy E. Ayers, of Montana.
Knute Hill, of Washington.
Henry E. Stubbs, of California.
Claude E. Cady, of Michigan.
James G. Scrugham, of Nevada.
J. W. Robinson, of Utah.
J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida.
Theo. B. Werner, of South Dakota.
Milton H. West, of Texas.
Vincent Carter, of Wyoming.
Fred A. Hartley, jr., of New Jersey.
William E. Hess, of Ohio.
J. Roland Kinzer, of Pennsylvania.
James L. Whitley, of New York.
P, H., Moynihan, of Illinois,
198   Congresstonal Directory
Judiciary
Hatton W. Sumners, of Texas.
Andrew J. Montague, of Virginia.
Tom D. McKeown, of Oklahoma.
Gordon Browning, of Tennessee.
Emanuel Celler, of New York.
Frank Oliver, of New York.
William V. Gregory, of Kentucky.
Malcolm C. Tarver, of Georgia.
Francis B. Condon, of Rhode Island.
Zebulon Weaver, of North Carolina.
J. Earl Major, of Illinois.
John E. Miller, of Arkansas.
Arthur D. Healey, of Massachusetts.
Warren J. Duffey, of Ohio.
James E. Ruffin, of Missouri.
Lawrence Lewis, of Colorado.
John C. Lehr, of Michigan.
J. Banks Kurtz, of Pennsylvania.
Cassius C. Dowell, of Iowa.
Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey.
Joseph L. Hooper, of Michigan.
U. S. Guyer, of Kansas.
Clarence E. Hancock, of New York.
James M. Beck, of Pennsylvania.
William E. Hess, of Ohio.
Labor
William P. Connery, jr., of Massachu-
setts.
Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey.
Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia.
Martin J. Kennedy, of New York.
Glenn Griswold, of Indiana.
Kent E. Keller, of Illinois.
Russell Ellzey, of Mississippi.
John Fitzgibbons, of New York.
Matthew A. Dunn, of Pennsylvania.
Reuben T. Wood, of Missouri.
Jennings Randolph, of West Virginia.
James Hughes, of Wisconsin.
Walter Nesbit, of Illinois.
John Lesinski, of Michigan.
Richard J. Welch, of California.
W. P. Lambertson, of Kansas.
Fred A. Hartley, jr., of New Jersey
Vincent Carter, of Wyoming.
Clifford R. Hope, of Kansas.
Michael J. Muldowney, of Pennsyl-
vania,.
Ernest Lundeen, of Minnesota.
Library
Kent E. Keller, of Illinois.
Lindsay C. Warren, of North Carolina.
Robert T. Secrest, of Ohio.
Robert Luce, of Massachusetts.
Carroll L. Beedy, of Maine.
Memorials
John H. Morehead, of Nebraska.
Mary T. Norton, of New Jersey.
| Frank Crowther, of New York.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries
Schuyler Otis Bland, of Virginia.
George W. Lindsay, of New York.
Oscar L. Auf der Heide, of New Jersey.
Bolivar E. Kemp, of Louisiana.
William I. Sirovich, of New York.
Robert Ramspeck, of Georgia.
Ambrose J. Kennedy, of Maryland.
Charles N. Crosby, of Pennsylvania.
Albert C. Willford, of Iowa.
Monrad C. Wallgren, of Washington.
John Young Brown, of Kentucky.
Edward C. Moran, jr., of Maine.
William B. Umstead, of North Carolina.
Francis E. Walter, of Pennsylvania.
Joe H. Eagle, of Texas.
Lincoln L. McCandless, of Hawaii.
Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska.
. Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey.
Frank R. Reid, of Illinois.
Charles L. Gifford, of Massachusetts.
Richard J. Welch, of California.
Francis D. Culkin, of New York.
George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania.
Committees of the House 199
Military Affairs
John J. McSwain, of South Carolina.
Lister Hill, of Alabama.
James M. Fitzpatrick, of New York.
Jed Johnson, of Oklahoma.
Numa F. Montet, of Louisiana.
Andrew J. May, of Kentucky.
R. Ewing Thomason, of Texas.
William N. Rogers, of New Hampshire.
Thomas C. Coffin, of Idaho.
Chester Thompson, of Illinois.
Dow W. Harter, of Ohio.
Wesley Lloyd, of Washington.
Charles I. Faddis, of Pennsylvania.
Clarence W. Turner, of Tennessee.
Richard M. Duncan, of Missouri.
Theodore A. Peyser, of New York.
Lincoln L. McCandless, of Hawaii.
W. Frank James, of Michigan.
Harry C. Ransley, of Pennsylvania.
Thomas C. Cochran, of Pennsylvania.
Edward W. Goss, of Connecticut.
Vincent Carter, of Wyoming.
Walter G. Andrews, of New York.
Theodore Christianson, of Minnesota.
Donald H. McLean, of New Jersey.
Paul J. Kvale, of Minnesota.
Mines and
Joe L. Smith, of West Virginia.
Andrew L. Somers, of New York.
Lynn S. Hornor, of West Virginia.
Ben Cravens, of Arkansas.
Virginia E. Jenckes, of Indiana.
Finley Hamilton, of Kentucky.
Abe Murdock, of Utah.
Frank H. Lee, of Missouri.
William M. Berlin, of Pennsylvania.
J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida.
Will Rogers, of Oklahoma.
William R. Thom, of Ohio.
Alfred F. Beiter, of New York.
Walter Nesbit, of Illinois.
Albert C. Willford, of Iowa.
Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska.
Mining
Harry L. Englebright, of California.
C. Murray Turpin, of Pennsylvania.
Harold McGugin, of Kansas.
L. T. Marshall, of Ohio.
Naval Affairs
Carl Vinson, of Georgia.
Patrick H. Drewry, of Virginia.
Stephen W. Gambrill, of Maryland.
John J. Delaney, of New York.
Frank C. Kniffin, of Ohio.
Joachim O. Fernandez, of Louisiana.
Patrick J. Boland, of Pennsylvania.
Leonard W. Schuetz, of Illinois.
William H. Sutphin, of New Jersey.
Joseph B. Shannon, of Missouri.
William J. Sears, of Florida.
John J. McGrath, of California.
Colgate W. Darden, jr., of Virginia.
W. D. McFarlane, of Texas.
John H. Burke, of California.
Marion A. Zioncheck, of Washington.
John M. O’Connell, of Rhode Island.
Lincoln L. McCandless, of Hawaii.
Fred A. Britten, of Illinois.
George P. Darrow, of Pennsylvania.
A. Piatt Andrew, of Massachusetts.
Nathan L. Strong, of Pennsylvania.
Charles D. Millard, of New York.
George Burnham, of California.
William L. Higgins, of Connecticut,.
Ralph R. Eltse, of California.
200     Congressional Directory
Patents ;
William I. Sirovich, of New York.
Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas.
Charles V. Truax, of Ohio.
George R. Durgan, of Indiana.
Braswell Deen, of Georgia.
Thomas O’Malley, of Wisconsin.
Robert L. Ramsay, of West Virginia.
Matthew A. Dunn, of Pennsylvania.
J. Leroy Adair, of Illinois.
James P. Richards, of South Carolina.
Charles J. Colden, of California.
John D. Dingell, of Michigan.
Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey.
Clarence J. McLeod, of Michigan.
Fred A. Hartley, jr., of New Jersey.
Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania.
Gerald J. Boileau, of Wisconsin.
James Simpson, jr., of Illinois.
Henry Arens, of Minnesota.
Pensions
Allard H. Gasque, of South Carolina.
Patrick J. Carley, of New York.
Edward B. Almon, of Alabama.
Riley J. Wilson, of Louisiana.
Will Rogers, of Oklahoma.
Sterling P. Strong, of Texas.
Raymond J. Cannon, of Wisconsin.
Martin F. Smith, of Washington.
John H. Hoeppel, of California.
Thomas J. O’Brien, of Illinois.
William T. Schulte, of Indiana.
Reuben T. Wood, of Missouri.
Fred H. Hildebrandt, of South Dakota.
J. Twing Brooks, of Pennsylvania.
Charles V. Truax, of Ohio.
Gale H. Stalker, of New York.
Hubert H. Peavey, of Wisconsin.
Richard J. Welch, of California.
J. Howard Swick, of Pennsylvania.
Walter G. Andrews, of New York.
Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania.
Post Office and Post Roads
James M. Mead, of New York.
Milton A. Romjue, of Missouri.
John H. Morehead, of Nebraska.
William F. Brunner, of New York.
Harry L. Haines, of Pennsylvania.
John S. Wood, of Georgia.
Thomas G. Burch, of Virginia.
Arthur P. Lamneck, of Ohio.
Martin L. Sweeney, of Ohio.
George W. Johnson, of West Virginia.
Elmer E. Studley, of New York.
George B. Terrell, of Texas.
Harry W. Musselwhite, of Michigan.
John C. Taylor, of South Carolina.
D. C. Dobbins, of Illinois.
John F. Dockweiler, of California.
Lincoln L. McCandless, of Hawaii.
Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania.
Frank H. Foss, of Massachusetts.
Isaac H. Doutrich, of Pennsylvania.
Oscar De Priest, of Illinois.
Fred A. Hartley, jr., of New Jersey.
Philip A. Goodwin, of New York.
Magnus Johnson, of Minnesota.
Printing
J. Walter Lambeth, of North Carolina.
Patrick J. Carley, of New York.
Robert F. Rich, of Pennsylvania.
Committees of the House 201
Public Buildings and Grounds
Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas.
Edward B. Almon, of Alabama.
John H. Kerr, of North Carolina.
Eugene B. Crowe, of Indiana.
Ben Cravens, of Arkansas.
Otha D. Wearin, of Iowa.
Claude E. Cady, of Michigan.
Wilbur L. Adams, of Delaware.
Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy, of
Kansas.
Stephen M. Young, of Ohio.
Robert L. Ramsay, of West Virginia.
J. Mark Wilcox, of Florida.
Edward R. Burke, of Nebraska.
Leo Kocialkowski, of Illinois.
J. Buell Snyder, of Pennsylvania.
Public
René L. DeRouen, of Louisiana.
Claude A. Fuller, of Arkansas.
Fletcher B. Swank, of Oklahoma.
Dennis Chavez, of New Mexico.
Fritz G. Lanham, of Texas.
J. W. Robinson, of Utah.
George R. Durgan, of Indiana.
Roy E. Ayers, of Montana.
Knute Hill, of Washington.
Claude E. Cady, of Michigan.
Otha D. Wearin, of Iowa.
Fred H. Hildebrandt, of South Dakota.
Compton I. White, of Idaho.
Henry E. Stubbs, of California.
J. Hardin Peterson, of Florida.
Lincoln L.. McCandless, of Hawaii.
Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska.
J. Will Taylor, of Tennessee.
Gale H. Stalker, of New York.
Gardner R. Withrow, of Wisconsin.
Alfred M. Waldron, of Pennsylvania.
William I. Traeger, of California.
Lands
Harry L. Englebright, of California.
George W. Edmonds, of Pennsylvania.
James W. Wadsworth, of New York.
James W. Mott, of Oregon.
William Lemke, of North Dakota.
Revision of the Laws
Byron B. Harlan, of Ohio.
William P. Connery, jr., of Massachu-
setts.
Samuel Dickstein, of New York.
Raymond J. Cannon, of Wisconsin.
James R. Claiborne, of Missouri.
Charles N. Crosby, of Pennsylvania.
Leo Kocialkowski, of Illinois.
J. Mark Wilcox, of Florida.
Frank R. Reid, of Illinois.
Thomas C. Cochran, of Pennsylvania.
James M. Beck, of Pennsylvania.
Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan,
Rivers and Harbors
Joseph J. Mansfield, of Texas.
John McDuffie, of Alabama.
Joseph A. Gavagan, of New York.
René L. DeRouen, of Louisiana.
Charles H. Martin, of Oregon.
William L. Fiesinger, of Ohio.
Martin Dies, of Texas.
Robert A. Green, of Florida.
Claude V. Parsons, of Illinois.
Edward H. Crump, of Tennessee.
Homer C. Parker, of Georgia.
James Hughes, of Wisconsin.
William M. Colmer, of Mississippi.
James R. Claiborne, of Missouri.
Charles J. Colden, of California.
Alfred F. Beiter, of New York.
Martin F, Smith, of Washington.
Nathan L. Strong, of Pennsylvania.
James J. Connolly, of Pennsylvania.
George N. Seger, of New Jersey.
Albert E. Carter, of California.
Francis D. Culkin, of New York.
Chester C. Bolton, of Ohio.
P. H. Moynihan, of Illinois.
George A, Dondero, of Michigan.
202 Congressional Directory
Roads
Edward B. Almon, of Alabama.
Bolivar E. Kemp, of Louisiana.
Lindsay C. Warren, of North Carolina.
Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma.
Claude A. Fuller, of Arkansas.
William M. Whittington, of Mississippi.
Wright Patman, of Texas.
Charles H. Martin, of Oregon.
Thomas O’ Malley, of Wisconsin.
Terry M. Carpenter, of Nebraska. .
Monrad C. Wallgren, of Washington.
Finley Hamilton, of Kentucky.
Frank H. Lee, of Missouri.
J. W. Robinson. of Utah.
Frank Gillespie, of Illinois.
C. Murray Turpin, of Pennsylvania.
Clyde Kelly, of Pennsylvania.
Gardner R. Withrow, of Wisconsin.
Jesse P. Wolcott, of Michigan.
James W. Mott, of Oregon.
Samuel L., Collins, of California.
Rules
Edward W. Pou, of North Carolina.
William B. Bankhead, of Alabama.
John J. O’Connor, of New York.
Adolph J. Sabath, of Illinois.
Arthur H. Greenwood, of Indiana.
E. E. Cox, of Georgia.
William J. Driver, of Arkansas.
Howard W. Smith, of Virginia.
Harry C. Ransley, of Pennsylvania.
Joseph W. Martin, jr., of Massachu-
setts.
Carl E. Mapes, of Michigan.
Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey.
Territories
Bolivar E. Kemp, of Louisiana.
John E. Rankin, of Mississippi.
John McDuffie, of Alabama.
Robert A. Green, of Florida.
John J. Douglass, of Massachusetts.
Eugene B. Crowe, of Indiana.
Claude V. Parsons, of Illinois.
Raymond J. Cannon, of Wisconsin.
Charles V. Truax, of Ohio.
Fred H. Hildebrandt, of South Dakota.
John Fitzgibbons, of New York.
Sterling P. Strong, of Texas.
J. Twing Brooks, of Pennsylvania.
Carl M. Weideman, of Michigan.
Lincoln L. McCandless, of Hawaii.
Anthony J. Dimond, of Alaska.
Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont.
Cassius C. Dowell, of Iowa.
Louis T. McFadden, of Pennsylvania.
Harry L. Englebright, of California.
Everett M. Dirksen, of Illinois.
James W, Mott, of Oregon.
Henry Arens, of Minnesota.
War Claims
Miles C. Allgood, of Alabama.
Wilburn Cartwright, of Oklahoma.
Joseph A. Gavagan, of New York.
John H. Hoeppel, of California.
Alfred F. Beiter, of New York.
Albert C. Willford, of Iowa.
James P. Richards, of South Carolina.
Braswell Deen, of Georgia.
William B. Umstead, of North Carolina.
Reuben T. Wood, of Missouri.
Stephen M. Young, of Ohio.
Robert L. Ramsay, of West Virginia.
James H. Sinclair, of North Dakota.
Hubert H. Peavey, of Wisconsin.
Gerald J. Boileau, of Wisconsin.
Peter A. Cavicchia, of New Jersey.
Benjamin K. Focht, of Pennsylvania.
.
Commaltees of the House 203
Ways and Means
Robert L. Doughton, of North Carolina.
Heartsill Ragon, of Arkansas.
Samuel B. Hill, of Washington.
Thomas H. Cullen, of New York.
Christopher D. Sullivan, of New York.
Morgan G. Sanders, of Texas.
John W. McCormack, of Massachu-
setts.
Clement C. Dickinson, of Missouri.
David J. Lewis, of Maryland.
Fred M. Vinson, of Kentucky.
Jere Cooper, of Tennessee.
Ashton C. Shallenberger, of Nebraska.
Charles West, of Ohio.
John W. Boehne, jr., of Indiana.
James V. McClintic, of Oklahoma.
Allen T. Treadway, of Massachusetts.
Isaac Bacharach, of New Jersey.
Henry W. Watson, of Pennsylvania.
Frank Crowther, of New York.
James A. Frear, of Wisconsin.
Harold Knutson, of Minnesota.
Daniel A. Reed, of New York.
Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan.
Thomas A. Jenkins, of Ohio.
William E. Evans, of California.
World War Veterans’ Legislation
John E. Rankin, of Mississippi.
Lamar Jeffers, of Alabama.
William P. Connery, jr., of Massachu-
setts.
Edgar Howard, of Nebraska.
Wright Patman, of Texas.
Claude A. Fuller, of Arkansas.
Glenn Griswold, of Indiana.
Joe H. Eagle, of Texas.
Stephen M. Young, of Ohio.
Walter Nesbit, of Illinois.
Edward C. Moran, jr., of Maine.
James P. Richards, of South Carolina.
Randolph Carpenter, of Kansas.
John H. Hoeppel, of California.
Kathryn O’Loughlin McCarthy, of
Kansas.
Robert Luce, of Massachusetts.
Randolph Perkins, of New Jersey.
Ernest W. Gibson, of Vermont.
Edith Nourse Rogers, of Massachu-
setts.
Frederick R. Lehlbach, of New Jersey.
J. Howard Swick, of Pennsylvania.
SELECT AND SPECIAL COMMITTEES OF THE HOUSE
Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Expenditures
Chairman.—Heartsill Ragon, Representative from Arkansas.
Loring M. Black, jr., Representative from New York.
Byron B. Harlan, Representative from Ohio.
Frederick R. Lehlbach, Representative from New Jersey.
[Vacant.]
Select Economy Committee
Chairman.—John McDuffie, Representative from Alabama.
Jacob L. Milligan, Representative from Missouri.
Clifton A. Woodrum, Representative from Virginia.
John Taber, Representative from New York.
Harold McGugin, Representative from Kansas.
MEETING DAYS OF HOUSE COMMITTEES
(Committees other than those mentioned meet upon call of the chairman)
Coinage, Weights, and Measures. ______
Distriectof Columbia... =.
Poreign Aflairy. ....oi-nl atin ate
Immigration and Naturalization_______
Indian Affairs... so. agents
Military Aflnirs: 0 as.
Minesand Mining... ... ...
Wednesday.
Tuesday.
Tuesday and at call of
chairman. 2
Wednesday.
Tuesday.
Saturday.
ASSIGNMENTS OF REPRESENTATIVES AND DELEGATES TO
ANDREW of Massachusetts.__
ANDREWS of New York.____
ARANE. oie
COMMITTEES
Appropriations.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Patents.
Civil Service.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Accounts.
Foreign Affairs.
War Claims, chairman.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Roads, chairman.
Pensions.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Naval Affairs.
Military Affairs.
Pensions.
Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Patents.
Territories.
Appropriations.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Indian Affairs.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Public Lands.
Appropriations.
Ways and Means.
Appropriations.
Education.
Elections No. 1.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Education.
Foreign Affairs.
Rules.
Agriculture.
Education.
Judiciary.
Revision of the Laws.
House Commallee Assignments 205
Bumpy. oo aH Banking and Currency.
Insular Affairs.
Library.
Boveon oo oo Elections No. 3.
Mines and Mining.
Rivers and Harbors.
War Claims.
BERLIN. onc nrar nanan Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Education.
Mines and Mining.
BIE RMANN.. ein Agriculture.
BLAeRS ae Claims, chairman.
Distriet of Columbia.
Education.
Special Committee to Investigate Campaign
Expenditures.
BLANCHARD. ov cee Claims.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Invalid Pensions.
Brawn. Uhl ae Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries, chairman.
BuANTON. Appropriations.
BLOOM. cnn peta Foreign Affairs. °
BORNE... na cies Ways and Means.
BOMBAY... renee Agriculture.
Patents.
War Claims.
BOLAND... ... cvs ww Naval Affairs.
BOLTON. o-oo Appropriations.
Rivers and Harbors.
BovYiaNn ......cconinonens Appropriations.
Begwwan. Foreign Affairs.
Briton. aaa Naval Affairs.
BUOORE: nis ae Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Pensions.
Territories.
Brown of Kentueky.______ Claims.
Insular Affairs.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Brown of Michigan__._____ Banking and Currency.
BrowwNIiNG.... Judiciary.
Baovw. Enrolled Bills.
Foreign Affairs.
Insular Affairs.
BRUNRER Post Office and Post Roads.
206 Congressional Directory
BUCHANAN... Li. lL Appropriations, chairman.
Boer... ns Agriculture.
BUCREER. ai Appropriations.
BULWINELR. aa Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Bonen. 00 ea Post Office and Post Roads.
Burke of California. _.____ Naval Affairs.
BurxkE of Nebraska. .____._ Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Elections No. 2.
Flood Control.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
BUBNHAM....... omnes District of Columbia.
Naval Affairs.
BYSEY a aaa Banking and Currency.
BYRNS. ara Majority Floor Leader.
OC ApY ea Irrigation and Reclamation.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Public Lands.
CALDWELL. oe ones is Foreign Affairs.
CANNON of Missouri_______ Appropriations.
Cannon of Wisconsin. ____ Elections No. 2.
Pensions.
Revision of the Laws.
Territories.
Capen... a Agriculture.
CATImY ss aaa Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress, chairman.
Pensions.
Printing.
CArPENTER of Kansas_.__. Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Indian Affairs.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
CARPENTER of Nebraska___ Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Roads.
CARTER of California. .__._. Education.
Invalid Pensions.
Rivers and Harbors.
CARTER of Wyoming. _.____ Accounts.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Labor.
Military Affairs.
CARTWRIGHT. - ccc mcae Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Indian Affairs.
Insular Affairs.
Roads.
War Claims.
CARY. a iaatas Appropriations,
House Committee Assignments 207
Casrpiiow. Foreign Affairs.
Cavicemia_ 00000000] Banking and Currency.
War Claims.
Caupe.. ood Judiciary.
Caspvan. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Cuase.. Agriculture.
Flood Control.
CHAVEZ... aici Irrigation and Reclamation, chairman.
Indian Affairs.
Public Lands.
CHRISTIANSON oo eee Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Indian Affairs.
Military Affairs.
STH ml Ses nn os Banking and Currency.
CraAtponRNe. Flood Control.
Revision of the Laws.
Rivers and Harbors.
CLARK of North Carolina... Elections No. 1, chairman.
Claims.
District of Columbia.
CLARKE of New York_..___ Agriculture.
CocurAN of Missouri.._.._. Expenditures in the Executive Departments,
chairman.
Accounts.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
CocuRAN of Pennsylvania__ Elections No. 2.
Military Affairs.
Revision of the Laws.
CorFiN......... ioc. Military Affairs.
Coren... = io Enrolled Bills.
Patents.
Rivers and Harbors.
OLY. ov rnoanennrenae Interstate and Foreign Commerce:
Coruins of California_____._ Census.
Elections No. 1.
Indian Affairs.
Roads.
CoLrins of Mississippi-..-- Appropriations.
COMMER... oon cscnimnn= Census.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Rivers and Harbors.
CONDON wv vo mm om een mR Judiciary.
CONNERY. ...nnnncomion~ Labor, chairman.
Revision of the Laws.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
CoNNOTAY. - ~~ Rivers and Harbors.
Cooper of Ohio..........n- Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
208 Congressional Directory
CooPER of Tennessee_~---- Ways and Means.
COBNING....cn isms siinana Interstate and Foreign Commerce: |
Shh Wenn Sete se Rules
CRAVENS...v mmm ames Elections No. 3.
Flood Control.
Mines and Mining.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
CROSBY. mma mimi Enrolled Bills.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Revision of the Laws.
LT i RRR el a Banking and Currency.
TT EE CE Ee Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
CROWE. ovo riciniunn ins Immigration and Naturalization.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Territories.
CROWTHER... nranemmmnn Memorials.
Ways and Means.
CroMp._ oe Census.
Flood Control.
Rivers and Harbors.
CuigIN. IC. UO Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Rivers and Harbors.
Coren Ways and Means.
CovMmINGS. . eee Agriculture.
DARDEN. uve os Naval Affairs.
DARROW... erin Naval Affairs.
DEAR... inane Census.
Civil Service.
Elections No. 1.
Flood Control.
PweN. is Education.
Patents.
War Claims.
PrraNeyYy. ooo aos Naval Affairs.
Dr Peresr. Enrolled Bills.
Indian Affairs.
Invalid Pensions.
Post Office and Post Roads.
DERBUEN. oe connie Public Lands, chairman.
Education.
Rivers and Harbors.
DICKINSON onan cinnn ns Ways and Means.
House Commattee Assignments
DICRSTEIN. onan Immigration and Naturalization, chairman.
Claims.
Indian Affairs.
Revision of the Laws.
209
DIES. or nanan Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Rivers and Harbors.
DIMOND... aera ae Indian Affairs.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
Territories.
Divaprt. o.oo. a Civil Service.
Insular Affairs.
Patents.
DmmeseN... ooo District of Columbia.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Territories.
Disney... a Banking and Currency.
DIT. finns cree as Appropriations.
BesBiNg....... ... + Post Office and Post Roads.
PDocrwWBNLER. Post Office and Post Roads.
BDoypeno... .. ........ .- Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Invalid Pensions.
Rivers and Harbors.
PouveuroN. tara n Ways and Means, chairman.
Dovarass. .__. __ Education, chairman.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Elections No. 2.
Territories.
Beornron. |... Post Office and Post Roads.
Bowen. oo... Judiciary. :
Territories.
Doxey... aan Agriculture.
PrEwRyY. ......... 000 Naval Affairs.
Porven.s oa tis os Rules.
Boeewy. . Judiciary.
PONCAN Military Affairs.
| DHEA ee ha ie Census.
Labor.
Patents.
DURGAN. oan Invalid Pensions.
Patents.
Public Lands.
Barve: ool ois Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries:
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
157297°—73-1—1sT ED——15
210 Congressional Directory
BATON iad Joa BEL EY Foreign Affairs.
IDMONDE. .. cnmmnimen ane Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Public Lands.
BicHER.... oo. JeiaBil ll Civil Service. Claims. |
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Invalid Pensions.
F11LONBOGEN. «neem em
BLizey. nea Civil Service.
Claims. Education.
Labor. |
LE py EE CR Re NE Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Naval Affairs.
FNGLEBRIGHT.. cae emnnen Flood Control.
Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
Territories.
VANS. as Ways and Means.
Bavprs. Slo oon Military Affairs. |
PARLEY ooo Soar Banking and Currency. |
FERNANDEZ... ic Naval Affairs.
EIESINGER. a Census. Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Rivers and Harbors.
Era. 0 Foreign Affairs. |
FrrzcienoNs. . ... ........ Civil Service. ; |
Labor.
Territories.
PrrzeATRick 0 Military Affairs.
FraNNAGAN.. 0 ols Agriculture.
FLETORER naa Census. |
Education.
Election of President, Vice President, and
Representatives in Congress.
Poor. cx-ivniaaissa Census. Immigration and Naturalization.
Pensions.
War Claims. |
BORD L.-T Foreign Affairs.
HE RR BE er Enrolled Bills.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Pours: © oun Agriculture.
PREAR. ccna Ways and Means.
PTI ee SO In ES Le Elections No. 1.
Public Lands.
Roads.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
House Committee Assignments 211
| 1 BET nl Se Agriculture.
ChavmBILL. oo Naval Affairs.
CAGE. oa Pensions, chairman.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
CR AVAGAN seers Elections No. 2, chairman.
Rivers and Harbors.
War Claims.
OIBSON.. _ ...icecineinaan Civil Service.
Insular Affairs.
| Territories.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
| En) Ho RS Election of President, Vice President, and
Representatives in Congress.
Elections No. 3.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Cremer... Agriculture.
Indian Affairs.
Corrusrein. aaa Civil Service.
Education.
Roads.
| CrLIemre. omens Foreign Affairs.
CGrovEn.. 0. oi. Agriculture.
COLDSBOROUGH.. Banking and Currency.
GoopwIN. soon Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Bee IE Se a oe Appropriations.
Military Affairs.
| ORANMIRID. oa Appropriations.
Cray Foreign Affairs.
GREEN... ..ouveriineva Disposition of Useless Executive Papers, chairman.
Rivers and Harbors.
Territories.
GREENWOOD... - =k == Rules.
CGroreony =... = Judiciary.
CORIvRIN. -. Appropriations.
|
GRIBWOLD. os ooeis air Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Flood Control.
Labor.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
| GUEVARA... ia
CUyER... aa es ees Claims.
Elections No. 2.
Judiciary.
Hagnmae- ooo Post Office and Post Roads.
Congressional Directory
Hancock of New York. ___
Hancock of North Carolina _
HILDEBRANDT
Hiry of Alabama
Hiun, K., of Washington___
Hiuw, S. B., of Washington_
Census.
Invalid Pensions.
Mines and Mining.
Roads.
Elections No. 1.
Judiciary.
Banking and Currency.
Revision of the Laws, chairman.
District of Columbia.
Special Committee to Investigate
Expenditures.
Appropriations.
Military Affairs.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Labor.
Patents.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Appropriations.
Judiciary.
Foreign Affairs.
Census.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Judiciary.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Naval Affairs.
Pensions.
Public Lands.
Territories.
Military Affairs.
Indian Affairs.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Public Lands.
Ways and Means.
Pensions.
War Claims.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
Agriculture.
Banking and Currency.
Flections No. 1.
V
|
} |
| |
|
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Elections No. 2.
Insular Affairs.
Judiciary.
Agriculture.
Labor.
House Committee Assignments 213
HUDDIESYON_ oa
HUGHES. Sl
fervmmas 0 a
JenNckEs of Indiana. _____._
JExkmNsof Ohio...
JorunsoN of Minnesota____._
Joranson of Oklahoma_____
JouNsoN of Texas. ______._
JounsoN of West Virginia__
Kenny ol lllineis. —--
KeuLy of Pennsylvania____
KenNEDY of Maryland. _ __
KenneDY of New York___._
Census.
District of Columbia.
Mines and Mining.
Indian Affairs, chairman.
Invalid Pensions.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Education.
Labor.
Rivers and Harbors.
Agriculture.
Insular Affairs.
Foreign Affairs.
Appropriations.
Military Affairs.
Civil Service, chairman.
Election of President, Vice Trosidont, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Immigration and Naturalization.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
Civil Service.
District of Columbia.
Mines and Mining.
Ways and Means.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Military Affairs.
Foreign Affairs.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Agriculture, chairman.
Appropriations.
Foreign Affairs.
Library, chairman.
Invalid Pensions.
Labor.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Roads.
Territories, chairman.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Roads.
Claims.
District of Columbia.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Education.
Invalid Pensions.
Labor.
EE
214 Congressional Directory
ENNEY we... ea anal Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
LT A SRO Elections No. 3, chairman.
Census.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
RINZER. ov aoman os Agriculture.
Census.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
RimpeRe. i Agriculture.
LT TE GE mR DE Foreign Affairs.
RNIPIN ia aaa Naval Affairs.
Yworwon.. Ways and Means.
ROCTALEOWSEY.. vine ms Insular Affairs.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Revision of the Laws.
KROPPLEMANN co vnm=- Banking and Currency.
Weaver... i Accounts.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Insular Affairs.
Eonny.. Judiciary.
Warm. Military Affairs.
LAVMBERTEON. nance Appropriations.
Labor.
ETE re es SE Printing, chairman.
Foreign Affairs.
avNEen Lo Post Office and Post Roads.
DANHAM one 2 Public Buildings and Grounds, chairman.
Patents.
Public Lands.
ANITA: Ca Enrolled Bills.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Insular Affairs.
Tsnmapwm. =o. oo Census.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Education.
Insular Affairs.
LEA of California... ._____ Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Erol Missour! _.-_-__.. Indian Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
Roads.
Lowveaon. ol eae Civil Service.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Rules.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
Special Committee to Investigate Campaign Ex-
penditures.
Hr Th a Ee ee Judiciary.
House Committee Assignments 215
Tommms oon eh Census.
Public lands.
TooINSRY.. oo. a Education.
Lewis of Colorado.
Lewis of Maryland
Invalid Pensions.
Labor.
any Judiciary.
Ee Ways and Means.
TANDSAY ». .. snamaicin Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Iroyp. ....  awwaianl Military Affairs.
Tozgimw. deuce Census, chairman.
Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Insular Affairs.
Invalid Pensions.
| vier ETRE SL RSS Banking and Currency.
Library.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
LUDLOW. ena Appropriations.
UNDEEN. ices Flood Control.
Indian Affairs.
Labor.
MoCANDLESS. nem bos Agriculture.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Military Affairs.
Naval Affairs.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Public Lands.
Territories.
McCaneny ~~ Education.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
World War Veterans’ Legislation:
MceCraNTic... Ways and Means.
McConvaer.... Ways and Means.
McDuerie... an Insular Affairs, chairman.
Elections No. 3.
Rivers and Harbors.
Territories.
Select Economy Committee, chairman.
McPADDEN. ava Territories.
MeVlamiave Naval Affairs.
McGrarn. oo. a Naval Affairs.
MeGuoIN. oo ue Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Mines and Mining.
Select Economy Committee.
McRrown.._......_-.-- Judiciary.
Mchusy. oo i= Accounts.
Military Affairs.
216 Congressional Directory
Melizon: aaa Appropriations.
Patents.
MeMIittAN. cine Appropriations.
MeBRryNoOIDS..... ea Foreign Affairs, chairman.
MeSwamww. Military Affairs, chairman. |
Muon... Judiciary.
MaroneEY of Connecticut.. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
MavroNEY of Louisiana_____ Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
MaNswImID. oo. Rivers and Harbors, chairman.
Ws Re ee Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Rules.
Marvane. o_o... Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Manswars..... Agriculture.
Education.
Mines and Mining.
MARTIN of Colorado... ___ Foreign Affairs.
MarTIN of Massachusetts. Foreign Affairs.
Rules.
MARTIN of Oregon. ._.____ ~- Irrigation and Reclamation.
Rivers and Harbors.
Roads.
May: Military Affairs.
Mean. Post Office and Post Roads, chairman.
Mewes. oc. 0 Banking and Currency.
MERRITT... -———--_.._.. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Mrzoanp. Immigration and Naturalization.
Invalid Pensions.
Naval Affairs.
MILLER. oo lanl Judiciary.
Mutrean... i. 5 Interstate and Foreign Commerce. |
Select Economy Committee.
Mwewmne. oo. Agriculture.
MoNaGHAN. ... Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
MoNTAGUE. oo Judiciary.
Monga doen Military Affairs.
Mogan... Lai Accounts.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
Morremeap:. 0... Memorials, chairman.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Mere ooo on Public Lands.
Roads.
Territories.
House Committee Assignments 217 |
MoymiaaN. _L.ociciald Education.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Rivers and Harbors. |
MUlpOWNEY. Cools Distriet of Columbia.
Labor.
Munpoon ann __ Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Indian Affairs.
Mines and Mining.
Mussgvuwarre_ Post Office and Post Roads.
IE EE es ae Elections No. 2.
Labor.
Mines and Mining.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
NOTION: Fondo ins vee District of Columbia, chairman.
Labor.
Memorials.
OBEN. Claims.
District of Columbia. |
Pensions. f
QCoNNmiL Naval Affairs. |
QCewmor--. Rules.
OniveEr of Alabama_______ Appropriations.
OriveER of New York______ Judiciary.
O!Marnwy.. Indian Affairs.
Patents.
Roads.
OsvAg. 0
OWEN... on Claims.
District of Columbia.
Elections No. 3.
Immigration and Naturalization.
ParmisanNoL i007 0088 wis District of Columbia.
Education.
Immigration and Naturalization.
PArkER of Georgia________ Elections No. 1.
Flood Control.
Rivers and Harbors. |
ParkER of New York______ Interstate and Foreign Commeree.
Pewee i ooo Appropriations.
|
Pandons.. ae Enrolled Bills, chairman.
Rivers and Harbors.
Territories.
PATMAN.. naa District of Columbia.
Roads.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
BRAVO... arene a Indian Affairs.
Pensions.
War Claims.
Congressional Directory
RANDOLPH... oii
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Elections No. 3
Judiciary.
Patents.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Mines and Mining.
Public Lands.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Military Affairs.
Agriculture.
Agriculture.
Rules, chairman.
Appropriations.
Banking and Currency.
Ways and Means.
Special Committee to Investigate Comal Ex-
penditures, chairman.
The Speaker.
Invalid Pensions.
Patents.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
War Claims.
Civil Service.
Claims.
Labor.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Civil Service.
District of Columbia.
Labor.
World War Veterans’ Legislation, chairman.
Census.
Territories.
Military Affairs.
Rules.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce, chairman.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Ways and Means.
Flood Control.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Revision of the Laws.
Banking and Currency.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Flood Control.
Patents.
Printing.
House Committee Assignments 219
RyemAwpg. il Patents.
War Claims. |
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
RICHARDSON. ............ Foreign Affairs.
ROBERTSON... Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Insular Affairs.
ROBINSON. oo Irrigation and Reclamation.
Public Lands.
Roads.
RoaeRrs of Massachusetts._ Civil Service.
Foreign Affairs.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
RocEers of New Hampshire. Military Affairs.
RoGers of Oklahoma ____ - Indian Affairs.
Mines and Mining. :
Pensions.
OMI. ieee Post Office and Post Roads. |
Rupp... Foreign Affairs. |
RuemiN..r oo Judiciary.
Seman. 0 Rules.
SN ADOWSEY. oi crnsnnses Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
SANDERS... ......... Ways and Means.
SANDIAN ono nena Appropriations.
SepaprEn.. onan Accounts.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments. |
Flood Control. |
Senquneg.. ol Naval Affairs.
Sempra. 00 Claims. :
Immigration and Naturalization.
Pensions. : |
{|}
Scnvewaw. .... -. ..... Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
District of Columbia.
Insular Affairs.
; : Irrigation and Reclamation. |
SPARS. aes Naval Affairs. |
Seemmer. oo... Flood Control. |
Insular Affairs. |
Library.
Serapw.. oo an Claims. |
Rivers and Harbors.
SHALLENBERGER veo ooo Ways and Means.
SHANNON: Naval Affairs.
Congressional Directory
Smita of Virginia
Smita of Washington
Smite of West Virginia. ___
StroNG of Pennsylvania_ __
STRONG of Texas__________
Civil Service.
Insular Affairs.
Invalid Pensions.
Banking and Currency.
Patents.
Appropriations.
War Claims.
Patents, chairman.
Civil Service.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Banking and Currency.
Rules.
Claims.
Pensions.
Rivers and Harbors.
Mines and Mining, chairman.
Indian Affairs.
Insular Affairs.
Invalid Pensions.
Minority Floor Leader.
Insular Affairs.
Invalid Pensions.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures, chairman.
Invalid Pensions.
Mines and Mining.
Banking and Currency.
District of Columbia.
Pensions.
Public Building and Grounds.
Banking and Currency, chairman.
Banking and Currency.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Naval Affairs.
Rivers and Harbors.
Accounts.
Census.
Pensions.
Territories.
Indian Affairs.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Public Lands.
Post Office and Post Roads.
Ways and Means.
Judiciary, chairman.
Naval Affairs.
House Committee Assignments 221
SWANK... Claims.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Flood Control.
Public Lands.
SWeYRNTY... oo oi Post Office and Post Roads.
Swick... ...._ Josicpeld Appropriations.
+ Pensions.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.
TABER.-_. saipeoinid hoa of Appropriations.
Select Economy Committee.
MARYER. oo ee Judiciary.
Tayror of Colorado_______ Appropriations.
Tavror of South Carolina__ Post Office and Post Roads.
TavyLor of Tennessee. _____ Immigration and Naturalization.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Togumumesr oC Post Office and Post Roads.
Poem id consi. 0 Claims.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Mines and Mining.
Tuomasen. - Military Affairs.
PoomrsoN. oo Military Affairs.
Tounsron. Appropriations.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Insular Affairs.
TINGEAN. dept br Foreign Affairs.
Tommy... Agriculture.
Civil Service.
Flood Control.
Toapeem = Immigration and Naturalization.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Toanapway. Ways and Means.
Tous 0 eel Patents.
Pensions.
Territories. |
|
TORNER = ea Military Affairs.
Tomei Mines and Mining. | Roads.
Umsrmap.. 0. = vol Elections No. 2.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
War Claims.
UNDERWOOD... nae Invalid Pensions, chairman.
Accounts.
Immigration and Naturalization.
UTTERBACK .- Agriculture.
Vinson of Georgia_ _______ Naval Affairs, chairman.
222 Congressional Darectory
Vinson of Kentucky. ____._ Ways and Means.
WaADSWORPHE. ©... Banking and Currency.
Elections No. 3.
Public Lands.
WALDRON... aia Claims.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
WALLGBREN oo oo Flood Control.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Roads.
WALLER Civil Serivce.
Claims.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
WABREN- Lo Accounts, chairman.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Library.
Roads.
WATEON . oan anna Ways and Means.
WHARING clea aii Flood Control. |
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Public Lands. |
WuAvER on Judiciary.
WEIDEMAN,. District of Columbia.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Territories.
A ete Insular Affairs.
Labor.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.
Pensions.
WenNRR. -- oo District of Columbia.
Indian Affairs.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Wesrol Ohlo.... .. cizess Ways and Means.
Wasrol Texas. ....oo-- Elections No. 1.
Immigration and Naturalization.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
VE SLE el Rel eT Coinage, Weights, and Measures.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
Public Lands.
WHYTERY sai Civil Service.
Distriet of Columbia.
Education.
Flood Control.
Irrigation and Reclamation.
WHITTINGTON. msm Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Flood Control.
Roads.
WIGGLESWORTH  _cocee mm Appropriations.
WILCOX. o. ianaiaaanais Census.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Revision of the Laws.
House Commiuitee Assignments 223
WILLFGRD: aaa Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries:
Mines and Mining.
War Claims.
WATIIAME.. ove teen Banking and Currency.
WHEoN... nena Flood Control, chairman.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.
Pensions.
WItHBOW...oo oi a District of Columbia.
Election of President, Vice President, and Repre-
sentatives in Congress.
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Roads.
WOLCOTT. nena mam Banking and Currency.
Revision of the Laws.
Roads.
WOLVYENDEN So a. Accounts.
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
WOLVERTON... 2. Interstate and Foreign Commerce.
Woop of Georgia__________ Post Office and Post Roads.
Woop of Missouri_________ Labor.
Pensions.
War Claims.
WOODRUFF... oo. Ways and Means.
WoeDRUM: © ir Co Appropriations.
Select Economy Committee.
NOUN Gens orem Public Buildings and Grounds.
War Claims.
World War Veterans’ Legislation:
ION CH CK. eens Naval Affairs.
CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSIONS AND JOINT COMMITTEES
Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Grounds
Chairman.—John N. Garner, Vice President of the United States.
Henry T. Rainey, Speaker of the House of Representatives of the United
States.
Tom Connally, chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Buildings and
Grounds.
Henry W. Keyes, Ranking Minority Member of the Senate Committee on
Public Buildings and Grounds.
Joseph T. Robinson, Majority Leader of the United States Senate.
Fritz G. Lanham, chairman of the House Committee on Public Buildings and
Grounds.
Bertrand H. Snell, Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
J. Will Taylor, Ranking Minority Member of the House Committee on Public
Buildings and Grounds.
David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol.
Senate Office Building Commission
Chairman.—Phillips Lee Goldsborough, Senator from Maryland.
John G. Townsend, jr., Senator from Delaware.
James F. Byrnes, Senator from South Carolina.
Secretary.— Frank F. Maxwell, 2901 Sixteenth Street.
Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and Additional Buildings for the Library
of Congress
Chairman.—Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky.
Simeon D. Fess, Senator from Ohio.
Kent E. Keller, Representative from Illinois.
Robert Luce, Representative from Massachusetts.
David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol.
Commission in Control of the House Office Building
Chairman.—Henry T. Rainey, Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Edward W. Pou, Representative from North Carolina.
Isaac Bacharach, Representative from New Jersey.
Assistant Sytner J. Bourke, 1789 Lanier Place. (Phone, COlumbia
3013.
United States Supreme Court Building Commission
Chairman.—Charles Evans Hughes, Chief Justice of the United States.
Willis Van Devanter, Associate Justice.
Henry W. Keyes, Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds
James A. Reed, of Missouri.
Richard N. Elliott, of Indiana.
Fritz G. Lanham, chairman of the House Committee on Public Buildings and
Grounds.
Member and executive officer.—David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol.
157297°—T73—-1—1ST ED   16 225
226 Congressional Directory
Joint Committee on Printing
(Office, Capitol Building, ground floor, west center. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 29)
Chairman.—Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida.
Vice charrman.—J. Walter Lambeth, Representative from North Carolina.
Carl Hayden, Senator from Arizona.
Henrik Shipstead, Senator from Minnesota.
Patrick J. Carley, Representative from New York.
Robert F. Rich, Representative from Pennsylvania.
Clerk.— Ansel Wold, 16 Grove Street, Hyattsville, Md.
Assistant clerk.—Evelyn Hicks, The Schuyler Arms.
Inspector of paper and material (Government Printing Office).—James H. Shay,
1230 Sixteenth Street.
Joint Committee on the Library
Chairman.— Alben W. Barkley, Senator from Kentucky.
Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee.
Elmer Thomas, Senator from Oklahoma.
Simeon D. Fess, Senator from Ohio.
Peter Norbeck, Senator from South Dakota.
Kent E. Keller, Representative from Illinois.
Carroll L. Beedy, Representative from Maine.
Lindsay C. Warren, Representative from North Carolina.
Robert Luce, Representative from Massachusetts.
Robert T. Seerest, Representative from Ohio.
Clerk.—Laura Barkley, 3102 Cleveland Avenue.
Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation
(Office, Room 227-A, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 290)
Charrman.—Pat Harrison, Senator from Mississippi
William H. King, Senator from Utah.
Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia.
David A. Reed, Senator from Pennsylvania.
James Couzens, Senator from Michigan.
Robert L. Doughton, Representative from North Carolina.
Samuel B. Hill, Representative from Washington.
Allen T. Treadway, Representative from Massachusetts.
Isaac Bacharach, Representative from New Jersey.
[Vacency.]
Secretary.—Bryant C. Brown, 1631 Euclid Street.
Chief of staff.—Lovell H. Parker, 3133 Connecticut Avenue.
Assistant chief of staff.—Gaston D. Chesteen, 4514 Connecticut Avenue.
Counsel.—Colin F. Stam, 3940 Livingston Street, Chevy Chase.
Special examiner.— William F. Collins, 1113 Fern Street.
Technical assistants.— Lynn L. Stratton, 1406 Delafield Place; William L. Wallace,
Driscoll Hotel.
Auditor.— Walter L. Tucker, 408 Rittenhouse Street.
Statistictan.— Allen T. Akin, 3616 Connecticut Avenue.
Legal assistants.—Harry K. ’Spalding, 408 Seward Square; Thomas G. Carney,
900 Butternut Street.
Public Buildings Commission
(Office, Room 1052-A, Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1225)
Chairman.— Tom Connally, Senator from Texas.
Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire.
Fritz G. Lanham, Representative from Texas.
J. Will Taylor, Representative from Tennessee.
David Lynn, Architect of the Capitol.
James A. Wetmore, Acting Supervising Architect of the Treasury, 5506
Thirteenth Street.
Member and executive officer.—Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d, Director Public Build-
ings and Public Parks of the National Capital.
Secretary.—Harold A. Candland, 2121 New York Avenue.
Commassions and Joint Commatiees 227
National Forest Reservation Commission
(930 F Street. Phone, District 6910)
President.—George H. Dern, Secretary of War.
Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior.
Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture.
Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire.
Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia.
Wall Doxey, Representative from Mississippi.
John D. Clarke, Representative from New York.
Secretary.—John E. Burch, 8504 Maple Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission
(Office, New Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1245)
Chairman.—Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States.
John N. Garner, President of the Senate.
Henry T. Rainey, Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Tom Connally, chairman Senate Committee on Public Buildings and Grounds.
Fritz G. Lanham, chairman House Committee on Public Buildings and
Grounds.
Executive and disbursing officer.—Lieut. Col. U. 8. Grant, 3d, Corps of Engineers,
2117 Leroy Place.
Assistant.—Maj. D. H. Gillette, Corps of Engineers, 4437 Reservoir Road.
Designing engineer.—John L. Nagle, 1408 Varnum Street.
The Interparliamentary Union
OFFICERS
President.—Andrew J. Montague, Representative from Virginia.
Vice presidents.—Simeon D. Fess, Senator from Ohio; Alben W. Barkley, Sen-
ator from Kentucky; Sam D. McReynolds, Representative from Tennessee.
Treasurer.—Sol Bloom, Representative from New York.
Secretary.—Charles A. Eaton, Representative from New Jersey.
Permanent executive secretary.— Arthur Deerin Call, 734 Jackson Place. (Phone
NAtional 7409.) Cable address, ‘“ Ampax, Washington.”
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Ez officio chairman.—Andrew J. Montague, Representative from Virginia.
Fred A. Britten, Representative from Illinois.
Albert E. Carter, Representative from California.
Tom Connally, Senator from Texas.
Joseph T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas.
Arthur H. Vandenberg, Senator from Michigan.
A. Piatt Andrew, Representative from Massachusetts.
Thomas C. Cochran, Representative from Pennsylvania.
[Vacant 2.]
The United States George Washington Bicentennial Commission
(Washington Building, New York Avenue and Fifteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 4172)
Vice chairman.—Simeon D. Fess, Senator from Ohio.
Arthur Capper, Senator from Kansas.
Carter Glass, Senator from Virginia.
Millard E. Tydings, Senator from Maryland.
Willis C. Hawley, former Representative from Oregon.
John Q. Tilson, former Representative from Connecticut.
R. Walton Moore, former Representative from Virginia.
Joseph W. Byrns, Representative from Tennessee.
228 Congressional Directory
PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSIONERS
Mrs. Anthony Wayne Cook, Cooksburg, Pa.
Mrs. John Dickinson Sherman, Walker-Johnson Building, 1734 New York
Avenue, Washington, D. C.
Henry Ford, Detroit, Mich.
C. Bascom Slemp, Washington, D. C.
Wallace McCamant, Northwestern Bank Building, Portland, Oreg.
Prof. Albert Bushnell Hart, Washington Building, Washington, D. C.
Joseph L. Scott, California.
[Vacancy.]
EX OFFICIO COMMISSIONERS
Chairman.—President of the United States.
President of the Senate, John N. Garner, United States Senate.
Speaker of the House, Henry T. Rainey, House of Representatives.
Executive secretary.— William Tyler Page.
DIRECTOR
Sol Bloom, Representative from New York, Walker-Johnson Building, 1734 New
York Avenue, Washington, D.
Migratory Bird Conservation Commission
Chazrman.—Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture.
Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce.
Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior.
Peter Norbeck, Senator from South Dakota.
Key Pittman, Senator from Nevada.
Sam D. McReynolds, Representative from Tennessee.
Roy O. Woodruff, Representative from Michigan.
Secretary.— Rudolph Dieffenbach, Bureau of Biological Survey.
George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial Commission
Chatrman.—Simeon D. Fess, Senator from Ohio.
Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee.
Frederick Van Nuys, Senator from Indiana.
Ralph Gilbert, former Representative from Kentucky.
Arthur H. Greenwood, Representative from Indiana.
Robert Luce, Representative from Massachusetts. |
Additional members who are not Members of Congress: Ewing R. Emison,
Vincennes, Ind.; Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, Louisville, Ky.; Luther Ely Smith,
St. Louis, Mo.; Lee Burns, Indianapolis, Ind.; Lew M. O’Bannon, Corydon,
Ind.; Clem J. Richards, Terre Haute, Ind.; : DD. Frank Culbertson, Vincennes,
Ind. Frank C. ball Muncie, Ind.
Executive secretary.—C. B. Coleman, 334 State House, Indianapolis, Ind.
Board of Visitors to the, Military Academy
Morris Sheppard, Senator from Texas.
Duncan U. Fletcher, Senator from Florida.
David A. Reed, Senator from Pennsylvania.
[Vacant, 2.]
John J. ‘McSwain, Representative from South Carolina.
Lister Hill, Representative from Alabama.
Jed J ohnson, Representative from Oklahoma.
Paul J. Kvale, Representative from Minnesota.
W. Frank James, Representative from Michigan.
Harry C. Ransley, Representative from Pennsylvania.
Thomas C. Cochran, Representative from Pennsylvania.
Commasstons and Joint Commattees 229
Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy
David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts.
Harry F. Byrd, Senator from Virginia.
Wallace H. White, jr., Senator from Maine.
Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire.
Park Trammell, Senator from Florida, ex officio.
Carl Vinson, Representative from Georgia.
Loring M. Black, jr., Representative from New York.
D. D. Glover, Representative from Arkansas.
Joachim O. Fernandez, Representative from Louisiana.
James S. Parker, Representative from New York.
Harry L. Englebright, Representative from California.
Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary Commission
Henry W. Keyes, Senator from New Hampshire.
Jesse H. Metcalf, Senator from Rhode Island.
David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts.
Royal S. Copeland, Senator from New York.
Robert 1. Bacon, Representative from New York.
Frank Crowther, Representative from New York.
John J. O’Connor, Representative from New York.
Oscar L. Auf der Heide, Representative from New Jersey.
Nashville (Tenn.) Presidents’ Plaza Commission
Simeon D. Fess, Senator from Ohio.
Kenneth McKellar, Senator from Tennessee.
Nathan L. Bachman, Senator from Tennessee.
Joseph W. Byrns, Representative from Tennessee.
J. Will Taylor, Representative from Tennessee.
United States Reanoke Colony Commission
Chairman.—Joseph T. Robinson, Senator from Arkansas.
Vice chairman.—Lindsay C. Warren, Representative from North Carolina.
Fred H. Brown, Senator from New Hampshire.
Jesse H. Metcalf, Senator from Rhode Island.
Isaac Bacharach, Representative from New Jersey.
Sol Bloom, Representative from New York.
Secretary.—W. O. Saunders, Elizabeth City, N. C.
Joint Committee on Veterans’ Affairs
Chairman.—John McDuffie, Representative from Alabama.
| Vice chairman.—David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts.
Arthur R. Robinson, Senator from Indiana.
Henry D. Hatfield, Senator from West Virginia.
Walter F. George, Senator from Georgia.
Jacob L. Milligan, Representative from Missouri.
John W. Boehne, jr., Representative from Indiana.
John Taber, Representative from New York.
[Vacant, 2.]
Secretary.— Bingham W. Mathias.
Joint Committee to Investigate Dirigible Disasters
Chairman.— William H. King, Senator from Utah.
Vice chairman.—John J. Delaney, Representative from New York:
David I. Walsh, Senator from Massachusetts.
F. Ryan Duffy, Senator from Wisconsin.
Hiram W. Johnson, Senator from California.
Hamilton F. Kean, Senator from New Jersey.
John J. McSwain, Representative from South Carolina.
Dow W. Harter, Representative from Ohio.
A. Piatt Andrew, Representative from Massachusetts.
Clifford R. Hope, Representative from Kansas.
Clerk.—James P. McCeney.
STATISTICAL INFORMATION
231
STATISTICAL
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS
Convress Ses- | Date of begin-| Date of ad- |Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House
g sion ning journment |in days of the Senate 1 of Representatives
Isto = 1 | Mar. 4, 17892 Sept. 29,1789 210 | John Langdon,® of | Frederick A. C. Muh-
New Hampshire. lenberg, of Pennsyl-
vania.
2 | Jan. 4,1790 | Aug. 12,1790 AA REE FE Ra Bs Sa
3 | Dec. 6,1790 | Mar. 3,1791 oI i C08 0 SS BEER J OF
27) EA 1] Oct. 24,1791 | May 8, 1792 197 | Richard Henry Lee, | Jonathan Trumbull,
of Virginia. of Connecticut.
2 | Nov. 5,1792 | Mar. 2,1793 119 | John Langdon, of
New Hampshire.
Bd. 1| Dec. 2,1793 | June 9,17%4 190 | Ralph Izard, of South | Frederick A. C. Muh-
Carolina. lenberg, of Pennsyl-
vania.
2 | Nov. 3,1794 | Mar. 3,1795 121 | Henry Tazewell, of
Virginia.
dh. 1| Dec. 17,1795 | June 1, 1796 1773205. desis. iil ul us Jonathan Dayton, of
New Jersey.
Samuel Livermore, of
New Hampshire.
2 | Dec. 5,1796 | Mar. 3,1797 89 | William Bingham, of
Pennsylvania.
Bthieciisn-- 1 | May 15,1797 | July 10,1797 57 | William Bradford, of Do.
Rhode Island.
2 | Nov. 13,1797 | July 16,1798 246 | Jacob Read, of South | George Dent, of
Carolina. Maryland.4
Theodore Sedgwick,
of Massachusetts.
3 | Dec. 3,1798 | Mar. 3,1799 91 | John Laurence, of
New York.
James Ross, of Penn-
sylvania.
Cth ci 1 | Dec. 2,1799 | May 14, 1800 164 | Samuel Livermore, of | Theodore Sedgwick,
New Hampshire. of Massachusetts.
Uriah Tracy, of Con-
neoticut.
2 | Nov. 17,1800 | Mar. 3,1801 107 | John ¥#. Howard, of .
Maryland.
James Hillhouse, of
Connecticut.
theo: = 1| Dec. 17,1801 | May 3, 1802 148 | Abraham Baldwin, of | Nathaniel Macon, of
Georgia. North Carolina.
2 | Dec. 6,1802 | Mar. 3,1803 88 | Stephen R. Bradley,
of Vermont.
Sth... 1 | Oct. 17,1803 | Mar. 27, 1804 163 John Brown) of Ken- Do.
ucky.
Jesse Franklin, of
North Carolina.
2 | Nov. 5,1804 | Mar. 3,1805 119 | Joseph Anderson, of
Tennessee.
Oily: rd 1| Dec. 2,1805 | Apr. 21, 1806 141 | Samuel Smith, of Do.
Maryland.
2 | Dec. 1,1806 | Mar. 3,1807 Oa. Lee Re ED EE
10th... 1 | Oct. 16,1807 | Apr. 25,1808 1828150. dole Svdi L. G Joseph B. Varnum,
of Massachusetts.
2 | Nov. 17,1808 | Mar. 3,1809 117 | Stephen R. Bradley,
of Vermont.
John Milledge, of
Georgia.
1 Until within recent years the appointment or 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 was
chosen. Since Mar. 12, 1890, they have served until ‘the Senate otherwise ordered.”
2 The Constitution (Art. I, sec. 4) provided that “The Congress shall assemble at least once in every
on the first Monday in December, unless they shall by law appoint a different day.”
Pursuant to a resolution of the Continental Congress, the first session of the First Congress convened
Up to and including May 20, 1820, 18 acts were passed providing for the meeting of Con-
year ‘Fo *
Mar. 4, 1789.
gress on other days in the year.
ber.
*
Since that year Congress has met regularly on the first Monday in Decem-
The first and second sessions of the First Congress were held in New York City; subsequently,
including the first session of the Sixth Congress, Philadelphia was the meeting place; since then Congress
has convened in Washington. :
* 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.
took his seat as President of the Senate. ;
4 Elected Speaker pro tempore for Apr. 20, 1798, and again for May 28, 1798.
John Adams, Vice President, appeared Apr. 21, 1789, and
233
234 Congressional Directory
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued
Congress Ses- | Date of begin- Date of ad- [Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House
er sion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives
Mth. 1 | May 22,1809 | June 28, 1809 3% | Andrew Gregg, of | Joseph B. Varnum,
Pennsylvania. of Massachusetts.
2 | Nov. 27,1809 | May 1, 1810 156 | John Qaillard, of
South Carolina.
3 | Dec. 3,1810 | Mar. 83,1811 91 | John ha of Ken-
tuc
TRh.... 1 | Nov. 4,1811 | July 6,1812 245 William H. Crawford, | Henry Clay, of Ken-
of Georgia. tucky.
2 | Nov. 2,1812 | Mar. 3,1813 122: 1Lto2s dost ark a
WBthis .o.. 1 | May 2, 1813 | Aug. 2,1813 7 WH AE Ah Be ET Do.
2 | Dec. 6, 1813 | Apr. 18,1814 134 | Joseph B. Varnum, of
Massachusetts.
3 | Sept. 19,1814 | Mar. 3,1815 166 | John Qaillard, of | Langdon Cheves,’ of
South Carolina. South Carolina.
14th. al iadd 1| Dec. 4,1815 | Apr. 29, 1816 4g: Lr IER A Gee Henry Clay, of Ken-
tucky.
2 | Dec. 2,1816 | Mar. 3,1817 LE QOL ens
15th: Ll... 1| Dec. 1,1817 | Apr. 20,1818 410... doi, vid or 7 Do.
2 | Nov. 16,1818 | Mar. 3, 1819 108 | James Barbour, of
Virginia.
16th. oo. 1 | Dec. 6,1819 | May 15,1820 162 | John Gaillard, of Do.
South Carolina.
2 | Nov. 18,1820 | Mar. 3,1821 Hi. Aodlt Lid A John W. Taylor,8 of
. New York.
th... 1| Dec. 38,1821 | May 8,1822 57... doi Le Philip P. Barbour, of
Virginia.
2 | Dec. 2,1822 | Mar. 3,1823 O24 EC. dort ak de oh
sth a 1 | Dec. 1,1823 | May 27,1824 ASE an le Hemy Clay, of Ken-
tucky.
2 | Dec. 6,1824 | Mar. 3,1825 i sap
1gth. ce... 1 | Dec. 5,1825 | May 22, 1826 169 | Nathaniel Macon, of | John W. Terlen of
N Ch Carolina. New Yor
2 | Dec. 4,1826 | Mar. 3,1827 00 ca dor
th 1 | Dec. 38,1827 | Mar. 26, 1828 175 api Smith, of | Andrew Stevenson, of
Maryland. Virginia.
2 | Dec. 11,1828 | Mar. 3,1829 Ovi 2 pT Pe
sb. 1| Dec. 7,1829 | May 31, 1830 A do Do.
2 | Dec. 6,1830 | Mar. 3,1831 88 Libr ‘Waller T'aze-
well, of Virginia.
3G LE ATA 1| Dec. 5,1831 | July 16,1832 225 oi doles ao Do.
2 | Dec. 33,1832 | Mar. 2,1833 91 | Hugh Lawson White,
of Tennessee.
28d...» 1| Dec. 2,1833 | June 30,1834 211 | George Poindexter, of Do.
Mississippi.
2 | Dec. 1,1834 | Mar. 3,1835 93 | John Tyler, of Vir- | John Bell,” of Tennes-
ginia. see.
24th... LL. 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 gone dosisic ora 0
25th... 1 | Sept. 4,1837 | Oct. 16,1837 AR foto doc. Do.
2 | Dec. 4,1837 | July 9,1838 28 ol doit soil
3 | Dec. 38,1838 | Mar. 3, 1839 EL do. iio nl
Bth 1 | Dec. 2,1839 | July 31,1840 233 |----- do. ikl Robert M. T. Hunter,
of Virginia.
2 | Dec. 17,1840 | Mar. 3,1841 Ly LESSOR ie Se a
2th... 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 89 d
WBthis.u Lu 1 | Dec. 4,1843 | June 17,1844 196 John W. Jones, of Vir-
ginia.
2 | Dec. 2,1844 | Mar. 3,1845 0 ee do. i oe
0th 1} Dec. 1,1845 | Aug. 10,1846 253 | David R. Atchison, of | John W. Davis, of In-
Missouri. diana.
2 | Dec. 17,1846 | Mar. 3, 1847 rie 0c. ie dss sans
oth... 1| Dec. 6,1847 | Aug. 14,1848 47 Ee ea Robert C. Winthrop,
of Massachusetts.
2 | Dee. 4,1848 | Mar. 3,1849 00 z- dO ms hy
gist... 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 02 fsa (51) a a
Sed. i. 1| Dec. 1,1851 | Aug. 31,1852 CY doi it Lin Boyd, of Ken-
ucky.
2 | Dec, 6,1852 | Mar. 3,1853 ri hia dos cos ual
5 Elected Speaker, Jan.
6 Elected Speaker Nov.
19, 1814,       vice Henry Clay, who resigned Jan. 19, 1814.
15, 1820, vice Henry Clay, who resigned Oct. 28, 1820.
7 Elected Speaker June 2, 1834, vice Andrew Stevenson, of Virginia, resigned,
Statistical
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued
235
c Ses- | Date of begin-| Date of ad- |Length| President pro tempore | Speaker of the House
ongress: l-sion ning journment [in days of the Senate of Representatives
83d. s 1| Dec. 5,1853 | Aug. 7,1854 246 | David R. Atchison, of | Linn Boyd, of Ken-
Missouri. tucky.
2 | Dec. 4,1854 | Mar. 3,1855 90 Jas D. Bright, of In-
ian
Low Cass, of Michi-
Sith... 2. 1| Dec. 3,1855 | Aug. 18,1856 260 Go D. Bright, of In- | Nathaniel P. Banks,
diana. of Massachusetts.
2 | Aug. 21,1856 | Aug. 30, 1856 0 doi aa tin...
3 | Dec. 1,1856 | Mar. 3, 1857 93 | James M. Mason, of
; Virginia.
Thomas J. Rusk, of
Texas. i
35th too 1| Dec. 7,1857 | June 14, 1858 189 | Benjamin Fitzpatrick, | James L. Orr, of
of Alabama. South Carolina.
2 | Dec. 6,1858 | Mar. 3, 1859 CE ERR RR Pd
Sotho 1 | Dec. 51859 | June 25, 1860 2025 (xr i do... co... i....|“William (Pennington,
of New Jersey.
Jesse D. Bright, of
Indiana.
2 | Dec. 3,1860 | Mar. 3,1861 93 Soloman Foot, of Ver-
mon
Sth. sae 1| July 4,1861 | Aug. 61861 7 A Fes doi oi goo: oof; Galusha A. Grow,iof
Pennsylvania.
2 | Dec. 2, 1861 | July 17, 1862 228 aa dowil p02 i. 6
3 | Dec. 1,1862 | Mar. 3, 1863 93 Pommmndinnenrnnee
88th... 1| Dec. 7,1863 | July 4, 1864 200: _| Schuyler Colfax, of
Bad Clark, “of New Indiana.
Hampshire.
2 | Dec. b5,1864 | Mar. 3, 1865 89pm do :
SOth: =o 1 | Dec. 4,1865 | July 28, 1866 237 Lafayette S. Foster, of Po. !
Connecticut.
2 | Dec. 3,1866 | Mar. 3, 1867 91 | Benjamin F. Wade,
of Ohio. :
40th... 1 | Mar. 4,18678 Dec. 2, 1867 2740iu Ci SR TEE Ns Do.
2 | Dec. 2, 18679 Nov. 10, 1868 S65... do 1 Cre ro
3 | Dec. 7,1868 | Mar. 3, 1869 87H o doi... . ou oo... |sTheodore, M. Pome-
roy,!0 of New York.
41st... 2... 1 | Mar. 4,1869 | Apr. 22, 1869 37 | Henry B. Anthony, | James G. Blaine, of
of Rhode Island. Maine.
2 | Dec. 6,1869 | July 15,1870 299 G0. oho a !
3 | Dec. 51870 | Mar. 3, 1871 Ly RPL LR 0 MERIT TR SF Be
RRR 1| Mar. 4,1871 | May 27, 1871 47 | Henry B. Anthony, i Do.
of Rhode Island.
2 | Dec. 4,1871 | June 10, 1872 190 Jac a a :
3 | Dec. 21872 | Mar. 3,1873 92 sl 2a ]
AB is 1| Dec. 1,1873 | June 23, 1874 204 YP H. “Carpen- Do.
ter, of Wisconsin.
2 | Dec. 7,1874 | Mar. 3,1875 87 |=: 2 # Elion SB pple
Henry B. Anthony,
of Rhode Island. i
44h... 1| Dec. 6,1875 | Aug. 15,1876 254 | Thomas W. Ferry, of | Michael C. Kerr,!! of
Michigan. Indiana.
Samuel S. Cox,2 of
New York, pro tem-
pore.
Milton Saylor,13 of
Ohio, pro tempore.
2 | Dec. 4,1876 | Mar. 3, 1877 O00. 40... aia... {.Samuel J. Randall, of
Pennsylvania.
A5th.. 1 | Oct. 15,1877 | Dec. 3,1877 ICE ERR NRT J a Do.
2 | Dec. 3,1877 | June 20, 1878 200 | Thomas W. Ferry, of
Micnican,
3 | Dec. 2,1878 | Mar. 3,1879 02 4:0..2 ai¥. i i
doth... ... 1 | Mar. 18,1879 | July 1, 1879 106 Allen ie: Thurman, Do.
0 io.
2 | Dec. 1,1879 | June 16, 1880 190 Looe doals.. iat ui.
3 | Dec. 6,1880 | Mar. 3, 1881 oR Eee
Thomas F. Bayard,
of Delaware.
8 There were recesses in this session from Saturday, Mar. 30, to Wednesday, July 1, and from Saturday,
July 20, to Thursday, Nov. 2
9 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.
10 Elected Speaker Mar. 3, 1869, and served one day.
11 Died Aug. 19, 1876.
12 Appointed Speaker pro tempore, Feb. i May 12, June 19.
13 Appointed Speaker pro tempore June 4
y
ik
)
236 Congressional Directory
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued
Concrces Ses- | Date of begin-| Date of ad- |Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House
8reSS | sion ning journment |in days of the Senate of Representatives
47¢h. 0 JL 1| Dec. 5,1831 | Aug. 8, 1882 247 | David Davis, of Illi- | J. jen Keifer, of
nois. io.
2 | Dec. 4,1882 | Mar. 3,1883 90 | George F. Edmunds,
of Vermont.
48th. _______ 1! Dec. 3,1883 | July 7,1884 218 |. Ocical oo a... foJohn GQ. Carlisle, of Kentucky.
2 | Dec. 1,1884 | Mar. 3, 1885 931.0 Aan tout lot o. 8
40th... 0 1} Dec. 7,1885 | Aug. 5, 1886 242 John Sherman, of Do.
hio.
2 | Dec. 6,1886 | Mar. 3, 1887 88 | John J. Ingalls, of
Kansas.
Both... .... 1 | Dec. 5,1887 | Oct. 20, 1888 320: BO td ba is ie Do.
2 | Dec. 3,18388 | Mar. 3, 1889 1 Pa do. ed Li
Blast bul. 1 | Dec. 2,1889 | Oct. 1,1850 304 0 ae i ERR Sei Thomas B. Reed, of aine.
2 | Dec. 1,1890 | Mar. 3,1891 93 | Charles F. Manderson,
of Nebraska.
820. 1| Dec. 7,1891 | Aug. 5,1892 251 | to do. ar. ie. ar Charles F. Crisp, of
Georgia.
2 | Dec. 5,1892 | Mar. 3,1893 89 | Isham G. Harris, of
’ Tennessee.
BRdiiuis.. 1| Aug. 17,1893 | Nov. 3,1893 808 3 CLM LAT Do.
2 | Dec. 4,1893 | Aug. 28,1894 oS dD... eit
3 | Dec. 3,1894 | Mar. 3,189 97 Matt W. Ransom, of
North Carolina.
Isham G. Harris, of
k Tennessee.
SAth... a..i 1| Dec. 2,1895 | June 11,1896 193 | William P. Frye, of | Thomas B. Reed, of
Maine. Maine.
2 | Dec. 17,1896 | Mar. 3, 1867 Vga ae BEE do-it Joni oo
55th... 1 | Mar. 15,1897 | July 24,1897 131. dors indatige. ol Do.
2 | Dec. 6,1897 | July 8, 1898 5 deiiiil 8901 6
3 | Dec. 5,1808 | Mar. 3, 1899 89 2a. SDR Sn Dat feel
BEE nla 1 | Dec. 4,1899 | June 7,1900 186: =x doi asia David B. Henderson, of Iowa.
2 | Dec. 3,1900 | Mar. 3,1901 UREA doizds 000 a
Sith: ¥5% 1| Dec 2,1901 | July 1,1902 2a Oui. iad rans Do.
2 | Dee. 1,1902 | Mar. 3, 1903 O35 doll ido. ik
58th... 1] Nov. 9,1903 | Dec. 17,1903 0... i (neers SEER IN Joseph G. Cannon, of Illinois.
2 | Dec. 17,1903 | Apr. 28,1904
3 | Dec. 5,1904 | Mar. 3,1905
Sotho. 1 | Dec. 4,1905 | June 30, 1506 Do.
2 | Dec. 3,1906 | Mar. 3,1907
60th. .o 0. 1| Dec. 2,1907 | May 30, 1908 Do.
2 | Dee. 7,1908 | Mar. 3,1909
Ost... oo 1| Mar 15,1909 | Aug. 5, 1909 Do.
2 | Dec. 6,1909 | June 25,1910
3 | Dec. 5,1910 | Mar. 3,1911
103 ea 1| Apr. 4,1911 | Aug. 22,1911 Ee dol: rs Champ Clark, of Mis-
souri.
2 | Dec. 4,1911 | Aug. 26,1912 267 | Bacon, Brandegee,!6 Curtis,” Gallinger,18
Lodge.1®
3 | Dec. 2,1912 | Mar. 3,1913 92 | Bacon, Gallinger 21___
63d... lL 1: Apr. 7,1013 | Dee. 11,1913 239 | James P. Clarke,2 of Do.
Arkansas.
2 | Dee. 1,1913 | Oct. 24,1914
3 | Dec. 7,1914 | Mar. 3,1915
Gath... 1 | Dec. 6,1915 | Sept. 8, 1916 do Do.
2 | Dec. 4,1916 | Mar. 3,1917 90 | Willard Saulsbury, of
Delaware.
6th... 1] Apr. 2,1917 1 Oct. ' 6,1917 1880-0 doit sine 4 Do.
2 | Dec. 38,1917 | Nov. 21,1918 354 |.-..- doll niga oo
3 | Dec. 2,1918 | Mar. 3,1919 92d i (EE Se BR CSP
Goth... 1 May 19, 1919 | Nov. 19, 1919 185 | Albert B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett,
of Iowa. of Massachusetts.
2 | Dec. 1,1919 | June 5, 1920 1885). ITE ae
3 | Dec. 6,1920 | Mar. 3,1921 88. lau (3 FEL Bhp © pe
14 Resigned as President pro tempore Apr.
15 Elected to serve Jan. 11-17, Mar, 11-12,
1-10, and Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912.
16 Elected to serve May 35, 1912.
17 Elected to serve Dec. 4-12, 1911.
27, 1911.
Apr. 8, May 10, May 30 to June 1 and 3, June 13 to July &, Aug.
18 Elected to serve Feb. 12-14, Apr. 26-27, May 7, July 6-31, Aug. 12-26, 1912,
19 Elected to serve Mar. 25-26, 1912.
20 Blected to serve Aug. 27 to Dec. 15, 1912, Jan. 5-18, and Feb. 2-15, 1913.
21 Elected to serve Dec, 16, 1912, to Jan. 4, 1013, Jan. 19 to Feb. 1, and "Feb. 16 to Mar. 3, 1913.
2 Died Oct. 1, 1916.
EEE
Statistical 237
SESSIONS OF CONGRESS—Continued
onutess Ses- | Date of begin- | Date of ad- |Length | President pro tempore | Speaker of the House i
gres sion ning journment |indays of the Senate of Representatives
67th. oo... 1| Apr. 11,1921 | Nov. 23, 1921 227 | Albert B. Cummins, | Frederick H. Gillett,
of Towa. of Massachusetts.
2 | Dec. 5,1921 | Sept. 22,1922 202 11.0 do... aaa
3 | Nov. 20,1922 | Dec. 4,1922 5s do. a a
4 | Dec. 4,1922 | Mar. 3,1923 00:1. oi. dor satin
Oth. eo i 1| Dec. 3,1923 | June 7,1924 188-2. Ee RAS Ch A Do.
2 | Dec. 1,1924 | Mar. 3,1925 98 fis AO i aaa
6th... 1| Dec. 17,1925 | July 3,1926 209 | George H. Moses, of | Nicholas Longworth,
% New Hampshire. of Ohio.
2 | Dec. 6,1926 | Mar. 3,1927 RETR do. consti
Joth-t... 1 | Dee. 5,1927 | May 29, 1928 ry iF Than me EN I Do.
2 | Dec. 3,1928 | Mar. 3,1929 LE ER SE do ho aT oo ho
ist tools 1 | Apr. 15,1929 | Nov. 22, 1929 2 0 Er EE do laa Do.
2 | Dec. 2,1929 | July 3,1930 234. dorsi ab do
3 | Dec. 1,1930 | Mar. 3,1931 93... 517 AR ENS SR
724. oi. 1| Dec. 17,1931 | July 16,1932 223 (11. AO ET J ong N. Garner, of
exas.
2 | Dec. 5,1932 | Mar. 3,1933 i AER CA ITA SR enn Se
TE RE AT 1a) Mar. 09,3033 cL oil fai Key Pittman... _-_._. Henry T. Rainey of
Illinois.
SPECIAL SESSIONS OF THE SENATE
Year Date of beginning Date of adjournment
eiday, Mar. 4. Ft hia seat ay Friday, Mar. 4.
Monday, Mar. 4... Monday, Mar. 4.
Monday, June 8__ Friday, June 28.
Satmany, Mar. di a ieee Saturday, Mar. 4. ]
! Puesday, July. oo. OL. ol ai Thursday, July 19. {
| Wednesday, Mar. 4... CL. Co... Al Lal 0 Thursday, Mar. 5.
Tuesday, Matid eae. Thursday, Mar. 6.
Saturday, Mara 4. fi i cul 0 ei Tuesday, Mar. 7s
Monday, Mar. 4 Lo aa Monday, Mar. 4.
i Priday, Mar. dd al oe aa Wednesday, Mar. 9.
Wednesday, Mar, 42. 2. 0 So LA Tuesday, Mar. 17.
Satmrday, Mar. 4. io An Seat ia Friday, Mar. 10.
Pharsday, Mar. 4d. na... L0 S  h sO Monday, Mar. 15.
Tuesday, Mar, 4.0. 0 ie Sri headin Thursday, Mar. 20.
Monday, Mar. 5 Friday, Mar. 23.
Tuesday, Mar. 4 Thursday, Mar. 13.
Friday, Mand. i... iaaaai -| Monday, Apr. 11.
Wednesday, Mar. 4 Saturday, Mar. 14.
| Tuesday, Juanes. ob. 10 Loos Co Lae Wednesday, June 16.
| Friday Wak 4. to a a ae sas Thursday, Mar. 10.
i Tuesday, June 26. lr i il aie Thursday, June 28.
Monday Mar 4 = 8 a Thursday, Mar. 28.
i Wednesday, iMarid. 0. Ll. J Sots, Saturday, Mar. 14.
| Satardoy, Mar-4- ooo ee Saturday, Mar. il.
Monday, April. Lass REL BIR on Loe Saturday, Apr. 20.
i BLUE LR Sa eB Monday, ADL I20 a due ll Sule oie ey Thursday, Apr. 22.
| | RT Wednesday, May 10... ee Saturday, May 27.
ea a Tuesday, Mar 4d. i a SES Wednesday, Mar. 26.
AS78s Friday, Mor. 8. a aries Wednesday, Mar. 24.
1877 isu i anna ioa ig Monday, Mar: 5.0 00 LU I0I 00 Jo i008 0d Saturday, Mar. 17.
1881 Lois Mardi. UU ns SD Friday, May 20.
He i vs He: esas Ve Monday, Oet100. 200i Bids oo al Saturday, Oct. 29.
1888 aa id neead LLL Wednesday, Mar. 4... 2 0dliofads, t0n ue Thursday, Apr. 2.
1889 coo tel saci Tiong Monday, Marsa. LC o8ir. Ji Limit Tuesday, Apr. 2.
1898 ats i wall IL Saturday, Map al. Su lil. lo 0. Friday, Apr. 15.
1807a de) dann ldo einls Thursday, Mar. 4. L100 ol S05 000 0 Wednesday, Mar. 10.
100043 oe esa alalians Monday, Mar. 40.00.0000 oo Solin Saturday, Mar. 9.
1008 rai aa Thursday, Mar. 8s. cota a at Thursday, Mar. 19.
1908; osu Boab oils Saturday, Mar. 4.000 olen IL SD PE Saturday, Mar. 18.
1909500. vi. aii dopa. Thursday, Mar. 4: Scie. co BL aor 06 utils Saturday, Mar. 6.
1918.2 als tou itelaees Tuesday, Mar alae. x CLL SEU LRIAE Monday, Mar. 17.
| 07. iis den Heating Monday, Mar.8: Loonie alguns ail TL ov Friday, Mar. 186.
1020s se oe Bridoy, Marid Jor ooh ete a Tuesday, Mar. 15.
| 1998 = oo Wednesday, Mar. 4c 0 0 Wednesday, Mar. 18.
18928. Monday, Mar. 4... Tuesday, Mar. 5.
1030: oo a MonGay, JMy7. oor ST nea Monday, July 21.
083 Saturday, Mav, 45 0 ooo fore an Monday, Mar. 6.
238 Congressional Darectory
REPRESENTATIVES UNDER EACH APPORTIONMENT
pe Ea EE ie El Re Ee EI SS cr Ee a Te Re
ERE 2 |2 1B |B BE 2B 13 17 |=5lE os a Be SE EE I Le LE 28 [98g B [5] 5} 5} [5 |) oO (5) [5 D D ~ 0
58 ER|0B|05 (08080 2810802 (08 (228(Y8 (a8 State S2I0R |" | "®| ®| 3 2 laE ICE "RI BIE lz (S4|E =e iar oo wt =r — r= jin ar or am 84 Br J [SRY
a 2 1% g E= = lea] < 5) = = pre} 2 23 oo Ss 2
SEE (2B 12 12 UB | 42 18 (8.12 |[F [=Z|8 oRlE [EE (2 NE [BEE |B iE IB 6 aCe
Alabama: ade. colle ilaea ts 2 1 5 7 7 6 8 8 9 9:1 10 9
Arizona. oon a sath ee ea an Cl fe ele Ee Se 1 1
ATkanSas. wen Ses Slee le dE HU USS 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 7
California. i uu. dy —cwmpiioaia td eal | fecaas 2 2 3 4 6 7 8 11 20
Colorado... on. hedaman eto, io ens tee. LE 1 1 2 3 4 4
Connecticnt-__o ____- 5 7 7 7 6 6 4 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 6
Belaware........ -. 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Plorida... o-oo nile ai far on si a, 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 4 5
Georgio... onl 3 2 4 6 7 9 8 8 7 Gel 108 = 11=1 1k 112 10
170 i tial he ES J del Nl EL CR LR, BS 2 1 1 1 2 2
Mimelgsali. 0. arial oe nas 1 1 3 7 9 14 19 20 22 25 27 27
maiana. ... owieelEaoll. ooou ale ins 1 3 7 10 11 11 13 13 13 13 13 12
OWA dominio rrer Aeet  oc Lo dn  s 2 2 6 9:4 11 11 11 11 9
Kansas. i. Coot ied ee eae heen ph 1 3 7 8 8 8 7
Kentucky... ool. Jl... C 2 6 10 12 13 10 10 9 10 11 11 11 11 9
Toulsiann... o.oo. chad ca isbn 1 3 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 7 8 8
Nahe eee 7 7 8 7 6 5 5 4 4 4 4 3
Maryland. =. ois 6 8 9 9 9 8 6 6 5 6 6 6 6 6 6
Massachusetts_._______ 8 14 17 13 13 12 10 11 10 11 121 13 14 16 15
Michigan. oc ous sino hie] 2 diay 1 3 4 6 Of 12 12.113 17
Minnesota... oc le nen ca ene ce fen ee 2 2 3 5 7 91 10 9
Missiegippl. ca io ooo fr oh Toe 1 1 2 4 5 5 6 7A 7 8 8 7
Missouri oe lool tus ea Saas 1 2 5 7 9-13 14 | 15 16 16 13
Montana. a a ite 1 1 1 2 2
Neagle i. ar oa eee ed me a BY oi 1 1 3 6 6 6 5
Nevada. sun Shasta datlinl saan oes ii aS 3 1 1 1 1 i} 1
New Hampshire. _.__. 3 4 5 6 6 5 4 3:40.23 3 2 2 2 2 2
New Jersey. ------___ 4 5 6 6 6 6 5 5 5 7 % 8) 10 12 14
New: Mexico. sar leat ag on Al hase i mn WE rb i) fees nnn 1 1
New York. -o-o.-oad 6 10 17. 27:34 | 40:1.-34 1-33 31 33 | 34 34 | 37 | 43 45
North Carolina________ Sani10. 212.0 134-13 13 9 8 7 8 9 9 10] 10 11
North Dakotasatn tosbiteanitle noon 0 cae a lssols ol) 1 1 2 3 2
Ohler adden endian oo 1 6 14 19 21 21 19 20 21 21 21 22 24
Oklahoma - & ads serfs titi gs a ai an a al ee 5 8 9
QRegON. ft nals. seibeles BEE. hie lo a ee 1 1 1 1 2 2 3 3
Pennsylvania_._.______ 8 13 18 | 23 200 28. 24 \wo5 | 245527. 1¢ 28 | 30 (32. 36 34
Rhode Island........-- L 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2
South Carolina._______ 5 6 8 9 9 9 7 6° 4 b 7 7 7 ¥ 6
South Dakotazcns oalogsazhi ols ole eso Sl ooed 2 2 2 3 2
Tennessee... ci. vu nas =rlaisi 1 3 6 9 13 11 10 8 10 10] 10 | 10 10 9
Pexas. 5 r oaks ole ee alae 2 2 4 Giri 11. = 330.165 18 21
a Ae eA I a SR Ce Bein Bee MLE RE eed Il Bt Se EL Sa ee 1 1 2 2
Vermont. . oi. oh -ooaooi: 2 4 6 5 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 2 2 7
Virginia. oo soaf Jou 10 19 |: 22 | 23 2] 21 15 13 11 9. 10 10 10 10 9
Washington: =i. oil le ee eee le 1 2 3 5 6
West Virginine ut. oslo ee fe a ne se [ee [eo tL 3 4 4 5 6 6
Wiseonsiiaes: cob sean aaa acass loa Lo ons 2 3 6 8 cl S102 11 ald 10
Wyoming. s&. ivi -mal-oaiala = Soaa  en ai e 1 1 1 1 1
Totaly: vu. onz 65 | 106 | 142 | 186 | 213 | 242 | 232 | 237 | 243 | 293 | 332 | 357 | 391 | 435 | 435
1 No apportionment was made in 1920.
The following representation was added after the several census apportionments indicated and is included
in the above table: First—Tennessee, i. Second—Ohio, 1. Third—Alabama, 1; Illinois, 1; Indiana, 1;
Louisiana, 1; Maine, 7; Mississippi, 1. = Fifth—Arkansas, 1; Michigan, 1. Sixth—California, 2; Florida, 1;
Iowa, 2; Texas, 2; Wisconsin, 2. Seventh—Massachusetts, 1; Minnesota, 2; Oregon, 1. Eighth—Illinois, 1;
Iowa, 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, 3; Tennessee, 1; Vermont, 1. * Tenth—Idaho, 1; Montana, 1, North Dakota,
1; South Dakota, 2; Washington, 1; Wyoming, 1. Eleventh—Utah, 1. Twelfth—Oklahoma, 5. Thir-
teenth—Arizona, 1; New Mexico, 1.
Nore.—The apportionment based on the Fifteenth Census (1930) was made by the method known as
the method of major fractions, which as applied to a House of 435 Members, gave each State as many
Representatives as the whole number of times 279,712 was contained in the total population of the State
plus an additional Representative if the fractional remainder was greater than one-half,
Statistical 239
COURT OF IMPEACHMENT
The Senate has sat 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; 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 western districts of Tennessee; removed from office; Wednes-
day, May 7, 1862, to Thursday, June 26, 1862.
ANDREW JOHNSON, President of the United States; acquitted; Tuesday,
February 25, 1868, to Tuesday, May 26, 1868. :
WILLIAM W. BELKNAP, Secretary of War; acquitted; Friday, March 3,
1876, to Tuesday, August 1, 1876.
CHARLES SWAYNE, judge of the United States district court for the northern
district of Florida; acquitted; Wednesday, December 14, 1904, to Monday, Feb-
ruary 27, 1905.
ROBERT W. ARCHIBALD, associate judge, United States Commerce Court;
removed from office; Saturday, July 13, 1912, to Monday, January 13, 1913.
GEORGE W. ENGLISH, judge of the United States district court for the
eastern district of Illinois; resigned office November 4, 1926; Court of Impeach-
ment adjourned to December 13, 1926, when, on request of House managers,
impeachment proceedings were dismissed.
HAROLD LOUDERBACK, judge of the United States district court for
the northern district of California; acquitted; Monday, May 15, 1933, to
Wednesday, May 24, 1933.
240 Congressional Directory
i i el dA
VOTES FOR SENATORS, REPRESENTATIVES, AND DELEGATES IN 1928,
1930, AND 1932
{The figures show the votes for the Democratic and Republican nominees, except as otherwise indicated.
ompiled from official statistics]
VOTES CAST FOR SENATORS
Vote
State 1028 1930 1932 Total vote
cast in 1932
Repub- : Repub- Repub- Democrat Yeats Democrat ont Democrat lion
Abobatife ib adileat Snalinioit a 150,985 | 1100,952 | 209, 614 33, 425 243, 039 ATOM a 47,013 BOBE bob. me othe fedex 74 310 35,737 |  2111,463 Aransas 0 TOI TREAT Ls 187, 994 21, 558 200, 552 California. ...__. COTE Doe Ll eae 943,164 | 669,676 | 22,173,832
oltre, Faison ote tial pyll 188 ent] Shvyplany [IC SOU E75 | BO DU | Een ont Connecticut. .___ 251,420 | 206,088 fl... oC 282,327 | 278,061 | 2594, 362
Delaware... 40,828 an 7 [13000 yr
’ ’
Florida... .o5..50 m0 153, 816 a eel CE neers ar 204, 651
EE 56,502 |. { “Baio |"inai| seen Yoho 53,399 90, 922 36, 162 94,038 | 103,020 78,325 | 2 185,146 Hlinois...__._._.... 1,316,038 | 1,004,031 | 1,432,216 | 087,460 | 1,070,466 | 1,471,841 | 23,198, lol
ndiana _- Ll.” 623, 996 LI Vv RE Se aH Rd SE Sy 870, 056 661, 750 1, 531, 806
RT La ly (Bo186 | aor oly | Gas) 309,920 | 104208 3 » 833 Cn ae { me | 6 5) amo | 302,800 | 2720408
0 MI FERS TH SRE IE {PS BOS) es0m7| 303,805 | 2072.2
Lonigamne. 0. oli Bose). ol anawmp lOO 2 249,192 Maine. 145, 501 56, 559 rE Tne mere ird vials Maryland : mat efi 203,380 | 138,536 | © 443,338
Massachusetts... 818, 055 693, 563 661, 939 Bog conti ant i Ate e ss nt et
Michigan... 376, 592 977, 893 169, 757 (RI Era an SRR Sate pe REAL EUL OL DUN SIE MERE 20
Minneiotn...o.—-| 70051000 sees) Teaver ems 7 “VT 0 Mississippi... IVLI800 ofa 88,088.) en erate ce cl be Missouri... meg ana PIR ae LL TT 1,017,046 | 575,174 | ® 1,607,758 Montana... _____ 103, 655 91,185 | 106, 274 Pre ERS RE i dene
Nebraska... .... 204, 737 324, 014 172, 795 yd BE man en el BE SR I ee Ti
Nevada... Cai 19, 515 att pine Sh 21,308 19,706 41,104
New Hampshire... | _. 2... 52, 284 72,225 98, 766 96, 649 2196, 176
New Jersey... 608,623 | sar7og if FBI) CHILO Nps p11) 741,734 | 21,405,228
’ Fi
: 51,495 | 864,623 New Mexico... { A Edy } 69, 362 28,090 4.0. 1. saifacib aden did
New York_.._____ SORCoBl goatont lL. Lv 2,532,905 | 1,751,186 | 24,451,364
* 3 K
NorpCatdtioa.. Loo.) mms owl PUN0R) LM Ne
> Lan y
North Dakota. _ mew wget. ol 65,612 | 172,706 | 3238,997
Ohio......c....-. { Sani jet, 046,610 | 864,039 | 1,203,175 | 1,126,832 | 22,461,994
J bl t]
EE Ee 25,838 | 22,080 | 426,130 | 218864 | 1610, 504 ee a 66,028 | 137,231 "937 | 186,210 Pennsylvania... 1,020,055 | 1,048,646 | 523,338 131,462,186 | 91,375,487 | 1,200,760 | 22,780,878 Rhode Island_____ Teoh | Neon] Amel Camel Lr South Caroling choos fone lis aoe ed WR Hou iin 104, 472 1,076 106, 448 South Dakota. 4. 0 ies 106, 317 90,505 | 125,731 | 151,845 | ? 282,092 5144, 019 49, 554 Tennessee. ------- 175, 329 120, 259 { 154, 131 58, 650 } an pd eh Ar Ss i NI tee
Poxan.. iooiuiie. 566,130 | 129,910 | 266,550 Shar Lon antad nal Sa ish i... 97, 436 OB Ea ea 116, 889 86,046 | 2 206, 282 Vermont... 37, 030 ORAS oe aa 60, 455 74,319 | 2134,795 Virginia... IA Heel TRL. lo hs ET Washington... LET DA le 365,030 | 107,250 | ¥ 603,795 West Virginia. __.| 317.620 | 327,266 | 342,487 | 000,427 ee lee Wisconsin... BRL Gane ne TO 610,236 | 387,668 | 21,071,065 : 20,004 | 542,726 Wyoming.......-- 43,032 37, 096 { 30, 259 43, 626 } EE
7 Farmer-Labor vote.
8 For unexpired term ending Mar. 3, 1929. ;
9 3,708 Liberal Party votes are included in this
total.
10 Independent Republican vote.
1 Independent vote. :
3 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
3 For unexpired term ending Mar. 3, 1933.
4 Includes Liberal-Republican vote.
8 For unexpired term ending Mar. 3, 1931.
8 For unexpired term ending Mar. 3, 1937.
A i A Uh A AANA CO
Statistical 241
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES
Vote cast in 1928 | Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932
State and district State and district Total vote (old apportion- (new apportion- cast in
ment) Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crat lican crat lican crat lican
Alabama: Alabama:
me 16, dis 16830 Yo Be OB B75) 3 re 20, 675
fc ERE Se 20,045) oo a 22,630]. oi oh PAE PEE 28, 250 1, 118] 129, 507
Bde ib 0 T4618 1 oe 13,308)... co cy HE 20, 959 1 20, 960
Ah to. 13, 271 7,768] 13,502] 26,209 dh doo 20, 960 4,016 124 977
Gh. dz on. TE Ee 18,2250. to: 2 Sth. ll. .it. 24, 783 6, 135 30, 918
Bln. eeecs- Te oni Onl iii BER. ae 05,2000. a 15, 296
thts. a 18, 186 16, 981 18, 932 12, 062 Eh g 21, 322 7, 699 29, 021
Sth... ii=a.20. 20, 606]... in 15,5700 .C.. C% Sth. .ioo.i.. S404... 31,404
LT IE TE 03, 558 areas 24,484 2 5, 750 Oth oth. ool 31, 539 3, 701 1.36, 577
105h. cog za. 15, 133 10, 862 14, 388 8, 009 :
Arizona: Arizona:
At large... 50, 231 31, 382 52,342 aii. I Atlarge...... 75, 469 29,710 1106, 584
Arkansas: Arkansas:
Ti ey ag, 824] C4770] 19,7081 nic ol Ist. ibaa] 38,070) 5... 36, 070
2d. zoo cr. 18, 772 5,471 18,623] _L__i. a. 40 ELE 23, 361 1, 995 25, 346
8d... oz0.ck. 18, 157 13, 129 28.8000... 0 b: 1 DRC 0 80,337 a 30, 337
4th. ran ses 20, 962 7.308) 19,004]. Co. 4ph. osc tll 9.4480 30, 443
Sth: sev as. 25, 5563 7, 140 21,8060. 20.50 Sth... 20 0. 27, 940 2, 928 30, 866
Gih:. ey a 28,008. oC Wag Diss as 6h arh ER 33,423
Teh: os a 20, 954 4, 757) 158500. Loi: Yeh .lo 0 30,3600. oo. 30, 360
California: California:
80: oS. 4:56, 3811 ou ias 466,708). ol 1 TEE a SRE SO Y73, 4000. 52 Lo 173, 507
2s Ee Se CR ERI 4.39455 i 4 35, M41 x Lo eit Snel KS SED 443, 146 143,153
a a 477,750] 526,785] 643, 336 8d. nul 61, 694 46,887) 1108, 707
4th... po 2 16, 838 50,208]... ions 447,397 Ath. JC L 711,603] ¢ 67,425 79, 028
Beh aif ei £51 708) "oe 4 59, 853 CRE aE A 4 67,349 67, 349
6th ao ca Jog on 4113, 579). nos 4110, 190 TRS a AE [ee 475, 528 175, 608
3 1 y Bl: I ML Le 271,195]. iui 479,041 ihe onl ar. 32, 365 45,944) 1101, 076
Sth oe: 37,947) 180,613. ui.. 193,377 Sth cits 65,455 49,487 1114, 964
Oth. ae oe 55,263] 222 281]... i 5. 182,176 LT EE A Se 50, 125 31, 208 181, 345
10th zoilao. 719, 659| 4 301, 028 54,231] 162, 502 6th. Sag Lh 50, 390 40, 794 191,195
{RELI MR a eS $127, 118% soon 4124, 092 thal 38, 240 57,739] 1111, 511
2h fon 43,122 40,674] 194,133
183th. Jeon ia 65, 261 53,449] 1123, 994
Miho 1 47,368] 35,598] 183 019
15th, cop iis 57, 518 67,390, 1127, 663
6th... 70,333] 57,718] 1128, 087
7h: Sins 50, 720 26, 868 181, 558
8th. 150 i. 48,179 33, 817 1.90, 497
th 51,796] 56,889 1111, 561 20th. 2c 00. 43,304] 43,757] 187 074
Colorado: Colorado:
Ist eo 44,713 63, 258 38, 152 39, 907 Ish. ani 70, 826 56, 601] 1130, 160
03 Cia Pie 31, 480 62, 375 37, 760 55, 099 2. soe So 63, 399 56, 516 119, 915
1 AL RE 34,670] 64,116] 35,744] 55,170 8d lor O= 50,882] 57,793 117, 675
Shs oes 30,142] 21,089] 34,536] 17,051 ET ie TA 40,736] 20,993 61, 729
Connecticut Connecticut
: RE a 65,922] 75,743 51,551} 50,877 dst. ios ob 72,807] 70,920] 1149, 249
rE dagen 37,786] 48,590) 33,029] 37,801 2d... a on 45,001 45, 232 191, 464
$7 REN bd 52, 358 58, 337 40, 269 45, 329 Sdn: srs 60 57, 881 55, 254) 1119, 567
dif 55, 106 71, 649 50, 769 49, 209, 7H TE I 64, 268 71, 670; 1144, 287
Sth. too an 39, 354 43, 332 32, 584 33, 302 Sthe. va 0) 42, 054 42, 132 185, 329
Atlarge.._.__ 282, 464) 284,490! 1592, 720
Delaware: Delaware:
At large... 38,045! 66,361] 38,801] 48,493 At large. ____ 51,6908) 48,841] 1112, 096
Florida: Florida:
Taf iC a. 42, 003 29, 871 24, 792 11, 819 TE Te a oh 61, 381 19, 010 80, 391
Meet 17.228) “2.310 een). 9d Ln doghouse 22, 213
LL a bo A Le ae a 1,796] coos I a TY 28, 208; .. 28, 208
RE Lad ned 67,130] 36,288] 40,422 _._.._... PN CO 86; 100... oo 86, 101
Atlarge 186, 284 61, 300 247, 584
Georgia: H Georgia:
sto boo 16,288 tas WI LL Ss SE Sa 24, 429 1, 726 26, 155
oT} Bas IRE 1D, 2a tania 2 DI8l. La 2d. bo so 20,44... La a 22, 446
3d [i-at Yusef Say 3d. i or 45 002. 43, 002
qth... ct 16,087)... era HERI dthe clo si 24, 782 20 24, 802
BLIr. acts 19.898). 10,752. oon k Sthe olan 26; 6071. te 26, 657
6th oe 15,9001... oo as 4. 3838]. iin dud 6tho. ni an 19, 615 2 19, 636
Hh oe I EE 85,5000. Jano Toho o.com rn 24, 689 24,295 28, 984
Sth ve 15,940). Lo 5, 058 2 369 Sthe oom ot 20, 021 912 20, 933
LL THE a Re Zoe Lo 7.0800 be. i LA TERT 24, 673 5, 898 130, 615
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
? Independent vote.
3 Democratic and Republican vote.
4 Republican and Democratic vote.
157297°—73-1—1sT ED——17
§ Vote cast for another Republican candidate.
6 Elected by “write in” process.
7 Socialist vote.
242 Congressional Directory
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
State and district
Vote cast in 1928 Vote cast in 1930
State and district
Vote cast in 1932
Total vote
(old apportion- (new apportion- cast in’
ment) Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crat lican crat lican crat lican
Georgia—con. Georgia—con.
16th 12d. 200s Lo oth. =... 23, 911 5 23, 916
Yithe set i. 18,044)... 7, 343 1, 631
Ihe to 18,802. as PATY 7 A ei
Idaho: Idaho:
| Re 19, 064 43, 770 18, 657 34, 527 FE Se 42,784 32, 545 177,943
Ea RE Bea 29, 422, 53, 236 27, 004 46, 342 47, Bie 1 pt Sr 58, 138 46, 273) 1105, 612
Lanois: Illinois:
Sl eaio ois 20, 664 24, 47 16, 747 23, 719 1:1 CRS SRE 26, 959 33, 672 161,474
27 Se ie La 76,909) 126, 005 63, 341 76, 665 Wi HER BR 102, 099 113, 447 1223, 228
El Se ee 95,999] 101, 384 83, 028 59, 644 Bd: 120, 093 95, 282 215, 375
Sth. aa ooo 40, 940 22, 741 36, 736 16, 192 4th doo. 53, 722 18, 659 72, 381
Sth. .o 00. 25, 225 10, 799 21, 460 10, 816 5th. aoc. 30, 747 12, 254 143, 360
{ji es Ret 143, 980 94, 941) 120, 408 59, 052 I IT 164, 187 95, 637) 1259, 826
the .o oo. 119,933 164,447 111,525 90, 844 ihc dit os 190, 446] 134,801] 1 327,819
Sth. tar 24, 517 10, 110] 8 15,394| 816, 565 Sth. iri .to 30, 147 11, 625 41, 772
EY ne RE 26,450, 43,394... _____ 24, 028 Oth. iii. 36, 596] 40, 253 1.77, 380
d0the=. ~~... 82, 598] 138, 386 70, 621 72, 938 othe.) 100, 449] 101,671] 1247, 187
3th. ooo. 44, 306, 97, 938 33, 169 56, 957 Tigh Co 80, 862 82, 195 163, 057
Yh. oan 29, 385 82, 938 17,497 55, 754 12h... a 57, 578 65, 122 122, 700
Ith. 19, 209 53, 985 11, 937 28,113 183th. aor te 34, 917 44, 655 179, 575
4th... .. 29, 768 53, 680 27, 592 36, 370 4th: 2. .o 3 50, 277 43, 082 1 93, 360
1 BE I 31,00 a7, oe 25307 34.008 15th... 55,730| 42,255] 07,904
8th. si ok 37, 662 59, 190 32, 692 36, 572 Yoth. J: a. 44, 802 67, 949 112, 751
| EATER TR 25, 480 47, 266 19,711 27, 696 17th uC 43,198 37, 594 80, 792
18th. ors ih 35,213 57, 373 29, 012 38, 102 ASthese to 0s 5 58, 483 44, 787 103, 270
18th: Jai ot 37, 358 73, 243 35, 310 43, 794 oth es cd 72, 366 53, 151 125, 517
a0the. .: heel: 38, 409 30, 100 37, 537 20, 262 20th te 48, 612 27, 540 76, 152
ost. Jas of 52, 183 52, 320 46, 058 34, 521 bi EBERT Lr 66, 213 44,430 1110, 741
rt es DL Gg 56, 825 72,448] 48, 281 47, 715 Ty CER eat 88, 151 49,965] 1138, 121
284. sas Gh 49, 378 42, 263 49,111 29, 291 Bde 64, 551 35, 885 100, 436
: o 26, 929| 9 26, 732 Jo opeh oo 25,773] 36,230 { ER gan 43,107 30,175] 73,282
5th bisa 42, 799 51, 025 38, 796 34, 927 LA ETRE 64, 286 43, 580 107, 866
Atlarge. uo: 1,171, 520]1, 711, 651] 890, 327|1, 062, 606 Atlarge.....- 1, 675, 274|1, 421, 221| 1 3, 150, 133
Atlarge.____ 1,111, 253|1, 673, 962] 975,422] 991, 083 At large. _____ 1,655, 147|1, 406, T71| 1 3, 111, 945
Indiana: Indiana:
Isis odie. 47,404 49, 013 46, 836 40, 015 | Re 45,473 42, 575 88, 048
2.1 No a 20) 45, 901 44 941 52, 452 35, 689 oa 73, 357 61, 897 135, 254
Sd ane ha 45,718 47, 768 45, 070 44, 808 Sde i 67, 686 52, 965 120, 651
ily ise ys 44, 671 40, 345] 46, 396 34, 856 dhe He rad 73, 198 56, 602 129, 800
Sthi LC 39,538] 51,138 43,355] 40,919 BRU TS 70,698] 59,904] 130, 602
Gh. aa oo 38, 326 50, 795! 40, 803 37, 969 6th cites. 74, 527| 64, 081 138, 608
Fthisebg ot 94, 643 88, 263 87,777 53, 822 hoes Sony 78, 356 59, 949 138, 305
Sth. oor 5 42, 645 59, 704 44,194 44, 203 Sth ora 83,396] 48, 031 131, 427
Oth = Bee ar 40,357, 53, 998 43, 346 43, 681 Oth cot i ee 76, 157 55, 868 132, 025
othe ortias 53, 874 87,972 47, 057 53, 702 Wohi. 68, 974 63, 398 132, 372
Lith: es OF 41, 836 49, 326 41, 823 39, 771 i BA CAR a Sa 67, 871 57, 006 124, 877
1th Sheen 45, 592 56, 436 39, 488 43, 286 qth. 70,128 61, 241 131, 369
13th. Jou fo 60, 993 90, 618 62, 609 59, 361
Towa: Towa:
1 dane ad a Meni LO LE 45, 806 15, 538 27, 053 123 RRR Eade bisa 55, 378 46, 738] 1103, 279
Ai EL Sh 37, 344 49, 690! 30, 008 24,113 drs 71,914 50,636] 1124, 717
1 RAE SS CAE 38,469, 60, 025 15, 908 27, 098 TE han Se 48, 939 47,776 1 96, 779
ath... 5 31, 968 50, 488 20, 236 29, 224! Lk end 62, 598 42,207) 1104, 882
Btn fc 27,893] 54,703] 19,931] 23, 221] She 51,732 . 51,900| 1104385
6th. nro 23, 065 43, 259 16, 811 25, 875! I Dele he 43, 891 56,962] 1102, 773
Thala 72, 404 11,372 36,7 15 Sth ro 57, 803 44,925 102, 728
Sth bl ol 28, 686 43,050, 26,373 27, 960, AEA, 41,772) 47,834 89, 606
Othe bv 27,750, 47,632 20, 587 27,873 Oph oo Tha 61, 755 50,796; 1112, 562
10th coisa nt ce Tee 58, 374 17, 540 34, 911
With ora 32,914 69, 563 13, 382 37, 659
Kansas: Kansas:
Sf a 22,402 48,543). ______. 53, 799 i EY Fig: Foto pb 34, 244 59, 241 1102, 504
aE RL 28, 106 66, 044 37, 991 49, 844 075 HR Sap ta 56, 805 60, 202 117, 707
Bd ost 39, 323 45,121 37, 807 42, 106 LTE Em ee 44 910 52,881] 1100, 023
AN ns 13,450, 38, 664 21, 933 30, 840 dhe er 45,246) 44, 621 190, 101
Sth. han 19,425) 45,053 28, 971 33, 871 Sth. io 65, 713 23, 176 88, 889
Oth. ge == 23, 836 41, 272 24, 975 40, 132 6th... 62, 818 50, 242, 113, 060
hn 25, 433 58, 001 33, 627 52, 858] oh he 47,418 59, 269 106, 687
Sth. Soa a 46,117) 32,802 57,173 19, 325
Kentucky: Kentucky:
JE] Eas ine Fe 36, 325 27, 581 24,620: Atlarge.____. 575,191 391,868] 1970,573
erbortin: 38,003 34, 104 { 32h Ieee At large... 574,270, 391,674] 1969, 444 24,658)
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
8 Election contested; Democrat declared elected.
9 To fill vacancy.
|
+ |
Statistical 243
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Vote cast in 1928 | Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932
State and district State and district Total vote
(old apportion- (new apportion- cast in
ment) Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crat lican crat lican crat lican
Kentucky—con. Kentucky—con.
Sdruii on a2, 2100 37-216" “ab ost o_o At large... _._ 574,189 390,982] 1 968,431
hh tae 34, 639 39, 244 30, 910 28, 220 Atlarge.. ... 574,079 390,739] 1968,077
Fi eR TA 64, 201 96,926] 191, 306 61, 832 At large. .____ 573,750, 390,474] 1967,4%0
Sth xe pnt 42, 309 48, 00 31, 520 18, 891 At large. ____ 573, 505; 390,370] 1967,131
hia 37, 936 43, 604 33, 402 24, 380 Atlarge_.____ 573,269] 390, 148] 1966, 672
Sth i....... 30, 424 33, 931 25, 688 19, 023 Atlarge 573, 257 390, 041 1 966, 552
Of leeongor 45, 426 51, 019 42,671 28, 850 Atlarge___.__ 573,024) 389,950] 1966, 226
th. 2-02 30, 919 39, 541 27,159 24,172
th oan: 18, 939 74, 929 24,716 48, 535
Louisiana Louisiana:
Ee on hE 2B000L cee 30, 629 1,335 1st 48. 984 48, 784
0 mer CE 33,176 14, 661 30, 739 50, 0271-1 50, 327
1 ml SESE 5,219) iota 8517 por 18,340} 18, 340
dthe “bute 14,9490 11,8380 t=arre 00, 200. re 26, 262
FANT or SR 11,827) +o oe TL A68I eo ie 25. 3800 JT mre 25, 853
Oth ota, 18,3700. =i 15.524] i. oo 25, 238]. Sra 25, 238
TEE alr ah 16,5820 ~ iy 203. ia Se 24, 233
Sth. iH. 20 12618 ne 12-383] ood 2B,0644 25, 644 Maine:
Jap Cait 19,219) 40,255] 14,741] 23,434 39,356) 41,112 80, 468
05 Fo heat 19, 420 36, 791 18, 943 24, 330 44, 490 40, 703 185, 871
3d pei fn 12,498) 36,686] 13,948! 25, 109 34,520] 34,226] 168,959 deh! > 0s 10,753] 32,223 7,839] 15,199
Maryland
Taber nny ec 28,795 28,059 34,553] 25,792 39,471] 21,387 60, 858
0 Ela EA 59, 912 69, 267 79, 963 54,914 87, 841 42, 740 130, 581
Selidh my 27,377 27, 047 28, 633 24,170 34, 724 11, 370 147,728
Airs Brat 41,432 34,112 49, 471 26, 661 Ra 46, 781
Bihs iso 31, 403 28, 574 40, 315 21, 463 46, 463 22, 231 170, 390
Gh ob 37,197 47, 789 42, 526 36, 815 42, 329 17, 835 60, 164
49,126 34, 989 84,115 Massachusetts:
ah ree 41,216 51,791] 33,934] 41,334 44,191 56,767 1103,818
2 EEE iE es 43, 856 52, 344 46, 432 37, 247 52, 346 47,920| 1104, 815
8d. koi 34,776 46, 204] - 27, 568 36, 620 47, 632 50, 617 1 08, 253
4th. over 42,115 51, 145 35, 661 42, 996 46, 081 56,408, 1102,491
Pith. iv 35, 713 56, 004 25, 742 50, 541 49, 788 74,459] 1124, 249
Sih. ets 27,130 58, 293 15, 683 50, 814 31,416 65, 728 197,146
Ji Tee Ln EL] 61,607). 45,521] 21,821 61,501 44,331] 1108, 848
Sth: poe os 53, 721 71, 850 44, 031 57,428 50, 266 48, 080 98, 346
9h. 48,290 48,947| 39,948 41, 040 56,425 61,178] 1119, 020 oth. 42,594) 7,498] 33,218 4,815 40,099] 60,926 1101, 026 wih. BE 37,514] 52,576] 23,739 40, 417 45,343) 7,583] 152 927 Pil 64,351] 19,937] 50,804 15,422 69,994) 25,995 195,990 Win 53,255 74,097] 43,800 55, 470 45,964] 64, 589 110, 553 Ah. 46,498 73,598) 42,307| 56,803 39,259] 51,680] 190, 940 TE 30,373] 39,905] 20,780 37,100 36,556] 53,066] 192 272 Yoho 23,590 49,202 17,467] 39, 953
Michigan:
i RRs El 39,870, 64, 606 8,758] 44, 021 51,620, 21,764 175,792
AEE a 31,223) 86,804] 29,979] 41,478 51,592) 49,257 1102, 022
7 VR Sn a 18,535 71,650 14,737] 36,190 Buz... en nn 46,093] 49, 383 1 98, 356
Sh. cs 19,708] 60,334] 17,953] 34, 980 ETRE 46,927) 42,931 1.90, 597
Othe 19, 627 73, 241 11 420 31, 297 Othe. mi. 3. 48, 686 52,870] 1103, 033
6h. 89, 085 238,223 50,221 124,797 6th. Zoi. 55,478) 45,818 1116, 137 Tih: Tet 21,659 61,439] 2,534] 42, 256 Fil. ia 38,738 51,974] 192 706
Sth. ai ais 21, 387 65, 600 18, 838 38, 891 Sth. aor 40 53, 959 45, 263 1100, 830
Oh. i 11 96 51, 246 10, 462 31, 318 Oth. ran 40, 200 36, 434 177,018
A0ih-. hol 15, 598 43, 800 8, 345 31, 033 16th... 32, 376 38, 937 172, 067
hh. 3 loos 21, 760 44, 546 ______ 34, 971 Tithe oo. 39, 261 37, 311 178, 450
th. 2a 21, 039 47, 069 11703 36, 907 26h. oo 26, 925 48, 014 176, 830
ABth. oo ae 37,574] 70,513 9,575 39, 064 13th... ooo. 43,374) 50,437 1.96, 258
Wh oo 53,789] 50,491] 1106, 799 15th. gooact 52,376] 49,801] 1108, 345
16th oes 43,369] 36, 174 1.81, 786
Ith... sya 44, 325 51, 918 1.08, 636
Minnesota: Minnesota: 13
AE LR SE 32, 398 59, 628] 12 24, 357 45, 330 At large... .. 12.388,616] ....... 12 388, 616
2 ee 26, 606 60, 259] 12 33, 092 38, 431 Atlarge.... cz 12 380,444) _________ 12 380, 444
TREE 19,844) 52,526] 12 21,118] 35, 704 At large _____ paeliyel 12 361, 724
Ahi ota 31, 521 39, 648] 12 16, 180 48, 633 At large.__.__. 12350.4588) 0. oC 12 350, 455
SR ali 31, 528 80, 856 32, 215 55, 502 Atlargeca. ia] ooo 337, 110 337, 110
Bihan 12 28,276] 55,663] 1219,461] 44, 058, Atlarge...__. golote 321, 946
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
9 To fill vacancy.
10 Socialist-Labor vote.
11 Workers’ Party vote.
12 Farmer-Labor vote.
13 In Minnesota there were 32 candidates of vari-
ous political partiesrunning at large, hence the total
vote of only the 9 successful candidates is shown.
244 Congressional Drirectory
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Vote cast in 1928 Vote cast in 1930   Vote cast in 1932
State and district State and district Total vote
(old apportion- (new apportion- cast in
ment) Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crat lican crat lican crat lican
Minnesota—con. Minnesota—con.
Teh. sooo 12 56, 029] 27, 735| 12 58,334] 13, 506 Atldarge.. o.oo. oo 321, 092 321, 092
coi Fr ei ns 12 42, 508 43, 777) 12 29, 001 55, 802 At large... ED bd 1 RS 12 317, 109
Oth... 00 12 36, 853 45,319] 2 32, 874 37, 531 AL 1ar80.. co] iets. 313, 221 313, 221
0th. oJ 12 23 774 60,100] 12 37,182] 38, 391
Mississippi: Mississippi:
1 ER 13,816. oan Foe VE Ba ed EAE Sing 19,549. coon 19, 549
od... oeul Les EU RE ah A EE ei dae 275 HERES Pg) 15, 000 ia. 15, 092
LR 13,0800. ooo CE RR 3 ales Je 13, 50a iat "18, 562
ah Iden. Sie 4 Oper SRE a oy i 14, 072
Lie ee TEL Ee B00. Loo. Lr See 19, 198. una 19, 123
6th... aaa 1820060 oo ...C 5, 995 GH DEER Nae LE | ER 22, 831
Hh ees Z848 Coo 3, 356] Ci RE RAE 85, al i 25, 725 SH. co ieane Wa 2, 560
Missouri: Missouri:
! FT HA Sr 35,702) 31,751 28,974 At large... _.__|1,013,824] 609, 268|1 1, 635, 377
ES nn 37,829) 33,273] 30,020 Atlarge______|1,004, 170, 603, 345|1 1,619, 152
TE 32, 665 32, 626 25, 853 At large. ._____ 1,002, 557| 589, 615|1 1, 603, 797
ath. oh 32, 892 43,73 32, 208 Atilarge.l 1, 000, 218] 589, 272( 1 1, 601, 096
thea... 110, 529] 113,043] 102, 569 Atlarge._____| 997,642] 588, 647|1 1,597, 862
Oth... iL. 26,838 30,557] 24,713 Atlarge______| 997,448] 588,246|11, 597, 265
Vii ES 45, 832 52, 317 36, 543 Atlarge__.___| 996,969] 586,165] 11, 594, 677
Sth, ina 2b 33, 327 26, 619 27,321 At large... 995, 676] 585, 840| 1 1, 593, 009
othe. t 41,036| 34,248 25,796 At large _.____ 995, 002| 584, 356] ! 1, 590, 817
tho. 134, 324| 164, 083 10 220 At large... ___ 994, 569| 582, 662 1 1, 588, 648
lth. io 0h 44, 13 32,706] 17,726 At large ._____ 994, 123| 582,324! 1, 587, R03
Mth. th 17, 609 24,701 10 34 At large... 988, 200{ 589, 205] 1 1, 599, 003
Wh. io. 29,842] 30,535] 27,633 At large ._____ 981, 847| 580,495| 1 1, 573, 666
14th 49, 495 57, 880 45, 332
28 551) 52 124 27, 387 25,809] 29,848 25, 392
Montana: Montana:
Ist 44,618] 32,796| 39,166 ELE 51,159] 33,333] 186,725 od No 33,051) 70,682 45,438 Sr Boral 64,103] 53,890 1122 146
Nebraska: Nebraska:
fst. aah 39,202| 38,583 34,662 Ist ud 63,022 43,653] 1108627
od. aun 41, 424 52, 801 33, 276 v1 aie ae 51, 728 44,209) 1100, 851
ith leh LT AR 50, 974 41, 967 53, 221 1 Lael ti 74, 207 32,954] 1112, 380
7 EER NE eh 36, 896 37,114 35, 812 doh 53, 713 38,938] 1119966
Sth... lah 36, 283 37, 853 34,915 St 53, 586 49,200{ 1104, 377
6th. Es 28, 215 81, 581 24, 519
Nevada: Nevada:
Atlarge.___.| 13,287] 18,815 15, 343 Atlargel i. 24,979] 16,133 41,112
New Hampshire: New Hampshire:
Ist FT 39,570, 53,642] 29,166 Who oat 50,306] 47,639] 198 080 TY a I EY 36,275 54,642 23,157 Sd. DUE 44,459] 50,156] 194,996
New Jersey: New Jersey:
Yet: ¥Eld 36, 778] 109, 510 19, 486 Ist 54, 701 89,816] 1149, 214
Mab 30,856] 99,109! 17,125 Sh. in UE 35,257] 60,963] 196,925
Bd ha 56, 280 95, 669 57,911 Sd oh ses 61, 253 58,217] 1120,315
YH ER SON 37, 341 65, 149 28, 330 Ahi oooh 40, 705 51, 794 194, 165
Sth... o. 5 46, 211 95, 458 33, 851 fp le sk 51, 964 60,713] 1114, 027
6th... nck 60, 988 98, 859 55, 283 (1 PR aloe 47, 938 65, 653] 1114, 322
Th CdS 41, 012 54, 896 29, 879 he as 47, 638 52,003] 1100, 832
Sth DENG 64,951] 65,296] 43,195 Sth cea 50,759] 50,997) 1103, 709
Guth. oni 35, 730, 46, 685 20, 497 gth eit 53, 822 52,932] 1113054
10th... 45, 287 74, 154 21, 539 T05h ar 41, 901 53, 316 1 96, 584
eh. oho 51, 982 31, 728] 44,691 Tih. oor 46, 540 47, 495 195, 381
12th... a. in 56,748] 34,817 53,565] 16,715 20h fs 40, 746] 54,783 1 97, 696
57 A CE ae 73,779 27,964] 1102, 345
: WEheo io 77,519 24,448] 1103, 165
New Mexico: New Mexico:
At large... ._. 56,048 61,208] 65,194] 51,655 Atlarge.__.__ 94,764] 52,905! 1149, 568
New York New York:
dst. .aa lt 83, 5351 143, 230: 64, 172 96, 390 Igbo iol 121, 9091 153,435 1 283,965
0 Le Ra 137, 214 78, 536] 110, 081 45, 651 bt EEL A 172, 512 68, 525] 1251, 381
8d alia 26, 626 9,139] 20, 525 5, 159) RE Se 33, 750 5, 799 141,747
CTR ra 34, 496 10, 696 25, 935 5,713 73 Bas BR 39, 562 7,429 1 48, 206
Stheicoii ail 50, 158 35, 935 35, 580 1R, 150 A Een se 51, 932 24, 814 1 80, 185
Bths.. 2.0. 70, 953 53, 700 46, 631 29, 862 Th ae 81, 011 42,221) 1142, 160
Eh au 30,897] 13,211] 22,387 8, 884 VARS sr 36, 088 9, 696 149, 784
Sth. .......\: 108,028 66, 180 80, 119 36, 421 Sth. dais 140, 853 49, 471 1 226, 725
Oth... Goi 60, 097 53, 552 48, 065, 27, 698 UE ei 69, 634 38,047] 1116,204
0th: 31, 152 18,411 23, 711 11, 532 Touhy == 36, 460 14, 167 157, 103
theo 44,820] 22,099] 37,148] 13,856 thi. eee 50,418) 20,323 172,819
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
2 Independent vote.
10 Socialist-Labor vote.
12 Farmer-Labor vote
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.         14 Democratic and Socialist vote.
16 Communist Party vote.
Statistical 245
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Vote cast in 1928 | Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932
State and district State and district Total vote
i (new apportion- cast in
Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crat lican crat lican crat lican
Ni ox Y ork—con. New y orkeroon,
2th 15, 093 3,321 14, 327 2, 663 J2th Jive, 21, 248 2, 068 124 572
16, 062 4,076 13, 034 3, 192 in hs 21, 939 2,513 125,370
16, 602 11,974 12, 431 77,793 Hath. ic. 20, 668 9, 651 1 34, 065
30, 849 8, 294 21, 758 4,377 18th. nr 30, 112 5, 987 137,226
29, 351 12, 600 20, 707 7, 081 6th... oo or 29, 485 12, 449 143, 959
32, 466 36, 655 19, 218 19, 913 17th. oa 36, 397 29, 776 1 68, 806
30, 030 9, 562 22,131 5, 288 8th. soi 30, 245 7, 997 1 40, 260
48, 054 30, 617 35, 322 14, 919 10th. oooh 57, 400 21, 7568 183, 163
10, 856 11, 956 8, 709 10, 606 oth... 16, 447 15, 227 132,432
56, 992 45, 610 42, 468 24, 202 4 Kid pi Sd 67, 583 28,955] 1104, 649
35, 711 12, 868 25, 198 7, 060 AS SE ER 38,172 8, 768 1 49, 789
128, 372 52, 5&8 93, 426 27,456 WE 131, 852 31,753| 1189,637
96, 556 72,408 79, 917 48, 154 2th. aay 128, 881 65,189 1214, 508
50, 589 79, 228 34, 940 51, 332 oth of 63, 345 80, 909] 1 149,092
36, 591 69, 445 26, 545 46, 082 Lt a 43, 174 61,687] 1105, 756
34, 993 59, 183 35, b74 41, 423 th. ada 46, 154 52, 099 199, 164
77, 365 53, 383 74, 386 40, 628 sth... 89, 096 47,706) 1137,675
40, 541 71, 326 35, 316 51, 341 00th... 46, 935 65,359] 1113, 083
36, 956 58, 022 31, 567 36, 190 80th. cali 42, 632 55, 981 1100, 834
30, 602 52, 702 21, 811 36, 308 Slgts Cline 35, 153 47, 937 183,423
30, 201 65, 009 20, 905 43, 625 32a 34, 199 56, 654 191, 604
46, 653 62, 746 39, 340 39, 810 nts EIRERIE Ss 53, 427 52,398] 1106, 944
32, 925 80, 531 23, 968 51, 460 34th... oil 44,174 58,735] 1110, 308
52, 926 90, 370 44, 336! 63, 955 goth. Laie 60, 376 79,345] 1142,671
30, 503 68, 035 23, 763 43, 132 goth... ul 36, 648 58, 484 196, 028
33, 212 78, 789 28, 723 44, 374 37th... 48, 048 55,305] 1 105,450
43, 009 47, 298 37, 500 50, 083 88th. ....o.o 58, 775 64,003] 1138, 512
34, 175 69, 615 29, 610 40, 069 80th ..o.00 35, 367 50,8556] 1107,931
46, 860 99, 896 27, 268 61, 333 400 cen 54, 363 92,929] 1150, 501
37, 057 44, 641 25, 861 26, 995 diab. ads 45, 120 42,743 190, 143
44, 373 31, 785 33, 195 16, 072 0 EAS 51, 516 30, 230 183,156
23, 176 73 571 14, 755 38, 913 Vy LENE Ren fey 34, 561 55, 988 193, 239
At large... 2, 363, 627|1, 766, 343] 1 4, 373, 733
Atlarge..___. 2, 333, 787(1, 740, 325} 1 4, 318, 005
Noh Carolina:
23, 140 7, 209 17,985... Ist. od 32,790 3,313 36, 103
24,129 3, 005 15, 98 1,124 od... SUD 34, 325 1,430 35, 755
21, 740 17, 310 20, 197 10, 215 od. ails 30, 395 11, 146 41, 541
31, 288 16, 434 25,724 9, 339 athel ope i) 51, 103 16, 129 67, 232
54,990, 54,813 54, 277 34, 259 Sth... ii i 40, 825 17, 326 58, 151
26, 061 16, 364 20, 786) 8, 348 Oth... Bi dz 38, 074 18, 093 56, 167
41,124 39, 101 38, 229 26, 583 whos 35,416 8, 657 44, 073
37,535 36, 251 44, 068 29, 307 Sth... 000.38 49, 584 26, 260! 75, 844
46, 756 49, 799 44, 159 37,911 Othe. cand kd 51, 145 29, 421 80, 566
48, 607 49, 045 52, 964 41, 224 10th: Cedi 63, 776) 43, 067 106, 843
: BEA DESERET 64, 667 39, 182 103, 849
North Dakota
15, 646 53, 941 14, 208 41, 698 At large... 72,659) 144,339] 1217, 688
26, 566 42, 844 25, 780 34, 063 At large... 71,695 135,339] 1207,712
9, 335 52, 220 12, 296! 50, 917
Ohio:
49, 880 80, 812 46, 974 50, 481 Isti. Saal 55, 416 66, 018 121, 434
54, 332 63, 605 45, 761 46, 347 RES MREr ET 57, 258 58, 971 116, 229
55, 767 101, 050 62, 107 60, 249 8Q.. ah 85, 069 66, 107) 1155, 354
41, 677 56, 291 37, 673 43, 104 4bh.. 210 23 59, 003 49, 100 108, 103
31, 385 36, 096 29, 117 27,497 Sth. it 44, 433 29, 605 74, 038
33,020] 43, 519 37, 158 33, 300 [37 Ne FUR 50, 913 39, 668 90, 581
34, 323 75, 753 39, 142 50, 595 ih. ar 57,715 65, 064 122, 779
38, 651 42, 199 33, 906 35, 663 Shab. i 45,930] 41, 234 87, 164
50, 601 82, 560 36, 375 49, 498 Siho fo 56, 765 54,078] 1119,102
16, 551 38, 347 19, 157 31, 836 othe Loo 29, 027 41, 654 70, 681
34, 257 30, 574 37, 887 21, 339 Pgh an 44,380] 26,075 70, 465
50, 216 82, 574 59, 330 43, 840 Toth. ane 63, 135 62, 704 65, 839
34, 015 54,174 38, 067 35, 199 thao 56, 070 39, 122 95, 192
58, 848| 106, 253 60, 951 61, 628 Bihan 93, 057 78,852] 1172617
26, 441 50, 941 33, 968 35, 611 45th... 50, 313 38,113 1.88, 870
556, 778 73, 966 47, 237 51,113 6th. oi 67, 670 63, 609 131, 279
40, 846 56, 823 45, 633 43, 197 Yidhe coin 55, 296 51, 601 106, 897
31,442 71, 378 30, 815 47, 096 18th eae 56, 562 56, 010 112, 572
40, 948 89, 731 40, 960 53, 996 Jothit: 20 = 65, 024 79, 534; 1139, 761
47, 313 28, 381 42, 123 13, 824 0th. ct 52, 933 15 650 53, 583
39, 090 26, 267 30, 722 29, 081 P24 CEE Ts anf 49, 436 25, 527 175, 839
65, 742| 151, 565 55, 868 91, 222 die 98,427) 141,296] 1 240, 893
Atlarge. 1, 206, 6311, 109, 562| 1 2, 347, 868
Atlorge.. 1, 200, 94611, 102, 567) 1 2, 327, 367
246 Congressional Directory
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Vote cast in 1928 | Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932
State and district State and district Total vote
(old apportion- (new apportion- cast in
ment) Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crab lican crat lican crat lican
Oklahoma: Oklahoma:
1st... avn 58, 148 63, 641 41, 902 41, 642 TE Cg ms 81, 080 46,472) 1128, 155
7 Ee TTR 31, 287 28, 959 31, 093 19, 464 5 SRA A IE 46, 710 19, 567 66, 277
4 [Eee 39, 467 21, 804 39, 943 9,721 21 Ena Sol 59, 090 10, 225 69, 315
Arh. Jleaa ho 37,191 36, 151 42, 885 18, 616 Githo oa 61, 867) . 20, 069 81, 936 |
theo ia or 42,856] 44,814| 38,225] 26,943 Stho. ious on 64,303] 35,785 100, 088
Obl: ean 32,820] 28,304] 35,9069 14,233 Oth... Loa 53,869] 14, 048 67, 917
thi 27,670] 21,758 29,828] 8,298 Whe 43,809] 8 756] 156,216
Sth. ooou 27,135 48,445] 22,784] 35,027 Sth. .oun a 51,404] 31,677 1 83, 876
At large... _.. 467, 644| 171,415 1642,102
Oregon: Oregon: {
fsb. toa. 33, 772 91, 839 44, 810 55, 855 Ist. oui au. 60, 066 82, 443| 1160, 922
2a 22, 108 28, 865 13, 061 25, 304 LI 30, 219 25, 169 162,716
Sdn shea 29, 673 75, 835 49, 316 35, 483 Saul Lim 74, 397 40, 650] 1 126, 096 |
Pennsylvania Pennsylvania: i
1 1 EL 44,956] 45,070] 14,918] 57,382 Isto oa mn 16 4. 933| 17 65, 508 171,632
Dd nr 18,697) 34,432] 6,084] 34,387 sth 16 97, 571] 1742, 233] 170, 934 Si vivo 22,559) 30,458] 6,921] 38,346 a 37,4877 53,064] 192 374 Hh 31,006] 49,877] 11,084] 41,549 athlon 36,198] 43,086] 181,507
TE LR 38,670; 71,978) 17,182, 57,501 Stheioan.e 17 36, 240) 17 49, 516 1.89, 452 {
1 951, 732 61, 822 113, 554 | Oth. ....c 59,410) 89,362) 21,004) 66,799 GO ns {ih 1744, 884] 188,052 |
ATE 42, 207 91,305] 17,860] 61,573 hentia 35,006] 62,031] 199 783 : 18 2, 579] 9116, 504 7 5 Sthe. oi a { 34,607] 116, 266 } 20,443] 84,521 AE ER 32,139] 17 70,177] 1106, 620
Oth. aoa 31,389] 102, 019] 23,375 63,286 9th 37,490] 40, 726 181, 036
30th. faae o 11, 395 55, 545 9, 547 32, 455 10th 17.36, 841) 17 62, 682] 1101, 884 |
th: osu os 48, 017 48,521] 762,994 ________ 11th 369,684] 183,005 72, 689 -
12th isso 69, 982 66, 442| 17 38, 938 53, 336 12th... 17 55, 650 57, 377 113, 027 |
13th. ois 37, 243 46,486) 19 8,968] 17 47, 344 13th 18 5,055] 495,771] 11086,899
dathi loi 0 36,176] 76,670 44,546] 29,164 Tavth cilia 29,386] 22,898] 171,697
5th: osc of 12, 311 38, 459 10, 998 17 29, 150 Yoh cel 12,935] 1771, 345 174, 304
143] 932, 393 AR fi | Toth os 16, 693 47, 023 { 10, 719 32, 964 $6the a 24, 671 46, 044 172, 546
i nee 0 29, 560] 45,437] 19,324] 31, 247 ThE. 17 32, Ei i a i; ! 99, oe |
: 26, 4 65, 02 wh 13,070] 54,547] 18,389 39,116 ih { 30 25.910 159 5
10th Jute 19, 032 80, 602 16, 685 64, 345 19h. cada. 37, 752 59,120) 1101, 780 {
20th. z6r 11 24, 629 29, 383| 17 16, 740| 17 20, 361 Q0bhE Lesh ol 38, 799| 17 43, 222 1 83, 553 |
20st. on 13, 420 41, 993 10, 045 25, 619 VA Lo REE RE 39, 996 34, 189 1.75, 860
2q.. ney 25,622] 43,830] 27,943] 22,716 ood nid 17 47,656] 32, 966 1 80, 623
Bd. ae 15,219] 41,791; 11,954 28,916 TS LR Se Ae 33,950] 17 35, 342 171, 865
oth. ano 23,176 41, 786 13, 581 28, 279 iH ERE pS 31, 144 17 26, 095 1 58, 314 |
25th. oo 23,260] 34,500, 11,910) 17 27, 561 5th Us 36, 781| 17 27, 351 1 65, 598
26h. vr os 24, 352 63,534. oa 17 50, 858 20th gon 8h 38, 402| 17 45, 029 1.83, 440
oh. inn 17,433 52, 266 11, 200 42,479 VY TSR ha ERE 42,763] 17 52, 886] 1104, 280 |
28th. war i 22,443 57, 944 14, 953 36, 367 Rh Sta 17.43 619| 17 32, 177 178, 957 |
FH Eee 28, 004 41, 700 20,470 24, 511 Wh: aa 17.30, 106| 17 27, 949 1 60, 040 |
30th. . ies i: 33, 633 48, 421 27, 621 28, 503 FT RR LR 35, 126 17 35, 045 174,468 |
Sisk: i 71,437 50, 002 15, 022 17 38, 990 gist. iscia: 20 6,031] 17 68, 924 1 80, 578
Re oo, 145 gl —pany FRTIEE aa... 18, 986| 17 24, 785| 146,474 |
83d... an 27,368] 53,551] 71,727] 1747, 187 88d a 1735 612] 30,076] 168,517
Sith. ax 22, 466 26, 192 15 703] 17 29, 074 Sth oho. 17.40, 651} 17 36, 101 1 81, 520
Sth ih = 30,619] 42,450, 7,005 31,172 |
368th. i I SILLS 47 515] iE 17 46, 172
- Rhode Island Rhode Island:
ist... An oO 33,002] 42,366] 29,341 39,712 Aste. Als 70,429| 55,940] 1126, 591
oa. 34,047) 43,772 ; 3, 164] 40, 037 odor inl 72,971] 59,993) 1133,270 3,429 33,38 Slice fon wolf 208 Ww :
South Carolina: South Carolina:
a en dy nh ee, oi5spl. i CATE EE 14, 415 6164 15, 131 {
7 me Ed vou] EE ER TE RRR aa 18, 699 401 19, 100
sd. lider 1510) EE a CI) Se dal oc ola 19, 286 159 19, 445
dhs Cola re Ee BrGSnl is Aft. uo 23, 041 382 23, 423 |
Sth rr Jd SO. iil 2810 io SihEs. riveas 15, 046 235 15, 281
eth... Enz Thi a 1,881 bre thi. iain 14, 159 194 14, 353
th. uk a al L372 ts
16 Fair Play Party vote. 3
17 Combined vote received for candidate from
various parties.
18 Prohibition Party vote. :
19 United Party vote.
20 Repeal Party vote,
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
3 Democratic and Republican vote.
4 Republican and Democratic vote.
7.Socialist vote.
9 To fill vacancy.
15 Communist Party vote.
Statistical 247
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Vote cast in 1928 | Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932
State and district State and district Total vote
(old apportion- (new apportion- cast in
ment) Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crat lican crat lican crat lican
South Dakota: South Dakota:
Ashe ilng na 38,003] 54,492] 27,451] 41,151 1 EAE AE 110,047] 92,062] 1 207,205
0) BOE Cie 39, 914 54, 815 34, 245 38, 195 dal 36, 839 29, 066 166, 156
Sd ae Ts 25, 437 33, 260 21, 473 27, 083
Tennessee: Tennessee:
Istanbul 7,646] 28, 152| 21 20,893] 18, 23 Isps i UCI 21 27,888] 30, 366 1 66, 445
fe SR 13, 968 30, 917] 21 13, 355 : 22, 818 32, 460 1 56, 301
Bll. LE 25,667] 22,405] 21,401 28,778] 1,252] 131,402
4th. lene. 17, 141 7, 999 15, 269 30, 580 5, 882 137,015
5th... u.ancn 12, 847 3, 126 11, 792 33, 833 4, 066 138, 638
iH La ee 24, 694 6, 220 13, 879 15, 779 3, 915 119, 961
74 1 li pe Say 16, 898 1, 268 13, 927 20, 294 5, 485 1 26, 101
Sth... .. 17, 867 9, 184 14, 024 19, 871 2, 307 122, 539
Sthatsd 20, 184 2, 217 17,979 38, 001 2,953 142, 198
10th... 21, 524 4, 961 23, 746
Texas:
a ls 24, 267 3, 349 9, 160 30, 854 776 31, 630
odin 35,000. 14, 236 51, 999 2, 522 1 54, 524
0 EL HEAL EEE ad , 162 Te RE SE 28, 525
dthe coe 00. 23, 847 4, 488 9, 385 23, 404 1,170 24, 575
Sthereer—o-s CE EV nt 9, 924 52, 598 4, 539 57,137
Gthus. 26, 412 2,714 12, 39 ol, 620). ee 31, 621
hoot ooo 21, 461 2, 827 , 857 29, 361 1,421 30, 782
Sth. 43,891 9,739 12,877 57,882] 5,005 162 892
Otho: = 24, 742 3,718 15, 855 36, 522 1, 240 37, 762
0fhe... 27, 890 2,457 “12,78 53, 30. aa 33,232
ith 21,484) 2,141] 10, 381 38, 186 1,247 39, 433 ih 30, 905 7,921 9, 846 41,151 2,968 44,119 FET ie 30, 926 4,026] 12,840 i 38, 657
Jah saan 22 29, 085| 22 28, 766] 18, 707 69, 471 6, 456 75, 927
5th. on. AEA EE Se 20, 733 44, 318 7, 362 51, 680
ihe Stig TT 18, 915 49,008... 49, 068 Yih IR iE 17, 119 dems. oT] 42, 658
Sth... 000 2 58, 667 9,137 26, 697 78, 226 3, 245 81, 471
798, 647 63, 579| 1864, 957
798, 545 60, 905| 1862, 149
794, 240; 60,060] 1 856, 732 Utah: [154
Isto ue. oy 31, 889 50, 274 29, 210 : 2 875 Ist. otal 47,774 44, 827 1.94, 238
33, 915 5, 349 oki 46,025 46, 866 { aan Bi 62,400, 46,919] 1111,355
Vermont: Vermont:
Senin 25, 095 44, 082 18, 205 25, 170 At large. ____ 47, 591 86,194] 1133,801
3 Ee 11, 356 47, 141 5, 536 23, 904
Virginia Virginia:
VS ier anass 28.012 soil 7,324 2705 Atlarge...... 206, 631] 92, 586 299, 217
2 Pea 14, 668, 18, 614 12, 297 14, 678 Atlarge.. 205, 133 84, 464 289, 597
ds 23,350] 25,854 6,134 2 853 Atlarge. 204, 372| 82,450 286, 852
ath ee 16,004) ca A200 ei Atlarge .___. 204, 069 81, 909 285, 978
Sth... 16, 682 14, 049 080 Af large... 203, 727 81, 015 284, 742
Oth, ........ 25,000. SOT ni At large _____ 203, 023| 78, 622 281, 645
ah 15,009] 15,243] 13,951 9, 934 Atlarge 202, 800, 2 43, 936 246, 736
Sth. o. M368 11, 201 2, 742 Atlarge. ____ 202, 759! 2 43, 202 245, 961
Othe 31, 722 32, 696 32, 802 26, 244 Ablarge. 201, 474) 2 16, 504 217, 978
0th... 14, 817 11, 230 7,229 2 620! 1H EI PR I I sa 23 23, 150
Washington: ‘Washington:
Abeta 0. 36,858) 70,703] 32,365 43,998 Ist ori 80, 665] 62,283 1145, 144
2d 2 410 59, 534| 12 3, 428 47, 679 2d. 49, 002 30, 780 1 87, 355
Erase 38,207 Tho... i 63, 451 Bd 38 F151 1128,507 182, 537
4th. 14, 512, 43.966. inn. 35, 917 qthe = 41, 708 32, 360 74, 068
the... = 50, 323 35, 660 43, 059 14, 892 Pgh 73,041] 72,403 75, 444
Gio 44,573 32,760] 188, 989 West Virginia: ‘West Virginia:
Lied a 40, 666 62, 646 34, 368 43,919 ) Es EEE 58, 060 55,023] 1114, 005
od. 41, 640 52, 424 34, 968 36, 079 ode 55, 556 48,055) 1104, 090
EBAY 44,477) 45,167 7 976 ; 2% 853 adi au 52,287) 45,274 97, 561
Fy 2,677] 943,152 dthoo i= 42, 057 55,672 35,649 41,455 A ae 62,848! 56,993 1120,134
Bho. 55,376]  63,550| 41,162] 44,978 Btho bv 61,277] 56, 355 117, 632
OLD. 67,845] 67,617] 80,828] 61,876 Otho 102, 896] 79, 470 182, 366
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
2 Independent vote.
7 Socialist vote.
9 To fill vacancy.
12 Farmer-Labor vote.
21 Independent Republican vote.
22 Election contested; Republican declared elected.
23 Special election in the tenth district to fill a
vacancy in the Seventy-second Congress.
248 Congressional Durectory
VOTES CAST FOR REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Vote cast in 1928 | Vote cast in 1930 Vote cast in 1932
State and district State and district Total vote
(old apportion= (new apportion- cast in
ment) Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub- ment) Demo- | Repub- 1932
crat lican crat lican crat lican
‘Wisconsin: ‘Wisconsin:
Ist.l. Lol 20, 534 83,069] 2¢2 101 46, 272 Ish... i 48, 093 50,874] 1104, 928
9d... isu 23,101 53, 530 14, 780 37, 081 3 La VY Si a 63, 091 47,193] 1112,319
SI ERGOT pat 20, 262 62,938] 242 219 43, 184 adi. Joa es 38, 646 59, 535 98, 181
dif ode 28, 956 37,685 7 20,789 26, 763 4th. lo 61, 058 33,609] 1119, 727
Sth. doac. or 7 40, 536 41, 265| 7 26, 357 27, 533 {vir 8 El ERE 57, 294 32,559] 1130, 911
6th 91000 53, 05y{2n 100) of En Con 50,055 38,708] 199,971 stele sib ? 7 25, 625 24, 985 Cade RL ’ 4 ’
Th... coda 18,530] 49,590) 55,606] 31,530 thi iia. 46,737) 49,322 96, 059
Sth... bho. 5. 16, 316 47, 848 7,927 30, 045 Sthoo cui. 53,414 51, 887 105, 301
9th. onal 83.302 8g, 300)... Lo) 43. 080 Obhl. ils] 39, 874] 52,680 92, 554 0th os 13,590! 59,314] 18940] 36,804 eh al 33,448) 49,764] 184,118
With. tus... 11, 962 56,586... o.-2. 43, 004
Wyoming: Wyoming:
At large ae 35, 972 38, 935 24, 519 44, 890 At large. _____ 43, 056 44 816 190, 191
DELEGATES AND RESIDENT COMMISSIONER
Vote
¢ . Total Territory or island 1928 1930 1932
ossession vote cast p in 1932
Republi- | Demo- | Repub- | Demo- | Repub-
Democrat can crat lican crat lican
Alaska:
Delegate at Large... __.__ 4,891 6, 547 5, 349 5, 645 9, 949 3, 820 13, 769
Hawaii:
Delegate at Large... _____ 11, 031 27, 908 19, 568 22,223 29, 431 27,017 56, 448
Puerto Rico:
Resident Commissioner
(4-year term) .._...__.__ 7.123.415 1:28.132 R084 Cb. ae. de 26 204, 692 [7 167,011 | 1 376,990
1 Includes the vote for various other candidates.
5 Vote cast for another Republican candidate.
7 Socialist vote.
? To fill vacancy.
18 Prohibitionist vote,
24 Independent Democrat.
25 Unionist vote.
% Coalition of Union-Republican and Socialist
Parties.
2 Liberal Party vote,
Statistical 249
GOVERNORS OF THE STATES AND TERRITORIES
State and Terri- ; Poli- [Term of] Expiration
tory Ganiial Governor tics | service | of term | Salary
STATE
Years
Alabamal. 2..." Montgomery... BoM Miller, — 1 ook D. 4 | Jan., 1935 | $7, 500
Arizona: Soi 2000 Phoenix. = _°t Dr. B.B.Moour--.._..- D. 2 | Jan., 1935 7, 500
Arkangoy nT Little Rock... J Marion Fuatrell. = __ 2 = D. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 16,000
California... Sacramento. ______ James Bolph jr... 0 BR. 4 | Jan., 1935 | 10,000
Colorado... .. Denver oe = vd. CO. Johnson... =D. 2 | Jan., 1935 5,000
Connecticut ..____ Hartford 2.2. :32 Wilbur V,-Cross. =. _-_° D. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 25,000
Delaware... Pover. aio Clayton Douglass Buck.____ ". 4 | Jan., 1937 | 37,500
Florida on. i Si Tallahassee. ...__. David Sholtz:_ Cr i D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 49,000
Georgia... Atlanta bored ov 9 Eugene Talmadge. ..._._.__ D. 2 | Jan., 1935 7, 500
| Idaho. cui Bolles ott = Cr Ben Rosy” - aa ob 2 D. 2 | Jan., 193 2 5,000
iinois. d=. toh Springfield _______ Henry Horner. —o-_ 0" D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 512, 000
i Indiang: 2. = 2. Indianapolis. _____ Pal V. MeNuajt_c-._ D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 68, 000
Towa. uo i058 Des Moines. _..___ Clyde L. Herring... ._.. BD. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 27,500
Kongag. = 00 Popeka AM. Bandon 2: kf 20 R. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 35,000
Ronlucky.. ...... Frankfort... ....... Ruby Taffoon_-... D. 4 | Dec., 1935 | 86, 500
Louisiana = > =. Baton Rouge._____ Oscar. Allen ~~~ , 4 | May, 1936 | 57, 500
Monet ol © Augusta te Louis d-Brann = 4 iB 2 | Jan., 1935 | 55,000
Maryland... Annapolis... __ Albert Cabell Ritchie. ______ D. 4 | Jan., 1935 4, 500
Massachusetts..._| Boston..._________ Joseph B. Rly. = Ty. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 10,000
Michigant Lansing fof William A. Comstock_______ D. 2 | Jan., 1935 5, 000
Minnesota... St Pani... or Floyd B: Olson. == F-L. 2 | Jan., 1935 7,000
Mississippi... Jackson = no on M.S Connery. 2-0 £10 ter iD: 4 | Jan., 1936 | 57,500
Missoari.c_ .____* Jefferson City_.__. Quy Park rear Dy. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 55,000
Montana... ....-. Halong. 0 = 2) Prank HF. Cooney--_.-... D. 4 | Jan., 193 47, 500
Nebraska... Lincoln co= Cd CharlessW. Bryan... c_ D. 2 | Jan., 1935 7, 500
Nevada... Carson City... .... Fred B. Balzar: _~ _ R. 4 | Jan., 1935 7,000
New Hampshire. _| Concord__________ John GoWinant =... R. 2 | Jan., 1935 5, 000
New Jersey... Trenton: oC oa A. Harry Moore... ..-.... =D. 3 | Jan., 1935 | 7 20, 000
New Mexico. _____ Santa Pee. Arthur Seligman____________ nD. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 835,000
New Yorke... = of pony. Se Herbert H. Lehman________ D. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 4 25,000
North Carolina. _.| Raleigh. _________. J.C. B.EBhrinchans_ => __- D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 5 10,000
North Dakota.___| Bismarck... ______ William Langer... __._______ R. 2 | Jan., 1935 , 000
Oligo lard 0 Columbus. -:-5 George White ...0. 1... D. 2 | Jan., 1935 8, 400
Oklshoms. .... ...- Oklaboma City. ._.| William H. Murray....._... D: 4 | Jan., 1935 | 44,500
Oregon... Soles he he Julius Meler——c 0 > 0 R. 4 | Jan., 1935 | 817,500
Pennsylvania. ____ Harrisburg... Gifford Pinchot. 0 R. 4 | Jan., 1935 | 18,000
Rhode Island... Providence... Theodore HF. Green... D. 2 | Jan., 1935 8,000
South Carolina____| Columbia_________ Ibra C. Blackwood... ....__ D. 4 | Jan., 1935 7, 500
South Dakota... / Pierre... Tom Berry 2-2 = ic. D. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 93,000
Tennessee. ....... Nashville... Hil MeAlister. co ooo. B. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 104, 000
exn8. wus: ca Agstine ; oo Mrs. Miriam A. Ferguson._| D. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 64,000
lah es ae Salt Lake City._..| Henry H. Blood... __.___. 0. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 26,000
Vermont. cw. oc Montpelier. ._____ Stanley C. Wilson. ____.____ BR. 2 | Jan., 1935 5,000
Virginia... oc aa: Richmond... -- John Garland Pollard_______ D. 4 | Jan., 1934 | 10,000
‘Washington_______ Olympia... Clarence D. Martin_________ D. 4 | Jan., 1937 | 56,000
West Virginia.___. Charleston... __. GeRKamn.. oo D. 4 | Mar.,1937 8,000
‘Wisconsin. .______ Madison... A. G. Schmedeman._________ D. 2 | Jan., 1935 | 57,500
Wyoming___._.... Cheyenne_...__/..{ Leslie A. Miller. ___________ PD. 4 | Jan., 1935 | 48,000
TERRITORY 11
Alaglen =~ Juneau... Jo W. Trey... eae Indefinite. | 6 10, 000
Hawall........... Honolulu... Tawience M. Judd... co fee fen ane Indefinite. | 10,000
ISLAND POSSES-
SION 11
Philippines. ....._ Manila... Frank Murphy. co... co Joa oles tal Indefinite. | 2 18, 000
Puerto Rico... SanJuan.. Robert Hays Gore....ioc. cee aalonii on Indefinite. | 2 10, 000
Virgin Islands_____ St, Thomas... Paul M. Pearson... 0 os. Indefinite. | 8,000
1 With $1,000 additional for mansion rent.
2 Also traveling expenses for official duties.
3 Also contingent fund of $2,500. ii
4 Also use of executive mansion.
5 Also use of executive mansion and expenses for upkeep.
8 Also use of executive mansion and $8,000 for maintenance of mansion.
7 Summer home and expenses at State camp.
8 With $1,500 additional for annual expenses.
| 9 House rent furnished free.
10 Also use of executive mansion and $3,500 expense fund.
11 Governors nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate
250
PRESIDENTS AND VICE PRESIDENTS AND THE CONGRESSES
Congressional Directory
COINCIDENT WITH THEIR TERMS
President Vice President Service Congress
George Washington____.________
Jon Adams... ec ou
Thomas Jefferson...........__..
D0: cis my phir toms thm int
J amas Madison. ...............
James MONT08.....2 «ox ns wn on
John Quincy Adams_____.______
Andrew Jackson... .........
D
William Henry Harrison______
JONEAYIOr sis rh
games KX. Polk.
Zochary Taylor. o-= 1
Millard Fillmore. .___________.
Franklin-Pilerce.—. =... ....
James Buchanan__ ____________
Abraham Lincoln. =...
Benjamin Harrison____________
Grover Cleveland. ____________
William McKinley.---_---_-_.
| BY LEN Sala ae
Theodore Roosevelt. __________
Do
William HTalt eee
Warren G. Harding... --ooeeoo
Calyin Coolidge. «= -....ou.-
George Clinton... ........
George: Clinton 1... _.....
Elbridge Gerry 2. _______.____
Daniel D. Tompkins_.______
Jom C..Calboun. oo. ....
George M. Dallas. __._______.
Millard Fillmere. 2.
William BR. King 4... ___
John C. Breckinridge... ..-.
Hannibal Hamlin... ________.
Andrew Johnson... ________
Schuyler Colfax... _______
Henry Wilsons...
William A. Wheeler...._.___
Chester A. Arthur..-.-.o-....
Adlai E. Stevenson..____.___
Garret A. Hobart? io...
“Charles G. Dawes...
Charles'Cuartis...... ao. .o.
John N..Garner...
Apr.
dar.
"10, 1850-Mar.
. 15, 1865-Mar.
30, 1789-Mar. 3,1797 | 1, 2
4,1797-Mar. 3,1801 | 5, 6.
4, 1801-Mar. 3,1805 | 7, 8.
4, 1805-Mar. 3,1809 | 9, 10.
4, 1809-Mar. 3, 1813 | 11, 12.
4,1813-Mar. 3,1817 | 13, 14
4,1817-Mar. 3, 1825
4,1825-Mar. 3,1829 | 19, 20
4, 1829-Mar.
4, 1833-Mar.
4, 1837-Mar.
4,1841-Apr. 4,1841 | 27.
6, 1841-Mar.
4,1845- Mar.
5, 1849-July
4, 1853-Mar.
4, 1857-Mar.
4, 1861-Mar.
4, 1865-Apr. 15,1865 | 39.
4, 1869-Mar. 3,1873 | 41, 42. 4 1873-Mar. 3,1877 | 43, 44. 4,1877-Mar. 3,1881 | 45, 46. 4 1881-Sept. 19, 1881 | 47. © 20,1881-Mar. 3, 1885 | 47, 48. 4, 1885-Mar. 83,1889 | 49, 50. 4 1889-Mar. 3,1893 | 51, 52. 4,1803-Mar. 3,1807 | 53, 54. 4,1897-Mar. 3,1901 | 55, 56. 4,1901-Sept. 14, 1901 | 57. . 14,1901-Mar. 38,1905 | 57, 58. 4 1905-Mar. 3,1909 | 59, 60. 4, 1909-Mar. 38,1913 | 61, 62 4,1913-Mar. 3,1921 | 63, 64, 65, 66. 67. 4,1921-Aug.
3,1923-Mar. 3,1925 | 68.
4,1925-Mar. 3,1929 | 69, 70.
4,1929-Mar. 3,1933 | 71, 72.
4,1933- ;
|
15, 16, 17, 18.
1 Died Apr. 20, 1812.
2 Died Nov. 23, 1814.
3 Resigned Dec. 28, 1832, to become United States Senator.
4 Died Apr. 18, 1853,
6 Died Nov. 22, 1875.
8 Died Nov. 25, 1885.
7” Died Nov. 21, 1899.
8 Died Oct. 30, 1912.
i
|
|
| THE CAPITOL
as]
THE CAPITOL
OFFICERS OF THE SENATE
PRESIDENT
President of the Senate—John N. Garner, Hotel Washington.
Secretary to the President of the Senate.—E. R. Garner, Hotel Washington.
Clerk to the President of the Senate—Louis M. Friday, 104 C Street SE.
Assistant clerk to the President of the Senate.—Josephine A. Sterling, 58 Wheeler
Avenue, Clarendon, Va.
PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE
President pro tempore of the Senate.— Key Pittman, 2620 Foxhall Road.
CHAPLAIN
Cronin of the Senate.—Rev. Z¢ Barney Thorne Phillips, D. D., LL. D., 2224 R
treet.
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
EDWIN ALEXANDER HALSEY, Secretary of the Senate (1324 Ingraham |
Street, phone, GEorgia 2175), was born at “Fern Moss,” Tye River, Nelson
County, Va., September 4, 1881; educated in the public schools of Virginia, the
Locust Dale (Va.) Academy, and at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute; was ap-
pointed colonel on the staff of Gov. William H. Mann, of Virginia, in 1910, and
subsequently served on the staff of Gov. Henry CC. Stuart, of Virginia; was
elected Sergeant at Arms of the Democratic National Committee in 1928; served
as the Sergeant at Arms during the Democratic National Conventions at Houston,
Tex., in 1928, and at Chicago, Ill., in 1932; has served continuously as an em-
ployee of the Senate in various capacities since December 6, 1897, and during
this period served 16 years in the Press Gallery; married Miss Mary Younger, of
Lynchburg, Va., March 14, 1917, and they have one son—Edwin A. Halsey, jr.;
unanimously elected Secretary of the Senate on March 9, 1933.
Chief clerk and reading clerk.—John C. Crockett, United States Senate.
Principal clerk.—John M. Gatling, Corcoran Courts.
Financial clerk.—Charles F. Pace, 1539 I Street.
Assistant financial clerk.—Chester M. Reich, 1617 D Street NE.
Chief bookkeeper.—0Oco Thompson, 6110 Broad Branch Road.
Clerk.— George F. Thompson, 159 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Legislative clerk.—Emery L. Frazier, 128 B Street NE.
Minute and Journal clerk.—Charles L.. Watkins, Falkstone Courts.
Assistant Journal clerk.—Edward J. Hickey, 5738 Seventh Street.
Enrolling clerk.— William W. Horne, 128 B Street NE.
Executive clerk.—Lewis W. Bailey, 11 Second Street NE.
Printing clerk.—Guy E. Ives, 221 B Street NE.
Bill clerk—Mary Jean Simpson, 128 B Street NE.
Keeper of stationery.—Harold Scarborough, The Preston, Baltimore, Md.
Assistant keeper of stationery.—Andrew J. Kramer, 305 Longfellow Street.
Librarian.—James D. Preston, 4724 Fifteenth Street.
First assistant librarian.—Ruskin McArdle, The Cecil.
Assistant librarian.—Robert M. Jackson, Dodge Hotel.
Assistant in library.—Virginia Harrison, Kirkwood Road, Clarendon, Va.
Private secretary to the Secretary.—Anna D. Hurwitz, 612 Otis Place.
253
254 Congressional Directory
Superintendent of document room.—John W. Lambert, 1351 Juniper Street.
First assistant in document room. —W. G. Lieuallen, 1634 Hobart Street.
Second assistant in document room.—Copher Howell, 107 E Street SE.
Clerks. —Peter M. Wilson, 1767 Church Street; George W. Boyd, 914 Twenty-
second Street; Ben T. Logan, 120 C Street NE.; Darrell St. Claire, 807 A
Street NE.; W. A. Rousseau, 20 Third Street SE.; Louise Cabell, Hotel
Raleigh; Kelly Turner, 2755 Macomb Street; J. L. Dobell, 109 First Street
NE.; J. C. Harrigan, Annapolis Hotel; Lloyd N. Mosbarger, 3009 Thirty-
fourth Street: Robert H. Cox, 1741 K Street; Robert M. Flynn, 203 Mary-
land Avenue NE.; J. L. Aston, 1643 Hobart Street; David G. Click, 203
Maryland Avenue NE.; Warren C. Jefferds, 116 B Street NE.; James
McFarland, 1803 Nineteenth Street.
CLERKS TO SENATE COMMITTEES
Agriculture and Forestry.—Clerk, C. Alfred Lawton, Portland Hotel; assistant
clerks, William P. Bowers, 314 East Capitol Street; Mary G. Jackson, 4615
Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; Pearl Murray, 606 Twenty-first Street;
Anna Brunson; Isobel Smith, Hamilton Hotel.
Appropriations. —Clerk, Kennedy F. Rea, Methodist Building, 100 Maryland
Avenue NE., apartment 400; assistant clerks, Everard H. Smith, 228 Ascot
Place NE.; John W. Rixey Smith, 1416 Sixteenth Street; Elizabeth D.
Pettit, The Cairo; James W. Sommerville, 900 Fifteenth Street; Jennie D.
McDaniel, 130 B Street NE.; Helen Cooper Fox, 1367 Massachusetts
Avenue SE.; John Storey Cleghorn, 1706 F Street; messenger, Wayne H.
Morris, 411 Delafield Place.
Audit and Control the Contingent Expenses of the Senate.—Clerk, H. B. Hare, 316
East Capitol Street; assistant clerks, Cassie Connor, 2819 Connecticut
Avenue; Walter E. Overstreet, 222 East Capitol Street; Loretta Connor,
2819 Connecticut Avenue; Ruby Kizer, 27 Logan Circle.
Banking and Currency.—Clerk, William L. Hill.
Civil Service.—Clerk, William J. Bulow, jr., 1650 Harvard Street.
Claims.—Clerk, Thad Page, 2944 Macomb Street; assistant clerks, Harry B.
Straight, 7 Ross Street, Cottage City, Md.; H. G. Gulley, Senate Office
Building; S. J. Parham, 2944 Macomb Street; Mavis Smith, The Evange-
line Hotel.
Commerce.—Clerk, George W. Neville, The Broadmoor; assistant clerks, Hubert
D. Stephens, jr., Francis Scott Key Apartments; J. G. Smythe, jr., The
Capitol Towers; T. E. Pegram, jr., 1741 K Street; Susie Candler Hgerton,
1713 1 Street.
Conference Majority of the Senate—Clerk, J. F. McClerkin, 1661 Crescent Place;
assistant clerks, Joe R. Brewer, 642 East Capitol Street; Pearl Hendricks, 110
Maryland Avenue NE.; Joe T. Robinson, jr., 1661 Crescent Place; Grady
Miller.
Conference Minority of the Senate.—Clerk, Helen K. Kiefer, 403 Takoma Avenue,
Takoma Park, Md.; assistant clerks, Jessie C. Allen, 5609 Chevy Chase
Parkway; Mary M. Bradley, 828 Gist Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.; Grace C.
Townsend, 644 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; George Smith, 2115 Newport
Place.
District of Columbia.—Clerk, James P. McCeney, Harvard Hall Apartments;
assistant clerk, Max XK. Kimball, 2121 New York Avenue.
Education and Labor.—Clerk, Joseph T. Kelly, Hotel Pennsylvania.
Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Garrett Whiteside, 5817 Chevy Chase Parkway; assistant
clerks, Charles R. Counts, 1914 Fifteenth Street; Hugh R. Smith, 1733 K
Street; Frank MecAlister, 1803 Nineteenth Street.
Expenditures in the Executive Depariments—Clerk, Wallace Streeter, The West-
chester; assistant clerks, Elmer A. Kempf; Helen B. Thompson, 6110 Broad
Branch Road; Randolph Fortune, 2803 Eleventh Street.
Finance.—Clerk, Ernest P. Jones, jr., Harrington Hotel; special assistant, Cath-
erine Blanton, The Altamont; assistant clerks, Felton M. Johnston, Cathe-
dral Mansions; Hansford Simmons, 110 Thirteenth Street NE.; Pauline
Smith, Continental Hotel; C. B. Hamilton, Bellevue Hotel; majority expert,
Augustus Magruder, The Harrington; minority expert, Theodore A. Huntley,
6928 Ninth Street; messenger, S. S. Barefield, 307 C Street.
Officers of the Senate 255
Foreign Relations. —Clerk, Edward J. Trenwith, 49 I Street; assistant clerks,
John L. Kouns, 3620 Sixteenth Street; Walter C. Lamb, 407 Eleventh
Street; James A. White, 3100 Connecticut Avenue; messenger, C. C. Patter-
son, 1365 Florida Avenue NE.
? § migration. —Clerk, Daniel Francis O'Connell, Wardman Park Hotel; assistant
clerks, Mary L. ‘Michael, 1739 I Street; Gertrude Mannix, 442 Senate Office
Building; Joanna E. O’ Connor, 2303 First Street.
Indian Affairs—Clerk, J. W. Anderson, 312 Sixth Street NE.; assistant clerks,
Maude W. Mitchell, 210 Clifton Terrace; Celia Arnold, 4912 Third Street;
Ruth Lacklen, 1960 "Biltmore Street.
Interoceanic Canals.—Clerk, Harry E. Kay, 2701 Connecticut Avenue; assistant
clerk, M. Lenore Flint, 5130 Connecticut Avenue.
Interstate Commerce.—Clerk, ; assistant clerks, Roseanne
McQuestin, La Salle Apartments; Agnes Gromish, 1329 Sixteenth Street;
Ralph Norenberg; Ethel L. Kirk, 130 B Street NE.
Irrigation and Reclamation.—Clerk, Fred O. Roth, 1807 Kilbourne Place; assistant
clerks, Marjorie Causey, The Sedgwick; Mabel Olson, Valley Vista; Edwin
Swope, Dagmar Apartments.
Judiciary. — Clerk, Maurice H. Lanman, 610 Rittenhouse Street; assistant clerks,
William L. Irvin, 1131 Euclid Street; Mary E. Haardt, 184 Sixth Street SW.;
Anna E. Ryan; Lucy Fair.
Library.—Clerk, Laura Barkley, 3102 Cleveland Avenue; assistant clerks, Flo
Bratten, 1124 Argonne Drive, Baltimore, Md.; Dorothy Duffey, 128 Web-
ster Street; Erskine McGuire, 1109 Sixteenth Street.
Manufactures — Clerk, Herbert G. Pillen, 511 Webster Street; assistant clerks,
Mary Jane Wagner, 2659 Connecticut Avenue; Alice D. Jones, 2620 Thir-
teenth Street; Mary M. Key, 211 Delaware Avenue SW.
Military Affairs.—Clerk, Victor Russell, 200 Massachusetts Avenue; assistant
clerks, Harley S. Pitts, 601 Fairfield Street, Brentwood, Md.; D. Roland
Potter, 124 Third Street NE.; B. C. Sasser, 1413 Massachusetts Avenue;
Consuelo R. Potter, 124 Third Street N E; Walter I. Smallery, 1928 Thirty-
seventh Street.
Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Frances Settle, 711-A The Westchester; assistant
clerks, Marian Fortune, 2717 Quarry Road; E. Demunbrun, 348 Senate
Office "Building; ; Vernon Richardson, 348 Senate Office Building,
Naval Affairs.—Clerk, Ed Ahearn, 114 Second Street SE.; ; assistant clerks, G. R.
Baker, Daisye Trammell, Charles Ahearn, J. A. Saunders.
Patents. — Clerk, Leon H. Keyserling, 1745 N Street; Minna L. Ruppert, 1825
Hamlin Street NE. ; ; Edythe Griffinger, Dupont Circle Hotel; Helen G. Perley,
1718 Hobart Street.
Pensions.—Clerk, Joseph B. Riddle, 16 Seventeenth Street NE.; law examiner,
William A. Folger, 1435 Fairmont Street; assistant clerks, D.C. Campbell,
236 Massachusetts Avenue N E.; Hedwig Brinkman, 1910 Biltmore Street;
Eva M. Riddle, 16 Seventeenth Street NE.
Post Offices and Post Roads.—Clerk, D. W. McKellar, 120 C Street NE. ; assistant
clerks, Bessie Newell, The Bellevue; Janice Tuchfeld, 120 C Street NE.;
Frances Wilson, The Bellevue; Luther J. Willis, The Lindbergh; Ruth Nisbet,
300 East Capitol Street.
Printing.—Clerk, J. E. Gavin, Capitol Towers Apartments.
Privileges and Elections. —Clork, Sarah Orr Williams, 1109 Sixteenth Street;
assistant clerks, Heard F. George; Pauline Ellison, 5317 Sixteenth Street:
Queen Holden, The Ambassador.
Public Buildings and Grounds. —Clerk, Arthur C. Perry, Dodge Hotel; assistant
clerks, Adaline S. E. Carr, The Roland; M. Eleanor Crow, 1413 Massachu-
setts Avenue; Joe L. Perry.
Public Lands and Surveys.—Clerk, Theodore A. Wanerus, Dodge Hotel; assistant
clerks, Alice H. Lyman, 1841 Columbia Road; Sue V. Wolfe, 2001 ‘Columbia
Road; Thelma H. Ross, 407 West Howell Avenue, Alexandria, Va.
Rules. — Clerk, Grace McEldowney, 2440 Sixteenth Street; assistant clerks,
T. Elton Billings, 200% Whalen Avenue, Clarendon, Va.; Katherine E. Dill,
201 Second Street NI; Lutie M. Hart, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue;
Davetta Pudifin, 900 N ineteenth Street.
Territories and Insular Affairs.—Clerk, Corinne Barger; assistant clerks, M. V.
Dolbey, Madge Foulks, Era V. Barger.
256 Congressional Directory
OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS
CHESLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeant at Arms, United States Senate (100 Mary-
land Avenue NE.), was born at Waco, Tex., June 25, 1877; attended the public
schools of that city; learned shorthand; attended Baylor University; graduated
from the law department of Georgetown University, Washington, D. C.; has been
continuously connected with Congress for 36 years; served as private secretary
to Representative Robert L. Henry, 1897-1903, and to Senator Charles A. Cul-
berson, 1903-1923; served also as clerk of the Senate Committee on the Judi-
ciary for six years during Democratic control, 1913-1919; served as private secre-
tary to Senator Royal S. Copeland, 1923-1933; was an unsuccessful candidate
for the Democratic nomination for Congressman at Large from Texas, 1932; is
married.
Gh the Majority.— Leslie L. Biffle, Northbrook Courts (phone, COlumbia
7231).
Secretary Jo the Minority.—Carl A. Loeffler, 1758 Kenyon Street (phone, ADams
0512).
Assistant Secretary to the Majority.— Walker Totty, 1819 G Street (phone, MEtro-
politan 5630). :
Assistant Secretary to the Minority—Howard C. Foster, Park Tower, 2440 Six-
teenth Street, apartment 507 (phone, COlumbia 8841).
Deputy Sergeant at Arms and Storekeeper.—J. Mark Trice, 4000 Cathedral
Avenue (phone, EMerson 5790).
Superintendent of the Press Gallery.— William J. Collins, 3402 Dent Place (phone,
W Est 1080).
Messengers acting as assistant doorkeepers—John R. Perry, 1370 East Capitol
Street; John B. Dufault, 2428 Sixteenth Street; A. L. de Montfredy, 4718
Fifth Street; James 1.. Moran, Hotel Bellevue.
POST OFFICE
Postmaster—Jack W. Gates, Woodley Park Towers, 2737 Devonshire Place
(phone, COlumbia 2312).
Assistant postmaster—Joe S. Morris, apartment 644, The Chastleton (phone,
NOrth 10000).
Chief foe Ra D. Altman, 1361 Irving Street, apartment 28 (phone, ADams
3547-J).
Money order and registry clerk.—Thomas O. Mathews, 128 C Street NE.
FOLDING ROOM
Foreman.—John W. Deards, Fontanet Courts (phone, COlumbia 0336).
OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES
James W. Murphy, 7 Primrose Street, | Assistant.—Edward V. Murphy, jr.,
Chevy Chase, Md. 3539 R Street.
Percy E. Budlong, 1308 Gallatin Street. | Congressional Record messenger.— Will-
Daniel B. Lloyd, Glenn Dale, Md. iam Madden, 1316 East Capitol
John D. Rhodes, 1427 Madison Street. Street (phone, Lincoln 2496-J).
James R. Wick, 3672 Park Place.
OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
(Room 100, Senate Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 958)
Sm counsel.—Charles F. Boots, 2032 Belmont Road (phone, DEcatur
5000).
Assistant counsels.—Henry G. Wood, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue; Ganson Purcell,
2131 Florida Avenue.
Law assistant.— Allen Heald, Racquet Club.
Clerk.—Joseph P. Mulhern, Silver Spring, Md. (phone, SHepherd 1962-W).
Assistant clerk.—Earl Pryor, Tuxedo, Md.
LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES
Senator Secretary Secretary’s address
Adams (Colon no
Ashurst (Ariz). 0 5
Aungtino(Vt) 0. i
Bachman (Tenn.)_ _____
Bailey (IN. Coolio:
Bankhead (Ala.)_______
Barbour (N. J) io 11
Barkley (Ky.)uoo. Zo.
Black (Ala)...
Bone (Wash.).._._..____
Borah (daho).
Bratton (N. Mex.) ______
Brown (N. HL. oof
Bulkley (Ohio)... 0 0 |
Bulow (8S. Dak) vo 0
Byrd (Va) lug dis. 0
Bymes (8. Cio
Capper (Kans.)_o.
Caraway (Ark... _____
Carey (Wyo. uo L180. 2
Clark: (Mo). ic:
Connally (Tex) oo.
Coolidge (Mass.) --_____
Copeland (N. Y.)..... _
Costigan (Colo)... __
Couzens (Mich). ______
Cutting (N. Mex.) =.
Dale (Vt.).
Davis (Pa) te. D010 0
Dickinson (Iowa) ____.___
Dieterich (111)...
Dill (Wash). joo 0.
DPully (Wis)... 0.
Erickson (Mont)... __
Pegs: (Ohio)... 00 0
Fletcher (Flay =.
Frazier (N. Dak)..." _
George (Ga).
Glass (Va)...
Goldsborough (Md.)____
Gore (Okla
Hale (Me)...
Harrison (Miss.) _______
Hagtings (Del)...
Hatfield (W.Va)
Hayden (Ariz)...
Hebert (RT). >
Johnson (Calif). =
Been (NJ)
Kendrick (Wyo.)___.___
R.R. Camzlier i ii
Maurice H. Lanman___
Charles A. Webb. =...
Lucey R. Carter... ___
Thad Page... ..L....
Charles B. Crow. _ _ ___
George: BR. Dye... 222
Hugh G. Grant... |
Saul Hagszio io 0 1d
Cora Rubin_: = 20-3
Fred O. Roth... i 2
George H. Duncan_____
Herbert Pillen. _ i.
William J. Bulow, jr___
H. BE. Dameron: _ 2.
William H. Souders____
Garrett Whiteside_ __ __
Prancis J. Bon. lL. 1.00
Ed. S. Villmoare, jr____
Arthur OC. Perry 0 00
Daniel F. O’Connell _ _ _
Grace McEldowney____
Marguerite Owen______
John Carson Li ~ 20
Edgar F. Puryear______
Florence M. Conway ___
Prank K.:Boalic:
Herbert C. Schmidt____
Miles. Taylor. .......
Margaret I. Welsh_ _ _ _
Willa Fill 0
Robert Larson. ___.___
Sarah Orr Wiiliams____
J. W. Rixey Smith_____
Frank F. Maxwell. ____
Horry B. Kay ~~
Rodney E. Marshall _ _ _
Catherine Blanton_____
Mary A. Connor. _ ___._
Henry S. Crouch._____.
Theodore A. Wanerus.__
157297°—73—-1—1sT ED——18
5401 Thirty-second Street.
610 Rittenhouse Street.
1432 Ames Place NE.
The Bellevue.
2944 Macomb Street.
1631 Euclid Street.
102 Sunnyside Road, Silver
Spring, Md.
3110 Wisconsin Avenue.
The Ambassador.
Woodley Park Towers.
1807 Kilbourne Place.
The Plaza.
511 Webster Street.
The Harvard Hall.
The Annapolis.
314 East Capitol Street.
1425 Rhode Island Avenue.
5817 Chevy Chase Parkway.
The Wardman Park. )
The Jefferson. :
Dodge Hotel.
The Wardman Park.
2440 Sixteenth Street.
1925 N Street.
16 Oxford Street,
Chase, Md.
1835 Irving Street.
1940 Biltmore Street.
4200 Eighteenth Street.
3601 Connecticut Avenue.
The Broadmoor.
124 Senate Office Building.
1007 Otis Place.
149 Lee Highway, Cherry-
dale, Va.
1434 Harvard Street.
2803 Fourteenth Street.
1109 Sixteenth Street.
1416 Sixteenth Street.
2901 Sixteenth Street.
2701 Connecticut Avenue.
110 Maryland Avenue NE.
1901 Wyoming Avenue.
Racquet Club.
The Chalfonte.
The Capitol Towers.
The Calverton.
1406 Meridian Place.
Senate Office Building.
Dodge Hotel.
Chevy
257
258 Congressional Directory
LIST OF SENATORS AND THEIR SECRETARIES—Continued
Senator Secretary Secretary’s address
Weyer (NL EH.) noi
King (Utah)
La Follette (Wis.)______
Tewig (IY. 2. 0
Logan (Ky). ui.
Lonergan (Conn.)______
Yong (La)... fy
McAdoo (Calif) _____.__
MeCarran (Nev.)_____._
MeGill (Kans)...
MeKellar (Tenn.)______
MeNary (Oreg.)
Metealf (RB. 0.) oo ¢
Murphy (Iowa)
Neely (W. Va.) _:
Norbeck (S. Dak.) __.___
Norris (Nebr) aoiazi o
Nye (No. Dak) iis
Overton fm.) c.f 5
Patterson (Mo). gt
Pittman (Nev)... 2-27
Pope (Idaho)
Reed (Pa). 3lowanuics
Reynolds (N.C)... ...
Robinson (Ark.)i. oc
Robinson (Ind.).._ 1: 2
Russell (Gay... 0.
Schall (Minn)... =
Sheppard (Tex.)___
Shipstead (Minn.)______
Smith (8.:0.)ar- 20 0
Steiwer (Oreg.) _________
Stephens (Miss.)_ _ _____
Thomas (Okla) 1:1... ¢
Thomas (Utah)
Thompson, (Nebr.).____
Townsend (Del.)_______
Trammell (Fla)... 5 +
Tydings (Md). booetio
Vandenberg (Mich.)_ ___
Van Nuys (Ind.)...---_
Wagner (N. YJ ui...
Walcott (Conn) oc
Walsh (Mass). _
Wheeler (Mont.) _______
White (Me.).cobuesi. i
Charles C. Wright_____
James P. MeCeney____
Nellie Dunn MacKenzie
Wallace Streeter. _____
Frances Settle. ________
Robert L. Jefferys__.__
Earle J. Christenberry__
Walter Measday.______
Hazel D. Smith: ___
J.B. Riddles} £ 0:
Don W. McKellar_____
Helen K. Kiefer _.____
Russell M. Arundel__ __
Clif Woodward ______
Aletha R. Huyett_____
Julian W. Blount______
John P. Robertson. __
Douglas H. McArthur _
Mary M. Donlin______
Robert C. Schroeder. _ _
Edward J. Trenwith___
W. T. Lockwood. _____
T. A. Huntleyoooci 2%
W. E. McDonald. _____
J.B. MecClerkinil
George O. Compton___
Leeman Anderson_____
M. H.
Vietor Bussell-l 1... _
Sylvia M. Lee___.._____
C. Alfred Lawton______
Doris Swayze Bounds__
George W. Neville. ____
Earl B. Wixcey_ _._____
DIA, Gall. 3 3F sens
Paul L. Townsend._.____
Bd. Abearn... =. .¢
Corinne Barger_______
Alfred J. Loda_
Ben Stern. 00 bo
Leon H. Keyserling. __
William H. Sault...
James TF. Clark. ~~.
James W. Anderson____
Douglas Fosdick. _____
The Cairo.
Harvard Hall Apartments.
2900 Connecticut Avenue.
The Westchester.
The Westchester.
The Plaza.
3507 Macomb Street.
The Stratford.
16 Seventeenth Street NE.
120 C Street NE.
403 Takoma Avenue, Ta-
koma Park, Md.
4310 Cathedral Avenue.
440 Senate Office Building.
631 East Capitol Street.
3900 Connecticut Avenue.
Takoma Park, Md.
The Schuyler Arms.
1515 Massachusetts Avenue.
49 I Street.
The Roosevelt.
6928 Ninth Street.
Cherrydale, Va.
1661 Crescent Place.
The Capitol Towers.
The Hamilton.
“Wyncrest,”” Berwyn, Md.
200 Massachusetts Avenue.
The Harwill.
The Portland.
2401 Calvert Street.
The Broadmoor.
3707 Woodley Road.
The Lafayette.
4767 Indian Lane.
1722 Nineteenth Street.
The Bellevue. i
1745 N Street.
29 Sherman Circle.
Dodge Hotel.
312 Sixth Street NE.
The La Reine.
OFFICERS OF THE HOUSE
(Phone, N Ational 3120)
OFFICE OF THE SPEAKER
The Speaker —Henry T. Rainey, 2001 Sixteenth Street.
Secretary to the Speaker. —E. M. Rainey, 2001 Sixteenth Street.
Clerk to the Speaker.—M. 8. Thomas, Winston Hotel.
SPEAKER’S TABLE
Parliamentarian.—Lewis Deschler, Alban Towers, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
Assistant Parliamentarian.— William T. Roy, 4550 Connecticut Avenue.
Messenger. —Frederick H. Green, 3010 Forty-fourth Place.
CHAPLAIN
Chaplain of the House.—Rev. James Shera Montgomery, D. D., 100 Maryland
Avenue NE. (Phone, Lincoln 8211.)
OFFICE OF THE MAJORITY LEADER
Floor Leader—Joseph W. Byrns, Wardman Park Hotel.
Legislative clerk.—Howard L. Savage.
Secretary.— Margaret M. Robertson, Bolling Field.
Clerk.—Betty McLean, 2901 Sixteenth Street.
Assistant clerk.—Imolin F, Herndon, 2901 Sixteenth Street.
OFFICE OF THE MINORITY LEADER
Floor Leader.—B. H. Snell, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
Secretary.—E. A. Gridley, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
Clerk.—Maud A. Reed, Stratford Hotel.
Assistant clerk.—Ruth Sample.
Legislative clork.—
OFFICE OF THE CLERK
SOUTH TRIMBLE, Clerk of the House of Representatives (The Chastleton),
attended the public schools of Frankfort, Ky., and Excelsior Institute; farmer
by occupation; elected to the Kentucky House of Representatives in 1898 and
again in 1900, and served as speaker the last year; was in that capacity during
the memorable Goebel contest; elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-seventh,
Fifty-eighth, and Fifty-ninth Congresses; Democratic nominee for lieutenant
governor of Kentucky, 1907; elected Clerk of the National House of Representa-
tives in the Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth, and Sixty-fifth Congresses,
and again elected Clerk of the National House of Representatives in the Seventy-
second and Seventy-third Congresses.
269
260 Congressional Directory
Property custodian.— William F. Ochsenreiter, 429 Quincy Street. (Phone, CO-
lumbia 5300.)
Assistant custodians.—Irene McCallan, The Bellevue; C. A. Rapee.
Journal clerk.—Louis Sirkey, The Mayflower. (Phone, DEcatur 1000.)
Reading clerks.—A. EF. Chaffee, 311 Maryland Avenue NE.; Patrick J. Haltigan,
2440 Sixteenth Street.
Tally clerk.—Maurice J. Freeman.
Chief bill clerk.—William J. McDermott, jr., The Shoreham. (Phone, ADams
0700.
Disbursing clerk.—J. C. Shanks.
File clerk.—John M. Greer, 209 A Street SE.
Enrolling clerk.— Matthew J. Rippon, The Loudoun. (Phone, LIncoln 4763.)
Stationery clerk.—Charles H. Bridgers.
Librarian. —W. Perry Miller, 236 Massachusetts Avenue NE.
OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS
Sergeant at Arms.— Kenneth Romney, 1026 Sixteenth Street.
Cashier—Harry Pillen, 511 Webster Street.
Assistant cashier.—John Oberholser, 232 Sixth Street SE.
Bookkeepers.—Elizabeth S. Mitchell, 1306 Columbia Road; Frank J. Mahoney,
Chastleton Hotel.
Deputy Sergeant at Arms.— Warren Hatcher. -
Deputy Sergeant at Arms in charge of pairs.—John O., Snyder.
OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER
Doariiener of the House of Representatives.—Joseph J. Sinnott, 3527 Thirteenth
treet.
Minority clerks— William Tyler Page, 220 Wooten Avenue, Chevy Chase; J. G.
Rodgers, 2924 Macomb Street (phone, CLeveland 1144); M. L. Meletio,
Republican pair clerk, 1724 Seventeenth Street (phone, POtomac 3964-W);
Bert W. Kennedy, 1615 Kenyon Street (phone, COlumbia 8427); Frank W. j
Collier, 418 Seventh Street NE. (phone, Lincoln 0507); James P. Griffin.
Chief pages.—John W. McCabe, 1102 I Street; James A. Roher.
Superintendent of the press gallery.— William J. Donaldson, jr., 3730 Brandywine
Avenue. (Phone, CLeveland 0602.)
Messengers.—Lee I. Seward; John D. Mann; A. R. Lamneck; Scott Brandenburgh;
C. F. Nolan; H. H. Morris; C. M. Jackson; D.'J. McCormack; E. W. Ivester;
D. M. Kessler; L. K. Pritchard; Gus Duffy; E. O. Kilpatrick; Jesse Ward, jr.
Messengers on the soldiers’ roll.—John T. Ryan, 759 Seventh Street SE.; Elnathan
Meade, 503 H Street; Henry C. McKinley; W. C. Allen, 1035 New Jersey
Avenue; William I. Early; Henry R. Brenman; W. H. Young, American
University Campus; W. P. Shelmire, 1036 Evarts Street NK.; John H.
Shepperd, Berwyn, Md.; F. J. Young.
Majority messenger in charge of telephones.— William J. Bray, 1122 Eighth Street
NE. (Phone, ATlantic 0589.)
Minority messenger in charge of telephones.— Michael J. Bunke, 6006 Fourth Street.
Chief of janitors—Stephen J. Paul, Keystone Apartment, 2150 Pennsylvania
Avenue. (Phone, WEst 2662.)
FOLDING ROOM
Superintendent.—Stanley F. Davis, 100 B Street NE.
Chaef clerk.—Robert H. Easley, 118 B Street NE.
Clerks.—Clarence W. Knerr, 130 B Street NE.; Lloyd L. Brown, 128 B Street
NE.; Charles A. McDonald, 130 B Street NE.
Foreman.—J. M. McKee, 2123 K Street. (Phone, WEst 1181.)
DOCUMENT ROOM
Superintendent.—Elmer A. Lewis, 115 Second Street NE. (Phone, Llncoln
4902-W.)
Assistant superintendent.—Edward J. McLaughlin, Hotel Grafton.
Clerk.—P. F. Stewart, 123 C Street NE.
Miscellaneous Officials 261
Assistants—Robert L. Wiley, 1426 Crittenden Street; W. G. Caudill, jr., 314
East Capitol Street; Maxwell C. Gilliam, 104 C Street SE.; C. C. Thrower,
222 Second Street NE.; Remy G. Ducote, jr., 207 Third Street SE.; Ernest
Weaver, 4125 River Road; Patrick J. McNamara, 1303 Kenyon Street; John
Lowery, 117 Carroll Street SE.; Miles Romney, Kew Gardens.
OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER
(Post Office in House Office Building)
Postmaster.—Finis E. Scott, 1330 Belmont Street.
Assistant.—L. F. Langhorst, 40 B Street SW.
Registry, stamp, and money-order clerks.—John J. Keegan, 1410 M Street; R. W.
Renkel, 2003 Columbia Road.
Night clerks.—B. P. Kennedy, 1827 Wyoming Avenue; Stanford Bland, 220
Second Street SE.
Special mail clerk.—J. Magee Gabbert, 214 Massachusetts Avenue NE.
Maal distributors.—Day clerks: W. Clyde Helm, 128 B Street NE.; William L.
Callender, 234 First Street SE. Night clerks: George Blanks, jr., 210 B
Street SE.; Henry W. Laughorn, jr., 220 Second Street SE.
MISCELLANEOUS
Delivery and collection messengers.—E. E. Dillon, Eugene Houchins, Eugene
Gosnell, Edward F. Ginger, W. A. Long, jr., John P. Rush, Wayne D.
Kniffin, T. L. Garland, Frank R. Munroe, Leo Raskowski, William M.
Whelan, jr., Peter J. Hamill, John T. Slattery, Carl Lutz, John Walczak,
Milot T. Palmer, Gene Latimer, James Crews, H. Austin Barker, Roy Cosby,
John Shields, Rice A. Ingram, Haskell Tidwell, Carl Elliot, Harold H. Lee,
and George Pontiatowski.
BRANCH POST OFFICE IN CAPITOL
Clerk in charge.—Lilly Stuart Gresham, 918 Seventeenth Street.
CLERKS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES
Accounts —Clerk, William S. Tyson, the Bond Apartments, 1230 New Hampshire
Avenue; assistant clerk, Leonora B. Stell, Valley Vista Apartments, 2032
Belmont Road.
Agriculture—Clerk, Katherine Wheeler, Takoma Park, Md.; assistant clerk,
Altavene Clark, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE.
Appropriations.—Clerk, Marcellus C. Sheild, 3 East Irving Street, Chevy Chase,
Md.; assistant clerks, John C. Pugh, Woodley Park Towers; James F.
Scanlon, 4207 Twelfth Street NE.; Arthur Orr, 455 South Spruce Street, Lyon
Park, Va.; William A. Duvall, 6314 Brookville Road, Chevy Chase, Md.;
Jack K. McFall, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue; Robert P. Williams, 1910
Biltmore Street; messenger, Robert M. Lewis, 411 U Street.
Banking and Currency.—Clerk, O. K. Weed, 214 Sixth Street SE.; assistant clerk,
Lucile Shabek. :
Census.—Clerk, John C. Atterbury.
Cwil Service.—Clerk, Oakley W. Melton.
Claims. —Clerk, James J. Mackin, Manchester Apartments; assistant clerks,
Joseph F. Travers, 318 C Street SE.; Robert E. Mitchell, 1701 Park Road.
Coinage, Weights, and Measures.—Clerk, William K. Gallagher, 1767 Q Street.
Disposition of Useless Executive Papers.—Clerk, George C. Johns, 208 Massa-
chusetts Avenue NE., apartment 403.
District of Columbia.—Clerk, Isabel Horton, 147 Carroll Street SE.; assistant
clerk, Marion McDonagh, 402 Connecticut Avenue.
Education.—Clerk, William J. Wallace, 303 First Street SE.
Election of President, Vice President, and Representatives in Congress.—Clerk
Samuel J. Scarpati, Hotel Winston.
262 Congressional Directory
Elections No. 1.—Clerk, Archie W. McLean, 614 East Capitol Street.
Elections No. 2—Clerk, Dorothy Whitehead, 1833 New Hampshire Avenue.
Elections No. 3.—Clerk, Etta Dunn.
Enrolled Bills.—Clerk, Henry V. Hesselman, 293 House Office Building.
Expenditures in the Executive Departments.—Clerk, E. J. Collum.
Flood Control.—Clerk, Henry G. Norris, 1312 N Street.
Foreign Affairs— Clerk, I. R. Barnes, No. 23 Capital Vista Apartments; assistant
clerk, Lucille Schilling, 612 Miramar Apartments.
Immigration and Naturalization.—Clerk, Sidney Scharlin, 483-A House Office
Building; assistant clerk, F. P. Randolph, 483 House Office Building.
Indian Affairs—Clerk, John C. Byrnes, 309 New Jersey Avenue SE.; assistant
clerk, A. L. Stuart, 40 B Street SW., apartment 202.
Insular Affairs.—
Interstate and Foreign Commerce.—Clerk, Elton J. Layton, Silver Spring, Md.;
assistant clerks, Helen Fleming, 110 Maryland Avenue NE.; William
Cantrell, jr., The Cavalier.
Invalid Pensions.—Clerk, Bingham W. Mathias, 3058 Clinton Street NE.; assist-
ants, G. H. Butt, L. H. Wine; examiner, James E. Gallagher.
Irrigation and Reclamation.—Clerk, Edward C. Hall, 4700 Sixteenth Street.
Judiciary. —Clerk, Elmore Whitehurst, 1736 G Street.
Labor.—Clerk, Mary B. Cronin, 5601 Nevada Avenue.
Library.—Clerk, Victoria M. Vodila, The Kennedy-Warren.
Merchant Marine, Radio, and Fisheries.—Clerk, Eunice V. Hutton, George Wash-
ington Inn. *
Military Affairs—Clerk, J. B. Knight; assistant clerk, Frances E. Martin.
Mines and Mining.—Clerk, Charles J. Farrington, 110 Maryland Avenue NE.
Naval Affairs.—Clerk, John C. Lewis, 127 B Street SE.; assistant clerk, Carl K.
Nelson, 127 B Street SE.
Patents.—Clerk, Molla Weisberg, The Mayflower.
Pensions.—Clerk, Deck Sligh, 1307 Rhode Island Avenue; assistant clerk,
Louise Coleman, 217 Second Street SE.; law examiner, Fred R. Miller,
5903 Fourth Street.
Post Office and Post Roads.—Clerk, Claire L. Keefe, 2525 Ontario Road; assistant
clerk, Alicia M. Hellrigel, 101 North Carolina Avenue SE.
Printing.—
Public Buildings and Grounds.—Clerk, Albert W. Woods, 277 House Office Build-
ing; assistant clerk, Viola M. Bitter, Maryland Courts North.
Public Lands.—Clerk, Louis R. DeRouen, The Miramar; assistant clerk, L. B.
LeBas, 207 Third Street SE.
Revision of the Laws.—Clerk, Robert F. Klepinger, 120 C Street NE.
Rivers and Harbors.—Clerk, Joseph H. McGann, 1345 Park Road; assistant clerk,
Alberta Berry, 3100 Connecticut Avenue.
Roads.—Clerk, Charlotte R. Curry, George Washington Inn; assistant clerk,
E. A. Williams, 6010 Thirty-third Street.
Rules—Clerk, William S. Moye, Racquet Club; assistant clerk, Novella H.
Capps, 3201 Nineteenth Street.
Territories.—Clerk, Eleanor Ogden Kemp, Wardman Park Hotel.
War Claims.—Clerk, A. B. Hall, 309 South Carolina Avenue SE.; assistant clerk,
Nannie Fox, 306 Second Street SE.
Mozscellaneous Officials 263
Ways and Means.—Clerk, Eugene Fly, 2839 Twentyv-ninth Street; assistant clerks,
Thomas P. Bumgardner, Marion Y. MecCanless; minority clerk, Leslie M.
Rapp, 609 Harvard Hall.
World War Veterans’ Legislation.—Clerk, Ida Rowan; assistant clerk, Ray W.
Nedrow.
OFFICIAL REPORTERS OF DEBATES
Reuel Small, 521 Butternut Street.
Allister Cochrane, 2638 Woodley Place.
John D. Cremer, 112 C Street SE.
H. B. Weaver, 1346 Ingraham Street.
W. L. Fenstermacher. 19 Quincy Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Roy L. Whitman, 7055 Eastern Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Clerk.—Charles H. Parkman, 1003 Taylor Street NE.
Expert transcribers.—Lida H. Dorian, 1725 Seventeenth Street (phone, NOrth
7951); Jessie M. Small, Burlington Hotel (phone, DIstrict 8822); Charles
T. Dulin, 2218 First Street (phone, POtomac 4443); Howard Butterworth,
1701 Park Road; J. Bruce MacArthur, 1219 Eleventh Street; Paul J. Plant,
1842 California Street (phone, NOrth 2006-7).
Custodian.—Paul L. Miller, 4216 Hill Street, Brentwood, Md.
Congressional Record messenger.—Samuel Robinson, 670 Maryland Avenue NE.
(Phone, Lincoln 3333.)
OFFICIAL STENOGRAPHERS TO HOUSE COMMITTEES
R. J. Speir, Flower Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
W. G. Stuart, 3446 Oakwood Terrace.
L. F. Caswell, 614 Maryland Avenue NE.
Albert Schneider, 4700 Connecticut Avenue.
OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
(Room 197, House Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 592)
Legislative Sa Middle Beaman, 1862 Mintwood Place. (Phone, COlum-
bia 6618.
Assistant counsel.—Allan H. Perley, 2901 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone, ADams
4310.) John O’Brien, The Racquet Club. Eugene J. Ackerson, 9413
Glenridge Road, Silver Spring, Md. (Phone, SHepherd 1806-W.)
Law assistant.—Ned W. Arick, 1900 F Street. (Phone, MEtropolitan 0540.)
Clerk.—C. Breck Parkman, 4314 Third Street. (Phone, ADams 4507-W.)
Assistant clerk.—Louis M. Cormier, 1277 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone,
DIstrict 8489.)
MISCELLANEOUS OFFICIALS
CONGRESSIONAL RECORD
(Office in Statuary Hall. Phone, NAtional 3120, Branch 200)
Clerk in charge at the Capitol.—W. A. Smith, 3817 Jocelyn Street, Chevy Chase
Heights. (Phone, CLeveland 0704.)
ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL
ARCHITECTS OFFICE
(Office in basement of Capitol. Phone, NAtional 8120, Branches 95, 125, and 940)
Architect.—David Lynn, 3700 Quebec Street. (Phone, CLeveland 5724.)
dovtriny) architect.—Horace D. Rouzer, 3519 Porter Street. (Phone, CLeveland
1257.)
Chief clerk and art curator.—Charles E. Fairman, 325 U Street.
Supervising engineer.— Arthur B. Cook, The Roosevelt. (Phone, DEcatur 0800.)
Civil engineer.— August Eccard, 3502 Quesada Street.
Engineer in charge (House wing) .—Charles R. Torbert, 492 G Street SW.
Engineer in charge (Senate wing).— Richard H. Gay, 1341 Oak Street.
Landscape gardener.— William A. Frederick, 1206 Kennedy Street.
Chief engineer (power plant).—Robert L. Harrison, Garrett Park, Md. (Phone,
Kensington 268-M.)
Electrical engineer—R. D. Holcomb, The Olympia. (Phone, COlumbia 2710-W.)
264 Congressional Directory
SENATE OFFICE BUILDING
(Office at Room 320. Phone, Branch 134)
Custodian.—James J. Dunn, The Wardman Park.
Assistant custodian.— Thomas L. Younger, 321 Giralt Avenue, Virginia High-
lands, Alexandria, Va.
HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING
(Office on second floor, northwest corner. Phones, Branches 142 and 143)
Custodian.— Edward Brown, 133 Mount Vernon Boulevard, Virginia.
Assistant custodian.— Frank Clarkson, 28 W Street.
OFFICE OF THE ATTENDING PHYSICIAN
(Office on ground floor, Capitol. Phone, Branch 305)
Medical officer.—Dr. George W. Calver, 2838 Twenty-eighth Street. (Phone,
ADams 0446.)
Assistants.—Harry W. Jarvis, Freeman E. Frank, C. W. O’Gilvie.
CAPITOL POLICE
(Office in lower west terrace, Room 3, Capitol. Phone, Branch 102)
Captain.—S. J. Gnash, 338 Maryland Avenue NE. (Phone, Lincoln 4225.)
Lieutenants.—P. H. Crook, 3746 Thirtieth Street, Mount Ranier, Md. (Phone,
GReenwood 2299-W.) James Laughlin, 1443 Pennsylvania Avenue SE
(Phone LiIncoln 1676-W.) James Hall, 300 First Street SE. (Phone,
IE 9398.) A. M. Jones, 511 Seventh Street NE. (Phone, LIncoln
4982. :
Special officer.—J. C. Steadman, 125 C Street SE.
Sergeants.—W. J. Gray, 1238 Quincy Street. Acting sergeant, William Keating,
632 C Street NE. Acting sergeant, George B. Walker, 831 Twentieth Street.
Acting sergeant, A. E. Glennon, 302 East Capitol Street. Acting sergeant,
Harrold T. Scott, 113 First Street NE. (Phone, LIncoln 9370.) Finnis
Parrish, 1609 K Street. (Phone, MEtropolitan 9183.) Acting sergeant,
E. L. Pigg, 921 Nineteenth Street. (Phone, MEtropolitan 3290.) B. W.
Kennedy, jr., 412 First Street SE. (Phone, LIncoln 6149.)
Clerk. —C. J, Killoran, 924 Seventeenth Street. (Phone, MEtropolitan 1987.)
RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE
(Office in Capitol, House side, ground floor. Phone, Branch 260)
Tucket er Crs W. Owings, 2603 North Capitol Street. (Phone, POtomac
0087.
In charge Capitol ticket office—P. H. McClune, 1123 Fern Street. (Phone,
GEorgia 3114.) y
Assistant —Ralph H. Gauker, The Klingle. (Phone, CLeveland 1686.)
TELEGRAPH OFFICES
WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO.
(Phones: Senate wing, Branch 87; S. O. B., 1111; House wing, Branch 251; H. O. B,, 317; New H. O. B.
1059 and 1060)
In charge of Senate Office Buzlding.—W. R. McConnell, 2915 Connecticut Avenue.
(Phone, COlumbia 3843-W.)
In charge at House wing of Capitol.—M. V. Wickers, 2915 Connecticut Avenue.
(Phone, COlumbia 3843-W.)
In charge at Senate wing of Capitol—H. Claudia Varn, 1841 Columbia Road.
(Phone, COlumbia 6624.) :
In charge of House Office Building—H. G. Royce, The Shermanor, Seventh and
Buchanan Streets.
In charge of New House Office Building.—Joseph G. Corona. 326 B Street SE.
[
|
|
Mascellaneous Officials 265
POSTAL TELEGRAPH-CABLE CO.
(Phones: Senate wing, Branch 86; S. O. B., 929 and 1112; H. CO. B., 208 and 310)
In charge at Senate Office Building.—George Trunnell, Miramar Hotel, apart-
ment 405. (Phone, POtomac 5600.)
In charge at House Office Building.—Carrie L. Davis, 1419 R Street, apartment
50. (Phone, NOrth 6010-J.)
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE
(Office, first floor, west side, New House Office Building)
Chief operator in charge—Harriott G. Daley, 2308 Ashmead Place. (Phone,
NOrth 3471.)
Assistant.—Nena Thomas.
Wire chief —James L. Rhine. (Branch 496.)
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
(Capitol Hill. Phone, NAtional 2727)
Librarian of Congress.—Herbert Putnam, 2025 O Street.
Chief Assistant Librarian.—Frederick W. Ashley, Stanton Manor.
Executive assistant.—Allen R. Boyd, The Farnsboro.
Secretary. —Jessica Li. Farnum, 5801 Fourteenth Street.
Superintendent of reading room.—Martin A. Roberts, 2841 St. Paul Street, Balti-
more, Md.
Chief assistant in reading room.—David C. Mearns, 9 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Representatives’ reading room.—Hugh A. Morrison, 2808 Thirty-ninth Street;
George H. Milne, North Woodside, Silver Spring, Md.
Capitol staiion.—Harold S. Lincoln (in charge), 736 Easley Street, Silver Spring, Md.
Rare book collection.—V. Valta Parma, curator, 21 Third Street NE.
Service for the blind.—Maude G. Nichols (in charge), 1314 Girard Street.
Chiefs of division:
Accessions.— Linn R. Blanchard, 3714 Windom Place.
Aeronautics.—Albert F. Zahm, The Cosmos Club.
Bibliography. — Florence S. Hellman (acting), 2804 Cathedral Avenue.
Binding.—George W. Morgan, Seabrook, Md.
Card.—Charles H. Hastings, 3600 Ordway Street, Cleveland Park.
Catalogue.—James B. Childs, 1325 Jackson Street NE.
Cataloguing, classification, and bibliography.—Charles Martel, consultant, 316
D Street SE. :
Classtfication.—Clarence W. Perley, 2805 Adams Mill Road.
Documents.—David J. Haykin, 1340 Fairmont Street.
Fine arts.—Leicester B. Holland, Library of Congress.
Legislative reference.—Herman H. B. Meyer, director, 3701 Massachusetts
Avenue.
Mail and delivery.—Samuel M. Croft, 1839 Monroe Street NE.
Manuscripts.—J. Franklin Jameson, 2231 Q Street.
Maps and charts.—Lawrence Martin, 3114 Dumbarton Avenue.
Music.—Carl Engel, Library of Congress.
On linus W. Hummel, 4615 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase Gardens,
d.
Periodical. —Henry S. Parsons, 3719 Van Ness Street.
Sematic.—Israel Schapiro, 1820 Clydesdale Place.
Slavic.—Nicholas R. Rodionoff, 35634 Tenth Street.
Smithsonian.—Frederick E. Brasch, 732 Rittenhouse Street.
Union catalogues.—Ernest Kletsch, director, 3601 Connecticut Avenue.
Law Librarian.—John T. Vance, jr., 16 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
European representative.— Worthington C. Ford.
Consultant in bibliography and research.—Ernest C. Richardson.
Consultant tn church history.— William H. Allison, 2440 Sixteenth Street.
Honorary consultant in classical literature.—Harold N. Fowler, 2000 R Street.
Consultant in economics.—Victor Selden Clark, 3930 Connecticut Avenue.
Consultant in European history.—Henry E. Bourne, 2844 Wisconsin Avenue.
Consultant in Hispanic literature.—David Rubio, 1021 Newton Street NE.
Consultant in philosophy.— William Alexander Hammond, The Rochambeau.
Honorary consultant tn science.—Harry Walter Tyler, The Ontario.
Consultant in soctology.—Joseph Mayer, 744 Jackson Place.
Honorary consultant in Chinese history and culture—Kiang Kang-hu.
Honorary consultant in military history.—Brig. Gen. John McAuley Palmer
(United States Army, retired).
Honorary consultant in paleography.— Elias Avery Lowe (Oxford).
Honorary consultant in Roman law.— Francesco Lardone.
Project C.—Seymour de Ricei, compiler and editor.
267
268 Congressional Directory
Copyright Office:
Acting register.— William L. Brown, The Ontario.
Library Building (custody and maintenance):
Superintendent of building.— William C. Bond, 3519 Thirteenth Street.
Disbursing officer.— Wade H. Rabbitt, Mount Rainier, Md.
THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS TRUST FUND BOARD
[Created by an act of Congress approved March 3, 1925, and as amended January 27, 1926, with the power
‘‘to accept, receive, hold, and administer such gifts or bequests of personal property for the benefit of, or
in connection with, the Library, its collections, or its service, as may be approved by the board and by the
Joint Committee on the Library.”’]
Charrman.— William Hartman Woodin, Secretary of the Treasury, Carlton Hotel.
Secretary.— Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress, 2025 O Street.
Senator Alben William Barkley, chairman of the Joint Committee on the Library,
3102 Cleveland Avenue.
John Barton Payne, Esq., 1601 I Street.
Mrs. Eugene Meyer, 1624 Crescent Place.
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
(Corner North Capitol and G Streets. Phone, District 6340)
Public Printer.—George H. Carter, 1661 Hobart Street.
Deputy Public Printer.—John Greene, 41 Rhode Island Avenue.
Assistant to the Public Printer.— Miss Mary A. Tate, 1453 Belmont Street.
Chief clerk.—Henry H. Wright, 1250 E Street NE.
Production manager.—Ellwood S. Moorhead, 3521 Seventeenth Street NE.
Night production manager.— Edward A. Huse, 1501 Monroe Street NE.
Superintendent of printzng.——Hermann B. Barnhart, 1415 Shepherd Street.
Superintendent of presswork.—Bert E. Bair, 3610 Seventeenth Street NE.
Superintendent of binding.— Martin R. Speelman, 153 Rhode Island Avenue NE.
Superintendent of platemaking—Edward G. Whall, 811 Quincy Street.
Superintendent of accounts (budget officer). —J. K. Wallace, 1322 Monroe Street NE.
Mechanical superintendent.— Alfred E. Hanson, 3424 Quebec Street.
Superintendent of documenis.—Alton P. Tisdel, 2842 Twenty-eighth Street.
Superintendent of planning.— William A. Mitchell, 1311 Lawrence Street NE.
Purchasing agent.—Ernest E. Emerson, University Park, Hyattsville, Md.
Technical director.—B. L. Wehmhoff, 7 Woodland Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Superintendent of stores (traffic manager).—W. H. Kervin, 329 Tenth Street NE.
Medical and sanitary director.—Daniel P. Bush, M. D., 1673 Columbia Road.
Captain of the guard.— Thomas L. Underwood, 1925 Kearney Street NE.
Congressional Record clerk (Capitol).— William A. Smith, 3817 Jocelyn Street.
BOTANIC GARDEN
(West of the Capitol Grounds)
Director —George W. Hess; residence, United States Botanic Garden. (Phone,
Office, NAtional 3120, Branch 267.)
Assistant director— Wilmer J. Paget, 5828 Fourth Street. (Phones, Office,
NAtional 3120, Branch 268; home, GEorgia 4556.) i
Chief clerk.— Emily Koons, 2634 Garfield Street.
THE CAPITOL
This building is situated on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the Potomac
| River and covers an area of 153,112 square feet, or approximately 3} acres.
Its length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its width, including ap-
proaches, is 350 feet; and its location is described as being in latitude 38° 53’ 20.4"
north and longitude 77° 00’ 35.7" west from Greenwich. Its height above the
base line on the east front to the top of the Statue of Freedom is 287 feet 5%
inches. The dome is built of iron, and the aggregate weight of material used in
its construction is 8,909,200 pounds.
The Statue of Freedom surmounting the dome is entirely of bronze and weighs
14,985 pounds. It was modeled by Thomas Crawford, father of Francis Marion
Crawford, the novelist, in Rome, Italy, and the plaster model shipped to this
country. It was cast in bronze at the shops of Clark Mills, on the Bladensburg
Road, not far from the city of Washington. The cost of the bronze casting and
the expenses in connection therewith were $20,796.82, and, as the sculptor
Crawford was paid $3,000 for the plaster model, the entire cost of the statue was
$23,796.82. It was erected and placed in its present position December 2, 1863.
The grounds have an area of 58.8 acres, at one time a part of Cern Abby
Manor, and at an early date was occupied by a subtribe of the Algonquin Indians
Irom as the Powhatans, whose council house was then located at the foot of
he hill. :
SELECTION OF A SITE FOR THE NATIONAL CAPITAL
It may seem strange that, in the selection of the 10 miles square for the territory
in which the National Capital should find a home, a locality was selected with
but a meager population. It may have been the intent to found a capital which
should develop its own particular surroundings instead of attempting to conform
with conditions then existing. But the principal reason was the lesson learned
from European experiences, where the location of the country’s capital in a large
city offered an opportunity for the coercion of legislators by the citizens of the
capital. From the inception of the Continental Congress, either through neces-
sity or voluntarily, it had moved from Philadelphia to Baltimore, Lancaster, York,
Princeton, Annapolis, Trenton, and New York City. Philadelphia seems to have
been the favorite location, and it was from this city that the Federal Congress,
organized in New York City, took up its abode until its removal to Washington,
in the year 1800.
The original 10 miles square was formed from territory donated by Virginia
and Maryland, and the cornerstone was erected and fixed on April 15, 1791, at
Hunters Point, just south of Alexandria, Va. This area remained intact until
the year 1846, when the Congress transferred to Virginia the portion furnished
by that State. PLANS FOR THE CAPITOL BUILDING
Following the selection of a site for the Capital, some little time elapsed before
advertisements appeared offering a prize of $500, or a medal of the same value, to
be awarded for the ‘“most approved plan’ for a Capitol Building. Some 14 plans
were submitted—some writers claim 16—but of these plans none was wholly
satisfactory. In October 1792, Dr. William Thornton, a versatile physician of
Tortola, West Indies, requested by letter an opportunity to present a plan as
within the terms of the original advertisement. The request was granted and his
plan accepted by the commissioners on April 5, 1793.
Affairs seemed to move rapidly in those days, for on September 18, 1793, the
cornerstone was laid with Masonic ceremonies in the southeast corner of the north
section of the building, now designated as the Supreme Court section of the
Capitol. Thornton’s plan provided for a central section nearly square in area,
surmounted by a low dome, this central section to be flanked on the north and
south by rectangular buildings, with a length of 126 feet and a width of 120 feet.
The northern wing was the first completed, and in this small building the legisla-
tive and judicial branches of the Government, as well as the courts of the District
of Columbia, were accommodated at the time of the removal of the Government
from Philadelphia in the year 1800.
269
es
270 Congressional Directory
BUILDING OF THE OLD CAPITOL
In the development of the accepted plans of Dr. William Thornton in the
erection of the first unit of the building—the present Supreme Court section— |
three architects were employed—Stephen H. Hallett, George Hadfield, and James
Hoban, the architect of the White House. The erection of the southern section
of the Capitol, which is now occupied by Statuary Hall, was under the charge of
B. H. Latrobe, and in 1811 the House of Representatives, which had previously
met in the Supreme Court section of the Capitol and in a temporary brick building
within the walls of the southern wing, commenced the occupancy of this new
Legislative Chamber. A wooden passageway connected the two buildings. This
condition existed when the interior of both buildings was burned by the British
on August 24, 1814.
The work of reconstruction of the damaged interiors was commenced by B. H.
Latrobe, who continued the work of restoration until December, 1817, when he
resigned, and Charles Bulfinch, a prominent architect of Boston, Mass., continued
the work of restoration and the erection of the central portion of the building,
commencing in 1818 and continuing until its completion in 1827.
During the period of restoration and completion the Congress met, for its first
session after the fire, in Blodget’s Hotel at Seventh and E Streets, and soon
thereafter in a building erected for that purpose on First Street NE., occupying
a portion of the site recently selected for the United States Supreme Court Build-
ing. They continued this occupancy until 1819, when the Capitol was again
ready for occupancy.
The original Capitol as completed was built of Aquia Creek (Va.) sandstone,
procured from quarries owned by the Government. This structure was 352
feet 4 inches in length and 229 feet in depth. The central portion was sur-
mounted by a low dome, and the sandstone interior was unchanged when the
new dome was erected in a later period. The cost of this original building, includ-
ing the grading of the grounds, repairs, etec., up to the year 1827, was $2,433,844.13.
Following the completion of the old Capitol in 1827, and the termination of
the services of the architect, Charles Bulfinch, in 1830, such architectural serv-
ices as were needed were performed by different architects until the year 1851,
when the building of the present Senate and House wings was commenced, the
plans of Thomas U. Walter having been selected in preference to others submitted.
On July 4, 1851, the corner stone of the extensions was laid in the northeast corner
of the House wing. The oration was delivered by Daniel Webster, and his
prophetic utterances on that occasion have been quoted many times. In the
building of the Senate and House wings the exterior marble came from the quarries
of Lee, Mass., and the columns from quarries of Cockeysville, Md.
The addition of the Senate and House wings made the construction of a new
dome necessary for the preservation of architectural symmetry. The greatest
exterior diameter of the dome is 135 feet 5 inches. The rotunda is 97 feet in
diameter, and its height from the floor to where the dome closes in at the base of
the lantern is 180 feet 3 inches.
The Capitol has a floor area of 14 acres, and 430 rooms are devoted to office,
committee, and storage purposes. There are 14,518 square feet of skylights,
679 windows, and 550 doorways. The dome receives light through 108 windows,
and from the architect’s office to the dome there are 365 steps, one for each day
of the year. In 1853, according to the report of Randolph Coyle, civil engineer, the Capitol
Grounds contained approximately 29.32 acres. The present area is 53.8 acres.
Contained in the grounds are 10.33 acres of cement sidewalks and 8.65 acres of
asphalt driveways, and more than 800 trees and 3,500 shrubs surround the
building. At this time the enlarging of the Capitol Grounds is in progress. The grounds
will contain, with the area included in the office buildings for the use of the
Senate and the House of Representatives, more than 120 acres.
During the 35 years following the completion of the Capitol additional ground
was acquired in order to obtain a better landscape surrounding in keeping with
the enlarged Capitol. The terraces were built on the north, west, and south
sides of the building. These changes resulted in an improved appearance of
the building, which still remained in an incomplete condition, as the east front
had not been extended as contemplated by the plans of Thomas U. Walter, under
whose direction the Senate and House wings had been added and the new dome
constructed.
An increased membership of the Senate and House resulted in a demand for
additional rooms for the accommodation of the Senators and Representatives,
Capitol Bualding - 271;
and on March 3, 1903, the Congress authorized the erection of a fireproof office
building for the use of the House Members as office and committee rooms.
The first brick was laid July 5, 1905, in square No. 690, and formal exercises were
held at the laying of the corner stone on April 14, 1906, in which President
Roosevelt participated. The building was completed and occupied January 10,
1908. A subsequent change in the basis of congressional representation made
necessary the building of an additional story. The entire cost of the building,
including site, amounted to $4,860,155.71. This office building contains 690
rooms, and was considered at the time of its completion fully equipped for all of
the needs of a modern building for office purposes.
The demand for a new building to be used for offices was greater for the Rep-
resentatives, on account of the large number forming the membership of that
bedy, and because the Members of the Senate were supplied with additional
office space by the purchase of the Maltby Building, located on the northwest
corner of B Street and New Jersey Avenue NW. However, the acquisition of
this building supplied but a temporary purpose, and its condemnation as an
unsafe structure created on the part of the Senators a desire for safer and more
commodious quarters. Accordingly, square 686, on the northeast corner of
Delaware Avenue and B Streets NI., was purchased as a site for the Senate
Office Building, and the plans for the House Office Building were adapted for the
Senate Office Building, the only change being the omission of the additional story
and the further omission of the fourth side of the building fronting on First
Street NE., this being planned for but not completed. The corner stone of
this building was laid without special exercises on July 31, 1906, and the building
was completed and occupied March 5, 1909; it cost, including site and furnishings,
$5,019,251.09.
During the development of the plans for fireproof office buildings for occupancy
by the Senators and Representatives, the question of heat, light, and power was
considered. The Senate and House wings of the Capitol were heated by separate
heating plants. The Library of Congress also had in use a heating plant for that
building, and it was finally determined that the solution of the heating and light-
ing, with power for elevators, could be adequately met by the construction of a
central power plant to furnish all heat and power, as well as light, for the Capitol
group of buildings.
Having determined the need of a central power plant, a site was selected in
Garfield Park, bounded by New Jersey Avenue, South Capitol Street, Virginia
Avenue, and B Street SE. This park being a Government reservation, an appro-
priation of money was not required to secure title. The determining factors lead-
ing to the selection of this site were its nearness to the tracks of the Pennsylvania
Railroad and its convenient distance to the river and the buildings to be cared for
by the plant.
The dimensions of the Capitol power plant are 244 feet 8 inches by 117 feet,
with a height over the boiler room of 81 feet to accommodate the coal bunkers.
A recent additional building, for accommodation of shops and storerooms, is
located near the power plant and is built of selected red brick, it being 90 feet
long, 50 feet wide, and 2 stories high. The building is located upon concrete
foundations resting upon 790 simplex reinforced concrete piles; the superstructure
is of red brick. There are custodis radial brick chimneys 212 feet in height and
11 feet in diameter at the top.
The buildings served by the power plant are connected by a reinforced concrete
steam tunnel 7 feet high by 4% feet wide, with walls approximately 12 inches
thick. This tunnel originally ran from the power plant to the Senate Office
Building, with connecting tunnels for the House Office Building, the Capitol,
and the Library of Congress, and has since been extended to the Government
Printing Office and the Washington City Post Office, while provision will be made
to accommodate the New House Office Building, the new Supreme Court Build-
ing, and the relocated Botanic Garden.
GLE
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5. Dynamo room.
4, 6. Hon. James V. McClintic,
7,9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Dynamo rooms.
12. Janitor’s storeroom.
14. Tile room.
= 16. Women’s toilet.
~ 18. Repair shop, dynamo room.
19, 21. Tinner’s shop.
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.
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35, 39. Elevators.
37. Kitchen.
BASEMENT AND TERRACE OF THE CAPITOL
MAIN BUILDING
SENATE SIDE
Room.
21, 23, 25, 27, 29. Architect’s office.
31. Senator Metcalf.
HOUSE SIDE
21. Architect’s office.
23, 25. House Committee on Printing.
27. Clerk’s storeroom.
29. Office of compiler of Congressional Directory.
31. Hon. Harry L. Englebright (Republican Whip).
SENATE WING
TERRACE
Room.
2, 4, 6.
1, 3. Captain of police.
5. Architect’s drafting room.
7.
9.
8, 10, 12, 14. Storage rooms.
11.
13.
15, 16, 17, 18. Janitor’s rooms.
19. Electrician’s storeroom.
20. Men’s toilet.
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35, 47. Elevators.
37.
39, 41. Engineer’s rooms.
43. Kitchen.
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2, 3. Subcommittee on Appropriations.
4. Hon. Clifton A. Woodrum.
5, 24. Hon. J. W. Byrnes.
6,7,8. Official Reporters of Debates.
9, 10. Speaker.
11. Parliamentarian.
12, 13. Office of Sergeant at Arms.
14, 33. Private dining room.
15. Barber shop.
16, 23. Committee on Appropriations.
17. Clerk’s storeroom.
18, 22, 23. Committee on Accounts.
19. Closets.
20, 21, 29, 30, 32, 34. Restaurant.
25, 28. Elevators.
27. Office, House restaurant
31. Public restaurant,
GROUND FLOOR OF THE CAPITOL
MAIN BUILDING
Room.
68. Joint Committee on Printing.
69. Senate Committee on the Library.
70. Hon. Thomas H. Cullen.
71. Hon. H. 'W. Sumners.
72. Hon. Edward T. Taylor.
74, 75, 76. Dr. George W. Calver.
77, 80, 107. Senator Johnson.
78. Senator Steiwer.
79. Senator Bratton.
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, ie of Doorkeeper of the House.
92, 97, 101. | Office of superintendent of folding room.
93. Annex office, post office.
94, 96. Railroad ticket office.
95, 102, 103. House disbursing office.
99.
100. Clerk’s storeroom.
104, 105. Assistant Property Custodian.
106. Enrolling Clerk,
SENATE WING
Room.
35, 67. Majority Leader.
36, 37, 38. Committee on Appropriations,
39, 40. Committee oun the Judiciary.
41. Committee on Interoceanic Canals.
42, 46. Senator Trammell.
43, 58. Senators Townsend, Kean, and Vandenberg,
44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 61, 62. Restaurant.
51, 60. Elevators.
52. Senator Schall.
52A. Committee on Enrolled Bills.
55. Senator Hale.
56. Senator Lewis.
57. Senator Norris.
59. Senator Coolidge.
53, 63. Committee on Foreign Relations.
65. Sergeant at Arms.
66. Men's toilet.
68. Women’s toilet.
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1, 2, 3, 4. Committee on Appropriations.
5. Hon. Joseph W. Byrnes.
6. Closets.
7, 8,9. Members’ retiring rooms.
10. Office of the Majority Leader.
11, 12, 13, 14. Cloakrooms.
15. Hon. Robert L. Doughton, Democratic Steering Com-
mittee, Ways and Means.
16. Library.
17, 18. Elevators.
19, 20. Speaker,
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 Justices of the Supreme Court.
48. Withdrawing room of the Supreme Court.
49, Office of the marshal of the Supreme Court.
50. Storeroom, clerk of the Supreme Court.
51. Senator Borah.
52. Senate storekeeper.
53. Senate Committee on Education and Labor.
54. Senate Committee on Contingent Expenses.
55. Senator Harrison.
56. Vice President.
57. Senator Connally.
58. House Minority Leader.
59. Hon. Bertrand H. Snell.
60, 61, 62. House Committee on Banking and Currency.
63. The Supreme Court, formerly the Senate Chamber.
64, 65. Speaker’s private office,
SENATE WING
Room.
21. Office of the Secretary.
22. Executive clerk.
23. Financial clerk.
24. Chief Clerk.
25. Engrossing and enrolling clerks.
26, 27. Committee on Military Affairs.
28. Senators’ lavatory.
29, 30. Cloakrooms.
31. The Marble Room.
32. Room of the Vice President.
33, 34. Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads.
3314, 35. Elevators.
36. Official Reporters of Debates.
37. The Senators’ reception room.
38. Committee on the District of Columbia.
39. Office of the Sergeant at Arms
40. Room of the President,
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HOUSE WING MAIN BUILDING SENATE WING
Room. Room. Room.
1, 2, 3. Committee on Foreign Affairs. 27. Senate library. 14. Committee on Rules.
4, File room. 28. Senate library—Librarian’s room. 15, 16. Committee on Interstate Commerce.
5. Committee on Appropriations. 29. Senator Neely. 17. Minority conference room.
6,7, 8,9, 10. Press gallery. 30. Senator Reed. 18, 19. Committee on Commerce.
11, 12. Committee on Rules. 31, 32, 33. Senate document room. 20, 21, 22. Press gallery.
13. Ladies’ retiring room. 34, Superintendent of the Senate document room. 23. Committee on Territories and Insular Affairs.
14. Elevator. 35. House Journal, tally, and bill clerks. 24. Committee on Public Lands and Surveys.
15. Elevator, 36, 37. House document room. 25. Committee on Privileges and Elections.
39. Clock-repair room. 26. Committee on Printing.
40. Senate document room. 27. Elevator. oS
41, 42, Senate Majority Whip. 28. Women’s retiring room. fo
43, 44. Justice Sutherland’s chambers. =~
45. Justice Roberts’s chamber. ~~
46. Senator Robinson, Indiana. .
47. Senator Wagner. on
48. Senator Smith. S
49, 50. Hon. Arthur H. Greenwood (Democratic Whip). ~,
51. NY
52, 53, 54. House Committee on Indian Affairs. S .
56, 57. S
6.8
SOUTHERN LOBBY
082
| 11 3 l
COAT ROOM    COAT ROOM
EASTERN
LOBBY
WESTERN
LOBBY
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pf a] i® L.C. Legislative Clerks. V.P. Vice President. D. - Secretary 0B)
o z C.C. Chief Clerk. J.C. Journal Clerk. to the Minority.
us Sec. Secretary. A. - Secretary to the Majority. R. - Official Reporters.
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ROOM : PRESIDENT'S ; THE MARBLE ROOM ROOM
. Adams, Alva B., Colorado.
. Ashurst, Henry F., Arizona.
. Austin, Warren R., Vermont.
. Bachman, Nathan L., Tennessee.
. Bailey, Josiah William, North Carolina.| 3.
. Bankhead, John H., Alabama.
. Barbour, W. Warren, New Jersey.
. Barkley, Alben W., Kentucky.
. Black, Hugo L., Alabama.
. Bone, Homer T., Washington.
. Borah, William E., Idaho.
. Bratton, Sam G., New Mexico.
. Brown, Fred H., New Hampshire.
. Bulkley, Robert J., Ohio.
. Bulow, W. J., South Dakota.
. Byrd, Harry Flood, Virginia.
. Byrnes, James F., South Carolina.
. Capper, Arthur, Kansas.
. Caraway, Hattie W., Arkansas.
. Carey, Robert D., Wyoming.
. Clark, Bennett Champ, Missouri.
. Connally, Tom, Texas.
. Coolidge, Marcus A., Massachusetts. 21.
. Copeland, Royal S., New York.
DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE
JOHN N. GARNER, Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate
KEY PITTMAN, President pro tempore of the Senate
EpwIN A. HALSEY, Secretary Lesuie L. BIFFLE, Secretary for the Majority
CHESLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeant at Arms CARL A. LOEFFLER, Secretary for the Minority
REV. DR. ZEBARNEY TBORNE PHILLIPS, Chaplain
85. Costigan, Edward P., Colorado. 73. Kean, Hamilton F., New Jersey. 54.
29. Couzens, James, Michigan. 34. Kendrick, John B., Wyoming. 19.
77. Cutting, Bronson, New Mexico. 8. Keyes, Henry W., New Hampshire. 25.
28. Dale, Porter H., Vermont. 12. King, William H., Utah. 10.
Davis, James J., Pennsylvania. 51. La Follette, Robert M., jr., Wisconsin. | 41.
2. Dickinson, L. J., Iowa. 96. Lewis, J. Hamilton, Illinois. 1
94. Dieterich, William H., Illinois. 64. Logan, M. M., Kentucky. 31.
35. Dill, Clarence C., Washington. 69. Lonergan, Augustine, Connecticut. 78.
18. Duffy, F. Ryan, Wisconsin. 17. Long, Huey P., Louisiana. 33.
95. Erickson, John E., Montana. 66. McAdoo, William Gibbs, California. 23.
24. Fess, Simeon D., Ohio. 89. McCarran, Patrick, Nevada. 63.
30. Fletcher, Duncan U., Florida. 38. McGill, George, Kansas. 70.
6. Frazier, Lynn J., North Dakota. 11. McKellar, Kenneth D., Tennessee. 83.
14. George, Walter F., Georgia. 4, McNary, Charles L., Oregon.
57. Glass, Carter, Virginia. 27. Metcalf, Jesse H., Rhode Island. 75.
72. Goldsborough, Phillips Lee, Maryland.| 90. Murphy, Louis, Iowa. 56.
82. Gore, Thomas P., Oklahoma. 39. Neely, M. M., West Virginia. 59.
26. Hale, Frederick, Maine. 7. Norbeck, Peter, South Dakota. 49,
13. Harrison, Pat, Mississippi. 53. Norris, George W., Nebraska. 68.
22. Hastings, Daniel O., Delaware. 50. Nye, Gerald P., North Dakota. 60.
74. Hatfield, H. D., West Virginia. 92. Overton, John H., Louisiana. 76.
36. Hayden, Carl, Arizona. 48. Patterson, Roscoe C., Missouri. 79.
Hebert, Felix, Rhode Island. 32. Pittman, Key, Nevada. 16.
5. Johnson, Hiram W,, California. 43, Pope, James P,, Idaho, 46.
Reed, David A., Pennsylvania.
Reynolds, Robert R., North Carolina.
Robinson, Arthur R., Indiana.
Robinson, Joseph T., Arkansas.
Russell, Richard B., jr., Georgia. *
Schall, Thomas D., Minnesota
Sheppard, Morris, Texas.
Shipstead, Henrik, Minnesota.
Smith, Ellison D., South Carolina.
Steiwer, Frederick, Oregon.
Stephens, Hubert D., Mississippi.
Thomas, Elbert D., Utah.
Thomas, Elmer, Oklahoma.
Thompson, William H., Nebraska.
Townsend, John G., jr., Delaware.
Trammell, Park, Florida.
Tydings, Millard E., Maryland.
Vandenberg, Arthur H., Michigan.
Van Nuys, Frederick, Indiana.
‘Wagner, Robert F., New York.
Walcott, Frederic C., Connecticut.
‘Walsh, David I., Massachusetts.
‘Wheeler, Burton K., Montana. |
‘White, Wallace H., jr., Maine,
burping
101dv)
186
282
Congressional
Directory
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TELEPHONES
ROOMS AND TELEPHONES
SENATORS
[Telephone numbers are branches of Capitol exchange—N A tional 3120]
Office building Capitol
Name Chairmanship
Room | Phone Location Phone
ADAMS: oo Se 404 37 ane nde sd mini aalabe EE a A in as ders Ve
ASHURST. css 109 806 Judiciary..c.cliesuail ouily Ground floor, northwest 156
corner.
AUSTIN Lo. a. 311 BIN ssl a eat ERE Clea Lo SIS Rae
BACHMAN... _...... 123 Lo TE Ie DEN te oo] LS 5 [RSS RE NS a SA lil
BAWLEYS oo a. 309 S12: Claims. oo LL RE RE re va ae ES
BANKHEAD... ........ 226 oT a NEE SE el i Ge BELAY EC fey vn ENC Sd SAE Be em 0 BLL ley
BARBOUR: =o... 147 YE EE er Sa ARE SS TEN TT Le AR 0 SB Bs 0 Reet ICR | SR
BARKLEY ‘vii ion 437 15 i Library. Cool nell le Old building, ground floor, |.______
west side.
BLACK... shia ih 308 11720 HARE SER DRT EL LT ON I eG SR LS LB
BONE Lf. 347 1a lins lela tednic ade nol amend Te, 0 Sal 0 HT SR tie. | 4 LL
BORAH Lo oa 139 7 a FU Ra Ra Ee Len Rey el LURE SE DR I) Rl Ep ma SL 1 Le
BRATION i 444 824 | Irrigation and -Beelama- |. 00x LAE oo a orn
tion.
BROWN: oe 143 HA He a en Fra rR ASR int 1 SL 3) NES SEER AE BL Lu
BURLEY: 313 EE DTI FL AE obama Lot oF | etl i 1 aan BEE i LES
BUOLOW i 247 107: Civil Service o.oo oon 50 LE aR
BYRD. 204 5 a ee a LEAR LER ada AIST
BYRNES... ania] 340 832 | Contingent Expenses... Senate floor, old library |...-__-
space, west side.
CAPPER. ain 206 LLL SE ese SS OR Sa sn RE 8 Cs LL ve Ss Sian LL
CARBAWAY: 304 193 Enrolled Bills... 8 0 eo d|ieiin Es
CAREY: foadidhiue... 326 7) SE RE LE IS SEL tT I SI A CR Sa
CLARE F.- 132 Ee Te ee a Ha
CONNALLY. io 117 969: Public. Buildings. and. lc. co. Chel Shor
Grounds.
CoOLIDGY... ni 442 167 ImMINIgration eae ee Ahn em hh = Se dn a hk mm |S ES
COPELAND. i. Jao) 315 096: -Rules.....-.—cfeo. szeaids Gallery floors. atfotecia:
COSTIGAN. =... 210 IE el SOR LAS SIE tl Ls i 5 a, 7 © CEL COR gee x 1
CovzERS....- 417 FE ES TIT Rt NUR ONT GS ee te Cen I <1
CUTTING. 344 1 SECC SRR i SIS SN SS og SORA 1) Se ee
DALE. oan 341 CRETE SE SE Le POY LT an ay RE Sl Gt eB BR +) LL
DAVIS 105 tr oO Gs a as Same nd Loe Biv MUN A oR eR dr Br SM
DICKINSON. - 240 14370 [Doe Dante Sede CS] D0 of eye © Sat Shere] Lod 0 BENT
DIETERICH- 413 LTH i LR Ue Le ne Sere een IG OR. Ly SER Cul ah R Enaly | TT
IDI Te Sie Se 429 806 | Interstate Commerce. _____ Gallery floor, west side________ 100
DURRY tie aon 124 a Sa RR SR Be CL Ae es Se Rs Ls
ERICKSON rr ono 441 oT I Co TE el ORE TI er ha MRE 013 RRL £1 gle et pn SE nn, (L007 7
00 LR a 215 sam ER a
FLETCHER... 337 176 "Banking and Carrency....|..-- 22 1 Cte. oo arulaoeoaa
FRAZIER... eee 426 LS ES aes see nen ee SU I aR Ta en
GRORGE..---..  on 342 817 | Privileges and Elections.._| Gallery floor, east side_________|.______
GLASS LZ oibi 330 182 | Appropriations... _.______ Ground floor, west side_.______ 61
GOLDSBOROUGH. _____ 133 [Vn GTR TE IR CT Cer me | rt aE IC SR od age, Sp epaetiey ge n RETIOI
RORE Ei. ah 331 i185: Interoceanic: Canals. oo olor oo ah en aa a
HATE or ol 121 ry A nS DES Ca EL TS RRR Ls en Se eet eee ETE
HARRISON: aint 217 EGE ET Cesena ieaisd aiid LOSS Ss mei en Lenser margin EO CT
TASTINGS... act 409 Ly er A Re See et CS TO Soe Pe SR ee Re la Le Cpe
286 Congressional Directory
SENATORS—Continued
Office building Capitol
Name TT Chairmanship ==
Room | Phone Location Phone .
i
HATFIELD... 408 cx Te BES Rial SCs ne SL Sh Stam Dad nal hee Lies eins la Bates
HAYDEN... oo oi 131 882 Printing deed hw me of Ta a
HEBERT D. 225 EUR Ll ae sa Ee Be BE ee i an Be a |
JONSON le Old building, ground floor, 36
northwest corner.
KEAN... nia 228 17 Same as er Ed Se TRL IIR ST Ya Sa a ae] ER
KENDRICK. coe 232 845 | Public Lands and Surveys_; Gallery floor, east side.._._____ 37
REYES.L nana 205 i a a a I ae SD EL
BING oii inne 349 171 | District of Columbia._____ Senate floor, east side__________ 113
LA TorLerTTE. ..... 239 Ee RE LSS IE i San Se SL a a ee
LEWIS. ai 111 954 ("Expenditures inthe Bxee-. 0 oi. il i itinerant
utive Departments.
LOGAN Lo cs ain 348 0663 Minesrand Mining. oo lo a i
LONERGAN... ooo... 323 1 SRR SL RC RR ID SE a 2 EEG £0 SS SRR RL
ONG. in scsi: 145 i a mie ns ah ts Se AI ih BA mde ee SHO A
MCADOO... oven 320 1 h74 BH EE TR NE Si Re CRON IER RR es a aC 1
MCCARBAN...ao ee 107 LP ei RE RR Se i BP LS Ae i Le Se Te TLE TE
MEG. oo 427 813 1- Pensions... - ie 0S Wd SA SR Ln Ee
McKELILAR. 0.0 221 191 | Post Offices and Post | Senate floor, southeast corner. 34
Roads.
MENARY ie 333 80 | Minority Leader__________ Gallery floor, west side.._...|.___...
MEZCALY cn voniia 244 ATER RS eR Se ea Rh HE SS Si BL Tae SR Cane i adn Tae LL
MURPHY... 440 BD lime Sin i in i Rp I Hl A
NEBL Lh caiureannv 423 820. La Sh Ri ase SE TE
NORBECE cola 303 HEE EL ER (easiness UE Fea
NORRIS =. afin 405 or ESR ee CE gm Ln WN an a YL Nes SOLO Eee EL Sen §
NYE iss 245 bE Se ESE BL NE na eRe £9 OBE (OC Reet 1 CIOID ree intiietutre BR BR Hel
OVERTON. vov=oeoee 428 Oy iit aan an ee EH en RE
PATTERSON coca aisl 432 Cpe Cont pees i i Dn i cS Sine dev adnate aie Fe a 0
PITTMAN. [O00 00 411 78 | Foreign Relations_________ Ground floor, east side.-.__.____ 101
POPE. owned enn s 5 TR ee Si Sn ER Sl ee Be SL eas le Ba
1 aa ES SEE SR J 321 i [550 ae reese de al en IR SER eR IR oi ed | De Sea Ce Se i EE te LE
BEYNOILDS o-oo 233 i bra Vi lem LSE Ser FEE Hs IL UR SU Sa TE IIE A
ROBINSON (Ark.)_____ 209 835 { Majority Leader. _______.__ Ground floor, southwest |.__.____
corner.
RoBiNsON (Ind.)_____ 227 4 14 TH TCRR Sy Coie lion TERY 1 E02 NEE) 1 on | BA EN An 4 LAIR [rn Sea SR mS Rl eg 7 SE
RUSSELL. 0. ssa. 439 rE Me a SS pe a TL en Be an Sen SR PI Ta
SCHALL. av imasnn 112 oT 5 Patel (i SC Sn BOR (AINE ne aR EI GT She SO Re eee i de aa BE
SHEPPARD --oesiaoia a 229 174 | Military Affairs. ______.... Senate floor, northwest corner. 155
SHIPSTEAD - - ccc 241 10) 1 ole nie Sp on pe hoot a! BER OL 1TTRRR 003 Re Se RE PE ge
SMITH=~ oss 325 183 | Agriculture and Forestry. foe ih EI TL
STEIWER = oc rants 410 tbe G8 ite ob mew BL RR aman Sorin LE Se Re eel RTS J
STEPHENS. Coa 127 877 1 COMMerCe. «oui in in Gallery floor, northwest corner 121
THOMAS (Okla.)_____. 345 ARES REE a ee TL Sr RO Vl Ean CEE |e as Be 0D
THOMAS (Utah) ______ 141 ond ER ARE Clee Re Pain ar 0 ms Se 1 I SR ee I RR
THOMPSON ea 125 rd ST SR ORE Ss ae DN ER LER Se Re RR I SIR
TOWNSEND. coo 447 nes FEBS es HR Se hee RE i Se Se i ed BIER
PRAMMELY oie 211 189 EL Naval Aalst ele on
WA TYDINGS...cao os 307 199 | Territories and Insular Gallery floor, southeast corner_|_______
| Affairs.
VANDENBERG . _..____ wl smd mma assis FLEE SE SINISE S ea Aim ed
VAN NUYS... REE SEDs I Ea a a Cl ev a eee
WAGNER. _ ooo. 45:0 7980 Patents-isisls Liman ak Lee LL en
WALCOTT. =... 202 332 A CRI Rd SR iL BER
WALSH (Mass.)_ 433 166 | Education and Labor___ ._ Old library space, Senate floor, 57
: west side.
WHEELER. vvivannean 421 09 India ARIS: oo on I a a si 3)
WHITE oo uiiisanins 242 816 | SER ee LR Te A ERR SR OR Ss I SE Ee DR EL TR
Rooms and Telephones 287
REPRESENTATIVES
2 [Telephone numbers are hranches of Capitol exchange—N Ational 3120]
Office building Capitol
Name Chairmanship
Suite | Phone Location Phone
ABERNETHY. ___. 1408 PO nie iin nnn sila IIE BAU Cons OBERT HDR A
ADAIR Loca 341 Le Tb nie Foti
ADAMS... 1626 A350 tH pi ee Se Se 1 VR Sten CE ee a
ATYENS aaa 1516 a LR CL CE IE REL Re ees Ti a
AITGO0D. one » [war BUT EER Eh ee es a
AILMON oiivve amine 1011 vol eoade. oa ai sna fee Mee og mh bee ss EARS Tos a
ANDREW (Mass.) 1526 i Te cr dr AER Rn J
ANDREWS (N. Y.)....| 1422 I Pa hl LAL oct oS Cl a RE
ARBNEL oceans 441 oe NS Se HE CR EL Rt ai he
ABNOLD ov cisions 1410 A a rr Er
AUF DER HEIDE. ____ 1225 ee ea
AYERS (Mont.).......| 422 BR a hn on nL ee Sh EL Cs Ete Le
AYRES (Kans.)...___. 1521 EE ee SCE dS hd een Ee El a Sl lS
BACHARACH .~...-: 1433 as Se te yr eh
BACON... coo 1035 LIN EA nie Li hea eto seven oS RSIS BE TT Sel) Se Sl RE TV Be
BANEY 0 caecini 220 EER Sel SI BOIS ie etal RS Bed allie LIONS Sie ee a JIE
BAKEWELL oo. 218 AY rh ee ee ae
BANKHEAD: .o..-.o. 1211 AG de es ee
BEAM icons 1237 a A
BECR iran 242 me A
BERDY =o ururneriagy 1530 FOE ee
BEITERL a. 253 LG RE asa ey Su Beatin Laat pons vil bend Coda iS cuales MRM TE Uo TE
BEREINL «aia 121 CBT ELE I rn Ls ball Seve Sando IL i ndeel Dooly SE Beiter io
BIERMANN.... 137 a a a mar a tor Drs iy Wiad Son ost ps Sp I rien ms
326 637 : BLACK. _ i ot 297 665 Jctaims a mm a a a | rh CI pe ES Si ot a ae BE
BIANCHARD. === -. =. 216 i Pg Ay Sern OS Rh ee gS Mss tl et PA Ra 4 en a
ee 217 578 i Marine, Radio, | Ee
A ESSROISERRTER 219 579 and Fisheries. sellin meas al dt lardr siden
BIANTON noc oo 257 ET Ul Popp pet Ee ES ean fed St Se SEE Sel a es it i be
BLOOM tit sn or 1528 TEL Co pe a st US ERASE Ra i eS ALE ah NAIC) on i Sai mete
BOPANE...: oe 1218 Ene an Se ee Sh Ra te Bean Lee ge 1 OT
BOIREAD. ~~ 1711 Sd ee Rr Ei in Ce tn A
BoAND: ons 1722 Aa penn in sr SE St sah i] of SU SER, Ealoen COs austen eh ape ln MLS
BOLTON vee 1419 LER BD Pa Ce Rm Er RAs Se Tels Be IE I peel persist INH SoD
BOYAN 1527 ne a
BRENNAN: =... 337 (NE ah sa Sl i hp iat et Bye I Ie he di B f elstrmmiatenio idan dual sl
BRitiEN. it 1524 Bs ee a
BROOR® i. 116 hE pe it Sl RT RE Te TL er Vie Rh ie Sn IR Coen nse ts fl Reni als
BROWN (Ky.).__.___. 420 A
BrowN (Mich.)______ i EERE TY Fd ed at a ite So Sen] SL Be UR Rd dnt naib bal dimen de an
BROWNING. __________ 1513 7: FH Bhd ae nT, Cae tae Sas Don 52 ten Eds Sl es eee beste bl Ll
Brow ooo 1117 VE i pes se SR Sm ST Li Ses LE Shea ends tenn teat I A
BRUNNER:. 7 1034 iil Tl tes eet ee Loe SCE ens hi Se CN ven Sen helontanalitnt din bie BD i
632 2s BUCHANAN... 1114 300 \ppropriations en House floor, west corridor_____ 227
353
BOCK. ar 221 [tl pk ns ba a a AY elt BL biel 8 se sentinel Bed dn
BUCRBEE. so 1506 ALY I hn Cl RI he NER it Re ei Ne SA SE Sedma anh Dna ai,
BULWINELE 1313 Sb Ae aie Shoei te pans ad Pal Sei I Mapes i ile ress 0 iuinand
BURCH or or 1707 OB a a ea re
BURKE (Calif)... 235 333 a a a A tr le eee
BURKE (Nebr.)_._____ 107 [3 bo Me Se OS et ORR Wma SE DAES Bot sie se end as
BUBNHAM -.- =... 317 YI RS A a a ad re Siena Bn (Ede PE ehh Siete ha
BUSEY. li 1531 iia cos Ge LR cp eee
vy 282 BynNgs: oo ne ae Maiotity Loader. co... ol Re fia ae 241
CADDY rE 1622 7 TE Sh NE SM ea See ed El eit | ae i ele tt Hideo
CALUOWELY nein o ne 103 3] ier ipo en an li CLS TE a BO LT
288 Congressional Directory
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Office building Capitol
Name ; Chairmanship
Suite |Phone Location Phone
CANNON (MoO.).__--_ 1423 sd He Se SRE eae SE Sp VEY PRES Ge oR STEN Res Se aE CnC Re
CANNON (Wis.)..._-_| 1607 1 1] ea eat Beit pps Rha ER TNE ATE a se RT Pa
CARDEN... .oavieaa 1540 A Endaetnanain sania ie I ates Thos eel Sl RL TTT
399 || Election of President, Vice
BARLEY. oruetese-ts 1228 657 | President, etc. | A rude Th ete a ER
CARPENTER (Kans.)._| 1216 TO eee AER Ll nT a CRED ea
CARPENTER (Nsbr.)_.| 105 rE Le a LS a ee iE CCL Se nh ne
CARTER (Calif)... .... 1125 FL I SR Ee a TE TY CE I ae
CARTER (WyO0.)...._.| 1729 rE rd ee EE A RE EE
CARTWRIGHT - 1507 nb UH aS al I a ET TY a Ie i GT TE LU
CARY aan 1520 Eo es est tiene Snip sin oC TT Gn Ee SRR mas LER
COASTELLOW...... vee 458 VE Ee as SN Be TT CR Te RO a
CAVICCHIA: Cooma 1018 Le Ee Se BR Me ee Le EEE
CRLLER Cialis 1227 va! VEE SSE GE an ES TCC a ST i UE Se ER LL STL In BT
OOAPMAN. ...anmmiea 1 Fg bs Sl [1 sh NE Rae a Eee ea le 0 a TER ne mE
CHASE +. wnt wanan 423 VE EE RR NE Pe a MR SP NS ie me nn SEE TU ET
Cutie... 17% 628 Jerre and Besema- Jl opi eer uous
676 tion. |
CHRISTIANSON. .______ 438 ee DC a SS eT a I CE SE EIEN
CHURCH. enna 134 AES en BS NY CE Ee Pe
CLATBORNE ooo 321 vs ERG pa ana ae es seine Dn TT i a ee Se Pe Tr
CLARE (N. C.).. ....] 1936 419 :sMections No. Fo ov ofa 0 at oe as
CIAREE (N.Y... 1726 FL tiem Re i Ben ET i VR al She en Sea pena
303 | 1004 ||Expenditures in the Exec-
Cocaras (Moy)... 304 580 | utive Departments. | Sar ete ia a! beled
COCHRAN (Pa.)-___... 1503 ALR EE mee Ln CCE ae al Cs SEO Ee Sn a nS ea
COFFIN ovina 419 eR a bes Sh al CR al er i Ee
COLDEN su coo-ioc.l 237 LL a EY TREN Ch dpi Sa al 5 Logi
COLE fl 1541 EE A Se SSS ER BEL RE rE RR eee ele Se a i
CoLLINS (Calif.) __.___ 456 An EE ee el a a EEL Bae ial. nes Hans
CoLLINS (Miss.)_---_- 1510 CL ETERS
COLMER.. oss 206 7 HE EE EE IE TH ER a ee Sn Ee Ea
CONDON: - voi onmm aan 1221 Fiy(1 EL el ae ee ET Se tm ee i ee ET
429 417 CONNEBY...couinica- 431 443 07 r SEE GS Se BD Te CX I CC AS Re SI SE te i Lh a
CONNOLLY ois 1110 HE ae se Se SE ae re a ea se eT
COOPER (Ohio)... 1235 vo BE Cal EE ee RES TS es es he ee
COOPER (Tenn.)__.___ 1512 ra CEE LN Re BEE YS RE GR TR iY
CORNING: .5.-. .venn 1429 POLE sean SR re a rs Se a an al ee
COX. i laa 200 EE SE NE SR Ee a
CRAVENS. ....... oo. 305 7a be Bl EE EER en SR BRE De ae a i a Tee
COROSBYL oo. onan 126 EE lL el Se I LD Ee Ee
CROSS. 3 naan 1323 rik: PR AE ES EE CE a oe eR a re [T
CROSSER ana 1130 LR Ee be eR ee A Er en a ee a Ea
CROWES. cium 1123 7 va eo Re SI MB Be a es Dee
CROWTHER ...-~vn mmm 1328 Be a a Sale ed Rane at RAE de Re a md SE pr
CRUMP aaa 123 EE aE NE Ll ER Re RS ee EL LE
QULEING oo sini 1305 OB fe net as rr ke en ie 2 EASE A ae hen ak eA Re Ea ee
CULLEN: oo a a Te iia Ground floor, room 70.________ 261
CUMMINGS... vvuneeme 334 i pt ER Sr Pe IR Res ST I aR A a) re
PARDEN oi 342 br Ee Sees ee SE Es Rs ER SE Ri mle
DARROW... 1111 Ee SE a Ce SR En SOR Ee Ee ie i ee eH men
PRAR Luin 1021 BO le Be bY a ee AY PE SE
DREN an i A EE Fy tol en RR DER ee dS Re Se ST SS
DELANEY: oi. aR Re asain te se Lanai ibe isn Se SE a LU !
DE PRIEST. ....vonvnn 1404 3p 8] Ee SSR PS Te Baal SLR a ee RR Re iS
[ 328] 3% DEBOUEN: iow ERD INE brn SE a rT 1 329 233
DICKINSON... ovo FLT BE 1h Ee eS Sl Re i SN ER SRR Pe
SR STEEs 445 488 am and Natu- |
Padget 446 456 ralization, TTT =
Rooms and Telephones
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
289
Office building
|
Capitol
Name 3 Chairmanship
Suite | Phone Location Phone
DIES ee nranm 1121 BE LL SE hi et S30 Lt pin si ob, EAST
Pvowp. oi To yReS LE IEE ee EL ho
DINGELL. oo {TE BRET EE We pe re ee Eo
PIRESEN- =: ais 209 B05. ch Nasi a Pe OE Se Sa ae a te
DIANEY enn 1712 Be a a EB EE a hm Lon)
BIMER.: iain 444 I ES i Ea BE Oe ee le he RE En Lr
PDOBBINS. 202 BO er rE a a ee ea a a
POCKWEILER oan 101 AOL a a a er
DONDERO. ac 204 YE Se SE BL REL SE A det ps] EU eh
615
DOVGHION. ---- --=--~ oo Waysand Means... i. luge oh a 219
759
DOUGLASS. a Pos [Baucation CE a rer he ee fee SHER Eat ta oh ROE STH RE A
DOUIRICH: oc .ounn 1405 es en ma
DOWELL: a 1424 4150 ORS oe Wel SG ve DEY LEAL SE Ib ee Jape apenas Up I TR
POXEY...-... oe 1515 CUE Bee er ER EE STR SS te ST Ln ee Sa Sa
DREWRY.... 1124 B00 Juin Sr eS TE a EN
DRIVER: Cis. a 1210 FB er dr ew wr Sl me
DUFEEY 0 coiccinn 1017 T0184. ahaa a er eT RE a
DUNCAN... Conia 403 7 EE mie tn Ru LL SORE LE 0 i Rn bean Ces
DUNN i 106 BF) Lessee ie am ee eR eR OE A
DURGAN oan 318 12.4 I EES Se Lt RU SL LE Se BI pe I oS dC SS, Se Bn
BAGLE 205 B07 qe Cid en me ar LE re
BARON. Lo ool. 1229 ER Ae Cr Re EER Ce rE ES A SR hd BE pent
BDPMONDS. -- ---...... 353 O08. 1. ioc s imi a EL eS A RA Se SR rm a me
BICHER. oo diuve. 131 Fr TR Re Dh ae Ls Ey Ee aa en Pn
ELLENBOGEN_________ 1632 BY. [tie Swann cabin re a a Eh Rr en
BIVZIEY. 0 io 1033 420. for nes BR eR eh RE BNR nei
{1 Pr) Ee EO SRR Bi 322 BID Jom cman ohn twas RR ke ee BE Re Se a a
ENGLEBRIGHT- _ 1122 286 | Minority Whip. ___._______ Basement floor, room 31_______ 278
EVANS. oo 1715 roy Ee FE SE ee Ee Ka ol kh LMT CE he sli Lame roi
PADDR: ni 436 Ew NN 0 ST i mmo sal is) sith rs
BARLEY. oil 102 BL. 7. unnasinr avs ihes sis sedate Ene CLR ee De a i a
FERNANDEZ. 1027 15 ET BE es SE RE Se ee RL Ee Le rh
FIESINGER..—— LE BC REE ERR ae a ERE EE rs Lk
Towa 0g Bn a a EEL Sanne Sl eh
POZGImEONT. a) 480 To | mht ea a
FITZPATRICK - o-oo 1233 1 RS REDRESS a ah a cr SR SAL AR CEC SE a ees a
FLANNAGAN... ..... 1713 Yi SEER op We i SHOE Liiek ww oo dana] >
FLETCHER - ooo. WON cn de eal RR SL Us RS
BOCET.. aes bane nin 355 I BLS rh oe ied mys bad LS sian,
FORD: 320 a a a i Eh pad Sani
Nossa a 1519 YE Ee LL ENE LS Care ei Yn) DRS A
FOULEES SL. aL 238 D2 Ld et we SNE ER SR hi a pS
FREARL > 1714 02 7d ae i ard se ho Ne ER GF en yi
BULLER... viii 1407 0 | Cra tae naa an eh a AI BE Da lm a A Pe Sa re re
FULMER. oii 1321 B20. Lin hail siesta naan s yet BL Ee ne A Rae
GAMEBBIL niin 1132 D0 Ne a dn REE A A A
GASQUE.  -o-ro oo i Se pensions EE a EE a OR re EE SE
GAVAGAN. .. co 1214 388. Elections ING. 2. ovine vin dlr aa
GIBSON: =o... ota 1430 fl EE a ea BE Le Sn le ee RT
GWIonpi:, vg ssi esaueen Losi SR IRE LE SERRE LT
GUCOBRISY. 1008 Ba os a a Ss ae ME a a,
GILLESPIE. co 104 i Eee a Se BE a I
GILLETTE. 133 EE CE aT as Ia
GIOVER 1319 AS a EE a a ee
GOLDSBOROUGH._____| 1131 sto Rem eS me Eat oN Bn Leh Be Se RS RS a a
157297°—73—-1—18T ED——20
290 Congressional Drrectory
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Chairmanship
Capitol
Location
Office building
Name
Suite | Phone
GOODWIN ooo 1640 428
BORE enna 1025 538
GRANFIELD....... ... 1223 674
CRAY oa 424 657
. [504 GREEN. :couczi225: 1230 1 234
GREENWOOD oo dai.
GREGORY. -. 1505 777
GRIFFIN... 1721 760
GRISWOLD... -------- 1418 423
GUEVARA... ... oo... 1204 451
BUYER oii 201 501
FIAINES. ooo bans 1007 1002
HAMILTON... i 110 249
HANCOCK (N.Y.). | 1228 618
HANCOCK (N.C.)____. 1504 683
ER .  . [120] 407
z { 130 | 1019
ART.) 1723 438
BARTER... 1641 786
FPARTIEY. i. 1724 540
HASTINGS. ooo 1102 655
HEALEY... 145 752
HENNEY... - 405 706
FIpssw Lo 1525 293
HGQINS..... a 1631 666
HILDEBRANDT________ 417 | * 366
ne (Aln Yo 1428 797
Hing, K. (Wash.).... |i = 457 607
HiLL, 8. B. (Wash.)__| 1209 354
HoverEL. ............ 252 698
HOIDALE te ries 124 609
HOLLISTER... % 1032 564
HOLMES... = 1238 644
HoorPER... i. 1205 651
HOPE... oun. i 1026 542
HOBNOR..... 1029 360
HOWARD: cocoa ra
HUDDLESTON... ..... 1329 746
HUGHES. ........... 3562 463
IGLESIAS... ... 433 474
IMBOFE... Lo 410 719
JACOBREN.... ..... 138 457
JAMES... nian 1710 778
JEFFERS fo 6% IT | 349 299
JENCEES (Ind.)....... 339 660
JENKINS (Ohio)_______ 1529 367
JOBNSON (Minn.)____| 1038 375
JOHNSON (Okla.)_.___| 1509 421
JOHNSON (Tex.)._____| 1207 650
JouNsoN (W.Va.)._..| 210 449
ff 352 JONES I =o ce lanos 1324 | 252
BAIN ola 1518 537
REDS 1626 395
{577 KELLER rio ii 1536 i 414
Reniy(n.)........ 233 787
EriLy (Pa)......... 1112 411
| Disposition of Useless Ex-
| ecutive Papers.
Majority Whip
Agriculture
{ 274
424
! 465
1023
Rooms and Telephones 291
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued 2
Office palling Capitol
Name | Chairmanship
Suite {Phone Location Phone
KEMP... io iio: 228 i | rerritories rE ee a Ee ee NEL
KENNEDY (Md.)_.._- 1441 EE SR SE ee re sere a SE ER Ee Re ne
KENNEDY (N.Y.)o-._ 1708 ER er En TE a ED BY Se CR Be STE RR a Kp TD TE
KONNBY oocscigrzas 119 LL RE a be Se a Le eR eT pn SR
KERB hr so sastans 1501 5007 Mlections No. 3 re errs ann Nhl er
RINZER aie ine oo 1213 yA EE eS LL I ET i SR Iie To ER Dae SE
RIEBERG -. cz: 1322 RE ee ea ER Sh FE 1 a ee NEE [Te RR HE BEE
RIOEB. -. soaanii-il 1605 Be eR ema se Lae
RNIFFING. oo oases 1337 ER RIE OE, CB Lake | od Cle. SRE Me a SR Smet £0 © Lo
BENUI80N...c sia: 1212 OD a ce RR SE St Tt
KOCIALKOWSKI_ ______ 1606 BAS de a EL BE a ee NE
KOPPLEMANN.________ 421 yg: Be EE ae El oy Te CR SE ee pf RD
KRAMER... —-=-.= 211 ER CN a Re ei tn LY Sg Cp LE SNR Ea 1 Fe
RUBRYZ:.. asus 1129 O24 ee ease RI aie ELE
KRVALE oo oc: 1709 Vi MR Se Re DER SR AEE SR ee nT
LAMBERTSON .____.__ 254 PR Or Le EE Rl ei ee Me RE SE
LAMBETH or eae ah eae seenste ide sated £ RSs al lols SOBRE si 240 1048
LAMNECK -- --:o == 1016 hr Ree Lt ee Se Se RIL COS Xe) SOMES ti Ee
Lana 243 | 561 | Public Buildings and ||
eT 245 | 1025 Grounds. (iris i Fo anlage bt el pe
TANZRTITAL So oo: 1610 a a FE © I pie; [Ae
FT ABRABEE..........- 1220 be he a RE Ne a bs i SL eS
EBA(Calf). a 1224 Er LT RI i 2 VER SN ee he
IE Meo). a . 244 TARY ee ee EE SE i tN Ee
LEHIBACH. .. i =: 1103 BOB aes ree ER ee ER ad
EE ee TT 141 I dea oe de a A Ee a ONL sn a ae
EMRE. a. ioicsoais 1630 il UP sy RE ea SL Le een «WW ES SS Se ROE I Ec 8
LESINGRL. oie 310 a Eb
Lewis (Colo.) ._______ 404 Ve bl Perna sree ee sLs dina TE Un ESE SF SEES Ra
Lewis (Md.)_____.___ 309 SBT ae ee eae ae IE SR TN a eu Et Lae
TANDSAY ii 1533 11 Lp So Bt Lo Lr is det Bh 20 + 1 BUI 1 la SRR ERR LL
IA0oYD an 118 dr ee NE ARE Se EE ATO es
BOZIER: an us 1414 Joensus ie mn le ti a te bs ri a A ra
LUCE. coins 1108 Pr RS SR TE em nC SE RR ER eS ER SEE
LUDLOW... coc is 315 RE EE ES Se ne
TL ONDEEN....---oooaiz 1022 RE A a RE Ee rE yy if
MCCANDLESS. ________ 140 eer EL Se SEE Se Te J Se RR EER SSE BI LL En
MCCARTHY... 402 Fd EE Cn LP Bis LCR bE £8 Sp Bin atl DE SL Ea
MCOLINTIC... = as 1101 Ee SL Re Te Re Se a Sn Tn SL SRL OTR
MCCORMACK _________ 1727 EE PTE en hte SE Ny en RETR SL
MCDUFFIE... i Jnsutar Afalscoiteionle oo diario dees
MCFADDEN___.______. 1535 yoo REE Sn Ls Ge lan a TR CES IE SR 1 CR IE SEARS
MCFARLANE... ______ 144 ya dE ET re RE ala ee A Bt 1 SC BR ME I Sa | a a
MCBRATH -.. 223 I Ce a Le SEN EE RR SL
MCAUGIN. =. 1119 IME er Ee ER ea pI Ce Ea
MCREOWN... 1314 LY Sl PE i na Mpg do po Sn i Ad FGI SE LE AR Be le pe SSR BT iS
MeLEAN... oC 239 EEE eT re Le Ce La
McLEoD. 1327 tp Ep Se LT ee I DR TL El SR SR Bn
MCMILLAN. = 1517 FL EE EB I Ie AE LL SPC Ps SI Da BE ha 5
MEREYNOIDS. ooo anni efi Foreign Affairs._..__.______ Gallery floor, west corridor.___ 230
341
MOSWAIN oi... [ I 14 |r Mitary Aas. ota Rl aR dns Le ar aE | 1310 619
MAIOB rans 1420 i EA ir i SIL Sapte Th I Sh OR EL SS a Ss ner BA
MALONEY (Conn.)___| 1629 B02 nana el ee ee a hn ARES
MALONEY (La.) oo 1028 a De Tee CL SI DB oR a I SRE LR DE LE 2
MANSFIELD. aauoe----- 1304 oo Fiver ond Baroy. ee
lie
k
292 Congressional Directory
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
Office building | Capitol
Name Chairmanship
Suite {Phone Location Phone
Mares... tii 1705 VE He SR RS SI Si CST Fs ei ERR ml
MARLAND... === 302 FN EA al a RL ES TR 8 EN ES aR IS Ah Sn
MARSHALL... ocr ooo 407 OU LE REL eel BEE ea 1 se EE ITS SR So a
MARTIN (Co0l0.)ooo.- 460 A ER a TE IE ne LS
MARTIN (Mass)-——__. 1523 11 RR SRR I sd a DC LE Se SER Se Se Pid
MARTIN (Oreg.)..---- 1720 Hg LE SAR See St STR i a LL mE Ee I eT I eh
VAY anos 1318 7.7, 7 FG Rl eC ER EE Ee CB Wo ER LR RE SR hi fe
213 0s MEAD. inne ! 670: i rPost Officeand Post Roads |. 10.88 ceo 215 253
MEBRS. eo ccenia aan 435 yi AB ES el LB BRE us See PL Le ed
MERRITT... aan 1039 LE es a Le ea i Lu eh
MILTARD..ceuonsca-=~ 1020 F325 RO RE NO Sen DANI 0 TORE BR IRE CE SE ed Lin Feil
MIELE. co aaaasss 1413 LS ea IE COS re LL
MITLIGAN. =. sc - 1331 1 ESE ne i Ca EE a Las
MITCHELL. oie 203 2 Ke eR ee i Be RL Sl Ee Te ne RL Le
MONAGHAN. «cee 443 SR a SS lp I MR ET Gs (aa Ca a BE
MONTAGUE... 1532 vB BE ese Ran Sa Sl ra i a ee aa He
MONTEL... ocoeicncaii 1417 Le ih ne En AR RR ee Me 1 Tee Jel EE er TL La
MOBAN. ooieaadonni 207 FLEE A le RE Ae ERR SE E28 RR DR SRB LL Re SE ed LOBE
MOBEHEAD..... = =: ! pi | sat NIemorialss na oe aa eae Ll aa nd ee
MOTT... aan ansan == 222 0 TE HE ME ER Ea IE ER Ee
MOYNIHAN... ..-a- 1620 EB RR en aa ae Le RR EL
MULDOWNEY ooo 408 ry 1 VEE Ss EID LI es hyena SN NU BL RRR SHIRL Le BEE an aur
MURDOCK ~~~ ~-cenema 249 rp. 2 Ent SRE RE ee SER Ra | DS pL BE CT LL Se
MUSSELWHITE ....---- 1627 ry eS ES SOE LT LL eR JE Le Ee Ll,
NESBITT. Suchen aac m 335 or, Le eal ees hen sl Ln Tenn i ER EE St EL
NORTON ..ai a ae-- I . oo Ipistrict of Columbine i anus te son ob Pa EE tp rraens 3
OBRIEN. onan 231 yates En SURE Sep SS ed IR I ee Ss Re Se TR Rt si
OXCONNELL. oon 418 vate ROR Ee Se Sh Ane a LC SLC el Re NR EE STEER Ee Sd
OCONNOR. .---ie- = 1234 27,” EE PRE eS ie ein I 2 De BL EER ee ST Tr i
OLIVER (Al9.) oe 1203 Ge SR er ri
OLIVER (N.Y .) oo 439 11S Bl ees SORT Ua URE SR Te ee a Pa
OIMALLEY cic 240 ry YE BR Ne ee PE Te Ri CE TAL
OSIAS: toon inns 1013 2 VE En eine EO GR el I CR Beet se Re EE a
CONIA I Se 401 OL LR Ah A ELL 1 seek Soy Sa
PATMISANG. 1511 in TR ER a ES Rear sr Se ER el as ale Ce balls he
PAREER (Ga). oari= 1316 OR Le i Se AR BEL de Le nL Ln Ra Me
PARKER. (N.Y) 212 CoE SR ee a BR ES Se Le Ss CE LR
PARKSE oro sion. 1307 LS Le a RE ie RR Ph a ee er bial ol
PARSONS 1514 [589 fEnrottea Bills 38a. tress Sti | 1036 Si rE Sena dom elas Sen i alt
PATMAN. ooo 1010 Foy fg Rd Bh el eR Se LL Ree PET RL Re BL
BEAYEY. oo. ions 1024 CE HO a RR VI CL eR IE A ER ER nt BE
PRRRINS. canoe 259 EH Bp a Le Pe on Fad in
PUTERSON. oii: 1616 27 OR DEE we fn Jeane pn ns ane SE Res TT BER BRE RPS ER eR A
PEMENGILY. - i:- -=: 127 “1 SS SE ee aS Ce EL RR SE Re ET EA ea
PREYSERE rile 323 CO he RR Re a le ene De Th Re CS Te PE a Dy
PIBRCE Soltis 224 FY BEL SRR Pe nen Ae on SD Ree eB Ee
POLK. ai. vena 1009 7 1B WE Sa ese Re Can Bl DEN LL Sn Se Tee EL BALLS
POE a ete 1 hE ae Gallery floor, east corridor... a
POWERS. oo. ana 1440 LO LO NTI aE 1c Ea LL SET I eR NE La i
PRAY. ica 1133 Coil i I Sa ne A It Cl ESHA Sel SE Re Re ne LSE
BACON inns ans 1427 A di a a rn as a ae rR BA Cn TR Eke ne Sg x Ne SERS
RAINEY: er cra nants iy | JEL Se te prt i Fel a Bl, CU BE ee LL a 204
RAMSAY... ail 434 75% Be ER Ok Sr en OR SR 3 £) Sl re RR TL I Ds 3
BAMSPECK. oon 1534 Ete SS Cee heen Ba Be SR 2 SER Ae fe eS Ee RE
RANDOLPH... .C----- 331 iL ER CE RL SR EE SR FR CRE Ee
Rooms and Telephones
REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
293
Office building Capitol
Name Chairmanship
Suite {Phone Location Phone ;
! 356 336 || World War Veterans’ Leg-
BANE ee 1 358 | 758 islation. | fmesssspesssssdnspsssesessspafope Sec
RANSILEY:-.........C 1109 TS CC le a re Ne Sp am Fe we Se ae SE SE a
RS ara ate i Joa Interstate and Yorelgn li aif on
1534 998 Commerce. J
REECE... ci voaasas 1522 1A 7 pie To adn aR met Raa cee (Se SiGe Sissi SRIRRIRE Sie pu LT
REED (N.Y) oii. 1202 as See met ci a Evie lee TLS OS ahve Sos SSTRESen anes i Dn LR
Rum.) 1128 ETS rs Llp as ot ak RR E Sl na A BUSRS EL En
BELLY cists 357 IL Re le eat a Sea erin BG PUNE ERS SERS SRl Se BR YER aR
RICH. atic a 1421 ELT Be Fa Sn hese pele Sab te ba on ade In eR Messen ie in Gl Lise 0
RICHARDS oa 109 CHA EN REA SESS sen nan Sei a a IGE 0 cl SUR GR Set Te I
RICHARDSON... 425 A ee I Se A
ROBERTSON... 411 a ea aR
ROBINSON... 316 Ii HS La Si my mre! ea SSL AS SO SRE Se SRR URL
ROGERS (Mass.) _.._-_ 1725 i EES Svan elas Aleit ia Sy wa IR Ci Big SUES iain snl Ol ERE
ROGERS (N.H.) _..... 1339 Er ae
ROGERS (Okla.) _.____ 1117 Ed SIE EA peep iin anid eens Dea) BSASe len adn Ds SR EL i a EE
BOMIUB... ol... 1306 2% EAR id eRe le Ss Th buen Rana esp Se LL Ee
RUDD serine 1219 4% 1 nth ea Ras cia ink AUseiias SeSaR eed ol Ll
RUFFIN oo 409 yh aL nk ie a ate end end Sei Be Sl EIS SL SR i Le
SABATH... a 1136 BE
SADOWSEL nui 1239 E130 Fon Idd ies cherie at Sie Go SEARS © St se ee A DR
SANDERS... .... a 1317 OD oa a
SANDLIN he 1508 rote ben batt lr SU let ce aimed Sl pene le Se ali Eh Budo
SCHEARFER. even 338 FE ER ee es ee Pr loll S20 0S Bee Bee a ER
SCHUBIZ i i 1706 oad ie dete SR dy ea NORE ol SINPREIIRS Sit the § SER eRe a DER
SCHULTE... io 236 vo en rine ti he hati al Pa SEs se mae La spa tl la
SCRUGHAM 120 BL Sade lei an Ce Ce EU
SEARS. 307 UE ea se es deren 0 bind elie Si AS am Se a BEI
SECREST. <i. tis 145 A Bs sal Saat De Seiten BOL SelB es Spar i sa ea RR ae
SEEGER... vn 1431 BT a Se SR
SHALLENBERGER . ___. 1338 2175 8 bb Sure a ol suk Cot dri sets ba eS tae SARL SR SS IR SEL Ie es Bi LT
SHANNON......o-ve-e= 1416 yp MH OG el Se LT OR el el ae ER
SHOEMAKER. _________ 1005 750 I Bs Setnamal Se esate Sean Ane Bas RO En Sl man Ses Dae LE
SIMPSON. = ai 117 em i ee Ll
SINCLAIR ....=5 aaa 415 J Bm eS Senet ae el ba saline Anu ES
SIROVICH =z: ooo. 1015 000 Patents ee a eee mn men aan
SISSON. =i 452 nl tae Naa Sa ea
SMITH: (VA). aaaaie 301 51] EE Bee bnt alginate She iin RMR LER Be ne SR ER EIR ER en
SmitH (Wash.)_.._.__.| 1628 4H Eee Shi pat adobe Borage nnd UT RRAIDS Sie Om ER Sa DR
Smite (W.Va)... 1401 LUISE Rr nh Gh BE 1 deans I SER Beis nls Semen iil Ln Ee
oi] TRE ER FT EO Re Minority Leader-......... House floor, room 58... { po
SNYDER... iis 437 OR te ame a a re Ce
: { 224 | Coinage, Weights, and
SOME Yes seers runs 2 | 441 Measures. | FREE Rea an a
SPENCE... rae 1415 7811 EB opie nana sn ERs SOR Se Tees pal SM CER
STALKER coisas 1206 Viorel be SRS Seb Re eC ES, IU Ree Sa a ET BS Re BC
SERAGALY oor os nao Banking and Currency..._| Old library space, House floor-. 218
STORRS. 1023 rE el rr EE LB
STRONG (PD.) aca’ 1107 0 i Hie am Se Sf SE 00 I Sinn Set Se SRT atte ELT
STRONG (Tex.)...._. 108 {3 eam ste eT anims db sa napa Bes de wh aise ESE Reena a
STUBBS. oi 308 tb end Sl Semin i Sion Se Snr int Feo Aes, [eel SER SRE a BED
STOPLEY a 208 BA aR ee
SULLIVAN. aia, 1432 LE Mand Uubie css isn eet pie MSIE LENE SE tine SIGIR ERLE
SUMNERS. oi: on on ls adiclary...... aa Ground floor, room 71.._______ 1033
SUTPHIN. con nn 1030 i be Be etn ak Seba Ded Stine MORE Son hes ie ial BR LE EA a
SWANK. nein aran-e 1118 Gn lS ns Wate bonis naan] SESE S SIAN Seno SE SE
SWEENEY... 1006 1 Ry pee badness ieee SNR IE Sait Sn shite alae se Td dis
SWICK. oo 1406 er sen mi i i ma im me le oe rt ee a ey Pk ee
294 Congressional Durectory
REPRESENTATIVES— Continued
Office building Capitol
Name re Sha SATE Chairmanship :
Suite |Phone Location Phone
PABERY 1126 LR a pe ee ets cole en CERI end on SRE LS OO GS Ce
PA RYER as 1232 TALS Se a el A Eien | eh a 1 0s asl amen sip di stg!
dE ER ea Ea TS RE IE Re Old library space, ground floor _ i Si
PAYILOR (8. OC.) -. 453 LIE dese ie ne asa stand DE BR Geen Re (alii SIT LL
PAYLOR (Tenn.)---..° 258 PEE ae ta steel TT
PRRREBLL 234 EE RRR SaaS dan itera tl Eh elie BEL So eee Bei Sy Le
4 BRT Be he ne 324 Gal Ie ey an eae Cae Es ey
THOMASON... 1740 EE etn Be Dales mites Led Wi oT iter |S Nine Si sei meni SR OTT
PHOMESON: oa 342 ral a eR Ae I a ha E SS a ee
HURSTON 1231 BS ee re i en vl pa
PINEIAM: ~~ 256 iba aeasiisal Rede Cac sel HI BU Cen pe nba Smeg
ROBEY 442 a ee ee ieee en iia
PRAEGER 323 BB feb ie et ea hae ene IE ra nnn
PREADWAY 1436 EER Le ERG Ne Sal el det Fe He oS Shoes | Cs SOIT
RUAN 426 Cis ieaal Rial baat funmeeal Ba 400 Sepia TOT aliipises Se 0 Tad Eis he ne
PONE ie 336 rea EE ade ll el So al bel BUS ee Eine a Bei misemigge |
PORPING oe 1730 a ie aR Sh A he
OVMSTEAD. 1215 1 Ea RE ER BLED Be SE BT Sel I Cel) Sle Spee
603
UNDERWOOD. ________ 247 60% Invalid Pensions. aaa mero tol amet
721
UMERBACE.. one 325 ER Nias
311 217
VINSON (Ga.) oon 203 ieNavalb Affairs. oC i he uma ho evan 313]; 593
VINSON (Ky.)- ooo 1201 £1 SRR Re pete al Crean Ly od TIS A ne eatin © 4 4 rr
WADSWORTH. ______.. 241 YEE SEN aT Ena el Sm Bi Ge ma Ya ei pm ER
WALDRON... 344 Cs eS ET ee Lee ee
WALILGREN. ... 1608 EE ERS BR OE SE Ri Ln en eT ae Le
ATIER. 440 BA rn a ae HS
WARREN a eae il en Aceounts.. oii vai Ground floor, main corridor___ ! oe
NW ATRON aa 1330 LIER Ses Sidr siete opel os 0 PE lete  Srets w eBaiiete Ral gel ET
WEARIN 139 2 Pes meets Tacoma iy ian es Sinn Phe a el ee Raia re Tl
WEAVERS oc or 1115 Z ELS wr DR ae fete ate Ui Pl 0 et ter eli Oheienmmiaagns de 1 0 TTD
WEIDEMAN ._.._..... 410 Anh SRR nee ed i hey TT se nisn Conia eS Sit
Were: Lr 1127 a EE aly yeaa
WERNER. Lt 1019 EEE ee i EE i i Rs ee a I Se ee pr
WEST (Ohio) .-2-- 1116 QO mdn=-m=scoecmenrtncaooootls- lomas. Lou Scott GH Leis
WesP(Tex.Y -...... 142 AE Eee Sis iiss EE Es sea ee ee a
WHITE = la 351 800 ae ER, TI I ee TE ee ee
WHITLEY... 1409 YEE eee el Le a Te
WHITTINGTON _ _ ___.__ 1105 RE EE ee ee sal we se Sa
WIGGLESWORTH._____ 1728 SEE Ra Se eee be ee Lee Fe based Lin
WEN eons 340 TEA EE ree A Rin iim a ee ER an Sa EC
WILLFORD n= 319 Em es Lal hsb na tee i AD ee eee De
WILLIAMS 2 1217 YR eRe i See i Sales Sel os Sebel iSemsale ai et
WATSON - a { ih ne Heed Contig. decal  t00 LSE. Bonbon cf Re
WITHREOW. — 1120 7 8 Be ST Re le i et Ls See em Bm eae LE
WOrCOTD =r 1222 Fe EE Si Ea eA EU Sas eal Ler
‘WOLFENDEN__________ 1113 A el ese Sate La ns a ene
WOLVERTON cee 1741 x EEE eR El eT
Woon (Ga) - 251 SE ne De ee ee ae
Woop (Mo.)- 1204 333 SE ep Le Be EE eC De ee
WOODBURY: aaa 1717 le im an are Aen SE Ee eh Seen man
WOODRUM 7 le me he ee Ground floor, west corridor. _ _ 284
NOUNG - 125 il ER EE SE ES SS LL Ps Te LE el pets ae) ER
ZIONCHECE ra 1609 de Se Bel i Sa nese ina a Tn
EXECUTIVE
295
EXECUTIVE
THE WHITE HOUSE
(Pennsylvania Avenue, between Fifteenth and Seventeenth Streets. Phone, NAtional 1414)
FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT, Democrat, of Hyde Park, N. Y.,
President of the United States, was born January 30, 1882; son of James and Sara
(Delano) Roosevelt; A. B., Harvard, 1904; Columbia University Law School,
1904-1907; married Anna Eleanor Roosevelt, of New York, March 17, 1905; chil-
dren—James, Anna, Elliott, Franklin D., John A.; was admitted to the New York
bar in 1907; practiced with Carter, Ledyard & Milburn, New York, 1907-1910;
member of firm of Roosevelt & O’Connor, 1924-1933; member of New York
Senate, 1910 to March 17, 1913 (resigned); Assistant Secretary of Navy, 1913
1920; Democratic nominee for Vice President of the United States in 1920; elected
Governor of New York in 1928, and reelected in 1930; member of the Hudson-
Fulton Celebration Commission, 1909, and the Plattsburg Centennial, 1913; mem-
ber of National Commission, Panama-Philippine Islands Expedition, 1915; over-
seer of Harvard University, 1918-1924; Episcopalian; president of the Georgia
Warm Spring Foundation; in charge of the inspection of United States naval forces
in European waters, July-September, 1918, and of demobilization in Europe,
January-February, 1919; member of Naval History Society, New York Historical
Society, Holland Society, Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Beta Kappa; Mason. Clubs: Har-
vard, Knickerbocker, Century. Legal residence: Hyde Park, Dutchess County,
N. Y. Elected President, November 8, 1932.
LOUIS McHENRY HOWE, born in Indianapolis, Ind., January 14, 1871;
educated at Yates Academy in Saratoga, preparatory for Yale; spent three years
in travel—mostly around the Mediterranean—in place of college course; married
Grace Hartley, of Fall River, Mass., and has two children; became local correspond-
ent for the New York Herald when 17 years old; acquired intimate knowledge of poli-
tics; spent two years with the Herald in New York and represented both the Her-
ald and New York Telegram at Albany for 15 years; met Franklin Roosevelt
while he was senator from Dutchess County, and managed his campaign for
reelection; returned to duties on the Herald at Albany; when Franklin D.
Roosevelt was appointed Assistant Secretary of Navy, gave up newspaper work
to become his secretary, and acted as Assistant Secretary of Navy when Mr.
Roosevelt went abroad during the World War; was with him during his campaign
for Vice President, and was requested by Mr. Roosevelt to become his personal
secretary and remained with him throughout all his activities; appointed Secre-
tary to the President, March 4, 1933. Legal residence: 464 Locust Street, Fall
River, Mass.; Washington residence, the White House.
MARVIN HUNTER McINTYRE, born in LaGrange, Oldham County, Ky.,
November 27, 1878; attended Wall & Mooney preparatory school (Franklin,
Tenn.) and Vanderbilt University; married Gertrude Kennedy, of Louisville, Ky.,
and they have two children; began newspaper work in 1905 on the Louisville Times;
Ashville Citizen, 1907-1909; city editor, Washington Times, 1909-1917; com-
mittee on public information and publicity director, United States Navy, as
special assistant to Secretary, 1917-1921; publicity representative for Mr:
Roosevelt’s vice-presidential campaign in 1920; contributor to Army and Navy
Journal and other publications of national defense articles, also representing
motion picture news reel, 1921-1931; business manager and publicity represent-
ative of Governor Roosevelt’s presidential campaign, 1932; appointed Assist-
ant Secretary to President Roosevelt, March 4, 1933; member of Sigma Chi and
National Press Club. Residence, 3106 Thirty-fourth Street.
STEPHEN EARLY, born in Crozet, Albemarle County, Va., August 27, 1889;
educated in public schools of Washington, D. C.; appointed to Washington staff
of the United Press Associations, 1908; Washington staff of Associated Press,
1913; entered first officers’ training camp, Fort Myer, Va., 1917; commissioned
297
298 Congressional Directory STATE
second lieutenant; served overseas with Three hundred and seventeenth Machine
Gun Company; promoted to first lieutenant, transferred to General Pershing’s
staff; assigned assistant officer in charge of The Stars and Stripes; promoted to
captain, Infantry; awarded silver citation for meritorious service; appointed pub-
licity director for board of directors, Chamber of Commerce of the United States;
advance representative for Franklin D. Roosevelt, campaign of 1920; married
Helen Wrenn, Washington, D. C., and they have three children; member of
Washington staff of Associated Press, 1920-1927; Washington representative
for Paramount-Publix Corporation and Paramount News; appointed Assistant
Secretary to President Roosevelt, March 4, 1933. Clubs: National Press and
Manor. Residence, 7704 Morningside Drive.
MARGUERITE A. LE HAND, Personal Secretary. Residence, the White
House.
RUDOLPH FORSTER, executive clerk in charge of White House executive
offices, the Wardman Park.
MAURICE C. LATTA, executive clerk, 2836 Twenty-seventh Street.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
(Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 4510)
CORDELL HULL, Secretary of State (Carlton Hotel), was born October 2,
1871, in Overton (now Pickett) County, Tenn.; is a citizen of Smith County; was
graduated from the law department of Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.,
and is a lawyer by profession; was a member of the lower house of the Tennessee
Legislature two terms; served in the Fourth Regiment Tennessee Volunteer
Infantry during the Spanish-American War, with the rank of captain; later was
first appointed by the governor and afterwards elected judge of the fifth judicial
circuit of Tennessee, which position he resigned during his race for Congress;
was elected to the Sixtieth, Sixty-first, Sixty-second, Sixty-third, Sixty-fourth,
Sixty-fifth, Sixty-sixth, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, Seventieth, and Seventy-
first Congresses; chairman Democratic National Committee, 1921-1924; author
of income-tax system, 1913, and of the revised act of 1916; also author of Federal
estate or inheritance act of 1916; elected to the United States Senate on Novem-
ber 4, 1930, receiving 154,131 votes, and his opponent 58,654 votes. Appointed
Secretary of State March 4, 1933.
Under Secretary of State.— William Phillips, 3501 Newark Street.
Assistant Secretary.— Wilbur J. Carr, 2300 Wyoming Avenue.
Assistant Secretary.— Francis White, 1730 Massachusetts Avenue.
Assistant Secretary.—Raymond Moley, Carlton Hotel.
Assistant Secretary.— :
Legal adviser.—Green H. Hackworth, 3714 Morrison Street.
Assistant to the Secretary.—Harry A. McBride, 3000 Tilden Street.
Special Assistant to the Secretary,— William C. Bullitt, Carlton Hotel.
Assistant to the Under Secretary.— Vinton Chapin, 3318 O Street.
Executive Assistant to Assistant Secretary.— Keith Merrill, 2535 Belmont Road.
Assistant (Office of the Assistant Secretary of State, Mr. Moley) .—J. Arthur Mullen,
Carlton Hotel.
Oe clerk and administrative assistant.—Clinton E. MacEachran, 1405 Girard
treet.
Assistant to the chief clerk and administrative assistant and chief of the appointment
sectton.—P. F. Allen, Alta Vista, Bethesda, Md.
Board of examiners for the Foreign Service— Wilbur J. Carr, Francis White,
Homer M. Byington, Howard A. Edson.
Board of Foreign Service personnel. — Wilbur J. Carr, Assistant Secretary of State,
chairman; , Assistant Secretary of State.
Division of Foreign Service personnel.— Chief, Homer M. Byington, 1310 Twentieth
Street.
Foreign Service School.—Chief instructor, James B. Stewart, 1516 Twenty-ninth
Street.
Divison of far eastern affairs:
Chief. —Stanley K. Hornbeck, 2138 California Street.
Assistant chiefs.—Maxwell M. Hamilton, 2700 Q Street; Stuart J. Fuller, 3210
Rodman Street.
STATE Executive Departments 299
Division of Latin American affairs:
Chief.—Edwin C. Wilson, 3111 Idaho Avenue.
Assistant chiefs.—Orme Wilson, 2374 Massachusetts Avenue; H. Freeman Mat-
thews, 2927 Forty-fourth Street.
Division of western European affairs:
Chief.—Jay Pierrepont Moffat, 1719 Nineteenth Street.
Assistant chiefs.—John Dewey "Hickerson, 2010 Kalorama Road; Paul Trauger
Culbertson, 5315 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Md.
Division of near eastern affairs.—Chief, Wallace S. Murray, 1868 Columbia Road.
Division of Mexican affairs:
Chief —Herschel V. Johnson, 1718 H Street.
Assistant chief —Richard C. Tanis, 3 Rhode Island Avenue NE.
Division of eastern European affairs:
Chief —Robert F. Kelley, 2200 Nineteenth Street.
Assistant chief.—Xarl L. Packer, 1911 R Street.
Office of the economic adviser—JX.conomic adviser, Herbert Feis, 1529 Twenty-
pinth Street; assistant economic adviser, Frederick Livesey, 1026 Sixteenth
treet.
Passport division:
Chref.—Ruth B. Shipley, 5508 Thirty-ninth Street.
Assistant chiefs.—John J. Scanlan, 4517 Fifteenth Street; F. Virginia Alex-
ander, The Conard.
Office of the historical adviser:
Historical adviser.—Hunter Miller, 3100 Dumbarton Avenue.
Assistant historical adviser.— Edward C. Wynne, 3410 Newark Street.
Agiimy to the historical adviser.—E. Wilder Spaulding, 1518 Forty-fourth
treet
Geographer.—S. W. Boggs, 219 Elm Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Labrarian.— Martha L. Gericke, 1316 New Hampshire Avenue.
Division of current information:
Chzef.—Michael J. McDermott, 2210 North Capitol Street.
Assistant chief —Walter A. Foote, 1901 Wyoming Avenue.
Division of Foreign Service administration:
Chief —Herbert C. Hengstler, 2816 Twenty-seventh Street.
Assistant chief.—Harry A. Havens, 4508 Fifteenth Street.
Division of protocol and conferences:
Chief.—James Clement Dunn, 27 Observatory Circle.
Assistant chief.—Richard Southgate, 2406 Kalorama Road.
Ceremonial officer.—Charles Lee Cooke, 1410 M Street.
Treaty division:
Chief.—Charles M. Barnes, 3420 Sixteenth Street.
Assistant chief. — Wallace McClure, 2145 C Street.
Division of communications and records:
Chief —David A. Salmon, 3223 Klingle Road.
Assistant chiefs.—Roger s. Drissel, 3812 Fifth Street; Harvey E. Fenster-
macher, 1429 Ames Place NE.
Visa division:
Chief —A. Dana Hodgdon, 3306 Cleveland Avenue.
Assistant chief. —FEliot B. Coulter, 2327 Twentieth Street.
Bureau of accounts:
Chief —William McNeir, 1844 Monroe Street.
Assistant chief.— George B. Stambaugh, 3833 Fourteenth Street.
Translating bureau.—Chief, Emerson B. Christie, 3236 McKinley Street.
Office of coordination and review:
Chief.—Margaret M. Hanna, 1529 Varnum Street.
Assistant chief.—Blanche Rule Halla, 724 Seventh Street NE.
Foreign Service buildings office.—Chief,
Consular commercial office:
Chief.—James J. Murphy, jr., 1261 New Hampshire Avenue.
Disbursing officer.—W. Ford Cramer, 1802 Kenyon Street.
Assistants to the legal adviser.—Jacob A. Metzger, 1831 Belmont Road; Joseph
R. Baker, 2032 Belmont Road; Ralph W. S. Hill, 3327 N Street; Richard
W. Flournoy, jr., 3122 P Street; William R. Vallance, 3016 Forty-third
Street; Bert L. Hunt, 3601 Connecticut Avenue; Frank X. Ward, 1431
Thirty- third Street; Anna A. O’ Neill, 1326 New Hampshire Avenue; Herbert
B. Collins, 1820 Monroe Street; Joseph B. Matre, North Woodside, Silver
Spring, Md. E. Russell Lutz, ‘1718 N Street; James O. Murdock, 8124
Twenty-third Street; Francis M. Anderson, 421 Whittier Street; Raymund
300 Congressional Directory TREASURY
T. Yingling, 1800 K Street; Frederick M. Diven, 4208 Maine Avenue, West
Forest Park, Baltimore, Md.; Jack B. Tate, Hammond Court, Thirtieth and
Q Streets; Frederic Alec Fisher, 912 Nineteenth Street; J ohn Maktos,1343
Clifton Street; Marjorie M. Whiteman, 1812 K Street; "Ethel L. Lawrence,
2928 Porter Street; Walter E. Pelton, ’5521 Colorado Avenue; Elizabeth S.
Rogers, 1729 G Street; Celeste Jedel, "Mayflower Hotel.
‘DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
(Fifteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 6400)
WILLIAM HARTMAN WOODIN, of New York City, Secretary of the
Treasury (Carlton Hotel), son of the late Clemuel Ricketts and Mary (Dicker-
man) Woodin; born in Berwick, Pa., May 27, 1868; educated at the New York
Latin School, the Woodbridge School (New York), and in the School of Mines,
Columbia University (class of 1890); married, October 8, 1899, to Annie Jessup,
daughter of Judge William H. Jessup, of Montrose, Pa.; New York State fuel
administrator, 1922; financial chairman of the mayor’s committee on receptions,
New York; in 1929 appointed by Governor Roosevelt to serve on special com-
mittee to study and revise New York State banking laws; chairman of finance
committee and trustee of Georgia Warm Springs Foundation; honorary degree of
LL.D. conferred upon him in April, 1929, by Juniata College, Huntingdon, Pa.;
ex-officio chairman of the Federal Reserve Board; director of Reconstruction
Finance Corporation; chairman Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Commission;
member board of trustees, Postal Savings System; Director General of Railroads; 3
member board of trustees, Smithsonian Institution.
Asszstant to the Secretary.—John Kieley, 1821 Wyoming Avenue.
Special assistant to the Secretary in matters of legislation.— Benjamin H. Bartholow,
5420 Connecticut Avenue.
The Under Secretary in General Charge.—Dean G. Acheson, 2805 P Street;
assistants, W. N. Thompson, 2922 Cortland Place; Edwin L. Kilby, 7106
Ninth Street.
Assistant Secretary in Charge of Fiscal Offices.—James H. Douglas, 2125 Kalorama,
Road; assistant (same as for Under Secretary, above).
Assistant Secretary in Charge of Public Buildings, Public Health, and Miscellane-
~ ous.— Lawrence Wood Robert, jr., The Mayflower; assistants, H. R. Shep-
pard, 503 Maple Ridge Road, Battery Park, Md.; L. C. Martin, 3509
Twenty-fourth Street NE.
Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Coast Guard, Industrial Alcohol, and
Narcotics.—Stephen B. Gibbons; assistant, Frank C. Rose, The Westchester.
Chief clerk and superintendent.—F. A. Birgfeld, 3338 Seventeenth Street.
Assistant chief clerk.—S. H. Marks, 3544 Thirteenth Street.
Commissioner of the public debt.— William S. Broughton, 1819 Q street.
Assistant commissioner of the public debt.—S. R. Jacobs, 1473 Harvard Street.
Deputy commissioner of the public debt.—Rene W. Barr, 900 Nineteenth Street.
Commissioner of accounts and deposits.—D. W. Bell, 3322 Seventeenth Street.
Anil commasstoner of accounts and deposits.—E. F. Bartelt, 3017 Stephenson
lace.
Chuef of division of—
Apo. —James E. Harper, 200 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase,
d
Bookkeeping and warrants.—A. M. Smith, 1347 Meridian Place.
Deposits.—E. D. Batchelder, 1208 Crittenden Street.
Loans and currency.—Marvin Wesley, 501 Oglethorpe Street.
Paper custody.—M. A. Emerson, 3057 Porter Street.
Public debt accounts and audit. —M R. Loafman, 5408 Nebraska Avenue.
Secret Service.—W. H. Moran, 1841 Columbia Road.
Supply. .—L. C. Spangler, 421’ Frazier Avenue, Virginia, Highlands, Alexandria,
Section of financial and economic research.—W. R. Stark, 3701 Massachusetts
Avenue.
Disbursing clerk.—J. L. Summers, 1416 N Street.
Government actuary.—A. 8S. Mcleod, 105 Northview Terrace, Rosemont,
Alexandria, Va.
TREASURY Executive Departments 301
OFFICE OF COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
(Treasury Building)
Comptroller.—J. F. T. O’Connor, Shoreham Hotel.
Deputy comptrollers—F. G. Awalt, 2923 Thirty-fourth Street; E. H. Gough,
Olney, Md.; Gibbs Lyons, 3733 R Street.
Chzef clerk.—George R. Marble, 218 Adams Street NE.
Secretary to the comptroller.—C. A. Poole, Roosevelt Hotel.
OFFICE OF THE TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES
(Treasury Building)
Treasurer.— William Alexander Julian, Mayflower Hotel.
Assistant Treasurer.—G. O. Barnes, 914 Kearney Street NE.
Cashier.—Harry H. Hulbirt, 1220 Crittenden Street.
Chief clerk.—Julian C. Wallace, 25 Drummond Avenue, Drummond, Md.
NATIONAL BANK REDEMPTION AGENCY
Superintendent.— Michael E. Slindee, The Iroquois.
Assistant superintendent.—E. B. Brown, 5500 First Street NE.
BUREAU OF CUSTOMS
(1300 E Street. Phone, NA tional 6400)
Commassioner.—[Vacancy.]
Assistant commasstoner.— Frank Dow, 6405 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase,
General counsel.—J. D. Nevius, 512 Randolph Street.
Assistant general counsel. —Frank J. Murphy, 426 Irving Street.
Assistant general counsel.—H. A. Hayward, 1401 Girard Street.
Deputy commassioner, Customs Agency Service.—Thomas J. Gorman, 1736 Irving
Street.
BUREAU OF INTERNAL REVENUE
(Internal Revenue Building, Twelfth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, DIstrict 5050)
Commissioner.—Guy T. Helvering, The Mayflower.
Assistant to the Commaissioner.—[Vacancy.]
Special deputy commissioner.—P. R. Baldridge, 4614 Norwood Drive, Chevy
Chase, Md.
Deputy commissioners.—Adelbert Christy, 1215 Hamilton Street (acting);
George J. Schoeneman, 1361 Locust Road; Wm. T. Sherwood, 1213 Holly
Street (acting).
General counsel.—Clarence M. Charest, 1507 Forty-fourth Street.
Chief, intelligence unit.—Elmer L. Irey, 1831 Monroe Street NE.
Head, personnel division.—George S. Paull, 4605 Thirteenth Street.
Head, administrative diviston.—Frederick I. Evans, 5517 Broad Branch Road,
Chevy Chase.
BUREAU OF THE MINT
(Treasury Building)
Director.—Nellie Tayloe Ross, The Mayflower.
Assistant director.— Mary M. O’Reilly, Hay-Adams House.
BUREAU OF INDUSTRIAL ALCOHOL
(1300 E Street. Phone, NAtional 6400)
Commissioner of industrial alcohol.—J. M. Doran, 3135 O Street.
Assistant commissioner.—B. R. Rhees, M. D., 2401 Calvert Street.
Special assistant to commaissioner.—John L. Keddy, 12 Glebe Road, Cherrydale, Va.
Chief counsel.—Vincent DeP. Simonton, 1879 Newton Street.
Head, technical division.—W. V. Linder, 1673 Columbia Road.
Chief, administrative division.—George C. Billard, 3900 Connecticut Avenue.
BUREAU OF NARCOTICS
(Treasury Annex No. 1, Pennsylvania Avenue and Madison Place. Phone, NAtional 6400)
Commasstoner of narcotics.—H. J. Anslinger, Shoreham Hotel.
Deputy commissioner of narcotics.— Will S. Wood, Burlington Hotel.
Administrative officer.—W, S. Blanchard, 4222 Thirty-eighth Street.
302 Congressional Directory TREASURY
OFFICE OF THE REGISTER OF THE TREASURY
(Auditor’s Building, Fourteenth and B Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 7422)
Register—Edward E. Jones, 2915 Connecticut Avenue.
Assistant register.—F. A. De Groot, 911 Tenth Street NE.
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING:
(Fourteenth and C Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 7422)
Director.— Alvin W. Hall, 1319 Kalmia Road.
Assistant director.—Administration: Clark R. Long, 1348 Iris Street.
Assistant director—Production: Jesse E. Swigart, 327 Essex Avenue, Chevy
Chase, Md.
BUREAU OF THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
(Building C, Seventh and B Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 5710)
Surgeon General.—Hugh S. Cumming, 2219 California Street.
Assistant Surgeons General.— Taliaferro Clark, 10 East Woodbine Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.; C. C. Pierce, 2800 Ontario Road; F. C. Smith, 3020 Tilden
Street; L. R. Thompson, 17 West Virgilia Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; F. A.
Carmelia, 4000 Cathedral Avenue; W. L. Treadway, Manor Club, R. F. D.
No. 4, Rockville, Md.; Clifford E. Waller, 1103 West Highland Drive,
Woodside, Md.; R. C. Williams, 6 Aspen Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief clerk.—Daniel Masterson, 1305 Kearney Street NE.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF HEALTH
(Twenty-fifth and E Streets)
Director—Medical Director George W. McCoy, 2618 Garfield Street.
THE COAST GUARD
(Treasury Annex No. 1, Pennsylvania Avenue and Madison Place. Phone, NAtional 6400)
Commandant.—Rear Admiral Harry G. Hamlet, 6410 Beechwood Drive, Chevy
Chase, Md.
Assistant commandant.—Capt. L. C. Covell, Coast Guard Headquarters.
Aide to commandant—Commander R. R. Waesche, 5312 Forty-first Street.
Inspector in chief.—Capt. P. W. Lauriat, 315 Maple Avenue, Falls Church, Va.
Engineer in chief—Capt. (E.) R. B. Adams, 1911 R Street.
Supply officer—Commander T. A. Shanley, 4405 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase,
Md
Superintendent of construction and repair.— Constructor F. A. Hunnewell, Onta-
rio Apartments.
Chief of division of operations.—Oliver M. Maxam, The Broadmoor. :
Chief of division of finance—A. T. Thorson, 402 W Street NE. :
Pay and allowances officer.—W. H. Webb, 4440 Ord Street NE., Kenilworth, D. C.
OFFICE OF SUPERVISING ARCHITECT
(Treasury Building)
Acting Supervising Architect.—James A. Wetmore, 2151 California Street.
Executive officer—H. G. Sherwood, 1929 Lawrence Street NE.
Technical officer.—George O. Von Nerta, 2006 N Street.
: CUSTOMHOUSE
(1221 Thirty-first Street. Phone, WEst 0243-0244)
Deputy collector in charge— Charles R. Lewis, 3216 Thirteenth Street.
GENERAL SUPPLY COMMITTEE
(Federal Warehouse, Ninth and D Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4832)
Superintendent of supplies—Robert Le Fevre, 112 West Thornapple Street,
Chevy Chase, Md.
Assistant superintendent of supplies—E. F. Inbody, Cherrydale, Va.
Chairman.—Harry C. Maull, jr. (representing Department of Justice), 1654
Euclid Street.
L. C. Spangler (representing Treasury Department), 421 Frazier Avenue, Vir-
ginia Highlands, Alexandria, Va.
TREASURY Executive Departments : 303
James E. Tibbitts (representing Navy Department), Somerset, Md.
Clinton E. MacEachran (representing State Department), 1405 Girard Street.
Frank B. Bourn (representing War Department), 3777 Oliver Street.
Victor G. Croissant (representing Post Office Department), 4913 Forty-seventh
Street.
Walter B. Fry (representing Interior Department), 4513 Iowa Avenue.
Alex McC. Ashley (representing Department of Agriculture), 5 West Melrose
Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
W. S. Erwin (representing Department of Commerce), 753 Quebec Place.
Marion C. Hargrove (representing District of Columbia), 1603 O Street.
S. J. Oliver (representing Office of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the
National Capital), 4608 Fifth Street.
BUREAU OF THE BUDGET
(In the Treasury Department, but under the immediate direction of the President)
(Treasury Building)
Director.—Lewis W. Douglas, 3257 N Street.
Assistant director.—[Vacancy.]
Executive assistant.—Guy F. Allen, 556 Varnum Street.
Assistants to the director.—R. O. Kloeber, 1821 Sixteenth Street; F. J. Bailey, 2223
Hall Place; Charles H. Fullaway, The Ontario; Lieut. Col. Thomas E. Jansen,
United States Army, The Mendota; Melvin Jones, 3800 Fourteenth Street;
Henry N. Wiseman, 1331 Jefferson Street; Charles L. Dasher, 114 Summer-
field Road, Chevy Chase, Md.; J. H. Mackey, 1717 Varnum Street; Howard
Baker, 2150 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Chief of division of estimates.—Frank A. Frost, 1328 Jonquil Street.
Counsel.—E. W. Cushing, 653 Glebe Road, Clarendon, Va.
Chaef clerk.—Mrs. Brownie H. Kerr, 1620 Fuller Street.
Secretary to the director.—Miss Marie A. Johnston, 2926 Porter Street.
FEDERAL COORDINATING SERVICE
(Under supervision of Director, Bureau of the Budget)
PERMANENT CONFERENCE ON PRINTING
(Government Printing Office. Phone, DIstrict 6840)
Chairman.— George H. Carter, Public Printer, 1661 Hobart Street.
Secretary.—F. D. Smith, Department of Agriculture, 1304 Fairmont Street.
FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION
(Arlington Building. Phone, NA tional 6740)
Chairman.— Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs, 4100
Cathedral Avenue.
OFFICE OF CHIEF COORDINATOR
(Room 5026 Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 754)
Gi Coordinator—Rear Admiral T. T. Craven, United States Navy, 1716 N
treet.
Assistant Chief Coordinator. —Col. L. W. Oliver, United States Army, 3402 Gar- field Street.
Assistants to the Chief Coordinator.—Lieut. Commander William A. Best (SC),
- United States Navy, 113 Kirkwood Road, Clarendon, Va.; J. A. Egleston,
Merchant Fleet Corporation, 4915 Forty-first Street; N. F. Harriman,
Department of Commerce, The Kenesaw; Maj. Jack W. Heard, United
States Army, 3103 Macomb Street; Capt. Fred W. Holt (SC), United States
Navy, 106 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Capt. H. D. Lamar
(SC), United States Navy, The Cairo; Capt. Maurice Morgan, United States
Army, Cathedral Mansions Center; Col. Edward M. Offley, United States
Army, 1334 Thirty-first Street; Lieut. R. G. Robeson (SC), United States
Navy, 1647 Lamont Street; Capt. Adolphus Staton, United States Navy,
3420 Garfield Street; Maj. A. A. Vandegrift, United States Marine Corps.
1607 Forty-fourth Street, Foxhall Village, D. C.
Chief clerk.—Mrs. Clara H. Pursel, Silver Spring, Md.
304 Congressional Directory TREASURY
FEDERAL COORDINATING AGENCIES
(Under immediate supervision of Chief Coordinator)
COORDINATOR FOR MOTOR TRANSPORT, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
(Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1259)
Coordinator.—Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d, United States Army, 2117 Leroy Place.
FEDERAL PURCHASING BOARD
(Room 5026 Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 744)
Executive chatrman.—N. F. Harriman, Department of Commerce, The Kenesaw.
Executive vice chairman and secretary.—J. A. Egleston, Merchant Fleet Corpora-
tion, 4915 Forty-first Street.
FEDERAL REAL ESTATE BOARD
(Room 5026 Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 752)
Chatrman.—James A. Wetmore, Surveyor General of Real Estate, 2151 California
Street.
Vice Shaya =k Edward M. Offley, United States Army, 1334 Thirty-first
treet.
ga to the executive.—W. T. Ritenour, Treasury Department, 1650 Harvard
treet.
Secretary.— Marjorie Sirlouis, War Department, 49 Adams Street. °
FEDERAL SPECIFICATIONS BOARD
(Bureau of Standards. Phone, CLeveland 1720)
Acting chairman.—L. J. Briggs, Acting Director, Bureau of Standards, 3208
. Newark Street.
Vice chairman and technical secretary.—Capt. J. H. Fellows, United States Marine
Corps, 1923 Biltmore Street.
FEDERAL STANDARD STOCK CATALOGUE BOARD
(Room 1149 Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 682)
Chairman.— Rear Admiral T. H. Hicks (SC), United States Navy, The Mayflower.
FEDERAL STATISTICS BOARD
(Room 5026 Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 746)
Chairman.—Capt. H. D. Lamar (SC), United States Navy, The Cairo.
Vice chairman and secretary.—Lieut. Commander William A. Best (SC), United
States Navy, 113 Kirkwood Road, Clarendon, Va.
FEDERAL TRAFFIC BOARD
(Room 5026 Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 748)
Chazrman and coordinator for traflic.—Capt. Fred W. Holt (SC), United States
Navy, 106 East Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Secretary.—Lieut. R. G. Robeson (SC), United States Navy, 1647 Lamont Street.
FOREST PROTECTION BOARD
(928 F Street. Phone, District 6910)
Chairman ex officio.—R. Y. Stuart, Chief, Forest Service, Department of Agri-
culture, 9 West Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
INTERDEPARTMENTAL BOARD OF CONTRACTS AND ADJUSTMENTS
(Treasury Building. Phone, NAtional 6400, Branch 2105)
Acting chairman.—Josiah L. Carr, Solicitor’s Office, Department of Agriculture,
4931 Butterworth Place.
Assistant to the chairman.—E. W. Cushing, Bureau of the Budget, 653 Glebe
Road, Clarendon, Va.
WAR Executive Departments 305
INTERDEPARTMENTAL BOARD ON SIMPLIFIED OFFICE PROCEDURE
(Room 5026 Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 746)
ie chairman.—Maj. Jack W. Heard, United States Army, 3103 Macomb
treet.
INTERDEPARTMENTAL PATENTS BOARD
(Commerce Building. Phone, NAtional 5060, Branch 347)
Chairman.— Andrew Stewart, Commerce Department, 1442 Clifton Street.
Secretary.—Col. J. I. McMullen, United States Army, 127 Glenbrook Road,
Bethesda, Md.
DEPARTMENT OF WAR
(Seventeenth Street, south of Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone NAtional 2520)
GEORGE HENRY DERN, of Salt Lake City, Utah, Secretary of War (‘ High-
wood,” 3301 Rittenhouse Street), was born in Dodge County, Nebr., September
8, 1872; graduated from Fremont (Nebraska) Normal College in 1888 and attended
the University of Nebraska in 1893-94; began mining in Utah in 1894; treasurer
Mercur Gold Mining and Milling Co., 1894-1900; general manager Consolidated
Mercur Gold Mines Co., 1900-1913; various other mining and metallurgical enter-
prises since 1913; joint inventor with Theodore P. Holt of Holt-Dern ore roaster;
member Utah State Senate, 1915-1923; member State council of defense, World
War; Governor of Utah two terms, 1925-1932; member American Institute of
Mining and Metallurgical Engineers; Delta Tau Delta; Mason (Knight Templar,
thirty-third degree, Shriner); was married on June 7, 1899, to Charlotte Brown;
children, Mary Joanna (Mrs. Harry Baxter), John, William Brown, Elizabeth
Ida, and James George; Secretary of War, March 4, 1933.
The Assistant Secretary of War.—Harry H. Woodring, The Mayflower.
Executive to the Assistant Secretary of War.—Lieut. Col. Earl McFarland,
2276 Cathedral Avenue.
Private secrelary to the Assistant Secretary of War.—Kate Buckingham, 412
Eleventh Street NE.
Assestant Secretary of War.—[Vacant.]
Executive assistant to Assistant Secretary of War.—Maj. W. G. Kilner, 5449
Thirty-third Street.
Assistant Executive to Assistant Secretary of War—Capt. I. H. Edwards,
6323 Delaware Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Private secretary to Assistant Secretary of War.—Regina T. Sullivan, 2618
Woodley Place.
Administrative assistant and chief clerk.—John W. Martyn, 2901 Thirty-fourth
Street.
Clerk to the Secretary.—John W. Schott, 1016 Taussig Place NE.
Private secretary.— Martha FE. McPherson, 405 Upshur Street.
Assistant chief clerk.—Frank M. Hoadley, 28 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase,
Md
Disbursing clerk.—Edwin M. Lawton, 1143 Twenty-fourth Street.
Chiefs of division:
Cwilian personnel.— William D. Searle, 1866 Wyoming Avenue.
Coordination and record.—Mary S. Nixon, 1756 Euclid Street.
Postal statton.—James G. McFadden, 2001 Sixteenth Street.
Printing and advertising.— Henry C. Lehmann, 1334 Valley Place.
Supply—Frank B. Bourn, 3777 Oliver Street.
WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF
(State, War, and Navy Building)
Chief of Staff. —Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Fort Myer, Va.
Deputy Chief of Staff.—Maj. Gen. Hugh A. Drum, 2123 LeRoy Place.
Assistant Chief of Staff G—1 (Personnel) —Brig. Gen, Andrew Moses, The Chastel-
ton, Sixteenth and R Streets.
In charge of G-2 (Military Intelligence) .—Brig. Gen. Alfred T. Smith, 2119 LeRoy
Place.
Acting Assistant Chief of Staff G-3 (Operations and Training). —Col. Duncan K.
Major, 1367 Connecticut Avenue.
157297°—73-1—18T ED——21
306 Congressional Durectory WAR
Assistant Chief of Staff G—4 (Supply).—Maj. Gen. Robert E. Callan, 2318 Cali- |
fornia Street. |
Assistant Chief of Staff W. P. D. (War Plans Division). —Brig. Gen. Charles E.
Kilbourne, 2015 R Street.
Secreiory of the General Staff —Lieut. Col. Charles F. Severson, 3729 Reservoir |
oad.
Chaef clerk.—A. Gerhard, 3911 Illinois Avenue.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CAVALRY
(Munitions Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue)
Chief—Maj. Gen. Guy V. Henry, 2316 Tracy Place.
Haseniiies Col, Aubrey Lippincott, Westchester Apartments, 3900 Cathedral
venue.
Chief clerk.—Master Sergt. Aram Kojassar, 1800 C Street.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FIELD ARTILLERY
|
(Munitions Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 2127)
| Chief—Maj. Gen. Harry G. Bishop, 3601 Connecticut Avenue.
Executive.—Lieut. Col. Robert M. Danford, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
Chief clerk.— Master Sergt. Fred Lind, Luray Avenue, Alexandria, Va.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF COAST ARTILLERY
(Munitions Building, rooms 3020, 3022, and 3212)
|
Chief.—Maj. Gen. John W. Gulick, 2214 Wyoming Avenue. |
Executive asststant.—Col. William F. Hase, 2400 Massachusetts Avenue. |
Chief clerk.—Hartley I. Sanders, 1606 Bass Avenue, Kenilworth, D. C. :
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF INFANTRY
(Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1879)
Chief—Maj. Gen. Edward Croft, 3410 P Street.
Ezecutive—Col. Laurence Halstead, 2025 Allen Place.
Chief clerk.—Master Sergt. Howard B. Rumsey, 1662 West Virginia Avenue NE.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CHAPLAINS
(Room 301, Walker- Johnson Building, 1734 New York Avenue. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1097)
Chief —Chaplain Julian E. Yates, 3803 Huntington Street.
Executive—Chaplain Edwin Burling, 126 North Glebe Road, Ballston, Va.
Personnel officer—Chaplain Benjamin J. Tarskey, 317 Dupont Circle Apartments.
Secretary and chief clerk.—Augustus S. Goodyear, 1422 Buchanan Street.
OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL
(Room 252, Department of State Building)
The Adjutant General.—Maj. Gen. James F. McKinley, 2818 Thirty-sixth Place.
Assistant The Adjutant General.—Brig. Gen. Edgar T. Conley, Silver Spring, Md.
Executive officer—Lieut. Col. Emory S. Adams, 3024 Cortland Place.
Chief clerk.—Thomas A. O’Brien, 3216 Military Road.
INSPECTOR GENERAL’S OFFICE
(Room 616, Walker-Johnson Building) p
Inspector General.—Maj. Gen. John F. Preston, The Brighton Hotel, 2123 Cali-
fornia Street. :
Ezecutive.—Col. R. C. Humber, Army and Navy Club, Seventeenth and I Streets.
Inspections division.—Col. M. G. Spinks, Highlands Apartment House, Con-
necticut Avenue and California Street.
Investigations division.—Lieut. Col. C. M. Dowell, 1738 Lanier Place.
Money accounts division.— Maj. J. L. Parkinson, The Calverton Apartments, 1673
Columbia Road.
Chief clerk.—B. H. Simmons, 1339 Kenyon Street.
OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL
(Walker-Johnson Building, 1734 New York Avenue)
The Judge Advocate General.—Maj. Gen. Blanton Winship, 1718 H Street.
Assistant.—Col. Kyle Rucker, 1870 Wyoming Avenue.
WAR Executive Departments 307
Executive.—Maj. Lucius M. Smith, The St. Nicholas, 2230 California Street.
Sends malitary affairs section.—Col. William A. Graham, 3133 Connecticut
venue.
Chief, military justice section.—Col. Edwin O. Saunders, 2036 O Street.
Chief, contracts and reservations sectizon.—Maj. Myron C. Cramer, 3725 R Street.
Chief, claims and bonds section.—Maj. Elza C. Johnson, 8 East Lenox Street,
Chevy Chase, Md. :
iF a section.—Col. Joseph I. McMullen, 127 Glenbrook Road, Bethesda,
d
Chzef, insular affairs section.—Col. William C. Rigby, East Falls Church, Va.
Chairman, board of review (courts-martial).— Lieut. Col. Edwin C. McNeil, Alban
Towers, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
Chief clerk.—Edwin B. Pitts, 16 Ross Street, Brentwood, Md.
OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER GENERAL
(Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 2520)
The Quartermaster General.—Maj. Gen. J. L. De Witt, 1868 Columbia Road.
Executive officer.—Col. Henry Gibbins, 3901 Connecticut Avenue.
Chief, admanistrative diviston.—Col. Richard T. Ellis, The Wyoming.
Chief, procurement division.—Brig. Gen. Henry C. Whitehead, Wardman Park
Hotel.
Executive officer.—Capt. Ezra Davis, 1615 Kenyon Street.
Chief, storage and distribution division.—Col. Warren W. Whitside, 1525 Thirty-
third Street. ! :
Executive officer—Lieut. Col. William F. Jones, 2122 California Street.
Chief, transportation division.—Brig. Gen. Alexander E. Williams, 6314 Connecti-
cut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief, construction diviston.—Brig. Gen. Louis H. Bash, 3830 Fulton Street.
Executive officer.—Col. Patrick W. Guiney, The Kennedy-Warren.
Chief clerk.—F. M. Cunley, 1003 Varnum Street NE.
OFFICE OF CHIEF OF FINANCE
(Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue)
Chief of finance.—Maj. Gen. Frederick W. Coleman, 5500 Edgemoor Lane,
Bethesda, Md.
Assistant chief of finance.—Col. Eugene J. Ely, 2562 Thirty-sixth Street.
Assistant to chief of finance.—F. Gwynn Gardiner, 134 Quincy Place NE.
Executive officer.—Capt. Frank J. Keelty, 2630 Brentwood Road NE.
Chief clerk.—Al Rogers, 441 Park Road.
OFFICE OF FINANCE OFFICER, UNITED STATES ARMY
(Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue)
Finance officer.— Col. Tilman Campbell, 2126 Connecticut Avenue.
OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL
(Munitions Building)
Surgeon General.—Maj. Gen. Robert U. Patterson, 3506 Garfield Street.
Executive officer.—Lieut. Col. Robert C. McDonald, 1815 Kilbourne Place.
Chief clerk.—Bertis B. Thompson, 2205 California Street.
ARMY MEDICAL MUSEUM AND LIBRARY
(Seventh and B Streets SW.)
Librarian.—Maj. Edgar E. Hume, 3015 Dumbarton Avenue.
Curator, Museum.— Maj. Virgil H. Cornell, 1205 Floral Street.
ARMY MEDICAL CENTER, WASHINGTON, D. C.
(Georgia Avenue and Butternut Street)
Commanding officer, Army Medical Center, Brig. Gen. Albert E. Truby,
Commandant, Medical Department Service Schools,/ Army Medical Center.
Aspen Street, Chevy Chase,
Md.
Schools,
Assistant Commandant, Medical Department gy P. W. Huntington, 102
Director, Army Medical School,
308 Congressional Directory WAR
Commanding officer, Walter Reed General Hospital.—Col. W. L. Keller, Army
Medical Center.
Diver, Army Dental School.—Lieut. Col. Robert H. Mills, 4000 Cathedral
venue. :
Director, Army Veterinary School.—Maj. Harold E. Egan, 1314 Kalmia Road.
GENERAL DISPENSARY, UNITED STATES ARMY
(Munitions Building)
Commanding officer.—Col. Arthur M. Whaley, 3045 Porter Street.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS
(Munitions Building, Twenty-first Street and Constitution Avenue)
eg Gen. Lytle Brown, 5627 Rock Creek Ford Road (near Nebraska
venue).
Assistant to the Chief of Engineers.—Brig. Gen George B. Pillsbury, 2216 Wyo-
ming Avenue.
Assistant in charge of the military division.— Lieut. Col. Francis B. Wilby, Ken-
nedy-Warren Apartments, 3133 Connecticut Avenue.
Assistant in charge of the river and harbor section.— Lieut. Col. John J. Kingman,
3530 Edmunds Street.
Lat eim: in charge of finance division.— Maj. John S. Bragdon, 1437 Madison
treet.
Chief clerk.—Claude Lindsey, 201 Quackenbos Street.
BOARD OF ENGINEERS FOR RIVERS AND HARBORS
(Munitions Building, Twenty-first Street and Constitution Avenue)
Resident member.— Lieut. Col. James J. Loving, Riverside Apartments.
Members.—Col. William J. Barden, 3072 Q Street; Col. Edward H. Schulz, Fort
Humphreys, Va.; Col. George M. Hoffman, 601 Army Building, New York
City; Col. Edward M. Markham, 419 Federal Building, Cleveland, Ohio;
Col. Thomas H. Jackson, 918 National Bank of Commerce Building, Norfolk,
Va.; Lieut. Col. Warren T. Hannum, 405 Masonic Temple, New Orleans, La.
Executive secretary.—H. W. Hobbs, 4119 Military Road.
Chief statistician.—W: E. Graves, Walter Heights, McLean, Va.
Chaef clerk.—Harry L. Freer, 4912 Forty-first Street.
UNITED STATES ENGINEER OFFICE
(Room 1068 Navy Building. Phone, N Ational 2520, Branch 1746)
In charge.—Maj. Joseph D. Arthur, jr., McLean, Va.
Chief clerk.—S. L. Duryee, 129 Sixth Street NE.
MISSISSIPPI RIVER COMMISSION
(Vicksburg, Miss.)
President.—Brig. Gen. Harley B. Ferguson.
Members.—Col. Ernest Graves (retired), Lieut. Col. George R. Spalding, Edward
Flad, Charles H. West, Leo O. Colbert, Lawrence A. Glenn.
Secretary.—Maj. Lunsford E. Oliver.
Chief clerk.—R. N. Duffey.
CALIFORNIA DEBRIS COMMISSION
(San Francisco, Calif.)
Members.—Lieut. Col. Thomas M. Robins, Lieut. Col. Henry A. Finch, Capt.
John G. Drinkwater.
Chief clerk.—ElImo A. Brule.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE
(Munitions Building)
Chief.—Maj. Gen. Samuel Hof, 1831 Nineteenth Street.
Assistants.— Brig. Gen. W. H. Tschappat, The Broadmoor Apartments, 3601
Connecticut Avenue; Brig. Gen. E. D. Bricker, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue,
apartment 101; Lieut. Col. C. M. Wesson, 1406 Thirty-fourth Street.
Executive officer.—Maj. T. J. Hayes, 3518 S Street.
Chief clerk.—Colin E. McRae, 1626 Webster Street.
WAR Hzxecutive Departments 309
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER
(Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue)
Chief—Maj. Gen. Irving J. Carr, Army and Navy Club.
Executive officer.—Maj. G. L. Van Deusen, Riverside Apartments, Twenty-second
and C Streets. :
Civilian assistant.—Herbert S. Flynn, 3216 Cleveland Avenue.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE AIR CORPS
(Munitions Building, Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue)
Chief of the Air Corps.—Maj. Gen. B. D. Foulois, 2101 Connecticut Avenue.
Assistant Chief of the Air Corps.—Brig. Gen. O. Westover, 3133 Connecticut
Avenue.
Director of aircraft production.— Brig. Gen. O. Westover.
Chief clerk.—John J. Mullaney, 1321 Monroe Street.
BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS
(Munitions Building, Twentieth Street and Constitution Avenue)
Chief of bureau.— Brig. Gen. Creed F. Cox.
Acting chief of bureau.— Brig. Gen. Francis LeJau Parker, Wardman Park Hotel.
Assistants to chief of bureau.— Lieut. Col. Walter C. Short, 3705 Harrison Street;
Lieut. Col. Edward A. Stockton, jr. (attached), 2141 Wyoming Avenue;
Lieut. Col. Karl F. Baldwin, 1345 Montague Street.
Chief clerk.—J. F. Welch, 1521 Trinidad Avenue NE.
GOVERNMENT OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
(Headquarters, Manila)
Governor General.—Frank Murphy.
Vice governor and secretary of public instruction.—John H. Holliday.
Secretary of finance.—Vincente Singson Encarnacion (acting).
Secretary of justice—Quirico Abeto.
Secretary of agriculture and commerce.— Vicente Singson Encarnacion.
Secretary of public works and communications.— Antonio de las Alas.
Secretary of interior and labor.— Teofilo Sison.
GOVERNMENT OF PUERTO RICO
(Headquarters, San Juan)
Governor.—Robert Hayes Gore.
Attorney general.—Charles E. Winter.
Treasurer.—Manuel V. Domenech.
Commissioner of the interior.—Francisco Pons.
Commasstoner of education.—José Padin.
Commissioner of agriculture and commerce—Edmundo Colén.
Commassioner of health.—Dr. Antonio Fernos Isern.
Commissioner of labor.—Prudencio Rivera Martinez.
Executive secretary.— Eduardo Saldana.
DOMINICAN CUSTOMS RECEIVERSHIP
(Headquarters, Santo Domingo City)
General recewwer of customs.— William E. Pulliam.
Deputy general receiver—Norman L. Orme.
MILITIA BUREAU
(Munitions Building)
Chief—Maj. Gen. George E. Leach, Tilden Gardens, apartment 501-H, 3000
Tilden Street.
Executive—Col. William H. Waldron, 3103 Garfield Street.
Chief clerk.—W. A. Saunders, 6126 Broad Branch Road, Chevy Chase.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE CHEMICAL WARFARE SERVICE
(Munitions Building)
Chief—Maj. Gen. Claude E. Brigham, Westchester Apartments.
Executive officer.—Maj. Alexander Wilson, 3121 Cleveland Avenue.
Chief clerk.—Guy B. Tippens, 4604 Asbury Place.
310 Congressional Directory JUSTICE
THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE
(Washington, D. C.)
Commandant.—Maj. Gen. Geo. S. Simonds.
Assistant commandant.—Col. Leon B. Kromer, Cavalry.
Executive officer—Col. Kerr T. Riggs, Cavalry.
Chief clerk.—A. B. Neal, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue.
THE ARMY INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE
(Munitions Building)
Director.—Lieut. Col. William A. McCain, Quartermaster Corps, 3337 N Street.
Executive officer—Capt. Jas. H. Beals Bogman, Signal Corps, 1757 K Street.
Chief clerk.—Ruth B. Connell, 16 Sherman Circle.
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
(Vermont Avenue and Fifteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 0185)
HOMER STILLE CUMMINGS, of Connecticut (Hamilton Hotel) ; appointed
Attorney General March 4, 1933; born in Chicago, April 30, 1870, son of Uriah C.
and Audie (Schuyler) Cummings; Ph. B., Yale University, 1891, and LL. B.,
1893; married May Cecilia Waterbury; admitted to bar in 1893 and practiced
at Stamford, Conn., until March 4, 1933; mayor of Stamford for three terms—
1900-1901, 1901-2, and 1904-1906; corporation counsel, 1908-1912; delegate at
large to Democratic National Conventions of 1900, 1904, 1924, and 1932; member
of Democratic National Committee for Connecticut, 1900-1925 (resigned) (vice
chairman, 1913-1919; chairman, February 26, 1919, to July, 1920); eandidate for
Congressman at Large from Connecticut in 1902 and for United States Senator
in 1916; temporary chairman of Democratic National Convention, San Francisco,
1920; chairman of committee on resolutions, Democratic National Convention,
New York, 1924; state’s attorney for Fairfield County, Conn., July 1, 1914, to
November 1, 1924 (resigned); former director of First Stamford National Bank;
president of Mayors’ Association of Connecticut, 1902-3, and of the Stamford
Board of Trade, 1903-1909; member of Connecticut State Council of Defense,
1917; chairman of committee on State prison conditions, 1930; clubs: Metropoli-
tan and National Democratic (New York), Suburban and Woodway Country
(Stamford), and Congressional Country and National Press (Washington, D. C.);
home, Greenwich, Conn.
Solicitor General.—James Crawford Biggs, Mayflower Hotel.
Assistant to the Attorney General.—[Vacancy.]
Assistant Atiorneys General—Roy St. Lewis, The Wardman Park; Pat Malloy,
Mayflower Hotel; [4 vacancies].
Assistant Attorney General, Division of Customs.—Charles D. Lawrence, 201 Va-
rick Street, New York City.
Director, Bureau of Investigaiion.—J. Edgar Hoover, 413 Seward Square SE.
Assistant directors, Bureau of Investigation.—Harold Nathan, 108 Spring Drive,
Lee Heights, Cherrydale, Va.; Clyde A. Tolson, The Westchester.
Director, Bureau of Prisons.—Sanford Bates, 101 Shepherd Street, Chevy Chase,
Md :
Assistant directors, Bureau of Prisons.— William T. Hammack, The Argonne;
Austin H. MacCormick, The Hammond Court; James V. Bennett, 119
Leland Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Board of parole:
Members—
Arthur D. Wood, The Westchester, Cathedral Avenue.
Irvin B. Tucker, Army-Navy Hotel.
Dr. Amy N. Stannard, 4000 Cathedral Avenue.
Director, Bureau of Prohibition.—A. V. Dalrymple, Mayflower Hotel.
Assistant Director, Bureau of Prohibition.—John S. Hurley, Annapolis Hotel.
Chief counsel, Bureau of Prohibition.—Randolph C. Shaw, 1419 R Street.
Executive assistant to the Attorney General.—Ugo J. A. Carusi, The Westchester.
Administrative assistant.—Charles E. Stewart, The Argonne.
General agent and chief clerk.—John W. Gardner, 1840 Biltmore Street.
Assistant chief clerk.—Daniel J. Heffernan, 1502 Stratford Drive, Wayecroft, Va.
dosent chief clerk and appointment clerk.—Charles B. Sornborger, 1857 Newton
treet.
Chief, division of mails and files—Arthur Robb, Herndon, Va,
POST OFFICE Executive Departments 311
Co, division of supplies and printing.—Edward N. Bodholdt, 5460 Thirty-first
treet.
Librarian.—George Kearney, Somerset House.
Attorney in charge of pardons.—James A. Finch, 3625 Davenport Street.
Assistant general agent.—H. J. McClure, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
Disbursing clerk.—Harry B. Dellett, 3601 Kanawha Street.
DEPARTMENTAL SOLICITORS
Solicitor for the Treasury Department.—Robert J. Mawhinney, 6206 Maple
Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Solicitor for the Department of Commerce.—South Trimble, jr. (acting), 3111
Macomb Street.
Solieiion for the Department of Labor—Charles Edward Wyzanski, 1200 Sixteenth
treet.
POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT
(Pennsylvania Avenue, between Eleventh and Twelfth Streets. Phone, DIstrict 5360)
JAMES A. FARLEY, of New York, Postmaster General (The Mayflower);
born May 30, 1888, at Grassy Point, N. Y., son of James and Ellen (Goldrick)
Farley; graduated from Stony Point High School in 1905, and from Packard
Commercial School, New York City, in 1906; married Elizabeth A. Finnegan,
April 28, 1920, at Haverstraw, N. Y., and has three children—Elizabeth, Ann,
and James A., jr.; elected town clerk of Stony Point, N. Y., 1912-1919; was
supervisor of town of Stony Point, 1920-1923; appointed port warden in New
York City by Gov. Alfred E. Smith, 1918-19; elected member of the assembly
from Rockland County for the 1923 session; appointed member of New York
State Athletic Commission by Governor Smith in 1924, and reappointed in 1926,
1928, 1930, and 1932, serving as chairman from 1925 until he resigned on Feb-
ruary 28, 1933; appointed Postmaster General by President Franklin D. Roose-
velt, March, 1933; chairman Rockland County Democratic Committee, 1919-1929;
delegate to Democratic National Conventions at New York in 1924, at Houston
in 1928, and at Chicago in 1932; elected secretary New York Democratic State
Committee in August, 1928, to fill vacancy, and reelected in October, 1928, for
two years, afterwards being elected chairman in October, 1930, and reelected in
April, 1932, for a term of two years; elected chairman of the Democratic National
Committee in Chicago on July 2, 1932; member of Rockland County Society of
New York; Knights of Columbus, Haverstraw Council, Order of Red Men,
Stony Point, N. Y.; Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks (P. E. R.), Haver-
straw, N. Y., also president New York State Elks Association, 1924-25; Rock-
land County Democratic Club; National and Osceola Democratic Clubs of New
York City; New York Athletic Club; Catholic Club of New York; Tompkins
Cove (N. Y.) Social Club; Stony Point (N. Y.) Social Club; honorary member
Congressional Country Club in Washington, D. C.; Fraternal Order of Eagles.
Executive assistant to the Postmaster General.—Harllee Branch, Raleigh Hotel.
Secretary to the Postmaster General.—J. Austin Latimer, 1302 Farragut Street.
Byrots assistant to the Postmaster General.—Ambrose O’Connell, Mayflower
otel.
SH assistant to the Postmaster General.— William C. Lyons, Mayflower
otel.
Chief clerk.—Audus T. Davis, 100 Hamilton Avenue, Clarendon, Va.
Assistant chief clerk.—Charles E. Warren, 127 Rosecrest Avenue, Alexandria, Va.
te hn assistant and purchasing agent.—Robert S. Regar, 1354 Kennedy
treet.
Chief clerk to purchasing agent.—Alfred H. Keim, 1628 Nicholson Street.
Personnel officer.—Alice B. Sanger, The Imperial, 1763 Columbia Road.
Disbursing clerk.—Robert E. Fellers, 4431 Fifth Street.
Solicitor—Xarl A. Crowley, Raleigh Hotel.
Assistant to the solicitor—Horace J. Donnelly, Alban Towers, 3700 Massachu-
setts Avenue.
Assistant solicitor— Walter E. Kelly, 1426 M Street.
Assistant attorneys.— Calvin W. Hassell, 219 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park,
Md.; Harold F. Jones, 1364 Iris Street; William L. Rhoads, 111 Philadelphia
Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Stewart E. Blassingham, 206 Holly Avenue,
Takoma Park, Md.; Abraham B. Keefer, 2028 First Street; William C.
O’Brien, 4514 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; John J. Gregory, 4416
New Hampshire Avenue; George H. Schoolmeesters, 717 Van Buren Street;
George F. Breen, 5425 Connecticut Avenue.
312 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE
OFFICE OF THE FIRST ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL
First Assistant Postmaster General.—Joseph C. O’ Mahoney, Carlton Hotel.
Deputy First Assistant and chief clerk.—Vincent C. Burke, Continental Hotel.
Assistant Deputy First Assistant and chief clerk.—Charles C. Wenrich, 1349
Quincy Street.
Division of Post Office Service:
Superintendent.— Thomas F. Fitch, 5709 Nevada Avenue.
Assistant superintendents.— Arthur C. Helmer, 3738 Veazey Street; Frank C.
Staley, 4707 Connecticut Avenue; Alonzo M. Thomas, 2112 F Street; Henry
C. Wyman, 3149 Nineteenth Street; Charles A. Vanderlip, 707 Randolph
Street; Lafayette G. Buehler, 311 Twelfth Street NE.; Thomas J. O'Halloran,
4301 Ridge Road SE.
Division of postmasters:
Superintendent.—Nelson A. Tacy, 4005 New Hampshire Avenue.
Assistant superintendent.—Norman R. Grant, 128 Webster Street.
Division of rural mails:
Superintendent.—George L. Wood, 3618 Thirty-fourth Street.
Assistant superintendent.—Frank Lees, 3430 Mount Pleasant Street.
Division of dead letters and dead parcel post:
Superintendent.—Burton G. Cowles, 3918 Illinois Avenue.
Assistant superintendent.—Everett F. Warner, 317 Fourteenth Street NE:
OFFICE OF THE SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL
Second Assistant Postmaster General.—William W. Howes, Mayflower Hotel.
Depuly Second Assistant and chief clerk.—Chase C. Gove, 2807 Thirty-eighth
treet.
Assistant Deputy Second Assistant and chief clerk.—Edward C. Steagall, 424
Seventh Street NE.
Division of railway adjustments:
Superintendent.— William E. Triem, 1626 Hobart Street.
Assistant superintendents.— William C. Beck, Garrett Park, Md.; Albert E.
Barr, 4604 Thirtieth Street.
Division of International Postal Service:
Director.—Eugene R. White, Springfield, Va. :
Assistant directors.—George H. Grayson, 2721 Ontario Road; Stewart M.
Weber, Benning Station, D. C.
Division of Ratiway Mail Service:
General superintendent.—Aleyne A. Fisher, The Ontario.
Assistant general superintendent.— Eugene W. Satterwhite, 3621 Everett Street.
Assistant superintendent.—Henry A. Shore, 1364 Otis Place.
Assistant superintendent, Star Route section.—Charles L. Davison, 2352 Q
Street SE.
Davision of Air Marl Service:
Superintendent.—Earl B. Wadsworth, 4410 Fessenden Street.
Assistant superintendent.—J. W. Sutherin, 3724 Northampton Street.
OFFICE OF THE THIRD ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL
Third Assistant Postmaster General.—Clinton B. Eilenberger, Raleigh Hotel.
Deputy Third Assistant and chief clerk.—Roy M. North, Raleigh Hotel.
Assistant Deputy Third Assistant and chief clerk.—Harry E. Stine, 1113 Seminary
Road, Silver Spring, Md.
Superintendents of divisions: y
Finance—Paul Freeman, The Manchester, 1426 M Street.
Money orders.—Charles E. Matthews, 1302 Madison Street; chief clerk, J.
Ford, 1800 K Street.
Classification.— William C. Wood, 2308 Ashmead Place.
Stamps.—Michael L. Eidsness, jr., 7500 Twelfth Street.
Registered mails.—C. Howard Buckler, 5135 Eighth Street.
Postal Savings:
Director— William T. S. Rollins, 3514 Eastern Avenue, Mount Rainier, Md.
Assistant director.— William H. Pearson, 325 Maryland Avenue NE.
Cost ascertainment: Superintendent.—A. W. Watts, Burlington Hotel.
Parcel post: Director.—Jesse C. Harraman, 3500 Fourteenth Street.
OFFICE OF THE FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL
Fourth Assistant Postmaster General.—Silliman Evans, Woodley Park Towers.
Deputy Fourth Assistant and chief clerk.—Smith W. Purdum, 9 Littlefield Avenue,
Hyattsville, Md.
NAVY Executive Departments 313
Assistant Deputy Fourth Assistant and chief clerk.—Joseph F. Betterley, 1613
Thirtieth Street. :
Diviston of engineering and research: Superintendent.—Floyd M. Williams, 5514
Nevada Avenue.
Division of post-office quarters:
Superintendent.—H. R. Nichol, 649 E Street NE.
Assistant superintendents.—Charles H. Carle, 4612 Eighth Street; John R.
La 2507 North Capitol Street; Harry A. Cummins, 2811 Thirty-eighth
treet.
Division of equipment and supplies:
Superintendent.— George Landick, jr., Kensington, Md.
Assistant superiniendents.—John W. Haring, 3310 Ross Place; Joseph H. Mec-
Allister, 912 Eighth Street NE.; Charles S. Beard, 2225 Quincy Street NE.
Division of motor-vehicle service:
Superintendent.— Thomas G. Mallalieu, 1862 Mintwood Place.
Assistant superintendent.—Arthur R. Gehman, 8 Hamilton Street NE., Brent-
wood, Md.
Mail equipment shops:
Superintendent.—John B. Cady, 7064 Eastern Avenue, Takoma Park.
Assistant superintendent.— Walter Frech, 4716 Fifth Street.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF POST OFFICE INSPECTOR
Chief Inspector.—Kildroy P. Aldrich, Woodley Park Towers.
Assistant chief inspector.—Joseph F. Gartland, 1634 Nineteenth Street.
Superintendent.—Roscoe E. Mague, 1812 Newton Street NE.
Assistant superintendents.—Clarence L. Williams, 2121 New York Avenue; Harold
W. Davis, 14 West Linden Street, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va.
OFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER
Comptroller.— William E. Buffington, 1317 Harvard Street.
Assistant and chief clerk.—John J. Haggerty, Berwyn, Md.
Expert accountant.—Lewis M. Bartlett, Continental Hotel.
Division of retirement records: :
Superintendent.— Merle L. Sweet, 1461 Girard Street.
DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY
(Navy Department Building, Potomac Park, Eighteenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone
District 2900)
CLAUDE AUGUSTUS SWANSON, Secretary of the Navy (2136 R Street), of
Chatham, Va.; was born at Swansonville, Pittsylvania County, Va.; attended
public schools until he attained the age of 16, at which time he taught public
school for one year; then attended the Virginia Polytechnic Institute for one ses-
sion; not having the means to complete his college course, he held a position in
Danville as a clerk for two years; made arrangements to enter college after that
time; matriculated at Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va., and remained
there three sessions, graduating with the degree of A. B.; studied law at the Uni-
versity of Virginia, graduating with the degree of B. L.; practiced law at Chat-
ham, Va., until he was nominated and elected to the Fifty-third Congress; was
reelected to the Fifty-fourth, Fifty-fifth, Fifty-sixth, Fifty-seventh, Fifty-eighth,
and Fifty-ninth Congresses; was a candidate in the Democratic primary for
Governor of the State of Virginia in 1905; was nominated and elected in Novem-
ber, 1905; resigned his seat in Congress and was inaugurated as Governor of
Virginia, February 1, 1906, and served until February 1, 1910; on August 1, 1910,
he was appointed by Gov. William Hodges Mann to fill the vacancy in the United
States Senate occasioned by the death of Senator John Warwick Ddhniel for the
remainder of his unexpired term ending March 3, 1911; reappointed by Governor
Mann from March 4, 1911, until the meeting of the General Assembly of Vir-
ginia, which elected him to fill the unexpired term beginning March 4, 1911, and
ending March 3, 1917; was nominated by the Democratic Party as its candidate
for the United States Senate without opposition at the election held November 7,
1916, and reelected without opposition for the term beginning March 4, 1917,
and ending March 3, 1923; reelected for the term beginning March 4, 1923, and
ending: March 3, 1929; and again reelected without opposition for the term
beginning March 4, 1929; appointed Secretary of the Navy, March 4, 1933.
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314 Congressional Directory NAVY
The Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Henry L. Roosevelt, 3023 Q Street.
Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Awr).—[Vacaney.]
Chief a S. Curtis, The Methodist Building, First and Maryland Ave-
nue .
Specie i to the Secretary of the Navy.—Archibald Oden, 3718 Veazey
reet.
Administrative Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.— Verne Simkins,
2031 Hamlin Street NE.
Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary of the Navy.—Helen G. O’Neill, 1626
Rhode Island Avenue.
Chief of appointment division.— William D. Bergman, 2526 Seventeenth Street.
Budget clerk and assistant chief clerk.—Roy H. Moses, The Valley Vista, 2032 Bel-
mont Road.
Disbursing clerk.—A. H. Hoiland, Falls Church, Va., route 1, box 75.
Chief of division of records.—Charles T. Ogle, 3740 Benton Street.
OFFICERS ON DUTY IN THE OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF THE NAVY AND THE
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY
Budget officer.—Rear Admiral Claude C. Bloch, Navy Department.
Director of navy yards.—Rear Admiral H. L. Brinser, 3714 Ingomar Street.
Naval Aide to Secretary.—Capt. Harold R. Stark, Chevy Chase Club, Chevy
Chase, Md.
Director of the Naval Petroleum Reserves.—[Vacancy.]
Assistant Director of the Naval Petroleum Reserves.—Commander Thomas Moran,
34 Kalorama, Circle.
Naval Aide to the Assistant Secretary.— Lieut. Commander A. S. Merrill, Chevy
Chase Club. ISLAND GOVERNMENTS
Capt. A. C. Pickens, room 2058, Navy Department. Telephone, DIstrict 2900,
Branch 214. :
GUAM
Capt. George A. Alexander, governor of island and commandant naval station,
Guam. Mail address: Agana, Guam, in care postmaster, San Francisco.
AMERICAN SAMOA
Capt. George B. Landenberger, governor of islands and commandant naval
station, Tutuila, Samoa. Mail address: Pago Pago, Island of Tutuila,
American Samoa, in care postmaster, San Francisco.
OFFICE OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
(Room 2054, Navy Department Building)
Chief of Naval Operations.—Admiral William V. Pratt, Naval Observatory,
Thirty-fourth Street and Massachusetts Avenue.
Aide to the Admiral.—Lieut. Commander Charles W. A. Campbell, Naval Observ-
atory, Thirty-fourth Street and Massachusetts Avenue.
Assistant Chief of Naval Operations.—Rear Admiral J. K. Taussig, Army and
Navy Club.
Chief clerk.—John T. Cuthbert, 1228 Fifteenth Street.
War plans division (room 2064). —Capt. Samuel W. Bryant, 1742 R Street.
Conary division (room 2058).—Capt. A. C. Pickens, 711 Prince Street, Alexandria,
a.
Ship movements division (room 2601).—Capt. Frank Fletcher.
Intelligence division (room 2713).—Capt. Hayne Ellis, 2861 Woodland Drive.
Com pmieation division (room 2622) —Capt. Stanford C. Hooper, 2219 California
treet. :
Material division (room 2604) —Capt. Edward J. Marquart, 2945 Newark Street.
Naval districts division (room 2613). —Capt. Neil E. Nichols, 3614 Fulton Street.
Inspection division (room 3628):
President.—Rear Admiral George C. Day, 1808 I Street.
Recorder.—Commander Comfort B. Platt, 6493 Beachwood Drive, Chevy
Chase, Md.
Chief clerk.—Alice W. Flynn, 709 Rittenhouse Street.
Fleet training division (room 3651).—Rear Admiral Cyrus W. Cole, 3601 Con-
necticut Avenue.
Nod) records and library (room 2726). —Capt. Dudley W. Knox, 2123 California
treet,
NAVY Executive Departments 315
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION
(Room 3057, Navy Department Building)
(For answers to questions concerning officers of the regular Navy, call District 2000, Branch 63; for officers
of the Naval Reserve, call DIstrict 2900, Branch 652; for answers to questions concerning Naval Academy
matters, call DIstrict 2900, Branch 31; for answers to questions concerning enlisted men of the Navy, call
DIstrict 2900, Branches 190, 162, or 291; for general information, call DIstrict 2900, Branch 11)
Chief—Rear Admiral W. D. Leahy, 2168 Florida Avenue.
Assistant to bureau.— Capt. A. P. Fairfield, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
Officer personnel division (room 3411).—Capt. D. W. Bagley, 3239 Klingle Road.
Enlisted personnel division (room 38056).—Capt. Charles F. Russell, Riverside
Apartments.
Sa] Reserve division (room 38449). —Capt. John Downes, 2301 Connecticut
venue.
Training division (room 3612).—Capt. Leigh Noyes, 2020 Hillyer Place.
Pransiinoy division (room 3609). —Commander William R. Purnell, 2222 Q
treet.
Chief clerk.—Edward Henkel, 2916 Cortland Place.
Head, Naval Academy diviston.— Leonard Draper, Riverside Apartments.
HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE
(Room 1026, Navy Department Building)
Ss a Admiral W. R. Gherardi, 11 East Bradley Lane, Chevy
hase, Md.
Chief clerk.—A. F. Bogue, 1358 Meridian Place.
NAVAL OBSERVATORY
(Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 2723)
Superintendent.—Capt. J. F. Hellweg, 3901 Connecticut Avenue.
Assistant to the superintendent.—Capt. J. N. Ferguson.
Chief clerk.—J. E. Dickey, 3601 Thirty-fourth Street.
BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS
(Room 2403, Navy Department Building)
Chief.—Rear Admiral A. L. Parsons, Chief of Civil Engineers of the Navy, The
Westchester, 4000 Cathedral Avenue.
Assistant to chief of bureau.—Capt. George A. McKay, Corps of Civil Engineers,
2601 Calvert Street.
Chief clerk.—E. W. Whitehorne, 713 Nineteenth Street.
BUREAU OF ORDNANCE
(Room 3147, Navy Department Building)
Chief.—Rear Admiral E. B. Larimer, 2126 Leroy Place.
Assistant to chief of bureau.—Capt. A. C. Stott, Wardman Park Hotel.
Chief clerk.—Harry M. Klee, 716 Taylor Street.
BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION AND REPAIR
(Room 2001, Navy Department Building)
Chief —Rear Admiral Emory S. Land, Construction Corps, 2500 Massachusetts
Avenue.
Assistant to chief of bureau.—Capt. W. G. DuBose, Construction Corps, Woodley
Park Towers, 2737 Devonshire Place.
Chief clerk.—Henry C. Brunner, 4611 Langdrum Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.
BUREAU OF ENGINEERING
(Room 2010, Navy Department Building)
Chief.—Engineer in Chief Rear Admiral Samuel M. Robinson, 2859 Twenty-
ninth Street.
Assistant to chief of bureau.—Capt. Harold G. Bowen, 2819 Woodley Road.
Cheef clerk.— Augustus C. Wrenn, 407 Rock Creek Church Road, NW.
316 Congressional Directory NAVY
BUREAU OF SUPPLIES AND ACCOUNTS
(Room 1003, Navy Department Building)
Chief —Rear Admiral Christian J. Peoples, Paymaster General of the Navy, The
Benedick. :
Assistant to the Paymaster General.—Capt. Edward Trimble Hoopes, Supply
Corps, 1614 Forty-fourth Street.
Special assistant.—Clyde Reed, 4326 Eighteenth Street.
Cwilran assistant.— Kirk Holmes, 1813 Newton Street.
BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY
(Room 2221-A, Navy Department Building)
Chief —Rear Admiral P. S. Rossiter, Surgeon General, United States, Navy, 619
South Lee Street, Alexandria, Va.
A to chief of bureau.—Capt. J. B. Dennis, Medical Corps, 1870 Wyoming
venue.
Chief clerk.—W. S. Douglass, 3210 Nineteenth Street.
BUREAU OF AERONAUTICS
(Room 2221-A, Navy Department Building)
Chief —Rear Admiral Ernest J. King, 45 Franklin Street, Annapolis, Md.
Assistant chief.—Capt. Arthur B. Cook, Wardman Park Hotel.
Chief clerk.—John B. May, 101 Fourteenth Street NE.
OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL OF THE NAVY
(Room 2524, Navy Department Building)
Judge Advocate General.—Rear Admiral O. G. Murfin, 3711 Idaho Avenue.
Assistant Judge Advocate General.—Capt. W. B. Woodson, 3303 Macomb Street.
Aide to Judge Advocate General.—Lieut. Commander J. L. McCrea, 1700 Surrey
Lane, Foxhall Village, D.C.
NAVAL CONSULTING BOARD
(Room 2604, Navy Department Building)
Chairman.—[Vacant.]
Vice chairman.—Frank J. Sprague, 421 Canal Street, New York City.
Secretary.— Thomas Robins, 13 Park Row, New York City.
Liaison officer.—Capt. E. J. Marquart, room 2604, Navy Department Building.
COMPENSATION BOARD
(Room 3249, Navy Department Building)
Senior member.—Rear Admiral W. L. Capps (retired), Construction Corps, 1823
Jefferson Place.
Auditor—Charles M. Eichelberger, 3609 Jenifer Street.
GENERAL BOARD
(Room 2743, Navy Department Building)
Chairman.—Rear Admiral G. R. Marvell, Army and Navy Hotel.
Rear Admirals Frank H. Clark, The Dresden; Clark H. Woodward. Capts.
E. S. Jackson, 3438 Thirty-fourth Place; Abram Claude, 3508 Rodman Street;
A. B. Reed, 3101 Woodley Road; Lieut. Commanders, R. E. Schuirmann,
3420 Porter Street; G. W. Dugger, jr., 3436 Thirty-fourth Street.
Secretary.—Commander T. S. Wilkinson, ‘‘ Hockley,” Rosslyn, Va.
Chief clerk.—Jarvis Butler, 100 Morgan Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va.
BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS AND NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD (MEDICAL)
(Room 2644, Navy Department Building)
President.—Rear Admiral Charles P. Kindleberger, New Shoreham Hotel,
Twenty-fourth and Calvert Streets.
Recorder.— Wilbur G. Kramer, 1104 E Street NE.
NAVY Executive Departments 317
NAVAL EXAMINING BOARD
(Room 2649, Navy Department Building)
President.—Capt. Hilary H. Royall, 2716 Thirty-sixth Place.
Recorder.— Wilbur G. Kramer, 1104 E Street NE.
NAVAL RETIRING BOARD
(Room 2644, Navy Department Building)
President.—Rear Admiral Charles P. Kindleberger, New Shoreham Hotel,
Twenty-fourth and Calvert Streets.
Recorder— Wilbur G. Kramer, 1104 E Street NE.
NAVAL DISPENSARY
(Rear Ninth Wing, Navy Department Building)
Capt. Edgar L. Woods, Medical Corps, 2335 Ashmead Place.
NAVY YARD AND STATION, WASHINGTON, D. C.
(Foot of Eighth Street SE. Phone, Lincoln 1360)
Commandant and superintendent Naval Gun Factory.—Rear Admiral H. V. Butler. Chief clerk.—George E. Gonard.
Assistant superintendent Naval Gun Factory, captain of the yard, engineer officer,
aeronautical officer, navigation officer, and public works officer.—Capt. F. D. Berrien.
Senior inspector.—Capt. W. L. Friedell.
Aide to commandant.—Lieut. Commander V. C. Barringer.
Communication officer— Commander Charles R. Clark.
NAVAL MEDICAL SCHOOL
(Twenty-third and E Streets)
Capt. Wm. H. Bell, Medical Corps, 1869 Wyoming Avenue.
NAVAL HOSPITAL
(Foot of Twenty-fourth Street)
Capt. Curtis B. Munger, Medical Corps, quarters B, Naval Hospital.
ATTENDANCE ON OFFICERS
Lieut. Commander Leo C. Thyson, Medical Corps, Shoreham Hotel, 2500 Calvert Street.
BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF MEDICAL OFFICERS
(Naval Medical School)
President.—Capt. Wm. H. Bell, Medical Corps, 1869 Wyoming Avenue.
BOARD FOR EXAMINATION OF DENTAL OFFICERS
(Naval Medical School)
Capt. Wm. H. Bell, Medical Corps, 1869 Wyoming Avenue.
HEADQUARTERS MARINE CORPS
(Navy Department Building, third floor. Phone, District 2900)
MAJOR GENERAL COMMANDANT’S OFFICE |
Commandant.—Maj. Gen. Ben H. Fuller, commandant’s house, Eighth and G Streets SE. :
Assistant to commandant.—Brig. Gen. John H. Russell, Marine Barracks, Eighth
and I Streets SE.
Director of operations and training.—Col. Douglas C. McDougal, 1746 K Street. Special assistant to commandant.—Charles A. Ketcham, Hyattsville, Md.
ADJUTANT AND INSPECTOR’S DEPARTMENT
Adjutant and inspector.—Brig. Gen. Rufus H. Lane, Falls Church, Va.
Chaef clerk.—Charles L. Snell, 1719 K Street.
318 Congressional Directory INTERIOR
QUARTERMASTER’S DEPARTMENT
Quartermaster.—Brig. Gen. Hugh Matthews, 815 Connecticut Avenue.
Special assistant to quartermaster.—James W. Burrows, 3719 Warren Street.
PAYMASTER’S DEPARTMENT
Paymaster.—Brig. Gen. George Richards, 1717 Twentieth Street.
Chief clerk.—Samuel F. Birthright, 726 Highland Drive, Woodside Park, Md.
MARINE EXAMINING BOARD
President.—Brig. Gen. Dion Williams, 1746 Q Street.
Recorder.— First Lieut. Edwin J. Farrell, 2205 California Street.
MARINE RETIRING BOARD
President.—Brig. Gen. Dion Williams, 1746 Q Street.
Recorder.— First Lieut. Edwin J. Farrell, 2205 California Street.
MARINE BARRACKS
(Eighth and I Streets SE. Phone, LIncoln 1230)
Commanding.—Col. Charles B. Taylor.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880)
HAROLD L. ICKES, of Winnetka, Ill., Secretary of the Interior, 1327 Thirty-
third Street, is a lawyer by profession; he was born in Frankstown Township,
Blair County, Pa., March 15, 1874; son of Jesse Boone Williams and Martha Ann
(McCune) Ickes; A. B., University of Chicago, 1897, J. D., cum laude, 1907;
married Anna Wilmarth Thompson, 1911; children—Mrs. ReQua Bryant,
Wilmarth, Raymond, and Robert; was a reporter on Chicago newspapers, 1897—
1900; practiced law at Chicago since 1907, and has been active in municipal
reform politics since 1897; was manager of the mayoralty campaign of John M.
Harlan in 1905, and of Charles E. Merriam in 1911; chairman of the Progressive
County Committee of Cook County, Ill., 1912-1914; chairman of the Illinois
Progressive State Committee, 1914-1916; member of the Progressive National
Committee and National Executive Committee, 1915-16; member of the National
Campaign Committee in charge of Charles E. Hughes’ campaign for President in
1916; was a delegate at large to the Progressive National Convention of 1916 and
the Republican National Convention of 1920; chairman of the Illinois State
Council of Defense Neighborhood Committee, 1917 to April, 1918; was in
Y. M. C. A. work in France with the Thirty-fifth Division of the American Ex-
peditionary Forces from April, 1918, to January, 1919; president of the People’s
Protective League in 1922; Illinois manager of Hiram W. Johnson’s Presidential
campaign in 1924, and of the campaign of Hugh S. Magill, Independent Republi-
can candidate for United States Senator from Illinois in 1926; member of the
Roosevelt Memorial Association and vice president of the Roosevelt Memorial
Association of Greater Chicago; president of the Chicago Forum Council during
1926-27, and a delegate to the Chicago Institute of Politics in 1928; member of the
board of the Chicago Government Planning Association and a member of the
National Conservation Committee; member of the board of advisors of the
Quetico-Superior Council; chairman of the People’s Traction League in 1929; is |
a member of the American Bar Association, Illinois Society of S. A. R., Phi Delta
Theta, Phi Delta Phi, and Pi Gamma Mu; his clubs are the University (Chicago), |
Indian Hill (Winnetka), National Press and Congressional Country (Washington,
D. C.). He became Secretary of the Interior, March 4, 1933.
First Assistant Secretary.—Theodore A. Walters, Hotel Roosevelt.
Assistant Secretary.—Oscar L. Chapman, Continental Hotel.
Personal assistant to the Secretary.—Harry Slattery, 2208 Cathedral Avenue.
Adminastrative assistant.—Ebert K. Burlew, 2904 Eighteenth Street.
Assistant administrative officer.— George BE. Scott, 4017 Marlboro Place.
Chief clerk.—W. Bertrand Acker, 1317 Harvard Street.
Solicitor—Nathan R. Margold, Dodge Hotel.
Assistant to the Solicitor.—Charles Fahy, 106 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Board of Appeals.—Alvah W. Patterson, 2847 Twenty-ninth Street; John P.
McDowell, 1707 Columbia Road; John H. Thomas, 900 Flower Avenue,
Takoma Park, Md.
INTERIOR Executive Departments 319
Darector of tnvestigations.— Louis R. Glavis, 1526 Seventeenth Street.
Director of information.—Stuart Godwin, 1309 Shepherd Street.
Supervisor of classification.—John Harvey, 1416 Shepherd Street,
Chiefs of division:
Disbursing.—Roy F. Lassly, 1791 Lanier Place.
Apia, mazls, and files.—Mrs. J. Atwood Maulding, 1514 Seventeenth
ree
Purchasing officer— Walter B. Fry, 4513 Iowa Avenue.
GENERAL LAND OFFICE
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880)
Commissioner.—Fred W. Johnson, Raleigh Hotel.
Assistant commzissioner.—[Vacancy.]
Assistant to the commassioner.—C. A. Obenchain, Chatham Courts.
Recorder.— Mrs. Emma L. Warren, Hotel Cairo.
Chiefs of diviston:
Accounts.—Clarence L. Bullion, 7101 Chatham Road, Chevy Chase, Md.
Homestead.— Augustus Zannelli, 209 Cromwell Terrace NE.
Indian lands.— Walter S. Binley, 9804 Central Parkway, Silver Spring, Md.
Law.—[Vacancy.]
Mail and files.—Thomas H. Jamison, Seabrook, Md.
Mineral.—Perry L. Keefer, 225 Holly Avenue.
Patents.—[Vacancy.]
Posting and tract records.—Elmer I. Baldwin, 3734 Benton Street.
Reclamation and land grant.—Andrew Markhus, 1430 Chapin Street.
Surveys.—Clinton G. Tudor, 437 Hamilton Street.
BUREAU OF INDIAN AFFAIRS
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NA tional 1880)
Commaissioner.—John Collier, 219 First Street NE.
Assistant commissioner.—[Vacaney.]
Chief clerk.—Benjamin §. td 2806 Cathedral Avenue.
Secretary to the commissioner.—C. Norris Millington, 5809 Thirty-second Street.
Chief counsel.—John R. T. Reeves, 3807 Fulton Street.
Chief finance officer.—Samuel M. Dodd, jr., 590 Lee Hiemnay, Cherrydale, Va.
Assistant finance officer.—E. J. Armstrong, Jefferson Park,
Assistant to the commasstoner (coordination).—Robert T. Yohei 2822 Dumbar-
ton Avenue.
daniel to the commissioner (property).—Arthur C. Monahan, 3700 Thirteenth
treet.
Junior assistant to the commsissioner.—Fred H. Daiker, 140 Tennessee Avenue NE.
Director of employment (field).—Ernest R. Burton, 206 Leland Street.
Education division:
Director—W. Carson Ryan, jr., corner of Columbia and Little Falls Streets,
Falls Church, Va.
Assistant director.—Miss Mary Stewart, Wardman Park Hotel.
Supervisor of home economics (field) —Miss Edna Groves, 1800 K Street.
Supervisor of elementary education (field).—Miss Rose K. Brandt, The Pentilly,
1812 K Street.
Supervisor of school administration (field).—John H. Holst, College Park, Md.
Supervisor of secondary education (field).—George F. Miller, 6605 Georgia
Avenue.
Supervisor of trade and industrial training (field) .—James Arentson, 816 Easley
Street, Silver Spring, Md.
Supervisor of public school relations (field).—Samuel H. Thompson, 1336 Fair-
mont Street.
Health division:
Director—Dr. Marshall C. Guthrie, 15 East Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Assistant director.—Dr. Lawrence W. White, 1708 Webster Street.
Hospital administration.—Dr. J. E. Faris, 3602 Newark Street.
Supervisor of nurses.—Miss Elinor D. Gregg, 3245 O Street.
Agricultural extension and industry division:
Director.—A. C. Cooley, Cosmos Club.
Assistant to the director.—H. W. Shipe, Falls Church, Va.
Supervisor of home demonstration work (field) — Mrs. Henrietta K. Burton,
Federal Building, Salt Lake City, Utah.
320 Congressional Directory INTERIOR
Agricultural extension and industry division—Continued. Supervisor of livestock (field).—John T. Montgomery, Federal Building, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Supervisor of agronomy (field).—Ralph S. Bristol, Federal Building, Salt Lake City, Utah.
Forestry division:
Director (field).—Jay P. Kinney, 1349 Girard Street. : Assistant director (field).—Lee Muck, 1528 South Adams Street, Spokane, Wash. Assistant to the director.—L. D. Arnold, 5330 Colorado Avenue. Irrigation division:
Director (field).—Albert L. Wathen, The Lee House. Assistant director (field).—Herbert V. Clotts, Wilda, Building, Denver, Colo.’ Chiefs of other divisions:
Fiscal.—Hamilton Dimick, 1814 Monroe Street. Land.—Dr. W. A. Marschalk, 3604 Thirty-fourth Street. Probate.—FEarl G. Torrey, 3028 Porter Street.
OFFICE OF EDUCATION
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NA tional 1880)
Commissioner.— William John Cooper, 6504 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md. Assistant commissioner.—Miss Bess Goodykoontz, The Kennedy-Warren Apart- - ments.
Chief clerk.—Lewis A. Kalbach, 662 E Street NE. Private secretary to commissioner.—Mrs. Mabel H. Smith, 1702 Summit Place. Chiefs of division:
Research and investigation.—Consultants: J. F. Rogers, 2041 Rosemont Avenue 2 M. M. Proffitt, 9 Cedar Avenue, Hyattsville, Md. a. Colleges and professional schools.—F. J. Kelly, Westchester Apartments. b. American school systems.—W. S. Deffenbaugh, 519 Butternut Street. c. Foreign school systems.—J. F. Abel, 2025 H Street. d. Special problems. —Mrs. Katherine M. Cook, 3020 Porter Street. e. Statistical. —E. M. Foster, 315 Channing Street NE. Editorial —W. D. Boutwell, 3254 O Street. Library.—Sabra W. Vought, Potomac Park Apartments. Service. —L. R. Alderman, 4514 Ridge Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NA tional 1880)
Director—W. C. Mendenhall, 9 East Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Adminis geologist.—J. D. Sears, 209 East Underwood Street, Chevy Chase, d
Chief clerk.—John J. Madigan, 3601 Connecticut Avenue. Geologic branch.—T. W. Stanton, chief geologist, 54 S Street. Water resources branch.—N. C. Grover, chief hydraulic engineer, 1442 Belmont Street.
Topographic branch.—J. G. Staack, chief topographic engineer, 1520 Webster Street.
Conservation branch.—Herman Stabler, chief engineer, 2700 Connecticut Avenue. Alaskan branch.—Philip S. Smith, chief Alaskan geologist, 3249 Newark Street. Engraving division.—C. H. Birdseye, 22 Grafton Street, Chevy Chase, Md. Division of distribution.—Ronne C. Shelsé, Fontanet Courts. Labrarian.—Guy E. Mitchell, The Benedick, 1808 I Street.
BUREAU OF RECLAMATION
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NA tional 1880)
Commissioner.— Elwood Mead, 1661 Crescent Place. Assistant commissioner.—P? W. Dent, 2935 Cathedral Avenue. Assistant to the commissioner—Miss M. A. Schnurr, 1340 Quincy Street. Chief engineer—R. F. Walter, United States Customhouse, Denver, Colo. Chief, engineering division.—George O. Sanford, 842 Madison Street. Director of reclamation economics.—[Vacancy.] Assistant director of reclamation economics.—L. H. Mitchell, 832 Sligo Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.
Chief accountant—William F. Kubach, 112 Park Avenue, Takoma Park, Md. Chief clerk.—Charles N. McCulloch, 1827 K Street.
INTERIOR Executive Departments 321
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880)
Director.—Horace M. Albright, 4920 Indian Lane.
Associate director.—Arno B. Cammerer, 701 Lyonhurst Road, Lyonhurst, Cherry-
dale, Va.
Senior assistant director:
Branch of operations.—A. E. Demaray, 1326 Gallatin Street.
Assistant directors:
Branch of lands and use.—George A. Moskey, The Westchester.
Branch of research and education.—Dr. H. C. Bryant, 2907 Rittenhouse Street,
Chevy Chase.
Branch of planning.—Conrad L. Wirth, 3422 Porter Street.
Editor.—Isabelle F. Story, 1900 F Street.
Chief of division of—
Park operators’ accounts.—Charles L. Gable, 4426 Ninth Street.
Accounts.—Everett E. Tillett, East Falls Church, Va.
Mails and files—Charles R. Brill, 2404 North Capitol Street.
Branch of engineering:
Chief engineer.—Frank A. Kittredge, 409 Underwood Building, San Francisco,
Calif.
Chief, eastern division.—Oliver G. Taylor, 6313 Georgia Street, Chevy Chase,
Md.
Branch of plans and design:
Chief architect.—Thomas C. Vint, 409 Underwood Building, San Francisco,
Calif.
Chief, eastern division.—Charles E. Peterson, Yorktown, Va.
Chief clerk.—Ronald M. Holmes, 4518 Davenport Street.
BOARD OF INDIAN COMMISSIONERS
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 79)
Chairman.—Samuel A. Eliot, Cambridge, Mass.
Warren K. Moorehead, Andover, Mass.
Frank Knox, Chicago, Ill.
Malcolm McDowell, Wilmette, Ill.
Hugh L. Scott, Princeton, N. J.
Flora Warren Seymour, Chicago, Ill.
John J. Sullivan, Philadelphia, Pa.
Mary Vaux Walcott, Washington, D. C.
G. E. E. Lindquist, Lawrence, Kans.
Charles H. T. Lowndes, Easton, Md.
Secretary.—Earl Y, Henderson, Washington, D. C.
ST. ELIZABETHS HOSPITAL
(Nichols Avenue, beyond Anacostia. Phone, Lincoln 1426)
Superintendent.— William A. White, M. D.
Assistant to superintendent.—Monie Sanger.
First assistant physician.—Herbert C. Woolley, M. D.
Chief clerk.—Paul M. Lehman.
Superintendent of nurses.—Edith M. Haydon, R. N.
Secretary to the superintendent.— Arnold W. Barbour.
157297°—73-1—1ST ED——22
322 Congressional Drrectory INTERIOR
- FREEDMEN’S HOSPITAL
(Sixth and Bryant Streets. Phone, NOrth 0754)
Surgeon in chief.— William A. Warfield, M. D.
Resident assistant surgeon.— Thomas E. Jones, M. D.
Resident physician.— Lawrence W. Jackson, M. D.
Anesthetist.—John K. Rector, M. D.
Rontgenologist.—B. Price Hurst, M. D.
Pathologist.—George W. Adams, M. D.
Chief clerk.—Frederick D, Henry,
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
(Howard Place and Georgia Avenue. Phone, COlumbia 8100)
Patron ex officco.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior.
Chairman, board of trustees.— Abraham Flexner, A. M., M. D., LL.D.
President.—Mordecai W. Johnson, STM., D. D.
Secretary.—Emmett J. Scott, A. M., LL. D.
Treasurer.—V. D. Johnston, M. B. A.
Registrar. —F, D, Wilkinson, LL. B.
WAR MINERALS RELIEF
Commissioner.—Roscoe Fertich, 1400 M Street.
TERRITORIAL OFFICIALS
Governor of Alaska.—John W. Troy, Juneau, Alaska.
Secretary of Alaska.—XKarl Theile, Juneau, Alaska.
Disbursing officer.—Charles E. Naghel, Juneau, Alaska.
Governor of Hawaii.—Lawrence M. Judd, Honolulu, Hawaii.
Serraay of Hawai and special disbursing agent.—Raymond C. Brown, Honolulu,
awaii.
Governor of Virgin Islands.—Dr. Paul M. Pearson, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
Government secretary and commissioner of finance—Boyd J. Brown, St. Thomas,
Virgin Islands.
THE ALASKA RAILROAD
General manager.—Otto F. Ohlson, Anchorage, Alaska.
Examiner of accounts and legal advisor—B. H. Barndollar, Anchorage, Alaska.
Chief engineer.—Porter Berryhill, Anchorage, Alaska.
Superintendent of transportation.—J. T. Cunningham, Anchorage, Alaska.
Superintendent of motive power and equipment.—W. L. Kinsell, Anchorage, Alaska.
General storekeeper.—D. W. Metzdorf, Anchorage, Alaska.
Chief surgeon.—J. H. Romig, Anchorage, Alaska.
Chief clerk.—J. J. Delaney, Anchorage, Alaska.
Special disbursing agent.—Alfred G. Balls, Anchorage, Alaska.
General freight, passenger, and immigration agent.—Harold W. Snell, Suite
321-322, 333 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
Office of chief clerk, Department of Interior.—Room 6119, Interior Department
Building, Washington, D. C. (Accounts and miscellaneous correspondence
relating to.)
CONSOLIDATED PURCHASING AND SHIPPING UNIT
Purchasing agent and office manager—J. R. Ummel, Room 441 Federal Office
Building, Seattle, Wash.
Special disbursing agent.—Leslie Cramer, 441 Federal Office Building, Seattle,
Wash.
AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 323
ALASKA ROAD COMMISSION
Ex officio commissioner in charge of work.—John W. Troy, Governor of Alaska,
Juneau, Alaska.
Chief engineer.—Ike P. Taylor, Juneau, Alaska.
Assistant chief engineer.—Hawley W. Sterling, Juneau, Alaska.
Chief clerk.—G. H. Skinner, Juneau, Alaska.
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
HENRY AGARD WALLACE, of Des Moines, Iowa, Secretary of Agriculture (Wardman Park Hotel); born on farm in Adair County, Iowa, October 7, 1888, son of Henry Cantwell Wallace (Secretary of Agriculture, 1921-1924) and Carrie
May (Brodhead) Wallace, and grandson of Henry Wallace, member of President
Theodore Roosevelt's County Life Commission; B. S. A., Iowa State College,
1910, honorary M. S. A., Iowa State College, 1920; married Ilo Browne, of Indianola, Iowa, May 20, 1914; children—Henry B., Robert B., Jean B.; editorial staff of Wallace’s Farmer, 1910-1933; editor, 1921-1933 (editor of Wallace’s Farmer and Iowa Homestead, 1929-1933); owns and supervises farm in Polk County,
Towa; devised first of corn-hog ratio charts indicating probable course of markets, 1915; published Agricultural Prices, 1920; forecast (1920) danger to agriculture in post-war decline; developed system of forecasting corn yields on basis of rainfall and temperature records; published Correlation and Machine Calculation, 1924; chairman, Agricultural Round Table, Williamstown, 1927; delegate, International Conference of Agricultural Economists, 1929; experimented with breeding high- yielding strains of corn, 1913-1933, also experimented with hogs and chickens; published Corn and Corn Growing, 1923; his strains of hybrid corn have been leaders in Iowa Corn Yield Tests since 1926 and in fields of practical corn farmers; appointed Secretary of Agriculture by President Roosevelt, taking oath of office and entering on duty March 4, 1933; member of National Forest Reservation Commission, Federal Board for Vocational Education, Migratory Bird Conserva- tion Commission, Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Commission; ex officio Qomper of Committee on the Conservation and Administration of the Public - omain.
Assistant Secretary.—R. G. Tugwell, Cosmos Club. Assistant to the Secretary.—Paul H. Appleby, 1771 Massachusetts Avenue. Assistant to the Secretary. —Ernest E. Hall, Park Central Apartment, 1900 F Street. Director of scientific work.—A. F. Woods, Berwyn, Md. Director of extension work.—C. W. Warburton, 20 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Dien 2 personnel and business administration.—W. W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar treet.
Director of information.—M., 8S, Eisenhower, 1813 Twenty-fourth Street; Solicitor —Seth Thomas,
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Director.—W. W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street. Assistant director and budget officer.—W. A. Jump, 3247 Patterson Street. Chief, division of operation, and real estate officer.—H. A. N elson, 907 Massachu- setts Avenue NE.
List division of accounts and disbursements.—W. R. Fuchs, 2817 Thirty-ninth treet.
Chief, division of appointments.—P. L. Gladmon, 1332 Fairmont Street. Chief, division of purchase, sales, and traffic.—A. McC. Ashley, 5 West Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
324 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE
OFFICE OF INFORMATION
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Director—M. S. Eisenhower, 1813 Twenty-fourth Street.
Chief of publications.—M. C. Merrill, 800 Carroll Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Assistant chief of publications.— Frank D. Smith, 1304 Fairmont Street.
Chief of press service.—C. E. Gapen, 6627 East Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief of radio service.—Morse Salisbury, 1650 Harvard Street.
LIBRARY
(South Building, Thirteenth and B Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Librarian.— Miss Claribel R. Barnett, 1661 Crescent Place.
Associate librarian.—Miss Emma B. Hawks, 2520 Fourteenth Street.
OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATION
(South Building. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief —James T. Jardine, 1508 Forty-fourth Street.
Chief, division of insular stations—James T. Jardine (acting), 1508 Forty-fourth
Street.
Associate in experiment station administration.—W. H. Beal, 1852 Park Road.
Editor, Experiment Station Record—Howard L. Knight, 1420 Buchanan Street.
EXTENSION SERVICE
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Director—C. W. Warburton, 20 West Lenox Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Assistant director—C. B. Smith, 1 Montgomery Street, Takoma Park, Md.
Assistant to director.—Mrs. Lenore B. Fuller, The Shoreham.
Business manager.— Mark M. Thayer, 1121 Twenty-fourth Street.
Chief of office of—
Cooperative extension work.—C. B. Smith, 1 Montgomery Street, Takoma
Park, Md.
Exhibits—J. W. Hiscox, 3414 Twentieth Street NE.
Motion pictures.—Raymond Evans, Bladensburg, Md.
WEATHER BUREAU
(Corner Twenty-fourth and M Streets. Phone, POtomac 4300)
Chief —Charles F. Marvin, 1501 Emerson Street.
Assistant chief.—Charles C. Clark, 21 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief clerk.— William Weber, 3624 Connecticut Avenue.
Investigative and service divisions and chiefs:
Forecast.—Edgar B. Calvert, 2205 California Street.
Washington forecast district.—Charles L. Mitchell, 904 Rittenhouse Street;
R. Hanson Weightman, 5914 Wisconsin Avenue.
. River and flood.—Montrose W. Hayes, 2205 California Street.
Monthly weather review and meteorological physics— William J. Humphreys,
1026 Fifteenth Street.
Solar radiation.—[Vacancy.]
Climate and crop weather—Joseph B. Kincer, 4112 Fessenden Street.
Aerology.—Willis R. Gregg, 37 Sycamore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Instrument.—Benjamin C. Kadel, Route 1, East Falls Church, Va.
Marine—Willard F. McDonald, 123 West Ingram Avenue, Clarendon, Va.
AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 325
BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief.—John R. Mohler, 1620 Hobart Street.
Associate chief —U. G. Houck, 1622 N Street.
Assistant chief.—A. W. Miller, 6817 Piney Branch Road.
Administrative officer.—Charles C. Carroll, 6801 Sixth Street.
Chiefs of—
Animal husbandry division.—E. W. Sheets, 1831 Lamont Street.
Brochemic division.—M. Dorset, 1851 Lamont Street.
Field inspection diviston.—G. W. Pope, 1340 Meridian Place
Hog-cholera control division.—Directed by associate chief of bureau.
Meat inspection diviston.—R. P. Steddom, 1481 Harvard Street.
Packers and stockyards diviston.— Directed by assistant chief of bureau.
Pathological diviston.—H. W. Schoening, 5504 Nebraska Avenue.
Tick eradication diviston.—W. M. MacKellar, 2456 Twentieth Street.
Tuberculosis eradication division.—A. E. Wight, 4101 Thirty-eighth Street.
Virus-serum control diviston.—D. I. Skidmore, 1357 Parkwood Place.
Zoological diviston.—Maurice C. Hall, 6314 Thirty-third Street.
Superintendent of experiment station.—W. E. Cotton, Bethesda, Md.
BUREAU OF DAIRY INDUSTRY
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief.—0O. E. Reed, 4927 Thirtieth Place.
Assistant to the chief (administration). —J. M. Kemper, 2231 Newton Street NE.
Assistant to the chief (publications and exhibits).—L. S. Richardson, 2121 New
York Avenue.
Dairy engineer.—Karl E. Parks, 2417 North Capitol Street.
Chief of division of—
Dairy research laboratories.—Lore A. Rogers, 3635 S Street.
Bain cattle breeding, feeding, and management.—Roy R. Graves, Kensington,
d
Market-milk tnvestigations.— Ernest Kelly, 610 Carroll Avenue, Takoma
Park,
Dairy herd improvement tnvestigations.—J. C. McDowell, 1416 Allison Street.
Dairy manufacturing investigations and introduction.—R. W. Bell, 4409
Greenwich Parkway.
BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief.—William A. Taylor, 3215 Northampton Street.
Associate chief —Karl F. Kellerman, 2221 Forty-ninth Street.
Assistant chief—H. E. Allanson, 124 Chestnut Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Head of division of—
Arlington experiment farm.—E. C. Butterfield, Rosslyn, Va.
Barberry eradication.—F. C. Meier, 6402 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.
Blister rust control.—S. B. Detwiler, 25 Beech Street, Clarendon, Va.
Botany.—F. V. Coville, 1836 California Street.
Cereal crops and diseases.—M. A. McCall, 209 Taylor Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Citrus canker eradication.— Directed by associate chief of bureau.
Cotton, rubber, and other tropical plants.—O. F. Cook, Lanham, Md.
Drug and related plants.—W. W. Stockberger, 529 Cedar Street.
Dry land agriculture.—C. E. Leighty, 300 Court House Road, Clarendon, Va.
Egyptian cotton breeding.—T. H. Kearney, Cosmos Club.
Fiber plant tnvestigations.—L. H. Dewey, 4512 Ninth Street.
Forage crops and diseases.—A. J. Pieters, 7206 Blair Road.
Foreign plant introduction.—X. A. Ryerson, 1601 Argonne Place.
Forest pathology.—Haven Metcalf, 1223 Vermont Avenue.
Fruit and vegetable crops and diseases.—E. C. Auchter, Franklin Avenue,
College Park, Md.
Gardens and grounds.—J. W. Byrnes, 149 V Street NE.
Genetics and biophysics.—G. N. Collins, Lanham, Md.
Mycology and disease survey.—C. L. Shear, Radnor Heights, Va.
National Arboretum.—F. V. Coville (acting director), 1836 California Street.
Nematology.—Gotthold Steiner, 3843 Twenty-ninth Street, Mount Rainier, Md.
Phony peach eradication.— Directed by associate chief of bureau.
326 Congressional Drrectory AGRICULTURE
Head of division of—continued.
Seed tnvestigations.— Edgar Brown, Lanham, Md.
Sugar plant investigations.—E. W. Brandes, 3404 Fulton Street.
Tobacco and plant nutritton.—W. W. Garner, 1367 Parkwood Place.
Western irrigation agriculture.—C. S. Scofield, Lanham, Md.
FOREST SERVICE
(Atlantic Building, 928-930 F Street. Phone, DIstrict 6910)
Forester and chief—R. Y. Stuart, 9 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Associate forester.—E. A. Sherman, 4103 Military Road.
Chief of finance and accounts.—H. I. Loving, 810 Aspen Street.
Assistant foresters:
Branch of operation.—Roy Headley, 4117 Fessenden Street.
Branch of forest management.—E. E. Carter, 3213 Nineteenth Street.
Erp of range management.—C. E. Rachford, 510 Vacation Lane, Cherrydale,
a.
Branch of lands.—L. F. Kneipp, 4831 Thirty-sixth Street.
Branch of research.—Earle H. Clapp, 6802 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.
Branch of engineering.—T. W. Norcross, 407 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Branch of public relations.—Fred Morrell, 2415 Twentieth Street.
Regional forester, eastern region.—Joseph Kircher, Roosevelt Hotel.
BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY AND SOILS
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief—Henry G. Knight, 4436 Q Street.
Assistant chief —C. A. Browne, 3408 Lowell Street.
Assistant to the chief.—A. G. Rice, Glebe Road, Clarendon, Va.
Chief of chemical and technological research.—C. A. Browne, 3408 Lowell Street.
Assistant chief, chemical and technological research.—W. W. Skinner, 6 Knowles
Avenue, Kensington, Md
Chief of dwiston of—
Carbohydrates.—H. S. Paine, 6401 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chemical engineering.—D. J. Price, 701 Whittier Street.
Color and farm waste.—H. T. Herrick, apartment 444, The Chastleton.
Food research.—F. C. Blanck, 3814 Jocelyn Street.
Insecticides—R. C. Roark, 7 Logan Circle.
Oil, fat, and war.—G. S. Jamieson, 3914 McKinley Street.
Proteins and nutrition.—D. B. Jones, 5011 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md.
Industrial farm products.—F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md.
Chief of soil investigations.—A. G. McCall, College Park, Md.
Chief of division of—
Soil survey.—C. F. Marbut, 1843 Mintwood Place.
Soil chemastry and physics.—H. G. Byers, The Ontario.
Soil microbiology.—Charles Thom, 1703 Twenty-first Street.
Soil fertility—Oswald Schreiner, 21 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Acting chief of fertilizer and fized nitrogen tnvestigations.—C. H. Kunsman, 3647
Veazey Street.
BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY
(Building C, the Mall at Seventh Street SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief—C. L. Marlatt, 1521 Sixteenth Street.
Assistant chief —S. A. Rohwer, 186 Key Boulevard, Lyon Village, Clarendon, Va.
Business manager.—F. H. Spencer, 58 Franklin Avenue, Hyattsville, Md.
Chief of division of— |
Fruit and shade-tree insects.—D. L. VanDine, Cosmos Club.
Truck and garden crop insects.—W. H. White, College Park, Md.
Forest insects.—F. C. Craighead, 5301 Forty-first Street.
Cereal and forage insects—W. H. Larrimer, 3304 Rittenhouse Street.
Cotton insects.—R. W. Harned, 2927 Macomb Street.
AGRICULTURE Executive Departments 327
Chief of division of—continued.
Insects fering man and animals.—F. C. Bishopp, 401 Cecil Street, University
Park, Md.
Stored product tnsects.—E. A. Back, 2936 Macomb Street.
Taxonomy of insects.—Harold Morrison, 1745 Kilbourne Place.
Insect pest survey.—J. A. Hyslop, Silver Spring, Md.
Physiology and toxicology of insects.—F. L. Campbell, 4402 Elm Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
Bee culture.—J. 1. Hambleton, 402 Warwick Place, Chevy Chase, Md.
BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL SURVEY
(South Building, Thirteenth and B Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief. —Paul G. Redington, Broad and Cherry Streets, Falls Church, Va.
Associate chief —W. C. Henderson, 8 Magnolia Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief of division of—
Admanistration.—E. J. Thompson, 5203 Fourteenth Street.
Biological investigaiions.—W. B. Bell, 803 Rittenhouse Street.
Food habits research.—W. L. McAtee, 200 Cedar Street, Cherrydale, Va.
Fur resources.—F. G. Ashbrook, 1801 K Street.
Predatory animal and rodent conirol.—Stanley P. Young, 1763 Columbia Road.
Game and bird conservation.—H. P. Sheldon, Broad Street, Falls Church, Va.
Land acquisition.—Rudolph Dieffenbach, 3527 Porter Street.
BUREAU OF PUBLIC ROADS
(Willard Building, 515 Fourteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 5960)
Chief —Thomas H. MacDonald, 520 Maple Ridge Road, Battery Park, Md.
Chief engineer.—P. St. J. Wilson, Woodley Apartments, 1851 Columbia Road.
Executive assistant.— Miss Carrie L. Fuller, Argonne Apartments.
Chief of division of—
Highway transport.—E. W. James, 2919 Forty-third Street.
Constructzon.—H. K. Bishop, The Shoreham.
Management.—T. W. Allen, 2840 Chesapeake Street.
Tests.—E. F. Kelley, 6409 Maple Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Control.—C. D. Curtiss, 10 West Virgilia Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Bridges.—0O. L. Grover, 3813 Jocelyn Street, Chevy Chase.
Laws and contracts.—L. E. Boykin, 2825 Albemarle Street.
Information.—H. S. Fairbank, 2041 East Thirty-second Street, Baltimore, Md.
Design.—R. E. Toms, 20 East Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING
(1300 E Street. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief.—S. H. McCrory, 6811 Sixth Street.
Fngingering assistant to the chief of bureau.—George R. Boyd, 1218 Sixteenth
treet.
Administrative officer.—G. P. Wolf, 1424 Taylor Street.
Chief of division of—
Irrigation.—W. W. McLaughlin, P. O. Box 180, Berkeley, Calif.
Drainage and soil-erosion control.—Lewis A. Jones, 7131 Chestnut Street.
Mechanical equipment.—R. B. Gray, 1701 Sixteenth Street.
Structures.— Wallace Ashby, 6905 Fifth Street.
Plans and service.—M. C. Betts, 437 Cedar Street.
Editorial and information.—R. D. Marsden, 6305 Broad Branch Road, Chevy
Chase, Md.
328 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE
BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
(South Building, Thirteenth and B Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief —Nils A. Olsen, Kennedy-Warren, 3133 Connecticut Avenue.
Assistant chief —C. W. Kitchen, 3422 Seventeenth Street.
Assistant chief.—FEric Englund, Westchester Apartments, 4000 Cathedral Avenue.
In charge of economic information.—J. Clyde Marquis, 1737 Irving Street.
Business manager. —F. J. Hughes, 1412 Euclid Street.
Chief of division of—
Agricultural finance.—Eric Englund, Westchester Apartments.
Cotton.— Arthur W. Palmer, 18 Oxford Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Crop and livestock estimates.—W. F. Callander, 1417 Van Buren Street.
Darry and pouliry—Roy C. Potts, 210 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Farm management and costs.—C. L. Holmes, 110 Virginia Avenue, Jefferson
Park, Alexandria, Va.
Pel population and rural life—C. J. Galpin, Little Falls Street, Falls Church,
a.
Foreign agricultural service.—Leslie A. Wheeler (acting), 4550 Connecticut
venue.
Fruits and vegetables.— Wells A. Sherman, R. F. D. 1, McLean, Va.
Grain.—H. J. Besley, 1105 K Street.
Hay, feed, and seed.—W. A. Wheeler, 5616 Grove Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Information.—J. Clyde Marquis, 1737 Irving Street.
Land economics.—L. C. Gray, 119 Wooten Avenue, Friendship Heights, Md.
Livestock, meats, and wool..—Charles V. Whalin, 12 University Road, College
Heights, Hyattsville, Md. ;
Siva and historical research.—0O. C. Stine, 6345 Western Avenue, Chevy
ase.
Warehousing.—H. S. Yohe, 402 Rosemary Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Tobacco section.—Charles E. Gage, Falls Chureh, Va.
BUREAU OF HOME ECONOMICS
(South Building, Thirteenth and B Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief —Miss Louise Stanley, 3223 Macomb Street.
Administrative assistant.— Mrs. Lennah Curtiss Zens, Silver Spring, Md.
Chief of division of—
Economics.— Miss Hildegarde Kneeland, 1713 I Street.
Textiles and clothing.— Miss Ruth O’Brien, 1219 Hamilton Street.
Foods and nutrition.— Miss Louise Stanley, 3223 Macomb Street.
Information.— Miss Ruth Van Deman, 3502 Thirtieth Street.
BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE
(Lemon Building, 1729 New York Avenue. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief —Lee A. Strong, 531 Maple Ridge Road, Bethesda, Md.
Assistant chief.—Avery S. Hoyt, 46 Elm Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Business manager.— Bernard Connor, 618 Eighth Street NE.
Chief of division of—
Foreign quarantines.—E. R. Sasscer, 9 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase, Md. 5
Domestic quarantines.—S. B. Fracker, 3716 Ingomar Street.
Field control, Japanese beetle and European corn borer.—L. H. Worthley, 22
Elizabeth Street, South Norwalk, Conn.
Field control, pink bollworm and Thurberta weevil—R. E. McDonald, 521
Avenue A, San Antonio, Tex.
Field conirol, gipsy and brown-tail moths.—A. F. Burgess, 20 Sanderson Street,
Greenfield, Mass.
Field control, Mexican fruit fly—P. A. Hoidale, 503 Rio Grande National
Life Building, Harlingen, Tex.
Field control, date scale—B. L. Boyden, Room 6, First National Bank
Building, Indio, Calif.
GRAIN FUTURES ADMINISTRATION
(The Mall, between Twelfth and Fourteenth Streets SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief —J. W. T. Duvel, 1225 Decatur Street.
Assistant chief.—J. M. Mehl, 1211 Gallatin Street.
Administrative assistant.— Albert Strack, 1603 Newton Street NE.
COMMERCE Executive Departments 329
FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
(216 Thirteenth Street SW. Phone, NAtional 4645)
Chief —W. G. Campbell, 910 Grant Road, Livingstone Heights, Cherrydale, Va.
Assistant chief—P. B. Dunbar, 311 Cumberland Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Assistant to the chief.—F. B. Linton, 222 Holly Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Chief of division of—
Interstate supervision—C. W. Crawford, 922 Rock Spring Road, Claren-
don, Va.
Import supervision.—A. E. Taylor, 1828 Kenyon Street.
Cooperation.—W. S. Frisbie, 1718 Irving Street.
Food control.—W. B. White, 4629 Hunt Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Color certification.—H. T. Herrick, The Chastleton, Sixteenth and R Streets.
Drug control.—F. J. Cullen, 1011 Barton Avenue, Cherrydale, Va.
Insecticide control.—C. C. McDonnell, 1808 Belmont Road.
Naval stores conirol.—F. P. Veitch, College Park, Md.
Microanalysis.—B. J. Howard, 1212 Decatur Street.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
(Commerce Building, Fourteenth Street between Constitution Avenue and E Street.
Phone, NAtional 5060)
DANIEL CALHOUN ROPER, of South Carolina, Secretary of Commerce
(3001 Woodland Drive); publicist, lawyer; born in Marlboro County, S. C.,
April 1, 1867; son of John Wesley and Henrietta V. (McLaurin) Roper; A. B.,
Duke University, N. C., 1888; LL. B., National University, Washington, D. C.,
1901; LL. D., Tusculum College, 1927; married Lou McKenzie, of Scotland
County, N. C., December 25, 1889; member, South Carolina House of Repre-
sentatives, 1892-1894; clerk, United States Senate Committee on Interstate
Commerce, 1894-1897; expert special agent, United States Census Bureau,
1900-1910; clerk, Ways and Means Committee, House of Representatives, 1910-
1913; First Assistant Postmaster General, March 14, 1913, to August 1, 1916;
chairman, organization bureau, Woodrow Wilson campaign, 1916; vice chairman,
United States Tariff Commission, March 22 to September 25, 1917; Commissioner
of Internal Revenue, 1917-1920; member, General Conference M. E. Church,
South, 1930; Sixth Ecumenical Conference, 1931; member, District of Columbia,
Board of Education, 1932; developed in United States Census Bureau a plan for
collecting cotton statistics by a count at frequent intervals during harvesting
seasons of bales turned out at the ginneries; chairman, American section, Inter-
American High Commission; chairman, Federal Employment Stabilization Board 3
member of Smithsonian Institution, Federal Oil Conservation Board, United States Council National Defense, Federal Board for Vocational Education, For-
eign Service Buildings Commission, Migratory Bird Conservation Commission; trustee, American University, Duke University; member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Phi Beta Kappa; Methodist; Mason (thirty-second degree); member of the fol- lowing clubs: Chevy Chase (Md.), University (D. C.); author of The United States Post Office (1917). Took oath as Secretary of Commerce, March 4, 1933.
shonin; Secretary.—John Dickinson, Jefferson Apartments, Sixteenth and M treets.
Assistant Secretary for Aeronautics.—Clarence M. Young, Hay-Adams House.
i assistant to the Secretary.—Malcolm Kerlin, 5615 Thirty-third treet.
Private secretary to the Secretary.— Arthur W. Coombs, 633 Emerson Street.
Assistant to Assistant Secretary.—C. Grant Isaacs, 1725 H Street.
Acting Solicitor—South Trimble, jr., 3111 Macomb Street.
Assistant solicitor.—James J. O'Hara, 1475 Girard Street.
Assistant to the solicitor—Frank C. Hall, Fontanet Courts.
Chief clerk and superintendent.—E. W. Libbey, 15 R Street NE.
Disbursing clerk.—Charles E. Molster, 1237 Lawrence Street NE.
Chief of dwision of:
Appointments.—Edw. J. Gardner.
Publications.—Thomas F. McKeon, 1352 Otis Place; assistant chief, Charles C. Barton, 1925 Sixteenth Street.
Purchases and sales.—Walter S. Erwin, 753 Quebec Place.
Labrarian.—Charlotte L. Carmody, 514 Nineteenth Street.
330 Congressional Directory COMMERCE
AERONAUTICS BRANCH
Director of air regulation.— Gilbert G. Budwig, John Marshall Apartments.
Director of aeronautic development—Harry H. Blee, 4000 Cathedral Avenue.
Chief, airways diviston.—F. C. Hingsburg, 5118 Chevy Chase Parkway.
Chief, aeronautic research division.—L. J. Briggs, 3208 Newark Street.
Chief, aeronautic information division.—Frederick R. Neely, 64 U Street.
Chief, licensing division.—W. Fiske Marshall, 1869 Ingleside Terrace.
Chief, airway mapping division.—E. H. Pagenhart, 3423 Porter Street.
Chief, administrative diviston.—S. W. Crosthwait, 4612 Fourth Street.
BUREAU OF THE CENSUS
Director.— William L. Austin, 1412 Delafield Place.
Assistant director.—[Vacant.]
Chief clerk.—Arthur J. Hirsch, 1505 Spring Place.
Personnel clerk.—Emily I. Farnum, 5801 Fourteenth Street.
Chief statisticians:
Publications.—Dr. Joseph A. Hill, 8 Logan Circle.
Agriculture.—[Vacant.]
Manufactures—LeVerne Beales, 4124 Fifth Street.
Cotton and vegetable oils.—Harvey J. Zimmerman, 1517 Varnum Street.
Distribution.—Dr. Robert J. McFall, 711 Lyonhurst Road, Cherrydale, Va.
Financial statistics of States and cities.—Starke M. Grogan, The Sherman.
Vital statistics.—Dr. T. F. Murphy, Calverton Apartments, Columbia and
Quarry Roads.
Machine tabulation.— William B. Cragg, 2616 Tenth Street NE.
Revision and results.—Christopher M. Zepp, 1926 Newton Street NE.
Chief, field section.—Emmons K. Ellsworth, 4922 Battery Lane, Bethesda, Md.
Geographer —Clarence E. Batschelet, 91 Military Road, Cherrydale, Va.
Mechanical laboratory.—E. M. La Boiteaux, 4115 Fessenden Street.
BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE
Director— Frederick M. Feiker, 2017 Hillyer Place.
Assistant directors.—Oliver P. Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.;
Thomas R. Taylor, 3905 Jocelyn Street, Chevy Chase; John Matthews, jr.,
4620 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.
Administrative assistant.— Wharton Moore, 7625 Georgetown Road, Bethesda,
Administrative divisions and chiefs:
Correspondence.—Royal H. Brasel, 3832 Garfield Street.
District offices—Harold Dotterer, 6505 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Editorial division.—Griffith Evans, 67 Observatory Circle.
Foreign service.— Walter L. Miller, 6500 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Commodity divisions and chiefs:
Agricultural implements —George B. Bell, 5720 Chevy Chase Parkway.
Automotive.—A. W. Childs, 5130 Connecticut Avenue.
Aeronautics trade.—Leighton W. Rogers, The Racquet Club.
Chemical.—Charles C. Concannon, 1200 Sixteenth Street.
Electrical equipment.—M. T. Jones, 3520 Thirtieth Street.
Foodstuffs—Edward G. Montgomery, 24 West Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Hides and leather.— Wilbur J. Page, 1612 Twentieth Street.
Iron and steel.—Luther Becker, 6306 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Lumber. —Leighton H. Peebles, 6407 Florida Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Machinery.— Walter H. Rastall, 5357 Reno Road.
Minerals.—James W. Furness, 2301 Connecticut Avenue.
Motion pictures.—Clarence J. North, 3348 Tennyson Street, Chevy Chase.
Paper.—John Matthews, jr., 4620 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.
Rubber.— Everett G. Holt, 2308 North Capitol Street.
Shoe and leather manufactures—Arthur B. Butman, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
Specialties—Eric T. King, 1611 Forty-fourth Street.
Tobacco.— Benjamin D. Hill, 1921 Kalorama Road.
Textiles.—Edward T. Pickard, 3029 OQ Street.
Technical divisions and chiefs:
Commercial intelligence— Arthur S. Hillyer, 3409 Fessenden Street.
Commercial laws.—C. J. Junkin, 4421 Watkins Avenue, Bethesda, Md.
Des piestts regional.—Edward F. Gerish, 4607 Stanford Street, Chevy Chase,
Ad.
Finance and investment.—Grosvenor M. Jones, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
COMMERCE Executive Departments 331
Technical divisions and chiefs—continued.
Horii construction.— Maurice H. Bletz, 6510 Summit Avenue, Chevy Chase,
d
Foreign tariffs.—Henry Chalmers, 5335 Forty-third Street.
Marketing service.—Edward B. George, 1420 Thirty-fifth Street.
Merchandising research.—Howard C. Dunn, 5428 Nebraska Avenue.
Regional information.—Louis Domeratzky, McLean, Va.
Economic research.—J. Frederic Dewhurst, 6408 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy
Chase, Md.
Statistics.—John Hohn, 1400 Twenty-eighth Street SE.
Transportation and communication.—A. Lane Cricher, 106 Summit Street,
Cherrydale, Va. BUREAU OF STANDARDS
(Connecticut Avenue and Upton Street. Phone, CLeveland 1720)
Acting Director.—Lyman J. Briggs, 3208 Newark Street.
Assistant director (commercial standardization). —A. S. McAllister, 3409 Thirty-
fourth Place.
Assistant to director (in charge of office).—Henry D. Hubbard, 112 Quincy Street,
Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief of division of:
Weights and measures.—H. W. Bearce, 6308 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase,
Md.; F. S. Holbrook, Kirk Street and Magnolia Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md.
Electricity.—E. C. Crittenden, 1715 Lanier Place.
Heat and power.—H. C. Dickinson, 4629 Thirtieth Street.
Optics.—C. A. Skinner, Kensington, Md.
Chemastry.—E. W. Washburn, 4417 Lowell Street.
Mechanics and sound.—L. J. Briggs, 3208 Newark Street.
Organic and fibrous materials.—W. E. Emley, 3604 Fulton Street.
Metallurgy.—H. S. Rawdon, 5103 Thirteenth Street.
Clay and silicate products.—P. H. Bates, 3835 Livingston Street, Chevy Chase.
Simplified practice.—E. W. Ely, 2426 Nineteenth Street.
Building and housing.—J. S. Taylor, Wilson Lane, Route 6, Bethesda, Md.
Spectfications.—A. S. McAllister, 3409 Thirty-fourth Place.
Trade standards.—I1. J. Fairchild, 3707 Thirty-fourth Street.
Plant.—0O. L. Britt, 6209 Thirtieth Street, Chevy Chase.
Shops.—0O. G. Lange, 3702 Livingston Street, Chevy Chase.
Liaison with Federal Specifications Board.—Norman F. Harriman, Kenesaw
Apartments, Sixteenth and Irving Streets.
BUREAU OF FISHERIES
Commissioner.— Frank T. Bell, The Benedict, 1808 I Street. :
Demy commassioner.—Charles HE. Jackson, 4615 Morgan Drive, Chevy Chase,
d
Adminstrative assistant.—Albert XK. Brown, 422 Raymond Street, Chevy Chase,
d.
BUREAU OF LIGHTHOUSES
Commissioner.—George R. Putnam, 2126 Bancroft Place.
Deputy commassioner.—Harold D. King, 2609 Chelsea Terrace, Baltimore, Md.
Chief constructing engineer.—H. B. Bowerman, 15 West Twenty-ninth Street,
Baltimore, Md.
Superintendent of naval construction—Edward C. Gillette, 1706 Surrey Lane,
Foxhall Village.
Chief engineer, arrways division.—F. C. Hingsburg, 5118 Chevy Chase Parkway.
Admanastrative assistant.— Walter P. Harman, 16 Poplar Avenue, Takoma Park,
Chief clerk.—Charles J. Ludwig, jr., 819 Jefferson Street.
COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY
Director—R. S. Patton, 3920 McKinley Street, Chevy Chase.
Assistant director—J. H. Hawley, 3710 Jenifer Street.
Chief clerk.—C. H. Dieck, 801 Crittenden Street.
Secretary to the director.—Peter Dulac, 3408 Twentieth Street NE.
Chief of division of:
Geodesy.— William Bowie, 1733 Church Street.
Hydrography and topography.—Gilbert T. Rude, The Kennedy-Warren.
Charts.—E. H. Pagenhart, 3423 Porter Street.
Tides and currents.—Paul C, Whitney, 2935 Twenty-eighth Street.
332 Congressional Darectory COMMERCE
Chief of division of—continued.
Terrestrial magnetism and seismology.—N. H. Heck, 3421 Northampton Street.
Accounts.—J. M. Griffin, 1340 Gallatin Street.
Instruments—D. L. Parkhurst, 4602 Norwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.’
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION AND STEAMBOAT INSPECTION
Assistant director (Navigation). — Arthur J. Tyrer, The Montello, 1901 Columbia
Road. :
Assistant director (Steamboat Inspection) .— Dickerson N. Hoover, Glenn Dale, Md.
Technical load line advisor.—Laurens Prior, 4415 Volta Place.
Admanistrative assistant.—A. E. Keyser, Seat Pleasant, Md.
PATENT OFFICE
Commissioner.— Thomas ¥. Robertson, 6 West Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Furst assistant commissioner. — William A. Kinnan, 3905 Huntington Street,
Chevy Chase.
Assistant commassioners.— Millard J. Moore, 111 Tennessee Avenue NE.; Fred
M. Hopkins, 3805 Gramercy Street.
Chief clerk.—James A. Brearley, 325 Second Street SE.
Assistant chief clerk.—Albert W. Kaiser, 10 Ninth Street SE.
Examiners in chief.— William L. Thurber, 3617 Quesada Street; W. S. Ruckman,
304 West Thornapple Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; E. Landers, 1328 A Street
SE.; Walter L. Redrow, 3533 Thirteenth Street; Paul P. Pierce, 33 Hickory
Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.; Frank P. Edinburg, 220 Maryland Avenue
NE.; Elonzo T. Morgan, 2817 Bellevue Terrace; James W. Clift, 4116
Harrison Street.
Solicitor.—T. A. Hostetler, 173 Surrey Lane, Foxhall Village.
Law examiners—Robert F. Whitehead, 1524 Twenty-eighth Street; George P.
Rugieh 802 Massachusetts Avenue NE.; Howard S. Miller, 1301 Fifteenth
treet.
Supervisors.—Harry C. Armstrong, 27 Prospect Street, Kensington, Md.;
Clinton L. Wolcott, 19 West Kirk Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; James H.
Lightfoot, 115 Chestnut Street, Takoma Park, Md.
Examiners of interferences.—H. I. Houston, 227 Park Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.;
J. H. Carnes, 1657 Thirty-first Street; I. P. Disney, 1945 Calvert Street,
Apartment 22; Harold H. Jacobs, 4100 Cathedral Avenue.
Classification examiner. —Charles H. Pierce, 1612 Forty-fourth Street.
BUREAU OF MINES
Director—Scott Turner, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
Assistant to the director.—Joseph H. Hedges, 3820 Van Ness Street.
TECHNOLOGIC BRANCH
Chief of branch and chief engineer, mechanical diviston.—Ozni P. Hood, 1831
Irving Street.
Cr, engineer, experiment stations division.—Arno C. Fieldner, 4739 Thirteenth
treet.
Chief engineer, explosives division.—Charles E. Munroe, Forest Glen, Md.
Chief engineer, helium division.—Roscoe A. Cattell, 7717 Fourteenth Street.
Chief engineer, metallurgical diviston.—Reginald S. Dean, 6000 Thirty-fourth
Place.
Chief engineer, mining division.—Charles W. Wright, 109 Brookside Drive, Ken-
wood, Chevy Chase, Md.
Acting chief engineer, petroleum and natural gas division.—Harry C. Fowler, 4943
Butterworth Place.
ECONOMICS BRANCH
Chief of branch and head, coal division.—Charles P. White, Wardman Park Hotel,
Chief economist, mineral statistics diviston.—Oscar E. Kiessling, Falls Church.
Va., Route No. 1.
Chief engineer, common metals division.—Carl E. Julihn, 2820 Thirty-ninth Street.
Chief engineer, rare metals and nonmetals division.—Paul M. Tyler, 1817 Thirty-
seventh Street.
Cet, economist, petroleum economics division.— Edward B. Swanson, 1225 Q
treet.
IHRE
LABOR Executive Departments 333
HEALTH AND SAFETY BRANCH
Chief of branch and chief engineer, safety division.—Daniel Harrington, 3153
Nineteenth Street.
Chief surgeon, health division.—Dr. Albert E. Russell, 3610 O Street.
Chief statistician, demographical division.— William W. Adams, 1103 Clifton
Street.
ADMINISTRATIVE BRANCH
Chief of branch.—Joseph H. Hedges, 3820 Van Ness Street.
Chzef engineer, information division.—John A. Davis, 1616 Sixteenth Street.
Chief clerk.—John D. Secrest, 108 Spa Street, Cottage City, Brentwood, Md.
OFFICE OF CHIEF MINING ENGINEER
Engineer.—George S. Rice, Route 1, Alexandria, Va.
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
(Department of Labor Building, 1712 G Street. Phone, NAtional 8472)
FRANCES PERKINS, of New York, Secretary of Labor (1712 G Street);
sociologist; born in Boston, Mass.; A. B., Mount Holyoke College; studied
at University of Pennsylvania; A. M., Columbia University, 1910; married
Paul Wilson and they have one daughter; executive secretary Consumers’
League, New York, 1910-1912; lecturer in sociology, Adelphi College, 1911;
executive secretary Committee on Safety, New York, 1912-1917; director of
investigations, New York State Factory Commission, 1912-13; executive direc-
tor New York Council of Organization for War Service, 1917-1919; commissioner
New York State Industrial Commission, 1919-1921; director Council on Immi-
grant Education, 1921-1923; member State Industrial Board, New York, 1923
(chairman, 1926-1929); commissioner New York State Industrial Commission
since 1929; director American Child Hygiene Association, Consumers’ League of
New York, Child Labor Committee, Maternity Center Association; member
National Fire Protection Association Committee on Safety to Life, National
Safety Council, Division of Industrial Hygiene of American Public Health Asso-
ciation, Academy of Political Science, American Economic Association. Clubs:
Cosmopolitan, Woman’s City (vice president); author of Life Hazards from Fire
in New York Factories (1912), The Problem of Mercantile Fire Hazards (1914),
A Plan for Maternity Care (1918), Women as Employers (1919), A Social Ex-
periment under the Workmen’s Compensation Jurisdiction (1921). Appointed
Secretary of Labor, March 4, 1933.
Private secretary to the Secretary of Labor.—Frances Jurkowitz, 1712 G Street.
Office of the Assistant Secretary:
The Assistant Secretary.—Robe Carl White, 542 Mapleridge Road, Battery
Park, Bethesda, Md.
Private secretary to the Assistant Secretary.— Anna V. Moynihan, The Concord.
Office of the Second Assistant Secretary:
Second Assistant Secretary.—W. W. Husband, 3456 Macomb Street.
Private secretary to the Second Assistant Secretary.—Henry F. Black, Potomac
Park Apartments.
Assistant to the Secretary.— Turner W. Battle, Burlington Hotel.
Office of the Solicitor:
Solicitor—Charles E. Wyzanski, jr., 1200 Sixteenth Street.
Assistant Solicitor.— Albert E. Reitzel, University Club.
Office of the chief clerk:
Chief clerk.—Samuel J. Gompers, 2517 North Capitol Street.
Disbursing clerk.—John R. Demorest, 1717 R Street.
Appointment clerk.—Robert C. Starr, Clarendon, Va.
Librarian.—Laura A, Thompson, The Ontario.
334 Congressional Directory LABOR
UNITED STATES CONCILIATION SERVICE
Director of conciliation. Hugh L. Kerwin, 632 A Street SE.
Executive clerk.—E. J. Cunningham, 3808 Windom Place.
BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
(1712 G Street)
Commissioner of Labor Statistics.— .
Assistant commassioner—Charles E. Baldwin, 1359 Oak Street.
Chief statistician.—J. Chester Bowen, 6 West Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief editor—Hugh S. Hanna, 2562 University Place.
BUREAU OF IMMIGRATION
(1712 G Street)
Commissioner General of Immigration.—Daniel W. MacCormack, The Carlton:
Assistant Commissioner General of Immaigration.—Edward J. Shaughnessy, The
Broadmoor.
Chief supervisor.—Irving F. Wixon, 1712 G. Street.
CHILDREN’S BUREAU
(Seventeenth and F Streets)
Chief —Grace Abbott, 528 Seventeenth Street.
Assistant chief.—Katharine F. Lenroot, The Woodward.
Directors of divisions:
Child and maternal health.—Dr. Martha M. Eliot.
Social service.—Agnes K. Hanna, The Riverside.
Delinquency.— Alida C. Bowler, 2011 I Street.
Statistical. —Dr. Elizabeth C. Tandy, 1241 Thirtieth Street.
Social statistics.—Dr. Emma A. Winslow, 1255 New Hampshire Avenue.
Industrial.—Clara M. Beyer, Spring Hill, McLean, Va.
Editorial.—Isabelle Mott Hopkins, 6701 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.
BUREAU OF NATURALIZATION
(1712 G Street)
Commissioner of Naturalization.— Raymond F. Crist, 3025 Newark Street.
Deputy Commissioner of Naturalizatton.— Thomas B. Shoemaker, 2924 Newark
Street.
WOMEN’S BUREAU
(1723 F Street)
Director.—Mary Anderson, The Broadmoor, 3601 Connecticut Avenue.
Assistant director.—Agnes L. Peterson, The Kennedy-Warren, 3133 Connecticut
Avenue.
UNITED STATES EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
(1724 F Street)
Acting supervising director.—Mary LaDame, The Carlton.
UNITED STATES HOUSING CORPORATION
(1724 F Street)
President—Charles E. Wyzanski, jr., 1200 Sixteenth Street.
Vice president and secretary.— Thomas W. O’Brien, 1845 Calvert Street.
INDEPENDENT OFFICES AND
ESTABLISHMENTS
335
INDEPENDENT OFFICES AND ESTABLISHMENTS
CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
(Offices, Seventh and F Streets. Phones, NAtional 0072 and 0075)
. Commissioners.—President, Harry B. Mitchell, U. S. Civil Service Commission.
George R. Wales, 3609 Norton Place.
Mrs. Lucille Foster McMillin, Carlton Hotel, 923 Sixteenth Street.
Chief examiner—H. A. Edson, 3822 Fourth Street.
Assistant chief examiner.—Kenneth C. Vipond, 3332 Seventeenth Street.
Secretary and budget officer.—E. Claude Babcock, 3301 Military Road.
Assistant secretary.— William C. Hull, East Falls Church, Va.
Personnel clerk.—Helen Miner, All States Hotel, 514 Nineteenth Street.
Director of scientific research in personnel and administration. —L. J. oO’ Rourke,
3506 Patterson Street, Chevy Chase.’
Medical officer. —Dr. Arthur R. Butler, Newington, Fairfax County, Va.
Chief of examining divistion.—James G. Yaden, 4119 Illinois Avenue.
Assistant chief —Frederick W. Brown, Kensington, Md.
Chief of clerical examining section.—Laura L. Tracy, Pelham Courts, 2115 P
Street.
Chief of certification section.—B. A. Brande, 121 Third Street NE.
Chief of application section. —James B. Baugh, jr., 73 Wine Avenue, Hyatts-
ville, Md.
Chief of service record and retirement division. —Lewis H. Fisher, 1223 Girard
Street NE.
Assistant chief.—Vivian Carlson, The Westchester, 4000 Cathedral Avenue.
Retirement specialist.—Calvin W. Bartlett, 436 M Street.
Chief of correspondence division.— William L. Quaid, 1430 V Street SE.
Chief of mail and files section.—June K. Lawson, 2219 Perry Street NE.
Chief of correspondence section.—Mrs. Flora P. Halsted, 16 Hunter Avenue,
Clarendon, Va.
Chef of personnel classification division.—Ismar Baruch, 3708 Brandywine Street.
Assistant chief.—Joseph L. Spilman, 918 Kennedy Street.
Chief of investigations diviston.—Harry T. Kranz, The Westchester, 4000 Cathedral
Avenue.
Assistant chief. —Henry T. Richards, 161 Kentucky Avenue SE.
Head investigator.— Henry A. Hesse, 510 A Street SE.
Chief of accounts and maintenance diviston.—Henry G. Porter, 1504 Crittenden
Street.
Assistant chief—Ray L. Woodward, Aurora Hills, Va.
Board of appeals and review.—M. J. McAuliffe, chairman, 1333 Shepherd Street.
John F. Edwards, 4302 Thirteenth Street NE.
S. G. Hopkins, 600 Twentieth Street.
Chief of editing and recruiting division.— Dr. Thomas A. Griffin, 2434 Twentieth
Street.
Editor and director of recruiting.—Herbert E. Morgan, 1312 Farragut Street.
Disbursing agent.—Elizabeth Downing, 2705 P Street.
Deputy disbursing agent.—Una H. Keck, Waverly Hills, Va.
157297°—73-1—1sT ED——23 337
338 5 Congressional Directory
UNITED STATES EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION
COMMISSION
(Old Land Office Building, Seventh and E Streets. Phone, NA tional 7177)
Commissioners:
Harry Bassett, 3611 Lowell Street.
John M. Morin, 1629 Columbia Road.
Secretary.— William McCauley, East Falls Church, Va.
Chief counsel.—Z. Lewis Dalby, 1615 Longfellow Street.
Medical director.— Edward C. Ernst, 216 Willow Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Chief, claims division.— William R. Carpenter, 1822 Kenyon Street.
Chief, disbursing office.—Bessie O. Reed, All States Hotel. !
Deputy commissioner, District of Columbia workmen’s compensation act.—R. J.
Hoage, Lovell Crest, Foxhall Road. : hi
GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE
(General Accounting Office Building, Fifth and F Streets. Phone, DIstrict 8465)
Comptroller General of the United States—J. R. McCarl, The Shoreham.
Special assistant to the Compiroller General. —F. R. Montgomery, 5521 Chevy
Chase Parkway.
Secretary to the Compiroller General.—Dorothy B. Perkins, Tilden Gardens.
Assistant to the Compiroller General (executive officer).—J. L.. Baity, The Shoreham.
Assistant Comptroller General of the United Siates.—Richard N. Elliott, 110
Maryland Avenue NE.
Secretary to the Assistant Comptroller General.—Lillabelle Gebert, 305 New Jersey
Avenue SE. ; :
General counsel.—Rudolph L. Golze, 1763 Park Road.
Assistants general counsel.—John C. McFarland, 6706 Meadow Lane, Chevy
Chase, Md.; George A. Ninas, R. D., Gaithersburg, Md.
Counsels.—Charles M. Galloway, 2015 Belmont Road; O. R. McGuire, 224
Virginia Avenue, Clarendon, Va.
Chief of wnvestigations.—S. B. Tulloss, Vienna, Va.
Assistant chief of tnvestigations.—H. A. Harding, R. D. 3, Rockville, Md.
Attorneys-conferees.—J. B. Woodside, Tilden Gardens; F. L. Yates, Tilden
Gardens.
Chief clerk.—Reed F. Martin, 6818 Ninth Street.
Chief of personnel.—Earl Taggart, 4519 Jowa Avenue.
Disbursing clerk —Carl Collier, 1415 Hamilton Street.
Chiefs and assistant chiefs of division:
Claims. —Chief, David Neumann, 6 Woodbine Street, Chevy Chase, Md.;
principal assistant chief, W. S. Dewhirst, 3906 Morrison Street.
Audit.—Chief, C. T. M. Cutcheon, 3515 Ingomar Street; assistant chief,
E. W. Bell, 1450 Irving Street.
Post Office Department.—Chief, Charles H. Cooper, 954 Rock Spring Road,
Clarendon, Va.; assistant chief, R. S. Tower, 1673 Columbia Road.
Bookkeeping.—Chief, Frank H. Bogardus, 2237 Hall Place; assistant chief,
Charles C. Geduldig, 531 Shepherd Street.
Records.—Chief, W. W. Richardson, 3600 Twentieth Street NE.; assistant
chief, Pascal D. Fallon, 401 Webster Street.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
(Interstate Commerce Commission Building, Eighteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone,
NA tional 7460) :
Commiassioners: Patrick J. Farrell, chairman, 1436 Clifton Street.
Balthasar H. Meyer, 3327 P Street.
Clyde B. Aitchison, 1929 S Street.
Joseph B. Eastman, 2266 Cathedral Avenue.
Frank McManamy, 3825 Huntington Street.
Ezra Brainerd, jr., 2234 California Street.
Claude R. Porter, 2101.Connecticut Avenue.
William E. Lee, 5622 Moorland Lane, Edgemoor, Bethesda, Md.
Hugh M. Tate, 3221 Macomb Street.
Charles D. Mahaffie, 3012 O Street.
Independent Offices and Establishments 339
Secretary.— George B. McGinty, 3030 Forty-fourth Street.
Assistant secretary.—T. A. Gillis, 4014 Twelfth Street NE.
Assistant to the secretary.—James L.. Murphy, 1716 Lanier Place.
Chief clerk and personnel officer.—John B. Switzer, 619 Whittier Street.
Disbursing clerk.—Guy L. Seaman, 207 Baltimore Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Purchasing agent.—A. H. Laird, jr., 56521 Colorado Avenue.
Librarian.— Leroy S. Boyd, Arlington P. O., Va.
Director of accounts.—Alexander Wylie, 5806 Cedar Parkway, Chevy Chase, Md.
Director of finance.—Oliver E. Sweet, 7619 Thirteenth Street.
Chief examiner.— Ulysses Butler, 1419 Longfellow Street.
Chief, bureau of informal cases.—Arja Morgan, 425 Manor Place.
Director, bureau of inquiry.— William H. Bonneville, 3110 Oliver Street.
Chief counsel.—Daniel W. Knowlton, 1829 Phelps Place.
Chief, bureau of locomotive inspection.—Alonzo G. Pack, Continental Hotel.
Director, bureau of safety.— Wilfred P. Borland, 1807 Irving Street.
Director of service—William P. Bartel, 3407 Fessenden Street
Director of statistics.—Max O. Lorenz, 3510 Porter Street.
Director of traffic—W. V. Hardie, Apartment 205, 2001 Sixteenth Street.
Director of valuation.—E, I, Lewis, 3099 Q Street.
UNITED STATES RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION
(Hurley- Wright Building. Phone, NA tional 7940)
Director general. —William H. Woodin, Carlton Hotel.
Assistant director general.—Wallace B. Robinson, 3632 Warder Street.
Comptroller.—0O. Thacker, The Monmouth.
Treasurer.—R. C. Dunlap, 829 Quincy Street.
FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD
(Treasury Building. Phone, NAtional 6400)
Chairman.— William H. Woodin, Secretary of the Treasury (ex officio member),
The Carlton Hotel.
J. F. T. O’Connor, Comptroller of the Currency (ex officio member), The
Shoreham Hotel. (Private secretary, C. A. Poole, The Roosevelt Hotel.)
Governor.—Eugene R. Black, The Washington Hotel.
Adolph C. Miller, 2230 S Street. (Private secretary, L. G. Ficks, 707 Mount
Vernon Place.)
Charles S. Hamlin, The Hay-Adams House. (Private secretary, Margaret L.
Nagle, 1742 Wisconsin Avenue.)
George R. James, The Westchester. (Private secretary, C. S. Bradley,
Wakefield Hall.)
Assistant to the governor.—E. M. McClelland, Norbeck, Md.
Secretary.— Chester Morrill, 3908 Ingomar Street.
Assistant secretary and fiscal agent.—J. C. Noell, The Westchester.
Assistant secretary.—S. R. Carpenter, 2121 New York Avenue.
General counsel.—Walter Wyatt, 1702 Kalmia Road.
Assistant counsel.—George B. Vest, 3015 Albemarle Street.
Chief, division of examinations.—Leo H. Paulger, 2836 Chesapeake Street.
Federal reserve examiner.— Frank J. Drinnen, room 353, Treasury Building.
Director, division of research and statistics.—E. A. Goldenweiser, 218 Elm Street,
Chevy Chase, Md.
Assistant director.—Carl E. Parry, 3701 Massachusetts Avenue.
Chief, division of bank operations.—E. L. Smead, 216 Elm Street, Chevy Chase,
Md
Assistant chief.—J. R. Van Fossen, 2711 Wisconsin Avenue.
Chief, division of Federal reserve issue and redemption.—L. G. Copeland, 6112
hird Street.
Assistant chief —William J, Tucker, 2622 Thirteenth Street.
340 Congressional Directory
WAR FINANCE CORPORATION
(IN LIQUIDATION)
(1825 H Street. Phone, NAtional 6400)
Ww. i Woodin, Secretary of the Treasury (in charge of liquidation), Carlton
otel.
Lagquadating commattee:
Chazrmaon.—[Vacant.]
Member.—John H. Guill, 227 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
General counsel.—James L.. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street.
Secretary and treasurer—W. T. McKeown, 1813 Potomac Avenue SE.
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
(2001 Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 7720)
COMMISSIONERS
Chairman.—Charles H. March, The Shoreham Hotel.
Garland S. Ferguson, jr., 1624 Eighteenth Street.
William E. Humphrey, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
Ewin Lamar Davis, 100 Maryland Avenue NE.
Secretary.—Otis B. Johnson, 3902 Northampton Street.
LEGAL DIVISION
Chief counsel.—Robert E. Healy, 3031 Sedgwick Street.
Assistant chief counsels—Martin A. Morrison, 3017 Thirteenth Street; William
T. Kelley, 4000 Cathedral Avenue.
Chief examiner.—Ishmael Burton, 1313 Lawrence Street NE.
Assistant chief examiner.—James A. Horton, 2900 Connecticut Avenue.
Chief trial examiner—Web Woodfill, 1901 Columbia Road.
Assistant chief trial examiner.—F. C. Baggarly, 2915 Connecticut Avenue.
Chairman, board of review.—Robert N. McMillen, 208 Connecticut Avenue, Ken-
sington,
Acting director, trade practice conferences.—George McCorkle, 1700 T Street.
Chairman, special board of investigation.—E. J. Adams, 4707 Connecticut Avenue.
Chief export trade section.— Ellen L. Love, 3748 McKinley Street.
ECONOMIC DIVISION
Chaef economist.—Francis Walker, 2351 Ashmead Place.
Assistant chief economists.—W. H. S. Stevens, 3900 Cathedral Avenue; William
H. England, 1344 Iris Street.
Chief accountant.—LeClair Hoover, 1700 T Street.
Chief statistician.— George P. Watkins, 2034 O Street.
ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION
Assistant secretary.—C. G. Duganne, 1801 Calvert Street.
Accounts and personnel, chief.—Andrew N. Ross, 5315 Seventh Street.
Dishing clerk.—Rudolph B. Schwickardi, 6315 Florida Street, Chevy Chase,
d
Docket, chief. —J. W. Karsner, 5232 Seventh Street.
Editorial service. —Shirley D. Mayers, 3513 S Street.
Librarian.—Howard R. Pim, 2633 Sixteenth Street.
Mail and files, chief. —William Ho. Galbraith, 3408 Tenth Street NE.
Publications, chief.—Harold B. Stamm, 1708 Webster Street.
Stenographic, chief.—Joseph E. Haugh, 60 Shepherd Street, Hyattsville, Md.
Supplies, chief—Sam F. Shrout, 125 Boliver Street, Clarendon, Va.
UNITED STATES TARIFF COMMISSION
(Old Land Office Building. Phone, NAtional 3947)
Chairman.—Robert L. O’Brien, of Massachusetts, The Willard Hotel.
Vice chairman.—Thomas Walker Page, of Virginia, The Shoreham Hotd,
Commissioners:
Edgar B. Brossard, of Utah, The Westchester.
John Lee Coulter, of North Dakota, The Alban Towers.
Ira M. Ornburn, of Connecticut, The Arlington Hotel.
James W, Collier, of Mississippi, The George Washington Inn,
Independent Offices and Establishments 341
Secretary.—Sidney Morgan, 2118 O Street.
Chief economist.—E. Dana Durand, 3613 Norton Place.
Chief investigator —George P. Comer, 53 Columbia Avenue, Hyattsville, Md.
Executive assistant to the chairman.—Eben M. Whitcomb, 4 Toll House Road.
Silver Spring, Md.
Secretary to the chairman.—Adele R. Thode, 7210 Radnor Road, Bethesda, Md.
Chiefs of division:
Economics.—A. M. Fox, 1423 Thirty-third Street.
International relations—Benjamin B. Wallace, 3112 South Dakota Avenue NE.
Legal.—Charles E. McNabb, 3215 McKinley Street.
Accounting.—Harry H. Newton, 13 Cedar Street, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va.
Agricultural —0. A. Juve, 3001 McKinley Street.
Ceramics.— Frederick L. Koch, 1514 Seventeenth Street.
Chemical.—Dexter North, The Westchester.
Lumber and paper —Franklin H. Smith, 1602 A Street NE.
Metals.—F. Morton Leonard, 3016 Tilden Street.
Sugar.—C. O. Townsend, 208 Massachusetts Avenue NE.
Sundries.—C. F. Yauch, Clifton Terrace, South.
Textile—W. A. Graham Clark, 3712 Morrison Street.
Transportation.—George H. Parater, 519 C Street NE.
Statistical —Stella, Stewart, 9004 Colesville Pike, Silver Spring, Md.
Administrative officer—L. W. Moore, 3219 Morrison Street.
Docket clerk.—Edna V. Connolly, 1430 Belmont Street.
Chief, finance section.—Franklin C. Getzendanner, Rockville, Md.
Chief, personnel division.—Grace Van Casteel, 2210 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Editor—Martha W. Williams, 2401 Calvert Street.
Librarian.—Cornelia Notz, 7000 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Ogee, an charge of New York office.—H. H. Waters, 712 Customhouse, New York
ity.
Representative in Europe~John F, Bethune, 15 Rue de Spa, Brussels, Belgium.
UNITED STATES BOARD OF TAX APPEALS
(Office, Constitution Avenue at Twelfth Street. Phones, NAtional 5771 to 5775)
Chairman.—Logan Morris, 3601 Van Ness Street.
Members.— William C. Lansdon, The Wardman Park:
John J. Marquette, The Benedick.
Charles P. Smith, 3817 Kanawha Street:
John M. Sternhagen, 3328 O Street.
Charles M. Trammell, 3915 Oliver Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
C. Rogers Arundell, 3733 Kanawha Street.
Ernest H. Van Fossan, The Wardman Park.
J. Edgar Murdock, 26 East Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.
Stephen J. McMahon, The Westchester.
Eugene Black, 1312 Irving Street.
Herbert F. Seawell, Raleigh Hotel.
Annabel Matthews, The Wardman Park.
Edgar J. Goodrich, 31 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase, Md:
J. Russell Leech, 3506 Macomb Street:
Jed C. Adams, Carlton Hotel.
Secretary.—Robert C. Tracy, Alexandria, Va:
Clerk.—Bertus D. Gamble, Garrett Park, Md:
Reporter—Mabel M. Owen, 1435 N Street.
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
(1300 E Street. Phone, MEtropolitan 3687)
Governor.—Henry Morgenthau, jr., 1300 E Street.
Deputy governor.—W. I. Myers, 1300 E Street.
Deputy governor.—Herbert E. Gaston, 1300 E Street.
General counsel.—Herman Oliphant, 1300 E Street.
Land bank commaissioner.—Paul Bestor, 1300 E Street.
Cooperative bank commissioner.— Francis W. Peck, 1300 E Street.
Production credit commissioner.—A. S. Goss, 1300 E Street.
Emergency credit commissioner.—George M. Brennan, 1300 E Street.
LL
342 Congressional Durectory
FEDERAL EMERGENCY RELIEF ADMINISTRATION
(Hurley Wright Building, 1800 Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 3606)
Admianistrator.—Harry L. Hopkins, The Mayflower.
Assistant adminisirator.— Langdon W. Post, 1516 Thirty-first Street.
TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY
Board of directors:
Arthur E. Morgan, of Ohio (term of 9 years from May 18, 1933).
[Other directors not appointed at this date.]
FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 350)
Commissioners:
- Chairman.— George Otis Smith, 2137 Bancroft Place.
Vice chairman.—Frank R. McNinch, 408 Fairfax Road, Bethesda, Md.
Claude L. Draper, Westchester Apartments.
[Vacant, 2.]
General counsel.—Oswald Ryan, 1813 Monroe Street.
Chief engineer.—Roger B. McWhorter, 3624 Davis Street.
Solicitor—H. B. Teegarden, East Florence Court, 2153 California Street.
Chief accountant.—William V. King, 530 Dittmar Road, Cherrydale, Va. °
Secretary.—Joseph R. McCuen, 3426 Porter Street.
Administrative assistant.—Earl F, Sechrest, 820 Marietta Place.
FEDERAL OIL CONSERVATION BOARD
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880)
The Secretary of the Interior, chairman.
The Secretary of War.
The Secretary of the Navy.
The Secretary of Commerce.
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
Chairman.—[Vacant.]
Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown, War Department.
Commander Thomas Moran, Navy Department.
Scott Turner, Bureau of Mines, Department of Commerce.
Ralph W. Richards, Geological Survey.
FEDERAL RADIO COMMISSION
(Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880)
Chairman.— Eugene O. Sykes, 7011 Hampden Lane, Bethesda, Md.
Commissioners:
Harold A. Lafount, 3009 Thirty-second Street.
William D. L. Starbuck, 1204 Sixteenth Street.
Thad H. Brown, Wardman Park Hotel.
James H. Hanley, La Salle Apartments.
Secretary.— Herbert L. Pettey, 3000 Tilden Street.
Assistant secretary.—John B. Reynolds, 5436 Thirty-second Street.
Acting general counsel.—George B. Porter, 3000 Tilden Street.
Chief engineer—Charles B. Jolliffe, 6315 Beechwood Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief examiner.—Ellis A. Yost, The Keystone.
Head, license division.— William P. Massing, 5258 Fifth Street.
Chief, division of field operations.— William D. Terrell, 909 Barton Avenue,
Cherrydale, Va. !
Independent Offices and Establishments 343
EMERGENCY CONSERVATION WORK
(Interior Building. Phone, NAtional 1880)
Director—Robert Fechner, Burlington Hotel.
Assistant directors:
James J. McEntee, Burlington Hotel.
Charles H. Taylor, 423 Irving Street.
W. Frank Persons, 3051 N Street.
Personal assistant to the director—Guy D. McKinney, 2808 Twenty-second Street.
Secretary to the director—Clara B. Holbrook, 317 Fourteenth Street NE.
Chief clerk.—Addie A, Hughes, 1828 Park Road.
VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION
(Arlington Building)
slau piniain of Veterans’ Affairs.—Brig. Gen. Frank T. Hines, 4100 Cathedral
venue.
Assistant Admanzstrator, medical and domiciliary care, construction, and supplies.—
George E. Ijams, 3201 Carlisle Avenue, Baltimore, Md.
Assistant Admanistrator, pensions and compensation.—Omer W. Clark, 3357
Stuyvesant Place.
Assistant Administrator, finance and insurance—Harold W. Breining, 1616
Sixteenth Street.
Executive assistant to the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs.—Adelbert D. Hiller,
1520 Forty-fourth Street.
The solicitor.—J. O’Connor Roberts, 3113 Forty-fourth Street.
Asszstant solicitor—James T. Brady, 4210 Thirty-eighth Street.
Medical director.—Charles M. Griffith, M. D., 1732 Irving Street.
Director of National Homes.—C. W. Wadsworth, The Kennedy-Warren, 3133
Connecticut Avenue.
Director of construction.— Louis H. Tripp, 3721 Fulton Street. ;
Director of supplies.—John D. Cutter, The Presidential, 1026 Sixteenth Street.
Director of pensions.—Edward W. Morgan, 622 Randolph Street.
Director of compensation.—George E. Brown, 1631 Euclid Street.
Director of finance—Maurice Collins, 5618 Nevada Avenue.
Director of insurance—Horace L. McCoy, 24 East Woodbine Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
Buds? officer and chief of statistics—Samuel M. Moore, jr., 2716 Wisconsin
venue.
FEDERAL BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION
(1800 E Street. Phone, District 8388)
Chasrman.—[Vacancy.]
The Secretary of Agriculture, Henry A. Wallace, The Wardman Park.
The Secretary of Commerce, Daniel C. Roper, 3001 Woodland Drive.
The Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins, 1712 G Street.
The Commissioner of Education, Wm. John Cooper, 6504 Maple Avenue,
Chevy Chase, Md.
Vice chairman.—Edward T. Franks, representative of manufacturing and com-
mercial interests, The Laclede. :
Harry King, representative of agricultural interests, 5232 Forty-second
treet.
Perry W. Reeves, representative of labor, Alban Towers.
Director—J. C. Wright, 5624 Western Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.
Chief, agricultural education service—C. H. Lane, 3013 Central Avenue NE.
Chief, trade and industrial education service—Frank Cushman, 4217 Thirty-
eighth Street.
Chief, home economics education service.—Adelaide S. Baylor, The Windermere.
Chief, commercial education service—E. W. Barnhart, 2557 Thirty-sixth Street.
Chief, vocational rehabilitation service—John Aubel Kratz, 4302 Springdale
Avenue, Baltimore, Md.
Chief, research and statistical service.—John Cummings, 3029 Q Street.
I
—,
—_—_—_—_—_——_—_——_——_§"
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— rh I-AA} A) Ch} ERA AA d(C
344 Congressional Directory
Educational consultant.—Charles R. Allen, 2630 Garfield Street.
Editor.—Charles M. Arthur, 512 Warwick Place, Chevy Chase, Md.
Secretary and chief clerk. — John S. Shaw, 6563 G Street NE.
Disbursing officer.— Miss Marie E. Schutt, 124 Ballston Road, Cherrydale, Va.
Mail and files—Miss Margaret G. Shannon, 933 L Street.
Librarian.— Mrs. Helen E. Wheeler, The Marne.
UNITED STATES BOARD OF MEDIATION
(1800 E Street. Phone, NA tional 8460)
Members.—Samuel E. Winslow, chairman, Metropolitan Club.
Oscar B. Colquitt, The Willard.
Edwin P. Morrow, 3750 Kanawha Street.
John Williams, Lee House.
- Secretary.—George A. Cook, 1620 Fuller Street.
Assistant secretary.—Mitchel D. Lewis, 6040 Daniel Road.
Law officer, assistant to chairman, and executive clerk.—Robert B. Bennett, 713
Lee Highway, Cherrydale, Va.
Chitty division of adminisiration.—R. B. Bronson, 1 Prospect Street, Cherrydale,
a. ;
Chief, technical and statistical diviston.—Harrison H. Reed, 8403 Cedar Street,
Silver Spring, Md.
Assistant chief, technical and statistical division.— William F. Mitchell, jr., 2901
Connecticut Avenue.
edicion ~ Rober F. Cole, Ambassador Hotel; John W. Walsh, Ambassador
ote
UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD
(New Navy Building. Phone, NA tional 5200)
MEMBERS
H. I. Cone, 2325 Tracy Place; David W. Todd, Army and Navy Club; Gatewood
S. Lincoln, Army and Navy Club.
Chairman.—H. 1. Cone, 2325 Tracy Place.
Vice chairman.—David W. Todd, Army and Navy Club.
Secretary.—Samuel Goodacre, 2210 Cathedral Avenue.
Disbursing officer.—H. M. Wells, 2701 Connecticut Avenue.
General counsel.—Chauncey G. Parker, 25623 Massachusetts Avenue.
Chief clerk.—M. J, Pierce, 5008 Thirteenth Street.
UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD MERCHANT FLEET
CORPORATION
(New Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 5200)
TRUSTEES
Elmer E. Crowley, U. J. Gendron, T. C. Donovan, F. G. Frieser, Chauncey G.
Parker, L. D. Staver, H. M. Wells.
EXECUTIVE OFFICIALS
President.—Elmer E. Crowley, The Shoreham Hotel. |
Executive assistant to the president.—U. J. Gendron, 2800 Connecticut Avenue.
Secretary.—Samuel Goodacre, 2210 Cathedral Avenue.
Treasurer.—H. M. Wells, 2701 Connecticut Avenue.
General comptroller.—L. D. Staver, 1914 Thirty-seventh Street.
Manager, ship sales diviston.—J. W. O. Von Herbulis, 943 Shepherd Street.
Menger, terminals and real estate division.—W. J. McCarthy, 921 Nineteenth
treet.
Manager, operations diviston.—F. HK. Ferris, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
Manager, traffic diviszon.—F. G. Frieser, The Wardman Park.
Director of insurance.—Thomas C. Donovan, 55649 Thirtieth Street.
Independent Offices and Establishments 345
THE PANAMA CANAL
(Munitions Building, Constitution Avenue and Nineteenth Street. Phone, NA tional 4294)
General purchasing officer and chief of office.—A. L. Flint, Friendship Heights,
Chevy Chase Station, Washington, D. C.
Chief clerk, purchasing department—E. D. Anderson, 2901 Sixteenth Street.
Assistant to the chief of office.—E. BE. Weise, 1346 Jefferson Street.
Appointment clerk.—R. S. Erdman, 5525 Thirteenth Street.
ON THE ISTHMUS
Governor of the Panama Canal.—Lieut. Col. Julian L. Schley, United States Army,
Balboa Heights, Canal Zone.
Engineer of maintenance.—Lieut. Col. Clarence S. Ridley, United States Army,
Balboa Heights, Canal Zone.
THE JOINT BOARD
(Room 2743, Navy Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 2900, Branch 126)
The Chief of Staff, Army, Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Fort Myer, Va.
The Deputy Chief of Staff, Army, Maj. Gen. Hugh H. Drum, 2123 Leroy Place.
The Assistant Chief of Staff, War Plans Division, Army, Brig. Gen. Charles E.
Kilbourne, 2015 R Street.
The Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral W. V. Pratt, Naval Observatory.
The Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, Rear Admiral J. K. Taussig.
The Director, War Plans Division, Office of Naval Operations, Capt. S. W.
Bryant, 1742 R Street.
Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 100 Morgan Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va.
UNITED STATES COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE
(Room 2046, Munitions Building. Phone, NAtional 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. Alvin C. Voris, Signal Corps, United States Army.
- COMMISSION ON NAVY YARDS AND NAVAL STATIONS
(Room 2015, Navy Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 2900, Branch 282)
Commissioner —Rear Admiral Washington L. Capps (CC.), United States Navy
(retired).
THE AERONAUTICAL BOARD
(Room 3638, Navy Department Building. Phone, DIstrict 2900, Branch 230)
The Chief of Air Corps, Army, Maj. Gen. B. D. Foulois, 2101 Connecticut Avenue.
The Assistant to Chief of Air Corps, Army, Brig. Gen. Oscar Westover, Ken-
nedy-Warren Apartments, 3133 Connecticut Avenue.
Member of War Plans Division, General Staff, Army, Maj. M. J. Gunner, 2032
Belmont Road.
The Chief of Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Rear Admiral Ernest J. King, Frank-
lin Street, Annapolis Md.
The Chief of Planning Division, Bureau of Aeronautics, Navy, Commander
P. N. L. Bellinger.
Member of War Plans Division, Naval Operations, Navy, Capt. R. F. Dillen,
3407 O Street.
Secretary.—Jarvis Butler, 100 Morgan Place, Rosemont, Alexandria, Va,
oT ESTE |
346 - Congressional Directory
NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS
(Room 3841, Navy Building, Seventeenth Street and Constitution Avenue. Phone, NAtional 5212)
Chairman.—Dr. Joseph S. Ames, Charlecote Place, Guilford, Baltimore, Md.
Vice chairman.—Dr. David W. Taylor, 2108 Bancroft Place.
Chairman executive committee.—Dr. Joseph S. Ames, Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, Md.
Dr. Charles G. Abbot, Capt. Arthur B. Cook (United States Navy), Dr. William
F. Durand, Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois (United States Army), Harry F.
Guggenheim, Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, William P. MacCracken, ir, Dr.
Charles F. Marvin, Rear Admiral Ernest J. King (United States Navy).
Brig. Gen. Henry CG. Pratt (United States Army), Edward P. Warner, Dr.
Orville Wright, one vacancy (Bureau of Standards).
Director of aeronautical research.—George W. Lewis, 6502 Ridgewood Avenue,
Chevy Chase, Md.
Secretary.—John I. Victory, 5 Sherman Circle.
Assistant secretary.— Edward H, Chamberlin, Silver Spring, Md.
ALIEN PROPERTY CUSTODIAN
(Hurley- Wright Building, Eighteenth and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, NAtional 5785)
Alien Property Cusiodian.—Howard Sutherland, 1845 R Street.
Director of finance and accounts.—C. D. Bray, 5822 Nevada Avenue.
Claims and insurance.—Harmon O. Acuff, Seat Pleasant, Md.
Chief, legal department.—C. B. Jennings, 1763 Columbia Road.
Stocks and bonds.—George C. Thompson, 1867 Kalorama Road.
Secretary to the custodian.—Sophie D. Freeman, 4514 Connecticut Avenue.
Corll property commasstoner.— Dr. Joh. G. Lohmann, 501 Dorset Avenue, Chevy
hase, Md.
FOREIGN SERVICE BUILDINGS COMMISSION
Chairman.—Sam D. McReynolds, Representative from Tennessee.
Cordell Hull, Secretary of State.
William H. Woodin, Secretary of the Treasury.
Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce.
Key Pittman, Senator from Nevada.
William E. Borah, Senator from Idaho.
Hamilton Fish, jr., Representative from New York.
MIXED CLAIMS COMMISSION, UNITED STATES AND
GERMANY
(Investment Building, 1511 K Street, tenth floor. Phones: Umpire, DIstrict 4259; American commis-
sioner, DIstrict 4259 and DIstrict 8768; German commissioner, DIsirict 4500; American agent, DIstrict
8768; German agent, DIstrict 4500)
(Established in pursuance of the agreement of August 10, 1922, and extended for late claims under agree-
ment of December 31, 1928, between the United States and Germany)
Umpire.—Owen J. Roberts, 1401 Thirty-first Street.
American commisstoner.—Chandler P. Anderson, 1618 Twenty-first Street.
German commissioner.— Wilhelm Kiesselbach.
American agent.—Robert W. Bonynge, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
German agent.—Dr. Wilhelm Tannenberg, 6403 Meadow Lane, Chevy Chase, Md.
TRIPARTITE CLAIMS COMMISSION : |
(United States, Austria, and Hungary)
(Investment Building, 1511 K Street, tenth floor. Phones: American agent, DIstrict 8768; J Gokratuly
of Commission, DIstrict 8768)
(Established in pursuance vr the agreement signed November 26, 1924 (effective December 12, 29:
between the United States and Austria and Hungary; activities practically completed)
American cgent.—Robert W. Bonynge, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
Secretary of the commission.—Ephraim P. Bowyer, 416 Farragut Street.
Independent Offices and Establishments 347
THE INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION
(Old Patent Office Building. Phone, DIstrict 3764)
UNITED STATES SECTION
Chairman.—Hon. A. O. Stanley, Henderson, Ky.
Hon. John H. Bartlett, Portsmouth, N. H.
[Vacancy.]
Secretary.—Donald M. Ewing.
CANADIAN SECTION
Chairman.—Hon. Charles A. Magrath, Ottawa, Ontario. i
Sir William H. Hearst, K. C. M. G., Toronto, Ontario. \
Hon. George W. Kyte, K. C., St. Peters, Nova Scotia. :
Secretary.—Lawrence J. Burpee, Ottawa, Ontario.
THE UNITED STATES SECTION OF THE INTER-AMERICAN
HIGH COMMISSION
(Department of Commerce, 400 Fourteenth Street)
Members:
John H. Fahey, of Massachusetts, member of the Senior Council of the Cham-
ber of Commerce of the United States.
A. C. Miller, of California, member of the Federal Reserve Board.
W. W. Nichols, of New York, past president of the American Manufacturers’ Export Association.
William Butterworth, of Illinois, past president of the Chamber of Commerce
of the United States.
Honorary member.—L. S. Rowe, director general of the Pan American Union.
Secretary. —Frederick M. Feiker, director, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic
Commerce, Department of Commerce.
Assistant secretary.—M. H. Bletz, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce,
Department of Commerce.
INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED
STATES, ALASKA, AND CANADA
For defining, marking, and maintaining the boundary between the United States, Alaska, and Canada
(Office, Room 2213, Commerce Department Building. Phone, NAtional 5060)
UNITED STATES SECTION
Commassioner.—James H. Van Wagenen, 3024 Tilden Street.
Engineer to the commission.—Jesse Hill, 3415 Porter Street.
Secretary and disbursing officer.—Edgar A. Klapp, 2809 Fifteenth Street.
CANADIAN SECTION
Commiassioner.—Noel J. Ogilvie, Ottawa, Canada.
Engineer to the commission.—John A. Pounder, Ottawa, Canada.
INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED
STATES AND MEXICO
AMERICAN SECTION
(Offices, sixth floor, First National Bank Building, El Paso, Tex.)
Commasstoner.— Lawrence M. Lawson (Texas). *
Consulting engineer—Culver M. Ainsworth (New Mexico).
Secretary and disbursing officer.—Clark W. Creps (Texas).
Assistant engineer.—Crawford S. Kerr (Texas).
Draftsman and computer.—F. P. Brown (Texas).
MEXICAN SECTION
(Offices, second floor, Sauer Building, Juarez, Mexico. Post-office address, Box 14, El Paso, Tex.)
Commaissioner.—Armando Santacruz, jr. (Mexico, D. F.).
Consulting engineer.—Joaquin C. Bustamante (Sonora).
* Appointed to competitive classified civil service from California.
EEE EEE EEE EEE SSS
348 Congressional Directory
Secretary.—José Herndndez Ojeda (Guanajuato).
Assistant secretary and translator.—H. G. de Partearroyo (Mexico, D. F.).
Surveyor.—J. D. Herndndez (Jalisco).
INTERNATIONAL FISHERIES COMMISSION, UNITED STATES
AND CANADA
(Headquarters office, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.)
American members—
Henry O’Malley, Bureau of Fisheries, Washington, D. C.
Edward W. Allen, Northern Life Tower, Seattle, Wash.
Canadian members—
J. P. Babcock, chairman, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
W. A. Found, Ottawa, Canada.
INLAND WATERWAYS CORPORATION
(Headquarters, Room 1016, Munitions Building. Phone, NA tional 2520)
Incorporator.—The Secretary of War.
President—Chairman of the board.—Maj. Gen. T. Q. Ashburn, United States
Army, 1827 Phelps Place. (Branch 1881.)
Adminastrative assistant—=QGeneral counsel.—Clark C. Wren, 2021 Kalorama Road.
(Branch 1502.)
Assistant to the president.—T. Q. Ashburn, jr., care of Federal Barge Lines,
Chicago, 111.
Secretary-treasurer.—Guy Bartley, 3151 Mount Pleasant Street. (Branch 1089.)
Chief clerk.—J. W. Jenkinson, 18 Channing Street. (Branch 2378.)
INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS,
UNITED STATES AND CANADA
AMERICAN SECTION
(Army Corps of Engineers, Munitions Building, Washington, D. C.)
Commasstoners:
Herbert H. Rice, of Michigan, chairman.
Maj. Malcolm Elliott, Corps of Engineers, United States Army.
Ernest Walker Sawyer, of California.
CANADIAN SECTION
Representatives:
Hon. George Black, Speaker of the House of Parliament, Ottawa, Canada.
J. N. Wardle, Banff, Canada, representing National Parks of Canada.
Gee Napier, Department of Public Works of British Columbia, Victoria,
B. C.
COMMITTEE ON THE CONSERVATION AND ADMINISTRA-
TION OF THE PUBLIC DOMAIN
(6342 Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 558)
Chairman.—James R. Garfield, Cleveland, Ohio.
Members: 1. M. Brandjord, Helena, Mont.; H. O. Bursum, Socorro, N. Mex.;
Gardner Cowles, Des Moines, Towa; James P. Goodrich, Winchester, Ind.;
W. B. Greeley, Seattle, Wash. ; : Perry W. Jenkins, Big Piney, Wyo.; Rudolph
Kuchler, Phoenix, Ariz.; George H. Lorimer, Philadelphia, Pa.; Geo. W.
Malone, ¢ Carson City, Nev. : Elwood Mead (representing California), Wash-
ington, C.; Charles J. Moynihan, Montrose, Colo.; I. H. Nash, Boise,
Idaho; Dien Peterson, Logan, Utah; Mary Roberts Rinehart, Washing-
ton, D. C.; Huntley N. Spaulding, Rochester, N.H.:R. Kk. Tiffany, Olympia,
Wash. ; Wallace Townsend, Little Rock, Ark; E. C. Van Petten, Ontario,
Oreg.; Francis C. Wilson, Santa Fe, N. Mex.
Ez officco members.—Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior; Henry A.
Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture. §
- Executive secretary,—Mae A. Schnurr (acting).
Independent Offices and Establishments 349
BOARD OF SURVEYS AND MAPS OF THE FEDERAL
; GOVERNMENT
(Map Information Office, Room 6206, Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 248)
Chairman.—J. G. Staack, United States Geological Survey.
Vice chairman.— Lieut. Col. F. B. Wilby, Corps of Engineers. |
Secretary.—J. H. Wheat, United States Geological Survey.
NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION
(Office, New Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1477) \
Chairman.— Frederic A. Delano, 2244 S Street, Washington, D. C. !
Members: |
Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown, Chief of Engineers, U. S. Army, 3508 Garfield Street. i
Maj. John C. Gotwals, Engineer Commissioner, District of Columbia, 3105
Cathedral Avenue.
Horace M. Albright, Director National Park Service, 4920 Indian Lane.
R. Y. Stuart, Chief, Forest Service, 9 West Kirke Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
William H. King, chairman Senate Committee on the District of Columbia,
The Westchester. '
Mrs. Mary T. Norton, chairman House Committee on the District of Columbia, f
The Mayflower.
Henry V. Hubbard, Robinson Hall Annex, Cambridge, Mass.
J. C. Nichols, 310 Ward Parkway, Country Club Plaza, Kansas City, Mo.
William A. Delano, 126 East Thirty-eighth Street, New York, N. Y.
Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d, United States Army, Director Public Buildings and
Public Parks of the National Capital, executive and disbursing officer, 2117
Leroy Place.
Staff:
Maj. D. H. Gillette, Corps of Engineers, executive assistant and engineer,
4437 Reservoir Road. :
Charles W. Eliot, 2d, director of planning, 2127 R Street.
John Nolen, jr., city planner, 3612 Newark Street.
T. S. Settle, secretary, 3715 Van Ness Street.
H. Tudor Morsell, land purchasing officer, 6317 Connecticut Avenue, Chevy
Chase, Md.
T. C, Jeffers, landscape architect, 6620 Sixth Street.
OFFICE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND PUBLIC PARKS OF
THE NATIONAL CAPITAL
(New Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1343)
Director.—Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d, Corps of Engineers, 2117 Leroy Place.
Assistant directors—Maj. D. H. Gillette, 4437 Reservoir Road; Capt. Ellis E.
Haring, 4423 Q Street.
Chief, administrative diviston.—B. C. Gardner, 714 Sheridan Street.
Chief, buildings division.—J. F. Gill, 611 Oneida Place.
Acting chief, engineering division.—J. L. Nagle, 1408 Varnum Street.
Chaef, park diviston.—F. T. Gartside, 1343 Randolph Street.
Chief, protection diviston.—Capt. D. O. Hickey, 126 Spring Drive, Cherrydale, Va.
Chief, supply dwision.—S. J. Oliver, 4608 Fifth Street.
THE COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 330)
Chairman.—Charles Moore, of Detroit, Mich.
Vice chairman.—John L. Mauran, St. Louis, Mo.
Egerton Swartwout, New York City.
Gilmore D. Clarke, White Plains, N. Y.
Lee Lawrie, New York City.
John M. Howells, New York City.
Eugene F. Savage, Ossining, N. Y.
Secretary and administrative officer—H. P, Caemmerer, 29 Seaton Place.
a. ——
350 AY Congressional Directory
ROCK CREEK AND POTOMAC PARKWAY COMMISSION |
(Created by sec. 22 of the public buildings act of March 4, 1913) :
(Navy Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 1234)
William H. Woodin, Secretary of the Treasury, Carlton Hotel.
George H. Dern, Secretary of War, Willard Hotel.
Henry A. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture, Wardman Park Hotel.
Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, 3d, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, executive
and disbursing officer, "2117 Leroy Place.
George E. Clark, civil engineer, 3301 Porter Street.
WASHINGTON NATIONAL MONUMENT SOCIETY
(Organized 1883; chartered 1859; acts of Congress August 2, 1876, October 2, 1888)
Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States, president ex officio.
The governors of the several States, vice presidents ex officio.
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.
William R. Harr, secretary, 36 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md. (Phone,
Wisconsin 3193.)
Herbert Putnam; Maj. Gen. William M. Black, United States Army; Admiral
Willard H. Brownson, United States Navy; Frederick H. Gillett; Lieut. Col.
U. 8. Grant, 3d, United States Army; Rt. Rev. James E. Freeman; Frederic
A. Delano; George E. Hamilton; Rev. Dr. Charles Wood; John Barton
Payne; Robert Walton Moore; Logan Hay; Gilbert H. Grosvenor.
ARLINGTON MEMORIAL AMPHITHEATER COMMISSION
[Act of March 4, 1921, created the commission to make recommendations for inscriptions, entombment, ete.]
Chairman.—Secretary of War.
Secretary of the Navy.
Executive and disbursing o ficer. — Depot Quartermaster of the Army in Washington.
AMERICAN BATTLE MONUMENTS COMMISSION
(Created by Public Law 534, 67th Cong., March 4, 1923)
(Room 6314, Commerce Building. Phone, NAtional 5060, Branch 515)
Chairman.—Gen. John J. Pershing, Carlton Hotel.
Vice chairman.—Robert G. Woodside, county controller’s office, Pittsburgh, Pa.
David A. Reed, United States Senator, Pennsylvania, 2222 S Street.
John Philip Hill, 3 West Franklin Street, Baltimore, Md.
Finis J. Garrett, 3024 Tilden Street.
D. John Markey, Frederick, Md.
Mrs. Cora W. Baker, box 112, Ruxton, Md.
Secretary.—Maj. X. H. Price, Corps of Engineers, United States Army.
Executive assistant.—James KE. Mangum, The Cavalier, 3510 Fourinin Street,
PERRY'S VICTORY MEMORIAL COMMISSION
(General office, Put in Bay, Ohio)
President.— Webster P. Huntington, Columbus, Ohio.
Vice president.—Charles B. Perry, Milwaukee, Wis.
Secretary.—Richard S. Folsom, Chicago, Ill.
Treasurer.— William Schnoor, Put in Bay, Ohio.
Auditor—Harry E. Davis, Woonsocket, R. I.
NATIONAL MEMORIAL COMMISSION
(Created by act of Congress, March 4, 1929, Pub. Res. 107, 70th Cong.)
(1830 Fifteenth Street, Washington, D. C.)
Ex officio members:
The Director of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital.
The Supervising Architect of the Eran.
The Architect of the Capitol.
Independent Offices and Establishments 351
Commissioners appointed by the President:
Chairman.—[Vacant.]
Vice chairman.—William C. Hueston, 744 Park Road, Washington, D. C.
Mary Church Terrell, 1615 S Street, Washington, D. C.
Rev. J. R. Ranson, 2247 Topeka Avenue, Topeka, Kans.
Webster L. Porter, 202 East Vine Avenue, Knoxville, Tenn.
Rev. H. Clay Weeden, 424 South Sixth Street, Louisville, Ky.
William Gaston Pearson, Durham, N. C.
Rev. L. K. Williams, 3101 South Park Avenue, Chicago, Ill.
Mary McLeod Bethune, Bethune-Cookman College, Daytona Beach, Fla.
Paul R. Williams, 3839 Wilshire Boulevard, Los Angeles, Calif.
M. T. Whittico, Keystone, W. Va.
Executive secretary and disbursing officer.—Samuel C. Smith, 1830 Fifteenth Street.
Assistants:
Administrative Vernie S. Bumbry, 788 Columbia Road.
Research, art collection, exhibits.—M. M. Kimball, 663 Morton Street.
Finance.—Harrison M. Wright, 906 S Street.
Correspondence, files—Mary C. Compton, 1700 Second Street.
Technical advisor on construction and maintenance.—Albert I. Cassell, 707 Fair-
mont Street.
State commissioners, appointed by the governors—Scipio A. Jones, Little Rock,
Ark.; Maj. Walter H. Loving, Oakland, Calif.; Fritz Cansler, Denver, Colo.;
Rev. J. C. Jackson, Hartford, Conn.; Charles H. Colburn, Wilmington, Del.;
Rev. C. L. Russell, District of Columbia; Prof. J. R. E. Lee, Tallahassee,
Fla.; Dr. J. W. E. Bowen, Atlanta, Ga.; Anthony Overton, Chicago, Ill;
R. L. Bailey, Indianapolis, Ind.; George H. Woodson, Des Moines, Iowa;
Benjamin Arms, Topeka, Kans.; Rev. Milton R. Geary, Bangor, Me.; W.
Ashbie Hawkins, Baltimore, Md.; Matthew W. Bullock, Boston, Mass.;
Perry W. Howard, Jackson, Miss.; Millard F. Singleton, Omaha, Nebr.;
James M. Halley, Reno, Nev.; Anthony R. Mayo, Bloomfield, N. J.; Rev.
A. Clayton Powell, New York City, N. Y.; Dr. James E. Shepard, Durham,
N. C.; Thornwell A. Caldwell, Warren, Ohio; Beatrice H. Cannady, Port-
land, Oreg.; Dr. George W. Bowles, York, Pa.; Rev. W. S. Holland, North
Scituate, R. I.; Harvey Mitchell, Sioux Falls, S. Dak.; Dr. A. M. Townsend,
Nashville, Tenn.; W. M. Greenwell, Salt Lake City, Utah; J. Thomas
Hewin, Richmond, Va.; Rev. J. W. Robinson, St. Albans, W. Va.; J. Anthony
Josey, Milwaukee, Wis.; Will H. Redd, Cheyenne, Wyo.
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
(The Mall. Phone, NAtional 1811)
Secretary.—C. G. Abbot, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street.
Assistant secretary.— Alexander Wetmore, 204 Maple Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Chaef clerk and administrative assistant to the secretary—H. W. Dorsey, Hyatts-
ville, Md.
Treasurer and disbursing agent.—Nicholas W. Dorsey, 1521 Thirty-first Street.
Editor—Webster P. True, Falls Church, Va.
Librartan.— William L. Corbin, Tilden Gardens, 3020 Tilden Street.
THE ESTABLISHMENT
Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States; John N. Garner, Vice
President of the United States; Charles Evans Hughes, Chief Justice of the
United States; Cordell Hull, Secretary of State; William H. Woodin, Secretary
of the Treasury; George H. Dern, Secretary of War; Homer S. Cummings,
Attorney General; James A. Farley, Postmaster General; Claude A. Swanson,
Secretary of the Navy; Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of the Interior; Henry A.
Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture; Daniel C. Roper, Secretary of Commerce;
Frances Perkins, Secretary of Labor.
352 AL Congressional Directory
BOARD OF REGENTS
Chancellor, Charles Evans Hughes, Chief Justice of the United States; John N.
Garner, Vice President of the United States; Joseph T. Robinson, Member
of the Senate; M. M. Logan, Member of the Senate; David A. Reed, Member
of the Senate; T. Alan Goldsborough, Member of the House of Representa-
tives; Edward H. Crump, Member of the House of Representatives; Charles
L. Gifford, Member of the House of Representatives; Irwin B. Laughlin,
citizen of Pennsylvania (Pittsburgh); Frederic A. Delano, citizen of Wash-
ington, D. C.; John C. Merriam, citizen of Washington, D. C.; R. Walton
Moore, citizen of Virginia (Fairfax); Robert W. Bingham, citizen of Ken-
tucky (Louisville); Augustus P. Loring, citizen of Massachusetts (Boston).
Ezecutive committee.—Frederic A. Delano, John C. Merriam, R. Walton Moore.
GOVERNMENT BUREAUS UNDER DIRECTION OF SMITHSONIAN
INSTITUTION
NATIONAL MUSEUM
on secretary wn charge.— Alexander Wetmore, 204 Maple Avenue, Takoma
ark, Md.
Associate director—John E. Graf, Woodley Park Towers.
Head curators.—Leonhard Stejneger, 1472 Belmont Street; Walter Hough, 1332
Farragut Street; R. S. Bassler, 2101 New Hampshire Avenue; C. W. Mitman,
4408 Klingle Street.
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
Acting director.—R. P. Tolman, 3451 Mount Pleasant Street.
FREER GALLERY OF ART
(A unit of the National Gallery)
Curator.—John E. Lodge.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
4 (Office in Smithsonian Building)
Chief —M. W. Stirling, 820 Connecticut Avenue.
INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGES
Secretary in charge.—C. G. Abbot, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street.
Chief clerk.—C. W. Shoemaker, 3115 O Street.
NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK
(Adams Mill Road. Phone, COlumbia 0744)
Director.— William M. Mann, 2801 Adams Mill Road.
Assistant director.— Ernest P. Walker, 3016 Tilden Street, apartment 103.
ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY
Director—C. G. Abbot, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street.
Assistant director.— Loyal B. Aldrich, 2105 N Street.
DIVISION OF RADIATION AND ORGANISMS
Director.—C. G. Abbot, 5207 Thirty-eighth Street.
Assistant director—Earl S. Johnston, Hyattsville, Md.
REGIONAL BUREAU FOR THE UNITED STATES INTERNATIONAL CATALOGUE OF
SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE
Assistant in charge—Leonard C. Gunnell, Smithsonian Institution.
UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD!
Frank Bond, chairman, room 5323, Department of the Interior.
John J. Cameron, secretary, office, room 6318, Department of Commerce
Building. (Phone, NAtional 5060, Branch 591.)
Executive commattee.—Samuel W. Boggs, chairman; Frank Bond, John J. Cam-
~ eron, J. N. B. Hewitt, and R. S. Patton.
1 Only the chairman and secretary are paid from the board’s appropriations.
Independent Offices and Hstablishments 353
Clarence E. Batschelet, geographer, Bureau of the Census, Department of
Commerce.
Samuel W. Boggs, geographer, Department of State.
Lieut. Col. H. L. Bull, General Staff, chief, Geographic Branch, War Department.
John J. Cameron, secretary, United States Geographic Board.
Edward E. Carter, assistant forester, Forest Service, Department of Agriculture.
Rear Admiral W. R. Gherardi, hydrographer, Hydrographic Office, Department
of the Navy.
J. N. B. Hewitt, ethnologist, Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian
Institution. :
Edward A. Huse, Night Production Manager, Government Printing Office.
Col. Lawrence Martin, chief, division of maps, Library of Congress.
Oliver M. Maxam, chief, division of operations, United States Coast Guard,
Treasury Department.
Capt. R. S. Patton, director, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, Depart-
ment of Commerce.
George R. Putnam, Commissioner of Lighthouses, Department of Commerce.
Dr. Helen M. Strong, geographer, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce,
Department of Commerce.
Nelson A. Tacy, superintendent, division of postmasters, Post Office Depart-
ment.
Joseph H. Wheat, topographic engineer, United States Geological Survey,
Department of the Interior.
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
(Constitution Avenue and Twenty-first Street. Phone, DIstrict 2614)
President.—W. W. Campbell, Lick Observatory, Mount Hamilton, Calif.
Vice president.—David White, 2812 Adams Mill Road, Washington, D. C.
Poreiss secretary.—R. A. Millikan, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena,
alif.
Home secretary.—Frederick E. Wright, 2134 Wyoming Avenue, Washington, D. C.
Treasurer.—Arthur Keith, 2210 Twentieth Street, Washington, D. C.
Assistant secretary.—Paul Brockett, 3303 Highland Place, Cleveland Park, D. C.
NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
Chairman.—W. H. Howell, National Research Council, Washington, D. C.
PAN AMERICAN UNION
(FORMERLY INTERNATIONAL BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLICS)
(Seventeenth between Constitution Avenue and C Sireet. Phone, NAtional 6635)
Director general.—L. S. Rowe, Pan American Annex.
Assistant director—E. Gil Borges, 3939 Morrison Street.
Counselor.—F¥ranklin Adams, The Marlborough.
Foreign-trade adviser— William A. Reid, 1842 Sixteenth Street.
Chief clerk.— William V. Griffin, 1338 Twenty-second Street.
Librarian.—Charles E. Babcock, Vienna, Va.
Chief, division of accounts.—Lowell Curtiss, 3105 Fourteenth Street NE.
Chief, division of agricultural cooperation.—José L. Colom, Dupont Circle Apart-
ments.
Chief, editorial diviston.— Elsie Brown, Alexandria, Va., R. F. D. No. 2.
Editorial assistant.—Enrique Coronado, La Salle Apartments.
Chief, division of financial informaiton.— William Manger, 1744 C Street.
Chaef, division of intellectual cooperation.—Heloise Brainerd, 2934 Macomb Street.
Chuef, division of statistics.— Matilda Phillips, The Mendota.
Chzef, division of translations.—José Tercero, 5331 Nebraska Avenue.
Secretary to the director gemeral.—Anne L. O’Connell, The Wardman Park.
Portuguese translator—Annie D. Marchant, The Portner.
Superintendent of butldings and grounds.—Harry Burkholder, Clarendon, Va.
Chief mazl clerk.—George F. Hirschman, 615 Park Road.
GOVERNING BOARD
Cordell Hull, Secretary of State (chairman), The Carlton.
Adridn Recinos, minister of Guatemala (vice chairman), 1614 Eighteenth Street.
Manuel de Freyre y Santander, ambassador of Peru, 1601 Massachusetts Avenue.
R. de Lima e Silva, ambassador of Brazil, 2437 Fifteenth Street.
157297°—73-1—1ST ED———24
354 + Congressional Darectory
Felipe A. Espil, ambassador of Argentina, 1600 New Hampshire Avenue.
Oscar B. Cintas, ambassador of Cuba, 2630 Sixteenth Street.
Fernando Gonzalez Roa, ambassador of Mexico, 2829 Sixteenth Street.
Jacobo Varela, minister of Uruguay, The Wardman Park.
Pedro Manuel Arcaya, minister of Venezuela, 1628 Twenty-first Street.
Dantés Bellegarde, minister of Haiti, 1818 Q Street.
Fabio Lozano, minister of Colombia, The Wardman Park.
Roberto Despradel, minister of the Dominican Republic, The Chastleton.
Celeo D4yvila, minister of Honduras, 1100 Sixteenth Street.
Gonzalo Zaldumbide, minister of Ecuador, 2633 Sixteenth Street.
Ricardo J. Alfaro, minister of Panama, 1535 New Hampshire Avenue.
Enrique Finot, minister of Bolivia, The Mayflower Hotel.
Enrique Bordenave, minister of Paraguay, The Shoreham.
Benjamin Cohen, chargé d’affaires of Chile, 2305 Massachusetts Avenue.
Mom Gonzdlez-Zeledén, chargé d’affaires of Costa Rica, 3000 Connecticut
venue.
Henri Debayle, chargé d’affaires of Nicaragua, 1711 New Hampshire Avenue.
Roberta D. Meléndez, special representative of El Salvador, 3800 New Hampshire
venue.
PAN AMERICAN SANITARY BUREAU
(Formerly International Sanitary Bureau)
(Pan American Building, Seventeenth Street, between Constitution Avenue and C Street. Phone
NAtional 6635)
Honorary director.—Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz Solddn, Lima, Peru.
Director—Surg. Gen. Hugh S. Cumming, United States Public Health Service,
Washington, D. C.
Assistant to the director—Medical Director B. J. Lloyd, United States Public
Health Service, Washington, D. C.
Vice director—[Vacant.]
Secretary.—Dr. Sebastidn Lorente, Lima, Peru.
Members board of directors.—Dr. Solon Niiiez F., San Jose, Costa Rica; Dr.
Ramoén Béez Soler, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic; Dr. Justo F.
Gonzédlez, Montevideo, Uruguay; Dr. Jodo Pedro de Albuquerque, Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil.
Scientific director—Dr. A. A. Moll, 3702 Military Road, Chevy Chase.
Traveling representative—Medical Director John D. Long, United States Public
Health Service.
AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS
(Seventeenth Street, between D and E Streets. Phone, NAtional 5400)
NATIONAL OFFICERS
President.—Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Vice presidents.—Herbert Hoover; Charles Evans Hughes, Washington, D. C.
Chairman.—John Barton Payne, National Red Cross, Washington, D. C.
Counselor—Thomas D. Thacher, Washington, D. C
Treasurer.— Arthur A. Ballantine, Washington, D. C.
Secretary.— Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P Street, Washington, D. C.
CENTRAL COMMITTEE
John Barton Payne, National Red Cross, Washington, D. C.; Arthur A. Ballan-
tine, Treasury Department, Washington, D. C.; Maj. Gen. Robert U. Patter-
son, Surgeon General, United States Army, War Department, Washington,
D. C.; Thomas D. Thacher, Department of Justice, Washington, D. C.;
Cornelius N. Bliss, 2 Wall Street, New York City; Eliot Wadsworth, 180
Marlborough Street, Boston, Mass.; Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P
Street, Washington, D. C.; Mrs. Henry R. Rea, Sewickley, Pa.; Alfred E.
Smith, Empire State Building, New York, N. Y.; George E. Scott, American
Steel Foundries, Michigan Boulevard, Chicago, Ill.; William Fortune,
Indianapolis, Ind.; Samuel Knight, Balfour Building, San Francisco, Calif;
Mrs. August Belmont, 1115 Fifth Avenue, New York City; Gustavus D.
Pope, Ford Building, Detroit, Mich.; Mrs. Henry P. Davison, Locust Valley,
N. Y.; Henry Upson Sims, Birmingham, Ala.; William Phillips, State De-
partment, Washington, D. C.; Rear Admiral Perceval S. Rossiter, Surgeon
General United States Navy, Navy Department, Washington, D, C
Independent Offices and Establishments 355
GENERAL EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Chairman.—John Barton Payne, 1601 I Street, Washington, D. C.
Vice chairman in charge of domestic operations.—James L. Fieser, Edgemoor, Md.
Vice chairman in charge of insular and foreign operations.—Krnest P. Bicknell,
1661 Crescent Place, Washington, D. C.
Vice chairman in charge of finance.—James K. McClintock, 1650 Harvard Street,
Washington, D. C :
Assistant to vice chairman and manager Eastern area.—DeWitt Smith, 5501 Edge-
moor Lane, Bethesda, Md.
Manager Midwestern area, St. Louis, Mo.— William M. Baxter, jr., 1709 Washing-
ton Avenue, St. Louis, Mo. ;
Manager Pacific area, San Francisco, Calif —A. L. Schafer, Civic Auditorium,
San Francisco, Calif.
Legal adviser.—H. J. Hughes, Brooklandville, Baltimore County, Md.
Medical assistant to vice chatrman.—Dr. William DeKleine, 3000 Tilden Street,
Washington, D. C.
Director, public information and roll call.—Douglas Griesemer, 115 West Under-
wood Street, Chevy Chase, Md. se
Director of accounting and statistics.—Howard J. Simons, 4910 Arkansas Avenue,
Washington, D. C.
Director, disaster relief.—Robert E. Bondy, Edgemoor, Md.
Director, Junior Red Cross.—Edward W. Marcellus, East Falls Church, Va.
Director, first aid and life-saving.—H. F. Enlows, 2753 Brandywine Street, Wash-
ington,
Director, nursing service.—Miss Clara D. Noyes, 1411 Twenty-ninth Street, Wash-
ington, D. C.
Director, public health nursing and home hygiene.—Miss I. Malinde Havey, 912
Nineteenth Street, Washington, D. C.
Breslin Som service.— Miss Mabel T. Boardman, 1801 P Street, Washington,
Director, war service.—Don C. Smith, 3518 Quesada Street, Washington, D. C.
THE CONGRESSIONAL CLUB
(2001 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, POtomac 5196)
(Incorporated by act of Congress approved May 30, 1908. Membership composed of women in official life)
OFFICERS, 1933—1935
President.—Mrs. Clarence C. Dill, of Washington.
Vice presidents.—Mrs. William A. Ayers, of Kansas; Mrs. Edward W. Pou, of
North Carolina; Mrs. William E. Evans, of California; Mrs. Tom D.
McKeown, of Oklahoma; Mrs. William J. Driver, of Arkansas.
Recording secretary.— Mrs. Cassius C. Dowell, of Iowa.
Corresponding secretary.—Mrs. Roy O. Woodruff, of Michigan.
Treasurer.—Mrs. John Taber, of New York.
Chairman of:
Membership committee—Mrs. A. C. Shallenberger, of Nebraska.
Entertainment commitiee—Mrs. Robert Bacon, of New York.
House committee—Mrs. Allard H. Gasque, of South Garolina.
Finance committee.—Mrs. Charles West, of Ohio.
Press.—Mrs. Arthur H. Greenwood, of Indiana.
Printing.—Mrs. William H. Larrabee, of Indiana.
Book committee— Mrs. Wallace H. White, jr., of Maine.
Building-fund trustees.—Mrs. Henry W. Keyes, of New Hampshire.
Cook book.—Mrs. Ross A. Collins, of Mississippi.
Emergency.— Mrs. Harry C. Ransley, of Pennsylvania.
Evening card party.—Mrs. Thomas L. Blanton, of Texas
Dance committee—Mrs. Jeff. Busby, of Mississippi.
Matinee card party.—Mrs. John T. Buckbee, of Illinois.
Hostess commitiee— Mrs. Joseph W. Byrns, of Tennessee.
Hospitality commitiee—Mrs. Frank Crowther, of New York.
Associate members.—Mrs. Joseph A. Herbert, jr., of District of Columbia.
Parliamentarian.—Mrs. Tilman B. Parks, of Arkansas.
Hustorian.—Mrs, W. W, Chalmers, of Ohio,
356 Congressional Directory
UNITED STATES SOLDIERS’ HOME
(Regular Army)
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
(United States Soldiers’ Home. Phone, A Dams 9100)
Maj. Gen. Henry P. McCain (retired), governor of the home.
Maj. Gen. Lytle Brown, Chief of Engineers.
Maj. Gen. John L. DeWitt, the Quartermaster General.
Maj. Gen. Blanton Winship, the Judge Advocate General.
Maj. Gen. Robert U. Patterson, the Surgeon General.
Maj. Gen. Frederick W. Coleman, Chief of Finance.
Brig. Gen. James F. McKinley, acting The Adjutant General.
Col. Walter C. Babcock (retired), secretary of the board.
OFFICERS OF THE HOME
(Residing at the Home. Phone, ADams 9100)
Governor.—Maj. Gen. Henry P. McCain (retired).
Deputy governor.—Col. William M. Morrow (retired).
Secretary-treasurer.—Col. Walter C. Babcock (retired).
Chief surgeon.—Col. Frederick M. Hartsock, Medical Corps, United States Army.
Quartermaster and purchasing officer.—Col. David S. Stanley (retired).
PUERTO RICAN HURRICANE RELIEF COMMISSION
(Room 3044, Munitions Building. Phone, NAtional 2520, Branch 2090)
Members.—The Secretary of War, chairman; the Secretary of the Treasury;
the Secretary of Agriculture.
Secretary.—Maj. Howard Eager, Field Artillery, United States Army, 3421
Quebec Street.
COLUMBIA INSTITUTION FOR THE DEAF
(Kendall Green. Phone, LIncoln 2450)
Patron ex officio.—Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States.
President.—Percival Hall, Kendall Green.
Directors.—Royal S. Copeland, Senator from New York; Sol Bloom, Represent-
ative from New York; Ernest W. Gibson, Representative from Vermont;
Theodore W. Noyes, Frederic A. Delano, and H. C. Newcomer, citizens of
. the District of Columbia; Ernest G. Draper, citizen of New York; William E.
Humphrey, citizen of Washington; Knight Dunlap, citizen of Maryland;
the president and the secretary of the institution.
Secretary.—Rev. Ulysses G. B. Pierce, 1748 Lamont Street.
Treasurer.—John Poole, Federal-American National Bank.
Visitors welcome on Thursdays from 8 a, m, to 3 p. m.
COLUMBIA HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN
(Twenty-fifth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. Phone, POtomac 4210)
President.—Joseph H. Himes, Transportation Building.
First vice president.—George H. Myers, 730 Fifteenth Strat.
Second vice president.—Maj. Gen. Merritte W. Ireland (retired) 1870 Wyoming
Avenue.
Treasurer— Wayne Kendrick, Rust Building.
Directors.—Alva, B. Adams, Senator from Colorado; Mary T. Norton, Rope:
sentative from New Jersey; Surg. Gen. Hugh 8S. ‘Cumming, S. F, Taliaferro,
Rabbi Abram Simon, Mrs. Barry Mohun, Mrs. Reeve Lewis, E. I. Kauf-
mann, Robert V. Fleming, Luther H. Reichelderfer, Norman W. Oyster,
Paul E. Lesh, Clark G. Diamond, Powell Browning, Capt. Chester H.
Wells, U. S. N. (retired), Surg. Gen. Robert U. Patterson, Henry P. Blair,
Admiral Perceval Sherrier Rossiter, Capt. W. W. Galbraith, U8 N.
(retired), and Mrs. Sidney F. Taliaferro, citizens of the District of Columbia;
‘the presidents and the treasurer; Dr. E. W. Titus. ex officio.
Superintendent and secretary,—Dr, S, 'B. Ragsdale,
Independent Offices and Establishments 357
NATIONAL TRAINING SCHOOL FOR BOYS
(Bladensburg Road. Phone, Lincoln 0197)
Consulting trustees.—W. Warren Barbour, Senator from New Jersey, and Edward
R. Burke, Representative from Nebraska.
Board of trustees.—Francis H. Duehay, president, 1624 I Street (phone, N Ational
3514); Justice Charles H. Robb, Court of Appeals, Fifth and E Streets
(phone, NAtional 4718); Warren F. Martin, vice president, the Metropoli-
tan Club (phone, NAtional 7500); Robert V. Fleming, Riggs National Bank
(phone, NAtional 5600); Sanford Bates, Department of Justice (phone,
NAtional 0185); D. J. Callahan, The Woodward Building (phone, NAtional
4620) ; Newbold Noyes, The Evening Star Building (phone, NAtional 5000); |
Herbert B. Crosby, Municipal Building (phone, NAtional 6000).
Secretary and ireasurer.—E. T. Hiser (phone, LIncoln 0197).
Superintendent.—Claude D. Jones (phone, LIncoln 0197).
FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT STABILIZATION BOARD
(Commerce Building. Phone NAtional 5060)
Chairman.— The Secretary of Commerce, Daniel C. Roper.
The Secretary of the Treasury, W. H. Woodin.
The Secretary of Agriculture, Henry A. Wallace.
The Secretary of Labor, Frances Perkins.
Director—D. H. Sawyer, Westchester Apartment, Thirty-ninth Street and
Cathedral Avenue. :
Assistant to the direcior—H. R. Colwell, East Falls Church, Va.
Chaef economist.—Corrington Gill, 2630 Adams Mill Road.
Chief engineer—Fred E. Schnepfe, Chalfonte Apartments, 1601 Argonne Place.
ADVISORY COUNCIL OF THE NATIONAL ARBORETUM
Chairman.—Frederic A. Delano, 2244 S Street, Washington, D. C.
Henry S. Graves, New Haven, Conn.
Vernon Kellogg, National Research Council, Washington, D. C.
Harlan P. Kelsey, East Boxford, Mass.
John C. Merriam, Carnegie Institution, Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Frank B. Noyes, 1239 Vermont Avenue, Washington, D. C.
Frederick Law Olmsted, Brookline, Mass.
Mrs. Harold 1. Pratt, Glen Cove, Long Island, N. Y.
Robert Pyle, West Grove, Pa.
Acting director of National Arboretum.—Frederick V. Coville, Bureau of Plant
Industry, U. S. Department of Agriculture.
FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK BOARD
(Commerce Building. Phone, NAtional 5060) ;
Chairman. — William F. Stevenson, Pennsylvania Hotel.
T. D. Webb, Washington Hotel.
Carroll Merriam, Washington Hotel.
Secretary.—A. E. Hutchison, Hotel Winston.
Counsel.—Horace Russell, Racquet Club, 1635 Sixteenth Street.
Comptroller.—R. Reyburn Burklin, The Broadmoor Apartment.
Economist.—Arthur J. Mertzke, 1121 Twenty-fourth Street.
Assistant secretary.—James O. Mann, 310 South Carolina Avenue SE.
RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION
(1825 H Street. Phone, DIstrict 4911)
Board of directors:
Chairman.—Jesse H. Jones, Mayflower Hotel. (Assistant, William C. Costello,
3701 Sixteenth Street.) :
Director ex officio.— William H. Woodin, Secretary of the Treasury, Carlton
Hotel. :
358 Congressional Directory
Board of directors—econtinued.
Directors:
Harvey C. Couch, Mayflower Hotel. (Assistant, Elbert L. Smith, Park
Central Apartments.)
Wilson McCarthy, Shoreham Hotel. (Assistant, Oliver J. Grimes, Black-
stone Hotel.)
[Vacancy.]
[Vacancy.]
[Vacancy.]
Secretary.— George R. Cooksey, 3340 Sixteenth Street.
Assistant secretaries.—Liston P. Bethea, Tilden Gardens; William G. McCarthy,
3000 Connecticut Avenue; Roger M. Calloway, 1360 Jefferson Street.
General counsel.—Stanley Reed, Mayflower Hotel.
General solicitor— Francis T. P. Plimpton, 2446 Kalorama Road.
Counsel.—James L. Dougherty, 3606 Quesada Street; William C. Fitts, Mayflower
Hotel; Charles S. Guthrie, 2708 Thirty-fifth Place; Thomas J. Gaughan, Pow-
hatan Hotel; Thomas G. Corcoran, 2708 Thirty-fifth Place; Cassius M. Clay,
1808 I Street; James B. Alley, 3238 R Street; Russell Snodgrass, Glen Echo,
Md.; James L. Fort, 3800 T Street.
Treasurer—Henry A. Mulligan, 1429 Rhode Island Avenue.
Assistant treasurers.—Charles C. Boysen, 4019 Eighteenth Street; David B.
Griffin, 1615 Kenyon Street; Harry L. Sullivan, 4435 Thirty-eighth Street;
Willard E. Unzicker, 3945 Connecticut Avenue.
Engineer's advisory board:
Chairman.—[Vacancy.]
Members.—John Lyle Harrington, Cosmos Club; John F. Coleman, Cosmos
Club; John Herbert Gregory, 204 Lambeth Road, Baltimore, Md.; Maj. Gen.
Lytle Brown, 3100 Highland Place.
Acting special adviser.—Philip M. Benton, 1748 M Street.
Executive assistant.—Harry E. Whitaker, Wardman Park Hotel. be
Engineering executive.—Frank E. Lamphere, Lafayette Hotel.
Assistant to the directors, financial institutions.—Lynn P. Talley, 2540 Massachu-
setts Avenue.
Special assistants, financial institutions.—Ben Johnson, Argonne Apartments;
Earl B. Schwulst, 3325 Rowland Place.
Cheef, examining divistion.—John K. McKee, 3010 Forty-fifth Street.
Assistant chiefs.—Frank R. Hanrahan, 3901 Connecticut Avenue; William F.
Sheehan, 1026 Sixteenth Street; William C. Ribenack, 1739 M Street.
Chief, agency division.—Roy A. Brownell, Westchester Apartments.
Assistant chiefs.—Frederick D. Gallagher, 6111 Broad Branch Road; Rene J.
Taylor, Argonne Apartments.
Assistant to the directors, railroads.—A. A. Berele, jr., 142 East Nineteenth Street,
New York City.
Chief examiner, railroad division.—John W. Barriger, Mayflower Hotel.
aso to the directors, information.—Norman W. Baxter, 4434 Hawthorne
treet.
Chief, statistical diviston.—David C. Elliott, 4000 Cathedral Avenue.
Chief auditor—Rubert J. Lindquist, 3617 Jocelyn Street.
Chief clerk.—Frank T. Tracy, 318 Greene Avenue Aurora Hills, Alexandria,
Va.
CHICAGO WORLD’S FAIR CENTENNIAL COMMISSION
(Interior Department Building. Phone, NAtional 1880, Branch 88)
Commission:
The Secretary of State.
The Secretary of Agriculture.
The Secretary of Commerce.
Commassioner.—Harry S. New, Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md.
Assistant commaissioner.—Col. W. B. Causey, Chicago, Ill.
Assistant secretary.— William B. Yeager, Racquet Club.
Assistant secretary.—Edith McDowell Levy, Chicago, Ill.
Disbursing officer.—0, K, Inderlied, Chicago, Ill,
JUDICIARY
359
JUDICIARY
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
(In Capitol Building. Phones, marshal’s office, NA tional 7707; clerk’s office, NA tional 3848,
CHARLES EVANS HUGHES, Chief Justice of the United States, 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; married
Antionette Carter, December 5, 1888; admitted to New York bar 1884; prize
fellowship, Columbia Law School, 1884-1887; practiced law in New York 1884-—
1891, 1893-1906; professor of law 1891-1893, special lecturer 1893-1895, Cornell
University; special lecturer, New York Law School 1893-1900; counsel Stevens
gas committee (New York Legislature), 1905; counsel Armstrong insurance com-
mittee (New York Legislature), 1905-6; special assistant to Attorney General,
coal investigation, 1906; nominated for mayor of New York by Republican con-
vention 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 Con-
vention at Chicago June 10, 1916, and resigned from the Supreme Court on the
same day; practiced law in New York, 1917-1921; chairman district board of
drafts appeals, New York City, 1917-18; special assistant to the Attorney General
in charge of aircraft inquiry, 1918; appointed Secretary of State March 5, 1921,
resigned March 5, 1925, and resumed practice in New York; United States dele-
gate to, and chairman of, the Conference on Limitation of Armament, Washing-
ton, 1921; special ambassador to the Brazilian Centenary Celebration, Rio de
Janeiro, 1922; chairman New York State Reorganization Commission, 1926;
chairman United States delegation to Sixth Pan American Conference, Habana,
Cuba, January—February, 1928; United States delegate Pan American Confer-
ence on Arbitration and Conciliation, Washington, D. C., 1928-29; member of
Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague, 1926-1930; judge of Permanent
Court of International Justice 1928-1930; appointed by President Hoover as
Chief Justice of the United States February 3, 1930, confirmed by the Senate
February 13, 1930, and took his seat February 24, 1930; president Guatemala-
Honduras Arbitral Tribunal, 1932; president New York State Bar Association
1917-18, Legal Aid Society (New York) 1917-1919, New York County Lawyers’
Association 1919-20, American Bar Association 1924-25, Association of the Bar
of the City of New York, 1927-1929, American Society of International Law
1927-1929; honorary bencher of the Middle Temple, London, 1924; fellow Brown
University; honorary trustee University of Chicago; Regent, now Chancellor, of
Smithsonian Institution, Washington; awarded Roosevelt Memorial Association
medal, 1928, for Development of Public and International Law; 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 1915, University of Michigan 1922, Dartmouth 1923, Princeton,
Amherst, and the University of the State of New York 1924, Pennsylvania Mili-
tary College 1928; D. C. L. New York University 1928; doctor honoris causa,
University of Brussels and University of Louvain, 1924; author Conditions of
Progress in Democratic Government (Yale University lectures), 1909; The
Pathway of Peace and Other Addresses, 1925; The Supreme Court of the United
States (Columbia University lectures), 1927; Our Relation to the Nations of
the Western Hemisphere (Princeton University lectures), 1928; Pan American
Peace Plans (Yale University lectures), 1929. :
WILLIS VAN DEVANTER, of Cheyenne, Wyo., Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of the United States, was born in Marion, Ind., April 17, 1859;
attended the public schools of his native town and Indiana Asbury (now De
Pauw) University; was graduated from the law school of the Cincinnati College
in 1881; LL. D., De Pauw, 1911, Cincinnati and Yale, 1927; practiced his profes-
sion at Marion, Ind., until 1884, and subsequently at Cheyenne, Wyo., where
361
362 Congressional Darectory
he served as city attorney, a commissioner to revise the statute law of Wyoming,
and member of the Territorial legislature; was appointed chief justice of the
Territorial supreme court by President Harrison in 1889, and by election was
continued as chief justice on the admission of the Territory as a State in 1890,
but scon resigned to resume private practice; was chairman of the Republican
State committee in 1894; was a delegate to the Republican National Convention
and also a member of the Republican national committee in 1896; was appointed
Assistant Attorney General of the United States by President McKinley in 1897,
being assigned to the Department of the Interior, and served in that position until
1903; was professor of equity pleading and practice 1898-1903, and of equity
jurisprudence 1902-3 in Columbian (now George Washington) University; was
appointed United States circuit judge, eighth circuit, by President Roosevelt in
1903; was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
by President Taft December 16, 1910, and entered upon the duties of that office
January 3 following.
JAMES CLARK McREYNOLDS, born in Elkton, Ky., February 3, 1862;
son of Dr. John O. and Ellen (Reeves) M.; B. S. Vanderbilt University 1882;
graduate of University of Virginia law department 1884; unmarried; practiced
law at Nashville, Tenn.; Assistant Attorney General of the United States 1903-
1907; thereafter removed to New York; appointed Attorney General of the
United States March 5, 1913, and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the
United States August 29, 1914, took his seat October 12, 1914.
LOUIS DEMBITZ BRANDEIS, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of
the United States, was born in Louisville, Ky., November 13, 1856; attended
private and public schools (the University of Louisville) there until 1872; then
went to Europe, where he remained until 1875; attended Annen Real Schule in
Dresden, Saxony, 1873 to 1875; attended Harvard Law School 1875-1878. He
began the practice of law in St. Louis, Mo., 1878; removed to Boston, Mass., in
1879, and practiced there until June, 1916, as a member first of the firm of Warren
& Brandeis, and later of the firm of Brandeis, Dunbar & Nutter. He was nom-
inated an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by Presi-
dent Wilson on January 28, 1916, was confirmed by the Senate June 1, 1916,
and took his seat June 5, 1916. :
GEORGE SUTHERLAND, of Salt Lake City, was born March 25, 1862, in
Buckinghamshire, England; received a common school and academic education;
studied law at the University of Michigan, being admitted to practice in the
supreme court of that State in March, 1883, and thereafter followed the practice
of law until his appointment as a member of the Supreme Court; received hon-
orary degree of doctor of laws from Columbia University of New York, Univer-
sity of Michigan, and from the George Washington University; was State senator
from the sixth (Utah) senatorial district in the first State legislature; was elected
to the Fifty-seventh Congress; declined renomination to the Fifty-eighth; was
elected to the United States Senate by the Utah Legislature for the term begin-
ning March 4, 1905, and was reelected in 1911, his term of service expiring March
3, 1917. President American Bar Association, 1916-17. Author of Constitu-
tional Power and World Affairs, a series of lectures delivered at Columbia Univer-
sity in 1918. On September 5, 1922, he was nominated by President Harding to
be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, immediately
confirmed by the Senate, and entered upon the duties of the office October 2, 1922.
PIERCE BUTLER, of St. Paul, Minn., was born March 17, 1866, in the town-
ship of Waterford, Dakota County, Minn., attended public school until 1881,
and graduated at Carleton College in 1887. He was admitted to the bar at St.
Paul in 1888 and practiced law there until January, 1923. He was nominated by
President Harding to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States November 23, 1922, was confirmed by the Senate December 21, 1922, and
took his seat January 2, 1923.
Judiciary. io) 363
HARLAN F. STONE, of New York City, Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States; born in Chesterfield, N. H., on October 11, 1872,
son of Frederick L.. and Anne Sophia (Butler) Stone; married Agnes Harvey,
of Chesterfield, N. H., September 7, 1899; has two sons, Marshall and Lauson;
graduate of Amherst College, B. S., 1894, M. A., 1897, honorary LL. D., 1913;
Columbia Law School graduate, receiving LL. B., 1898; honorary LL. D., 1925;
honorary LL. D., Yale University, 1924; Williams College, 1925; George
Washington University, 1927; Harvard University, 1931; honorary D. C. L.,
Syracuse University, 1928; member International Academy of Comparative
Law since 1923; admitted to New York bar 1898; became member of law firm
of Wilmer & Canfield and later of its successor, Satterlee, Canfield & Stone;
while practicing law with that firm lectured on law in Columbia Law School
1899-1902, 1910-1923; adjunct professor of law 1903; severed his university con-
nection and devoted himself exclusively to practice 1905-1910; Kent professor of
law and dean of Columbia Law School 1910-1923; resigned 1923 and became
member of law firm of Sullivan & Cromwell, New York City; appointed Attorney
General of the United States April 7, 1924; nominated Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of the United States by President Coolidge January 5, 1925;
confirmed by the Senate February 5, 1925, and entered upon the duties of that
office on March 2, 1925.
OWEN J. ROBERTS, of Philadelphia, Pa., Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States, was born May 2, 1875; graduated from the Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania, A. B., 1895; LIL. B., 1898; married Elizabeth Caldwell
Rogers, June 15, 1904; one child, Elizabeth Rogers Roberts; began practice at
Philadelphia in 1898, and continuously practiced there until June, 1930; first
assistant district attorney of Philadelphia County, 1901-1904; instructor, assist-
ant professor, and professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania, 1898-1918;
honorary degree LL. D. Ursinus College, Beaver College, Lafayette College,
Dickinson College, Trinity College, University of Pennsylvania; appointed special
deputy attorney general to represent the United States in prosecution of cases
arising under espionage act in eastern district of Pennsylvania during the World
War, and also represented the United States Housing Corporation in Philadelphia;
he was appointed by President Coolidge one of two attorneys to prosecute cases
arising under leases of Government lands in California and Wyoming, in 1924;
nominated Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by Presi-
dent Hoover May 9, 1930; confirmed by the Senate May 20, 1930, and entered
upon the duties of that office June 2, 1930,
BENJAMIN N. CARDOZO, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the
United States; born at New York City, May 24, 1870; A. B. Columbia Univer-
sity, 1889; A. M. 1890; admitted to the bar, 1891; elected Justice of the Supreme
Court of New York for term beginning January 1, 1914; designated by the
Governor to act as Associate Judge of the Court of Appeals of New York, Febru-
ary 2, 1914; elected Associate Judge of the Court of Appeals for term beginning
January 1, 1918; elected Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals for term beginning
January 1, 1927; resigned as Chief Judge, March 7, 1932, having been nominated
by President Hoover, February 15, 1932, as an Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of the United States, and confirmed by the Senate, February 24, 1932;
entered upon the duties of that office March 14, 1932; trustee of Columbia Uni-
versity, 1928-1932; vice-president of the American Law Institute, 1923-1932;
awarded the Ames Medal by Harvard University for distinguished contributions
to jurisprudence, 1931; awarded the Roosevelt Memorial Medal for distinguished
services in the development of public law, 1931; Honorary LL. D., Columbia
University, 1915; Yale University, 1921; New York University, 1922; University
of Michigan, 1923; Harvard University, 1927; St. Johns University, Brooklyn,
1928; St. Lawrence University, Williams College, Princeton University, Univer-
sity of Pennsylvania, 1932; author, The Jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals, 1903;
The Nature of the Judicial Process (Yale University lectures), 1921; The Growth
of the Law (Yale University lectures), 1924; The Paradoxes of Legal Science
(Columbia University lectures), 1928; Law and Literature, and other essays and
addresses, 1930. eg ;
364 Congressional Dairectory
RESIDENCES OF THE JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT
}
|
|
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the } designates those whose daughters accoms 1
pany them]
*Mr. Chief Justice Hughes, 2223 R Street.
*Mr. Justice Van Devanter, 2101 Connecticut Avenue.
Mr Justice McReynolds, The Rochambeau.
*Mr. Justice Brandeis, 2205 California Street.
*t Mr. Justice Sutherland, 2029 Connecticut Avenue.
*t Mr. Justice Butler, 1229 Nineteenth Street.
*Mr. Justice Stone, 2340 Wyoming Avenue.
*1 Mr. Justice Roberts, 1401 Thirty-first Street.
Mr. Justice Cardozo, 2101 Connecticut Avenue.
OFFICERS OF THE SUPREME COURT
Clerk.—Charles Elmore Cropley, Cathedral Mansions, South.
Deputy clerks.—Reginald C. Dilli, 1329 Hemlock Street; Hugh W. Barr, 4701
Connecticut Avenue.
Marshal.—Frank Key Green, 2934 Newark Street.
Reporter.— Ernest Knaebel, 3707 Morrison Street.
CIRCUIT COURTS OF APPEALS OF THE UNITED STATES
First judicial circust.—Mr. Justice Brandeis. Districts of Maine, New Hamp-
shire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Puerto Rico.
Circuit judges.—George Hutchins Bingham, Manchester, N. H.; Scott Wil-
son, Portland, Me.; James M. Morton, jr., Bedford, Mass.
Second judicial circuit.— Mr. Justice Stone. Districts of Vermont, Connecticut,
northern New York, southern New York, eastern New York, and western
New York.
Circuit judges.—Martin T. Manton, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Learned Hand, New
York, N. Y.; Thomas W. Swan, New Haven, Conn.; Augustus N. Hand,
New York, N. Y.; Harrie Brigham Chase, Brattleboro, Vt.; Julian W.
Mack, New York, N. Y.
Third judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Roberts. Districts of New Jersey, eastern
Pennsylvania, middle Pennsylvania, western Pennsylvania, and Delaware.
Circuit judges.—Joseph Buffington, Pittsburgh, Pa.; J. Warren Davis,
Trenton, N. J.; Victor B. Woolley, Wilmington, Del.; J. Whitaker Thomp-
son, Philadelphia, Pa.
Fourth judicial circuit.—Mr. Chief Justice Hughes. Districts of Maryland,
northern West Virginia, southern West Virginia, eastern Virginia, western
Virginia, eastern North Carolina, western North Carolina, and eastern
and western South Carolina.
Circuit judges.—John J. Parker, Charlotte, N. C.; Elliott Northcott, Hunt-
ington, W. Va.; Morris A. Soper, Baltimore, Md.
Fifth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Cardozo. Districts of northern Georgia,
southern Georgia, middle Georgia, northern Florida, southern Florida,
northern Alabama, middle Alabama, southern Alabama, northern Missis-
sippi, southern Mississippi, eastern Louisiana, western Louisiana, northern
Texas, southern Texas, eastern Texas, western Texas, and Canal Zone.
Circuit judges.—Nathan P. Bryan, Jacksonville, Fla.; Rufus E. Foster, New
Orleans, La.; Samuel H. Sibley, Atlanta, Ga.; Joseph C. Hutcheson, jr.,
Houston, Tex.
Sixth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice McReynolds. Districts of northern Ohio,
southern Ohio, eastern Michigan, western Michigan, eastern Kentucky,
western Kentucky, eastern Tennessee, middle Tennessee, and western
Tennessee.
Circuit judges.—Charles H. Moorman, Louisville, Ky.; Xenophon Hicks,
Knoxville, Tenn.; Smith Hickenlooper, €incinnati, Ohio; Julian W. Mack,
New York, N. Y.; Charles C. Simons, Detroit, Mich.
Seventh judicial circust.—Mr. Justice Van Devanter. Districts of Indiana,
northern Illinois, eastern Illinois, southern Illinois, eastern Wisconsin, and
western Wisconsin.
Circuit judges.—[Vacancy], Chicago, Ill.; Samuel Alschuler, Chicago, Ill;
Evan A, Evans, Madison, Wis,; William M. Sparks, Indianapolis, Ind.
EE
Judiciary 365
Eighth judicial circutt.—Mr. Justice Butler. Districts of Minnesota, northern
Towa, southern Towa, eastern Missouri, western Missouri, eastern Arkansas,
western Arkansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota.
Circuit judges.—Kimbrough Stone, Kansas City, Mo.; William S. Kenyon,
Fort Dodge, Iowa; John B. Sanborn, St. Paul, Minn.; Archibald K.
Gardner, Aberdeen, S. Dak.; Joseph W. Woodrough, Omaha, Nebr.
Ninth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Sutherland. Distriets of northern California,
southern California, Oregon, Nevada, Montana, eastern Washington,
Yostern Washington, Idaho, Arizona, and Territories of Alaska and
awail.
Circuit judges.— William H. Sawtelle, Tueson, Ariz.; Curtis D. Wilbur,
San Francisco, Calif.; Francis A. Garrecht.
Tenth judicial circuit.—Mr. Justice Van Devanter. Districts of Colorado.
Wyoming, Utah, Kansas, eastern Oklahoma, western Oklahoma, northern
Oklahoma, and New Mexico.
Circuit judges.—Robert E. Lewis, Denver, Colo.; Orie 1. Phillips, Albuquer
que, N. Mex.; Geo. T. McDermott, Topeka, Kans. [Vacancy.]
UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND PATENT
APPEALS
(Internal Revenue Building. Phone, NAtional 4696)
WILLIAM J. GRAHAM, presiding judge, of Aledo, Mercer County, Ill., was
born near New Castle, Pa., February 7, 1872; moved to Mercer County 1879;
educated in publie schools and University of Illinois; admitted to bar 1895;
married and has three children; State’s attorney Mercer County 1900-1908;
member House of Representatives of Illinois 1915-1917; elected to Sixty-fifth,
Sixty-sixth, Sixty-seventh, and Sixty-eighth Congresses; appointed presiding
judge of the United States Court of Customs Appeals by President Coolidge
May 29, 1924. : Hlmeten : ;
OSCAR E. BLAND, judge, of Linton, Ind.; born in Greene County, .Ind.,
November 21, 1877; educated at Indiana University and Valparaiso University;
studied law at Indiana University, admitted to the bar in Indiana in 1901;
member of the Indiana State Senate, 1907, 1908, 1909; elected to Congress
from the second district of Indiana in 1916, served through the Sixty-fifth,
Sixty-sixth, and Sixty-seventh Congresses; appointed to the United States
Court of Customs Appeals by President Harding March 4, 1923.
CHARLES SHERROD HATFIELD, judge; born in West Millgrove, Ohio,
June 29, 1882; A. B. at Hanover College; postgraduate course at Indiana Uni-
versity; graduated at law at Ohio State University, and commenced the practice
of law in 1907; was prosecuting attorney of Wood County; LL. D. National
University, 1931; appointed judge of the United States Court of Customs Appeals
by President Harding March 4, 1923.
FINIS JAMES GARRETT, judge, of Dresden, Tenn., was born August 26,
1875, near Ore Springs, in Weakley County, Tenn., of Noah J. and Virginia
Garrett; educated at the common schools at Clinton College, Clinton, Ky., and
at Bethel College, McKenzie, Tenn., graduating from the latter institution in
June, 1897, taking the degree of A. B.; in June, 1925, received the honorary
degree of LL. D. from Roanoke College at Salem, Va.; admitted to the bar in
August, 1899, and began practice at Dresden, January 1, 1900; was appointed
master in chancery, September 14, 1900, and served until January 24, 1905;
married, November 27, 1901, to Miss Elizabeth Harris Burns, of McKenzie,
Tenn.; they have two children; was elected to the Fifty-ninth Congress and to
each succeeding Congress up to and including the Seventieth; nominee of the
minority party for Speaker of the Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Seventieth
Congresses, serving as minority leader for those Congresses; appointed judge of
the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals by President Coolidge
February 18, 1929, and took the oath of office March 5, 1929.
IRVINE L. LENROOT, judge, of Superior, Wis., was born in Superior, Wis.,
January 31, 1869; received common school education; became a court reporter;
studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1897; is married; member Wisconsin
Legislature, 1901-1907; speaker of assembly, 1903 and 1905; Member House
366 Congressional Directory
of Representatives, 1909 to April 2, 1918; Member United States Senate, April
2, 1918, to March 4, 1927; American member of the Anglo-American Commission
of Conciliation, appointed thereto by President Coolidge on September 12, 1927;
appointed judge of the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals
by President Hoover on May 17, 1929.
RESIDENCES OF THE JUDGES OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND
; PATENT APPEALS
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the t those whose daughters accompany them]
*{ Presiding Judge William J. Graham, 7114 Alaska Avenue.|
*t Judge Oscar E. Bland, 2950 Macomb Street.
*iJudge Charles S. Hatfield, 4335 Cathedral Avenue.
*tJudge Finis J. Garrett, 3024 Tilden Street.
*tJudge Irvine L. Lenroot, The Woodward Apartments.
OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES COURT OF CUSTOMS AND PATENT APPEALS
Clerk.— Arthur B. Shelton, 10 Cypress Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
Marshal.—Joseph G. Gauges, 3900 Fourteenth Street.
Assistant clerk.—Frank C. Merritt, 1318 Farragut Street.
Reporter—W. R. MeWherter, Cairo Hotel.
COURT OF APPEALS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
(Court of Appeals Building, Judiciary Square. Phone, NA tional 4624)
Chef justice.— George E. Martin, 1661 Crescent Place.
Associate justices.—Charles H. Robb, The Rochambeau; Josiah A. Van Orsdel,
Hotel Roosevelt; William Hitz, 3124 Woodley Road; D. Lawrence Groner,
2540 Massachusetts Avenue.
Clerk.—Henry W. Hodges, 2208 Q Street.
Deputy clerk.—Moncure Burke, 3009 Whitehaven Street (formerly W Street).
COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES
(Pennsylvania Avenue and Seventeenth Street. Phone, DIstrict 0642)
FENTON WHITLOCK BOOTH, chief justice; born in Marshall, Ill., May 12,
1869; graduated Marshall High School, 1887; student De Pauw University three
years; LL. B., University of Michigan, 1892; member Fortieth General Assem-
bly, lllinois; admitted to the bar in 1892 and practiced at Marshall, Ill., as a
member of the firm of Golden, Schofield & Booth; appointed judge, Court of
Claims, March 17, 1905, and chief justice, April 23, 1928.
WILLIAM RAYMOND GREEN, judge, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, was born
at Colchester, Conn.; graduated at Oberlin College, Ohio, in 1879, in the classical
course; honorary degree LL. D., Oberlin College, 1927. He was admitted to the
bar in Illinois in 1882 and shortly after began the practice of law in Iowa; in 1894
he was elected one of the judges of the fifteenth judicial district of Iowa and was
reelected four times thereafter. On June 5, 1911, he was elected to the Sixty-
second Congress, and resigned his position as judge; he was reelected to and
served in the Sixty-third to the Seventieth Congresses, inclusive; chairman of
the Committee on Ways and Means, Sixty-eighth, Sixty-ninth, and Seventieth
Congresses; chairman Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Taxation, Sixty-
ninth and Seventieth Congresses; appointed judge of the Court of Claims by
President Coolidge and, after resignation from Congress, qualified March 31, 1928.
BENJAMIN H. LITTLETON, judge, of Nashville, Tenn., was born at
Weatherford, Tex., 1889; educated in the public schools of Tennessee; LL. B.,
Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn., 1914. He was admitted to the bar in
1914 and practiced law at Nashville, Tenn.; appointed assistant United States
attorney for the middle district of Tennessee, 1918; resigned in 1921 to accept
appointment as special attorney in the office of general counsel for the Bureau of
Internal Revenue, Treasury Department; was appointed by President Coolidge
as a member of the United States Board of Tax Appeals, July 16, 1924, for 2 years;
reappointed June 6, 1926, for term of 10 years. He was elected chairman of the
| aovJudictary oo 367
United States Board of Tax Appeals, April, 1927; reelected chairman of the board,
April, 1929; appointed judge of the Court of Claims by President Hoover, Novem-
ber 6, 1929. ;
THOMAS S. WILLIAMS, judge, of Louisville, I1l.; born in Clay County,
Ill., February 14, 1872; educated in the public schools and at Austin College;
admitted to the bar by the Supreme Court of Illinois, November, 1897, and en-
gaged actively in the general practice of the law in the fourth judicial circuit of
Illinois until his election to Congress in 1914; served continuously in Congress
from March 4, 1915, until November 11, 1929, on which date he became a mem-
ber of the Court of Claims by appointment of President Hoover; is married and
has three children—Harold S., a practicing attorney at Taylorville, Ill.; Ruth
(Mrs. Pol Hansen), Washington, D. C.; and Alice (Mrs. Oscar M. Browne, jr.),
oston, Mass. : ;
RICHARD SMITH WHALEY, judge; born in Charleston, S. C., July 15,
1874; son of William B. and Helen (Smith) W.; Episcopal High School, Alexan-
dria, Va.; LL. B., University of Virginia, 1897; admitted to the bar of South
Carolina in 1897; elected to the House of Representatives of South Carolina,
1900, and reelected five successive times (speaker of house for two terms); pre-
siding officer of the Democratic State convention, 1910; delegate to Democratic
National Convention, Baltimore, 1912, and San Francisco, 1920; elected to
Sixty-third Congress (1913-1915), first South Carolina district; reelected to
Sixty-fourth, Sixty-fifth, and Sixth-sixth Congresses (1915-1921) ; chairman, Rent
Commission of the District of Columbia, 1923-1925; commissioner, Court of
Claims, 1925-1930; judge of Court of Claims, June 4, 1930."
RESIDENCES OF THE JUDGES OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { those whose daughters accompany them]
*++Chief Justice Fenton W. Booth, 1752 Lamont Street.
1Judge William R. Green, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
*Judge Benjamin H. Littleton, The Northumberland.
*t+Judge Thomas S. Williams, 3414 Garfield Street.
Judge Richard S. Whaley, The Shoreham.
RETIRED
Chief Justice Edward K. Campbell, The Dresden.
Judge Samuel Jordan Graham, The Shoreham.
OFFICERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS
Chief clerk.—Willard L. Hart, 3306 Cathedral Avenue.
Assistant clerk.—Fred C. Kleinschmidt, 3002 Q Street.
Bailiff —Jerry J. Marcotte, Chevy Chase View, Md.
Secretary to court.— Walter H. Moling, 1791 Lanier Place.
Auditor and reporter—Charles F. Kincheloe, East Falls Church, Va.
Auditor—Hyland R. Johns, 1445 Massachusetts Avenue.
COMMISSIONERS OF THE COURT OF CLAIMS
Israel M. Foster, 1842 Sixteenth Street.
Myron M. Cohen, Woodley Park Towers.
Hayner H. Gordon, 1755 Lamont Street.
Guilford S. Jameson, 209 Thirteenth Street NE.
Ewart W. Hobbs, box 5414, Seat Pleasant, Md.
Richard H. Akers, Garrett Park, Md.
C. William Ramseyer, Alban Towers.
UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT
(201 Varick Street, New York City. Phone, Walker 5-9030)
WILLIAM J. TILSON, presiding judge; born in Clearbranch, Tenn., August 13,
1871; B. A., Yale University, 1894; LL. B., 1896; M. L., 1897; practiced law in
Atlanta, Ga., 28 years; appointed United States judge, middle district of Georgia,
July 5, 1926, and resigned March 17, 1928, to accept appointment as judge
United States Customs Court.
co. o.oo. Lao
368 Congressional Directory
CHARLES P. McCLELLAND, judge; born in Scotland December 19, 1854;
received degree of LL. B. from New York University 1882; special deputy
collector of customs (now assistant collector of customs), port of New York,
1886 to 1890; served as member of New York State Assembly 1885, 1886, and
1891; majority leader 1891; member New York State Senate 1892, 1893, and
1903; appointed to Board of United States General Appraisers (now United
States Customs Court) 1903.
JERRY B. SULLIVAN, judge; born in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, January 1, 1859;
admitted to Iowa State bar 1881; city attorney, Creston, lowa, 1887-1889;
member of board of education of Des Moines, Iowa, for five years; Democratic
candidate for Governor of Iowa 1903; appointed member of Board of United
States General Appraisers (now United States Customs Court) 1913.
GEORGE STEWART BROWN, judge; born in Baltimore, Md., August 15,
1871; A. B., Johns Hopkins University, 1893; LL. B., University of Maryland,
1895; practiced law in Baltimore with the firm of Brown & Brune, 1895 to 1913;
member city council, Baltimore, 1889-1907; member United States Customs
Court since 1913.
GENEVIEVE R. CLINE, judge; born in Warren, Ohio; educated at Warren
High School, Spencerian Commercial College, Cleveland, Oberlin College; LL. B.,
Baldwin Wallace University. Admitted to practice in Ohio State and Federal
courts; practiced law with John A. Cline in Cleveland, Ohio; appointed United
States appraiser of merchandise at Cleveland, Ohio, by President Harding in 1922;
appointed judge United States Customs Court by President Coolidge in 1928. -
DAVID H. KINCHELOE, judge; born in Sacramento, Ky., April 9, 1877;
attended Valparaiso University, Ind., 1896; B. S., Bowling Green College, Ky.,
1898; admitted to the Kentucky bar in 1899; prosecuting attorney of McLean
County, Ky., 1902-1906; practiced law at Madisonville, Ky., 1906-1930; Member
of Congress from Kentucky, 1915-1930; appointed judge United States Customs
Court by President Hoover September 22, 1930, resigning from Congress to
accept appointment; at the time of his appointment was renominated for Congress
from his district for his ninth term without Democratic or Republican opposition.
WALTER H. EVANS, judge; born on a farm near New Middletown, Ind.,
April 17, 1870; graduate of Valparaiso University, B. S., 1896; University of
Oregon, LL. B.; 1905; assistant United States district attorney, Oregon, 1907—
1912; distriet attorney, fourth judicial district, Portland, Oreg., 1912-1921; cir-
cuit judge, fourth judicial district, 1921-1931; resigned to accept appointment
as judge United States Customs Court under commission of President Hoover
dated February 23, 1931.
FREDERICK W. DALLINGER, judge; born in Cambridge, Mass., October
2, 1871; A. B., A. M., LL. B., Harvard University; admitted to Massachusetts
and Federal bars; engaged in general practice, 1897-1932; public administrator,
1897-1932; member of Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1894-95, and of
Massachusetts Senate, 1896-1900; lecturer in government, Harvard University;
author of Nominations for Elective Office in the United States; Representative
in Congress from Massachusetts, 1915-1932; appointed judge United States
Customs Court by President Hoover, July 8, 1932, resigning from Congress to
accept appointment; married and has four children—two sons and two daughters.
[Vacancy.]
J udiciary 369
OFFICERS OF THE UNITED STATES CUSTOMS COURT
Clerk.—John W. Dale.
Marshal and deputy clerk.— William H. Tietgen.
Deputy marshal.—Michael S. Gleason.
SUPREME COURT OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
(United States Courthouse. Phone, DIstrict 2854; clerk’s office, DIstrict 2854)
Chief Justice.— Alfred A. Wheat, Stoneleigh Court.
Associate justices.—Jennings Bailey, 2231 Bancroft Place; Peyton Gordon, 2139
Wyoming Avenue; Jesse C. Adkins, 1424 Sixteenth Street; Oscar R. Luhring,
3601 Connecticut Avenue, apartment 710; Joseph W. Cox, 1850 Monroe
Street; James M. Proctor, 4615 Linnean Avenue; F. Dickinson Letts, 3500
Garfield Street; Daniel W. O'Donoghue, 2303 California Street.
Auditor—A. Leftwich Sinclair, The Westchester, apartment 409B. (Office
phone, NAtional 0103.)
Oe) E. Cunningham, 2704 Cathedral Avenue. (Office phone, DIstrict
2854.
Chuef rn officer—Amos A. Steele, The Westcliffe. (Office phone, DIstrict
28564.
UNITED STATES MARSHAL’S OFFICE-
(United States Courthouse. Phone, DIstrict 2854)
United States marshal.—Edgar C. Snyder, 1605 Kennedy Place.
Chief deputy marshal.—Stephen B. Callahan, 1401 Monroe Street NE.
UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
(United States Courthouse. Phones, NAtional 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139)
United States attorney, District of Columbia.—Leo A. Rover, 1300 Quincy Street
NE.
Secretary to the United States attorney, District of Columbia.—Allen J. Krouse,
1107 Holbrook Terrace NE.
Assistant United States attorneys, District of Columbia.—John W. Fihelly, 1737 H
Street; David A. Hart, 3708 Jenifer Street; Rebekah S. Greathouse, 5329
Sixteenth Street; Harold W. Orcutt, 310 Elm Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.;
William H. Collins, 3347 Eighteenth Street; M. Pearl McCall, Roosevelt
Hotel; John B. Williams, 3920 Third Street; Walter M. Shea, 1422 Van
Buren Street; Charles B. Murray, 5417 Kansas Avenue; William A. Gallagher,
1805 Lincoln Road; Irvin Goldstein, 310 Taylor Street; James R. Kirkland,
229 Rhode Island Avenue; John R. Fitzpatrick, 1723 Taylor Street; Julian I.
Richards, 4 Blackthorn Street, Chevy Chase, Md.; Frank W. Adams, 52
Quincy Place; Michael F. Keogh, 2001 Sixteenth Street; Wilbert McInerney,
621 Gallatin Street; Wilbur N. Baughman, Calvert Place, Kensington, Md.;
John J. Sirica, 6217 Fourteenth Street; Alex. H. Bell, jr., 6601 East Avenue,
Chevy Chase, Md.; John J. Wilson, 2737 Devonshire Place; John W. Wood,
1500 Webster Street; Milford F. Schwartz, 1317 Randolph Street; Roger
Robb, 1722 Nineteenth Street.
Chief clerk.—John C. Conliff, jr., 1320 Juniper Street.
Clerks.—Margaret D. Weber, 502 Dorsett Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.; Eliza-
beth R. Magruder, 140 Rucker Avenue, Lyon Village, Va.; Ethel A. Bras-
well, 1730 Sixteenth Street; W. R. Stitely, 2400 Thirteenth Street; Mamie
C. Copp, 5620 Sherrier Place; Charles J. Crogan, 315 Greene Avenue,
Aurora Hills, Va.; Robert E. McLaughlin, 410 Fifth Street; John J. O’Leary,
33 S Street; Margaret Virginia Carr, 2926 Porter Street; Doris M. Newton,
1823 Newton Street; Stephen P. Haycock, 1869 Wyoming Avenue; John
B. Nesbitt, 3033 Sixteenth Street; Thomas M. David, 1382 East Capitol
Street; Paul C. Albus, 1614 Seventeenth Street; I. Irvin Bolotin, 7701
Georgia Avenue. :
Messengers.—Luther Ross, Vista, Md.; Hugh W. Harvey, 1956 Second Street;
Howard V. Wilkes, 1125 Fairmont Street.
157297°—173-1—1ST ED——25
370 Congressional Darectory
MUNICIPAL COURT
(467 C Street. Phone, NAtional 6000)
Presiding judge.— George C. Aukam, 1821 Irving Street.
udges:
Robert BE. Mattingly, 1224 Massachusetts Avenue.
Mary O’Toole, apartment 302, 3022 Porter Street.
James A. Cobb, 1732 S Street.
Nathan Cayton, 2948 Macomb Street.
Clert.—Blanche Neff, 6407 Third Street.
POLICE COURT
(Sixth and D Streets. Phones, NAtional 6990 and 6991)
Presiding judge.—Gus. A. Schuldt, 3300 Sixteenth Street.
udges:
John P. MeMahon, Argonne Apartment, 1629 Columbia Road.
Isaac R. Hitt, 3909 McKinley Street, Chevy Chase.
Ralph Given, 3716 Morrison Street.
Clerk.—F. A. Sebring, 5320 Colorado Avenue.
Chief deputy clerk.— William A. Norgren, Riverdale, Md.
JUVENILE COURT
(472 Indiana Avenue. Phones, District 5739 and NA tional 6000)
Judge.—Kathryn Sellers, 1471 Monroe Street.
Clerk.—Charles F. Sellers, 1471 Monroe Street.
Deputy clerk.— Virginia Breckinridge, 1761 Lanier Place.
Divarior department of inquiry.— Mary H. Bayles, 1445 Spring Road, apartment
Director department of probation.—Jeannette Ezekiels, The Roosevelt.
Assistant director of probation.—J. Leonard Lyons, 3422 Garfield Street.
REGISTER OF WILLS AND CLERK OF THE PROBATE COURT
(United States Courthouse. Phone, NAtional 2840)
Register and clerk.—Theodore Cogswell, The Broadmoor.
Deputies— Victor S. Mersch, 6806 Forty-fourth Street; Melvin J. Marques,
2525 Ontario Road, apartment 37.
RECORDER OF DEEDS
(Century Building, 412 Fifth Street. Phone, DIstrict 0672)
Recorder of deeds.—Jefferson S. Coage, 1911 Eleventh Street.
Deputy recorder of deeds.— Margaret M. Killeen, 2726 Connecticut Avenue.
Second deputy recorder of deeds.—[Vacant.]
Chief clerk.—Catherine F. Downing, 1155 Fourth Street NE.
Secretary.—Romeo W, Horad, 1736 Vermont Avenue.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
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 Acceptance 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, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings;—"’
The States of Maryland and Virginia made cessions contemplated by this
clause in the years 1788 and 1789, respectively. From the cessions tendered by
the two States was selected the territory for the permanent seat of the General
Government. This territory was 10 miles square, lying on either side of the
Potomac River at the head of navigation. Later, 1846, Congress retroceded to
Virginia that portion ceded by it. The Maryland or retained portion is approxi-
mately 70 square miles.
The seat of government of the United States was first definitely named by the
clause in the act entitled ‘“ An act providing a permanent form of government
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 to be designated as the District of Columbia’ (20 Stat. 102), although
it had been incidentally mentioned as such in several preceding statutes.
The land within the ceded territory was owned by a number of people. In
Georgetown President Washington negotiated with the proprietors or landowners
of that portion of the ceded territory selected as the site of the city of Washington,
which comprised about 10 per cent of the area of the present District of Columbia.
On the second day, March 30, 1791, he concluded an agreement which was put
in writing and signed by the proprietors. By it the President was given sole
power to lay off streets as he pleased: These proprietors conveyed their holdings
to trustees named by the President to hold title to the same during the laying
out of the Federal city and then convey as agreed to the United States and ‘the
proprietors, respectively. Under this agreement the proprietors donated to the
United States all of the lands for the streets and one-half of the city lots through-
out the entire city. Sites reserved by the United States for the public buildings,
parks, and other public purposes were paid for by the United States in Maryland
money the equivalent to $66.66 per acre. Such payment, amounting to $36,099,
was made oul of the proceeds from the sale of some of the lots which these pro-
prietors had donated to the United States. This was the only purchase price
paid by the United States for any part of the entire acquisition of 5,128 acres for
the purpose of building the Capital City.
The land within the original city of Washington comprised a total of 6,111
acres and was divided to the United States 4,147 acres—3,606 acres for streets
and 541 acres for public purposes. The remaining 1,964 acres was divided into
squares and the squares into lots. The whole number of lots was 20,272—10,136
to the United States and the same number to the proprietors.
Thomas Jefferson, then Secretary of State, declared the liberality of the pro-
prietors was ‘‘noble.”
The United States lots were sold from time to time, chiefly before 1800 and up
to 1835 and brought $741,024.45. (Senate Doc. 247, 64th Cong., 1st sess., p. 23.)
This was a considerable sum as compared with the average annual income of the
371
372 Congressional Directory
Federal Government during the 12 years from 1789 to 1800, it being about 13 per
cent of that average of about $5,600,000. The lots which still remained the prop-
erty of the United States after gifts of them to charitable and literary institutions
were sold about September, 1865, for a moderate sum.
The proceeds from the sales of the Government lots were largely applied to the
erection of the original Government buildings and improvements in their immedi-
ate neighborhood. The funds for these buildings were supplemented by grants
of $120,000 by the State of Virginia and $72,000 by the State of Maryland.
(H. R. Report 269, 21st Cong., 1st sess., Doe. No. 5, p. 47.) Both President
Washington and President Jefferson expected the sale of these lots, if properly
conserved, would not only provide ample funds for the erection of the public
buildings without charge upon the lean Federal Treasury but would leave what
Jefferson termed ‘‘the residuary interest of the city’ which it was intended to be
used for streets and other city improvements. The failure of the Government
to make these expected improvements so retarded the appreciation of values of
the lots that the Government’s prospective income from this source fell far short
of expectations. The landowners who had so generously given their land to the
Government as well as those who had been induced to purchase failed to realize
the enhancement of value of their lots because of the failure of expected abutting
and community improvements. The faith of Mr. Jefferson and the proprietors
matched, but their fond hopes were not realized. The original proprietor of the
land whereon is the Capitol Building, Daniel Carroll, of Duddington, in 1837
wrote ‘‘that the unfortunate proprietors are generally brought to ruin,” who,
“were so wild as to suppose that the donation was so great the Government
might pave the streets with ingots of gold or silver.”
The city was planned and partly laid out by Maj. Pierre Charles I’Enfant, a
French engineer. This work was perfected and completed by Maj. Andrew
Ellicott. The building of the city and the erection of the public buildings was in
charge of three commissioners selected by the President and subject to his
direction.
When the Government establishment was moved in 1800 there existed within
the 10 miles square two municipal corporations; the Corporation of the City of
Alexandria, incorporated by Virginia; and the Corporation of the City of George-
town, incorporated by Maryland.
~ The act of February 27, 1801, was the first legislation by Congress for the
government of the District of Columbia following the removal to the permanent
seat of government. While this act failed to set up a complete local government,
it declared all of the laws of the States of Maryland and Virginia as then existing
to be in force in the parts of the District ceded by the respective States. It
created two counties, Washington County being the area outside of the cities of
Washington and Georgetown on the Maryland side of the river and Alexandria
County being the area beyond the limits of the city of Alexandria on the Virginia
side of the river. It also created the circuit court, the office of marshal of the
District, the office of United States attorney for the District, justices of the peace
for the ie counties, a register of wills, and a judge of the orphan’s court. (2
Stat. 103.
The first government of the city of Washington consisted of a mayor appointed
by the President of the United States and a city council elected by the people of
the city. This was in 1802. The act chartering the city of Washington also
created the levy courts, consisting originally of the justices of the peace of the
respective counties. (2 Stat. 115; 2 Stat. 773; 3 Stat. 195; 9 Stat. 230; 12 Stat.
384.) The levy courts were given broad administrative powers over the counties
of Washington and Alexandria, but had no judicial functions. At a later date the
levy court for Washington County was composed of nine members appointed by
the President. (12 Stat. 799.) Thus, there were within the 10 miles square five
distinet local administrative units, namely, (1) the corporation of Washington,
(2) the corporation of Georgetown, (3) the county of Washington, (4) the corpo-
ration of Alexandria, and (5) the county of Alexandria. These were reduced to
three units in 1846 with the retrocession of Alexandria city and County to the
State of Virginia. (9 Stat. 35; 9 Stat. 1000.) The members of the city councils
of the three municipalities were elected as were the mayors of Georgetown and
Alexandria. In 1812 the city council was permitted to elect the mayor of Wash-
ington and in 1820 and thereafter the mayor was elected by the people. (3 Stat.
583.) The term of the mayor of Washington was for two years. This govern-
ment continued until 1871.
. By an act of Congress of February 21, 1871, the corporation of Washington,
the corporation of Georgetown, and the levy court for Washington County were
District Government 373
abolished and the administration consolidated into a so-called territorial form
of government. This government consisted of a governor, a board of public
works, and a legislative assembly. The legislative assembly consisted of a
council of 11 members and a house of delegates of 22 members. The District
then also had a Delegate in the House of Representatives of the United States.
The governor, the board of public works, and council were appointed by the
President of the United States by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
The 22 members of the house of delegates and the Delegate in Congress were
Shoe by the people. The District had a Delegate in Congress until March 4,
875.
This form of government lasted for three years, until June 20, 1874, when
Congress provided that the District should be governed by three commissioners,
appointed by the President. This was known as the temporary form of govern-
ment and lasted until July 1, 1878, when the present permanent commission
government was set up. (18 Stat. 116.) In the creation of the temporary com-
mission form of government in 1874 and the permanent form in 1878 no provision
was made for the franchise, and for the first time in three-quarters of a century
no part of the District exercised the right of suffrage. The present form of
government was created by act of Congress approved June 11, 1878. (20 Stat.
102
The District of Columbia has an area of 69.245 square miles, of which 60.1
square miles are land. The river boundary is high-water mark along the Virginia
shore of the Potomac River.
The local government of the District of Columbia is a municipal corporation
having jurisdiction over the territory which was ‘‘ ceded by the State of Maryland
to the Congress of the United States for the permanent seat of the Government of
the United States.” (20 Stat. 102.) This government is administered by a board
of three commissioners having general equal powers and duties. (20 Stat. 103.)
Two of these commissioners, who must have been actual residents of the Dis-
trict 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 for the term of three years each
and until their successors are appointed and qualified.
The other commissioner is detafled from time to time by the President of the
United States from the Corps of Engineers of the United States Army, and shall
not be required to perform any other military duty. (Ib.) This commissioner
shall be selected from the captains or officers of higher grade having served at
bos 15 years in the Corps of Engineers of the Army of the United States. (26
tat. 1113.)
Three officers of the same corps, junior to said commissioner, may be detailed
to assist him by the President of the United States. (26 Stat. 246.) The senior
officer of the Corps of Engineers of the Army, who for the time being be detailed
to act as assistant (and in case of his absence from the District, or disability,
the junior officer so detailed), shall, in 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 com-
missioner. (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 members of the
zoning commission. (37 Stat. 974.)
The expenditures of the District of Columbia are based upon estimates pre-
pared annually 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 portion 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.) ‘All taxes collected shall be paid
into the Treasury of the United States, and the same as well as the appropriations
to be made by the Congress as aforesaid, shall be disbursed for the expenses of
said District, on itemized vouchers, which have been audited and approved by
the auditor of the District of Columbia, certified by said commissioners or a
majority of them.” (Ib. 105.) This act also provided that the cost of operation,
development, and maintenance of the District of Columbia should be borne
374 Congressional Darectory
jointly by the United States and the District of Columbia upon a 50-50 basis.
This ratio was in 1922 changed to a payment of 60 per cent from the revenues of
the District of Columbia and 40 per cent by the United States. For several
years this legal ratio has been superseded in practice by an annual lump sum
appropriation of from $9,000,000 to $9,500,000 and for the fiscal year 1933
$7,775,000 by the United States, the remainder of the local expenses being borne
by the revenues of the District of Columbia derived from taxation of private
property and privileges. For the past several years the Federal contribution has
been approximately from 22 to 19 per cent of the total District budget, while the
money raised through local taxation represents approximately from 78 to 81
per cent.
Congress has by sundry statutes empowered the commissioners to make
building regulations; plumbing regulations; to make and enforce all such reason-
able 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.
While the District has a municipal form of government, Congress by various
statutory enactments has treated it as a branch of the United States Government,
by including it in legislation applying to the executive departments, such as the
budget and accounting act, the act classifying the salaries of Federal employees,
and the act proviaing for retirement of Federal employees.
All legislation affecting the District of Columbia must be passed by Congress
under the provisions of the Constitution. The advice of the commissioners is
usually asked before such legislation is enacted.
i i
i
/
DISTRICT GOVERNMENT
(District Building, Pennsylvania Avenue and Fourteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 6000)
Commassioner—Luther H. Reichelderfer (president of the board), 1661 Crescent
Place.
Private secretary.—Ross Haworth, 132 Thirteenth Street SE.
Commassioner.—Herbert B. Crosby, 2540 Massachusetts Avenue.
Private secretary—Ralph A. Norton, 1416 Chapin Street. :
Engineer Commissioner—Maj. John C. Gotwals, United States Army, 310
Cathedral Avenue.
Private secretary.—Isadore Bryan, 811 Quincy Street.
Assistants to Engineer Commissioner—Maj. Paul A. Hodgson, 4439 Greenwich
Parkway; Capt. Howard F. Clark, 3394 Stuyvesant Place; Lieut. Robert
E. York, Great Falls Road, McLean, Va.
Secretary to the board.—Daniel E. Garges, 5224 Chevy Chase Parkway.
DISTRICT OFFICERS
Alienist.—Dr. D. Percy Hickling, 1304 Rhode Island Avenue.
Assessor.— William P. Richards, 1457 Harvard Street.
Deputy assessor.—Charles A. Russell, 4720 Fifth Street.
Assistant assessor.—M. C. Fitzgerald, 3811 Tenth Street.
Board of assistant assessors of real estate.—Fred D. Allen, 5609 Chevy Chase
Parkway; L. S. Johnson, 716 Shepherd Street; John T. Bardroff, 1412 Euclid Street; Daniel H. Edwards, 1446 Parkwood Place; Lloyd F. Gaines, 5000 Thirteenth Street.
Board of assistant assessors of personal property.—F. A. Gunther, 3204 Twenty-
second Street NE.; Augustus Willige, 3815 Upton Street; Edward B. Fletcher,
3120 Thirty-eighth Street.
Special assessment clerk.—Foster Causey, 324 Tenth Street SE.
Auditor.—Daniel J. Donovan, 2924 Cortland Place.
Principal assistant auditor.—Arthur R. Pilkerton, 3220 Connecticut Avenue.
Second assistant auditor.—Simon MecKimmie, 903 Allison Street.
” Lg assistant auditor.— William G. Wilding, 46 Franklin Street NE.
oaras.:
Accountancy.— Wayne Kendrick, chairman, Rust Building; C. Vaughan Darby,
secretary, Potomac Electric Power Building, Room 912; William Gordon
Buchanan, treasurer, Tower Building.
Anatomical.—Dr. F. A. Hornaday, secretary-treasurer, The Mayflower.
Architects, examiner, and registrars of—L. M. Leisenring, president, 1707 I
Street; Robert F. Beresford, secretary, 1115 Connecticut Avenue.
Dental examiners.—Dr. Harry E. Osborn, president, The Farragut; Dr. C.
Willard Camalier, secretary, 1726 I Street.
Education (Thirteenth and K Streets).—Dr. Hayden Johnson, president, 818
Thirteenth Street; Mrs. Henry Grattan Doyle, vice president, 5500 Thirty-
third Street; Dr. Frank W. Ballou, superintendent of schools, 3117 Forty-
fifth Street; Dr. S. E. Kramer, first assistant superintendent, 1215 Holly
Street; Garnet C. Wilkinson, first assistant superintendent, 406 U Street; Jere
J. Crane, first assistant superintendent in charge of business affairs, 5829
Chevy Chase Parkway; Harry O. Hine, secretary, 3204 Highland Place,
Cleveland Park; assistant superintendents of schools: Maj. Raymond O.
Wilmarth, 34 Woodside Parkway, Silver Spring, Md.; R. L. Haycock, 1606
Longfellow Street; Miss Jessie La Salle, 6304 Hillcrest Place, Chevy Chase,
Md.; A. K. Savoy, 217 T Street; Dr. Howard H. Long, 1112 Girard Street.
Examiners veterinary medicine—John R. Mohler, president, 1620 Hobart
Street; F. W. Grenfell, secretary, 1916 H Street.
Healing Art Commission on Licensure to Practice.—President, Board of Com-
missioners, District of Columbia; United States Commissioner of Education;
United States district attorney for District of Columbia; superintendent
of public schools, District of Columbia; health officer, District of Columbia
(secretary-treasurer).
Nurses’ examining.—Miss Shelby W. Patton, president, 1746 K Street; Miss
Bertha E. McAfee, secretary-treasurer, 1746 K Street.
Optometry.—M. A. Leese, president, 614 Ninth Street; M. Luther Dicus, sec-
retary, 1319 F Street. :
375
376 Congressional Durectory
Boards—Continued.
~ Parole.—Isaac Gans, chairman, Iowa Apartment; Dr. Loren B. T. Johnson,
1900 Twenty-fourth Street; Dr. Emmett J. Scott, 2401 Sixth Street; Hugh
F. Rivers, secretary. :
Pharmacy.— Augustus C. Taylor, president, 150 C Street NE.; W. T. Kerfoot,
jr., secretary, Seventh and L Streets.
Plumbing.— Robert J. Barrett, president, 14 Grant Circle; Samuel Tapp, sec-
retary, 1516 Newton Street, NE.
Public welfare—W. W. Millan, chairman; George S. Wilson, director of
public welfare, 7601 Georgia Avenue; Paul L. Kirby, assistant director of
public welfare; Miss A. Patricia Morss, chief child welfare division; Miss
Emma L. Davies, supervisor, division of home care for dependent children;
Dr. R. F. Tobin, medical officer.
Trustee National Training School for Boys.—Claude D. Jones, superintendent:
Trustees Public Library (Ninth and K Streets).—Theodore W. Noyes, presi-
dent; George F. Bowerman, librarian, 2852 Ontario Road.
Collector of taxes.—C. M. Towers, 1626 Montague Street.
Deputy collector of taxes.—W. D. Clark, jr., 118 Thirteenth Street NE.
Coroner.—[Vacancy.]
Disbursing officer—James R. Lusby, 3232 Military Road.
Deputy.— Kenney P. Wright, 414 Clifton Terrace, East.
Assistant disbursing officer.—J. J. Krohr, 2205 Evarts Street, NE.
Gallinger Municipal Hospital.—Dr. Edgar A. Bocock, superintendent.
Penal institutions.—M. M. Barnard, general superintendent; J. E. C. Bischoff,
business manager; W. L. Peak, superintendent, jail; Arthur L. Petitt, superin-
tendent, workhouse; A. C. Tawse, superintendent, reformatory.
Purchasing officer—M. C. Hargrove, 1603 O Street. :
Assistant purchasing officer.— Melville D. Lindsay, 6819 Fifth Street.
Deputy purchasing officer—J. T. Kennedy, 743 Sligo Avenue, Silver Spring, Md.
Superintendents of—
Bathing beach.—John Espey, 2010 First Street.
Home for Aged and Infirm.—Frank B. Haskell, Blue Plains.
District Training School.—Dr. Kenneth B. Jones, Laurel, Md.
Industrial Home School (white). —Earle W. Cassie, 2453 Wisconsin Avenue.
Industrial Home School (colored).— Wendell P. Tucker, Blue Plains.
Insurance.—Herbert L. Davis, Falkstone Courts.
Deputies.—C. F. Creighton, 3612 Twelfth Street NE.; [one vacancy].
License bureau.— Wade H. Coombs, 3313 O Street.
Municipal lodging house.—Henry A. Koch, 310 Third Street.
National Training School for Girls.—Miss Lottie R. Richardson.
Playgrounds.—Miss Sibyl Baker, 3100 Newark Street.
Receiving Home for Children.—E. S. Arnold, 816 Potomac Avenue SE.
Temporary Home for Soldiers and Satlors.—T. A. Hudlow, 921 Pennsylvania
Avenue SE. :
Fedargulons Hospital (Fourteenth and Upshur Streets).—Dr. Joseph Winthrop
eabody.
Weights, measures, and markets.—George M. Roberts, 1816 Monroe Street.
Veterans’ service officer.— William I. Snyder, 327 Emerson Street.
Veterinary surgeon.—F. W. Grenfell, 1916 H Street.
Zoning commission.— The Commissioners of the District of Columbia, the Archi-
tect of the Capitol, and the officer in charge of public buildings and public
parks of the National Capital. Executive officer, Hugh P. Oram, District
Building.
CORPORATION COUNSEL’S OFFICE
Corporation counsel.—William W. Bride, 4763 Indian Lane. (Secretary, Mrs.
“Ruth Neff, 3800 New Hampshire Avenue.)
Principal assistant corporation counsel.—Vernon E. West, 23 Hesketh Street,
Chevy Chase, Md.
Special assistant corporation counsel for public utility matters.— William A.
Roberts, 4440 Lowell Street.
Assistant corporation counsel.—Francis H. Stephens, 1714 Summit Place;
Robert E. Lynch, 2929 Ordway Street; Walter L. Fowler, 1331 Valley Place
SE.; Edward W. Thomas, 6415 Ridgewood Avenue, Chevy Chase, Md.;
William H. Wahly, 3031 Sedgwick Street; Elwood H. Seal, 4842 Sixteenth
Street; Stanley DeNeale, 1507 Decatur Street; T. Gillespie Walsh, 4312
Thirteenth Place NE.; Chester H. Gray, 620 Ingraham Street; Edward M.
Welliver, 1667 Monroe Street; Raymond Sparks, 1667 Monroe Street.
| |
District Government S77
Chuef clerk.—Adam A. Giebel, 1644 Monroe Street.
Inspector of claims. —Edward S. Dawson, 1426 Monroe Street.
ENGINEER DEPARTMENT
Chief clerk.—Roland M. Brennan, 1711 Otis Street NE.
Director of construction.—Harold W. Baker, 3632 Ordway Street.
Assistant superintendent District Building.—E. P. Brooke, 1343 Thirtieth Street.
Engineer in charge of D. C. repair shop.—L. C. Wormington, Roosevelt Hotel.
Municipal architect.—[Vacant.]
Director of highways.—H. C. Whitehurst, 3115 Thirty-fourth Street.
Electrical engineer.— Walter E. Kern, 432 Delafield Place.
Engineer of bridges.—Clifford R. Whyte, 1649 Hobart Street.
Engineer of streets.—L. P. Robertson, Lanham, Md.
Superintendent municipal garage and D. C. auto repair shop.—Charles N.
Emmons, Cathedral Mansions.
Superintendent trees and parking.—Clifford Lanham, 4210 Alabama Avenue SE.
Surveyor.—Melvin C. Hazen, 1829 Sixteenth Street.
Director of inspection.—Hugh P. Oram, 3612 Quebec Street.
Chief electrical inspector.—J. S. Zebley, 1115 Orren Street NE.
Inspector of buildings.—John W. Oehmann, 1253 Lawrence Street NE.
I ld of plumbing.—Alfred R. McGonegal, 200 Clarendon Avenue, Claren-
don, Va.
Inspector of steam boilers.—P. M. Greenlaw, 1616 Twenty-second Street SE.
Director of sanitary engineering.—J. B. Gordon, 2817 Q Street.
Engineer of sewers.—A. D. Black, 1523 Twenty-second Street.
Supervisor of city refuse.—Morris Hacker, 1825 Adams Mill Road.
Superintendent water division.—D. W. Holton, 5467 Thirty-first Street.
DIRECTOR OF VEHICLES AND TRAFFIC
Director of vehicles and traffic.—William A. Van Duzer, 4436 Klingle Street.
First assistant.—M. O. Eldridge, 1789 Lanier Place.
Administrative assistant.—E. E. Naylor. Cherrydale, Va.
Chief clerk.—Miles W. Bell, 1040 Quebec Place.
FIRE DEPARTMENT
Chief engineer.—George S. Watson, 3928 Fourteenth Street.
Deputies.—Charles E. Schrom, 1314 Maryland Avenue NE.; John Carrington,
1526 East Capitol Street.
Battalion chief engineers.—Charles W. Gill, 332 Allison Street; Patrick J. Sulli-
van, 1412 Twenty-ninth Street; Andrew C. Buscher, 3550 Warder Street;
Hubert F. McConnell, 1133 Trinidad Avenue NE.; John B. Watt, 2440 Six-
teenth Street; Joseph B. Simms, 3633 Van Ness Street; Thomas B. Stanton,
2201 K Street; Benjamin W. Weaver, 1304 A Street SE.; Edward O’Connor,
1436 Meridian Street; Edward R. Pierce, 3400 South Dakota Avenue NE;
John R. Groves, 102 Eighth Street NE.; Logan L. Woolard, 919 E Street
SE.; Albert S. Haight, 3657 New Hampshire Avenue; Stephen T. Porter,
2012 M Street; Twyman S. Jones, 818 Longfellow Street; Harry B. Barker,
4114 Garrison Street.
Fire marshal.—Calvin G. Lauber, 5509 Nebraska Avenue.
Superintendent of machinery.—Otto KE. Fearn, 516 A Street NE.
HEALTH DEPARTMENT
Health officer—Dr. William C. Fowler, The Westchester.
Assistant health officer.—Dr. Edward J. Schwartz, The Westchester.
Chief clerk and deputy health officer.—Arthur G. Cole, 4121 Seventh Street.
Chief of bureau of preventable diseases.—Dr. James G. Cumming, 2801 Thirty-
fourth Place.
Chief samitary inspector.—J. Frank Butts, 3507 T Street.
Chief food inspector.—Dr. Reid R. Ashworth, 3533 Hertford Place.
Chief of bureau of vital staiistics.—John H. Milligan, West Falls Church, Va.
Chemist.—John B. Reed, A. B., 3100 Forty-fifth Street.
Serologist.—Jesse P. Porch, D. V. M., Vienna, Va.
Bacteriologist.—John E. Noble, 1544 Twenty-fifth Street SE.
Microanalyst.—Edwin R. Donaldson, 821 Elder Street.
Chief medical and sanitary inspector of schools.—Dr. Joseph A. Murphy, 75
Observatory Circle.
Director, child hygiene service.—Dr. Hugh J. Davis, 1841 Wyoming Avenue.
Poundmaster.— Walter R. Smith, 7015 Ninth Street.
378 Congressional Directory
METROPOLITAN POLICE
Major and superintendent.—Ernest W. Brown, 1335 Thirtieth Street.
Detective headquarters.— Assistant superintendent, F. S. W. Burke, 3338 O Street.
Traffic bureau.— Inspector, Benjamin A. Lamb, 1326 Euclid Street.
Police headquarters.— Assistant superintendent, L. I. H. Edwards, 1210 Potomac
Avenue SE.; Inspector J. F. Beckett, 729 Kennedy Street.
First Police District.—Inspector T. R. Bean, 4011 Eighteenth Street.
Second Police District.—Inspector O. T. Davis, 1408 Crittenden Street.
" Third Police District.—Inspector A. J. Headley, 217 Ninth Street SW.
Chief, also property, clerk.—H. E. Crawford, 1205 Geranium Street.
Police surgeons.—Dr. W. H. R. Brandenburg, The Parkwood; Dr. D. L. Borden,
2337 Ashmead Place; Dr. W. B. Marbury, 1403 Twenty-first Street; Dr. F. Y.
Williamson, 3619 Legation Street; Dr. J. A. Reed, 3309 Thirty-fifth Street.
Harbor master.— Lieut. Edward T. Harney, Alcova Heights, Va.
Women's bureau.— Acting Capt. Rhoda J. Milliken, 3315 N Street.
PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
Commissioner. —Gen. Mason M. Patrick, chairman, United States Army (retired),
3010 Albemarle Street. (Private secretary, Miss Sarah E. Wilson, 504 Ogle-
thorpe Street.)
Commassioner—Riley E. Elgen, vice chairman, 2022 Klingle Road. (Private
secretary, Mrs. Naomi H. Hetzel, 815 Eighteenth Street, Apartment 207.)
Comnilionin—Mal, John C. Gotwals, United States Army, 3105 Cathedral
venue.
People’s counsel.—Richmond B. Keech, 2746 Woodley Place.
Assistant to people’s counsel.—John M. Nicholson, 1825 New Hampshire Avenue,
Executive secretary.—James L. Martin, 4502 Watkins Avenue, Bethesda, Md.
General counsel.—William W. Bride, 4763 Indian Lane.
Chief accountant.—B. M. Bachman, 4429 Lowell Street.
Associate accountant.—J. Donald Murray, 1209 Delafield Street.
Chief engineer.—Fred A. Sager, 3808 Kanawha Street.
Chief valuation engineer.— Thomas R. Tate, 3245 Livingston Street.
Inspector of gas and meters—Elwin A. Potter, 3426 Mount Pleasant Street.
Inspector of electric meters—Henry V. Hoysradt, 3418 Twenty-fourth Street NE.
Chief clerk.—E. J. Milligan, 717 Twenty-first Street.
District Government 379
WASHINGTON CITY POST OFFICE
(Corner Massachusetts Avenue and North Capitol Street. Phone, DIstrict 7272)
Postmaster.— William M. Mooney, 4407 Eighteenth Street.
Secretary to the postmaster—Harry KE. Shilling, 1226 Orren Street NE.
Appointment clerk.—John H. Thackston, 1326 Orren Street NE.
Bookkeeper.—Edgar Church, 637 Franklin Street NE.
Examiners of stations. — Charles F. Knockey, The Chevy Chase; Frank M.
Sommerkamp, 1922 Kearney Street NE.; Arthur E. Dean, 501 Twelfth
Street NE.
Physician.— Aaron W. Martin, Beltsville, Md.
Assistant postmaster.—W. H. Haycock, 4300 Cathedral Avenue:
Postal cashier—Franklin C. Burrows, 311 Takoma Avenue, Takoma Park, Md.
Assistant postal cashiers.—J. W. Quick, 227 T Street NE.; T. R. Talbert,
214 Bryant Street NE.
Money-order cashier.— Philip Otterback, 3519 Quesada Street.
Assistant money-order cashier.—M. Ww. Stevenson, 1126 Tenth Street; Joseph
A. Griffith, 111 Sherman Avenue, Takoma Park, ‘Md.
Superintendent of mails.—Clarence E. Schooley, 1766 Lanier Place.
Assistant superintendents of mails.—H. W. Klotz, 37 V Street; Frederick
Sillers, 1530 Upshur Street; Sidney G. Bursley, 5425 Connecticut Avenue;
Frederick D. Riggles, 35 Rhode Island Avenue; Luke Thompson, 809 Glebe
Road, Clarendon, Va.; Basil Sillers, 1355 Kalmia Street; John J. Downey,
The Augusta; Herbert A. Clark, 6713 Piney Branch Road.
Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of registry section.—E. A. Heilig, 1736
Columbia Road, apartment 411.
Assistant superintendent of mails @n charge of carriers.—Russell H. Thompson,
3105 Twenty-fourth Street NE.
Assistant superintendent of mails in charge of inquiry section.— William C.
Gilbert, 4210 Seventh Street.
gi superintendent of mails in charge of supplies.— William W. Day, 1311
treet.
opr in charge of special-delivery section.— William M. Clark, 4826 Fifth
treet.
Superintendent of motor vehicles.—Hiram B. Jones, 1705 Lanier Place.
Classified stations
Station Superintendent Location
Anneostine iano iin H.B. Moon...-... 200% 1320 Good Hope Road SE.
Arveade. nade nd baa 2 B.J. Leonard... 5520 Connecticut Avenue.
ATEYAe Cie er B.l.8mih _... 3220 Seventeenth Street.
Arlington... oe Mrs; J.C. Watson... Arlington, Va.
Benjamin Franklin ________ George L. Tait 1: i oi. Post Office Department Building.
Benning. coud ohio Jods. Wise it top so dis 514 Minnesota Avenue NE.
Bethesda... vw _._.-_.. Mrs. B. F. Wallace. _.___._._| Bethesda, Md.
Brichtwoed... 5... = anthony Tehri o_o. 5921 Georgia Avenue.
Brookland./. oi hs LB. Barnard... 00 Ul. Twelfth and Newton Streets NE.
Central io oie as CG. GC. Bondurant... __..... 820 Fourteenth Street.
Chenrydales... .....  ..:. ... AE DR TE ed Cherrydale, Va.
Chevy Chase = ~~... .-. GR Hwley. cna 5908 Connecticut Avenue.
Clarendon. =... L-.. P.-C. Bischoff... ....... 64 East Wilson Boulevard.
Columbia Road... .... JE. Belfield. ooo. lao 1771 Columbia Road.
Connecticut Avenue_._______ Hole BHey oc ooicoi.. 1220 Connecticut Avenue.
Street ~~ 2h a RAM Harper... Land Office Building.
Florida Avenue.....__...... Wo. TT. Page: oon) 1802 T'wentieth Street.
Triendship:- oo. c nnnne HAT McCuent... ioc o 0 4511 Wisconsin Avenue.
@E:Street. i anaes W. PB: Bebey. aa Woodward & Lothrop Store.
Georgetown... nnn PP. X. Waltmeyer.......... 1215 Thirty-first Street.
HStrentac aeons nad J 5 Beoplala: Sat cir tals 800 H Street NE.
MidCity. SNYE re 1408 Fourteenth Street.
Navy Department. _________ Ww. % 2. fot Be aE Nineteenth Street and Constitution Avenue
(Navy Building).
Northeast ooo oi ool B.R. Mueller... ......... 703 Maryland Avenue NE.
Park Roads or 0 adeus LW. Murphy... oa-.C 1413 Park Road.
Petworth... rote rn ASS, Brown: ri aan 4211 Ninth Street.
Rosslyn... lio Li Jas, J. Mateer.......... ..... Rosslyn, Va.
Southeast... io aot aan BiW. Gosnell... ......00 408 Eighth Street SE.
Southwest... coir senn GO. L. Maxwell... ....... 416 Seventh Street SW.
Takoma Park... .......... M.D. Finch... ....0 301 Cedar Street.
DIenSULY oii en JaWoiCobter co il. United States Treasury.
TruztonCirele.... oc... R..SAshford-.............. 17 Florida Avenue NE.
EN ee aE Se a B.S. Leman... _...... 1438 U Street.
Walter Reed... 0s... or AG Turner. 0.0 Walter Reed Hospital.
West End... or... SW. mae iio ot. 1751 Pennsylvania Avenue.
Woodridge... ai B.W.Turner................ 2211 Rhode Island Avenue NE.
EPRI)
IRSA
RE Fs
a
a
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 seal of the United States,
and countersigns and affixes such seal to all treaties, 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.
UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE
The Under Secretary 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 atten-
tion 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 Under
Secretary of State is charged with the general direction of the work of the Depart-
ment of State and of the Foreign Service.
ASSISTANT SECRETARIES OF STATE
One Assistant Secretary of State is charged with the general administration of
the Department of State and the Foreign Service and with supervision of matters
relating to personnel and management. He is legislative, budget, and fiscal officer,
charged with the supervision and preparation of estimates of appropriations of the
department and its several activities, their presentation to the Congress, and the
allotments and expenditures of appropriations when made. He has supervision
also over all matters pertaining to consular affairs, passports, visas, Foreign
Service buildings, and international conferences. He is chairman of the Foreign
Service Personnel Board, the Board of Examiners for the Foreign Service, and the
Foreign Service School Board.
The other three Assistant Secretaries of State are charged with such duties as
may be assigned by the Secretary of State.
OFFICE OF THE LEGAL ADVISER
Drafts and interprets treaties, conventions, protocols, and other international
agreements; deals with questions of municipal, foreign, and international law,
and handles diplomatic claims of American citizens against foreign govern-
ments; claims of foreigners against the Government of the United States, includ-
ing the preparation and presentation of the former class of cases to international
arbitral tribunals and the defense of the United States before such tribunals in
cases of claims made by foreign governments; questions of personal and private
rights of aliens in the United States and of American citizens in foreign countries,
such as acquisition, inheritance, and transfer of property; arrest, detention,
fines, imprisonment, personal injury, acts of insurgents, taxation, breach or
annulment of concessions or other contracts; failure to pay interest or principal
on Government obligations, sequestration or confiscation of property; complaints
regarding action of executive, legislative, judicial, or military authorities; ques-
381
382 Congressional Directory STATE
tions concerning the rights and privileges of American diplomatic and consular
officers abroad and of foreign diplomatic and consular officers in the United
States, and concerning the rights and immunities of sovereigns and public prop-
erty; questions relating to the jurisdiction over and control of public or private
vessels; questions relating to citizenship, naturalization, expatriation, extradition,
and extraterritoriality; questions relating to the acts and rights of belligerents,
neutrals, and insurgents on land or sea; and a large number of miscellaneous legal
questions not included in the above classification.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF CLERK
Is charged with the general supervision of the clerical personnel of the depart-
ment; supervision over the property of the department; expenditures of appro-
priations for salaries, and contingent expenses; office space; authentications;
custody of the great seal and the seal of the department; classification of positions;
efficiency ratings; miscellaneous correspondence; supervision over appointment,
stenographic, mail, and supply sections.
BOARD OF FOREIGN SERVICE PERSONNEL
The duties of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, under the Executive
order of June 8, 1931, are to submit to the Secretary of State (a) lists of Foreign
Service officers prepared in accordance with law by the Division of Foreign Service
Personnel, in which all Foreign Service officers shall be graded in accordance with
their relative efficiency and value to the service, (b) lists of Foreign Service officers
who have demonstrated special capacity for promotion to the grade of minister,
(c) names of those officers and employees of the Department of State who, after
five years of continuous service in an executive or quasiexecutive position, are
recommended for appointment by transfer to the position of Foreign Service offi-
cer, and (d) names of those Foreign Service officers who are recommended for
designation as counselors of embassy or legation; to recommend to the Secretary
of State the assignment of Foreign Service officers to posts and the transfer of
such officers from one branch of the service to the other according to the needs of
the service; to recommend promotions in the Foreign Service; to consider contro-
versies and delinquencies among the service personnel and recommend to the
Secretary of State appropriate disciplinary action where required, and to deter-
mine, for submission to the Secretary of State after considering recommendations
of the Division of Foreign Service Personnel, that the efficiency rating of an officer
is unsatisfactory, thereby meaning below the standard required for the service,
in order that the Secretary of State may take appropriate action.
DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE PERSONNEL
The duties of the Division of Foreign Service Personnel are: To maintain con-
tact with Foreign Service officers and employees while on visits to the United
States; to discuss with Foreign Service officers ways for the development and
improvement of their work; to confer with the divisions of the department con-
cerning the work of Foreign Service officers; to interview applicants and pro-
spective applicants for the Foreign Service; to examine and recommend for
appointment applicants for positions as subordinate employees in the Foreign
Service and to keep the efficiency records and other pertinent data concerning all
employees of the Foreign Service; to hold strictly confidential all personnel records
of the Foreign Service, and to reveal no papers, documents, data, or reports relat-
ing thereto, except to the Secretary of State and to the members of the Personnel
Board; to keep records of the board of examiners for the Foreign Service and
attend to all details connected with the holding of examinations for the Foreign
Service; to submit recommendations on all matters within the authority of the
Board of Foreign Service Personnel, and to attend, through the personnel officers
- assigned to the division, the meetings of the Board of Foreign Service Personnel
when so directed.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS’ TRAINING SCHOOL
The Foreign Service Officers’ Training School is maintained for the instruction
of new appointees to the Foreign Service. Only those persons who have passed
the examination for the position of Foreign Service officer are admitted to the
school. It is under the direction of a board composed of the Assistant Secretaries
of State composing the Board of Foreign Service Personnel, one Foreign Service
officer assigned for duty in the Division of Foreign Service Personnel, and the
director of the Foreign Service Officers’ Training School.
EEE E————————
STATE Tr Official Dutres - 383
DIVISION OF FAR EASTERN: AFFAIRS:
General charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular,
political and economic, with China, Japan, Siam, Siberia (in conjunction with
the division of eastern European affairs), the far eastern possessions of European
nations and the foreign-controlled islands of the Pacific not included therein (in
conjunction with the division of western European affairs and other interested
divisions), and of such matters as concern this department in relation to the
American-controlled islands of the Pacific, and charge of such matters as concern
this department in relation to the control of the traffic in narcotic drugs.
DIVISION OF LATIN AMERICAN AFFAIRS
General charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular,
political and economic, with Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa
Rica, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Haiti,
Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela.
DIVISION OF WESTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS
General charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular,
political and economic, with Austria, Belgium, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Den-
mark, France, Germany, Great Britain (including Northern Ireland, British
Dominions beyond the Seas, India), Hungary, Irish Free State, Italy, Liberia,
Morocco, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Union
of South Africa, and international organizations in Europe; European posses-
sions in the Far East in conjunction with the division of far eastern affairs.
DIVISION OF NEAR EASTERN AFFAIRS
General charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular,
political and economic, with Afghanistan, Albania, Bulgaria, Egypt and the
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, Ethiopia, Greece, Iraq, Palestine and Trans-Jordan,
Persia, Rumania, the countries of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria and the Lebanon,
Turkey, and Yugoslavia.
DIVISION OF MEXICAN AFFAIRS
General charge, under the Secretaries, of relations, diplomatic and consular,
political and economic, with Mexico. .
DIVISION OF EASTERN EUROPEAN AFFAIRS
General charge, under the Secretaries, of matters pertaining to Russia (includ-
ing Siberia), and of relations, diplomatic and consular, political and economic,
with Estonia, Finland, Free City of Danzig, 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 depart-
ment; establishes and maintains liaison with the various economic bureaus in
other departments; handles economic cases which have no regional character or
which overlap geographical divisions.
PASSPORT DIVISION
Charged with examination and adjudication of applications for passports and
for registration in consulates of the United States as American citizens; issuance
of passports; issuance of instructions on passport matters to the executives of the
several insular possessions; supervision over the department’s passport agencies
in New York, Chicago, San Francisco, New Orleans, Boston, and Seattle; direc-
tion of clerks of courts in passport matters; correspondence regarding citizenship,
passports, registration, and right to protection while abroad; issuance of letters of
introduction.
OFFICE OF THE HISTORICAL ADVISER
Gives advice and makes recommendations with reference to historical and geo-
graphical subjects; is responsible for the policy of the department with reference
to the publication of official documents; passes upon applications of scholars for
permission to search the archives; has supervision over the library, the archives
384 Congressional Directory STATE
section, the geographic section, and all work of the former division of publications,
including the selection of documents for and the editing of the Foreign Relations
of the United States and the Treaties and Other International Acts of the United
States; edits the Statutes at Large, Executive orders and proclamations, the
Register, the Foreign Service List, Press Releases, Treaty Information, Treaty
Series, Executive Agreement Series, and other publications of the department;
compiles the session laws; has custody of original laws, treaties, Executive orders
and proclamations, etc.; drafts correspondence relating to the ascertainment
of presidential electors and constitutional amendments; has eharge of the funds
of the department for printing and binding and for books and maps; distributes
publications.
DIVISION OF CURRENT INFORMATION
Charged with 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; fur-
nishing them with press bulletins, copies of texts, and general information bearing
upon foreign relations.
DIVISION OF FOREIGN SERVICE ADMINISTRATION
Charged with general administration of the Foreign Service, including matters
of appropriations and expenditures, rentals, equipment and supplies, organiza-
tions, instruction of diplomatic and consular officers, ete., correspondence relat-
ing 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
countries, and the designation of commercial, military, and naval attachés;
whereabouts and welfare of Americans abroad, shipping and seamen, settlement
of estates of deceased Americans in foreign countries, consular 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.
DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES
Is charged with making arrangements for international conferences, congresses,
expositions, and conventions, in which the United States is to participate, at home
or abroad, and in cooperation with other branches of the Government and inter-
ested persons and organizations; determining the extent and character of that
participation; with the organization of the delegations of the United States and
the appointment of delegates and other personnel; with the preparation of
expenditure programs and supervision of the expenditures of delegations of the
United States; with the supervision of the preparation of the reports of American
delegations or of the conferences, congresses or other meetings, and supervision
of their distribution; with the supervision of the fulfillment of the international
obligations of the United States with respect to membership in international
treaty commissions, committees, bureaus and other organizations, and acting as
liaison with other governmental organizations, private organizations, and
individuals, with regard to the work of international commissions, committees,
bureaus, and similar organizations; with the clearance of expenditures for interna-~
tional obligations, congresses, conferences, and commissions.
DIVISION OF PROTOCOL
Is charged with the arrangement of all ceremonials of national or international
character in the United States or participated in by the United States abroad,
including the entertainment of distinguished foreign visitors, safeguarding them
while in the United States; with the formal presentation of newly appointed for-
eign ambassadors and ministers to the President and audiences with the President
for distinguished foreign visitors; with the preparation of communications from
the President to heads of foreign’ States; with the preparation of correspondence
in reply to communications received by the President from foreign citizens or
subjects; with matters involving the rights and immunities of foreign governments
in the United States; with the drafting of correspondence concerning the accepta-
bility of American ambassadors and ministers abroad and of foreign ambassadors
and ministers to the United States; with the designation of American ambassadors
and ministers on special mission; with matters involving recognition of foreign
consular officers in the United States; with the arrangement of social functions
given under the auspices of the White House or the Department of State; with
EEE ET
a
STATE : Official Duties 385
making arrangements for the visits of foreign naval vessels or foreign military .
organizations; with the preparation of the Diplomatic List and list of employees
of embassies and legations; with the issuance of automobile plates for the foreign
Diplomatic Corps and passes to the Diplomatic Gallery of the United States
House of Representatives and the United States Senate for the use of the chiefs
of the foreign missions; with the issuance of identification cards to the members
of the Diplomatic Corps; with the preparation of all messages of felicitation and.
sympathy sent to the foreign chiefs of state on national holidays and occasions of
mourning; with matters concerning medals and decorations conferred by foreign
governments upon military, naval, or civilian officers of the United States and
custody thereof prior to the action of Congress upon the question of their accept-
ance; with arrangements for appropriate customs and other courtesies to be
extended on arrival in the United States to foreign officials and distinguished
visitors.
TREATY DIVISION
Charged with assisting, when and as requested by the responsible officers, in
the drafting of treaties and other international agreements and correspondence:
pertaining to the negotiation, construction, and termination of treaties. The
division is also charged with maintaining a set of treaties and other international
agreements in force to which the United States is a party, and likewise those to
which it is not a party, together with the pertinent laws, proclamations, Execu-
tive orders, and resolutions; maintaining lists of treaties and other international
agreements between the United States and foreign governments which are in
process of negotiation or ratification; collecting and keeping available informa-
tion regarding the application, interpretation, and status of treaties; analyzing
treaties by subject, and assembling, comparing, and studying the provisions on
the same subject in different treaties; examining the texts of treaties, conventions,
or international agreements to which the United States is a party, with a view to
recommending such action as may be required to obtain the fulfillment by the
other party of its duties and obligations and to effect the performance of the duties
and obligations of the United States by legislative or administrative acts; main-
taining lists of treaties, conventions, or international agreements expiring or
subject to extension with a view to considering the renewal or extension thereof;
pad with performing such other duties as may be assigned by the Secretary of
tate.
DIVISION OF COMMUNICATIONS AND RECORDS.
Is charged with the dispatch and receipt of all telegraphic correspondence of
the department; the encoding and decoding of messages exchanged in the con-
duct of foreign relations; the building of codes and ciphers used in the depart-
ment’s intercourse with its representatives abroad; and devising rules and regu-.
lations governing their use; the auditing of telegraph accounts; the administration
of the telephone service; the classification, recording, distribution, and preserva-
tion of correspondence; the custody of and conduct of research in the archives
subsequent to 1906; the custody of the records of international conferences,
congresses, and commissions in which the Government of the United States
officially participates; the custody of and conduct of research in the records of
the former War Trade Board; drafting correspondence and instructions on code,
cipher, and record matters; the maintenance of a comprehensive index and file
of documents published by the League of Nations; the distribution of official
publications of foreign governments; the maintenance of a record of precedents
of policy and procedure.
VISA DIVISION
Charged with matters connected with the administration of the immigration
laws in so far as they concern the Department of State and its officers abroad.
BUREAU OF ACCOUNTS
Charged with the keeping of all accounts of the department; of the Foreign
Service; the administrative examination of all accounts; the approval of all
accounts for transmission to the Comptroller General of the United States,
together with the preparation of correspondence in relation thereto; the making
of all financial reports and statements for the administrative officers of the
department; has general administrative supervision of all disbursing officers
under the Department of State. :
157297°—1T73-1—1ST BD——26
386 Congressional. Directory TREASURY
TRANSLATING BUREAU:
Charged with the translation of communications in foreign languages referred
by the White House; diplomatic notes and annexed documents; laws, treaty
texts, proceedings at international conferences; such other services as the bureau
may be in a position to render in connection with international conferences;
translation or final review of translations of arguments and documents submitted
in international conferences; translation or summarizing of letters and docu-
ments from foreign countries on departmental business; the critical examination
of drafts of foreign texts of bilingual or multilingual treaties to which the United
States is a party in order to insure the closest possible adjustment to each other
of the foreign and English texts. :
OFFICE OF COORDINATION AND REVIEW
Reviews all outgoing diplomatic, consular, and other correspondence. Coordi-
nates the correspondence of the several bureaus of the department for considera-
tion and initialing when necessary. Dispatches the mail and certifies copies
thereof for the records. Maintains a current ready-reference file and an index
of diplomatic precedents. Advises the bureaus of the department of changes in
forms of address or changes in the accepted style of correspondence.
FOREIGN SERVICE BUILDINGS OFFICE
Charged with the general supervision of matters relating to the housing of
diplomatic and consular establishments abroad and the protection and main-
tenance of properties owned or to be acquired by the United States for such pur-
pose. The office has charge of programs of expenditures, with the approval of
the budget officer of the department, for the acquisition, construction, altera-
tion, or furnishing of such properties.
CONSULAR COMMERCIAL OFFICE
The drafting of correspondence on consular trade promotion and reporting
work and the direction of consular activity in this field; the censoring, grading,
and criticizing of commercial and economic reports, as well as the distribution
of economic data to the Department of Commerce, and to such other Government
departments and organizations and non-Government organizations as may
appropriately receive such reports; the coordinated grading of all consular
political reports and the keeping of all related records, effected in cooperation
with the geographical divisions; certifying to the division of foreign service per-
sonnel of the department the relative rank of each officer of career of the Foreign
Service in commercial work to be entered upon his record; liaison office of the
department with the Department of Commerce and the Department of Agricul-
ture, as well as other departments in all matters involving the cooperation of
consular officers in procuring economic and commercial data.
DISBURSING OFFICE.
The disbursing officer is charged with the receipt of all funds and the payment
of all accounts of the department, together with the preparation of correspond-
ence relating thereto.
THE TREASURY DEPARTMENT
The following is an outline of the administrative organization of the Treasury
Department, showing the various offices and bureaus of the department and the
divisions of the Secretary’s office. A description of the duties of each follows
the outline.
THE SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
The Under Secretary of the Treasury:
1. The finances.
2. Commissioner of accounts and deposits—
(a) Division of bookkeeping and warrants.
(b) Division of deposits.
(¢) Section of surety bonds.
a
or
SA
—
en
——
TREASURY a Official Dutres 387
The Under Secretary of the Treasury—Continued.
3. Commissioner of the public debt— :
(a) Division of loans and currency.
(b) Office of the Register of the Treasury.
(¢) Division of public debt accounts and audit.
(d) Division of paper custody. .
4. Office of the Treasurer of the United States.
5. Section of financial and economic research.
6. Government actuary.
7. Chief clerk of the department.
The Fiscal Assistant Secretary:
8. Bureau of Internal Revenue.
9. .Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
10. Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
11. Bureau of the Mint.
12. Secret Service division.
13. Disbursing clerk.
Avsisinnt Secretary in Charge of Public Buildings, Public Health, and Miscel-
aneous:
1. Office of the Supervising Architect.
2. Bureau of the Public Health Service.
3. Division of appointments.
4. Division of supply.
5. General Supply Committee.
Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Coast Guard, Industrial Alcohol, and
Narcotics: :
1. Bureau of Customs.
2. United States Coast Guard.
3. Bureau of Industrial Alcohol.
4. Bureau of Narcotics.
The Bureau of the Budget is also in the Treasury Department, but is under the
immediate direction of the President.
THE SECRETARY
The Secretary of the Treasury is charged by law with the management of the
national finances. He superintends the collection of the revenue; grants warrants
for money drawn from the Treasury in pursuance of appropriations made by
law, and for the payment of moneys into the Treasury; directs the forms of keep-
ing and rendering public accounts; prepares plans for the improvement of the
revenue and for the support of the public credit; and submits a report annually
to Congress on the condition of the public finances and the results of activities
under his supervision. He controls the construction and maintenance of public
buildings; the coinage and printing of money; the administration of the Coast
Guard, the Public Health, Industrial Alcohol, Narcotics, and Secret Services;
and furnishes generally such information as may be required by either branch of
Congress on matters pertaining to the foregoing. He is ex officio chairman of
the Federal Reserve Board; ex officio member board of directors Reconstruction
Finance Corporation; chairman of the Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Com-
mission; member of the board of trustees, Postal Savings System; member of
the board of trustees, Smithsonian Institution; and Director General of Railroads.
In the absence of the Secretary, the Under Secretary acts as Secretary of the
Treasury. In the absence of both the Secretary and the Under Secretary, the
senior Assistant Secretary present acts as Secretary.
THE UNDER SECRETARY
To the Under Secretary is assigned the general supervision of matters relating
to the fiscal bureaus, offices, and divisions, certain of which are especially detailed
to the Fiscal Assistant Secretary. The bureaus, offices, and divisions under
immediate control of the Under Secretary are shown in the preceding outline of the
administrative organization of the department.
The Under Secretary also is charged with the supervision of the finances, acts
as budget officer of the Treasury, and is authorized to act, for and by direction
of the Secretary, in any branch of the department, and represents the Secretary
in dealings with the Federal Reserve Board.
388 Congressional Directory TREASURY
In the absence of the Secretary the Under Secretary also is a member ex officio
of the Board of Directors of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.
THE ASSISTANT SECRETARIES >
To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Fiscal Offices is assigned, under the
direction of the Under Secretary, the bureaus, offices, and divisions shown in the
preceding outline of the administrative organization of the department.
To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Public Buildings, Public Health, and
Miscellaneous is assigned the general supervision of matters pertaining to the
bureaus and divisions shown in the preceding outline of the administrative
organization of the department. ;
To the Assistant Secretary in Charge of Customs, Coast Guard, Industrial
Alcohol, and Narcotics is assigned the general supervision of those respective
services.
THE UNDER SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF ACCOUNTS AND DEPOSITS
The office of the commissioner of accounts and deposits has administrative
supervision over the division of bookkeeping and warrants and its relations to
the office of the Treasurer of the United States, over the division of deposits
and over the section of surety bonds. It prepares periodic estimates of the future
cash position of the Treasury for use of the department in connection with its
financing; prepares calls for the withdrawal of funds from special depositaries to
meet current expenditures; directs the transfer of Government funds between
Federal reserve banks when necessary; directs fiscal agency functions in general,
including gold deposits with Federal reserve banks; supervises collections of
principal and interest on foreign obligations; keeps the accounts, and handles
generally matters relating to the indebtedness of foreign governments to the
United States, including matters arising under funding agreements; supervises
collections of railroad obligations owned by the Government and keeps the
accounts relating thereto; handles the collection of other obligations owned by
the United States which are turned over to the Treasury by other departments
for collection; makes payments, keeps accounts, and handles matters generally
relating to awards under the settlement of war claims act of 1928. The commis-
sioner likewise has control of the investment accounts of the Government and is
responsible for the proper custody of investments and securities held by the
Treasurer of the United States and the Federal reserve banks for which the Sec-
retary is responsible, other than those related to public debt operations.
The division of bookkeeping and warrants is by law the official bookkeeping
organization of the Government in regard to the receipt, appropriation, and
expenditure of public moneys. The accounts and records of disbursements in
this division are on a basis of warrants issued, and differ somewhat from the
actual cash expenditures as shown in the daily Treasury statement prepared in
the office of the Treasurer of the United States. This division makes analyses
of acts of Congress carrying appropriations and opens up the necessary appro-
priation accounts on its ledgers; it issues warrants for placing disbursing funds
to the credit of disbursing officers, for the payment by the Treasury of claims
settled by the General Accounting Office, and for covering into the Treasury the
revenues and receipts of the Government. It handles the work involved in the
Secretary’s special deposit accounts, including alien property trusts and offers
in compromise. It compiles, for submission to the Bureau of the Budget, the
estimates of appropriations for the service of the Treasury.
In addition to the above this division compiles and publishes an annual digest
of the appropriations made by Congress and an annual combined statement of
the receipts, expenditures, and unexpended balances under each appropriation
account.
The division of deposits is charged with the administration of matters pertain-
ing to designation of Government depositaries and the deposit of Government
funds in such depositaries; i. e., the Federal reserve banks, general and limited
national bank depositaries, and special depositaries under the Liberty loan acts,
foreign depositaries, Federal land banks, and the Philippine treasury.
The commissioner of accounts and deposits has administrative control over
surety companies authorized to transact business with the Government; fixes the
qualifying power of each company; supervises the audit of the financial state-
ments of the companies quarterly; notifies the companies of the settlement of
fiscal officers’ accounts under fidelity bonds; and has custody of official bonds
|
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TREASURY Official Duties 389
running to the Government except those for post-office employees and for certain
officials of Federal courts.
OFFICE OF THE COMMISSIONER OF THE PUBLIC DEBT
The commissioner of the public debt has supervision over transactions in the
public debt and the paper currency issues of the United States. The public
debt service includes the division of loans and currency, the office of the Register
of ie Treasury, the division of accounts and audit, and the division of paper
custody.
The division of loans and currency is the issuing branch of the public debt
service. It receives, examines, and has custody of public debt securities printed
by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. It is charged with the original issue
of public debt securities (and thereafter conducts transactions therein, including
exchanges, transfers, conversions, and replacements), the maintenance of accounts
with holders of registered bonds and the preparation of checks for the payment
of interest thereon. This division also handles the public debt issues of the
Philippine government and the government of Puerto Rico and audits United
States paper currency received for redemption and mutilated work delivered by
the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
The office of the Register of the Treasury is the retirement branch of the public
debt service. It is charged with the receipt, examination, and custody of public
debt securities retired for any account, including paid interest coupons.
The division of accounts and audit maintains administrative control accounts
over all official transactions in the public debt, including those conducted by
the Division of Loans and Currency, the office of the Register of the Treasury,
the office of the Treasurer of the United States, and the Federal reserve banks
as fiscal agents of the United States, and also over transactions involving the
manufacture, receipt, custody, and issue of distinctive and nondistinctive paper
used for printing public debt securities, United States currency, national-bank
notes, Federal reserve notes, Federal reserve bank notes, United States postage
stamps, internal-revernue stamps, and other miscellaneous securities and docu-
ments in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Numerous administrative
audit functions are performed in connection with the foregoing. The division
also maintains control accounts over various classes of unissued currency in
reserve stocks of the Treasurer of the United States and the Comptroller of the
Currency, and conducts administrative examinations and physical audits of such
unissued stocks of currency, of cash balances in custody of the several divisions
of the Treasurer’s office, and also of collateral securities held in trust by the
Treasurer to secure national bank currency circulation, postal savings deposits,
postal investments, evidences of the debt of foreign governments, ete.
The division of paper custody receives from various contractors the distinctive
paper used in printing the public debt obligations and the paper currency of the
United States, internal-revenue stamps, and other securities. It issues such
paper to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing against orders to print (and
requires that bureau to account for each sheet issued). The manufacture of the
distinctive paper used in the printing of public debt obligations and paper currency
issues is supervised by a representative of this division detailed to the contracting
paper mills.
OFFICE OF THE TREASURER OF THE UNITED STATES
The Treasurer of the United States is charged with the receipt and disburse-
ment of public moneys that may be deposited in the Treasury at Washington and
in the other depositaries authorized by the Secretary of the Treasury to receive
deposits of Government funds for credit in the account of the Treasurer of the
United States. Funds advanced to disbursing officers for the use of Government
departments and establishments under the appropriation of Congress are credited
in the accounts of such disbursing officers on the books of the Treasurer and dis-
bursements therefrom are made by checks drawn on the Treasurer. In his office
are prepared and issued, for the Secretary of the Treasury, the daily Treasury
statement of the United States, the monthly preliminary statement of the public
debt, and the monthly preliminary statement of classified expenditures of the
Government; the monthly statement of the outstanding paper currency of the
Government is also published. The Treasury general ledger accounts of the trust
fund, the reserve fund, the gold settlement fund, and the general fund, and other
important accounts are maintained in his office. He prepares an annual report
to the Secretary of the Treasury. The Treasurer is fiscal agent for the issue and
redemption of United States paper currency, for payment of principal and interest
390 Congressional Directory TREASURY
on the public debt, for payment of principal and interest on bonds of the Puerto
Rican and Philippine governments (of which the Secretary of the Treasury is the
transfer agent), and for the redemption of national-bank notes, Federal reserve
notes, and Federal reserve bank notes. He is treasurer of the board of trustees
of the Postal Savings System, trustee for bonds held to secure national-bank note
circulation and public deposits in national banks and bonds held to secure postal
savings in banks, and custodian of miscellaneous securities and trust funds.
There are in the office of the Treasurer seven divisions: The chief clerk, cashier,
division of securities, redemption division, division of general accounts, accounting
division, and national bank redemption agency, whose duties are indicated in
general by their names. :
THE SECTION OF FINANCIAL AND ECONOMIC RESEARCH
The section performs a combined research, editorial, and service funetion for
the Treasury, largely in the field of finance. Upon request or on the initiative of
the section, studies and investigations in taxation, public debt, and other subjects
in or related to the field of public finance are conducted. These projects, the
results of which are for the most part for use within the department, are under-
taken with a view to providing information for the use of Treasury officials in
formulating the policies of the department and in improving Treasury methods
and records. Information on business and financial developments is made
available currently to Treasury officials.
The specific tasks performed include:
(1) Estimates of tax receipts for two succeeding fiscal years are prepared.
These, together with forecasts of other Treasury agencies, are the basis of the
Treasury’s regular estimates of Federal revenue. :
(2) Under the general supervision of the Under Secretary of the Treasury, the
Annual Report of the Secretary of the Treasury is outlined, assembled, edited,
and indexed, a considerable part of the material in the body of the report being
prepared in the section. :
(8) The section also assists in editing the statistics of income compiled from
income tax returns, published by the Bureau of Internal Revenue, and in editing
and revising several other publications of the Treasury.
(4) Articles discussing various phases of public finance appearing in periodicals,
encyclopedias, etc., under Treasury authorization, together with material for
public use by Treasury officials, are prepared in part or in whole in the section.
(5) Financial, economic, and bibliographical information service to Members
of Congress and to the general public is performed, and a diversified corre-
spondence, dealing with problems of public and general finance, is conducted.
(6) During the sessions of Congress a digest of the progress of financial and
other economic legislation is made and distributed daily.
For administrative reasons the office of Government Actuary has been trans-
ferred to the Section of Financial and Economic Research. The duties of the
Government Actuary include (1) the recording of daily market prices of all out-
standing Government securities and the calculation and publication of yields of
United States bonds and the calculation of yields of all other United States
securities; (2) collaboration in the estimating of Federal revenues; (3) the making
of monthly estimates of the population of the United States; and (4) service on
the Board of Government Actuaries in connection with the civil service retire-
ment law. Under the present arrangement the Government Actuary, in addition,
participates in the general work of the section. ;
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF CLERK
The chief clerk and superintendent is the chief executive officer of the depart-
ment, and, under the direction of the Secretary, Under Secretary, and Assistant
Secretaries, is charged with the enforcement of departmental regulations of a
general nature. He is superintendent of Treasury buildings in the District of
Columbia, except the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. In addition, he has
custody of sites for proposed public buildings in Washington.
The chief clerk has administrative jurisdiction of the contingent appropriation
as well as the appropriations made for Government exhibits at various expositions
and handles offers in compromise cases (under sec. 3469, R. S.). He has the
custody of the records and files of the Secretary’s office and of the Treasury seal,
and handles requests for certified copies of official papers. :
TREASURY ; Official Duties 391
He is chairman of the personnel committee of the Treasury and classification
officer for the department. He also has general supervision of the assignment of
annual efficiency ratings of the Treasury personnel.
The emergency medical relief service, in charge of the Treasury physician, is
operated under the office of the chief clerk.
In addition to the duties described above, the chief clerk has charge of the
unassigned business of the Secretary’s office.
THE FISCAL ASSISTANT SECRETARY, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF
INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue has general supervision of the assess-
ment and collection of all internal-revenue taxes; the enforcement of internal-
revenue laws; and the preparation and distribution of instructions, regulations,
forms, blanks, stamps, etc. An annual report to the Secretary of the Treasury
covering the activities of this service is made by the commissioner.
For the purpose of efficient and effective administration of the internal-revenue
laws the duties of the bureau are assigned to various units as follows: Commissioner
and miscellaneous unit, income-tax unit, miscellaneous tax unit, accounts and
collections unit, general counsel’s office.
The commissioner and miscellaneous unit includes the immediate office of the
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the assistant to the commissioner, two
assistant commissioners, the office of the special deputy commissioner, the intel-
ligenee unit, personnel division, administrative division, training division, special
advisory committee, and public relations division.
The income-tax unit is the agency of the Bureau of Internal Revenue for
administering the Federal income and profits tax provisions of the revenue laws.
Its duties are to prepare regulations for the administration of such provisions; to
receive, audit, and verify the returns covering such taxes; to review and dispose
of claims for refund, and to compile statistics from these returns.
The miscellaneous tax unit is charged with the administration of the law in
respect to all internal-revenue taxes except income and profits taxes, and is also
responsible for adjusting and closing cases involving repealed miscellaneous
internal-revenue taxes.
The accounts and collections unit is charged with the administration of matters
having to do with the organization and management of the offices of collectors
of internal revenue, including their field forces; with the administrative audit
of revenue and disbursing accounts of collectors of internal revenue and of the
disbursing accounts of disbursing agents in the Internal Revenue Bureau and
Service. It also issues stamps to collectors of internal revenue.
The general counsel’s office is the legal branch of the bureau. Its functions
are separated into six divisions, as follows: Interpretative division, civil division,
penal division, appeals division, administrative division, and review division.
There are two main divisions of the field service, as follows: The collection
service and the field audit service.
In addition there are the following traveling forces operating from Washington:
Intelligence agents, supervisors of accounts and collections, miscellaneous and
sales tax agents, and field representatives of the general eounsel’s office.
OXFFICE OF THE COMPTROLLER OF THE CURRENCY
The most important functions of the Comptroller of the Currency are those
relating to the organization of new national banks; the general supervision over
the national banks in operation; the administration, through receivers, of national
banks which have failed; and the issue and regulation of national-bank notes
secured by United States bonds.
Reports of condition of national banks are required to be made to the comp-
troller by the banks not less than three times a year upon a date fixed by the
comptroller. Under the direction of the comptroller, national-bank examiners
make regular examinations of the affairs of the national banks, showing their
condition with reference to solvency and observance of the provisions of the
national bank act. In case of deliberate violation, suit may be brought in the
name of the comptroller against any such bank for the forfeiture of its charter.
If it appears to the comptroller that any national bank is in an insolvent condition,
he is empowered to appoint a receiver.
The Comptroller of the Currency is an ex officio member of the Federal Reserve
Board and sits regularly with the board. He executes and issues the charters for
the Federal reserve banks.
392 Congressional Directory TREASURY
The Comptroller of the Currency is required by law to report directly to Con-
gress annually and to recommend to Congress amendments to the national
banking laws.
BUREAU OF ENGRAVING AND PRINTING
This bureau designs, engraves, and prints for the Government, United States
securities; United States, national-bank, and Federal reserve bank currency;
Federal farm loan and joint-stock land bank bonds; revenue, customs, and post-
age stamps; Government checks; and many other classes of engraved work for
governmental use. It performs a similar function, as authorized by the Bureau
of Insular Affairs, for the insular possessions of the Government. An annual
report, covering the activities of the bureau, is made to the Secretary of the
Treasury.
MINT BUREAU
The Director of the Mint has general supervision of 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 expenditures, superintends the annual settle-
ments of the several institutions, and makes special examinations of them when
deemed necessary. Appointments, removals, and transfers in the mints and
assay offices are subject to his approval.
The Director of the Mint publishes quarterly an estimate of the value of the
standard coins of foreign countries for customhouse use and other public pur-
poses. He also makes an annual report to the Secretary of the Treasury, cov-
ering the operations of the mint service for the fiscal year and giving statistics
of the production of precious metals in the United States and the world for the
calendar year.
SECRET SERVICE DIVISION
This division is charged with the protection of the President of the United
States, his family, and the President elect; with the suppression of counter-
feiting; with the investigation of violations of the farm loan act, the war finance
corporation act, section 704 of the World War adjusted compensation act, and
the act of December 11, 1926, relating to the counterfeiting of Government
transportation requests; and with such other matters relating to the Treasury
Department as are directed by the Secretary of the Treasury.
OFFICE OF THE DISBURSING CLERK
The work of this office is concerned with paying by check or cash those obli-
gations of the Treasury which have been certified by the proper division as due.
The office makes disbursements for salaries, expenses, and supplies for the bureaus
and divisions of the Treasury Department in the District of Columbia (except
the Bureau of Engraving and Printing), and for a large portion of such sala-
ries, expenses, ete., outside of the District of Columbia. Claims for refund of
internal-revenue taxes illegally collected are paid by check by this office. Another
important function of the office is receiving and accounting for moneys due the
United States on account of rents for buildings and real estate owned by the
Government as well as of sales of public property.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS, PUBLIC HEALTH, AND
MISCELLANEOUS OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF
BUREAU OF PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE
The Bureau of Public Health Service at Washington comprises eight divisions
and the chief clerk’s office, the operations of which are coordinated and are
under the immediate supervision of the Surgeon General, who makes an annual
report to the Secretary of the Treasury on the activities of the service.
The division of scientific research conducts the scientific investigations of the
service. Information thus obtained is disseminated through publications,
lectures, and correspondence. Through the division the department enforces
the act of July 1, 1902, to regulate the sale of viruses, serums, toxins, and analo-
gous products, including arsphenamine.
The division of foreign and insular quarantine and immigration administers the
quarantine laws of the United States concerned with the prevention of the
introduction of human contagious or infectious diseases from foreign ports into
the United States, together with the observation of the provisions of the Pan
TREASURY Officral Dutres 393
American Sanitary Code and the International Sanitary Convention of Paris,
1926, and supervises the medical examination of intending immigrants conducted
at certain American consulates abroad and at ports of entry in the United States
and its insular possessions.
The activities of the division of domestic quarantine include the following:
(1) Plague suppressive measures; (2) activities for the eradication of trachoma;
(3) enforcement of the interstate quarantine regulations; (4) cooperation with
other Government departments in matters pertaining to public health engi-
neering and sanitation; (5) the investigation of sanitary conditions of areas used
for growing shellfish; (6) assisting State health departments in establishing and
improving local health conditions; (7) the control of water supplies used for
drinking and culinary purposes on interstate carriers; (8) studies and demonstra-
tions in rural sanitation.
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. The section on public health education cooperates with
the State, local, and volunteer health agencies to extend health educational
service throughout the United States.
Through the division of marine hospitals and relief, hospital and out-patient
treatment is given at 25 marine hospitals and 131 other relief stations to legal
beneficiaries who are chiefly seamen from American merchant vessels, Coast
Guard personnel, patients of the Veterans’ Bureau of the Employees’ Compen-
sation Commission, and immigrants. The National Leper Home is operated.
Physical examinations are made for the Civil Service Commission and shipping
commissioners.
Under the supervision of the Surgeon General, the division of personnel and
accounts transacts bureau matters relating to personnel; convenes boards for
the examination or discipline of medical officers and other personnel; supervises
all bookkeeping and accounting in connection with bureau appropriations; and
maintains and supervises property records.
. 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
“diseases; (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.” Cooperative activities
include educational, medical, and control measures.
The division of mental hygiene (formerly the narcotics division—name changed
by act of June 14, 1930) is charged with the responsibility of administering the
two narcotic farms; conducting studies of the nature of drug addiction and the
best methods of treatment and rehabilitation of addicts; making studies of the
quantities of narcotic drugs necessary to supply the normal and emergency
medicinal and scientific requirements of the United States; conducting studies of
the causes, prevalence, and means for the prevention and treatment of mental
and nervous diseases; and supervising and furnishing medical and psychiatric
service in the Federal penal and correctional institutions under the control of the
Department of Justice (act of May 13, 1930).
The chief clerk has charge of clerical personnel, office quarters occupied by
the bureau in Washington, the bureau library, official files and records, mail,
supplies of stationery to bureau and field service, and printing and binding.
OFFICE OF THE 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, etec., for, and the superin-
tendence of the work of constructing, rebuilding, extending, or repairing public
buildings, the maintenance of public buildings outside of the District of Colum-
bia, including the employment and supervision of the custodial forces, and the
supply of furniture, carpets, lighting fixtures, mechanical equipment, safes, and
miscellaneous supplies for the use of custodians’ and engineers’ forces in the care
of public buildings.
The Supervising Architect is a member of the joint Treasury and Post Office
Department committee for allocating funds under the public building acts, is
also a atber of the Public Buildings Commission and is the surveyor general of
real estate,
394 Congressional Directory TREASURY
DIVISION OF APPOINTMENTS
This division has supervision over matters relating to appointments and other
changes in the personnel of the departmental and field services of the Treasury
Department, including negotiations with the Civil Service Commission. It pre-
pares nominations and commissions of presidential officers and arranges bonds
required for Treasury officials. The division has supervision over the work
connected with the retirement and retention of employees under the retirement
law, and keeps a record of leave granted to employees in the department in
Washington.
DIVISION OF SUPPLY
The division of supply is the central procuring or purchasing agency of the
Treasury Department, and as such it does purchasing for local and field activities,
with the exception of those from appropriations for the Bureau of Engraving and
Printing (which are exempted by law), the Coast Guard, and to some extent the
Bureau of the Mint. It is charged also with certain duties closely related to
purchasing, such as accounting for funds appropriated or allotted to it; super-
vision over printing and binding for the Treasury Department and engraving
work by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for all departments and establish-
ments, unless money, securities, or postage stamps are involved; control over
newspaper and periodical advertising for the department; routing of freight,
express, and parcel-post shipments; and warehousing and distribution of sta-
tionery and miscellaneous supplies, including blank books and forms, to Washing-
ton and field offices of the Treasury Department. The appropriations to the
department for purchases of stationery, and for printing and binding are under
its administrative control.
GENERAL SUPPLY COMMITTEE
The General Supply Committee was created by the act of June 17, 1910, and
is composed of one representative from each of the executive departments, desig-
nated by the head of the department. The superintendent of supplies, who is an
official of the Treasury Department, is ex officio secretary of the committee, and
in general conducts its affairs. It is the duty of the committee to prepare annually
a schedule of miscellaneous supplies in common use by, or suitable to, the ordinary
needs of two or more executive departments or Government establishments in
Washington; to standardize such supplies, and to solicit bids therefor and recom-
mend awards. .
By the Executive order of December 3, 1918, and Treasury Department regula-
tions dated December 10, 1918, the General Supply Committee has 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.
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 surplus Government material, supplies, and equip-
ment throughout the United States.
An act of Congress approved February 27, 1929, enlarged the functions of
the General Supply Committee to include the purchase and distribution of sup-
plies to meet the consolidated requirements of the executive departments and
independent establishments of the Federal Government in Washington, D. C,,
and of the municipal government of the District of Columbia. Requirements
of the field service of any department or establishment may be included in such
consolidated purchases when requested by the head thereof.
The act of February 27, 1929, also provides for the construction of a fire proof
warehouse of approximately 400,000 square feet of floor space for use of the
General Supply Committee and other departments and establishments. The
completion of this new Federal warehouse has widened the scope of the duties of
the General Supply Committee very materially, in that those supplies common to
the needs of two or more departments may now be retained in the Federal ware-
house until they are needed for current consumption, and issued in smaller
quantities and at more frequent intervals than has been possible before.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY IN CHARGE OF CUSTOMS, COAST GUARD, INDUSTRIAL ALCOHOL,
AND NARCOTICS, OFFICES UNDER THE SUPERVISION OF
CUSTOMS SERVICE
The Customs Service was created by the First Congress in the act of July 31,
1789, but its present organization dates from March 3, 1913, under the act of
TREASURY Official Duties 395
August 24, 1912. (U. 8S. C,, title 19, sec. 1.) The act approved March 3, 1927,
created the Bureau of Customs and a commissioner of customs. . Under the
authority of that act the Secretary of the Treasury has conferred upon the
Commissioner of Customs, subject to the general supervision and direction of
the Secretary, the powers and duties in regard to the importation and entry of
merchandise into or the exportation of merchandise from the United States,
vested in or imposed upon the Secretary of the Treasury by the tariff act of
1930, or any other law, subject to certain exceptions. These exceptions require
the approval of the Secretary of regulations and certain classes of decisions
prepared by the commissioner.
The principal function of the service is the collection of import duties; incident
to this is the prevention of smuggling, including the smuggling of all contraband
such as narcotics and alcoholic beverages.
The customs agency service, which operates as a part of the Customs Service,
is an investigative service. 3
The Customs Service also cooperates with other services in the Treasury and
other executive departments in the enforcement of the preventive, sanitary, and
other laws under their administration relating principally to articles brought to
this country and in some cases to articles sent out of the country.
COAST GUARD
"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, operating under the
Treasury Department in time of peace and as a part of the Navy in time of war
or when the President shall so direct.
In general, the duties of the Coast Guard may be classified as follows:
(a) Enforcement of Federal law upon the navigable waters of the United
States and its insular possessions and upon the high seas where jurisdiction of the
United States extends thereto, including prevention of smuggling; enforcement
of customs laws, navigation, and other laws governing merchant vessels and
motorboats, of rules and regulations governing anchorage and movements of
vessels (captains of the ports), of law to provide for safety of life during regattas
or marine parades, of laws relative to oil pollution, immigration, quarantine, and
neutrality, of rules and regulations for the protection of the fisheries in Alaska,
of international conventions relative to fisheries on the high seas, of law and the
administration of oaths generally in Alaska, of the sponge fishing law, and of
miscellaneous laws for the other branches of the Government; examining mer-
chant seamen for certificates as lifeboatmen; protection of game and the seal
and otter fisheries in Alaska; protection of bird reservations established by
Executive order; suppression of mutinies on merchant vessels.
(b) Rendering assistance to vessels in distress and the saving of life and prop-
erty on the seas and navigable waters of the United States and its insular posses-
sions and along the coasts thereof; flood relief on the western rivers; destruction
and removal of derelicts, wrecks, or other dangers to navigation; international
service of ice observation and ice patrol in the North Atlantic Ocean; extending
medical and surgical aid to United States vessels engaged in deep-sea fishing;
assisting other branches of the Government in the performance of duties assigned;
transporting Government agents; caring for and transporting shipwrecked and
destitute persons in Alaska and elsewhere; carrying the United States mails; col-
lecting statistics regarding loss of life and property on vessels; keeping navigable
channels free of ice.
(¢) Constitutes a part of the military forces of the United States at all times,
operating as a part of the Navy in time of war or when the President shall so
direct.
To assist the commandant, who is charged by law with the administration of
the Coast Guard, there are established at headquarters an inspector in chief,
having cognizance of matters relating to the inspection of vessels, stations, boats,
and other property; division of operations; division of finance; office of supplies
and accounts; pay and allowances office; office of construction and repair; and
office of the engineer in chief. An annual report, covering the activities of the
Coast Guard, is made to the Secretary of the Treasury.
BUREAU OF INDUSTRIAL ALCOHOL
The Commissioner of Industrial Alcohol has supervision, under the direction
of the Secretary of the Treasury, of the administration of the permissive pro-
396 Congressional Drrectory TREASURY
visions of the national prohibition act, as amended and supplemented, and of
the internal revenue laws relating to the manufacture, custody, transportation,
importation, exportation, sale, distribution, and use of intoxicating liquors for
industrial, scientific, medicinal, and other nonbeverage purposes, including the
right to make arrests and seizures, and swear out and execute search warrants
for violations discovered in the performance of such duties. The work of the
bureau includes the preparation, for the Secretary of the Treasury, of regulations
for joint consideration with the Attorney General, under the national prohibi-
tion act and the ‘‘ Prohibition reorganization act of 1930,” relating to permits,
forms of applications for permits, bonds, records, and reports; the preparation of
regulations under the internal revenue laws involving the administration of pro-
hibition; the issuance or denial of permits, the Attorney General being authorized
by law, if in any case he so desires, to act jointly with the Secretary of the Treasury
in passing upon the allowance or refusal of applications for permits; the conduct of
hearings involving the refusal or revocation of permits; the inspection and super-
vision of registered distilleries, industrial-alcohol plants, denaturing plants,
wineries, cereal-beverage plants, bonded warehouses, and all other permittees
under the national prohibition act, as amended and supplemented; administra-
tive action in relation to bonds, records, and reports under such acts; the approval
of formulas for completely and specially denatured alcohol, and for the manu-
facture of medicinal, toilet, and other preparations containing liquors or denatured
alcohol; the authorization and supervision of the distillation of spirits for the
replenishment of medicinal liquors; the authorization of withdrawals of spirits
from warehouses for nonbeverage purposes upon approved orders of purchase and
the payment of tax; and the concentration into centrally located warehouses of
spirits produced at bonded distilleries, the location of such bonded warehouses
requiring approval of the commissioner. An annual report is made by the com-
missioner to the Secretary of the Treasury.
BUREAU OF NARCOTICS
The Commissioner of Narcotics, under the direction and supervision of the
Secretary of the Treasury, has general supervision of the enforcement of the
Harrison narcotic law and related statutes, including the administration of the
permissive features of the narcotic drugs import and export act, and cooperates
with the Customs Bureau in the enforcement of the prohibitive features of the
latter act. The commissioner also cooperates (1) with the State Department in
the discharge of the international obligations of the United States concerning
the traffic in narcotic drugs and (2) with the several States in the suppression of
the abuse of narcotic drugs in their respective jurisdictions.
The duties of the bureau include the investigation and the detection and
prevention of violations of the Federal narcotic laws, the determination, with the
cooperation of the Public Health Service, of quantities of crude opium and coca
leaves to be imported into the United States for medical and legitimate uses, and
the issuance of permits to import the crude narcotic drugs and to export drugs and
preparations manufactured therefrom under the law and regulations. An annual
report is made to Congress which also serves the purpose of the special report
heretofore prepared in the bureau on behalf of the Government for transmittal
through the State Department to The Hague under the International Opium
Convention of 1912.
BUREAU OF THE BUDGET
The Bureau of the Budget was created by the act approved June 10, 1921.
It is in the Treasury Department but under the immediate direction of the
President. The bureau prepares for the President the annual Budget and such
supplemental or deficiency estimate as the President may recommend from time
to time to Congress. The bureau has the authority under the act, ‘to assemble,
correlate, revise, reduce, or increase the estimates of the several departments and
establishments.” The act requires the head of each department and estab-
lishment to appoint a budget officer whose duty it is to prepare, under his direc-
tion, the departmental estimates of appropriations and such supplemental or
deficiency estimates as may be required. These officials are liaison officers
between the department and the Bureau of the Budget. On or before September
15 of each year the head of each department and establishment revises his esti-
mates and submits them to the bureau.
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 interest of economy
TREASURY Official Duties 397
and efficiency. Officials of the bureau are given the authority to have access, for
the purpose of examination, to the books, papers, and records of any department
or establishment.
FEDERAL COORDINATING SERVICE
(Under Supervision of Director, Bureau of the Budget)
PERMANENT CONFERENCE ON PRINTING
Composed of one representative from each executive department and inde-
pendent establishment. Organized under Executive order promulgated in
Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 14 of July 22, 1921, to investigate and propose
uniform standards, businesslike methods, and proper economies in public printing
and binding and the distribution of publications. It recommends reductions
in the amount of Government printing and binding through the elimination of
unnecessary reports, bulletins, publications, etc.; standardizes and changes
specifications where necessary to reduce the cost of printing; scrutinizes requisi-
tions from the various departments with a view to reducing the cost of work
without impairing its usefulness; investigates preparation of copy for printer,
cost of author’s corrections, standardization of paper in relation to grades, sizes,
weights, and colors, illustrations and printing in colors, standard size form and binding of publications, discontinuance of periodicals and annual reports, blank and loose-leaf forms and letterheads, rush work, duplications of departmental
printing, distribution of public documents, mimeographing and multigraphing.
FEDERAL BOARD OF HOSPITALIZATION
Composed of the Administrator of the Veterans’ Affairs, who shall be the chair-
man of the board, the Surgeon General of the Army, the Surgeon General of
the Navy, the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service, the superintendent
of the St. KElizabeths Hospital, the Solicitor General of the United States, the
Assistant Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs in charge of medical and domiciliary
care, and the special representative of the Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs on
matters pertaining to National Homes; created by Executive order promulgated
by Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 46 of November 9, 1921 (subsequently
superseded by Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 146 of October 24, 1924, as
amended by Circular No. 282 of July 28, 1930), for the purpose of coordinating
the separate hospitalization activities of the Medical Department of the Army,
the Bureau of Medicine and Surgery of the Navy, the Public Health Service,
the St. Elizabeths Hospital, the office of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs,
and the Veterans’ Administration. It is the duty of the board (a) to recommend
general plans of operation designed to knit together in proper coordination the
hospitalization activities of the several departments and establishments, with a
view to increasing the usefulness and efficiency of the several organizations
so as to achieve the maximum of service and economy in operation, maintenance,
and betterments; (0) to give consideration and make recommendation of questions
which may arise concerning the proper coordination of hospitalization facilities,
with particular reference to the use of existing facilities, the construction of
addition facilities, and the standardization and utilization of supplies.
OFFICE OF CHIEF COORDINATOR
The office of Chief Coordinator was created by Executive order promulgated
in Circular No. 15, Bureau of the Budget, July 27, 1921, and the duties of this
office were later enlarged by the following Budget circulars, Nos. 25 (as amended
by Circular No. 160 of May 29, 1925), 35, 41, 42, 47 (as amended by Circular
No. 319), 69, 137, 142, 160, 246, 260, 293, 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
application of the policies of the President and of the Congress to the routine
business activities of the executive branch of the Government.
FEDERAL COORDINATING AGENCIES
(Under immediate supervision of Chief Coordinator)
COORDINATOR FOR MOTOR TRANSPORT, DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
Office created by Executive order promulgated in Bureau of the Budget
Circular No. 35 of September 23, 1921, to coordinate in the interest of efficiency
and economy the use of motor transportation operated under the executive
398 Congressional Directory TREASURY
departments and independent establishments of the Federal Government;
investigates the proper housing and grouping of the vehicles of each department;
arranges for economical repairs by Government activities; limits the number of
assigned vehicles and provides for the operation of all in pools; links all pools
of vehicles in the District of Columbia into a single pool for the purpose of econom-
ical operation; prevents the hire of passenger cars and trucks and additional
garage space when the required service can be furnished by other Government
agencies; prescribes uniform system of cost accounting throughout the Govern-
ment motor transport services in the District of Columbia.
FEDERAL PURCHASING BOARD
Composed of one representative from each department and independent
establishment having authority to purchase supplies. Created by Executive
order promulgated in Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 25 of August 25, 1921
(as amended by Circular No. 160 of May 29, 1925), to enable the Chief Coordi-
nator to perform the duties of coordinating purchases throughout the several
departments and establishments. It formulates policies and plans to unite
purchasing activities of the several departments and establishments and to
bring about business methods calculated effectively to safeguard the interests
of the Government, and at the same time promote the confidence of private
business interests having dealings with the Government. The board studies
purchase operations with a view to determining the advisability of centralizing
purchases within departments, coordination among departments, utilization of
surplus, and economies to be effected by combined purchases. Detailed studies
are made of the requirements of the Government as a whole both as to quantities
and qualities, available sources, localities, seasons of supply, means of transporta-
tion and storage, and kindred conditions involving purchase.
FEDERAL REAL ESTATE BOARD
Composed of one representative from each executive department or inde-
pendent establishment owning, occupying, or controlling real estate or interest
therein for or in behalf of the United States. Created by Executive order pro-
mulgated in Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 54 of February 18, 1922 (subse-
quently superseded by Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 69 of June 16, 1922),
to insure the adoption of uniform methods of procedure and for better utilization
of existing Government owned or controlled real estate; supervises and coordi-
nates all activities, except in the District of Columbia, connected with real
estate or interests therein, the procurement thereof, whether for temporary
or permanent use, by lease, donation, gift, or purchase, the occupancy thereof
by an executive department or independent establishment of the United States
Government, and the disposal thereof, under authority of Congress, by lease,
license, permit to use, sell, or otherwise; standardizes the maintenance of all
files and records of grants, deeds, leases, and other instruments pertaining to
real estate under the control of or in use by particular departments and the
maintenance of a proper indexing system thereof.
FEDERAL SPECIFICATIONS BOARD
Composed of representatives from each department and independent estab-
lishment purchasing materials or services in accordance with specifications pre-
pared in such department. Created by Executive order promulgated in Bureau
of the Budget Circular No. 42 of October 10, 1921, for purposes of coordination
and economy in the procurement of material and services used by the Govern-
ment under specifications prepared in the various branches thereof; compiles
and adopts standard specifications for materials and services and brings specifi-
cations into harmony with the best commercial practice wheraver the conditions
permit; standardizes nomenclature and dimensions to insure ready interchange-
ability of supplies and interworking parts made by different manufacturers, and
limits the number of types, sizes, and grades of manufactured products used by.
the Government.
FEDERAL STANDARD STOCK CATALOGUE BOARD
Composed of at least one representative from each of the departments and
such of the establishments as, in the judgment of the Chief Coordinator, have
sufficiently large purchasing functions to call for representation on the board.
TREASURY ~ Officeal Duties. 399
Created by Executive order promulgated in Bureau of the Budget Circular No.
260 of March 29, 1929, to compile and adopt, under supervision of the Chief
Coordinator, a Federal Standard Stock Catalogue for the use of the several
departments and establishments.
The board determines the articles to be included in the Federal Standard
Stock Catalogue, together with information relative to nomenclature, descrip-
tions, classifications, groups, specifications, stock numbers, code words, and other
pertinent data, and decides questions of arrangement and other considerations
that may arise in connection with the compilation of the catalogue.
FEDERAL STATISTICS BOARD
Composed of representatives from the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce,
Labor, and Treasury, including the Federal Reserve Board, and from the Inter-
state Commerce Commission, Federal Trade Commission, Federal Farm Board,
United States Tariff Commission, Bureau of Efficiency, Civil Service Commission,
and Veterans’ Administration. Created by Executive order promulgated in
Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 293 of April 10, 1931, to study the existing
situation with regard to the collection, compilation, dissemination, and utiliza-
tion of statistics by agencies of the Federal Government and to make recommenda-
tions to the Chief Coordinator looking to the elimination of needless duplication
in statistical work and the fullest possible utilization of statistical information
collected and the personnel and facilities concerned therewith, as well as the
most effective and economical means of procuring additional statistics for which
there may be a reasonable demand.
FEDERAL TRAFFIC BOARD
Formed by Executive order promulgated in Bureau of the Budget Circular
No. 41 of October 10, 1921, for the purpose of effecting economies and better
business administration throughout the Government service in the handling of
passenger and freight shipments as well as shipments by express and parcel post,
and for the utilization in a more practical way of the various carrying facilities
available, both rail and water. Study of traffic problems confronting the Gov-
ernment departments and establishments, establishment of uniform classifica-
tions on all Government items and reclassification of items erroneously classified,
handling of all questions pertaining to terminal, switching, port, lighterage
charges, and general rate adjustments. The board is designed to prevent the
overlapping of service and duplication of effort in the conduct of the traffic business
of the Government.
FOREST PROTECTION BOARD
Composed of the following members: The Chief of the Forest Service (chair-
man ex officio), the Chief of the Weather Bureau, the Director of the National
Park Service, ‘the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, the Commissioner of the
General Land Office, the Chief of the Bureau of Biological Survey, the principal
entomologist in charge of forest insect investigations, and the principal pathol-
ogist in charge of the office of forest pathology; created by Executive order pro-
mulgated in Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 246 of November 23, 1928, to
aid in the development of general policies for the protection of the forests of the
United States and in the preparations of coordinated plans therefor. Coordi-
nates, subject to the approval of the Chief Coordinator and within the limits of
existing law, the policies and plans for the prevention and suppression of forest
fires and for general forest protection formulated by the several Federal bureaus
and agencies charged with the protection of the forests of the country.
INTERDEPARTMENTAL BOARD OF CONTRACTS AND ADJUSTMENTS
Composed of representatives from each department and independent estab-
lishment authorized by law to enter into important contracts. Created by
Executive order promulgated in Bureau of the Budget Circular No. 47 of No-
vember 22, 1921 (amended by Circular 319 of December 22, 1932), for the pur-
pose of standardizing contract forms, securing the adoption of uniform policies
as regards construction work and uniform practices of interpretation and nego-
tiation both preceding and following the actual execution of such contracts;
standardizes where possible the forms and methods of contract letting to the end
that a uniform policy may control the making of contracts, with a view to such
changes in form of contracts as will tend to enlist the interest of the contractor
400 Congressional Directory WAR
in behalf of economy and promptness of execution, as well as to eliminate those
uncertainties of construction and hazards to be assumed by the contractor which
have operated to increase the cost of Government work and supplies; recom-
mends general policies in the settlement of outstanding obligations arising from
contracts of the United States; acts in an advisory capacity, when requested,
to review and revise important contracts and agreements, to advise as to proper
interpretation of contracts in process of execution, and to assist in the negotiation
of important contracts and agreements relating to personal services, supplies, or
construction work.
INTERDEPARTMENTAL BOARD ON SIMPLIFIED OFFICE PROCEDURE
~ Composed of one representative from each department and independent estab-
lishment. Created by Executive order promulgated in Bureau of the Budget
Circular No. 137, dated May 16, 1924, with a view to promoting economy and
efficiency in routine office procedure in departments and establishments through
simplicity and uniformity of practice as to matters not already allocated else-
where by law or Executive order. The board standardizes forms, other than
General Accounting Office forms, used in the executive departments and estab-
lishments, where such forms lend themselves to standardization; investigates
matters relating to methods of conducting correspondence, use of forms, methods
of filing, and allied questions.
Established by Executive Order No. 3721, dated August 9, 1922. The duty
of this board shall be to make suitable recommendations relative to the estab-
lishment of policies to be followed by the Government with respect to handling
inventions and patents evolved by Government employees and other inventions
and patents acquired by the Government, to put into practice such proposed regu-
lations thereto appertaining, approved by the President, and to disseminate proper
information among the departments and other units of the Government con-
cerning patents, applications for patents, licenses, and other rights under patents
owned by the Government. On May 21, 1925, supervision of the interdepart-
mental patents board as a coordinating agency was assumed by the Chief Coordi-
nator under the provisions of Executive Order No. 3578, dated November 8, 1921.
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.
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 is responsible for the proper execution of the provisions of the national
defense act of 1920. He is held responsible for the protection of our seacoast
harbors and cities; for the development of improved weapons and matériel; for
the proper instruction of all military personnel; for the discipline and morale
of the Military Establishment; for the defense of, and the administration of
government in, those insular possessions that come under his jurisdiction.
He directs the activities of the Corps of Engineers in the improvement of the
waterways of the United States, Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, including ex-
aminations, surveys, and economic studies of harbors and streams for the formu-
lation of improvement projects. He recommends to Congress definite plans for
improvement and makes contracts for the execution of the physical works
required to make our waterways capable of meeting the needs of constantly
expanding inland, coastwise, and foreign commerce.
He is charged with the formulation and execution of plans for flood control on
inland rivers, power and irrigation development, and the survey and charting of
the Great Lakes.
He is responsible for surveys of international boundary waters, the inter-
oceanic survey (Nicaragua Canal route), and the construction of national mon-
uments and memorials. He is also charged with the establishment of harbor
lines, approval of plans for the construction of bridges and issue of permits for
wharves, piers, and other works upon navigable waters; investigation, in coopera-
tion with the Federal Power Commission, of water-power projects, the removal
of wrecks from navigable waters, the regulation of the operation of drawbridges,
WAR Official Duties 401
establishment and regulation of anchorage grounds, regulation of the use of
navigable waters of the United States, the preservation of the American Falls of
Niagara, and the administration of matters pertaining to the participation of the
United States in the Niagara Control Board.
He is responsible for the defense, maintenance, care, and operation of the
Panama Canal. This responsibility requires that he not only provide for the
transit of ships from one ocean to the other but also for their repair, fueling,
supplies and foodstuffs, and the care of hospitalization of ships’ personnel and
passengers. The organization under his charge includes public health, quaran-
tine, and immigration service, customs, post offices, police and fire protection,
hydrographic and meteorological observations, steamboat inspection, aids to
navigation, construction and maintenance of roads; streets, water supply, and
sewers.
He exercises jurisdiction over the civil affairs of the Philippine Islands and
Puerto Rico.
He is president of the National Forest Reservation Commission, which is
authorized to purchase such forested cut-over or denuded lands within the water-
sheds of navigable streams as in its judgment may be necessary to the regulation
of stream flow or for the production of timber.
He supervises the activities of the Inland Waterways Corporation as author-
ized by the requirements of the Denison Act (Public 801, 70th Cong.), which
created this agency to complete our national transportation system and make
possible the coordination of rail, water, air, motor, and pipe-line transportation.
He approves the purchase of supplies and equipment necessary for the opera-
tion of the barge lines, the location and erection of terminals, the terms and
conditions of sales and leases to private management of the transportation
facilities of any unit belonging to the corporation, and improvement and develop-
ment projects for over 30,000 miles of inland waterways being improved and
coordinated by the Inland Waterways Corporation: ;
He supervises the maintenance and conduct of the United States Military
Academy at West Point and is responsible for all matters relating to leases,
revocable licenses, and all other privileges upon lands under the control of the
War Department.
THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR
The Assistant Secretary of War is charged with supervision of the procurement
of all military supplies and other business of the War Department pertaining
thereto, including the manufacture or production at the Government arsenals or
Government-owned factories of the United States of all such supplies or articles
needed by the War Department as such arsenals or factories are capable of manu-
facturing or producing upon an economical basis; and the assurance of adequate
provision for the mobilization of matériel and industrial organizations essential
to war-time needs. He is charged with supervising and acting upon matters
pertaining to the purchase, lease, and sale of real estate, including leases, licenses,
easements, and rights of way to others; the sale of surplus supplies, equipment,
plants, land, or other facilities, including engineer property pertaining to rivers
and harbors; claims, foreign or domestic, by or against the War Department,
except those resulting from the operation of aircraft; clemency cases in litigation
or remission of sentence by courts-martial; matters relating to national military
parks, national monuments, and national cemeteries; activities relating to the
National Board for the Promotion of Rifle Practice and Civilian Marksmanship;
permits for construction of bridges and laying of submarine cables; and the use of
patent rights by the War Department and Army.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF WAR (AIR)
The Assistant Secretary of War is charged with aiding the Secretary of War in
fostering military aeronautics and with performing such functions as may be
directed by the Secretary of War.
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
Assists the Secretary of War in directing the administration of the department,
Panama Canal, and Inland Waterways Corporation.
Is chief executive officer of the department and has administrative direction
of the divisions of the office of the Secretary of War.
Has charge of the records and files, and supervision of the receipt, distribution,
and transmission of the official mail and correspondence of the Secretary’s office.
Acts upon appointments and all changes affecting status of civilian employees
157297°—73-1—18T ED——27
mC EE
402 Congressional Directory WAR
in the department and its field services. Has charge of the following: Printing
and binding and newspaper advertising for the War Department and the Army;
expenditures from the War Department appropriations for contingent expenses,
stationery, and postage; and allotment of office space assigned for the use of the
department in Washington.
Signs such official mail as the Secretary of War may direct.
WAR DEPARTMENT GENERAL STAFF
The War Department General Staff is organized under the provisions of the
act approved June 4, 1920 (as amended).
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. Assisted 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 appoint-
ment, 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 renders professional aid and assistance
to the Secretary of War and the Chief of Staff.
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 establishment of important policies. In addition to his other duties, he is
charged with supervision over the activities of all the divisions of the War Depart-
ment 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 abbre-
viations G-1, G-2, G-3, G-4, respectively, 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 are designated as Assistant
Chiefs of Staff; the prescribed abbreviation A. C. of 8. is followed by the
prescribed abbreviation of the division.
The Personnel Division is charged, in general, with those duties of the War
Department General Staff which relate to the personnel of the Army as individ-
uals. It is specifically charged with the preparation of plans and policies and
the supervision of activities concerning the procurement, classification, assign-
ment, 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, the Enlisted
Reserve Corps, and the Citizens’ Military Training Camps; measures for con-
serving 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, recre-
ational, 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 Military Intelligence Division is charged, in general, with those duties of
the War Department General Staff which relate to the collection, evaluation,
and dissemination of military information. It is specifically charged with the
preparation of plans and policies and the supervision of all activities concerning:
Military topographical surveys and maps, including their reproduction and dis-
WAR Official Dutzes 403
tribution; the custody of the General Staff and photograph collection; mili-
tary attachés, observers, 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. It 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; assignments of
units to higher organizations; so much of tables of equipment as relate to the
allotment of major items of equipment to units and the distribution of such items
within units; distribution and training, 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 and the Command and General Staff School; 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
Department 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 equip-
ment, the quantities and types of military supplies required for the use of the
Army and essential to the military program; inventions; leasing of War Depart-
ment 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 determination and statement of plans and policies govern-
ing the preparation of estimates 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 appropriated; 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 connected therewith.
The War Plans Division is charged, in general, with those duties of the War
Department 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 prepara-
tion 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 national 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 maneuvers, 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 enable 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 headquarters 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 con-
trol of Fort Riley, Kans., including the Cavalry School, the Cavalry Board, and
certain troops and installations thereat designated by the Secretary of War.
He 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
404 Congressional Directory WAR
and use of matériel 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 recommendations 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 units of his arm, includings 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 organizations 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 appoint-
ment, assignment, transfer, examination, 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. 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 super-
vision and control of the special service 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 Army be trained for
offensive combat. He prepares the necessary publications relating to the em-
ployment, instruction, and training of his arm, and to the care and use of matériel
and equipment which, after being submitted to The Adjutant General and
approved by the Secretary of War, are distributed by The Adjutant General
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 Adjutant General such recommendations as to armament and
equipment as are necessary; recommendations as to the organizations of units of
his arm; recommendations as to the training and instruction of units of his arm,
including such 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 instruc-
tion, equipment, and general administration and efficiency of the personnel and
organizations 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 other 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 noncommissioned officers.and other enlisted
men of his arm. He visits such places as may be necessary for the purpose of
observation and information to insure the efficiency 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 Artillery Board, and the Submarine Mine Depot. He formulates
and develops the tactical doctrine of Coast Artillery in accordance with the War
Department doctrine. He prepares the necessary manuals, training literature,
and training memoranda relating to the employment, instruction, and training
of Coast Artillery, and to the care and use of matériel 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 organization 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,
mobilization, training, equipment, 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
WAR Officral Duties 405
bureau of The Adjutant General’s Office and recommends 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, examination, 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 is charged with manning the artillery primarily
designed for fire upon naval and air targets, the controlled submarine mine sys-
tems, the sound-ranging installations in harbor defense, and the antiaircraft guns.
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 matériel 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 equipment 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, in-
cluding units of the Infantry Reserve Officers’ Training Corps. He confers
with the appropriate agencies of the War Department in all matters connected
with the organization, training and instruction, equipment, and general admin-
istration 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 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 noncom-
missioned officers and other enlisted men of the Infantry. He or his repre-
sentatives visit such places as may be necessary in connection with the efficiency
of his arm. J
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF CHAPLAINS
The Chief of Chaplains, under the direction of the Chief of Staff, is charged with
the general supervision of matters pertaining to the religious and moral welfare
of the military personnel. His specific duties in this realm include the investiga-
tion of the qualifications of candidates for appointment as chaplains and the prep-
aration of examinations for their entrance into the Army; general coordination and
supervision of the plans and duties of chaplains, recommendations for their
assignment to stations and their relief therefrom; and advisory information as to
the articles of equipment and supply necessary for their work. His duties also
include direct supervision over the Chaplains’ School, the preparation of training
manuals for his branch, and training material for the extension courses for chap-
lains, and general direction of all other projects for the instruction of chaplains
which may be considered necessary to secure a properly trained personnel. He
promulgates such office circulars of professional nature as may be helpful to
chaplains of the Regular Army, National Guard, and Reserve Corps; provides for
them a stimulating interchange of ideas and programs; and makes such visita-
tions and inspections of chaplain activities as will qualify him to give competent
advice to the Chief of Staff in matters of religious and moral nature in the Army.
MILITARY BUREAUS
The chiefs of the military bureaus of the War Department are, with the ex-
ception of the Chief of the Militia Bureau, officers of the Regular Army of the
406 Congressional Durectory WAR
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 commissions in the Officers’ Reserve Corps.
OFFICE OF THE ADJUTANT GENERAL
The Adjutant General is charged with the duty of recording, authenticating,
and communicating to troops and individuals in the military service all orders,
instructions, 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 consoli-
dating 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 procuring candidates for admission
to citizens’ military training camps; of handling matters pertaining to the
education and recreation of the soldier, including the Army motion-picture
service; and of conducting correspondence concerning the military service gen-
erally, including such as pertains to military training camps, 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 of the
Secretary of War, of the United States Disciplinary Barracks and its branches
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 re-
mitting 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 docu-
ments pertaining to the military service and distributing those publications
to the Army. He also has charge of the records of the permanent Military Estab-
lishment and of all War Department business pertaining thereto, including the
consideration of applications for the congressional medal of honor, the distin-
guished-service cross, the distinguished-service medal, and other medals or crosses
awarded in connection with military service; for the benefits of the act of Con-
gress approved April 27, 1916, establishing the Army and Navy medal-of-honor
roll; for certificates of military service, and certificates authorizing the purchase
of service medals; and for removal of charges of desertion and the issue of dis-
charge certificates to such soldiers finally charged with desertion as are entitled
to relief under the terms of existing law. The archives of The Adjutant Gen-
eral’s Office include all military records of the Revolutionary War in the pos-
session of the General Government; the records of all organizations, officers,
and enlisted men that have been in the military service of the United States
since the Revolutionary War, including those pertaining to the volunteer 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
Abandoned Lands; a considerable collection of the Confederate records, includ-
ing those pertaining to the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the
Confederate Government; and the records kept by draft boards and State head-
quarters 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 commanders and the chiefs of the several branches of the Army shall
be charged with such of the above-described duties within their respective
jurisdictions as may be prescribed by the Secretary of War.
INSPECTOR GENERAL'S OFFICE
The Inspector General, with his assistants, inspects the United States Military
Academy; the service schools; garrisoned posts and commands; camps of
maneuver and instruction; corps-area, department, and division headquarters;
general hospitals; armories and arsenals; quartermaster, ordnance, medical,
torpedo, signal, air, chemical-warfare, and engineer depots; proving grounds;
WAR Offictal Duties 407
recruit depots and recruiting stations; remount purchasing and breeding head-
quarters; 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; the National Guard as
required by the act of June 3, 1916; the several national military parks and
national monuments; also makes such special investigations and such annual
inspections of troops as may be ordered, and conducts the annual inspections of
all activities of the War Department.
OFFICE OF THE JUDGE ADVOCATE GENERAL
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
administration, including disciplinary action, matters affecting the rights and
mutual relationship of the personnel of the Army, and the financial, contractual,
and other business affairs of the War Department and the Army. The funec-
tions 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 head-
quarters of other officers exercising general court-martial jurisdiction.
OFFICE OF THE QUARTERMASTER GENERAL
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 exclusively 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 Gov-
ernment 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 exclusively by other branches of the service may be pur-
ehased 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 exclusively to any branch of the Army may be
oreied by such branches. (Sec. 9, act June 3, 1916, as amended by act June
4, 1920.
Executive office.—In charge of administration of the Quartermaster General’s
office; transmits orders and instructions of the Quartermaster General; super-
vises office personnel; distributes all authorized publications; supervises mail and
record branch.
Procurement division.—Responsible for all matters pertaining to supervision of
procurement policies of the Quartermaster Corps and that they are in accordance
with law, regulations, decisions of the Comptroller, and policies of the Secretary
of War.
Storage and distribution diviston.— Responsible for all matters concerning
storage and distribution pertaining to supplies of the Quartermaster Corps,
horses, mules, and forage required in connection with the operations of the Army
and control of remount depots and stations.
Construction division.—Is charged with the construction, maintenance, and
repair of all buildings, structures, and utilities of the Army (other than per-
manent fortifications).
Transportation division.—Is charged with the transportation of the Army by
land and water.
Adminzstrative diviston.— Handles all administrative matters of general nature
not assigned elsewhere; investigations; all matters pertaining to tables of basic
allowances, war planning equipment charts, requirements, war plans and training;
general control over appropriations; in charge of matters relating to legislation;
408 Congressional Directory WAR
prepares proposed orders, circulars, regulations, bulletins, and similar papers, for
publication; compiles and prepares history of Quartermaster General's office.
Has supervision over all matters pertaining to cemeteries, including interments,
disinterments, furnishing Government headstones, 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; handles all matters
pertaining to the pilgrimage of mothers and widows to the cemeteries in Europe;
also supervises and controls all national military parks and national monuments.
Has charge of all matters pertaining to commissioned, enlisted, and civilian
personnel of the Quartermaster Corps.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF FINANCE
The Chief of Finance is charged with the disbursement of all funds of the
War Department and has responsibility for and authority over such funds, also
the examination and recording of money accounts, the auditing of property
accounts, and with such other fiscal and accounting duties as may be required
by law or assigned to him by the Secretary of War.
The Chief of Finance is also budget officer for the War Department and in this
capacity is charged with the preparation of estimates for the War Department.
OFFICE OF THE SURGEON GENERAL
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
Department; 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 Army Medical Library, and the general
hospitals are under his direct control.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ENGINEERS
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 Territorial command nor assigned to some *actical 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, reproduction, and distribution of military maps of the
United States and its possessions, including 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 esti-
mates 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, installation 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 commu-
nication for supplies and for military movements; and, within a theater of mili-
tary operations, all general construction and road work, including maintenance
and repair (except telegraph and telephone lines), and the construction, opera-
tion, and maintenance of all railways, utilities, ferries, canal boats, or other means
of inland water transportation. It collects, arranges, and preserves all cor-
respondence, 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 equipment.
Civil duties committed to the Chief of Engineers, under the direction of the
Secretary of War, are principally as follows: The execution of work ordered by
Congress for the improvement of rivers and harbors and other navigable waters
of the United States, including examinations and surveys, administration and
enforcement of laws for the protection and preservation of such waters, the
establishment of harbor lines, establishment of anchorage grounds, of regulations
for the use, administration, and navigation of such waters; regulations for the
operation of drawbridges; removal of wrecks and other obstructions to naviga-
tion; approval of plans of bridges and dams; issuance of permits for structures,
WAR Official Dutres 409
or for dredging, dumping, or other work in navigable waters; investigation and
supervision, in cooperation with the Federal Power Commission, of power proj-
ects affecting navigable waters of the United States; supervision of operations
affecting the scenic grandeur of Niagara Falls; surveying and charting the Great
Lakes; reclamation and development of Anacostia River and Flats, D. C.; main-
tenance and repair of the Washington Aqueduct; increasing the water supply of
Washington, D. C.; the construction of monuments and memorials.
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 recommendation all reports upon examinations and surveys provided for by
Congress and all projects or changes in projects for works of river and harbor
improvements upon which report is desired by the Chief of Engineers, United
States Army. It is further the duty of the board, upon request of the Commit-
tee 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 im-
provement of rivers and harbors. In its investigations the board gives consid-
eration 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 improve-
ment. The board is engaged on the investigations authorized by the trans-
portation act of 1920, with a view to the promotion of water transportation,
and the investigations 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 distribution of useful statistics, data, and information concerning
ports and water transportation.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF ORDNANCE
The Chief of Ordnance is in command of the Ordnance Department, whose
duties are to design, procure, store, supply, and maintain the ordnance and ord-
nance stores of the United States Army, including artillery, artillery ammuni-
tion, small arms, bombs, and all munitions of 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 ordnance
matériel for the adoption by the Army, prepares the necessary regulations for
proof, inspection, storing, and for maintaining this matériel, as well as the de-
tailed information necessary for the manufacture of munitions, for inspection
of them, and for maintaining reserves prescribed by higher authority.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF SIGNAL OFFICER
The Chief Signal Officer has immediate charge, under the direction of the Sec-
retary 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 procure-
ment and distribution 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, telegraph and telephone lines, radio and meteor-
ological apparatus and stations not excepted by regulations; of the supply, repair,
and operation of field telegraph trains; of the preparation and revision of all
codes and ciphers required by the Army; of the general supervision of military
radio operations and the enforcement of regulations concerning the same; of the
coordination and standardization of all radio operations of the Army and the
410 Congressional Directory WAR
assignment of call letters, wave lengths, systems, and audible tones thereto; of
the procurement and supply of photographs and motion pictures directed by
the General Staff Corps, and in general all of photographic and cinematographic
work of the Army not specifically assigned to other branches.
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF THE AIR CORPS
The Chief of the Air Corps 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 oper-"
ating all radio apparatus and signalling systems within Air Corps activities; of
establishing, maintaining, and operating all flying fields, aviation stations,
repair and supply depots, etc.; of operating organizations, and training officers,
flying cadets, enlisted men of the Air Corps, 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 Produc-
tion functioning only on matters in connection with the cancellation of contracts
and with the approval or authority for funds).
BUREAU OF INSULAR AFFAIRS
To the Bureau of Insular Affairs, under the immediate direction of the Secre-
tary of War, are assigned all matters pertaining to civil government in those
island possessions of the United States subject to the jurisdiction of the War
Department, except as otherwise provided by law. The Philippine Islands and
Puerto Rico are the insular possessions subject to War Department jurisdiction
at the present time.
The bureau is charged with the formulation and communication, to the re-
spective insular authorities, of the policies and action of the Secretary of War
in appropriate matters within the scope of the War Department’s supervisory
jurisdiction and with the presentation, to the Secretary of War, of such insular
matters as may require his action or should be brought to his attention. It
makes studies of varied questions such as those regarding proposed legislation,
financial matters, tariffs, navigation, commercial and industrial possibilities,
and other subjects relating to the islands in question. It assists in preparing,
for submission to Congress, such proposed legislation affecting the insular posses-
sions under War Department jurisdiction as may receive the approval of the
Secretary of War and in the presentation before the courts of the United States
of cases in which the insular authorities are concerned. The bureau assembles
the statistical and other data, and makes the studies and recommendations
incident to the functions assigned to it, and acts as a general center of informa-
tion regarding matters pertaining to the insular possessions administered under
War Department supervision. It supervises agencies charged with the purchase
and shipment, in the United States, of supplies for the insular governments and
the Dominican customs receivership and performs certain other functions in
the nature of assistance to the insular governments, including those relative to
appointments to the civil service of the Philippine Islands and Puerto Rico.
The bureau is also the repository of the civil records of the Government of
Occupation of Cuba (January 1, 1899, to May 20, 1902) and of certain other
records pertaining to functions formerly assigned the bureau from time to time
but not at present so assigned. These functions included matters relating to
the second occupation of Cuba (1906-1909), Panama Canal (1904 and 1905),
and the Haitian customs receivership (1920-1924).
Under the convention of December 27, 1924, between the United States and
the Dominican Republic (which replaced the convention of February 8, 1907),
and the general regulations of the President of the United States issued there-
under, 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.
MILITIA BUREAU
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. It is vested with all the administrative
duties (coordinating with department and corps area commanders) involving the
JUSTICE Official Duties 411
organization, armament, instruction, equipment, discipline, training, and inspec-
tion of the National Guard; the conduct of camps of instruction of the National
Guard and the administrative 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 Re-
serve, and the unorganized militia of the United States not herein generally
enumerated which do not under existing laws, regulations, 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 super-
vision of the training of the Army in chemical warfare, both offensive and defen-
sive, including the necessary schools of instruction; the organization, equipment,
training, and operation of special gas troops; and such other duties as the
President may from time to time prescribe.
THE ARMY WAR COLLEGE
The Army War College, located in Washington, D. C., 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 doctrines and methods
approved by the War Department.
THE ARMY INDUSTRIAL COLLEGE
The Army Industrial College is one of the three general service schools of the
Army. It is located in the Munitions Building, Washington, D. C. It operates
under supervision of The Assistant Secretary of War, pursuant to section 5a of
the national defense act. Its mission is the training of officers for the procure-
ment of munitions in the event of war and in the preparation of plans for the
mobilization of matériel and industrial organizations essential to war-time needs.
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
ATTORNEY GENERAL (HOMER 8. CUMMINGS)
The Attorney General is the head of the Department of Justice (see sec. 346,
R. S.) and as such is the chief law officer of the Federal Government. He repre-
sents the United States in legal matters generally and gives advice and opinions
when requested by the President or by the heads of the executive departments.
He appears in the Supreme Court of the United States in cases of exceptional
gravity and importance, exercises general superintendence and direction over
United States district attorneys and marshals in the various judicial districts of
the United States, and provides special counsel for the United States in cases
of exceptional importance or when the character of the interests involved requires
such action. (See sec. 354, R. S., as amended by act of February 27, 1877,
19 Stat. 241; secs. 356, 357, and 358, R. S.; act of June 30, 1906, 34 Stat. 816;
secs. 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, and 366, R. S.)
SOLICITOR GENERAL (JAMES CRAWFORD BIGGS)
- The Solicitor General assists the Attorney General in the execution of his
duties and, by special provision of law, exercises all such duties in case of a vacancy
in the office of the Attorney General, or his absence or disability.
Under the direction of the Attorney General, the Solicitor General has special
charge of the business of and appears for and represents the Government in the
Supreme Court of the United States.
When requested by the Attorney General, the Solicitor General prepares,
reviews, and revises opinions rendered to the President and the heads of the exec-
utive departments, and may conduct and argue any case in which the United
412 Congressional Directory JUSTICE
States is interested, in any court of the United States, or may attend to the
interests of the Government in any State court or elsewhere, conferring with and
directing the law officers of the Government throughout the country in the
performance of their duties when occasion requires. (See secs. 347 and 349,
R. S.) No appeal is taken by the United States to any appellate court without
his authorization. -
ASSISTANT TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL (VACANT)
Under the direction of the Attorney General the Assistant to the Attorney
General has special charge of all suits and other matters arising under the Federal
antitrust laws.
In addition he has, under current assignment, charge of matters relating to
acts to regulate commerce, suits to set aside orders of the Interstate Commerce
Commission, the Federal Trade Commission act, the stockyards act, the radio
act, strike questions, special assignments by the Attorney General, and the
Adamson law.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (VACANT)
Under the direction of the Attorney General this assistant has charge of matters
involving taxation and the administration and enforcement of the national
prohibition act and related acts.
He has supervision of all cases, civil and eriminal, which involve taxation
(except customs), other than those in the Court of Claims and the United States
Board of Tax Appeals, and of the approval of compromises of pending actions for
the collection or refundment of taxes.
He also has supervision of the activities of the Bureau of Prohibition and of the
general conduct of all cases, civil and criminal, arising under the national prohibi-
tion act and related acts, including the making of remissions and compromises
of forfeitures and penalties under such acts.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (VACANT)
Under the direction of the Attorney General this assistant has charge gener-
ally of claims against the United States in the Court of Claims and in the district
courts; also of patents and copyrights, cases arising out of war transactions, all
war claims affecting patents under the settlement of war claims act, and special
assignments by the Attorney General.
This division is charged with the defense of suits in which the United States is
made a party defendant and in which a money judgment is sought. Under the
applicable statutes the Government may be sued upon any claims, except pen-
sions, founded upon the Constitution of the United States or any law of Congress,
upon any regulation of any executive department, upon any contract, express or
implied, with the Government of the United States, or for damages liquidated or
unliquidated in cases not sounding in tort. Jurisdiction to hear and determine
such cases has been vested in the Court of Claims, and concurrent jurisdiction of
claims under $10,000 has been vested in the various district courts of the United
States. There are also some special statutes, such as the Lever Act, which vest
juridiction in certain cases in the district courts even though the amount claimed
exceeds $10,000.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (ROY ST. LEWIS)
Under the direction of the Attorney General this assistant has charge of matters
relating to aeronautics, and litigation involving admiralty, finance, foreign rela-
tions, and insular affairs, including civil proceedings under the national banking
act, the Federal reserve act, the Federal farm loan act, and other like litigation;
also minor regulations of commerce, such as those regulating hours of service,
safety appliances on railroads, quarantine acts, pure food, meat inspection,
game bird, insecticide and fungicide acts, ete.; matters relating to the Federal
employees’ compensation act and pensions; Alien Property Custodian matters,
Shipping Board litigation, bankruptcy matters (except crimes), customs matters
(except importation of liquors), and special assignments by the Attorney General.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (VACANT)
Under the direction of the Attorney General this assistant has charge of mat-
ters relating to the acquisition of land for the Government, including all title
work, all suits and proceedings under the public land laws, including those insti-
JUSTICE Official Duties 413
tuted to set aside conveyances of allotted lands, cases involving water rights,
reclamation and irrigation projects, oil lands and forest reserves, boundary dis-
putes, Indian litigation, and the conservation of natural resources; also all claims
in favor of the Government, except those growing out of war-time contracts.
He also has charge of matters affecting the Pueblo Lands Board and the rent
commission, and matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (VACANT)
Under the direction of the Attorney General this assistant has charge of criminal
cases generally, except matters arising under the prohibition laws, including
matters involving criminal practice and procedure, such as questions concerning
indictments, grand juries, search warrants, passports, alien enemies, extradition,
ete. ; also cases involving crimes on the high seas, crimes arising under the national
banking act and under the naturalization laws, and generally directs district
attorneys with respect to the conduct of criminal cases. He also has charge of
matters specially assigned to him by the Attorney General.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (CHARLES D. LAWRENCE)
Under the direction of the Attorney General this assistant has charge of pro-
tecting the interests of the Government in matters of reappraisement and classi-
fication of imported goods before the United States Customs Court and the
Court of Customs and Patent Appeals. He also has charge of matters specially
assigned to him by the Attorney General.
ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL (VACANT)
Under the direction of the Attorney General this assistant has supervision over
all of the major units of organization of the department and also supervision
over United States attorneys and marshals.
This office has charge of authorizations for appointments and the salaries per-
taining thereto when not otherwise fixed by law; also promotions and demotions
both in the department and the field, as well as other departmental administrative
matters.
The administrative assistant (Charles E. Stewart) acts as assistant to the
Administrative Assistant Attorney General and as head of the office in his
absence. He is specifically in charge of administrative and organization matters
and United States attorneys and field offices.
(a) General agent and chief clerk (John W. Gardner).
Under the direction of the Administrative Assistant Attorney General, the
general agent and chief clerk has direct administrative control over the clerical
and subclerical forces; responsibility for the enforcement of general depart-
mental regulations; expenditures from contingent appropriations; the purchase
and distribution of departmental and field supplies; the preparation of the Annual
Report of the Attorney General and other publications, and requisitions upon
the Public Printer. He has supervision over the division of mail and files, the
division of supplies and printing, the library, the telephone and telegraph office,
and the stenographic bureau. He also has charge of the division of accounts, the
field examiners, estimates, deficiencies, and all fiscal matters generally of the
department and the courts; and the compilation of statistical information required
by law, showing the business transacted in the courts of the United States. He
is the budget officer for the department, and is authorized and directed to certify
to the Bureau of Pensions of the Veterans’ Administration all applications for
refund of deductions from salaries under the provisions of the retirement act of
May 22, 1920.
(b) The disbursing clerk (Harry B. Dellett).
Under the direction of the Administrative Assistant Attorney General, the
disbursing clerk pays all vouchers, claims, pay rolls, and accounts prepared in
and audited and approved for payment by the division of accounts, from the
appropriations for the department proper. He also pays the salaries of justices
of the Supreme Court of the United States and the judges and other officials of
the courts in the Distriet of Columbia and the United States Customs Court, as
well as the salaries of judges retired under the provisions of the Judicial Code.
(¢) Assistant chief clerk and appointment clerk (Charles B. Sornborger).
The appointment clerk has charge, under the supervision of the Administrative
Assistant Attorney General, of all matters relating to applications for positions,
recommendations, and appointments, including certifications by the Civil Service
Commission; conducts correspondence pertaining thereto; prepares nominations
414 Congressional Directory JUSTICE
for submission to the Senate; also commissions and appointments for the officers
and employees of the department in Washington, and for United States attorneys,
marshals, and other court officers. He also compiles the register of the Depart-
ment of Justice (including the offices of the United States courts) and matter
relating to that department for the Official Register of the United States, the
Congressional Directory, ete.
DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION (J. EDGAR HOOVER)
Under the direction of the Attorney General, the Director of the Bureau of
Investigation has general charge of the investigation of alleged offenses against
the laws of the United States, excepting those arising under national prohibition
and counterfeiting laws and of the acquisition, collection, classification, and
preservation of criminal identification records and their exchange with the
officials of States, cities, and other institutions.
He directs the work of the special agents and bank accountants who are
employed for the purpose of detecting crimes and collecting evidence for use
in proposed or pending suits or prosecutions.
DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF PROHIBITION (A. V. DALRYMPLE)
Under the direction of the Attorney General, the Director of the Bureau of
Prohibition has charge of the investigation of violations of the national prohibi-
tion act and of internal revenue laws (if a violation of the national prohibition
act is involved); of the apprehension of offenders against such laws; of seizures
and forefeitures under such laws; of joint hearings (with Treasury Department)
on applications for permits under the national prohibition act; and of determina-
tion of liability for internal revenue taxes and penalties (where a violation of the
national prohibition act is involved).
ATTORNEY IN CHARGE OF PARDONS (JAMES A. FINCH)
Under the direction of the Attorney General, the attorney in charge of pardons
has charge of all applications for Executive clemency except those of the Army
and Navy. He conducts all correspondence with respect thereto and prepares
memoranda and recommendations for submission to the Attorney General and
the Executive and has charge of matters specially assigned to him by the
Attorney General.
DIRECTOR, BUREAU OF PRISONS (SANFORD BATES)
Under the direction of the Attorney General, the director of the bureau of
prisons has charge of all matters directly relating to United States prisons and
prisoners, including the maintenance of such prisoners in State and Federal
penitentiaries, reform schools, and county jails.
He is also in charge of the construction work of the Federal penitentiaries and
reformatories and the management of industries at the Federal penitentiaries.
There is in the bureau, appointed directly by the Attorney General, .a board of
parole of three members whose sole duties are to grant and revoke paroles of
Federal prisoners.
SOLICITOR OF THE TREASURY (ROBERT J. MAWHINNEY)
Under the direction of the Attorney General, the Solicitor of the Treasury
has charge of civil claims of the Treasury and Post Office Departments and of the
General Accounting Office; advises the officials of the Treasury Department on
legal questions arising in connection with finances, banking, customs, public
health, and other matters under the jurisdiction of that department; examines all
contracts of, and official bonds filed in, the Treasury Department; and renders
such other legal services as may be required of him by the Treasury Department.
SOLICITOR FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE (SOUTH TRIMBLE, JR.)
The solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department of Commerce, and his
duties are to act as legal adviser for the officials of that department; to prepare
and examine all contracts and bonds entered into or required by said depart-
ment; and to render such legal services in connection with the administrative
work of said department as may be required of him,
POST OFFICE Officral Dutzes 415
SOLICITOR FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR (CHARLES E. WYZANSKI)
The solicitor is the chief law officer of the Department of Labor, and his duties
are to act as legal adviser to the officials of that department; to prepare and
examine all contracts and bonds entered into or required by said department;
and to render such legal services as may be required by the head of said depart-
ment in connection with the administrative work thereof.
POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT
POSTMASTER GENERAL
The Postmaster General is the executive head of the Postal Serviee. He
appoints all officers and employees under his supervision, exeept the four Assistant
Postmasters General, the purchasing agent, the comptroller, and postmasters of
the first, second, and third classes, who are appointed by the President of the
United States. Subject to the approval of the President, he makes postal treaties
with foreign governments. He awards and executes contracts for the air and
ocean mail services. He is the executive head of Postal Savings and ex officio
chairman of the board of trustees.
EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT TO THE POSTMASTER GENERAL
The executive assistant performs such duties as may be assigned from time to
time by the Postmaster General.
CHIEF CLERK
The chief clerk of the Post Office Department is charged with the general
superintendence and assignment of the clerical and subclerical forces of the
department; the care, maintenance, and operation of the department buildings
and all of public property located therein; the advertising of the department;
the supervision of requisitions entailing expenditure of the appropriations for the
departmental service; the consideration of requisitions for the printing and bind-
ing required in the department and service; the receipt and inspection of blanks
required in the department; the supervision of receipt and inspection of supplies
for the department and service delivered in Washington; superintendence of the
publication and distribution of the Official Postal Guide; the miscellaneous corre-
spondence of the department not assigned to other offices; matters affecting the
proper administration of the civil-service rules and regulations; and the execution
of the provisions of the reclassification and retirement acts. The chief clerk is
the liaison officer between the department and the Personnel Classification Board.
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 supplies; prepares the advertisements and forms for proposals
necessary for the making of contracts for supplies; and enters into contracts for
such supplies for the Postmaster General.
SOLICITOR OF 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 in the course of business of the Postal Service; with the hearing
and consideration of cases of alleged use of the mails to defraud the public and
of cases relating to lotteries; 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
contracts of the department; with the enforcement of laws making unmailable
matter containing any advertisement of intoxicating liquors or solicitation of an
order for such liquors; with the legal work incident to the enforcement of those
provisions of the espionage law which concern the Post Office Department; with
the consideration of all questions relating to the mailability of firearms; with the
416 Congressional Directory POST OFFICE
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 liabilities 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 or corre-
spondence 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 consideration of applications for pardons for crimes com-
mitted against the postal laws which may be referred to the department; with
the determining of questions as to the delivery of mail the ownership of which is
in dispute; and with such other duties as may from time to time be required by
the Postmaster General.
The solicitor is also 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 ad-
justment of railroad mail pay and the fixing of fair and reasonable rates for the
transportation 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 General 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.
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 computing for annual adjustment of salaries of post-
masters at presidential offices, the organization and management of post offices
of the first and second classes; the establishment of contract stations, the appoint-
ment, disciplining, and fixing salaries of assistant postmasters, supervisory
officers, clerks, special clerks, watchmen, messengers, laborers, printers, mechan-
ics, and skilled laborers, and of city and village letter carriers; the establishment,
maintenance, supervision, and extension of city and village delivery and collec-
tion service; allowances for clerk hire at first, second, and third class offices, and
for mail separations and ‘‘unusual conditions’ at fourth-class offices, and for
miscellaneous service items at first and second class offices, such as telephone
and water rentals, laundry, towel service, and all matters concerning the, special-
delivery service and the hours of business at presidential offices.
The division of postmasters.—The preparation of cases for the establishment,
change of name, and discontinuance of post offices; the appointment of post-
masters and keeping a record of such appointments; the obtaining, recording,
and filing of bonds and oaths of office and issuance of postmasters’ commissions;
the consideration of charges and complaints against postmasters; and the regu-
lation of hours of business and change of site of post offices of the fourth class.
The division of rural mails.—The consideration of all matters pertaining to
the rural-delivery service, and the appointment and discipline of rural carriers.
The division of dead leiters and dead parcel post.—The treatment of all unmail-
able and undelivered mail matter which is sent to it and the general supervision
of the treatment of all such matter sent to its respective branches and to post
offices at the several division headquarters of the Railway Mail Service for dis-
position; the verification and allowance of claims for credit by postmasters for
postage-due stamps affixed to undelivered matter; the examination and forward-
‘ing or return of all letters which have failed of delivery; the inspection and
return to the country of origin of undelivered 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.
POST OFFICE Official Duties 417
SECOND ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL
The Second Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divisions
to which are assigned the duties specified:
Railway adjustments.—The supervision of expenditures for the transportation
of mails on railroad, electric car, mail messenger, power boat, and Alaskan star
routes, and with the preparation of orders, rules, and regulations governing
the same, based on the law and the orders of the Interstate Commerce Com-
mission; with the administrative audit of reports concerning the performance of
service of the classes above stated; certifies accounts for payment, and prepares
for proper deductions all cases of nonperformance; imposes fines for delinquen-
cies and failures; with the handling of cases arising from the private express
statutes; and with the preparation of all correspondence affecting these services.
International Postal Service—Supervision of the International Postal Service,
including international registry, insured, and C. O. D. services, and parcel post;
all matters affecting the transportation of foreign mails, including the ocean mail
service under the merchant marine act and air mail service to and from foreign
countries; Navy mail service; the preparation of postal conventions (except those
relative to the money-order system) with foreign countries and the regulations
for their execution, as well as the consideration of questions arising under them
and the preparation of all correspondence in connection therewith.
Railway Mail Service—The supervision of the Railway Mail Service and
railway postal clerks; the preparation of plans and specification of railway post
office cars; designation of trains on which railway post office service is to be
performed; issues orders relative to the moving of the mail on railroad trains;
the distribution and dispatch of mail matter in railway postal cars and post
offices; the leasing of quarters for terminal railway post offices; the approval of
purchases and expenditures necessary for the conduct of the Railway Mail
Service; determining, subject to the Postal Laws and Regulations, what matter
shall be excluded from the mails as liable to damage the contents of mail bags
or harm the person of anyone engaged in the Postal Service, and how such matter
as is admitted must be packed; the distribution to the Postal Service of mail
pouches and sacks and mail-pouch locks, the designation and supervision of mail-
bag depositories; the investigation of delays and damage to mail matter; the star
route contract service (except in Alaska) and the Government-operated star
route service; the preparation of advertisements inviting proposals for the trans-
portation of mails on star routes (except in Alaska), the award of such service °
and the preparation of contracts therefor; the change of schedules on star routes;
the inspection of monthly reports of the performance of star route service, and
the preparation of monthly statements to the General Accounting Office of the
amounts found to be due contractors for service performed; attends to all cor-
respondence relative to these matters.
Air mail service.—The supervision of the transportation of mail under con-
tract by aircraft; the authorization of new routes; changes or additions to exist-
ing service; the encouragement of commercial aviation in so far as the Postal
Service is concerned.
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 sec-
tion; the payment by warrant of all accounts settled by the General Accounting
Office; the receipt and disposition of all moneys coming directly to the depart-
ment; and the keeping of books of account showing the fiscal operations of the
postal and money-order services and the regulation 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 classifica-
tion of domestic mail matter and the rates of postage thereon; the determina-
tion of the admissibility of publications to the second class of mail matter,
the right to continue in that class, including the administration of the law
requiring semiannual statements of their ownership, circulation, ete., and the
instruction of postmasters relative thereto; also the use of penalty envelopes, the
franking privilege, and the limit of weight and size of mail matter. :
157297°—T73—-1—1ST ED 28
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418 Congressional Dzrectory POST OFFICE
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 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 redemp-
tion and credit; the issuance to postmasters of and accounting for internal-
revenue stamps.
Registered mails.— The supervision and management of the domestic registry,
insurance, and collect-on-delivery services; the establishment and control of all
domestic 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 domestic 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.
Cost ascertainment.— General direction of the work of ascertaining the revenues
derived from and the cost of carrying and handling the several classes of mail
matter and of performing the special services.
Parcel post.—General direction of investigations of methods designed to im-
prove the Parcel Post Service.
FOURTH ASSISTANT POSTMASTER GENERAL
The Fourth Assistant Postmaster General has charge of the following divi-
sions, to which are assigned the duties specified:
Engineering and research.—The design and construction of buildings so far as
the operation of the post-office service is concerned; the layout of post-office
quarters in Federal buildings and leased buildings, including conveyor and other
labor-saving equipment for same; general engineering problems affecting the
activities of the Postal Service, and the consideration of the praeticability of
devices and inventions for use in the Postal Service.
Post-office quarters.—The selection, leasing, and equipment of quarters for
post offices of the first, second, and third classes, and stations thereof (except
those located in Federal buildings, which are under the jurisdiction of the Super-
vising Architect of the Treasury Department); the leasing of quarters for the
Railway Mail Service; the leasing and equipment of post-office garages, and the
fixing of allowances for rent, light, and heat at offices of the first, second, and
third classes, and stations thereof.
Equipment and supplies.—The custody and distribution of equipment and
supplies for the Postal Service (except that equipment referred to under mail-
equipment shops); the preparation of specifications for such equipment and
supplies; the purchase of same through the purchasing agent.
Motor-vehicle service.—The authorization, operation, and maintenance of the
Government-owned motor-vehiele service, including the appointment and dis-
cipline of the personnel employed in connection therewith; requisitions for
materials, supplies, and garage equipment and correspondence pertaining thereto;
requests for allowances for rent, light, fuel, power, water, telephone service,
ete.; the monthly and quarterly reports and correspondence pertaining to the
accounting system; the preparation of advertisements inviting proposals for the
transportation of the mails in cities by means of screen wagons and pneumatic
tubes, and the drafting of orders awarding such service, including the prepara-
tion of contracts therefor; the fixing of allowances for the hire of vehicles used
in the delivery and collection service; the examination of reports and the prepa-
ration of orders making deductions and imposing fines for nonperformance of
service and other delinquencies on the part of contractors.
Topography.— The compilation, revision, and distribution of post route, rural
delivery, county, and local center maps; the preparation and the distribution of
parcel-post zone keys.
Maal equipment shops.— The manufacture and repair of equipment for use in
the Postal Service, including mail bags, locks, keys, chains, tools, and other
special equipment; the preparation of specifications for the articles named, and
requisitions on the purchasing agent therefor, and the issuance of locks and keys.
NAVY Offical Duties 419
CHIEF INSPECTOR
The chief inspector is charged with the selection and assignment to duty of all
post-office inspectors and clerks at division headquarters and the general super-
vision of the business of the post office inspection service. Applications for per-
mission to take the examination for the position of post-office inspector and cor-
respondence in connection with such applications, and in connection with the
appointment and promotion of and charges against inspectors should be addressed
to him. His office has jurisdiction of all matters relating to depredations upon
the mails and losses therein as well as reported violations of the postal laws
such as interception and tampering with mail; forgery of money orders; mailing
of poisons, intoxicating liquors, firearms, explosives, and infernal machines;
mailing of indecent, obscene, and scurrilous matter; and complaints of the
fraudulent use of the mails through stockselling or other schemes. 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 considera-
tion and adjustment of claims for rewards and accounts of inspectors for salaries
and expenses. 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
investigation by an inspector is necessary to a determination of the question at
issue such bureau will make the request for the investigation on the chief inspector.
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.
Retirement records.— Maintains an individual record of deductions made from
the salary of each field employee of the Postal Service subject to retirement dedue-
tions for credit to the civil service retirement and disability fund.
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 super-
intendence of construction, manning, armament, equipment, and employment
of vessels of war.
THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY
The Assistant Secretary of the Navy performs such duties in the Navy Depart-
ment as may be prescribed by the Secretary of the Navy or required by law.
THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY (AIR)
The Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Air) is charged with the supervision of
naval aeronautics and the coordination of its activities with other governmental
agencies, and performs such other duties as may be assigned to him by the
Secretary of the Navy.
CHIEF CLERK
As administrative assistant to the Secretary and Assistant Secretaries of the
Navy, the chief clerk has administrative control over the clerical force and
responsibility for the general business operations of the Navy Department, in-
volving supervision over matters relating to the employees of the department;
responsibility for the enforcement of departmental regulations general in their
nature; 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 expendi-
420 Congressional Directory NAVY
tures 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 Secretaries of the Navy.
OFFICE OF ISLAND GOVERNMENTS
This office assists the Secretary of the Navy in his supervision of the govern-
ments of United States dependencies which are under naval administration.
These dependencies at the present time comprise Guam and American Samoa.
OFFICE OF CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
During the temporary absence of the Secretary and the Assistant Secretaries of
the Navy the Chief of Naval Operations is next in succession to act as Secretary
of the Navy. (Acts March 3, 1915, and February 11, 1927.) 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
August 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 March 3, 1915.) This includes the
direction of the Naval War College, the Office of Naval Intelligence, the Office
of Fleet Training, the operation of the Radio Service and of other systems of
communication, the operations of the Aeronautic Service, of mines and mining,
of the naval districts, and of the Coast Guard when operating with the Navy;
the direction of all strategic and tactical matters, organization, maneuvers, target
practice, drills and exercises, and of the training of the fleet for war; and the prep-
aration, revision, and enforcement of all drill books, signal codes, and cipher
codes.
The Chief of Naval Operations so coordinates all repairs and alterations to
vessels and the supply of personnel and material thereto as to insure at all times
the maximum readiness of the fleet for war.
The Chief of Naval Operations is charged with the preparation, revision, and
record of Regulations for the Government of the Navy and General Orders. He
advises the Secretary concerning the movements and operations of vessels of the
Navy, including their assignment for docking, repairs, and alterations, and pre-
pares all orders issued by the Secretary in regard thereto, and keeps the records
of service of all fleets, squadrons, and ships. He advises the Secretary in regard
to the military features of all new ships and as to any proposed extensive altera-
tions 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-
taining to fuel reservations and depots, the location of radio stations, reserves of
ordnance 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.
The Chief 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.
ASSISTANT TO THE CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS
An officer on the active list of the Navy is detailed by the Secretary of the
Navy as Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations. During this detail the
Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations receives the highest pay of his rank.
In the case of the death, resignation, absence, or sickness of the Chief of Naval
Operations, the Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations shall, unless other-
wise directed by the President, perform the duties of the chief until his successor
is appointed or such absence or sickness shall cease,
NAVY Officral Dutzes 421
The Assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations is next in authority to the chief.
He does not administer the details of any division but coordinates the activities
of all divisions.
CENTRAL DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
This division, directly under the Assistant Chief of Naval Operations, acts
in immediate assistance to the Chief of Naval Operations in his duties with
respect to:
(a) Policy, organization, and current plans.
(b) Budget, legislation, Navy Regulations and General Orders, bureau man-
uals, courts and boards, honors and ceremonies, annual and special reports from
naval forces; annual and special reports made by the Chief of Naval Operations.
(¢) Administration of places under naval occupation.
(d) International affairs, including relations and contacts of naval forces,
afloat and ashore, with governments or forces of other nations; direction and
control of naval forces in foreign waters or territory; and matters pertaining to
treaties and conventions. :
(e) Recommendations in connection with appropriation ‘Contingent, Navy.”
(f) Matters not clearly within the cognizance of any other office, or requiring
central coordination, and such other matters as the Chief of Naval Operations
may designate.
This division is charged with the duties of the Office of Island Governments.
WAR PLANS DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
The War Plans Division is charged with the preparation and maintenance of
basic war plans for the development and maintenance of the naval forces in a
state of readiness for war and for operating in war.
The Director of the War Plans Division is a member of the Joint Board. One
officer of the War Plans Division is assigned as a member of the Board for Devel-
opment of Navy Yard Plans. Three or more officers of the War Plans Division
are detailed to form the Navy section of the Joint Army and Navy Planning
Committee. One officer of the War Plans Division is assigned as a member of
the Aeronautical Board. Through membership on these boards and committees
the War Plans Division assists in the coordination of the plans and policies of the
War and Navy Departments.
SHIP MOVEMENTS DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
The Director of Ship Movements Division is responsible to the Chief of Naval
Operations for:
(1) The organization of the United States Naval Forces in accordance with
the policy of the Navy Department.
(2) The coordination, within the Office of Naval Operations, of the United
States Fleet employment plans.
(3) The allocation of all floating equipment.
(4) The preparation of the annual fuel estimates for all naval forces and the
allocation of this fuel to vessels.
(5) The coordination of the movements of all naval craft, whether surface,
subsurface, or air. :
(6) The operation of the Naval Transportation Service, the preparation of
plans for its extended operation on the outbreak of war and for the maintenance
of liaison with the Coast Guard, Shipping Board, Army Transport Service, and
Merchant Marine in that connection.
INTELLIGENCE DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
(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
disseminates such information to the Navy and to Government officials requiring
it. It cooperates with the other executive departments of the Government in
discovering 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
department’s medium of communication to the press and public of items of naval
interest.
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.
422 Congressional Divectry NAVY
In time of war the Office of Naval Intelligence 1s charge of the censorship of
cables and radio.
The Office of Naval Records and Library, in addition to maintaining a technical
library for reference purposes, collects and classifies, with a view to publication,
the records of the naval history of the World War.
COMMUNICATION DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
(Office of the Director of Naval Communications)
The Director of Naval Communications is charged with the administration,
organization, and operation of the entire radio, telegraph, telephone, and cable
systems of communications within the naval service, including the operation of
the Navy overseas radio system and all communications between merchant ships
and naval shore stations in the United States and its possessions. The foregoing
includes the services rendered by shore direction-finder stations and commercial
accounting. The Director of Naval Communications handles all matters pertain-
ing to naval radio communications in any manner whatsoever, except those relat-
ing solely to purchase, supply, test, and installation of apparatus.
The communication office of the Navy Department (a section of the Commu-
nication Division) is responsible for the handling of all telegraphic and radio
communications to and from the Navy Department.
MATERIAL DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
The Material Division advises the Chief of Naval Operations on material
matters ashore and afloat affecting the efficiency of the Naval Establishment, and
matters relating to the merchant marine act of 1928. In so doing the division
keeps in close touch with the material bureaus and the navy yards, naval stations,
and the high commands afloat.
NAVAL DISTRICTS DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
The Naval Districts Division has cognizance of the following in connection
with naval districts; routine eentral administrative work; matters of policy; the
military administration of the districts as a whole; and the supervision of plans
for local defense in time of war. It handles matters in connection with the sale
of naval vessels, and the loan of vessels to States, and their transfer to other
Government departments. This division is also charged with the initiation
and formulation of the department’s policies relating to the size, organization,
administration, training, and mobilization of the Naval Reserve.
INSPECTION DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
(Board of Inspection and Survey)
The activities at present under this division are:
(a) Board of inspection and survey; and
(b) Joint merchant vessel 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 mate-
rial inspections of all vessels of the Navy. It is in close coordination with the
Material 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 suitability for military purposes.
FLEET TRAINING DIVISION, NAVAL OPERATIONS
This division of the Office of Naval Operations is charged with the following:
(a) The general direction of tactical, gunnery, engineering, damage control, and
communications training of the fleet.
(b) Coordinating study, research, and experiment in all bureaus pertaining to
fleet training.
(c) The preparation of the war instructions, tactical instructions, manuals, and
instructions governing the military activities of the fleet in war and in training
for war.
(d) The collection, analysis, and review of all data in regard to fleet training and
compilation of the same into suitable reports for the information and guidance
of the service.
NAVY Official Dutres . 423
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION
The Bureau of Navigation, Navy Department, was created by the act of July
5, 1862.
1. The duties of the Bureau of Navigation comprise the procurement, training,
distribution, and administration of the officer and enlisted personnel of the Navy
and the Naval Reserve; the issue, record, and enforcement 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); and 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 (except of Hospital Corps), and of the Naval Home at Philadelphia,
Pa.; the upkeep and the payment of the operating expenses of the Naval War
College. It is charged with general supervision of the instruction and training
of personnel.
2. It has under its direction all recruiting stations, training stations, receiving
ships and receiving stations, and provides transportation for all personnel of the
Navy.
3. It establishes the personnel complements and allowances of all ships and
shore stations of the naval service.
4. It maintains the records of service of all officers and enlisted personnel and
prepares an annual Navy Register and a quarterly Navy Directory for publica-
tion. It is also charged with the custody of deck logs of all ships.
5. It is charged with all matters pertaining to applications for appointments
and commissions and warrants in the Navy and with the preparation of such
appointments and commissions and warrants for signature of the President or
of the Secretary of the Navy.
6. It is charged with the preparation, revision, and enforcement of regula-
tions governing uniforms, and with the distribution of all general orders and
regulations.
7. Questions of naval discipline are considered by this bureau, and recom-
mendations submitted for the action of the Secretary of the Navy. The records
of all general courts-martial, courts of inquiry, and boards of investigation
involving the personnel of the Navy before final action are referred to this bureau
for comment as to disciplinary features.
8. It is charged with the enforcement of regulations and instructions regarding
naval ceremonies and naval etiquette.
9. It advises the Secretary of the Navy on all personnel matters.
10. It is charged with the upkeep and operation of the Hydrographic Office
and the Naval Observatory. It also has charge of all ocean and lake surveys,
and ships’ and crews’ libraries; it defrays the expenses of pilotage of all ships in
commission.
11. It is charged with carrying on the administration and training of the Naval
Reserve in accordance with the policies of the Office of the Chief of Naval
Operations.
NAVAL OBSERVATORY, BUREAU OF NAVIGATION
The Naval Observatory at Washington, D. C., broadcasts time signals six
times daily. In addition to establishing standard time for the country and
making it possible for the navigator at sea to determine his chronometer error
and position, these signals are used by surveyors, engineers, and scientific workers
for the determination of position, measurement of gravity, and radio frequencies
and other purposes requiring exact time. In order to meet the needs of all who
may have use for thei a number of different frequencies are used in broadcasting
the signals via the naval radio stations at Arlington and Annapolis. Three of the
daily signals are also retransmitted by the station at Mare Island, Calif., and the
noon signals are also distributed by telegraph. Naval radio stations at San Diego,
Honolulu, and in the Canal Zone transmit time signals which are based on Naval
Observatory time. :
The administration for the development, supply, upkeep, repair, and inspection
of navigational, aeronautical, and aerological instruments for the ships and air-
craft of the Navy is performed at the Naval Observatory.
The Naval Observatory maintains continuous observations for absolute posi-
tions of the fundamental stars, and the independent determination, by observa-
tions of the sun, of the position of the ecliptic and of the Equator among the
stars, and of the positions of the stars, moon, and planets, with reference to the
Equator and equinoxes, in order to furnish data to assist in preparing the American
424 Congressional Directory NAVY
Ephemeris and Nautical Almanac and improving the tables of the planets, moon,
and stars.
The ephemeris department of the Naval Observatory computes and prepares
for publication the American Ephemeris and its supplements. In addition, there
is carried on the essential research work of deriving improved values of the
fundamental astronomical elements and embodying them in new tables of the
celestial motions.
HYDROGRAPHIC OFFICE, BUREAU OF NAVIGATION
The Hydrographic Office is charged with topographic and hydrographic surveys
in foreign waters and on the high seas; the collection and dissemination of hydro-
graphic and navigational information and data; the preparation and printing by
its own personnel and with its own equipment of maps and charts relating to
and required in navigation, including confidential, strategical, and tactical charts
required for naval operations and maneuvers; the preparation and issue of sailing
directions (pilots), light lists, pilot charts, navigational manuals, periodicals, and
radio broadcasts 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 the sale to the mercantile marine of all nations and to
the general public, at the cost of printing and paper. It maintains intimate
relations with the hydrographic offices of all foreign countries and with the Inter-
national Hydrographic Bureau, Monaco, and (through branch hydrographic
offices and sales agents) with mariners and the general public.
The Hydrographic Office prepares special charts for the use of aviators, covering
the coastal areas of the United States and foreign countries; disseminates through
Notices to Aviators information relative to aids to aerial navigation and aviation
facilities; prepares and publishes plotting sheets, plotting instruments, and navi-
gational tables especially designed for aviation use; and carries out researeh into
the science of aerial navigation.
The Hydrographic Office cooperates with the National Academy of Sciences by
conducting research work in oceanography, especially in soundings and in the
collection of the temperatures of the surface of the sea.
BUREAU OF YARDS AND DOCKS
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 stationary 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 locomotives, 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 ordnance stations, hospitals, the Naval
Academy, and marine posts; it provides clerks for the offices of the commandant,
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 ground.
(e) Naval powder factory.
(f) Naval ammunition depots.
(9) Naval magazines on shore.
(h) Naval mine depots.
NAVY Officral Dutres 425
And 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 require-
ments 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, and transporting ammunition and torpedoes, all of which work shall
be performed to its satisfaction. It designs and construets all turret ammuni-
tion hoists, determines the requirements of all ammunition hoists, and the method
of construction of armories and ammunition rooms on shipboard and, in conjunc-
tion with the Bureau of Construction and Repair, determines upon their location
and that of ammunition hoists outside of turrets. It installs all parts of the
armament and its accessories which are not permanently attached to any portion
of the structure of the hull, excepting turret guns, turret mounts, and ammuni-
tion hoists, and such other mounts as require simultaneous structural work in
connection with installation or removal. It confers with the Bureau of Con-
struction and Repair respecting the arrangements for centering the turrets and
the character of the roller paths and their support.
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; 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 responsi-
bility 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 turret-turning machinery, spars, capstans, windlasses, decks,
winches, boat cranes, steering gear, and hull-ventilating apparatus (except port-
able fans); and, after consultation with the Bureau of Ordnance and according
to the requirements thereof as determined by that bureau, the designing, con-
struction, and installation of independent ammunition hoists, the same to con-
form to the requirements of the Bureau of Ordnance as to power, speed, and
control, and the installation of the permanent fixtures of all other ammunition
hoists and their appurtenances; placing and securing armor, placing and secur-
ing 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 con-
nection 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.
It has charge of the docking of ships, and is charged with the operating and
cleaning of dry docks.
It is responsible for the care and preservation of ships not in commission.
It has cognizance of electric launches and other boats supplied with electric
motive power.
It has charge of the manufacture of anchors and cables; the supplying and
fitting of rope, cordage, rigging, sails, awning, 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
1. The duties of the Bureau of Engineering comprise all that relates to the
designing, building, fitting out, repairing, and altering of machinery and its related
equipment used for the propulsion of naval ships. It has the same cognizance
and responsibility over the following machinery not associated with propulsion
equipment: Pumps (except motor-driven pumps for drainage and for distribution
of fresh water for ship’s use); distilling apparatus; refrigerating apparatus
(except for small self-contained units); steam and electric heaters; all air com-
pressors (except those required for adjusting and diving on submarines and
426 Congressional Directory NAVY
those for galley use); all steam connections and piping on ships; and all small
power-boat machinery.
2. It has cognizance of all that relates to electric generating sets and storage
batteries; the generation and distribution of electric power on board ship for all
purposes; all means of interior communication, including telephones and tele-
graphs of all description; the size of voice tubes and the location of outlets; all
electrical methods of signaling, internal and external; all other electrical apparatus
on board ship, except gyrocompass and anemometer equipment (Bureau of Navi-
gation); fire-control instruments (Bureau of Ordnance); galley ranges and ovens
(Bureau of Construction and Repair); and motors and control appliances used
to operate machinery under the specific cognizance of other bureaus.
3. It is charged with the design, manufacture, installation, maintenance, and
repair of radio and sound equipment on board ship, in aircraft, and on shore,
and has cognizance of radio and sound research.
4. It inspects all fuel for the fleet. It prepares recommendations for the
purchase on annual contracts of consumable engineering supplies and conducts
tests for determining the quality which these supplies must meet. It prepares
the specifications for the yearly contract under which lubricating oil is purchased
by the Navy and by all other Federal activities.
5. (a) It has supervision and control of the upkeep and operation of the
Naval Research Laboratory, Bellevue, D. C., the Engineering Experiment Sta-
tion, Annapolis, Md., the Fuel Oil Testing Plant, Philadelphia, Pa., and, jointly
with the Bureau of Construction and Repair, of the electrical laboratory at the
navy yard, Brooklyn, N. Y., and employs these activities for conducting neces-
sary tests and investigations to obtain suitable apparatus and material for
naval purposes. .
(b) The bureau prepares specifications and prescribes tests for material and
machinery under its cognizance. It is represented on many of the national stand-
ardization and engineering bodies.
6. It maintains in the field offices of inspectors of machinery who are directly
under the administrative control of the Bureau of Engineering, and also main-
tains jointly with the Bureaus of Ordnance, Aeronautics, and Construction and
Repair, the offices of the inspectors of naval material. In the offices of inspectors
of machinery a force of trained naval and civilian experts is maintained for the
inspection of machinery and engineering materials generally entering into the
construction of new vessels; this force interprets and enforces strict compliance
with the engineering specifications for the construction of vessels as regards
the characteristics of the material used and the method of installation of com-
pleted parts. The offices of the inspectors of naval material, which are also
composed of trained naval and civilian experts, are maintained for the purpose of
inspecting and insuring strict compliance with the specifications of materials
purchased for the maintenance of the Naval Establishment. These offices are
available to and frequently used by other Federal departments for the inspection
of material purchased for Government use.
7. It nominates to the Bureau of Navigation specially qualified officers for
engineering duties at sea and on shore, including those for duty as inspectors of
machinery and materials.
8. It compiles and issues instructions for the care, operation, and maintenance
of engineering equipment and prepares and issues bulletins of official engineering
information.
9. With the Bureau of Construction and Repair it has a joint supervision
and control over the appropriations ‘‘Increase of the Navy, construction and
machinery,” and ‘‘ Major alterations, naval vessels.”
BUREAU OF MEDICINE AND SURGERY
The Bureau of Medicine and Surgery shall have charge of the upkeep and
operation 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 in-
formation as to the assignment and duties of all enlisted men of the Hospital
Corps; it shall recommend to the Bureau of Navigation the complement of
medical officers, dental officers, nurses, and Hospital Corps men for hospitals
NAVY Offictal Duties | 427
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
laboratories, naval hospitals, dispensaries, technical schools for the Medical,
Dental, and Hospital Corps, and the administration of the Nurse Corps.
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 requisition 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 sanitary condition of the Navy and making recommendations in reference
thereto; of advising 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 hospitals and of the internal organization and administration of hospital
ships, the instruction 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 these affect the health of the Navy.
It shall safeguard the. personnel 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 personnel ready for service at all times. It
shall adopt for use all such devices or procedures 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 Bureau of
Medicine and Surgery.
BUREAU OI 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, pro-
posals, contracts, 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 fac-
tories 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 account-
ing for allotments for ships under all appropriations; the preparation and issuance
of allowance lists for ships and S. and A. material; the disposition of excess
stocks accumulated at the various yards and the upkeep of naval supply account
stock; he recommends to the Bureau of Yards and Docks the interior arrange-
ments of storehouses ashore and to the Bureau of Construction and Repair the
character of the permanent galley fittings and interior storeroom arrangement
of all naval vessels.
He has direction of the sale of condemned, salvaged, and scrap, or other mate-
rials, 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 pur-
poses on board naval vessels, and the chartering of merchant vessels for trans-
portation purposes.
428 Congressional Directory NAVY
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 funds for Navy disbursing
officers and the payment for articles and services for which contract and agree-
ments 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 manufacturing and operating expenses at navy yards and stations; the direc-
tion of naval cost accounting and the audit of property returns from ships and
stations. He prepares the estimates for the appropriations for freight, fuel, provisions,
and clothing for the Navy, the maintenance of the supply, accounting, and dis-
bursing 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, their acces-
sories and equipment, 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 dis-
tribution in the various ratings of the enlisted personnel required for aeronautic
activities, and on all matters pertaining to aeronautic training; 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 enlisted personnel required for aeronautic activities; also relative 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.
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
Department 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 examination 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 examinations of
officers for promotion and retirement, for the examination 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 also 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
INTERIOR Official Duties 429
and retirements, and to the validity of the proceedings in court-martial cases;
all matters relating 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 interpretation of statutes; references to the General Account-
ing Officers of the Treasury; proceedings in the civil courts by or against the
Government or its officers; preparation of advertisements, proposals, and con-
tracts; insurance; patents; the sufficiency of official contracts and other bonds
and guarantees; claims by or against the Government; and to conduct the corre-
spondence respecting the foregoing duties, including the preparation for sub-
mission to the Attorney General of all questions which the Secretary of the Navy
may direct to be so submitted.
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 department 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
General of the Navy. He shall examine and report upon questions of interna-
tional 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
Secretary 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; con-
stabulary 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 Comman-
dant, has cognizance of military intelligence, operations, training, matériel, and
aviation.
The adjutant and inspector has general supervision of claims of officers and
enlisted men, courts-martial, courts of inquiry, investigations, ete.; historical
archives; inspections; post exchanges; appointment, examination, promotion,
reduction, and retirement of commissioned and warrant officers; military records;
discharges, promotion, and reduction of noncommissioned officers; casualties;
insignia.
The paymaster has supervision of questions relating to pay, allowances, bonus,
gratuities, mileage, travel expenses, allotments, insurance, ete., to officers and
enlisted men; deficiency and other estimates for pay, ete.
The quartermaster has supervision of matters relating to the purchase of
military supplies for the Marine Corps, including subsistence, construction
material, and labor; pays all expenses of the corps except those pertaining to
paymaster’s department; has jurisdiction 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, Bureau of Reclamation, Geological Survey,
Office of Indian Affairs, Office of Education, National Park Service, and certain
hospitals and eleemosynary institutions in the District of Columbia. By author-
ity of the President, the Secretary of the Interior has general supervision over
the Government railroad in the Territory of Alaska. He exercises also certain
powers and duties in relation to the Territories of Alaska and Hawaii. He was
designated custodian of the records and files of the United States Fuel Admin-
430 Congressional Directory INTERIOR
istration and the Bituminous Coal Commission by Executive orders of July
22, 1919, March 24, 1920, and June 16, 1920, and those of the United States Coal
Commission by Executive order of September 13, 1923. The Secretary of the
Interior is charged with the adjustment of claims filed under the war minerals
relief act (sec. 5, act of March 2, 1919, 40 Stat. 1274) for losses incurred in pro-
ducing or preparing to produce manganese, chrome, pyrites, or tungsten during
the war, and with the supervision of all matters pertaining to the Alaska Road
Commission. He is a member of the National Forest Reservation Commission
under act of Congress approved March 1, 1911. He is chairman of the Federal
Oil Conservation Board, constituted by the President on December 19, 1927. He
is a member also of the District of Columbia Permanent System of Highways
Commission under act of Congress approved March 2, 1893 (27 Stat. 532), and of
the Smithsonian Institution under act of March 12, 1894 (28 Stat. 41). Executive
order of February 27, 1931, placed the administration of the government of the
Virgin Islands under his supervision.
FIRST ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
The First Assistant Secretary has general supervision over matters concerning
the Indian Service, the Bureau of Reclamation, and the Geological Survey.
His duties relate to the administration and enforcement of the laws enacted by
Congress affecting these activities and involve consideration of matters dealing
with the education and advancement of the Indians, including the natives of
Alaska, also medical relief work and the promotion of health and sanitation
among them; administration of Indian property and affairs generally; irrigation
development on Indian reservations; matters relating to Federal reclamation
projects generally, their inception, opening, operation, and maintenance; en-
larged homestead and stock-raising homestead designations; withdrawal of public
lands for public purposes; classification of lands for power sites, coal, oil, oil shale,
potash, phosphate, ete. He also considers proposed legislation relating to matters
under his supervision. Duties in connection with the affairs of other bureaus
are assigned to him from time to time. In the absence of the Seeretary he be-
comes Acting Secretary.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
The Assistant Secretary has general supervision over all matters concerning the
General Land Office, Office of Education, National Park Service, St. Elizabeths
Hospital, Freedmen’s Hospital, and Howard University; admission, disbarment,
and restoration of attorneys and agents to practice before department and bureaus
thereof; the Virgin Islands; Territories of Hawaii and Alaska; the Assistant
Secretary also has jurisdiction of matters of a miscellaneous character, such as the
approval of the pay roll of the Secretary’s office and the signing of contracts under
the contingent and stationery appropriations, etc. He also considers proposed
legislation pertaining to matters under his supervision. Duties 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 regula-
tions of the department, and has administrative supervision of the buildings
occupied by the department. He also supervises, under the direction of the
department budget officer, the classification and compilation of all estimates of
appropriations for the Bureau of the Budget, and has general supervision of
expenditures from the appropriations for printing and binding and contingent
expenses for the department, including stationery and postage on mail addressed
to postal-union countries. The detailed work relating to the Territories of
Alaska, Hawaii, and the Virgin Islands; accounts and miscellaneous correspond-
ence relating to the Alaska Railroad to corporate sureties on bonds; to contracts
and miscellaneous correspondence relating to St. Elizabeths Hospital, Freedmen’s
Hospital, and Howard University; estimates for and admissions to Columbia
Institution for the Deaf; the admission of attorneys and agents to practice and
disbarments from practice, and miscellaneous matters are performed in his office.
During the temporary absence of the Secretary and the Assistant Secretaries he
may be designated by the Secretary to sign official papers and documents.
SR
INTERIOR Official Duties 431
COMMISSIONER OF THE GENERAL LAND OFFICE
The Commissioner of the General Land Office is charged with the survey
management, and disposition of the public lands, the adjudication of conflicting
claims relating thereto, the granting of railroad and other rights of way, ease-
ments, the issuance of patents for lands, and with furnishing certified copies of
land patents and of records, plats, and papers on file in his office. In national
forests he executes all laws relating to surveying, protecting, locating, appro-
priating, 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, under the supervision of the Secretary
of the Interior, has charge of the Indians of the United States, their education,
lands, moneys, schools, and general welfare, and the purchase of supplies in
connection therewith; also the education and health administration of the
natives of Alaska.
COMMISSIONER OF EDUCATION
The Commissioner of Education has charge of the Office of Education, which
collects statistics and general information showing the condition and progress of
education 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 survey of education; and administers the endowment fund
for the support of colleges for the benefit of agriculture and mechanic arts.
He is required to make an inspection of Howard University, Washington, D. C.,
at least once each year, and submit a report to Congress thereon. The com-
missioner 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
Commission on Licensure to Practice the Healing Art in the District of Columbia.
DIRECTOR OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY
The Director of the Geological Survey is charged, under the direction of the
Secretary of the Interior, with the classification of the public lands and the exami-
nation of the geologic structure, mineral resources, and products of the national
domain. In conformity with this authorization, the Geological Survey is engaged
in preparing geologic maps and reports on the United States and Alaska, involving
both topographic and geologic surveys, in conducting investigations relating to
mineral resources, surface and underground waters, and in classifying the public
lands and supervising the engineering phases of mineral leasing.
COMMISSIONER OF RECLAMATION
The Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation, under the direction of the
Secretary of the Interior, is charged with investigation, construction, and manage-
ment of irrigation developments in the arid States as authorized by the recla-
mation act of June 17, 1902, and amendments; also construction of the Hoover
Dam and the development of the Colorado River Basin, as authorized by the
act of December 21, 1928.
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
The National Park Service is charged with the protection of the national park
and monument system, which as of April 1, 1933, includes 22 national parks and
40 national monuments, while at the same time making these areas available for
the enjoyment of the people.
Protection of the parks and monuments involves the conservation of all forms
of life, the natural scenic features, and objects of historic, prehistoric, or scientific
interest. This includes forest fire prevention and control, eradication and
prevention of tree diseases and insect infestations, study and solution of wild-
animal problems, including such matters as providing the necessary range and
controlling disease epidemics. Much of the specialized control work is carried
on through the cooperation of other Government bureaus.
432 Congressional Directory INTERIOR
Making the parks available for the enjoyment of the people involves the build-
ing of roads, trails, bridges, and administrative units; the installation of lighting
and sanitary systems; the operation of public automobile camps; and the inducing
of private capital to operate the necessary utilities for visitors, under strict Gov-
ernment supervision. The provision of these various accommodations in the
parks makes necessary careful surveillance by a force of architects and landscape
architects to insure protection of the scenic and other features, both from despolia-
tion and lack of harmonious blending of developments with scenery and other
important features.
Appreciation of the principal features of the parks and monuments, whether
scenie, scientific, historic, or prehistorie, is an important factor in the complete
enjoyment of these areas by visitors. Thus it is the duty of the Service to
promote the understanding and appreciation of these areas and their mental and
spiritual values. This is done through an educational staff which engages in
lecture and ranger-guide work, the operation of museums, and in research work,
through a corps of naturalists and historians.
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 independ-
ent 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 Commissioner 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 for promoting the general welfare of the Indians.
THE ALASKA RAILROAD
The Alaskan Engineering Commission was created under the act of March 12,
1914, which empowered, authorized, and directed the President to locate, con-
struct, operate or lease a railroad, or railroads, to connect one or more of the
open harbors on the southern coast of Alaska with the navigable waters in the
interior, and a coal field or fields, and agricultural lands. Authority was also
granted to purchase 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
administration 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.
The railroad was completed in the spring of 1923 and is now under operation.
By Executive order of June 8, 1923, the President placed the operation of the
railroad under the Secretary of the Interior, and by order of the Secretary of the
Interior of August 15, 1923, the designation of the Alaskan Engineering Commis-
sion was changed to The Alaska Railroad, and a general manager was appointed
in October of 1923, whose headquarters are at Anchorage, Alaska, with a pur-
chasing office and special disbursing agent at Seattle, Wash., and a general
freight, passenger, and immigration agent located in suite 321-322, 333 North
Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Ill. Reports and miscellaneous correspondence
in relation to the railroad are handled in the office of the chief clerk of the
department.
ALASKA ROAD COMMISSION
The Board of Road Commissioners in Alaska was created by the act of Con-
gress approved January 27, 1905 (sec. 2), amended by the act approved May
14, 1906. By act approved June 30, 1932, the duties of the board were trans-
ferred from the jurisdiction of the Secretary of War to the Secretary of the
Interior. Funds for the work are derived from a tax fund collected in Alaska
and from special appropriations made by Congress.
The board is charged by law with the construction, repair, and maintenance
of roads, tramways, ferries, bridges, and trails in the Territory of Alaska.
AGRICULTURE : Official Duties 433
Under the act of June 30, 1921, there was authorized to be received from
the Territory of Alaska or other source funds contributed for the construction,
repair, and maintenance of roads, bridges, trails, and related works, said funds
to be deposited in the United States Treasury and expended in accordance with
the purpose for which they were contributed. ,
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE
The Secretary of Agriculture is charged with the work of promoting agricul-
ture 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.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE
The Assistant Secretary of Agriculture becomes Acting Secretary in the
absence of the Secretary and assists in the general direction of the work of the
department.
DIRECTORS
Each of the directors of scientific work, extension work, personnel and business
administration, and information, reporting directly to the Secretary, has general
supervision over all the work of the-department of the type which the title of
his position implies. :
SOLICITOR
The solicitor is the legal advisor of the Secretary and the heads of the several
branches of the department. He directs and supervises all law work of the
department.
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
This office has general direction and supervision of the personnel and of the
business operations of the department as a whole, including the coordination and
improvement of such business activities of its various bureaus and offices as
personnel administration, organization, budget and fiscal matters, purchases and
supplies, traffic, housing, and care of buildings and equipment. It conducts the
business of the department with the Civil Service Commission, Employees’ Com-
pensation Commission, Bureau of the Budget, General Accounting Office, re-
tirement division of the Veterans’ Administration, the various boards operat-
ing under authority of the Chief Coordinator, and similar agencies.
OFFICE OF INFORMATION
The Office of Information supervises the publication, press, and radio activities
of the department. It has general supervision of all editing, illustrating, indexing,
printing and binding, and distributing of publications. It cooperates with the
bureaus in the accurate recording of the results of scientific agricultural research
and in the printing of these results in technical publications, and then assists the
scientists and the bureaus to popularize this information in publications that are
available to farmers, home makers, and others interested in the practical use of
the facts. Such publications serve to facilitate the department’s voluminous
correspondence and reduce its cost. Through newspapers, farm journals, and
other periodicals, this office also secures the circulation in popular form of the
discoveries and recommendations of the scientists, specialists, and field workers of
‘the department, thus enlarging the department’s service by placing facts about
improved practices in the hands of greater numbers who can benefit by this
information. This office also furnishes daily to 300 radio stations, in all parts of
the country, authentic, timely information of practical use to farmers and others.
Radio stations donate the broadcasting time as an aid in disseminating facts
about the important discoveries made by the department and the farm practices
recommended by it.
LIBRARY
The department library, with its branch libraries in the various bureaus, con-
tains approximately 245,000 volumes on agriculture, the related sciences, and
157297°—73-1-—18T ED——29
434 Congressional Directory AGRICULTURE
economics, exclusive of the collections in the Weather Bureau library. It
receives currently approximately 4,200 periodicals.
The dictionary card catalogue of the main library, containing three-quarters
of a million cards, is a record of the book resources of the whole department.
It is supplemented by several extensive special indexes which are maintained
by the branch libraries in the various bureaus. These together form the most
comprehensive bibliography of agriculture and the related sciences available in
the United States. Various current lists of accessions are also issued by the
main library and the branch libraries.
The library lends its books for purposes of research to other libraries and
institutions throughout the country, especially to the State agricultural colleges
and experiment stations. It also furnishes bibliographical assistance and
endeavors in various other ways to serve as the national agricultural library.
OFFICE OF EXPERIMENT STATIONS
The Office of Experiment Stations administers Federal funds provided by the
Hatch, Adams, Purnell, and supplementary acts for the support of State and
Territorial agricultural experiment stations in the several States and in Alaska,
Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, has immediate direction of experiment stations of the
department in Hawaii and Puerto Rico, and affords such advice and assistance
as will best promote the efficiency of the stations and the effective coordination
of their work with that of the Department of Agriculture. It also issues the
Experiment Station Record and collects and disseminates information regarding
the progress of agricultural research through the Record and in other ways, and
reports annually on the work and expenditures of the stations as required by law.
EXTENSION SERVICE
The Extension Service cooperates with the State agricultural colleges in the
conduct of extension work in agriculture and home economics under the Smith-
Lever and supplementary acts, and acts as an agency for coordinating the exten-
sion activities of the several bureaus of the department with similar work carried
on by the State agricultural colleges. It conducts demonstrations on reclamation
projects to assist settlers in making a success of their farm enterprises. It also
has charge of the preparation, installation, and display of agricultural exhibits at
State, interstate, and international fairs and of the motion-picture activities of
the department.
WEATHER BUREAU
The Weather Bureau has charge of the forecasting of the weather; issuance and
display of weather forecasts, and storm, cold-wave, frost, forest-fire-weather, and
flood warnings; gaging and reporting of river stages; collection and transmission
of marine intelligence for the benefit of commerce and navigation; collection and
furnishing of meteorological information and forecasts, including upper-air obser-
vations, for the benefit of air navigation; reporting of temperature and rainfall
conditions for agricultural interests; and the taking of such meteorological obser-
vations as may be necessary to determine and record the climatic conditions of
the United States.
BUREAU OF ANIMAL INDUSTRY
The Bureau of Animal Industry is primarily concerned with the protection
and development of the livestock and meat industries of the United States. It
conducts scientific investigations of the causes, prevention, and treatment of
diseases of domestic animals; investigates the existence of communicable dis-
eases of such animals, and aids in their control or eradication; and carries on
investigations and experiments in animal husbandry and in the feeding and
breeding of animals. It also is charged with the administration of the meat
inspection act, the animal quarantine acts, the 28-hour law, the diseased animal
transportation acts, the virus-serum-toxin act, and the act relating to the super-
vision of the business in interstate commerce of packers, public stockyard markets
and commission men, traders, and other agencies operating in the public
stockyard markets of the United States.
BUREAU OF DAIRY INDUSTRY
The Bureau of Dairy Industry conducts investigations of the various problems
of dairy production and of the manufacture of dairy products and by-products.
:
AGRICULTURE Official Dutres 435
These include studies in the breeding, feeding, and management of dairy herds;
effect of minerals in feed in maintaining milk yield, animal growth and reproduc-
tion, and other nutritional problems, and the efficiency and economy of production
through the operation of dairy-herd improvement associations; sanitary methods
for the improvement of city milk supplies; efficiency of dairy machinery, milk-
plant operation, and milk transportation, and factors affecting the commercial
value of milk; bacteriology and chemistry of milk; factors concerned in the manu-
facture of various dairy products and by-products, and the development of new
or improved processes of manufacture and their introduction into creameries
and factories. The bureau is also charged with the inspection of renovated-
butter factories.
BUREAU OF PLANT INDUSTRY
The Bureau of Plant Industry directs its activities primarily toward the im-
provement of the quality of crop production without increasing cost, and at the
same time securing greater dependability of production through reduction or
elimination of erratic hazards of plant disease epidemics. This work includes
the study of destructive plant diseases and the establishment of methods of
eradication and control; the improvement, by breeding and selection, of cotton,
of corn, wheat, and other cereals, of apples, peaches, citrus, and other fruits, of
potatoes and other vegetables, of alfalfa and other forage crops, of tobacco, and
of other crop plants; the introduction of promising seeds and plants from foreign
countries; the improvement of methods of crop production; improvements in
methods of handling, transportation, and storage of perishable products; and the
utilization of plants or plant products of economic value.
Campaigns to control or eradicate certain plant diseases are conducted in
cooperation with the authorities of the States concerned. The 13 States inter-
ested in spring-wheat production are cooperating to eradicate the common bar-
berry throughout this area as a means of controlling epidemics of black stem rust
of wheat. The New England, Great Lakes, and Northwestern States are coop-
erating in the eradication of the black currant and related plants as a means of
controlling or preventing the spread of blister rust of white pine. The Gulf
States are cooperating in the eradication of the canker of citrus trees and fruits.
Georgia and Alabama and other southern peach-growing States are cooperating
in a campaign to eradicate the phony disease of peach trees.
The regulatory activities of the bureau are limited to the enforcement of the
Federal seed act.
In addition to the experimental activities of the bureau at the Arlington
(Va.) Experiment Farm, which is immediately adjacent to the District of Colum-
bia, the bureau is operating field stations or laboratories in practically all the
major cropping regions of the United States and is maintaining close cooperation
with the State agricultural colleges and experiment stations.
The bureau is acquiring land in the District of Columbia on which to establish
and maintain the National Arboretum.
FOREST SERVICE
The Forest Service administers the national forests; cooperates with States in
maintaining organized protection of forest lands against fire, and in distributing
planting stock to farmers for windbreaks, shelter belts, and farm woodlands;
conducts investigations in the entire field of forestry, including industrial research
and research in forest economics and taxation; diffuses information relating to
the best uses of forests and forest products; and, in short, seeks to promote the
application of forestry throughout the country on both public and privately
owned lands, together with efficient and economical use of the yield. The
national forests contain approximately 161,000,000 acres of Government-owned
land and nearly one-fourth of the timber in the United States, besides forage and
recreational resources of great public value. The administration of the national
forests aims to coordinate and develop to the utmost the use of all their resources
in the best public interest. Technical methods of forestry are applied to the
growing and harvesting of timber. Livestock grazing is scientifically regulated
so as to obtain range conservation along with full use of the annual growth of
forage. Sustained and, where possible, increased yields of timber and forage
are obtained. Water from the protected watersheds is made available for
power, irrigation, and municipal and domestic supply. Provision is made for
many other forms of national-forest land use under regulation. Systematic
protection is provided against fire and other destructive agencies.
436 0 ongressional Directory AGRICULTURE
BUREAU OF CHEMISTRY AND SOILS
The Bureau of Chemistry and Soils is primarily concerned with the conservation
and more profitable utilization of the country’s soil resources and the conversion
of farm products into farm profits.
The work of this bureau is organized along three major lines—(1) chemical and
technological research, (2) soil investigations, and (3) fertilizer and fixed-nitrogen
investigations.
(1) Under “chemical and technological research’ is grouped the work relating
to the application of the science of chemistry to the improvement of agriculture;
development of processes for the utilization of agricultural products; biological,
chemical, physical, microscopical, and technological investigation of foods, feeds,
drugs, and substances used in the manufacture thereof, including studies of their
physiological effects on the human organism; experiments on the utilization of
agricultural and other raw materials for coloring, medicinal, and technical pur-
poses; development of improved processes in the production of rosin and turpen-
tine; investigation of chemical problems relating to the composition, action, and
application of insecticides and fungicides; investigation and development of
methods of manufacturing insecticides and fungicides; and development of means
to prevent farm fires and dust explosions.
(2) Under ‘soil investigations’ is grouped all the soil work of the bureau,
including the classification and mapping of the soils of the United States, studies
of the agricultural value of soils, their characteristics in relation to productiveness,
their origin and development, and their chemical and mechanical compositions;
research in soil microbiology; investigations of the response of soils to fertilizers
and soil amendments; and studies of soil erosion.
(3) Under “fertilizer and fixed-nitrogen investigations’ are grouped studies of
the fertilizer resources of the country and methods of manufacturing fertilizer
materials, including nitrogen and its fixation, phosphates, potash, concentrated
fertilizers, organic waste products, and miscellaneous soil amendments.
BUREAU OF ENTOMOLOGY
The Bureau of Entomology conducts investigations in economic entomology,
involving studies of the life history and habits of insects injurious and those
beneficial to agriculture, horticulture, and arboriculture, with a view to devel-
oping practical methods for destroying those found to be injurious and promot-
ing the increase and spread of those found to be beneficial. It studies bee
culture and bee-keeping practices and investigates the life historv and control
of insects affecting the health of man and animals.
BUREAU OF BIOLOGICAL SURVEY
The Bureau of Biological Survey is engaged in those forms of research work,
conservation and control operations, and enforcement of laws that relate to
vertebrate wild animals (except fishes), in the interests of agriculture, horticul-
ture, stock raising, forestry, recreation, and the natural requirements of the
wild life itself. Its activities embrace field investigations and laboratory studies
(including biological surveys of areas) of the distribution, migration, classification,
natural history, food habits, and food resources of birds and other animals and
their diseases and parasites; experiments in the production of fur-bearing ani-
mals in captivity and demonstration of improved practices developed therefrom;
studies of the propagation of game birds; investigations for the improvement of
the reindeer industry and the reintroduction of musk-oxen in Alaska; and devel-
opment of effective methods for the control of predatory animals, including stock
killers, rodents, injurious birds, and other destructive species. Control opera-
tions are conducted by organized field forces in cooperation with State and other
organizations. More than one hundred reservations are maintained for the con-
servation of game and other animals and birds, and work is under way for the
acquisition of numerous additional refuges at concentration points of migratory
birds. The bureau administers Federal laws for the conservation of migratory
birds, protection of animals and property on wild-life reservations, and preven-
tion of illegal interstate shipments of bodies of wild animals and of the entry of
injurious foreign species; and, through representation on and cooperation with the
Alaska Game Commission, assists in the enforcement of the Alaska game law.
BUREAU OF PUBLIC ROADS
The Bureau of Public Roads deals with all highway functions of the department.
It administers the department’s appropriations for Federal aid to the States for
AGRICULTURE Official Duties ; 437
road construction and for the construction of forest roads. In order that funds
may be properly administered it conducts research into highway design, con-
struction, and economics. The bureau also supervises the construction of national
park roads for the National Park Service of the Department of the Interior.
BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING
The Bureau of Agricultural Engineering conducts investigations of farm
irrigation, farm drainage and soil-erosion control, farm machinery, farm buildings,
and other rural-engineering problems. These investigations include studies of
the hydraulics of flow in open watercourses and in closed conduits; organization,
administration, and operation of community enterprises for irrigating and for
draining farm lands; water requirements for irrigating various lands and crops;
means for checking soil erosion and reclaiming gullied lands; land-clearing
methods; rearrangement of field boundaries for effective use of farming machinery;
mechanical equipment for use in producing crops, farm processing of products,
and controlling insect pests; and the planning and construction of farm buildings.
Service is rendered in the design and construction of engineering structures and
the purchase of engineering equipment for other bureaus of the department.
BUREAU OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS
The Bureau of Agricultural Economics conducts studies of the economics
of production and marketing, farm organization, farm financial relations, farm
labor, land economics, and the problems of rural life. It acquires and dissemi-
nates current information regarding the marketing and distribution of farm
products; collects, compiles, summarizes, interprets, and makes public statistical
data relating to agricultural production, including crop and livestock estimates,
and estimates of the grade and staple length of the cotton crop and carry-over;
studies marketing methods and conditions and the standardization, transporta-
tion, handling, financing, utilization, and storage of agricultural products; pre-
pares and publishes reports on the outlook for farm products; and issues quarterly
reports on stocks of leaf tobacco.
Reports are issued which furnish information on the supply, commercial
movement, disposition, and market prices of fruits and vegetables, livestock
and meats, dairy and poultry products, grain, hay, feed, seed, tobacco, and other
products. Information is obtained and published also with regard to the supply
of and demand for agricultural products in foreign countries. A market inspec-
tion service is available in many of the principal producing areas and receiving
centers on fruits and vegetables, hay, beans, broomcorn, and other products, and
a grading service is conducted on dairy and poultry products, canned fruits and
vegetables, meats, tobacco, and rice.
Regulatory work is performed in connection with the enforcement of the cotton
futures act, cotton standards act, grain standards act, standard container
act, standard hamper act, produce agency act, and perishable agricultural
commodities act, and the administration of the warehouse act.
BUREAU OF HOME ECONOMICS
The Bureau of Home Economics conducts scientific studies of problems con-
nected with the home, including questions of food and nutrition, economics,
textiles and clothing, and housing and equipment. It assists the homemaker in
the solution of these problems by sending information through bulletins, articles
for newspapers and magazines, and radio releases. The bureau employs no field
agents, but through the home demonstration agents under the Extension Service
and the State colleges it is in close contact with homemakers and professional
home-economics workers throughout the country.
BUREAU OF PLANT QUARANTINE
The Bureau of Plant Quarantine is responsible for the enforcement of quaran-
tines and restrictive orders promulgated under the authority of the plant quar-
antine act to prevent the entry into or dissemination within the United States
of dangerous plant pests new to or not widely distributed within this country.
Such quarantines and restrictive orders regulate the importation or interstate
movement of nursery stock, fruits, vegetables, cotton, and other plants and plant
products likely to carry injurious pests. The bureau is also responsible for carry-
ing on, in cooperation with the States, necessary work to prevent the spread of
or to eradicate pests which have gained more or less limited foothold. The latter
438 Congressional Directory COMMERCE
includes quarantines on account of the pink bollworm of cotton, Thurberia weevil,
date scale, gipsy, and brown-tail moths, Japanese beetle, Mexican fruit fly, and
white-pine blister rust.
This bureau also enforces the act providing for the Mexican border inspection
and control service; the act providing for inspection and certification as to free-
dom from injurious insect pests and plant diseases of domestic fruits, vegetables,
seeds, and nursery stock and other plants for propagation intended for export, in
order to meet the sanitary requirements of foreign countries; the insect pest act
of 1905; and, in cooperation with the Post Office Department, the terminal
inspection act of 1915.
GRAIN FUTURES ADMINISTRATION
The Grain Futures Administration is charged with the carrying out of the
provisions of the grain futures act of September 21, 1922, which brings under
the supervision of the Federal Government all trading in grain futures at grain
exchanges designated as contract markets by the Secretary of Agriculture.
The work consists of compiling daily reports of transactions in grain futures
from all markets, in checking the dissemination of false and misleading infor-
mation which affects or tends to affect the prices of grain, and in making general
observations of the entire grain-marketing machinery, with a view to prevent
abnormal fluctuation of prices and to create market conditions which will reflect
supply and demand. The results of investigations concerning the operations
of contract markets are published from time to time for the information of Con-
gress and the general public. In cooperation with other Government agencies,
the administration also makes investigations of grain and grain products and by-
products, including supply and demand, cost to consumer, and handling and
transportation charges.
FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION
The Food and Drug Administration enforces the food and drugs act, insecti-
cide act, tea act, naval stores act, import milk act, and caustic poison act.
This administration inspects and analyzes samples of the various products
coming under its jurisdiction, both at its field stations and in its laboratories
at Washington, to the end that it may detect and cause to be removed from
the channels of trade all those products which fail to comply with the terms of
the regulatory acts which it administers. It assists manufacturers to keep their
products in compliance with these acts and institutes legal action against those
who violate the law. Its primary function is to protect the consuming public
against misbranded or adulterated foods, drugs, naval stores, insecticides, and
fungicides, and honest manufacturers against unfair competition with such goods.
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
SECRETARY OF COMMERCE
The Secretary of Commerce is charged with the work of promoting the com-
merce 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 steam-
boats, 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 pas-
sengers, and laws relating thereto, and to seamen of the United States; the
custody, construction, maintenance, and application of standards of weights and
measurements; the gathering and supplying of information regarding industries
and markets for the fostering of manufacturing; the administration of the air
commerce act of 1926, providing for the fostering of air commerce, the establish-
ment and maintenance of aids to air navigation, the licensing of air pilots, and the
inspeetion and registration of commercial aircraft; the supervision of the Patent
Office; direction of the Bureau of Mines in its scientific, technologie, and eco-
nomic investigations in the mining industries; and the formulation (in conjunc-
COMMERCE Offictal Duties 439
tion 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 of 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
executive department in and over any bureau, office, officer, board, branch, or
division of the public service transferred to said department, or any business aris-
ing 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.
It is his further duty to make such special investigations and furnish such
information 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
Secretary or may be required by law. In the absence of the Secretary he acts
as head of the department.
ASSISTANT SECRETARY FOR AERONAUTICS
The Assistant Secretary for Aeronautics is in direct charge of the aeronautics
work of the department and aids the Secretary in the performance of the duties
imposed by the air commerce act of 1926.
AERONAUTICS BRANCH
The Aeronautics Branch is charged with the duty of carrying out the provisions
of the air commerce act of 1926 and amendments thereto. The act provides
comprehensively for the promotion and regulation of civil aeronautics. Among
other things, it includes the establishment and maintenance of civil airways and
their equipment with intermediate landing fields, beacon lights, signal and radio
apparatus, and other aids to air navigation; the establishment of air traffic rules;
the inspection and licensing of aircraft, the examination and licensing of airmen,
and the identification of aircraft; the collection and dissemination of information
pertaining to air commerce and the state of the art, including data concerning the
causes of accidents; the establishment of a suitable weather service on airways;
the charting of airways, and the publication of air maps; the promotion of air
commerce, industry, and trade; the conduct of scientific research and develop-
ment work tending to the improvement of facilities for air navigation; the ex-
amination and rating of civilian schools giving instruction in flying; and the rating
of airports as to suitability, and for the encouragement of the establishment and
maintenance of airports by municipalities.
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 regula-
tions of the department, and has administrative supervision of the buildings
occupied by the department; has general supervision of expenditures from the
appropriations for contingent expenses; the care of all vehicles under the office
of the Secretary; the receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail; the cus-
tody 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 rec-
ords; and the discharge of all business of the Secretary’s office not otherwise
assigned. During the temporary absence of the Secretary and the Assistant
Secretary he may be designated by the Secretary to sign official papers and
documents.
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 appropria-
tion ledgers relating to the advance and expenditure of all items of appropriations.
440 Congressional Directory COMMERCE
He has charge of 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);
preparation of official bonds and custody of records pertaining thereto; and the
general accounting of the department.
APPOINTMENT DIVISION
The chief of the appointment division is charged by the Secretary of Com-
merce with the supervision of matters relating to personnel, such as appoint-
ments, transfers, promotions, reductions, removals, classification, retirement, and
efficiency ratings; the consideration of applications for positions, the conduct of
correspondence and the preparation of recommendations connected therewith;
the preparation and submission to the Secretary of all questions affecting the
personnel of the department in its relation to the civil service, classification, and
retirement laws and rules; the preparation of nominations sent to the Senate and
of commissions and appointments of all officers and employees of the department;
the compilation of statistics in regard to the personnel, including material for
the Official Register, service records of officers and employees, correspondence
and reports relating to the personnel, and records relating to leaves of absence.
DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS
The chief of the division of publications is charged by the Secretary of Com-
merce with the conduct of all business the department transacts with the Govern-
ment Printing Office; the general supervision of printing, including the editing
and preparation of copy, illustrating and binding, the distribution of publica-
tions, and the maintenance of mailing lists. The advertising done by the depart-
ment 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. He has
charge of the issuing, recording, and accounting for Government requests for
transportation issued to officers of the department for official travel.
DIVISION OF PURCHASES AND SALES
Under the direction of the chief clerk the chief of the division of purchases
and sales 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 de-
partment 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 annual returns of property from the offices
and bureaus of the department which are supplied from the contingent appro-
priation, and examines and reports on the property returns of all other bureaus
and services.
BUREAU OF THE CENSUS
The Bureau of the Census takes the decennial census of the United States
covering population, agriculture, irrigation, drainage, manufactures, mines and
quarries, distribution, and unemployment, and is continuously engaged in the
compilation of other statistics covering a wide range of subjects. Statistics
regarding the dependent, defective, and delinquent classes in institutions; public
debt, national wealth and taxation; religious bodies or churches; and transporta-
tion by water are compiled every tenth year in the period intervening between
the decennial censuses; and statistics of electric light and power plants, electric
railways, telephones, and telegraphs every fifth year. A special census of agri-
culture is taken in the fifth year following the decennial census; and a census of
manufactures is taken biennially. Statistics of births, deaths, marriages, and
divorces are compiled annually; also financial statistics of cities and States;
‘and statistics of prisoners in State prisons and reformatories, and of patients in
hospitals for mental disease and in institutions for epileptics and feeble-minded.
At monthly intervals statistics are published relating to cotton supply, con-
sumption, and distribution; to cottonseed and its products; and at approximately
semimonthly intervals during the ginning season reports are issued showing the
amounts of cotton ginned to specified dates. The bureau also collects monthly
or quarterly data regarding the production or supply of many other commodities,
including hides, skins, leather and leather goods, clothing, and wool.
The bureau compiles from various sources current data regarding production,
orders, shipments, stocks, ete., for numerous lines of trade and industry, together
COMMERCE Official Duties 441
with such other available information as may throw light upon the trend of
business conditions.
The bureau also publishes the Official Register of the United States, giving
the names, titles, and salaries of all persons occupying administrative and super-
visory positions in the executive and judicial departments of the Government.
BUREAU OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC COMMERCE
It is the duty of this bureau to “promote and develop the foreign and domestic
commerce of the United States.” Included under the obligations with which it
is charged are such duties as (1) ‘‘to report upon domestic as well as foreign
problems relating to production, distribution, and marketing in so far as they
relate to the important export industries of the United States”; (2) ‘to investi-
gate and report upon such conditions in the manufacturing industries and trade
of foreign countries as may be of interest to the United States’; (3) to promote
American trade with Europe, Latin America, the Far East, Africa, and other
areas; (4) ‘to operate and maintain “district and cooperative offices within the
United States’; (5) to enforce the China Trade Act regarding the tax exemptions
of American firms doing business with China; (6) to compile and publish statis-
ties on foreign trade; (7) to investigate trade restrictions and regulations of foreign
countries in relation to American commerce; (8) to prepare and circulate lists of
available foreign agents for American firms.
The bureau maintains offices in 47 foreign countries. These are in charge of
commercial attachés or resident trade commissioners, whose reports on trade
conditions and prospects are widely circulated among American firms.
Reports of the Consular Service of the Department of State on the trade of
foreign countries and opportunities for the sale abroad of articles produced in the
United States are transmitted to the Department of Commerce for distribution.
This material is edited in the bureau and distributed to the commercial public by
means of the weekly magazine, Commerce Reports, special monographs, bulle-
tins, pamphlets, and circulars or letters.
Commodity divisions, in charge of technical experts, put the resources of the
Government at the disposal of basic industries in the extension of their foreign
trade. Services to the following industries are in operation: Agricultural imple-
ments, aeronautics, automotive products, chemicals, electrical equipment, food-
stuffs, hides and leather, iron, steel, and hardware, lumber, machinery, minerals,
motion pictures, paper, rubber and rubber products, shoe and leather manufac-
tures, specialties, tobacco, and textiles. There is close cooperation with com-
mittees of trade associations and other representatives of American industry.
The organization of the bureau also includes eight technical divisions, besides
three divisions devoted to problems of domestic ecommerce.
The Division of Foreign Tariffs collects and disseminates information regarding
foreign tariffs, and the related conditions of movement of goods between countries.
The division advises exporters and importers concerning commercial treaties and
preferential arrangements; import duties, restrictions, consular documents, and
customs requirements; foreign export duties, bounties and subsidies; shipment of
samples and advertising matter abroad; and foreign treatment of commercial
travelers.
The Finance and Investment Division attends to all financial and economic
questions that are international in scope and to matters connected with the
flotation of foreign securities in the United States, the investment of American
capital abroad, and the general aspects of foreign-trade financing.
Statistical information with respect to United States imports and exports is
received by the bureau in monthly and quarterly returns from the collectors of
customs, showing the articles imported and exported and the countries from which
imported and exported.
The Transportation Division compiles and furnishes to shippers information
on freight rates, services, and facilities, both rail and ocean, which will enable
them to route shipments economically and to quote c. i. f. prices. The division is
prepared to give advice on how to pack shipments for foreign markets. It gathers
and distributes data on facilities, regulations, and charges in the ports of the
world. This division also deals with telephone, telegraph, cable, radio, and postal
communication and is interested in all matters tending to protect and increase
American facilities for world communication.
The Division of Commercial Laws furnishes information concerning commercial
laws and judicial procedure, patent and trade-mark laws, the taxation of American
firms doing business abroad, formalities in connection with bankruptey proceed-
442 Congressional Directory COMMERCE
ings, powers of attorney, the protesting of drafts, the legal aspects of construction
enterprises, agency agreements, standardization of bills of exchange, ete.
An active trade directory of business houses and prospective buyers and agents
all over the world is maintained by the Commercial Intelligence Division for the
benefit of American manufacturers and exporters. The bureau also locates, in
foreign markets, exporters of such raw materials as are needed by American
manufacturers.
The services of the bureau in domestic commerce are directed toward providing
the American manufacturer, wholesaler, and retailer with accurate and definite
data upon which he can base efficient merchandising methods and thus eliminate
the large wastes in our distribution system. These services aim to make available
more adequate knowledge of markets and distribution costs. This work is
carried on in close cooperation with commercial organizations.
The distribution work of the bureau is facilitated by district offices maintained
in the important commercial centers of the United States. In addition, arrange-
ments have been made with chambers of commerce and commercial organizations
in many other cities which act as direct representatives of the bureau in the work
of foreign and domestic trade promotion. These branch offices expedite the
distribution of commercial information and establish closer relations between the
Government and private industry.
BUREAU OF STANDARDS
The Bureau of Standards was established by act of Congress approved March
3, 1901. Its functions are the development, construction, custody, and main-
tenance of reference and working standards and their intercomparison, improve-
ment, and application in science, engineering, industry, and commerce. Under
the air commerce act of 1926, the Secretary of Commerce is authorized “to advise
with the Bureau of Standards and other agencies in the executive branch of the
Government in carrying forward such research and development work as tends
to create improved air navigation facilities.” By act of Congress approved May
14, 1930, there was established a national hydraulic laboratory at the Bureau of
Standards: for ‘‘the determination of fundamental data useful in hydraulic
research and engineering.”
The bureau’s functions are exercised for the National Government, State
governments and, subject to reasonable fees, the general public. Its unique
research and testing facilities are used to discover and evaluate material standards
and to solve basic technical problems. In connection with its work on standards
of measurement, the bureau assists in size standardization of containers and
products, in promoting systematic inspection of trade weights and measures,
and facilitates research in science and technology through the standardization of
measuring instruments. The establishment of more precise values for the
standard constants furnishes an exact basis for scientific experiment and design
and makes possible the efficient technical control of industrial processes. The
bureau’s work on standards of quality sets up attainable standards to assure
high utility in the products of industry and furnishes a scientific basis for fair
dealing by promoting truthful branding and advertising. Standards of per-
formance are usually specifications for the operative efficiency of machines or
devices; their ultimate purpose is to make exact knowledge the basis of the
buyer’s choice and to clarify the understanding between maker, seller, buyer,
and user. To establish standards of practice the bureau collates data and for-
mulates codes of practice for public utilities and other services. This work
makes possible a single impersonal standard of practice mutually agreed upon
by all concerned and clearly defined in measurable terms.
Congress has made special provision for research and testing in specific fields
involving the five kinds of standards described above. Some examples of such
functions are: Aid to State governments on technical details of weights and
measures inspection service; standardization and testing of gages, screw threads,
and other length standards required in manufacturing; investigation of railroad
track scales, mine scales, and other large scales used principally for interstate
shipments; investigations of methods of high temperature measurements and
temperature control in manufacturing processes; promotion of economy and
efficiency in automotive transportation by land and air through investigations of
the basic principles underlying the design, performance, operation, and testing of
automotive power plants; development of color standards and methods of color
measurement; investigation and standardization of methods and instruments
COMMERCE Offictal Duties 443
used in radio communication, and the development of radio aids to air naviga-
tion; investigation of principles of sound transmission and absorption and their
application to military and industrial purposes; preparation, analysis, and cer-
tification of the composition of technical materials either of typical composition
or of high purity, for checking the accuracy of scientific and industrial analysis
and for testing measuring instruments; investigation of the fire resistance of
building materials; determination of the properties of stone, clays, cement, and
other structural materials, and the formulation of building codes and researches
to promote, improve, and make possible less expensive building construction;
development of improved standards for dental materials; investigations of the
industrial utilization of waste products from the land; development of standards
of quality and methods of measurement of textiles, paper, leather, rubber, and
tests of varnish, soap, ink, and other supplies for the Government services; study
of ceramic materials and the processes used in their manufacture; investigation
of problems involved in the production of optical glass; researches in metals,
including melting, heat treatment, mechanical working, chemical and optical
properties, and effects of corrosion; use of testing machines in the determination
of physical constants and properties of materials; determination of technical
specifications for all grades of sugars, involving their standardization and methods
of manufacture, and study of technical problems relating to the collection of
revenue on sugars; investigation of radium, radium compounds, and other radio-
active materials, and the development of standard specifications for X-ray equip-
ment and for the operation of X-ray machines; formulation of standards of
performance for instruments, equipment, tools, and other devices, development
of test methods to insure compliance with specifications, and simplification of
varieties of products; solution of problems in connection with standards for
public utilities, such as gas, electric light and power, telephone, heating, and elec-
tric railway services; technical cooperation with manufacturers upon fundamental
research to promote industrial development and to assist in the permanent
establishment of new American industries; and the standardization of mechanical
appliances used in mechanical, hydraulic, and aeronautic engineering.
BUREAU OF FISHERIES
The work of the Bureau of Fisheries comprises (1) the propagation and sal-
vaging of useful food fishes and shellfish and their distribution to suitable waters;
(2) the inquiry into the causes of fluctuations in abundance of food fishes in the
lakes, rivers, and coast waters of the United States, the development of methods
of husbanding these resources, including improvements in methods of fish cul-
ture and the investigation of the fishing grounds of the Atlantic, Gulf, and
Pacific coasts, with the view of determining their food resources and the develop-
ment of the commercial fisheries; (3) the study of the methods of the fisheries
and of the preservation, utilization, and merchandizing of fisheries products,
and the collection and compilation of statistics of the fisheries; (4) the adminis-
tration of the salmon fisheries of Alaska, the fur-seal herd onthe 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; enforcement of the
law regulating the interstate transportation of large mouth and small mouth
black bass.
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 giving information regarding all aids to
navigation maintained by the Lighthouse Service; it also publishes each week,
jointly with the Coast and Geodetic Survey, Notice to Mariners, giving the
changes, in lights, buoys, etc.
Pursuant to the air commerce act of 1926, an airways division has been set
up in the bureau which, under the Assistant Secretary for Aeronautics, is charged
with the establishment and maintenance of civil airways and their equipment
with intermediate landing fields, beacon lights, signal and radio apparatus, and
other aids to navigation,
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444 Congressional Directory COMMERCE
UNITED STATES COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY
The Coast and Geodetic Survey is charged with the survey of the coasts of
the United States and its possessions and with the publication of navigational
charts of those regions. These surveys include base measurements, triangula-
tion and traverse, hydrography and topography, tidal and current observations
along those coasts; deep-sea soundings, temperature and current observations
along the courses of the Gulf and Japan Streams; the survey of rivers to the head
of tidewater; magnetic observations and researches; seismological investigations;
gravity measurements; and the determination of elevations by trigonometric
leveling. The Coast and Geodetic Survey is also charged with the determina-
tion of geographic positions by astronomic observations and by triangulation
and traverse, and with the determination of elevations by spirit leveling, in
the interior of the United States and Alaska.
The results of these surveys and investigations are published in the form of
navigational charts, coast pilots giving detailed sailing directions, annual tables
giving the predicted times and heights of the tide at many ports and the veloci-
ties and directions of tidal currents, charts showing the magnetic declination,
Notices to Mariners (published jointly by the Coast and Geodetic Survey and
the Bureau of Lighthouses), and in annual reports and special publications.
The special publications contain specifications and instructions for the various
classes of surveying executed by the Coast and Geodetic Survey and the results
of observations, investigations, and researches carried on by the field and office
forces. The bureau has been assigned the duty of compiling and publishing maps
of civil airways.
BUREAU OF NAVIGATION AND STEAMBOAT INSPECTION
The Navigation Unit is charged with general superintendence of the com-
mercial marine and merchant seamen of the United States, except so far as
supervision is lodged with other officers of the Government, and administers
the load line law. 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 admeasure-
ment, 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 direc-
tion of the Secretary of Commerce, with the enforcement, through collectors
and surveyors of customs, of the navigation and steamboat inspection laws, 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 commissioners 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, ete.
The Steamboat Inspection Unit 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 in-
spectors having original jurisdiction. All material subject to tensile strain used
in the construction of marine boilers is required to be tested by an inspector of the
Steamboat Inspection Unit, so that not only is the material but the design of
a boiler under the closest scrutiny. The inspectors of hulls look after the exami-
nation of the hulls of vessels and of life-saving equipment such as life preservers,
life boats, 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 Steam-
boat Inspection Unit; excursion 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 supervision over the licensing
LABOR Official Duties 445
of officers, a very high standard is maintained. The Steamboat Inspection
Unit 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 Gov-
ernment officers, especially detailed for that purpose, also certificate the lifeboat
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, inat-
tention to duty, etc. The traveling inspectors of the service, in addition to fol-
lowing up vessel inspections made by local inspectors, conduct stability tests of
the larger class of passenger and ferry vessels.
PATENT OFFICE
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
inventions, and the registration of trade-marks.
BUREAU OF MINES
The Director of the Bureau of Mines is charged with the investigation of
methods of mining, especially in relation to the safety of miners, the appliances
best adapted to prevent accidents, and 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; the improvement of methods in the produc-
tion of petroleum and natural gas; and other inquiries and technological investi-
gations pertinent to such industries. He has charge of tests and analyses of
ores, coals, lignites, and other mineral fuel substances belonging to or for use of
the United States; has charge of the collection of statistics on mineral resources,
and economic studies of metals and minerals produced or consumed in the
United States; supervises all work relating to the production and conservation
of helium; in case of war, he has charge of issuance of licenses covering the manu-
facture, distribution, storage, use, or possession of all explosives and their ingre-
dients. 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.
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
THE SECRETARY OF LABGR
The Secretary of Labor is charged with the duty of fostering, promoting, and
developing the welfare of the wage earners of the United States, improving their
working conditions, and advancing their opportunities for profitable employ-
ment. He has power under the law to act as mediator and to appoint com-
missioners 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 direc-
tion of the work of investigating all matters pertaining to the welfare of children
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
department 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 trans-
ferred to the Department of Labor, or any business arising therefrom or per-
taining thereto, or in relation to the duties performed by and authority conferred
446 Congressional Directory LABOR
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 Depart-
ment of Labor, and to make such special investigations and reports to the Presi-
dent or Congress as may be required by them or which he may deem neces-
oy, and to report annually to Congress upon the work of the Department of
abor.
THE ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF LABOR
The Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed by the
Secretary or may be required by law. He becomes the Acting Secretary of
Labor in the absence of the Secretary.
SECOND ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF LABOR
The Second Assistant Secretary performs such duties as shall be prescribed
by the Secretary or may be required by law. He becomes Acting Secretary of
Labor in the absence of the Secretary and the Assistant Secretary.
ASSISTANTS TO THE SECRETARY OF LABOR
The assistants to the Secretary perform such duties as shall be prescribed by
the Secretary.
UNITED STATES CONCILIATION SERVICE
The United States Conciliation Service is charged with the duty of using its
good offices, through the director or the commissioners of conciliation, to seek
peaceful settlement in any trade dispute arising between employers and employees
in industry. The authority for this service is found in section 8 of the act cre-
ating the department, wherein the Secretary is authorized to act as a mediator
or appoint commissioners of conciliation whenever the interests of industrial peace
may require it to be done.
CHIEF CLERK
The chief clerk is charged with the general supervision of the clerks and em-
ployees 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; the general supervision of all expenditures from the
appropriations for contingent expenses, printing and binding, and rents; the
receipt, distribution, and transmission of the mail; 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 Labor with the duty of
preparing all requisitions for the advance of public funds from appropriations
for the Department 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 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; the general accounting of the depart-
ment; and the accounting for all naturalization receipts received under the pro-
visions 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 cus-
todian of oaths of office, bonds of officers, personnel files, retirement records, and
efficiency reports. . :
LABOR Offictal Duties 447
DIVISION OF PUBLICATIONS AND SUPPLIES
The Chief of the Division of Publications and Supplies is charged by the Secre-
tary of Labor with the conduct of all business the department transacts with
the Government Printing Office and the correspondence it entails; the general
supervision of printing, including the editing and preparation of copy, illustrat-
ing and binding, the distribution of publications, and the maintenance of mail-
ing 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 supplied by him. The advertising
done by the department is in his charge. Under the direction of the chief clerk
he has supervision of all the work incident to the purchase and distribution of
supplies for the department proper and for the services of the department out-
side of Washington, and of the keeping of detailed accounts of all expenditures
from the appropriations for contingent expenses and printing and binding 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 appropriation, 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 prosperity
and social, intellectual, and moral welfare.
It is especially charged to investigate the causes of and facts relating to con-
troversies 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 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 immigra-
tion.” 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 occupa-
tions, 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 investigations in such 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, pro-
vided a Bureau of Naturalization, and that the Commissioner of Naturalization,
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448 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
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 naturalization laws under the immediate direction of the
Secretary of Labor. Under the provisions of the act of June 29, 1906, naturali-
zation 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 accounting therefor quar-
terly to the Auditor for the State and Other Departments, to conduct all cor-
respondence 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 for naturalization. In the archives of the bureau are filed duplicates
of all certificates of naturalization 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 as the
Women’s Bureau.” Its functions are to formulate standards and policies to
promote the welfare of wage-earning women, to improve their working condi-
tions, increase their efficiency, and advance their opportunity for profitable
employment. The bureau has authority to investigate and report to the de-
partment upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of women in industry.
The director of the bureau publishes the results of these investigations 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 expenses 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 following year and
until it became a statutory bureau by the act of Congress above quoted.
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 interest 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 ex-
tended by section 11 of the legislative appropriation act for 1920, 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 distribution 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 semimonthly and session indexes to the Record.
The CoNGREsSIONAL DIRECTORY, memorial addresses on deceased Senators and
Members, statute proceedings, and similar publications are compiled and prepared
MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 449
under the direction of the committee. The Superintendent of Documents pub-
lishes 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
printing of documents and reports in two or more editions. Orders for sub-
sequent 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 depositary 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
congressional allotment. The committee may order additional copies printed of any Government pub-
lication within a limit of $200 in cost in any one instance.
The act of 1895 also provides that the committee shall exercise the following
functions 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 legislative appropriation act for 1925 authorizes the Public Printer to pro-
cure under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing in accordance with
the act approved January 12, 1895, and furnish, on requisition, paper and enve-
lopes (not including envelopes printed in the course of manufacture) in common
use by two or more departments, establishments, or services of the Government
in the District of Columbia.
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 service 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 regu-
lations and conditions as the committee may prescribe.
Section 11 of the legislative appropriation act for 1920 requires all printing,
binding, and blank-book work for the Government to be done at the Govern-
ment 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.
ARLINGTON MEMORIAL BRIDGE COMMISSION
The Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission was created by section 23 of the
public buildings act approved March 4, 1913, for the purpose of investigating
and reporting to Congress a suitable design for a memorial bridge across the Poto-
mac River from the city of Washington to a point at or near the Arlington estate,
in the State of Virginia. :
Although the above-mentioned act of 1913 authorized the expenditure of
$25,000, it was not until nine years later that an appropriation was made in the
executive and independent offices appropriation act approved June 12, 1922.
The act approved February 24, 1925, authorized and directed the commission
to proceed at once with the construction of a memorial bridge across the Potomac
River from the vicinity of the Lincoln Memorial, in the city of Washington, to
an appropriate point in the State of Virginia, including appropriate approaches,
roads, streets, boulevards, avenues, and walks leading thereto on both sides of
said river, together with the landscape features appertaining thereto, all in
accordance with the design, surveys, and estimates of cost transmitted by said
commission to Congress under date of April 22, 1924, and authorized the total
sum not to exceed $14,750,000.
The deficiency act approved March 4, 1925 (Public, No. 631, 63th Cong.),
appropriated the sum of $500,000 to enable the commission to proceed with the
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450 Congressional Dzirectory MISCELLANEOUS
construction of the bridge, and subsequent appropriations, to include the fiscal
year 1931, have been made in general accordance with the authorizing act. The
appropriation for fiscal year 1932 was $340,000, approximately one-third of the
authorized amount.
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
“Smithsonian 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 President’s Cabinet. It is governed 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 is its 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 library of the Smithsonian Institution (of which the Smithsonian Deposit
in the Library of Congress and the libraries of the United States National Museum
and the Bureau of American Ethnology are the chief units) consists mainly of
scientific publications, including especially the reports, proceedings, and trans-
actions of the learned societies and institutions of the world, and numbers over
800,000 volumes, pamphlets, and charts.
GOVERNMENT BUREAUS UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGE SERVICE
The International Exchange Service is the agency of the Urited States Gov-
ernment for the exchange of scientific, literary, and governmental publications
with foreign governments, institutions, and investigators. It receives and dis-
patches about 700,000 pounds of printed matter annually.
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
The Bureau of American Ethnology is engaged in the colleetion and publica-
tion of information relating to the American Indians and the natives of Hawaii.
ASTROPHYSICAL OBSERVATORY
The Astrophysical Observatory investigates solar radiation and other solar
phenomena. The work of this observatory. is carried on partly in Washington,
D. C., and partly at stations on Mount Wilson and Table Mountain, in California,
and Mount Montezuma, near Calama, Chile.
DIVISION OF RADIATION AND ORGANISM
The Division of Radiation and Organism was established during the year 1929
for the purpose of making scientific investigations relating to the effect of radia-
tion on the growth and life of plants and animals.
NATIONAL ZOOLOGICAL PARK
The National Zoological Park has an area of 175 acres, and is located in the
Rock Creek Valley, 2 miles north of the center of Washington. Its collection
comprises about 2,400 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 prineipal countries of the world. That for the United States is supported
ny an annual appropriation from Congress, administered by the Smithsonian
nstitution.
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 451
UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM
The United States National Museum is the depository of the national collec-
tions. It is especially rich in the natural science of America, including zoology,
entomology, botany, geology, paleontology, archeology, ethnology, and physical
anthropology, and has extensive series relating to the arts and industries, the
fine arts, and history. The great study series in the various fields of natural
science form the basis for fundamental researches in pure science, upon which
the structure of applied science is built. The collections in the field of history
comprise art, antiquarian, military, naval, numismatie, and philatelic materials,
and include many historic objects relating to the period of the World War. The
arts and industries collections consist of objects relating to engineering, textiles,
graphic arts, and medicine, and include raw materials, processes of manufacture,
and finished products. The aircraft display includes among others the historic
airplanes of Langley, Wright, and Curtiss, and Lindbergh’s ‘Spirit of St. Louis.”
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
The National Gallery of Art is the depository for those portions of the national
collections relating to the fine arts, including principally paintings and sculpture.
It contains among other exhibits the George P. Marsh collection of etchings,
engravings, and books on 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.
The Freer Gallery of Art (a unit of the National Gallery) is contained in a
separate building provided by the late Charles L. Freer, of Detroit, especially
designed and constructed to house the notable collection also presented by him.
This comprises numerous paintings, etchings, ete., by Whistler, Tryon, Dewing,
Thayer, and other American artists, and extensive examples of Japanese and
Chinese art. This collection is to the art and archeology of the Far East what
the Cairo Museum is to that of Egypt.
An important addition to the National Gallery was made in June, 1929, by
the gift of Mr. John Gellatly, of New York, of his notable art collection, con-
taining more than 150 pictures by eminent American and foreign artists, large
collections of glass, jewels, oriental specimens, antique furniture, and other
valuable material—the entire collection valued at several million dollars. By
the terms of the gift, however, it will not be brought to Washington from New
York before 1933. A considerable addition was made by Mr. Gellatly in August,
1930, to his original gift.
PAN AMERICAN UNION
(Formerly International Bureau of American Republics)
The Pan American Union is the official international organization of the 21
Republics of the Western Hemisphere. It was established with a view to devel-
oping closer cooperation between the nations of America, the fostering of inter-
American commerce, the strengthening of intellectual and cultural ties, and the
interchange of information on all problems affecting the welfare of the nations
of this continent. It is supported through their joint contributions, each
nation annually paying that part of the budget of expenses which its population
bears to the total population of all the Republics. Its general control is vested
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. Its executive officers are a director general 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. Its activities and facilities include the
following: Publication in English, Spanish, Portuguese, with separate editions,
of an illustrated monthly bulletin, which is the record of the progress of all the
Republics; publication of handbooks, descriptive pamphlets, commercial state-
ments, maps, and special reports relating to each country; correspondence
covering all phases of Pan American activities; distribution of every variety
of information helpful in the promotion of Pan American commerce, acquaintance,
cooperation, and solidarity of interests. It also sets the date and prepares the
programs for the International Conferences of the American States known as the
452 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
Pan American Conferences, and is custodian of their archives. Its library,
known as the Columbus Memorial Library, contains 78,000 volumes, including
the official publications, documents, and laws of all the Republics, together with
a large collection of maps. The Union also possesses a collection of more than
25,000 photographs, lantern slides, and negatives. Its reading room has upon
its tables the representative magazines and newspapers of Latin America. Both
are open to the public for consultation and study. It occupies and owns build-
ings and grounds facing Seventeenth Street, between Constitution Avenue and
€ Street, overlooking Potomac Park on the south and the White House Park on
the east. These buildings and grounds, representing an outlay 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 inter-
national organization. The Pan American Union was founded in 1890, under the
name of the International Bureau of American Republics, in accordance 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 reorgan-
ized 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. The fifth conference, held at Santiago, Chile, in 1923, and the sixth
conference, which met at Habana, Cuba, in 1928, considerably enlarged the func-
tions of the Pan American Union. All communications 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
settlement 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 conferred 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 personal ledger 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 Gov-
ernment. 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 establishments instead of by warrant, and prescribes the
forms, systems, and procedure for administrative appropriation and fund aceount-
ing in the several departments and establishments and for the administrative
examination of fiscal officers’ accounts and claims, reporting to Congress upon
the adequacy and efficiency of such administrative examination. He appoints
and removes 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 Comptroller
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 neces-
sary 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 depart-
ment or other independent establishment not under any of the executive de-
partments, 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 rendered governs in the settlement of the account involving
the payment inquired about. He reviews, on his own motion, any settled account
when in the interest of the United States to do so. 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 coun-
tersigns 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
government or elsewhere all matters relating to the receipt, disbursement, and
{
MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 453
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 con-
cerning 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 investigations for Congress as to revenue, appropria-
tions, 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 effectiveness of departmental inspec-
tion of the offices and accounts of fiscal officers, and, in accordance with law, has
access to and examines any books, documents, papeis, 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 expenditures and accounting as it may request from time to time.
CIVIL SERVICE COMMISSION
The purpose of the civil service act (January 16, 1883), 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 commis-
sion to aid the President, as he may request, in preparing suitable rules for carry-
ing the act into effect. The act requires that the rules shall provide, among other
things, for open competitive examinations for testing the fitness of applicants for
the classified service, the making of appointments from among those passing with
highest grades, an apportionment of appointments in the departments at Wash-
ington among the States and Territories, 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 im-
prisonment, 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
nt or the collection of such contributions by any person in a Government
uilding.
The retirement act of May 22, 1920, and as subsequently amended, directs the
commission to prescribe a system of individual accounts of employees’ contribu-
tions to the fund; to assign employees to retirement age groups in collaboration
with the departments concerned; to keep needful tables and records for the carry-
ing out of the provisions of the act, including data showing the mortality experi-
ence of employees in the service, the percentage of withdrawals from the service;
and to maintain statistics. On these records will be based the determination of
all rights of individuals under the retirement act and such reports as are necessary
for the proper payment of any claim from the fund due to retirement, resignation,
death, ete.
The commission was organized on March 9, 1883. The first classification of
the service applied to the departments at Washington and to post offices and
customhouses having as many as 50 employees, embracing 13,924 employees.
On June 30, 1932, there were 578,231 officers and employees in the Federal execu-
tive civil service. Of this number 68,793 were employed in the District of Colum-
bia. On June 30, 1932, there were 467,161 positions in the classified service
subject to competitive examination.
Examinations are held in the principal cities throughout the country through
the agency of local boards of examiners, of which there are approximately 5,000.
The members of these boards are detailed from other branches of the service.
During the fiscal year ended June 30, 1932, the commission examined 279,318
applicants, and 27,615 appointments were made.
The commission also holds examinations in the Canal Zone, Hawaii, Puerto
Rico, and the Philippine Islands. Under the rules, the commission is required
to render all practical assistance to the Philippine Civil Service Board.
Appointments of unskilled laborers in the departments at Washington and in
all branches of the service in certain other cities and certain branches of the
service in all cities are required to be made in accordance with regulations pro-
mulgated by the President, restricting appointments to applicants who are rated
454 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
highest in physical condition. This system is outside the civil service act, and
is auxiliary to the civil-service rules.
The commission holds examinations for postmasterships at first, second, and
third class offices under an Executive order.
CHIEF EXAMINER
The chief examiner has supervision of the system of examinations and the
procedure of examining boards, and is the technical adviser of the commission.
SECRETARY
The secretary is the general administrative officer of the commission, having
the responsibility for the formulation and presentation to the commission of
plans concerning the organization of the whole office, including the field force,
and the supervision of the personnel in all parts of the office and the field, and
the Budget.
EXAMINING DIVISION
Prepares announcements of examinations; prepares examinations, rates the
papers, issues notices of markings, passes on the qualifications of applicants for
examinations and of persons proposed for change in status, prepares and main-
tains registers of eligibles and certifies therefrom for appointment, passes on and
records temporary appointments.
The application section receives and passes upon applications; and supervises
the holding of examinations by local civil-service boards. It maintains a record
of applications.
" SERVICE RECORD AND RETIREMENT DIVISION
Maintains service records of permanent employees in the executive civil serv-
ice; acts on cases of reemployment, reinstatement, transfer, and change of status;
administers all phases of the retirement law that are under the jurisdiction of the
commissioner; passes upon reductions and separations in connection with effi-
ciency ratings; and acts in cases of violation of the civil service law or rules by
administrative officers or employees.
INVESTIGATIONS DIVISION
Investigates frauds, political-activity cases, irregularities in examinations,
Executive order cases; conducts personal interviews and investigations of charac-
ter, training, experience, and suitability of applicants for various classes of
positions; supervises the taking of finger prints.
PERSONNEL CLASSIFICATION DIVISION
Ascertains the facts as to the duties and responsibilities of positions within the
scope of the classification act of 1923, as amended, and allocates them into
services, classes, and grades.
Prepares class specifications, setting forth classification standards and contain-
ing titles of classes and statements of duties and responsibilities, and statements
of minimum qualifications required to perform such duties and exercise such
responsibilities.
Conducts surveys of groups of positions for the purpose of discovering the need
for and making necessary classification adjustments due to changes in positions
since they were last allocated.
RESEARCH DIVISION
Analyzes duties of positions and determines qualifications essential to their
performance; develops means of measuring these qualifications; evaluates various
selection methods by correlating their results with valid criteria; prepares model
series of new-type examinations chosen for actual use; standardizes examination
material and method; makes surveys and recommendations in connection with
the revision of the efficiency rating system and research in the theory and practice
of classification. Cooperates with other Government departments, with univer-
sities, industries, and research foundations, for purposes of furthering research
with regard to selection, placement, promotion, and training, and of improving
personnel procedure and administration. Maintains connections and exchanges
findings with psychological laboratories of Europe and America. The director
of research is also director of the Council of Personnel Administration,
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duires 455
EDITING AND RECRUITING DIVISION
Prepares or edits all forms and publications, including examination announce-
ments; has charge of recruiting, press relations, radio broadcasts, and exhibits at
expositions.
BOARD OF APPEALS AND REVIEWS
Has appellate jurisdiction in all matters pending before the commission. Re-
views the record and passes upon the merit of appeals from ratings in all examina-
tions, including character investigations; appeals from debarment from examina-
tion on account of unsuitability; appeals from action taken in cases of transfer,
reinstatement, promotion, or proposed noncompetitive appointments; appeals
from action taken in retirement cases; appeals in connection with allocation.
CORRESPONDENCE DIVISION
Answers inquiries made by mail concerning vacancies, relative standing, and
prospect of appointment, and gives general information about examinations;
maintains central files for all divisions; receives and distributes incoming com-
munications. The office of information answers telephonic and personal inquiries,
supplies application forms and other printed matter concerning examinations,
maintains a complete index of examination announcements, records the names
and addresses of persons to be notified of future examinations, and gives other
general information.
ACCOUNTS AND MAINTENANCE DIVISION
Has charge of accounts covering general business operations of the main office
and field offices; preparation of estimates, statements, and auditing of expendi-
tures; purchase and procurement of printing, supplies and equipment, including
maintenance of stocks and distribution; supervision of matters pertaining to
quarters of the commission in Washington, D. C., in cooperation with the Office
of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital and the Public
Buildings Commission; operation of duplicating and photostat machines.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE COMMISSION
The original acl to regulate commerce, approved February 4, 1887, provided
for a commission consisting of five members. By various amendatory and sup-
plementary enactments the powers of the commission have been increased and
the scope of the regulating statute materially widened. Among the more impor-
tant of these enactments 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 in-
creased under the act of June 29, 1906, to 7 members; under the act of August
9, 1917, to 9 members; and under the transportation act, 1920, to 11 members.
The commission appoints a secretary (who is its general administrative and
executive 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.
The interstate commerce act applies to all common carriers engaged in the
transportation 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 rail-
road, or partly by pipe lines and partly by water, and to telegraph, telephone,
and cable companies (whether wire or wireless) engaged 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 transportation 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 continucus
carriage or shipment); also to express companies and sleeping-car companies, to
bridges, ferries, car floats and lighters, and all terminal and transportation
facilities used or necessary in the interstate transportation of persons and prop-
erty, and all instrumentalities and facilities used in connection with the trans-
mission of intelligence and messages by the use of electric energy,
456 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
The interstate commerce act requires all rates to be just and reasonable and
prohibits unjust discrimination and undue or unreasonable preference or advan-
tage in transportation rates or facilities. The act provides that whenever in
any investigation, including one instituted upon petition of the carriers con-
cerned, there shall be brought in issue any rate, fare, charge, classification,
regulation, or practice made or imposed by any State authority, or by the Presi-
dent, 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 commission
may confer and hold joint hearings with the authorities of the interested States.
If, after hearing, the commission finds such rate, fare, charge, classification
regulation, 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, unreason-
able, or unjust discrimination 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 ils judgment, will remove such advantage, preference, prejudice, or
discrimination.
The act 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 the act. It is provided,
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, how-
ever, to the further proviso that in so doing the commission shall not permit the
establishment of any charge to or from the more distant point that is not reason-
ably compensatory, 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 petitioning 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 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 equi-
table 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 sidetracks.
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 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 carriers deprived of its right to
participate in the haul of the property.
The act authorizes the commission, under certain circumstances, upon such
terms and conditions and subject to such rules and regulations 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 rail-
roads, 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 pre-
pare 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, 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
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 457
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 prop-
erty 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 encaeding one-half of 1
per cent for improvements, betterments, or equipment, for the two years begin-
ning 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 commis-
sion for the purpose of establishing and creating a contingent fund. The carrier
is authorized 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 prescribed 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 reason-
able 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 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 commission may also
require carriers to cease and desist from unjust discrimination or undue or
unreasonable preferences. By the act as amended February 28, 1920, it is
provided that an order of the commission shall continue in force until its further
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 transporta-
tion unless such rates, rules, and regulations are published and filed. Severe
penalties are provided 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, distribu-
tion, exchange, interchange, and return of locomotives, cars, and other vehicles,
including special types of equipment and the supply of trains.
The commission may inquire into the management of the business of all com-
mon 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.
By the act of June 18, 1910 (Mann-Elkins law), the jurisdiction of the commis-
sion was increased as to through routes and joint rates, freight classification,
" switch connections, long and short hauls, filing or rejection of rate schedules,
investigations on own motion, determining reasonable rates, suspension of pro-
posed 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, require 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.
458 Congressional Darectory MISCELLANEOUS
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 ques-
tions of fact as to competition, after full hearing, on the application of any rail-
road 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 con-
nection 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 conditions 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 investi-
gate, 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, limita-
tions 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 car-
rier 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 destinations 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 2-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 approved April 23, 1930, modifies the requirements of this section as
to notice and filing of claims.
The act as amended February 28, 1920, prohibits a carrier from issuing securi-
ties 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 investors or purchasers in good faith and without notice of securities which,
if not legally issued, are void, and for penalties against directors, officers, attor-
neys, or agents of carriers who knowingly assent to or concur in the issuance
of securities, etec., contrary to the provisions of the commissjion’s orders or grants
of authority.
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MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 459
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 provi-
sions of this amendatory act, either in whole or in part, any carrier where the
particular circumstances shown to the commission shall justify such exemption
to be made.
As amended February 28, 1920, the act also required every common carrier by
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 specific 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 publica-
tions 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 transportation 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 arrangement 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,
prohibits 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 expediting act of February 11, 1903.
District court jurisdiction act.—The urgent deficiency appropriation act ap-
proved 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 com-
plainant 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 control 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 Presi-
dent 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 com-
mission; 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 into consideration the
fact that the railroads are operated under unified control and such recommenda-
tions as the President may make as to the necessity of increasing railway revenues.
Transportation act, 1920.—The transportation act, 1920, as amended by act
approved February 24, 1922, provides for the termination of Federal control and
460 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
limits 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 arising 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 interchange 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 aet, and requires the
commission to ascertain and certify to the Secretary of the Treasury the amounts
to be thus advanced to the carriers. It also provides for the appointment by the
President of an agent to act as defendant in actions at law, suits in equity, pro-
ceedings 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 repa-
ration 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 carrier 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 Feb-
ruary 29, 1920, and prohibits reductions of such rates, fares, and charges prior
to September 1, 1920, except with the approval of the commission. It provides
certain guaranties 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
deficit in operating income. It provides for advances to the express company
and the carriers to meet operating expenses and fixed charges, and that the com-
mission 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
certain 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 consists 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 prescribed 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 en-
force certain provisions of the act approved October 15, 1914, to supplement
existing laws against unlawful restraints and monopolies in so far as such pro-
visions relate to carriers subject to the act to regulate commerce. The act
prohibits, with certain exceptions, carriers from discriminating between pur-
chasers in sales of commodities, and from making leases or sales of commodities
and from acquiring stock or capital of other corporations engaging in commerce
tending to substantially lessen competition or create a monopoly; makes it a
SRA ROT Offical Duties 461
felony for a president or other specified officers to misappropriate 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 supplies, or con-
tract 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 competitive bidding under regulations to be prescribed by the commission.
The commission 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 investigations shall be conclusive when supported by testimony.
Governmeni-arded railroad 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 pro-
vides penalties for failure to comply with the act or the orders of the commission.
Railway Maal 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 trans-
portation of mail matter by railway common carriers and services connected
therewith, prescribing 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 commission is
authorized to fix the limits of the standard time zones established for the con-
tinental United States and Alaska, having due regard, in doing so, to the con-
venience 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 loco-
motive engines used in moving interstate traffic shall be equipped with a power
riving-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 provisions 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 equipment 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
require 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.—By 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
accidents to the commission and increasing the scope of the commission’s author-
ity 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 Inter-
state 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
Commerce 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, ete., not equipped with an ash pan which can be emptied with-
out 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
approved March 4, 1921, directs the Interstate Commerce Commission to make
regulations for the safe transportation of explosives by common carriers engaged
in interstate commerce. Penalties are provided for violations of such regulations.
462 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
Locomotive and boiler inspection acts.—The act of February 17, 1911, confers
jurisdiction upon the commission to enforce certain provisions compelling rail-
road companies 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 appur-
tenances thereto was extended to include ‘‘all parts and appurtenances of the
locomotive and tender.”
Block signal and automatic wwainscontol safety devices.—The urgent deficiency
appropriation act approved October 22, 1913, contained an appropriation of
$25,000 to enable the commission to investigate and test block signals and appli-
ances for the automatic control of railway trains and appliances or systems
intended to promote the safety of railway operation, including experimental tests
of such systems and appliances as shall be furnished in completed shape to the
commission for investigation and test, free of cost to the Government, in accord-
ance 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 continuing 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 fulfillment.
UNITED STATES BOARD OF MEDIATION
The United States Board of Mediation was organized under the provisions of
Public Act No. 257, Sixty-ninth Congress, approved May 20, 1926, entitled
“An act to provide for the prompt disposition of disputes between carriers and
their employees, and for other purposes,” known as the railway labor act. It is
an independent agency in the executive branch of the Government and is com-
posed of five members appointed by the President, by and with the advice and
consent of the Senate. The board annually designates a member to act as
chairman and maintains its principal office in the District of Columbia, but it
may meet at any other place.
The railway labor act applies to express companies, sleeping-car companies,
and carriers by railroad subject to the interstate commerce act, provides that
such carriers, their officers, agents, and employees shall exert every reasonable
effort to make and maintain agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, and work-
ing conditions, and to settle all disputes whether arising out of the application of
such agreements or otherwise. All disputes between a carrier and its employees
shall be considered and, if possible, decided with all expedition, in conference
between representatives designated and authorized so to confer, respectively, by
the carriers and by the employees thereof interested in the dispute.
The act also provides that representatives for the purpose of the act shall be
designated by the respective parties; that boards of adjustment shall be created
by agreement between any carrier or group of earriers or the carriers as a whole
and its or their employees to handle disputes growing out of grievances or out
of the interpretation or application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules,
or working conditions.
The parties, or either party, to a dispute may invoke the services of the Board
of Mediation or the Board of Mediation may proffer its services in any of the
following cases: (a) A dispute arising out of grievances or out of the interpreta-
tion or application of agreements concerning rates of pay, rules, or working
conditions not adjusted by the parties in conference and not decided by the appro-
priate adjustment boards; (b) a dispute which is not settled in conference
between the parties in respect to changes in rates of pay, rules, or working
conditions; (¢) any other dispute not decided in conference between the parties.
When mediation services are requested or proffered the board is authorized to
put itself promptly in communication with the parties to the controversy and
use its best efforts by mediation to bring the parties to agreement. When
unsuccessful in bringing about an adjustment through mediation the board shall
at once endeavor to induce the parties to submit the controversy to arbitration
Pr
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MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutzes 463
in accordance with the provisions of the act. The failure or refusal of either
party to submit a controversy to arbitration shall not be construed as a violation
of any legal obligation imposed upon such party by the terms of the railway
labor act or otherwise.
When an agreement to arbitrate has been filed with the Board of Mediation
a board of arbitration shall be chosen in the following manner:
The representatives of the carrier or carriers and of the employees shall each
name one arbitrator (or two if the agreement to arbitrate so designates); the
arbitrators thus chosen shall select the remaining arbitrator or arbitrators. On
failure of the arbitrators named by the parties to agree on the remaining arbi-
trators during a period stipulated in the act, it shall be the duty of the Board
of Mediation to name such remaining arbitrator or arbitrators.
The agreement to arbitrate shall be in writing and shall stipulate, among other
things, that the respective parties to the award will each faithfully execute the
same. Copies of arbitration awards shall be furnished to the respective parties
to the controversy, to the clerk’s office of the district court of the United States
for the district wherein the controversy arose or the arbitration is entered into,
to the Board of Mediation, and to the Interstate Commerce Commission.
If a dispute between a carrier and its employees is not adjusted under the
foregoing provisions of the act and should, in the judgment of the Board of
Mediation, threaten substantially to interrupt interstate commerce to a degree
such as to deprive any section of the country of essential transportation service,
the Board of Mediation shall notify the President, who may thereupon in his
discretion create a board to investigate and report respecting such dispute. The
act also provides that after the creation of such board no change in the conditions
out of which the dispute arose shall be made by either party to the controversy
during a period of 60 days.
The Board of Mediation makes an annual report of its activities to Congress.
FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD
The Federal Reserve System, which was established pursuant to authority
contained in the act of December 23, 1913, known as the Federal reserve act,
comprises the Federal Reserve Board, the Federal Advisory Council, which acts
in an advisory capacity to the Federal Reserve Board, the 12 Federal reserve
banks situated in different sections of the United States, and the member banks.
The latter include all national banks and such State banks and trust companies
as have voluntarily applied to the Federal Reserve Board for membership and
have been admitted to the system. All of the stock of the Federal reserve banks
is owned by their member banks. Broad supervisory powers are vested in the
Federal Reserve Board, which has its offices in Washington. The law designates
the Secretary of the Treasury and the Comptroller of the Currency as ex-officio
members, and provides for the appointment of six members by the President
with the advice and consent of the Senate. In selecting these six members, the
President is required to have a due regard to a fair representation of the financial,
agricultural, industrial, and commercial interests, and geographical divisions of
the country. No two appointive members may be from the same Federal Re-
serve District.
Federal reserve banks are authorized, among other things, to discount for their
member banks notes, drafts, bills of exchange, and bankers’ acceptances of
short maturities arising out of commercial and agricultural transactions, and
short-term paper secured by obligations of the United States; to make advances
to their member banks for periods not exceeding 15 days upon collateral security
of certain prescribed classes; in certain exceptional circumstances and under
certain prescribed conditions, to make advances upon other kinds of security to
groups of member banks and, until March 3, 1934, or for such additional period
not exceeding one year as the President may prescribe, to individual member
banks; to make loans, until the President shall otherwise declare and in no event
after March 24, 1934, to nonmember banks or trust companies under certain
prescribed conditions upon security which may or may not be eligible for redis-
count; in unusual and exigent circumstances when authority has been granted
by at least five members of the Federal Reserve Board, to discount for indi-
viduals, partnerships, or corporations, under certain prescribed conditions, notes,
drafts, and bills of exchange of the kinds and maturities made eligible for dis-
count for member banks; to make advances to individuals, partnerships, or cor-
464 GC ongressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
porations secured by direct obligations of the United States for periods not exceed-
ing 90 days; to purchase and sell in the open market bankers’ acceptances and
bills of exchange of the kinds and maturities eligible for discount, and obligations
of the United States; to deal in gold coin and bullion; to receive and hold on deposit
the reserve balances of member banks; to issue Federal reserve notes and Federal
reserve bank notes subject to certain prescribed conditions; to act as clearing
houses and as collecting agents for their member banks, and under certain condi-
tions for nonmember banks, in the collection of checks and other instruments;
to act as depositaries and fiscal agents of the United States; and to exercise other
banking funetions specified in the Federal Reserve Act.
Among the more important duties of the Federal Reserve Board are the review
and determination of discount rates charged by the Federal reserve banks on
their discounts and advances and supervision over the open-market operations
of the Federal reserve banks. In connection with its supervision of Federal
reserve banks the board is also authorized to make examinations of such banks;
to require statements and reports from such banks; to require the establishment
or discontinuance of branches of such banks; to supervise the issue and retirement
of Federal reserve notes; and to supervise the foreign operations of the Federal
reserve banks.
The Federal Reserve Board also passes on the admission of State banks and
trust companies to membership in the Federal reserve system and on the termina-
tion of membership of such banks; it has the power to examine member banks
either through its own personnel or in cooperation with national and State bank-
ing authorities; it receives condition reports from State member banks; it passes
on applications of national banks for authority to exercise trust powers or to act
in fiduciary capacities; it may grant authority to national banks to establish
branches in foreign countries or dependencies or insular possessions of the United
States, or to invest in the stock of banks or corporations engaged in international
or foreign banking; it supervises the organization and activities of corporations
organized under Federal law to engage in international or foreign banking; and
it issues permits under the authority granted by the provisions of the Clayton
Antitrust Act relating to interlocking bank directorates. Another function of
the board is the operation of the gold settlement fund, by which balances due to
and from the various Federal reserve banks arising out of their own transactions
or those of their member banks are settled in Washington without physical ship-
ments of gold.
In exercising its supervisory functions over the Federal reserve banks and
member banks, the Federal Reserve Board promulgates regulations, pursuant to
authority granted by the Federal reserve act, governing certain of the above-
mentioned activities of Federal reserve banks and member banks. To meet its
expenses and to pay the salaries of its members and its employees, the board makes
semiannual assessments upon the Federal reserve banks in proportion to their
capital stock and surplus. Annual reports of the operations of the board are
made to the Speaker of the House of Representatives for the information of
Congress as required by law,
FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
The Federal Trade Commission was created by an act of Congress approved
September 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 powers are conferred upon this commission by ‘An act to supple-
ment existing laws against unlawful restraints and monopolies, and for other
purposes,” approved October 15, 1914 (Clayton Act), and by ‘‘An act to pro-
mote export trade, and for other purposes,” approved April 10, 1918, known as
the export trade act (Webb-Pomerene law).
FUNCTIONS AND PROCEDURE UNDER THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION ACT
Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission act declares that ‘‘unfair methods
of competition 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.”
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 465
Whenever the commission shall have reason to believe that any such person,
partnership, or corporation has been or is using any unfair method of competition
in ecommerce, 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 eommission 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.
A letter to the commission stating what the writer believes to constitute
the employment of unfair practices by some concern is sufficient to institute a
proceeding under section 5 before the commission. If the letter clearly discloses
that nothing is charged within the jurisdiction of the commission, it is filed without
further action. If it appears, however, that there may have been such a viola-
tion of law, the matter is settled, after further investigation, by dismissal of the
charges, or by stipulation and agreement with the concern named in the letter, or
by the issuance of a formal complaint followed by a formal trial of the charges,
as required by the facts of the particular case and by the public interest.
Stipulations setting forth the unfair practices used by the concern named and
agreements to discontinue their use voluntarily are entered into where the
public interest does not require formal action, for example, where the concern in
question agrees to discontinue the unlawful practices. Stipulations and agree-
ments are not entered into in those cases where a fraudulent business is con-
cerned, where the conduct of a legitimate business in a fraudulent manner is
concerned, where the circumstances are such that there is reason to believe that
an agreement entered into with the concern involved will not be kept or where
for any reason it is believed that the public interest will be better served by
the institution of a formal complaint and proceeding. Digests of such stipu-
lations and agreements are published after omitting the names of the proposed
respondents. The stipulations referred to are those employed by the commission
in dealing with the general run of cases in whieh this method of disposition is
considered appropriate. However, in the commission’s false and misleading
advertising stipulations (negotiated through the commission’s special board of
investigation. See infra p. 472/1.) the names of respondents are frequently made
public. A formal proceeding, instituted by a formal complaint and followed by the
taking of testimony, filing of briefs, and oral argument, is terminated by the
entry of a formal order to cease and desist or by a formal order of dismissal.
Such a proceeding is prosecuted in the name of the commission by the chief
counsel’s division and testimony and evidence in such proceeding are proffered
before a member of the trial examiner’s division, who is charged with passing
upon the testimony and evidence and with other details incident to the trial of
the case. No formal complaint is issued, except where incompatible with the
public interest or clearly not called for by the circumstances of the case, until
the concern named in the complaint has been given an opportunity to appear
before the board of review of the commission and present its side of the case
and I certain cases to stipulate the facts and have the matter dismissed without
publicity.
Investigation in the preliminary stages is largely the function of the chief
examiner’s office.
Procedure and internal! organization of the commission, and methods of com-
petition ccndemned by the commission under section 5, are set forth in detail in
its annual reports.
In speaking of the commission’s activities in dealing with unfair methods of
competition mention should also be made of what has become known as the
trade practice conference, which affords, broadly stated, a means through which
representatives of an industry voluntarily assemble, either at their own instance
or that of the commission, but under auspices of the latter, for the purpose of
considering any unfair practices in their industry, and collectively agreeing upon
and providing for their abandonment in cooperating with and with the support
of the commission.
157297°—73-1—1s8T ED——31
466 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
OTHER SECTIONS OF THE FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION ACT
Under section 6 the Federal Trade Commission derives its authority for making
general 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 cor-
poration engaged in commerce, excepting banks, and common carriers subject
to the act to regulate commerce; and that it may require reports and answers to
specific questions in the compilation of such information.
Under these powers the commission has conducted many economic inquiries,
chiefly at the request of the President, the Senate, or the House, to whom reports
have been made, and has gathered and published for the use of the Congress,
the executive departments, and the public, a great deal of information regarding
many of the essential industries of the country. Occasionally the commission
carries on investigations on its own initiative under these powers, as in the
instances of inquiries into the subjects of resale price maintenance and price bases
used in quoting and selling articles and commodities by manufacturers and
distributors. The commission also has power under section 6 to investigate alleged violations
of the antitrust acts by any corporation, upon the direction of the President or
either House of Congress, and, at the request of the Attorney General, to make
such investigations and recommendations for changes in the corporation’s methods
so as to conform to the law. Among the more important inquiries under way
under the former power are those dealing with power and gas utility corporations,
chain-store industry, cottonseed crushers and oil mills, cement and building
materials. The commission is also empowered under section 6 to investigate the manner
in which final decrees that have been entered in suits to restrain violations have
been carried out, either upon its own initiative or at the request of the Attorney
General, to whom it must report in the matter; to make such reports public; to
investigate from time to time trade conditions in and with foreign countries where
associations, combinations, or practices of manufacturers, merchants, or traders,
or other conditions may affect the foreign trade of the United States; and to make
public from time to time such portions of the information 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 antitrust 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 investi-
gations and the compilation of data, with provisions 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 functions
of the commission are both legal and economic. These include prevention of
unfair competition and of violation of the Clayton law. Investigatory functions
include economic studies of domestic industry and interstate and foreign com-
merce. Such inquiries may be inaugurated by the commission of its own initia-
tive, but are more frequently undertaken by direction of the President or the .
Senate or the House of Representatives.
DUTIES OF THE COMMISSION UNDER THE CLAYTON ANTITRUST ACT
The commission is given jurisdiction over violations of sections 2, 3, 7, and 8
of the Clayton Act, which prohibit:
(1) Certain discriminations in prices between different purchasers of com-
modities 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
condition of sale or lease, the seller or lessor exacts from the purchaser or lessee
an agreement 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.
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 467
(3) In certain cases so-called ‘‘holding companies,” or the ownership by one
company of the stock of another, where the effect may be to substantially lessen
competition between the companies, 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 (any one of which
has capital, surplus, and undivided profits aggregating more than $1,000,000)
engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, other than banks, banking associa-
tions, trust companies, and common carriers subject to the act to regulate com-
merce, 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, with some exceptions, identical with that
under the Federal Trade Commission act.
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 trade within the United States, or of the
export trade of any domestic competitor, nor any artificial or intentional enhanc-
ing or depressing 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
Commission act to “unfair methods of competition used in export trade against
competitors 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.
PROCEDURE AND POLICY
POLICY IN PURELY PRIVATE CONTROVERSIES
The policy of the commission is not to entertain proceedings of alleged unfair
practices where the alleged violation of law is a purely private controversy
redressable in the courts except where said practices substantially tend to affect
the public. In cases where the alleged injury is one to a competitor only and
is redressable in the courts by an action by the aggrieved competitor and the
interest of the public is not substantially involved, the proceeding will not be
entertained.
In accordance with the foregoing, the commission amended paragraph 3, of
subdivision 2, of the Rules of Practice, headed ‘II. Complaints,” by inserting
after the word ‘jurisdiction’ the following: ‘‘and if it shall appear to the com-
mission that a proceeding by it in respect thereof would be to the interest of the
publie.”
SETTLEMENT OF CASES BY STIPULATION
The commission also adopted the following as its policy in the handling and
settlement of cases:
The end and object of all proceedings of the Federal Trade Commission is to
end all unfair methods of competition or other violations of the law of which
it is given jurisdiction. The law provides for the issuance of a complaint and a
trial as procedure for the accomplishment of this end. But it is also provided
that this procedure shall be had only when it shall be deemed to be in the public
interest, plainly giving the commission a judicial discretion to be exercised in
the particular case.
It has been contended that the language of the statute using the word ‘‘ shall”
is mandatory, but in view of the public-interest clause no member of the com-
mission as now constituted holds or has ever held that the statute is manda-
tory. Hence, the proposed rule for settlement of applications for complaint [by
stipulation] may be considered on its merits.
If it were not for the public-interest clause it might appear that the statute
would be mandatory. It remains to determine what effect the public-interest
468 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
clause has. In the interest of economy and of dispatch of business as well as
the desirability of accomplishing the ends of the commission with as little harm
to respondents as possible [therefore], all cases should be so settled where they
can be except where the public interest demands otherwise.
But when the very business itself of the proposed respondent is fraudulent,
it may well be considered by the commission that the protection of the public
demands that the regular procedure by complaint and order shall prevail.
Indeed, there are some cases where that is the only course which would be of
any value at all. As, for instance, the so-called ‘‘blue-sky cases’ and all such
where the business itself is inherently fraudulent or where a business of a legiti-
mate nature is conducted in such a fraudulent manner that the commission is
warranted in the belief that no agreement made with the proposed respondent
will be kept by him.
The rule shall be that all cases shall be settled by stipulation except when
the public interest demands otherwise for the reasons set forth above.
ON AFFORDING PROSPECTIVE RESPONDENTS OPPORTUNITY TO SHOW CAUSE WHY COMPLAINT SHOULD NOT
Except as hereinafter provided, the board of review, before it shall recommend
to the commission that a complaint issue in any case, shall afford the proposed
respondent a hearing to show cause why a complaint should not issue. Such
hearing shall be informal in character and shall not involve the taking of testi-
mony. The proposed respondent shall be permitted to make or submit such
statements of fact or law as he shall desire. The extent and control of such
hearing shall rest with a majority of the board. The respondent shall have
such notice of the time and place of hearing, not exceeding three weeks, as may
be fixed by the board, to be served on the respondent by the secretary of the
commission: Provided, That if in any case the majority of the board shall be of
opinion that a hearing is not required because (a) the respondent has been fully
interviewed and has given to the examiner every fact or argument that could be
offered as a defense, or (b) the practice has been fully established and is of such
character that in the nature of the case nothing could be adduced in mitigation,
or (c) to delay the issuance of a complaint to afford a hearing might result in a
loss of jurisdiction, or (d) otherwise unnecessary or incompatible with the public
interest, the board may transmit the case to the commission, via the docket
section, with its conclusions and recommendations, without a hearing, as in this
rule provided. ON PUBLICITY IN THE SETTLEMENT OF CASES
In the settlement of any matter by stipulation before complaint is issued, no
statement in reference thereto shall be made by the commission for publication
(the commission does, however, after omitting the names of the proposed re-
spondents, make public digests of cases in which it accepts stipulations of the
facts and agreements to cease and desist). After a complaint is issued, no state-
ment in regard to the case shall be made by the commission for publication until
after the final determination of the case.
After a complaint has been issued and served the papers in the case shall
be open to the public for inspection, under such rules and regulations as the
secretary may prescribe.
It has been the rule, which is now abolished, to issue a statement upon the
filing of a complaint, stating the charges against a respondent.
Concerning the withholding of publicity where cases are settled by stipula-
tion without complaint, the custom has always been not to issue any statement.
The so-called applicant or complaining party has never been regarded as a
party in the strict sense. The commission is not supposed to act for any appli-
cant, but wholly in the public interest. It has always been and now is the rule
not to publish or divulge the name of an applicant or complaining party, and
such party has no legal status before the commission except where allowed to
intervene as provided by the statute.
ON DEALING WITH UNFAIR COMPETITION THROUGH TRADE-PRACTICE CONFERENCES
The trade-practice conference affords, broadly stated, a means through which
representatives of an industry voluntarily assemble, either at their own instance
or that of the commission, but under the auspices of the latter, for the purpose
of considering any unfair practices in their industry, and collectively agreeing
upon and providing for their abandonment in cooperation with and with the
support of the commission.
MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 469
This procedure deals with an industry as a unit. It is concerned solely with
practices and methods, not at that time with individual offenders. It regards the
industry as occupying a position comparable to that of ‘‘friend of the court’ and
not as that of the accused. It wipes out on a given date all unfair methods con-
demned at the conference and thus places all competitors on an equally fair
competitive basis. It performs the same function as a formal complaint with-
out bringing charges, prosecuting trials, or employing any compulsory process,
but multiplies results by as many times as there are members in the industry
who formerly practiced the methods condemned and voluntarily abandoned.
The beneficial results of this form of procedure are now well established, and
the commission is always glad to receive and consider requests for the holding
of trade-practice conferences.
SPECIAL BOARD OF INVESTIGATION
The special board of investigation was established for the purpose of effecting
a more direct method of handling certain cases involving false and misleading
advertising. Advertisers, publishers, and advertising agents have the privilege
of informal hearings before this board for the purpose of discussing the issues
involved prior to preparation and service of formal complaints.
By this procedure the advertisers are afforded an opportunity to explain or
justify the advertising claims questioned by the commission or to revise their
advertising copy and stipulate the discontinuance of such representations. In
most cases the results obtained by this procedure are as effective as those that
could be accomplished by the issuance of cease and desist orders, and long delays
and litigation, expensive both to the advertisers and the Government, are
avoided.
It is the practice of publishers and advertising agents to waive any rights
they may have to be joined in proceedings against the advertisers; to disclaim
any interest in the subject matter that they desire to defend before the commis-
sion, and to agree by stipulation that they will abide by the provisions of any
cease and desist order that may be issued against the advertiser or any stipulation
made by the advertiser of which they have notice.
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 reserve and a merchant marine to meet the requirements of the com-
merce 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 independent 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, vice chairman, and secretary. By
later acts the membership was increased to seven and then reduced to three.
(See below.)
By the shipping act, 1916, regulatory powers are given the board over common
carriers by water engaged in interstate and foreign commerce of the United
States and over persons carrying on the business of forwarding or furnishing
wharfage, dock, warehouse, or other terminal facilities in connection with com-
mon carriers by water. These powers are principally in relation to rates, fares,
charges, and practices. Carriers in interstate commerce subject to the board’s
jurisdiction are required to file their maximum rates, fares, and charges with the
board, and after board approval thereof, to keep sueh rates, fares, and charges
open to public inspection. The act gives the board quasi-judicial authority to
receive and determine complaints of shippers, passengers, and others alleging
unreasonableness or unjust discrimination by carriers and others subject to its
regulatory authority; and provides the method for the enforcement of orders of
the board, including orders directing the payment of money in reparation for
violation of its regulatory provisions. An important regulatory power vested in
the board is the approval, disapproval, or modification of agreement entered
into between carriers subject to the act respecting cooperative working arrange-
ments. The board’s approval of such agreements excepts the parties thereto
from the operation of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, Wilson Tariff Act, Clayton
470 Congressional Darectory MISCELLANEOUS
Ach apd supplementary acts and amendments directed at monopolies in restraint
of trade.
The act expressly provides that the board does not have concurrent jurisdiction
with the Interstate Commerce Commission over transportation agencies within
the latter’s jurisdiction, and that its provisions do not apply to intrastate
commerce. The board is further empowered to investigate the action of foreign govern-
ments 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.
The board is further empowered by the shipping act to regulate the sale of
vessels owned by citizens 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 or to transfer title thereto or an interest therein to an
alien. All charters of American vessels to persons not citizens of the United
States must be under regulatious prescribed by the board. The board’s approval
may be accorded either absolutely or upon such conditions as the board may
prescribe. In connection with applications for the approvals of the board, heavy
penalties are imposed for making false statements, etc., in obtaining approval.
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, organ-
ized the United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, the name
of which was changed to United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corpo-
ration by the independent offices act, 1928. All the stock of the corporation
has been fully paid up and is now owned by the United States of America through
the United States Shipping Board, except qualifying shares held one each by the
members of the board of trustees.
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 it is 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, ultimately
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
necessary 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 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 administration 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
sections of the country from which they are to be appointed are designated, and
MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Dutres 471
the President is to designate the member to act as chairman of the board, the
board electing its vice chairman. By a later act membership is reduced to three.
(See below.)
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. These provisions are further amended by the
merchant marine act, 1928.
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
maintenance 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 com-
merce 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 con-
sider appropriate under existing law in case the board decides that rates, charges,
rules, or regulations of common carriers by rail subject to the jurisdiction of the
Interstate Commerce Commission are detrimental to the promotion and develop-
ment of such ports.
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
Merchant Fleet Corporation, which is authorized to continue in existence until
all vessels are sold regardless of the provisions 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 continue the operation of housing projects acquired by the United States
Shipping 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 devel-
opment of the terminal facilities acquired by the President by or under the act
entitled “An act making appropriations to supply urgent deficiencies in appropri-
ations 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 earry out the provisions of the
act, with authority to request the head of any department, board, bureau, or
ageney 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, bureau, 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 Service, 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 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, 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 reason-
able rates to accommodate the commerce and passenger travel of such islands,
472 Congressional Durectory MISCELLANEOUS
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.
The American Bureau of Shipping is directed to be recognized by all depart-
ments, boards, bureaus, or commissions of the Government for the classification
of vessels owned by the United States so long as the American Bureau of Ship-
ping is maintained as an organization with no capital stock and paying no divi-
dends. The Secretary of Commerce and the chairman of the board are each
directed to appoint one representative 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 pas-
senger 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 attached in like amounts and priorities
to the proceeds of the sale except that the lien arising under the preferred mort-
gage 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 mortgaged vessels and the assignment of vessels’ 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
on 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 per-
sonal injuries suffered on board a vessel or in its service, is amended so as to
extend to seamen, 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 sea-
man is 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 declared to be applicable.
The act further provides that in the judgment of Congress treaties or conven-
tions 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 impose 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 force, terminating such restrictions at the expiration
of the period provided for in such 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 corporation, partnership, or association.
The Shipping Board is authorized to exercise the powers vested in it, except as
otherwise specifically provided, either directly by the board or by it through the
Merchant Fleet Corporation.
The legislation designed to develop the American merchant marine and to
assure its permanence in the transportation of the foreign trade of the United
States was further amended by the merchant marine act, 1928, approved May
MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 473
22, 1928. Under this legislation, the policy and primary purpose deelared in
section 1 of the merchant marine act, 1920, are reaffirmed. The Shipping Board
is directed not to sell any vessel or any line of vessels except when the upbuilding
and maintenance of an adequate merchant marine can best be served thereby, and
then only upon affirmative vote of five members of the board. The board is
authorized to improve vessels owned by the United States in its possession or
control to adequately equip them for foreign trade. All such vessels must be
documented under the laws of the United States and remain so for not less than
five years from the completion of remodeling or so long as any money is due the
United States on account of such vessels. The Shipping Board is also directed
to present to Congress, from time to time, recommendations so that Congress may
provide adequate appropriations for the construction of new, up-to-date cargo,
combination cargo and passenger, and passenger ships for replacements and
additions to those operated so that an adequate merchant marine under the
United States flag may be maintained. Such vessels shall be built in the United
States and planned with reference to their possible usefulness as naval and
military auxiliaries.
The construction loan fund provision, being section 11 of the merchant marine
act, 1920, as amended, is further amended to authorize the board to set aside from
revenues from sales, including proceeds of securities, consisting of notes, letters of
credit or evidences of debt taken by it for deferred payments of purchase money
from sales by the board, and operations, and authorized to be appropriated such
additional funds to aggregate a total of $250,000,000. The fund is a revolving
fund, and repayments on loans from the fund are credited to the fund, but interest
is covered into the Treasury of the United States as miscellaneous receipts
The board is authorized to use the fund in making loans to persons, citizens of the
United States, on terms prescribed by the board for the purpose of construction,
reconditioning, remodeling, or improvement in private shipyards or navy yards
in the United States of vessels of the best and most efficient type for operation in
lines deemed to be desirable or necessary by the board, provided such vessels shall
be fitted and equipped with the most modern, most efficient and economical
engines and machinery. No loan shall be made for a longer period than 20 years,
nor for a greater sum that three-fourths of the cost of vessels to be constructed or
three-fourths of the cost of reconditioning or equipping vessels already built. All
such loans shall be repaid to the board in equal annual installments and bear
interest, payable not less frequently than annually, while the vessel is operated
exclusively in coastwise trade or is inactive, at a rate as fixed by the board but
not less than 5), per eent per annum; while being constructed, equipped, recon-
ditioned, remodeled, or improved and/or during any period in which operated
in foreign trade, the rate shall be as fixed by the board but the interest rate shall
not be less than 3% per cent per annum. The lowest rate of interest shall not be
granted for the construction, equipping, reconditioning, remodeling, or improve-
ment of any vessel for the foreign trade unless it is contracted that such vessel
upon completion shall not be operated exclusively and under enrollment in the
coastwise and/or intercoastal trade for more than three months in any calendar
year; and if such vessel shall be operated exclusively and under enrollment in
such trade for more than three months in any calendar year the board shall
collect the difference between the low rate of interest charged and 5% per cent
per annum during the period of construction, equipping, reconditioning, remodel-
ing, or improvement. The board is authorized to prescribe rules for determining
the amount of interest payable. (The foregoing is as amended by act approved
February 2, 1931.)
The board is directed to supervise the construction and equipment of vessels
and see that a preferred mortgage is properly recorded, and that adequate pro-
tection is provided to properly protect the repayment of the full amount of the
loan, as well as insure the adequacy of the protection of the vessel and the se-
curity of the Government’s equity in the vessel property.
This act further provides that all mails of the United States shall, where prac-
ticable, be carried on American-built vessels documented under the laws of the
United States. The Postmaster General is directed to certify to the United
States Shipping Board what ocean-mail routes should be established and main-
tained for the carrying of mails, the volume of mail moving over such routes or
estimated to move during the next five years, the frequency of the sailings, ete.,
to provide adequate postal service. The board is directed, upon receipt of such
certification from the Postmaster General, to determine and certify the type,
size, speed, and other characteristics of vessels which should be employed in
such routes. The Postmaster General is authorized to enter into contracts with
474 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
citizens of the United States whose bids are accepted for the carrying of mails on
the routes deemed to be adequate and necessary. The act further outlines the
types and classes of vessels as to their speed and tonnage and provides the com-
pensation which may be awarded under the contracts for carrying the mail.
The insurance fund, being section 10 of the merchant marine act, 1920, is
amended, and provides that the board may create, out of insurance premiums
and revenue from operations and sales, and maintain and administer, separate
insurance funds, which it may use to insure in whole or in part against hazards
commonly covered by insurance policies in such cases, any legal or equitable
interest of the United States (1) in any vessel constructed or in process of con-
struction and (2) in any plants or property in the possession or under the authority
of the board; and provides that the United States shall be held to have such an
interest in any vessel toward the construction, reconditioning, remodeling, and
improving or equipping of which a loan has been made from the construction
loan fund, or in any vessel upon which it holds a mortgage or lien of any character,
or in any vessel which is obligated by contract with the owner to perform any
services in behalf of the United States, to the extent of the Government’s interest
herein.
This act provides that all officers.or employees in the United States traveling
on official business overseas shall travel and transport their personal effects on
ships registered under the laws of the United States when available, and should
vessels of the United States not be used, the Comptroller General of the United
States is directed to disallow travel or shipping expenses unless satisfactory proof
of the necessity for the use of foreign-flag ships is given.
The act further provides that, during any national emergency declared by
proclamation of the President, the following vessels may be taken or purchased
and used by the United States: (1) Vessels in respect to which under contract
a loan is made from the construction loan fund—at any time until the principal
and the interest on the loan has been paid; (2) vessels in respect to which an
ocean-mail contract is made—at any time during the period for which the con-
tract is made. In case such vessels is required by the United States, the owner
shall be paid the fair actual value of the vessel at the time of the taking or a fair
compensation for her use based upon the actual value, and all vessels shall be
returned to owners in condition at least as good as when taken. The owners,
however, shall not be paid for any consequential damages arising from such
taking or purchase and use.
Finally, the act reaffirms the policy set forth in section 7 of the merchant
marine act, 1920, which provides that the board be directed to investigate and
determine what steamship lines shall be established and put in operation from
ports of the United States or any Territory, district, or possession thereof, to such
world and domestic markets as, in its judgment, are desirable for the promotion,
development, and expansion and maintenance of the foreign and coastwise trade
of the United States, and an adequate postal service, and determine the size,
type, speed, and other requirements of vessels to be so employed, and, if necessary,
the board shall operate vessels on such lines until business has so developed that
such vessels may be sold on satisfactory terms, services maintained, ete.
The legislative appropriation act for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1933, part 2,
title 3, section 306, reorganized the Shipping Board to be composed of three com-
missioners to be appointed by the President, by and with the advice and consent
of the Senate. One commissioner shall be appointed from the States touching the
Pacific Ocean, one from the States touching the Atlantic Ocean or a navigable
river directly tributary thereto, and one from the States touching the Gulf of
Mexico, but not more than one shall be appointed from the same State, nor
more than two of the commissioners shall be appointed from the same political
party. The terms of the commissioners appointed to the reorganized board are
for one, two, and three years, respectively, and their successors for 3-year terms.
Under the reorganization, all laws relating to the board remain in full force and
effect and no regulations, action, investigations, or proceedings under any such
laws existing or pending are affected by reason of the reorganization. Where
under previous law the concurrence of four or more of the commissioners was
required, such provisions are now held to be complied with by the concurrence
of two commissioners.
The functions and duties of the Shipping Board remain the same and the in-
ternal organization has been rearranged and the duties formerly performed by
the Sven members have been absorbed by the three commissioners of the new
oard.
MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 475
By the intercoastal shipping act, 1933, enacted March 3, 1933, additional
regulatory functions were vested in the board. This act, applicable to carriers
engaged in interstate transportation for hire of passengers or property by water
via the Panama Canal, requires each subject carrier to file with the board and
keep open to public inspection schedules of all rates, fares, and charges for or in
connection with transportation between intercoastal points on its own route, and,
if a through route has been established, all the rates, fares, and charges for or in
connection with transportation between points on its own route and points on
the route of any other carrier by water. Thirty days’ notice of all changes in
filed rates, fares, and charges, or classifications, rules, or regulations affecting such
rates, fares or charges, is required, except that the board may in its discretion
and for good cause allow changes upon shorter notice. Suspension power is
vested in the board to determine the lawfulness of any newly filed individual or
joint rate, fare, or charge, or any new individual or joint classification, regulation,
or practice. By this act it is made unlawful for subject carriers through the
medium of any agreement, conference, association, understanding, or otherwise,
to prevent or attempt to prevent any other such carrier from extending service
to any publicly owned terminal located on any improvement project authorized
by Congress at the same rates which it charges at its nearest regular port of call.
UNITED STATES SHIPPING BOARD MERCHANT FLEET
CORPORATION
The United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation was incor-
porated April 16, 1917, by the United States Shipping Board as the United States
Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation under the authority of section
11 of the act of Congress approved September 7, 1916, generally known as the
shipping act, 1916. The name of the corporation was changed under the inde-
pendent offices act making appropriations for 1928, approved February 11, 1927.
The corporation is capitalized at $50,000,000, divided into shares of a par
value of $100 each. All of the stock of the corporation, except the qualifying
share of each member of the board of trustees, is held by the United States
Shipping Board on behalf of the United States of America.
The object for which the corporation was organized is stated in the articles of
incorporation as follows: “The purchase, construction, equipment, lease, charter,
maintenance, and operation of merchant vessels 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 performed 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 Merchant Fleet Corporation consists of seven
members. The general officers consist of a president, the secretary, the treasurer,
and the general comptroller.
The proceeds received by the corporation in exchange for its capital stock,
pursuant to section 13 of the shipping act, 1916, and by appropriations made
by Congress from time to time, have been used for the construction by contract
of steel, wood, composite, and concrete vessels for overseas commerce and for
the completion of steel vessels over 2,500 tons dead-weight capacity requisitioned
by direction of the United States Shipping Board on August 3, 1917, and for the
operation of vessels on essential trade routes, the determination of which is
made by the United States Shipping Board.
By the emergency shipping fund provision of the urgent deficiencies appro-
priation 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 connection with the construction, requisition, and operation of vessels were
conferred on the President and by him by Executive orders of various dates con-
ferred on the corporation. The merchant marine act, 1920, transferred all the
powers and authorities thus delegated to the corporation to the United States
Shipping Board, which 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 Shipping Board, by resolution adopted from time to time,
has conferred certain general powers on the corporation, under which the cor-
poration acts as the administrative agent of the United States Shipping Board,
476 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
representing the United States of America. The actual physical operations and
management of the United States owned vessels is assigned to various managing
operators under a contractual relationship. The corporation is controlled and
Jirooted by the board of trustees under general policies approved by the Shipping
oard.
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 effec-
tive 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. Mr. Davis resigned January 1, 1926, and Mr. Andrew
W. Mellon was appointed. Mr. Mellon resigned February 12, 1932, and Mr.
Ogden L. Mills was appointed. Mr. Mills resigned March 15, 1933, and Mr.
William H. Woodin was appointed director general and agent of the President as
of that date.
The act of February 28, 1920, authorizes the President to adjust, settle,
liquidate, and wind up all of the matters, including compensation, and all ques-
tions 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 or systems of transportation were at any
time under Federal control. It also provides that the carriers, at their own
expense, upon the request of the President or those duly authorized by him,
shall furnish all necessary and proper information and reports compiled upon the
records made or kept during the period of Federal control affecting their respective
lines. The act provides that any carrier which refuses or obstructs such in-
spection or which willfully fails to provide reasonable facilities therefor or to
furnish such information or reports shall be liable to a penalty of $500 for each
day of the continuance of such offense.
UNITED STATES COUNCIL OF NATIONAL DEFENSE
The Council of National Defense, composed of the Secretary of War, the
Secretary of the Navy, the Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of Agriculture,
the Secretary of Commerce, and the Secretary of Labor, was charged by the act
of August 29, 1916, among other things, with the ‘‘ coordination of industries and
resources for the national security and welfare’’ and with the ‘creation of rela-
tions which will render possible in time of need the immediate concentration and
utilization of the resources of the Nation.” No appropriations have been made
for nor any meetings held by the council since the fiscal year 1921. The records
of the Council of National Defense, as well as those of the War Industries Board
and the Committee on Public Information, are now under the jurisdiction of the
Assistant Secretary of War, who is charged by law (act of June 4, 1920) with the
“assurance of adequate provision for the mobilization of matériel and industrial
organizations essential to war-time needs.”
UNITED STATES BOARD OF TAX APPEALS
The Board of Tax Appeals was created by the act of June 2, 1924 (Public, No.
178, 68th Cong.), and extended by the acts of February 26, 1926 (Public, No. 20,
69th Cong.), and May 29, 1928 (Public, No. 562, 70th Cong.).
The act of February 26, 1926, which continued the board, confined the mem-
bership to 16, who are appointed by the President. The terms of office of the
members expire—four at the end of the sixth year, four at the end of the eighth
year, four at the end of the tenth year, and four at the end of the twelfth year.
MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 477
The terms of office of all successors expire 12 years after the expiration of the
terms for which their predecessors were appointed, but any member appointed
to fill a vacancy occurring prior to the expiration of the term for which his
predecessor was appointed shall be appointed only for the unexpired term of his
predecessor. On May 26, 1926, the President appointed 16 members, who entered
on duty June 8, 1926.
The membership of the board is divided into 16 divisions for the hearing
of proceedings. The board sits on each office day (except Fridays and Saturdays)
to hear proceedings which have been called from the day calendar at 9.30 a. m.
of each day and assigned to the respective divisions by the chairman.
The board functions in the manner of a court. The statute provides that its
proceedings shall be conducted in accordance with the rules of evidence appli-
cable in courts of equity of the District of Columbia. Its hearings are open to
the public and its reports are public records open to the inspection of the public.
The statute authorizes, and the board’s rules prescribe, a fee of $10 for the filing
of any petition after the enactment of the revenue act of 1926. The decisions
of the board are reviewable by the United States Circuit Courts of Appeals and
the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia on a petition for review. Such
decisions may be reviewed (a) in the case of an individual, by the circuit court of
appeals for the circuit whereof he is an inhabitant, or if not an inhabitant of
any circuit, then by the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia; (b) in the
case of a person other than an individual, by the circuit court of appeals for the
circuit in which is located the office of the collector to whom such person made
the return, or in case such person made no return, then by the Court of Appeals of
the District of Columbia; (¢) in the case of a corporation which had no principal
place of business or principal office or agency in the United States, then by the
Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia; (d) in the case of an agreement
between the commissioner and the taxpayer, then by the circuit court of appeals
for the circuit, or the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, as stipulated
in such agreement.
The principal office of the board is at Washington. Hearings are had not
only at the seat of government but, as required by statute, at other cities within
the United States with a view to securing reasonable opportunity to taxpayers
to appear before the board or any of its divisions with as little inconvenience
and expense as is practicable.
The reports of the board are published at the Government Printing Office,
and such authorized publication, under the 1926 and 1928 revenue acts, becomes
competent evidence of such reports in all courts of the United States and of the
several States without any further proof or authentication thereof. These pub-
lications are subject to sale in the same manner and upon the same terms as
are other public documents.
WAR FINANCE CORPORATION
The War Finance Corporation was created by the act approved April 5, 1918.
Its original purpose was to give financial support to industries whose operations
were ‘necessary or contributory to the prosecution of the war’ and to banking
institutions that aided in financing such industries. It was also authorized to
make advances to savings banks and building-loan associations, to buy and sell
obligations of the United States Government, and to issue bonds.
The corporation was in existence only six months before the armistice was
signed. When hostilities ceased its operations were contracted automatically,
but in the spring of 1919 it was called upon to undertake the burden of financing
the railroads, then under Federal control, because no appropriation had been
made for the maintenance of their operations.
AUTHORITY . TO FINANCE EXPORTS
By act approved March 3, 1919, the powers of the corporation were extended to
embrace an entirely new line of activity. In order to assist in the transition from
conditions of war to conditions of peace, the corporation was given authority to
make advances to the extent of $1,000,000,000 to American exporters and
American banking institutions which extended credits to finance American
exports. The activities of the corporation under this authority were discontinued
in May, 1920, at the request of the then Secretary of the Treasury. In January,
1921, the Congress passed a joint resolution directing the corporation to resume
operations in accordance with the provisions of the act of March 3, 1919.
478 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
AGRICULTURAL CREDITS
By act approved August 24, 1921, commonly known as the agricultural credits
act of 1921, the corporation’s powers were furtner extended and it was authorized
to make loans for agricultural purposes to banking and financing institutions,
including livestock loan companies, and to cooperative marketing associations.
The act required the corporation to obtain in every case ‘‘full and adequate
security by indorsement, guaranty, pledge, or otherwise,” and provided that the
aggregate of advances made by the corporation remaining unpaid at any one time
may not exceed $1,000,000,000. It contained a provision limiting to June 30,
1922, the period during which the corporation was authorized to make new
advances. This period, however, was extended to June 30, 1923, by the act
approved June 10, 1922; to March 31, 1924, by the agricultural credits act of
1923; and to December 31, 1924, by the act approved February 20, 1924.
In accordance with the act of February 20, 1924, the corporation ceased to
receive applications on November 30, 1924, and discontinued the making of new
loans on December 31, 1924. It entered the period of liquidation on January 1,
1925, and since that date only expense advances incident to the liquidation of its
assets and the winding up of its affairs have been made. For the purpose of
liquidating its assets, the corporate life of the corporation was extended for one
year, from April 4, 1923, to April 4, 1929, by the act approved April 4, 1928.
By the act approved March 1, 1929, the liquidation of the assets remaining at
the close of April 4, 1929, and the winding up of the affairs of the corporation
thereafter were transferred to the Secretary of the Treasury, who for such pur-
pose was given all the powers and duties of the board of directors of the corpora-
tion under the War Finance Corporation act of April 5, 1918, as amended. For
carrying out the provisions of the act approved March 1, 1929, the Secretary of
the Treasury, pursuant to authority contained in said act, assigned to a liquidat-
ing committee the exercise and performance, under his general supervision and
direction, of all such powers and duties.
CAPITAL STOCK OF THE CORPORATION
The capital stock of the corporation was fixed by the act of April 5, 1918, at
$500,000,000, all of it to be held by the Government. On November 30, 1919,
the entire amount had been subscribed, and on January 5, 1925, the corporation,
with the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury, canceled and retired $499,000,-
000 of its capital stock, leaving $1,000,000 outstanding. On April 5, 1929, the
corporation canceled and retired $990,000 additional of its capital stock, leaving
$10,000 outstanding. On the same date, and later on June 30, 1931, the cor-
poration paid into the Treasury all moneys belonging to it which, in the opinion
of the Secretary of the Treasury, were not required for carrying on and com-
pleting the liquidation of its remaining assets and the winding up of its affairs,
including reasonable provision for the further expenses thereof.
In April, 1919, the corporation issued for public sale $200,000,000 one-year
5 per cent bonds which matured on April 1, 1920. All but $13,000 of these bonds,
which have not yet been presented for payment, have been retired.
The funds of the corporation are kept on deposit with the Treasurer of the
United States.
ALIEN PROPERTY CUSTODIAN
The President was authorized under the provisions of the ‘trading with the
enemy act’’ to appoint an official, to be known as the Alien Property Custodian,
who shall be empowered to receive all the moneys and property in the United
States due or belonging to an enemy or ally of an enemy, which may be paid,
conveyed, transferred, assigned, or delivered to the said custodian under the
provisions of the act, and to hold, administer, and account for the same under
the general direction of the President and as provided in the act.
. The President has delegated to the Alien Property Custodian, the following
powers and duties under the trading with the enemy act:
The executive administration of all the provisions of section 7 (a) section 7 (¢),
and section 7 (d), including power to require reports and extend the time for filing
the same, conferred upon the President by the provisions of section 7 (a) and
including the power conferred upon the President by the provisions of section
7 (¢), to require the conveyance, ete., to the Alien Property Custodian at such
time and in such manner as he shall require, of any money or other properties
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 479
owing to or belonging to or held for or on account of any enemy or ally of an
enemy not holding a license granted under the provisions of the trading with
the enemy act which, after investigation, said Alien Property Custodian shall
determine is so owing, ete.
The property seized and demanded by the Alien Property Custodian is scat-
tered throughout the United States and its Territories, including the Philippine
Islands and Hawaii, and consists of industrial plants, such as chemical and woolen
mills, steamship lines, banks, land and cattle companies, salmon factories, gold
and silver and other mines of metal, and other miscellaneous industrial plants,
and thousands of parcels of real estate and trusts represented by securities and
liquid assets.
The Alien Property Custodian is required by the trading with the enemy act
to deposit all moneys coming into his hands in the Treasury of the United States,
to be invested by the Secretary of the Treasury in United States bonds or cer-
tificates of indebtedness. With respect to all other property the Alien Property
Custodian has all the powers of a common-law trustee, and the further power
of management and sale under the direction of the President. All moneys or
properties after the end of the war will be disposed of as Congress shall direct.
The treaties of peace between the United States of America and Germany and
Austria provide that—
““ All property of the Imperial German Government, or its successor or succes-
sors, and of all German nationals, which was, on April 6, 1917, in or has since
that date come into the possession of, under control of, or has been the subject
of a demand by the United States of America or of any of its officers, agents,
or employees, from any source or by any agency whatsoever, and all property
of the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Government, or its successor or
successors, and of all Austro-Hungarian nationals which was on December 7,
1917, in or has since that date come into the possession or under control of, or
has been the subject of a demand by the United States of America or any of its
officers, agents, or employees, from any source or by any agency whatsoever,
shall be retained by the United States of America and no disposition thereof
made, except as shall have been heretofore or specifically hereafter shall be
provided by law until such time as the Imperial German Government and the
Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Government, or their successor or suc-
cessors, shall have, respectively, made suitable provision for the satisfaction of
all claims against said Governments, respectively, of all persons, wheresoever
domiciled, who owe permanent allegiance to the United States of America and
who have suffered, through the acts of the Imperial German Government, or its
agents, or the Imperial and Royal Austro-Hungarian Government, or its agents,
since July 31, 1914, loss, damage, or injury to their persons or property, directly
or indirectly, whether through the ownership of shares of stock in German,
Austro-Hungarian, American, or other corporations, or in consequence of
hostilities or of any operations of war, or otherwise” * * *, :
Under an amendment to the trading with the enemy act approved March 4,
1923, the President was authorized to return an amount of property or money
not to exceed in value the sum of $10,000 to individuals, partnerships, unincor-
porated associations, and corporations whose property was seized or demanded
by the Alien Property Custodian during the existence of the war.
The President, by an Executive order dated May 16, 1923, has vested in the
Alien Property Custodian all the power and authority conferred upon him by
the said amendment pertaining to every claim in which the amount to be paid
does not exceed in money or other property the value of $10,000.
The settlement of war claims act of 1928 was approved on March 10, of said
year, and amends the trading with the enemy act and the act of March 4, 1923,
by authorizing the custodian to return to German nationals 80 per cent and to
Austrian and Hungarian nationals 100 per cent, when the Austrian and Hun-
garian Governments shall deposit a sufficient sum to pay the awards of the
Mixed Claims Commission. An Executive order of the President authorized
the custodian to make such returns without submission to the Attorney General
or the President.
UNITED STATES TARIFF COMMISSION
The United States Tariff Commission was created by act of the Congress
approved September 8, 1916, and was reorganized under the provisions of the
tariff act approved June 17, 1930. The commission consists of six members,
aM cc cfu ea ha
480 C ongressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, for terms of six years
each, one term expiring each year. The principal office of the commission is by
law in the city of Washington, but the commission may meet and exercise all its
powers at any other place, and may, by one or more of its members, or by desig-
nated agents, prosecute any necessary inquiry in any part of the United States
or in any foreign country. It maintains an office at the port of New York. The
commission has an official seal which is judicially noticed.
The commission is required to put at the disposal of the President, the Com-
mittee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, and the Committee
on Finance of the Senate, whenever requested, all information at its command;
to make such investigations and reports as may be requested by the President
or by either of said committees or by either branch of the Congress; and to
report its activities annually to the Congress on the first Monday in December.
It is the duty of the commission—
(1) To investigate the administration and fiscal and industrial effects of the
customs laws of the United States; the relations between rates of duty on raw
materials and on finished or partly finished products; the effects of ad valorem
and specific duties and of compound specific and ad valorem duties; all questions
relative to the arrangement of schedules and classification of articles in the tariff
schedules; and the operation of the customs laws, including their relation to the
Federal revenues and the industries and labor of the country.
(2) To investigate the tariff relations between the United States and foreign
countries; commercial treaties; preferential provisions; economic alliances; the
effect of export bounties and preferential transportation rates; the volume of
importations compared with domestic production and consumption; and condi-
tions, causes, and effects relating to competition of foreign industries with those
of the United States, including dumping and cost of production.
(3) To investigate organizations and arrangements in Europe similar to the
Paris Economy Pact.
(4) To ascertain conversion costs and costs of production in the principal
growing, producing, or manufacturing centers of the United States, whenever
practicable in the opinion of the commission, and to obtain in foreign countries
such costs of articles imported into the United States, whenever in the opinion
of the commission such costs are necessary for comparison with conversion costs
or costs of production in the United States and can be reasonably ascertained;
and to ascertain all other facts which will show the differences affecting competi-
tion between articles of the United States and imported articles in the principal
domestic markets. 3
The commission is directed also to select and describe articles representative of
the classes or kinds of articles imported into the United States similar to or com-
parable with articles of domestic production; to obtain samples of such articles
when deemed advisable; to ascertain the import costs of such foreign articles;
and to ascertain the selling prices of such domestic articles in the principal
growing, producing, or manufacturing centers of the United States. :
Sections 336, 337, and 338 of the tariff act approved June 17, 1930, contain
special provisions for the modification of existing duties and for the imposition of
special duties by Executive proclamation under certain conditions and within
stated limitations in accordance with the legislative principles defined in those
sections.
Section 336 provides that the commission, under such reasonable procedure,
rules, and regulations as it may deem necessary, shall investigate the differences
in the costs of production of any domestic article and of any like or similar foreign
article and shall report to the President the results of such investigation and its
findings with respect to such differences. If the commission finds that the duties
fixed by the statute do not equalize the differences in costs as ascertained by its
investigation, it shall specify in its report such increase or decrease, not exceeding
50 per cent, of the statutory rate (including any necessary change in classification)
as it finds shown by the investigation to be necessary to equalize such differences.
If the commission shall find, however, that such proceeding in respect of an ad
valorem rate of duty will not equalize the ascertained differences, it shall so state
in its report to the President and shall specify therein such ad valorem rates based
upon the American selling price, as elsewhere defined in the act, of the domestic
article as it finds shown by the investigation to be necessary to equalize such
differences. No such rate, however, may be decreased by more than 50 per cent,
nor shall it be increased. Any specified increase or decrease of a rate so reported
by the commission, if approved and proclaimed by the President, shall take effect
commencing 30 days after such proclamation. The section prescribes the ele-
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MISCELLANEOUS Offical Duties 481
ments to be taken into consideration in ascertaining such differences in costs of
production; prohibits the transfer of an article from the dutiable list to the free
list or from the free list to the dutiable list; and provides for the modification or
termination of any increase or decrease so proclaimed.
The commission is required, in the course of its investigations under section
336, to give reasonable public notice thereof and to afford reasonable opportunity
for parties interested to be present, to produce evidence, and to be heard at such
earings.
The commission is authorized under section 337 to investigate unfair methods
of competition and unfair acts in the importation of articles into the United
States or in their sale after importation. When the findings and recommenda-
tions of the commission, upon its investigation of such acts, justify the President
in doing so, he is authorized to exclude such articles from entry into the United
States, such refusal of entry to remain in effect until otherwise ordered by the
President.
The testimony in every investigation under the provisions of this section is
required to be reduced to writing, and with the findings of the commission con-
stitutes the official record in each case. A copy of the findings is required to be
sent to the importer or consignee of the articles affected thereby and shall be
conclusive, subject only to rehearing by consent of the commission or to appeal
on questions of law only to the United States Court of Customs and Patent
Appeals, whose judgment shall be final.
Under the provisions of section 338 the commission is required to ascertain
and at all times to be informed whether any foreign country discriminates against
the commerce of the United States, whether by imposing upon it unreasonable
charges or regulations not equally imposed upon other countries; or by laws,
administrative regulations, or practices in regard to customs, port charges,
classifications, or other like requirements which may be to the disadvantage of the
commerce of the United States in such country or in any other foreign country.
The commission is required to report to the President with its recommendations
any such discriminations which it may find to exist, and upon such findings,
when confirmed by him, the President is authorized to specify and declare upon
articles wholly or in part the growth or product of any such country such new and
additional duties as will offset such burdens, or he may exclude from importation
articles from such country. Such new or additional duties are limited, however,
to not to exceed 50 per cent ad valorem. Articles imported contrary to the provi-
sions of this section are subject to seizure and forfeiture to the United States.
UNITED STATES EMPLOYEES’ COMPENSATION
COMMISSION
(Created by the act of Congress approved September 7, 1916)
The act of Congress creating the United States Employees’ Compensation
Commission assures compensation, including reasonable medical and hospital
treatment, to all civil employees (unclassified as well as classified) of the Federal
Government, employees of the District of Columbia except firemen and police-
men, and officers and enlisted men of the Naval Reserve on authorized training
duty in time of peace, who sustain personal injuries while in the performance of
their duties, but no compensation shall be paid if the injury is caused by the willful
misconduct of the employee or by his intention to bring about the injury or death
of himself or of another, or if intoxication of the injured employee is the proximate
cause of the injury or death. To obtain the medical and hospital treatment, the
employee shall be sent to the nearest United States medical officer or hospital,
but if this is not practicable, to the nearest physician or hospital designated by
the United States Employees’ Compensation Commission, or when neither of
these is available, to the nearest physician or hospital.
The monthly compensation for total disability shall not be more than $116.66
nor less than $58.33, unless the employee’s monthly pay is less than the latter
amount, in which case his compensation shall be the full amount of his monthly
pay.
Payment shall be made for partial disability equal to 66%; per cent of the dif-
ference between the employee’s monthly pay and his earning capacity after the
disability.
In case of death the compensation shall be paid the widow or widower, to
dependent children under the age of 18 years, to dependent parents or grand-
157297°—73-1—1ST BED——32
482 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
parents, and to other dependents under certain conditions. All claims for com-
pensation must be filed within one year.
By Executive orders the administration of the compensation act so far as it
relates to the Panama Canal employees and employees of the Alaskan Engineer-
ing Commission has been placed under the heads of those organizations.
The commission also administers the longshoremen’s and harbor workers’
compensation act, approved March 4, 1927. This act covers employees in private
industries engaged in maritime employment on the navigable waters of the
United States (including dry docks) who sustain injury or death arising out of,
and in course of, employment. These employees are mostly longshoremen
and men engaged in repair work on vessels. It does not include the master or
members of the erews of vessels, nor persons engaged by the master to load or
unload or repair vessels under 18 tons. The compensation features of the act
were effective July 1, 1927. Compensation is paid by the employer and the cost
of administration by the United States.
On and after July 1, 1927, every employer having employees coming under the
provisions of the act is required to secure payment of compensation by insurance
in a company authorized by the commission or self-insurance authorized by the
commission. A heavy penalty is provided for failure to secure compensation.
A severe penalty is also provided for the employing of any stevedoring firm
which does not present a certificate of compliance.
The commission is required to make the rules and regulations under this act,
prescribe forms, establish compensation districts, and appoint and assign deputy
commissioners to such districts. The deputy commissioners are required to issue
certificates of compliance with insurance provisions, enforce requirements as to
reports and penalties, regulate medical and legal fees, hold hearings when nec-
essary or demanded by either party, make investigations, allow or disallow claims,
examine settlements when hearings are not required to see that the injured
employee has received the benefits of the law, take action in case of default in i
payment, and certify records upon appeal to the courts. Appeal to the Federal
Couriy from the decision of the deputy commissioner may be had upon questions
of law.
Compensation for total disability is two-thirds of the average weekly pay, not |
to exceed a maximum of $25 per week, with a minimum of $8 per week. There |
is a schedule of benefits for permanent partial disability. Death benefits are
payable to the widow until remarriage and to children until they reach the age
of 18, also to other dependents under certain circumstances. Reasonable funeral
expenses not to exceed $200 are provided. The total compensation payable for
injury or death in any one case shall not exceed the sum of $7,500.
The act approved May 17, 1928, which became effective July 1, 1928, made
applicable to employers and employees in the District of Columbia the provisions
of the longshoremen’s and harbor workers’ compensation act, thus extending the
principles of workmen’s compensation to employment in the District of Columbia.
The act excludes from its benefits the master and a member of a crew of any
vessel, such men having the rights known as maintenance and cure and the rights
given by the Federal employers’ liability act; the employees of railroads when
engaged in interstate or foreign commerce who are also specifically provided for
by the Federal employers’ liability act, and employees engaged in domestic
service or agriculture, and those engaged in casual employment not in the usual
course of the trade, business, occupation, or profession of the employer.
Compensation is paid by the employer through an insurance carrier authorized
by the commission or direct as a self-insurer under conditions prescribed by the
commission.
EMERGENCY CONSERVATION WORK
By virtue of the authority vested in the President by the act of Congress
entitled ‘““An Act For the Relief of Unemployment through the Performance of |
Useful Public Work and for other Purposes’, approved March 31, 1933 (Public
No. 5, 73d Cong.), and for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of said act,
the President by Executive Order No. 6101, dated April 5, 1933, created an
independent establishment for Emergency Conservation Work and appointed a
director therefor. :
The director functions in an administrative capacity, and all projects involving
the expenditure of funds in connection with Emergency Conservation Work
receives his consideration and approval. He is assisted by an advisory council
composed of representatives appointed by the Secretary of War, the Secretary of
Agriculture, the Secretary of Interior, and the Secretary of Labor, The field
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 483
program of the Emergency Conservation Work is executed by the referred to Departments, and involves the enrollment and employment of personnel, pro- curement of supplies and equipment for use in connection with the carrying on and accomplishment of such works of a public nature as are mentioned in the referred to act.
VETERANS’ ADMINISTRATION
The Veterans’ Administration was authorized to be established as an independ-
ent agency under the direction of the President, by Public No. 536, Seventy-
first Congress, approved July 3, 1930, which further authorized the President by
Executive order to consolidate and coordinate under a single control all Govern-
ment agencies having to do with the administration of laws relating to the relief
of and other benefits provided by law for former members of the military and
naval forces. By Executive order of July 21, 1930, there was established the
Veterans’ Administration and consolidated therein the Bureau of Pensions (pre-
viously under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior), the United States
Veterans’ Bureau, and the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, the
latter now known as the National Homes Service.
The Administrator of Veterans’ Affairs is charged with the control, direction,
and management of all agencies and activities comprising the Veterans’ Adminis-
tration, and all final decisions or orders of any agency of the Veterans’ Adminis-
tration are, on appeal, subject to review by him. The Administrator of Veterans’
Affairs is also chairman of the Federal Board of Hospitalization, which board is
advisory to the President in all matters having to do with the need for, the location
of, and expenditures on account of increased Government facilities for the hospi-
talization and domiciliary care of all veterans of the United States.
The Veterans’ Administration is responsible for extending relief to veterans of
the World War and their dependents in accordance with the various acts of Con-
gress passed for the benefit of these veterans. These laws include benefits of
Government insurance, compensation for death and disability directly resulting
from military service, adjusted compensation, emergency officer retirement, medi-
cal and hospital relief, and disability allowance for World War veterans 25 per
cent or more permanently disabled without reference to military service as pro-
vided by the statute of July 3, 1930 (Public No. 522, 71st Cong.). Regional
offices or combined regional offices and hospitals are located in every State, except
Delaware, to facilitate the granting of the benefits provided. In addition the
Veterans’ Administration is also responsible for the operation and maintenance
of 61 hospitals located throughout the United States and the construction of such
additional hospital facilities as may be authorized by the Congress. The Admin-
istration is also responsible for the hospital treatment of veterans of all other wars
and expeditions, and is responsible for the examination and adjudication of all
claims arising under laws passed by Congress granting pensions on account of
service in the Military and Naval Establishments of the United States prior to
April 6, 1917, and after July 2, 1921, and claims for reimbursement, for expenses
of the last sickness and burial of deceased pensioners. This Administration is
also charged with the adjudication of claims for annuities, refunds, and allow-
ances arising under the acts providing retirement for employees in the classified
civil service, and employees of the Panama Canal and the Panama Railroad Co.,
on the Isthmus of Panama, who are citizens of the United States.
The Veterans’ Administration is also responsible for the maintenance and oper-
ation of 10 Veterans’ Administration homes and the domiciliary care and treat-
ment of all members admitted thereto. All persons who served in the armed
forces of the Government and who received an honorable discharge from their
last enlistment, and who are disabled by disease or wound to such an extent as
to incapacitate them for earning a living, are eligible for care in the homes.
The foregoing description of functions is subject to such regulations as the
President may approve under the authority of Public No. 2, Seventy-third Congress.
FEDERAL BOARD FOR VOCATIONAL EDUCATION
The Federal Board for Vocational Education was created by act of Congress
approved February 23, 1917. This act makes continuing appropriations to be
expended in the States under State plans for the promotion of vocational educa-
tion. For the fiscal year 1917-18 the amount appropriated was $1,860,000, and
the appropriation increased each year until in 1925-26 it reached $7,367,000,
484 : Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
which sum was provided annually thereafter. An act approved February 5, 1929,
authorized an additional appropriation of $250,000 for agriculture and $250,000
for home economics for the fiscal year 1930, and for each year thereafter, for
four years, a sum exceeding by $250,000 the appropriation of the preceding year
for the promotion of vocational education in each of these two fields. The money
appropriated under these acts is to be allotted to the States on the basis of rural,
farming, urban, or total population as designated in the acts, for the promotion
of vocational education in agriculture, trades and industries, and home economics,
and for the preparation of teachers of vocational subjects. Utilization of allot-
ments is authorized upon condition that for each dollar of Federal money ex-
pended the State or local community, or both, shall expend at least an equal
amount for the same purpose.
The duties imposed upon the Board by the national vocational education act |
are of a twofold character: On the one hand, as representative of the Government
the Federal Board cooperates with State boards for voeational education in pro-
moting vocational education; and, on the other, as a research agency it is required
to make, or cause to have made, studies, investigations, and reports to aid the
States in developing their programs. As representative of the Government, it
examines the plans submitted by the State boards, presenting in the case of each
State the scheme of vocational education to be conducted by the State, and ap-
proves plans found to be in conformity with the provisions and purposes of the
act. It ascertains annually whether the several States are using or are prepared
to use the money received by them in accordance with the provisions of the Statute
and each year it certifies to the Secretary of the Treasury the States which have
complied with the provisions of the act, together with the amount which each !
State is entitled to receive. It is expressly required to make studies, investiga- i
tions, and reports dealing with occupational processes and educational require-
ments for workers and apprentices, and with problems of administration of voca-
tional schools and of courses of instruction in vocational subjects, in the several
employment.
A large part of the work of the Board’s staff members consists of advising with
and rendering direct assistance to State boards for vocational education in develop-
ing more effective and efficient programs of vocational education.
The Federal Board for Vocational Education is designated as the administra-
tive agency, also, of the civilian vocational rehabilitation act, approved June 2,
1920. By this act the Federal Government agrees to cooperate with the States |
in rehabilitating and restoring to remunerative employment any persons disabled
in industry or otherwise. Under this act the duties imposed upon the Federal
Board include the making of rules and regulations appropriate for carrying out
the purposes of the act; cooperation with the States in the promotion of voca-
tional rehabilitation of disabled persons; examination of State plans and their
approval, if in conformity with the provisions of the act; and cooperation in this
work with public and private agencies. The Federal Board must ascertain
annually whether the States are properly using Federal funds and must certify,
on or before the first day of January of each year, to the Secretary of the Treasury
those States which have accepted and complied with the provisions of the law,
designating the amount of money which each State is entitled to receive. To
aid the States, the Federal Board is authorized to make studies and investigations
of the vocational rehabilitation of disabled persons and their placement in suitable
or gainful occupations. Acts authorizing continuation of appropriations for this
purpose i approved June 5, 1924, June 9, 1930, and June 30, 1932 (effective
July 1, 1933).
An act approved March 10, 1924, extended the benefits of the vocational educa-
tion and rehabilitation acts to the Territory of Hawaii and authorized annual
appropriations for this purpose.
An act approved February 23, 1929, extended to the District of Columbia the
program for rehabilitating disabled persons. This act provided that the Board
should be the active operating agency in the District.
. An act of March 3, 1931, extended the vocational education and rehabilitation
acts to the island of Puerto Rico, and authorized annual appropriations for this
purpose.
COMMISSION ON NAVY YARDS AND NAVAL STATIONS
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fields of agricultural, trade and industrial, home economics, and commercial |
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Appointed by direction of the President to carry out provisions of the act of
Congress, approved August 29, 1916, relative to the establishment of navy
yards, naval stations, and submarine and aviation bases.
MISCELLANEOUS : Official Duties 485
NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR AERONAUTICS
The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics was established by act of
Congress approved March 3, 1915 (U. 8S. C,, title 50, sec. 151), and the member-
ship increased from 12 to 15 members by act approved March 2, 1929 (U. S. C.
Supp. V, title 50, sec. 151 (a)). Its membership is appointed by the President
and consists of two representatives each of the War and Navy Departments from
the offices in charge of military and naval aeronautics, one representative each
of the Smithsonian Institution, the United States Weather Bureau, and the
United States Bureau of Standards, together with eight additional persons
“acquainted with the needs of aeronautical science, either civil or military, or
skilled in aeronautical engineering or its allied sciences.”” All the members, as
such, serve without compensation.
The law provides that this committee shall “supervise and direct the scientific
study of the problems of flight, with a view to their practical solution, * * *”
and also “direct and conduct research and experiment in aeronautics.”
Under rules and regulations formulated by the committee and approved by
the President, technical subcommittees, organized along lines similar to the
main committee, and with members serving as such without compensation, pre-
pare programs of fundamental research in aeronautics. In order that research
programs may be of maximum value, provision is made to keep the subcom-
mittees informed as to aeronautical researches conducted by the more progressive
foreign nations.
The office of aeronautical intelligence was established in the early part of 1918
as an integral branch of the committee’s activities. It serves as the depository
and distributing agency for the scientific and technical data on aeronautics com-
prising not only the results of the committee’s researches, but also the scientific
and technical information collected by the committee from governmental and
private agencies in this country and abroad. A technical assistant in Europe,
with headquarters at the American embassy in Paris, visits governmental and
private agencies in Europe to collect, not merely results of researches, but also
first-hand information as to researches proposed and in progress.
Briefly, the general functions of this committee may be stated as follows:
First. This committee, in the field of aeronautical research, coordinates the
needs of the various branches of the Government concerned.
Second. The committee approves research programs which include projects
initiated by the committee, in addition to those proposed by the Army and
Navy, coordinated and broadened so as most efficiently and economically to
yield results of maximum value.
Third. The committee maintains and operates the Langley Memorial Aero-
nautical Laboratory, comprising a group of 11 structures erected at Langley
Field, Va., on ground set aside for the committee’s use by the War Department.
There the committee conducts under its own direct control the fundamental
scientific researches in aeronautics to meet the needs of the Army and the Navy,
and to enable the United States to keep abreast of foreign nations in the technical
development of military and civil aircraft.
Fourth. The committee supplies to the governmental agencies concerned the
results of its researches and, through its office of aeronautical intelligence, dis-
seminates such as is not confidential to aircraft manufacturers, universities
teaching aeronautical engineering, and also to the public. :
Fifth. The committee holds itself at the service of the President, the Congress,
and the executive departments for the consideration of any scientific or special
problem in the field of aeronautics which may be referred to it. In the exercise
of its functions as an advisory committee it has made special reports to the
President and to the Congress regarding the air mail service, the development
of a system of transcontinental airways and landing fields, the extension of
aerological and weather report service, Federal regulation of air navigation, the
development of airships, the production of helium, and the development of
aviation generally for military and civil purposes.
Sixth. The committee may also, under certain restrictions, conduct special
researches for and at the expense of individuals, firms, associations, or corpora-
tions within the United States.
The foregoing duties and functions of the committee, exercised under its
organic act, were supplemented in 1926. Section 10 (r) of the act of Congress
approved July 2, 1926 (U. 8. C., title 10, sec. 310 (r)), creating an aeronautical
patents and design board, consisting of Assistant Secretaries of War, Navy, and
Commerce, and amended March 3, 1927 (U. 8S. Supp. V, title 10, sec. 310 (r)),
486 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
gave to the committee the additional duty of considering the merits of aeronautical
invention submitted to any branch of the Government and of making recom-
mendations thereon to the aeronautical patents and design board.
THE INTERNATIONAL JOINT COMMISSION
The International Joint Commission was created by the treaty between the
United States and Great Britain signed January 11, 1909, the object of which is
“to prevent disputes regarding the use of boundary waters and to settle all
questions which are now pending between the United States and the Dominion of
Canada involving the rights, obligations, or interests of either in relation to the
other or to the inhabitants of the other, along their common frontier, and to
make provision for the adjustment and settlement of all such questions as may
hereafter arise.”
The commission consists of six members, three appointed by the President of
the United States and three appointed by His Majesty on recommendation of the
Government of Canada. It was organized in 1911, adopted rules of procedure,
and established permanent offices in Washington and Ottawa. It has jurisdie-
tion over all cases involving the use or obstruction or diversion of boundary
waters between the United States and Canada, of waters flowing from boundary
waters, and of waters at a lower level than the boundary in rivers flowing across
the boundary.
Under Article IX of the treaty the International Joint Commission also is con-
stituted an investigatory body for the purpose of examining into and reporting
upon any questions or matters of difference arising along the common frontier
that shall be referred to it from time to time whenever either the Government of
the United States or the Government of Canada shall request that such questions
or matters of difference be so referred.
Under Article X of the treaty any questions or matters of difference arising
between the high contracting parties involving the rights, obligations, or interests
of the United States or of the Dominion of Canada, either in relation to each
other or to their respective inhabitants, may be referred for decision to the Inter-
national Joint Commission, it being understood that on the part of the United
States such action will be by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and
on the part of Great Britain with the consent of the Government of Canada.
Under Article VI of the treaty the commission is charged with the measurement
and apportionment from time to time of the waters of the St. Mary and Milk
Rivers and their tributaries, these rivers lying partly in Montana and partly in
Alberta and Saskatchewan, and being largely used for irrigation purposes in both
countries.
INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED
STATES, ALASKA, AND CANADA
For defining, marking, and maintaining the boundary between the United States, Alaska, and Canada
The International Boundary Commission, United States, Alaska, and Canada,
was created under the provisions of the several boundary treaties between the
United States and Great Britain, for the purpose of defining, marking, and .
maintaining the demarcation of the international boundary line between the
United States and Canada and between Alaska and Canada, as follows:
1. Southeastern Alaska, or the boundary between Alaska and British Columbia.
Length, 893 miles.
Article VI of the convention between the United States and Great Britain
providing for the settlement of questions between the two countries with respect
to the boundary line between the Territory of Alaska and the British possessions
in North America, signed at Washington January 24, 1903, stipulated that
when the high contracting parties shall have received the decision of the tribunal
upon the questions submitted as provided in the foregoing articles, which decision
shall be final and hinding upon all parties, they will at once appoint, each on its
own behalf, one or more scientific experts, who shall with all convenient speed
proceed to lay down the boundary line in conformity with such decision.
2. The boundary between Alaska and Canada, along the one hundred and
forty-first meridian. Length, 647 miles.
The convention between the United States and Great Britain, signed at
Washington April 21, 1906, provided for the surveying and marking out upon
the ground of the one hundred and forty-first meridian of west longitude where
said meridian forms the boundary line between Alaska and the British possessions
MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 487
of North America. The convention stipulated that each Government shall ap-
point one commissioner, with whom may be associated such surveyors, astron-
omers, and other assistants as each Government may elect, who shall locate the
boundary line, erect the necessary boundary marks, make the necessary surveys,
and file duplicate records with their respective Governments.
3. The United States and Canada boundary from the Atlantic to the Pacific
Sern 1 the exception of the St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes. Length,
2,697 miles.
Articles I, II, III, V, VI, VII, and VIII, of the treaty between the United
States and Great Britain, entitled ‘‘ Canadian International Boundary,” signed at
Washington April 11, 1908, stipulated that each of the high contracting parties
shall appoint without delay an expert geographer or surveyor as commissioner,
and the commissioners so appointed shall jointly execute the necessary surveys,
repair existing boundary marks, erect additional boundary marks, and lay down
the boundary line in accordance with the existing treaties upon quadruplicate
sets of accurate modern charts, prepared or adopted by them for that purpose,
and that said charts so marked shall be filed with each Government, and said
commissioners shall also prepare, in duplicate, and file with each Government a
joint report or reports, describing in detail the course of the boundary so marked
by them, and the character and location of the several monuments and boundary
marks and ranges marking it.
4. Article IV of the treaty between the United States and Great Britain in
respect to Canada, signed at Washington February 24, 1925, which provides for
the maintenance of an effective boundary line between the United States and the
Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Dominion of Canada, author-
izes and directs the commissioners appointed under the provisions of the treaty of
April 11, 1908, to inspect the various portions of the boundary line between the
United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Domin-
ion of Canada at such times as they shall deem necessary; to repair all damaged
monuments and buoys; to relocate and rebuild monuments which have been
destroyed; to keep the boundary vistas open; to move boundary monuments to
new sites and establish such additional monuments and buoys as they shall
deem desirable; to maintain at all times an effective boundary line between the
United States and the Dominion of Canada and between Alaska and the Domin-
ion of Canada as defined by the present treaty and treaties heretofore concluded
or hereafter to be concluded; and to determine the location of any point of the
boundary line which may become necessary in the settlement of any question
that may arise between the two Governments.
INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARY COMMISSION, UNITED
STATES AND MEXICO
The International Boundary Commission, United States and Mexico, was
created pursuant to the provisions of the treaty concluded March 1, 1889, with
exclusive jurisdiction to examine and decide all differences or questions arising
on that portion of the frontier between the United States of America and the
United States of Mexico where for a distance of 1,321 miles the Rio Grande, and
for a distance of 19 miles the Colorado River form the boundary line as originally
established under the treaties of 1848 and 1853, and further regulated by the
treaties of 1884 and 1905, growing out of changes in the beds of, or works con-
structed in, these rivers, or any other cause affecting the boundary line. Matters
pertaining to the practical location and monumentation of the overland boundary
of 673 miles between El Paso, Tex., and the Pacific Ocean, as well as questions
for investigation and report touching flood-control measures along the interna-
tional boundary, are also, from time to time, submitted to the commission upon
concurrence through an exchange of notes between the respective Governments.
The commission is empowered to suspend the construction of works of any charac-
ter along the Rio Grande and Colorado River that contravene existing treaties;
erect and maintain monuments along the water boundary; make necessary sur-
veys of changes brought by force of current in both rivers caused by either avul-
sion, accretion, or erosion; mark and eliminate bancos caused by such changes;
survey, place, and maintain monuments on all international bridges between the
two countries. The commission is authorized to call for papers of information
relative to boundary matters from either country; hold meetings at any point
questions may arise; summon witnesses and take testimony in accordance with
rules of the courts of the respective countries. If both commissioners shall agree
to a decision their judgment shall be binding on both Governments, unless one of
488 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
them shall disapprove it within one month from the date it shall have been pro-
nounced.
The American section of the commission was, by the act approved June 30,
1932 (Public, No. 212, 72d Cong.), charged with the exercise and performance of
the powers, duties, and functions of the American section, International Water
Commission, United States and Mexico, which was abolished by the terms of
such act, effective July 1, 1932. The American section of the International
Boundary Commission is thus charged with cooperating with a similar body repre-
senting the United States of Mexico in an investigation, study, and report regard-
ing the equitable use of waters of the three major international streams of the
southwestern frontier, namely, the Lower Rio Grande, the Lower Colorado, and
the Tia Juana Rivers, for the purpose of securing information on which to base
a treaty with the Government of Mexico relative to the use of the waters of these
rivers. In addition to the development and analysis of data pertaining to irri-
gated areas and the extent of beneficial use of these waters generally, there are
operated by the commission, over some 1,500 miles of the Rio Grande, its tribu-
taries and diversions, 55 stream gaging stations embracing the measurement of
the run-off from over 55,000 square miles of the drainage area of the Rio Grande
within the United States between Fort Quitman, Tex., and the Gulf of Mexico,
and incaxiy one-half of the pertinent drainage area in Mexico between those
points.
BOARD OF SURVEYS AND MAPS OF THE FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT
The Board of Surveys and Maps of the Federal Government was created by
Executive order of December 30, 1919, for the purpose of making recommenda-
tions to the several departments or to the President for coordinating all map-
making and surveying activities of the Government and to settle all questions
at issue between executive departments relating to surveys and maps in so far
as their decisions do not conflict with existing laws. Meetings are held at stated
intervals, to which representatives of the map-using public are invited for con-
ference and advice. A central information office has been established in the
United States Geological Survey for collecting, classifying, and furnishing infor-
mation concerning all map and survey data available in the several Government
departments and from other sources.
THE UNITED STATES SECTION OF THE INTER-AMERICAN
HIGH COMMISSION
The United States Section of the Inter-American High Commission received
legal recognition in an act approved February 7, 1916. It consists of the eight
representatives of the United States on the commission. There are correspond-
ing sections in the Republics of Central and South America and the West Indies.
The commission was organized on the recommendation of the First Pan American
Financial Conference held at Washington, May 24-29, 1915. It aims to bring
about substantial uniformity in the commercial law and administrative regula-
tions of the American Republics and more stable financial relations between
Latin America and the United States, and, in general, to carry out the recom-
mendations of the First and Second Pan American Financial Conferences, and
cooperate in the formulation and effectuation of the program of the International
Conferences of American States in so far as it bears directly on the purposes and
work of the commission. The second financial conference took place in Wash-
ington, January 19-24, 1920. The commission’s work is directed by a central
executive council, which is composed of the chairman, vice chairman, and secre-
tary of the section which represents the country selected as headquarters of the
commission for the interval between any two meetings. The meeting held at
Buenos Aires, April 3-12, 1916, selected Washington as headquarters until the
second meeting of the entire commission would take place. The officers of the
United States section, therefore, now constitute the central executive council.
FEDERAL POWER COMMISSION
The act of Congress approved June 23, 1930 (46 Stat. 797), amending the
Federal water power act (41 Stat. 1063), by reorganization established the Fed-
eral Power Commission, to be composed of five commissioners to be appointed
by the President by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and authorized
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 489
the commission so constituted to appoint a secretary, a chief engineer, a general
counsel, a solicitor, and a chief accountant, and such other officers and employees
as are necessary in the execution of its functions. The reorganization became
effective December 22, 1930.
The commission has general administrative control over all power sites on
the navigable waters and on the public lands and reservations of the United
States, and over the location, design, construction, maintenance, and operation
of power projects upon such sites, an investigation being required in the case of
every application to determine whether the project proposed is best adapted
to a comprehensive scheme of development of the water resources of the region,
not only for power development, but also for such related uses as irrigation,
navigation, flood control, and water supply. The act requires that there shall
be sufficient inspection and supervision of project works to assure their adequate
maintenance and efficient operation, and that the commission shall ascertain
the amounts necessary to be set aside to cover depreciation and to make necessary
renewals and replacements. The act requires the establishment by the com-
mission of a system of public-utility accounting, to be made applicable to all
licensees, with provisions for determining and reporting cost of projects, for
creation and disposition of depreciation and amortization reserves, for allocation
of earnings to project and other property, and for all the other items which
enter into modern utility accounting practice. The commission is charged with
the duty of regulating rates, service, and securities in intrastate business wherever
the several States have not provided agencies for undertaking such duties them-
selves and in interstate business whenever the individual States have not the
power to act or can not agree.
The commission is authorized to make determinations whether the value of
lands reserved for power purposes will be injured or destroyed for purposes of
power development by location, selection, or entry under the public land laws,
with reservation of power rights to the United States; to determine the value of
power available at Government dams, and the advisability of its development
for public purposes; and to fix annual rental charges for reimbursing the costs
of administration and for recompensing the United States for the use of its lands.
and other property.
In cases where a licensee makes use of a headwater improvement, the com-
mission determines the proper share of the annual costs to be paid by the licensee
benefited; and when any project already constructed is brought under license,
the commission determines its fair value.
The commission is authorized to conduct general investigations of power re-
sources and of their relation to interstate and foreign commerce, cooperating
with State and National Governments in its investigations, and to publish the
results of its work in special and annual reports; and it is required to make
certain special investigations and report thereon to Congress.
UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD
The United States Board on Geographic Names was created by Executive
order of September 4, 1890; by Executive order of August 10, 1906, the official
title was changed to United States Geographic Board. That part of the latter
order enlarging duties was rescinded by Executive order, December 30, 1919.
The board passes on all unsettled questions concerning geographic names which
arise in the departments as well as determines, changes, and fixes place names
within the United States and its insular possessions, and all names suggested by
any officer or employee of the Government shall be referred to the board for
consideration and approval before publication. The decisions of the board are
to be accepted by all the departments of the Government as standard authority.
On November 8, 1929, the President ordered that ‘For the purpose of securing
uniformity of style and form and for the better safeguarding of the texts of
proclamations and Executive orders it is directed that—
“3. The spelling of geographic names should conform to the most recent deci-
sions of the United States Geographic Board.” (See Executive orders of Sep-
tember 4, 1890, and January 23, 1906.)
ROCK CREEK AND POTOMAC PARKWAY COMMISSION
The Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Commission was created by section
22 of the public buildings act approved March 4, 1913, for the purpose of pre-
venting the pollution and obstruction of Rock Creek and of connecting Potomac
490 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
Park with the Zoological Park and Rock Creek Park, and was authorized and
directed to acquire by purchase, condemnation, or otherwise, such land and
premises in the District of Columbia shown on the map on file in the office of
the engineer commissioner of the District of Columbia, dated May 17, 1911,
and lying on both sides of Rock Creek, including such portion of the creek bed
as may be in private ownership between the Zoological Park and Potomac Park.
Said map was subsequently revised and is now on file in the office of the executive
and disbursing officer and known as the map of the Rock Creek and Potomac
Parkway, dated May, 1923.
The land acquired is a part of the park system of the District of Columbia,
under the Director of Public Buildings and Public Parks.
THE COMMISSION OF FINE ARTS
By act approved May 17, 1910, Congress created as a permanent body the
National Commission of Fine Arts. The commission is ‘composed of seven
well-qualified judges of the fine arts,” who are appointed by the President and
serve for a period of four years each, and until their successors are appointed
and qualified.
Under the provisions of this organic act Congress directs that ‘It shall be the
duty of the commission to advise upon the location of statues, fountains, and
monuments in the public squares, streets, and parks in the District of Columbia,
and upon the selection of models for statues, fountains, and monuments erected
under the authority of the United States and upon the selection of the artists for
the execution of same. It shall be the duty of the officer charged by law to
determine such questions in each case to call for such advice. The foregoing
provisions of this act shall not apply to the Capitol Building of the United States
and the building of the Library of Congress. The commission shall also advise
generally upon questions of art when required to do so by the President or by
any committee of either House of Congress.”
By Executive order dated October 25, 1910, the President directed that ‘‘ Plans
for no public building to be erected in the District of Columbia for the General
Government shall be hereafter finally approved by the officer duly authorized
until after such officer shall have submitted the plans to the Commission of Fine
Arts created under the act of Congress of May 17, 1910, for its comment and
advice.
On February 2, 1912, the President directed the commission to advise the
officer in charge of public buildings and grounds in regard to the improvement of
any of the grounds in the city of Washington under his charge whenever such
advioe is asked for by that officer. That officer now uniformly consults the com-
mission regarding deteils of the development of all the parks and reservations
under his control.
On November 28, 1913, the President issued the following Executive order:
“It is hereby ordered that whenever new structures are to be erected in the Dis-
trict of Columbia under the direction of the Federal Government which affect
in any important way the appearance of the city, or whenever questions involving
matters of art and with which the Federal Government is concerned are to be
determined, final action shall not be taken until such plans and questions have
been submitted to the Commission of Fine Arts designated under the act of
Congress of May 17, 1910, for comment and advice.”
On July 28, 1921, the President issued the following Executive order: ‘It is
hereby ordered that essential matters relating to the design of medals, insignia,
and coins produced by the executive departments, also the design of statues,
fountains, and monuments, and all important plans for parks and all public
buildings, constructed by the executive departments or the District of Columbia,
which in any essential way affect the appearance of the city of Washington, or
the District of Columbia, shall be submitted to the Commission of Fine Arts for
advice as to the merits of such designs before the executive officer having charge
of the same shall approve thereof.”
In order that the development of the District of Columbia may proceed
harmoniously both under Federal and District jurisdictions, the President has
requested the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia to consult
the Commission of Fine Arts on matters of art falling under their jurisdiction
and control.
The duties of the commission, therefore, now embrace advising upon the loca-
tion of statues, fountains, and monuments in the public squares, streets, and
parks in the District of Columbia; upon the selection of models for statues,
MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 491
fountains, and monuments erected under the authority of the United States,
and the selection of the artists for their execution; also for medals, insignia, and
coins; upon the plans and designs for public structures and parks in the District
of Columbia, as well as upon all questions involving matters of art with which
the Federal Government is concerned. In addition, the commission advises upon
general questions of art whenever requested to do so by the President or any
committee of Congress.
Congress has stipulated in many recent enactments that the plans for certain
designated buildings, monuments, etc., must be approved by the commission
before they can be accepted by the Government. :
By act approved May 16, 1930, Congress has given the commission control
over certain portions of the District of ry in the matter of private build-
ings, under what is known as the Shipstead-Luce Act.
NATIONAL CAPITAL PARK AND PLANNING COMMISSION
The National Capital Park Commission was created by the act approved
June 6, 1924 (Public, No. 202, 68th Cong.) for the purpose of preserving the flow
of water in Rock Creek, preventing the pollution of Rock Creek and the Potomac
and Anacostia Rivers, preserving forests and natural scenery in and about
Washington, and to provide for the comprehensive, systematic, and continuous
development of the park, parkway, and playground system of the National
Capital. The Director of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National
Capital is executive and disbursing officer of the commission.
The commission was authorized and directed to acquire such lands as in its
judgment shall be necessary and desirable in the District of Columbia and (by
agreement with Maryland and Virginia authorities) adjacent areas in Maryland
and Virginia, for suitable development of the National Capital park, parkway,
and playground system.
By act of April 30, 1926, the name of the commission was changed to the
National Capital Park and Planning Commission. The same officials named in
the former act were retained as ex officio members and the President was author-
ized to add ‘‘four eminent citizens well qualified and experienced in city planning,
one of whom shall be a bona fide resident of the District of Columbia,” to be
appointed, after the original appointments, for the term of six years, to serve
without compensation. The new commission retained all the powers of the
park commission and was given further important advisory powers. It was
charged with the duty of preparing, developing, and maintaining a comprehen-
sive, consistent, and coordinated plan for the National Capital and its environs,
which plan shall include recommendations to the proper executive authorities
as to traffic and transportation, plats and subdivisions; highways, parks, and
parkways; school and library sites; playgrounds; drainage, sewer, and water
supply; housing, building, and zoning regulations; public and private buildings;
bridges and water fronts; commerce and industry; and other proper elements of
city and regional planning. Paragraph (c¢) transfers to this commission the
power previously vested in the highway commission, namely, the approval or
revision of the recommendations of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia
for changes in the existing highway plan. Paragraph (d) vested the pew com-
mission with all the powers of the original National Capital Park Commission.
By act of May 29, 1930, establishing the George Washington Memorial Park-
way and for other purposes, a regional park system for Washington and its
environs was approved, including a basis for cooperation with the States of
Maryland and Virginia and authorizing an advance of funds to the District of
Columbia for use by the commission in accelerating park purchases within the
District.
PAN AMERICAN SANITARY BUREAU
(Formerly International Sanitary Bureau)
The Pan American Sanitary Bureau is the central coordinating sanitary agency
as well as the general collection and distribution center of sanitary information
of the American Republics. It was created by the Second International Con-
ference of American Republics (1901-2), organized by thie First Pan American
Sanitary Conference (1902), and reorganized by the Sixth Pan American Sanitary
Conference (1920). Its functions and duties are fixed by the Pan American
Sanitary Code (1924) and modified and amplified by the various international
492 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
sanitary and other conferences of the American Republics. The bureau is con-
cerned in maintaining and improving the health of all the people of the 21 Amer-
ican Republics and in preventing the international spread of communicable
diseases. It acts as a consulting office for the national directors of health of the
American Republics, prepares the programs and publishes the proceedings of
the Pan American Sanitary Conferences and the Conferences of the National
Directors of Health, and carries out epidemiological and other scientific studies
and investigations. It also publishes in three languages a monthly Pan American
Sanitary Bulletin, weekly reports on disease prevalence, and a series of other
publications on sanitary subjects. The bureau is governed by a board elected
at each Pan American Sanitary Conference. Its executive officer is a director,
also chairman of the board, who is elected at the same conferences. The neces-
sary personnel, including an assistant director, editor, traveling representatives,
epidemiologists, experts, translators, and clerks, is assigned or employed by the
director to attend to the various duties imposed on the bureau by the Pan Ameri-
can Sanitary Code and the Pan American Sanitary Conferences. The bureau
is supported by a fund contributed by all the American Republics in proportion
to their populations. Address all correspondence to the Director, Pan American
Sanitary Bureau, Washington, D. C.
INLAND WATERWAYS CORPORATION
The Inland Waterways Corporation is charged with the duties incident to the
development of national inland waterway transportation as delegated to the Secre-
tary of War under the transportation act of 1920 and by Public 185, Fprovsd
June 3, 1924, as amended by Public 601, Seventieth Congress, approved May 29,
1928. This corporation 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 inter-
change 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.
OFFICE OF PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND PUBLIC PARKS OF THE
NATIONAL CAPITAL
The Office of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital is an
independent establishment created by the act approved February 26, 1925
(Public, No. 478, 68th Cong.), and in its relation to public buildings and public
parks succeeded to the duties and prerogatives of the Office of Superintendent,
State, War, and Navy Department Building, and the Office of Public Buildings
and Grounds.
The director has charge of the maintenance and operation of the buildings
under his custody, including the care of the grounds, heating, lighting, repairing,
altering, and cleaning the buildings, and the forces provided therefor. He is also
responsible for the safety of the buildings and the personnel housed therein and
has charge of the guarding and fire-fighting force authorized by Congress.
The director also has charge of the care, maintenance, improvement, and
policing of the public grounds, parks, monuments, and memorials in the District
of Columbia, including recreational activities conducted on the public grounds
under the supervision of this office.
AMERICAN BATTLE MONUMENTS COMMISSION
The American Battle Monuments Commission was created by an act of
Congress approved March 4, 1923, for the purpose of preparing plans for and
erecting suitable memorials to mark and commemorate the services of the Ameri-
can forces in Europe during the World War, including works of architecture and
art in the American cemeteries in Europe. The act creating the commission
charges it with the duties of controlling as to materials and design, providing
regulations for and supervising the erection of all memorial monuments and build-
ings in the American cemeteries in Europe. To the commission is given the
function of photographing the battlefields of Europe upon which American forces
were engaged, in order to complete the historical records of these forces.
The commission is directed to cooperate, in such manner as it shall determine,
with American citizens, States, municipalities, and associations desiring to erect
MISCELLANEOUS Officral Duties 493
war memorials in Europe, providing that the plans for such memorials have been
approved by the commission in accordance with the provisions of the act.
The commission is authorized to receive funds from any State, municipal, or
private source for the purposes of its work, and is also permitted to furnish
replicas of any memorial, or part thereof, at actual cost, applying the proceeds
of such sales to the purposes of the commission.
FEDERAL OIL CONSERVATION BOARD
The Federal Oil Conservation Board consists of the Secretary of the Interior,
chairman, the Secretary of War, the Secretary of the Navy, and the Secretary
of Commerce.
The duty and purpose of this board include comprehensive inquiries into
national and international petroleum conditions as they relate to production, refin-
ing, distribution, future supply, etc., and study of Government’s responsibilities,
with a view to providing ways and means for the safeguarding of our national
security, and promotion of sound economics, through equitable conservation of
the country’s natural petroleum and gas resources; and submission of findings to
the President for such action as may be deemed proper.
The work of conducting investigations, compiling data, ete., is delegated
largely to an advisory committee consisting of officials selected by members of
the board from their respective departments. Technical and scientific agencies
of the Government cooperate freely in this investigative work. Reports and
seasonal surveys treating of national and international conditions in the petroleum
industry are issued periodically.
FEDERAL RADIO COMMISSION
The Federal Radio Commission was created by an act of Congress, approved
February 23, 1927. The commission is composed of five commissioners and
assisted by a secretary, general counsel, and chief engineer. Its duties are the
regulation of all wireless communication activities, including broadcasting, ship,
amateur, and point-to-point services within the jurisdiction of the United States;
the issuance of all licenses and the allocation of frequencies, ete., for the purpose
of bringing about clearer and better transmission and reception.
The commission, when necessary, holds hearings on applications for radio
facilities.
The commission was created originally for a period of one year. On March
28, 1928, and March 4, 1929, amendments to the law were signed extending the
life of the commission until December 31, 1929.
On December 18, 1929, an amendment to the law was signed which extends
the powers and authority of the commission until otherwise provided for by law.
INTERNATIONAL HIGHWAY SPECIAL COMMISSIONERS,
UNITED STATES AND CANADA
The International Highway Special Commissioners were appointed by the
President, under Public Act 228, to cooperate with representatives of the Domin-
ion of Canada, in a study regarding the construction of a highway to connect the
northwestern part of the United States with British Columbia, Yukon Territory,
and Alaska, with a view to ascertaining whether such a highway is feasible and
economically practicable.
COURT OF CLAIMS OF THE UNITED STATES
This court was established by act of Congress February 24, 1858 (10 Stat. L.
612). It has general jurisdiction (36 Stat. L. 1135) of all ‘‘ claims founded upon
the Constitution of the United States or any law of Congress, except for pensions,
or upon any regulations of an executive department, or upon any contract,
express or implied, with the Government of the United States, or for damages,
liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort, in respect of which
claims the party would be entitled to redress against the United States, either
in a court of law, equity, or admiralty, if the United States were suable, except
claims growing out of the late Civil War and commonly known as war claims,”
and certain rejected claims.
494 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
It has jurisdiction also of claims of like character which may be referred to it
by the head of any executive department involving controverted questions of
fact or law. In all the above-mentioned cases the court, when it finds for the
claimant, may enter judgment against the United States, payable out of the
Public Treasury.
Under section 3 of the act of February 13, 1925, the Court of Claims may
certify to the Supreme Court any definite and distinct questions of law con-
cerning which instructions are desired for the proper disposition of the cause;
and also in any case the Supreme Court upon the petition of either party may
require by certiorari that the cause be certified to it for review and determination.
It also has jurisdiction of the claims of disbursing officers of the United States
for relief from responsibility for losses of Government funds and property by
capture or otherwise, without negligence, while in the line of duty.
There is a statute of limitations which prevents parties from bringing actions
on their own motion beyond six years after the cause of action accrued, but the
departments may refer claims at any time if they were pending therein within
the six years.
By the act of March 2, 1919 (40 Stat. 772), known as the Dent Act, the Court
of Claims is given jurisdiction of the class of war claims therein specified. In
these cases the action of the Secretary of War upon the claim, or his failure to
act thereon, is a condition precedent to the right of the claimant to commence
an action in the Court of Claims.
The court also has jurisdiction of actions provided for by certain statutes
passed during the last war permitting the seizure of property by the Government.
By section 151, Judicial Code (36 Stat. L. 1135), whenever any bill, except
for a pension, is pending in either House of Congress providing for the payment
of a claim against the United States, legal or equitable, or for a grant, gift, or
bounty to any person, the House in which such bill is pending may, for the
investigation and determination of facts, refer the same to the Court of Claims,
which shall proceed with the same in accordance with such rules as it may adopt
and report to such House the facts in the case and the amount, where the same
can be liquidated, including any facts bearing upon the question whether there
has been delay or laches in presenting such claim or applying for such grant, gift,
or bounty, and any facts bearing upon the question whether the bar of any statute
of limitation should be removed or which shall be claimed to excuse the claimant
for not having resorted to any established legal remedy, together with such
conclusions as shall be sufficient to inform Congress of the nature and character
of the demand, either as a claim, legal or equitable, or as a gratuity against the
United States, and the amount, if any, legally or equitably due from the United
States to the claimant: Provided, however, That if it shall appear to the satis-
faction of the court upon the facts established that under existing laws or the
provisions of this chapter, the subject matter of the bill is such that it has juris-
diction to render judgment or decree thereon, it shall proceed to do so, giving
to either party such further opportunity for hearing as in its judgment justice
shall require, and it shall report its proceedings therein to the House of Congress
by which the same was referred to said court.
Section 5, act of March 4, 1915 (38 Stat. 996), provides: ‘‘ That from and after
the passage and approval of this act the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims shall
not extend to or include any claim against the United States based upon or
growing out of the destruction of any property or damage done to any property
by the military or naval forces of the United States during the war for the sup-
pression of the rebellion, nor to any claim for stores and supplies taken by or
furnished to or for the use of the military or naval forces of the United States, nor
to any claim for the value of any use and occupation of any real estate by the
military or naval forces of the United States during said war; nor shall said Court
of Claims have jurisdiction of any claim which is now barred by the provisions
of any law of the United States.”
By act of March 3, 1891, chapter 538 (26 Stat. L. 851, and Supplement to
R. S., 2d ed., p. 913), the court is vested with jurisdiction of certain Indian
depredation claims. :
The act of June 25, 1910, chapter 423 (36 Stat. L. 851-852), ‘‘ An aet to provide
additional protection for owners of patents of the United States, and for other
purposes,”’ conferred a new jurisdiction.
There are five judges, who sit together in the hearing of cases, the concurrence
of three of whom is necessary for the decision of any case.
All claims are prosecuted in the Court of Claims by an action commenced by
the filing of a petition and prosecuted in accordance with the rules of the court,
copies of which rules can be obtained upon application to the clerk of the court.
MISCELLANEOUS Offictal Duties 495
The court is located at Washington, D. C., in the old Corcoran Art Building,
Seventeenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue. The term begins on the first
Monday in December each year and continues until the Saturday before the first
Monday in December. Cases may be commenced and entered at any time,
whether the court be in session or not.
PERRY’S VICTORY MEMORIAL COMMISSION
The Perry’s Victory Memorial Commission, created by act of Congress ap-
proved March 3, 1919, is charged with the administration of the Perry’s Victory
Memorial at Put in Bay, South Bass Island, Lake Erie, Ohio, erected by the
Federal Government and the States of Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Illinois,
Wisconsin, New York, Rhode Island, Kentucky, and Massachusetts. Members
of the commission are those named in the act, who formerly composed an inter-
state board appointed, on legislative authority, by the governors of the States
named, the act providing that their successors shall be appointed by the President
of the United States.
The commission is required to report annually to the Secretary of the Interior
all receipts and disbursements of money and regarding the physical condition of
the memorial property. Costs of operation are met by revenue derived from small
fees charged the public for the elevator privilege to the top of the memorial,
which has thus been self-sustaining since opened to the public in 1915. Neither
Federal nor State Governments have been required to make appropriations for
upkeep. Upon the accumulation of $20,000 surplus, to provide for emergencies,
the net earnings from operation are to be turned into the United States Treasury.
Commissioners serve without compensation.
The memorial, the world’s second highest monument, constructed entirely of
Massachusetts granite, is a Grecian Doric column 352 feet in height and 45 feet
in diameter at the base, with a spacious and beautiful rotunda and a spectator’s
gallery at the top capable of accommodating 300 people in the open air. Its
physical setting in a park of 14 acres on the isthmus of Put in Bay Island, with
Lake Erie on both sides, gives it the appearance of rising from the water. At
night it is illuminated by floodlights.
The memorial commemorates the victory of Commodore Oliver Hazard
Perry and his men in the Battle of Lake Erie, September 10, 1813, the north-
western campaign of Gen. William Henry Harrison in the War of 1812, and a
century of peace between English-speaking peoples, and is dedicated to the
principle of international peace by arbitration and disarmament—the only public
work in the world so dedicated. :
NATIONAL MEMORIAL COMMISSION
The National Memorial Commission was created by the act approved March
4, 1929 (Public, Res. 107, 70th Cong.), for the purpose of supervising plans for the
erection of a National Memorial Building, in Washington, D. C., as a tribute to
the Negro’s contributions to America and his achievements in the military and
naval service, in art, literature, science, inventions, industry, ete.
The commission is composed of 15 members, of whom the Director of Public
Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital, the Supervising Architect
of the Treasury, and the Architect of the Capitol are ex officio members, the 12
additional members being appointed by the President of the United States.
The commission is to determine upon and procure a location, plans, and designs
for a memorial building suitable for meetings of patriotic organizations, public
ceremonial events, exhibitions, the placing of statues and tablets, and to contain
a large library and a large auditorium.
The commission is authorized to erect the memorial upon such site as it shall
determine upon, and said construction shall be entered upon as speedily as
practicable after the site, plans, and designs therefor shall have been determined
and approved by the National Commission of Fine Arts, and shall be prosecuted
to completion under the direction of the commission and the supervision of the
Director of Public Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital, under a
contract or contracts in a total sum of not less than $500,000, which sum shall be
provided by voluntary contributions, under auspices of the National Memorial
Association (Inc.), in accordance with plans to be authorized by the National
Memorial Commission.
496 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
The commission is authorized to employ the services of such artists, sculptors,
architects, and others as it shall determine to be necessary, and avail itself of the
services or advice of the National Commission of Fine Arts, the Office of Public
Buildings and Public Parks of the National Capital, the Office of the Supervising
Architect of the Treasury, and the Office of the Architect of the Capitol.
It is the purpose of the National Memorial Association, which has sponsored
the project, to erect a beautiful building suitable to depict the Negro’s contribu-
tions to America and achievements along all lines—a fitting tribute which would
serve as an educational center giving inspiration to the present and future genera-
tions, that they may be inspired to follow the example of those who have aided
in the advancement of the race and Nation.
The building is to contain a hall of fame, art and music rooms, library and
reading rooms, museum, statues and tablets, which are proposed to commemorate
the deeds of American negroes wrought for the perpetuation and advancement of
the Nation, and is to have an auditorium seating from 3,000 to 4,000 people,
which would embody the utilitarian, esthetic, and reverential, thus meeting the
monument-building ideas of the age as well as serving the race in a useful way.
The commission will be assisted by the State commissioners who are appointed
by the governors of the several States, and the advisory board members of the
association in all principal cities.
To defray the necessary expenses of the commission, an appropriation of
$50,000 was authorized by Congress. The commission is to submit a detailed
statement to Congress from time to time as to the progress of the work.
PUERTO RICAN HURRICANE RELIEF COMMISSION
The Puerto Rican Hurricane Relief Commission was created by an act of Con-
gress approved December 21, 1928 (Public, Res. No. 74, 70th Cong.), as an agency
to extend relief to the people of Puerto Rico affected by the hurricane of September
13 and 14, 1928. The commission consists of the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Secretary of War, and the Secretary of Agriculture, of which the Secretary of
War is chairman. The duties of the commission, as set forth in the act by which
it was created, are to assist in the rehabilitation of agriculture in the island of
Puerto Rico, particularly on the coffee and the coconut plantations; to encourage
a more general planting of food crops needed by laborers on the plantations, espe-
cially of root crops; to aid in the repair and restoration of schools and roads; and
to assist in providing employment for unemployed and destitute laborers. The
total amount authorized by Congress to be appropriated for the Puerto Rican
Hurricane Relief Commission has been $11,150,000, of which amount $10,150,000
has already been appropriated. Of the amount appropriated, $6,000,000 is for
loans to individual agriculturists. The second deficiency appropriation act,
approved March 4, 1929 (Public, No. 1035, 70th Cong.), provided for constitut-
ing a board of alternates as the operating agency of the commission in Puerto Rico.
The commission is required to make an annual report of its activities to Congress.
FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT STABILIZATION BOARD
The Federal Employment Stabilization Board was created by act of Congress
approved February 10, 1931 (Public, No. 616, 71st Cong.). The act provides for
the advance planning and regulated construction of public works and for aiding in
the prevention of unemployment during periods of business depression.
The duties of the board may be summarized as follows:
1. To cooperate with the construction agencies of the Federal Government in
formulating methods of advance planning.
2. To advise the President from time to time of—
a. The trend of employment.
b. Business activity.
¢. Volume of construction.
d. The existence or approach of periods of business depression and unemploy-
ment in the United States or in any substantial portion thereof.
(In advising the President, the board shall take into consideration the volume,
based upon value, of contracts awarded for construction work in the United States,
or in any substantial portion thereof, during any 3-month period in comparison
with the corresponding 3-month periods of three previous calendar years.)
3. To make progress reports.
MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 497
4. The board shall collect information concerning advance construction plans
and estimates by States, municipalities, and other public and private agencies,
which may indicate the probable volume of construction within the United States
or which may aid the construction agencies in formulating their advance plans.
ADVISORY COUNCIL OF THE NATIONAL ARBORETUM
The appointment by the Secretary of Agriculture of an advisory council in
relation to the planning and development of the National Arboretum was author-
ized by section 4 of the act authorizing the Secretary to establish a national
arboretum (Public, No. 799, 69th Cong.), approved March 4, 1927.
This act authorizes and directs the Secretary to establish and maintain a
national arboretum for purposes of research and education concerning tree and
plant life. The first deficiency act, fiscal year 1928, approved December 22, 1927
(Public, No. 2, 70th Cong.), appropriated the sum of $300,000 to enable the Sec-
retary to proceed with the acquisition of land for establishing the proposed arbo-
retum, and subsequent small appropriations for maintenance have been carried
in connection with the annual appropriations of the Bureau of Plant Industry as
provided in the annual appropriation acts of the United States Department of
Agriculture.
RECONSTRUCTION FINANCE CORPORATION
The Reconstruction Finance Corporation was created by the reconstruction
finance corporation act, approved January 22, 1932, and entitled ‘“An act to
provide emergency financing facilities for financial institutions, to aid in financing
agriculture, commerce, and industry, and for other purposes.”’” The scope of the
loan operations of the corporation was enlarged and its basic law amended in
certain respects by acts of Congress approved July 21, July 22, 1932, February 4,
March 9, March 24, March 31, and May 12, 1933; and by a joint resolution of
Congress approved March 23, 1933.
The corporation was organized on February 2, 1932. The management of the
corporation is vested in a board of directors consisting of the Secretary of the
Treasury (or, in his absence, the Under Secretary of the Treasury), who is a
member ex officio, and six other directors appointed by the President of the
United States by and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
The act provides that the corporation shall have succession for a period of 10
years from January 22, 1932, the date the law was enacted, unless it is sooner
dissolved by an act of Congress.
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
The corporation is authorized, under the provisions of section 5 of the recon-
struction finance corporation act, as amended, to make loans, upon the terms
and conditions stated in the law, to any bank, savings bank, trust company,
building and loan association, insurance company, mortgage loan company,
credit union, Federal land bank, joint-stock land bank, Federal intermediate
credit bank, agricultural credit corporation, livestock credit corporation, organ-
ized under the laws of any State, the District of Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii,
Puerto Rico, or the United States, including loans secrued by the assets of any
bank or savings bank that is closed, or in process of liquidation, to aid in the
reorganization or liquidation of such bank, upon application of the receiver or
liquidating agent of such bank. It is provided that all loans made to the above
enumerated institutions shall be fully and adequately secured, and that not more
than $200,000,000 shall be used for the relief of banks (including savings banks)
that are closed or in the process of liquidation.
Under section 27 of the emergency farm mortgage act of 1933, the corpora-
tion is authorized to make loans to any receiver appointed by the Federal Farm
Loan Board pursuant to section 29 of the Federal farm loan act, as amended, or
any receiver appointed by a district court of the United States, for the purpose of
paying taxes on farm real estate owned by the bank or securing the mortgages
held by it. Such receivers are authorized to borrow from the corporation for
the purposes stated, with the approval of the Farm Loan Commissioner.
Under section 304 of an act of Congress approved March 9, 1933, as amended
by an act approved March 24, 1933, the corporation is authorized to comply
with requests, made by the Secretary of the Treasury with the approval of the
157297°—73—-1—1ST ED——33
498 Congressional Drrectory MISCELLANEOUS
President of the United States, to subscribe for preferred stock which is exempt
from double liapility, in any national banking association, or any State bank or
trust company, to make loans secured by such stock as collateral, or to purchase
legally issued capital notes or debentures of a State bank or trust company, when,
in the opinion of the Secretary of the Treasury, such association, State bank, or
trust company is in need of funds for capital purposes, either in connection with
the organization or reorganization of such institutions.
RAILROADS
Under this section of the law, the corporation, upon the approval of the Inter-
state Commerce Commission, also may make loans to aid in the temporary
financing of railroads and railways engaged in interstate commerde, to railroads
and railways in process of construction, and to receivers of such railroads and
railways, when in the opinion of the board of directors of the corporation such
railroads or railways are unable to obtain funds upon reasonable terms through
banking channels or from the general public and the corporation will be ade-
quately secured. 3
RELIEF OF DESTITUTION
The corporation was authorized by section 1 of the emergency relief and con-
struction act of 1932 to make available out of the funds of the corporation the sum
of $300,000,000, under specified terms and conditions, to the several States and
Territories (i.e., Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico) to be used in furnishing relief
and work relief to needy and distressed people and in relieving the hardship
resulting from unemployment.
The Federal emergency relief act of 1933 created a Federal Emergency Relief
Administration, all the powers of which are exercised by a Federal Emergency
Relief Administrator, appointed by the President, by and with the advice and
consent of the Senate. The expenses of such administration, not to exceed
$350,000, are to be paid by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, out of funds
made available by such act. The act provided that after the expiration of 10 days
after the date upon which such Administrator assumed his duties, no application
snould be approved by the corporation under the provisions of title 1 of the
Emergency Relief and Construction Act of 1932 and that such Administrator
should have access to all files and records of the Reconstruction Finance Corpora-
tion relating to the administration of funds under title 1 of the Emergency Relief
and Construction Act of 1932. The act also authorizes and directs the Corpora-
tion to make available, out of the funds of the Corporation, not to exceed
$500,000,000, in addition to the funds authorized under tielt 1 of the emergency
relief and construction act of 1932, for expenditure under the terms stated in
the act, upon certification by the Federal Emergency Relief Administrator, for
the purpose of furnishing relief to needy and distressed people in the several
States and Territories and the District of Columbia. In addition to the
$500,000,000 to be made available as indicated above, the act provided that at
the expiration of 10 days from the date of its enactment, the unexpended and
unobligated balance of the funds authorized under title 1 of the emergency relief
and construction act of 1932 should be available also for the purposes stated in
the Federal emergency relief act of 1933.
SELF-LIQUIDATING FROJECTS
Under the provisions of section 201 (a) of the emergency relief and construction
act of 1932, the corporation is authorized to make loans or contracts, under the
terms stated in the law, to aid in financing the construction of self-liquidating
projects.
EARTHQUAKE RELIEF
Under a joint resolution approved March 23, 1933, amending section 201 (a)
of the emergency relief and construction act of 1932, the corporation is author-
ized to make loans, under the terms stated in the resolution, for the purpose of
financing the repair or reconstruction of buildings damaged by earthquake in the
year 1933, to an amount not exceeding $5,000,000.
CARRYING AND ORDERLY MARKETING OF AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES AND LIVE-
STOCK
Under section 201 (d) of the emergency relief and construction act of 1932,
the corporation is authorized to make loans to bona fide institutions, organized
MISCELLANEOUS Official Dutres 499
under the laws of any State or of the United States and having resources adequate
for their undertakings, for the purpose of enabling them to finance the carrying
and orderly marketing of agricultural commodities and livestock produced in the
United States.
Under section 5 of the reconstruction finance corporation act as amended by
an act of Congress approved May 12, 1933, the corporation is authorized to
make loans to processors, associations of producers, and others engaged in the
handling, in the current of interstate or foreign commerce, of any agricultural
commodity or product thereof, who are parties to marketing agreements entered
into with the Secretary of Agriculture, to provide for reduction in the acreage or
rodngson in the production for markets, or both, of any basic agricultural com-
modity.
Under section 5 of the reconstruction finance corporation act as amended by
section 19 (c¢) of an act of Congress approved May 12, 1933, the corporation is
authorized to make loans to any processor or distributor of any basic agricultural
commodity, subject to taxes imposed and defined in Part I of Title I of the act of
Congress approved May 12, 1933, in order that the payment of such taxes may
not impose any immediate undue financial burden upon such processors or
distributors.
EXPORTS
Under section 5 (a) of the reconstruction finance corporation act, the cor-
poration is authorized, subject to specified limitations, to accept drafts and bills
of exchange drawn upon it, having at the time of acceptance a maturity of not
more than 12 months, which grow out of transactions involving the exportation of
agricultural or other products actually sold or transported for sale subsequent to
the enactment of the law, and in process of shipment to buyers in foreign coun-
tries.
Under section 201 (¢) of the emergency relief and construction act of 1932,
the corporation is authorized to make loans for the purpose of financing sales of
surpluses of agricultural products in the markets of foreign countries in which
such sales can not be financed in the normal course of commerce, and will not
affect adversely the world markets for such products; except that such loans may
not be made to finance the sale in the markets of foreign countries of cotton owned
by the Federal Farm Board or the Cotton Stabilization Corporation.
REGIONAL AGRICULTURAL CREDIT CORPORATIONS
Under the provisions of section 201 (e) of the emergency relief and construc-
tion act of 1932, authority was conferred on the corporation to create in any of the
12 Federal land-bank districts where it might deem the same to be desirable a
regional agricultural credit corporation with a paid-up capital of not less than
$3,000,000, to be subscribed and paid by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.
Under this authority, the corporation created a regional agricultural credit cor-
poration in each of the 12 Federal land-bank districts. Such corporations have an
aggregate paid-up capital of $44,500,000 and function through 12 principal
offices, 21 branch offices, and 1 agency which has been established at San Juan,
P. R. The act provides that such corporations shall be managed by officers and
agents appointed by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation under such rules
and regulations as its board of directors may prescribe. They are authorized to
make loans or advances to farmers and stockmen, the proceeds of which are to be
used for an agricultural purpose (including crop production), or for the raising,
breeding, fattening, or marketing of livestock; and to rediscount with the Recon-
struction Finance Corporation and the various Federal reserve banks and Fed-
eral intermediate credit banks any paper that they acquire which is eligible for
such purpose.
An Executive order issued by the President of the United States on March 27,
1933, transferred to the jurisdiction and control of the Farm Credit Administra-
tion the functions of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and its board of
directors relating to the appointment of officers and agents to manage regional
agricultural credit corporations formed under section 201 (e) of the emergency
relief and construction act of 1932; relating to the establishment of rules and
regulations for such management, and relating to the approval of loans and
advances made by such corporations and of the terms and conditions thereof.
Such Executive order provided further, that the records, property (including
office equipment), and personnel used and employed in the execution of the
functions transferred be likewise transferred to the jurisdiction and control of
the Farm Credit Administration; that all power, authority, and duties conferred
500 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
by law upon any officer, executive agency, or head thereof, from which or from
whom transfer is made, in relation to the executive agency or function transferred,
be transferred to and vested in the Governor of the Farm Credit Administration.
REFINANCING OF AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT INDEBTEDNESS FOR THE
BENEFIT OF FARMERS
Section 36 of the emergency farm mortgage act of 1933, authorizes the corpora-
tion to make loans, under the terms stated in the law, in an aggregate amount
not exceeding $50,000,000, to drainage districts, levee districts, levee and drainage
districts, irrigation districts, and similar districts, duly organized under the laws
of any State, and to political subdivisions of States, which prior to the date of
enactment of such act, have completed projects devoted chiefly to the improve-
ment of lands for agricultural purposes, for the purpose of enabling any such
district or political subdivision to reduce and refinance its outstanding indebted-
ness incurred in connection with any such project.
CAPITAL STOCK OF THE CORPORATION
The capital stock of the corporation was fixed by the act approved January
22, 1932, at $500,000,000, all of which has been subscribed and paid in by the
. Secretary of the Treasury on behalf of the Government of the United States.
ISSUE OF NOTES, DEBENTURES, BONDS, OR OTHER SUCH OBLIGATIONS
The reconstruction finance corporation act, as amended by the emergency
relief and construction act of 1932, authorizes the corporation, with the approval
of the Secretary of the Treasury, to issue, and to have outstanding at any one
time in an amount aggregating not more than six and three-fifths times its sub-
scribed capital stock, its notes, debentures, bonds, or other such obligations; such
obligations to mature not more than 5 years from their respective dates of issue.
The law provides that these obligations of the corporation shall be fully and
unconditionally guaranteed both as to interest and principal by the United
States and shall be exempt both as to principal and interest from all taxation
(except surtaxes, estate, inheritance, and gift taxes) now or hereafter imposed
by the United States, by any Territory, dependency, or possession thereof, or by
any State, county, municipality, or local taxing authority.
Under section 304 of an act of Congress approved March 9, 1933, as amended
by an act approved March 24, 1933, the amount of notes, bonds, debentures,
and other such obligations which the corporation may issue was increased by an
amount sufficient to provide for subscriptions to, or loans on, nonassessable pre-
ferred stock in any national banking association, or any State bank or trust
company, and for purchases of legally issued capital notes or debentures of any
State bank or trust company.
Under section 5 of an act of Congress approved May 12, 1933, the amount of
notes, bonds, debentures, and other such obligations which the corporation may
issue was increased by an amount sufficient to provide for advances or loans to
the Secretary of Agriculture to acquire (a) all cotton owned by the Federal
Farm Board and all departments and other agencies of the Government, not
including the Federal intermediate credit banks, and (b) all cotton on which
money has been loaned or advanced by any department or agency of the United
States, including futures contracts for cotton or which is held as collateral for
loans or advances, and to pay the classing, carrying, and merchandising costs
thereon, in such amounts and upon such terms as may be agreed upon by the
Secretary of Agriculture and the Reconstruction Finance Corporation.
Under section 38 of the emergency farm mortgage act of 1933, the amount of
notes, bonds, debentures, and other such obligations which the corporation may
issue was increased by $300,000,000 in order to provide funds to carry out the
- purposes of such act.
Under section 2 (b) of the federal emergency relief act of 1933, the amount of
notes, bonds, debentures, and other such obligations which the corporation may
issue, was increased by $500,000,000, in order to provide funds to carry out the
purposes of such act: ‘‘ Provided, That no such additional notes, bonds, deben-
tures, or other such obligations shall be issued except at such times and in such
amounts as the President shall approve.”
- MISCELLANEOUS Official Duties 501
ORGANIZATION.
The Reconstruction Finance Corporation functions through an organization
set up in Washington and through 32 loan agencies established in cities throughout
the United States.
The corporation originally established 33 loan agencies, one having been closed
on August 15, 1932, and its work transferred to other agencies.
The Federal reserve banks act as depositaries, custodians, and fiscal agents,
for the corporation. In addition, the corporation has a special representative and
a custodian at San Juan, P. R.
The funds of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and the regional agri-
cultural credit corporations created by it are kept on deposit with the Treasurer
of the United States.
CAPITAL OF FEDERAL HOME-LOAN BANKS SUBSCRIBED BY THE UNITED STATES
Under an amendment of the reconstruction finance corporation act, contained
in the Federal home loan bank act, $125,000,000, or as much thereof as may
be necessary for the purpose, is allocated and made available to the Secretary of
the Treasury out of the capital of the corporation and/or the proceeds of notes,
debentures, bonds, and other obligations issued by the corporation in order to
enable the Secretary of the Treasury to make payment upon the capital stock of
Federal home-loan banks subscribed for by him, on behalf of the United States,
in accordance with the terms of the Federal home loan bank act.
ALLOCATION .OF FUNDS TO THE SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE
Under section 2 of the reconstruction finance corporation act, the corpora-
tion was authorized to allocate and make available to the Secretary of Agriculture
out of the amount subscribed by the United States of America for capital stock
of the corporation, the sum of $50,000,000 and the expansion of same through
notes, debentures, bonds, or other obligations, issued pursuant to the provisions
of section 9 of the act (as in force prior to the enactment of the emergency relief
and construction act of 1932), or so much thereof as might be necessary, to be
expended by the Secretary of Agriculture, under certain conditions, for the purpose
of making loans or advances to farmers in the several States of the United States
in cases where he found that an emergency existed as a result of which farmers
were unable to obtain loans for crop production during the year 1932. Section
201 (e) of the emergency relief and construction act of 1932 authorized the
Reconstruction Finance Corporation to subscribe and pay for the capital of the
regional agricultural credit corporations out of the unexpended balance of the
amounts allocated and made available to the Secretary of Agriculture under
section 2 of the reconstruction finance corporation act. Pursuant to this author-
ity, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation has used $44,500,000 of such funds
for that purpose.
Under an act of Congress approved February 4, 1933, the Secretary of Agri-
culture was authorized and directed to request the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation to advance to him the balance of the sum authorized to be allocated
to him under section 2 of the-reconstruction finance corporation act, and the
corporation was directed to make such advances regardless of the amounts of
notes, debentures, bonds, or other obligations of such corporation that may be
outstanding at the time of making such advances, and the Secretary of Agriculture
was further authorized to request the corporation to return all sums theretofore
returned and/or released to the corporation by the Secretary of Agriculture,
except so much as may have been used by the Corporation to establish regional
agricultural credit corporations under section 201 (e) of the emergency relief
and construction act of 1932, which sums, together with the sums collected or
to be collected from loans made by the Secretary of Agriculture during the year
1932 under section 2 of the reconstruction finance corporation act, shall be
available to the Secretary of Agriculture to make loans to farmers during the year
1933 for crop production, planting, fallowing, and cultivation, and in drought
and storm stricken areas not to exceed $1,000,000 for feed for farm livestock:
“Provided, however, That the total sums used for the purposes of the act of Feb-
ruary 4, 1933, shall not exceed $90,000,000.”
Under an act of Congress approved May 12, 1933, the corporation is author-
ized to advance money and to make loans to the Secretary of Agriculture to
acquire (a) all cotton owned by the Federal Farm Board and all departments or
other agencies of the Government, not including the Federal intermediate credit
502 Congressional Directory MISCELLANEOUS
banks, and (b) all cotton on which money has been loaned or advanced by any
department or agency of the United States, including futures contracts for cotton
or which is held as collateral for loans or advances, and to pay the classing, carry-
ing, and merchandising costs thereon, in such amounts and upon such terms
as may be agreed upon by the Secretary of Agriculture and the Reconstruction
Finance Corporation.
ALLOCATION OF FUNDS TO THE SECRETARY OF INTERIOR
Under section 37 of the emergency farm mortgage act of 1933, the corpora-
tion is authorized, upon request of the Secretary of the Interior, to advance from
funds made available by section 2 of the act of January 22, 1932, to the reclama-
tion fund created by the act of June 17, 1902, such sum or sums as the Secretary
of the Interior may deem necessary, not exceeding $5,000,000, for the completion
of projects or divisions of projects then under construction, or projects approved
and authorized.
ALLOCATION OF FUNDS TO THE FARM LOAN COMMISSIONER
The corporation is authorized and directed, under the provisions of section 30
of the emergency farm mortgage act of 1933, to make available to the Farm
Loan Commissioner, out of the funds of the corporation, the sum of $100,000,000,
to be used, for a period not exceeding 2 years from the date of enactment of such
act, for the purpose of making loans to the joint-stock land banks organized
and doing business under the Federal farm loan act, as amended, to provide for
their orderly liquidation. Under section 32 of such act the corporation is author-
ized and directed also to allocate and make available to the Farm Loan Com-
missioner the sum of $200,000,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, to
be used for the purpose of making loans, under the terms stated in the law, to any
farmer, to effect reduction of debts and redemption of foreclosed farms.
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
By Executive order promulgated by the President and submitted to Congress
on March 27, 1933, the following Government agencies and functions were con-
solidated into a single agency known as the Farm Credit Administration:
Federal Farm Board,
Federal Farm Loan Bureau,
Regional Agricultural Credit Corporations of the Reconstruction Finance
Corporation,
Crop Production Loan Office, and
Seed Loan Office of the Department of Agriculture,
and also the functions of the Secretary of Agriculture under all provisions of
law relating to the making of advances or loans to agricultural producers, including
loans for the purpose of forming or increasing the capital stock of agricultural
credit corporations. The order abolished the offices of the appointed members
of the Federal Farm Board, except that of the chairman, who became Governor
of the Farm Credit Administration, and abolished also the offices of the appointed
members of the Federal Farm Loan Board, except that of the member designated
as Farm Loan Commissioner, in whom are vested all the powers and functions
of the Federal Farm Loan Board, subject to the jurisdiction and control of the
Farm Credit Administration; the functions of the Secretary of Agriculture as a
member of the Federal Farm Board and of the Secretary of the Treasury as a
member of the Federal Farm Loan Board were also abolished. The order as
above promulgated became effective May 27, 1933.
FEDERAL EMERGENCY RELIEF ADMINISTRATION
The Federal Emergency Relief Administration was created by act of Congress
approved May 12, 1933 (Public No. 15, 73d Cong.). The act provides for cooper-
ation by the Federal Government with the several States and Territories and the
District of Columbia ‘in relieving the hardship and suffering caused by unem-
ployment, and for other purposes.”
FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR
OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES
FOREIGN DIPLOMATIC REPRESENTATIVES
[Those having ladies with them are marked with * for wife, { for daughter, and || for other ladies]
ALBANIA
(Office of the legation, The Mayflower. Phone, NAtional 4845)
Mr. Faik Konitza, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Mayflower
Hotel. (Phone, NAtional 4845.)
ARGENTINA
(Office of the embassy, 1806 Corcoran Street; phones, NOrth 0852 and 0853. Office of finance, 1806 Cor-
coran Street; phone, DEcatur 1100)
Seiior. Dr. Felipe A. Espil, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1600
New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 0247.)
*Sefior Don Conrado Traverso, counselor of embassy, 1806 Corcoran Street.
*Sefior Don Adolfo J. de Urquiza, first secretary of embassy, Westchester Apart-
ments. (Phone, CLeveland 5613.)
Seiior Don Eduardo L. Vivot, second secretary, Shoreham Hotel. (Phone,
ADams 0700.)
*Sefior Don Manuel de Olazabal, attaché.
AUSTRIA
(Office of the legation, 2343 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, NOrth 1274)
*Mr. Edgar L. G. Prochnik, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
2343 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 2474.)
BELGIUM
(Office of the embassy, 1777 Massachusetts Avenue. Phones, DEcatur 1286 and 1287)
*t Mr. Paul May, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1780 Massa-
chusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 2846.)
Viscount de Lantsheere, first secretary of embassy.
Count Francois de Buisseret, first secretary of embassy.
*Mr. Raoul Grenade, commercial counselor.
Mr. Jean Cattier, financial attaché.
BOLIVIA
(Office of the legation, Room 609 Hill Building. Phone, NAtional 0812)
*Sefior Don Enrique Finot, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
Mayflower Hotel. (Phone, DIstrict 3000.)
*Sefior Don Enrique S. de Lozada, first secretary of legation, 3700 Massachusetts
Avenue. (Phone, CLeveland 6400.)
BRAZIL
(Office of the embassy, 2437 Fifteenth Street. Phone, COlumbia 9095)
*Mr. R. de Lima e Silva, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2437
Fifteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 9093.)
*Mr. Soe, counselor of embassy, 1661 Crescent Place. (Phone, ADams
9610.
Mr. Jodo Ruy Barbosa, second secretary, 1363 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone,
NOrth 10284.)
*Mr. Paulo G. Hasslocher, commercial attaché, 2437 Fifteenth Street.
503
504 Congressional Directory
BULGARIA
(Office of the legation, 2101 R Street. Phone, NOrth 8989)
*Mr. Simeon Radeff, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2101
R Street. (Phone, NOrth 8989.)
Mr. Vladimir S. Manoloff, third secretary of legation, 2101 R Street.
CANADA
(Office of the legation, 1746 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 0971)
*The Honorable William Duncan Herridge, K. C., D. S. O., M. C., envoy extraor-
dinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1746 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone,
DEcatur 0971.)
*Mr. Hume Wrong, counselor, 2110 Bancroft Place. (Phone, DEcatur 1936.)
*Mr. hom Mahoney, first secretary, 3510 Garfield Street. (Phone, EMer-
son 3780.
Mr. E. D’Arcy MecGreer, second secretary, 2810 Thirty-sixth Place. (Phone,
CLeveland 5388.)
Mr. H. F. Feaver, third secretary, 2810 Thirty-sixth Place. (Phone, CLeve-
land 5388.)
CHILE
(Office of the embassy, 2154 Florida Avenue; phone, NOrth 0747. Office of commercial attaché, 10 Bridge
Street, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-4093)
Sefior Don Miguel Cruchaga Tocornal, ambassador extraordinary and plenipo-
tentiary. (Absent.)
Sefior Don Benjamin Cohen, counselor of embassy and chargé d’affaires ad
interim, 2305 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 8662.)
Seftor Don Mario Rodriguez, second secretary of embassy, 2154 Florida Avenue.
(Phone, NOrth 0747.)
Sefior Don Carlos de la Barra, commercial secretary, 2154 Florida Avenue.
(Phone, NOrth 0747.)
*Seflor Don Carlos H. Lee, commercial attaché.
CHINA
(Office of the legation, 2001 Nineteenth Street. Phone, POtomac 1328)
*Mr. Sao-Ke Alfred Sze, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Nine-
teenth and Vernon Streets.
*Mr. Yung Kwai, counselor of embassy.
Mr. Ching-Lin Hsia, first secretary.
Mr. Tswen-ling Tsui, second secretary.
COLOMBIA
(Office of the legation, Hill Building, 839 Seventeenth Street. Phone, NAtional 7125)
*{Sefior Dr. Don Fabio Lozano, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten-
tiary, Wardman Park Hotel. (Phone, COlumbia 2000.)
Seiior Don José M. Coronado, first secretary of legation, 1215 Sixteenth Street.
(Phone, DIstrict 4399.)
| |
|
Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 505
COSTA RICA
(Office of the legation, Cathedral Mansions Center. Phone, ADams 4800)
*{||Sefior Don Manuel Gonzilez-Zeledon, counselor of legation and chargé
d’affaires ad interim, Cathedral Mansions Center.
Sefior Don Mario Montealegre, second secretary.
*Sefior Don Aristides Bonilla, commercial attaché.
CUBA
(Office of the embassy, 2630 Sixteenth Street. Phone, COlumbia 7984)
*Sefior Don Oscar B. Cintas, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary,
2630 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 2680.)
*Sefior Don José T. Barén, counselor of embassy, 2440 Sixteenth Street. (Phone,
COlumbia 8841.)
*Sefior Don Pedro Rodriguez-Capote, first secretary of embassy. (Absent.)
*Sefior Don Gonzalo Giiell, first secretary of embassy, 3625 Sixteenth Street.
(Phone, ADams 7024.)
*Capt. Enrique A. Prieto, military attaché, 3600 Massachusetts Avenue.
(Phone, CLeveland 6184.)
*Sefior Don José Manuel Lara, third secretary, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone,
COlumbia 7200.)
Seiior Don José A. Sera, attaché and secretary to the ambassador. (Absent.)
CZECHOSLOVAKIA
(Office of the legation, 2349 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, NOrth 9402)
*Mr. Ferdinand Veverka, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
2349 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 9402.)
Dr. Josef Némedek, first secretary of legation, 1603 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone,
POtomac 0338.)
*Mr. Otakar Kabelad, first secretary of legation, 1215 Sixteenth Street. (Phone,
NOrth 8809.)
*Mr. Ale§ Bro, secretary of legation, 2137 Leroy Place. (Phone, NOrth 2337.)
DENMARK
(Office of the legation, 1620 Belmont Street. Phone, DEcatur 4831)
*Mr. Otto Wadsted, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1620
Belmont Street. (Phone, DEcatur 2802.)
*Mr. Hubert de Wichfeld, counselor of legation, 1327 Thirty-third Street.
(Phone, WEst 0070.)
Mr. Erik Fischer, attaché, 2633 Fifteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 2622.)
Mr. Constantin Brun, honorary counselor of legation, 1605  Twenty-second
Street. (Phone, NOrth 3052.)
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
(Office of the legation, Woodward Building. Phone, DIstrict 6481. Office of commercial attaché, 17
Battery Place, New York City)
Seiior Don Roberto Despradel, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
The Chastleton. (Phone, NOrth 10000.)
*Sefior Don Ulises F. Espaillat, counselor of legation, The Chastleton. (Phone,
NOrth 10000.)
Sefior Don Agustin Acevedo Feliu, first secretary of legation, The Chastleton.
(Phone, NOrth 10000.)
Sefior Don José Maria Bonetti Burgos, commercial attaché.
506 Congressional Directory
ECUADOR
(Office of the legation, 2633 Sixteenth Street. Phones, COlumbia 2840 and 2841)
*Sefior Don Gonzalo Zaldumbide, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo-
tentiary, 2633 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 2840.)
Seiior Dr. Don Eduardo Salazar, financial counselor, 2633 Sixteenth Street.
EGYPT
(Office of the legation, 2301 Massachusetts Avenue. Phones, DEcatur 6020 and 6021)
Sesostris Sidarouss Pasha, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
2301 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 6021.) (Absent.)
Nicholas Khalil Bey, first secretary and chargé ’d’affaires ad interim, 2400 Six-
teenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 7200.)
Mr. Ea Seton, third secretary, Meridian Hill Studios. (Phone, ADams
Mr. om Chawky, attaché, 2100 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, POtomac
ESTONIA
(Office of the consulate general, 1860 Broadway, New York City)
Mr. Charles Kuusik, acting consul general of Estonia in New York City in
charge of legation.
FINLAND
(Office of the legatioh, 1709 Massachusetts Avenue. Phones, DEcatur 0556 and 0557)
Mr. L. Astrom, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1709 Massa-
chusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 0556.)
Mr. Eino Wilikangas, counselor of legation, Roosevelt Hotel. (Phone, DEcatur
0800.)
FRANCE
(Office of the embassy, 2034 Sixteenth Street; phones, DEcatur 2036, 2037, and 2038. Office of the military
attaché, The Portner, 2015 Fifteenth Street; phone, NOrth 5700. Office of air attaché, The Portner,
2015 Fifteenth Street; phone, NOrth 5700. Office of the naval attaché, The Argonne; phone, ADams
4362. Office of commercial attaché, 597 Madison Avenue, New York City; phone, Plaza 36370. Office of
financial attaché, Room 4511, 20 Exchange Place, New York City; phone, Bowling Green 9-4323)
*t Mr. André de Laboulaye, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2460
Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 2787.)
Mr. Jules Henry, counselor of embassy and chargé d’affaires ad interim, 2017 S
Street. (Phone, DEcatur 6034.)
*Brig. Gen. Francois Pillon, military attaché, Wardman Park Hotel. (Phone,
COlumbia 2000.)
Capt. Camille Husson, naval attaché, 2301 Connecticut Avenue. (Phone,
NOrth 8386.)
*1 Mr. Maurice Garreau-Dombasle, commercial attaché.
*Mr. Emmanuel Monick, financial attaché.
Mr. Roger Gaucheron, first secretary of embassy, 2400 Sixteenth Street. (Phone,
COlumbia 7200.)
*Lieut. Col. Emmanuel Lombard, assistant military attaché, 2312 California
Street. (Phone, DEcatur 4636.)
Mr. Claude de Boisanger, second secretary of embassy, The Mayflower.
Mr. Jacques Paris, third secretary of embassy, Dupont Circle Apartments.
(Phone, DEcatur 6201.) ;
Mr. Claude-Achille Clarae, attaché of embassy, 1606 Twentieth Street. = (Phone,
DEcatur 0573-W.)
Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 507
GERMANY
(Office of the embassy, 1439 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, District 4500)
Herr Hans Luther, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1435 Massa- chusetts Avenue.
*Herr Rudolf Leitner, counselor of embassy, 3105 Thirty-sixth Street. (Phone, EMerson 6536.)
100 Gen. Friedrich von Boetticher, military attaché, 1439 Massachusetts venue.
Herr Ernst Wilhelm Meyer, first secretary of embassy, 3812 Warren Street. (Phone, CLeveland 6837.)
*Herr Johann G. Lohmann, second secretary of embassy, 501 Dorset Avenue, Somerset, Chevy Chase, Md. (Phone, Wlsconsin 2227.) Herr Alexander von Wuthenau, third secretary of embassy, 1213 St. Matthew’s Court. (Phone, MEtropolitan 2904.)
Herr Gustav Struve, Racquet Club.
Herr, oo von Haeften, attaché, 2308 Ashmead Place. (Phone, POtomac 97-J.
GREAT BRITAIN
(Office of the embassy, 3100 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, DEcatur 1340)
*The Hon. Sir Ronald Lindsay, P. C., G. C. M. G., K. C. B, C. V. O., ambas- sador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 3100 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phones, DEcatur 1340, 6040, and 6041.) Mr. F. D. G. Osborne, C. M. G., minister plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy, 1830 Twenty-fourth Street. (Phone, NOrth 1456.)
*Col. Maurice Fitzmaurice Day, M. C., military attaché, 12 Primrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
*Capt. Patrick Macnamara, R. N., naval attaché, 2222 Wyoming Avenue. Group Capt. G. R. M. Reid, D.S8.0., M. C., R. A. F,, air attaché, 2336 Massa- chusetts Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 2387.) *Mr. H. O. Chalkley, C. M. G., C. B. E., commercial counselor of embassy, 3014 Woodland Drive. (Phone, ADams 3479.) *Mr. Ts Bewley, financial counselor, 2014 Hillyer Place. (Phone, NOrth 3453.
*Mr. A. H. Wiggin, C. M. G., first secretary. : *Mr. C. J. W. Torr, first secretary, 3265 N Street. (Phone, WEst 1556.) Fag! oon J. 8. Orr, R. N., assistant naval attaché, 2336 Massachusetts venue.
*Capt. F. St. D. B. Lejeune, assistant military attaché, 16 Melrose Street, Chevy Chase, Md.
*Mr. J. H. Magowan, O. B. E., commercial secretary. (Absent.) *Mr, Cyril H. Cane, M. B. E., commercial secretary.
Mr. Roger M. Makins, third secretary, 1232 Thirty-third Street.
Mr. Maurice Rodney Greiffenhagen, third secretary. (Absent.)
Mr. H. W. A. Freese-Pennefather, third secretary, 1232 Thirty-third Street. *Mr. Leander McCormick-Goodhart, O. B. E., commercial secretary, Langley Park, Md. (Phone, SHepherd 2552.)
*Mr. H. i Sims, attaché, Wardman Park Hotel Annex. (Phone, COlumbia 2000.
The Earl of Chichester, attaché, 1232 Thirty-third Place.
GREECE
(Office of the legation, 2139 R Street. Phone, NOrth 3168)
*Mr. Charalambos Simopoulos, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
2139 R Street. (Phone, POtomac 1609.)
Mr. hla G. Lély, first secretary, 2501 Calvert Street. (Phone, COlumbia
5411.
GUATEMALA
(Office of the legation, 1614 Eighteenth Street. Phone, DEcatur 2240)
*Sefior Dr. Don Adrian Recinos, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten-
tiary, 1614 Eighteenth Street. (Phone, NOrth 8623.) :
*Sefior Dr. Don Ramiro Ferndndez, first secretary, 1474 Columbia Street. (Phone,
COlumbia 2260-J.)
Seiior Don Francisco Palomo, attaché, 1614 Eighteenth Street.
cons
508 Congressional Directory
HAITI
(Office of the legation, 1818 Q Street. Phone, NOrth 9256)
*Mr. Dantés Bellegarde, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1818
Q Street. (Phone, NOrth 9256.) (Madame Bellegarde absent.)
*Mr. Louis Mercier, secretary of legation, 1818 Q Street. (Phone, NOrth 9256.)
(Madame Mercier absent.)
HONDURAS
(Office of the legation, 1100 Sixteenth Street. Phone, NAtional 8268)
*Sefior Dr. Don Céleo D4vila, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
1100 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, DIstrict 3183.) (Absent.)
Ln Profesor Carlos Izaguirre V., secretary of legation and chargé d’affaires
ad interim.
HUNGARY
(Office of the legation, 1424 Sixteenth Street. Phones, NOrth 0516 and 0517)
*11 Count Ldszl6 Széchényi, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
2929 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 4115.) (Absent.)
Mr. Nicholas de Végh, counselor of legation and chargé d’affaires ad interim,
1424 Sixteenth Street.
Lieut. Col. Count Marcel Stomm, military attaché, 1424 Sixteenth Street.
(Absent.) :
Baron Paul Schell, secretary of legation.
IRISH FREE STATE
(Office of the legation, 1800 Connecticut Avenue. Phone, NOrth 9612)
*Mr. Michael MacWhite, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
Shoreham Hotel.
ITALY
(Offices of the embassy and of military, naval, and air attachés, 1601 Fuller Street. Phone, ADams 6300)
Signor Augusto Rosso, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2700
Sixteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 2815.) »
*Marquis Pasquale Diana, counselor of embassy, 2900 Cleveland Avenue. (Phone,
ADams 6620.)
*Signor Giuseppe Catalani, second counselor of embassy, 1301 Sixteenth Street.
Capt. Ferdinando Casardi, naval attaché, Mayflower Hotel.
Lieut. Col. Marco Pennaroli, honorary aide-de-camp to His Majesty the King of
Italy, military attaché, 1911 R Street. (Phone, NOrth 2216.)
*Comdr. Paolo Sbernadori, air attaché, 2150 Wyoming Avenue. (Phone,
~~ DEcatur 3032.)
*Count Guido Roncalli di Montorio, first secretary of embassy, 1529 Thirty-third
Street. (Phone, WEst 2161).
*Signor Eugenio Bonardelli, counselor for emigration, 5510 Thirty-ninth Street.
(Phone, EMerson 0600.)
Signor Giuseppe Tommasi, secretary of embassy, Dupont Circle Apartments.
*Signor Romolo Angelone, commercial attaché.
Signor Andrea Ferrera, secretary of embassy.
JAPAN
‘(Office of the embassy, 2514 Massachusetts Avenue. Phones, DEcatur 0716 and 0717. Office of military
attaché, Portland Hotel; phone, MEtropolitan 2755. Office of naval attaché, 3700 Massachusetts
Avenue; phone, CLeveland 8500)
*Mr. Katsuji Debuchi, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2514
Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur 6221.)
*Mr. Toshihiko Taketomi, counselor of embassy, 2839 Allendale Place. (Phone,
EMerson 1734.) :
*Mr, Juichi Tsushima, financial attaché. (Absent.)
Forewgn Diplomatic Representatives 509
Mr. Kosaku Midzusawa, first secretary, Westchester Apartments. (Phone,
CLeveland 8081.)
*Col. Shizuichi Tanaka, I. J. A., military attaché, Woodley Park Towers. (Phone,
ADams 0057.)
*Capt. Masashi Kobayashi, I. J. N., naval attaché, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
(Phone, CLeveland 8500.)
*Mr. Shunichi Kase, second secretary, 3204 Thirty-eighth Street. (Phone,
CLeveland 7878.)
Lieut. Comdr. Ichiro Yokoyama, I. J. N., assistant naval attaché, 2252 Cathedral
Avenue. (Phone, ADams 8998.)
Maj. Ryosuke Nakanishi, I. J. A., assistant military attaché, 4425 Fourteenth
Street. (Phone, COlumbia 6759-R.)
Capt. Takashi Aoki, I. J. A., assistant military attaché, 1445 Manchester Lane.
(Phone, GEorgia 5299.)
Lieut. Yoshihiro Kanamoto, I. J. N., assistant naval attaché, 3233 Klingle Road.
(Phone, CLeveland 7035.)
*Mr. Hikozo Tanaka, attaché, Clifton Terrace Apartments. (Phone, COlumbia
7744.) :
Mr. Sadao Hirose, attaché, 2514 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEcatur
0716.)
Mr. Eiji Wajima, attaché, 2514 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, DEecatur
0716.)
Mr. Jun Tsuchiya, attaché, 2127 California Street. (Phone, NOrth 9813.)
Mr. toma Kimura, attaché, Westchester Apartments. (Phone, EMerson
4035.
Mr. Wataru Okuma, attaché, 3145 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 3237.)
*Mr. Takio Oda, attaché, Woodley Park Towers.
Mr. Shintaro Fukushima, attaché, 1230 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone,
DIstrict 8715.)
LATVIA
(Office of consulate general, 225 Broadway, New York City)
*Mr. Arthur B. Lule, consul general of Latvia in New York City in charge of
legation.
LITHUANIA
(Office of legation, 2622 Sixteenth Street. Phone, ADams 5860)
*Mr. Bronius Kasimir Balutis, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten-
tiary, 2622 Sixteenth Street. (Madame Balutis absent.)
Dr. Mikas Bagdonas, secretary of legation, 2622 Sixteenth Street.
LUXEMBOURG
*Baron Raymond de Waha, chargé d’affaires. (Absent.)
MEXICO
(Office of the embassy, 2829 Sixteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 4914 and 4915. Office of commercial
attaché, room 514 Woodward Building)
Sefior Dr. Don Fernando Gonzélez Roa, ambassador extraordinary and plenipo-
tentiary, 2829 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 4914.)
*Sefior Dr. Don Luis Padilla Nervo, minister resident, counselor of embassy,
3338 Military Road.
*Sefior Dr. Don Pablo Campos-Ortiz, first secretary, 1744 Irving Street.
*Sefior Dr. Don Rafael Fuentes, second secretary, 2400 Sixteenth Street.
*Sefior Don Francisco Vdzquez-Treserra, third secretary, Victoria Apartments.
Sefior Don Carlos Peén-del-Valle, third secretary, Victoria Apartments.
Hetior Dr. Don Francisco Nuiiez Chavez, secretary of embassy, 2829 Sixteenth
treet.
*Brig. Gen. Francisco J. Aguilar, military attaché, Fairfax Hotel.
Sefior Teniente Don Emilio Calder6n Puig, assistant military attaché, The
Chastleton. (Absent.)
Senior Ingeniero Don Hilario Meza Cienfuegos, agricultural attaché, The
Chastleton.
Seftor Don Luis Ortegén, jr., attaché, The Balfour.
510 Congressional Durectory
NETHERLANDS
(Office of the legation, 147C Euclid Street. Phones, COlumbia 1630, 1631, and 1632)
*Mr. J. H. van Roijen, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2535
Fifteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 0364.)
*Baron C. van Breugel Douglas, counselor.
Mr. B. Kleijn Molekamp, commercial counselor, Washington Golf and Country
Club. (Phone, WAIlnut 8690.)
Jonkheer H. M. van der Wyck, secretary, Fairfax Hotel. (Phone, POtomac 4480.)
*Mr. L. A. H. Peters, agricultural attaché.
; NICARAGUA
(Office of the legation, 1711 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, POtomac 3263)
*Sefior Dr. Don Henri De Bayle, chargé d’affaires ad interim, 1711 New Hamp-
shire Avenue.
NORWAY
(Office of the legation, 3401 Massachusetts Avenue. Phone, CLeveland 3203)
*Mr. Halvard H. Bachke, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
3401 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, CLeveland 8020.)
*Mr. Leonhard C. P. Offerdahl, first secretary of legation, 2415 Twentieth Street.
(Phone, ADams 5952.)
Mr. Francis Irgens, secretary of legation, 1345 Nineteenth Street. (Phone,
DEcatur 6201.)
PANAMA
(Office of the legation, 1535 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, POtomac 3780)
*Sefior Dr. Ricardo J. Alfaro, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
1535 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 3780.)
*Sefior Don Juan B. Chevalier, secretary of legation, Woodley Park Towers.
(Phone, ADams 8393.)
*Sefior Don Luis R. Alfaro, attaché, 3701 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone,
EMerson 3585.)
PARAGUAY
(Office of the legation, Shoreham Hotel)
*Sefior Dr. Don Enrique Bordenave, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipo-
tentiary, Shoreham Hotel.
PERSIA
(Office of the legation, 1534 O Street. Phone, NOrth 4202)
*Mr. Yadollah Azodi, chargé d’affaires, 1333 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, NOrth
Dr. ef Ardalan, secretary of legation.
PERU
(Office of the embassy, 1300 Sixteenth Street. Phone, POtomac 3404)
Sefior Don Manuel de Freyre y Santander, ambassador extraordinary and
plenipotentiary, 1601 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 1677.)
*Dr. Juan Mendoza Almenara, first secretary of embassy, 2737 Devonshire Place.
(Phone, ADams 10179.)
Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 511
POLAND
(Office of the embassy, 2640 Sixteenth Street; phones, ADams 3800, 3801, and 3802. Office of the com-
mercial and financial counselor, 41 Broad Street, New York City)
Mr. Stanislaw Patek, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 2640
Sixteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 3800.)
*Mr. Wladyslaw Sokolowski, counselor of embassy, 1816 Twenty-fourth Street.
(Phone, DEcatur 2534.)
*Mr. Joseph MoSecicki, secretary, 2640 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 3800.)
Mr. Zdzislaw Klimpel, secretary, 2 Riggs Court. (Phone, NOrth 0082-J.)
Mr. Jan Tomaszewski, attaché, 2640 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, ADams 3800.)
Mr. Edward Weintal, attaché, 1200 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, DIstrict 4704.)
Mr. Andrew Sapieha, commercial counselor, 2640 Sixteenth Street. (Phone,
A Dams 3800.)
PORTUGAL
(Office of the legation, 1744 R Street. Phone, DEcatur 3772)
*Viscount d’Alte, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1744 R
Street. (Phone, DEcatur 3772.)
*Mr. H. Genet da Silva, first secretary, 2415 Twentieth Street. (Phone, ADams
9251.
RUMANIA
(Office of the legation, 1601 Twenty-third Street; phone, POtomac 4747. Office of finacial counselor,
1601 Twenty-third Street; phone, POtomac 3117)
Mr. Charles A. Davila, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1607
Twenty-third Street. (Phone, NOrth 7242.)
*Mr. F. C. Nano, counselor of legation, 1601 Twenty-third Street.
*Mr. George Boncesco, financial counselor of legation, Cathedral Mansions,
Center. (Phone, ADams 4800.)
Dr. A Popovici, secretary of legation, Shoreham Hotel. (Phone, ADams
0700
Mr. D. Dem. Dimancesco, attaché, 1601 Twenty-third Street.
Mr. Laurence Bungardeanu, attaché, 3700 Massachusetts Avenue. (Phone,
CLeveland 6400.)
*Mr. Emanuel H. Dimitriu, assistant financial counselor, 3700 Massachusetts
‘Avenue, (Phone, CLeveland 7944.)
RUSSIA
(Office, Room 806, 17 East Forty-fifth Street, New York City)
*Mr. Serge Ughet, financial attaché, 140 East Eighty-first Street, New York
City.
SIAM
(Office of the legation, 2300 Kalorama Road. Phone, NOrth 1849)
*H. S. H. Prince Damras Damrong Devakula, envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary, 2300 Kalorama Road. (Phone, NOrth 1849.)
*M. C. Nakkhat Kitiyakara, first secretary of legation, 2116 Kalorama Road.
(Phone, NOrth 4022.)
Mr. Snga Nilkamhaeng, attaché, 2300 Kalorama Road. (Phone, DEcatur 5977.)
SPAIN
(Office of the Smbissty 2700 Fifteenth Street; phones, COlumbia 0190 and 0191. Office of commercial
attaché, 2700 Fifteenth Street; phone, COlumbia 9636)
*Seftor Don Juan Francisco de Cardenas, ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary, 2801 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 0252.)
Seifior Don Luis M. de Irujo, minister plenipotentiary, counselor of embassy, 1901
Wyoming Avenue. (Phone, NOrth 7660.)
Sefior Don Luis de Olivares, first secretary of embassy, 2700 Fifteenth Street.
(Phone, COlumbia 0190.)
512 Congressional Directory
Seiior Don Ramén Padilla y de Satrustegui, second secretary of embassy, 2700
Fifteenth Street. (Phone, COlumbia 0190.)
*Comdr. Federico Monreal y Pil6n, Spanish Navy, naval attaché, 3301 Ritten-
house Street. (Phone, EMerson 2880.)
*Capt. Joaquin Planell Riera, Spanish Army, military attaché, 3315 Military
Road. (Phone, CLeveland 0663.)
*Sefior Don Miguel Echegaray y Romea, agricultural attaché, 1650 Harvard
Street. (Phone, COlumbia 5714.)
Seiior Don Juan Terrasa, commercial attaché, 2700 Fifteenth Street. (Phone,
COlumbia 9636.)
SWEDEN
(Office of the legation, 2249 R Street. Phone, NOrth 1044)
*t Mr. W. Bostrom, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2249
R Street. (Phone, NOrth 2020.) : :
*Baron Johan Beck-Friis, counselor of legation, 2804 Thirty-fourth Place.
(Phone, CLeveland 8027.)
*Mr. Gustaf Weidel, commercial counselor of legation, 3405 O Street. (Phone,
WEst 2481.)
Mr. Carl H. Borgenstierna, attaché. (Absent.)
SWITZERLAND
(Office of the legation, 2013 Hillyer Place. Phone, NOrth 1815)
*Mr. Marc Peter, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 2031 Q
Street. (Phone, DEcatur 5858.)
Mr. Louis H. Micheli, first secretary of legation, 1603. Connecticut Avenue.
(Phone, POtomac 0338.)
Mr. Max A. Raeber, attaché, Annapolis Hotel. (Phone, NAtional 9220.)
TURKEY
(Office of the embassy, 1606 Twenty-third Street. Phones, POtomac 3233 and NOrth 0811)
Mr. Ahmet Muhtar, ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary, 1606
Twenty-third Street. (Phone, NOrth 0811.)
Ussaki zade Biilent, second secretary of embassy.
UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA
(Office of the legation, 1529 New Hampshire Avenue. Phone, POtomac 3471)
*Mr. Eric Hendrik Louw, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary,
1521 New Hampshire Avenue. (Phone, POtomac 1814.)
Mr. Eugene Kevin Scallan, secretary of legation, 2301 New Hampshire Avenue.
(Phone, DEcatur 3880.)
*Mr. iba) Theron, commercial attaché, Alban Towers. (Phone, CLeveland
6400.
URUGUAY
(Office of the legation, Rooms 607-608, American Building, 1317 F Street. Phone, MEtropolitan 0831)
*tDr. J. Varela, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, Wardman
Park Hotel.
*Mr. J. Richling, first secretary of legation.
*Dr. J. A. Mora, first secretary of legation. (Absent.)
Mr. J. Varela, jr., attaché. (Absent.)
\ {
|
Foreign Diplomatic Representatives 513
VENEZUELA
(Office of the legation, 1628 Twenty-first Street. Phone, POtomac 0673)
*Sefior Dr. Don Pedro Manuel Arcaya, envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary, 1628 Twenty-first Street. (Phone, NOrth 4963.)
Sefior Don Luis Churion, counselor of legation.
Seiior Don Pedro Rivero, secretary of legation.
¥Sefior Don Claudio Urrutia, attaché. (Absent.)
Sefior Dr. Don César A. D4dyvila, commercial attaché. (Absent.)
YUGOSLAVIA
(Office of the legation, 1520 Sixteenth Street. Phone, POtomac 0492)
Dr. Leonide Pitamic, envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary, 1520 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, NOrth 1982.)
Mr. Bojidar P. Stoianovitch, first secretary of legation, 1520 Sixteenth Street. (Phone, POtomac 0492.)
Dr. at secretary of legation, Wardman Park Hotel. (Phone, COlum- ia ;
157297°—T73-1—1ST ED——34
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS
IN THE UNITED STATES
515
FOREIGN CONSULAR OFFICERS IN THE UNITED STATES
AFGHANISTAN—AUSTRIA
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
AFGHANISTAN
(The diplomatic and
consular representa-
tives of Turkey have
charge of the interests
of Afghanistan in the
United States.)
ALBANIA
Boston, Mass... _.._._..__
ARGENTINA
Mobile, Allg. 2 ree
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Francisco, Calif__.__
‘Washington, D. C______
Jacksonville, Fla________
Pensacola, Fla... _......
Pampa, Fla... oo...
Savannah, Ga... ....
Chicago, Hl 2%...
New Orleans, La.._.....
Baltimore, Md... =...
Boston, Mass............
Detroit, Mich... .......
Gulfport, Miss... =
St. Louis, Mo.....oiue
Cleveland, Ohio...._.___
Portland, Oreg__________
Philadelphia, Pa________
Manila iPr i a
San?Tuan,'P. Re ox
Charleston, S. C=...
Houston, Tex. ~. 7.
Port Arthur, Tex... ..__.
Newport News, Va___.__
Seattle, Wash
AUSTRIA
Los Angeles, Calif_______
Panama, Canal Zone...
Chicago, I... aaa
Baltimore, Md..._.._...
St: Louis, Mol i222 52
New York, Na Yo. =o.
George N. Prifti, consul. _......_.._.__.
G. Russell Ladd, vice consul_.______.__
Enrique C. Niese, honorary consul-___
Manuel A. de Olazabal, consul________
seonsal. CL S ot ld
George W. Hardee, vice consul________
J. Harris Pierpont, vice consul. _______
L. N. Dantzler, jr., vice consul________
W. H. Morrell, vice consul ____________
Edurado Gruning Rosas, consul_.______
Agustin J. Fink, vice consul-..._______
Antonio Ashby, vice consul.__________
Juan Connor, vice consul
José J. McLean, vice consul___________
Samuel Fitzpatrick, vice consul.___.___
Carlos Augusto Simpson, vice consul.
Carlos von Brecht, vice consul
, consul general. __________
Conrado Traverso, counselor of em-
bassy at Washington, in charge.
Arturo G. Fauzon, vice consul..___.__
L. W. Hartman, vice consul...._._____
Ernesto C. Uriburu, consul_._________
José Florentino Fernandez, honorary
consul.
Sergio Ramirez, vice consul. ..___._.__
A. Beauregard Betancourt, vice consul.
Alfredo J. Ambrosoni, consul
Christopher Stephen Flanagan, vice
consul.
H. C. Leslie, viceconsul...... ......_._.
John P. Hausman, vice consul..______
Frederick Oskar Martin, honorary
consul.
August Jacobs-Kantstein,
consul.
Michael F. Girten, honorary consul
general.
honorary
Charles William Galloway, honorary
consul.
Wilder Lucas, honorary consul._______
Friedrich Fischerauer, consul general...
Georg Schmidt, consul................
Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho,
Montana, Nevada, New Mexico,
Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wyo-
ming, and the Philippine Islands.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota,
Nebraska, North Dakota, South
Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Mississippi.
Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Mary-
land, Massachusetts, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
North Carolina, North Dakota,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Dakota,
Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin,
oie Rico, and the Virgin Islands.
io.
New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Philippine Islands.
Puerto Rico.
Washington.
Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada,
Oregon, Utah, and Washington.
Alaska, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska,
New Mexico, North Dakota, Okla-
homa, South Dakota, Texas, Wiscon-
sin, Wyoming, Hawaii, and the
Philippine Islands.
Maryland and Delaware.
Arkansas and Missouri.
Alabama, Connecticut, Florida,
Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts,
Mississippi, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South
Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, and
‘West Virginia.
517
518 Congressional Directory
AUSTRIA—BELGIUM
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
AUSTRIA—continued
Cleveland, Ohio...._.___ Viktor F. J. Tlach, honorary consul | Kentucky, Ohio, and Tennessee.
San Juan, P. R...-.. =" J Bre, he honorary consul.____..___ Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands.
BELGIUM
Birmingham, Ala... V. G. Nesbit, consul (honorary) ....... In Alabama the counties of Bibb,
Blount, Calhoun, Cherokee, Clay,
Cleburne, Colbert, Cullman, De
Kalb, Etowah, Fayette, Franklin,
Jackson, Jefferson, Lamar, Lauder-
dale, Lawrence, Limestone, Madi-
son, Marion, Marshall, Morgan,
Pickens, Randolph, St. Clair,
Shelby, Talladega, Tuscaloosa,
Walker, and Winston.
Mobile, Al... oo. T. M. Ross, consul (honorary). ....... Alabama (except that part comprised
in the jurisdiction of the consulate at
Birmingham).
Los Angeles, Calif__._.___ Ch. Winsel, consul (honorary). _._._____ Arizona and southern California.
San Francisco, Calif_____ J. Ullens de Schooten, consul general __| Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho,
P. Van der Stichelen, vice consul._____ Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah,
Washington, and Hawaii. Canal Zone......----... J. Heurtematte, consul (honorary)...
J. J. Pong vice consul (honor-
ary).
Denver, Colo........----... J. Mignolet, consul (honorary). _.__.___ Colorado, New Mexico, and Wyo-
ming.
Jacksonville, Fla____.__. A.J. Rosenthall, consul... "1 For the counties of Alachua, Baker,
Bradford, Clay, Columbia, Duval,
Flagler, Gilchrist, Nassau, Putnam,
St. Johns, Seminole, Union, and
Volusia.
Pensacola, Fla... _....__ H. Hilton Greene, vice consul (honor-
ary).
PDR, B8...5. nn suniiis R. De Beule, vice consul... __..._._.__. For the counties of Brevard, Broward,
; Charlotte, Citrus, Collier, Dade, De
Soto, Glades, Hardee, Hendry, Her-
nando, Highlands, Hillsborough, In-
dian River, Lake, Lee, Levy, Mana-
tee, Marion, Martin, Monroe, Okee-
chobee, Orange, Osceola, Palm
Beach, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk, St.
Lucie, Sarasota, and Sumter.
Atlants, Gg oa H. L. De Give, consul (honorary)..... Georgia, except southeastern Georgia.
Savannah, G@oceeo.__ A. Thesmar, consul. 2 es In Georgia the counties of Appling,
Berrien, Brooks, Bryan, Bullock,
Burke, Camden, Clinch, Coffee, Col-
quitt, Charlton, Chatham, Colum-
bia, Decatur, Dodge, Dooly, Echols,
Effingham, FEmanual, Glascock,
Glynn, Hancock, Houston, Irwin,
Jefferson, Johnson, Laurens, Liberty,
Lowndes, McDuffie, McIntosh,
Mitchell, Montgomery, Pierce, Pu-
laski, Richmond, Screven, Tattnall,
Telfair, Thomas, Twiggs, Ware,
Warren, Washington, Wayne, Wil-
cox, Wilkinson, and Worth. Honolulu, Hawaii... ._ V. Lappe, consul (honorary). .--ee.-..
Chicago, =... >: C. Vermeren, consul (honorary)..__... Illinois (except the Moline consular
John Cyrille Vermeren, vice consul....| district) and Indiana.
Emile Rosier, vice consul _____.______
Moline Rl. eos Ed. Andries, vice consul (honorary).__| In Illinois, the counties of Adams,
Brown, Bureau, Calhoun, Ful-
ton, Hancock, Henderson, Henry,
Knox, McDonough, Mercer, Pe-
oria, Pike, Rock Island, Schuyler,
Stark, and Warren, For Iowa,
counties of Adair, Adams, Appa-
noose, Cass, Clarke, Davis, Decatur,
Des Moines, Fremont, Henry,
Jefferson, Johnson, Keokuk, Lee,
Louisa, Lucas, Madison, Mahaska,
Marion, Mills, Monroe, Mont-
gomery, Muscatine, Page, Potta-
wattamie, Ringgold, Scott, Taylor,
Union, Van Buren, Wapello, Warren,
‘Washington, and Wayne,
Foreign Consular Officers in the Unated States
BELGIUM
519
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
BELGIUM—continued
T.ouisville, Ky..........
New Orleans, La_..._.__
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Mass. .....—.._..
Detroit, Mich =.
Minneapolis, Minn_____
Kansas City, Mo......_
St.-Louis,; Me. c-----=.
New York, N. T....-.-.
Cincinnati, Ohio...
Cleveland, Ohio__...__._
Portland, Oreg...... -.-.
Philadelphia, Pa....____
Pittsburgh, Pa.........
Manila, P.-L. onl
Puerto Rico (Habana,
Cuba).
Mayaguez, P. R........
Ponce, Po. RE. L.S
San Juan, P. R
Charleston, S. C__.______
Memphis, Tenn_________
Galveston, Tex_..___.___
Houston, Tex _...........
Norfolk and Newport
News, Va.
Richmond, Va... .....
Virgin Islands (Habana,
Cuba).
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash._..._..__...
Green Bay, WiS.aneawn--
Louis Hermann, acting vice consul
(honorary).
F. Gobert, consul general . __._________
H. Dabezies, consul (honorary).....___
J. G. Whiteley, consul (honorary)._.__.
G. H. Toole, consul... .Ciooo. 0 000
P. Boeye, consul (honorary)........_..
0. E. Safford, consul (honorary)._.._..
P. C. Constant, consul (honorary)...
M. Seguin, consul (honorary) ..__.___.
J. Mali, consul
Charles Hallaert, vice consul___.______
P. Lincoln Mitchell, consul (honorary).
E. E. Stearns, consul (honorary) ......
A. D. Whipple, cons
C. H. Labbé, vice consul (honorary)...
J. Leroux, consul (honorary) .__.__._.__.
R. Dereume, consul (honorary).......
H. Vander Straeten, consul general ___
M. Verlinden, consul
J. de Neeff, consul general _______.__.____
A. Bravo, vice consul (honorary)...__.
J. Oppenheimer, vice consul_____._____
M. 1. Saldana, consul (honorary)._____
R. C. Patterson, consul
P. J. André, Mottu, consul (honorary) _.
Fred E. Nolting, consul (honorary)... _
J. de Neeff, consul general
E. Van Beverhoudt, consul (honorary).
R. Auzias de Turenne, consul (hon-
orary).
J. Hertogs, vice consul (honorary).____.
M. J. Heynen, consul (honorary)......
Kentucky (except the counties of
Boone, Campbell, and Kenton).
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico,
Cklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas.
Delaware and Maryland.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, and Vermont.
Michigan.
Minnesota.
Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Som Dakota, and Kansas City,
0.
Missouri (except Kansas City).
United States (except the districts of
the consuls in New Orleans and San
Francisco).
In Ohio, the counties of Adams, Athens,
Brown, Butler, Clark, Clermont,
Clinton, Fairfield, Fayette, Frank-
lin, Gallia, Greene, Hamilton, High-
land, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Madison, Meigs, Monroe, Mont-
gomery, Morgan, Muskingum,
Noble, Perry, Pickaway, Pike,
Preble, Ross, Scioto, Vinton, Warren,
and Washington. In Kentucky, the
counties of Boone, Campbell, and
Kenton.
The northern counties of Ohio.
Idaho and Oregon.
In Pennsylvania, thecountiesof Adams,
Bedford, Berks, Blair, Bradford,
Bucks, Carbon, Centre, Chester,
Clinton, Columbia, Cumberland,
Dauphin, Delaware, Franklin, Ful-
ton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Lacka-
wanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh,
Luzerne, Lycoming, Mifflin, Mon-
roe, Montgomery, Montour, North-
ampton, Northumberland, Perry,
Philadelphia, Pike, Potter, Schuyl-
kill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna,
Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming,
and York.
In Pennsylvania, the counties of
Allegheny Armstrong, Beaver, But-
ler, Cambria, Cameron, Clarion,
Clearfield, Crawford, Xlk, Erie,
Fayette, Forest, Greene, Indiana,
Jefferson, Lawrence, McKean, Mer-
cer, Somerset, Venango, Warren,
Washington, and Westmoreland.
Philippine Islands.
Possessions of the United States in the
West Indies.
Departments of Aguadilla and Maya-
guez.
Departments of Arecibo, Bayamon,
Guayama, Humacao, and Ponce, and
the Island of Vieques.
North Carolina and South Carolina.
Texas.
Oklahoma,
Virginia and West Virginia.
Possessions of the United States in the
‘West Indies.
St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas.
Washington.
‘Wisconsin,
520 Congressional Directory
BOLIVIA—BRAZIL
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
BOLIVIA
Mobile, Ala...
Los Angeles, Calif ._....
San Diego, Calif... .__..
San Francisco, Calif__...
Panama, Canal Zone....
Hartford, Conn.....-...
Chicago, M.-oivenanae
Dubuque, Towa. ...__...
New Orleans, La....__..
Baltimore, Md
Boston, Msass.......cr--
Detroit, Mich___._.._.__.
Kansas City, Mo._.._._
St. Louis, Mo... ...oaaz0
New York, N. Y__......
Cincinnati, Ohio...
Philadelphia, Pa.._.__....
San Juan, P. R
Providence, R. I. __...__
Norfolk, Va... > -.couaia-
Seattle, Wash...
BRAZIL
Los Angeles, Calif._....
San Francisco, Calif...
Panama, Canal Zone...
Savannah, Ga. _-__.__
Honolulu, Hawaii..._.__
Chicago, 111
New Orleans, La_....__.
Baltimore, Md.caeeo._-
Boston, MasS.auacaman--
New York, N. Y_.__.__.
Philadelphia, Pa...
San Juan, P. B......-o-
Charleston, S. Cocaeeeee
Galveston, TeX-camcacn--
Port Arthur, Tex.....--
T. G. McGonigal, honorary vice con-
sul.
Julio Landivar Moreno, honorary
consul.
Jorge Eduardo Boyd, honorary consul
general.
Nardo Pennisi Spina, honorary consul_
Manuel Soria QGalvarro, honorary
consul.
William Henry Rose, honorary vice
consul.
‘W. A. Smith, honorary consul__....._
Alfredo Blanco, honorary consul_._.____
Henry B. Wilcox, honorary consul...
Pedro M. de Almeida, honorary consul.
, consul
Edwin R. Heath, honorary consul..._.
Arnold George Stifel, honorary consul.
Walter Decker, consul general ________
Rodsiio ‘Wurlitzer, honorary vice con-
sul.
Oscar Correia, in charge of consulate. _
William A. Waymouth, honorary con-
sul.
Julio C. Pino, honorary vice consul...
John D. Leitch, vice consul (honorary)
Lawrence Ammon, honorary consul--.-
Armando Fleury de Barros, honorary
consul.
James M. Sheridan, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Pedro de Alcantara Nabuco de Abreu
Filho, consul.
Jorge Arias Feroud, honorary consul...
Vinicio da Veiga, consul
Purse Anderson Miller, vice consul...
Antonio Daniel Castro, consul. _._____
Affonso de Luca, consul
Francisco Garcia Pereira Ledo, consul
general.
Jodo Carlos Mufliz, consul... oo...
Jayme Mackay de Almeida, consul
honorary).
Pedro M. de Almeida, vice consul
(honorary).
Sebastido Sampaio, consul general_._._
Mrs. Marietta da Silva Lange, consul.
David Barbosa Lage Moretzsohn,
consul.
Mrs. Daisy de Holstein Morse, acting
vice consul.
Pedro Neves de Paula Leite, consul...
Henry C. Sheppard, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Waldemar E. Lee, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Albert Edward Lee,
agent (honorary).
Ernest Yeates, consular agent_________
Robert G. Rhett, jr., vice consul (hon-
commercial
orary).
Jodo Antonio Rodrigues Martins, con-
sul.
Fred M. Burton, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Miers S. Backenstoe, commercial
agent (honorary).
Carlos Carleton Coelho Cintra, consul.
Christopher Stephen Flanagan, vice
consul (honorary).
Richard Patrick Flanagan, cominer-
cial agent (honorary).
Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington,
Wyoming, Hawaii, and the Philip-
pine Islands.
Georgia.
Hawaii.
Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mis-
sissippi, and Missouri.
Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, Ten-
nessee, and West Virginia.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New York, Rhode
Island, and Vermont.
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, In-
diana, Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan,
Iowa, Nebraska, Minnesota, North
Dakota, and South Dakota.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States
BRAZIL—COLOMBIA
921
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
BRAZIL—continued
Newport News, Va_....
Norfolk, Vai ii...
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash___________
BULGARIA
New York, N. Y...-.-..
CHILE
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Diego, Calif. _______
San Francisco, Calif_____
Canal Zone. ..._ ......-.
Honolulu, Hawaii_______
Chicago, NV... ......o
New Orleans, La_.______
Baltimore, Md...........
Boston, Mass. ........:00
Detroit, Mich... ..
New York, N. ¥........
Cincinnati, Ohio-....___
Philadelphia, Pa__.______
San Juan, P. R
CHINA
Los Angeles, Calif ._____
San Francisco, Calif_____
Panama, Canal Zone____
Honolulu, Hawaii.______
Chicago, It... ......
New Orleans, La__.._._.
New York, N. Y........
Manila, PL...
Galveston, Tex_...___.__
Norfolle,Va_..
COLOMBIA
Los Angeles, Calif___.____
Pasadena, Calif .___.._.
San Francisco, Calif.____
Cristobal, Canal Zone.._
Panama, Canal Zone...
Miami, Pla...
Tampa, Fla... ......
Chicago; Tl}. . oss
South Bend, Ind.____.._.__
New Orleans, La_.._.__..
Baltimore, Md............
Boston, Mass. -o...z.0-.
Stid.ouis, Mo....cennuas
Harry Arthur Keitz, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Caio E. de Moraes Barros, consul_____
Arthur Cameron Humphreys, vice
consul (honorary).
George Levi, consul (honorary). ___.____
F. B. Carter, vice consul (honorary) __
Neal Dow Becker, honorary consul
general.
Arturo Rios Talavera, consul._________
Mauricio Herschel, honorary consul-__
Arturo Bascufidn E., consul general ___
, consul general. __________
Juan Guzman Cruchaga, consul
(honorary).
M. H. Ehlert, consul (honorary)._.___
Fernando Dahmen, consul (honorary).
Salvador Dinamarca Jofre, honorary
consul.
Manuel Sigren, honorary consul.______
Bruno B. Thannheimer, honorary
consul.
, consul general .__________
Alfonso Grez, honorary consul.________
Enrique Bustos, honorary consul______
Francisco Peiia, consul (honorary).._..
Manuel Moreno, in charge of consulate
Filipo L. de Hostos, honorary consul__
yeonsal.. iio TRineane
Carlos Grant Benavente, honorary
consul.
Yi-Seng S. Kiang, vice consul______.__
Chang Lok Chen, consul general ______
, consul general.__..._._.._
King-chau Mui, consul. ____________
Ken-Shen Weigh, consul general. _____
Joe Tong Lee, vice consul __________.___
Koliang Yih, consul general ___=_______
Kwang Lim Kwong, consul general. __
Tsinlon Ouang, vice consul____________
Kat Shau Fung, vice consul.__________
Goon Dip; eonsul. .......o_ .  . ..
Luis A. Marifio Ariza, consul_________
Eahio A. Manotos, honorary vice con-
sul.
Luciano Restrepo, honorary consul.____
Alvaro Rebolledo, consul general _____
Victor Dugand, vice consul (honorary)
Miguel Samper Herrera, vice consul-__
Daniel Coronado Suérez, consul_______
Francisco Valencia, consul general
(honorary).
Juan A. Calvo, consul. i... ui. cueuusal
Earl C. Moore, honorary vice consul. _
Diego José Fallon, honorary consul
general.
Luis S. de Santamaria, honorary vice
consul.
Fernando L.. Mendez, honorary consul.
Ignacio Ortiz Lozano, consul general. _
Ernesto Murillo, consul (honorary).
Enrique Naranjo M., consul (honor-
ary).
Macedonio Romero, honorary consul..!
United States.
United States.
Ohio.
‘Washington and Oregon.
Canal Zone.
Philippine Islands.
District of Los Angeles.
Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, Oregon, and Washington.
Canal Zone from Cristobal to San
Pablo, inclusive.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan,
Minnesota, North Dakota, South
Dakota, Utah, Wisconsin, and
Wyoming.
Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida,
Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisi-
ana, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska,
Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and
Texas.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, and Vermont,
522 Congressional Directory
COLOMBIA—CUBA
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
New York, N. Y...
Philadelphia, Pa---
SanJuan, P. R____
Galveston, Tex_____
Houston, Tex___.__
Seattle, Wash...__.
COSTA RICA
Mobile, Ala...
Hollywood, Calif __
Los Angeles, Calif__
Balboa, Canal Zone
Miami, Fla........
Chicago, IN... ==
Dubuque, Iowa.---
Lawrence, Kans_.__
Wichita, Kans. ____
New Orleans, La___
Baltimore, Md..___
Boston, Mass...
Detroit, Mich_____.
St. Paul, Minn...
Kansas City, Mo...
St. Louis, Mo...
New York, N. Y._.
Toledo, Ohio...
Philadelphia, Pa___
Philippine Islands_-
San Juan, P. R....
Brownsville, Tex...
Galveston, Tex..___
Houston, Tex...._-
Norfolk, Va.. li...
St. Thomas,
Islands.
" Seattle, Wash.______
Racine, Wis__._.....
CUBA
Mobile, Ala........
St. Petersburg, Fla.
COLOMBIA—continued
San Francisco, Calif__.__
Cristobal, Canal Zone...
Oklahoma City, Okla___
Virgin
German Olano, consul general ._______
Roberto Escobar Isaza, vice consul ___
Eduardo Buendia Herera, vice consul:
Octavio Diaz Valenzuela, consul (hon-
orary).
M. Benitez Florez, honorary consul...
J. Al Torregrossa, honorary vice consul-
T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul. .__
Carlos Garcia Prada, consul (honorary) -
Bernard H. Eichold, honorary consul.
John Field Povedano, honorary consul_
Carlos Enrique Bobertz, consul (hon-
orary).
Juan Anjno, honorary consul. _____.___
Fernando Flores Banuet, honorary
vice consul.
Luis de San Simén y Ortega, consul
(honorary).
Enrique Pucci Paoli, consul (honorary) -
Gonzalo J. Gallegos Flores, honorary
consul.
Francisco Villafranca Carazo, honor-
ary consul.
Harold E. Rucavado, consul general
(honorary).
Berthold Singer, honorary consul .____
E. F. Lusch, honorary consul. ________
José Maria Osma de Aysa, honorary
consul.
Joaquin Angulo, honorary vice consul.
John Marshall Quintero, honorary
consul general.
William A. Riordan, consul (honor-
ary).
RA LT Va
Claudio J. Loria, honorary consul..___
José Joaquin Vargas Calvo, honorary
consul. :
Miguel Flores Trejos, honorary consul.
John M. Hadley, honorary consul.____
Manuel Madrigal Mora, honorary vice
consul.
D. Calhoun Jones, honorary consul. .__
Juan M. Jiménez, consul general______
Felipe Molina Larios, honorary consul.
J. Z. Werby, honorary consul. ________
Carlos G. Perez, honorary consul._____
Edward E. Dougherty, honorary vice
consul.
Eduardo Azuola Aubert, honorary
vice consul.
Vingonic T. Fernandez, honorary con-
sul.
Francisco Ramirez de Arellano, hon-
orary consul.
Gustavo Vera, honorary consul ._..____
L. W. Reed, honorary consul__________
Clarence A. Miller, honorary consul...
Harry Reyner, honorary consul... _____
George Levy, honorary consul_________
Frank P. Dow, honorary consul_______
Edward J. Menge, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Wilfred Seng, honorary vice consul_.__
Andrés Jiménez y Ruz, consul... ______
United States and the following spe- °
cial jurisdiction: Connecticut, Dela-
ware, Maine, Maryland, Massachu-
setts, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New York, North Carolina, Penn-
sylvania, Rhode Island, South Caro-
lina, Vermont, Virginia, and West
Virginia.
Canal Zone from Balboa to and ex-
cluding Gatun.
Louisiana.
Kansas City, Mo., and the State of
Kansas.
With jurisdiction also in Newport
News.
Alabama and Tennessee; jurisdiction
includes the honorary consulate in
Chattanooga.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States
CUBA
523
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
cuBA—continued
Los Angeles, Calif ______
San Francisco, Calif-____
Washington, D. C______
Jacksonville, Fla___._____
Key West, Fla__________
Mia, Ila...
Tampa, Fla....... L000
Savannah, Ga: .___
Chieago; Hl. 2...
Louisville, Ky eo. __..
New Orleans, La_.______
Baltimore, Md______.___
Boston, Mass... __..
Detroit, Mich... ........:
Gulfport, Miss..........
Pascagoula, Miss_.______
Kansas City, Mo______.
St. Louis, Moi. .....-..
NewYork, N.Y........
Cincinnati, Ohio___._____
Philadelphia, Pa________
Aguadilla, P. B.........
Arecibo, P. R
Mayaguez, P.R........
San Joan, P-RB. .- _ =
Chattanooga, Tenn_____
Galveston, Tex___.______
Norfolk, Va: lai el
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Jose Antonio Torralbas y de la Cruz,
vice consul.
Gabriel Angel Amenadbar y Cabello,
consul.
Miguel Cornide y Salva, vice consul. _
Julio Rodriguez Embil, consul. _______
Rafael Cervifio y Reytor, consul...___
Conrado Dominguez y Nuiea, consul__
Miguel Angel Campos y Conde, vice
consul. R
Guillermo Espinosa y Pérez, consul. __
Eliseo Pérez y Diaz, vice consul_______
Abelardo A. Leon Blanco, honorary
consular agent. :
Ursulo J. Dobal y de la Torre, consul. __
Francisco Gonzalez Riancho y Guer-
rero, consular agent.
José Joaquin Zarza y Hernandez,
consul.
Francisco Batet y Rivas, vice consul.__
Eduardo L. Desvernine, consul________
José M. Gonzalez y Rodriguez del Rey,
consul.
Oo A. Barranco y Fernandez, con-
sul.
— Pr Lem eR TE
José R. Cabrera y Bequer, consular
agent (honorary).
Antonio Medina Barrios, consul_______
Armando de Leon y Valdes, consul____
José Manuel Vasquez Bello, consul
general.
Mario del Pino y Sandrino, consul. __
Julio Garrida y Arango, consul._______
Fernando Bridat y del Riesgo, consul.
seonsul. canara ol Tn
Miguel Angel Caballero y Dollenarte,
consular agent.
Eduardo Patterson y de Jauregui,
consul.
Rogelio Tofiarely y Chaumont, consul.
Frederic Valdemar Alphonse Miiller,
honorary consul.
California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho,
Nevada, Utah, and Arizona; juris-
diction includes the honorary consu-
late in Los Angeles.
District of Columbia.
In Florida the counties of Duval, Nas-
sau, St. John, Flagler, Volusia, Mar-
ion, Bloxham, Levy, Alachua, Put-
nam, Clay, Bradford, Baker, Colum-
bia, Hamilton, Suwanee, Lafayette,
Taylor, Madison, and Jefferson. For
Georgia.
In Florida the counties of Monroe, Lee,
Palm Beach, Broward, and Dade.
In Florida the counties of Bay, Cal-
houn, Escambia, Franklin, Gadsden,
Holmes, Jackson, Leon, Liberty,
Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, Wakulla,
‘Walton, and Washington.
In Florida the counties of Brevard,
Citrus, De Soto, Hernando, Hills-
borough, Lake, Manatee, Okee-
chobee, Orange, Osceola, Pasco,
Pinellas, Polk, St. Lucie,, Semi-
nole, and Sumter.
Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa
North Dakota, South Dakota, and
Montana.
Louisiana, Mississippi, and Arkansas;
jurisdiction includes the honorary
consulates in Gulfport and Pasca-
goula.
Maryland and Delaware.
Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Ver-
mont, New Hampshire, and Maine.
Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Wyo-
ming, and Colorado; jurisdiction
includes the honorary consulate at
Kansas City.
New York and Connecticut, and in
New Jersey the counties of Mon-
mouth, Mercer, Middlesex, Union,
Hudson, Essex, Bergen, - Passaic,
Sussex, Warren, Morris, Hunterdon,
and Somerset.
Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and Michi-
gan; jurisdiction includes the hon-
orary consulates in Louisville and
Detroit.
Pennsylvania, and in New Jersey the
counties of Burlington, Ocean,
Camden, Atlantic, Cape May,
Cumberland, Salem, and Gloucester.
Districts of San Juan, Guayama, and
Humacao in Puerto Rico. For Virgin
Islands; jurisdiction includes the
honorary consulate in St. Thomas.
Texas, Oklahoma, and New Mexico.
North Carolina, South Carolina, Vir-
ginia, and West Virginia.
524 Congressional Directory
CZECHOSLOVAKIA—DENMARK
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
CZECHOSLOVAKIA
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Francisco, Calif_.___
Chicago, WM: .. .o...ilni
Minneapolis, Minn. ____
Kansas City, Mo.......
New York, N.-Y.....co.
Cleveland, Ohio. _.______
Philadelphia, Pa________
Pittsburgh Pa...
Manila, Pol. ois. od
Seattle, Wash___________
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 o.oo ak
Los Angeles, Calif. ______
San Francisco, Calif_____
Colon, Canal Zone.______
Panama, Canal Zone____
Denver, Colo.._...._____
Pensacola, Fla________._
Nampa, Bla. .o...oo
‘West Palm Beach, Fla___
Savannah, Ga.._...._....
Honolulu, Hawaii.______
Chieago, Hl.couii. au
New Orleans, La________
Baltimore, Md____..____
Boston, Mass.....cc.i-..
Detroit, Mich... ..
Minneapolis, Minn_____
St. Louis, Moi...
Omaha, Nebr. ..c ot. 00
New York, N. Y..cceee-
Felix B. Janovsky, consul (honorary) . _
E. Chloupek, honorary consul
Jaroslav Smetanka, consul... _________._
Charles Edward Proschek, honorary
consul.
Alexandre Rieger, honorary consul .___
Jaroslav Novak, consul general _._____
Bedfich Kalda, consul... ......__..
Charles Robinson Toothaker, honor-
ary consul.
Charles Brejska, consul. ______________
Leo Schnurmacher, honorary consul. _ _
Otokar Strizek, honorary consul
Thomas Stone Leatherbury, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Ryan Asger Grut, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Axel Caspar Frederik Sporon Fiedler,
consul.
Colman Sasso, consul (honorary)
Samuel Levy Maduro, consul (honor-
ary).
Wolf = Hansen, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Carl McKenzie Oerting, vice consul
(honorary).
Harry B. Roberts, vice consul.________
A. S. Andersen, vice consul (honorary)
Aage Georg Schroder, vice consul
(honorary).
Robert Benjamin Booth, consul_.___._
Reimund Baumann, consul... ___
Ingemann Olsen, consul (honorary)...
Hola A. Koppel, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Niels Hjalmar Larsen, vice consul
(honorary).
Aage Emanuel Olsen, vice consul
(honorary).
Andrew Nissen Johnson, vice consul
(honorary).
Chicago consulate has charge_.________
Prong W. Lawson, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Georg Bech, consul general............
Southern California and Arizona.
Northern California, Idaho, Nevada,
Utah, and Hawaii.
Alabama, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho,
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana,
Mississippi, Nebraska, New Mexico,
Tennessee, Oklahoma, South Dako-
ta, Texas, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Minnesota, North Dakota, and Mon-
tana.
Kansas and Missouri.
Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Maine,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, North Caro
lina, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
Vermont, Virginia, and the Virgin
Islands.
Kentucky, Michigan, and Ohio.
Eastern Pennsylvania, Delaware, and
Maryland.
Pennsylvania and West Virginia.
Philippine Islands.
Alaska, Oregon, and Washingten.
Alabama.
Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada,
and Oregon.
Canal Zone.
Do.
Colorado.
Florida.
Hawaii.
Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, New
Mexico, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Oklahoma, South Dakota, Utah,
Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Maryland.
Massachusetts.
Michigan.
Minnesota.
Missouri.
Nebraska.
Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware,
Florida, Georgia, Louisiana (ex-
cept the city and port of New Or-
leans), Maine, Maryland, Massa-
chusetts, Mississippi, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York,
North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, South Carolina, Ten-
nessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia,
and West Virgnia.
Foreign Consular Officers wn the United States
DENMARK—DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
925
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
DENMARE—continued
Grand Forks, N. Dak___
Cleveland, Ohio.________
Portland, Oreg..........
Philadelphia, Pa________
Manila, Po Loc.
Humaeao, P. Rc...
Mayaguez, P. RB... ....
Ponce, PR i io. ian
San Jaan, PR... ..
Charleston, 8. C........ :
Brookings, S. Dak______
Galveston, Tex......____
Houston, Tex...
Port Arthur, Tex... ...-.
Salt Lake City, Utah____
Newport News, Va_____
Norfolk, Va
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash___________
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
Mobile, Ala_____________
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Francisco, Calif ____
Christobal, Canal Zone. _
Panama, Canal Zone_.__
Denver, Colo. _.__.______
Jacksonville, Fla________
Miami, Plaid ii 200
Tampa, Fla... ..........
Chicago, M............n
Dubuque, Iowa_________
Lake Charles, La_______
New Orleans, La. _______
Baltimore, Md___.____.__
Boston, Mass...
St.Louis, Me, conven
New York, NY
Hamsecao, P. B....... =
Mayaguez, P. R__._____
Ponce, PB. aia
Sandagan, P.B....
Galveston, Tex__.______._
Houston, Tex... ul.
Port Arthur, Tex. iL. L
Norfolk and Newport
News, Va.
St. Croix, Virgin
Islands.
St. Thomas, Virgin
Islands.
—— —— viceconsul ______ oo...
Niels Anthon Christensen, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Sherman Harkson, acting vice consul.
Ludvig Theodor Brehm, vice consul
(honorary).
Gerrit Pieter Datema, consul (hon-
orary).
Antonio Roig, vice consul (honorary). -
Hiram Gomez, vice consul (honorary)
Alberto Armstrong, vice consul
(honorary).
Frantz Adolf Charles Hastrup, con-
sul (honorary).
Hans Wilhelm Bagger, vice consul
(honorary).
Christian Larsen, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Carl Christian Biehle, vice consul.___.
Edmond Peter Pincoffs, vice consul
(honorary).
N. M. Nielsen, vice consul (honorary) -
Hans Marius Hansen Lund, vice
consul.
V. D. Anderson, acting vice consul____
Walter Knox, vice consul (honorary)..
Axel Ovensen Thage, consul. _________
Aage Halk, in charge of consulate..___
T. G. McQGonigal, vice consul______.__.
J oss S. Saenz y Macho, honorary con-
sul.
John Barneson, honorary consul.......
William Fisher, honorary vice consul -
H.J. Henriquez, honorary vice consul .
Mauricio Benjamin Fidanque, hon-
orary consul.
René Rodriguez, honorary consul._.__
Marqués Hannibal Viti Mariani,
honorary consul.
William Lawton, honorary consul.____
A. Perper, honorary vice consul_______
J. Paul Jenkins, honorary consul______
Javier H. Cerecedo, honorary consul..
James T. Case, honorary vice consul. _
—— ——, consul
G. P. Hannan, honorary consul.______
Armando Pompeyo Lopez, consul ____
Alfredo Blanco, honorary vice consul__
Julius F. Sandrock, honorary consul__
Max L. Glazer, honorary consul_______
Victor M. Hinojosa, honorary vice
consul.
Arturo Kennedy, honorary vice consul.
J. M.. Bonnetti Burgos, consul general _
Rongrto D. Abrahams, honorary con-
sul.
Eduardo Fronteras, vice consul_..____
Eugenio Lefranc, honorary consul-____
Pedro Garcia, honorary consul________
Raul Comme Fernaddez, consul-______
—— ——, vice consul
—— ——, vice consul
Peregrino Lopez, honorary consul ___
Fernando S. Rivera, honorary consul _ _
Carlos M. Petterne "Alomar, honorary
vice consul.
Pablo Cabral y Baez, consul general. _
Frank J. Richardson, honorary vice
consul.
J. A. Torregrosa, honorary consul. ____
T. L. Evans, honorary consul_________
Fernando Pro, honorary consul ______
—— —— viececonsul __________________
—— —— viceconsul __________.________
Emile A. Berne, honorary consul_.__.___
J. Percy Soufiront, honorary vice con-
sul,
North Dakota.
Oregon.
Pennsylvania.
Puerto Rico.
South Carolina.
Utah.
Virgin Islands.
Alaska and Washington.
Canal Zone.
United States.
Puerto Rico.
tT CC OC CE Ee
526 Congressional Directory
ECUADOR—ESTONIA
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
ECUADOR
Los Angeles, Calif...
San Francisco, Calif ____
Colon, Canal Zone._____
Panama, Canal Zone____
Chieago, Tl... o- 2 -:
Dubuque, Iowa.._-______
New Orleans, La________
St. Louis, Mo-_ ~~... --
New York, N. Y
Portland, Oreg..-.....__
Philadelphia, Pa________
Pittsburgh, Pa... =.
San Juan, P. Ri.
Houston, Tex... -.....
Norfolk, Va... 2o-
Seattle, Wash. ......____
EGYPT
San Francisco, Calif __._
New York, N. Y_..o....
EL SALVADOR
Mobile, Ala... ._..
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Francisco, Calif_____
Canal Zone... coc.
Miami, Fla............-
Chieago, TH... 0 ioc:
New Orleans, La_.______
Baltimore, Md..__..____
Boston, Mass... 2...
New York, N.Y. ......
Philadelphia, Pa________
San Juan, P.
Brownsville, Tex_.______
Seattle, Wash. ..._...._.
ESTONIA
San Francisco, Calif_.-._
Chicago, Tll.....-.£::.
‘New Orleans, La___.___.
New York City, N. Y _.
Charleston, S. O...------
Neorfolls, Va. ..-c-o ann
Aninmio Géandara, honorary vice con-
sul.
Gustavo R. de Ycaza, consul general. __
Benjamin Mosquera A., honorary vice
consul.
Ricaurte Zaval, honorary consul...
———, consul general __________
Ernesto Alcivar, honorary consul
R. W. Clewell, honorary vice consul.
Francisco Banda C., consul general...
J. N. Spangler, honorary vice consul.
Eduardo Jaramillo A, consul general _
A. R. Vejar, viceconsul.._....._....o22
Harol R. Loring, honorary vice consul.
Siehen Q. Hayes, honorary vice con-
sul.
Fernando L. Gonzélez, honorary vice
consul.
Gustavo Adolfo Icaza, honorary consul.
T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul. ___
Arthur C. Humphreys, honorary vice
consul.
Ulpiane Borja P., consul... —---
Aly Fouad Toulba Effendi, consul...
Anis Azer, consul. tessa Lean. an
Howard M. Hempstead, honorary
consul.
Roberto E. Tracey, honorary consul...
———, consul
Vicente Godoy, vice consul___________.
Ernesto A. Boyd, honorary consul.__.
William B. Lawton, honorary consul.
Max Henry Ehlert, honorary consul. .
—— consul.
Joaquin Arrieta Gallegos, honorary
consul.
————, @ODSUL eee
, consul general________._-
, consul
R. Fernandez Nater, honorary consul__
Gustavo Vera, honorary consul________
———, consul
Walter E. Hettman, honorary consul. .
Clifton Clark Coldren, honorary con-
sul. N. O. Pedrick, consul (honorary)...
, consul general
Charles Kuusik, vice consul _._.___._-
Thaddeus Street, consul (honorary). .--
R. T. Hasler, consul (honorary)..._..-
Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colo-
rado, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Loui-
siana, Minnesota, Missouri, Mon-
tana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Ne-
vada, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah,
‘Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, and
Hawaii. Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Dis-
trict of Columbia, Florida, Georgia,
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan,
Mississippi, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont,
Virginia, West Virginia, and Wis-
consin.
Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisi-
ana, Mississippi, and Tennessee.
‘Washington.
United States.
Connecticut, Delaware, District of
Columbia, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and
Vermont.
Foreign Consular Officers wn the United States
FINLAND—FRANCE
527
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
FINLAND
San Francisco, Calif...
Pl
Canal Zone. -.-eeecee--
Chicago, Toon
Boston, Mass. ..cae-an--
Detroit, Mich............
Hancock, Mich. __......
Marquette, Mich_______
Duluth, Minn... ..--<i=-
New York, N. Y.....o-&
Ashtabula, Ohio...
Astoria, Oreg............
Philadelphia, Pa._..._._..
Aberdeen, Wash_____.__
Seattle, Wash___________
FRANCE
Mobile,sAln. acinus.
Panama, Canal Zone...
Denver, Colo-....___._._
Miami, Fla. wos iod.ls
Pensacola, Fla......_..__
Tampa, Fla
Atlanta; Gazc ol oxic
Savannah, Ga...........
Honolulu, Hawaii__._____
Chicago,IL. cio. ae
Indianapolis, Ind_...____
Louisville, Ky__._._______
Lafayette and Lake
Charles, La.
New Orleans, La
Baltimore, Md_._...._._.__
Boston, Mass___.
Detroit; Mich... u..l.oi.
Duluth, Minn__________
Minneapolis, Minn_.___
Jarl Arthur Lindférs, vice consul
(honorary).
Ramon Arias-Feraud, jr., consul (hon-
orary).
Elmer A. Forsberg, consul (honorary).
OscarHayskar, vice consul (honorary) _
John Alfred Anderson, vice consul
(honorary).
George H. Heideman, honorary vice
consul.
Henry Holm, vice consul (honorary).
John Lammi, vice consul (honorary).
Eino Aapo Aaltio, consul __.___________
Frans Albert Mustonen, honorary
vice consul.
Kaarlo Fredrik Altio, consul general _ _
George E. Ervast, vice consul _________
Kaarlo Edvin Kuusamo, acting vice
consul.
Paul Josef Collander, honorary vice
consul.
E. E. Pajunen, honorary vice consul. .
Norbert A. Considine, vice consul
(honorary).
Werner Fellman, honorary consul_____
Alarik Wilhelm Quist, vice consul
(honorary).
Simon Klotz, consular agent_____.__.___
George T. Cowles, consular agent.._.___
Henri Alfred Noel Didot, consul..____
Lucien Bouvet, consular agent._.._.___
Joseph Marie Yves Méric de Bellefon,
consul general.
Louis Eugene Langlais, consul. __.____.
Eitenne Bernardeau Renaud, consular
agent.
Gaston Wautier, consular agent_______
George Westerby Howe, consular
agent.
Ernest W. Monrose, consular agent. __
Charles Loridans, consular agent. .___
Frank W. Spencer, consular agent_____
Irving Otis Pecker, consular agent ____
Jean Jacques René Weiller, consul. _.._
Hugh McKennan Landon, consular
agent.
James G. O’Brien, consular agent____.
Francois Vavasseur Mouton, consular
agent.
Jean Marie René Delage, consul
John Phelps, consular agent__._________
Joseph J. Flamand, honorary consul. _
Léon Marie Philippe Morand, consul.
Julien Romieux, consular agent
Edouard Hinman Sirich, consular
Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada,
New Mexico, and Utah; Hawaii,
Philippine Islands, and other insular
possessions of the United States in
the Pacific Ocean.
Illinois and Indiana.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Lower Peninsula of Michigan.
Arkansas, Iowa, Idaho, Kansas, Mich-
igan, Minnesota, Missouri, Mon-
tana, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennes-
see, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
United States and its dependencies.
Kentucky and Ohio.
Oregon.
Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho,
Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Wash-
ington, Wyoming, Hawaii, and the
Philippine Islands.
Arizona and New Mexico, and in Cali-
fornia the counties of Imperial, Inyo,
Kern, Kings, Los Angeles, Mono,
Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino,
San Diego, San Luis Obispo, Santa
Barbara, and Ventura.
California (except the consular district
of Los Angeles), Alaska, Colorado,
Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon,
Utah, Washington, Wyoming, and
Hawaii.
Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota,
South Dakota, and Wisconsin, and
in Indiana the counties of Lake and
Porter.
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma,
Tennessee, and Texas.
Indiana (except the counties of Lake
and Porter), Kentucky, Michigan,
and Ohio. >
agent.
928 Congressional Directory
FRANCE—GERMANY
Residences Name and rank Jurisdiction
FRANCE—continued
Kansas City, Mo-__..._
St. Louis, Mo..uo. oi.
Omaha, Nebr........_..
Buffalo, N.Y... .coo0i).
New York, N.Y ........
Cincinnati, Ohio________
Cleveland, Ohio_._______
Columbus, Ohio________
Toledo, Ohio... .L....l...
Portland, Ores... .......
Philadelphia, Pa________
Pittsburgh, Pa._._...o_.
Manila, Poludisii fuga
Mayaguez, P.R_._.._
Ponce, P:R...
Beaumont, Tex.._._.__.
BYPaso, Tex. i
Galveston, Tex.__._______
Houston, Tex...
San Antonio, Tex_______
Norfolk, Newport News,
and Portsmouth, Va.
St. Thomas, Virgin
Islands.
Seattle, Wash ____. _____.
Milwaukee, Wis_.____.__
GERMANY
Mobile, Ala.....cc.. cn
Los Angeles, Calif_..____
San Francisco, Calif...__
Balboa, Canal Zone__.__.
Colon, Canal Zone.______
Denver, Colo. ___.__.____
Jacksonville, Fla________
Pensacola, Fla...
Savannah, Ga... ...___
Chicago, TH 2c. =:
Louisville, Ky... _______
New Orleans, La..______
Baltimore, Md.._....._.
Boston, Mass....aoauad-
Detroit, Mich...
Kansas City, Mo-......
St. Louis, Mo......cnvmnmm
Paul Constant, consular agent ________
Mare Francois Eugené Seguin, con-
sular agent.
Auguste Borglum, consular agent. ____
Paul Joseph Speyser, consular agent. .._
Charles Hippolyte Marie de Ferry de
Fontnouvelle, consul general.
Jean ten Have, consular agent_________
Edouard Jacquet, consular agent._____
Henri Fabert, consular agent__________
William Harrison Anderson, consular
agent.
Charles Henri Labbe, consular agent...
Emile Marsel de Verneuil, consul..___
William Glenn MacKee, consular
agent.
Gaston Désiré Willoquet, consul..____
Eugene Orsini, consular agent_________
Antoine Quilichini, consular agent. ___
Jean Pierre Malivoire Filhol de
Camas, consul.
G. C. Vidrine, consular agent. ________
Jean Marie Romagny, consular agent.
P. A. Drouilhet, consular agent_______
Georges Pierre Ferdinand Jouine, con-
sular agent.
Alfred Sanner, consular agent_._______
Georges Joseph Fossier, consular
agent.
Cyril Daniel, consular agent___.._.____
Pierre Lefebvre, consular agent________
Riordan Hugues, consular agent___.___
Walter Hermann Zingelmann, consul
(honorary). , consul
Gustav Heuser, consul general. .._.._.
Eduard Baron von Berchem, vice con-
sul.
Ernst Neumann, consul (honorary)...
‘Walter Scharpp, consul (honorary)...
William Godel, consul (honorary)...
Ernst Steinke, consul (honorary)..___._
Gerhard Rolfs, consul (honorary). .___
Julius Carl Schwarz, consul (honorary).
Ting ferainand Simon, consul gen-
eral.
Werner Schiiller, vice consul._______..
Georg Schaller, vice consul__________..
Arthur E. Mueller, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Rolf Jagger, const cc. vaio niiinnininsa
Heinrich Gerhard Hilken, consul
(honorary).
Kurt von Tippelskirch, consul general.
Fritz Hailer, vice consul (honorary)...
Henry J. Wilde, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Reinold Freytag, consul
Delaware, North Carolina, Pennsyl-
vania, South Carolina, Virginia,
West Virginia, and for the cities of
Camden and Gloucester im New
Jersey.
Philippine Islands.
Puerto Rico.
Alabama.
In California the counties of Imperial,
Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, River-
side, San Bernardino, San Diego,
San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara,
and Ventura.
Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada,
New Mexico, and Utah. For the
Territory of Hawaii.
Port of Balboa, including the Pacific
part of the Canal Zone.
Port of Cristobal and the Atlantic
part of the Canal Zone.
Colorado.
Florida east and south of the Suwanee
iver.
Florida west of the Suwanee River.
Georgia.
Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska,
North Dakota, South Dakota, and
Wisconsin.
Kentucky.
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, and Texas.
Delaware, Maryland, and the District
of Columbia.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Wayne County, Mich.
Kansas, and in Missouri the counties
of Clay and Jackson, and for Kansas
City.
Arkansas, Mis- Kansas, Kentucky,
souri, Oklahoma, and Tennessee.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States
GERMANY—GREAT BRITAIN
929
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
GERMANY—continued
Buffalo, N. Y--------
New-York, N.Y...
Cleveland, Ohio_._______
Portland, Oreg.__._._____
Philadelphia, Pa.__..___
Pittsburgh, Pa vii i= =
Manila, P. I
Aguadilla, P.R -1
San Juan, P. R
Charleston, S. C._._.__.
Galveston, Tex___.______
San Antonio, Tex_______
Tutuila (Sydney, Aus-
tralia).
Tutuila (Wellington,
New Zealand).
Newport News-Nor-
, Va.
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash._._.._._____
GREAT BRITAIN
Douglas, Ariz... iva.
Los Angeles, Calif_._.___
| Georg Gyssling, vice consul___________
Alphonse Karl, consul (honorary)__.___
—— consul... ..
Paul Schwarz, consul =
Baron von Lentz, consul__.___________
Adolf Reichel, vice consul. ____________
Heinrich Jordan, vice consul. _________
Johannes Borchers, consul ____________
Robert Clostermann, consul (hon-
orary).
Arno Paul Mowitz, consul (honorary).
John E. Loibl, vice consul (honorary) _
Joachim Schulze, consul __.___.__.______
Georg Sanders, vice consul (honorary).
Friedrich Schomburg, consul (hon-
orary).
J. A. von Dohlen, consul (honorary) _ __
Julius W. Jockusch, consul (honorary) _
onsul
Consul at Noa Orleans transacts
business temporarily.
Rudolf Asmis, consul general..________
Wilhelm Penseler, consul (honorary)  _
Leopold Marshall von Schilling, vice
consul (honorary).
L. M. Monsanto, consular agent (hon-
orary).
Walther Reinhardt consul............
Alexander Baird, jr., vice consul. _____
Wentworth Martyn Gurney, consul. _
Wilfred Hansford Gallienne, vice con-
sul.
George Wellington Irving, vice consul.
157297°—73-1—1ST ED——35
In New York the counties of Allegany,
Cataraugus, Chautauqua, Erie, Gen-
esee, Livingston, Monroe, Niagara,
Ontario, Orleans, Seneca, Steuben,
Wayne, Wyoming, and Yates.
Connecticut, Delaware, District of
Columbia, Maryland, New Jersey,
New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia,
and St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
Port of New York.
Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and West
Virginia.
Oregon.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Adams,
Berks, Bradford, Bucks, Carbon,
Centre, Chester, Clinton, Columbia,
Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware,
Franklin, Fulton, Huntington, Ju-
niata, Lancaster, Lackawanna, Leb-
anon, Lehigh, Luzerne, Lycoming,
Mifflin, Monroe, Montgomery, Mon-
tour, Northampton, Northumber-
land, Perry, Philadelphia, Pike,
Potter, Schuylkill, Sullivan, Snyder,
Susquehanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne,
‘Wyoming, and York.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Alle-
gheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Bedford,
Blair, Butler, Cambria, Cameron,
Clarion, Clearfield, Crawford, Elk,
Erie, Fayette, Forest, Greene,
Indiana, Jefferson, Lawrence, Mec-
Kean, Mercer, Somerset, Venango,
‘Warren, Washington, and West-
moreland.
Philippine Islands and the Island of
Guam.
Aguadilla.
Puerto Rico (except Aguadilla).
North Carolina and South Carolina.
That part of Texas situated east or
south of the counties of Brazoria,
Collin, Freestone, Grayson, Grimes,
Harris, Henderson, Jackson, Kauf-
man, Leon, Madison, Matagorda,
Montgomery, Nueces, Refugio,
Rockwall, San Patricio, and Victoria,
and including these counties.
That part of Texas situated west,
north, or south of the counties of
Brazoria, Collin, Freestone, Gray-
son, Grimes, Harris, Henderson,
Jackson, Kaufman, Leon, Madison,
Matagorda, Montgomery, Nueces,
Refugio, Rockwall, San Patricio, and
Yicoria, and excluding these coun-
ies.
Newport News, Norfolk, and Ports-
mouth
Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon,
Washington, and Wyoming.
In California the counties of Imperial,
Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, River.
side, San Bernardino, San Diego, San
Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and
Ventura, and the State of Arizona,
530 Congressional Directory
GREAT BRITAIN
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
GREAT BRITAIN—CON.
San Francisco, Calif_____
Colon, Canal Zone__..__
Panama, Canal Zone...
‘Washington, D. C..__._.
Jacksonville, Fla________
Miami Fla: eet
Savannah, Ga..._______.
Honolulu, Hawaii_______
Chicago dl. 00 ab 2 0k
New Orleans, La._______
Baltimore, Md._..__.__.
Boston, Mass_.._.._.....
Detroit, Mich’. oi:
Kansas City, Mo______.
St. Touis, Mo... 5...
New York, N.Y  ......
Cincinnati, Ohio_._..____
Philadelphia, Pa._.._____
Pittsburgh, Pa... oi 2
Cebup Pil. duveianidsl
Archibald Campbell Charlton, consul
general.
Cyril Hubert Cane, consul.___________
Eivion Hugh Davies, vice consul_____
Wilired Gruffydd Rhys Howell, vice
consu
Alan Meredith Williams, acting vice
consul.
Thomas Emanuel Kavanagh Cormac,
proconsul.
Gilbert Laurence Rogers, consul. _____
Francis Brian Anthony Rundall, act-
ing vice consul.
Josiah Crosby, consul general _________
Egerton Shaw Humber, vice consul. _
Dudley Lynn Humber, vice consul. __
Cyril Herbert Alfred Marriott, vice
consul.
John Campbell Thomson, acting vice
consul.
Walter Mucklow, consul ______________
J. HH. Bland, proconsal....«.
Lewis Arthur Oates, vice consul ______
Kenneth James Macarthur White,
consul.
Richard William Holt, vice consul. ___
Montague Bentley Talbot Paske
Smith, consul.
William Henry Baird, vice consul.____
Lewis Edward Bernays, consul general
Malcolm. Sibourne Henderson, vice
consul.
Robert Ross, vice consul _._.__________
Frank Gordon Rule, consul general. __
William Percy Taylor Nurse, vice
consul.
Kenneth James Macarthur White,
vice consul.
Robert Mackenzie Crawford Buchan,
consul.
Robert Chambers, vice consul._______
George Bailey Beak, consul general _ __
James Arthur Brannen, vice consul. _ _
Francis Edward Evans, vice consul. __
Leslie Charles Hughes-Hallett, consul
Albert Rendle Stone, vice consul_____
Richard Hansford Gallienne, vice con-
sul.
Reginald Thomas Davidson, vice con-
sul.
Eric Cunliffe Buxton, consul__________
Gerald Campbell, consul general ._____
Edward Henry Gerald Shepherd, con-
sul.
John Moncaster Ley Mitcheson, con-
sul.
Alexander Swinton Paterson, vice con-
sul.
Joseph Stanton Goodreds, acting vice
consul.
David Loinaz, acting vice consul______
Roger Bentham Stevens, acting vice
consul.
Clarence Norbury Ezard, vice consul. ._
Frank Butler, acting vice consul. _____
Richard Harold Fawcett Smith, acting
vice consul.
Walter Frederick James, proconsul.___
Walter Macleod, vice consul. _________
Frederick Watson, consul general. ____
John Thomas Cullen, acting vice
consul.
Arthur Harry Tandy, vice consul._.__
Peter Pares, acting vice consul. _______
Sydney Alwyn Grayson, consul. _____.
Oliver Smalley, vice consul___________
Fred Kennedy, acting vice pig Sas
Geoffrey Whitfield Sinclair, acting
vice consul.
California (except the counties included
in the jurisdiction of the consulate
at Los Angeles), Nevada, and Utah.
Canal Zone.
North Carolina, South Carolina, and
Georgia.
Hawaii.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota,
Nebraska, North Dakota, South
Dakota, Wisconsin, and Wyo-
ming.
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, and Mis-
sissippi.
Maryland, Virginia, and West Vir-
ginia.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Michigan and Ohio.
Arkansas, Colorado, Kansas, Ken-
tucky, Missouri, Oklahoma, Ten-
nessee, and the city of East St. Louis,
111
Connecticut, New Jersey (with the
exception of the counties of Atlantic,
Burlington, Camden, Cape May,
Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and
Salem), and New York.
Delaware and Pennsylvania, and in
New Jersey the counties of Atlantic,
Burlington, Camden, Cape May,
Cumberland, Gloucester, Ocean, and
Salem.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 531
GREAT BRITAIN—GUATEMALA
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
GREAT BRITAIN—COD.
Davao, P: Li. .caauadcis
Noelle, Puls cowie vonasd
Legaspi, P.. 1. ...ucuaii.
Manila, PY. Jo
Zamboanga, Mindanao-.
Ponce, P. RB. ooccveiuas
San'Juan, P. BR... ....
Dallas, Tex... van
Galveston, Tox...
Newport News, Va_____
Norfolk, Va: =>
Frederiksted, Virgin Is-
lands.
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash. ______.__
GREECE
San Francisco, Calif_____
Denver, Colo. _.._._..._
Washington, D. C______
Chicago, TN... ocicae.
Boston, Mass. .......-.--
New York, N. Y........
Cleveland, Ohio_....___.__
GUATEMALA
Mobile, Ala. _.___......
Los Angeles, Calif
San Diego, Calif. _______
San Francisco, Calif...
San Pedro, Calif _______.
Cristobal, Canal Zone.___
Panama, Canal Zone____
Jacksonville, Fla._______
Miami, Fla...
Pensacola, Fla__.._______
Chicago, IN...
Louisville, Ky... ........
New Orleans, La_.__._..
Baltimore, Md.._._______
Boston, Mass.............
Gulfport, Miss..__._____
St. Louis, Mo... ....omn=
William Cunningham Naismith, act-
ing vice consul.
Aubony Taylor Kay, acting vice con-
sul.
Alexander Kenneth Macleod, acting
vice consul.
Thomas Joseph Harrington, consul
general.
Linton Harry Foulds, vice consul_____
John David McLaren, acting vice
consul.
Fernando Miguel Toro, vice consul. __
Arthur Henry Noble, consul. _________
Maurice West Guinness, vice consul.
Hugo Norton Dixon, vice consul..____
Frederick William Paris, consul_______
George Payne, vice consul__.__________
James Guthrie, consul... .___.___._._
Miles Merwin, vice consul. ___________
Frederick George Hemsley, consul. _..
Eric Grant Cable, consul______________
Bernard: Pelly, consul... --
Apostolos Macheras, consul general. __
George Depastas, consul general_______
Pericles Polyvios, consul .__.____.______
P. Paraskevopoulos, consul general._._
C. N. Vilos, acting vice consul________
W. Steber, jr., honorary consul...__.__
Frederico Waller, honorary consul.____
Juan Irigoyen, honorary vice consul.__
, vice consul... salon ou
Felipe Marquez, consul general. ______
Angnsio Castillo Lara, honorary con-
sul.
, consular agent_.___._____
Julio C. Mejia, honorary consul_______
Gaprist Barrios, honorary consul gen-
eral.
E. Carles, honorary consul. ___________
Arthur E. Curtis, honorary consul____
Vicente J. Vidal, honorary vice consul.
Octavio Barrios Solis, honorary con-
sul general.
Harry R. Hurlbut, vice consul__._.___
R. Arturo Ramirez, consul general. ._.
John A. MclIsaae, honorary consul.____
William A. Mosman, honorary consul.
—— vice consul ______________
Rafael Castillo Zilioli, honorary consul.
Philippine Islands.
Puerto Rico.
New Mexico and Texas.
Islands of St. Croix and St. Thomas.
Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and
Washington.
Arizona, California, Nevada, Oregon,
and Washington, and the Hawaiian
Islands. Supervisory jurisdiction
over Alaska, Idaho, Montana, New
Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming.
Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas.
The legation of Greece at Washington
has consular jurisdiction over the
District of Columbia, the adjoining
section of Virginia, Maryland, Dela-
ware, North Carolina, South Caro-
lina, Georgia, and Florida.
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Missouri,
and Wisconsin. Supervisory juris-
diction over Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Nebraska, North Da-
kota, Oklahoma, and South Dakota.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Connecticut, New Jersey, New York,
and the adjoining section of Penn-
sylvania, including Philadelphia.
Supervisory jurisdiction over Vir-
ginia.
Alabama, Ohio, Pennsylvania (except
the part adjoining New York),
Tennessee, and West Virginia.
Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington,
and Wyoming.
The Atlantic part of the Canal Zone.
The Pacific part of the Canal Zone.
The southern part of Florida.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Min-
nesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South
Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, New Mexico,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas.
Maryland.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, and Vermont.
Missouri, Kansas, and Kentucky.
532 Congressional Directory
GUATEMALA—HONDURAS
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
GUATEMALA—continued
Jersey City, N. J...
New York, N.Y
Winston-Salem, N. C___
Philadelphia, Pa...
San Juan, P. R
Providence, R. T........
Charleston, S. C________
Brownsville, Tex_.__....
Dallas, Tex... convenes
Houston, Tes.......~.-
Norfolk, Va. _.
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash___________
HAITI
Mobile, Alx.........--
San Francisco, Calif ____
Miami Pla: ~~ =
Tampa, Fla. =r J.
Honolulu, Hawaii_______
Lake Charles, La____._._
New Orleans, La...____.
Boston, Mass... _....-..
Manchester, N. H_____.
Newark, N. J... =.
New York, N.Y
Chester, Pa. i
Philadelphia, Pa________
Mayaguez, P.R_____
Ponce, Pai. x. a:
SanJuan, Po =
Galveston, Tex ~~ __
Houston, Tex. =...
Port Arthur, Tex_......
Newport News, Va_____
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
HONDURAS
Mobile, Ala oo
Los Angeles, Calif ______
San Francisco, Calif_____
Balboa, Canal Zone__.___
Cristobal, Canal Zone._._
Jacksonville, Fla__..____
Tampa, Bla. 5d ig
Chicago, I:ic_ Lali Jo
Kansas City, Kans...
New Orleans, La________
Baltimore, Md_......-..
Boston, Mass. ......_...
Detroit, Mich... oo... 0.
Kansas City, Mo...._..
St.Louis, Mo iilaiaals
Jersey City, N.J.....__.
New York, N. Y....._..
, consul general ___________
Leonardo Lara G., consul general ____
Héctor Giron Zirion, vice consul ....__
Arthur M. Strauss, honorary vice
consul.
J. W. Purner, honorary consul________
Carlos Veére, consul
eonsul oo
M. Bishop Alexander, honorary vice
consul.
Frank Oliver Willy, honorary consul__
William E. Edmundson, honorary
vice consul.
Robert Burgher, vice consul (honorary)
L. Evans, honorary consul
Harry Reyner, honorary consul _______
, consul
Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul______
Richard Murray, honorary consul_____
B. C. Bremer, honorary consul________
Alden Freeman, honorary consul gen-
eral.
Arthur C. Curtis, honorary consul. ___
William F. Yves, honorary consul_____
Robert W. Shingle, consul. .._..______
Glen A. Broussard, honorary consul___
Louis de Delva, consul general ________
Frank Laraque, consul ___.._________.
N. U. Carrié, viceconsul..............
A: Preston Clark, consul __._...__._
Francis R. Clark, vice consul _________
, consul
Victor de 1a Fuente, consular agent____
Charles B. Vincent, consul general ____
Emmanuel Gation, vice consul________
William Ward, jr., honorary vice con-
sul.
Jules Louis Elson, honorary consul.___
, consul
Blas, C. Silva, vice consul..____________
Charles Verejconsal ..._..  . ...
J. A. Torregrossa, honorary consul. ___
T. L. Evans, honorary consul_________
Arthur S. Khan, vice consul. __.______
Harry Reyner, honorary consul_______
Cyril Daniel, consul general ___________
Philip Gomez, honorary vice consul. __
eA C11 0117 | BESS EAEII EN CIALIS
Arturo Pallais, honorary consul. ______
, consul general ___________
Salvador Herrera, acting consul. ______
Juan Francisco Arias, honorary consul.
Ramon Garcia de Paredes, jr., honor-
ary vice consul.
E. Carles, honorary consul____________
B. W. Humphrey, honorary consul _ __
A. A. Braschi, honorary consul general.
J. S. Ergas, honorary consul general...
Federico Smith, consul general _______
C. Morton Stewart, honorary consul. .
Paul G. Shipley, honorary vice consul.
Birain: Zamora, consul ..._..._______._..
Charles C. Benjamin, honorary consul.
Gabriel Madrid Herndndez, honorary
consul.
Miguel Paz Paredes, honorary consul.
J. A. McLeay, honorary consul______.
Vicente Alfredo Ariza, consul general.
Francisco Gonzalez Rosa, honorary
consul.
Fernando de la Garza, honorary vice
consul,
Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Mary-
land, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York, North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Is
land, South Carolina, Vermont, Vir-
ginia, and West Virginia.
Washington.
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and Lou-
isiana.
New Jersey.
Jurisdiction includes Orange County.
Virgin Islands.
Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana, and Ten-
nessee.
Missouri.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States
HONDURAS—ITALY
533
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
HONDURAS—continued
Philadelphia, Pa________
San Juan, P. R
Charleston, S. C
Houston, Tex...
San Antonio, Tex. __.....
HUNGARY
Los Angeles, Calif_______
Denver, Colo_____._____
Chicago, TN. il.coiin’l
New York, N. Y___.____
Cleveland, Ohio________
IRAQ
(The diplomatic and
consular representa-
tives of Great Britain
have charge of the in-
terests of Iraq in the
United States)
IRISH FREE STATE
San Francisco, Calif.___.
Chicago, 111
Boston, Mass
New: Yorkie. won gal
ITALY
Los Angeles, Calif______
Sacramento, Calif _______
San Francisco, Calif__...
Timoteo Vaca Seidel, honorary consul_
‘Waldemar E. Lee, honorary consul. __
Juan Bermudez Sanchez, honorary
vice consul.
C. A. Graeser, honorary consul ________
Guillermo Scheel Collier, honorary
consul.
T. L. Evans, honorary vice consul_..__
Ricardo de Villafranca, honorary con-
sul general.
Francis Proiszl, deputy consular agent.
Coloman Jonas, honorary vice consul.
Léaszl6 Medgyesy, consul._..__._______
Georges de Ghika, consul general _.___
LotisAlexy,leonsul. =... .L...
Matthew Murphy, consul _.__________
Daniel J. McGrath, consul____________
Percy Galwey Foley, consul ___________
William James Babington Macaulay,
consul general.
Sean Nunan, consul._____.____________
Giuseppe Firpo, acting vice consul._.__
Rolando Dalla Rosa Prati Marchese
di Collecchio, vice consul.
».consular agent. ...........
Lodouico Manzini, consul general. .__
Texas.
Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Ne-
vada, Oregon, Washington, Hawaii,
and the Philippine Islands.
Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and
Wyoming.
Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kan-
sas, Louisiana, the counties embraced
in the northern peninsula of Michi-
gan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Mis-
souri, Montana, Nebraska, North
Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota,
Texas, and Wisconsin.
Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Flor-
ida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, North
Carolina, Rhode Island, South
Carolina, Vermont, Puerto Rico, and
the Virgin Islands.
Kentucky, for counties embraced in
the southern peninsula of Michigan,
for Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
Virginia, and West Virginia.
In Alabama the counties of Autauga,
Baldwin, Barbour, Bullock, Butler,
Choctaw, Clarke, Coffee, Conecuh,
Covington, Crenshaw, Dale, Dallas,
Elmore, Escambia, Geneva, Henry,
Houston, Lowndes, Macon, Ma-
rengo, Mobile, Monroe, Mount-
gomery, Pike, Russell, Washington,
and Wilcox.
In California the counties of Imperial,
Kern, Los Angeles, Orange, River-
side, San Bernardino, San Diego,
San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara,
and Ventura.
In California the counties of Alpine,
Amador, Butte, Eldorado, Nevada,
Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, Sierra,
Sutter, and Yuba.
Arizona and Nevada. In California
direct jurisdiction over the counties
of Alameda, Colusa, Contra Costa,
Del Norte, Fresno, Glenn, Hum-
boldt, Inyo, Kings, Lake, Lassen,
Madera, Marin, Mariposa, Mendo-
cino, Merced, Modoc, Monterey,
Napa, San Benito, San Francisco,
San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz,
Shasta, Siskiyou, Solano, Sonoma,
Trinity, Tulare, and Yolo,
534 Congressional Directory
ITALY
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
ITALY—continued
Stockton, Calif... .._.___
Denver, Colo... conan
Trinidad, Colo......----
Hartford, Conn. ocean...
New Haven, Conn....._
Wilmington, Del....._..
Pensacola, Fla. .coeea.._
Pomp, Bl. ner ase
Savannah, Gao.
Honolulu, Hawaii.._____
Chieago, MN. .....0 0.
Springfield, N-. ...._...
Indianapolis, Ind_..._.._
Des Moines, Iowa.___._._
Frontenac, Kans_.__._.__
Louisville, Ky_ .._....._
New Orleans, La_......_
Portland, Me. ._........_
Baltimore, Md_.......__
Boston, Mass. _.........
Lawrence, MasS........
Enrico Alverto Mazzera, consular
agent.
Pietro Gerbore, consul _ ooo
Michele Albi, acting consular agent___
, consular agent... _....__
Pasquale de Cicco, acting vice consul...
Carmine Vignola, consular agent_.__.___
Pietro Luigi Rosasco, consular agent...
Filippo F. Licata, acting consular
agent.
Mose Cafiero, consular agent.._._._____
G. H. Phipps, in charge of consulate. .
Giuseppe Castruccio, consul general.__
Giuseppe Dall’ Agnol, vice consul. ____
, consular agent. ........_
Vincenzo Lapenta, consular agenf_..._
Pietro Dapolonia, consular agent______
Raffaele Purgatorio, consular agent _ ___
Alfonso Facchetti Guiglia, consular
agent.
Vitale Gallina, consul.___________
Antonino Vinti, vice consul.__________
Ottavio D’Amato, acting consular
agent.
Mario Carosi,iconsal...................
Armando Armao, consul general ______
Silvio Vitale, honorary vice consul._.__
Giuseppe Caterini, consular agent.....
In California the counties of Calaveras,
Mono, San Joaquin, Stanislaus, and
Tuolumne.
Colorado (except the counties of Huer-
fano and Las Animas), Nebraska,
New Mexico, Utah, and Wyoming.
In Colorado the counties of Huerfano
and Las Animas.
In Connecticut the counties of Hart-
ford, Tolland, and Windham.
In Connecticut the counties of Fair-
field, Litchfield, Middlesex, New
Haven, and New London.
The Pennsylvania counties of Berks,
Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Lancaster,
Lebanon, Montgomery, and York.
In Florida, the counties of Calhoun,
Escambia, Holmes, Jackson, Santa
Rosa, Walton, and Washington.
In Florida the counties of Alachua,
Baker, Bay, Bradford, Broward,
Charlotte, Citrus, Clay, Collier, Co-
lumbia, Dade, DeSoto, Dixie, Duval,
Flagler, Franklin, Glades, Gulf,
Hamilton, Hendry, Highlands, Her-
nando, Hillsborough, Jefferson, In-
dian River, Lafayette, Lake, Lee,
Madison, Manatee, Marion, Martin,
Monroe, Leon, Levy, Nassau, Okee-
chobee, Osceola, Orange, Pasco, Polk,
. Pinellas, Putnam, Palm Beach,
Sarasota, Seminole, St. Johns, St.
Lucie, Sumter, Suwannee, Taylor,
Union, Volusia, and Wakulla.
Direct jurisdiction over Georgia.
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wis-
consin.
Direct jurisdiction in Illinois over the
counties of Boone, Bureau, Carroll,
Cook, DeKalb, Du Page, Jo Daviess,
Kane, Kankakee, Kendall, Lake,
Lee, McHenry, Ogle, Stephenson,
Vermillion, Whiteside, Will, Winne-
bago.
In Illinois the counties of Adams, Alex-
ander, Bond, Brown, Calhoun, Cass,
Champaign, Christian, Clark, Clay,
Clinton, Coles, Crawford, Cumber-
land, De Witt, Douglas, Edgar, Ed-
wards, Effingham, Fayette, Ford,
Franklin, Fulton, Gallatin, Greene,
Grundy, Hamilton, Hancock, Hard-
in, Henderson, Henry, Iroquois,
Jackson, Jasper, Jefferson, Jersey,
Johnson, Knox, La Salle, Lawrence,
Livingston, Logan, McDonough,
McLean, Macon, Macoupin, Madi,
son, Marion, Marshall, Menard-
Mason, Massac, Mercer, Monroe,
Montgomery, Morgan, Moultrie,
Peoria, Perry, Piatt, Pike, Pope,
Pulaski, Putnam, Randolph, Rich-
land, Rock Island, Saline, Sangamon,
Schuyler, Scott, Shelby, Stark, St,
Clair, Tazewell, Union, Wabash.
‘Warren, Washington, Wayne, White,
Williamson, and Woodford.
Direct jurisdiction over Indiana.
Direct jurisdiction over Iowa.
Kansas.
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Missis-
sippi, and Texas.
aine.
Maryland, Virginia,and West Virginia.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
In Massachusetts the counties of Xssex
and Middlesex,
Foreign Consular Officers tn the United States
ITALY
935
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
ITALY—continued
Springfield, Mass_.____.
Worcester, MasS_.......
Detroit, Mich. _____.__
St.Paul, Minn... ......
Vicksburg, Miss........-
St. Louis; Mo... ....
Butte, Mont... 2...
Omaha, Nebr. ___._.___
Reno, Nev: . i. 1-44
Paterson, N. Joceaeee.
Trenton, NJ...
ATbany, Ni iY mast cans
Buffalo, N.Y...
New York, N.'¥........
Rochester, N. Y__._..____
Syracuse, N.Y ........_
Yonkers, N.Y .couce.
Akron, Ohio... oc. ican
Cincinnati, Ohio_.._____
Cleveland, Ohio_.._.__._
Columbus, Ohio._...___
Lorain, Ohio...... =...
Tommaso de Marco, consular agent...
Michel Angelo De Felice, consular
agent.
Ugo Berni Canani, vice consul._.._..
Attilio Castigliano, consular agent. ____
Andrea Bucci, consular agent. ________
Alberto Alfani, acting consul_._________
Pietro Amabile Notti, consular agent..
Vincenzo Chiodo, consular agent___.__
Antonio Miniggio, consular agent...
Pier Pasquale Spinelli, vice consul....
Ricco Matteo, consular agent. ________
Felice Ronca, consular agent_________.
Germano Placido Bacecelli, consular
agent.
, viceconsal io Lolo
Antonio Grassardi, consul general...__
Umberto Caradossi, vice consul_______
Augusto Castellani, vice consul_______
Giorgio Serafini, vice consul.____._____.
Antonio Logoluso, vice consul_________
Giorgio Tiberi, vice consul. ______.____.
Cesare Sconfietti, consular agent. _____
Corrado Armieri,
agent.
acting consular
Giuseppe Brancucei, consular agent...
Enrico Gullia, consular agent. ________
Carlo Ginocchio, consular agent_______
In Massachusetts the counties of
Berkshire, Barnstable, Dukes,
Franklin, Hampden, Hampshire,
and Plymouth.
In Massachusetts the county of
‘Worcester.
Direct jurisdiction over Michigan.
Towa, Minnesota, North Dakota, and
South Dakota.
Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, OKkla-
homa, and Tennessee.
Montana.
Nebraska.
Direct jurisdiction over Nevada.
In New Jersey the counties of Essex,
Hudson, Morris, Union, and War-
ren.
In New Jersey the counties of Bergen,
Passaic, and Sussex.
In New Jersey the counties of Atlantic,
Burlington, Camden, Cape May,
Cumberland, Gloucester, Hunter-
don, Mercer, Middlesex, Mon-
mouth, Ocean, Salem, and Somer-
set.
In New York the counties of Albany,
Clinton, Columbia, Delaware, Es-
sex, Franklin, Fulton, Greene,
Hamilton, Herkimer, Jefferson,
Montgomery, Otsego, Rensselaer,
Saratoga, St. Lawrence, Schenec-
tady, Schoharie, Ulster, Warren
and Washington. :
In New York the counties of Allegany,
Cattaraugus, Chautauqua, Erie,
Niagara, Steuben, and Wyoming.
In New York the counties of Kings,
New York, Queens, and Richmond.
In New York the counties of Chemung,
Genesee, Livingston, Monroe, On
tario, Orleans, Schuyler, Seneca,
Tioga, Tomkins, Wayne, and Yates.
In New York the counties of Broome,
Cayuga, Chenango, Cortland, Lewis,
Madison, Oneida, Onondaga, and
Oswego.
In New York the counties of Dutchess,
Nassau, Orange, Putnam, Rockland,
Suffolk, Sullivan, and Westchester.
In Ohio the counties of Carroll, Holmes,
Medina, Portage, Stark, Summit,
and Wayne.
In Ohio the counties of Adams, Au-
glaize, Brown, Butler, Champaign,
Clark, Clermont, Clinton, Darke,
Greene, Hamilton, Highland, Law-
rence, Logan, Mercer, Miami, Mont-
gomery, Pike, Preble, Scioto, Shelby,
and Warren. In Kentucky the
counties of Boone, Bracken, Camp-
bell, Kenton, and Mason.
Kentucky and Ohio.
In Ohio the counties of Athens, Dela-
ware, Fairfield. Fayette, Franklin,
Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Knox,
Licking, Madison, Marion, Meigs,
Morgan, Morrow, Perry, Pickaway,
Ross, Union, and Vinton.
In Ohio the counties of Allen, Ashland,
Crawford, Defiance, Erie, Fulton,
Hancock, Hardin, Henry, Huron,
Lorain, Lucas, Ottawa, Paulding,
Putnam, Richland, Sandusky, Sen-
eca, Van Wert, Williams, Wood, and
‘Wyandot.
536 Congressional Directory
ITALY
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
ITALY—continued
Steubenville, Ohio__.____
Youngstown, Ohio______
MacAlester, Okla_______
Portland, Oreg_..__.____
Brie, Pa... Aine ind
Johnstown, Pa :....:1.
Philadelphia, Pa... __
Pittsburgh, Pac Lon.
Seranton, Pa... ... a0. 3
Areeibo, P. R-.......iz0
Mayaguez, P. R_._._____
Ponce, P. BR... oii.
San Juan, P:R cou ol
Manila, P. T...conoiil
Providence, R. I..____._
Fort Worth, Tex........
Attilio Serafini, acting consular agent.
Attilio Rosapepe, consular agent. _.___
Giovanni Tua, acting consular agent. _
——, consularagent.____..__.___
Giovanni Cappabianca, consular
agent.
Angelo Jannelli, consular agent_____.__
Giovanni Maria Pio Margotti, consul
general.
Chevalier Armando Salati, honorary
vice consul.
Giovanni Giurato, vice consul __.______
Fortunato Tiscar, consular agent______
, consular agent...
Giacomo Antonio Caino, consular
agent.
, consular agent_______.____
Ciro Malatrasi, consul... 00...
Rinaldo Pietro Staurenghi, acting
consul.
,-viee.consul C0 Jo.0 Jl)
Attilio Ortolani, consular agent... _.___
In Ohio the counties of Belmont, Co-
shocton, Guernsey. Harrison, Jef-
ferson, Monroe, Muskingum, Noble,
and Washington.
In Ohio the counties of Ashtabula,
Geauga, Lake, Mahoning, and
Trumbull.
Oklahoma.
Oregon.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Cam-
eron, Clarion, Crawford, Elk, Erie,
Forest, McKean, Potter, Venango,
and Warren.
In Pennsylvania the counties of
Adams, Bedford, Blair, Cambria,
Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Cumber-
land, Franklin, Fulton, Huntingdon,
Juniata, Mifflin, Perry, Snyder,
Somerset, and Union.
Delaware and Pennsylvania.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Alle-
gheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler,
Fayette, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson,
Lawrence, Mercer, Washington, and
Westmoreland.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Brad-
ford, Carbon, Columbia, Dauphin,
Lackawanna, Lehigh, Luzerne, Ly-
coming, Monroe, Montour, Nor-
thampton, Northumberland, Wyo-
ming, Pike, Sullivan, Schuylkill,
Susquehanna, Tioga, and Wayne.
Puerto Rico.
Rhode Island and Bristol County,
ass.
In Texas the counties of Anderson, An-
drews, Archer, Armstrong, Bailey,
Baylor, Bell, Borden, Bosque, Bowie,
Briscoe, Brown, Callahan, Camp,
Carson, Cass, Castro, Cherokee,
Childress, Clay, Cochran, Coke,
Coleman, Collin, Collingsworth, Co-
manche, Concho, Cooke, Coryell,
Cottle, Crane, Crosby, Dallam, Dal-
las, Dawson, Deaf Smith, Delta,
Denton, Dickens, Donley, Eastland,
Ector, Ellis, Erath, Falls, Fannin,
Fisher, Floyd, Foard, Franklin,
Freestone, Gaines, Garza, Glasscock,
Gray, Grayson, Gregg, Hale, Hall,
Hamilton, Hansford, Hardeman,
Harrison, Hartley, Hemphill, Hen-
derson, Hockley, Hood, Hopkins,
Houston, Howard, Hunt, Hutchin-
son, Irion, Jack Johnson, Jones,
Kaufman, Kent, King, Knox, La-
mar, Lamb, Lampasas, Leon, Lime-
stone, Lipscomb, Lubbock, Lynn,
McCulloch, McLennan, Marion,
Martin, Midland, Mills, Mitchell,
Montague, Moore, Morris, Motley,
Nacogdoches, Navarro, Nolan, Ochil-
tree, Oldham, Palo Pinto, Panola,
Parker, Parmer, Potter, Rains,
Randall, Reagan, Red River, Reeves,
Roberts, Rockwall, Runnels, Rusk,
San Augustine, San Saba, Schleicher,
Scurry Shackelford, Shelby, Sher-
man, Smith, Somervell, Stephens,
Sterling, Stonewall, Swisher, Tar-
rant, Taylor, Terry, Throckmor-
ton, Titus, Tom Green, Upshur,
Upton, Van Zandt, Wheeler, Wichita,
Wilbarger, Winkler, Wise, Wood,
Yoakum, and Young.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 537
ITALY—JAPANESE EMPIRE
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
ITALY—continued
Houston, Tex............
Salt Lake City, Utah___
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Norfolk, Va. .........
Seattle, Wash_____...i._
Spokane, Wash_________
Charleston, W. Va______
Milwaukee, Wis_.__.__.
JAPANESE EMPIRE
Mobile, Ala. _____.___.__
Juneau, Alaska_____.___..
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Francisco, Calif_____
Panama, Canal Zone____
Honolulu, Hawaii_______
Chicago, IY. ~~
New Orleans, La________
Boston, Mass... .-
St.Louis, Mo...
New York, N.Y.
Portland, Oreg._________
Philadelphia, Pa________
Davao, P.1.........
Monila, P.Y...
— ———, vice consul ___._._____.__
Fortunato Anselmo, consular agent .__
Isidro de Lungo, in charge of consu-
late.
Rosario Carlo Ruggieri, acting con-
sular agent.
Louis F. Buty, acting consul__________
Giuseppe A. Albi, acting consular
agent.
Enrico Jannarelli, consular agent_..___
Angelo Cerminara, consular agent_____
Henry H. Clark, honorary consul..___
Emery Valentine, honorary consul____
Toshito Sato,iconsal .-., =
Kaname Wakasugi, consul general.___
Takahiko Wakabayashi, consul_______
Kanekazu Okada, consul general ______
Yoshio Muto, consul
Yuki Sato, vice consul (acting consul).
Courtenay Crocker, honorary consul. .
Cre consul
Kensuke Horinouchi, consul general. ._
Toyoichi Nakamura, consul___________
J. Franklin McFadden, honorary con-
sul.
Toyoji Kaneko, vice consul (acting
consul).
Atsushi Kimura, consul general .______
In Texas the counties of Angelina,
Aransas, Atascosa, Austin, Bandera,
Bee, Bexar, Blanco, Bastrop, Bra-
zoria, Brazos, Brewster, Brooks,
Burleson, Burnet, Caldwell, Cal-
houn, Chambers, Colorado, Comal,
Crockett, Culberson, De Witt, Dim-
mit, Duval, Edwards, El Paso,
Fayette, Fort Bend, Frio, Galves-
ton, Gillespie, Goliad, Gonzales,
Grimes, Guadalupe, Hardin, Harris,
Hays, Hidalgo, Hudspeth, Jackson,
Jasper, Jeff Davis, Jefferson, Jim
Hogg, Jim Wells, Karnes, Kendall,
Kerr, Kimble, Kinney, Kleberg, La
Salle, Lavaca, Lee, Liberty, Live
Oak, Llano, Loving, McMullen,
Mason, Matagorda, Maverick, Me-
dina, Milam, Montgomery, Nueces,
Orange, Pecos, Polk, Presidio, Real,
Reeves, Refugio, Robertson, Sabine,
San Jacinto, San Patricio, Starr,
Sutton, Terrell, Travis, Trinity,
Tyler, Uvalde, Val Verde, Victoria,
Walker, Waller, Ward, Washington,
Webb, Wharton, Williamson, Wil-
son, Zapata, and Zavala.
Utah.
Virgin Islands.
Virginia.
Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington,
and Alaska.
Idaho and the eastern counties of Wash-
ington.
‘West Virginia.
Direct jurisdiction over the State of
Wisconsin. .
In California the counties of Imperial,
Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San
Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis
Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ven-
tura, and the States of Arizona and
New Mexico.
California (except the Los Angeles con-
sular district), Colorado, Nevada,
and Utah.
Hawaii.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Ken-
tucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mis-
souri, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Caro-
lina, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
Tennessee, and Texas.
Connecticut, Delaware, District of
Columbia, Maine, Maryland, Massa-
chusetts, New Hampshire, New Jer-
sey, New York, Pennsylvania,
Puerto Rico, Rhode Island, Ver-
mont, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Idaho (except that part included in the
consular district of Seattle), Oregon,
and Wyoming.
Mindanao and the Sulu Islands.
Philippine Islands and the island of
Guam,
538 Congressional Directory
JAPANESE EMPIRE—LIBERIA
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
JAPANESE EMPIRE—CON.
San Juan, BP. Bi. u-aas
Galveston, Tex._..___~___
Seattle, Wash______..._.
LATVIA
Mobile, 813... oe ive
Los Angeles, Calif. _.____
San Francisco, Calif_____
Denver, Colo... ...__.
Jacksonville, Fla________
Honolulu, Hawaii.._____
ChieagolHl t= Lo
Indianapolis, Ind... __..
Louisville; Ky: ..__: ..
New Orleans, La._______
Boston, Mass. __..___...
St. Youls, Mo. =...
New York, N. Y........
Cleveland, Ohio.._.___.
Oklahoma City, Okla___
Portland, Oreg......___.
Philadelphia, Pa________
Pittsburgh, Ps...........
Manila, P.T............
San'Juan, P, R000
Memphis, Tenn. _.__.__.
Galveston, Tex. _.__.____
Noriolg, Va... eeaiina
Seattle, Wash____.__.___
Milwaukee, Wis. ______.
LIBERIA
Mobile, Ala. LL UL
San Francisco, Calif... __
Ghieage, TN ii 0:02 0
New Orleans, La_.__.._..
Baltimore, Md_..______.
St: Younis, Mo.........0..
Jersey City, N. J._______
New York, N. Y.......:
Philadelphia, Pa_._.._.___
Manila, P. A co 00000
Galveston, TeX. .nuuaaan
Miguel Such, honorary consul_________
J. H. Langben, honorary consul_______
Kiyoshi Uchiyama, consul. ___________
yviceeonsul......._. ....
Leo E. Anderson, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Harry Willard Glensor, consul (honor-
ary).
John Pershing, vice consul (honorary).
orm Ewouds, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Edward W. Hunter, consul (honorary) -
Henry B. Finn, vice consul (honorary)
August Edward Pradillo, consul (hon-
orary).
Jacob Sieberg, consul (honorary) ._.._.
Bernard Greensfelder, consul (honor-
ary).
Arthur Lule, consul general. __________
Malvern E. Schultz, consul (honorary).
Hal S. Whitten, vice consul (honorary).
Rogers MacVeagh, consul (honorary)...
John Hemphill, consul (honorary)__.__
John Joseph Neville Gorrell, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Leopoldo Aguinaldo, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Ricardo Ramon Pesquera, vice consul
(honorary).
Abe D ‘Waldauer, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Edwin Goudge, vice consul (honorary) .
John David Leitch, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Hans Cron, consul (honorary). ..______
Charles A. Hansen, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Ernest Lyon, consul general ___________
Hutchins Inge, consul... ________.__
Albert W. Minick, vice consul________
Edward G. Merrill, consul ____________
E. B. Merrill, vice consul _.___________
Helena S. Haines, consul._____________
Robert C. Moon, vice consul__________
R:' Summers, constl..................
20. Gibson, consul... ccoceneneenaau=
Alaska, Montana, and Washington;
and the counties of Boise, Bonner,
Custer, Idaho, Kootenai, Latah,
Lomal, Nez Perce, and Shoshone in
aho.
Alabama.
Arizona and New Mexico, and in Cali-
fornia, the counties of Imperial, Kern,
Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San
Bernardino, San Diego, San Luis
Obispo, Santa Barbara, and Ventura.
California (except the Los Angeles juris-
diction), Nevada, and Utah.
Colorado.
Florida
Hawaii.
Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska,
North Dakota, and South Dakota.
Indiana.
Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, and Vermont.
Kansas and Missouri.
The United States.
Michigan and Ohio.
Oklahoma.
Oregon.
Pennsylvania (except Pittsburgh con-
sular district).
In Pennsylvania, the counties of Alle-
gheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler,
Clarion, Crawford, Erie, Fayette,
Greene, Lawrence, Mercer, Venan-
go, Washington, and Westmoreland.
Philippine Islands.
Puerto Rico.
Tennessee.
Texas.
Virginia.
‘Washington.
Wisconsin
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States
LITHUANIA—MEXICO
939
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
LITHUANIA
Chicago, 1........c.....
New York, N. Y_.......
LUXEMBOURG
San Francisco, Calif..___
Washington, D. C..____
Chicago Ill. own vn nis
Minneapolis, Minn...__
New York, N. Y.._.....
Redfield, 8S. Dak........
MEXICO
Mobile, Ala__________.__
Douglas, Ariz... J...
NCO, Ariz. or. evocation
Nogales, ‘Ariz. —........-.
Phoenix, Ariz. ..ccooit..
Yuma, Ariz... cosdieie
San Bernardino, Calif. _.
Antanas Kalvaitis, consul..__.._. aga:
Polivas Zadeikis, consul general _____.
Petras Daudzvardis, vice consul. ____.
Prosper Reiter, consul...__......-..
Prosper Reiter, jr., vice consul________
Cornelius Jacoby, consul... ________
Peter P. Kransz, consul general .______
Eugene Huss, vice consul. ____________
Jean Baptiste Merkels, vice consul____
Emile Ferrant, consul
Othon Raths, vice consul. .___________
Harry Krombach, honorary consul-__.
Cornelius Staudt, honorary vice con-
sul.
Peary Daubenfeld, consul ____________
José Cabrera, honorary consul-..._____
Francisco Alfonso Pesqueira, consul-__
Ladislao Lopez Montero, consul __.___
Joel S. Quifones, consul____.__________
Leopoldo Diaz, vice consul.___________
Ernesto E. Cota, consul ___..___._..__.
José, Torres E., consul. _______________
Asa Frank Post, honorary vice consul.
Joaquin Terrazas, consul
Enrique Bravo C., consular agent...
Alejandro V. Martinez, consul ________
Ricardo G. Hill, vice consul ________.__
Juan E. Richer, vice consul. _.______._.
Manuel Aguilar y Vazquez del Mer-
cado, vice consul.
Hermolao E. Torres, consul.__._______
Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Califor-
nia, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indi-
ana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louis-
iana, Michigan, Mississippi, Missou-
ri, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska,
Nevada, New Mexico, North Dako-
ta, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South
Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah,
Washington, Wisconsin, and Wy-
oming.
Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Geor-
gia, Maine, Maryland, Massachu-
setts, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New York, North Carolina, Pennsyl-
vania, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
Vermont, Virginia, and West Vir-
ginia.
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington,
Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii,
and New Mexico.
Delaware, District of Columbia, Mary-
land, Virginia, and West Virginia.
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, and
‘Wisconsin.
Idaho, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana,
North Dakota, South Dakota, and
Wyoming.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska, and
South Dakota.
Mobile County.
Cochise County except the municipal-
ities of Naco, Osborne Station,
Warren, Tombstone, Bisbee, Lowell,
Don Luis, Fairbank, Dragon, St.
David, Gleeson, Courtland, Benson,
and Fort Huachuca.
Municipalities of Naco, Osborne Sta-
tion, Warren, Tombstone, Bisbee,
Lowell, Don Luis, Fairbank, Drag-
on, St. David, Gleason, Courtland,
Benson, and Fort Huachuca in
Cochise County.
Santa Cruz County, Ariz.
In Arizona, the counties of Apache,
Coconino, Gila, Maricopa, Mohave,
Navajo, Pinal, and Yavapa.
Pima County.
Yuma County.
Imperial County, Calif.,, and Yuma
County, Ariz., except the city of
Yuma.
In California, the counties of Inyo
Merced, Mariposa, Madera, Fresno,
Kings, Tulare, and Mono.
In California, the counties of Los
Angeles, Orange, San Luis Obispo,
Santa Barbara, and Ventura.
In California, the counties of Riverside
and San Bernardino.
540 Congressional Directory
MEXICO
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
MEXICO—continued
San Diego, Calif. ____..__
San Francisco, Calif_____
Colon, Canal Zone......
Panama, Canal Zone...
Denver, Colo. ..____..__
‘Washington, D. C._____
Tampa, Fla_....._.aoeel
Savannah, Ga____._.....
Honolulu, Hawaii... ____
Ghicago, Ta. oll. 20
Louisville, KY. -
New Orleans, La________
Baltimore, Md.______.____
Boston, Mass. ._....._._
Detroit, Mich...
Kansas City, MO...._...
Enrique Ferreira, consul ooo...
Alezandro Lubbert, consul general. - __
Joel S. Quinones, consul
Antonio L. Schmidt, vice consul.__._.
CONS ce vee nen San wa
Nabor Séenz Rubio, honorary Consul.
Ricardo Saniz Rubio, honorary vice
consul.
Ismaele M. Vazquez, consul _._______.__
Ismael Magafia, consul general __._____
Rafael Ruesga, honorary consul_______
Juan E. Chauvet G., honorary consul.
, consul.
Carlos Palacios Roji, consul ___________
Adolfo G. Dominguez, vice consul. ___
Ignacio Ramirez, vice consul. ._____.__
Gabriel G. Romo, honorary consul____
Fernando Alatorre, consul _..._________
Pablo Alegre, honorary consul_________
James F. Beatty, honorary vice consul.
Alfred R. Shrigley, honorary consul___
Ignacio, Batiza, consul.-...............
Carlos M. Gaxiola, consul... ....._
San Diego County.
Nevada and Oregon, and in California
the counties of Alameda, Alpine,
Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa,
Contra Costa, Del Norte, Eldorado,
Glenn, Humboldt, Lake, Lassen,
Marin, Mendocino, Modoc, Mon-
terrey, Napa, Nevada, Placer,
Plumas, Sacramento, San Benito,
San Francisco, San Joaquin, San
Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz,
Shasta, Sierra, Siskiyou, Solano, So-
noma, Sutter, Tehama, Trinity, Yolo
and Yuba.
Canal Zone (except the Panama con-
sular jurisdiction).
Canal Zone from Panama City to Gor-
gona.
Colorado and Wyoming.
United States.
Florida.
Savannah.
In Illinois, the counties of Adams,
Boone, Brown, Bureau, Carrol, Cass,
Champaign, Christian, Clark, Coles,
Cook, Crawford, Cumberland, De
Kalb, De Witt, Douglas, Du Page,
Edgar, Effingham, Ford, Fulton,
Grundy, Hancock, Henderson,
Henry, Iroquois, Jasper, Jo Daviess,
Kane, Kankakee, Kendall, Knox,
Lake, La Salle, Lee, Livingston,
Logan, McHenry, Macon, Marshall,
Mason, McDonough, McLean, Me-
nard, Mercer, Montgomery, Morgan,
Moultrie, Ogle, Peoria, Pike, Piatt,
Putnam, Rock Island, Sangamon,
Schuyler, Scott, Shelby, Stark,
Stephenson, Tazewell, Vermilion,
Warren, Whiteside, Winnebago, Will
and Woodford and for Indiana. For
Wisconsin except Milwaukee
County. For Iowa, Minnesota, and
the Michigan Peninsula.
Kentucky.
Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Missis-
sippi, Tennessee, and Alabama, ex-
cept Mobile County.
Maryland.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, and Vermont.
Michigan (except the upper peninsu-
la), and Ohio (except the counties of
Ashland, Ashtabula, Athens, Bel-
mont, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshoc-
ton, Gallia, Geauga, Guernsey,
Harrison, Holmes, Jefferson, Lake,
Lawrence, Lucas, Mahoning, Medina,
Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Muskin-
gum, Noble, Perry, Portage, Stark,
Summit, Trumbull, Tuscarawas,
‘Washington, and Wayne).
Ohio, the counties of Cuyahoga and
Lorain. In Kansas, Nebraska, North
and South Dakota. In Missouri, the
counties of Andrew, Atchison, Bar-
ton, Barry, Bates, Buchanan, Cald-
well, Cass, Cedar, Clay, Clinton,
Dade, De Kalb, Gentry, Henry,
Holt, Jackson, Jasper, Johnson,
Lafayette, Lawrence, McDonald,
Newton, Nodaway, Platte, Ray,
St. Clair, Vernon, and Worth.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 541
MEXICO
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
MEXICO—continued
St.Louis, Mo. ..iz- od. Edmundo L. Aragon, consul.___._.._.._ Iowa. In Missouri, the counties of
Albuquerque, N. Mex... Manuel C. Garcia, honorary vice con-
sul.
Buffalo, N.Y L.i0.. ast: Leon L. Lancaster, honorary consul____
New York, N. Y...._... Enrique D. Ruiz, consul general ______
Louis L. Duplan, consul _____________
Manuel.-Cruz G., consul... _..
Toledo, Ohio... Guillermo Grimm, honorary consul ____
Oklahoma City, Okla___| Luis Perez Abreu, consul___.__________
Portland, Oreg__________ , honorary consul_________
Philadelphia, Pa._._____ Basilio Bulnes, consul... ........ ... ___
Adair, Audrain, Benton, Bollinger,
Boone, Butler, Callaway, Camden,
Cape Girardeau, Carter, Cass, Car-
roll, Chariton, Christian, Clark, Cole,
Cooper, Crawford, Dallas, Daviess,
Dent, Douglas, Dunklin, Franklin,
Gasconade, Greene, Grundy, Har-
rison, Hickory, Howard, Howell,
Iron, Jefferson, Knox, Laclede, Lewis,
Linn, Lincoln, Livingston, Macon,
Madison, Maries, Marion, Mercer,
Miller, Mississippi, Moniteau, Mont-
gomery, Monroe, Morgan, New
Madrid, Oregon, Osage, Ozark,
Perry, Pettis, Phelps, Pike, Polk,
Pulaski, Putnam, Ralls, Randolph,
Reynolds, Ripley, Saline, Schuyler,
Scotland, Scott, Shannon, Shelby,
St. Charles, St. Francois, Ste. Gene-
vieve, St. Louis, including St. Louis
City, Stoddard, Stone, Sullivan,
Taney, Texas, Warren, Washington,
Wayne, Webster, and Wright. In
Illinois, the counties of Alexander,
Bond, Calhoun, Clay, Clinton,
Edwards, Fayette, Franklin, Galla-
tin, Greene, Hamilton, Hardin, Jack-
son, Jefferson, Jersey, Johnson,
Lawrence, Macoupin, Madison,
Marion, Massac, Monroe, Perry,
Pope, Pulaski, Randolph, Richland,
Saline, St. Clair, Union, Wabash,
Washington, Wayne, White, and
Williamson.
Bernalillo County, N. Mex.
Erie and Niagara Counties, N. Y.
Connecticut and New Jersey (except
the counties of Camden, Burlington,
Atlantic, Salem, Cape May, Ocean,
Gloucester, and Cumberland). New
York (except Erie and Niagara
Counties). Indirect jurisdiction over
the consulates at Baltimore, Boston,
Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Indian-
apolis, Norfolk, Philadelphia, Pitts-
burgh, Providence, and St. Thomas,
Virgin Islands.
Lucas County, Ohio.
Oklahoma.
Portland.
Delaware. In Pennsylvania, the coun-
ties of Adams, Berks, Bradford,
Bucks, Carbon, Center, Chester,
Clinton, Columbia, Cumberland,
Dauphin, Delaware, Franklin, Ful-
ton, Huntingdon, Juniata, Lacka-
wanna, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh,
Luzerne, Lycoming, Mifflin, Mon-
roe, Montgomery, Montour, Nor-
thampton, Northumberland, Perry,
Philadelphia, Pike, Potter, Schuyl-
kill, Snyder, Sullivan, Susquehanna,
Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming,
and York. In New Jersey, the
counties of Atlantic, Burlington,
Camden, Cape May, Cumberland,
Gloucester, Ocean, and Salem.
542 Congressional Directory
MEXICO
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
MEXICO—continued
Pittsburgh, Pa... ..... José Antonio Valenzuela, consul. .__.__ West Virginia. In Pennsylvania, the
counties of Allegheny, Armstrong,
Beaver, Bedford, Blair, Butler,
Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clear-
field, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Fayette,
Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson,
Lawrence, McKean, Mercer, Somer-
set, Venango, Warren, Washington,
and Westmoreland. In Ohio the
counties of Ashland, Ashtabula,
| Athens, Belmont, Carroll, Columbi-
ana, Coshocton, Gallia, Geauga,
Guernsey, Harrison, Holmes, Jeffer-
son, Lake, Lawrence, Mahoning, Me-
dina, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Mus-
kingum, Noble, Perry, Portage,
Stark, Summit, Trumbull, Tuscara-
was, Washington, and Wayne.
Manila, Po Foooaiz coo Trinidad E. Lacayo, honorary consul. .| Philippine Islands.
Ponce, PiiR.oouoci 0 Antonio Corretjer, honorary consul..._| Departments of Aguadilla, Arecibo,
Mayaguez, and Ponce.
San Juan, PoR....__..! Manuel Rodriguez Serra, honorary | Departments of Guayama, Humacao,
consul. and San Juan and the U. S. posses-
sions in the Lesser Antilles.
Providence, R. I..__._.___ Edgard L. Burchell, honorary consul-..| Rhode Island.
Beaumont, Tex. ._....._ ‘W. D. Gordon, honorary consul.._____ Beaumont, and the counties of An-
gelina, Chambers, Hardin, Jasper,
Jefferson, Nacogdoches, Orange, Sa-
bine, San Augustine, Shelby, and
Tyler.
| Brownsville, Tex_....... Samuel J. Trevifio, consul. ___.__._.__ Counties of Brooks, Cameron, Jim
| Wells, Kennedy, Kleberg, and Will-
acy.
: Corpus Christi, Tex..... -_— "MA A CONS a Nueces and San Patricio Counties.
Dallas, Tex... 00. a Juan E. Anchondo, consul...__._._____ In Texas, the counties of Anderson,
Archer, Armstrong, Baylor, Bosque,
Bowie, Briscoe, Callahan, Camp,
Cass, Cherokee, Childress, Clay,
Collin, Comanche, Cooke, Coryell,
Cottle, Dallas, Delta, Denton, Dick-
ens, Donely, Eastland, Ellis, Erath,
Falls, Fannin, Foard, Franklin,
Freestone, Grayson, Gregg, Hall,
Hamilton, Hardeman, Harrison,
Haskell, Henderson, Hill, Hood,
- Hopkins, Hunt, Jack, Johnson,
Jones, Kaufman, Kent, King, Knox,
Lamar, Limestone, Marion, Mec-
Lennan, Montague, Morris, Motley,
Navarro, Palo Pinto, Panola, Parker,
Rains, Red River, Rockwall, Rusk,
Shackleford, Smith, Somervell, Ste-
phens, Stonewall, Tarrant, Throck-
morton, Titus, Upshur, Van Zandt,
Wichita, Wilbarger, Wise, Wood,
and Young.
Del Rio, Tex.....ou.0i.. Armando C. Amador, consul........__| In Texas, the counties of Crockett,
Sutton, Terrell, and Val Verde.
Eagle Pass, TeX.cuaee--- Francisco B. Salazar, consul. .......... In Texas, the counties of Dimmit, Ed-
wards, Kinney, Maverick, Uvalde,
and Zavalla.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States
MEXICO—MONACO
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
MEXICO—continued
BliPasos Tex... ..--=1-2 Luis Lupian G., consul general _.__.__._ In Arizona, the counties of Graham and
Galveston, Tex ......._.
Houston, Tex...-...-i.--
Laredo, Tex...cucouoaia.
McAllen, Tex...
Presidio, Tex. ool.
San Antonio, Tex....___
Zapata, Tex...........2
Salt Lake City, Utah ___
Norfolk, Va._ coi
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash___________
Milwaukee, Wis________
MONACO
Chicago, IN... 000.000
Boston, Mass... ......
Salvador Bafios Contreras, consul...
Jests Gutiérrez, vice consul. _._______
Ignacio A. Pesqueira, consular agent__
Edmundo Gonzalez, consul
Rafael Aveleyra, consul______._______.__
Efrain G. Dominguez, vice consul.____
Lauro Izaguirre, consul__._____________
Gustavo Garza Lopez, consul. _.______
Fernando R. Pesqueira, consul general_
M. Tomas Morlet, vice consul________
Rafael San Miguel, honorary consul___
Raul G. Dominguez, consul ___________
Bruce Austin, honorary consul________
George Levi, honorary consul_________
W. P. Lawson, honorary consul_______
E. P. Kirby Hade, honorary consul. __
Roger Bocqueraz, consul ______________
Marcellus-Donald Redlich, consul_____
Charles F. Flamand, consul___________
Paul Fuller, consul general_.__________
Greenlee. In New Mexico, the coun-
ties of Catron, Colfax, Curry, Cha-
ves, De Baca, Dona Ana, Eddy,
Grant, Guadalupe, Harding, Hildal-
go, Lea, Lincoln, Luna, McKinley,
Mora, Otero, Quay, Rio Arriba,
Roosevelt, Sandoval, San Juan, San
Miguel, Santa Fe, Sierra, Sorocco,
Taos, Torrance, Union, and Valencia.
In Texas, the counties of Andrews,
Bailey, Borden, Carson, Castro,
Cochran, Crosby, Culberson, Dal-
lam, Dawson, Deaf Smith, Ector, El
Paso, Fisher, Floyd, Gaines, Garza,
Gray, Hale, Hansford, Hartley,
Hemphill, Hockley, Howard, Hud-
speth, Hutchinson, Lamb, Lips-
comb, Loving, Lubbock, Lynn,
Martin, Midland, Mitchell, Moore,
Nolan, Ochiltree, Oldham, Parmer,
Potter, Randall, Reeves, Roberts,
Scurry, Sherman, Swisher, Taylor,
Terry, Ward, Wheeler, Winkler, and
Yoakum.
Brazoria and Galveston Counties.
In Texas, the counties of Aransas, Aus-
tin, Bee, Brazos, Burleson, Calhoun,
Colorado, Fort Bend, Goliad,
Grimes, Harris, Houston, Jackson,
Lavaca, Lee, Leon, Liberty, Live
Oak, Madison, Matagorda, Mont-
gomery, Polk, Refugio, Robertson,
San Jacinto, Trinity, Victoria,
Walker, Waller, Washington, and
Wharton.
In Texas, the counties of Duval, Jim
Hoge, La Salle, McMullen, and
ebb.
In Texas, the counties of Hidalgo and
Starr.
In Texas, the counties of Brewster,
Coke, Crane, Glasscock, Irion, Jeff
Davis, Pecos, Presidio, Regan, Run-
nels, Sterling, Tom Green, and
Upton.
In Texas the counties of Atascosa, Ban-
dera, Bastrop, Bell, Bexar, Blanco,
Brown, Burnet, Caldwell, Coleman,
Comal, Concho, De Witt, Fayette,
Frio, Gillespie, Gonzales, Guada-
lupe, Hays, Karnes, Kendall, Kerr,
Kimble, Lampasas, Llano, McCol-
loch, Mason, Medina, Menard,
Milam, Mills, Real, San Saba,
Schleicher, Travis, Williamson, and
Wilson. Indirect jurisdiction over
the consulates at Brownsville, Cor-
pus Christi, Dallas, Del Rio, Eagle
Pass, Houston, Laredo, Marfa, Okla-
homa City, Riogrande, and the con-
sular agencies at Galveston and
McAllen.
Zapata County, Tex.
Idaho, Montana, and Utah.
Virginia, North Carolina, and South
Carolina.
Virgin Islands.
Alaska and Washington.
Milwaukee County.
544 Congressional Directory
NETHERLANDS
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
NETHERLANDS
Mobile; Ala wu i oo
Los Angeles, Calif _._____
San Diego, Calif. _______
San Francisco, Calif__.__
Colon, Canal Zone._.___
Panama, Canal Zone____
Denver, Colo... .__-__.__
Jacksonville, Fla________
Pensacola, Fla... _-il._:
Tampa, Fla zctasaiioo co
Savannah, Ga... -:u:t
Honolulu, Hawaii-._____
Chicago, Tino i. Tuscle
Indianapolis, Ind. __.___
Orange City, Jowa.____.
New Orleans, La________
Baltimore, Md.___..____
Boston, Mass... .. c=.
Detroit, Michio.
Grand Rapids, Mich____
Minneapolis, Minn__.___
Gulfport, Miss. _.____-..
Kansas City, Mo-._._._
St. Louis, Mo... 50
New York, N. Y______.__
Portland, Oreg.._.__._.___
Philadelphia, Pa___.____
Cebit; Pala. Loam ait
Hollo, Pol. anivari oes
Manila, PT: ico. i io
Mayaguez, P. Ro...
Ponce, P
San Jaan, P..R.. co...
Charleston, S. Oi ......
Galveston, Tex__.-.__-__
Port Arthur, Tex......-
Salt Lake City, Utah. _.
Newport News, Va______
Norfolk, Va....o........
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
ands.
Seattle, Wash. _..........
L. K. Van Leer, vice consul (honorary).
A. Hartog, consul (honorary). ....._____
J. J. van Eizenga, vice consul (hon-
orary).
H. A. van Coenen Torchiana, consul
general.
B. J. Gratama, acting consul general. _
eer {GONS Ue
D. M. Sasso, consul general (honorary)-
@G. J. Rollandet, vice consul (honorary)
C. Hough, jr., vice consul (honorary).
— — vice consul. .- ome.
J. R. van Julsingha Blinck, vice consul
(honorary).
R. Perrin, vice consul (honorary)...
C. A. Mackintosh, consul (honorary) -
J. Vennema, consul general (honorary)
J. Posthuma, vice consul (honorary). --
MW. Eo Bloch, consul... .ouecomwewsme nes
G. Klay, vice consul (honorary).._..._
A. Terkuhle, consul... ~~ _.--_
R. H. Mottu, consul (honorary)...
H.J. E. van Oosten, acting consul._____
William G. Bryant, honorary consul. __
Ch: H.Ray, viceeonsal ................
Jacob Steketee, consul (honorary)...
John Steketee, vice consul (honor-
ary).
L. C. Wilten, vice consul (honorary)...
A. O. Thompson, vice consul (hon-
orary).
William A. Hannon, consul. ____.__.__.
H. ter Braak, consul (honorary)...
W. P. Montyn, consul general. ____._._
J. I. Noest, acting consul general. _____
A Methtfer, consul... o-oo...
George Powell, vice consul. _._________
P. J. Groenendaal, consul (honorary)...
Harold Walford, acting vice consul
(honorary).
H. Walford, vice consul (honorary)...
Francis Wallace Pelling, acting vice
consul (honorary).
G. T. Datema, consul (honorary). ....
T. Bremer, vice consul (honorary). __.
O. F. Bravo, vice consul (honorary)._._
P. J. Armstrong, vice consul (hon-
orary).
W. E. Lee, consul (honorary). ...._._..
D. Ravenel, consul (honorary). _.__.__.
R.J. McDonough, consul (honorary). -
E. A. Bunge, consul (honorary)._..___.
B. Tiemersma, vice consul (honor-
ary).
EB. Ls J. Luening, vice consul (honor-
ary).
J. P. A. Mottu, consul (honorary).-..._
W. P.M. van Eps, consul (honorary)...
A. van der Spek, vice consul (honorary).
Alabama.
Arizona and that part of California
south of Inyo, Kern, and San Luis
Obispo Counties, except the counties
of Imperial and San Diego.
Imperial and San Diego Counties,
Calif. :
Alaska, Arizona, California, Colo-
rado, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon,
Utah, and Washington.
Colorado and New Mexico.
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.
Indiana, except the counties of Elkhart,
Lake, La Porte, Porter, and St.
Joseph.
Towa.
Alabama, Florida west of the Apa-
lachicola River, Louisiana, and
Mississippi.
Delaware and Maryland.
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Counties of Macomb, Oakland, and
Wayne.
Michigan (except the Detroit consular
district) and Minnesota.
Minnesota.
Mississippi.
Towa, Kansas, Missouri (west of 93d°
longitude), Nebraska, and Okla-
homa.
Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri (east
of 93d° longitude), and Tennessee.
Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Mary-
land, Massachusetts, New Hamp-
shire, New Jersey, New York, North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode
Island, Vermont, Virginia, and
West Virginia.
Oregon.
Pennsylvania.
Island of Cebu.
Island of Panay.
Philippine Islands.
West coast of Puerto Rico.
South coast of Puerto Rico.
Puerto Rico.
Georgia, South Carolina, and Florida
east of the Apalachicola River.
Galveston and suburbs.
al (except Galveston and suburbs).
tah.
City of Newport News.
North Carolina and Virginia (except
city of Newport News).
St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas.
Washington and Alaska.
|
|
|
| |
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States   945
NICARAGUA—NORWAY
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
NICARAGUA
Meoblle;;Aln. Fernando Gonzalez, consul (honorary) _
Calexico, Calif... _.__.__
Los Angeles, Calif... ___
San Diego, Calif _______
San Francisco, Calif ____
Cristobal, Canal Zone...
Panama, Canal Zone____
Miami, Fla
New Orleans, La_._.____
Baltimore, Md._._...____
Boston, Mass. >
Detroit; Mich... 0...
Minneapolis, Minn_____
Kansas City, Mo_______
St- Louis, Mo cl sooo.
Jersey City, N. J______.__
Albany, NY Sita.
New York, N. Y__..___.
(San Francisco) Oregon.
Philadelphia, Pa________
NORWAY
Mobile, Ala
Juneau, Alasks. ....
Los Angeles, Calif
San Diego, Calif
San Francisco, Calif _____
Ancon, Canal Zone_.____
Cristobal, Canal Zone.___
Washington, D. C
Fernandina, Fla. _______
Jacksonville, Fla________
Key West, Fla____.___._.
Pensacola, Fla. .o.....=
Tampa, Fla... .ae.oae
Savannah, Ga i... .....
157297°—T73—1—1ST ED
Arturo Pallais, honorary consul_______
Arturo Pallais, jr., honorary vice con-
sul.
Domingo Salinas, consul (honorary). __
Julio César Juarez, consul_____________
Isaac Montealegre, consul general ____
Teresa Argiiello Tefel, honorary vice
consul.
Roberto Feuillebois, honorary consul.
Juan Francisco Arias, honorary consul-
Julio César Roman, consul________.___
Francisco Villafranca Carazo, hon-
orary consul.
Néstor Ly Portocarrero, consul (hon-
orar
Berthold Singer, consul general ________
Alexander Singer, vice consul (hon
orary).
Julio Somoza, honorary vice consul...
Luis Gonzalo Bravo, consul general. __
Luis Manuel Debayle, consul (honor-
ary).
J. M.. Almeida, honorary consul_______
José Guerrero, honorary consul________
eonsul ic ld, Jioi E20
J. S. Ergas, honorary consul___________
Juan J. Romero, consul (honorary)____
Henry C. Lutjen, honorary vice consul.
Gonnar Froman, honorary consul_____
Gilberto, Lacayo Bermudéz, consul
general.
William C. Godfrey, honorary consul_ _
, consul general .__________
forenzo Guerrero Potter, consul gen-
eral.
Rafael Deshon, honorary consul_______
Mrs. Blanca Vega de Asenjo, hon-
orary vice consul.
Trinidad Eugenio Lacayo, honorary
consul general.
Ignacio Garcia Rojas, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Robert L. O’Brien, honorary consul___
Arturo S. Kahn, honorary consul______
C. B. Austin, honorary consul________
Thomas Alden Provence, vice consul
(honorary).
yvice'eonsal o_o
Andrew O. Nelson, vice consul (hon-
orary).
John Engebretsen, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Christopher First Smith, consul
Reidar Kildal, acting consul __________
Andreas Bjolstad, vice consul.-.__.____
Thomas Jacome, vice consul (honor-
Nathaniel Barnett Borden, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Jason Curry Outler, vice consi (hon-
orary).
Choa, Sigsbee Lowe, vice consul
(honorary).
John Edmund Toulmin, vice consul. _
Barton Hewitt Smith, vice consul
(honorary).
James Joseph McQuillan, in charge of
vice consulate.
36
California.
Canal Zone.
Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Missis-
sippi, and Texas.
Minnesota and the adjacent territory.
Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Mas-
sachusetts, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Oregon and Washington.
Alabama.
Alaska.
Los Angeles.
San Diego.
Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho,
Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah,
Washington, Wyoming, and the Ter-
ritory of Alaska.
Ancon.
Canal Zone.
The legation of Norway has general
supervision over consular matters
throughout the United States.
Fernandina.
Jacksonville.
Key West and Miami.
Florida (except the ports of Fernan-
dina, Jacksonville, Key West, Mi-
ami, and Tampa).
Tampa.
Georgia,
546 Congressional Directory
NORWAY—PANAMA
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
NORWAY—continued
Honolulu, Hawaii... ._..
Chicago, Mais =.
Decorah, Iowa. ._.......
New Orleans, La_._._..._.
Portland, Me... _._._....
Baltimore, Md._..._....
Boston, Mass. ......._...
Detroit, Mich... ......
St. Paul, Minn... .... ..-.-
Gulfport, Miss............
St. Louis, Mo... .....-
Billings, Mont. __..____.
Newark, N. J...
AIbany, NN. Yau
New York, N. Y..._....
Niagara Falls, N. Y_____
Wilmington, N. C______
Grand Forks, N. Dak...
Cleveland, Ohio.________
Portland, Oreg__._______
Philadelphia, Pa________
Manila P. EF...
SanJusn, P.R...-....-
Charleston, 8. C._..._..
Sioux Falls, S. Dak_____
Galveston, Tex .........
Houston, Tex. c; 2
Port Arthur, Tex. .----.
Lone
Noriolkk, V3. vooeivaas
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Port Townsend, Wash __
Seattle, Wash____..._._.
Milwaukee, Wis....._..
PANAMA
Mobile, Alp...
Victor Cotta Schoenberg, consul. .....
Olaf Bernts, consul... cio coioolili.c
Trond Stabo, vice consul (honorary). .
‘Walter Frederick Jahncke, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Joseph Todd Mulvenny, vice consul
(honorary).
Joel M. Cloud, vice consul (honorary).
Georg Tausan Vedeler, vice consul
(honorary).
Carl Bromstad Moe, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Engebreth Hagbarth Hobe, consul
(honorary).
Harry (Halfdan) Eberhardt, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Olus John Dedeaux, vice consul (hon-
orary).
sivicoconsal Lo
Christian Rostad Hansen, vice consul
(honorary).
, vice consal.. ooaoooi
Donald G. Kibbey, vice consul__._.___
Wilhelm Thorleif von Munthe af
Morgenstierne, consul general.
Jacob Gregg, consul....-..0 loon os
Rolf Asbjorn Christensen, vice consul.
Oluf Tostrup, vice consul. ._._._______
Job Morten August Stillesen, vice
consul (honorary).
John D. Corbett, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Ingvald Andreas Berg, vice consul
(honorary).
Hans Glad-Block, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Joseph Chester Calhoun, in charge of
vice consulate.
Emil P. Slovarp, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Mathias Moe, vice consul (honorary).
Niels Christian Gude, consul (honor-
ary).
William Edward Alexander Lee, con-
sul.
James Doar Lucas, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Niels Oliver Monserud, vice consul
(honorary).
John W. Focke, vice consul (honorary).
Jesse Newton Rayzor, vice consul
(honorary).
John Robert Adams, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Nels Mettome, vice consul (honorary) -
T. Parker Host, vice consul (honorary).
Anders Williams, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Carl Gustav Thiele, consul (honorary).
Oscar Klocker, viee consul (honorary).
Einar Beyer, consul... _.__...... 2
Olaf I. Rove, vice consul (honorary). .
Clyde E. Posey, honorary consul__....
A. H. Diaz, vice consul (honorary)._..
Boe Sosa Dutari, consul (honor-
ary).
Hawaii.
Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Mis-
souri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Ten-
nessee, and Wisconsin.
Towa.
Louisiana.
Maine.
Maryland.
Massachusetts.
Michigan.
Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota,
and South Dakota.
Mississippi.
Missouri.
Montana.
New Jersey.
Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware,
Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, Missis-
sippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey,
New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico, Rhode
Island, South Carolina, Texas, Ver-
mont, Virginia, West Virginia, and
the Virgin Islands.
Niagara Falls.
North Carolina.
North Dakota.
Ohio.
Oregon.
Pennsylvania.
Philippine Islands.
Puerto Rico.
South Carolina.
South Dakota.
Texas (except the harbors of Port
Arthur and Sabine Pass).
Port Arthur and Sabine Pass.
Utah.
Newport News, Va.
Virginia (except the port of Newport
News).
In Washington the counties of Clallam,
Grays Harbor, Island, Jefferson,
Kitsap, Mason, Pacific, San Juan,
and Wahkiakum.
Washington, except the Port Town-
send district.
‘Wisconsin.
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States
PANAMA—PARAGUAY
547
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
PANAMA—continued
Long Beach, Calif.....__
Los Angeles, Calif......_
Oakland, Calif. _oooo__
Pasadena, Calif. ._..._..
San Diego, Calif... _____
San Fernando, Calif____.
San Francisco, Calif...
Miami, Bla. cocina
Dubuque, Iowa__.......
Lexington; Ky. ........>
New Orleans, La......__
Baltimore, M3..ocnee-a
Boston, Mass. ..eamenmm-
Detroit, Micha ouaaeaa-.
Gulfport, Miss... ....----
St. Louis and Kansas
City, Mo.
Silver City, N. Mex...
New. York, N. Y...cnnm-
Charlotie, N. Coane
Cincinnati, Ohio...
Cleveland, Ohio.._..._..
Dayton, Ohlo........---
Portland, Oregz...........
Philadelphia, Pa__._..._._
Mandl, P. Tt
Aguadilla, P.R.........
Mayaguez, P. R........
Ponce, Boel.
San Juan, P. B......---
Dallas, Tex. .....
Galveston, Tex.
Houston, Tex..caacen--
Port Arthur, Tex_...._.
Newport News, Va_.____
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash___.._._.._
PARAGUAY
Mobile, Ala... coe...
Los Angeles, Calif...____
San Diego, Calif.__..._._
San Francisco, Calif__.__
Jacksonville, Fla________
Chicago, YI1.5._ 2.00
Indianapolis, Ind.....___
New Orleans, La_....___
Boston, Mass.............
Detroit, Mich______._____
Kansas City, Mo_....___
St.Louis, Mo......aname
Enrique Halphen, honorary consul____
Adolfo de la Guardia, honorary consul.
Edudn de la Guardia, consul (honor-
ary).
Julio Alvaredo, honorary vice consul __
Agustin Alberto de la Guardia, honor-
ary vice consul.
Salvador C. Navarro, honorary consul _
Erie gorge Barham, consul (honor-
ary).
Gerald Harcourt Morrice, vice consul
(honorary).
Ernesto Valencia, consul (honorary). -
Adolfo Aleman V., consul general ____
José E. de Ycaza, honorary vice consul.
Edwin L. Apperson, consul (honor-
ary).
Luis R. Alfaro, honorary consul....___
, consul LINTOU0N Uli
F. N. Traynor, honorary consul.______
John Ashley Jones, consul _____________
Bert W. Caldwell, honorary consul____
John Rider Wallis, consul (honorary) -
George Hamilton, consul (honorary)
Ernesto Brin, consul general ._________
Nathan Eisenmann, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Jerome J. Gebhart, consul (honorary)...
William F. Volmerhaus, vice consul
(honorary).
Antonio José Sucre, consul (honorary).
sire R. Shrigley, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Louis James Rosenberg, consul (hon-
orary). d
Max Rowland, honorary consul_______
Joseph S. Ergas, honorary consul.__.__
Ernesto de la Ossa, consul ___._________
Gonzalo Lopez Fabrega, consul general.
Manuel de Obaldia, honorary vice
consul.
Edwin L. Jones, honorary consul______
Pablo Arosemena Pinilla, consul (hon-
orary).
Thomaés J. Owens, consul (honorary) __
Alberto de Obarrio, honorary consul. __
L. W. Hartman, consul (honorary)____
Carlos Berguido, jr., consul (honorary) _
E. C. Ross, consul (honorary)... ______
Jorge Silva y Sapia, consul (honorary).
Lope Bello, honorary consul___________
Aristides Vidal, consul (honorary)____.
Luis Brau, consul (honorary). .____.___
Robert Burgher, consul (honorary)____
L. T. Rogers, consul (honorary)__._____
R. L. O’Brien, consul (honorary)_.____
Leopoldo J. Castellanos, consul (hon-
orary).
W. H. Gilliland, consul (honorary).___
W. E. Barrett, honorary vice consul. _
Isaac Parewensky, consul (honorary)..
Adolfo Bracons, honorary consul._____
———, cons
Richard N. Thompson, consul (hono-
rary).
Roberto H. Vorfeld, consul______._..____
Juan D. Vickers, vice consul ______..__
Fred W. Allen, honorary consul.______
Charles E. Coffin, vice consul .________
James Lloveras, consul__________._._...
Jerome A. Petitti, consul________.____._
— yiceconsual......._........
F. L. Phillips, vice consal.............
yviceconsul o.oo Soll,
Congressional Directory
PARAGUAY—POLAND
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
PARAGUAY—continued
Newark, N.J...cuowwne
New York, N. ¥en
Cincinnati, Ohio........
Portland, Oreg._.._._____
Manila PT... ...
Norlelic, Vo... ona
Seattle, Wash_______.._.
PERSIA
San Francisco, Calif.____
Washington, D. C______
Chicago, Ill
Boston, Mass...-.....o--
St.Louis, Mo...
New York City, N. Y._
Philadelphia, Pa___.._....
PERU
Los Angeles, Calif.______
San Francisco, Calif_.._.
Colon, Canal Zone......
Cristobal, Canal Zone...
Panama, Canal Zone...
Honolulu, Hawaii....___
Chicago, N......... cn
New Orleans, La_.._____
Baltimore, Md...
Boston, Mass. aceceen--
Detroit, Mich...........
Buffalo, N.Y ....cacue--
New York, N. Y__......
Toledo, ONO... eave nena
Portland, Oreg.........
Philadelphia, Paoca---..
Manila, PP... aiveicae
Mayaguez, P. Roccuen-..
San Juan, Pr Racacooad
Houston; TeX. ..cucacne-
San Antonio, Tex. ......
Newport, News, Va_.____
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
ands.
Seattle, Wash...c.u.......
POLAND
Chicago, WN. .nevicnee--
James A. Coe, vice consul. ____________
William Wallace White, consul general.
Philip de Ronde, consul.____.__________
Wallace White, jr., vice consul. _______
Irwin F. Westheimer, vice consul. ____
Howard L. White, honorary consul...
Juan.J. Russell, consul." >
Carlos Barnett, consul ____________.___
Elmer Joseph Young, consul. _________
Thomas W. Firby, honorary consul.___
yw eonsuloa con nuts
Henry Nathan, acting honorary consul.
Thomas C. Perkins, honorary consul. _
Milton Seropyan, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Firouz Saklatvala, honorary consul
general.
Haig Herant Pakradooni, honorary
consul.
Manuel Antonio Calderon, honorary
consul.
Svicoconsuls sre
Alfredo Lertora, consul general ____.___
Josef Sigall, honorary vice consul_.____
seonsul... [2 ee
Juan Picén Pinzés, consul... ._______
Hernan Del Solar, consul ______________
Enrique Garcia Bedoya, honorary
consul general.
Antonio D. Castro, honorary consul___
Jorge M. Chavarri P., consul__________
Oscar Vasquez Benavides, consul..____
Enrique A. Cordiviola, honorary con-
sul.
Max von Klock y Cordel, honorary
consul.
A CONS caries soni rol ors
E. R. de Money, honorary consul_____
Alfredo Henriod, consul general .______
Oscar Freyre, honorary vice consul._..
Rex W. Wells, honorary consul. ______
Manuel L. Gutierrez de la Barrera,
consul.
Oscar Freundt, const]. ove oi icc =e
Antonio Melion y Pavia, honorary
consul.
Guillermo H. Moscoso, honorary vice
consul.
Emiliano Mendez Fernandez, honor-
ary consul.
Leopoldo J. Castellanos, honorary con-
sul.
Ricardo Villafranca, honorary consul.
T. P. Host, honorary vice consul.____._
George Levi, consul (honorary). ._._....._
J. Fernando Berckemeyer, consul_____
Tytus Zbyszewski, consul general _____
Vice constl.. <a. a cacl
United States.
Norfolk and Newport News.
Canal Zone except Cristobal.
Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, and
Mississippi.
United States.
For Pennsylvania.
Texas.
Washington.
Arizona, Arkansas, California, Cole-
rado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa,
Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mis-
souri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada,
New Mexico, North Dakota, Okla-
homa, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas,
Utah, Washington, Wisconsin,
Alaska, Hawaii, and the Philippine
Islands.
Forergn Consular Officers in the United States
POLAND—PORTUGAL
549
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
POLAND—continued
New. York, N..Yervnrun-
Pittsburgh, Pa.....ce-.-
PORTUGAL
San Francisco, Calif_____
Panama, Canal Zone...
Hartford, Conn.........
Pampa, Fla...
Honolulu, Hawaii_____._.
Ghicago, Me...
New Orleans, La_.______
Baltimore, Md..____..._
Boston, Mass. .-........
Fall River, Mass________
New Bedford, Mass_..._
Gulfport, Miss... cements
New York, N. Y
Philadelphia, Pa........
Nanila, BP. I........-o
SanJuan, P. R...c:.25.
Providence, R. I..___.__
Galveston, Tex...........
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Mieoaysiaw Marchlewski, consul gen-
eral.
wyiceeonsulo oro ooo
Jan Lech Byszewski, consul .___._____
Francisco de Pina Aragao e Costa, con-
sul.
G. Armas do Amaral, vice consul
(honorary).
José Soin Arango, consul (honor-
ary).
(honorary).
Alberto Alves De Araujo, consul
(honorary).
S. Chapman Simms, consul (honorary).
Frederic Charles Harwood, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Luiz da Costa Carvalho, consul (hon-
orary).
Jodo Francisco dos Santos, jr., vice
consul.
Adelbert W. Mears, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Antonio Luiz Cerveira de Albuquer-
que e Castro, consul general.
Antofiio Laranjo Ferreira Monteiro,
vice consul (honorary).
Manuel Caetano Pereira, vice consul__
Antonio Madureira e Castro, consul
(honorary).
Francisco Madureira e Castro, vice
consul (honorary).
John Paoli, vice consul (honorary) .._..
Victor Eduardo Verdades de Faria,
consul general.
Jodo de Deus Bataglia Ramos, consul.
José Saavedra de Figueiredo, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Camilo Camara, vice consul (honor-
ary).
John W. Ferrier, consul (honorary). __
Dionisio Trigo, consul (honorary).....
Esteban Garcia Cabrera, vice consul
(honorary).
José Agostinho De Oliveira, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Robert O’Brien, consul (honorary)._..
M. E. Trepuk, consul (honorary).._--
In Pennsylvania, the counties of Brad-
ford, Berks, Bucks, Chester, Carbon,
Columbia, Dauphin, Delaware,
Lackawanna, Lancaster, Lebanon,
Lehigh, Luzerne, Monroe, Mon-
tour, Montgomery, Northampton,
Northumberland, Pike, Philadel-
phia, Schuylkill, Susquehanna, Sulli-
van, Wayne, and Wyoming. For
Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware,
District of Columbia, Florida, Geor-
gia, Maine, Maryland, Massachu-
setts, Mississippi, New Jersey, New
Hampshire, New York, North Caro-
lina, Rhode Island, South Carolina,
Vermont, and Virginia.
Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee,
and West Virginia. In Pennsyl-
vania, the counties of Adams, Alle-
gheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Bedford,
Blair, Butler, Cambria, Cameron,
Centre, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton,
Crawford, Cumberland, Elk, Erie,
Fayette, Forest, Franklin, Fulton,
Greene, Huntingdon, Indiana, Jeffer-
son, Juniata, Lawrence, Lycoming,
McKean, Mercer, Mifflin, Perry,
Potter, Snyder, Somerset, Tioga,
Union, Venango, Warren, Washing-
ton, Westmoreland, and York.
San Francisco and its consular district.
Canal Zone.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and
Vermont.
Fall River and its consular district.
New Bedford and its consular district.
Gulfport and its district.
All the States (except California, Con-
necticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
Nevada, New Hampshire, Oregon,
Rhode Island, Vermont, and Wash-
ington).
Philadelphia and its district.
Philippine Islands.
Providence and its district.
550 Congressional Directory
RUMANIA—SPAIN
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
RUMANIA
Chieago, TN.
New York, N. Y________
Cleveland, Ohio.________
Philadelphia, Pa________
RUSSIA
Chicago, M2. 20... 0.
Boston, Mass_____..__._
Seattle, Wash___________
SALVADOR
(See El Salvador.)
SAN MARINO
New York, N, Y..eewv--
SIAM
San Francisco, Calif_____
Chicago, Tl... ..._....
Boston, Mass. ._........
New. York, N. Y........
(honorary).
Philadelphia, Pa_..._... Wm E. Goodman, consul (honor-
ary).
ania, B01... E. A. Perkins, consul (honorary)______
Seattle, Wash___________ Stanley Arthur Griffiths, consul (hon-
orary).
SPAIN
Mobile, Ala .........cnwe Juan Llorca y Marti, honorary vice
Los Angeles, Calif_____..
San Francisco, Calif...
San Leandro, Calif._____
Colon, Canal Zone..___._
Panama, Canal Zone...
New London, Conn____.
Jacksonville, Fla________
Key West, Fla__________
Miami, Pla...
amps, Blo. ...an eae
Savannah, Ga...........
Honolulu, Hawaii......-
Ira Nelson Morris, consul general
(honorary).
T. Tileston Wells, consul general
(honorary).
Carol Tarcauanu, vice consul. ________
George Anagnostache, vice consul_____
Mihail Marian, consul (honorary)..._.
Antoine Volkoff, consul general. ______
Joseph'A. Conry,consal....___...____.
N Te] Bogoyavlensky, consul gen-
eral.
CONSUL Bly Sait
Martin J. Dinkelspiel, vice consul
(honorary).
Nathan William MacChesney, consul
general (honorary).
Arthur Messenger Beale, consul
(honorary).
Charles W. Atwater, consul general
consul. ;
Alejandro Torres, honorary vice con-
sul.
Alvaro de Aguilar y Goméz Acebo,
consul general.
Marcos Gracia Palacio, honorary con-
sular agent.
Antonio Rodriguez Martin, honorary
vice consul.
Francisco Andrade Polanco, honorary
consul.
Luis San Simon, honorary consul. _...
yvieeconsulll lJ loUd 0
Francisco Pifiol Giro, consular agent
(honorary).
Emilio Carles, honorary vice consul...
Feliciano Castro Verde, honorary vice
consul.
vice consular aor oe
y.consul......... Soozioz--
Angel M. Dunn, honorary vice consul.
Irving Otis Pecker, vice consul........
Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Califor-
nia, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indi-
ana, Iowa, Kansas, Xentucky,
Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Ne-
vada, New Mexico, North Dakota,
Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Washing-
ton, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New
York, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Supervisory jurisdiction over the
Philadelphia consular district.
Michigan, Ohio, and West Virginia.
Delaware, the District of Columbia,
Florida, Georgia, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and
Virginia.
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Mich-
igan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebras-
ka, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South
Dakota, and Wisconsin.
Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington,
Wyoming, and Alaska. Also consul
general at Nome.
Alabama.
In California, the counties of Imperial,
Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San
Bernardino, and San Diego.
California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada,
Oregon, Washington, and Wyoming.
Alaska and Hawaii.
Canal Zone from Cristobal to San Pa-
blo, inclusive.
Canal Zone (except the Colon district).
New London, Conn.
Duval and Nassau Counties, Fla.
Monroe County, Fla.
In Florida, the counties of Broward,
Dade, and Palm Beach.
Escambia County, Fla.
Florida, South Carolina, and Georgia.
Georgia (except Glynn County).
Hawaii,
|
|
Foreign Consular Officers in the United States 551
SPAIN—SWEDEN
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
SPAIN—continued
Chicago, J... ..
New Orleans, La...
Baltimore, Md_.___.___.
Boston,/Mass............-
Detroit, Mich. =.
Gulfport, Miss___._____.__
St. Louis, Mo... ..._:
NewYork, N.Y...
Portland, Oreg_.._______
Philadelphia, Pa____.___
Pittsburgh, Pa-. ..._....
Cebu; PL.
Iloilo, P. I
Manila, P.L x oo.
Tuguegarao, P. I... ....
Aguadilla, P. RR... _._._
Arecibo, P. Rt.
Humaeae, P. RB...
Mayaguez, P. R_____.._
Ponee, BR ao oi.
SanJasn, P. Ro...
Dallas, Tex: =. coil
El Paso, Tex
Galveston, Tex_....__._
Port Arthur, Tex...
Norfolk, Va... ns re,
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash_____._____
SWEDEN
Mobile, Ala........-......
Sebastian Romero Madigales, consul.
Max Enry Ehlert, honorary vice con-
sul.
Luis Careaga y Echevarria, consul____
Jaime Ramoneda Cuch, vice consul...
Giuseppe Schiaffino, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Cesareo de Garavilla y Alverdi, hon-
orary vice consul.
yviceconsul. ..............
Eduardo Fernandez Alonso, honorary
vice consul.
José Alvarez Hernandez, vice consul
(honorary).
Emilio Zapico y Zarraluqui, consul
general.
Mariano Angel Silvela y Tordesillas,
consul.
Pablo de Palacios y Mateos, vice con-
sul.
Antonio Rafael Vejar, honorary vice
consul.
Teodoro Varela y Gil, consul._________
José Corriols y Sala, honorary vice
consul.
Manuel Gonzalez Ruiz, honorary vice
consul.
José Manuel Reguera y Frias, honor-
ary consul.
Luis Arino y Cenzano, consul general.
Andrés Rodriguez Ramon, vice consul.
José Maria Hernandez, consular agent.
Higinio Ferreiray Martin De Argenta,
honorary consular agent.
Antonio Lens Cuena, honorary vice
consul.
José Mendez Rodriguez, honorary
vice consul.
Benigno Rodriguez Campoamor, hon-
orary vice consul.
Bartolomé Melidy Ferrer, honorary
vice consul.
» consul general __________
Santiago Ruiz-Tabanera, vice consul__
Justo Bermejo Gomez, vice consul.____
Antonio Campdera Gala, honorary
vice consul.
Ramiro Diaz Erro, honorary vice
consul.
Pablo Ubarri y Soriano, consul._._____
Narcisco Estrada y Vallet, honorary
vice consul.
Fernando Pro, honorary vice consul. _
Arthur C. Humphreys, honorary vice
consul.
Isidro de Lugo, honorary vice consul.._
John Wesley Dolby, honorary vice
consul.
Robert Bennett Turner, vice consul
(honorary).
Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Ken-
tucky, Missouri, Nebraska, North
Dakota, South Dakota, and Tennes-
see.
Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Missis-
sippi, and Oklahoma.
Maryland.
Maine, Massachusetts, and New
Hampshire.
Michigan, Minnesota, and Wisconsin.
Mississippi.
Missouri, and in Illinois the city of
East St. Louis.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, and in New Jersey
the counties of Essex, Hudson, Mid-
dlesex, Bergen, Monmouth, Passaic,
Sussex, and Union. For New York,
Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Oregon.
Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West
Virginia, and in New Jersey the
counties of Atlantic, Burlington,
Camden, Cape May, Cumberland,
Gloucester, Hunterdon, Mercer,
Morris, Ocean, Salem, Somerset, and
Warren.
In Pennsylvania the counties of Alle-
gheny, Armstrong, Beaver, Butler,
Cambria, Cameron, Clarion, Clear-
field, Crawford, Elk, Erie, Fayette,
Forest, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson,
Lawrence, McKean, Mercer, Somer-
set, Venango, Warren, Washington,
and Westmoreland.
Bohol and Cebu.
Provinces of Antique, Capiz, Iloilo,
Negros Occidental, and Negros
Oriental.
Philippine Islands and the island of
Guam.
Provinces of Batanes and Cagayan.
Aguadilla district.
Arecibo district.
Humacao district.
Mayaguez district.
The towns of Adjuntas, Barranquitas,
Barros, Coamo, Guanica, Guaya-
nilla, Juana Diaz, Pefiuelas, Salinas,
Santa Isabel, and Yauco.
Island of Puerto Rico, Vieques Island,
and the Virgin Islands.
El Paso County, Tex.
Texas and New Mexico.
In Texas the counties of Hardin, Jeffer-
son, Liberty, and Orange.
Virginia.
Virgin Islands.
‘Washington.
552 Congressional Directory
SWEDEN—SWITZERLAND
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
SWEDEN—continued
Skagway, Alaska. ______
ng el
San Francisco. Calif. ___
Colon, Canal Zone._____
Panama, Canal Zone.___
Pensacola, Fla... _______
Tampa, Fla__o CL £4
Savannah, Ga__________
Honolulu, Hawaii.______
Chieago, Muni 1d i
New Orleans, La________
Baltimore, Md__________
Boston, Mass_______.____
Detroit, Mich... _.
Minneapolis, Minn____.
Kansas City, Mo._______
Omaha, Nebr________.__.
Buffalo, N.Y _.0000.7 _&
Jamestown, N.Y________
New York, N.Y...
Cleveland, Ohio._._____
Portland, Oreg........ ..
Philadelphia, Pa__._____
Manila, (PIT. cainuing
Ponee,P. RB. Sais
San Juan, P. RUE Lai
Galveston, Tex... __.___
Salt Lake City, Utah___
Noriollz, Va... oo
St. Thomas, Virgin Is-
lands.
Seattle, Wash._____.______
SWITZERLAND
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Francisco, Calif..___
Denver, Colo...
Washington, D. C______
Edward Anton Rasmusson, vice con-
sul (honorary).
yvicerconsul..
Nils Malmberg, vice consul (honorary)
Carl Edvard Wallerstedt, consul._____
Carl Fredrik Hellstrom, vice consul. _
Julio Abraham Salas, vice consul
(honorary).
Rudolf Bierman de St. Malo, consul
(honorary).
Charles McKenzie-Oerting, vice con-
sul (honorary).
D. Collins Gillett, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Aage Georg Schroder. vice consul (hon-
orary).
Nils P. Larsen, vice consul (honorary)
Oscar Constans Gorgodt Lundquist,
consul.
Gustaf Bernhard Anderson, vice con-
sul (honorary).
George Plant, vice consul (honorary) --
Edgar T. Fell, vice'consul.. =v.
Carl Wilhelm ‘Emanuel Andre Johans-
son, vice consul (honorary).
Carl Berglund, vice consul (honorary) -
Carl Albert Magnus Hallenborg, vice
consul.
A. Hawkinson, vice consul (honorary).
Carl Axel Adolf Wollert, vice consul__
yviceeonsul. Zo
Carl Alfred Okerlind, vice consul
(honorary).
Olof Herman Lamm, consul general___
Gosta Oldenburg, vice consul. ________
N. K. Stahle, vice consul...__________
Herman J. Nord, vice consul (hon-
orary).
~viceeonsul =.
Maurice Hogeland, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Alexander George Henderson, consul
(honorary).
Rafael Subira, vice consul (honorary)...
Ernest'Yeates, consul... _.____.
Herman Arthur Bornefeld, vice consul
(honorary).
,. viee:consall ci? Soli
Horan Aspegren, vice consul (hon-
orar
Axel Holst, consul (honorary)...
Yngve Carl Ivar Lundequist, vice
consul (honorary).
Otto Wartenweiler, honorary consul. ._
John Freuler, consul (honorary). ..____
‘Wilhelm Schwyter, vice consul____.___
Paul Weiss, consul (honorary) __._._.___
Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho,
Nevada, Oregon, Utah, and Wash
ington.
Canal Zone.
Do.
Territory of Hawaii.
Arkansas, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana,
Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota,
Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New
Mexico, North Dakota, Ohio, Okla-
homa, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and
Wyoming. For Alabama, Missis-
sippi, Louisiana, and Texas, except
their coast lines.
Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota,
and South Dakota.
Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska,
New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Wyo-
ming.
Connecticut, Delaware, District of
Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Ken-
tucky, Maine, Maryland, Massa-
chusetts, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont, Vir-
ginia, and West Virginia. For the
coast line of Alabama, Mississippi,
Louisiana, and Texas.
Philippine Islands.
Island of Puerto Rico.
Virgin Islands.
Arizona, and in California the counties
of Imperial, Los Angeles, Orange,
Riverside, San Bernardino, San
Diego, Santa Barbara, and Ventura.
Northern California, Nevada, and
Hawaii.
Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah.
The legation of Switzerland in Wash-
ington has charge of consular matters
in the District of Columbia, Mary-
land, Virginia, and West Virginie.
Foreign Consular Officers tn the United Slates   553
SWITZERLAND—URUGUAY
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
SWITZERLAND—contd.
Chieago, Tui. i caanacin
New Orleans, La.....__.
St. Louis, Mo...
New York, N. Y.......-
Cincinnati, Ohio._______
Philadelphia, Pa_______.
Manila, PX...
Puerto Bicone ane
VirginIslands...........
Seattle, Wash. _......._-
TURKEY
Chicago, ll. cones
New Orleans, La_..__.__
Boston, Mass. __......_
New York, N. Y__....._
URUGUAY
Mobile, Ala... l.l.
Los Angeles, Calif_______
San Diego, Calif________
San Francisco, Calif_____
Jacksonville, Fla________
Pensacola, Fla. _________
Chicago, Il...
New Orleans, La_._______
Baltimore, Md._._.______
Boston, Mass. ...- =
Pascagoula, Miss__._____
Kansas City, Mo.....__.
Buffalo, N.Y .........-.
New York, N.Y...
Portland, Oreg.. ... __.:
Philadelphia, Pa________
Mayaguez, P.R........
Ernest Biihler, honorary consul.___.___
Ulrich Buesch, viceconsul_____________
Walter Schmid in charge of consulate--
Alfred Aigler, honorary consul_._._....
, consul general ___________
Victor Nef, consul... ..... oneamenn
Henry Escher, honorary consul._.....
Walter Baumann, in charge of consu-
late.
Jacob Knup, honorary consul_________
Verner Tobler,in charge of consulate...
Berthold Singer, honorary consul gen-
eral.
Charles F. Buck, jr., honorary consul.
Georges R. Farnum, honorary consul
general.
Basri Bey, consul general... __________
Juan Llorca Marty, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Robert E. Tracey, honorary consul. __
Mauricio Herschel, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Manuel Rivera, honorary consul______
Emilio Carles, in charge of consulate. _
Vicente J. Vidal, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Rodolfo Carlos Lebret, consul (hon-
orary).
Henry L. Lange, consul (honorary)...
John Phelps, vice consul (honorary). _
Yam A. Mossman, consul (honor-
ary).
——— vice consul ______________
Gabriel Madrid Herndndez, vice con-
sul (honorary).
Ledn L. Lancaster, vice consul (hon-
orary).
José Richling, consul general ._________
Santiago Rivas, jr.,consul....____.___.
John H. Lothrop, vice consul (hon-
© orary).
Alberto Secco Ellauri, consul ..______.
Guillermo H. Moscoso, vice consul
(honorary).
Iowa, northern Illinois, Michigan,
Minnesota, Montana, North Da-
kota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and
Wyoming.
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, North Caro-
lina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and
Texas.
Southern Illinois, Kansas, Missouri,
and Nebraska.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New York, Rhode
Island, Vermont, and in New Jersey
the counties of Bergen, Essex, Hud-
son, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Mon-
mouth, Morris, Passaic, Somerset,
Sussex, Warren, and Union, Puerto
Rico, and the Virgin Islands.
Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and Ten-
nessee. :
Delaware, Pennsylvania, and New Jer-
sey (except the counties of Bergen,
Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Middle-
sex, Monmouth, Morris, Passaic,
Somerset, Sussex, Warren, and
Union).
The consulate general of Switzerland
at New York has charge of consular
matters in Puerto Rico.
The consulate general at New York has
charge of Swiss consular matters in
the Virgin Islands.
Alaska, Idaho, Oregon, and Washing-
ton.
Arizona, California, Colorado, Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan,
Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Ne-
braska, New Mexico, Nevada, North
Dakota, Oregon, Ohio, South Da-
kota, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin,
and Wyoming.
Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma,
and Texas.
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and
Vermont.
United States
554 Congressional Directory
URUGUAY—YUGOSLAVIA
Residence Name and rank Jurisdiction
URUGUAY—continued
San:Juam, Po Raul. na.
Galveston, Tex___..._.__
Port Arthur, Tex_______
Norfolk, Va... ......
Seattle, Wash_________._.
VENEZUELA
Los Angeles, Calif____.__
San Francisco, Calif..__.
OR
Chicago, TH: . o:vociniz
New Orleans, La..__.___
Baltimore, Md__________
New. York, N. Yoo.
Mayaguez, P. R__.__.__
San Juan, P. R
Beaumont, Tex... ______.
Houston, Tex... 75. oiovw
Seattle, Wash___________
YUGOSLAVIA
San Francisco, Calif...
Chieage, Bil... aa --
New York, N. Y.__...__.
Cleveland, Ohio....__._.
Pittsburgh, Pa.............
Manuel Mendia Morales, consul (hon-
orary).
Manuel Gomez Lopez, vice consul
(honorary).
Enrique Schroeder, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Fernando Pro, vice consul (honorary).
E. J. Rudgard Wigg, vice consul (hon-
orary).
Adolfo Bracons, vice consul (honor-
ary).
Pedro J. de Larralde, honorary consul. _
J. L. Schleimer, honorary vice consul. _
Luis Paul, consul general __..__________
sviceconsal...........--—-
Juan Paris, jr., consul general. _._______
‘W. F. Ives, honorary consul... ______
R. C. Lebret, honorary consul._______
Diego Matute Ruiz, consul general ___
, consul
Pedro Rafael Rincones, jr., consul
general.
Nicolas Veloz, honorary vice consul. __
Luis Garcia Davila, consul. ___________
Alberto P. Delfino, honorary consul...
Sebastian Bonet, consul (honorary)...
Vicente Barletta, honorary consul_____
Manuel Norberto Vetancourt, consul
general.
Carlos H. Parodi, honorary consul. .__
Filiberto Galvan, honorary consul _.__
José R. Asuna Lucena, consul.________
Milivoje Naumovitch, consul. ______
Dioura Kolombatoviteh, consul gen-
eral.
Radoye Jankovitch, consul general...
Michael Cerrezin, honorary vice con-
sul.
Kosto Unkovich, honorary consul...._.
Arecibo, Bayamon, and Humacao.
Arizona, California, Colorado, Ne-
vada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah,
and Washington.
For the country of Hillsborough.
Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa,
Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mis-
sissippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio,
Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and
West Virginia.
Puerto Rico.
‘Washington.
Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado,
Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, Montana,
Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico,
North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon,
the Philippines, Puerto Rico, South
Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington,
and Wyoming.
Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Lou-
isiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missis-
sippi, Missouri, and Wisconsin.
Alabama, Connecticut, Delaware, Dis-
trict of Columbia, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Maine, Maryland, Mas-
sachusetts, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
South Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont,
Virginia, West Virginia, and the
Virgin Islands.
FOREIGN SERVICE OF THE
UNITED STATES
5565
FOREIGN SERVICE OF THE UNITED
STATES
[Consular agencies are indicated by an asterisk]
ALBANIA—BELGIUM
Post Name Office
ALBANIA :
4 Ty nL] en PM hall ho Herman Bernstein _._.._._______ Envoy extraordinary and minister
wilpipaioniary
Gloyee K. Huston... ...c.-=i4 ird secretary (vice consul).
Col. E. R. Warner McCabe_____ Military attaché.
Karl, Rankin... ...aiicoten Commercial attaché.
Erich W. A. Hoffmann___.______ Vice consul.
ARGENTINA
Buenos Aires... -ceccecoeo- Alexander W. Weddell..___._____ Ambassador extraordinary and plen-
ipotentiary.
John Campbell White___________ Counselor of embassy.
Elbridge Gerry Greene._________ First secretary.
JohnN'N. Hamlin. >> = i. Second secretary.
Frederick D. Sharp... Military attaché.
Commander Leland Jordan, jr--| Naval attaché.
Alexander V. Dye... i 5. - ovni= Commercial attaché.
James G. Burke oc sn Assistant commercial attaché.
AviaM. Warren =... Cc Consul general.
John 'W. Bailey, jt... cooing o.. Consul.
John GaShilloek. 0. rect Vice consul.
H. Livingston Hartley __.__.__.__._ Vice consul.
Stanley G. Slavens_.__.___._..._._ Vice consul.
Theodore S. Cleveland _________ Vice consul.
John GC. Pool... i accles; tren Vice consul.
Clare H. Timberlake. _._.__-__. Vice consul.
William CG. Frimble ..-c Vice consul.
Sydney Hd. Banash- _:__-i--_.: Vice consul.
AUSTRIA
VIOIIA. «ooo iin wa Auman Gilchrist Baker Stockton________ Envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary.
Merritt Swift. olf vo First secretary.
Walter H. Schoellkopf_____.______ Second secretary.
Col. Joseph A. Baer o.oo Military attaché.
Gardner Richardson._______..____ Commercial attaché.
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest__| Assistant military attaché for air.
De Forest A. Spencer-.._.___._.. Assistant commercial attaché.
Ernest IL. Harris... &..5i....n Consul general.
Francis R. Stewart _...._._..__.__ Consul
Walter J. Linthicum.._.__._____ Vice consul.
Thomas R. Flack. ......_ cuir. Vice consul.
John William Scott.....oo--- .- Vice consul.
BELGIUM 1!
Brussels... lias Dave Hennen Morris..._________ Ambassador extraordinary and plen-
ipotentiary.
Ferdinand L. Mayer......i:. .. Counselor of embassy.
Stanley Woodward..______.____ Second secretary.
George P. Waller... 31:2 Jo) Second secretary (consul).
Samuel Reber, jr... -oo.cof 2 Third secretary.
Maj. Robert C. F. Goetz._.____. Military attaché.
Raymond C. Miller... ___... Commercial attaché.
Leigh W. Hunt. o.oo or Assistant commercial attaché.
Walter H. Sholes.......ioiii ic Consul.
F: Manson Gilbert... . i .in Vice consul.
ANTWOID... caveman mg Ht a Marion Letcher... li ioiad Consul general.
William Hall Beach... __._____ Consul
Robert G. McGregor, jr... ____ Vice consul.
William D. Moreland, jr Vice consul.
Dwight W. Fisher_.._..__...__ Vice consul.
Ghent. anaes Charles J. Pisar..-u-a-il 31. _-| Consul.
Harry Tuck Sherman.__________. Vice consul.
1 See also Luxembourg, The ambassador to Belgium is also minister to Luxembourg,
557
558
BOLIVIA—CANADA
Congressional Directory
Post Name Office
BOLIVIA
La Paz i Eaward BP. Teely. ~~ Envoy extraordinary and minister ¥
plenipotentiary.
Robert:P. Joyce. .o ox sil Third secretary.
Robert F. Fernald. .._..________ Consul.
BRAZIL
Rio de Janeire.......-cccecennm---=y Hugh S-Gibson. 2 2 >... Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
‘Walter C. Thurston._.......__.__ Counselor of embassy.
John-¥., Cabot... Third secretary.
Capt. William ali 0 AX Military attaché.
CarltonJackson.__--._-_____ __ Commercial attaché.
A. Ogden Pierrot_—=2 = = "= Assistant commercial attaché.
Sanmel T, Lee. = 2 oC Consul general.
Julian L., Pinkerton. -_.__..-__. Consul.
Harold B. Minor.--..- o-oo. Vice consul.
Rudelt BE. Cahn____.____________ Vice consul. 4
Theodore A. Xanthaky.. ________ Vice consul. ~
Victory CERES ERY ER A Roberi¥-Clarke ti it ot Vice consul. :
RS RA BL LT Lawrence P. Briggs....._._._____| Consul. i
TeooWorley.. ok 2a 0 ort 20% Vice consul. o
Para... ol UREA Ley George E. Seltzer..._____________ Consul. t
Toys ds Nem = Vice consul. i
Pernambuco (Recife). ..________ Goorge J.-Haering 20% xt" Consul.
E. Allan Lightner, jr... ____.___ Vice consul.
LAN Eh i Andre Gradvonl.._.....__. .____ Consular agent.
Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul_| Reginald S. Castleman__________ Consul.
Henry S. Haines... ___ Vice consul.
*Rio Grande: &0 "0 10 Ri Ld Arthur L.. Bowen... __. Consular agent.
Santos... oe Rand TN Arthur G: Parsloe-_ ~~": Consul.
Sao Paulo... L207 Bh Charles R. Cameron___.____._.___ Consul general.
Frederic C. Fornes, jr__._._______ Vice consul.
Willard Galbraith_________ | Vice consul.
Sherburne Dillingham Vice consul. 3
BULGARIA .
Sofia... a Henry Wharton Shoemaker.____ Envoy extraordinary and minister :
plenipotentiary. ¢
Maynard B. Barnes: 2-22. First secretary.
John-MeArdle---21 0. ht Third secretary (consul).
Maj. John A'Crane= =f == Military attaché.
Julian B. Gillespie..-.--0- -.... Commercial attaché.
John'P.- Harding &- 0000 tL 7 Assistant commercial attaché.
CANADA
Ottawa, Ontario. ooo ccooo__ Warren Delano Robbins_.._____ Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Pierrede Ll... Boal... .. First secretary.
James C. H. Bonbright_.________ Third secretary.
William W. Butterworth, jr.____ Third secretary.
Lynn W. Meekins_______________ Commercial attaché. 3)
Oliver-B-Norghti-c ituilol gid Assistant commercial attaché. ¥
William HH. Beck... .00 20 2 Consul general.
Julian F. Harrington..._________ Consul. A
Donglag:Floed-.zo-ctth fv aos Vice consul. Y
Milton P. Thompson._.__.______ Vice consul. {
William McGrath Harlow_.__..__ Vice consul.
gern Hiner. vo. oo het ora mal Vice consul.
Calgary, Alberta... ____ Samuel C. Reat........___.___. Consul.
Charles W. Allen... __._ Vice consul.
Charlottetown, Prince Edward | William A. Bickers.__._._________ Consul.
sland. Robert J. Cavanaugh Vice consul.
Edmonton, Alberta. _____________ Harold M. Collins_____._____ Consul.
Chivyan Peal. ;.. or 00 0. 1) Vice consul.
Fernie, British Columbia________ Norton F. Brand... io. 2 70 Consul.
Fort William and Port Arthur, | Jesse B. Jackson__.______________ Consul.
Ontario. Henry TP. Dwyer... oil Vice consul. |
Halifax, Nova Scotia____________ George E. Coenen nl PII Consul general. §
Fredericton, New Bruns-
wick.
Hamilton, Ontario... ______
Kingston, Ontario.._..___________
London, Ontario _.____.___.______
Moncton, New Brunswick______
Joseph P. Ragland... =~ C1
Terry S-Hinkle. 22050 oo 1
Orlando H. Massie... "1 _lU__
Frederick C. Johnson_.__________
John D. Johnson... ........ 2.0
Adam Beaumont... oC tui
George Gregg Fuller_____________
Thomas-D. Bergin_.__-Z> toil
Harry Campbell. 000 Jo. 1
Charles E. B. Payne. __.._._____
Harry L. Walsh__.
Hernan C, Vogenitz.....oceeea--
Consul
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
|
mi
cet
2
BE Cr tlre A a
Foreign Service of the United States
CANADA—CHILE
559
Post Name Office :
CANADA—Continued
Montreal, Quebec.______________
Niagara Falls, Ontario__._________
North Bay, Ontario..___________
Prince Rupert, British Columbia
Quebec, Quebec... __________
Regina, Saskatchewan__________
St. John, New Brunswick_______
St. Stephen, New Brunswick ___
*St. Leonard, N. B...........
Sarnia, Ontario__________________
Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario_______
Sydney, Nova Scotia____________
Toronto, Ontario. ______.______.__
Vancouver, British Columbia____
Victoria, British Columbia______
Windsor, Ontario_______________
Winnipeg, Manitoba____________
Antofagasta. ___ ooo
*Tocopilln
Yalparaiso..... oo icaears
rCoquimbe.
*Cruz Grande, Coquimbo.....
Wesley Prost...
George D. Hopper._.__________.._
James H. Keeley, jro____.________
William R. Langdon_.__._____._
Flavius Chapman. ._..____..__..
J. Lawrence Pond
Stephen E. C. Kendrick.________
LeoToch.. .........counki: Hi
John 'R. Barry... . Dail iad
Edward Caffery...____ _J.:i
Elton M. Hoyt... lo 2 jas
Henry C. von Struve__________.__
James R.-Riddle..... i. _[.... :0
John Randolph... ... fJjoccel sis
Harvey Lee Milbourne._________
John S. Calvert. _wani. i fiscld
Charles M. Gerrity_._____._.______
Philip Adams... .cedodi asl
Conrad C. Spangler_____________
George L. Bris... ....c..... oui
William H. Brown_____.________
Alphonse P. Labbie.____________
Hooker A. Doolittle._._..________
George L. Tolman___._______.._.
Frank -Bohr. i... LL. .oadl donil
Hugh H, Watson... J. (o..._ :
Eugene H. Johnson._____._._._..___
Emi] Sauer.........;.uoiliii
Damon C. Weods....... ool L
C. Paul Fletcher. ...i.coili..u
Ely E. Palmer........i....0..0. ..
Harris N. Cookingham__________
Harvey T. Goodier_.__.__.___.____
Laurence W. Taylor... ..._._._
James E. Henderson.___.________
Robert E. Leary... __-....i..u _.
Nelson P. MeeKS_.._..._....___.
Augustus C. Owen..............
Walter M. Walsh................
George A. Bucklin_______________
Robert M. Newcomb.__.._._._____
Marshall M. Vance___.___.___._._
Hervé J. IL Heureux._..___________
Edwin N. Gunsaulus, jr._.______
Robert L. Hunter...:...... =
P. Stewart Heintzleman____
John S. Richardson.___.___._____.
Stanley R. Lawson.______________
Rupert H. Moore........co.....
Walter H. McKinney._.________
Maurice J. Chilton... ...._.....
Jacob M.Owen.................
William S. Culbertson_.__._.____.
R. Henry Norweb.____..________
Winthrop R. Scott. ........0.....
Edward J. Sparks._________
George H. Butler___________
Capt. Ralph H. Wooten_._______
Commander Ernest Ludolph
Gunther.
Ralph H. Ackerman___....______
Harold M. Randall _______._______
ddward A. Dow... _.....:. VL
Camden L. McLain.__.._._.______
Samuel A. Mcllhenny, jr._._._.
Odin G. Loren........ci-:.ib ons
FelixLavatl.... . ...ccou0. iii.
Frank A. Henry. .....uoei.iin
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent;
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
_| Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
--| Vice consul.
-| Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
560 Congressional Directory |
CHINA
Post Name Office
CHINA
POIDING cio iin nn LUEDE Nelson T. Johnson: ._._._.__ Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Mahlon Fay Perkins________.___ Counselor of legation.
Cornelius Van H. Engert_______ First secretary.
Clarence J. Spiker First secretary. i
Leon H. Ellis "lio oo. 00 Second secretary.
Paul W. es SR -| Second secretary. |
Robert L.. Buell________ Third secretary.
Lewis Clark......... 0.0. --| Third secretary.
Robert S. Ward.......c0. i... 00 Language officer.
Everett F. Drumright_.________ Language officer.
Lieut. Col. Walter S. Drysdale__| Military attaché.
Com. Cleveland MecCauley_____| Naval attaché.
Julean Arnold........ 0 00000 Commercial attaché.
Maj. Samuel V. Constant. ______ Assistant military attaché.
A. Bland Calder........C..._ Assistant commercial attaché.
Capt. Arcadi Gluckman._____.__ Language officer.
1st Lieut. Robert H. Soule______ Language officer.
1st Lieut. Haydon L. Boatner___| Language officer.
1st Lieut. John E. McCammon. .| Language officer.
1st Lieut. Thomas S. Timber- | Language officer.
man.
1st Lieut. William E. Crist.._.__ Language officer.
1st Lieut. Henry S. Jernigan. ___| Language officer.
1st. Lieut. Bernard A. Tormey.__| Language officer.
Lieut. (j.g.) William T. Kenney.| Language officer.
Lieut. (j.g.) Henry T. Jarrell ___| Language officer.
Lieut. (j. g.) Paul W. Card_____ Language officer.
Capt. William A. Worton_______ Language officer.
Capt. Lyman Passmore__.._____ Language officer.
Capt. Edward G. Hagen._______ Language officer.
Capt. James F. Moriarty. ___.___ Language officer.
1st Lieut. William L. Bales_____ Language officer.
Amoy, Fakien________________.__. Lynn W. Franklin... C0 0 0 0 Consul.
Canton, Kwangtung_ ___________
Chefoo, Shantung_______________
Foochow, Fukien_______________._
Hankow, Hupeh_ _______________
Harbin, Kirin, Manchuria______
Mukden, Liaoning, Manchuria__
Nanking, Kiangsu_ _____________
Shanghai, Kiangsu______________
Swatow, Kwangtung._._ _________
Tientsin, Hopei_________________
Charles C. Sundell___.____._____
Joseph W. Ballantine
J. Hall Paxton... 0-00 0
Horace H. Smith_______
Charles A. Cooper-________
Leroy Webber... ___.__
Charles J. Brennan-=__ __.- il
Gordon L.. Burke. ©... ili &
Lincoln C. Reynolds.____.______
Walter A. Adams. _________.____
Edwin F. Stanton_______.______
Edmund -O.-Clubbll ‘i i ___ 1°
Hemry W..-Beek 2020 ar 500
James B.- Pilcher: . 221: 7: i
Reginald P. Mitchell____________
Verne G. Staten. i200
George C. Hanson. _____________
Culver B. Chamberlain_________
Ralph-J. Blake...00 0 00 c7
T. Leonard Lilliestrom__________
Myrl S. Myers iii 3d 0
‘Augustus-S. Chase. 2i [0.0
Monroe B. Hall... 0 0 0
Willys-R. Pecliz tii = ui
Robert Lacy Smyth_____________
Claude A. Buss... 07 :0°_ _( 7°
Douglas Jenkins, jr. iio 10 00
Harold E. Montamat.__________
Edwin S. Cunningham _ _
Paul R. Josselyn____.____
Richard B.*Butrick ‘=. __:_152 0
John J. Muecio...-.. _ :270 Ch
Carl D.-Meinhardt- "2: 2:
William Clarke Vyse___________
Dale W. Maher... .......
George: V.- Allen. J . 1008s] Bisa
John-B.-Sawyer.. no Jl if C10
William R.. Lynch 1000 oF Jc
Thomas B. Clark......2 10. L000
Leonard N. Green... _____
Robert C. Coudray.-________..___
Frank P. Loekhart..- 00... 50
George Atcheson, jro____________
Angus T.- Ward Suvi ve
Robert L.-Buell ».ocoo 00 00
Howard C. Taylor. ..cccunuveaes
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul
| Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general,
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
_| Consul general,
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul,
Forewgn Service of the United States
CHINA—CUBA
561
Post Name Office
CHIN A—Continued
Tientsin, Hopei—Continued.__._
Tsinan, Chantung_ _ ____________
Tsingtao, Kiaochow_____________
Yunnanfu, Yunnan_______.______
COLOMBIA
Barranquilla. ...........ocooaoi..
Medellin Lis. ooc vii. tous
Buenaventura_ _________________
Cartagena............. .. ......cco.
Santa Marta... .. i.
COSTA RICA
San Jos6..........-.-ziaicessad
Santiago... idiosta Liars
‘| Herbert W. Carlson_____________
AM anzanillo. eee ates
157297°—73—-1—1sT ED——37
John.S. Mosher... ...ccneeea--
Stuart Allen... oc. anaes
Gerald Warner......1.0oall C0
John Hubner, 2d: tad lic oo. 0.
Harry E. Stevens_________
Raymond P. Ludden
David. C. Berger.» oil 2 oy
Hedley V. Cooke, jr.____.____.__.
Carl O. Hawthorne
Charles S. Reed, 2d.....___.__..
John:-Davies, Jroazicio id 7 18
Alvin. Rewe, jr...
Walter J. Donnelly. ____________
Carlos). Warmer... .-. ......
Alvin T. Bowe, jroo) nos d
Brik:W. Magnuson =. --—_
Swift Vaughter. Joolicor 17 =
Raymond Phelan_ ______________
Edgar L. McGinnis, jro_._.______
Lyle C. Himmel. «io: 20 Foon
Stephen C. Worster_____________
Louis S. Peckhamizc wn ional
Stanley L. Wilkinson___________
Orlando L.. Flye................
Charles C. Eberhardt. __._._______
McCeney Werlich _____________
Edward G. Trueblood__._______
Maj. Arthur R. Harris... .0_ 1 oo:
Maj. Harold S. Fassett__________
Robert A. Martin...
Pavid J.D. Myers:
Livingston Satterthwaite_______
Barl TT. Crain... .... acid cos
Sumner Welles. _........... oi LL
Bdward L.. Reed... o_.. i... 2
Fayette J. Flexer_____
George D. Andrews, jr __.__.___
Lieut. Col. Thomas N. Gimper-
ling.
Alberi Tl aNUer. oe annn
Howard H. Tewksbury. .__.____
Frederick T. F. Dumont________
Harold S. Tewell... i...
Jee R.Blohm....oooaecll. 4. cul
George H. Winters. _....._______
Sydney. G. Gest......---ia.. 0 aa
Dorsey GQ. Fisher. - occa olen
Donald D. Edgar... cooio
William: B. Murray...» l.oti.g
Raoul F. Washington___________
John H. Marvin. z=: 2 chugs
Horace J. Dickinson... -..
MylesStandish........-—_.__._
Knox Alexander....co...n 220!
Edward S. Benet...
Andrew E. McNamara-__..__.__
Eugene B.Jova... oJ I uo
Hartwell Johnson... _...._.._..
Gerald A. Mokma._____________
Lester Sockwell.___.___._________
Edwin Schoenrich______________
Harry W. Story... -oooio. wooo
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary (vice consul).
Third secretary (vice consul).
Commercial attaché.
Vice consul (third secretary).
Vice consul (third secretary).
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
First secretary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
562 Congressional Directory
CZECHOSLOVAKIA—EL SALVADOR
Post Name Office
CZECHOSLOVAKIA
Prague. oneal TE Se a er
DANZIG, FREE CITY OF
J: Webb Benton... =a. J. i. .
Lieut. Col. Albert Gilmore______
Don C. Bliss... 20 ate wud
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest__
Samuel E. Woods_.__.__.__.___.___
Leland L. Smith ioe ol. i.
Sheridan Talbott. io i = 2d)
Walter N. Walmsley...
Dunean VM. White 50 1...
Andrew Gllehrist:. - - ......._..
Danzlg....... oooemmeabsnimie 2 Charles Fl. Heisler... Joo Li
Ellis’A. Johnson... toni. 20
DENMARK
Copenhagen____________.co._._. Ruth Bryan Owen. cil... Ji
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
North Winship. i i... ol 30
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest__
Capt. Kenneth G. Castleman___
Charles B. Spofford.._.oi. li
Commander Howard D. Bode...
Louis G. Dreyfus, jis Ci 2%
Bdward M. Groth. ul oo. =
Briand Gjessing_—._--0_ 1
J. Stanford Edwards_____________
Santo Domingo__________________ H. F. Arthur Schoenfeld _ _._____
James T. Brown, jr. 000 cn
Walter S. Reineele..
Albion W. Johnson: "io =~
Dudley E. Cyphers__.__________
*La Romana... oi. ii.) Eugene J. Lieder__:____._________
*Sanehez. 0. cbiulin lh J. Enrique Leroux_ =. 11...
ECUADOR
Quito: oi ane William Dawson.........0......
Selden Chapin... ....... x.
Merwin'L,. Bohan. ..:o._........
Guayaquil coi ui Lo od. Harold B. Quarton:..c.. 0...
Paylor:W.. Gannett... .._...C
Philip K. Tattersall 20.0
Frederick L. Royt. il i 0
Cairo... aie naa William M. Jardine_____________
Y- Rives Childs. lo 001 aU
Charles E. Dickerson, jr.___
Ralph F. Chesbrough______ 2
Gordon P. Merriam... 2. ©
Robert Y. Brown. _.iii 0: G8
Baston T. Kelsey... 2 i
Alexandria... ........... 00000 H. Earle Russell... (20...
'W. Leonard Parker... ...
Wade Blackard. [i lois fi
Port:Sald............. .... 0200 Horace Remillard. ___.___________
EL SALVADOR
Frederick S. Barny_..___________
San Salvador_.__.._____._._..___. Charles B. Curtis... loci bis
Willard L. Beaulae._._..________
William J. McCafferty... ._____
George M. Graves... ___._._______
Maj. Arthur R. Harris:2 LJ.
Maj. Harold S. Fassett.......___
George C. Peck: iin ul Ong [1
iW. Quincey Stanton... liici.f ©
Morgan Atherton......ccoeeuce.-
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary
Military attaché
Commercial attaché.
Assistant military attaché for air.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Counselor of legation.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary
Third secretary.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Third secretary.
Commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul and language officer.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Vice consul.
Vice consul,
Foreign Service of the United States
ESTONIA—FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS
963
Post Name Office
ESTONIA ?
Tallinn... oo
ETHIOPIA (Abyssinia)
Addis Ababa___________________._
*Djibouti, French Somali
Coast.
FINLAND
Helsingfore. 0.1.
FRANCE AND POSSES-
SIONS
FRANCE
Robert P.Skinner............___.
Felix Cole... od...
HarryB. Carlgsonz oo
Frederick P. Latimer, jr._.______
Maj. William E. Shipp.__..__.___
Lee C. Morse......... leuald lid
Edward E. Brodie__...________._:
Samuel S. Dickson._._..____.___
Maj. William E. Shipp....._____
Osborn S. Watson.........__.__._
John 'L. Bouehal.. w...ov.. i foc
Thomas Edmund Burke________
Jesse Isidor Straus...
J. Theodore Marriner_.....______
Williamson S. Howell, jr________
Robert M. Scotten__...._______.__
H. Merle Cochran..._..._______.
Si Pinkney Tuek.....0..l. i va:
Jobn H. MacVeagh__...___..____
Alan S. Rogers... uoiossalinoll
Capt. David McDougal Le Bre-
ton.
Fayette W. Allport__.____________
James PF. ONeill... .._........
Maj. James A. Lester-.....______
Coli Frank P.1ahm._.__... ..
Capt. Richard L. Smith..__..____
Capt. Herbert Seymour Howard.
Comdr. George D. Murray._____
Lieut. Comdr. Calvin H. hes
Comdr. Howard D. Bode._______
Daniel J. Reagan... _.__.__..
William L. Finger: i... Lat:
Leod. Reena... cosine ig
Robert D. Murphy... ...c.oon
Charles H. Derry.....cza0i2. VE
Howard F. Withey..._._.____.__
William E. DeCourcy
James EB. Parks.......c. eo iail
Joseph L.. Brent... .__.......
John B. Faust: .cq foal ak
Norris B. Chipman iL © zis
Bertil E. Kuniholm.__________._
James S. Moose, jroo... i. coos
Charles E. Bohlen.______________
Maurice Pasquet... _aoosciol ii.
Marcel. Severe... [oo loi wx
Pall C Betts... son. .d
Davis B. Levis. ool coi ulus
David Henry Slawson_____.____._
George C. Minor. oocaios Ho
W. Winthrop Burr. coo. lL... ue
Victor M. Lenzer.....l.... 0. x
Worthington E. Hagerman______
John GF. Erhardt oo. iseao iL.
Archibald E. Gray... ii. ii oe
Frank Cussans____........io_..._
Sam Park... ae Fn
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Counselor of legation.
First secretary (consul).
Third secretary (vice consul).
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Minister resident and consul general.
Third secretary (vice consul).
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
First secretary.
First secretary.
First secretary.
First secretary.
Second secretary.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Treasury attaché.
Assistant military attaché.
Assistant military attaché for air.
Assistant military attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
-| Vice consul and language officer,
Vice consul.
Vice consul and language officer.
Vice consul and language officer.
Vice consul and language officer.
Vice consul and language officer.
Vice consul
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
? The diplomatic officers here listed, except Carlson, are accredited also to Latvia and Lithuania.
564 Congressional Directory
FRANCE AND POSSESSIONS—GERMANY
Post Name Office
FRANCE AND POSSES-
SIONS—Continued
FRANCE—continued
Calais. Logo) aol) aint in James. G., Carter ti... .....0..0.0 Consul.
Cherbourg... 2 glig vii] Horatio T. Mooers.__...._.._.___. Consul.
Fred BH. Houck -...- Foiots 1 Vice consul.
Havre: oon pee Bdwin'Carl Kemp... ~~ Consul.
POSSESSIONS
Algiers, Algeria____.___._.____.._._.
*Oran, Algeria... it 05000]
Martinique, French West Indies
Saigon, French Indochina_______
Tahiti, Society Islands, Oceania_
Tananarive, Madagascar________
Tunis, Tunisia__________________
GERMANY
Ernest de W. Mayer__._________
Charles B. Perkins. ii: 1 Bol
Gaston Smith_._._U8rigs © ial
George P. Willson Soir 03 Gio:
Hugh's. Fullerton. =~ =:
William W. Adams... _.__
Charles Roy Nasmith___________
Charles B. Beylard.
Harry M. Donaldson. __..____.__
Harry F. Hawley... fini FF |
Jack FE. Cogke.._. 0cia raf
Robert T. Cowan... 2.000% 11
Robertson Honey... _________
Preseotb Childs: ~~ > 1
0. Gaylord Marsh. ~~~ v" -
Jomes D: Child > or ea
Hrnest Lo Yves: cin aie
Joseph I. Touchette.._.__.___..._._
Albert H. Elford 000 3 ozo!
Rudolph A. Schausten__________
Quincy F. Roberts. Ui! Jiiian:
William E. Scotten..._____.._.___
Perey G.. Kemp. Lil lois J
Alfred T.- Nester =... i
Joy Walker... ills, 0 soir
George A. Gordon.___._______.___
Alfred W. Kliefoth.___.__._.____._
William W. Sehott.i.. ludio 1:
John Sterett Gittings... _.______
Sidney E. O'Donoghue. ____.____
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest__
Capt. Kenneth G. Castleman. ._
H. Lawrence Groves. ___________
Loyd V. Steere... ... 212) 1: 2a
Capt. Hugh W. Rowan__
Maj. John H. Hinemon, jr__.___
Capt. Herbert Seymour Howard.
Comdr. George D. Murray
Comdr. Howard D. Bode
Douglas P. Miller 2 iil 0 20
George S. Messersmith__________
Raymond H. Geist. 000 4 520
William E Beitz
John H, Morgan... 22i0ER1T 5001
Archer Woodford. ..________..__
Cecll W. Cray. .....onub te io
Hugh C.. Pox... 200i oo
Reginald Bragonier, jr__________
Casimir T. Zawadzki____
Cyrus B. Follmer______._ i
Walter A. Leonard... _________.
Gilbert R. Willson. : i... i 7.
Lon S. Gresham'- 1: Ot 7 010
Francis A, Lane. 20° 0F Soi9aiis
Stephen B. Vaughan_______.____
John Farr Simmons_____________
Bartley PP. Yost... .. 218%
James FH. Wright 1 i830 008 2
HAdward S. Parker....c.ors screen
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
First secretary.
Second secretary.
Second secretary.
Second secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Agricultural attaché.
Assistant military attaché.
Assistant military attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul,
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul,
a
Foreign Service of the Unated States 565
GERMANY—GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.
Post Name Office
GERMANY—Continued
Dresden.
Frankfort on the Main__.__.____
Hamburg. 3 Le
GREAT BRITAIN AND
NORTHERN IRELAND,
BRITISH DOMINIONS
BEYOND THE SEAS,
INDIA
Belfast, Northern Ireland
Birmingham, England
Bradford, England
Bristol, England
Cardiff, Wales
Dundee, Scotland_______________
Edinburgh, Scotland.._.___.____
Glasgow, Scotland... ......
Arminius T. Haeberle
Maurice W. Altaffer
Bernard F. Heiler
Will L. Lowrie... J/g fil
Robert W. Heingartner___.______
Sydney B. Redecker____________
Charl C. Yl Wyles
Lester L. Schnare
John J. Mefly.. foie = 8 HUE
John H. Bruins
Lloyd D. Yates- oii Huu
Alan N. Steynelilifinin yr oo 75
Sabin J. Dalferes
Ralph-C. Busser filo: = 200 WW
Richard R. Willey
Paul J. Reveley. mii an gis
Charles M. Hathaway, jr
Robert D. Longyear_ ____.______
Hugh FP. Ramsay. =~
James M. Bowcock
Leon Dominian
Pal). Grayiccevss. Somat]
Shiras Morris, ir
Hugh H. Teller... ..-.ssiii Za
Donn Paul Medalie
Robert Worth Bingham _ _______
Ray Atherton. oiienash iolooil
Eugene H. Dooman_.____.______
Raymond BE. CGexciiiaoil Ii oo.
Wainwright Abbott_____________
Walter T'. Prendergast
David McK. Keyui-:21: 1. as
Lieut. Col. Courtlandt Parker___
Capt. Arthur L. Bristol
William L. Cooper
Bdward A. Foley... _._
Capt. John W. Monahan_______
Maj. William T. Pigott, jr _____
Capt. Herbert Seymour Howard
Comdr, George D. Murray...
Commander Howard D. Bode__
Charles E. Lyon
Homer S. Fox
Charles C. Broy.......»..f5. Sv
Russell M. Brooks
Quy W. Bay... scuinsl SC. Tt
John F. Claffey
Daniel Miller
JohnH. Puqua... . o.l.of 0d
Lucien Memminger
Albert W. Scott
Robert Jang........-2208 5 4% 2180
George A. Makinson
William N. Carroll
George L. Fleming
Roy W. Baker
John J. Coyle
Maurice P. Dunlap... __.___.___
Julian K. Smedberg
Austin C. Brady.
Edwin B. Earnest_ _____________
Samuel W. Honaker_.__________
Marcel E. Malige......__._._.__.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
First secretary.
First secretary.
First secretary.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commericial attaché.
Agricultural attaché.
Assistant military attaché for air.
Assistant military attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
J. Forrest Ingle... 200i 21 00 Vice consul,
566 Congressional Directory
GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—AUSTRALIA
Post Name Office
GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—
Continued
Hull, England... ie...
Liverpool, England. _____________
Manchester, England___._______
Newcastle-on-Tyne, England___
Plymouth, England_____________
Sheffield, England ______________
Southampton, England._.._.______
*Jersey, Channel Islands......
OTHER EUROPE
Gibraltar... ........ Loecuos ing
OTHER ASIA
Aden, Arabia... __..._.._......
Colombo, Ceylon
Hong Rong. .....ii i. leoanionl
Penang, Straits Settlements_____
Singapore, Straits Settlements.
AFRICA
Lagos, Nigeria, West Africa
Nairobi, Kenya, East Africa
AUSTRALIA
Adelaide, South Asutralia_______
Brisbane, Queensland
Melbourne, Victoria
Sydney, New South Wales______
Andrew J. McConnico_____.___.
Walter A. Thomas... ...u.
Philip Holland... Joc. .L1L
Phil H. Hubbard-....i =~... =
Hugh Watson. ...—--- 0 Juesh
Alfred R. Thomson. __________.
Wallace E. Moessner____________
Paul C. Squire... 5: el
Merlin E. Smith. _.._.________._
Arthur B. Cooke... ni od
L. Pittman Springs ._._.-_<._-..
Henry S. Waterman. __________
Henry O. Ramsey. -: Lu
James B. Young. of. al
Edward S. Maney........_..___.
Blvin Seibert... ogli il Si Sessl
C. Burke Elbrick.. i. oo-i Lo.
BF. Willard. Calder. :. I. -olzc
Albert E. Ereaut...... . J iz.
Richard L. Sprague.............
William F. Cavanaugh_.__._____
Mason Turner... oll zi. o]
Coke S. Bice. .....J0 ll Ld
J Wesley Jones. cca viinunn
F. Russell Engdahl__ ___________
Donald H. Robinson._..._____.___
Ered Jandioy. o.-cvuio nimi
Dayle C. M¢Donough______.____
Paul CC. Hutton, jro. oo ico
Nathaniel Lancaster, jr- ________
Norris:Rediker... ili. il 207
Joseph GG. Groeninger_._________
Lloyd BE. Riggs..- iif Jlonoails
Charles W. Lewis, jro___..__._...
Leland C. Altaffer. 2. 0l. 00
Winfield{H. Seott. loi. .0 1.00
Reginald S. Kazanjian________.._
Ray Fox tena J on nit
Pred:K. Salter... 0c ot
‘Whitney Young........0: Coo
Brockholst Livingston._.________
Douglas Jenkins... oo. 0io000
J. Ernest Black... 0... 71%
George Bliss Lane... .___
Cecil B.Lyon...... oa i200
Donald €. Dunham... ....___.
Wilbur: Keblinger...ooo:.
Roy. E.B. Bower... tu...
Edward Anderson, jro.__________
Harrison A. Lewis... __
William C. Affeld, jr... ....
R.AllenHaden..... it...
William 'L, Peck... iol boy
Augustus Ostertag...__...____o__
Leo J. Callanan.. occult dou
Oscar Thomason.- =... 2 ois
Henry M. Wolcott... al.cii J:
Forrest K. Geerken______________
John W. Dye... ober 3. a:
Bernard C. Connelly____.__._____
Ralph H. Hunt. __ ace 0 ai
John XK, Caldwell foi.uii 0 ail
Albert M. Doyle... lo_ 0 ia:
Foster H, Kreis... aiiuri icons
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general,
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice eonsul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Foreign Service of the United States 567
GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—HAITI
Post Name Office
GREAT BRITAIN, ETC.—
Continued
NEW ZEALAND
Wellington. ....cecu-- Sle ep CalviniM., HitoN. namo nnis =e Consul general.
*Christchureh. .eevoneeneed=c-
*Dunedin £57
Anckiand_s- 1... imncenccnn-
NEWFOUNDLAND
St. John’s. .... coeeeeeceaana-
CENTRAL AMERICA—SOUTH
AMERICA—WEST INDIES
Barbados, British West Indies...
*Roseau, Dominica, British
West Indies.
*St. Lucia, British West In-
dies.
Belize, British Honduras_......_
Hamilton, Bermuda... ..oceaaaaoo
St. George’s, Bermuda...
ing , Jamaica Sid
Nassau, N. P., Bahamas__.______
Trinidad, British West Indies___
*Brighton, Trinidad, British
West Indies.
*Grenada, British West In-
dies.
*Paramaribo, Netherland
Guiana.
GREECE
Athens...........- covmsnssaninn
Patras... oo... Seecpiends
Salonika (Thessalonike) ________
GUATEMALA
Guatemala... ioe.
Puerto Barrios....... hewan--
HAITI
Port-au-Prince _________________
Walter W. Orebaugh___.____.___
LP, Bridge....ooemisii-stican
Harman Reeves............
WalteriB. Boyle... =
Leonard A. Bachelder___________
Frederick W. Baldwin...._.._...
Perry N. Jester. seoicast. ih cua
Henry A. Frampton...___.._._._.
William Peter... uuwsnode nian
WilliomM. Cramp... _.......
Culver Gidden...-Jcoizeoni ool
Graham H. Kemper_._._..._._.__
Edwin Clay Merrell _..___._______
Frederick Joseph Robertson_____
William W. Corcoran____________
Richard S. Huestis... ......
George F. Kelly... ___
John P. Hurley... co-zo 0 =o
John B. Keogh... uli (i cois
Alfredo L.. Demorest____________
Marede Vertenil................
John McGilehrist..oo.ooooooo..
James S. Lawtone ceo viaes
Lieut. Col. Franklin Langley
Whitley.
Karl L.Rbhnkin conan: ooo
Capt. Francis M. Brady... .....
Ralph B. Currenc..c--oo1 oo cua
Jester Maynard.....co.oo coven
Edwin A. Plt... oar 3...
Edward B. Thomas......__.._..
Albert E. Clattenburg, jr_______
Walworth Barbour... __.._______
Rufus H. Lane jr 2 2c. o..
William C. Young. i ino on...
Harry L. Troutman..ccoo. 5 Lo.
Paul Bowerman... ....._.. i.
Donal F. McGonigal....._______
Sheldon Whitehouse. _.__._____.
Edward P. Lawton... ..._......
Charles’A. Page...r oun ti abs
Maj. Arthur B. Harris...
Maj. Harold S. Fassett. ___.._...
George C. Peck. oi-ieanl nis
George K. Donald....ococr 2 oc
William E. Flournoy, jr... _.___
Chester Kimrey....coeth ob ic
Rodney Deane Wells___________
Patrick J. Powers... ix..... -coud
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
First secretary.
Second secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant military attaché for air.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary.
568
HAITI-ITALY
Congressional Directory
Post Name Office
HAITI—Continued
Port-au-Prince—Continued._..| Gerald A. Drew..._____.._______. Third secretary
RoberiY. Jarvis = li = Consul.
Cap Haitien....____......02000 70
Conalves..i....i.... 5000 y
Port de Paix... 000 BENE
HONDURAS
Teguelgalpa. ois a oi
IRAQ (MESOPOTAMIA)
Baghdad...............000 a
IRISH FREE STATE
DUB. rane
Florence (Firenze)... ___..______.
Genoa (Genova) .__ _....._.___.__
Leghorn (Livorno)... ._..
Corl Breuer... os
Bolard More. ~»-sit of, fe 4
Gorey PF. Wood ich ty or
J. Willlam WeoeldU2 0 0
Florentin Maurrasse_ ———.------_
Jans @. hay:
Lawrence Higgins...
Randolph Harrison, jro-_..-_._._
Roberti A. ACY... oi i iE
Maj. Arthor BR. Harris -_
Maj. Harold S. Fassett... ....
Creorge CO. Peck. 0 10 210%
Warren C. Stewart--_._.._____.
Kenneth S. Stout iliiziz 2 0
Myron H. Sehraud...——._—---__
Leslie W. Johnson... _._.._._.._
Nicholas Roosevelt______________
David Williamson. _____.___.___
Robert English. 21 20200 200000
Col. Joseph A. Baer. lL
Frederick B. Lyon. cot .=_2-0l
John Ball Osborne... liz. 222
Fletcher Warren... 10. ._.C
Overton G. Ellis, jr 00022 00
Ernest V. Polutnik. J tl cio]
Paul Knabenshue.______________
Morris N. Hughes. +. ==
George W. Renchard_.._________
Frederick A. Sterling... ——-..
James Orr Denby... =.
Lt. Col. Courtlandt Parker-____
William L. Cooper... ...___.._
Henry Hi Baleh. ill si 0k
Benjamin M. Hully._..._-_2.___
Sidney A. Belovsky.__________.__
Bdwin'J. King: 2... 10 SUE Lod
George H. Barringer. ____.______
Robert A. Tennant. bilan. th
Leslie BE. Woods. ound foo iis
Robert R. Pattersont:_ -__. Li
Breckinridge Long_ _ __.____.__..
Alexander C. Kirk <2 000
Harold H. Tittmann, jr.....i_ 10
Chorlegs ABay., ol gidiziion
Capt. Macgillivray Milne_______
Mowatt M. Mitchell____________
Capt. Francis M. Brady___.._.___
Capt. Herbert Seymour Howard.
Comdr. Howard P. Bode__.____
Lieut. Comdr. Frederick W.
Pennoyer, jr.
"Theodore Jaeckel- 0220. 20
Hiram: A. Boucher 100» 2.722
Leonard G. Bradford... "tl
Joseph BE: Haven. :l:is Cu
Mo OC: Funk. 03 5.0000 Lt
Frederick L. Washbourne_._.___
'W.. Roderick Dorsey... ...-...
George. Li: Brandt. o-oo:
Calvinit. Oakes... 25.
William P. Shockley.__.____._____
John R. Patnam. ooo 2.2
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consular agent.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary (vice consul).
Third secretary (vice consul).
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Minister resident and consul general.
Third secretary (vice consul).
Third secretary (vice consul).
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
First secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pieni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
First secretary.
Second secretary.
Military attaché and military attaché
for air.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant military attaché for air.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul,
Foreign Service of the United States
ITALY-JAPANESE EMPIRE
569
Post Name Office
ITALY—Continued
| Messing.........ocesaliocionisad Bernard Gotlieb... Consul.
H. Armistead Smith» __________ Vice consul.
i Milan (Milano) _________________ Homer Brett... .cosi.il lis Consul.
E. Talbot Smithog =o 1-2 Consul.
Naples (Napok) ________.________
James W. Gantenbein.__________
Constance R. Harvey... ___.___
Paul Dean Thompson.__________
Frank C. Niceoli.... 2200. J
CoertiduBols... ana 5 5 0 0
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Charles B. Hosmer_.____________ Consul.
i C. Porter Kuykendall___________ Consul.
i Samuel H. Wiley... soli0 Li Consul.
i Brnest E. Evans. 2... Consul.
Ralph A. Boernstein..—....._._. Consul.
Thomas ©. Wasson... er
Claude BH. Hall, jeaziiil ii.
Wales:W. Signor...
Douglas James... oo...
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul
Vice consul.
Palermo...io. iooiboosniza io Howard K. Travers... _____ Consul
David. Buffum.._ —._..._ _.. Vice consul.
Trieste........ alas 10 sen Rollin BR. Winslow..........0.0__ 3% Consul.
T. Monroe Fisher_._____._______ Vice consul.
| Turin (Torino) __________.________ Richard B. Haven. - 0. Ll 0 Consul.
i Francis B. Moriarty... 0.20... Vice consul.
Venice (Venezia) ________________ John. Corrigan... 20 0 J. Consul.
} Capt. Isaac C. Johnson, jr.______ Naval attaché.
Halleck A.- Butts. o:iog oi0 lL Commercial attaché.
Maj. Rufus S. Bratton__________ Assistant military attaché.
Capt. Truman M. Martin_______ Assistant military attaché.
Lieut. Henri H. Smith-Hutton__| Assistant naval attaché.
William S. Dowd iol. oo. 000. Assistant commercial attaché.
Capt. Moses W. Pettigrew______ Language officer.
Ce
————
JAPANESE EMPIRE
Claude B. Chiperfield.__._.______
Chorles T. Torry....5 i. 2h.
Joseph CG. Grew. l_L... .l:lull
Edwin L. Neville__.____________
Erle R. Dickover....._______._._.
William T. Turner... 0000
S. Walter Washington__________
John Mi Allison... —..._._.
Frank A. Schuler, jv _...........
1st Lieut. Carlisle C. Dusenbury.
1st Lieut. Joseph J. Twitty. ____
1st Lieut. Frederick P. Munson_
1st Lieut. Robin B. Pape. ______
1st Lieut. Russell G. Duff_______
Lieut. (jg) Daniel J. McCallum. _
Lieut. (jg) Alwin D. Kramer_____
Lieut. (jg) Spencer A. Carlson. _
Lieut. (jg) Ranson Fullinwider__
Lieut. (jg) Redfield Mason_.____
1st Lieut. Joe R. Sherr__________
1st Lieut. Harold Doud.____.____
2d Lieut. Kenneth H. Cornell___
Lieut. Henri de B. Claiborne_ __
Arthur Garrels..... oils tsi
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
First secretary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Language officer.
Consul general.
Leo D. Sturgeon... Siri. Li Consul.
Carl O. Spamer--Ciieisy. 0 Consul.
Charles A. Hutchinson____._____ Vice consul.
Dairen, Manchuria______________ John Carter Vineent. 2. Zou. .¢ 20 Consul.
Arnold van Benschoten. ________ Vice consul.
Kobe, Japan....................00C Howard Donovan... Lo iil Consul.
William F.. Nason... ds oii ct 2} Consul.
Nagasaki, Japan_________________
Nagoya, Japan___________________
Seoul, Chosen___________________
Taihoku, Taiwan________________
Yokohama, Japan__________.____
Bruce Lancaster-io-f (5
Kenneth C. Krentz... _..._____
Bdmund J. Dorsz. iu C05 ol”
Walter P. McConaughy.....____
Robert Mills McClintock _._.___
Otis: W. Rhoades... 1... . 000
Glen W. Bruner...0..0 LLL
J. Holbrook Chapman.__._.______
Joseph E. Newton.__...____....__
John KX. Davis. ...2cc lil Lo HAs
Charles H. Stephan...__._._____
John B. Keteham. 0... i]
Charles I... De Vault... .._
H. Merrell Benninghoff_________
Hayward G. THN > =
Gregor C, Merrill... 2-2.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul,
570 Congressional Directory
LATVIA—MEXICO
Post Name Office
LATVIA
Riga. aaa Robert P.Skinner............... Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Felix Colo....co. iinet Counselor of legation.
Clarence B. Hewes_______._______ First secretary.
Waldemar J. Gallman_.____._____ Second secretary.
William M. Gwynn__.____..._.__ Third secretary.
George F. Kennan___________.____ Third secretary.
Maj. William E. Shipp._....____ Military attaché.
Tee OC. Morse... 5xko a Lily Commercial attaché.
Algar BE. Carleton......2.i0 ll Consul.
Bernard Gufler_.t.cooc Co Vice consul.
Leslie Gordon Mayer.____.....___ Vice consul.
Paul M. Dutko...2o..-.0. oll Vice consul.
LIBERIA
Monrovia... benteen pla ET Rn Bae EE TY se Minister.
William C. George. .o o-oo Vice consul.
LITHUANIA
BoUNgS....... i mada Robert P. Skinner... Li... o Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Felix Colo... ena Fl. Soi Counselor of legation.
Maurice L. Stafford... _..___.___ First secretary (consul).
George D. LaMont. ______._.___ Third secretary (vice consul).
Maj. William E. Shipp. ________ Military attaché.
Lee OC. Morse. aun asusianold ss Commercial attaché.
LUXEMBOURG 4
Luxembourg. _ __________.____.____ Dave Hermen Morris. ..._..___ Envoy extraordinary and minister
MEXICO
Mexico, D. BF... oiaaeiai
Acapulco, Guerrero
Agua Prieta
Chihuahua, Chihuahua_________
Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua._____
Durango, Durango
Ensenada, Baja California______
Guadalajara, Jalisco... ____..___
Ferdinand L.. Mayer... ._._._
George P. Waller
Samuel Reber, jr
Maj. Robert C. F. Goetz._______
Raymond C. Miller... __________
Leigh W. Hunt
Josephus Daniels
Arthur Bliss Lane
Stanley Hawks
Peter H. A. Flood
Joseph C. Satterthwaite..__.____
Stephen E. Aguirre. _______.___
Charles H. Cunningham________
Capt. Robert E. Cummings_____
Robert G. Glover
Thomas D. Bowman....__._._.__
Dudley G. Dwyre
Arthur F. Tower
John S. Littell
William P. Cochran, jr.._.__._.____
Thomas J. Maleady.....___._.___.
Robert M. Taylor
Orray Taft, jr
Andrew E. Donovan, 2d-_______
Winfield H. Minor..___.____.___._
John Wilson, jr
Victor H. Loftus
Hyman Goldstein
Jack D. Neal__._
Joseph E. Maleady__.._..______
Lewis V. Boyle
James. C. Powell, dro. i. 0.0
Francis H. Styles
Louis B. Mazzeo
Ollis B. Ferguson
Harry K. Pangburn: ici: J...
Ellis A. Bonnet
Granville Oury-Jackson
William A. Smale
Raleigh A. Gibson... .-i. 2:
Orray Taft, jr
Charles C. Gidney, jr........__.
plenipotentiary.
Counselor of legation.
Second secretary (consul).
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Ambassador.
Counselor of embassy.
Second secretary.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Third secretary.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant military attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
8 The diplomatic officers here listed are accredited to Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. :
4 See Belgium. The ambassador to Belgium is also the minister to Luxembourg, and the vice consulate
at Luxembourg is under the consulate at Antwerp.
i
i
|
Foreign Service of the United States 571
MEXICO—NETHERLANDS AND POSSESSIONS
Post Name Office
MEXICO—Continued
Guaymas, Sonora_______________
Matamoros, Tamaulipas_ .______
Mazatlan, Sinalea_______________
*Los Mochis, Sinaloa._._____
Mexicali, Baja California_______
Monterrey, Nuevo Leon_________
Nogales, Sonora_..___._.__________
Ur
Piedras Negras, Coahuila___ ____
Progreso, Yucatan_______________
Saltillo, Coahuila____.___________
San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi
Tampico, Tamaulipas.____________
Torreon, Coahuila_______________
Vera Cruz, Vera Cruz___________
MONACO?
Monaco.........nomne a lumon
MOROCCO
TF ANGIOr - vec wm iim vin mm SA RLS
Casablonea..c...vvsninmniiinn a
NETHERLANDS AND POS-
SESSIONS
NETHERLANDS
Amsterdam...............__ LL
Rotterdam... _______
POSSESSIONS
Batavia, Java, Netherland East
Indies.
Curacao, Netherland West In-
dies.
Thomas W. Voetter.___.___.__.__
Alfonso B. Yepis.. ... o.-_.. ..]
Herndon W. Goforth_______.____
Henry G. Krausseve al Tinie
Frederic W. Hinke_. =i oii casi
Howard A. Bowman___._._.._____
Willys A. Myers. ___~_.__._.___._
Edward I. Nathan _._____._._..
Willlam E: Copley...
Paull. Demille. ~~...
Jeptha M. Gibbs_______.__.___.__
Romeyn Wormuth______.__.____
Arthur R. Williams... olcweil
Osear C. Harper. ioiscis. i duoc
Stewart E. McMillin. __________
Harold C. Woods. goal 51 So
Waldo E. Bailey....c..liil i
Charles H. Taliaferro... vc. -c.2.
Samuel Sokobin......cno ono
H. Claremont Moses__.._......_.
George P.Shaw--_._.....
Henry T. Unverzagt___..__._____
Clarence E. Macy.............._.
TL... Randolph Higgs.o 25. slonis
Reginald S. Carey... ___....._.
Nelson RI Parke: cool ln iu
Robertson Honey... _______
Prescott Childs. _aagol. 0 Lin
Donald F. Bigelow____..________
Parker W. Buhrman...
Frederick F. Henrotin___.._..____
Maj. Robert C. F. Goetz_______._
Lieut. Commander John H.
Magruder, jr.
Jesse F. Van Wickel _____________
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest__
Capt. Herbert Seymour Howard
Commander George D. Murray.
Commander Howard D. Bode___
Pagl 8. Guinn.....L000 0 J 0 i
Warren M. Chase.______________
F. Ridgeway Lineawéaver_______
Carol H. Foster... 20.00 id
Sidney H. Browne..........._...
Eugene Nabel._....._._.__._.__
Kenneth S. Patton._____.____.___
John J. Macdonald 2 = __ 021
William K,  Adflshie «7.
Joseph?B Barto. ..o.ni oot
Arthor- TP. Flavin... 170 J 200
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
onsul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Diplomatic agent and consul gen-
ral.
Consul (second secretary).
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Counselor of legation.
Second secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant military attaché for air.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
§ The Foreign Service officers at Monaco are also assigned to Nice, France.
6 Foreign Service officer, class 1, appointed to act as diplomatic agent and consul general pursuant to
article 17 of an act of Congress approved May 24, 1924, Receives compensation as a Foreign Service officer.
io
572 Congressional Directory
NETHERLANDS AND POSSESSIONS—PERSIA
Post Name Office
NETHERLANDS AND POS-
SESSIONS—Continued
POSSESSIONS—continued
Medan, Sumatra, Netherland
East Indies.
*Paramaribo, Netherland
Guiana - (agency under
Trinidad).
Surabaya, Java, Netherland
East Indies.
NICARAGUA
Managua... _.._.Lngons
Corinto... il
*Matagalpa— a... 300
Puerto Cabezas_________________
NORWAY
O10. a area SAI 8
570) Ep i Re es RE
Stavenger. o.oo de
PALESTINE
serusalemy. aa aaa
PANAMA
Panama... coo duimis sak ani
COMO... o.oo Fir idon bis wt mills
PERSIA
Teheran
Louis H. Gourley.2iii.....J 15
William Du B. Thorne ._____.___
James'S. Lawton... .iiili i.
Matthew E. Hanna... ___...__._.
Paul GC. Daniels... 0.50)
Maj. Arthur R. Harris...
Maj. Harold S. Fassett _________
Robert A. Martin. .20 C0. _) 1
Samuel G. Ebling__.-____._____._
Obert R. Nelson, jroo. Ji
John A. Willey. wlio. i Gl
Eli Paylor.... 0 ile 20 ids
Hoffman Philipaoi il. 1.000
Benjamin Thaw, jr... .__.___.
Julius Wadsworth. ou... 000
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest.
Capt. Kenneth G. Castleman __
Marguard H. Lund... ..;
"Thomas H.. Bevan. iio. 0. Li...
George M. Abbott... ______
Walter C. Dowling... __.____.
Julius J. C. Jensen 20 iil Jie
Alexander P. Cruger........_____
Brigg A. Perkins... Soil: Lowy
Thomas DEPavis..... oo
Frithjof C, Sigmond..._...._..____
Alexander K. Sloan ..........._.
Cyril L. Thiel. Ui oioh oo
"Thomas A. Hickok... oo...
H. Gordon Minnigerode.._._____
Edward W. Blatchford....______
Roy TT. Davis... iaduial isl
Harold D. Finley.J.. otic...
Sheldon T. Mills. oi
Maj. Arthur R. Harris__________
Maj. Harold S. Fassett .________
Robert Ao Martin. ol. lol...
Herbert O. Williams.____________
Harry, D. Myers... oc. ocbonansa
John BE. Holler. ..oou. cote
Franeis OC, Jordan... oi. L 5.0
BW. Puleher.. cicoondd. i uile
Post Wheeler... cnn. i.00 5
‘Thomas S, Horn... iced ves
Capt. Frederick D. Sharp... ____
Alexander V. Dye...
Thomas S. Horn.....oii oo. die
Charles C, Hart... .....0-0. 0.0.4
George Wadsworth .___.__.______
Robert B. Streeper_..________.__
Arthur I. Richards... .....0.0
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Cc onsul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Counselor of legation.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché,
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary (consul).
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul (second secretary).
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
First secretary.
Third secretary (consul).
4 Third secretary (vice consul).
Foreign Service of the United States 973
PERU—SIAM
Post Name Office
PERU
Lima... icici oath ane aR a a Fred Morris Dearing_.__________ Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
Sn potentiary.
William C. Burdett..__.____.._... First secretary.
Garret G. Ackerson, jro._____.____ Third secretary.
Merwin I, Bohan... .......... Commercial attaché.
Julian:D-Smith._..._............ Assistant commercial attaché.
Callao-Lima__.__________________ James B. Young. sooo io Consul general.
J. Kenly Bacon... o.oo nai. Vice consul.
T. Muldrup Forsyth__.__._____ Vice consul.
Edwin McKee... onal dd Vice consul.
Arthur D. Jukes...  bialiof od Vice consul.
*1.8 Or0Y8.....o-cninaiic inl Norman: Duncan. i ocd. iol. .0 Consular agent.
*Mollendo.. Ernest IH. Quenset.......__.. -__ Consular agent.
*Salaverry........ -adaaioule Neil Whyte. lecoouialliliell. Consular agent.
: POLAND
NTE a ni en Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
PORTUGAL AND POSSES-
SIONS
PORTUGAL
dsbon. a rea na
POSSESSIONS
Lourenco, Marques, Mozam-
bique, Africa.
RUMANIA
Bucharest... nos vitnaraias
SAN MARINO’
San Marine... ... cine
Sheldon L.. Crosby... oe 222
Orsen N. Nielsen =... 0
George Alexander Armstrong. __
Lieut. Col. Albert Gilmor.______
Claytontlane Cr 20 a
JoolahrHuddies a 2
CC. Warwick Perkins, jr =.
John H. Madonne:=_-___- ____ =
Hiram Bingham jroo. =
Montgomery Colladay._________
Charles W-. Yost it ory
John: Stone. Co... ec
John'Glover South... ._
Alexander R. Magruder_._______
Maj. Robert H. Fletcher, jr_____
Capt. David McDougal Le Bre-
ton.
Richard C-Tong_- >. ~~
Lieut. Commander Calvin H.
Cobb.
Carl B.-Deichman.. — _.........
Lawrence S. Armstrong... _...__
Daniel V. Anderson... ___._..._
John-F. Huddleston. ......
Alfred D. Comeron. coer -en-n
Bdward P- Borden...
Charles 8. WHSON oc var enn
Louis: Sussdorf, ire: oo. -o-uene=
Julius G-Holmes: =.
Lieut. Col. Franklin
Whitley.
Sproull Fouehé. _-.. .  _. .  ..-
Harold DD: Clum. oo arene
David E. Kaufman. ...._..._.._..
Kennett F. Potter... 5.5.0
7 The consul at San Marino is also consul at Florence, Italy.
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Counselor of legation.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant naval attaché.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Counselor of legation.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Third secretary (vice consul).
SIAM—SWITZERLAND
Congressional Directory |
Post Name Office
SIAM—Continued
Bangkok—Continued..__._.__._...
SPAIN AND POSSESSIONS
Alicante, Spain. ________..._______
Barcelona, Spain________________
*Parragona, Spain."
Bilbao, Spain________________.____
Las Palmas, Canary Islands_____
Malaga, Spain___________________
Seville, Spain____________________
Tenerife, Canary Islands________
Valencia, Spain__________________
Vigo, Spalm........c... oo... 0
SWEDEN
Stockholm... ccs
GOLeBOYY cc aaa
SWITZERLAND
Andrew G. Lynch
Lieut. Col. Walter S. Drysdale. _
Charles E. Brookhart____________
Henry J. Post duscuiar. cia
Joseph Flack... ... 002 0000
Hugh Millard... CL i. 0
Lieut. Col. Robert H. Fletcher,
jr.
Capt. David McDougal Le Bre-
ton.
Charles A. Livengood. ..._..____
Col. Prank P.labm... .........
Lieut. Commander Calvin H.
Cobb.
Julian C. Greenup......cciie woe m-
Curtis C. Jordan... ..z.-.5.
Raymond O. Richards__.._..__..
W. M. Parker Mitchell ._________
Manuel J. Codoner........._____
Clande I. Dawson. .........iciwewe-
Richard PF. Boyce... :c.
Harold Shanty. .....-cedeeest aa
Cecll M. P. Cross... ones nas
Thomas Mc¢Enelly.____.____.____.
Daniel M. Braddock. __________
Caesar Franklin Agostini________
William E. Chapman...
Owen WW. Gaines... ...........
Augustin W. Perrin. __
William B. Douglass, jr...._.____
Richard Ford
S. Reid Thompson
Russell B. Jordan
Laurence A. Steinhardt
Edward S. Crocker, 2d
Miss Frances E. Willis__________
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest__
Capt. Kenneth G. Castleman. __
i SEE 20 LG on a a ay
Commander Howard D. Bode___
Roger Culver Tredwell
Edward P. Maffitt
Hugh R. Wilson
Benjamin Reath Riggs
Winthrop S. Greene_____________
Lieut. Col. Jacob W. S. Wuest_._
Donald Renshaw... _._-.... i. ::_
David B. Macgowan
J. A. Tuck Sherman
Alfred Donegan
Alfred T'. Burri
Gilson G. Blake, jr. ~~.
Curtis, Everett... cc...
James W. Riddleberger_._____.__
Llewellwyn E. Thompson, jr...
Robert C. McCloud
Third secretary (vice consul).
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
First secretary.
Second secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant military attaché for air.
Assistant naval attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consular agent.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
Second secretary. i
Third secretary. i
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant naval attaché,
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentiary.
First secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Foreign Service of the United States
SWITZERLAND—YUGOSLAVIA
575
Post Name Office
SWITZERLAND—Continued
TURKEY
Istanbul (Constantinople). _.___
Izmir (Smyrna) ooo.
UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA
Pretoria, Transvaal ______________
Capetown, Cape Provinee_____._
Durban, Natal ___________________
Johannesburg, Transvaal ________
Port Elizabeth, Cape Province...
URUGUAY
Montevideo. ___._.____
VENEZUELA
TaCGmalra..... co
Maracaibo...
YUGOSLAVIA
Belgrade...
Lewis W. Haskell oo ina o.2
George BR. Hukill.................
Cavendish W. Cannon..__...___
Herbert 8S. Goold.....ooli lolol
Christian T. Steger_.______.__.____
Raymond A. Hare...._...._..._._
Daniel Gaudin, jro......._______
G. Howland Shaw__.....__.._____
Eugene M. Hinkle..__
Robert D. Coe__.._.__
Maj. John A. Crane._____________
John E. Gillespie._....__._______
John T. Harding......0ol0 20000,
Charles E. Allen___.__.__________
Burton'Y., Berry... 10200020000
Howard Elting, jr... ._______
William P. George___.........____
Courtland Christiani....._______
Ralph J. Totten..- 2c.
Samuel H.. Day... i000 0000
Clifford C. Taylor.__
Irving N. Linnell ___.____.________
Karl de G. MacVitty_.__________
Charles A. Converse.__._.__..____
Hugh S. Miller.t... 00.0 0000
Walter F. Dement_______________
Maxwell K. Moorhead __________
R.Borden Reams... ..........
Hassel HH. Dick... ....
Alan GC. Tavlor.. oa ncviasiae
S- Butler Wright... ... cool.
Benjamin Muse..................
Balph Miller... oo...
Capt. Frederick D. Sharp.______
Com. Leland Jordan, jr-....___.
William A. Hodgman___._______
Testie Bo Reed. i... ..c........
Robert Newbegin, 2d ___________
Pevie Hun ea
George T. Summerlin___________
Warden McK. Wilson___________
Glen A. Abbey.
Erwin P. Reeler__........_.
George Ory... ov oan
Alert H. Cousins, jr... - =.
Ben. C. Matthews. ........ =.
George BR. Phelan... ........
John Dyneley Prince... ....._.
Howard Bucknell, jr............
Lt. Col. Franklin Langley Whit-
Reed Paige Clark... ...
Jom, Calman... >.
Egmont C. Von Tresckow______
Theodore J. Hohenthal __________
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Ambassador extraordinary and pleni-
potentiary.
Counselor of embassy.
Second secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Assistant commercial attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentia ry.
Commercial attaché.
Agricultural attaché.
Consul general.
Consul
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and
plenipotentiary.
First secretary.
Third secretary.
Military attaché.
Naval attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Consul general.
Vice consul.
Vice consul
Vice consul.
minister
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentia:
First secretary.
ry.
Third secretary.
Commercial attaché.
Consul
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Vice consul.
Envoy extraordinary and minister
plenipotentia ry.
Second secretary.
Military attaché.
Commercial attaché.
Agricultural attaché.
Consul.
Vice consul.
Consul.
Vice consul.
576 Congressional Directory
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS DETAILED AS INSPECTORS
Name Name
‘Thomas Ml. Wilson... - — .. = too LowelC., Pinkerton... io. sa
Monnett: B. Davis. oo. id hen ee
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS ASSIGNED TO THE DEPARTMENT
La Verne Baldwin_________.____.__..__ Department. | J. Pierrepont Moffat ______________.__ Department.
Bllis:0. Briegs. .... . ... .5kguite Department. | Edmund B. Montgomery... _________ Department.
Herbert S. Bursley. ..___iu..cucooil Department. |«RichardW. Morin... __.._.___.. Department.
Homer M. Byington... loose coil Department. | Jefferson Patterson. ____________._ Department.
Richard M. DeLambert.__.._____.._.. Department. | Troy L. Perkins... __ {J 8%! Department.
Jullen'C. Dorp. ooo oa Cag Department. | Christian M. Ravndal_______________ Department.
Walter A. Foote... c:ioisshunigl bs Department. Laurence E. Salisbury____.__.____._. Department.
Clarence E. Gauss.......zoi coi. Department. | Rudolf E. Schoenfeld ________________ Department.
Stuart Edgar Grummon._____________ Department. {James B..Stewart....._______________ Department.
Landreth M. Harrison. ....._ .cooole Department. GeorgeMafban td. o.oo Department.
Loy W. Henderson.....cioxaua aiidl Department. “Henry 8, Villard... 0 Department.
Frederick P. Hibbard. ...._... i. Department. | Edward T. Wailes__________________ Department.
Joseph BE. Jacobs. i cits folwnurails Department. | Erie C. Wendelin_ _.________________ Department.
Herschel V. Johnson... _....._.._ Department. | James R. Wilkinson. ________________ Department.
Joseph BF. McGurk... loon Department. | Edwin C. Wilson. ______.._______.___ Department.
James E. McKenna... _foo.acialt Department. Orme Wilson ire... 0. Department.
H. Freeman Matthews. _.___._._..._. Department. | Kenneth J.-Yearns. ........_..___... Department.
George R. Merrell, jr... ocean Department.
FOREIGN SERVICE OFFICERS DETAILED TO FOREIGN SERVICE SCHOOL FOR
INSTRUCTION
Theodore C. Achilles... ooo ca:ii: Department. | Joni P. Balmer 02k... Department.
Homer M. Byington, Jr______.__._.____ Department. | Edward Page, jr... _._________ Department.
John Williard Carrigan___._._______.__ Department. | Halleck I.. Rose. ________._____._._.. Department.
Merritt N. Cotes... -... von bisanasd Department. | Homes Conrad Smith_______________ Department.
Frederick E. Farnsworth..______.____ Department. | Francis L. Spalding_________________ Department.
Kent Leavitt oot bia Lennaiy Department. | Laurence W. Taylor___.___________.___ Department.
Henry P. Leverich Department. |: Tyler; Thompson. ... Department.
Patrick Mallon... . .ieeewen-esasts Department. | H. Bartlett; Wells... Locaozzall, Department.
PRESS GALLERIES
157297°—73-1—18T ED——38 577
| |
|
|
RULES GOVERNING PRESS GALLERIES
1. Persons desiring admission to the press galleries of Congress shall make
application to the Speaker, as required by Rule XX XV of the House of Represent-
atives, 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 newspapers 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 galleries; 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 organiza-
tion, 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 having
legislation before Congress, and will not become so engaged while retaining mem-
bership in the galleries. Holders of visitor’s cards who may be allowed temporary
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 corre-
spondents of reputable standing in their business, who represent daily news-
papers 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 correspondent may be suspended.
3. Persons engaged in other occupations who chief attention is not given to
newspaper correspondence or to newspaper associations requiring telegraphic
service shall not be entitled to admission to the press galleries; and the Press List
in the CoNGRESSIONAL DIRECTORY shall be a list only of persons whose chief
attention is given to telegraphic correspondence for daily newspapers or news-
paper associations requiring telegraphic service.
4. Members of the families of correspondents are not entitled to the privileges
of the galleries.
5. The press galleries shall be under the control of the standing committee of
correspondents, subject to the approval and supervision of the Speaker of the
House of Representatives and the Senate Committee on Rules.
Approved.
Henry T. RAINEY,
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
Approved by the Committee on Rules of the Senate.
SAMUEL W. BLL,
Charrman.
Lyre C. WILSON,
Harry B. Gauss,
Bascom N. Timmons,
W. TurNER CATLEDGE,
Secretary,
Standing Commatiee of Correspondents.
579
PRESS GALLERIES
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION
[The * designates those whose wives accompany them; the { designates those whose daughters accompany
them; the || designates those having other ladies with them]
Name Paper represented Residence
*Abell, George SL... 10
*Adams, Phelps H_____.___..
*Akers, Merton'T-_. _s-2:
Albright, Robert.....-.= a.
* Alford, Theodore C._.._..._.
*Allen, Robert:8. ....
Anderson, Robert C________
*Anderson, Paul ¥V......---:
* Armstrong, Robert B., jr___
Arne, (Sigridiio Ji 0000
*Authier, George F_________
*Baird, Joseph His. ll.
*Baker, Richard R., jr......
*Bargeron, Carlisle._.____.___
*Barkley, Frederick R______
Barnes, George A _._________
*Barthelme, George.
Beale; Wil. jr. oils. 20
*Bean, Rodney......covos bt
Beattie, Edward W., jr_____
Belair, Pelix; jr ion iiris.
*Bell,:Samuel W._...._... _..
*RelliiUltie. ofa. kb booted
Bell, Williamy'A...
Benedict, Bertram__._______
*Benson, George A__________
*Bent, Myron H.....c.i:. 2.
*Benton, Ralph W.._____.__._
*Biondi, Leone Fumasoni.__
Black, Ruby. A. (5 ii ii
*Blaisdell, Richard S_.______
*Bledsoe, S. B
Boeckel, Richard... _._____
*Boettiger, John. cio il)
Bonwit, Julia A... ._ 21
Boyd, M. EB... _ . ==
Boyle, John i2to0 2 oe
Bradshaw, Roberta V_______
*Brandt, Raymond P. Peat a
Brewer, Alvaios nf 0
Brooke, Neds... tou L.
*Brayman, Harold...
*Brown, Ashmun N________
*Brown, Constantine A_____
*{ Brown, George Rothwell. _
*Brown, Harry J............
580
WashingtonNews i: LLU S008) 00
New. York 8un..-..ou-dp aiiiiotuc ons
United Press Associations__.________________
Washington Posto. czoiiei ator a so ols
Kansas City Star, Kansas City Times. _____
lars American, United Feature Syndi-
cate.
Associated Presse. oo tecna toto nods
St. Louis Post-Dispateh ev = oo ..._.
San Francisco'Chronicle... =. ~ 0.
Associated Pressi soi o.00 Jl 200 0 gl iT
Daily News Record (New York), Women’s
Wear.
Minneapolis Tribune, Dav enport Democrat.
United Press AssOCIations.-_..-_.-..........
Washington: DallyiSun. cc. casio in on
Washington Herald. +. a
Baltimore Evening Sun___ li _________
Chicago Tribune. rare oar eh eee
Cologne Gazettes duel i bY oi ii
Associated Press... [LOIS L0G OF 3000.
New: York Times i. toilo. srieosmnreayi 1.
United Press Associations... : oc ____.._
New York imeg 2 rt a
New York Herald Tribune
Louisville Courier-Journal _ ______.________._
United Press Associations... -.-- =~‘
Editorial Research Reports. ________________
MinneapolisiJournal. -. i UIE Oil nll
Brooklyn Daily Times. ..coa-co ooo 2.
Washinghon Dimes. = ca Cy
Stefant Agenee. or
Portland (Me.) Evening News, Jamestown
(N.Y.) Evening Journal, Madison (Wis.)
State Journal, Green Bay Press-Gazette,
Mason City Globe Gazette, Oshkosh
(Wis.) Northwestern, La Democracia (San
Juan, P. R.).
NewOrleans States... oo coo LC
Associated Press. o.oo ais ooo
Editorial Research Reports. ____.__________
Chicago Wribune oo oll
Waghineton Times... or ai,
Washington Herald... ol. 2 2
‘Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph
Co., London, England.
Consolidated Press Association..____________
St.. Younis Post-Dispatch... . co.
Washington Herald... =. _. ___.
Cleveland Press, Cincinnati Post, Toledo
News-Bee, Columbus Citizen, Akron
Press, Youngstown Telegram.
New York Evening Post... _.
Providence Journal, Providence Bulletin___._
Washington Siar... 0 oe
Washington Herald... 2 i. 0...
Boise Statesman, Salt Lake Tribune,
Spokane Spokesman-Review, Oakland
Tribune.
3140 Dumbarton Avenue.
700 Rock Spring Drive,
Clarendon
6404 oS. Bod, Chevy
Chase, Md.
2203 First Street.
2914 Glover Driveway.
1525 T'wenty-eighth Street.
Roosevelt Hotel.
Westchester Apartments.
2145 C Street.
Jefferson Apartments.
The Argonne.
1833 Newton Street.
3701 Massachusetts Avenue.
3342 M Street.
4311 Elm Street,
Chase, :
119 W. Woodbine Street,
Chevy Chase, Md.
914 Kearney Street NE.
Wardman Park Hotel.
1915 S Street.
3332 O Street.
Racquet Club.
1235 G Street NE.
3803 Alton Place.
3021 Forty-fourth Place.
1954 Columbia Road.
Chevy
Westchester Apartments.
1524 1. Street.
29 Hesketh Street,
Chase, Md.
1727 Nineteenth Street.
211%% Prince Street, Alexan-
dria, Va.
Chevy
Chastleton Hotel.
1521 Thirty-fifth Street.
3333 Thirty-fifth Street.
Wardman Park Hotel.
5913 Sixteenth Street.
1219 K Street.
1740 H Street.
3200 P Street.
Westchester Apartments.
2400 Sixteenth Street.
3218 Klingle Road.
2121 New York Avenue.
3903 Oliver Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
1819 Nineteenth Street.
1809 Twenty-fourth Street.
6412 Ridgewood Avenue,
Chevy Chase, Md.
Press Galleries 581
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued
Name Paper represented Residence
*Brown, Walter_.__.________
*Buck, Robert M
*Buel, Walker S_____.____.._
Bugbee, Emma. ooo lL.
Butler, James J o:2 oii) 000
*Cameron, Donald_._____.___
*Canham, Erwin D_________
Carpenter, G. Richmond.____
*Catledge, W. Turner-..____
*Cherry, Ralph L
*Chester, John: FP... 2000
*Chinn, James E____.________
Christerson, Melbourne.____
*Clapper, Raymond .-_._____
*Clark, Delbertioeuiz Janis
*Clark, Kennetho o.oo...
*Clark, Kenneth S___.______
*Codel,s Martin somo 0000
*Collier, Ambrose.__._.______
*Coflier, Jom PF... ..........
*[|Collins, Ralph A__________
Colton, F. B
*Combs, George W_________
*Conness, Leland S.._______
*Clope, James. ..o..1=.0. 0 1
*Cornell, Douglas B_________
*Cotten, FPelixosl lio C00
Cottrell, Jesse S__________.__
*Cox, George Howland.______
*tCraig, Elisabeth May._____
*Crawford, Arthur W_______
Cullinane, James_..__.______
Daly, John JT 717 Digit
Davis, Maxine foi 1007
*Pavis, Watson or 20:
Dayton, Katharine _________
De Greve, Arthur F________
*Denny, Ludwell_.__________
Denoyer, Pierre. _Jioiiiioi.
*Dickson, C. B00 vir
Dinwoodey, Dean___________
Doherty, William H________
*Douthat, James W____._____
Doying, George E___________
*Doyle, James'P. io 0 LL
Ducas, Dorothy...
*Duffy, Edward J______
Durno, George E_______
[| Dutcher, Rodney ..________
*Edwards, Fraser_________.__
Tegan, Leo... nf 0lkr
Emery, Ferd A... ily Sil
*Engle, Parke... i..0L0
*Epes, Horace. iol a coal
*Ervin, Morris -DoicC 0.
*1 Erwin, Johm'D..o00o iL.
=f Associated Press... ooh luis
_| International News Service
Winston-Salem Journal, Winston-Salem
Sentinel, Anderson Independent, Green-
ville News, Greenville Piedmont, Ashe-
ville (N. C.) Citizen-Times.
Buffalo Evening News_____._____________.__
Philadelphia Public Ledger_-_______________
Charlotte News, Great Falls Tribune_______
‘Washington Daily News... _______________
Cleveland Plain Dealer... _____._____._______
New York Herald Tribune_.___.______._____
New Britain Herald, Utica Observer Dis-
patch, Schenectady Gazette, Butler (Pa.)
Eagle, Niagara Falls (N. Y.) Gazette.
Associated Press... io Louliiad unis
Christian Science Monitor__.___..______.____
Providence Journal, Providence Evening
Bulletin.
New Yorleimes. ll coi So lotelimanniz..
New York Journal of Commerce ______.___
Associated Press.........asurlaszand 2o.0
Washington Star. taniloinsss wl Doin’!
Associated Press. nuoliciuesd andi Doin l
United Press Associations... ____.___.___
New York Times... ..... aor haliiopez i,
Universal Service... Lo Uoatuiigouninl
Canadian Press... funsdaioi mg]
Radio News Bureau... ii... uci. _onboi..l
Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette, Wheeling
Register, Lexington (Ky.) Leader, St.
Petersburg (Fla.) Times, West Palm
Beach (Fla.) Post.
Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette, Wheeling
Register, Lexington (Ky.) Leader, St.
Petersburg Times, West Palm Beach
(Fla.) Post.
New York Sun... ri ations
Assoelated ‘Press... i i iC ll a Pan
Baltimore Evening Sun, New Orleans Item-
Tribune.
Border Cities Star (Windsor, Ont.), Ottawa
Journal, Charleston (W. Va.) Mail, Salt
Lake Telegram.
Associated Press... oT T0000
York Dispatch, Reading Eagle, Uniontown
Morning Herald, Olean (N. Y.) Herald,
Jersey Journal.
Central News of America___._______________
Charlotte Observer Arizona Daily Star_____
Christian Science Monitor__________________
Portland (Me.) Evening Express, Portland
Press Herald.
Chicago Journal of Commerce ____________
‘Washington Herald. fil Suna doi nis.
‘Washington Times... LL cll Lil. Gl
Gary (Ind.) Post-Tribune___
Seienee’Service ci SE iL 00500 J AVG
Consolidated Press Association______________
United Press Associations... ..__._ 000.
Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance_.______
Petit Parision.. fo unt yuu 00 RARE
Associated Press..co0l oil fool Doig
Consolidated Press Association______________
Buffalo Courier-ExXpress. ._._.__.___.______..
International News Service
Newspaper Enterprise Association
Universal Service... ili oli ill DIR
Brooklyn Dajly Bagle. ......ooitacsancaniw
Consolidated Press Association. _____________
DallasNews. ct ol,
Consolidated Press Association. ____._______
Cincinnati Times-Star./. Lol. Cli]
Nashville T'ennesseean, Chattanooga News,
Knoxville Journal, Memphis Commercial
Appeal.
_| 1714 Twenty-second Street.
1511 Forty-fourth Street.
632 A Street SE.
4453 Greenwich Parkway.
3611 Wisconsin Avenue.
Arlington Ridge, Va.
3815 Gramercy Street.
Mayflower Hotel.
1921 First Street NE.
1616 Sixteenth Street.
3008 Forty-third Street.
Park Lane Apartments.
1641 Nineteenth Street.
2520 Tenth Street NE.
3620 Sixteenth Street.
Lyon Village, Va.
1441 Spring Road.
209 Primrose Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
1722 Nineteenth Street.
1230 Sixteenth Street.
3304 N Street.
1404 M Street.
1141 Twelfth Street.
5030 Forty-first Street.
Jefferson Apartments.
6239 Thirty-third Street.
The Cumberland.
1017 Maple Avenue, Silver
Spring, Md.
3220 Wisconsin Avenue.
5435 Connecticut Avenue.
3930 Connecticut Avenue.
2810 P Street.
Capitol Towers Apartment.
6325 Woodside Place, Chevy
Chase, Md.
816 Eighteenth Street.
3322 Tennyson Street.
1235 Thirty-first Street.
1422 Rhode Island Avenue.
Shoreham Hotel.
1712 Seventeenth Street.
Glenwood, Md.
Wardman Park Hotel.
1109 Sixteenth Street.
7203 Maple Avenue, Chevy
Chase, Md.
1317 H Street.
1344 Gallatin Street.
4219 River Road.
Woodley Park Towers.
The Benedick. |
1644 Argonne Place. i
5420 Connecticut Avenue.
1020 Sixteenth Street.
5315 Connecticut Avenue.
1740 K Street.
3930 Connecticut Avenue.
3110 Forty-fourth Street.
Allies Inn.
082 Congressional Directory
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued
Name Paper represented Residence
* 1 Rssary, J. Fred. coll.
Eustis, Grace Hendrick..____
*Pay, Elton C...o...
Ferguson, Harry... .__...___
Field, Carter... cooauii lik
|Finney,:Ruthic cos ji Luk
*Fitzpatrick, John J. _______
*Fleming, Dewey L_________
Flemming, A. S
Flynn, Alfred-F._ J 001.
*Flynn, Michael W_________
*Flythe, William P_________
Folliard, Edward T_.____.___
*Roote, Mark... oil dsall
*Francis, Warren B______.___
*Frandsen, Julius___._.._._.__
*PFrantz, Harry. oti Lidl
Frazier, Corinne Reid______
Friedheim, Eric... coc i
Furman, Bessic ola C0001
*Qableman, Edwin W______
*@achon, Jean... ... .....
*Qauss, Harry Boot 22 LoL
Ser
*QGridley, Charles O_._______
“Gridley, BR. Lo
*Q@riffin, Bulkley S_._....___
Qusack, Harry. io soil.
*Hachten, Arthur... ....22
*Hadley, Ed
Hall, Prank A... 0 N. C.
Hall, F.
{Hamilton Charles A_______
*Hard, Willi
Harris, M.
Harris, Mrs. Ned B_________
*Harsch, Joseph C...... 5.5.0
*Hart, Lee P00. area dL 8002
*t Hayden, Charles S........
*Heath, Louis Joy A GL
*Heinl, Boba
*Hendrickson, Roy F___...__
*Henle, Raymond Z..______
*tHenning, Arthur S_.______
*Herrick, Genevieve Forbes.
*Herrick, John...coooualt 3482
Heslep, Charter........._._..
Higgins, E. Worth__________
*Hildebrand, W. A__.___..__
*Hinton, Harold B.._.-:----
“Hodges, Ponl. ....--ccaceaee
Baltimore: San: ... cont suelsrean eal
‘Washington Stari. oacnl A Jodo...
Associated Press... oo sonnill cornl ola
United Press Association... ...___________
Bell Syndicate, Boston Herald. _____________
Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance .______
Washington Times. co. oll ao nila il
Baltimore Sun... a.0al. nial nosiaralll
Consolidated Press Association ..___..______
Wall Street Journal, Exchange Telegraph
Co., London, England.
‘Washington Herald... co colli _olset..
Universal Service, New York American.____
Washington Heraldiioo soins iol
Grand Rapids Press, Saginaw News, Jack-
son Citizen Patriot, Flint Journal, Kala-
mazoo Gazette, Bay City Times, Muske-
gon Chronicle, Ann Arbor News.
Los Angeles Times. _.......22050 cna d,
United Press Associations... __________.___
United Press Associations ..__._____________
Philadelphia Public Ledger. _____.__________
International News... o.oo.
Associated: Press... .ozuini lh us well
Cineinnati Enquirer... _..soluasl loreal’
Havas News Agency. .......-zgid sulin’
Chicago Daily News... oicorull mupld ciaell
zl Associated Pressozil. ind. Uli _poleslsedl}
-| ‘International News: . funda. Juizinall. |
Central News of America... ._.__.____-l___
Dallas News, Dallas Evening-Journal,
Galveston News.
Denver Post, Peoria Star, Moline Dispatch,
Rockford (Ill.) Register-Republic.
United Press Associations... ______.__
Worcester Post, Brockton Enterprise, Lewis-
ton Sun, New Haven Register, Paw-
tucket Times, Springfield Union, Pitts-
field Eagle, Lynn Item, Hartford Times.
‘Wall Street Journal. .coiaaladln. Josroenti
Boston Globe... cua vina roan pteinws ll
Universal Service... cv-o-lioToi ln
Universal Service, San Francisco Examiner.
Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City Times...
W. C. News Service. _.....oo.__-ci..
Consolidated Press Association... .__..___
Binghamton Press, Troy Times_.___________.
Consolidated Press Association... _______.___
Washington Times. coches 30 Lalo Joralondd
Associated Press... oven blonoid geod.
Automotive Daily News... __________
Minneapolis: Star... Sous rao.
Christian Science Monitor, Boston.___._.___
New York Journal of Commerce. ____...___
Nashville Banner, Fort Worth Star-Tele-
gram, St. Joseph News-Press, Little Rock
Democrat, Wichita Falls Times.
Detroit News. sooiicivrni cami batinl!
Central News of America. _.._____
Philadelphia Public Ledger ___._____ i
United Press Associations... _....c..._.
Washington Pos lank ud Lagalioecals
Trafiie World, Chicago... =.
Johnson City Chronicle, Johnson City Stafi-
News, Syracuse Herald, Kansas City
(Mo.) Journal-Post.
Associated Press... vnmeoc Sores all sling
Piishargn Post Gazette, Milwaukee Sen-
tine
Chicago Tribune Press Service_.___.________
Chicago Tribune Press Service-.__.__._._____
Chicago Tribune Press Service... .___._.
‘Washington News. uob word bod abileacad
Consolidated Press Association... _.__...___
Greensboro Daily News. o.oo ocoomocmoooooan
INOW Yor TI Ned. anni siamo
Cleveland Plain Dealer... ..ovoeecem anno
3121 Newark Street.
1403 Thirtieth Street.
818 Sligo Avenue, Silver
Spring, Md.
1808 Eye Street.
Columbia Country Club.
1525 Twenty-eighth Street.
4708 Blagden Terrace.
4000 Cathedral Avenue.
4531 Lowell Street.
3000 Otis Street NE.
5901 Nevada Avenue.
1726 Twentieth Street.
2650 Woodley Place.
3211 Northampton Street.
2902 Porter Street.
1722 Nineteenth Street.
2805 T'wenty-eighth Street.
+1661 Cresent Place.
4541 Lowell Street.
2145 C Street.
The Ontario.
1735 New Hampshire A venue.
2900 Connecticut Avenue.
3837 Military Road.
1309 Shepherd Street.
2120 LeRoy Place.
The Mendota.
3800 Massachusetts Avenue.
412 Turner Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
6403 Delaware Street, Chevy
Chase, Md
5610 Moorland Lane, Edge-
moor, Md.
1742 Q Street.
1735 F Street.
5410 Forty-first Street.
Kensington, 5
4460 Greenwich Parkway.
2222 Hall Place.
1921 Kalorama Road.
1607 Twenty-eighth Street.
1401 Fairmont Street.
1314 Farragut Street.
6937 Georgia Avenue.
Park Lane Apartments.
1618 Twenty-second St.
Army and Navy Apartments.
2901 Thirteenth Sreet.
2324 Twentieth Street.
_| 1803 Belmont Road.
Hammond Courts.
456 N Street SW.
2400 California Street.
3035 Newark Street.
os! i Avenue, Riverdale,
9 Cleveland Avenue, Takoma
ark, ;
3434 Oakwood Terrace.
2737 Cathedral Avenue.
312 Queen Street, Alexan-
dria, Va.
312 Queen Street, Alexan-
dria
1735 ain Place.
3611 S Street.
1277 New Hampshire Ave-
nue.
1824 Twenty-third Street.
3031 Rodman Street.
i
i
i
g f ‘ A
Press Galleries 583
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued
Name Paper represented Residence
*Holmes, George R_________
*Holmes, George Sanford___.
Horan, Harold J. T....-o-—.
*tHornaday, James P_______
Hornaday, Mary._._._._______
Horton, Robert W__________
*Howe, James P____________
*Hulen, Betram D__._______.
Hunt, Charles P.........._.C
|Hurd, C. W. B_.
Hutchinson, William K_____
Hutton, Tom B.-i...-.- oi:
*Hyde, Henry M._..._._.:
*Jackson, Gardner. -.....---.
w
|| Jamieson, William Edward.
Jefferson, Mary F.___......_
*Jenkins, J. H.ooo oii ca
IIJermane, W. W____________
*Jewell, Edmund. _.._______
*Jones, Coleman B__________
Jordan, George C__________ co
*Kelly, John W._ .cc-ia.il
Kennedy, Edward._..._____
Kennedy, Frank A__..____._.
*Kennedy, John A________.__
*tKennedy, William P______
*Kent, Russell.....c..o-c:a.
*Kenworthy, Carroll H..__.
Kerby, Willlam'F. ........-
*tKeyser, Charles P.__.._____
King, Tom W
Kinnear, Isabel.......i-a.it
*Kirkley,. Don: J-....c ic coc:
Kneeland, Harold___________
*Knorr,:Brnst A. ......o.5.:0
Kreiselman, Lee. ....._____
*Lane, Robert R....c-.tan-oc N
*Lawrence, David.....______
*Loe, Dick. ode adiaaid gs
Leggett, B.S. aio inn.
*Lewils, Fulton, jr... oo:
*Lewis, Sir Willmott._______
*Lincoln, G. Gould..........
*Lindley, Ernest K_________
*1inz, BerirtamiE..........
*|| Linz, Clarence L___.__..__.
*Little, Horberbe..oo omnia
Livingstone, B. 1... _
*Lockett, Edward B________
Lorance, John... ... 5...
Louthan, M. CQ. _o._.. =. :.
*Ludecke, Kurt G. W_______
*Lynn, Robert: M __...o._..
Lyons, James Grant___._____
*MeBee, Avery..."
McCleery, William T.______
*McDonnell, J. Bernard____
|McGahan, Paul J..........
International News Service. ._______.......
Denver Rocky Mountain News, Oklahoma
News, Birmingham Post.
Washington Poste cui coisa nulil..
Indianapolis News... ooidilouia. an...
Christian Science Monitor. ..___________.____
Washington Daily News... oo...
Associated Press.zac. con soiuiols sansa.
New-York Times. .... oouaausnloiioiamny
Johnstown (Pa.) Tribune. ........c..o..ao.t
New. York Times... civinicalivnnsodiviiog..
Binghamton Press. iucaiaoeeictucs. cisadnais
Baltimore Evening Sun. .__________.__....___
Toronto Telegram, Montreal Star... .._.....
New York Morning Telegraph, Houston
Chronicle, Cleveland News.
Tn EI ER Ee
Washington TiMeS.cicsemacnrisanis «ssaddn a.
New York Herald Tribune._....____.....____
Associated Pressi...ofacesdemuni nivsdn bun nn
Atlantis Constitution. ......eweet-tutidosas de
Portland (Oreg.) Oregonian... ..__.___..__
Associated Press... ono er wewnithn-s neds inte
Clearwater (Fla.) Sun, St. Petersburg (Fla.)
Independent, Tampa Daily Times, Jack-
sonville Journal, Miami Daily News.
Universal News Service  _.._.__ocooo_o_._
‘Washington Star, Springfield Republican,
Salem News, Worcester Gazette.
Birmingham News, Birmingham Age-
Herald, Chattanooga Times, Daily News
Record (New York), Montgomery Ad-
vertiser, Atlantic Journal.
United Press Associations et
United Press Associations. o-oo ooo
St. Louis Globe-Demoerat. - - -coeooooooo_
Winnipeg Free Press. ....-ceenterawsmnaae
Bridgeport Times-Star, Holyoke Transcript,
Newburyport News, Stamford Advocate,
Westerly Sun.
AS3ociated Press... ..cuu. is sunannenmieresis
Washington Daily News... ooo.
Central News of America.___.___..____._.__._
‘Wichita Beacom, Roswell (N. Mex.) Record.
New York Times. .o. cocoa ice sit amination
Daily Metal Trade. cui. coir asiraessiis
ewark Evening News... cocoon
Consolidated Press Association .___._________
New York Dally News. ..cooe oe ou
Detroit Free Presse. co coaccd coven oezst
Muscatine Journal, La Crosse (Wis.) Tri-
bune, Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent.
United Press Associations... ....:
UNIVErsal BerVICE. cco: anaraei =a. usiios
London TNCs. Ji... iii tuned ds waste dads
Washington Star... i. adem in a?
New York Herald Tribune. ........_..___._._.
Ni Sport Daily News, La Nacion, Buenos
ires.
New York Journal of Commerce, Newport
Daily News.
Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance__._____
washinglon Post. oon ir avinarg
New York Sun
Richmond News Leader, Wilmington (Del.)
Every Evening, Roanoke Times, Hudson
Observer, Hoboken, Danville Register,
Newport News Press.
Journal of Commerce (IN. Y.)cucemacmoncooo
Washington Herald ..._..____
Associated Press. _..
Washington Post... Lo. siamo
Philadelphia Inguirer.ceeeenoeae oor:
1922 I Street.
3930 Connecticut Avenue,
Apartment 301 H.
Shoreham Hotel.
1327 Hemlock Street.
1327 Hemlock Street.
1322 New York Avenue.
820 Connecticut Avenue.
3020 Dumbarton Avenue.
1744 Lanier Place.
Westchester Apartment.
Stoneleigh Court.
6 West Kirke Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
1717 G Street.
2508 Cliftbourne Place.
2121 New York Avenue.
2840 Twenty-eighth Street.
3031 Sedgewick Street.
4419 Greenwich Parkway.
2707 Adams Mill Road.
1400 L Street.
Continental Hotel.
918 Eighteenth Street.
1669 Columbia Road.
2121 Bancroft Place.
2405 First Street.
1925 Sixteenth Street.
2115 Pennsylvania Avenue.
114 Hesketh Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
1620 Decatur Street.
1468 Clifton Street.
6403 Delaware Street, Chevy
Chase, Md
1433 Spring Road.
4705 Eighth Street.
1803 Biltmore Street.
Westchester Apartments.
1901 Wyoming Avenue.
2408 California Street.
1708 Thirty-seventh Street.
3900 Nebraska Avenue.
3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
3024 Macomb Street.
1817 Varnum Street.
3216 Thirteenth Street.
223 Willow Street, Takoma
Park, ;
4402 Volta Place.
1605 New Hampshire Avenue
1808 R Street.
5513 Thirteenth Street.
4107 Legation Street.
21114 Prince Street, Alexan-
dria, Va.
3145 Sixteenth Street.
828 Eighteenth Street.
1305 N Street.
1619 R Street.
2039 New Hampshire Ave-
nue.
The Avondale.
222 Ninth Street SE.
Toronto Apartments.
Jefferson Apartments.
1412 Chapin Street.
1747 Corcoran Street.
584 Congressional Directory
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued
Name Paper represented Residence
McGeachy, J. Boo.
**MeGowan,: Po Heo O00
*McKee, Oliver, jro--..__.__
*MecKelway, Benjamin M___
*MecKinney, Guy D__.______
*MecLean, Charles Clark ___.
*MecNeil, Marshall __________
MecPeak, William. _._.______
*MacMahon, Louis A.._.___
Magruder, Thomas G._..___
*Naollon, Pal... -2 5.
Mallon, Winifred... --....__
*Manning, George H_...____
Marbut, B.B_-..0._. UL.
Marshall, @. GQ... iL icuin..
*Martin, Lorenzo W.__._.___
Maud’Huy, Count de.._____
*Mayl, Edward O.____..____
*Meiman, Benjamin. _______
*tMellett, Lowell .__________
*Michael, Charles R__.._____
*Miller, Gerald 1... _._.
Miller, Joseph Li. ___________
*Miller, Karl W.__.__.......
Miller, Lawrence... __.____
Mobley, Radford E., jr_____
*Monfort, Reid. LC... .
Montes, HC. 00 0000
*Morgan, Cole E____________
Morhart, Frederick H., jr.__
*Mulligan, Ralph Coolidge.
*Neal, William S_______.____
*Nevin, John Edwin._______
*(O’Keefe, Richard J.________
=O bearyal Ach ve an,
*Oliver, D. Harold o-U 0 0-2
Orr, Flora G0 lis
*Othman, Fred C.0..i cL.
Owen, Ceelloiliiii: 407 000
*Owen, Russell oo... 0.
“Palmer, Kyle D...........-
*Palmer, Ralph DPD... .00
Patterson, Eleanor M_______
Pearson, Drew. ...........
*Perking, Fred W...........
Petty, A. Milburn. _......_.
Pinkley, Virgil. J. 102i nol
*Plummer, H. Giulio: 2. i.
*Price, Byron. -_Cu io flail
Pyle, Ernest T__........_...:
*Ragsdale, W. B._..___.:Cl
+Ralph, Henry: DL Cio. 000
*Ramsay, Marion Li. _._____
Reed, Don B........oniiis
Reed Bred A... ciioeinnin
*Reichmann, J. iA. .10 2 oo
Reynolds, Quintin__________
I|Richards, Mrs. George F._.
Manitoba Free. Press Jc Jas ll mil,
Macon News, Macon Telegraph, Columbia
State, Charleston Evening Post, Tampa
Tribune, Savannah Press, Augusta Chron-
icle, Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald.
Boston Evening Transcript... ____
Washington Star. .o 200 3080. Bus iniiea iv
Chicago Tribune Press Service... __.._.
New York. Times... eaaaaSloba J: HS
Knoxville News-Sentinel, Memphis Press
Scimitar, El Paso Herald-Post, Fort
‘Worth Press, Houston Press.
Freeport Journal-Standard, Mitchell (8S.
Dak.) Republican, Omaha World-Herald,
Alton Telegraph.
Washington Herald. ocean
Wall StreetiJournal.. ol. 0L  0 E80
MeClure Syndicate... 2a LC lio 00
New York Times: cceceansa dtl LU 0000
Harrisburg News-Patriot, Bridgeport Post,
Troy Record, Rochester Times-Union,
Trenton Evening Times, Camden Courier
and Post, Scranton Republican.
Assoelated ‘Press... loo Loi LN Die
Consolidated Press Association.
Louisville: Times. uous canna 3001 JL C0000
Temps, Paris... =. 5 J00 LOL Jenin]
International News Service... _____________
Jewish Daily Forward... L.01 0 ov ion
Washington News, Scripps-Howard News-
paper Alliance.
New YorkLimnes, Sool fa 0 doze ihea
Associated Press. [L.ED ITE
Associated Press... lili ood
Detroit: News ios i808 Vor LUI.
United Press Associations... _______________
Akron Beacon Journal, Madison Capital
Times, Youngstown Vindicator, Honolulu
Star Bulletin, Sheboygan Press, Long
Beach Press Telegram, Reno Gazette.
Associated Press. .c.-oo ll 000 000
International News Service... _____________
DniversalService oo li2 J UL 0 0
Indianapolis News... co Zio Lo.
Boston Traveler, Worcester Telegram_______
Baltimore: Suncast 030, Lobos Daas oh
Philadelphia Public Ledger... _____________
Norfolk Virginian-Pilot, Savannah Morning
News, Charleston News and Courier.
International News Service... __________
Minneapolis Star, Sioux City Journal ______
International News Service. __...___________
Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger._______
Waghington-Times co oo cD ih veo
Philadelphia Inquirer: oo co
Washington Starts Lal tp basa es a
Associated Press: opin Tin mad sii
St.Paul News... oC 3 oo oo
United Press-Associations-—____ ~~. __—__
Washington Herald: coz =o to oo
New-¥orle Times. coins lo oa
Los Angeles ‘Dimes oi ta: tai id i
‘Washington News. .co 00 woior 200s L002
Washinton Herald... io
United Features Syndicates. _______._.___
Washington! News: =.= osu ne i.
Cleveland News... anise ities ohes
United Press Associations... .._____________
Associated - Press. o-oo lS Seg sa
Associated Press foo enn asi
Washington News sll Seis wrt ana niiby
Associated Press... oo on
Beloli Baily News, 21 20808 E08 20 oi.
Universal Service, Seattle Post-Intelligencer .
Washingion Post. ni 0 2 gui es
Chicago Dally News...=.7 = ode guid
United Press Associations. _________________
International News Service. ___.____________
Worcester Gazette, Lowell Sun, Worcester
Telegram,
710 Fourteenth Street.
1746 Lamont Street.
1225 Thirtieth Street.
3618 T Street.
2808 T'wenty-seventh Street.
Boulevard Apartments.
307 Carroll Avenue, Takoma
Park, Md.
818 Seventeenth Street.
Clarendon, Va.
809 T'wenty-first Street.
509 South Lee Street, Alex-
andria, Va.
The Woodward.
4909 Thirteenth Street.
1843 Mintwood Place.
Wardman Park Hotel.
1763 Columbia Road.
Shoreham Hotel.
1212 L Street.
4203 Sixteenth Street.
3308 N. Street.
3224 Cathedral Avenue.
1616 Sixteenth Street.
2701 Fourteenth Street.
4408 Volta Place.
1633 Q Street.
2100 Nineteenth Street.
2310 Connecticut Avenue.
The Benedick.
2106 R Street.
1704 Sixteenth Street.
1827 Nineteenth Street.
1746 K Street.
3606 Van Ness Street.
1918 Biltmore Street.
401 Twenty-third Street.
225 Marion Avenue, Claren-
don, Va.
310 Evarts Street NE.
1823 Twenty-third Street.
1513 Spring Place.
3446 Connecticut Avenue.
1718 Newton Street NE.
6004 Thirty-fourth Place.
828 Eighteenth Street.
1629 Columbia Road.
3608 S Street.
Wardman Park Hotel.
800 Sixteenth Street.
818 Eighteeth Street.
15 Dupont Circle.
2820 Dumbarton Avenue.
101 Spring Street, Chevy
Chase, .
7002 Connecticut Avenue,
Chevy Chase, Md
1221 K Street.
3700 Massachusetts Avenue.
4521 Lowell Street.
456 N Street SW.
1208 Gallatin Street.
3100 Forty-fourth Street.
5429 Forty-first Street.
2920 Ontario Road.
Hotel Roosevelt.
912 Nineteenth Street.
George Washington Inn.
Press Galleries   585
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued
Name Paper represented Residence
*Riley, Nelson J... _______..
Riley, Rockford. ._._...._.__
*Rippey, Stephens
Riseling, J. J. W
*Robertson, Nathan W_..__.
Roddan, B. L.. lt eiiaaa..
| Roosa, Floyd 8. cieonimics
*Royle, Jonathan Oooccaaa-e
*Ruth, Carli ll oaclaa.
*Qack,; Teo RIAL. LLL 2005
*Sartwell, Franklin G-..-.__
Saunders, Richard E________
*Schroeder, K. M ________.._
Scott, David B21 ti
Sell, ‘Kurt’ Guo ii tna ae
*Selvage, James P___________
*Shaeffer, Chas. P____......
Sherinan, ‘Allap- i... 05
Short, Joseph HI122 210 Sane
Sloan, Kermit. o.oo.
*||Simms, William Philip. _
[|[Simpson, Kirke L
*Smith, Car
*Smith, Choos Brooks...
*Smith, Charles Oliver_..__.
Smith, Charles Shoe.
Smith, Denys H.-H >. ">
Smith, Erith er
Smith, Frank M..._.......
*Smith, Hal Harrison....___
Smith, Kingsbury... .....
*Smith, Boberly B: soo i
Smith, Bussell...cceeeeviee...
*Smith, Stanley H..oeeano..
nurs ONT. a
Snure John, ir. cate
Speers, Leland C___
Stafford, Lawrence_-
*Stedman, Alfred D
Stephenson, Francis M_____
Stevenson, Charles M______.
Stern, Max. =. i 00
*Sterner, Charles J__________
[Stevens, H.C
*Stewart, Charles P.________
|[Stofer, Allred 7.0
*Stokes, Thomas L..........
*Stone, Walker... ....
*Storm, Frederick A______._
*Stration, CUf 2...
*Straus, Michael W._.__...__
Strayer, Martha 2. i...
Strout, Richard L,._.._......
Associated Press) Ul LO 0 HE.
Washington NewS ..asaas. 000 L200 00 UL
Watertown Times, Jamestown Post, El-
mira Star-Gazette, Williamsport Sun,
New Brunswick Home News.
Washington Post... Loli. Li. in
Associated Press...ea-e-aiidooi Dil 8
Universal Service, Los Angeles Examiner...
Universal Service... i. ill ol.
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Business News Service. occeeooo__________
Toledo Blade, Newark Star Eagle, Duluth
Herald, Toledo Times, Duluth News-
Tribune.
Pittsburgh Press. iliac Loa li000 00
‘Washington Times
New Orleans Times-Picayune
ASS0Ciated Press... oc inna
Sandusky Register, Sandusky Star-Journal _ _
‘Wolff’s Telegraph Bureau of Berlin. ________
Associated Press. coe cmannn aan SL DOT IE
Associated Press... oo ooo lili Din
Consolidated Press Association...___________
Associated Press i VoL LOI IRIN
Central News of America... __..__________
Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance .______
Assoeiated Press. Zot tl doo Clo
Oregon Journal, Portland. ....._____________
Wheeling Intelligencer, Wheeling News,
Parkersburg Sentinel, Fairmont West
Virginian, Martinsburg Journal, Elkins
Intermountain, Welsh News, Hinton
News, Point Pleasant Register.
Vancouver Province, Edmonton Journal,
Winnipeg Tribune, Hamilton Spectator,
Ottawa Citizen, Calgary Herald.
Associated Press. cocoa i SS
T.ondon Morning Post... ool. 0 Ji00 0
Vancouver Province, Edmonton Journal,
Winnipeg Tribune, Hamilton Spectator,
Ottawa Citizen, Calgary Herald.
Washington Times. atte. Ju JIL Ui
New York Times._..._.. CE LL
Philadelphia Public Ledger, New York
Evening Post.
Altoona Mirror, Lancaster Intelligencer-
Journal, Morning Call, Scranton Times,
Reading Times, South Bend Tribune,
Fort Wayne News-Sentinel, Cedar Rapids
Gazette.
Traffic World, Chicago....-..c loo 5 U0
New York Herald Tribune, Des Moines
Register, Davenport Times.
Washington. Rimes: or oo 2 Bo =i a
New: Yorke Times. .0. 0 eas ool
New Mexico State Tribune (Albuquerque),
San Diego Sun, San Francisco News.
Wall Street. Journal. cerca 3
Minneapolis Journal 0. orem ecnrnrian aa
Central Press Association... ____________
Birmingham News, Montgomery Advertiser.
United Press Associations... ___..._________
Baltimore Post, Indianapolis Times, Evans-
ville Press, Buffalo, Times.
United Press Associations... cov .i.
Kansas City Kansan, Topeka Daily Capital,
Kansas City Star.
Universal Service, Chicago Herald-Exam-
iner.
Washington News... cian aaa
Christian Science Monitor...coeeeeoo ina.
Washington Post. t..00 aaa iniic is
Washington Post... oi. onitaoao toon ais
Valley Vista Apartments.
3500 Fourteenth Street.
250 Farragut Street.
2608 Park Place.
116 Shepherd Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
1735 De Sales Street.
2400 Thirteenth Street.
5 Primrose Street, Chevy
Chase, Md.
4721 Blagden Terrace.
3014 Woodland Drive.
3309 Wooldey Road.
31 Michigan Avenue NE.
3618 Porter Street.
513 Whittier Street.
1332 I Street.
Racquet Club.
110 Sunnyside Road, Silver
Spring, Md
Ontario Apartments.
2009 Eye Street.
747 Princeton Place.
1763 Q Street.
2101 Connecticut Avenue.
2815 Wooldey Road.
3541 R Street.
1650 Harvard Street.
3618 Rittenhouse Street.
1808 Eye Street.
1343 Connecticut Avenue.
3818 Rittenhouse Street.
2115 Pennsylvania Avenue.
1824 Jefferson Place.
Ventosa Apartment.
3104 P Street.
24 Melrose Avenue, Be-
thesda, Md.
209 Spruce Avenue, Takoma
Park, Md.
Silver Spring, Md.
1632 L: Street.
The Chastleton.
3516 W Place.
131 Carroll Avenue, Takoma
Park, Md
2000 Connecticut Avenue.
1611 Connecticut Avenue.
Hotel Hamilton.
525 Rittenhouse Street.
The Chastleton.
1900 S Street.
7705 Thirteenth Street.
3718 T Street.
1739 Connecticut Avenue.
Westchester Apartments.
The Burlington.
2235 Q Street.
922 Seventeenth Street.
3815 Alton Place.
6308 Oakridge Avenue,
Chevy Chase, Md.
586 Congressional Directory
MEMBERS OF THE PRESS ENTITLED TO ADMISSION—Continued
Name Paper represented Residence
*Qullivan, Mark... i. New York Herald Tribune Syndicate ..__._ 2308 Wyoming Avenue.
*HSuter, John To... i.0sat. Associated Press... ...ccoenlli goonmaloc fd. 4119 Connecticut Avenue.
*Suydam, Henry......._____
Sweinhart, Henry Li. __._____
Taft, Hulbert, jr. .---
Taishoff, Sal. wih
Parry, Gali enconia. 3
*Thistlethwaite, Marks...
*Thompson, H. O
*Thornburgh, Robert S._.__
*Thurston, Elliott L______._
*Timmons, Bascom N._____
*Todd, Laurence. --...._-..
*Tacker, Ray T.veau.sias.
“Tupper, RB. W..ce fossi.
Turner, Richard! L..-.o...50.
*Trussell, Charles P_._._____
Van Tine, Ronald. coo __
*Vernon, Leroy T.. oo...
*Vosburgh, Frederick G_.___
‘Waldman, Emerson_....____
Wildman, Seymour___._____
*Wallen, Theodore C___.___
Walsh, Burke... jc. i080 N
*Waltman, Franklyn, jr..___
*+Ward, Harry ....e-.-<
*Warner, Albert L.___
*Watkins, Charles D...____.
|Watkins, Everett C....__._
*Watson, Kenneth R________
Welle, Frank RE
*Wight, William...
Wile, Frederic William._.___
*Williams, Gladstone...
Williams, James T., jro.._._-
*Williamson, C. P
Wilson, Daane....couwonlitl
*Wilson, Lyle C..........-_
Wilson, Vylle Poe.....co:.:
*Wimer, Arthur C.ad:: i
*Wood, Lewis._....___-
*'Wooton, Paul... co:
*Wright, Clarence M
*Wright, James L......._c..2
* Yates, PankiCuo. ois toas
Brooklyn Daily Eagle... lo. co civil
Havas News AgeNnCy accommo oon
-| Cincinnati Times-Star..  ._.c.oceii ooo...
Consolidated Press Association.
Wall Streat Journal. cei iia hs
Indianapolis News, Fort Wayne Journal
Gazette, Evansville Courier Journal,
Terre Haute Tribune.
United Press Associations... _.o..___..__.
International News Service. ______...______
Philadelphia Record, Boston Post. ..._._....
Houston Chronicle, Cleveland News, ‘San
Antonio Express, Dallas Times-Herald,
Tulsa World, New Orleans States.
Federated Press, Telegraph Agency of the
Soviet Union.
New York World Telegram, Buffalo Times.
Central News of America... _..._._.__
Associated! Press: suuvust-clisonnie fo atnia Je.
Baltimore Sun... cue mtdurbs Jaton i
United Press Associations... ooo.
Chicago Daily News... cui fedsiagas io
Associated Press. ce ued. conn Suni bwiensor
Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance--_-.__.
New York Daily Worker... cc... _oieotn
New York Herald Tribune .....__.._._._____
..C.W. C. News Service. .-.o< badzinone i=
Baltimore: Sul... .boaldssst odarseiD suse scly
International News Service. __.____.__._.____
New York Herald Tribune... .._._.._____.____
Associated Press. c--wioniiniil -  sodennainba-
Indianapolis Star... coowouil tulad commie
Cleveland Press, Cincinnati Post, Toledo
News-Bee, Columbus Citizen, Akron
Press, Youngstown Telegram, Pittsburgh
Press.
Buffalo Evening News... oo ocoooiiocainenan
Reuters (144.), London. cnet. cucsrmmmen =
Associated Press. io. codicil moms mime
Philadelphia Public Ledger, Philadelphia
Evening Public Ledger, New York Eve-
ning Post.
Associated Press... ccct-cureli samen tosmmteat
Japan Advertiser (Tokyo, Japan), South
Bend News-Times, Joliet Herald-News,
Washington Evening Star.
Miami Herald, Detroit Times, Pittsburgh
Sun- Telegraph, Atlanta Constitution,
Sacramento Bee.
Universal Service... ..oouuilr lend a iboats
Agsocinted Press. oo uso eis
United Press Associations... oo. __....
United Press Associations.....-z: o-oo --
Washington Post... ..... ooepilll rode smd it
Hartford Courant, New Castle News_.._._.._
oli New: York Times. ....... Laaweel sanaso-Ha at
New Orleans Times-Picayune..________.____
agsecktedi Bross: cc nr Lh)
Buffalo Evening News_.___.
International News Service. LEE
Washington Star. atm cain raat alt
1812 Nineteenth Street.
1632 P Street.
Fairfax Hotel.
5631 Third Street.
3427 Thirteenth Street.
200 Holly Avenue, Takoma
Park, Md.
2301 Cathedral Avenue.
1414 Chapin Street.
2907 Q Street.
La Salle Apartments.
3738 Huntington Street.
6308 Hillcrest Place, Chevy
Chase, Md
2121 H Street.
2150 Pennsylvania Avenue.
4900 Western Avenue.
1101 Euclid Street.
2922 Newark Street.
2208 Thirty-eighth Street.
1215 Sixteenth Street.
7206 Alaska Avenue.
1013 Upshur Street.
Alban Towers.
4220 Fourth Street.
2938 Twenty-eighth Street.
123 Jackson Avenue, Univer-
sity Park, Md.
Cathedral Mansions.
Cavalier Hotel.
3808 Legation Street.
2848 Twenty-eighth Street.
1612 Twentieth Street.
Westchester Apartments.
107 Sunnyside Road, Silver
Spring, Md.
3313 Sixteenth Street.
1109 Sixteenth Street.
1900 Q Street.
9301 Montgomery Avenue.
1102 Sixteenth Street.
Westchester Apartments.
1731 Twenty-first Street.
3110 Wisconsin Avenue.
Shoreham Hotel.
3016 Tilden Street.
6711 North Central Avenue.
3115 Forty-fourth Street.
Falls Church, Va.
1834 Jefferson Place.
SR
t | i i
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED IN PRESS GALLERIES
(Phones: House press gallery, NAtional 5540: Senate press gallery, N Ational 0618)
[NOTE.—e., evening; m., morning; S., Sunday]
Paper represented Name Office
Akron Beacon-Journal__________________
Akron PressiesS.youioi so tobi ool
Allentown Call i(m:). sacll 2d...
Alton Telegraph
AltoonaiMirror«(e.)- colic 10h oo. ]
Anderson (S. C.) Independent__________
AnnarboriNews (e)ii. oll ena
Appleton (Wis.) Post-Crescent (e.).____
Arizona Dally Stars ooaolc 008 oo.
Asheville (N. C.) Citizen-Times
Associated Press
Atlanta Constitution’. .o.co coo
Atlanta Journal (e. S.)
Augusta Chreniele. cioos ld ogi
Automotive Daily News
Baltimore Evening Sun
Baltimore Post (6: )u.iciiien dite aan
Radford E. Mobley_________
Kenneth R. Watson________
Ned Brooks..t0 oc - .......
Walter Brown So: .......
MarkiPoote.02 00 Lo...
Dorothea J. Lewis__________
Jesse SC Cattrall ii oo
Walter:Brown i... .........
ByroniPriee. 200 oo
Edward J. Dufly..........
Kirke I. Simpson... ........
John RiSuterciil coon
Francis M. Stephenson_____
Charles D. Watkins____
D. Harold Oliver. __
Richard L. Turner____
W.B. Ragsdale. _...........
C.B. Dickson) oi.
Charles Stephenson Smith __
James:P. Howe i. ____.. _
Frankl: Weller >... __...
AR. George ooo.
S.:BBledsoe i: i... =
James'Cope.. 2h... i.
James P. Selvage____________
H.C. -Plummertisc
CP. Williamson... .........
James W. Douthat _________
Bess Farman... __.__.
K.M. Schroeder-.—._._.____
William'Wight.._ ._.__._.___
Reid:Monfort.. ...o _.._.._.
John FB. Chester..0..........
Clarence M. Wright________
B.BJHarper. 250...
Chas. P. Shaeffer___________
J-H:Jenking. «io. o.oo.
Melbourne Christerson_____
Nathan W. Robertson.._____
Wd. Beale, jlo...
Don, Fi Kirkley. ii. ........
Frederick G. Vosburgh_____
BiB. Colton ii: oo oo.
George C. Jordan.
Nelson J. Riley... --.._..
Joseph-L, Miller i. _._.__..
Joseph Hi.:Short..... .........
Sigrid*Arnes ili) oo
Robert C. Anderson. _______
Donald Cameron_.__________
Elton'C. Pay... Ci oo... 0
Edward Kennedy
Gerald Milley Zoic.
B. L. Livingstone___________
Roy F. Hendrickson. ______
William T'. MecCleery
FB. Marbutoiiis to
Gladstone Williams_________
Ralph Kelley_______________
Russell Kent i: 2.
Frederick R. Barkley...
George W. Combs__________
HemryM. Hyde: ..... =
Walker Stone.™..............
505 Albee Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1322 New York Avenue.
505 Albee Building.
505 Albee Building.
505 Albee Building.
1054 National Press Building.
927 Colorado Building.
225 Kellogg Building.
999 National Press Building.
1054 National Press 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.
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.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
Star Building.
1246 National Press Building.
1246 National Press Building.
1261 National Press Building.
410 Bond Building. Building.
1171 National Press Building.
1214 National Press Building.
1214 National Press Building.
1214 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
587
588 Congressional Directory
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued
Paper represented Name |
|
Office
Baltimore Sunmm.Y- ooh
Bay City Times: (eS). inca soils
Beloit Daily News. _
Binghamton Press... ....cielisic  o,
Birmingham Age-Herald (m.).__._______
Birmingham News (€)-.-_ o.oo...
Birmingham:Pest (e) >. =.
Boise Statesman (m.).-..c:-zciemen an.
Border Cities Star, Windsor, Ontario (e.)-
Boston Evening Transeript.._.________.
Boston Globe (m.e.).. 5. coo
Boston Herald (m.) =. .z: zou. b. oa.
Boston Traveler... ......c. tection
Bridgeport Post (In..€.). = coo.ii
Bridgeport Telegram.____________________
Bridgeport Times-Star. nooo nano
Brockton Enterprise (€.)- o-oo ____
Brooklyn Daily Eagle (e. S.)__..._______
Brooklyn Daily Times (€.)-cocoeeo_o___.
Buffalo Times (e. SY e200 oi
Business News Service
Butler (Pa.) Eagle__
Calgary Herald (€.). orto rim-aeebonenasin:
Camden Courier and Post (m.e.)_______
Canadian Press... it. masts oe tssew
Cedar Rapids Gazette... ________
Central Press Association. ._.___________
Central News of America. _._.__________
Charleston Evening Post... ...._._______
Charleston News and Courier._._.______
Charleston (W. Va.) Daily Mail________
Charleston (W. Va.) Gazette..__________
Charlotte News. 1. sre cor wonit asin.
Charlotte Observer (m.)-- cco ___
Chattanooga News (€.) eee ______
Chattanooga Times. (my...
Chicago Daily News (.) coco eeeoo___
Chicago Hearld-Examiner___.___._______
Chicago Journal of Commerce...________
Chicago Tribune Press Service__...__..__
Christian Science Monitor, Boston______
Cincinnati Enquirer (m.).. ooo.
Cincinnati Post (€.). 2 icitvmedeasann-
Cincinnati Times-Star (€.)..._____..____
Clearwater Sun... ....._.__. Bl
Cleveland News ..c ......ocmadmitos ot oman
Cleveland Plain Dealer (m.)..__.___._____
Cleveland Presse eee. cnn
J. Fred Bsgary: oo... -.
Franklyn Waltman, jr______
M. Farmer Murphy. ___.____
Dewey L. Fleming __________
Charles P. Trussell
Mark Foote! 5.7:
Henry D. Ralph. = _
Tem Hutton 1.00 Jw vl]
George Sanford Holmes. ___.
Haorey J. Brown: Lo...
Leland S. Conness_._._.______
Oliver McKee, jr.._________
Charles S. Groves_.______.__
Carter Tlelda civ: L.  ...
Elliott L. Thurston. __._____
Ralph Coolidge Mulligan. _
George H. Manning_________
George H. Manning_________
Isabel Kinnear_..__._________
Buckley S. Griffin. _________
Henry Suydam... -.......
Leolgani rool
Myron BH. Bento...
James F. Doyle... ..._______
James L.. Wright... ........
Arthur. Well. inne
J-CuRoyals. oo leanne.
James J. Butlers. o.oo.
Charles Oliver Smith. ______
Erith MacDonald Smith.___
George H. Manning_________
Kenneth S. Clark___________
William MePeak.........__.
Charles P. Stewart_._______.
Brost A. Knorr. oo...
Stuart-FHayes. 3. 2. .....
Felix-Cotten. 4-0 aceee ae
BRB. VW. TUDDPEL. cout nmennnin
Kermit Sloan. ii. oad...
P. H:sMeGowsn. i...
K. Foster Murray -_....___.
Leland S. ConnesS_.__._____
Ambrose Collier__._________
John F.Cellier.o..o. -.......
George B. Bryant, jr..______
Jesse S. Cottrell .___.________
John Exwindic io...
Russell Kent...i..0......_
Arthur W. Crawford._______
Arthur S. Henning..________
Guy D. McKinney. ______.__
John Herrick
Genevieve Forbes Herrick. _
George A. Barnes_._.___.___
John Boeettiger-...c......_...
Erwin D. Canham__._______
Richard: Li Strout... _.
Mary Hornaday... _..______
Joseph:C. Harsch...
George Howland Cox_______
Edwin W. Gableman_______
Hulbert; Taft jr-ouil....
Frank A. Kennedy. __..__.__
Bascom N. Timmons.__.____
William Edward Jamieson...
A. Milburn Petty... __.
‘Walker S. Buel .__._._______
Paul Hodges.io.iliil........
1214 National Press Building.
1214 National Press Building.
1214 National Press Building.
1214 National Press.
1214 National Press Building.
927 Colorado Building.
1050 National Press Building.
National Press Building.
National Press Building.
1261 National Press Building.
1261 National Press Building.
1261 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
810 Transportation Building.
1360 National Press Building.
911 Colorado Building.
307 Albee Building.
1252 National Press Building.
1241 National Press Building.
1361 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
920 Colorado Building.
920 Colorado Building.
901 Colorado Building.
901 Colorado Building.
1524 1. Street.
1228 National Press Building.
1207 National Press Building.
1207 National Press Building.
1207 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
936 Shoreham Building.
1157 National Press Building.
1044 National Press Building.
1044 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
505 Albee Building.
1900 S Street.
205 Mills Building.
205 Mills Building.
205 Mills Building.
205 Mills Building.
205 Mills Building.
205 Mills Building.
410 Bond Building.
985 National Press Building.
1360 National Press Building.
425 Colorado Building.
425 Colorado Building.
1232 National Press Building.
999 National Press Building.
1228 National Press Building.
1261 National Press Building.
423 Washington Building.
423 Washington Building.
423 Washington Building.
1317-1321 H Street.
1058 National Press Building.
815 Albee Building.
815 Albee Building.
815 Albee Building.
815 Albee Building.
815 Albee Building.
815 Albee Building.
1287-93 National Press Building.
1287-93 National Press Building.
1287-93 National Press Building.
1287-93 National Press Building.
1287-93 National Press Building.
45 Post Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1322 New York Avenue.
1393 National Press Building.
1393 National Press Building.
1863 Wyoming Avenue.
1253-55 National Press Building.
1253-55 National Press Building.
1253-55 National Press Building.
611 Albee Building.
611 Albee Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1322 New York Avenue,
Press Galleries 589
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued
Paper represented Name Office
Cologne Gazette. Loi. ola me ooo...
Columbia (S. C.) State (m.)- ________.___
Columbus Citizen (e.) ooo
Consolidated Press Association. .._..____
Daily Metal Trade (€.) ooo...
Daily News Record (New York) (m.)___
Dallas Evening Journal... ...__________
Dallas News: (my) tooeisa th ito oo
Dallas Times-Herald (e. S.) ._.._________
Danville (Va.) Register (m.)____________
Davenport Democrat (e.) .__....________
Davenport, Times (ei)-c-lo tit noo a
Denver Poste) obuedol: lite cunans
Denver Rocky Mountain News (m.)____
Des Moines Register and Tribune (m. e.)
Detroit Free: Press... 0...
Detroit News (@.i8) aor sin =
Detroit Times. coe lata Fo Sli deans
Duluth-Heraldie) coo ie ii os
Duluth News-Tribune. ...._....___.__._
Edmonton Journal (e.)_._.._____________
Elkins Intermountain
Elmira Star-Gazette (e.).__
El Paso Herald-Post (e.) «ini oceee
Evansville Courier io ournal (m.e.)._____
Evansville Pressi(e. 8S.) oui oan
Exchange Telegraph Co. (Ltd.), London,
England.
Fairmont West Virginian_ ______________
Federated: Press: Loc. iol uit oo.
Flint Journali(e-8) cif nails cies
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette (m.)_______
Fort Wayne News-Sentinel .____________
Fort Worth Press (e.)-2-.oco
Fort Worth Star-Telegram (m. e. S.)____
Freeport Journal-Standard______________
Galveston News (m.)
Gary (Ind.) Post-Tribune_______.______
Grand Rapids Press (€.)-._..-________..
Great Falls (Mont.) Tribune____________
Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Gazette (e.).___
Greensboro Daily News (m.)____________
Greenville (S. C.) News (m.).___________
Greenville (S. C.) Piedmont. ___________
Hamilton Spectator (e.).__._.____________
Harrisburg News (e) ol. ioc...
Harrisburg Patriot (m.). oo... oi
Hartlord:Courantdm:)oc.Co ou oo
Hartlord Times: cio cin ll...
Haverhill Gazette (e.)......_.___.________
Havas News Agency... _..__.___.__._._
HintoniNewso-d Loaudior ir oo = =
Holyoke Pranseript-oi ci iwi ©
Houston Chronicle (e. S.).______________
Houston Presse.) obocc a li dono.
Hudson Observer, Hoboken (e.)_._.___.___
Indianapolis News (€:) «oc cocomooo oo
Dr. George Barthelme______
P.H.-McGowan... .........
Ned Brooks..o i iioceannaa-
David Lawrence. ___________
Horace:Bpes. 5... aaa...
William Hard i. .0..nee oe
Katharine Dayton__________
Sol Taisheff =. .cott nen
C.G.aMarshall:. 1 0...
E. Worth Higgins___________
Fred:A.Bmery.............
Dean Dinwoodey--_..____.__
PB. YaHall ssa in.
George E. Doying.._._.______
ARS. Flemming... ova
Allan Sherman._____________
Lynne M. Lamm __________.
John: OC. Atchison. .........
Russell: Kent, ovation ao
Mark L. Goodwin. ______.__.
Parke Bogle. o..il.c.inosin
Mark L. Goodwin. _________
Parke. Engle... oct oocvvnn..
Bascom N. Timmons..______
Robert Mb. Lynn...
George F. Authier___________
John Snure.i. fai oo...
Charles O. Gridley_._._______
George Sanford Holmes_____
John'Snare ci icy ooo
BS. Leggett caadi i oocuse
Jay G. Hayden ii: onion
Karl W. Miller. coin
Bertram Benediet___________
Charles Oliver Smith_______
Erith MacDonald Smith____
Charles Brooks Smith_______
Stephens Rippey._._-_______
Marshall MeNeil ___________
Mark Thistlethwaite._______
Walker Stone.......cn anos
John Boyle. coin ooo.
Alfred F. Flynn
Charles Brooks Smith_______
Laurence Todd
Mark Thistlethwaite___._____
Russell Smith
Marshall McNeil... ______
Charles S. Hayden.________.
William McPeak___________
Mark L. Goodwin. _._______
Maxine Davis... ..... 5
Mark Footer ci...
George B. Bryant, jr._______
Ruby A. Black
‘W. A. Hildebrand __.___.____
‘Walter Brown... oo...
Walter Brown... ..........
Charles Oliver Smith_______
Erith MacDonald Smith____
George H. Manning_._______
George H. Manning_________
Arthur C..Wimer.............
Bulkley S. Griffin.__________
Bulkley 8. Griffin___________
Jean:Gaehon..il i..........
Henry L. Sweinhart________
Charles Brooks Smith_______
Isabel Kinnear. ._.__________
Bascom N. Timmons. ______
William Edward Jamieson __
Marshall McNeil... ________
Robert M. Lynn:i .. 0.0.
James P. Hornaday.___.______
Mark Thistlethwaite________
Frederick H., Morhart, jr.___
1724 Seventeenth Street.
410 Bond Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1322 New York Avenue.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
The LaSalle Apartments.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
2201 M Street.
1050 National Press Building.
505 Union Trust Building.
505 Union Trust Building
620 Albee Building.
620 Albee Building.
620 Albee Building.
620 Albee Building.
1255 National Press Building.
1196 National Press Building.
721 Albee Buidling.
1007 National Press Building.
1225 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1007 National Press Building.
985 National Press Building.
904 Colorado Building.
904 Colorado Building.
1246 National Press Building.
1365 National Press Building.
1365 National Press Building.
839 Seventeenth Street.
839 Seventeenth Street.
1044 National Press Building.
1044 National Press Building.
1650 Harvard Street.
1157 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
605 Albee Building
1322 New York Avenue.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1650 Harvard Street.
234 Maryland Building.
927 Colorado Building.
605 Albee Building.
505 Albee Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
999 National Press Building.
505 Albee Building.
620 Albee Building.
1235 Thirty-first Street.
927 Colorado Building.
1232 National Press Building.
225 Kellogg Building.
623 Albee Building.
1054 National Press Building.
1054 National Press Building.
1044 National Press Building.
1044 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
1241 National Press Building.
920 Colorado Building.
920 Colorado Building. ;
1269 National Press Building.
1269 National Press Building.
1650 Harvard Street.
920 Colorado Building.
1255 National Press Building.
1255 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1196 National Press Building.
605 Albee Building.
605 Albee Building.
605 Albee Building.
590 Congressional Directory
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued
Paper represented Name Office
Indianapolis Starsoiaratt Lol. ~ 0
Indianapolis Times (8.) oo —_.____
International News Service. ._________.
Jackson City Patriot (e. S.).o_._.__.
Jacksonville (Fla.) Journal _ _ __________
Jamestown Morning Post_________.______
Jamestown (N. Y.) Evening Journal ____
Japan Advertiser (Tokyo, Japan) (m.)..
Jersey Journal, Jersey City, N
Jewish Daily Forward ___________.___._._
Johnson City Chronicle (m.)_._____._____
Johnson City Staff-News (e) ..-___._____
Johnstown Tribune (e.).________________
Joliet Herald-News (m. e. S
Kalamazoo Gazette (e. S.)_.___________._
Kansas City Journal-Post_______________
Kansas City Kansas (e. S.)_.._.______-..
Kansas City Star (e.), Times (m.)._.____
Knoxville Journal tl 0 0 Cocoon
Knoxville News-Sentinel (e. S.)__.._____
La Crosse (Wis.) Tribune (e. S.)..._-___
La Democracia (San Juan, P. R.)____.__
Lancaster Intelligencer-Journal (m.)..___
Lewiston Sun (e.)
Lexington (Ky.) Leader (e.)---.__--_____
Little Rock Democrat (6. S.)____________
London: Morning Post or. Ll oo ox00z
London®Pimes. 2.10 J F327: wet canal:
Long Beach Press-Telegram______.______
Los Angeles Examiner__________________
Los Angeles Times (m.)___._____-_.____
Louisville Courier-Journal. __ ___________
Louisville! Times. Uo 0 0 Son aioais
Lowell Sun. Doi CoEIUIS) Vn oo oavs
Lynn Ttemn 20 Ul lo Poll S80 oa
Macon’News:(e. S8.). Jo 82 cee ooo.
Macon Telegraph’ (m.y......__.._ _-____..
Madison (Wis.) Capital Times. ____.____
Madison (Wis.) State Journal (e. S.)___.
Manitoba Free Press. oc ccaeoo_________
Martinsburg Journal... _____--_.
Mason City Globe Gazette... ________-_
Memphis Press-Scimitar (6.)__-..__.____
Memphis Commercial Appeal __________
Miami Daily News
Miami Herald (m.)....
Milwaukee Sentinel (m.
Minneapolis Journal (e.S.)._____________
Minneapolis: Star (6. yoo. oo oo ooo
Minneapolis Tribune (m.e.)____.____._.___
Mitchell (S. D.) Republican. ___________
Moline Dispateh (0). 0. Wii Joiaccuan
Montgomery Advertiser (m)._.__.______
Montreal:Star(e.) ooo nll fi a sak
Muscatine Journal (€.).___.____________
Muskegon Chronicle (.)--_.________.____
National Catholic Welfare Council News
Service.
Nashville Banner (0.5)...
Nashville Tennessean (m. €.)_ _-_......_
National Socialist Press service...
Everett C.. Watkins_._______
‘Walker Stone. ._.__________.
George R. Holmes __________
William K. Hutchinson_____
William S. Neal ________.____
A.T.Newberry..... __..._.
Robert S. Thornburgh______
George BE. Durno.......____.
Edward O. Mayl.._________
Horry Wardis Joc.
H.C:Montee.t! oo...
Edward B. Lockett ________
Josep K. Smith... __._
Stuart Godwin._______ =k
Panl:O.-Yates...-.
Price Friedheim_ 2. | _______
Quentin Reynolds. .__.___.__
Dorothy Duecas_.___________
Mark Foote... ... _..-.....
Frank A. Kennedy _...______
Stephens Rippey.-_-__.____.._
Ruby A. Black... .....:::
Frederic William Wile______
Douglas B. Cornell __________
Benjamin Meiman.__________
William P. Helm... ___..____
CHL Stratton: (00s 00000
Theodore C. Alford. ______._
Cli Stratton... i. ac
Joh D. Brwin._...._
Marshall McNeil... ________
Dorothea J. Lewis. _....__._.
Ruby A. Black... ......::-
Russell Smith__________._____
Bulkley S. Griffin 157 a
John TT, Collier__._ 3
Charles S. Hayden. _._ wa
Denys H. H. Smith...
Sir Willmott Lewis. ________
William McPeak_____.______
Kyle DSPalmer. i... 000
Warren B. Francis...
Wirie' Bell. 0. iil aaa
Lorenzo W. Martin___.______
Mrs. George F. Richards...
Buckley S. Griffin
Paul Mallon... ooo...
Radford E. Mobley...
Ruby A. Black... .......-.
J.-B. MeGeachy.......-..--
Charles Brooks Smith_._____
RubyAitBlaek. ll... .... 0.
Marshall McNeil ___._______
John DD. Brwin.. |. _........
Frank A. Kennedy. .___..____
Gladstone Williams_________
George F. Authier__._____..
William McPeak____..___._
Charles O. Gridley..._._._____
Russell’ Rent. 00...
1397 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
1162 National Press Building.
927 Colorado Building.
1669 Columbia Road.
1157 National Press Building.
225 Kellogg Building.
1220 Shoreham Building.
1157 National Press Building.
4203 Sixteenth Street.
1410 H Street.
1410 H Street.
506, 1406 G- Street.
1220 Shoreham Building.
927 Colorado Building.
1410 H Street.
The Burlington.
610 Albee Building.
610 Albee Building.
1228 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
225 Kellogg Building.
225 Kellogg Building.
505 Albee Building.
920 Colorado Building.
425 Colorado Building.
425 Colorado Building.
999 National Press Building.
1343 Connecticut Avenue.
1605 New Hampshire Avenue.
505 Albee Building.
1317-1321 H Street.
1217 National Press Building.
1217 National Press Building.
1211 National Press Building.
1213 National Press Building.
George Washington Inn.
920 Colorado Building.
509 South Lee Street, Alexan-
dria, Va.
410 Bond Building.
410 Bond Building.
505 Albee Building.
318 Kellogg Building.
710 Fourteenth Street.
1650 Harvard Street.
225 Kellogg Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1228 National Press Building.
1669 Columbia Road.
1246 National Press Building.
1363 National Press Building.
814 Albee Building.
814 Albee Building.
932 Shoreham Building.
932 Shoreham Building.
721 Albee Building.
505 Albee Building.
1225 National Press Building.
1261 National Press Building.
1261 National Press Building.
710 Fourteenth Street.
225 Kellogg Building.
927 Colorado Building.
1312 Massachusetts Avenue.
1312 Massachusetts Avenue.
999 National Press Building.
1228 National Press Building.
2039 New Hampshire Avenue.
| '
|
3
bi
Press Galleries 591
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued
i Paper represented Name Office
Newark Evening News... ooo... Robert'R. Lane............. 903 Colorado Building.
Newark Star Eagle (e.)- Carl D. Ruth.__ _.| 1365 National Press Building.
Newburyport News____.__ Isabel Kinnear. ..: :i........ 920 Colorado Building.
New Britain Herald (e.) - - ooo... James J. Butler... ......_... 1157 National Press Building.
New Brunswick Home News___________ Stephens Rippey..--....____ 1157 National Press Building.
New Castle (Pa.) News (e.) o-oo. Arthur C. Wimer.__________ 1241 National Press Building.
} New Haven Register____________________ Bulkley S. Griffin___________ 920 Colorado Building.
i New Mexico State Tribune, Albu- | Max Stern_.________________ 1322 New York Avenue.
querque.
New Orleans Item-Tribune (6. m. S.)_._| J. Fred Essary._____._._______ 1214 National Press Building.
George W. Combs__________ 1214 National Press Building.
New Orleans States (e. S.) coco Bascom N. Timmons._._.____ 1 1255 National Press Building.
Richard S. Blaisdell .________ 1255 National Press Building.
New Orleans Time-Picayune (m. S.)__._| Paul Wooton_______________ 1252 National Press Building.
{ Richard E. Saunders_.._____ 1252 National Press Building
| Newport (R 1.) Daily News (e)_____._..__ Clarence F. Linz... ._______ 621 Albee Building.
Bertram FP. Linz. ~.._ _.. ____ 621 Albee Building.
Newport News Press (m.)_______________ Robert M. Lynn._...._..... 1196 National Press Building.
{ Newspaper Enterprise Association. _____ Rodney Dutcher. ___________ 1322 New York Avenue.
X New York American (m.).___________.___ William P. Flythe._________ 1317-1321 H Street.
New York Daily News... ____________.__ Dickiiee. ibid National Press Building.
New York Daily Worker_ __.______._____ Seymour Waldman. ________ ;
New York Evening Post_._______________ Robert B. Smith. ._____._. 1200 National Press Building.
§ ‘Warren Wheaton. ____._._____ 1200 National Press Building.
p Harold Brayman... 1200 National Press Building.
| New York Herald Tribune... _......_.. Theodore C. Wallen________ 1279-85 National Press Building.
Albert I. Warner. __._.._._. 1279-85 National Press Building.
JohniSpure. ... 2: 1279-85 National Press Building.
Samuel 'W. Bell __. __ __.___. 1279-85 National Press Building.
! Coleman B. Jones___________ 1279-85 National Press Building.
: Ernest XK. Lindley. ......... 1279-85 National Press Building.
Emma Bugbee____._____..___ 1279-85 National Press Building.
H New York Herald-Tribune Syndicate...| Mark Sullivan___ --| 1700 I Street.
| New York Journal of Commerce (m.)._.| Clarence L. Linz____________ 619 Albee Building.
! Jee PoerHart.. 0... .. 619 Albee Building.
‘ Ralph L. Cherry... _... 619 Albee Building.
{ James Grant Lyons. ________ 619 Albee Building.
New York Bun (8). 2. cued telis ain Phelps BH. Adams. -_..__. 1 Munsey Building.
Ralph A. Collins__.__________ 1 Munsey Building.
M.C.oLlouthan. lo... 1 Munsey Building.
New York World Telegram (€.)-_..___._ Ray TD. Tucker-oLi. _o_.._.. 1322 New York Avenue.
New York Times:(m.)..c.0. 005. no ArthuriKrock ito... ..... 715 Albee Building.
i Hal Harrison Smith_________ 715 Albee Building.
i Rodney Bean... _...._._.. 715 Albee Building.
i Charles R. Michael. .__._____ 715 Albee Building.
{ LewisWood ooo... .. 715 Albee Building.
{ Y. CofSpeers. oa oii suis 715 Albee Building.
t Bertram D. Hulen-_.._.____ 715 Albee Building.
f Winifred Mallon_________.___ 715 Albee Building.
} W. Turner Catledge.....___ 715 Albee Building.
i C.WiB Hurd: o_o... 715 Albee Building.
: FelixiBelair, jr... cone. 715 Albee Building.
¢ Charles Clark McLean______ 715 Albee Building.
4 Harold B. Hinton___________ 715 Albee Building.
Delbert Clank. ane 715 Albee Building.
Russell Owen............... 715 Albee Building.
{ Niagara Falls Gazette (e.).——.ooocoeee-- JamesJ.. Butler... ....... 1157 National Press Building.
| Norfolk Virginian-Pilot (m. S.)__________ K. Foster Murray... .._.__ 985 National Press Building.
f North American Newspaper Alliance___| Martin Codel 911 Barr Building.
| Oakland Tribes ci oo tet dara nis Harry J. Brown 810 Transportation Building.
i Oklahoma City Oklahoman..___________ Ed. Hadley... loool ool 710 Fourteenth Street.
H Oklahoma City Times....cesacione BEd. Hadley... lobo... 710 Fourteenth Street.
i Oklahoma News (€.) .ccmeccoeooo ooo. George Sanford Holmes. ____ 1322 New York Avenue.
} Olean (N.Y. Herald... oc in ini... Douglas B. Cornell ___.______ 1157 National Press Building.
| Omaha World Herald (m.).___._________ Bussell Smith. ___.___. 505 Albee Building.
{ Radford Mobley._...__.______ 505 Albee Building.
Oregon Journal, Portland (e. S.)__.__._. Carl Smith, iui... ol. 906 Colorado Building.
Oshkosh Daily Northwestern (e.)..._.___| Ruby A. Black_____________ 225 Kellogg Building.
Ottawa Citizen (Mm. €.) ote oie oon. Charles Oliver Smith_______ 1044 National Press Building.
Erith MacDonald Smith____| 1044 National Press Building.
Ottawa Journal (m..e.).....o.coa. Leland S. Conness_.________ 1360 National Press Building.
Panama American... ....c-.5uscbaenoan Robert: S. Allen... ........ 982 National Press Building.
Parkersburg Sentinel... =. . = Charles Brooks Smith_______ 1650 Harvard Street.
Pawiucket Timeso. oc. cceeis Bulkley S. Griffin___________ 920 Colorado Building.
) Peoria Evening Star (e.)-...._...___.___ Charles O. Gridley__..______ 1225 National Press Building.
! Petit Parisien”... _ o.oo. o.oo Pierre Denoyer._.___________ 1200 National Press Building.
Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger....| Warren Wheaton___________ 1200 National Press Building.
i : : } W. Porter Ogelsby._.________ 1200 National Press Building.
i Philadelphia Inquirer (m. S.)_______.___. PaulJ. McGahan........... 1240 National Press Building.
: . 2 Richard J. O’Keefe......_.__ 1240 National Press Building.
Philadelphia Public Ledger (m.) cceaeoo_ Roberti B. Smith. Hueco nae 1200 National Press Building.
592 Congressional Directory
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued
Paper represented Name Office
Philadelphia Public Ledger (m)—Con.
Philadelphia Record (m.). coo _____
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (m.).__._______
Pittsburgh Press (e.:8.) cca...
Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph (e.)._._...___
Pittsfield Eagle. r tein fii
Portland (Me.) Evening Express...
Portland (Me.) Evening News...
Portland (Me.) Press Herald (m.)_.._.._
Portland (Oreg.) Oregonian... _________
Providence Evening Bulletin. _________
Providence Journal......-c..oc.
Radio News Bureau... ..... ...
Raleigh News and Observer (m.)..._____
Reading Eagle (0)... ava ann
Reading: Times. . coi tran Lo au
BONO Gazeble. or sn ceiis ma to ER bod i ire
Reuter’s (Lid.), Londons: coze
Richmond News-Leader SR a
Roanoke Timesi(m) co oe uae Loo
Rochester Times-Union (e.)-____________
Rockford Register-Republic (e.)_..______
Rock Island Argusi(e.): ower...
Roswell (N. Mex.) Record______________
St. Joseph News-Press (m.e. S.)__._____
St. Louis Globe-Democrat (m. S.)_______
St. Louis Post-Dispatch (e. S.)._._______
St. Paul Dispateh (0). ai costo on oon
St. Paul News (€.) coon Rn
St. Paul Pioneer Press (m.).___.________
St. Petersburg Independent ____________
St. Petersburg (Fla.) Times_._____._____
Sacramento Beer. of cui init nanan
Saginaw News (€. S.) ooo.
Salem Evening News. ._._____..____.___.
Salt Lake Telegram (€.)--___________.__.
Salt Lake Tribune (m,)...i--iiuaaea...
San Antonio Express (m.)_____._.________
San Diego Sun (e.)-u.-cocade iii ie nas
Sandusky Register... codt i Sit io nennnn
Sandusky-Star Journal. ..0 oo .......
San Francisco Chronicle. ______._________
San Francisco Daily News (e.)....______
San Francisco Examiner. __._____________
Savannah Morning News_______________
Savannah Press.t.i i saddle
Schenectady Gazette (m.)._.__._________
Sclence Service... toootiait id vase
Scranton Republican (m.)______.________
Scranton Timesi(@.).. coco iio Loo.
Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance... .
Seattle Post-Intelligencer...._.__.._____
Seattle Times (e. S
Sheboygan Press... ...-coiieibilommnnnnn
Shreveport Times (M.)._.._....______.__
Sioux City Journal i... cond...
South Bend News-Times (e. S.).._______
South Bend Tribune... cos...
Spartanburg (S. C.) Herald____.________
Spokane Spokesman-Review (m.).__.___
Springfield Republican (m.)___._________
Springfield Union:(mn..e.)-.%. 5... .... ...
Stamford Advocate. ....iiiivi. cana...
Stefani Agence (Italy)... _______
Superior Telegram (e.).___._.___________
Syracuse Herald-o oc ie wma i 0.
Tampa Pally: Times...
Tampa Fribane(m:). >...
Terre Haute Tribune (6.)-cveeeecevmeaan
Warren Wheaton. __._..__..
Thomas F. Healey._..._.._.___
W. @.- Murphy; ir...
W. Li‘ Bruckart cs. .........
Corinne Reid Frazier. _____
Ruby A. Black._____
Dorothea J. Lewis. _________
Elisabeth May Craig
John W.:Kelly:.ior
Ashmun N. Brown. ________
G. Richmond Carpenter... __
Ashmun N. Brown_.________
G. Richmond Carpenter...
Martin Godel... 0... ......
H.E.
Radford E. bie i ea
Paul Weir—..o.cio
Robert M. Lynn... .....
George H. Manning_________
Charles O. Girdley..._..____
William McPeak._._________
Lee Kreiselman_.______._____
Charles S. Hayden._________
Charles P. Keyser_..._______
Charles G. Boss... C1
Paul Y:: Anderson... ...
Raymond P. Brandt. _______
Alfred D. Stedman
Frank A. Kennedy--
Ambrose Collier.._.._.......
John EB Collier... c... .ceevw
Gladstone Williams. ___._____
Mark Foote. oon
William P. Kennedy.___.____
Leland S. Conness.___..__.__
Harry J. Brown... ......
Bascom N. Timmons. ._...__
R..B. ‘Armstrong, jr i...
MaxiStern... ol oa
Arthur W. Hachten_________
K. Foster Murray_._.________
P.H.McGowanii..
James J. Butler...
Watson Davis... ....--
George H. Manning_________
Russell Smith. ii... ....-...
Lowell Mellett._.____________
Herbert Little... _....._:
William Philip Simms______
Ludwell Denny.
Ruth Finney...
Emerson Waldman_________
Marion L.. Ramsay.-________
W.W.Jermane. _.______.____
William McPeak_.___.______
Bascom N. Timmons..____.
JohnE. Nevin lol Loo.
Frederic William Wile. _____
Russell'Smith....... ......
P.H. McGowan... ............
Harry J. Brown:ot. 2
William P. Kennedy._______
Bulkley S. Griffin. ________.
Isabel Kinnear___.__________
Leone Fumajoni Biondi.___.
Bascom N. Timmons._.____
William P. Helm... -
Frank A. Kennedy. ..__.____
P:H.MeGowan............
Mark Thistlethwaite........
1200 National Press Building.
1200 National Press Building.
1200 National Press Building.
1200 National Press Building.
1200 National Press Building.
1241 National Press Building.
1363 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1246 National Press Building.
920 Colorado Building.
Capitol Towers Apartment.
225 Kellogg Building.
225 Kellogg Building.
Capitol Towers Apartment.
1225 National Press Building.
607-8 Hibbs Building.
607-8 Hibbs Building.
607-8 Hibbs Building.
607-8 Hibbs Building.
National Press Building.
1241 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
505 Albee Building.
505 Albee Building.
330 Star Building.
1196 National Press Building.
1196 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
1225 National Press Building.
505 Albee Building.
The Westchester.
999 National Press Building.
711 Albee Building.
201 Kellogg Building.
201 Kellogg Building.
201 Kellogg Building.
625 Albee Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
625 Albee Building.
1863 Wyoming Avenue.
425 Colorado Building.
425 Colorado Building.
1246 National Press Building.
927 Colorado Building.
Star Building.
1360 National Press Building.
810 Transportation Building.
1255 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
National Press Building.
National Press Building.
996 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1317-21 H Street.
985 National Press Building.
410 Bond Building.
1157 National Press Building.
Twenty-first and B Streets.
1163 National Press Building.
505 Albee 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.
1317-21 H Street.
906-7 Colorado Building.
505 Albee Building.
1255 National Press Building.
932 Shoreham Building.
1220 Shoreham Building.
505 Albee Building.
410 Bond Building.
810 Transportation Building.
Star Building.
920 Colorado Building.
920 Colorado Building.
1255 National Press Building.
1410 H Street.
1669 Columbia Road.
410 Bond Building.
605 Albee Building,
| { |
|
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED—Continued
Press Galleries 593
|
Paper represented Name Office
Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union.-.| Laurence Todd. _...___._.__. 234 Maryland Building.
Temps, Paris ease tl JU5I-S380 | aco Count de Maud’Huy....._. Shoreham Hotel.
Toledo Blade (€.) sth distri. icncanen Carl Ds Bath. 205... 1365 National Press Building.
Toledo News-Be€. oo cvveooooo omens Kenneth R. Watson... 1322 New York Avenue.
Ned Brooks. magi... 1322 New York Avenue.
Toledo THNES: |. coun ioyeete Sita dunanana CarliD:Ruthigist. i... 1365 National Press Building.
Topeka Daily Capital (m.)---o_______. ClifiStratton Slo ....... The Burlington.
Toronto Evening Telegram __._________. Gardner J AE al 710 Fourteenth Street.
Traffic World, Chieago=. cso oo. A.D. Helssl oom... 210 Mills Building.
Stanley ng Smithas 210 Mills Building.
Trenton Evening Times (€.) coo __- George H. Manning________ 1157 National Press Building.
Troy Record. (IN e.) ox cveti ion dnnnenn- George H. Manning. .___.__ 1157 National Press Building.
Troy Times {e.) due voir Slit ue auann= Charles A. Hamilton_.______ 1380 National Press Building.
Tulsa World (10,) oor cone foie meneame Bascom N. Timmons. ..____ 1255 National Press Building.
Uniontown (Pa.) Herald (m.).._________ Douglas B. Cornell... ______ 1157 National Press Building.
United Feature SyndicateS--..__———_-__ Robert S.;Allenc.coi......... National Press Building.
Drew Pearsonioi.ii i... 2820 Dumbarton Avenue.
United Press AssociationS_.......______. Raymond Clapper._...____. 1322 New York Avenue.
Thomas 1. Stokes. .......- 1322 New York Avenue.
_.| 1322 New York Avenue.
1322 New York Avenue.
Louis W. Frantz___________| 1322 New York Avenue.
Joseph'H. Baird i... 1322 New York Avenue.
J. A. Reichmann... .....__.. 1322 New York Avenue.
H..0. Thompsonzci. L ... .. 1322 New York Avenue.
Carroll H. Kenworthy..____ 1322 New York Avenue.
William F. Kerby... __.___.. 1322 New York Avenue.
Ronald Van Tine_._..______ 1322 New York Avenue.
Julius Frandsen....i......... 1322 New York Avenue.
William A, Bellzoo il... ... 1322 New York Avenue.
| Edward W. Beattie, jr-_____ 1322 New York Avenue.
| Arthur F. De Greve________ 1322 New York Avenue.
Harry Ferguson... ..... 1322 New York Avenue.
BE. W.Lewis. J.oulol Lo... 1322 New York Avenue.
F.CoOthmanuloli. 1322 New York Avenue.
Merton T'. Akers.._.________ 1322 New York Avenue.
RB. L.Gridley. Lical oo... 1322 New York Avenue.
Frederick A. Storm_._______ 1322 New York Avenue.
| Duane: WilsonL oi... .___. 1322 New York Avenue.
Universal Service. - ----coiovomocaoao. Kenneth Clark. oc... ..... 1317-1321 H Street.
James T'. Williams, jr. _____. 1317-1321 H Street.
Fraser Edwards ..__________ 1317-1321 H Street.
William P. Flythe.________. 1317-1321 H Street.
Floyd 8S: Roosa.l ..l........ 1317-1321 H Street.
Cole E. Morgan_..__________ 1317-1321 H Street.
Marion L. Ramsay... __.._._. 1317-1321 H Street.
Arthur Hachten_. 1... 1317-1321 H Street.
Edward L. Roddan__
Fulton Lewis, jro____
William H. Doherty
-| 1317-1321 H Street.
_| 1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
John A. Kennedy. __________ 1317-1321 H Street.
Michael W. Straus. _______. 1317-1321 H Street.
Harry Gusack...... _.....L 1317-1321 H Street.
Utica Observer-Dispateh (€. S.) cee. James: J. Butler ical i... 1163 National Press Building.
Vancouver Provinee (€.)- -coocceeoeoo ‘Charles Oliver Smith_______ 1044 National Press Building.
Wall Street Journal... _...____
Washington Daily Sun__.._......_.
Washington Evening Star-......_..
Washington Herald (m.). coo...
Erith MacDonald Smith____
JohmBeyles. ..... .. .....
W.H. Grimesaliii. ... ....
Alfred’ P. Flynn...
Oliver B. Lerch... .....
Gola Party. oo acnsna
Lawrence Stafford _________
Thomas G. Magruder...
Richard R. Baker, jr....___.
G. God Lincoln...
William P. Kennedy .__.____.__
JOA Oeary. io ...ULSii Ll
Frederic William Wile_______
John Russell Young _.______.
Constantine A. Brown______
Grace Hendrik Eustis_______
Benjamin M. McKelway._..
James BE. Chinn_____________
Carlisle Bargeron._ _________.
Michael W. Flynn_________.
George Rothwell Brown____
Edward T. Folliard___.____.
157297°—73-1—1ST ED——39
1044 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
1091 National Press Building.
3342 M Street.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
Eleventh and Pa. Avenue.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1371-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
594   Congressional Dzrectory
NEWSPAPERS REPRESENTED-—Continued
Paper represented Name Office
‘Washington Herald (m.) (continued)...
Washington News (6.) -caccccccocaaaoaax
Washington Posti(mo)aial. nie...
Washington Times (€.)-coeccoeccmmaea..
Watertown Timesi(e.). conc Lol.
Welsh News ub dao loon d Sialic oo
Westerly: Sunes don pa Bret 20
West in ach TS) Postel. or.
‘Wheeling Intelligencer. - o_o _..__.__
‘Wheeling N
Wheeling (W. Va.) Register-..____.______
Wichita Beacon ol Sos. 218500 2
Wichita Falls Times (m.e. S.)___.______
Williamsport Sun (m. €.) o-oo o_._______
Wilmington (Del.) Every Evening ______
Winnipeg Free Press. Joi a 2s. L  ...
Winnipeg Tribune (e.)-.coaeauidomaaann.
‘Winston-Salem Journal . __ ______________
‘Winston-Salem Sentinel .________________
Wolfl’s Telegraph Bureau of Berlin_.___
Women’s Wear Daily (€.)cecccaaaeono_
Worcester Gazette. .«ooenau dodo ool
Worcester Post (6) concn ao.
Worcester Telegram... ot iit...
York (Pa.).Dispateh-(6.)n oo -ontic nee
Youngstown Telegram (€.) ooo. ___.
Youngstown Vindicator (€.)---o...__...__
M.PaBoydovaonio i. nul
AveryMeBee. iii nema
Alva Brewer... ..........
Lowell Mellett_.____________
Ernest T.iPyle....... ___ __.
Ralph D. Palmer... .....
Harold Kneeland ________.___
Martha Strayer: ..-.........
George Abell. ..............
Fred W. Perkins_..__________
Rockford Riley:oc. o.......
Robert W. Horton
Robert Albright... .._...
John'loranee. oo...
J. JAWeRiseling. oo...
Robert: D. Heinlil_.________
Laurence F. Stuntz_._______
Vylla Poe Wilson... _....._
John J. Fitzpatrick... .......
Ralph W. Benton__._________
Dan E. O'Connell ._..______
Franklin G. Sartwell ._______
John'Spure, jr o....
Frank:M. Smithi'........
Edmund Jewell .____________
DunbartHare.-.. 2... ....
Julia: Bonwit... ......
Jom: JPaly. ed co.
Stephens Rippey------uea---
Charles Brooks Smith__.____
Isabel Kinnesr....i.a.........
Charles S. Hayden._._______
Stephens Rippey.---....____
Robert M. Lynn......______
Tom W. King
Charles Oliver Smiths...
Erith MacDonald Smith____
Waller Brown. .._o......_..
Walter Brown... C..eo.
Kurt G. Sell
John GC. Atebhison............
Mary F. Jefferson... __._.__
Mrs. George F. Richards..._
W.P.Xegnedy ico. ....c
Bulkley S. Griffin___________
Mrs. George F. Richards..__
Ralph C. Mulligan_.._._____
Douglas B. Cornell .__.______
Routh 2 Watson...
Ned Bro
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
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.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
Post Building.
1317-1321 H. Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H Street.
1317-1321 H. Street.
1157 National Press Building.
1650 Harvard Street.
920 Colorado Building.
425 Colorado Building.
425 Colorado Building.
1650 Harvard Street.
1650 Harvard Street.
_| 425 Colorado Building.
425 Colorado Building.
‘Westchester Apartments.
999 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
1196 National Press Building.
1468 Clifton Street.
1044 National Press Building.
1044 National Press Building.
1054 National Press Building.
1054 National Press Building.
Racquet Club.
505 Union Trust Building.
505 Union Trust Building.
George Washington Inn.
Star Building.
920 Colorado Building.
George Washington Inn.
1361 National Press Building.
1157 National Press Building.
1322 New York Avenue.
1322 New York Avenue.
505 Albee Building.
House Press Gallery:
William J. Donaldson, jr., superintendent, 3730 Brandywine Street.
Melvin P. Thrift, assistant superintendent, 3109 Thirteenth Street NE.
Chester R. Thrift, page, 1218 Thirty-third Street.
Senate Press Gallery:
William J. Collins, superintendent, 3402 Dent Place.
Joseph E. Wills, assistant superintendent, 1230 New Hampshire Avenue.
Harold R. Beckley, messenger, 4622 Forty-third Place.
MAPS OF CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS
595
Maps of Congressional Districts
ALABAMA
(9 districts)
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598 Congressional Directory
ARIZONA
(1 at large)
COCONINO
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(20 districts)
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Congressional
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CONNECTICUT (5
districts
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WINDHARS
HARTFORD
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FAIRFIELD
Maps of Congressional Districts 1603
DELAWARE
(1 at large)
NEWCASTLE
KENT
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SUSSEX
604 Congressional Directory
FLORIDA
(4 districts and 1 at large)
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Maps of Congressional Districts 605
GEORGIA
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Maps of Congressional Districts 607
ILLINOIS
(25 districts and 2 at large)
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608 Congressional Directory
INDIANA
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613 Maps of Congressional Districts
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616 | Congressional Directory
MICHIGAN
(17 districts)
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Maps of Congressional Districts 617
MINNESOTA
(9 at large)
KITTSON R032AY
a
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a 0 ee ca wo wr
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618 Congressional Directory
MISSISSIPPI
(7 districts)
J J —
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Maps of Congressional Districts 619 |
MISSOURI
(13 at large)
| SCOTLAND i
!
.
MERCER
SULLIVAN 5 SOAR
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Congressional Directory
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LINCOLN
Maps of Congressional Districts 623
NEW HAMPSHIRE
(2 districts)
GRAFTON
CARROLL
MERRIMACK a
p °
1 Concord * A STRAFFORD
l 7 \,
/ \,
624 Congressional Directory
NEW JERSEY
(14 districts)
BURLINGTON      ®
1 CAMDEN
} . 9
A)
GLOUCESTER N -
CUMBERLAND
Maps of Congressional Districts
NEW MEXICO
(1 at large)
625
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628
Congressional
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NORTH
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OHIO
(22 districts and 2 at large) ga
T ASHTABULA i i FuLTon : WILLIAMS
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PHILIPPINE ISLANDS
(2 Resident Commissioners)
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MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES
649
MEMBERS’ ADDRESSES
NAME, HOME POST OFFICE, WASHINGTON RESIDENCE,
AND PAGE ON WHICH BIOGRAPHY APPEARS
[The * designates those whose wives or husbands accompany them; the f designates those whose unmarried
daughters in society accompany them; the || designates those having other ladies with them]
THE SENATE
*JoEN N. GARNER, President, The Washington.
*KeY PrrT™MaN, President pro tempore, 2620 Foxhall Road.
ery frtamiay T. PriLuiprs, D. D., LL. D., Chaplain of the Senate, 2224
treet.
*EpwiN A. HALsEY, Secretary, 1324 Ingraham Street.
CrEsLEY W. JURNEY, Sergeant at Arms, 100 Maryland Avenue NE.
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 285, 286)
| Name Home post office Washington residence is
Page
x+Adams, Alva B._.. o.. Pueblo, Colo. cai. The Mayflower________ 13
*Ashurst, Henry F_______ Prescott, Ariz_____._ 1602. K St- 10 ee 5
*Austin, Warren R_.._.____| Burlington, Vt_.__._ The Mayflower___..___ 118
Bachman, Nathan L______ Chattanooga, Tenn__| The Willard_ _ ________ 110
Bailey, Josiah W._________ Raleigh, N. C...i... The Mayflower______ 83
*Bankhead, John H______ Jasper, Ala... ...... 2oin Massachusetts 3
ve.
*|| Barbour, W. Warren.___| Locust, N. J________ 1344 Thirtieth St______ 67
*{Barkley, Alben W______ Padueash, Ky... 3102 Cleveland Ave____| 38
#Black, Hugo L..... oil Birmingham, Alani. oo. Loa) das 3
%*Bone, Homer T......----- Tacoma, Wash______ The Ambassador. _____ 121
*Borah, William E_______ Boise, Idaho. _.___..._ 2101 Connecticut Ave__| 22
Bration,Sam G....c..o0 Albuquerque, N. Mex.| The Washington_______| 70
2Brown,: Fred FH... 00 Somersworth, No. H.I{. Ji cool) wiv 66
Bulkley, Robert J____.___ Cleveland, Ohio_____ 1901 Wyoming Ave____| 88
*Bulow, William J_...__._ Beresford; 8. Pak... .000L nbeely 109
Byrd, Harry Flood______._ Berryville, Va_______ The Willawdi i. coneesls 119
*| Byrnes, James F_______ Spartanburg, S. C.__| The Shoreham________ 106
Capper, Arthur_..__.._... Topeka, Kans... The Mayflower... _. 36
|Caraway, Hattie W_____ Jonesboro, Ark_..._. 1427 Whittier St______ 6
*1Carey, Robert D_______ Careyhurst, Wyo_.__| The Wardman Park___[ 127
*Clark, Bennett Champ.___ Sloyies, Mo., R. F.D.| The Mayflower_._______ 59
o. 1.
*Connally, Tom. Lo. ool Marlin, Tex... oon. The Highlands.....___ 112
*1Coolidge, Marcus A____| Fitchburg, Mass_____ The Shoreham. ._______ 46
*Copeland, Royal S______ New York City, N. Y.| The Shoreham________ 71
*Costigan, Edward P_____ Denver, Colo... Ploy New Hampshire | 13
ve.
*tCouzens, James________ Birmingham, Mich__| 2850 Woodland Drive__| 50
Cutting, Bronson... __._ Santa Fe, N. Mex___| 2500 Thirtieth St______ 71
*1Dale, Porter H...._ 2.0 Island Pond, Vt_____ 4331 Blagden Ave_____ 118
*Davis, James J.__._. i. Pittsburgh, Pa______ 3012 Massachusetts Ave] 97
*Dickingon, 1. Joo. 10. Algona, lowa_______ 3601 Connecticut Ave__| 33
*1 Dieterich, William H___| Beardstown, Ill_____ The Broadmoor_______ 24
*Dill, Clarence C________ Spokane, Wash______ The Presidential _______ 121
*Dufly, F.-Ryan__ ____.. Fond du Lac, Wis___| The Mayflower________ 125
*{ Erickson, John E_____._ Kalispell, Mont... |. ae viene dam Lidl 63
Fess, Simeon Divi Jl Yellow Springs, Ohio_| The Carlton. _________ 88
*|| Fletcher, Duncan U____| Jacksonville, Fla____| 2101 Connecticut Ave__| 17
*1Prazier, Lynn-J. 0 oul Hoople, N. Dak_____ 6629 First Stoo. uc 87
*George, Walter F_______ Vienna, Ga... Lc The Hamilton_________ 19
*Glass, Carter... oi Lynchburg, Va______ The Raleigh... ......¢ 119
Goldsborough, Phillips Lee. Baltimore, Md... LU. |. once boo S000, 44
652 Congressional Directory
THE SENATE—Continued
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 285, 286)
Name Home post office Washington residence Las
Page
*||Gore, Thomas P....__. Oklahoma City, Okla_| 3930 Connecticut Ave__| 93 |
Hale, Frederick... __ Portland, Me__.____._ 1001 Sixteenth St______ 43
#3{Harvison, Pal... _- Gulfport, Miss_ _.___ 2260 Cathedral Ave____.| 56
*Hastings, Daniel O__.__. Wilmington, Del____| The Shoreham________ 16
Hatfield, Henry D______._ Huntington, We. Va. |. oat minnim oer ers 123
2Hayden, Corl, L.. PHoeniX, Ariz... cena tes 5
4 Hebert, Felix... .... West Warwick, R. I_| The Wardman Park___| 105
*Johnsony; Hiram W_____._ San Francisco, Calif .] 122 Maryland Ave. NE. 8
*Kean, Hamilton F______ ¢Ursino,”’ Union P2800 8S Ste mca ee ee 67
County, N. J :
*Kendrick, John B_______ Sheridan, Wyo______ 2400 Sixteenth St____._ 127
*Keyes, Henry W.________ North Haverhill, | 111 N. Alfred St., Alex- | 66
NH. andria, Va.
*+King, William H_______ Salt Lake City, Utah.| The Westchester______ 117
*La Follette, Robert M., jr_| Madison, Wis_______ 2244 Cathedral Ave____| 125
*Lewis, J. Hamilton. _ o._ Chicago, Ml... lilo The Mayflower. _____. 23 |
(Logan, M. M___ ir 4.04 Bowling Green, Ky_.| The Shoreham________ 38
*Lonergan, Augustine____| Hartford, Conn____._ 3311 Cathedral Ave____| 15
Long, Huey P_ Lu. {7 ai New Orleans, La__.__| The Mayflower_______._ 40
*tMeAdoo, William Gibbs_| Los Angeles, Calif ___| The Shoreham_______._ 8
McCarran, Pat. __.____.2 Reno, Nev... :-ocee The Raleigh... j.c.iiu 65
*tMeGill, George. __ Wichita, Kans. ....__.. 3009 Thirty-fourth St__| 36
McKellar, Kennéth______ Memphis, Tenn____. Stoneleigh Court______ 109
*McNary, Charles Li_____| Salem, Oreg.__.______ The Hay-Adams_ _____ 96
*Metealf, Jesse H________ Providence, R. I____| The Anchorage.______. 105
Murphy, Lovisoccco/ ooC Dubuque; downoad] |... l pugollioss 33
*Neely, Matthew M______ Fairmont, W. Va.._..| The Willard... __ = 123
*t Norbeck, Peter. ___.__ Redfield, S. Dak. ___| The Kennedy-Warren__| 109
* Norris, George W._._____. McCook, Nebr______ The Kennedy-Warren_.| 63
*Nye, Gerald: Po... 13Q Cooperstown, N. Dak_{ 3802 Gramercy St_____ 87
*711Overton, John H_____ Alexandria, La______ The Wardman Park___| 40
*Patterson, Roscoe C_____ Springfield, Mo_____ The Burlington. ______ 58
#Pittman, Keyo. oil 0 Tonopah, Nev... : 2620 Foxhall Road____| 65
*Pope, JamessP. coll ol Boise, Idaho____._..__ The Northumberland... | 23
*Reed, David AZ: tio Pittsburgh, Pa_.d-..c 2222 8S Stocisall woven 97
*1|| Reynolds, Robert R___| Asheville, N. C_____ The Wardman Park___| 84
*tRobinson, Arthur R__.__| Indianapolis, Ind____| The Mayflower. ______ 30
*IRobinson, Joseph T____| Little Rock, Ark____| 100 Maryland Ave. NE_ 6
[Ill Russell, Richard B., jr_.| Winder, Ga_.___.____ The Hamilton. ___.____ 19
*Schall, Thomas D_____.__ Minneapolis, Minn. _| “ Wynecrest,”” Berwyn, 54
Md.
*tSheppard, Morris_ _ ____ Texarkana, Tex____._ 1814 Nineteenth St____| 112
*Shipstead, Henrik_.______ Miltona, Minn._____. 1113 East Capitol St___| 54
tity Ellison D___._.| Lynchburg, S. C__._| The Hamilton_______.__ 106
*1||Steiwer, Frederick_____ Portland, Oreg..._._. 7325 Orchid Sto. ol 96
*Stephens, Hubert D_____ New Albany, Miss._.| The Driscoll -___._._____ 56
*t11 Thomas, Elbert D____| Salt Lake City, Utah_| The Washington. _____ 117
*Thomas, Elmer_...____._ Medicine Park, Okla_| 1661 Crescent Place___l 93
*| Thompson, William H__| Grand Island, Nebr_._| The Lafayette____..__ 64
tTownsend, John G., jr___| Selbyville, Del______ The Shoreham ________ 17
Trammell, Park. oll ool Lakeland, Fla... ._ The Capitol Park_____ 17
Tydings, Millard E_______ Havre de Grace, Md A... ... ..cL.cid. coal 44
*Vandenberg, Arthur H___| Grand Rapids, Mich_| The Wardman Park___| 50
~*Van Nuys, Frederick____| Indianapolis, Ind___.| The Wardman Park___| 30
Wagner, Robert F_______. New York City, N. Y_| The Shoreham. _______ 71
‘Walcott, Frederic C.___.__ Norfolk, Conn. coo _ The Shoreham ______._| 15
Walsh, David Lis. Jol ol Clinton, Mass_______ The Carlton... 46
*Wheeler, Burton K______ Butte, Monta. soil 3757 Jocelyn St... 62
*|| White, Wallace H., jr...| Auburn, Me....._.. 2449 Tracy Place.__... 43
|
Members’ Addresses
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
*Henry T. Rainey, Speaker, 2001 Sixteenth Street.
*t1tSourH TrimMBLE, Clerk, The Chastleton.
*Rev. JAMES SHERA MoNTGOMERY, D. D., Chaplain, 100 Maryland Avenue, NE.
*KENNETH ROMNEY, Sergeant at Arms, 1026 Sixteenth Street.
Josepru J. SinvorT, Doorkeeper, 3527 Thirteenth Street.
Finis E. Scott, Postmaster, 1330 Belmont Street.
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
653
Name Home post office ‘Washington residence Bon
Page
*Abernethy, Charles L____| New Bern, N. C_____ The Raleigh. LoL. 85
Adair, J. Leroyo 0. 2 Quiney, Hho: coisod The Broadmoor_.______ 28
Adams, Wilbardiool. oo Wilmingion,: Del. ool... 2d voal _salnag 17
Allen, Leo E_ uci 70 0 un Galena, Wa. bozlle The Hamilton_________ 27
*|||| Allgood, Miles C______ Gadsden, Ala_______ 306 Second St. SE_____ 4
*||Almon, Edward B______ Tuscumbia, Ala_____ George Washington Inn_ 5
Andrew, A. Piatt_________ Gloucester, Mass____| Racquet Club_________ 47
Andrews, Walter G_______ Bufialo, N-NW. add ule Codi bane nalicl 83
Arens, Henry. i idoiodo cn Jordan, Minn_______ Y. M.C.A.Bldg....... 55
*tArnold, William W_____ Robingon, Ml. culdooudl ooo nea cdoiopass. oll 29
*Auf der Heide, Oscar L._| West New York, N. J. |. oe commccmeaocos 70
Ayers, Roy: BE... ul. od Lewistown; Mont iii]. ome Stored. anni 63
Fill Ayres, WoAo ico Lol] Wichita, Kans______ The Broadmoor. ______ 37
Bacharach, Isaac. _____. Atlantic City, N. J__| The Mayflower________ 68
*tBacon, Robert L_______ Old Westbury, N. ¥.} 1801 FP St. oii. dao. 72
*Bailey, Joseph W., jr____| Dallas, Tex_________ The Lafayette._.______| 113
*Bakewell, Charles M____| New Haven, Conn___| The Mayflower_._______ 15
*Bankhead, William B____| Jasper, Ala_________ 2822 Dunbarton Ave__._ 5
*Beam, Harry: PL 00 ol Chicago, Ill... boul. 2 The Wardman Park___| 25
*|| Beck, James M________ Philadelphia, Pa_____ 1624 Twenty-first St___| 98
*Beedy, Carroll L________ Portland, Me_ ______ 2311 Connecticut Ave__| 43
*Beiter, Alfred F.. __..._.. Williamsville, N. Y__.| The Hamilton_________ 83
Berlin, William M________ Greensburg, Pa. conn oat. i unillod 4 104
*Biermann, Fred________._ Decorah, Iowa______ The Westchester. _____ 34
Black, Loring M., jr______ Brooklyn sN. Yina oul. Jo Loe iuiuss. sink 74
*Blanchard, George W..__| Edgerton, Wis______ The Alban Towers...__| 125
*|| Bland, Schuyler Otis___| Hampton, Va______._ The Woodward. _ _.____ 120
*7Blanton, Thomas L____.| Abilene, Tex________ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 116
*3BloomgzSol.:...._... New York City, N.Y_| 2323 Wyoming Ave____| 78
*Boehne, John W., jr_____ Evansville, Ind______ 5226 Chevy Chase Park-| 32
way.
*Boileau, Gerald J_______ Wausau, Wis_._._____ The Cavalier... _.... 126
*Boland, Patrick J_.____. Seranton, Pal. cio ocuianasin adel 20 99
*Bolton, Chester C_______ Lyndhurst, Ohio____| 2301 Wyoming Ave____| 93
*Boylan, John'J = 1:5: ou. New York City, N. Y_| 1135 Sixteenth St______ 77
Brennan, Martin A______._ Bloomington, coc HX. oe nv oven mad LL nds 24
*Britten, Fred A________._ Chicago, TI... ..c. 2253 Sheridan Circle__._| 26
*1{Brooks, J. Twing______ Sewickley, Pa oath ©. oooaonst oul 104
*Brown, John Young_____ Lexington, By. iio i oui iain 39
*111||Brown, Prentiss M__| St. Ignace, Mich____| The Wardman Park___| 52
*Browning, Gordon______ Huntingdon, Tenn___| The Continental ______ 111
fl|Brumm, George F______ Minersville, Pa______ The Baronet.__._______ 100
Brunner, William F______ Rockaway Park, Nol... _ Jl eosodl go 73
*||||Buchanan, James P___| Brenham, Tex______ George Washington Inn_| 115
Buck, Frank:H jolici. Jul Vacaville, Calif _ _ __. The Washington_ _____ 9
*| || Buckbee, John T______ Rockford, II________ 518 House Office Bldg_.| 27
*Bulwinkle, Alfred L_____ Gastonia; N.oCruczolle cv mec enn baiaaal) 20a 86
*Bureh, Thomas. G.. LL... Martinsville, Va___.__ The Powhatan________ 120
*{{Burke, Edward R____. Omaha, Nebr______._ The Altamont_________ 64
*Burke, JohnH. . co... 0 Long Beach, Calif. __| The Broadmoor______._ 12
*Burnham, George. ...... San Diego, Calif___.. The Mayflower........- 13
654 Congressional Directory
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
|
. |
Name Home post office ‘Washington residence Te |
|
Page
*Busby, Jefl...... . . ci oie Houston, Miss. ..... 2836 Allendale Place.__| 57
*Byrng, Joseph W......_.. Nashville, Tenn_____ The Wardman Park___| 111 |
*0ady, Claude E.__... Lansing, Mieh_. _... The Westchester. _ ____ 51 |
*Caldwell, Millard F_____ Milton, Ela... i... The Chastleton_______ 19
*t{1Cannon, Clarence_____ BlsberryesMo.o oases cases 60
*Cannon, Raymond J____| Milwaukee, Wis_____ The Shoreham________ 126
##1Carden, Cap RB... ..... Munfordville, Ky... | 3024 Q St... _. 40
*1Carley, Patrick J_______ Brooklyn, N. Yo. ... The Wardman Park___| 74
*Carpenter, Randolph____| Marion, Kans_______ 3728 Windom Place____| 37
*Carpenter, Terry M_____ Scottsbluff, Nebr____| The Broadmoor. ______ 65
*Carter, Albert E________ Oakland, Calif _ _____ The Mayflower_....___._ 10
*Carter, Vincent_________ Kemmerer, Wyo .sell Loo. Thaslid i loaalt 128
*Cartwright, Wilburn_____ McAlester, Okla_____ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 94
*t11Cary, Glover H______ Owensboro, Ky _____ 1526 Eighteenth St____| 40
tCastellow, Bryant T_____ Cuthbert, Ga... The Hamilton. 22... 20
Cavicchia, Peter A_______ Newark, N. J__..... The Shoreham. _._____._ 69
*1Celler, Emanuel ________ |- Brooklyn, N. Yu... The Mayflower________ 75
*|| || Chapman, Virgil______ Paris, Kyo. oo. a The Washington______ 39
#71Chase, Ray. P......... Anoka, Minn_______ The Harvard Hall. ____ 55
*tChavez, Dennis________ Albuquerque, N. Mex_| 2126 Connecticut Ave__| 71
Christianson, Theodore. __| Minneapolis, Minn__|______________________ 55
*||Church, Denver S______ Fresno, Calif ._._.._. 20 Third St. 8B... ..... 10
Claiborne, James R______ St. Louis, Mo... Jiu The Roosevelt... 59
*1Clark, J.. Bayard cL. ul Fayetteville, N. C___| The Raleigh__________ 86
*Clarke, John 'D._ i S22 Prager, N. Yi. .uxgs University Club_______ 81
*Cochran, John J. cil... St. Louis, Mo_______ The Shoreham _ _______ 59
*11Cochran, Thomas C___| Mercer, Pa_____.___ 2608 Thirty-sixth Place.| 102
*Coffin, Thomas C_______ Pocatello, Idaho_____ The Roosevelt... _____ 23
Colden, Charles J______._ San'Pedro, Calif ill ro oo. dl bvdie- aud 12
*Cole, William P., jr_____ Towson, Md... co. 388 House Office Bldg__| 44
*#1Collins, Ross: ALizoil ul Meridian, Miss______ 2205 Wisconsin Ave____| 58
*Collins, Samuel L_______ Fullerton, Calif _ _ ___ The Ambassador. _____ 12
*Colmer, William M______ Pascagoula, Miss____| The Harrington_______ 58
*Condon, Francis B._____ Central Falls, R. I___| 820 Connecticut Ave___| 105
Connery, William P:,:jr olf Lynn, Mass. .oucdial ooo ligucadds uuiis 48
Connolly, James J._______ Philadelphia Pa soll coon ios aan 99
*||Cooper, Jere__.._______ Dyersburg, Tenn____| The Washington. _____ 112
Cooper, John CG... au. Youngstown, Ohlo...[_ Lo Jo oanaaainan 92
Corning, Parker:iz iii ol Albany, Ni XY .uz.oil The Carlton ecu. coal 80
2Cox, B.. BE. .ouoo..o.. Camilla, Ga. .uuuous The Hamilton: ict. Juco 20
*Cravens, Ben Luo i LUC Fort Smith, Arkd well J. i. oO toandti aot 7
Crosby, Charles N______ Meadville, Pa_______ The Pennsylvania_____ 104
%*4Cross, O. HH: . .... _. Waco, Texu oo iuooh The Army and Navy___| 115
*1Crosser, Robert________ Cleveland, Ohio_____ 2440 Sixteenth St______ 92
*Crowe, Eugene B_______ Bedford, Ind... Luo 2 New Hampshire | 32
ve.
*Crowther, Frank... __._ Schenectady, N. Y___{ 110 Maryland Ave, NE_| 80
*Crump, Edward H______ Memphis, Tenn_____ The Shoreham _______._ 112
*Culkin, Francis D______._ Oswego, NN. Yioouudl. ooo  Bonmnall suri 81
Cullen, Thomas H________ Brooklyn, N.Y... The Shoreham ________ 73
*Cummings, Fred________ Fort Colling, Coloaudfl i... dasa. iuesedous 14
Darden, Colgate W., jr___.| Norfolk, Va_________ The Capitol Park. _____ 121
*Darrow, George P__.____ Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Washington. _____ 99
*|| Dear, Cleveland __ _ ____ Alexander, Lac.cciuuft oo Lod bagdd abloud 42
*Deen, Braswell ._ _______ Alma, Ga.cliza aol 105, Oak St., Clarendon, | 22
a.
Delaney, John J____.____._ Brooklyn, N. Y_____ The Hamilton.....____ 74
*De Priest, Osear______.__ Chicago,sIN. coil ic 419 U Stood auedos 25
*DeRouen, René L_______ Ville Platte, Ya. ood. nes Coa goin oi ooo 42
*t{ Dickinson, Clement C..l Clinton, Mo___.__.___ The Washington_._____ 62
Members’ Addresses 655
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
(Fer office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
Name Home post office Washington residence Br
| Page
Dickstein, Samuel ________ New York City, N.Y_| The Washington____.__ 76
*Dies, Martin... Orange, Tex. __._._.. 1625 Hobart St_______ 113
*| | Dingell, JohniDi LLL Detroit, Mich..._.___ 2126 Connecticut Ave__| 53
| *t Dirksen, Everett M___.| Pekin, Ill......._ ud The Staunton Manor__| 28
*PDisney, Wesley E_____.. Tulsa, Qlela. Li. Jin 3015 Forty-fourth St___| 94
Ditter, J. William_______. Ambler, Palo Boil Le OR EE 101
Dobbins, DAC Joi a ol Champaign, I11______ The Hamilton________ 29
*Dockweiler, John F_____ Los Angeles, Calif ___; The Shoreham________ 12
| *1||Dondero, George A____| Royal Oak, Mich_.__| The Continental _______ 54
®t Doughton, Reobert'L.. 00 Lauvel Springs, NoCual)__ooouan lial Jou 86
*|| Douglass, John J_______ East Boston, Mass_._| The Ambassador is a4 48
*PDoutrich, Isaae H_...___ Harrisburg, Pa C1 The Willard oo 000 0 102
*PDowell, Cassius C_______ Des Moines, Iowa_._| The Roosevelt_ _______ 35
*Doxey, Wall.o o.oo oe Holly Springs, Miss__| The Driscoll __________ 57
*Drewry, Patrick H______ Petersburg, Va______ The Portland... 121
*Driver, William J_______ Osceola, Ark________ 100 Maryland Ave. NE_ 6
*t|| Duffey, Warren J_____ Toledo, Ohfo:. Joi. The Stratford. ........ 90
*PDuncan, Richard M_____ St. Joseph Mo______ The Alban Towers____._ 62
Dunn, Matthew A_______ Mount Oliver, Pitts- | The Capitol Towers. __| 105
burgh, Pa.
*Durgan, George R______ La Fayette, Ind_____ The Dupont Circle. ___| 31
*1Ragle, Joe H._... __ 0 Houston, Tex: ._2. The Raleigh.......__... 115
*Eaton, Charles A_______ Plainfield, NoJ oLioile oo ben nniddih. 68
Edmonds, George W_____ Philadelphio, Pal iil: acne diliaiila 98
*tHEicher, Edward C______ Washington, Iowa___| The Roosevelt. _._._____ 33
Ellenbogen, Henry. ______ Pittsburgh, Pa... clot anise ca 105
*HEllzey, Russell. _.___. J. Wesson, Miss_______ The Bellevue... ..L 58
*Elise, Ralph BR... _.... Berkeley, Calif ______ The Mayflower_._______ 10
*Englebright, Harry L____| Nevada City, Calif__| The Roosevelt. _______ 9
*Evans, William E_____._ Glendale, Calif ______ The Shoreham. _______ 10
*Faddis, Charles I. ______ Waynesburg, Palioiol) ooo wend JOLIIS JU 103
*tFarley, James I___._____ Auburn, Ind. i 00 The Roosevelt_ ______._ 31
*|| Fernandez, Joachim O._| New Orleans, La____| 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 41
*tFiesinger, William L____| Sandusky, Ohio_____ 1661 Crescent Place___| 91
#1 Fish,’ Hamilion; jr.2.. = Garrison, N.°Y_ 2319 Ashmead Place___| 79
*Fitzgibbons, John... __.. Qewege, N. Yul | ur ene 72
*tFitzpatrick, James M___| New York City, N.Y_| The Roosevelt________ 79
*{Flannagan, John 'W., -jr.| Bristol, Va... ..._. The Roosevelt Z_.. 121
*Fletcher, Brooks _.__.__.. Marion, Ohlo. 20.00 0 gu i0 Jol 90
x1 [li Focht, Benjamin K__| Lewisburg, Pa______ The Harringlon..... 1. 101
“Ford, Thomas FF... = Los Angeles, Calif ___| The Roosevelt _______ 11
#1 Foss, Peanle H.. -. Fitchburg, Mass_____ The Roosevelt. __._ 47
*Foulkes, George_________ Hartlord, Mich lu u0 oo fs senor 1 iii 51
*|||| Frear, James A_______ Hudson, Wig lo... The Shoreham ________ 127
*1 Fuller, Claude A_______ Eureka Springs; Ark... ois ln 080 7
*Fulmer, Hampton P..... Orangeburg, S. C____| 2440 Sixteenth St______ 107
*Gambrill, Stephen W____| Laurel, Md_________ The Shoreham _____.. 45
Hie) Allard H. .o Florence, S. C______ The Northumberland. _| 108
A {Srna Joseph A_____ New York City,N.Y_| The Carlton__________ 78
Gibson, Ernest W_______ Brattleboro, VA. 00 oa OR 119
i) Gifford, Charles L LL Cotuit, Mass. ._____ The Roosevelt. [Zi 50
ilchrist, Pred C..20: tl Laurens, Towa______ The Roosevelt_ _______ 35
a Prank. .. 3L Bloomington, I11_____ George Washington Inn_| 28
*Gillette, Guy M________ Cherokee, Iowa.______ The Roosevelt_ _.______ 35
#1 ||| Glover, DD... Malvern, Ark ico del oo co bigepnians JAH 7
Goldsborough, T. Alan__._| Denton, Md________ The Driscoll. 00k 44
*Goodwin, Philip A______ Coxsackie, N. Y_____ The Mayflower___.___._ 80
Goss, Edward W_________ Waterbury, Conn ii8iy [o.oo ool 000% 7 16
Granfield, William J______ Springfield, Mass____| The Shoreham________ 46
*Groy, Finly H.......... Connersville, Ind____| George WashingtonInn_| 32
656 Congressional Directory
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
Name Home post office ‘Washington residence
||Green, Robert A________
*Greenwood, Arthur H___
*Gregory, William V_____
*Griffin, Anthony J______
*Griswold, Glenn_ _ _.____
#Cuyer, U.S...
*tiHaines, Harry Li..____
Hamilton, Finley. _.._____
*Hancock, Clarence E____
Hancock, Frank... ..--
Harlan, Byron B........J
*Hart, Michael Joo. ili
*Harter, Dow W........d
Hartley, Fred A., jr......
*1t1 Hastings, William W_
*Healey, Arthur D______._
. *Henney, Charles W_____
*Hess, William BE... oJ
Higgins, William L_______
*Hildebrandt, Fred H__ __
Hill, Knute....deiiciiod
ER Mister. cn as
Hil, Samuel B........ .....
*Hoeppel, John H________
Hoidale, Einar... ..
Hollister, John, B.0...0i. 4
*Holmes, Pehr G_________
*Hooper, Joseph L_______
*Hope, Clifford B..........
*Hornor, Lynn 8S...
* Howard, Edgar... ._..
*Huddleston, George. _.__
*Hughes, James. _.._._.___
*|| Imhoff, Lawrence E____
*Jacobsen, Bernhard M__._
*t|| James, W. Frank______
EJeffors, Lamar... oo
fdenckes, Virginia F______
*Jenkins, Thomas A_____._
*Johnson, George W______
Johnson Jed. =...
*Johnson, Luther A______
Johnson, Magnus_______._
[[Jones, Marvin__________
Kahn, Florence P_______._
Keller, Kent B......o
Kelly, Clyde... ...cnst ce
Kelly, Edward A___.____._
*1Kemp, Bolivar E_______
Kennedy, Ambrose J_____
*Kennedy, Martin J______
*Kenney, Edward A______
Kerr, John H................
Starke, Fla. io. ina
Washington, Ind_.__
Mayfield, Ky. ._._...
New York City, N. Y.
Peru, Ind. coil ais
Kansas City, Kans_ _
Red Lion, Pa. _...__
London, Ky.Lo. i =
Syracuse, N, Yo...
Oxford, N. Cuoco os
Dayton, Ohio... .-:
Saginaw, Mich_._.____
Akron,;Ohlo. 0. =
Kearny, NoJdacg-<4a
Tahlequah, Okla____
Somerville, Mass____
Portage, Wis___.....
Cincinnati, Ohio_____
South Coventry,
Conn.
Watertown, S. Dak__
Prosser, Wash______._
Montgomery, Ala_ _ _
Waterville, Wash____
Arcadia, Calif...
Minneapolis, Minn. _
Cincinnati, Ohio_____
Worcester, Mass. __
Battle Creek, Mich__
Garden City, Kans_ _
Clarksburg, W. Va__
Columbus, Nebr_.___
Birmingham, Ala____
De Pere, Wis_______
St. Clairsville, Ohio_ _
Clinton, Iowa.__....
Hancock, Mich_____._
Anniston, Ala______._
Terre Haute, Ind__..
Ironton, Ohio. .nusa
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Anadarko, Okla_____
Corsicana, Tex__._._.
Kimball, Minn______
Amarillo, Tex____._._.
San Francisco, Calif _
Bluefield, W. Va_._._.
Ava, Tl... ett inun
Edgewood, Pa. cnx
Chicago, ll... cco
Amibe, Toe .t oo ubnwie
Baltimore, Md______
New York City, N. Y.
Cliffside Park, N. J_._
Warrenton, N. C____
The Mayflower_ ____._.
2719 Thirty-sixth Place.
The Hamilton. .|. i...
George Washington Inn.
The Washington_ _ ____
131 B St SH.L. abo oi
The Mayflower... ._._._
The Carlton... .v..uus
The Chastleton_ ______
The Shoreham.________
The Washington_____._
The Plazaus oii wai d
119 Second St. NE_.___
George Washington Inn.
The Park Central __._..
2400 Sixteenth St_____.
The Continental ___._.._
The Woodley Park
Towers.
The Raleigh it... 0. -.
3000 Connecticut Ave.
1235 Massachusetts
Ave.
George Washington Inn_
904 Massachusetts
Ave. NE.
The Roosevelb_ic-t-o
The Alban Towers...._._
Dodge Hotel... _....
3125 Adams Mill Road._
1629 Columbia Road__
The Methodist Bldg _-
110 Maryland Ave. NE.
2701 Connecticut Ave...
1816 Eighth Street___.
George Washington Inn.
The Mayflower.______.
Dodge Hotel... i...
The Roosevelt... _.___._
3730 McKinley St_.___
The Carlton. .<icuat
The Wardman Park___
The Washington_____.
The Hamilton........1-
Members’ Addresses 657
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
Name Home post office ‘Washington residence bik
Page
Ringer,’ J. Roland... _.C Lancaster, Pa... 00 The Washington_____._ 99
*111Kleberg, Richard M__| Corpus Christi, Tex__| The Hamilton_________ 116
#Kloeb, Frank L__....... Celina, Ohio. .....~ The Bellevue_ ________ 89
SKniffin, Frank C2 Napoleon, Ohio_____ Davenport Terrace____| 89
Knutson, Harold._.______. St. Cloud, Minn_____ 1529 a 56
ve. SE.
Kocialkowski, Leo..." {i Chicago, TI... 0.0. The Shoreham ________ 26
*||Kopplemann, Herman P_| Hartford, Conn_____ The Mayflower. _______ 16
*1|| Kramer, Charles. _____ Los Angeles, Calif ___| The Broadmoor_______ 11
JRurtz, J. Banks. 0 Altoona, Pao niin Lone adie aie s 102
Zl Rvale,, Paul J. o. _ = Benson, Minn_______ The Cavaller. i... 0. 54
*lLamberison, W. P_____. Palrview, Bango: oo Jor coo Sopa ils 0 36
Lambeth, J. Walter. _____ Thomasville, NC. Coli. wondoea Jo anlys 86
*tLamneck, Arthur P____| Columbus, Ohio_____ 1661 Crescent Place___| 90
*Lanham, Fritz G.._._._.| Forth Worth, Tex. _.| The Westchester..__.. 115
Lanzetta, James J________ New York City, N.Y. {The Carlton... _._. 1 _ 78
*Larrabee, William H____| New Palestine, Ind__| The Roosevelt________ 22
Blea, Clarence IB... Santa Rosa, Calif____| 110 Maryland Ave. NE_ 9
ee, Frank Holo o0. 0 Joplin, Mo. lis 3701 Sixteenth St____. 60
*Lehlbach, Frederick R_.__| Newark, N. J_______ The Shoreham:': J... 70
*1iLehr, John'Co un 2 Monroe, Mieh____ The Bellevue. ________ 51
*iLemke, William________ Fargo, N. Dak... The Capitol Park______ 87
*Lesinski, John__________ Dearborn, Mich _____ The Bellevue. ________ 53
ewig, DavidJ..._ 0 Cumberland, "Md: col = 0 So 0 Shi 45
Lewis, Lawrence_ ________ Denver, Colo... The Roosevelt. ___.___ 13
Lindsay, George W_______ Brooklyn, N.Y... The Baleigh! =o o_o 73
#loyd, Wesley. ........... Tacoma, Wash______ The Harvard Hall_____ 123
[Lozier, Ralph F......... Carrollton, Mo____.._ The Bellevue... ___.__.. 61
Luce, Robert... Waltham, Mass_____ 1520: T=8e ee 48
*|||| Ludlow, Louis________ Indianapolis, Ind. [1820 H St... 33
*|||Lundeen, Ernest______ Minneapolis, Minn__| The Stratford_________ 55
*McCarthy, Kathryn | Hays, Kans... ____ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 37
O’Loughlin.
*1MecClintic, James V____| Snyder, Okla________| The Chastleton_______ 96
*McCormack, John W____| Dorchester, Mass____| The Washington______ 49
*| Me¢Duffie, John. _______ Monroeville, Ala____| 2311 Connecticut Ave_.| 3
*MecFadden, Louis T_____ Canton, Pa. «0! The Mayflower________ 101
*McFarlane, W. D.._.____ Graham), Tex Lhd Cb yiutie sot 116
*t|| McGrath, John J_____ San Mateo, Calif: cone nono S000 C0 10
*McGugin, Harold_______ Coffeyville, Kans____| The Roosevelt________ 37
*McKeown, Tom D______ Ade, Okla. George Washington Inn_| 95
*| McLean, Donald H____| Elizabeth, N. J______ The Roosevelt... 68
McLeod, Clarence J______ Detroit, Mich... The Shoreham _______._ 53
*|| McMillan, Thomas S___| Charleston, S. C_____ 4512 Cathedral Ave____| 106
*+ McReynolds, Sam D.._| Chattanooga, Tenn__| The Highlands________ 110
*i| ||| MeSwain, John J_.___ Greenville, S. C_____ The Harrington... 108
Major,’d. Barl. 0 “0 Hillsboro, TH... The Plaga +. Lo 29
*Maloney, Francis T_____ Meriden, Conn______ The Willaed 020 n> 16
*Maloney, Paul H_______ New Orleans; Lact -2ill2 oo ols ca aan 41
*t|||| Mansfield, Joseph J__| Columbus, Tex______ Wakefield Hall. ______ 115
*tMapes, Carl E_________ Grand Rapids, Mich_| 2818 Connecticut Ave__| 51
* Marland, B. W.___.___ Ponea City, Okla... |The Willard =>... 96
Marshall, L. Po. 0 Xenia, Ohio... 00a The'Bellevne__ -___. 90
*Martin, Charles H______ Portland, Oreg...... The Shoreham. ..___._._ 97
Martin, John A... .. Pueblo, Colo..-C Dodge Hotel... 14
Martin, Joseph W., jr_.__ Nn Attleboro, | Racquet Club__._..___. 49
ass.
157297°—T73-1—1ST ED   43
658 Congressional Directory
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
Name Home post office Washington residence bin
Page
*|| || May, Andrew J______ Prestonsburg, Ky....| The Roosevelt________ 39
*Mead, James M________ Buffalo, N.Y. ...... The Capitol Vista_____ 83
*Meeks, James A_______._ Danville Hos fo oils viii sain ans 28
*t Merritt, Schuyler______ Stamford, Conn_____ 2424 Wyoming Ave___| 16
*t Millard, Charles D_____ Tarrytown, N. Y____| The Wardman Park___| 79
Miller, John EB... =... Searcy, Ark... _.... The Bellevue________._ 6
*|| Milligan, Jacob Li_____._ Richmond, Mo__._.___ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 61
Mitchell, John R_........- Cookeville, Tenn____| The Raleigh. .________ 111
Ill Monaghan, Joseph P___! Butte, Mont________ The Greystone______.._ 63
*Montague, Andrew J____| Richmond, Va______ Chatham Courts______ 120
*||Montet, Numa F______ Thibodaux, La______ 6810 Fairfax Road, 41
Edgemoor, Md.
*Moran, Edward C., jr___| Rockland, Me_______ The Highlands___.._..._ 43
* Morehead, John H______ Palla City, Nebro.o0 [oc Coote 2 uo. 64
*| ||| Mott, James W._____ Salem, Ore. oi lati ico inane catiay 96
Moynihan, P..-H......- = Chieago, lll... 1300 K St... 25
Muldowney, Michael J___| Pittsburgh, Pa______ The Hamilton: __....- 104
=*Murdoek, Abe... ox.-2.- Beaver, Ullah. ooo lo .oo nian adnini dis. 117
*1|| Musselwhite, Harry W_| Manistee, Mich_____ The Broadmoor_______ 52
*Nesbit, Walter... Belleville 01a. ooo lf one in noainodd ouast 24
*1 ||| Norton, Mary T_____ Jersey City, N. J__._| The Mayflower_____.___ 70
*(’ Brien, Thomas J______ Chieago, Ill: The Hamilton... 26
*(Q’Connell, John M______ Westerly, Rol. cult oa a lee 106
%#0’Connor, John'J..-- -.- New York City, N. Y.| The Shoreham________ 77
2Olver; Fronk.. c.i.cn 4 New York City, N.Y. The Driseoll 7 _.. 79
|Oliver, William B_______ Tuscaloosa, Ala_____ 1827 Wyoming Ave____| 4
O’Malley, Thomas_ . _____ Milwaukee, Wis. ol amas ana ata 126
Owen, EM. __._ __ ...... Criflin, Une nou i dodals i 21
Palmisano, Vincent L_____ Baltimore, Md... .oc lo... oa atecl- 45
*Parker, Homer C_______ Statesboro, Ga______ 436 New Jersey Ave.SE_| 20
*Parker, James S.._ ..... Salem, N. Y...oouo- 2148 Wyoming Ave____| 80
*iParks, Tilman B.._.-.. Camden, Atk. 0. ofc Sean tin a weds aza 7
Parsons, Claude V_._____. Goleonda, Hl... lio c 0 oficial 29
*Patman, Wright. __._.__ Texarkana, Tex... The Bellevue... ._-___ 113
*1Peavey, Hubert H_____ Washburn, Wis_____ 653 East Capitol St____| 127
*111f1Perkins, Randolph. _| Woodcliff Lake, N. J_| 2344 California St_____ 68
*Peterson, J. Hardin. ____ Lakeland, Fla... 1907 H.-S ...o0 18
Pettengill, Samuel B______ South Bend, dnd. o.oo oo on od oo oa 31
Peyser, Theodore A_____._ New York City, N. Y.| The Shoreham ________ 77
*Pierce, Walter M_______ La Grande, Oreg....| The New Haven______ 97
*Polk, James Go... ounce Highland, Ohio... fe... ocail rose 89
*t|| Pou, Edward W______ Smithfield, N. C_____ The Wardman Park___| 85
*Powers, D. Lane________ Trenton, N. J... The Shoreham. ______._ 68
Prall, Anning 8S... 2... Staten Island, N. Y__| The Shoreham _______._ 75
*Ragon, Heartsill________ Clarksville, Ark. ____ 110 Maryland Ave. NE_ 7
*Rainey, Henry TT... Carrollion, Ill... .... 2001 Sixteenth St______ 29
*tRamsay, Robert Li_____ Follansbee, W. Va___| George Washington Inn_| 123
*Ramspeck, Robert______ Atlanta, Ga. oo The Westchester__ ____ 21
*|| Randolph, Jennings____| Elkins, W. Va_______ Thela Salle... .. 123
*Rankin, John B. _...-.... Tupelo, Miss________ 100 Maryland Ave. NE_| 56
*Ransley, Harry C______. Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Mayflower________ 98
Rayburn, Sam_...... =... Bonham, Tex... ... The Anchorage... __._. 114
*Reece, B. Carroll ___.____ Johnson City, Tenn__| 2100 Massachusetts | 110
Ave.
Reed, Daniel A. _._____.._ Dunkirk, No. Virol oo ed ai Soin 83
Reid, Frank Ro... oo... Aurora, Hl... ._.... The Mayflower________ 27
Reilly, Michael K________ Fond du lae, Wis. | The Plaza... __._.__- 126
*t111Rich, Robert F_____ Woolrich, Pa... lo aa 101
Richards, James P..._ Loaneagier, 8. Cla 20 108
*Richardson, William E...| Beading, Pa. © |. ni ia aia 100
Robertson, A. Willis_ _____ Lexington, Va_._..__. The Capitol Park...... 120
a
i)
=
i
Members’ Addresses
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
Name Home post office ‘Washington residence
*Robinson, J. W.icennaane
Rogers, Edith Nourse_____
= lIRogers, Will. ___.....
*Rogers William N_______
*|| Romjue, Milton A_____
*Rudd, Stephen A____.__._
Ruffin, James B___ .......
*Sabath, Adolph J... ...-
*11Sadowski, George G___
Sanders, Morgan G___.___
#8andlin, John N....---.
Schaefer, Edwin M_______
*+Schuetz, Leonard W____
*Schulte, William T______
Scrugham, James G______
*Sears, William J_._______
*Secrest, Robert T._.___._._
*Seger, George N. _ ._...-
*tShallenberger, Ashton C_
Shannon, Joseph B_______
Shoemaker, Francis H____
*Simpson, James, jro_____
Sinclair, James H....._-....
Sirovich, William I_______
*71Sisson, Pred J...
*||Smith, Howard W.______
Smith, Joell, .... co-.
*||Smith, Martin F_______
*+Snell, Bertrand H______
*iSnyder,J. Buell .._..___.
Somers, Andrew Li_______
*Spence, Brent._________
*1{Stalker, Gale H__._.____
Steagall, Henry B________
*Stokes, Edward L_______
Strong, Nathan L_____.
*{Strong, Sterling P___.__._
*Stubbs, Henry E________
Studley, Elmer E________
Sullivan, Christopher D___
Sumners, Hatton W______
*Sutphin, William H_____
*Swank, Fletcher B_ _____
Sweeney, Martin L_______
*Swick, J. Howard_______
Saber, John... .......
*Tarver, Malcolm C______
*Taylor, Edward T.......
Toviers Jd. Will ~~ C  -
*Terrell, George B_______
Thom, WilllamB-._____-
*tThomason, R. Ewing___
*|| Thompson, Chester_____
*Fhurston, Tloyd-.._: -.
Tinkham, George Holden.
Provo, Utah
Lowell, Mass
Moore, Okla
Sanbornville, N. H_ _
Brooklyn, N. Y
Springfield, Mo
Detroit, Mich
Canton, Tex
El Paso, Tex
Rock Island, Ill
Osceola, Iowa
Boston, Mass
Belleville, T1________
Hammond, an
Jacksonville, Fla____
Senecaville, Ohio____
Kansas City, Mo___._
Red Wing, Minn___._
Wadsworth, Ill
Kenmare, N. Dak___
New York City, N.Y.
Whitesboro, N. Y___
Alexandria, Va
Beckley, W. Va
Hoquiam, Wash
Potsdam, N. Y
Perryopolis, Pa
Brooklyn, N. Y
Fort: Thomas, Ky...
Elmira, N. Y
Philadelphia, Pa
Brookville, Pa
Santa Maria, Calif ___
Flushing, N. Y
New York City, N. Y_
Matawan, N. J
Norman, Okla
Cleveland, Ohio
Beaver Falls, Pa____
Auburn, N. Y
Glenwood Springs,
Anderson, S. C
La Follette, Tenn__ _
°
1155 Sixteenth St______
George Washington Inn_
The Roosevelt. ______
George Washington Inn_
The Raleigh_4 =...
The Harrington. ______
The Wardman Park. __
5012 Hampden Lane,
Bethesda, Md.
The Chastleton_______
110 Maryland Ave. NE_
The Shoreham. ......L_
1625 Sixteenth St_____
The Raleigh....c-.oi.
The Shoreham _ _______
140 Twelfth St. NE____
The Mayflower_______._
The Wardman Park____
The Willard... nis
3515 Legation St______
2400 Sixteenth St______
The Capitol Park.......
83238 Rta ian
2721 Pennsylvania Ave.
SE.
125 B St. SE.
The Chastleton__.. =
The University Club___
The Baleigh. i...
The Carlton. 57: iF
George Washington Inn_
The Hamilton... ___
1613 Forty-fourth St___
2647 Woodley Road._ -_
The Harrington...
The Raleigh...
9203 Connecticut Ave.,
Chevy Chase, Md.
3719 Reservoir Road___
1610 Sixteenth St_____
The Roosevelt... =. _
The Arlington... ......
660 Congressional Directory
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—Continued
(For office rooms and telephones, see pp. 287-294)
Name Home post office ‘Washington residence Es
Page
*tTobey, Charles W______ Temple, NoHo fo seas 67
*Traeger, William I______ Los Angeles, Calif. __| The Hamilton_________ 11
*Treadway, Allen T______ Stockbridge, Mass___| 2490 Tracy Place______ 46
*+Truax, Charles V______ Bueyrus, Ohio. _____ George WashingtonInn_| 88
*|| Turner, Clarence W____| Waverly, Tenn______ The Capitol Park______ 111
t1Turpin, C. Murray._.____ Kinggton,; Pa: in os 99
*Umstead, William B_____ Durham, N.C... The Raleigh... ___._ 85
*Underwood, Mell G.____ New Lexington,Ohio_| The Ambassador. _____ 90
*7Utterback, John G_____ Bangor, Me... .. The Driscoll 2.x 43
*Vingson, Carl... 0. Milledgeville, Ga____| 4 Primrose St., Chevy | 21
Chase, Md.
*Vingon, Fred M... . . _ Ashland, Ky. ..._.. 110 Maryland Ave. NE_| 39
*Wadsworth, James W___| Geneseo, N. Y______ 2800 Woodland Drive__| 82
11] | Waldron, Alfred M___| Philadelphia, Pa_____ The Washington______ 98
*Wallgren, Monrad C_____ Everett, Wash______ The Harvard Hall_____ 122
Walter, Francis E________ BEngton, Pa. The Washington_ _____ 102
Warren, Lindsay C...._ . Washington, N. C___| The Washington______ 84
*iWatson, Henry W_____ Langhorne, Pa. _____ 1765 Massachusetts 99
Ave.
*Wearin, Otha D.._... Hastines down. sot lo aes rn hneas 25
Weaver, Zebulon_________ Asheville, N. C.____ The Hamilton... .. 86
*Weideman, Carl M______ Detroit, Mich_______ The Bellevue __________ 53
*Welch, Richard J... San Francisco, Calif__| The Roosevelt________ 9
*t{Werner, Theo. B._____ Rapid City, S. Dak__| The Continental _______ 109
West, Charles... Granville, Ohio______ The Kennedy-Warren__| 92
West, Milton H._._._.. Brownsville, Tex-...| The Hamilton... _..___._ 116
*White, Compton I______ Clark Fork, Idaho...| The Roosevelt _______ 23
*Whitley, James L_______ Rochester, N. Y.___ The Mayflower_______._ 82
*1|| Whittington, Wm. M__| Greenwood, Miss____| The Hamilton_________ 57
Wigglesworth, Richard B. ./ ‘Milton, Mass. =o [0 oi... eo .. 49
*Wilcox, J. Mark... Wor Palm Beach, | The Jefferson. ._-.._.. 19
la.
*Willford, Albert C_______.| Waterloo, Iowa_.____ The Roosevelt ._______ 34
*t Williams, Clyde________ Hillsboro, Mo... The Harvard Hall _____ 60
*{|[Wilson, Riley J. ..._ Rustom; $a. = 3109 Garfield St_______ 41
*Withrow, Gardner R____| La Crosse, Wis______ 3500 Fourteenth St____| 126
*|| Wolcott, Jesse P_______ Port Huron, Mich___! 2910 Ordway St_______ 51
Wolfenden, James________ Upper Darby, Pa____| The Washington. _.____ 99
*Wolverton, Charles’ A... Merchantville, N. J_ |. coo ol io oi 67
*Wood, John 8. 27. Canton, Ga. oo Sr ee tea 22
[lIlWood, Reuben T_______ Springfield, Mo_____ George Washington Inn_| 61
*tWoodruff, Roy O______ Bay City, Mich____._ 1801 Sixteenth St______ 52
Woodrum, Clifton A______ Roanoke, Va... The Burlington_______ 119
*+Young, Stephen M_____ Cleveland, Ohio..__._ The Ambassador__ ____ 88
Zioncheck, Marion A_____ Seattle, Wash oo feet 122
DELEGATES
*Dimond, Anthony J_____ Valdez, Alaska______ 3024 Tilden St = 128
*McCandless, Lincoln L__| Honolulu, Hawaii. __| 3804 Fulton St________ 128
RESIDENT COMMISSIONERS
*|||Guevara, Pedro_______ Hin Crus, Laguna, | 3106 Eighteenth St____| 128
*t111TIglesias, Santiago__| San Juan, P. R______ 3175 Porter St=-_ “0 130
%*Opiag, Camilo... 20... 3157 Eighteenth St____| 129   Balaoan, La Union,
P. 1.
INDIVIDUAL INDEX
(For list of Members of Congress, with their addresses, see pp. 651-660)
A
Abbot, C. G.:
Secretary, Smithsonian Institution. .....
Director, Astrophysical Observatory... ._.
International Exchanges ie 08 UL Re
Accioly, X, Brazilian Jon Gabi ia
Acheson, Dean G., The Under Secretary of
Ne. Treasury Lil tor cd Slain hath wwii basta
Acker, W. B., chief clerk, Interior Depart-
ELT Ee an an a SE a a al
Ackerson, Eugene J., office of the House
Legislative Counsel. occ onionvac-vai.
Acuff, Harmon O., office of Alien Property
Castodian: on. site cae nenies
Adair, E. Ross, House folding room.________.
Adams, Alva B., Columbia Hospital for
WOMeNE oo rsodih fsa 20 Dor Sas
Adams, E. J., Federal Trade Commission. __
Adams, Lieut. Col. Emory S., office of The
Adjutant:-General: 00 fo. nmn ting
Adams, Franklin, Pan American Union_____
Adams, Frank W., United States attorney’s
Adams, George W., Freedmen’s Hospital.___
Adams, Jed C., Board of Tax Appeals__.____.
Adams, Capt. (E.) R. B., the Coast Guard.-.
Adams, William W., Bureau of Mines_______
Adkins, Jesse C., associate justice, Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia...
Aguilar, Brig. Gen. Francisco J., Mexican
EBmbasgy oo nl tania
Ahearn, Ed.:
Secretary to Senator Trammell. _________
Senate Committee on Naval Affairs ____
Ainsworth, Culver M., International
* Boundary Commission, United States
and Mexico. J oon J ane dy
Aitchison, Clyde B., Interstate Commerce
Commisslon oii tr hs
Akers, Richard H., commissioner, Court of
Mme se A
Akin, Allen T., Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Paxation tl oo os fi iho lia
Albright, Horace M.:
Director National Park Service._________
National Capital Park and Planning
Commission: ao oe Ji ld aiaagiy an
Alas Paul C., United States attorney’s
offleg. cdo iui ro ST ae
Alderman, L. R., Office of Education________
Aldrich, Kildroy P., chief post office
inspector Sa Sh hE hae ee ae
Alario, Loyal B., Astrophysical Observa-
EI Capt. George A., Governor of
Alfaro, Luis R., Panaman Legation...
Alfaro, Dr. Ricardo J
Pan American Union... __..____......
Ministerof Panama... of 0. 5 Lo.
Allanson, H. E., Bureau of Plant Industry...
Allen, Charles R., Federal Board for Voca-
tional Education SEE SR RE ad
Allen, Edward W., International Fisheries
COMMISION nvr cur edie sane mn desis
Page
369
320
Page
Allen, Fred D., office of District assessor..... 375
Allen, Guy F., Bureau of the Budget... ___.___ 303
Allen, Jessie C., Committee on Conference
Minority ofthe Senate. o.oo ooo ii. 254
Allen, P. F., State Department______________ 298
Allen, T. W., Bureau of Public Roads_.._.___ 327
Allen, W. C., office of the Doorkeeper__._.___ 260
Alley, James B., Reconstruction Finance
CorDOralioN Ji. J. fn owi ies ums bone tn sted wa 358
Allison, William H., Library of Congress.... 267
Almenara, Juan Mendoza, Peruvian Em-
DOREY ai an BE NE 510
Altman, Russell D., Senate post office_______ 256
Ames, Dr. Joseph S., National Advisory
Committee for Aeronauties._________..____ 346
Anderson, Chandler P., Mixed Claims Com-
mission, United States and Germany._____. 346
Anderson, E. D., office of Panama Canal___. 345
Anderson, Francis M., office of Secretary of
SEO ecb ie ims sis di Ss he Se Ede nh 299
Anderson, James W.:
Secretary to Senator Wheeler____________ 258
Senate Committee on Indian Affairs_.___ 255
Anderson, Leeman, secretary to Senator
Bussell a es 258
Anderson, Mary, director, Women’s Bu-
11h IE SRR Eke tS By eae 334
Andrew, A. Piatt.:
The Interparliamentary Union... ___._____ 227
Joint Committee to Investigate Dirigible
Isasters 229
Angelone Romolo, Italian Embassy. .__._____ 508
Anslinger, H. J., Commissioner of Narcotics. 301
Anthony, Richard H., Secretary to Senator
15 ETE ind ne 4 i SR a a Se Tals 8 3 257
Aoki, Capt. Takashi, Japanese Embassy--... 509
Appleby, Paul H., assistant to the Secretary
olf Agricalbures ou toe ee rt i 323
Arcaya, Pedro Manuel:
Venezuelan minister. = oo =i aise] 513
Governing Board, Pan American Union. 354
Ardalan, Dr. Ali Gholi, Persian Legation__._. 510
Arentson, James, Bureau of Indian Affairs... 319
Arick, Ned W., House Legislative Counsel... 263
Arms, Benjamin, National Memorial Com-
musslon i. UE AS aT 351
Armstrong, E. J., Bureau of Indian Affairs. 319
Armstrong, Harry C., Patent Office..______.. 332
Arnold, Celia, Senate Committee on Indian
Affairs SATA i AE a SA aed 3 255
Arnold, E. S., Receiving Home for Children. 376
Arnold, L. D., Bureau of Indian Affairs.__.. = 320
Arthur, Charles M., Federal Board for Voeca-
tlonal'Eduecation.. ool... oi icc nny 344
Arthur, Maj. Joseph D., jr., United States
Engineer Office... 0 oo _ Loins 308
Arundel, Russell M., secretary to Senator
e tealf nea Rah aE ai] 258
Arundel], C. Rogers, Board of Tax Appeals_._ 341
Ashbrook, F. G., Bureau of Biological Survey. 327
Ashburn, "Maj. Gen. T. Q., Inland Waterways
Corporation Be i ee mE a TA 348
Ashburn, T. Q., jr., Inland Waterways Cor-
DOTAEION. iia ie hae Sloan 348
Ashby, Wallace, Bureau of Agricultural
Engineering oar. © oolimaeeiy anit Se 327
Ashley, A. McC.:
Office of Secretary of Agriculture. __..______ 323
General Supply Committee ______________ 303
Ashley, Frederick W., Library of Congress... 267
661
662 Congressional Directory
Page
Ashworth, Dr. Reid R., District health de- Barbour, W. Warren, trustee National Train-
Dartment io iat a ea aE 377 ing: Schoolfor Boys... ..-. 7:
Aston, J. L., office of Secretary of the Senate_.. 254 | Barden, Col. William J., Board of Engineers
Astrom, L., Finnish minister. .....--o i... 506 for-Riversand Harbors... ....... >
Atterbury, John C., House Committee on the Bardroff, John T., office of District assessor. _
Census tse 261 | Barefield, S. S., Senate Committee on Fi-
Auchter, E. C., Bureau of Plant Industry_____ 325 1 Fn er CA a Ge SE
Auf der Heide, Oscar L., Massachusetts Bay Barger, Corinne:
Colony Tercentenary Commission___________ 22! Senate Committee on Territories and In-
Autan, George C., presiding judge, municipal
B
Babcock, Charles E., Pan American Union__. 353
Bahoacs, E. Claude, Civil Service Commis-
ry cn a 337
Babgeok, J. P., International Fisheries Com-
mdsslon. Fool a iS 348
Babcock, Col. Walter C. (retired), United
States Soldiers’ Home. on ooo coe 356
Bacharach, Isaac:
Commission in Control of House Office
Buln a a Ae it 225
Joint Committee on Internal Revenue
AXA ON mee ee 226
United States Roanoke Colony Commis-
SOR a 229
Bachke, Halvard H., Norwegian minister... 510
Bachman, B. M., Public Utilities Commis- ]
BO i a mn tr ch 378
Bachman, Nathan L., Nashville Presidents’
Plaza Commission... an. 00 aa 229
Back, E. A., Bureau of Entomology.__._____- 327
Bacon, Robert L., Massachusetts Bay Col-
ony Tercentenary Commission__.__________ 229
Bacon, Mrs. Robert, The Congressional
SLT re Senate ol Rae Sue Se oR Rn WE 355
Bagdonas, Dr. Mikas, Lithuanian Legation. 509
Baggarly, F. C., Federal Trade Commis-
SO ee A A Pre 340
Bagley, Capt. D. W., Bureau of Navigation_-. 315
Bailey, F. J., Bureau of the Budget. ___.___._- 303
Bailey, Jennings, District Supreme Court--. 369
Bailey, Lewis W., office of Secretary of the
Senate aa 253
Bailey, R. L., National Memorial Commis-
SION. as ai a nbn a Em ea 351
Bair, Bert E., superintendent of presswork,
Government Printing Office. ______.______ 268
Baity, James L., General Accounting Office... 338
Baker, Cora W., American Battle Monu-
ments Commission. C2: ce. ico ios 350
Baker, Harold W., District engineer depart-
TON aa ai mit San sii i oh ie ra re 377
Baker, Howard, Bureau of the Budget______ 303
Baker, Joseph R., office of Secretary of State... 299
Baker, Sibyl, District superintendent of play-
SPOURAS LiL ae ae aN Ge nd es Sac Be 376
atin te A tae Sa Sh A EA 301
Thuy Charles E., Bureau of Labor Sta-
EAT Tt Ls ER a SE Sl ET 0 ns A Er 334
Baldwin, Elmer I., General Land Office.____ 319
Baldwin, Lieut. Col. Karl F., Bureau of In-
Salar AfTairS. co 309
Ball, Frank C., George Rogers Clark Ses-
quicentennial Commission ._____________._ 228
Ballantine, Arthur A., American National
Red Cross... oo rian 354
Ballou, Dr. Frank W., superintendent Dis-
triet schools. io. aad 375
Balls, Afred G., the Alaska Railroad. ______. 322
Balutis, Bronius Kasimir, Lithuanian min-
I i Si RS apie 3 Lad OE 509
Barbosa, Jodo Ruy, Brazilian Embassy .__.. 503
Barbour, Arnold W., St. Elizabeths Hos-
101% I Pend i a dr Bs RE CA LET ERS wp BI 321
sulor AflaivSsl oa
Secretary to Senator Tydings____________
Barger, Era V., Senate Committee on Terri-
tories and Insular Affairs. _._______________
Barker, Harry B., District fire department...
Barker, H. Austin, House post office________
Barkley, Alben W.:
Interparliamentary Union_______________
Joint Committee on the Library __.______
Library of Congress Trust Fund Board. ._
Joint Committee to Acquire a Site and
Additional Buildings for the Library of
Congress. oii. onl aii on iii
Barkley, Laura:
Senate Committee on the Library._.___..
Joint Committee on the Library._________
Barnard, M. M., superintendent of District
penalinstitations. Lo. fs oo 00
Barndollar, B. H., the Alaska Railroad_.____
Barnes, Charles M., office of Secretary of
Barnes, George O., Assistant Treasurer of the
United States... io io cia ti
Barnes, I. R., House Committee on Foreign
Barnett, Claribel R., librarian, Department
of Agriculture a RS Eh
Barnhart, E. W., Federal Board for Voca-
tional Bdueation.. Zilia vil ahaa
Barnhart, Hermann B., superintendent of
printing, Government Printing Office_____
Baron, José T., Cuban Embassy. _....____..
Barr, Albert E., office of the Second Assist-
ant‘ Postmaster General... i...
Bare: WY W., United States Snprems
rn heres (EO SR rete Ol pe In
Bali; Robert J., president District plumb-
ing boar Sesh Ee RET ERE) TO
Barriger, John W., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation. oe. aca 2 RE
Barringer, Lieut. Commander V. C., navy
yard and station, Washington, D. C_______
Bartel, William P., Interstate Commerce
Commission = 0 mi Di at
Bartelt, E. F., office of Secretary of Treasury
Bartholow, Benjamin H., special assistant
to the Secretary of the Treasury. ._________
Barileit, Calvin W., Civil Service Commis-
Bartlett, Lewis M., office of the Comptroller,
Post Office Department EP Ca SL
Bartley, Guy, Inland Waterways Corpora-
Barton, Charles ©., office of Secretary of
Commerce: Jo es a,
Baruch, Ismar, Civil Service Commission...
Bash, Brig. Gen. Louis H., office of the
Quartermaster General. __ _________________
Bassett, Harry, United States Employees’
Compensation Commission. _.__.________
Bassler, R. S., National Museum. _.._______._
Batchelder, E. D., office of Secretary of
TPYCASHLY ave nica ne ee an ie a nim mm mie
Bates, Sanford:
Attorney General’s office... ______..__.._.
National Training School for Boys-...._
Batschelet, Clarence E.:
Bureau of the Census... __________.__.___
United States Geographic Board________
Battle, Turner W., office of the Department
Try il PY oT) SEE PE OL FRA Le i ni SR
268
505
339
300
°29
3.7
338
352
300
331
310
357
330
353
Sag
iy
Individual Index
Baughman, Wilbur N., United States attor-
NEY S00 Sun sos cana anh th th wih
Baxter, Norman W., Reconstruction Finance
COrpOration.. ..q.... «oh vanewriited sree ns
Baxter, William M., jr., American National
A a eR SE RSE
Bayles, Mary H., juvenile court_..._._..____._
Baylor, Adelaide S., Federal Board for Voca-
tional Bducalion ic coats. domaasiao te 5.
(1 PRR IE NR AI Ne AR
Beales, LaVerne, Bureau of the Census_.__..
Beaman, Middleton, House Legislative
Cotnsel toon oon Saat nbs ea rn a
Bean, Inspector T. R., Metropolitan police.
Bearce, H. W., Bureau of Standards______.__
Beard, Charles S., office of Fourth Assistant
Postmaster General... o.oo oo5i- oo
Beck-Friis, Baron Johan, Swedish Legation_
Beck, William C., office of the Second Assist-
ant Postmaster General . ___.______________
Becker, Luther, Bureau of Foreign and Do-
mestic Commerce... . i:cic ioaioziiw.
Beckett, Inspector J. F., Metropolitan police.
Beckley, Harold R., Senate Press Gallery._..
Beedy, Carroll L., Joint Committee on the
Library
Bell, D. W., office of Secretary of Treasury...
Bell, E. W., General Accounting Office______
Bell, Frank T., Commissioner, Bureau of
Fisheries: 0 a a Ee
Bell, George B., Bureau of Foreign and Do-
mesticCommerce. ._..... Li 2 Fac
Bell, Miles W., District chief clerk of vehicles
and tmaffle. oo ior eee
Bell, R. W., Bureau of Dairy Industry_-._._.
Bell, W. B., Bureau of Biological Survey._._.
Bell, Capt. Wm. H., Naval Medical School...
Bellegarde, Dantes:
Minister of dail] 1 ool avioali mand
Pan American Union... ccoweineados.
Bellinger, Commander P. N. L., The Aero-
mantical Board... _...... afin
Belmont, Mrs. August, American National
Red Cross... so bid Son oie cass
Bennett, James V., Department of Justice__.
Bennett, Robert B., Board of Mediation____
Benton, Philip M., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation. cate similis oli: ih
Beresford, Robert F., secretary District exam-
Inersiand registrars. Li oT
Bergman, William D., office of Secretary of
Berrien, Capt. F. D., navy yard and station,
Washington, DD. Qa oie slimes 0
Berry, Alberta, House Committee on Rivers
and Harborsi iL wicca ld Shere
Berryhill, Porter, The Alaska Railroad ______
Besley, H. J., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
mommies. “ees os In
Best, Lieut. Commander William A.:
Federal Statistics Board _________________
Assistant to Chief Coordinator. _________
Bestor, Paul, Farm Credit Administration. .
Bethea, Liston P., Reconstruction Finance
Corporations... SEL EE He iG
Bethune, John F., United States Tariff Com-
Bethune, Mary McLeod, National Memorial
Commission. >. ir rhe aie ae
Betterley, Joseph F., office of Fourth Assist-
ant Postmaster General
Betts, M
peering” finish SES ee
Bewley, T. K., British Embassy. ___________
Bey, Nicholas Khalil, Egyptian Legation____
Beyer, Clara M., Children’s Bureau.__._____.
Bicknell, Ernest P., American National Red
Crosiesoreas 71 A BAUR, RIREG JG
Biffle, Leslie L., Secretary to the Majority. -
Biggs, James C., Solicitor General ___________
Billa, George C., Bureau of Industrial Alco-
0 mmm. mmm mmm ————————
Page
369
358
hia T. Elton, Senate Committee on
1 Be aa
Bingham, Robert W., Regent of Smithsonian
Institution: loo. saad re
Binley, Walter S., General Land Office__.____
Birdseye, C. H., Geological Survey__.___._____
Birgfeld, F. A., chief clerk, Treasury Depart-
EINe COTDB. oo i rae san EPL HEGEL Sh
Bischoff, J. E. C., business manager for Dis-
trict penal Institutions. .cc.- 2 cc 03. i. ....
Bishop, Maj. Gen. Harry G., Chief of Field
ARIRIErY ol en Sit run al ch nd Lhe
Bishop, H. K., Bureau of Public Roads_____
Bishopp, F. C., Bureau of Entomology_____
Bitter, Viola M., House Committee on Public
Buildings and Grounds.........-.-..--- 2...
Black, A. D., District engineer department.
Black, Eugene, Board of Tax Appeals_____._.
Black, Eugene R., governor of Federal Re-
serve Board oo iui ots se a
Black, Hon. George, International Highway
Special Commissioner... .--—..o.. a 5
Black, Henry F., office of Secretary of Labor.
Black, Loring M., jr., Board of Visitors to
the Naval Aeademy........ ooo ooo iia
Black, Maj. Gen. William M., Washington
National Monument Society... _.._.._____
Blair, Henry P., Columbia Hospital for
Blanchard, Linn R., Library of Congress.-._-
Blanchard, W. S., Bureau of Narcotics. _.__-
Blanck, F. C., Bureau of Chemistry and Soils_
Bland, Oscar E., judge, United States Court
of Customs and Patent Appeals (biogra-
Blanks, George, jr., House post office..aan--
Blanton, Catherine:
Secretary to Senator Harrison... ________
Senate Committee on Finance. ..._._______
Blanton, Mrs. Thomas L., The Congres-
Sonali CID ae TT
Blassingham, Stewart E., office of Postmaster
General ot ory
Blee, Harry H., Aeronautics Branch, Depart-
ment:of Commerce... oi oo. ol iil
Bletz, Maurice H.:
Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com-
United States Section of the Inter-Amer-
ican ich Commission =... Cc.
Bliss, Cornelius N., American National Red
15 Er EL i co a sa de Waa Fo
Bloom, Sol:
Columbia Institution for the Deaf. ______
Interparliamentary Union.______________
The George Washington Bicentennial
Commission... 0 ome
United States Roanoke Colony Commis-
1 [711 DA SI Ca I en i
Blount, Julian W., secretary to Senator
Norheek ror aes
Boal, Frank K., secretary to Senator Davis _
Boardman, Miss Mabel T., American Na-
Tonal Red Cross... ca or Gn
Bocock, Edgar A., superintendent, Gallinger
Muonicipat Hospital... oo oe oie
Bodholdt, Edward N., Attorney General's
Boehne, John W., jr., Joint Committee on
Veterans’ Aare. co. i ethane ate
Bogardus, Frank H., General Accounting
83173 alerted Ss hiatal in roe Biel 1
Boggs, Samuel W.:
United States Geographic Board......_._
Office of Secretary of State__...._..______
Bogman, Capt. James H. Beals, Army In-
dustrial College... on i wel
Bogue, A. F., Hydrographic Office. ________
Bolotin, I. Irwin, United States attorney’s
Page
376
356
227
228
229
258
257
354
376
311
229
338
352
299
310
315
369
257
664
Bonardelli, Eugenio, Italian Embassy.......
Boncesco, George, Rumanian Legation.____.
Bond, Frank, chairman, United States Geo-
graphie Board o-oo io ic occ lool
Bond, William C., Library of Congress...
Bondy, Robert E., American National Red
YR SC LS i TE EA
Bonilla, Aristides, Costa Rican Legation._..
Bonneville, William H., Interstate Com-
merce Commission... sci nmaee
Bonynge, Robert W.:
Mixed Claims Commission, United
Statesand'Germany. i. oo oh.-o
Tripartite Claims Commission... _.._....
Booth, Fenton W., chief justice, Court of
Claims (biography) oa- i coa ana
Boots, Charles F., Senate Legislative Coun-
Borah, William E., Foreign Service Buildings
TE IE ee Ss eS ee Tp a
Borden, Dr. Daniel L., Metropolitan police.--
Bordenave, Dr. Enrique:
Ministerol Paraguay... ..-ceee-nencmavs
Pan Ameriecan'Union.. _._-__- ___.
Borgenstierna, Carl H., Swedish Legation.-..
Borges, E. Gil, Pan American Union...____.
Borland, Wilfred P., Interstate Comerce
OTIS ON em eens Se nme
Bostrom, W., Swedish minister-.._.._....__.
Bounds, Doris Swayze, secretary to Senator
SO Wer a i a em
Bourke, Robert J., assistant secretary Com-
mission in Control of the House Office
BANG re en Se a
Bourn, Frank B.:
Office of Secretary of War. ...occccceaaa-
General Supply Committee o_o...
Bourne, Henry E., Library of Congress_.....
Bousquet, Raymond, French Embassy-----.
Boutwell, W. D., Office of Education______..
Bowen, Capt. Harold G., Bureau of En-
gineering. Jom or Caio a
Bowen, J. Chester, Bureau of Labor Statis-
Bowerman, George F., Librarian, Public Li-
| 3 T Rk e h  RE A RSE
Bowerman, H. B., Bureau of Lighthouses...
Bowers, William P., Senate Committee on
Agriculture and Forestry... __._.__.
Bowie, William, Coast and Geodetic Survey.
Bowler, Alida C., Children’s Bureau__.__.___
Bowles, Dr. George W., National Memorial
Commission. oi oc oie a isl a
Bowyer, Ephraim P., Tripartite Claims
Commission... oo ore
Boyd, Allen R., Congressional Library
Boyd, George R., Bureau of Agricultural En-
ghneering. ooo ao eae
Boyd, George W., office of Secretary of
Boyd, Leroy S., Librarian, Interstate Com-
merce:Commission... C. .o lol...
Boyden, B. L., Bureau of Plant Quarantine...
Boykin, L. E., Bureau of Public Roads__...
Boysen, Charles C., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation: .. facia niacin as oa ae
Bradley, C. S., Federal Reserve Board.._...
Bradley, Mary M., Committee on Con-
ference Minority of the Senate_____________
Brady, James T., Veterans’ Administration.
Bragdon, Maj. John S., office of the Chief of
br RSE Ras ee Te
Brainerd, Ezra, jr., Interstate Commerce
COMMISSION oo niin is to etme prom rosin
Brainerd, Heloise, Pan American Union___._
Branch, Harllee, executive assistant to the
Postmaster General =... oo Tools
Brande, B. A., Civil Service Commission____
Brandes, E. W., Bureau of Plant Industry...
Brandeis, Louis D., Associate Justice,
United States Supreme Court (biography) _
Brandenburg, Dr. W. H. R., Metropolitan
rH JE a A a BE
Brandenburgh, Scott, office of the Doorkeeper.
Brandjord, I. M., Public Domain Com-
mittee.
Congressional Directory
Brandt, Rose K., Bureau of Indian Affairs_.
Brasch, Frederick E., Congressional Library.
Brasel, Royal H., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commeree-. =... _---_z- ZF." LL
Braswell, Ethel A., United States attorney’s
PALY dis a AE dt nite dn re et OE
Bray, C. D., office of Alien Property Cus-
todian: ooo ini coo ii LE
Bray, William J., office of the Doorkeeper.
Brearley, James A., chief clerk, Patent Office.
Breckinridge, Virginia, District juvenile
[Ln ny sienna hen San Sail sre EL as Ci
Breen, George F., office of the Postmaster
General. oil coo ios Ae i re
Reining, Harold W., Veterans’ Administra-
£137) te LE I a BE (I, 5 CIT v0 3 a LED Re
Brenman, Henry R., office of the Doorkeeper-
Brennan, George M., Farm Credit Adminis-
UE ION Jo aits en at EEE SI,
Brennan, Roland M., chief clerk, District
engineer department... -._--- oo. ....
Brewer, Joe R., Committee on Conference
Majority ofthe Senate. =o. ll...
Bricker, Brig. Gen. E. D., office of the Chief
OF OLANONCR Soin some oe i citi Pm Bm
Bride, William W.:
District corporation counsel - .-___._._---
Public Utilities Commission. . .______.._-
Bridgers, Charles H., office of Clerk of the
House: ti dat ota oad Si dacun
Briggs, L. J.:
Acting chairman Federal Specifications
Board cis viii atin da i a ls
Aeronautics Branch, Department of
COMME. oo drat ts ae deeb enn
Bureau of Standards... o.oo
Brigham, Maj. Gen. Claude E., Chief of the
Chemical Warfare Service. _-________----
Brill, Charles R., National Park Service. ---
Brinkman, Hedwig, Senate Committee on
Pensions = i LEE SRE Ln
Brinser, Rear Admiral H. L., office of Secre-
tarvofthe Navy. = oo coo ai oo
Bristol, Ralph S., Bureau of Indian Affairs--
Britt, O. L., Bureau of Standards ____- ele
Britten, Fred A., Interparliamentary Union.
Brockett, Paul, National Academy of Sci-
ie 2 phe HL eR oom aa hs ey SASS ERs LS
Bronson, R. B., United States Board of
Mediation Sa rors Se ae ot
Brooke, E. P., District engineer department.
Brossard, Edgar B., United States Tariff
Commission. oon mete
Broughton, William §., office of Secretary of
TPLOASULY <> = op = ons err rman mn ne pets
Brown, Albert K., Bureau of Fisheries. _____
Brown, Boyd J., Government secretary of
Virgin Islands otico oo oint Saanich
Brown, Bryant C., secretary Joint Com-
mittee on Internal Revenue Taxation...
Brown, E. B., office of Treasurer of the
United States. o.oo reactor zaoE
Brown, Edgar, Bureau of Plant Industry. --
Brown, Edward, office of Architect of the
Capifol.. i german ate 3
Brown, Elsie, Pan American Union.___._._-
Brown, Ernest W., major and superintend-
ent, Metropolitan police. — _ -——————-c-o-o--
Brown, F. P., International Boundary Com-
mission, United States and Mexico. _------
Brown, Frederick W., Civil Service Com-
TRISSION. ao ares eat oa oe Rebwaene
Brown, Fred H., United States Roanoke
Colony Commission. to -as-eurmcmznmmz
Brown, George E., Veterans’ Administration.
Brown, George Stewart, judge, United States
Customs Court (biography). -ccooecoooo-
Brown, Lloyd L., office of the Doorkeeper.._.
Brown, Maj. Gen. Lytle:
Chief of BNZiNeers... co -e=r===~memmmmm=
United States Soldiers’ Home.  - —.----_.
Federal Oil Conservation Board.________
National Capital Park and Planning
Commission: co. casossenai usr dann
Reconstruction Finance Corporation. _..
Brown, Raymond C., Secretary of Hawaii. -
Page
319
267
376
378
Individual Index
Page
Town, Thad H., Federal Radio Commis-
Boos William Ly Lay of Congress. ___
Browne, Charles A., Bureau of Chemistry
and Soll8: Loi oe RTE R RI EEA
Browning, Powell, Columbia Hospital for
WOMEN: - a t Lare as an La
Brownson, Admiral Willard H., Washington
National Monument Society _.________.__
Broz, Ales, Czechoslovakian Legation. ______
Brule, Elmo A., chief clerk, California Débris
Commission SRE Thar nS BE ee
Brun, Constantin, Danish Legation. ________
Brunner, Henry C., Bureau of Construction
and Repair EE CI CW ERO RR LE Te
Brunson, Anna, Senate Committee on Agri-
culiureiand:- Forestry... oc o-oo oiC
Bryan, Isadore, secretary to District com-
IISSIONIR son anes bon SL LB SET
Bryant, Dr. H. C., National Park Service...
Bryant, Capt. S. W.:
‘The Joint Board- i 2.0L won 0
Office of Naval Operations. ________.____
Buchanan, William Gordon, treasurer Dis-
trict board of accounianey .. ollie
Bap Mrs. John T., The Congressional
} 1 FL Bh pag A RE Spe fon Bd BES el aA LTE EE
Buckingham, Kate, office of Secretary of War.
Buckler, C. Howard, office of the Third
Assistant Postmaster General... cco)
Budlong, Percy E., Official Reporter, Senate.
Budwig, G. G., Aeronautics Branch, Depart-
ment of Commerce Aa EER a ital AL SMe Eo
Buehler, Lafayette G., office of the First As-
sistant Postmaster General oer
Buffington, William E., office of the comp-
troller, Post Office Department ___________
Bull, Lieut. Col. H. L., United States Geo-
eraphic Boards Pe Lo, adi
Bullion, Clarence L., General Land Office___
Bullitt, William C., ‘Department of State. __
Bullock, Matthew 'wW., National Memorial
CONTRUEIION. oases he ae DANO
Bulow, William 7J., jr.:
Secretary to Senator Bulow.___.__________
Senate Committee on Civil Service._____
Bumbry, Vernon $S., National Memorial
Commission. 3 oir in pos ae ah
Bumgardner, Thomas P., House Committee
on Waysiand Means. 2.00, 5. lo tod
Bungardeanu, Laurence, Rumanian Lega-
OD a
Bunke, Michael J., office of the Doorkeeper -
Burch, John E., National Forest Reservation
Commission ieee ER LS el Ra
Burgess, A. F., Bureau of Plant Quarantine.
Burgess, Col. "Harry, Governor of Panama
Burgos, José Maria Bonetti, Dominican Re-
public Legation. oats sansa isi tok
Burke, Edward R., consulting trustee, Na-
tional Training School for Boys.___________
Burke, F. S. W., Metropolitan police..______
Burke, Moncure, District Court of Appeals_
Burke, Vincent C., office of First Assistant
Postmaster General... Co 0 Ui...
Burkholder, Harry, Pan American Union. ._
Burklin, R. Reyburn, Federal Home Loan
Interior Rt Re Ss wh ph Reh gab Bh peal
a Lee, George Rogers Clark Sesquicen-
tennial Commission. bo... o.oo... ll
Burpee, Lawrence J., International Joint
Commission... Cistin on. Tiau onl
office. la RI A
Burrows, James W., quartermaster’s depart-
ment, Marine Corps. i oo vi i alah =
huey, Sidney G., Washington City post
Bursum, H. O., Public Domain Committee.
Burton, Ernest R., Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Bunion, Henrietta K., Bureau of Indian
1 Eel RA SL Led SE ES YL
268
326
356
350
505
308
505
315
254
375
321
345
314
375
355
305
312
256
Burton, Ishmael, Federal Trade Commis-
Busby, Mrs. Jeff, The Congressional Club. _
Pusoas, Andrew C., District fire depart-
ane Daniel P., medical and sanitary officer,
Government Printing Office. coiiisn gn
Buss, Ralph H., Reconstruction Finance
Corporalion. ... oui sis soi Le oa
Bustamante, Joaquin C., International
Boundary Commission, United States and
IE oy Wat g SA he Sr I be Sh ER SL SS
Butler, Dr. Arthur R., Civil Service Commis-
lon ETL Ee sen Ai peas er sn
Butler," Rear Admiral Henry V., comman-
gong) navy yard and station, Washington,
YB 00 0 EA TO Be Ae SCE Bd Rn PE TR
Butler, Jarvis:
General Board, Navy.ioovu. dare
ThelJointBoard. occa coo oioce
Secretary, The Aeronautical Board. _____
Butler, Pierce, Associate Justice Supreme
Court (biography)... iene pions
Butler, Ulysses, Interstate Commerce Com-
missions iol ela ii dunts anes
Butman, Arthur B., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce. ..-—...._.--c cocacnos
Butt, G. H., House Committee on Invalid
Penslong. o.oo... uni i adssasc auido
Butterfield, E. C., Bureau of Plant Industry -
Butterworth, Howard, office of Official Re-
porters of Debates: «riley «mitoiie nes
Butterworth, William, Inter-American High
Commission rae HO EE Ce OLA SW La)
Butts, J. Frank, District health department._
Byers, H. G., Bureau of Chemistry and Soils.
Bsion, Homer M., office of Secretary of
£7 hy EE LTA in Lee LR Lh A AE A Et
Byrd, Harry F., Board of Visitors to the
Naval Academy Cd Mery wn SRR LR ET
Byrnes, James Fo Senate Office Building
Commission. ol uth soi. oo os ops
Byrnes, John C., House Committee on Indian
Aft
Byrnes, J. W., Bureau of Plant Industry .....
Byrns, Joseph W.:
Majority Leader of the House. _._._..____
The George Washington Bicentennial
Commission... ico oo ol chant,
Nashville Presidents’ Plaza Commission.
Bun Mrs. Joseph W., The Congressional
AD ais ini dss Ae as Badu mr
Cabal, Louise, office of Secretary of the
Cady, John B., office of the Fourth Assistant
Postmaster General... _....<. :.
Caemmerer, H. P., Commission of Fine Arts_
Caldwell, Thornwell A., National Memorial
CO OTNINISEION os vw smn nm Se fe A re ne
oa a Deerin, Interparliamentary
lor: Boys: cr. a aie a sal
shalseffien. oo oii lai. cou diic 20
Callan, Maj. Gen. Robert E., War Depart-
ment - General Staff. coir ie non
Callander, W. F., Bureau of Agricultural
ReonNOIMesSs oo. ey a
Callender, William L., House post office.____
Calloway, Roger M., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation Coo oo foie ai
Calver, Dr. George W., Capitol physician___
Calvert, Edgar B., Weather Bureau.________
Camalier, Dr. C. Willard, secretary District
Board of Dental Examiners. ______________
Camalier, R. F., secretary to Senator Adams.
Cameron, John J., secretary United States
Geographic Boardu. ci 0-00 oun.
Cammerer, Arno B., National Park Service...
Campbell, Lieut. Commander Charles W. A.,
Office of Naval Operations. _______.________
Campbell, D. C., Senate Committee on Pen-
665
Page
262
325
227
229
666
Campbell, Edward K., retired judge Court
of Claims TEP A nC Ep Le CL A SR EU
Campbell, F. L., Bureau of Entomology. ____
Cannhed, Col. Tilman, office of Chief of
IIIT Eh Se Br Nr LS
Campbell, Walter G., Chief, Food and Drug
Administration... aio oes iz 0
Campbell, W. W., National Academy of
TT LTTE I SA ls LPs Re gt CL Se els
Campos-Ortiz, Dr. Pablo, Mexican Embassy-
Candland, Harold A., Public Buildings Com-
TRL TET BR Dh ORES oe SAE Ch RL ad
Cane, Cyril H., British Embassy. _--.
Cannady, Mrs. "Beatrice EH, i me Memo-
risCommission. c..... oo nha oa oll
Consens Fritz, National Memorial Commis-
Cornell William, jr., House Committee on
Interstate and Foreign Commerce...-____-
Capper, Arthur, The George Washington Bi-
centennial Commission. =... Jo... 22-2
Capps, Novella H., House Committee on
Capps, Rear Admiral Washington L.:
Commission on Navy Yards and Naval
Stations co oe alee al
Compensation Board.....o.noo ooo oi
Cardozo, Benjamin N., Associate Justice
United States Supreme Court (biography)
Carle, Charles H., office of the Fourth
Assistant Postmaster General iis ol aaa
Carley, Patrick J., Joint Committee on
Printing. oo oi Lt nL TES
Carlson, Vivian, Civil Service Commission...
Carmel, F. A., Bureau of the Public Health
grvigens isn ini La a
Carmody, Charlotte L., office of Secretary of
TIT HT iE rn SS a eC
Carnes, J. H., Patent Office
Carney, Thomas G., Joint Committee on
Internal Revenue Taxation...
Carpenter, S. R., Federal Reserve Board.____
Carpenter, William R., United States Em-
ployees’ Compensation Commission...
Carr, Adaline S. E., Senate Committee on
Public Buildings and Grounds. —--_
Carr, Maj. Gen Irving J., Chief Signal
Officer i nal nen aa
Carr, Josiah L., Interdepartmental Board of
Contracts and Adjustments. _._____._______
Carr, Margaret Virginia, United States attor-
TA EL Eel Se Se Sp ee ae
Carr, Wilbur J., Assistant Secretary of State_
Carrington, John, District fire department._.
Cotenll, Charles LH Bureau of Animal Indus-
IY mi et ST ae ea
Carson, John, Secretary to Senator Couzens.
Carter, Albert E. , Interparliamentary Union.
Carter, E. E.:
Forort Servion. eet an
United States Geographic Board.-...__..
Carter, George H.:
Public: Printer. ooo. oh oui sdiaiiei
Chairman, Permanent Conference on
Printing. ov cee lati SE ae
Carter, Lucy R., Secretary to Senator Bach-
General cal Cina aaa
Casardi, Capt. Ferdinando, Italian Embassy.
Cassell, Albert I., National Memorial Com-
mission co eal io
Cassie, Earle W., superintendent District
Industrial Home School (white). ..._____-
Caswell, L. F., official stenographer to House
committees vi. foo. i. Sl lll
Catalani, Giuseppe, Italian Embassy...
Cattaui, André, Egyptian Legation__.______
Cattell, Roscoe A., Bureau of Mines.._..___.
Cattier, Jean, Belgian Embassy... __T-2:1-
Caudill, W. J., jr., House document room._.
Causey, Foster, District special assessment
Clerkzate ir esl rs rh ar]
Causey, Marjorie, Senate Committee on Irri-
gation and Reclamation... co...
Causey, Col. W. B., Chicago World’s Fair
Centennial COMMISSION - - - ro oc oo omen
Page
367
327
307
329
353
509
226
507
345
316
226
337
332
226
339
Congressional Directory
Cayton, Nathan, Municipal Court. ..ca-...
Chaffee, A. E., reading clerk of House___._.._
Chalkley, H. 0. British Embassy........_..
Chalmers, Henry, Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce... i c-cacue. ok.
Gaga, Mrs. W. W., The Congressional
Chamberlin, Edward H., chief clerk, National
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics dreads
Chapin, Vinton, Assistant to the Under Sec-
retaryol State... ole oi nas
Chapman, Oscar L., Assistant Secretary of
the Interior. cio i ion lal anon oles
Charest, Clarence M., Bureau of Internal
Revenue «oie canal
Chaves; Dr. Francisco Nufiez, Mexican Em-
ASSY. Seah nae
Chesteen, G. D., Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue TALON. es. destin
Chevalier, Juan B., Panaman Legation______
Chichester, the Earl of, British Embassy.--__
Childs, A. W., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-
tic Commerce ts me lias
Childs, James B., Library of Congress_._____
Chritonblivy, Earle J., secretary to Senator
Co Edgar, Washington City post office-
Churion, Luis, Venezuelan Legation_________
Cienfuegos, Hilerio Meza, Mexican Embassy.
Cintas, Oscar B.:
Cuban ADRSAdOr. or rs sents
Governing Board, Pan American Union.
Clapp, Earle H., Forest Service...
Clarac, Claude- -Achille, French Embassy--__
Clos Altavene, House Committee on Agri-
ERR he DIS Ce SB eT Es
Clark, nies C., Weather Bureau-_________
Clark, Commander ‘Charles R., navy yard
and 0 HLH a Tt ER
Clark, Rear Admiral Frank H., General
Board, NOVY idioma anna nea
Clark, yy E., Rock Creek and Potomac
Parkway COMTOISSION sees s
Cos, Herbert A., Washington City post
Clark, Howard F., assistant to Engineer
Commissioner, District of Columbia...
Clark, James T., secretary to Senator Walsh.
Clark, Omer Ww, Veterans’ Administration.
Clark, Taliaferro, Bureau of the Public
Health Service... =
Clark, Victor Selden, Library of Congress...
Clark, W. A. Graham, United States Tarift
Commission Saas er a
Clark, W. D., jr., District deputy collector
Ob IAXes. ios ein ea anh vate
Clark, William M., Washington City post
Clarke, John D., National Forest Reserva-
tion Commission ea de a
Clarkson, Frank, Office of Architect of the
Capitol. cine dco niatic ni sin he da mans
Claude, Capt. Abram, General Board, Navy-
Clay, Cassius M., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation... ...i-cui Paid co et seas
Cleghorn, John Storey, Senate Committee on
Appropriations... =i aos
Click, David G., office of Secretary of the
SOTAlo: oe. a ae
Clift, James W., Patent Office...
Cline, Genevieve R., Judge, United States
Customs Court (biography) Saale as
Clotts, Herbert V., Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Coage, Jefferson S., District recorder of deeds.
Cobb, James A., judge, municipal court. ..__
Cochran, Thomas C.:
The Interparliamentary Union. lo.
Board of Visitors to the Military
Academy. ans onan aden IASG
Cochrane, Allister, Official Reporter, House.
Cogswell, Theodore, office of register of wills.
{ | |
Indwidual Index 667
Page Page
Cohen, Benjamin: Cook, Arthur E., supervising engineer, office
Chargé d’affaires of Chile ....oooooeeo 504 of Architect of the Capitol... oir 263
Pan American Union.....oo one snes 354 | Cook, George A., United States Board of
Cohen, Myron M., commissioner, Court of MEABLION ees fers rt ot ded orate 344
OE Ee Ra i Se 367 | Cook, Katherine M., Office of Education.__. 320
Colbert, Leo O., Mississippi River Commis- Cook, O. F., Bureau of Plant Industry_.___._. 325
OT ee a Ee Se 308 Cooke, Charles Lee, office of Secretary of
Colburn, Charles H., National Memorial {yee CR a A 299
COMMISSION... coves sil soit staal ae mn dn ans 351 | Cooksey, George R., Reconstruction Finance
Cole, Arthur G., District health department. 377 Corporation. oi] aiid ec rn 358
Cole, Rear Admiral Cyrus W., Office of Naval Cooley, A. C., Bureau of Indian Affairs_____ 319
Operations es ie 314 | Coombs, Arthur W., office of Secretary of
Cole, Robert F., United States Board of COMINET06. oi i tl Sash dd er sed 329
Mediation: hi: tool boa nage ny be ag ey 344 | Coombs, Wade H., District superintendent of
Coleman, C. B., George Rogers Clark Memo- An ae ee se ey 376
isl Commission: vi de rey ais 228 Cooper, Charles H., General Accounting
Coleman; Mal. Gen. Broderick War's vob oi seOfce. 0 oe a em ae gi Cy 338
Chief of Finance, United States Army... 307 ay William John: i
United States Soldiers’ Home... ______. 356‘ Office of Bducabion o-oo Lin aeviicuus 320
Coleman, John F., Reconstruction Finance Federal Board for Vocational Education. 343
Corporation. Foon es 0 tao 358 | Copeland, L. G., Federal Reserve Board-.... 339
Coleman, Louise, House Committee on Pen- Copeland, Royal S.:
HLA a ee Ee SN Rar 262 Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary
Collier, Carl, General Accounting Office_____ 338 COMMISSION 0 ets i aa Bd att Sets 229
Collier, Frank W., minority clerk___________ 260 Columbia Institution for the Deaf ______ 356
Collier, James W., United States Tariff Com- Copp, Mamie C., United States attorney’s
IiSSion or ey 340 TH RE LI 369
Collier, John, Bureau of Indian Affairs_______ 319 | Corbin, William L., Smithsonian Institution. 351
Collins, G. N., Bureau of Plant Industry... 325 | Corcoran, Thomas G., Reconstruction Fi-
Collins, Herbert B., office of Secretary of nance Corporation... o-oo. 358 Slate oh ee Te Ee a RE 290 Conia, Louis M., House Legislative Coun-
Collins, Maurice, Veterans’ Administration. 343% ~ sel... __.____.-_._--.———-___..—.___.._..C 263
Collins, Mrs. Ross A., The Congressional Corndl, Maj. Virgil H., curator, Army Medi- Cab i say or Ca ee 355 Gl IV OBE a ee ea 307
Collins, William F., Joint Committee on In- Corona, Joseph G., Western Union Telegraph 7 ternal Revenue Taxation... ._.__.___._____ 226 EE SE SR Se 264 Collins, William H., United States attorney’s Coronado, José M., Colombian Legation... 504 | OIAGe oii rT as Bato ea a 369 | Coronado, Enrique, Pan American Union_._. 353
Collins, William J., Senate press gallery.__.. 256 | Cosby, Roy, House post office. _____________ 261
Collum, E.J., House Committee on Expendi- Costello, William C., Reconstruction Finance
tures in the Executive Departments. ..... 262 Corporation. oo) ores CrArocinirioeia 357
Colom, José L., Pan American Union_______ 353 | Cotton, W. E., Bureau of Animal Industry-- 325 Colquitt, Oscar B., United States Board of Couch, Harvey C., Reconstruction Finance Mediation: f= 3 ade rae a 344 COrpOLalION os ti 35 Sn Bd Co Vb tot SS 358
Colwell, H. R., Federal Employment Stabili- Coulter, Eliot B., office of Secretary of State-- 299
TATION Bomb 357 | Coulter, John Lee, United States Tariff Com-
Comer, George P., United States Tariff Com- Mission. =... ooo Fsr==-c 340 IRISSion. or hae sand nae Ga Ra Oi 341 | Counts, Charles R., Senate Committee on
Compton, George O., Secretary to Senator Enrolled Bills _-_.-.....- Rt ke i 254 | Ropinsons. Thi Yo i aa 258 | Couzens, James, Joint Committee on Internal
Compton, Mary C., National Memorial Revenue Taxation. cv-vmroo-cmsnen anos. 226 COTRISRION oh per i Sy 351 | Covell, Capt. L. C., Coast Guard......_-._. 302
Concannon, Charles C., Bureau of Foreign Coville, F. V.:
and Domestic Commerce ________________ 330 Bureaniof Plant Industry == ioc 20 325
i Cone, H. I., chairman United States Ship- Acting director of National Arboretum_.. 357
{ ping Board orca lool i hat al nel 344 | Cowles, Burton G., office of the First Assist-
Conley, Brig. Gen. Edgar T., office of The ant Postmaster General... .... 312
Adjutant General. . ....c co aoeiid de sien 306 | Cowles, Gardner, Public Domain Com-
| Conlift, John C., jr., United States attorney’s TIER. ad rnd penn 348
Ee GS Sa a ee 369 | Cox, Brig. Gen. Creed F., Bureau of Insular
Connally, Tom: ° Affairs. dian Zo Lo 309
i Interparliamentary Union. _..__.___._____ 227 | Cox, Joseph W., associate justice Supreme
i Commission on Enlarging the Capitol Court of the District of Columbia__________ 369
Grounds. ct ian fF ou aa 225 | Cox, Robert H., office of Secretary of the
Public Buildings Commission._.__________ 226 Senate... uo. oid 254
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission. 227 | Cragg, William B., Bureau of the Census..._ 330 { Connell, Ruth B., Army Industrial College. 310 | Craighead, F. C., Bureau of Entomology... 326 Connolly, Edna V., United States Tariff Cramer, Leslie, the Alaska Railroad... 322
Commission. oo or Nae 341 | Cramer, Maj. Myron C., office of the Judge |
| Connor, Bernard, Bureau of Plant Quaran- Advocate General. >. cL... _Cil00 307 | FH Rhee Ca aa Lol 328 | Cramer, W. Ford, office of Secretary of State. 299 ;
{ Connor, Cassie, Committee to Audit and Crane, Jere J ., District Board of Education. 275
Control the Contingent Expenses of the Craven, Rear Admiral T. T., Chief Coordi-
i Sel a CL He a Se tS 254 CE a Nh Le Ea 303
Connor, Loretta, Committee to Audit and Crawford, C. W., Food and Drug Adminis-
Control the Contingent Expenses of the Srp lyr pau RR Ee re Pa Le 329
Senate rw er GEE vat Ea Ta Ty 254 | Crawford, H. E., Metropolitan police.__.___. 378
{ Connor, Mary A., secretary to Senator Creighton, C. F., District insurance deputy. 376
Johngon =o bi con TRIE Nen ta 257 | Cremer, John D., Official Reporter, House... 263
Conway, Florence M., secretary to Senator Creps, Clark W., International Boundary
BT Ee SP Te SE 257 Commission, United States and Mexico.__._. 347
Cook, Mrs. Anthony Wayne, The George Crews, James, House post-office. _____________ 261 !
| Washington Bicentennial Commission___. 228 | Cricher, A. Lane, Bureau of Foreign and i
| Cook, Capt. Arthur B.: Domestic Commerce. h. lo 00 Co fiel 331 Hs
National Advisory Committee for Aero- Crist, Raymond F., Commissioner of Natu- |
NAANICE. at oe LL RS 346 PAMZALION ow pain wre d if air i a ems A be 334
i Bureau of Aeronautics. -coeoacoccecanoo- 316 | Crittenden, E. C., Bureau of Standards... 331
|
| |
|
1
668
Croskett, John O., office of Secretary of Sen-
Crott Maj. Gen. Edward, Chief of Infantry.
Croft, Samuel M., Library of Congress.._____
Crogan, Charles J., United States attorney’s
House Committee on Cronin) Mary B.,
Crook, P. H., Capitol police
Cropley, C. Elmore, clerk, United States
Supreme Court. oil oc Cl Sh i Ls
Croissant, Victor G., General Supply Com-
ETL IR ER ee SO UR ee a SA,
Crosby, Maj. Gen. Herbert B.:
National Training School for Boys... __
District: Commissioner... .... ol
District Zoning Commission__._____.____
Crosthwait, ‘S. W., Aeronautics Branch,
Department of Commerce. __.______________
Crouch, Henry S., secretary to Senator Kean.
Crow, Charles B., secretary to Senator Bank-
CO Rie ee MERA il IE Red Sel ry Sa
Crow, M. Eleanor, Senate Committee on
Public Buildings and Grounds___.____.._____
Crowley, Elmer E., Merchant Fleet Cor-
DOratIoN. a et Ds
Crowley, Karl A., solicitor for Post Office
Department. 0 or disor e
Crowther, Frank, Massachusetts Bay Colony
Tercentenary Commission... _..........._
Crowne, Mrs. Frank, The Congressional
BB ee a
Crump, Edward H., Regent of Smithsonian
Institolion ur oT aera
Culbertson, D. Frank, George Rogers Clark
Sesquicentennial Commission... __________
Culbertson, Paul Trauger, office of Depart-
mentof State fos 0 on one oaa
Cullen, F. J., Food and Drug Administra-
Cumming, Surg. Gen. Hugh S.:
Bureau of the Public Health Service__.__
Pan American Sanitary Bureau.__.__.__._
Columbia Hospital for Women
Cumming, Dr. James G., District health de-
partment. as
Cummings, Homer S.:
Attorney General (biography)-___.__-_.__
Member Smithsonian Institution________
Cummings, John, Federal Board for Voca-
tional'Bdueation. 0. sin
Cummins, Harry A., office of Fourth Assist-
ant Postmaster General... ___ ~
Canley, F. M., office of Quartermaster Gen-
eral. ole nt as Lo Le RR LEE
Cunningham, F. E., clerk, Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia... ____._.___
Cunningham, J. T'., The Alaska Railroad. _
Curry, Charlotte R., House Committee on
Fe A BS NS RE Ia
Curtis, F. S., chief clerk, office of Secretary of
Navy. 0a J ee i Un
Curtiss, C. D., Bureau of Public Roads...___
Curtiss, Lowell, Pan American Union.______
Cushing, E. W., counsel:
Bureau of the Budget... ...... 0 a...
Interdepartmental Board of Contracts
and- Adjustments... 5 0
Cushman, Frank, Federal Board for Voca-
tional BEdueation. ©... ol iia is
Cricheon, C. T. M., General Accounting
Gis John D., Veterans’ Administration...
D
Daiker, Fred H., Bureau of Indian Affairs...
Dalby, Z. Lewis, United States Employees’
Compensation Commission. ._____________
Dale, John W., United States Customs Court.
Daley, Harriott G., Capital Telephone Ex-
CNANge. rl eat
Dallinger, Frederick W., judge, United States
Customs Court (biography). occa...
Page
314
343
319
338
369
Congressional Directory
Dalrymple, A. V., director, Bureau of Prohi-
d’ Alte, Viscount, Portuguese minister_______
Dameron, H. E., secretary to Senator Byrd..
Danford, Lieut. Col. Robert M., office of
Chief of: Field Artillery = ~~ = ~ = —=
Darby, C. Vaughan, secretary, District board
of aegounting. 5 cl isbn oo La
da Silva, H. Gabriel, Portuguese Legation.__
Dasher, Charles L., Bureau of the Budget...
David, Thomas M., United States attorney’s
Davies, Emma L., District public welfare
hoard. eee ees
Dayvilla, Dr. Céleo:
Minister of Honduras. o....-..0. cio.
Governing Board, Pan American Union_
Davila, Dr. César A., Venezuelan Legation.__
Dayvila, Charles A., Rumanian minister_____
Davis Audus T., office of Postmaster Gen-
nl Br a ee SE SS ee Te
Davis, Carrie L., Postal Telegraph-Cable
Coaalb Capitol... .uiviiiilicio ais nian 2
Davis, Ewin Lamar, Federal Trade Com-
mission. 5 cota ania ai a
Davis, Capt. Ezra, office of the Quartermaster
Generals aie aust ee ne ET
Davis, Harold W., office of the chief post office
dnspeelor tl ia ER a
Davis, Harry E., Perry’s Victory Memorial
Commission... coo. ae a ey
Davis, Herbert L., District superintendent
of insurance. io oa ast
Davis, Dr. Hugh J., District health depart-
Ment lien tail ET
Davis, John A., Bureau of Mines____________
Davis, Inspector O. T., Metropolitan police.
Davis, Stanley F., office of the Doorkeeper. _
Davison, Charles L., office of the Second As-
sistant Postmaster General ________________
Davison, Mrs. Henry P., American National
Red Cross ici i tana
Day, Rear Admiral George C., Office of
Naval Operations... .caciiia ow iiviiaa
DY ms Maurice Fitzmaurice, British
MbasSY ee e
Day, Williom W., Washington City post
EH an Ra Se SR ee Te RRs SR Ls Fe
de Albuquerque, Dr. Jodo Pedro, Pan Ameri-
ean Sanitary Bureau... i. nl
Derg, Arthur E., Washington City post
office. iia sm ae SE
De Bayle, Dr. Henri:
Chargé d’ Affaires of Nicaragua. _..______
Pan American Union. .0 0.002 -0 is
de Boisanger, Claude, French Embassy.____
Debuchi, Katsuji, Japanese ambassador..___
ge Buia Count Francois, Belgian Em-
Doan, W. S., Office of Education__._._
de Freyre y Santander, Manuel:
Peruvian ambassador... _____________
Governing Board, Pan American Union.
Doro, F. A., office of Register of the Treas-
de oo Luis M., Spanish Embassy. _
DeKleine, Dr. William, American National
Red Cross: caer ae
de la Barra, Carlos, Chilean Embassy.__._-_
de Laboulaye, André, French ambassador. __
Delaney, John J., Joint Committee to Inves-
tigate Dirigible Disasters... ___________
Delaney, J. J., The Alaska Railroad-.....___
Delano, Frederic A.:
Advisory Council of the National Ar-
DOTS teases cine anaes a iE
Columbia Institution for the Deaf. _____
National Capital Park and Planning
Commission... lc diam
Washington National Monument So-
CESS Ren Se eT
Indwwrdual Index
Delano, William A., National Capital Park
and Planning Commission.__..__.___.._____
de Lantsheere, Viscount, Belgian Embassy...
Dellett, Harry Bs Department of Justice...
de Lozada, Enrique S., Bolivian Legation___
Demaray, A. E., N ational Park Service..___
de Montfredy, x L., office of the Sergeant at
Avms, Senate: coo oa oo Eder
Demorest, John R., office of the Secretary of
LaDOrS Jar srcsa naa sabia endl aint Jaatioy
Demunbrun, E., Senate Committee on
Mines.and Mining... i. ooo aman
DeNeale, Stanley, assistant Pisizies corpora-
tion cogs or RRR PRR CMA TN
EN CHE SAR
de Olazabal, Manuel, Argentine Embassy...
de Olivares, Luis, Spanish Embassy ___.___..
de Partearroyo, H. G., International Bound-
ary Commission, United States and Mexico-
de Ricci, Seymour, Library of Congress... ..
Dern, George H.:
Secretary of War (biography)... _._.__.__.
Chairman Council of National Defense. .
Federal Oil Conservation Board.._...__.
Inland Waterways Corporation.__.._.__...
Member Smithsonian Institution..___.__.
Puerto Rican Hurricane Relief Commis-
sio
DeRouen, Louis R., House Committee on
PubliecTandsii.. oo dain a
Deschler, Lewis, Parliamentarian of the
Despradel, Roberto:
Minister of the Dominican Republic...
Governing Board, Pan American Union.
Detwiler, S. B., Bureau of Plant Industry.___
de Urquiza, Adolfo J., Argentine Embassy...
Devakula, Prince Damros Damrong, minister
of Siam = Lo a a irae
de Végh, Nicholas, Hungarian Legation_____
de Waha, Baron Raymond, chargé d’affaires,
Jegationof Taxemburg.......... 00 00.
Dewey, L. H., Bureau of Plant Industry....
Dewhurst, J. Frederic, Bureau of Foreign
and Domestic Commerce... __.____________
Devmmrsh WwW. .S.,
de Wichfeld, Hubert, Danish Legation__._.
De Witt, Maj. Gen. J ohn LL
The ‘Quartermaster General... Lo
oR United States Soldiers’
General Accounting
Women CIARA ag A Ng ARR A BLS a
Diana, Marquis Pasquale, Italian Embassy.
Dickey, J. E., Naval Observatory _________._
Dickinson, H. C., Bureau of Standards______
Dickinson, John, Assistant Secretary of Com-
Dicus, M. Luther, secretary, District Op-
tometry Board... o.oo: sli niall
Dieck, C. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey...
Dieffenbach, ‘Rudolph:
Bureau of Biological Survey.__._.__.._.__...
Misrsiory Bird Conservation Commis-
Dill, Mo Clarence C., president, The Con-
gressional Club. ode iiss isu.
Dill, Katherine E., Senate Committee on
Dillen, Capt. R. F., the Aeronautical Board.
Dilli, Reginald C., deputy clerk, United
States Supreme Court... o_o...
Dillon, E. E., House post office
Dimancesco, D. Dem., Rumanian Legation.
Dimick, Hamilton, Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Dimitria, Emanual H., Rumanian Legation.
di Montorio, Count Guido Roncalli, Italian
Embassy. .cuicmnmeers ibutitnaada ll Sie.
Page
Dyn Frederick M., office of Secretary of
RR aR LL UL ele Sn sy CET
Dobbel, Charles A., office of Secretary of the
Interior EIEN Tat SOT RE Rei aE
Dobell, J. L., office of Secretary of the Senate.
Dodd, Samuel M., jr., Bureau of Indian
Dolbey, M. V., Senate Committee on Terri-
tories and Insular Affairs. ________._________
Domeratzky, Louis, Bureau of Foreign and
DomesticiCommeree.... =--i...Lo. oi.
Donaldson, Edwin R., District health de-
partment ioc oslo nl nasal nn
Donaldson, William J., jr., superintendent
House press-gallery. ca uo. eli y cosy
Donlin, Mary M., secretary to Senator Over-
Donnelly, Horace J., office of Postmaster
General. ____ Fon Ln RS SE
DOPATION. i a i Sadana dat
Doran, James M., Commissioner of Indus-
tal Aleohol. oc ess ear en ae
19 PT EE SCE Se el i
Dorset, M., Bureau of Animal Industry_____
Dorsey, H. W., chief clerk, Smithsonian In-
SELION co 3 iid Sah vn dew ied ps i bs dl
Dorsey, Nicholas W., Smithsonian Institu-
Dotterer, Harold, Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce.......cuanucnenessus.
Dougherty, James L.:
‘War Finance Corporation... coco...
Reconstruction Finance Corporation. .__
Doughton, Robert L., Joint Committee on
Internal Revenue Taxation ._._____________
Douglas, James H., Assistant Secretary of the
STE EE ER pe EA Se ee LS
Douglas, owns W., Director of Bureau of the
Budget rt aa dS
Douglas, Baron C. van Breugel, Nether-
ands legation co. i i aed
Douglass, W. S., chief clerk, Bureau of
Medicine and SUrgery...--..-.ccommnnnuan.
Dow, Frank, Bureau of Customs__._________
Dowell, Lieut. Col. C. M., Inspector Gen-
Ter REN BE OR pe a
Papel, Mrs. Cassius C., The Congressional
Downes, Capt. John, Bureau of Navigation _
Downey, John J., Washington City post
Downing, Catherine F'., office of Recorder of
ead ree
Downing, Elizabeth, Civil Service Commis-
Doxey, Wall, National Forest Reservation
Commission a pe LN I
Doyle, Mrs. Henry Grattan, vice president
District Board of Education_______________
Draper, Ernest G., Columbia Institution
for the Deal. . ou ne ann si RUE
Draper, Leonard, Bureau of Navigation. ____
Drinkwater, Capt. John G., California Débris
Commission... joo i soos aud soe ay
Drinnen, Frank J., Federal Reserve Board__
Drissell, Roger S., office of Secretary of State__
Driver, Mrs. William J., The Congressional
Ly Re SB ASD
Drum, Maj. Gen. Hugh H.:
War Department, General Staff _____.___
The Joint. Board... ....... 2. Ff cxusd
Du Bose, Capt. W. G., Bureau of Construc-
tion and Repair... io duis snmis ii ol
Ducote, Remy G., jr., House document
Duehay, Francis H., National Training
School for Boys. @. uaa Sead
Dufault, John B
Arms, Senate. lo
Duffey, Dorothy, Senate Committee on the
TADIOTY. oasis Saat aE Sade A a Sas
Duftey, R N., chief clerk, Mississippi River
Commission. im aan ls ches ins wi SRLS
669
Page
300
319
254
311
375
263
325
340
358
670 Congressional Directory
Page
Duffy, F. Ryan, Joint Committee to Investi-
gate Dirigible Disasters... ..... =.
Duffy, Gus, office of the Doorkeeper_____.____ 260
Duganne, C. G., Federal Trade Commis-
SON Ed A na SE Re aia 340
Dugger, Lieut. Commander G. W., jr., Gen-
eral Board, Navy... ...--.-. 316
Dulac, Peter, Coast and Geodetic Survey... 331
Dulin, Charles T., office of Official Reporters
ELIT CIS Se ST Sl Ree At 263
Dunbar, B., Food and Drug Adminis-
ET UY RRR ATA Ce RSs UY Ti EA LR add Sr A 8 he 329
Duncan, George H., secretary to Senator
BOW, i i ain ath na an 257
Dunlap, Knight, Columbia Institution for
theDeal oe ai aad 356
Dunlap, R. C., United States Railroad Ad-
ERATE Foyt TLR Re A i TR CHES 339
Dunn, Etta, House Committee on Elections
INDE Ee Sr er ER ES 262
Dunn, Howard O., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce NES GR ei Lh 331
Dunn, James Clement, office of Secretary of 2
AeA en SS eS 299
Dunn, James J., custodian Senate Office
Bulldine oc. ioe ea 264
Durand, E. Dana, United States Tariff Com-
mission dios oun a Aa ad 341
Durand, Dr. William F., National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics ..._.__________ 346
Duryee, S. L., United States Engineer Office. 308
Duvall, William A., House Committee on
ADDLODEIAUIONS oe aire cain Bite et nt 261
Dive, J. W. T., Grain Futures Administra-
gt A Re LS A Dp 0 OB a El hn We 0 328
Do George R., secretary to Senator Bar-
ONL a im me wid em i tn SB 257
BE
Eager, Maj. Howard, Puerto Rican Hurri-
cane Relief Commission. _...._.... ______. 356
Early, Stephen, Assistant Secretary to Presi-
dent:Boosevelt . iio iii aia 297
Early, Wm. I., office of the Doorkeeper.____. 260
Easley, Robert H., office of the Doorkeeper.. 260
Eastman, Joseph B., Interstate Commerce
Commission: oo. a a 338
Eaton, Charles A., Interparliamentary
Union RELI ANAS RS 227
Eccard, August, office of Architect of Capitol. 263
Eckstein, Fred A., Senate post office.._.__._. 256
Edinburg, Frank P, Patent Office. .__..___. 332
Edson, H. A., Civil Service Commission__.. 337
Edson, Howard A., office of Secretary of
IE AE i SS Ne ER SR ees 208
Edwards, Daniel H., District board of assist- °
ant assessors of pergonsl Property... 375
Edwards, Capt. I. H., office of Secretary of
War
Edwards, John F., Civil Service Commission. 337
Edwards, Inspector L. I. H., Metropolitan
police. onl writ a a Ie ook 378
Egan, Maj. Harold E., Army Medical Center. 308
Egerton, Susie Candler, Senate Committee
On COMNIMOLEO... Suh dren bdo mb noe arn 254
Egleston, James A.:
Assistant to Chief Coordinator. .__...___ 303
Federal Purchasing Board. __.____________ 304
Eichelberger, Charles M., Navy Compensa-
tioniBoard: Cn orn a 316
Eidsness, Michael L., jr., office of the Third
Assistant Postmaster General . ____________ 312
Eilenberger, Clinton B., Third Assistant
Postmaster General... co oilialiilEl 312
Eisenhower, M. S.:
Office of Secretary of Agriculture... ____ 323
Office of information, Agriculture._______ 324
Eldridge, M. O., District assistant director of
vehiclesand traffic... oon coca 377
Elgen, Riley E., Public Utilities Commis-
SION oie it tbe sie er ni Bt Bate ers TO 378
Eliason, Howard R., Federal Trade Com-
TRISSION. co ns Se i oa i Sie ARES rt 340
Eliot, Charles W., 2d, National Capital Park
and Planning Commission... ......_.. 349
Eliot, Dr. Martha M., Children’s Bureau,
Department of Labor: -.-i--.....cun-al.
Page
Eliot, Samuel A.., Board of Indian Commis-
SIONBIB. oo. oive cane dain sa
Elliot, Carl, House post office. .__._________ 261
Elliott, David C., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation. «30 rains ah 358
Elliott, Maj. Malcolm, International High-
way special commissioner. ........_... 1H" 348
Elliott, Richard N.:
General Accounting Ofen.... 0.0. io 338
United States Supreme Court Building
Commission.) .Co...c. ol 00 225
ellis, + Capt. Haine, Office of Naval Opera-
Er EO pe a RR 314
Ellis, Gol. Richard T., office of the Quarter-
master:General. CTU on Ol 307
Ellison, Pauline, Senate Committee on
Privileges and Elections... __________ 255
Ellsworth, Emmons K., Bureau of the Cen-
BUS oom em At rain SE SR re ln I YE AS 330
Ely, ga. Eugene J., office of Chief of Finance. 307
Ely, E. W., Bureau of Standards..........-. 331
Emerson, Ernest E., purchasing agent, Gov-
ernment Printing Office Nose a Te TL 268
Enon, M. A. office of Secretary of Treas-
17 LS Ce Eb Sate a SE rt SUL REE 300
Emison, Ewing R., George Rogers Clark
Sesquicentennial Commission na is 228
Emley, W. E., Bureau of Standards__._.______ 331
Emmons, Charles N., District engineer de-
partment... adnate 377
Engel, Carl, Library of Congress... _.._____ 267
England, William H., Federal Trade Com-
TRISSION... ob Doh aibae tabu ed asl 340
Englebright, Harry L., Board of Visitors to
the Naval'Academy.....  _ __._-._. 0.23 229
Englund, Eric, Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
T8111 AR RAR ps OI i FR A SR pe a 328
Enlows, H. F., American National Red
By Ee LS er ee Ln NE ie nk diag LE 355
Erdman, R. S., the Panama Canai.____._.____ 345
Ernst, Edward C., United States Employees’
Compensation Commission... ____._______ 338
Erwin, Walter S.: .
Office of Secretary of Commerce. _._____ 329
General Supply Committee __.__________ 303
Espaillat, Ulises F., Dominican Republic
{BT A BS ees en a de AE Ee FS 505
Espey, John, superintendent of District
bathing beach ooo. oruna oe Ll s 376
Espil, Felipe A.:
Argentine ambassador. _________________ 503
Governing Board, Pan American Union. 354
Evans, Frederick I., Bureau of Internal Reve-
VEE PL ASTRA spe Serb ol Ee Ln oa 10 ST St sald TERS n Je Jit 301
Evans, Griffith, Bureau of Foreign and Do-
mestic.Commerce.- = Colo Lo col 330
Evans, Mrs. William E., The Congressional
LB Lr Se Ra Sa sn a Sin 355
Evans, Raymond, Extension Service________ 324
Evans, Silliman, Fourth Assistant Postmas-
ter-Generala.. olin To Ee tas 312
Evans, Walter H., judge, United States
Customs: Conrt a... iio Joi 368
Ewing, Donald M., International Joint Com-
MISSION. ol ei aR 347
Ezekiels, Jeannette, juvenile court. ._______ 370
F
Fahey, John H., Inter-American High Com-
misgion io i. Cl tale 347
Fahy, Charles, office of Secretary of Interior. 318
Fair, Lucy, Senate Judiciary Committee___. 255
Fairbank, H. S., Bureau of Public Roads_.. 327
Fairchild, I. J., Bureau of Standards________ 331
Fairfield, Capt. A. P., Bureau of Navigation. 315
Fajrman, Charles E., art curator of the Capi-
tol ies 2 oh a un nr aad 263
Fallon, Pascal D., General Accounting Office. 338
Faris, Dr. J. E., ‘Bureau of Indian Affairs... 319
Farley, James Al:
Postmaster General (biography) _______.__ 311
Member of Smithsonian Institution_____ 351
Farnum, Emily I., Bureau of the Census. 330
Farnum, Jessica L. ., secretary, Library of
Congress... [iu oll Lao asllia in 267
Farrell, First Lieut. Edwin J.:
Marine Examining Board. .__.__________ 318
Marine Retiring Board. .___________.__._ 318
Individual Index 671
Page
Farrell, Patrick J., chairman, Interstate
Commerce Commission. ooo _______
Farrington, Charles J., House Committee on
Minesand Mining... 0 rt 262
Fearn, Otto E., District fire department_____ 377
Feaver, H. F., ‘Canadian Tegation =~: 504
Fechner, Robert, Emergency Conservation
A Gl Re ell LS Se 343
Feiker, Frederick M.:
Inter-American High Commission. ______ 347
Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com-
ire ORE eRe sure SE Te Ty 330
Feis, Herbert, office of Secretary of State_ 299
Feliu, Augustin Acevedo, Dominican Re-
pubeYegation. - -_.. i... aco ooo 1. 505
Fellers, Robert E., office of the Postmaster
Te Lens all ds een Ee Ce CO 311
Fellows, Capt. J. H.:
Burean of Standards... ors iil 331
Federal Specifications Board. ______._____ 304
Fenstermacher, Harvey E., office of Secretary
Of State. adr al re. dba iets 299
Fenstermacher, W. L., Official Reporter,
HH OUS0 es hss ira dar i AoE ss 263
Ferguson, Garland S., jr., Federal Trade
CoOmMMISBION. +35... ins dinate es oe a on 340
Ferguson, Brig. Gen. Harley B., Mississippi
River: Commission - uae coves en 308
Ferguson, Capt. J. N., Naval Observatory... 315
Fernandez, Joachim O., Board of Visitors to
the Naval Academy......c.. qc. ooo: 229
Fernandez, Dr. Ramiro, Guatemalan Lega-
Hi 7Y): PAS Se Ar SR SR Sees ih sel & BS is 507
Ferrera, Andrea, Italian Embassy. _.__.__.___ 508
Ferris, F. E., Merchant Fleet Corporation... 344
Fertich, Roscoe, War Minerals Relief. ______ 322
Fess, Simeon D.:
The George Washington Bicentennial
Commission... . iceinesaat 227
Joint Committee on the Library... _._____ 226
Interparliamentary Union_._____________ 227
Commission to Acquire Site and Addi-
tional Buildings for Library... _...__._. 225
Presidents’ Plaza Commission___________ 229
George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial
Bln ET TR Ae a a er 228
Ficks, L. G., Federal Reserve Board..___._.__. 339
Fieldner, Arno C., Bureau of Mines_________ 332
on James L., American National Red
Ee Ln ns, Se ee RI as alee 355
Fiholly, John W., United States attorney’s
a HE IR RAR te ES Sa 369
Finch, Lieut. Col. Henry A., California
Débris.Commission.... oc ... 308
Finch, James A., office of Attorney General_. 311
Finot, Enrique:
Minister of’ Bolivia... ocean 503
Pan American Union 354
Fischer, Erik, Danish Legation 505
Fish, Hamilton, jr., Foreign Service Build-
ings Commission. .y ~- fovoc seat 346
Fisher, Aleyne A., office of Second Assistant
Postmaster General =... co...  ciien-a 312
Fisher, Frederic A., office of Secretary of a,
31 a en Sh a a I I 00
Fisher, Lewis H., Civil Service Commission. 337
Fitch, Thomas F., office of the First Assistant
Postmaster: General... o_o: 0 312
Fitts, William C., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation... oc nace ons oo 358
Fitzgerald, M. C., assistant assessor of Dis-
lO si eh venir Nr BL LC 375
Fitzpatrick, John R., United States attor-
noyigeffice ro lata a 369
Flad, Edward, Mississippi River Commis-
Til Ee el ae Sad TO ied SERRE Ne 308
Fleming, Helen, House Committee on Inter-
state and Foreign Commerce... __.___... 262
Fleming, Robert V.:
National Training School of Boys. ._.... 357
Columbia Hospital for Women.__.._._.. 356
Fletcher, Duncan U.:
Chairman Joint Committee on Printing. 226 ©
Boe of Visitors to the Military Acad-
Ee eS HE CO SE I ae] 228
Fletcher, Yung B., office of District as-
CTR ee SSR ie my Nas DN ag 375
Bhar Capt. Frank J., Office of Naval
Operations ihe CN EE I a Se LR 314
Page
Flexner, Abraham, A. M., M. D., Howard
AE ot be Sema lell Mmeks sain ul ol vain 322
Flint, A.L.,, the Panama Cana). 37 =" 345
Flint, M. Lenore, Senate Committee on In-
teroconmic Canals. 0 0 0 oa nay 255
Flournoy, Richard W., jr., office of Secretary
THIN Desa vp Sons BER Sige lik uan 299
Fly, Pog House Committee on Ways and oi
ae wen am mn a or ot it SE oh mr 6.
ig ios 'W., chief clerk, Office of Naval
ODOT AT ONS = var nr me wre in ps RE En mas 314
Flynn, Jepett S., office of Chief Signal
Oar ie ee a 309
Flynn, Robert M., office of Secretary of the ’
TEL) Fomine ker Cen IS Sn i Sn CD 25
Folger, William A., Senate Committee on
PONSIONS iranian ams le oe 255
Folsom, Richard S., Perry’s Victory Memo-
vial Commission ou. oe 350
Foote, Walter A., office of Secretary of State. 299
Ford, Henry, the George Washington Bi-
centennial’Commission = = = 228
Ford, J., office of Third Assistant Postmaster
Gloneralo ah on Cc aby Sandia ie 312
Ford, Worthington C., Library of Congress. 267
Forster, Rudolph, executive clerk, The White
HOUSE. ide mn ee i hated aoe 298
Fort, James L., Reconstruction Finance Cor-
porgtion.. Sr oo Lorin Coe A 358
Fortune, Marian, Senate Committee, on
Minesand Mining... cc. .co i araicn 255
Fortune, Randolph, Senate Committee on
Expengisuses in the Executive Depart-
A TL RR So Se Ep Ok 254
Pn William, American National Red
HIER Sasso CSR Lp i es 354
Fosdick, Douglas, secretary to Senator White. 258
Foster, E. M., Office of Education___________ 320
Foster, Howard C., Assistant Secretary to the
Minor ae ee aan ed es 256
Foster, Israel M., commissioner, Court of
Claims i Se es i 9 Rn 367
Foulks, Madge, Senate Committee on Terri-
toriesand Insular Affairs... ccoeviicncenm 255
Foulois, Maj. Gen. Benjamin D.:
Chief ofithe Air Corps. os... . 309
The Aeronautical Board. ___.____________ 345
National Advisory Committee for Aero-
FLITE Le PE nl SE i ST 346
Found, W. A., International Fisheries Com-
TISBIONIG . i oS me me Erte ie bp 5 he te TN 348
Fowler, Harold N., Library of Congress. ..... 267
Fowler, Harry C., Bureau of Mines_.__._..___. 332
Fowler, Walter L., assistant District corpora-
tHoneounsele oa. 0. Ca 376
Tower Dr. William C., District health offi-
Meee EE ES 377
oy A. N., United States Tariff Commission. 341
Fox, Helen Cooper, Senate Committee on
Appropriations eR Re IE ea 254
Fox, Nannie, House Committee on War
Clan re eel 262
Fracker, S. B., Bureau of Plant Quarantine__ 328
Franges, Dr. Ivan, Yugoslavian Legation. __. 513
Frank, Freeman E., second assistant to Capi-
tolbphyslelan a. Gr oo eee 264
Franks, Edward T., Federal Board for Voca-
tonal BAUealion. oo. irene a eh 343
Frazier, E. L., office of Secretary of the Senate. 253
Frech, Walter, office of the Fourth Assistant
Postmaster General... 2... 313
Frederick, William A., office of Architect of
the Capitol. ur aes cis Se denna e ti mnt 263
Freeman, Rt. Rev. James E., Washington
National Monument Society... ._..___._ 350
Freeman, Maurice J., office of Clerk of the
OUSE. cho bs at deer RL ad Bo a Lt) 260
Freeman, Paul, office of the Third Assistant
Postmaster Generali. c.onnaaaa iin Lo 312
Freeman, Sophie D., office of Alien Property
COSEORIAN oo anf nmi in mm etme wile 346
Freer, Harry L., Board of Engineers for
Rivers: and Harbors. o.oo ices mo dunia 308
Freese-Pennefather, H. W. A., British Em-
DASE ire tite oh: orbit Abstr kv dS bai ms wh 507
Tray Louis, clerk to the President of the
SONATE. Jou ls sds Sn weir ~ a sit ie 253
Friedell, Capt. W. L., navy yard and sta-
tion, Washington, D.C. a a= 317
672
Frieser, F. G., Merchant Fleet Corporation _
Lg Ww. S, Food and Drug Administra-
$13 Pi Spm
Frost, Frank A., Bureau of the Budget__.__.
Fry, Walter B.:
Office of the Secretary of the Interior__.__.
General Supply Committee
Fuchs, W. R., office of Secretary of Agricul-
Fuentes, Dr. Rafael, Mexican Embassy._.___
Fukushima, Shintaro, Japanese Embassy...
Fullaway, Charles H., Bureau of the Budget _
Fuller, Maj. Gen. Ben H., Commandant
Marine Cope 0 oo
Fuller, Miss Carrie L., Bureau of Public
Fuller, Mrs. Leonore B., Department of Agri-
culture Extension Service. ___.________.____
Furness, James W., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commeren. . - . .. ica ermnemnwn
Gabbert, J. Magee, House post office. ___.._.
Gable, Charles L., National Park Service_.__
Gage, Charles E., Bureau of Agricultural
Reonomies i roi tas ooo a al as
Gail, D. A, secretary to Senator Thompson.
Gaines, Lloyd F., office of Distriet assessor.
Galbraith, William H., Federal Trade Com-
mission
Galbraith, Capt. W. W. Columbia Hospital
for Women bs LE oS EN Tv Sn le ret
Gallagher, Frederick D., Reconstruction Fi-
nance Corporation. ..co acevo neers aan
Gallagher, James E., House Committee on
Invalid:Penslons: oor ro = =
Gallagher, William A., United States attor-
mevisofflee. oo or nro
Gallagher, William K., House Committee on
Coinage, Weights, and Measures. ..._...___
Gallnway, Charles M., General Accounting
(0)
Galpin, C. J., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
TLE a i ent. as BU sl AS a
Gamble, Bertus D., Board of Tax Appeals_.
Gans, Isaac, District Parole Board...
Gapen, Cc. 5. Office of Information, Agricul-
Rl B. C., office of Public Buildings
and Public Parks of the National Capital.
Gardner, Edw. J., Department of Commerce.
Gardner, John W., office of Attorney General.
Gardiner, F. Gwynn, office of Chief of Fi-
IC ON a EAE i a
Garfield, James R., chairman Public Domain
Committee cas or a
Garges, Daniel E., secretary to District Board
of Commissioners... ..-. =. Cc ifiolol
Garland, T. L., House post office... ___._____
Garner, E. R., secretary to the President of
the Senate. rane a a r.
Garner, John N.:
Vice President of the United States
(blography) ooo. iii oats.
President of the Senate
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission.
The George Washington Bicentennial
Commission rd SL A
Chairman of Commission on Enlarging
the Capitol Grounds... -.....
Member of Smithsonian Institution_....
Regent of Smithsonian Institution_____..
Garner, W. W., Bureau of Plant Industry...
Garreau-Dombasle, Maurice, French Em-
DABRY rrr a Red Re Ce wee
Garrett, Finis J.:
United States Court of Customs and
Patent Appeals (biography)... ....
Alleriom Battle Monuments Commis-
Gorter Joseph F., office of the Chief Post
Office Tnspector wae
Page
344
329
303
Congressional Directory
Gartside, F. T., office of Public Buildings
and Public Parks of the National Capital__
Gasuus, Mrs. Allard H., The Congressional
Gaston, Herbert E., Farm Credit Adminis-
bration se a a
Gates, Jack W., Postmaster of the Senate_.__
Gatling John M., office of Secretary of the -
Senate. did it cy a a
Gaucheron, Roger, French Embassy ________
Gauges, Joseph G., marshal, United States
Court of Customs and Patent Appeals___.
Gaughan, Thomas J., Reconstruction Fi-
nance:‘Corporation. i. oo. = 0
Gauker, Ralph H., railroad ticket office in
Secretary to Senator Hayden____.__.__.__.
Senate Committee on Printing. _________
Gay, Richard H., office of Architect of the
Captol oie i a a 2 hs
Geary, Rev. Milton R., National Memorial
Commission, =z. o.oo oh es
ee General Accounting
Office
Gehman, Arthur R., office of the Fourth
Assistant Postmaster General. ____________
Gendron, U.J., Merchant Fleet Corporation_
George, Edward B., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce... oii
George, Heard F., Senate Committee on
Privileges and Elections... __________
George, Walter F.:
National Forest Reservation Commis-
TIT Aen at Se a a SRE lle
Joint Committee on Internal Revenue
Rasatlon: odo
Joint Committee on Veterans’ Affairs ___
Gerhard, A., chief clerk, War Department
General’Staff >... bs i ey
Gericke, Martha L., office of Secretary of
Gerish, Edward F., Bureau of Foreign and
DomesticCommeree. 0.
Getzendanner, Franklin C., United States
Tarifl- Commission. eee
Gherardi, Rear Admiral W. R.:
Burean of Navigation... _..__.__—_-¢
United States Geographic Board. ______.
Gibbins, Col. Henry, office of the Quarter-
maaster-General.. ola Ll
Gibbons, Stephen B., Assistant Secretary of
the Treasury
Gibson, Ernest W., Columbia Institution for
the Deaf on
Gibson, John H., House Committee on
Indian Airs. re a
Giebel, Adam A., chief clerk, corporation
counselsoffice. oo oo. 0.
Gifford, Charles L., Regent of the Smith-
sonianInstitation 0...
Gilbert, Ralph, George Rogers Clark Sesqui-
centennial Commission____________________
Gilbert, William C., Washington city post
©
Gill, Charles W., District fire department.___
Gill, Corrington, Federal Employment
Stabilization-Beard: oo ois oC
Gill, James F., office of Public Buildings and
Public Parks of the National Capitol______
Gillett, Frederick H., Washington National
Monument: Secletyo oo aaa aan
Gillette, Maj. D. H.:
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission.
National Capital Park and Planning
Commission. ibe = ar sien Doe on 2
Office of Public Buildings and Public
Parks of the National Capital ______.____
Gillette, Edward C., Bureau of Lighthouses_
Gilliam, Maxwell C., House document room _
" Gillis, T. A., Interstate Commerce Commis-
SION 2 a ae a A
Ginger, Edward F., House post office. _____.
Given, Ralph, judge, police court. _ _________
Gladmon, P. L., office of Secretary of Agri-
e171) enn ea ARS Re En el
Page
349
355
341
256
253
506
257
255
226
229
315
353
379
377
Individual Index 673
Glass, Carter, the George Washington Bi-
centennial Commission__._________________
Glavis, Louis R., office of Secretary of the
Interior. clu sii Soon io nl 30
ao Lawrence A., Mississippi River
Commission. ee ce i Sine
Glennon, A. E., Capitol police..____________
Glover, Charles C., Washington National
MonumentSociety. oo. iia Liat Lal
Glover, D. D., Board of Visitors to the Naval
Academy roe rn Tenia
Gnash, Stephen J., captain, Capitol police. -
Godwin, Stuart, office of Secretary of the
Interior... Tuioulonni dh mai danny
Goldenweiser, E. A., Federal Reserve Board.
Goldsborough, Phillips Lee, Senate Office
Building Commission... ool is
Goldsborough, T. Alan, Regent, Smithsonian
Institution o-oo Cieoido solo
Golden, Irvin, United States attorney’s
office rs Cs a eae La na
SO Rudolph L., General Accounting
Office. sii ow puma adnan are
Gompers, Samuel J., chief clerk, office of
Secretaryioftliabor. io ional
Gonard, George E., navy yard and station._
Gonzélez, Dr. Justo F., Pan American Sani-
tary Bureau oo. or bo oceans ia dni and
Gonzalez-Zeledon, Manuel:
Chargé d’ Affaires of Costa Rica-- __.___
Governing Board, Pan American Union.
Goodacre, Samuel:
Secretary United States Shipping Board.
Secretary Merchant Fleet Corporation. ..
Goodrich, Edgar J., Board of Tax Appeals___
Goodrich, James P., Public Domain Com-
Goodyear, Augustus S., office of Chief of
Chaplains. io. Sil sonusiis adda iliiag
Goodykoontz, Bess, Office of Education...
Gordon, Hayner H., commissioner, Court of
CIImS en i es iio Sas aal
Gordon, J. B., District engineer department_
Gordon, Peyton, District Supreme Court...
Gore, Robert Hayes, Governor of Puerto
{ATL aR A Re SS LO RTS Le eh
Gorman, Thomas J., Bureau of Customs.._.
Gosnell, Eugene, House post-office............
Goss, A. S., Farm Credit Administration...
Gotwals, Maj. John C.:
National Capital Park and Planning
COIISSION ST a cis sane aaa
District. Commissioner... 2. _-—...-
Public Utilities Commission
District Zoning Commission. _._..______
Gough, E. H., Deputy Comptroller of the
CUITONEY- ocr oo onesie mn man nae
Gove, Chase C., office of Second Assistant
PostmasteriGeneral...........-— ooo i.
Graf, John E., National Museum._.________.__
Graham, Samuel J., judge (retired), Court of
1 EL Sse Ra SE aoe a See LB adit)
Graham, Col. William A., office of Judge
Advocate General... io.
Graham, William J., presiding judge, United
States Court of Customs and Patent Ap-
peals (biography) coat on i Se ai
Grant, Hugh G., secretary to Senator Black.
Grant, Norman BR. office of the First Assist-
ant Postmaster General. ol
Grant, Lieut. Col. U. S., 3d:
Director, office of Public Buildings and
Public Parks of the National Capital ._.
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission.
Coordinator for Motor Transport, Dis-
trictol Columbia. 2 atten
Distriet Zoning Commission. __-__._____.
National Capital Park and Planning
Commission ot iz. ae ine dann
Public Buildings Commission___.__.______
Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway Com-
MISSION. LL aan saree
Washington National Monument So-
1567297°—T73-1—18T ED——44
Page
227
319
369
308
264
264
319
339
Page
Graves, Col. Ernest, Mississippi River
Commission. wolivodo ind ia tigi. Lk 308
Graves, Henry S., Advisory Council of the
National Arboretum... sii. if Lili 357
Graves, Roy R., Bureau of Dairy Industry... 325
Graves, W. E., Board of Engineers for Rivers
ANA HEAYDOrS. eit cra SAA ia 308
Gray, Chester H., assistant District corpora-
tHoneounsel. oie ae EE LEE 376
Gray, L. C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
417A E LD aa Se AE mi Ee A SP 328
Gray, R. B., Bureau of Agricultural Engi-
ROBIE RN a 327
Gray, W..J., Capitol police... caacuu una... 264
Grayson, George H., office of the Second As-
sistant Postmaster General _..______________ 312
Greathouse, Rebekah S., United States at-
torney’soffice.. oi oo 369
Greeley, W. B., Public Domain Committee... 348
Green, Frank Key, marshal of United States
Supreme BT FT A Te a 364
Green, Frederick H., messenger to the Speak- :
Cia i EE 259
Green, William R., judge, Court of Claims
(DIOZIADNY) ution iat od anaes 366
Greene, John, Deputy Public Printer___._____ 268
Grosain, P. M., District engineer depart- »
Aen Le SAE ST AAR SAR Se TU Ea 3
Greenwell, W. M., National Memorial Com-
mission. i Jo. iat ai aa 351
Greenwood, Arthur H., George Rogers Clark
Sesquicentennial Commission. ___.__.______ 228
Greenwood, Mrs. Arthur H., The Congres-
sional Clab. oi 0 ar i un nl 355
Greenwood, Joe R., House Committee on
Minesand: Mining... oon nan 262
Greer, John M., file clerk of the House______ 260
Gregg, Elinor D., Bureau of Indian Affairs... 319
Gregg, Willis R., Weather Bureau. .________ 324
Gregory, John Herbert, Reconstruction Fi-
nonce Corporation. . a... nia ase 358
Gregory, John J., office of Postmaster Gen-
LR LS SLR TREE ER Sd 311
Greiffenhagen, Maurice Rodney, British
Embassy: na an Cae 507
Grenade, rly Belgian Embassy. o-oo... 503
Grenfell, ¥. W., Distriet veterinary surgeon. 375
Gresham, Lilly Stuart, branch post office at
Capitol: ooo ia ty a oo ce 261
Gridley, E. A., secretary to Minority Floor
Yeader. dio on dada I Si tes) 259
Griesemer, Douglas, American National Red :
Cross dt a a 355
Griffin, David B., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation: =o: Sali RT sin iii Sas 358
Griffin, J. M., Coast and Geodetic Survey... 332
Griffin, James P., minority clerk. ___________ 260
Griffin, Dr. Thomas A., Civil Service Com-
TASSIOR Car aaa a LL as 337
Griffin, William V., Pan American Union__. 353
QGriffinger, Edythe, Senate Committee on
Patents: as hc siclousr sel ooiie Se Sh aie 255
Griffith, Charles M., M. D., Veterans’ Ad-
ministration. Li Con iii dd aes 343
Griffith, Joseph A., Washington city post -
TTL ORR PL ISR bees a SE SSS LS i 379
Grimes, Oliver J., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation. io ._c - cle. 0 rl 358
Grogan, Starke M., Bureau of the Census__. 330
Gromish, Agnes, Senate Committee on Inter-
State Commeree. =... oz ... lo i 5 000 255
Groner, D. Lawrence, associate justice, Dis-
trict Courtof Appeals. io... 0. 366
Grosvenor, Gilbert H., Washington National
Monument Society... coaao i oalliLail 350
Grover, N. C., Geological Survey. ._.__..____ 320
Grover, O. L., Bureau of Public Roads._.__. 327
Groves, Edna, Bureau of Indian Affairs. ____ 319
Groves, John R., District fire department... 377
Gdiiell, Gonzalo, Cuban Embassy. ........... 505
Guggenheim, Harry F., a Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics ARAFAT 346
Guill, John H., War Finance Corporation__. 340
Guiney, Col. Patrick W., office of the Quar-
termaster General. ..... i... Liu i 0 307
Gulick, Maj. Gen. John W., Chief of Coast
Artery aia ERR 306
674
Gulley, H. G., Senate Committee on Claims.
Gunnell, Leonard C., Smithsonian Institu-
ETRE i Ly We SRR AAT SS LTR AS
Gunner, Maj. M. J., the Aeronautical Board.
Gunther, F. A., office of District assessor__..
Guptill, Charles H., House Committee on
Hlections No. LL - momento U0
Guthrie, Charles S., Reconstruction Finance
Ola gn Ay pe Rn LR
Gaines Dr. Marshall C., Bureau of Indian
airs...
H
Haardt, Mary ¥., Senate Judiciary Com-
EE ae AAR a Rn Sh A SR
Haas, Saul, secretary to Senator Bone
Hacker, Morris, District engineer depart-
EE (Er Rds a LAR EER DEORE RR De EL LRN,
Hackworth, Green H., legal adviser to Secre-
ary of State Tor nt ad
Haggerty, John J., office of the Comptroller,
Post Office Department... -2 20 2".
Haight, Albert S., District fire department. .
Hall, A. B., House Committee on War
Elaimge oi tres bi cs sin tie Lo Se TET HOES
Hall, Alvin W., Director Bureau of Engrav-
ing andiPrinting. o.oo ZC Sioa ol Tl
Hall, Edward C., House Committee on Irri-
gation‘and Reelamation. ..c.__. i ...__.._
Hall, Ernest E., office of Secretary of Agri-
culture. oC SN IIa
Hall, Frank C., Department of Commerce. .
Hall, James, Capitol police... _ 2.
Hall, Maurice C., Bureau of Animal In-
CRE a a LOR ERR Bac Se SRS RC AR A
Hall, Percival, president Columbia Institu-
tion forthe Deal. Lo. lo oiaidei. Ln Je.
Halla, Blanche Rule, office of Department
(RET CR a re ie Ne I EE Ee SE
Halley, James M., National Memorial Com-
MISSION orf ct i eA BOE TL
Halsey, Edwin A., Secretary of the Senate--
Halstead, Col. Laurence, office of the Chief
of Infantr
Halsted, Mrs. Flora P., Civil Service Com-
mission
Haltigan, Patrick J., reading clerk of the
Hamilton, George E., Washington National
MonumentiSoelety. o.oo ool i aszail.
Hamilton, Maxwell M., office of Secretary of
Hamlet, Rear Admiral Harry G., Com-
mandant the Coast Guard... _._..___
Hamlin, Charles S., Federal Reserve Board.
Hammack, William T., Department of
Justice. bol auiealy mesh od Tt lv
Hammond, William Alexander, Library of
Congress Lolile dl lod del halle
Hanley, James H., Federal Radio Commis-
Hanna, Agnes K., Children’s Bureau-_.___..
Hanna, Hugh S., Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Hanna, Margaret M., office of Secretary of
Hanrahan, Frank R., Reconstruction Fi-
nance Corporation... .----. ios -zevcaa-
Hannum, Lieut. Col. Warren T., Board of
Engineers for Rivers and Harbors __
Hanson, Alfred E., Mechanical Superintend-
ent, Government Printing Office__________
Hardie, W. V., Interstate Commerce Com-
TUBBIOD Je hi ai ars Sh iii SIT om bh
Harding, H. A., General Accounting Office...
Hare, H. B.:
Secretary to Senator Byrnes oo --o.-.__
Committee to Audit and Control the
Contingent Expenses of the Senate-.-.
Hargrove, Marion C.:
District purchasing officer. ccaaoeoooaaen
General Supply Committee. ..._..__.—-._-
Haring, Capt. Ellis E., Office of Public Build-
ings and Public Parks of the National
Capital es
Page
254
339
338
376
308
Congressional Directory
Haring, John W., office of the Fourth Assist-
ant Postmaster General... . 0.0
Harman, Walter P., Bureau of Lighthouses...
Harned, R. W., Bureau of Entomology._.___.
Hay Lieut. Edward T., District harbor
ne RR eT a Ee
ur
Harr, William R., Washington National
Monument Soelety. _oicoil. Li so sin...
Harraman, Jesse C., office of Third Assistant
Postmaster General. ui ca aos oti.
Senate. Ldoio low
Harriman, N. F.:
Assistant to Chief Coordinator... ......
Federal Purchasing Board. ______.
Harrington, Daniel, Bureau of Mines
Harrington, John Lyle, Reconstruction Fi-
nancetCorporation.i coil uo... Lo Ul
Harrison, Pat, Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation. o . ooiis oo Jilin
Harrison, Robert L., office of Architect of the
Capitol he nei nen ihn
Harrison, Virginia, office of Secretary of the
Senate. Lule nana sada ul
Harrison, William W., Jr., House Committee
on: Printing. 0 Sa te oh ania ssl
Hart, Prof. Albert Bushnell, The George
‘Washington Bicentennial Commission__.__
Hath David A., United States attorney’s
offices oi ort ES
Hart, Lutie M., Senate Committee on Rules.
Hart, Willard L., chief clerk, Court of Claims.
Harter, Dow W., Joint Committee to Investi-
gate Dirigible Disasters... bo... Li iL
Hartsock, Col. Frederick M., United States
Soldiers! Home. oo. Cai anil
Harvey, Hugh W., United States attorney’s
Harvey, John, office of Secretary of Interior.
Hase, Col. William F., office of the Chief of
Coast Artillery Loli ld an ToS aol
Haskell, Frank B., superintendent, Home for
Aged and Infivin. G0 ies Saal
fone; Calvin W., office of Postmaster Gen-
eral Alnus Op imu La Laas
Hasslocher, Paulo G., Brazilian Embassy...
Hastings, Charles H., Library of Congress. --
Hatcher, Warren, Deputy Sergeant at Arms
of Housel. il a nn Al ee etd
Hatfield, Charles S., judge, United States
Court of Customs and Patent Appeals
ST LA pene I SE I Dr Cr
Hatfield, Henry D., Joint Committee on
Veterans ASS. ore reer emer
Haugh, Joseph E., Federal Trade Commis-
EI nn pla ea as pe pe el Se
Hawes, Harry B., Migratory Bird Conserva-
tion Commission... 7. oo c= _ ooooeie
Hawkins, W. Ashbie, National Memorial
CO IRISRIONT ries se ro oe ea
Hawks, Emma B., associate librarian, De-
partment of Agriculture. o-oo nea
Hawley, J. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey...
Hawley, Willis C., The George Washington
Bicentennial Commission... _________
Haworth, Ross, secretary to District Com-
SS ONL ra ce ot
Hay, Logan, Washington National Monu-
ment Society
Haycock, R. L., District Board of Education.
Haycock, Stephen B., United States attor-
ney siofiee. i ai ir nr oleh
Haycock, W. H., Washington city post office
Hayden, Carl, Joint Committee on Printing.
Haydon, Edith M., St. Elizabeths Hospital
Hayes, Montrose W., Weather Bureau......
Hayes, Maj. T. J., office of the Chief of Ord-
Haykin, David J., Library of Congress------
Hayward, H. A., Bureau of Customs.___..._..
Hazen, M, C,, District engineer department.
Individual Index
Heagloy) Inspector A. J., Metropolitan
Poless.... oo ani Ed
Headley, Roy, Forest Service_.._____.________
Heald, Allen, Senate Legislative Counsel... _
Healy, Robert E., Federal Trade Commis-
Heard, Maj. Jack W.:
Assistant to Chief Coordinator. _._._____
Interdepartmental Board of Simplified
Office Procedure... coi 0
Hearst, Sir William H., International Joint
Commission... 0 Linu deat nas
Heck, N. H., Coast and Geodetic Survey.__..
Hedges, Joseph H., Bureau of Mines. _._._____
Heffernan, Daniel J., office of Attorney
ol ER ea Leeda EE Se Sa ey
Hefner, Wilson C., Select Committee on
Campaign Expenditures of Senatorial Can-
didates toon Leis, Cl na a
Heilig, E. A., Washington City post office__
Hellman, Florence S., Library of Congress...
Hellrigel, Alicia M., House Committee on the
Post Office and Post Roads... ......-
Hellweg, Capt. J. F., Naval Observatory....
Helm, W. Clyde, House post office____._.___
Helmer, Arthur C., office of the First Assist-
ant Postmaster General... =. 0
Helvering, Guy T., Commissioner of Internal
Revenue... dl ther dle dashes
Henderson, Earl Y., Board of Indian Com-
missioners Ail nino ana a me ER
Henderson, M. R., secretary to Senator Hat-
Cs EET es NS SR ie Se heal
Henderson, W. C., Bureau of Biological
Survey. iu ilu stn oni as
Hendricks, Pearl, Committee on Conference
Majority of the Senate. -_ - i: _. i. __.....
Hengstler, Herbert C., office of Secretary of
Henkel, Edward, Bureau of Navigation_.___
Henry, Frederick D., Freedmen’s Hospital. _
Henry, Maj. Gen. Guy V., Chief of Cavalry.
Henry, Jules, French Embassy
Herbert, Mrs. Joseph A., jr., The Congres-
stonal Club... .. oni La
Hernandez, J. D., International Boundary
Commission, United States and Mexico. __
Herndon, Imolin F., office of the Majority
Leader of the House. vamos. ok
Herrick, H. T.:
Bureau of Chemistry and Soils__.___..__.
Food and Drug Administration. ________
Herridge, William Duncan, K. C., D. S.-0,
Canadianminister. ao nvinnr ours
Hert, Mrs. Alvin T., George Ro Clark
Sesquicentennial Commission a ee
Hess, George W., Director United States
Botanic Garden Sse Aha sea la
Hesse, Henry A., Civil Service Commission.
Hesselman, Henry V., House Committee on
Enrelle:Bills. is de
Hetzel, Naomi H., secretary Public Utilities
Commission
Hewitt, J. N. B., United States Geographic
ET De ee SHR is Ble ESR BOT
Hickerson, John Dewey, office of Secretary
RS i a mE SR A Be NT
Hickey, Capt. D. O., office of Public Build-
es 2 Public Parks of the National
Senate hie Ar Te ae
Hickling, Dr. D. Percy, District alienist_____
Hicks, Evelyn, Joint Committee on Printing,
Capitol 2 Soe oars ab uh
Hicks, Rear Admiral T. H., Federal Standard
Stock Catalogue Board........ =. 0
Hill, Benjamin D., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic’ Commeree.......  ..... =
Hill, Jesse, International Boundary Commis-
sion, United States, Alaska, and Canada...
Hill, John Philip, American Battle Monu-
ments Commission: 20-20: 2 oe rn
Hill, Dr. Joseph A., Bureau of the Census.___
Hill, Lister, Board of Visitors to the Military
ACAI oe iT re een adem
Page
326
329
268
337
253
375
350
330
Hill, Ralph W. S., office of Secretary of State.
Hill, Samuel B., Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation... .. cou oa i doa. 4.
Hill, William L.:
Secretary to Senator Fletcher _..._______
Boe Committee on Banking and Cur-
Hie, Arthur S., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Compmbeen LEAN Reet sal TE
WOO a as van a andes tae. aus
Hine, Harry O., secretary, District Board of
Education
Hines, Brig. Gen. Frank T.:
Veterans’ Administration... _._..._____
Federal Board of Hospitalization. ____.__
Hingsburg, F. C.:
Aeronautics Branch, Department of
COMIMBICO. .. . cotati erin nwt i hn ans
Bureau of Lighthouses... _.__._
Hirose, Sadao, Japanese Embassy
Hirsch, Arthur J., Bureau of the Census._.__
Hirschman, George F., Pan American Union.
Hiscox, J. W., Extension Service. ___._._._._._._.
bo E. T., National Training School for
Hitt, ne R., judge, police court... _.._...
Hitz, William, associate justice, District
Coart:ol Append... ives tienen mre
Hoadley, Frank M., office of Secretary of War.
Hoage, R. J., United States Employees’ Com-
pensation. Commission... cee racomewn=-
Hobbs, Ewart W., commissioner, Court of
COINS i funni wis msi votre Amen m Sem
Hobb, H. W., Board of Engineers for Rivers
and Harbors. cue ares nese an aends nna
Hodgdon, A. Dana, office of Secretary of
Hodges, Henry W., District Court of Appeals.
Hodgson, Maj. Paul A., assistant to Engineer
Commissioner, District of Columbia_._____
Hof, Maj. Gen. Samuel, Chief of Ordnance...
Hoffman, Col. George M., Board of Engineers
lor Rivers and- Harbors. ....a.. ogia. L is
Hohn, John, Bureau of Foreign and Domestic
Commerce: de mr a le
Hoidale, P. A., Bureau of Plant Quarantine._
Hoiland, A. H., office of Secretary of Navy___
Holbrook, Clara B., Emergency Conserva-
HON WIE. os es oe ae
Holcomb, R. D., office of Architect of Capitol.
Holden, Queen, Senate Committee on
Privileges and Elections... ______________
Holland, Leicester B., Library of Congress___
Holland, Rev. W. S., National Memorial
Commission... 2a ni
Holliday, John H., vice governor and secre-
tary of public instruction, Philippine
lands. a a
Holmes, Ronald M., National Park Service.
Holst, John H., Bureau of Indian Affairs___.
Holt, Everett G., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce... .----—=-c cac-ao-=
Holt, Capt. Fred W.:
Assistant to Chief Coordinator_____._____
Federal Traffic Board
Holton, D. W., District engineer department.
Hood, Ozni P., Bureau of Mines___....__.____
Hooper, Capt. Stanford C., Office of Naval
Operations... Jodi tora in au
Hoopes, Capt. Edward Trimble, Bureau of
Suppliesiand Accounts-..---=--__- 3
Hoover, Dickerson N., Bureau of Navigation
and Steamboat Inspection. _.___________
Hoover, Herbert, American National Red
A i A Le i
Hoover, J. Edgar, office of Attorney General.
Hoover, LeClaire, Federal Trade Commis-
675
Page
299
226
257
254
343
328
316
319
377
332
354
310
676 Congressional Directory
Hope, Clifford R., Joint Committee to Inves-
tigate Dirigible Disasters. _________________
Hopkins, Fred M., Patent Office_.._.________
Hopkins, Harry L., Federal Emergency
Rellef Administrators. uaa i lidiin
Hopkins, Isabelle Mott, Children’s Bureau.__
Hopkins, Oliver P., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic:Commerece.... 2 ol.
Hopkins, S. G., Civil Service Commission.
Horad, Romeo W., recorder of deeds office___
Hornaday Dr. F. A., District anatomical
oardd Sadinsorr algo rol Soseod.
a Stanley K., office of Secretary of
tat
Senate TTR LAS CT OMe Sie ER Lh eB
glo ai Tn ONL a DR RE A ned
Hostetler, T. A., Patent Office. _....-_.l 1.
Houchins, Eugene, House post office. _______
Houck, U. G., Bureau of Animal Industry.._
Hough, Walter, National Museum__________
Houston, H. 1., Patent Office... 12 25 ~~
Hower B. J., Food and Drug Administra-
TIT A La Th Se IN RE ET
Howe, Louis McHenry, Secretary to Presi-
dent Roosevelt... oo t_- i
Howell, Copher, office of Secretary of the
Senate. 22 Moar trans
Howell, W. H., National Research Council..
Howells, John M., Commission of Fine Arts_
Howes, William W., Second Assistant Post-
master General oo oo. aie
Hoysradt, Henry V., inspector, Public Utili-
ties’Commission. faut
Hoyt, Avery S., Bureau of Plant Quarantine_
Hsia, Ching-Lin, Chinese Legation__________
Hubbard, Henry D., Bureau of Standards.._
Hubbard, Henry V., National Capital Park
and Planning Commission... ----_-._ _..
Hudlow, T. A., Temporary Home for Sol-
diersiand'Sallors... ooo. oii.
Hueston, William C., National Memorial
Commission. ono i er
Hughes, Addie A., Emergency Conservation
NTA eT a SS Tl a
ly Charles Evans:
Chief Justice United States Supreme
Court (DIography) os owamsn inion
Member Smithsonian Institution. ____
Chancellor Smithsonian Institution_____
American National Red Cross_._________
United States Supreme Court Building
Cormmission Sa
Hughes, F. J., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
I EL rE Sn aE ee iE
Hughes, H.J., American National Red Cross.
Hulbirt, Harry H., office of Treasurer of
United TT PA eh NS LDN a
Hull, Cordell:
Secretary of State (biography)... ____...
Governing Board, Pan American Union.
Foreign Service Buildings Commission. _
Member Smithsonian Institution _______
Chicago World’s Fair Centennial Com-
TISSION fr i a hh Se
Hull, William C., Civil Service Commission _
Humber, Col. R. C., Inspector General’s
Hummel, Arthur W., Library of Congress.-
Humphrey, William BE.
Ditecion Columbia Institution for the
Foden] Trade. Commission..............=_.
Humphreys, William J., Weather Bureau._-_
Hunnewell, F. A., the Coast Guard C=.
Hunt, Bert ¥., office of Secretary of State_____
Hunter, Rollin A., secretary to Senator
Dickinson oi od Lal Wi nail ohn
Huntington, Col. P. W., Army Medical
Center...--
Page
Huntington, Webster P., Perry’s Victory
Memorial Commission... ..c... =
Huntley, T. A., secretary to Senator Reed.._
Senate Finance Committee:. oi... uli.
Hurley, John S., Bureau of Prohibition.____
Hurst, B. Price, Freedmen’s Hospital _______
Hurwitz, Anna D., office of Secretary of the
Senate... teledibaie Bi sh aki
Husband, W. W., Second Assistant Secre-
ory ol Labor ae Bn Se Lad
Huse, Edward A.:
Night Production Manager, Government
Printing: Office. toa win w sings:
United States Geographic Board ________
Husson, Capt. Camille, French Embassy...
Hutchison, A. E., secretary Federal Home
Loan-BanlkeBoard. ona. ii deities
Hutton, Eunice V., House Committee on
Merchant Marine, Radio and Fisheries...
Hien, Aletha R., secretary to Senator
Ickes, Harold L.:
Secretary of the Interior (biography)...
Migratory Bird Conservation Commis-
Howard University (patron ex officio) - --
Member of Smithsonian Institution_.___
National Forest Reservation Commis-
glonts Sri ines an a Se ad
Federal Oil Conservation Board
Ex officio member Public Domain Com-
Ijams, George E., Veterans’ Administration.
Ilsley, Arthur B., office of Architect of the
Be ER eR Se Ca Te
Inbody, E. F., General Supply Committee__
Inderlied, O. K., Chicago World’s Fair Cen-
tennial Commission. wo aco al
Ingram, Rice A., House post office._______.___
Ireland, Maj. Gen. Merritte W., Columbia
Hospital for- Women... ..c...o.: 220 1a
Irey, Elmer L., Bureau of Internal Revenue.
Irgens, Francis, Norwegian Legation___._____
Irvin, William L., Senate Committee on the
Jadiciary. ce iso rninse hes tn dust
Isaacs, C. Grant, Department of Commerce.
Ives, Guy E., office of Secretary of Senate...
Ivester, E. W., office of the Doorkeeper._____
Izaguirre V., Profesor Carlos, Honduran
FT AT a ALI ae SY ft TA
Jackson, Charles E., Bureau of Fisheries___.
Senate Committee on Agriculture and
HNO a Seth a Ce RE Le
Jackson, C. M., office of the Doorkeeper___._._
Jackson, Capt. E. S., General Board, Navy.
Jackson, Rev. J. C., National Memorial
COMMISSION. oo sun coins param weeds ae
J Aken, Lawrence W., Freedmen’s Hos-
Tri] Re RC eee Rs ee Ca On
Jackson, Mary G., Senate Committee on
Agriculture and Forestry... ___._.
Jackson, Robert M., office of Secretary of the
Lr eT Ne se
Jackson, Col. Thomas H., Board of Engineers
for Rivers and Harbors. a tm cer ree
Jacobs, Harold H., Patent Office_____._______
Jacobs, S. R., office of Secretary of Treasury.
James, E. W., Bureau of Public Roads___.___
James, George R., Federal Reserve Board. _-
James, W. Frank, Board of Visitors to the
Military Academy DRT a SRE RENT
Jameson, Guilford S., Commissioner, Court
of CIalINg. ooo. rior iat fi oh sss Se
Jameson, J. Franklin, Library of Congress.
Jamiesor, G. S., Bureau of Chemistry and
I ER ae rr SR
Jamison, Thomas H., General Land Office. _
J shen, Laon, Col. Thomas E., Bureau of the
Page
-
Individual Index
Jarvis, Harry W., assistant to Capitol physi-
Jedel, Celeste, office of Secretary of State..._
Jefferds, Warren C., office of Secretary of the
Senate. oi se a aaa ial
Jeffers, T. C., National Capital Park and
Planning Commission. co --—oo. ..
Jefferys, Robert L., secretary to Senator
Lonergan rol ie cn ilol ovhiniaia
J ening, Perry W., Public Domain Com-
mi
Jenkinson, J. W., Inland Waterways Cor-
poration en nS NEE es fans SAC Sl
Jennings, C. B., office of Alien Property Cus-
todiam.c oon ied a ann Ld a ald
Johns, George C., House Committee on Dis-
position of Useless Executive Papers_______
Johns, Hyland R., auditor, Court of Claims.
Johnson, Ben, Reconstruction Finance Cor-
poration. ac eonliiinoiee  oaSs
Johnson, Maj. Elza C., office of the Judge
Advocate General. cc ovina tl
Johnson, Fred W., commissioner General
ET RH RR NE Re SRE
Johnson, Dr. Hayden, president District
Board of Education... io acan-aac.-oulh
LE RR eR SOE, [1S Sn PO dn pag
Johnson, Hiram W., Joint Committee to
Investigate Dirigible Disasters
Johnson, Jed, Board of Visitors to the Mili-
tary Academy. oii. io dic iain Salles
Johnson, L. S., office of District assessor_._._.
Johnson, Dr. Loren B. T., District Parole
Board
Johnson, Mordecai W., Howard University.
Johnson, Otis B., Federal Trade Commis-
SION. end a a Sr ain
Johnston, Earl S., Smithsonian Institution. _
Johnston, Felton M., Senate Committee on
IT ET Lh a i ee at Ee CL Sa eA ON 1
Johnston, Marie A., Bureau of the Budget. -
Johnston, V. D., Howard University__.______
Jolliffe, Charles B., Federal Radio Commis-
Jones, A. M., Capitol police. . cocoa ict
Jones, Claude D.:
National Training School for Boys._..___.
District government... core ois
Jones, D. B., Bureau of Chemistry and Soils.
Jones, Edward E., office of the Register of
the "Treasury STE Jae le Lag SL Be Ay Be
Jones, Ernest P., jr., Senate Committee on
FIAanee. Sx oo. aria wir os
Jones, Grosvenor M., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce... _ o-oo ______
Jones Harold F., office of Postmaster Gen-
era.
J ones Hiram B., Washington City post
office
Jones, Jesse H., Reconstruction Finance Cor-
poration... oo soos nl toa
Jones, Dr. Kenneth B., District training
TE ET a SR a ST Ce eo nd
Jones, Lewis A., Bureau of Agricultural En-
INOREINg ik rea
Jones, Melvin, Bureau of the Budget____._..__
Jones, M. T., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-
ticiCommeree. in: ood. nai iaiilla
Jones, Scipio, National Memorial Commis-
Jones, Thomas E., Freedmen’s Hospital... __
Jones, Twyman S., District fire department.
Jones, Lieut. Col. William F., office of the
Quartermaster General ____________________
Josey, J. Anthony, N ational Memorial Com-
Judd, Lawrence M., Governor of Hawaii__
Julian, William A., "Treasurer of the United
Julihn, Carl E., Bureau of MineS..__._._____
Jump, W. A., office of Personnel and Busi-
ness AGMINISITAtION. i Jodi cian inden
Junkin, C. J., Bureau of Foreign and Domes-
RE OE SR eS
Page
264
300
254
349
258
348
348
346
261
367
Jurkowitz, Frances, private secretary to the
Secretary of Labor
J es Chesley W., Sergeant at Arms of the
ORALE. oo hi eins doe hs dR
Kabeladé, Otakar, Czechoslovakian Legation.
Kadel, Benjamin C., Weather Bureau.___._.
Kaiser, Albert W., Patent Office_._.__._._____
Kalbach, Lewis A., Office of Education
Kalthof, Ruth, secretary to Senator Diet-
ere ta NL Ne A ER
Krebii, Kiang, Library of Congress...
Karsner, J. W., Federal Trade Commission.
Kase, Shunicht, Japanese Embass
Kaufmann, E. I., Columbia Hospital for
Women ure ass a san a iI
Kay, Harry E.:
Secretary to Senator Gore 2 ii.
Senate Committee on Interoceanic Canals.
Kean, Hamilton F., Joint Committee to In-
vestigate Dirigible Disasters. oo acoiote
Kearney, George, librarian, Department of
Justice: cine and iit St Te
Kearney, T. H., Bureau of Plant Industry.---
Keating, W. E., Capitol police .____..-.---
Keck, Una H., Civil Service Commission...
Keddy, John 1, Bureau of Industrial Al-
cohol
Xeon, Richmond B., District people’s coun-
Rote, Claire L., House Committee on Post
Office and Posi Roads. oo. ore
677
Page
256
Keefer, Abraham B., office of Postmaster
General co c ae em
Keefer, Perry L., General Land Office
Keegan, John J., "House post office.
Eeolty, Col. Frank J., office of Chief ef Fi-
Keith, Arthur, National Academy of Sciences.
Keller, Kent E.: J oint Committee on the Library...
Joint Commission to Acquire a Site and -
Additional Buildings for the Library of
CONCLESS. ores sonst as aman oot
Keller, Sol. W. L., Army Medical Center___
Xow Karl F., Bureau of Plant Indus-
Kooy, E. F., Bureau of Public Roads._----
En Robert F., office of Secretary of
TER wei en IR ERC i
Kellogg, Vernon, Advisory Council of the
National Arboretum =. ~~. =... _---
Kelly, Ernest, Bureau of Dairy Industry.----
Kelly, F.J., Office of Education. ._.____..._-
Kelly, J. oseph T., Senate Committee on Edu-
cation and Labor
Kelly, Walter E., office of Postmaster Gen-
eral
Kelsey, Harlan P., Advisory Council of the
National Arboretum... -...-_~-.--7----
Kemp, Eleanor Ogden, House Committee on
4 TT REF n LL Ea hea ed Shae i
Kemper, John M., Bureau of Dairy Indus-
tr
Kempf, Elmer A., Senate Committee on Ex-
penditures in the Executive Departments.
ie Wayne:
Chairman, District board of accountancy -
Columbia Hospital for Women .__________
Kennedy, Bert W., minority clerk_________.
Kennedy, B. P., House postoffice......-o--=
Kennedy, B. Ww. Jl: Capitol police... =
Kennedy, J. Thomas, District government. _-
Koons, Michael F., United States attorney’s
Koes: Ww, T., jr., District pharmacy board.
678 Congressional Directory
Page
Kerlin, Malcolm, office of Secretary of Com-
ROTC a ans so adie TN alate
Kern, W. E., District engineer department_. 377
Kerr, Mrs. Brownie H., Bureau of the
Budget ic. al aed asin ts de 303
Kerr, Crawford S., International Boundary
Commission, United States and Mexico__- 347
Kervin, William H., Superintendent of Stores
and Traffic Manager, Government Printing
Office. unt adsense ota. 268
Kerwin, Hugh L., Director of Conciliation,
Department:of. Labor... . oh ended 334
Kessler, D. M., office of the Doorkeeper_____ 260
Koyonam, Charles A., headquarters, Marine »
ODS AE Salina ub aad d aang soa nst. 22. 31
Key, eis M., Senate Committee on Manu-
FETE EL RR IN a CI CU EP I MY 255
Keyes, Henry W.:
Commission on Enlarging the Capitol
Crounds ao. Lahde diya cL J. us 225
United States Supreme Court Building
Commission: = cutie nisin dion 225
Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy. 229
Public Buildings Commission.__________ 226
National Forest Reservation Commis-
SloNLL ed i i a Ue a he Sl aa Se 227
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commis-
SION. hin can ada eddy d cea Los 227
Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercente-
Nary. Commission... . cua cine s=ses wimg 229
Keyes, Mrs. Henry W., The Congressional
Sr TE I DN OL VOR Te 355
Keyser, A. E., Bureau of Navigation and
Steamboat Inspection RRR a EL ae 332
Keyserling, Leon H.:
Senate Committee on Patents. _._...____ 255
Secretary to Senator Wagner _.__.____.____ 258
Kiefer, Helen K.:
Committee on Conference Minority of the
ST Re EL 254
Secretary to Senator McNary _.._____. 258
Kieley, John, private secretary to the Secre-
tary of the Treasury... co viva siasnn sas 300
Kiesselbach, Wilhelm, Mixed Claims Com-
mission, United States and Germany-____. 346
Kiessling, Oscar E., Bureau of Mines_....__. 332
Kilbourne, Brig. Gen. Charles E.:
The: Joint Boar G.c. cw iiimnsisctamentnese 345
War Department General Staff__________ 306
Kilby, Jovi L., office of Secretary of the
POSING =. cu ied nt mt as mes Ss os 300
Killeen, ats M., deputy recorder of
deeds ss ol iE i kee nits 370
Killoran,-C.:J.,: Capitol Police. ...: ----...--- 264
Kilner, Maj. W. G., office of Secretary of War. 305
Kilpatrick, E. O., office of the Doorkeeper__. 260.
Kimball, Max rr Senate Committee on Dis-
trict of Columbia SES NAN RE Re 254
Kimball, M. M., National Memorial Com-
FEY yy a Rp SS rd 351
Kimura, Shiroshichi, Japanese Embassy---- 509
Kincer, Joseph B., Weather Bureau-___.____ 324
Kincheloe, Charles F., auditor and reporter,
Court ob Claims: oa en cree 367
Kincheloe, David H., judge, United States
Customs Court (biography) o-oo 368
Kindleberger, Rear Admiral Charles P.:
Board of Medical Examiners. .._._._._..__ 316
Naval Retiring Board... .. came mcxe—= 317
King, Eric T., Bureau of Foreign and Do-
mRestic. COMINeICe Le sna mm mie = mm 330
King, Rear Admiral Ernest J.:
Chief, Bureau of AeronauticS------—---__ 316
The Aeronautical Board... 345
National Advisory Committee for Aero-
EL EH Ta Se SEs se a peers Se 346
King, Harold D., Bureau of Lighthouses.... 331
King, William H.:
Joint Committee on Internal Revenue
EL Le ie bas Sd 226
National Capital Park and Planning
Commission: i a a hit 349
Joint Committee to Investigate Dirigible
Disasters oo nL a 229
King, W. Harry, Federal Board for Voca-
tional Bddeation o.oo ora out 343
King, William V., office of Federal Power
COINS One Sa RAE Lr Eh 342
Kingman, Lieut. Col. John J., office of the
Onl ol Engineers. ce nv. nnn me manana
Kinnan, William A., Patent Office. ._._._____
Kinney, Jay P., Bureau of Indian Affairs ___
Kinsell, W. L., The Alaska Railroad _______
Kircher, Joseph, Forest Service. _.....______
Kirk, Ethel L., Senate Committee on Inter-
Kitchen, C. W., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
pT SN eT
Kittredge, Frank A., National Park Service. _
Kizer, Ruby, Committee to Audit and Con-
trol the Contingent Expenses of the Senate _
Klapp, Edgar A., International Boundary
Commission, United States, Alaska, and
Canada. ce i LE a Lah
ey Fred C., clerk, Court of
Claims i. eco a i Ash Sr ars
Klepinger, Robert F., House Committee on
Revisionofthe Laws. _iici oo ila il
Kletsch, Ernest, Library of Congress. ________
Klimpel, Zdzislaw, Polish Embassy_.________
Kloeber, R. O., Bureau of the Budget. _______
Klotz, H. W., Washington City post office.___
Knaebel, Jones) reporter, United States Su-
preme Gombe i a
Kneeland, Hideaade, Bureau of Home Eco-
nomics. LL Li a Te ee
Kneipp, L. F., Forest Service. ovo.
Knerr, Clarence W ., office of the Doorkeeper _
Kniffin, ‘Wayne D., "House post office_________
Knight, Henry G., "Bureau of Chemistry and
Knight, Howard L., Office of Experiment
ST ny RRR nhs flee le Alla i lang
Knight, J. B., House Committee on Military
Rpjeos, Samuel, American National Red
POSS en es
Knockey, Charles F., Washington City post
ee, mr a eR a
i Tag Daniel W., Interstate Commerce
Commission... coven alii dso Ud
Knox, Capt. Dudley W., Office of Naval
Operations oii on. a sd a
Koos, Frank, Board of Indian Commission-
Koch, io L., United States Tariff
Commission TR THRE LD ATE SR 8 fe en
Koch, Henry A., District municipal lodging
House i at di ol ela ic  R a
Kojassar, Master Sergt. Aram, office of the
Chiefiol’Cavalty. iol Buia i i.
Konitza, Faik, Albanian minister____._______
Koons, Emily, United States Botanic Gar-
d
Kouns, John L., Senate Committee on For-
eign Relations. er rade ERT Rl SE
Kramer, Andrew J., office of Secretary of
Senateilic iin thE nd a ait hey soadns
Kramer, Wilbur G.:
Board of Medical Examiners. .__________
Naval Examining Board________________
Naval Retiring Board... . 0...
Kranz, Harry T., Civil Service Commission.
Kratz, John Aubel, Federal Board for Voca-
tional Bducation. ooo t asamp ii iin
Krohr, J. J., District assistant disbursing
i LETC i a A a ee CN hi SE el
Kromer, Col. Leon B., Army War College...
Rronss Allen J., United States atforney’s
QIN Ca a en a et
Kubach, William F., Bureau of Reclamation.
Kuchler, Rudolph, Public Domain Commit-
511
321
Individual Index 679
Kunsman, C. H., Bureau of Chemistry and
Kuusik, Charles, Estonian Legation__________
Kvale, Paul J ., Board of Visitors to the Mili-
tary Academy... Ci ii
Kwai, Yung, Chinese Legation______________
Kyte, George W., International Joint Com-
mission tad od Il naa I ia
La Boiteaux, E. M., Bureau of the Census.
Lacklen, Ruth, Senate Committee on Indian
Affairs or 0 Sa oni hd
Lacour-Gayet, Robert, French Embassy. ___
Iams Mary, United States Employment
CREVICE I rae ae
Lamar, Capt. H. D.:
Assistant to the Chief Coordinator... ____
Federal Statistics Board... _-._.._______
Lamb, Benjamin A., Metropolitan police.___
Lamb, Walter C., Senate Committee on
ForeigniRelations. - 25 Soir mnie a
Lambert, John W., office of Secretary of
Senafe nr. ove anes mE
Printing AE Voom ps SER AINE on Sa
Lamneck, A. R., office of the Doorkeeper.___
Lamphere, Frank E., Reconstruction Fi-
vance Corporation. o.oo ton oui
Land, Rear Admiral Emory S., Chief of
Bureau of Construction and Repair Ee phe
Landenberger, Capt. George B., Governor
of American Samos... ooo.
Tanders, E., Patent Office... =. - Cn
Landick, George, jr., office of the Fourth
Assistant Postmaster General _____________
Lane, C. H., Federal Board for Vocational
Bducation polis rane nti es
Lane, Brig. Gen. Rufus H., headquarters,
Maring:Gorps.. 0-5 x rina san
Lange, O. G., Bureau of Standards__________
Langhorst, L. F., assistant to House post-
masier cio Teh a
Lanham, Clifford, District engineer depart-
Ment. a a a
Lanham, Fritz G.:
Public Buildings Commission. __________
Commission on Enlarging the Capitol
Groimnds.= 0 oy aE
United States Supreme Court Building
Commission... =o a or
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission.
Lanman, Maurice H.:
Secretary to Senator Ashurst_._.___.___..
Senate Judiciary Committee_..._________
Lansdale, Robert T., Bureau of Indian
AAS... a an EEE
Lansdon, W. C., Board of Tax Appeals__.__.
Lara, José Manuel, Cuban Embassy... _____.
Lardone, Francesco, Library of Congress. .__
Larimer, Rear Admiral E. B., Bureau of
OrANANCe. oie as Se
Larrabee, Mrs. William H., The Congres-
slonaliClubs sie arr a
Larrimer, W. H., Bureau of Entomology ____
Larson, Robert, Secretary to Senator Frazier.
La Salle, Jessie, District Board of Education.
Lassly, Roy F., office of Department of the
Imterior. ioe ota io nL C2
Latimer, Gene, House post office..___._._____
Latimer, J. Austin, secretary to the Post-
master General: Co ii Cl il nan
Latta, Maurice C., executive clerk, the
WhiteeHouse 0. colar imo
Lauber, Calvin C., District fire department.
Laughlin, Irwin B., Regent, Smithsonian
Institation: a 7 0 oC C200 lis
Laughlin, James, Capitol police... _________
Laughorn, Henry W., jr., House post office.
Lauriat, Capt. P. W., the Coast Guard...._.
Lawrence, Charles D., office of Attorney
General. .c- oc. oeccari manana EE
Page   Page
Lawrence, Ethel L., office of Secretary of
#17 ICE ES Le BR TR a SU ND
Lawrie, Lee, Commission of Fine Arts_______ 349
Lawson, June K., Civil Service Commission. 337
Lawson, Lawrence M., International Bound-
oy Commission, United States and Mex-
a te A er wd AR 347
Toi C. Alfred:
Secretary to Senator Smith______________ 258
Clerk of Senate Committee on Agricul-
tare and Forestry... ue aa vas. 254
Lawton, Edwin M., office of Secretary of
BE iat aii St ad Se i St tpt Ea 305
id Elton J., House Committee on Inter-
state and Foreign Commerce. «.....- oo. 262
Leach, Maj. Gen. George E., Chief of Militia
Bureaw. doa ea ana 309
Leahy, Rear Admiral W. D., Bureau of
Navigation ol oid ants 315
LeBas, L. B., House Committee on Public
ands cra ee a 262
Lee, Carlos H., Chilean Embassy. _......... 504
Lee, Harold H., House post office_________.___ 261
Lee, Rev. J. R. E., National Memorial Com-
3 13 1a Fi) Fe foe Re li i SE AR Sra 351
Lee, Sylvia M., Secretary to Senator Ship-
Stead a ee 258
Lee, Yili E., Interstate Commerce Com-
msslon a 338
Leech, : Russell, United States Board of Tax
Appeals STE aR AE nN aE Dr i Li 341
Le Hand, Marguerite A., Personal Secretary
to President‘ Roosevelt... Lo i. __ 298
Lees, Frank, office of the First Assistant Post-
master General... coi rower 312
Leese, M. A ., District board of optometry__.. 375
Le Fevre, Robert, General Supply Com-
mates La 302
Lehman, Paul M., St. Elizabeths Hospital... 321
Lehmann, Henry C., War Department._.___. 305
Leighty, C. E., Bureau of Plant Industry---- 325
Leisenring, L. M., president District exam- .
iners and registrars: o_o. iC lool 375
Leitner, Rudolf, German Embassy .___-_--._ 507
Lejéune, F. St. D. B., British Embassy ..._- 507
Lély, Nicholas G., Greek Legation. _.._...__ 507
Lenroot, Irvine : 3H judge, United States
Court of Customs and Patent Appeals
(blography) i Ei es 365
Lenroot, Katharine F., Children’s Bureau... 334
Leonard, F. Morton, United States Tariff
Commission. c.2us i. ae ams ent 341
Lesh, Paul E., Columbia Hospital for Women. 356
Letts, F. Dickinson, associate justice, Dis-
trict:Supreme Court... eee n= 369
Levy, Edith McDowell, Chicago World’s
Fair Centennial Commission... ___________ 358
Lewis, Charles R., deputy collector of port... 302
Lewis, Elmer A., House document room._... 261
Lewis, Ernest I., Interstate Commerce Com-
mission. fo aE sd eee ana 339
Lewis, George W., National Advisory Com-
mittee for Aeronautics. So tor fii aoa 346
Lewis, John C., House Committee on Naval
AIS rs eto 262
Lewis, Mitchel D., Board of Mediation___.__ 344
Lewis, Mrs. Reeve, Columbia Hospital for
AT Ae RES Ee An ER a ni 356
Lewis, Robert M., House appropriations
Committee... i ire aria ney 261
Libbey, E. W., chief clerk, Department of
Commeree.. 3... or a 329
Lieuallen, W. G., office of Secretary of Senate. 254
Lightfoot, James H., Patent Office__.._.__.__ 332
Lima e Silva, R. de:
Brazilian ambassador... % 503
Governing Board, Pan American Union. 353
Lincoln, Gatewood S., United States Ship-
ping Board ooo. oso hr ST opr arsed 344
Lincoln, Harold S., Library of Congress...__ 267
Lind, Master Sergt. Fred, office of the Chief
of Field Artery nies 306
Lindbergh, Col. Charles A: National Ad-
visory Committee for Aeronautics. _______ 346
Linder, W. V., Bureau of Industrial Alcohol. 301
Lindquist, G. E. E., Board of Indian Com-
IIEBIONEYS.. onc sams aes mae amma Ea 321
680 Congressional Directory
Page
Lindquist, Rubert J., Reconstruction Fin-
anee:Corporation .. >...  _. ...0..0 0% 358
Lindsay, Melville D., District assistant pur-
chasing officer. oi oo... C2 Awol is 376
Lindsay, Sir Ronald, British ambassador.___ 507
Lindsey, Claude, chief clerk, Office of Chief
off Engineers. © = 0. oi ene 308
Linton, F. B., Food and Drug Administra-
LT EE CS ls TES NE Ls |S ett 329
Lippincott, Col. Aubrey, office of Chief of
Cavalry. ol ea aah 306
Littleton, Benjamin H., judge, Court of
Claims (biography). ol ce 366
Livesey, Frederick, office of Secretary of
SLL ea pS Ep RL EE Je 299
Lloyd, Med. Dir. B. J., Pan American Sani-
tary Burean i coc iol ost ona 354
Lloyd, Daniel B., Official Reporter, Senate... 256
Loafman, M. R,, office of Secretary of Treas-
3 A eT SL SA Cl 300
Lockwood, W. J., secretary to Senator Pope. 258
Loa Alfred Ee secretary to Senator Vanden-
A I LE 258
RS John E., curator, Freer Gallery of Art. 352
Loeffier, Carl x. secretary to the Minority... 256
Logan, Ben T., office of Secretary of the
Senate ol o.oo toinnL or Sn Naa 254
Logan, M. M., Board of Regents, Smith-
sonian Institution RR RENE SI SRL Sa SU 352 Lohmann, Dr. Johann G.:
German HR eR tn lee 507
German property custodian. ____________ 346
Lombard, Lieut. Col. Emmanuel, French
Embassy A A eR Ed kk Ba 506
Long, Clark R., Bureau of Engraving and
EE EL RA SE eV 1 i SA 302
Long, ee Howard H., District government. 375
Long, Med. Dir. Joh 'n D., Pan American
Sanitary Burean. oo 354
Long, W. A., jr., House post office.__________ 261
Lorente, Dr. "Sebastian, Pan American Sani-
ory Buren, oh ata ae aaah 354
Lorenz, Max O., Interstate Commerce Com-
mission Lon ls an ee i ee ai 339
Lorimer, George Horace, Public Domain
Comiitiens oa mea 348
Loring, Augustus P., Regent of Smithsonian
Imstitgtion. 352
Louw, Eric Hendrik, Union of South Africa
minster. Le a 512
Love, Ellen L., Federal Trade Commission. 340
Loving, HoH. 1, Forest Service... __. 326
Loving, Lieut. Col. James J., Board of Engi-
neers for Rivers and Harbors a se 308
Loving, Maj. Walter H., National Memorial
Commission: tut ner al 351
Lowe, Elias Avery, Library of Congress... 267
Lowery, John, House document room_______ 261
Lowndes, Charles H. T., Board of Indian
Commissioners: co rile 0 ithe. 321
Lozano, Dr. Fabio:
Ministeriof Colombin. 0 uci of 504
Governing Board, Pan American Union. 354
Luce, Robert:
Joint Committee on Library... ______ 226
Commission to Acquire Site and Addi-
tional Buildings for Library_._________ 225
George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial
Commission: i ee 228
Ludwig, Charles J., jr., Bureau of Light-
OSB A Sb ww 331
Luhring, Oscar R., associate justice, Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia... 369
Lule, Arthur B., Latvian Legation__________ 509
Lusby, James 2 District disbursing officer... 376
Luther, Hans, German Ambassador_________ 507
Lutz, Carl, House post office... .....eveen.... 261
Lutz, E. Russell, office of the Secretary of
LT RR a Ser a pat) ET 299
Lyman, Alice H., Senate Committee on Pub-
lic Lands and Surveys SERA A TN Te 255
Lynch, Robert E., assistant District corpora-
tion counsel..cmenn-- 376
Lynn, David:
Architect of the Capitol... .emecenm—ieaas
District Zoning Commission... ___._____
Member of Commission on Enlarging the
Capitol Grounds... =... oieil
Member of Public Buildings Commis-
Member of Commission to Acquire Site
and Additional Buildings for Library...
Member of United States Supreme Court
Building Commission. 222 = 20 hoo
Meniher of National Memorial Commis-
BION re ni ho
Lyons, Gibbs, Deputy Comptroller of the
Currenoy. ae
Lyons, J. Leonard, juvenile court___._________
Lyons, William C., administrative assistant
to the Postmaster General... .__.____.____
M
McAfee, Miss Bertha E., District Nurses’
Examining Board... oo. __..li
McAllister, Frank, Senate Committee on
BEmolled Bills. 2 0 5 ow
McAllister, Joseph H., office of Fourth As-
sistant Postmaster General. _______________
McArdle, Ruskin, office of Secretary of
Senate
Nye
Noten W. L., Bureau of Biological Survey.
McAuliffe, Maurice J., Civil Service Com-
Tnigslon. he Ne ae
Np, Harry A., assistant to Secretary of
McCabe, John W., office of the Doorkeeper._
McCain, Maj. Gen. Henry P. (retired),
United States Soldiers’ Home_____________
McCain, Lieut. Col. William A., Army In-
fa ah ore Ng eat en
Cn i we Se St
McCall, M. A., Bureau of Plant Industry.._
McCall, M. Pearl, United States attorney’s
MecCallan, Irene, office of Clerk of the House.
McCamant, Wallace, The George Washing-
ton Bicentennial Commission ____________
McCanless, Marion Y., House Ways and
Means Committee... no ow a
MeCarl, J. R., Comptroller General of the
United Sales: out cas dines urate shine
McCarthy, W. J., Merchant Fleet Corpora-
BION Siders ea db t oe oi ath oan A BoA
McCarthy, William G., Reconstruction Fi-
nance: Corporation. .o. 0. ciuso ol funeeeas
McCarthy, Wilson, Reconstruction Finance
Corporation. hide iin bp heni cnr cals un dais
McCauley, William, United States Employ-
ees’ Compensation Commission. .____._____.
McCeney, James P.:
Secretary to Senator King _____._._________
Senate Committee on District of Colum-
| 51 int ei an Ca
Clerk, Joint Committee to Investigate
Dirigible Disasters. tenis ol ida
McClelland, Charles P., judge, United States
Customs Court (biography). oo. ____._.
McClelland, E. M., Federal Reserve Board.
MeClerkin, J. F.:
Committee on Conference Majority of
the Senate. i ece i. locaiinanerim dumm
Secretary to Senator Robinson __________
McClintock, James K., American National
Rod Cross. oi oo gouou. oieeat od.opa
MecCline, P. H., railroad ticket office in
Capitol... ois ibaa ily wala.
McClure, H. J., office of Attorney General__._
Mohs, Wallace, office of Secretary of
2711-0 RA ELE Ce EI Se RUC SR Lg
301
370
375
331
254
313
253
258
327
337
298
260
356
310
326
325
369
260
228
263
338
344
358
358
338
258
254
229
368
339
254
258
264
311
Individual Index
McConnell, W. R., Western Union Tele-
gIap.O0.. vis. ie ed ae Sa da
McCorkle, George, Federal Trade Commis-
McCormack, D. J., office of the Doorkeeper.
MecCormick-Goodhart, Leander, British Em-
bass
McCoy, George W., Medical Director Na-
tional Institute of Health... .._...._
McCoy, Horace L., Veterans’ Administration.
McCrea, Lieut. Commander J. L., aide to
Judge Advocate General ...________________
MecCrory, S. H., Bureau of Agricultural En-
ZINBETING iil orn Sen svine nae Sm en a
MecCuen, Joseph R., Federal Power Com-
TE TT apa ee i ee SER fe SRR
McCulloch, Charles N., Bureau of Reclama-
11) Fe SA SRT A AN eed CR Se A ET RE
McDaniel, Jennie B., Senate Committee on
Appropriations ci. zo too coatings
McDermott, Michael J., office of Secretary
of State. oi ct Lie
McDermott, William J., jr., bill clerk of the
HoOUSe iota ainsi both Sates
McDonagh, Marion, House Committee on
the District of Columbia. sco. lili:
McDonald, Charles A., office of the Door-
| REIL er pai Le BE Sens SSeS BE
McDonald, W. E., secretary to Senator
Reynolds. uw to oucil oolvidaoinaeobhornny
McDonald, Willard F., Weather Bureau...
McDonnell, C. C., Food and Drug Admin-
rib he me as aie ie eC
McDougal, Col. Douglas C., headquarters
Marine Corps. ca fri iinet oadld
McDowell, J. C., Bureau of Dairy Industry.
McDowell, John P., office of Secretary of the
Interior so. cua please satay
McDowell, Malcolm, Board of Indian Com-
TsslONerS i en a A a
MeDuffie, John, Joint Committee on Veter-
ans AAS sree
McEldowney, Grace:
Senate Committee on Rules_____________
Secretary to Senator Copeland. _________.
McEntee, James J., Emergency Conserva-
tion Work
McFadden, James G., office of Secretary of
Proprintionss. cui ts ee ee
McFall, Dr. Robert J., Bureau of the Census.
McFarland, Lieut. Col. Earl, office of Secre-
tary ol. War... oC eeaaie li.
McFarland, James, office of Secretary of the
Senate oo ul i ide
ffi
McGann, Joseph H., House Committee on
Riversand:-Tarbors. coc itc ss -aenor-
McGinty, George B., secretary Interstate
Commerce:Commission. .-..---5- ===
McGonegal, A. R., District engineer depart-
eR a rh rte es oa rs ve oT mi i 30
MecGreer, E. D’Arcy, Canadian Legation__.
McGuire, Erskine, Senate Committee on the
PI Sn ea ern a I
McGuire, O. R., General Accounting Office_
Meclnerney, Wilbert, United States attor-
ney'soffiee i. liso eee
Meclntyre, Marvin H., Assistant Secretary to
President Roosevelt... 5. co. cloocnmnn
McKay, Capt. George A., Bureau of Yards
AHAEDOCK ts. ao Ea ine see we
McKee, J. M., House folding room_._____.___
McKee, John K., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation. ce aco oon 3o 2
McKellar, Don W.:
Secretary to Senator McKellar___._...___
Senate Committee on Post Offices and
Post Roads... amin ann
Page
264
340
260
507
302
343
316
327
342
320
254
299
260
261
260
307
328
258
324
329
317
325
318
321
229
255
257
343
305
261
330
305
254
338
262
339
377
504
255
338
315
260
McKellar, Kenneth:
Joint Committee on the Library_________
George Rogers Clark Sesquicentennial
Commission... coins ang
McKeon, Thomas F., office of Secretary of
COMIN Cf ror ares eae a bea
Cor LTT el aS ee a Sa
McKinley, Henry C., office of the Door-
Keeper. wim ht SIR Ct Emm a es
McKinley, Maj. Gen. James F.:
The Adjutant General... i: i.
United States Soldiers’ Home..___.._____
McKinney, Guy D., Emergency Conserva-
Hon Work 2 io ies
McLaughlin, Robert E., United States attor-
ney soffice. oid aa er
McLaughlin, W. W., Bureau of Agricultural
Engineering rs a ea
McLean, Archie W., House Committee on
Elections No. Yo. oo ool. rs
McLean, Betty, office of the Majority Leader
oftheHouse. 4... o.oo fc _
McLeod, A. S., office of Secretary of the
i bE Em es I ha ER En BD
McMahon, John P., judge, police court__.___
MoM anon, Stephen J., Board of Tax Ap-
LL ee RN RE
McManamy, Frank, Interstate Commerce
Commission... 0... oo ur ca aaa
McMullen, Col. J. I.:
Interdepartmental Patents Board... _____
Office of the Judge Advocate General ___
McNabb, Charles E., United States Tariff
Commission... = o-oo cay
McNamara,
Judge Advocate General
MeNeir, William, office of Secretary of State.
McNinch, Frank R., Federal Power Com-
MecQuestin, Roseanne, Senate Committee on
Interstate Commerce... .o.o..ao. oc
McRae, Colin E., chief clerk, office of Chief
of Ordnance. o.oo iene
McReynolds, James C., Associate Justice,
Supreme Court (biography). cceocemoo____
McReynolds, Sam D.:
Migratory Bird Conservation Commis-
1 IT T1 Paar ee AS be ICI Ls
Foreign Service Buildings Commission. _
Interparliamentary Union... ..._._______
McSwain, John J.:
Board of Visitors to the Military Acad-
McWherter, W. R., United States Court of
Customs and Patent Appeals_.____________
McWhorter, Roger B., Federal Power Com-
MacArthur, Gen. Douglas:
Chicfof- Staff, Army... __. oi "ai.
PheJoint Board... 0 a li Cc To
MacArthur, J. Bruce, office of Official Re-
portersof Debates. -- _.-.-_.._...C__.
MacCormack, Daniel W., Commissioner
General of Immigration... _-._.--“--_._..
MacCormick, Austin H., Department of
Justice- -
260
306
356
343
260
369
327
262
259
300
370
341
305
307
307
305
345
or
— ———
a.
—
682 Congressional Directory
Page
MacCracken, William P., jr., National Ad-
visory Committee for Aeronautics. ._______ 346
MacDonald, Thomas H., Chief of Bureau of
Priblic Roods. occ roves ary b 7
MacEachran, Clinton E.:
Office of Secretary of State_._..___________ 298
General Supply Committee. ._._.________ 303
MacGregor, Licenciado Genaro Fernindez,
Mexican Claims Commission ...__.___._____ 349
MacKellar, W. M., Bureau of Animal Indus-
LY re ee i a aS 325
Mochi, Nellie Dunn, Secretary to Senator
a Folletos a on nr a 258
Mackey, J. H., Bureau of the Budget. ______ 303
Mackin, J ames J., House Committee on
Claims. oi bl a 261
Macnamara, Capt. Patrick, British Em-
DABEY inns saath Sic SRR CL ATR 507
MacWhie, Michael, Irish Free State minis-
eA A AE nA iy HEE 508
Maden] William, Congressional Record
EE A 256
Madigan, John J., Geological Survey._._._____ 320
Magowan, J. H., British Embassy A 507
Magrath, Charles A., International Joint
Commission... coc foci aot JVI 00 10 347
Magruder, Augustus, Senate Committee on
PINANCE. soto stn aam ar mma sant e Rane reads 254
Magruder, Elizabeth R., United States at-
Horney’s Offiee.. coc aioo sion saannd JHU SEL 369
Mague, Roscoe E., office of the chief post
office INSPeELOr... seco -ascasio isn aS 313
Mahaffie, Charles D., Interstate Commerce
Commission. ios con Crane Si ol 338
Mahoney, Frank J., office of the Sergeant at
Armsofthe House... o. 3 iid lion 260
Mahoney, Merchant, Canadian Legation ____ 50
Major, Col. Duncan K., War Department
General Staff... cou. isis iscronoaiac ating 305
Makins, Roger M., British Embassy-_-...___ 507
Maktos, John, office of Secretary of State _-__ 300
Mallalieu, Thomas C., office of the Fourth
Assistant Postmaster General. ___________. 313
Malloy, Pat., Assistant Attorney General..___ 310
Malone, George W., Public Domain Com-
IIIEECO oo ts oa ie pe wm se ds Ww ik vs 348
Manger, William, Pan American Union______ 353
Mangum, James E., executive assistant,
American Battle Monuments Commission. 350
Mann, James O., Federal Home Loan Bank
Boards Lo. Se LEER UI TL ak 357
Mann, John D., office of the Doorkeeper - 260
Mann, William M., director National Z0o-
logieal Parle. Jo fos i. Coa@ Dd aad Lai0saay 352
Mannix, Gertrude, Senate Committee on
Tomigration oo sai Daal linen ids 255
Manoloff, Vladimir S., Bulgarian Legation___ 504
Marble, George R., office of Comptroller of
the. CUPEENEY: su won thr nks mee i SAS A 301
Marbury, Dr. W. B., District police surgeon. 378
Marbut, C. F., Bureau of Chemistry and
EE Mr 2 Sn See LL Va 326
Marcellus, Edward W., American National
Red Cr 088. i. has Sent Cis a 355
March, Charles H., Federal Trade Commis-
HT SLL a TU) Ae J Th Lr bo 2 ISN pa dod Ca a aT 340
Marchant, Annie D., Pan American Union__.. 353
Marcotte, Jerry J., bailiff, Court of Claims... 367
Margold, "Nathan BR office of Secretary of the
Interloreu cl) danas oct sh aos tn an Jon Sha 318
Markey, D. John, American Battle Monu-
ments Commission...c. oil ios. 350
Markham, Col. Edward M., Board of Engi-
neers for Rivers and Harbors. _.__._..______ 308
Markhus, Andrew, General Land Office
Marks, S. H., office of Secretary of Treasury . 300
Marlatt, C. L., Bureau of Entomology .....-. 326
Marquart, Capt. Edward J.:
Office of Naval Operations. ..o._oo.._.__. 314
Naval Consulting Board... _...-.__._._. 316
Marques, Melvin J., register of wills office... 370
Marquette, John J., Board of Tax Appeals... 341
Marquis, J. Clyde, Bureau of Agricultural
CORON ir hansen ae Renn mw en 328
Marschalk, Dr. W. A., Bureau of Indian
Ales a eas 320
Marsden, R. D., Bureau of Agricultural En-
A ele a eS Ee CR, 327
Page
Marshall, Rodney E., Secretary to Senator
on Ed ed i Bh a ets Sg 257
Marshall, W. Fiske, Aeronautics Branch, De-
partment of Commerce... .._._._ 330
Martel, Charles, Library of Congress_________ 267
Martin, Aaron W., Washington City post
PELE) re tl eek Cl SS Se ee i 379
Martin, Frances E., House Committee on
Nay Airs a A 262
Martin, George E., chief justice, Court of
Appeals of the District of Columbia_______ 366
Martin, James L., Public Utilities Commis-
IT pint Lal tim es le SE 378
Martin, Col. Lawrence:
United States Geographic Board________ 353
Library ofl Congress. —-2_ cc ana .o ls 267
Martin, L. C., office of Secretary of Treasury. 300
Martin, Reed F., General Accounting Office. 338
Martin, Warren F., National Training School
for BOYS... cia nnaiciieiiatnas pinnate 02 357
Fp op Ut lS a Jp Se CE Atel $A IL 305
Morelli Rear Admiral G. R., General
Board, NOVY 2 desman in swaemtam emt 316
Marvin, Dr. Charles F.:
Chief of Weather Bureau... .....__- 324
National Advisory Committee for Aero-
11:0 7 A Te Rg Ge SLE oR MI OREN Gy 346
Massing, William P., Federal Radio Com-
Taission oo ies rn Lea SN Ta 342
Masterson, Daniel, chief clerk, Bureau of the
Public Health Service... cnnaee = 302
Mathias, Bingham W.:
House Committee on Invalid Pensions... 262
Joint Committee on Veterans’ Affairs_.__ 229
Matre, Joseph B., office of Secretary of
Bate a he i ae an 299
Matthews, Annabel, Board of Tax Appeals... 341
Matthews, Charles E., office of Third Assist-
ant Postmaster General. _....__-__..22 0 312
Matthews, H. Freeman, office of Secretary
of Safe: oc ton rs ra SEI LUTE 299
Matthews, Brig. Gen. Hugh, headquarters,
Marine Corps iss ori vias stag BoE 318
Matthews, John, jr., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce... z i--iiloi. 330
Matingy, Robert E., judge, municipal
TI TH Pi a Se Ue de CN SSR SL EE LEI 370
Maulding, Mrs. J. Atwood, office of Secretary
ofthe Interior ooo. or vom 0, 319
Maull, Harry C., jr., General Supply Com-
mittee A Se LN REE 302
Mauran, John L., the Commission of Fine
AT NL 349
Mawhinney, Robert J., Solicitor of the
dl RRS GSR EL SE A I 311
Maxam, Oliver M.:
The Const Guard... oil sh ali. 302
United States Geographic Board WS 353
Maxwell, Frank F.:
Secretary to Senator Goldsborough______ 257
Secretary Senate Office Building Com-
mission. 2.0 dol ree ai] 225
May, John B., chief clerk, Bureau of Aero-
nobles tah re ea i a 316
May, Paul, Belgian ambassador_____________ 503
Mayer, J oseph, Library of Congress.._______ 267
Mayers, Shirley D., Federal Trade Commis-
BION re a ee Sa 340
Mayo, Anthony R., National Memorial
Commission ose ics taal a 351
Mead, Elwood:
Commissioner, Bureau of Reclamation... 320
Public Domain Committee _____________ 348
Meade, Elnathan, office of the Doorkeeper_.. 260
Mearns, David C., Library of Congress...__ 267
Measday, Walter, secretary to Senator Me-
AdOO: oe ar rr aE ne 258
Mehl, J. M Grain Futures Adminis.
bration... a 328
Meier, F. C., Bureau of Plant Industry. __.. 325
Meléndez, Roberto D., Pan American Union. 354
Meletio, M. L., Republican Pair Clerk of the
House = to nr or Ti anil hens 260
Melton, Oakley W., House Committee on
Civii:Service, .. occa de a 261
Mendenhall, W. C., director, Geological Sur-
LN Sen pat EI es RR rE 320
Mercier, Louis, Haitian Legation____________
Merriam, Carroll, Federal Home Loan Bank
Board
Merriam, John O.:
Regent, Smithsonian Institution. _______
Advisory Council of the National Ar-
RL Ee ee DA ee
Merrill, Lieut. Commander A. S., office of
Secretary ofthe Navy, oo ans
Merrill, Keith, office of Secretary of State____
Merrill, M. C., Office of Information, Agri-
GE DR mrs eet LL CCR BUS, SG TS
Merritt, Frank C., United States Court of
Customs and Patent Appeals. ____________
Mersch, Victor S., office of register of wills___
Mertzke, Arthur J., Federal Home Loan
Bank Board. a
Metcalf, Haven, Bureau of Plant Industry...
Metcalf, Jesse H.:
Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary
Commission... o.oo. vase oon.
Metzdorf, D. W., the Alaska Railroad_______
Metzger, Jacob A., office of Secretary of State.
Meyer, Balthasar H., Interstate Commerce
Commission. oot a he igb aa on
Meyer, Ernst Wilhelm, German Embassy ___
Meyer, Mrs. Eugene, Library of Congress
Trust Fund Board
Meyer, Herman H. B., Library of Congress.
Michael, Mary L., Senate Committee on Im-
migration. io. oe pee
Micheli, Louis H., Swiss Legation___________
Midzusawa, Kosaku, Japanese Embassy. ___
Millan, W. W., chairman District Public
Wellmo Board... o.oo. lio. oo os
Miller, A. C.:
Inter-American High Commission_______
Federal Reserve Board
Miller, A. W., Bureau of Animal Industry. _
Miller, Fred R., House Committee on Pen-
Miller, George F., Bureau of Indian Affairs___
Miller, Grady, Committee on Conference
Majority of the Senate____________._______.
Miller, Howard S., Patent Office. ___________
Miller, Hunter, office of Secretary of State___
Miller, Paul L., office of Official Reporters of
Debates. ei rei
Miller, Walter L., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce. cv. ic sb nine
Miller, W. Perry, librarian of the House_____
Milligan, E. J., Public Utilities Commission_
Milligan, Jacob L., Joint Committee on
Veterans’ Affairs. 0 ol,
Milliken, Acting Capt. Rhoda J., Women’s
Bureau, Metropolitan police.______________
Millington, C. Norris, Bureau of Indian
Aira oa
Mills, Lieut. Col. Robert H., Army Medical
Centers de on ina nh
Milne, George H., Library of Congress. _.___
Miner, Helen, Civil Service Commission. ___
Mitchell, Charles L., Weather Bureau.______
Mitchell, Elizabeth S., office of the Sergeant
at Arms ofthe House: >. = dF =
Mitchell, Guy E., Geological Survey._______
Mitchell, Harry B., Civil Service Commis-
Mitchell, L. H., Bureau of Reclamation_____
Mitchell, Maude W., Senate Committee on
Indian Afadrs.. on lion aio
Mitchell, Robert E., House Committee on
Claims. ro aol iano si rg
Mohler, John R.:
Mohun, Mrs. Barry, Columbia Hospital for
Women. =u, cass ouneil TL Sind ee
Moll, Dr. A. A., Pan American Sanitary
Bureau: a. ao iii bali ane
Molster, Charles E., office of Secretary of
Commerce... ivi si as
Monahan, Arthur C., Bureau of Indian
ARANS aes a a a Ee ar BY TN
Monick, Emmanuel, French Embassy...
Monroe, Frank R., House post office. _______
Montague, Andrew J., Interparliamentary
Montealegre, Mario, Costa Rican Legation___
Montgomery, Edward G., Bureau of Foreign
and Domestic Commerce... _.__..__._.__.___
Montgomery, Rev. James Shera, D. D.,
Chaplaimof House... 0 io sida i.e
Montgomery, John T., Bureau of Indian
Affairs no nl orm naa all
Mooney, William M., postmaster, Washing-
ton City postoffiee =o Lie oii ii
Moore, Charles, chairman, the Commission
Of Pine ATES Sos. icon p valiie athe
A REESE SR ERE El Fn nS Rhea
Moore, R. Walton:
Washington National Monument Asso-
elation. 0 oo ss bens
The George Washington Bicentennial
Commission Sx io 17 oar dns ahi
Moore, Samuel M., jr., Veterans’ Adminis-
Ratton Sr
Moore, Wharton, Bureau of Foreign and Do-
mesticCommerees... ...0 os ol 0.
Moorehead, Warren K., Board of Indian
Commissioners... 0. 5 0 4X
Moorhead, Ellwood 8., production manager,
Government Printing Office... ___._________
Mora, Dr. J. A., Uruguayan Legation________
Moran, James L., office of the Sergeant at
Arms, Senate. oo. oo a io
Moran, Commander Thomas:
Office of Secretary of the Navy___________
Federal Oil Conservation Board
Morgan, Arthur E.,
Authorlyo i val 2 i3 sn a
trations ss ni A
Morgan, Elonzo T., Patent Office. ___________
Morgan, George W., Library of Congress_____
Morgan, Herbert E., Civil Service Commis-
Morgan, Capt. Maurice, assistant to the
ChiefCoordinator.......... oT i toa
Morgenthau, Henry, jr., governor of Farm
Credit Administration... = =o oni of
Morin, John M., United States Employees’
Compensation Commission________________
Morrell, Fred, Forest Service. _______________
Morrill, Chester, Federal Reserve Board. .___
Morris, H. H., office of the Doorkeeper._____
Morris, Joe S., assistant postmaster of the
Senate: iii iii ad. i EA
Morris, Logan, chairman, Board of Tax
Appeals...
683
Page
379
341
332
227
352
268
512
314
342
343
267
684 Congressional Directory
Morris, Wayne H., Senate Committee on
ADDIOPLIaHONS. ocean aaa a
Morrison, Harold, Bureau of Entomology...
Morrison, Hugh A., Library of Congress____
Morrison, Martin A., Federal Trade Com-
missions oss ai nnlal, rount alle Bs
Morrow, Edwin P., United States Board of
Mediation... colo si solu aussi
Morrow, Col. William M., United States
Soldiers’ Home. toad. ob. guild
Morsell, H. Tudor, National Capital Park
and Planning Commission... _..__._..___.
Morss, Miss A. Patricia, chief, District child
wellareidivisionoe Joon sol on a
Mosbarger, Lloyd N., office of Secretary of
theSenate i 0 phi adhe daa we
Moscicki, Joseph, Polish Embassy _._____..__
Moses, Brig. Gen. Andrew, War Depart-
ment, General:Stafl...... oi io A
Moses, Roy H., office of Secretary of Navy..
Moskey, George A., National Park Service. _
Moye, William S., House Committee on
AE De Te sth
Moynihan, Anna V., office of Secretary of
LADOrN ds ome ST ha a Ras
Moynihan, Charles J., Public Domain Com-
TE A ST CRA FRE ee Li Sn lg
Muck, Lee, Bureau of Indian Affairs. __._.____
Muhtar, Ahmet, Turkish ambassador______.
Mulhern, Joseph P., office of Legislative
Counsel; Senate iu... iia iets
Mullaney, John J., chief clerk, office of the
Chief: of Air Corpses. oy ienlic ih oa
Mullen, J. Arthur, office of Secretary of
Mulligan, Henry A., Reconstruction Finance
COPPOLA ON. oh rh sii enh i oo i ma
Munger, Capt. Curtis B., Naval Hospital__
Munroe, Charles E., Bureau of Mines_.___.
Murdock, J. Edgar, Board of Tax Appeals__
Murdock, James O., office of Secretary of
Murfin, Rear Admiral O. G., Judge Advocate
General-of the Navy... ..... dooen.7n
Murphy, Edward V., jr., Assistant Official
Reporter, Senate. . co... uv. einen
Murphy, Frank, Governor General of the
PRIDDINES oo ai rier am nn rae en eam
Murphy, Frank J., Bureau of Customs______
Murphy, James J., office of Secretary of State.
Murphy, James L., Interstate Commerce
Commis ON Si os or ee denna
Murphy, James W., Official Reporter,
COTEL LARa  deeiled B en cpa yl re he Ng
Murphy, Dr. Joseph A., District health de-
Tinran nl ns Chan deeds rela Boilie in Sn
Murphy, Dr. T. F., Bureau of the Census____
Bana, Charles B., United States attorney’s
THA Tr neem pes £0 0 ea el Bs SL EO
Murray, J. Donald, Public Utilities Com-
Murray, Pearl, Senate Committee on Agri-
callie and Forestry... itu. a iL
Murray, Wallace, S., Department of State___
Muzafter Ahmet, Turkish Embassy. _________
Myers, George H., Columbia Hospital for
Women. oJ, saeraiia) ols hn a
Myers, W. I., Farm Credit Administration__
N
Naghel, Charles E., disbursing officer for
Alaska. su hablo a rn ai asl
Nagle, John L.:
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission._
Office of Public Buildings and Public
Parks of the National Capital ____.____
Nagle, Margaret L., Federal Reserve Board.
Nakanishi, Ryosuke, Japanese Embassy____
Nano, F. C., Rumanian Legation. __.___._____
Napier, George, International Highway
Special Commission... ooo: coi LC
Nash, I. H., Public Domain Committee_____
Nathan, Harold, Department of Justice. ____
Naylor, E. E., office of District director of
vehicles and traffie, . oucoailo. auc
Neal, A. B., chief clerk, Army War College...
Page
254
327
267
340
344
356
349
Nedrow, Ray W., House Committee on
World War Veterans’ Legislation__________
Neely, Frederick R., Aeronautics Branch,
Department of Commerce _.______________
Neff, Blanche, clerk, municipal court________
Neff, Mrs. Ruth, District corporation coun-
RC a ea EL TL Ch
Nelson, Carl K., House Committee on Naval
AIS. Lo tation dea dmehe da ahs J 8
Nelson, H. A., office of Personnel and Busi-
ness Administration... Lo.
Némecek, Josef, Czechoslovakian Legation. .
Nervo, Dr. Luis Padilla, Mexican Embassy. -
Noth, John B., United States attorney’s
Neville, George W.:
Secretary to Senator Stephens. ____._____
Senate Committee on Commerce ----.---
Nevius, J. D., Bureau of Customs_____._____
New, Harry S., Chicago World’s Fair Cen-
tennis Commission... ......_i.
Newcomer, H. C., director, Columbia Insti-
tution forthe Deaf... .. .....l il.
Newell, Bessie, Senate Committee on Post
Offices'and Post Roads. .% oo... oie]
Newton, Doris M., United States attorney’s
Nichol, H. R., office of Fourth Assistant
Postmaster General... aac 2
Nichols, J. C., National Capital Park and
Planning Commission: 2... .._
Nichols, Maude G., Library of Congress___-
Nichols, Capt. Neil E., Office of Naval Opera-
YR 11Y] LAR ee bo SEA le Sat Lt is LL
Nicholson, John M., District assistant to
people’scounsel il. Lill illo ol
Nilkamhaeng, Snga, Siamese Legation_______
Ninas, George A., General Accounting Office.
Nisbet, Ruth, Senate Committee on Post
Officesand Post Roads-..-. .C.....__
Nixon, Mary S., office of Secretary of War_.
Noble, John E., District health department.
Noell, J. C., Federal Reserve Board_________
Nolan, C. F., office of the Doorkeeper___.___
Nolen, John, jr., National Capital Park and
Planning Commission... 0. oo.
Norbeck, Peter:
Migratory Bird Conservation Commis-
Joint Committee on the Library...______
Norcross, T. W., Forest Service___.__.._.._.
Nordstrom, Lillian C., Senate Committee on
Appropristionsc co eo Te
Norenberg, Ralph, Senate Committee on
Interstate Commerce... ooo...
Norgren, William A., chief deputy clerk,
police court asco a ian nil a
Norris, Henry G., House Committee on
Flood Control... ae ea,
North, Clarence J., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce: wove. boo cuii..
North, Roy M., office of Third Assistant
Postmaster General... to i. ooo...
Norton, Mary T.:
Columbia Hospital for Women. _________
National Capital Park and Planning
Commission... coisa ania ates
Norton, Ralph A., secretary to District Com-
missioner... oun Lo olan he SE
Noyes, Mrs. Frank B., Advisory Council of
the National Arboretum....________________
Noyes, Capt. Leigh, Bureau of Navigation. .
Noyes, Newbold, National Training School
J0F Boys... co. bl ah ras a
330
355
357
315
357
Individual Index
Page
Noyes, Theodore W.:
Divscioe Columbia Institution for the
ea
Diipies board of trustees, t board of trustees, Public Li-
Washinglon “National Monument So-
Niifiez ES Y Pv. Solin, Pon American Sanitary
Bureau. Es Sh Ce en aw mn A mm i rs mE a
O’Bannon, Lew M., George Rogers Clark
Sesquicentennial Commission. ___________
Obenchain, C. A., General Land Office_.____
Oberholser, John, office of Sergeant at Arms
of Housel cat oli do at dn oi
O’Brien, Robert L., chairman United States
Tariff ‘Commission A A So a Eg
O’Brien, Ruth, Bureau of Home Economics.
O’Brien, Thomas A., office of The Adjutant
General ooo. eta A
O’Brien, Thomas W., United States Housing
Corporation. /2 be i. alin ale rs
O’Brien, William C., office of Postmaster
General
Ochsenreiter, William F., office of Clerk of
O’Connell, Ambrose, special assistant to the
Postmaster General... S.C
0O’Connell, Anne L., Pan American Union__.
O’Connell, Daniel F.:
Secretary to Senator Coolidge. ______._.___
Senate Committee on Immigration.
O’Connor, Edward, District fire department.
O’Connor, J. F. T.:
Comptroller of the CurrenCy. —-cccoooooo
Federal Reserve Board... _.__._________
O’Connor, Joanna E., Senate Committee
on: Immigration. soi tag u UE]
O’Connor, John J., Massachusetts Bay Col-
ony Tercentenary Commission. __________._
Oda, Takio, Japanese Embass
Oden, Archibald, special assistant to Secre-
faryofthe Navy. .. cocci iaciaaa iY
O’Donoghue, Daniel W., associate justice,
District Supreme Court
Soman Oc: John W., District engineer
departm
Offerdahl, ite C. P., Norwegian Lega-
Offiey, Col. Edward M.:
Assistant to Chief Coordinator. ________
Federal Real Estate Board
O’Gilvie, C. W., office of the attending
physlelan oo incon or yoriiiay
Ogilvie, Noel J., International Boundary
Commission, United States, Alaska, and
Canadasebucle eo din nlisaissig
a
O’Halloran, Thomas J., office of the First
Assistant Postmaster General _____________
O’Hara, James J., Department of Commerce.
Ohlson, Otto F., general manager, The
Alaska: Raflveadc- oii. fs oe.
Ojeda, José Hernandez, International Bound-
ary Commission, United States and Mex-
G0 ne
Okuma, Wataru, Japanese Embassy________
O’Leary, John J., United States attorney’s
ration eae
BA OT er a es te a Bn a
Oliver, Maj. Lunsford E., Mississippi River
ComMIMIBSION. ears eae eran ns
Oliver, S. J.:
General Supply Committee. ..__________
Office of Public Buildings and Public
Parks of the National Capital
Olmsted, Frederick Law, Advisory Council
of the National Arboretum... _________
Olsen, Nils A., chief, Bureau of Agricultural
I EE TE 3 ope ES ee Ae A gh
356
376
350
354
319
340
328
303
304
312
329
348
509
Olson, Mabel, Senate Committee on Irriga-
tion-and Reclamation... Ci iii. 00.0
O’Mahoney, Joseph C., First Assistant
Postmaster General... ...._.... 0 i. ¢
O’Malley, Henry, International Fisheries
Commission... oi os oo Cia
O’Neill, Anna A., office of Secretary of State.
Oe, Helen G., office of Secretary of the
av
Oram, Capt. Hugh P.:
Assistant to Engineer Commissioner.____
Executive officer Zoning Commission,
District of Columbia. i...
District engineering department__._______
Oran, Harold W., United States attorney’s
office Le i i aaa
O’Reilly, Mary M., Bureau of the Mint_____
Orme, Norman IL., Dominican customs re-
ceivership.: Loa. cl. Sidi oa iiitaas.
Ornburn, Ira M., United States Tariff Com-
O’Rourke, L. J., Civil Service Commission.
Orr, Arthur, House Committee on Appro-
pristions Si area iin sion i i Ti
Orr, Engineer Commander J. S., British
EI DASEY ao ee ei i
Ortegon, Luis, jr., Mexican Embassy
Osborn, Dr. Harry E., president District
dentallexaminers. (i ale oo nun iE
Osborne, F. D. G., British Embassy________
0O’Toole, Mary, judge municipal court.._____
Qin, Philip, Washington city post
office
Overstreet, Walter E., Committee to Audit
and Control the Contingent Expenses of
theBenale. ia cial aauth
Owen, Mabel M., Board of Tax Appeals. ___
Owen, Marguerite, secretary to Senator
Costigan. loll Sh 00 RJ aio fads,
Owings Charles W., Capitol railroad ticket
offfee st iiLl 0 Se EU
Oyster, Norman W., Columbia Hospital for
Women... ones inmates
Pace, C. F., office of Secretary of Senate_____
Pack, Alonzo G., Interstate Commerce Com-
RL on en a a Le Sn Sr ait
Page, Thad:
Secretary to Senator Bailey__._____.___.___
Senate Committee on Claims____________
Page, Thomas Walker, United States Tariff
Commission. er ca aon sa.
Page, Wilbur J., Bureau of Foreign and Do-
mestie Commerce ino 8 8 io ono 00
Page, William Tyler:
Minorityelerk...i0.0 oo i
Executive secretary to the George Wash-
ington Bicentennial Commission. _____
Pagenhart, E. H.:
Aeronautics Branch, Department of
COMIMEYCO. iui tit an dada t mae
Coast and Geodetic Survey._.____.________
Paget, Wilmer J., United States Botanic
Garden reese iio sf xii a ns
Paine, H. S., Bureau of Chemistry and Soils__
Palmer, Arthur W., Bureau of Agricultural
BCONOMICS: »t ori ate bios dnd 0
Palmer, Brig. Gen. John McAuley, Library
oLiCongress. Co nian es ai
Palmer, Milot T., House post office. ________
Palomo, Francisco, Guatemalan Legation. _.
Parater, George H., United States Tariff
CommISSION. coca cana dndn nearer te
Parham, S. J., Senate Committee on Claims.
Paris, Jacques, French Embassy. ....___.....
Parker, Chauncey G.:
United States Shipping Board.__________
Merchant Fleet Corporation... ___.____
Parker, Brig. Gen. Francis LeJau, Bureau of
Insular Aas. Ca ienaane van
685
Page.
351
341
257
254
340
330
228
sm.
686
Parker, L. H., Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation......o-nioos otal ial
Parker, James S., Board of Visitors to the
Naval Academy... od. otoaati soso isn
Porstast, D. L., Coast and Geodetic Sur-
Yi C. Breck, House Legislative
Commsel. iach ioc Ul atelefd all
Parkman, Charles H., clerk, Official Report-
er. for Debates... int rentin. sauna
Parks, Karl E., Bureau of Dairy Industry...
Parks, Mrs. Tilman B., The Congressional
Clabes svat saudi sei ioi do, Sl bib J 5
Parma, V. Valta, Library of Congress. ......
Parrish, Finnis, Capitol police. _____.___...._.
Parry, Carl E., Federal Reserve Board..___.
Parsons, Rear Admiral A. L., chief of Bureau
of Yards and Docks, Navy... ... =i... 0
Parsons, Henry S., Congressional Library __.
Pasha, Sesostris Sidarouss, Egyptian Min-
ADORE
Pring Stanislaw, Polish ambassador._______
Patrick, Gen. Mason M., chairman Public
Utilities Commission... Some vnca nnd a tmws
Patterson, Alvah W., office of Secretary of
IO IO Cia Ga id ct om ad oni ew
Patterson, C. C., Senate Committee on For-
eign Relations roo coos io. i iooaas
Patterson, Maj. Gen. Robert U.:
Surgeon General of the Army. - eee...
American National Red Cross. .-co.....
United States Soldiers’ Home. _o.o....._
Columbia Hospital for Women. _......_..
Patton, R. S
Director, Coast and Geodetic Survey.._..
United States Geographic Board. ._..___.
Patton, Shelby W., District Nurses’ Exam-
ining Beard sii oanueiues a iuviaasi ol
Paul, Stephen J., office of the Doorkeeper._ _ _
Paulger, Leo H., Federal Reserve Board____
Paull, George S., Bureau of Internal Rev-
Payne, John Barton:
Library of Congress Trust Fund Board
Nor American National Red
PTL a he I ER CI
Peabody, Dr. Joseph Winthrop, superintend-
ent District Tuberculosis Hospital . _ ____..
Peak, W. L., District penal institutions._.._
Pearson, Dr. Paul M., Governor of Virgin
sland. cn Ln aE
Pearson, William Gaston, National Memorial
Commission... Soul nao. mura
Pearson, William H., office of Third Assistant
Pon General LS a a
pin - Leighton H., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce CR Ls A LR
Pegram, T. E., jr., Senate Committee on
Commerce. ie Jono I a Bid
Pelton, Walter E., office of Secretary of State.
Pennaroli, Lieut. Col. Marco, Italian Em-
bassy.. lea roa a ne
Peodn-del, Valle, Carlos, Mexican Embassy. _
Peoples, Rear Admiral Christian J., Pay-
master General of os Navy
Perkins, Frances:
Secretary of Labor (biography) _.___.__._..
Federal Board for Vocational Education.
Federal Employment Stabilization Board -
Perley, Allan H., House Legislative Counsel.
Perley, Clarence W., Library of Congress. __
Perley, Helen G., Senate Committee on Pat-
Perry, Arthur C.:
Secretary to Senator Connally.
Senate Committee on Public Buildings
and: Grotnds So a
Page
226
376
376
Congressional Directory
Perry, Charles B., Perry’s Victory Memorial
Commission. ai si. antsindol is Javaadit
Perry, Joe L., Senate Committee on Public
Buildingsand Grounds... oi
Perry, John R., office of the Sergeant at Arms,
art ITE RA Se Ie RAS ER
Pershing, Gen. John J., American Battle
Monuments Commission. _________________
Persons, W. F
tion Work... aoa ari aire
Peter, Mare, Swiss minister... _.____________
Peters, Li. A. H., Netherlands Legation
Peterson, Agnes L.., Women’s Bureau_._____
Peterson, Charles E., National Park Service.
Peterson, William, Public Domain Commit-
tee
Petit, Arthur L., District penal institu-
HONS. coli tani abla im boris abs = se Gn wit
Pettit, Elizabeth D., Senate Committee on
Appropriations. igi lier Sia aly
Phillips, Matilda, Pan American Union_.____
Phillips, William:
Under Secretary of State. ocooooon..
American National Red Cross. ..........
Phillips, Rev. ZeBarney T., D. D., chaplain
of United States Senate... ._ i...
Pickard, Edward T., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic COMMEICE..vmawusnensnsne anes
Pickens, Capt. A. C.:
Island governments... iioc. ouaull.
Office of Naval Operations. ____________.
Pierce, C. C., Bureau of the Public Health
SOIVICE ibid aint ode SM Baim De
Pierce, Charles H., Patent Office. _________.__
Pierce, Edward R., District fire department_
Pierce, M. J., United States Shipping Board.
Pierce, Paul P., Patent Office. .c..uio oo...
Pierce, Rev. Ulysses G. B., secretary Colum-
bia Institution for the Deaf .______________
Pieters, A. J., Bureau of Plant Industry____.
Pigg, BK. Li, Capitol police. i... iad
Pilkerton, Arthur R., principal assistant Dis-
ATIC aAIEOr .. ieee ie Gn nm ie
Pillen, Herbert G.:
Secretary to Senator Bulkley... ________
Senate Committee on Manufactures-__.
Pillon, Brig. Gen. Frangois, French Embassy
Pillsbury, Brig. Gen. George B., office of
Chief of Engineers. ocean diunin
Pilon, Commander Federico Monreal y,
Spanish Embassy... oc... i Lil i oo.
Pitamie, Dr. Leonide, Yugoslavian minister.
Pittman, Key:
President pro tempore of the Senate...
Migratory Bird Conservation Commis-
Foreign Service Buildings Commission_._.
Pitts, Edwin B., office of Judge Advocate
General. ois ddan ree
Pitts, Harley S., Senate Committee on Mili-
vary Aflalre os. tdi ia nnn anol
Plant, Paul J., office of Official Reporters of
Debates.  irssaiit. SOT na adi asad
Platt, Commander Comfort B., Office of
Naval Operations. od. .oohon iii iad
Plimpton, Francis T. P., Reconstruction Fi-
nance Corporation... cava ai. sonic auacias
Pomeroy, R. N., House post office..______..__
Pontiatowski, George, House post office...__
Poole, C. A.:
Office of Comptroller of the Treasury...
Federal Reserve Board... .._.
Poole, John, Columbia Institution for the
Pope, G. W., Bureau of Animal Industry__.._
Popovici, Dr. Andrei, Rumanian Legation. ._
Porch, Jesse P., District Health Department
Porter, Claude R., Interstate Commerce
Commission tase ced tee aa
Indrvidual Index
Porter, Henry G., Civil Service Commission.
Porter, Stephen T., District fire department.
Porter, Webster L., National Memorial Com-
Fnission.. ans hl Son al
Post, Langdon W., Federal Emergency Re-
lief Administration... oi. Lo
Potter, Consuelo R., Senate Committee on
Military: Affairs. oo od ei an
Potter, D. Roland, Senate Committee on
Military Affairs. ooo oo dunia
Porn; Elwin A., Public Utilities Commis-
NOMICE Er ln saree ats
Pou, Edward W., Commission in Control of
the House Office Building___.________.___.._
Pa ors: Edward W., The Congressional
Bh Ea a ae CTL
Pounder, John A., International Boundary
Commission, United States, Alaska, and
Canadar ol ts oi aia
Powell, Rev. Clayton A., National Memorial
Commission. iis 2 soins chai
Pratt, Mrs. Harold I., Advisory Council of
the National Arboretum __.________________
Pratt, Brig. Gen. Henry C., National Advi-
sory Committee for Aeronautics--....______
Pratt, Admiral W. V.:
Chief of Naval Operations... coo
The Joint Beard. io o.oo bauiiaiio oe
Preston, James D., Senate librarian_________
Preston, Maj. Gen. John F., Inspector Gen-
eral, United States AYINY i ial
Price, D.J., Bureau of Chemistry and Soils...
Price, Maj. X. H., American Battle Monu-
ments Commission... C.ooo oo ooagii]
Priddy, Roby, Senate Committee on Naval
Airs st a rE EE
Prieto, Capt. Enrique A., Cuban Legation. __
Prior, Laurens, Bureau of Navigation and
Steamboat Inspection... co. aoaaaaiaoit
Pritchard, L. K., office of the Doorkeeper____.
Prochnik, Edgar L. G., Austrian minister...
Proctor, James M., associate justice, District
Supreme Court..ai i aioli Trini l
Proffitt, M. M., Office of Education__________
a "Earl, office of Legislative Counsel,
enafe GC. Soli ee a
pudiin, Davetta, Senate Committee on
Riles oct feat ini stool shims nave
Pugh, E ohn C., House Committee on Appro-
priatlons.. ote fr a i anaes
Puig, Emilio Calderon, Mexican Embassy - --
Pulliam, William E., Dominican customs
receivership SL ES pa LE
Purcell, Ganson, office of the Legislative
Counsel EE Ea NT I BL a2
Purdum, Smith W., office of Fourth Assistant
Postmaster:General. co acon i
Purnell, Commander William R., Bureau of
Navigdtion.: co... aaa lamas
Pursel, Mrs. Clara H., office of Chief Coor-
dinator a
Puryear, Edgar F., secretary to Senator
Cutling=o oo ra eae te
Putnam, George R.:
Commissioner, Bureau of Lighthouses...
United States Geographic Board.......__
Putnam, Herbert:
Librarian of Congress. ....coec-aie- saiswnss
Washington National Monument So-
ciet
Pyle, Robert, Advisory Council of the Na-
tional Arhoretume oo... oi: oi ic.
Quaid, William L., Civil Service Commis-
Te W., Washington city post office. __
Quinn, Ruth M., Senate Committee on
Naval Affairs. aia ninincrsnnstnnn
Rabbitt, Wade H., Congressional Library...
Rachford, C. E., Forest Service... _.___.__.
Radeff, Simeon, Bulgarian minister.._..______
Raeber, Max A., Swiss Legation .__...__....
Page
337
377
351
342
255
255
378
327
225
355
347
351
331
353
Raghanles Dr. S. B., Columbia Hospital for
Rainey, E. M., secretary to the Speaker. _.__.
Rainey, Henry T.:
Speakerof thei House... o.._alil
Commission on Enlarging the Capitol
Grounds... 0. iol noo Li
Commission in Control of the House
Office Building =... i 1 20
Arlington Memorial Bridge Commission.
George Washington Bicentennial Com-
Ramseyer, C. William, commissioner, Court
of Claims ie oo Herd a sa]
Randolph, F. P., House Committee on Immi-
gration and Naturalization. _______.________
Ransley, Harry C., Board of Visitors to the
Military Academy
Rapslo, Mrs. inh C., The Congressional
Ranson, Rev. J. R., National Memorial
Commission = os loos nos
Rapee, C. A., office of Clerk of House________
Rapp, Leslie M., House Committee on Ways
and Means. = .0 io aaa Hoa lei
Raskowski, Leo, House post office____________
Rastall, Walter H., Bureau of Foreign and
PDomestic:Commeree: vi Jaa ogi or
Rawdon, H. S., Bureau of Standards. ________
Rea, Mrs. Henry R., American National Red
Rea, Kennedy F., Senate Committee on Ap-
vropristions... 20. Lo nui nia i anaan
Recinos, Adrian:
Ministerof:Guatemala. ....— _-..._.-.
Pan American-Union...2. 0 2.20%
Rector, John K., Freedmen’s Hospital. ______
Redd, Will H., National Memorial Commis-
goons Ua Sm aE Rie LN a Ba
Bota, Paul G., Bureau of Biological
urvl
Roney: Walter L., Patent Office... ........--
Reed, Capt. ALB, General Board, Nav
Reed, Bessie O., "United States Employees’
Compensation Commission. Co 2
Reed, Clyde, Bureau of Supplies and Ac-
counts CR ea REE SI ES SN La
Reed, David A.:
American Battle Monuments Commis-
slop. 2 rn a a a
Joint Sonmites on Internal Revenue
Taxati
Boy of Regents, Smithsonian Insti-
tutio
Reed, a H., United States Board of
Mediation ts oo tte
Reed, Dr. J. A., District police surgeon_______
Reed, James A., United States Supreme
Court Building Commission_______________
Reed, John B., District health department.
Reed, Maud x office of Minority Floor
Leader Ee le A SER et
Reed, O. E., chief, Bureau of Dairy Industry_
Reed, Stanley Y. Reconstruction Finance
Corporation RE RRR SLC EAL Ba
Reeves, John R. T., Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Reeves, Perry W., Federal Board for Voca-
tiomal Bducation a aa
Regar, Robert S., administrative assistant,
Post Office Department
Reich, Chester M., office of Secretary of
Reichelderfer, Luther H.:
Commissioner, District of Columbia_____
Columbia Hospital for Women__________
District Zoning Commission. ____________
Reid, Group Capt. G. R. M., British Em-
Trams tineits Ran eae Sas Ds ma Sani
Reitzel, Albert E., office of Secretary of
Tabor. ta ae A
Renkel, R. W., House post office. _..__._.__.___
Reynolds, John B., Federal Radio Commis-
Rion B. R., M. D., Bureau of Industrial
Alcohol
687
Page
344
378
225
377
259
325
358
319
688 Congressional Directory
Page
Rhine, J. L.., Capitol Telephone Exchange._. 265
Bharay, William L., office of Postmaster Gen-
ih mS RR Es nse EE a ak 311
try John D., Official Reporter, Senate___ 256
Ribenack, William C., Reconstruction Fi-
nance Corporation i PS ER nL aR RL 358
Rice, A. G., Bureau of Chemistry and Soils... 326
Rice, George S., Bureau of Mines_____________ 331
Rice, Herbert H., International Highway
Special Commissioner. _....___._._____.._. 348
Be Robert F., Joint Committee on Print-
eR SR Ie rm A uk 226
Hy Clem J., George Rogers Clark
Sesquicentennial Commission Rat edt) 228
Richards, Brig. Gen. George, headquarters,
Marine Corps... ooo doa 318
Rigas, Henry T., Civil Service Commis-
ns a ed rE BT rt 337
Richards, Julian I., United States attorney’s
EL A A SN SRS On SS 369
Rodi Ralph W., Federal Oil Conserva-
tion Boards sl a ae et 342
Richards, William P., District assessor-._.-__ 375
Richardson, Ernest C., Library of Congress_. 267
Richardson, Lottie R., District National
Training Schoolfor Girls... .._ 376
Richardson, L. S., Bureau of Dairy Indus-
BEY ee an bm a wa es i Ea i mr 325
Richardson, Vernon, Senate Committee on
Minegand Mining... a. o.oo oon 255
Richardson, W. W., General Accounting
i Ee ae Pe See Sr 338
Richling, J., Uruguayan Legation____________ 512
Bde, Eva M., Senate Committee on Pen-
Dumas A SE Ea 255
Riddie, Joseph B.:
Secretary to Senator MeGHl....0......C 258
Senate Committee on Pensions. ________ 255
Ridley, Lieut. Col. Clarence S., Panama
IT EE EA ree Sl Le PS Re 345
Riera, Capt. Joaquin Planell, Spanish Em-
DOSE. i nat aaa a a 512
Rigby Col. William C., office of the Judge
AdvoealeGeneral... io. _ io... 307
Riggles, Frederick D., Washington City post
Ee re Re CO 379
Riggs, Col. Kerr T., Army War College______ 310
Rinehart, Mary Roberts, Public Domain
Committee TLC SRI 348
Rippon, Matthew J., enrolling clerk of the
13 Vrs rn Re a BS en ee SE he 260
Ritenour, W. T., Federal Real Estate Board- 304
Rivero, Pedro, Venezuelan Legation. ________ 513
Rivers, Hugh F., District Parole Board_____ 375
Roa, Fernando Gonzélez:
Mexican: Embassy....o oo. ii srt 509
Pon American-Union..... i. iz. 354
Roark, R. C., Bureau of Chemistry and Soils. 326
Robb, "Arthur, office of Attorney General-___ 310
Robb, Charles H.:
Associate justice District Court of Ap-
DORI it rea ee A 366
National Training School for Boys_ _____ 357
Robb, Roger, United States attorney’s office. 369
Robert, Lawrence Wood, jr., Assistant Secre-
tary of thelreastry 0 i foe 0 300
Roberts, George M., District superintendent
of weights, measures, and markets. ____._. 376
Roberts, J. O’Connor, Veterans’ Administra-
OT a aman a tr A 343
Roberts, Martin A., Library of Congress_._.. 267
Roberts, Owen J.:
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
(DIOgIapNY). en anit Sse 363
Umpire, Mixed Claims Commission,
United States and Germany _._________ 346
Roberts, William A., assistant corporation
COUNERLL Le eas 376
Robertson, John P., secretary to Senator
NOTLIS eT a 258
Robertson, L. P., District engineer depart-
I en i DL me ee rth 377
Robertson, Margaret M., office of Majority
Y.eader of the House......ocaov ovo coon or a 259
Robertson, Thomas E., Commissioner of Pat-
Tt 34 ah et AA i Sa Sn Sn LAE Ph 332
Robeson, Lieut. R. G.:
Assistant to the Chief Coordinator_._..__. 303
Federal Traffic Board... .eece=earcsonne=v 304
Robins, Thomas, secretary Naval Consult-
Ing Board: a... 0 J osill abn
Robins, Lieut. Col. Thomas M., California
Débris- Commission: Jal. fut 0 aha
Robinson, Arthur R., Joint Committee on
Veterans) Affalrs oo. clo iii aun
Robinson, Joseph T.:
Commission on Enlarging the Capitol
Grovmds uns i nage LU nei sr oR
Interparliamentary Union_._.___________
Bong of Regents, Smithsonian Institu-
lon: ee i sa
Robinson, Joe T., jr., Committee on Confer-
ence Majority of the Senate_ ______________
Robinson, Rev. J. W., National Memorial
CommiSBION. a tee
Robinson, Samuel, Congressional Record
messenger. rl nla is il all
Robinson, Rear Admiral Samuel M., Bureau
ofiEngineeringso iol oo ohn
Robinson, Wallace B., United States Railroad
Administration. soi. o0 Linki aia si ds
Rodgers, J. G., minority clerk... 1.
Rodionoft, Nicholas R., Library of Congress.
Rodriguez- -Capote, Pedro, Cuban Embassy -
Rodriguez, Mario, Chilean Embassy...
Rogers, Al, office of Chief of Finance, Army.
Rows, Elizabeth S., Office of Secretary of
Rogers, J. F., Office of Education____________
Rogers, Leighton 'W., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Comer. lt
Rogers, Lore A., Bureau of Dairy mdushy.
Roher, James x, office of the Doorkeeper. _
Rohwer, S.A, Bureau of Entomology. _______
Rollins, William T. S., office of Third Assist-
ant Postmaster General. -.o.0 on
Romea, Miguel Echegaray y, Spanish Em-
IT SRS Ce Si oy AR Ls Ee
Romig, J. H., The Alaska Railroad__._______
Romney, Kenneth, Sergeant at Arms of
House. si. au a ea ol
Romney, Miles, House document room______
Ronsaville, May, Senate Committee on
Naval Aang eC dae ne
Roosevelt, Franklin D.:
President of United States (biography) .__.
Chairman Arlington Memorial Bridge
Commpission, “ov. oie
Chairman The George Washington Bi-
centennial Commission._______________
Member Smithsonian Institution_____ 3
Patron ex officio Columbia Institution
forthe Deal: i. ohnisl sont of wat
President American National Red Cross_
President ex officio Washington National
Monument Society... 2: Ti .il.o.
Roosevelt, Henry L., The Assistant Secretary
ofthe NOVY. ada nae
Roper, Daniel C.:
Secretary of Commerce (biography) __.__
Council of National Defense.____________
Federal Board for Vocational Education.
Federal Oil Conservation Board_________
Member of Smithsonian Institution ____
Migaiory Bird Conservation Commis-
3 fi ost Se Tr re a LR a
Federal Employment Stabilization
a Service Buildings Commission.
Rose, Frank C., office of Secretary of Treas-
TL a ne EE
Ross, Luther, United States attorney’s office.
Ross. Nellie Tayloe, director, Bureau of the
Ross, Thelma H., Senate Committee on Pub-
lic ‘Lands and Surveys Be dh ee a ie
Rosso, Augusto, Italian Embassy Rs 0 Eas
Rossiter, Rear Admiral Perceval S.:
Columbia Hospital for Women__________
Chief Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. -
American National Red CrosS.ceecece--.
Page
Individual Index 689
Roth, Fred O.!
Secretary to Senator Bratton.._.___...___
Senate Committee on Irrigation and
Reclamation cool taco ioooia. aaa oo
Rousseau, W. A., office of Secretary of the
Senate. ri a Lr Se dE Lay
Rouzer, Horace D., Assistant Architect of the
CaO a el
Rover, Leo A., United States attorney_..._..
Rowan, Ida, House Committee on World
War Veterans’ Legislation. ...oooeeaaooo..
Rowe, L. S.:
Director General, Pan American Union...
Inter-American High Commission.____..
Roy, William T., Assistant Parliamentarian
ofthe Tonge. or iii
Royall, Capt. Hilary H., Naval Examining
Board. ise ha a a ease
Royce, H. G., Western Union, House Office
BING rs LE ae al
Rubin, Cora M., secretary to Senator Borah.
Rubio, David, Library of Congress._.._._.__..
Rucker, Col. Kyle, office of the Judge Advo-
cate General or id
Rae Master Sergt. Howard B., office of
the Chief ofiInfantry.. oo... coc iii hs
Ruppert, Minna L., Senate Committee on
Patents Le ee Tei
Rush, John P., House post office___.___.___._.
Russell, Dr. Albert E., Bureau of Mines_____.
Russell, Charles A ., office of District assessor.
Russell, Capt. Charles F., Bureau of Navi-
sation. oS re aaa or ted
Russa, Horace, Federal Home Loan Bank
vy EEE ee a ae
Russell, Brig. Gen. Jobn H., headquarters
Marine Cora veo ah ie rer adam a
Russell, Victor:
Secretary to Senator Sheppard _._..__._..
Senate Committee on Military Affairs...
Ryan, Anna E., Senate Judiciary Com-
MIEEe0. onde bats is nde SAE st Sak
Ryan, John T., office of the Doorkeeper_.__..
Ryan, Oswald, Federal Power Commission...
Ryn, W. Carson, jr., Bureau of Indian Af-
ES iin ane i ee ee
Ryerson, K. A., Bureau of Plant Indusiry.-..
S
Sager, Fred A., Public Utilities Commission.
St. Claire, Darrell, office of Secretary of the
Benale i eae brea
St. Lewis, Roy, Aeaitznt Attorney General.
Salazar, Dr. Eduardo, Ecuadorian Legation..
Salisbury, Morse, Office of Information, De-
pirtmentiof Agricoliure. o.oo naan.
Salmon, David A., office of Secretary of State.
Sample, Ruth, office of Minority Floor
STG I SE IR I Se en Se
Affairs Sn En a i Bp ee a
Sanders, Hartley I., office of the Chief of
Coast ATENery oo i ae aera
Sanford, George O., Bureau of Reclamation -
Sanger, Alice B., office of Postmaster Gen-
Sanger, Monie, St. Elizabeths Hospital ..___
Santacruz, Armando, jr., International
Boundary Commission, United States and
A Bs Ee SR a a BE
Sapieha, Andrew, Polish Embassy...____.___
Sasscer, E. R., Bureau of Plant Quarantine...
Sasser, B. Cs ‘Senate Committee on Military
Affairs a a ER CR dr Ae Re SR
Satterwhite, Eugene W., office of the Second
Assistant Postmaster General ..___________
Sault, William H., secretary to Senator
EL ep RT a oe
Saunders, Col. Edwin O., office of the Judge
Advocate General... ooo. oo oo Tilo
Saunders, W. A., Militia Bureau.__._._._...____.
157297°—73~1—18T ED——45
Page   Page
Saunders, W. O., United States Roanoke Col-
ony Commission: =... 2 2... rv 229
Savage, Eugene F., Commission of Fine Arts. 349
Savage, Howard L., office of Majority Leader
ofthe House. :.. 0.0 saodaio ideal 259
Savoy, A. K., District government__________ 375
Sawyer, D. H., Federal Employment Stabi-
lization. Board. Los on aoa en 357
Sawyer, Ernest Walker, International High-
way Special Commissioner. _.._____.____.___ 348
Sbernadori, Commander Paolo, Italian Em-
TG EE Re nd EN Ra SL 508
Scallan, Eugene Kevin, Union of South Africa
Tegntion. co nial nha lio oni Tle 512
Scanlan, John J., office of Secretary of State. 299
Scanlon, James F., House Committee on
Appropriations... i. oii Ca ania 261 =~
Scarborough, Harold, office of Secretary of the
Senater co ine en as ad 253
Scarpati, Samuel J., House Committee on
Election of President, Vice President, and
Representatives in Congress. ____________ 261
Schafer, A. L., American National Red Cross. 355
Schall, M. H., secretary to Senator Schall.___ 258
Schapiro, Israel, Library of Congress_.______ 267
Scharlin, Sidney, House Committee on Immi-
gration and Naturalization... _.._____.___ 262
Schell, Baron Paul, Hungarian Legation.____ 508
Schilling, Mrs. Lucille, House Committee on
Forelgn Affairs... oui nnaiinuns 262
Schley, Lieut. Col. Julian L., Panama Canal. 345
Schmidt, Carl H., Senate Committee on
{7 EL Ee SS NSE hn TIE 257
RIE Albert, official stenographer to
Hose committens.. oases eons 263
Schnepfe, Fred E., Federal Employment
Stabilization Beards =. =... .___ 357
Schnoor, William, Perry’s Victory Memorial
Commission gy. ein Sui Sven se Soi 350
Schnurr, M. A Bureau of Reclamation ____. 320
Bey, Mae A., Public Domain Commit-
eR a Se a Sh 348
Revenue... toc. .o hoor os 301
na eI ESE SRS SE TR Bt 325
Scrodley, Clarence E., office of city post-
$11 ET] Fo i fo Se Gi © Sh a A TR SS 379
Schoolmeesters, George H., office of Post-
master Generals of Jou a ioe 311
Schott, John W., clerk to Secretary of War. 305
Schreiner, Oswald, Bureau of Chemistry and
rH ERR ee Ee a Te a Sa 326
Schroeder, Robert C., secretary to Senator
Patterson SE A ES Ta RL 258
Schrom, Charles E., District fire department. 377
Schuirmann, Lieut. Commander R. E., Gen-
eral Board ofthe Navy. _.____.______.____... 316
Schuldt, Gus A., presiding judge, police court. 370
Schulz, Col. Edward H., Board of Engineers
for Riversand Harbors... .....3 308
Schutt, Marie E., Federal Board for Voca-
tionakBdpeation. i oo lo es 344
Schwartz, Dr. Edward J., District health
deparimaent Cros trae Sarr aaa ote 377
Schwartz, Milford F., United States attor-
ney mofo. as Lae 369
Schvwickardt, Rudolph B., Federal Trade
Commission. conn. 3 anne deans nanan ol 340
Schwultz, Earl B., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation. i. tor Jol as hiss 358
Scofield, C. S., Bureau of Plant Industry... 326
Scott, Dr. Emmett J., District Parole Board. 375
Scott, Emmett J., Howard University _._.__. 322
Scott, Finis E., postmaster of the House.___. 261
Scott, George E., Interior Department. ____. 318
Bo George E., American National Red hE
Scott, nid T., Capitol Police AREER Ti Ee 264
Scott, Hugh L., "Board of Indian Cominis-
SIONEPSE ee al 321
Scott, Joseph L., George Washington Bicen-
tennial Commission... Uo aa Clin 228
Seal, Elwood H., District assistant corpora-
tion counsel. - 376
690
Seaman, Guy L., Interstate Commerce Com-
Searle, William D., office of Secretary of War.
Sears, J. D., Geological Survey._...___._.____.
Seawell, Herbert F., Board of Tax Appeals...
Sebring, F. A., clerk, police court... _._.__.__
Sechrest, Earl F., office of Federal Power
COMMISEION. ois cease he Ae 2
a) John D., chief clerk, Bureau of
Secrest, Robert T., Joint Committee on the
Library
Sellers, iin F., juvenilecourt... i... i.
Sellers, Kathryn, fudge, juvenile court...
Seri, José A., Cuban Embassy. ___. oo...
Settle, Frances:
Bonate Committee on Mines and Min-
Seabtory to Senator Logan... --.-—--22
Settle, T. S., National Capital Park and
Planning COMMISION, burs ssn cane
Severson, Lieut. Col. Charles F., War De-
partment General Staff... .cacini cnmans
Seward, Lee I., office of the Doorkeeper__...
Seymour, Flora Warren, Board of Indian
COMIMISSIONEIS. Ju iis din ih nnn de Jay ea oid
Shabek, Lucile, House Committee on Bank-
ing and Currency
Srellonhersar, Mrs. A.C.
Shanks, J. C., office of Clerk of House______.
Shanley, Commander T. A., the Coast
(rrreyy BR a a ee Te
Shannon, Margaret G., Federal Board for
Vocational Bduecation. i i... _..
Shaughnessy, Edward J., Bureau of Immi-
EPOBIOIY oo ee io em ne Slt wk 40 tm
Shaw, John S., Federal Board for Vocational
Education ol i ie tl ede &
Shaw, Randolph C., Department of Justice._.
Shay, James Fl J oint Committee on Print-
ing, Capitol
Shes Walter M., United States Attorney’s
om Ee a i Sa
Shear, C. L., Bureau of Plant Industry-.-.-.
Sheehan, William F., Reconstruction Finance
COTPORAIION : saat wo bre wives ide ooo Ade oie
Sheets, E. W., Bureau of Animal Industry.
Sheild, Marcellus C., House Committee on
Appropriations A RS ne a a 2 el
Sheldon, H. P., Bureau of Biological Survey.
Shelmire, W. Yr. office of the Doorkeeper_._.
Shelsé, Ronne c, Geological Survey... ..._
Shelton, Arthur B. ., clerk, United States
Court of Customs and Patent Appeals...
Shepard, Dr. James E., National Memorial
OTIS ON i Lennon ee Em
Shepherd, John H., office of the Doorkeeper...
Shorad, H.-R. office of Secretary of Treas-
The Congressional
Sond Morris, Board of Visitors to the
Military Academy... i acm innadtmand an
Sherman, E. A., Forest Service... .a..ooaa
Sherman, Mrs. J ohn Dickinson, The George
Washington Bicentennial Commission...
Sherman, Wells A., Bureau of SR
Beohomies. iii i a dae
Sheryoody H. GC.
Revenue ee a hs ls eB RE
Shields, John, House post office... _....____
Stung, Harry E., Washington City post
Shipe, H. W., Bureau of Indian Aflairs..._..
Shipley, Ruth B., office of Secretary of State.
Shipstead, Henrik, Joint Committee on
PrN ING. cod ii inant antes we Se Barre
Shoemaker, Carl D., special investigator,
Special Senate Committee on Conservation
of Wild Life Resources..c..-c.... id ireere=
Shoemaker, C. W., International Exchanges.
Shoemaker, Thomas B., Deputy Commis-
sioner of "Naturalization Pe a mr Ses
Shore, Henry A., office of Second Assistant
Postmaster General. «o-oo ovoroomem an
Short, Lieut. Col. Walter C., Bureau of Insu-
lar ne
Page
Congressional Directory
Shrout, Sam F., Federal Trade Commission.
Sillers, Basil, Washington City post office...
Sillers, Frederick, office of city postmaster.
Simkins, Verne, private secretary to Assistant
Secretary ofthe Navy... oo aie. 2.
Simmons, B. H., Inspector General’s Office.
Simmons, Hansford, Senate Committee on
ERT ER ER CE SR 1
Simms, Joseph B., District fire department...
Simon, Rabbi Abram, Columbia Hospital for
WW OITIEIL ims in oles sme ad ve ob i
Simonds, Maj. Gen. Geo. S., Army War
O0leg0. ou. oe fed mid Sa
Simonton, Vincent De P., Bureau of Indus-
trial Afoholui. Luin dnd ntl
Simopoulos, Charalambos, Greek Minister. _
Simpson, Mary Jean, office of Secretary of
BONE oo aiid mais BA i apie be
Sims, H. H.,: British Embassy...... Lu.)
Sims, Henry Upson, American National
Red Cross. wobin. ont laos sled Jai.
Smcis A
ULE coir i iim miibees 20 SEL
iki Willard F., National Memorial
TRIE ot TE Do ee RO SER SR el pee Be
Sinnott, Joseph J., Doorkeeper of the House
of Representatives ie i wh EA 0 Tod
Sirica, John J., United States attorney’s
Sirkey, Louis, journal clerk of the House____
Sirlouis, Marjorie, Federal Real Estate
Bod 0 ii vai a nn sad we a Dr we
Skidmore, D. 1., Bureau of Animal Industry.
Skinner, C. A., Bureau of Standards..______
Skinner, G. H., Alaska Road Commission...
Skinner, W. W., Bureau of Chemistry and
Soll 2080, A SU ae dello
Slattery, Harry, Department of the Interior.
Slattery, John T., House post office. ________
Slemp, C. Bascom, The George Washington
Bicentennial Commission. ____________.___
Sligh, Deck, House Committee on Pensions...
Slindee, Michael E., National Bank Redemp-
ton Agency... coll ln SEE ass JUNE
Small, Jessie M., office of Official Reporters of
Teabags i ae ada
Small, Reuel, Official Reporter, House. ____.
Smallery, Walter I., Senate Committee on
Military Affairs cn re a
Smead, E. L., Federal Reserve Board_._____
Smith, Alfred E., American National Red
Smith, Brig. Gen. Alfred T., War Depart-
ment: General Staff. oo.
Smith, A. M., office of Secretary of the
Treasur
Smith, C. B., Department of Agriculture Ex-
1ension Ser VIO nena mms me mee mur
Smith, Charles P., Board of Tax Appeals. __
smith, DeWitt, ’ American National Red
en Re ed ae Pl ea Cie PR ll
smith, Don C., American National Red
Smith, Elbert L., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation er re
Smith, Everard H., Senate Committee on
Appropriations. o_o aaa
Smith, F. C., Bureau of the Public Health
Service a SIN NE
Smith, Frank D.:
Office of Information, Department of
Aorloulbare i. oi uate samedi
Permanent Conference on Printing ______
Smith, Franklin H., United States Tariff
COTiEET ee Sa a aE
Smith, George, Committee on Conference
Minority ofthe Senate... oo oli ue
Roan, George Otis, Federal Power Commis-
Smith, Hugh R., Senate Committee on
Barolled Bl a aia
Smith, Isobel, Senate Committee on Agricul-
tare 40d Poorest yc weer waamnunasevnwnw
324
303
Individual Index
Smith, J. W. Rixey:
Secretary to Senator GlasSeceaemmccaaaaa-
Senate Committee on Appropriations...
Smith, Maj. Lucius M., office of the Judge
Advocate General... cities tal
Smith, Luther E., George Rogers Clark Ses-
quicentennial Commission...
Smith, Mrs. Mabel H., Office of Education_
Smith, Mavis, Senate Committee on Claims.
Smith, Pauline, Senate Committee on
PINONCE i eaiivi atirhanhe tit abies spake
Smith, Philip S., Geological Survey._._._._.____
Smith, Samuel C., National Memorial Com-
HTT RAR RE ea a
Smith, W. A., Congressional Record clerk,
CADILOL coor sm Saas ot aE a ro
Smith, Walter R., District health depart-
a LR RE RL ERD SD BE
COMIBOTCR. oun ii cand we Sn bn RE Swe hg a ls
Snell, B. H.:
Minority Floor Leader. .........cons
Commission on Enlarging the Capitol
Grounds
Snell, headquarters, Marine
Snodgrass, Russell, Reconstruction Finance
BOLDOLAION - 2 me mm riba bk Shien
Snyder, Edgar C., United States marshal____
Snyder, John O., office of the Sergeant at
Arms of House 1: RR i AAs Ss oe SL SAT
officer... ospisilgs ie ani iol
Sokolowski, Wladyslaw, Polish Embassy.__
Soldan, Dr. Carlos Enrique Paz, Pan Ameri-
can Sanitary Bureau... ool oad
Soler, Dr. Ramon Béez, Pan American Sani-
NY BOreal io river sdas ae by
Sommerkamp, Frank M., Washington City
Dostoffice.. ii aaa aad DSTO
Sommerville, James W., Senate Committee
on Appropriations... i ann
Sornborger, Charles B., office of Attorney
General
Lion Lieut. Col. George R., Mississippi
River: Commission. =...) a Ei
Spalding, Harry K., Joint Committee on In-
ternal Revenue Taxation
Spangler, L. C.:
Office of the Secretary of the Treasury.___
General Supply Committee. ___.________
Sparks, Raymond, assistant corporation
eounEel eo ac ene
Spauldine, Huntley N., Public Domain Com-
mittee. co sais re TIL
Staton Martin R., Superintendent of
Binding, Government Printing Office... ._
Speir, R. J., official stenographer to House
committees
Spencer, F. H., Bureau of Entomology ._____
Solan J oseph L., Civil Service Commis-
SPs Col. -M. G.,
office
Sprague, Frank J., Naval Consulting Board.
taack .
Board of Survey and Maps of the Federal
Governments H-fe i mes a nk
Geologieal Survey on Tam
Stabler, Herman, Geological Survey.__.____.___
Staley, Frank C. ., office of First Assistant
Pogtmaster Generals" = 2vhe nr va vv
Stam, C. F., Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation =~ son 1
hte George B., office of Secretary of
SH ear dita ential ain Sue
Shy, A. O., the International Joint Com-
LE Bn Sl pe I I A LL
Page
302
Stanley, Col. David 8., quartermaster,
United States Soldiers’ Home EAE a RL
Stanley, Louise, chief, Bureau of Home
no: adie i ee J SD
stanton, Thomas B., District fire depart-
enL. Condi ian te a an
Stanton, T. W., Geological Survey.___.__._____
Starbuck, William D. L., i Radio
COMTIEEON: sei ian eat
Stark, Capt. Harold R., office of Secretary of
the N AVY ilo nies ied Sr an
Stark, W. R., office of Secretary of Treasury.
Starr, Robert C., office of Secretary of Labor.
Staton, Col. Adolphus, assistant to Chief
Coordinator. -... ce hia arene ow
Staver, L.. D., Merchant Fleet Corporation.
Steadman, Js Cc Capitol police. oii. =
Steagall, Edward C., office of the Second
Assistant Postmaster Generali. i. Lous
Steddom, R. P., Bureau of Animal Industry.
Steele, Amos a. Supreme Court of the Dis-
trichof Combo. o  tiesieir teat
Stejneger, Leonhard, National Museum _____
Steiner, Gotthold, Bureau of Plant Industry.
Stell, Lenora B., House Committee on Ac-
counts oe i a A ER
Stephens, Francis H., assistant District cor-
poration counsel. o.oo. ods oo ae
Stephens, Hubert D., jr., Senate Committee
on Commeres. oo soot ohana te Lod ian
Sterling, Josephine A., assistant clerk to the
President of the Senate... .. io...
Stern, Ben, secretary to Senator Van Nuys.
Sternhagen, John M., Board of Tax Appeals.
an Ww. H.S, Federal Trade Commis-
Stevenson, M. W., Washington City post
offic
Stevenson, William F., chairman Federal
Home Loan Bank Bowd ~~.
Stewart, Andrew, Interdepartmental Patents
Boar Er a ee a
Stewart, Charles E., Department of Justice__
Stewart, James B., office of Secretary of State.
Stewart, Mary, Bureau of Indian Affairs____
Stewart, P. F., House document room___.___
Stewart, Stella, United States Tariff Com-
Stine, Harry E., office of the Third Assistant
Postmaster General. i
Stine, O. C., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
nomics
al M. W., Bureau of American Eth-
nolog
PRI WwW. W.:
Office of Secretary of Agriculture. ______
Director of Personnel and Business Ad-
ministration. or oo un OnAT
Bureau of Plant Industry. ___"°
Stockton, Lieut. Col. Edward A., jr., Bureau
of Insular Affairs. = 700 as ida ah
Stoianovitch, Bojidar, Yugoslavian Legation.
Stomm, Lieut. Col. Count Marcel, Hunga-
vin “Fegation oro Sous whe Se Be
Stone, A. M., Federal Reserve Board_______
Stone, Harlan F., Associate Justice, United
States Supreme Court (biography).________
Story, Isabelle F., National Park Service.___
Stott, A. C., Bureau of Ordnance______._.___
strait Harry B., Senate Committee on
Claim
iy L. L., Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue A ON A
Streeter, Wallace:
Secretary to Senator Lewis_ _____________
Senate Commiteee on Expenditures in
the Executive Departments __________
Strong, Dr. Helen N., United States Geo-
graphic Board........-. aR em Br
691
Page
692 Congressional Directory
Page
Strong, Lee A., Darel of Plant Quarantine. 328
Struve, Gustav, German Embassy. _________ 507
Stuart, A. L., House Committee on Indian
Affairs at ts ce lo i i wd A ES 262
Stuart, R. Y.:
Chief; Forest Services. oo oiszccssiosias 326
National Capital Park and Planning
CommiSSION.,. «oi duties s sans Sra as 349
Forest Protection Board... ____._.___.___ 304
Stuart, W. G., official stenographer to House
comrnittees ST Ts CL GR RS GR ALO SR en Al 263
Sullivan, Harry L., Reconstruction Finance
COL DOLALION Go wa id vis Saabs he ma SA 358
Sullivan, Jerry B., judge, United States Cus-
toms Court (biography)... _ ooo oo... 368
Sullivan, John J., Board of Indian Commis-
TIE CRA ane RR Se CAN ip LO 321
Sullivan, Patrick J., District fire department. 377
ll Regina T., office of Secretary of
MEY oR ITLL WSR tL so dt 2 300
Sutherin, J. W., office of Second Assistant
Postmaster General re CL An 312
Sutherland, George, Associate Justice, Su-
preme Court (biography)... ____. 362
Sutherland, Howard, Alien Property Custo-
ti £7 g REA BT EE RE 346
Swanson, Claude A.:
Secretary of the Navy (biography) ._..... 313
Council of National Defense_______.____. 345
Member of Smithsonian Institution. .____ 351
Federal Oil Conservation Board._____.___ 342
Arlington Memorial Amphitheater Com-
mersslon a i8l S lin cenear pay Je i ne La 350
Swanson, Edward B., Bureau of Mines.__.__ 332
Swartwout, Egerton, Commission of Fine
ATTEN Ah 20 2 Mbeki Sie ela 349
Sweet, Merle L., office of the Comptroller,
Post Offles Department... 313
Sweet, Oliver E., Interstate Commerce Com-
INESION Bol frets pe 339
Swigart, Jesse E., Bureau of Engraving and
EY cn ddr r nami 302
Switzer, John B., Interstate Commerce Com-
mission Fe ae = i EAA 339
Swope, Edwin, Senate Committee on Irriga-
tion and Reclamation... 0 255
Byes Eugene O., Federal Radio Commis- 3
T(r AREA a LY ood SOR CTR Ei 8 ESR VARIA R I he SD 34
Sze, en Ke Alfred, minister plenipotentiary
from RTE TR LINE SN SL Ser 504
Széchenyi, Count Léaszlo, Hungarian minis-
1 SEERA PR PE SR TR 1 1 0 SL Ean 508
T
Taber, John, Joint Committee on Veterans’
AE RS Co Te 229
Taber, Mrs. John, The Congressional Club. 355
Taey, Nelson A.:
Office of the First Assistant Postmaster
General. Lo lila not, teuda hen 312
United States Geographic Board_.____... 353
Taggart, Earl, General Accounting Office._.. 338
Taketomi, Toshihiko, Japanese Embassy_... 508
Talbert, T. R., Washington City post office... 379
Taliaferro, Sidney F., Columbia Hospital for
LUTE) ERR TR a ET SS ee 356
Taliaferro, Mrs. Sidney F., Columbia Hos-
pital dor Women. i cu oo er Doh o3s 356
Talley, Lynn P., Reconstruction Finance
COL DOTOION... «fi ol Fle emia Hm tis Sms 358
Tanaka, Hikozo, Japanese Embassy. .__.._.. 509
Tanaka, Col. Shizuichi, Japanese Embassy... 509
Tandy, Dr. Elizabeth C., Children’s Bureau. 334
Tanis, Richard C., office of Secretary of State. 259
Tannenberg, Dr. ’ Wilhelm, German agent,
Mixed Claims Commission. ._._._._.._._.. 346
Tapp, Samuel, District plumbing board.____. 376
Tarskey, Chaplain Benjamin J., office of
Chieflof Chaplaing.« .. ¢ oociaseean 306
Tate, Hugh M., Interstate Commerce Com-
THEI em es a ma ban be 338
Tate, Jack B., office of Secretary of State___. 300
Tate, Miss Mary A., Assistant to Public
CF EEL ee rps baited linden ley 268
Page
Tate, Thomas R., Public Utilities Commis-
IHR Tre Sl SL eS RS A, 378
Taussig, Rear Admiral J. K
The Joint Boardiillu Gandia wad 345
Office of Naval Operations.___.__________ 314
Tawse, A. C., District reformatory._________ 376
Taylor, Augustus C., District pharmacy
BoardilQ TnL 30 te GRE ORT BEIT, 376
Taylor, A. E., Food and Drug Administra-
Yor iid SF ORR Sead BER 329
Taylor, Col. Charles B., commanding Marine
Barraeks, oD ic En eian ip 5 Ua 318
Tago Charles H., Emergency Conservation
pea BE Ban ts la ie J SARA 343
iy Dr. David W., secretary, Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics Senn ed br dl 346
Taylor, Ike P., Alaska Road Commission___. 323
Taylor, J.:8., Bureau of Standards... .......C 331
Taylor, J. Will:
Nashville Presidents’ Plaza Commission. 229
Commission on Enlarging the Capitol
Goud... ups po JR BT S001 IE FTE 225
Public Buildings Commission. __________ 226
Taylor, Miles, secretary to Senator Erickscn. 258
Taylor, Oliver G., National Park Service____ 321
Taylor, Rene J., Reconstruction Finance
Corporationidi Sg: C288ih Sl 0 ish 358
Taylor, Thomas R., Bureau of Foreign and
Domestic Commerce... uci niin 330
Taylor, William A., Chief of Bureau of Plant
Industrysgonios. all Uy Sale (0 oan oo 325
Teegarden, H. B., Federal Power Cominis-
SON. sds andesnindl lala bie 342
Tercero, José, Pan American Unicn.______.__ 353
Terrasa, Juan, Spanish Embassy. __._.______. 512
Terrell, Mary Church, National Memorial
Commission... ........«.. udu saoiians 351
Terrell, William D., Federal Radio Commis-
TH eR REE Ca TR 342
Thacher, Thomas D., American National
Red Cross, ho hoe oe a 354
Thacker, O., United States Railroad Ad-
ministration... __...._ osalliioionn 339
Thackston, John H., Washington City post
OO i a le an kas 379
Thayer, Mark M., Department of Agricul-
ture Extension Service. ..... vue dus 324
Theile, Karl, Secretary of Alaska____..____.___ 322
Theron, Jan. N., Union of South Africa Lega- 5
RS a Sr OER RR a eT TT 12
Theds, Adele R., United States Tariff Com-
TNISSION . ve sid ba pint Bh Sins» Alb le ES 341
Thom, Charles, Bureau of Chemistry and
A Rn eed os Da aa 326
Thomas, Alonzo M., office of the First Assist
ant Postmaster General... __..._.._______ 312
Thomas, Edward W., assistant District cor-
Porafionepunsel: o.oo SiC ola dee 376
Thomas, Elmer, Joint Committee on the
SADYRYyY Ce aa an Ty 226
Thomas, John H., office of Secretary of the
Mterior otha eR I a 318
Thomas, M. S., clerk to the Speaker___.___.__ 259
Thomas, Nena, Capitol Telephone Exchange. 265
Thomas, Seth, office of Secretary of Agricul-
ore tr LE ee 323
Thompson, Bertis B., office of Surgeon Gen-
TL en Dee pT TR De RE CE 307
Thompson, E. J., Bureau of Biological Sur-
NEY rales the he teal i 327
Thompson, George C., office of Alien Prop-
erty Custodian. CSc re Ee od 348
Thompson, George F., office of Secretary of
The Senate. tice i sit trem ir bie 253
Thompson, Helen B., Senate Committee on
Expenditures in the Executive Depart-
: 010 IR A ATA LS RE EL SE I To 254
Thompson, Laura A., office of Secretary of
a oe 333
Thompson, L. R., Bureau of the Public
Health Service ose iota 302
Thompson, Luke, Washington City post
Olinger 379
Thompson, Oco, office of Secretary of Senate... 253
Thompson, Russell H., Washington City
LER ALE MS AR ee SR eC 379
Thompson, Samuel H., Bureau of Indian
Affairs co 319
Individual Index : 693
Thompson, W. N., office of Secretary of
the Treaswry-. . l ococrgnlio i Soaie lize,
Thorson, A. T., the Coast Guard__________.__
Thrift, Chester R., page, House press gallery.
Thrift, Melvin P., House press gallery... ....
Thrower, C. C., House document room.__._._
Thurber, William 1.., Patent Office. .......0
Thyson, Lieut. Commander Leo C., attend-
anceon officers coal fade ms taa nee.
Tons, James E., General Supply Com-
Tidwell, Haskell, House post office.
Tietgen, William H., United States Customs
Tiffany, R. K., Public Domain Committee...
Tillett, Everett E., National Park Service----
Tilson, John Q. the George Washington
Bicentennial Commission. ------._...-
Tilson, William J., presiding judge, United
States Customs Court (biography) -_.._----
Tippens, Guy B., Chemical Warfare Service.
Tisdel, Alton Tr, Superintendent of Docu-
ments, Government Printing Office _------
Titus, Dr. E. W., Columbia Hospital for
Women... so t.o.oiooicil ia.
Welfare ._____ PER Be a yn AER SRL
Board os. oid. ieee anand
Tolman, R. P., National Gallery of Art...
Tolson, Clyde A., Department of Justice... .-
Tomaszewski, Jan, Polish Embassy. _-----.--
Tommasi, Giuseppe, Italian Embassy _-._..-
Toms, R. E., Bureau of Public Roads..__..._
Torbert, Charles R., office of Architect of the
LITE} 11) I A TB LA Up VR SIR Su Ea
Torr, C.J. W., British Embassy... Ci
Torrey, Earl G., Bureau of Indian Affairs. __
Totty, Walker, ’ Assistant Secretary to the
To EINE DR Sl Ly C0 Su Rh on
Tower, R. S., General Accounting Office...
Towers, C. M., District collector of taxes____
Townsend, Dr. A. M., National Memorial
Commission... .o.utaie rai Nabi on
Townsend, C. O., United States Tariff Com-
Townsend, Grace C., Committee on Confer-
ence Minority of the Senate. _____.________
Townsend, John G., jr., Senate Office Build-
ing Commission MS LN CO CARA
Townsend, Paul L., secretary to Senator
Lowman SHEER OR SH ER RE Leb a SN
Ta Frank T., Reconstruction Finance
SIETH her HATE Me Rae LR te a
Tracy, Laura L., Civil Service Commission.
Tracy, Robert C., secretary, Board of Tax
A DDeAIS  emd
Trammell, Charles M., Board of Tax Ap-
Trammell, Lee R., secretary to Senator
Trammell ol od iia a
Trammell, Park, Board of Visitors to the
NavaliAcademy cil to ana iii sds .p
Travers, Joseph F., House Committee on
alms. i i ne ee a Ss
Traverso, Conrado, Argentine Embassy ___._
Treadway, Allen T., Joint Committee on
Internal Revenue Taxation... _.___________
Treadway, Walter L., Bureau of the Public
Health Serviceiciii cone ane eniniann as
Trenwith, E. J.:
Secretary to Senator Pittman... _____
Senate Committee on Foreign Relations.
Trice, J. Mark, Deputy Sergeant at Arms of
HE A na BR BA
Triem, William E., office of the Second
Assistant Postmaster General. __._____..__.
Trimble, South, Clerk of the House._.______
Trimble, South, jr., Department of Com-
"Fripp, Louis H., Veterans’ Administration._
Troy, John W.:
Governoriof Alaska... cians
Page   Page
Truby, Brig. Gen. Albert E., Army Medical
BIT EI NCR VI TIS a NULL TO 307
True, Webster P., editor, Smithsonian Insti-
1 LT Tt a A tr ae 351
Truesdell, Dr. Leon E., Bureau of the Cen-
BUS. cm SoS a i RRS Se BBS Ta 330
Trunnell, George, Postal Telegraph-Cable
Co. at Capitol tir er A Sn ee SRS 265
Tschappat, Brig. Gen. W. H., office of Chief
ol OraAnanee...... nasa ees na nl 303
Tsuchiya, Jun, Japanese Embassy __..._______ 509
Tsui, Tswen-ling, Chinese Legation____._____ 504
Tsushima, Juichi, Japanese Embassy... _.__ 508
Tuchfeld, Janice, Senate Committee on Post
Offices and Post-Boads. ...oovan ana avis 255
Tucker, George P., Patent Office__._____.___. 332
Tucker, Irvin B., Department of Justice_.___ 310
Tucker, W. L., Joint Committee on Internal
Revenue Taxation... li. oo i. 00 lo 226
Tucker, Wendell P., superintendent District
Industrial Home School (colored) ._________ 376
Tucker, William J., Federal Reserve Board... 339
Tudor, Clinton G., General Land Office... 319
Tugwell, R. G., Assistant Secretary of Agri-
Cre. aS a a a, 323
Tullis, John R., office of Fourth Assistant
Postmaster: General... oo. oo lL toil 313
Tulloss, S. B., General Accounting Office... 338
Turner, Kelly, office of Secretary of the
Senate cel) arnan iia wn sa en 254
Turner, Scott:
Director, Bureau of Mines_..____..__.__._._ 332
Federal Oil Conservation Board ________ 342
Tydings, Millard E., the George Washington
Bicentennial Commission... _._____________ 227
Tyler, Harry Walter, Library of Congress... 267
Tyler, Paul M., Bureau of Mines_._.________ 332
Tyrer, Arthur J., Bureau of Navigation and
Steamboat Inspection...co oa oo tio 000 332
Tyson, William S., House Committee on
ACCOR. cosas nibs soem en ee A ee A Ais 261
U
Ughet, Serge, Russian Embassy. ..._--_....._ 511
Ummel, J. R., the Alaska Railroad__________ 322
Underwood, Thomas L., captain of the guard,
Government Printing Office_._____________ 268
Unzicker, Willard E., Reconstruction Fi-
nance-Corporatien. J. fi fo. SZ ub 358
Urrutia, Claudio, Venezuelan Legation______ 513
Ussaki Zade Biilent, Turkish Embassy... 512
; Vv
Vallance, William R., office of Secretary of
BAEC ce a SE ea a 2 299
Van Casteel, Grace, United States Tariff
ComImMISSION. «oo ce cee dr aia Le adel LOE 341
Vance, John T., jr., Tiras of Congress__... 267
Vandegrift, Maj. . A., assistant to Chief
coordinator eee SR APEC 303
Van Deman, Ruth, Bureau of Home Eco-
BOUHOS oo ohne EE re 328
Vandenberg, Arthur H., Interparliamentary
113 [P77 Bee SESE EE ERR TA as 227
Vanderlip, Charles A., office of the First
Assistant Postmaster General. ____________ 312
van der Wyck, Jonkheer H. M., Netherlands
LETITIA Sr eel 510
Van Deusen, Maj. G. L., office of Chief Signal
Ofcer. a SE Be LL I 309
Van Devanter, Willis: -
Associate Justice, Supreme Court (biog-
EP) a aa ean 361
United States Supreme Court Building
Commission: Jo ios san iaos reli od 225
Wosaingum National Monument Soci-
(1 1 200 Cn SRI IG, SY Or i bt it Sa S10 350
Van Dine, D. L., Bureau of Entomology _.___ 326
Van Duzer, W illiam A., District director of
vehicles anditraffie. oo. ne 377
Van Fossan, Ernest H., Board of Tax Ap-
PealS aarti ab a a a a HR, 341
Van Fossen, J. R., Federal Reserve Board... 339
Van Nuys, Frederick, George Rogers Clark
Sesquicentennial Commission. __._._..____ 228
694
Van Orsdel, Josiah A., associate justice,
District Courtiof Appeals........-...._ cou.
Van Petten, E. C., Public Domain Com-
Van Wagenen, James H., International
Boundary Commission, United States,
Alaska and. Canada... bir aaa. cai. adh
Varela, Dr. Jacobo:
Minister of UruguayL sooo avail ious
Governing Board, Pan American Union_
Varela, J., jr., Uruguayan Legation______..__.
a H. Claudia, Western Union Telegraph
Veitch, F. P.:
Bureau of Chemistry and Soils. .........
Food and Drug Administration. ___._____
Vest, George B., Federal Reserve Board. ___.
Veverka, Ferdinand, Czechoslovakian min-
Victory, John F., National Advisory Com-
mittee for Aeronautics Geshe SER Gap a SL
Villmoare, Ed. S., secretary to Senator Clark_
Vinson, Carl, Board of Visitors to the Naval
Academ
Vint, Thomas C., National Park Service.._..
Vipond, Kenneth C., Civil Service Commis-
GION. Sat sn arhann ah Sas tad ws roe SRR
Vivot, Eduardo L., Argentine Embassy
Vodila, Victoria M., House Committee on the
TAbranyai alanis sla hain ies as
von Boetticher, Maj. Gen. Friedrich, German
Embassy
von Haeften Gerrit, German Embass
Page
366
348
von Herbulis, J. W. O., Merchant Fleet’
Corporation... ...ocveee uid dol AL AED
von Nerta, George O., Office of Supervising
TRE RR Ne LEE NS 1
Ww
‘Wadsted, Otto, Danish minister____._.___.___.
Wadsworth, C. W., Veterans’ Administra-
Wageworth, “Earl B., office of Second Assist-
cowant Postmaster General
‘Wadsworth, Eliot, American National Red
Commander R. R., The Coast ‘Waesche,
Guard
Wagner, Mary Jane, Senate Committee on
BN anNaIaetares.. ee ae SLB
‘Wahly, William H., assistant District corpo-
ratiomcounsel iuiaican oh Lo Nl Ila
‘Waite, M. B., Plant Quarantine and Control
Administration: i. i soul. olla snd
‘Wajima, Eiji, Japanese Embassy
Walcott, Mary Vaux, Board of Indian Com-
IRISSIONers. tons Jon ra a ae a al
‘Walezak, John, House post office...__.______
‘Waldron, Col. William H., Militia Bureau.
Wales, George R., Civil Service Cominis-
Stoner. cl a se aS a se
Wiilinkangas, Eino, Finnish Legation. ______
Walker, Ernest P., National Zoological Park.
Walker, Francis, Federal Trade Commission.
Walker, George EB; Capitol police... ..._._..
‘Wallace, Benjamin Bi, United States Tariff
Commission. oun ua sabia iio bay
Wallace, Henry A.:
Secretary of Agriculture (biography)...
Chairman Migratory Bird Conservation
Commission. cs oi beer nl ool i ao 3
Council of National Defense_____________
Federal Board for Vocational Education.
Member Smithsonian Institution... _____
National Forest Reservation Commis-
Ro Creek and Potomac Parkway Com-
mission
345
320
Congressional Directory
‘Wallace Henry A.—Continued
Ex officio member Public Domain Com-
mittee Lat Lous ag a roan
Pasko Rican Hurricane Relief Commis-
Pon Employment Stabilization
Boards. J.oo ll ion ann on
Chicago World’s Fair Centennial Com-
TORSION LiLo Tams) ol Ba led
‘Wallace, James X., superintendent of ac-
counts and budget officer, Government
PrintingOffiee. 5 oil. CLdomiion
‘Wallace, Julian C., office of Treasurer of the
United:Stofesit) Coulis iia Hall
Wallace, William J., House Committee on
Education: i 7. ciiooit illo) quai
‘Wallace, William L., Joint Committee on In-
ternal Revenue Taxation _...._.__.._______
‘Waller, Clifford E., Bureau of the Public
Health: Serviee io [ln oat suas
Walsh, David 1.:
Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary
Commission. ocala 0 oon air
Board of Visitors to the Naval Academy.
Joint Committee on Veterans’ Affairs. __
Joint Committee to Investigate Dirigible
Disasters li. sandal donde Uns
‘Walsh, T. Gillespie, assistant corporation
counsel
Walter, R. F., Bureau of Reclamation______
‘Walters, Theodore A., First Assistant Secre-
taryiofthe Interior. occ ioc inl lois
‘Wanerus, Theodore A.:
Secretary to Senator Kendrick... _____.___
Senate Committee on Public Lands and
Surveys... dedi iia tli a Ld
‘Warburton, C. W.:
Office of Secretary of Agriculture. _______
Director, extension service. __.__________
Ward, Frank X., office of Secretary of State__
‘Ward, Jesse, jr., office of the Doorkeeper___.
Wardel, J. N., International Highway Spe-
elal Commissioner... a... a8rioy
Warfield, William A., Freedmen’s Hospital__
Warner, Edward P., National Advisory
Committee for Aeronautics ___._____________
‘Warner, Everett F., office of the First Assist-
ant Postmaster General. ...___._._____.____
Warren, Charles E., office of Postmaster
Generals. iu IS Laden anil
Warren, Emma L., General Land Office_.__
‘Warren, Lindsay C.:
Joint Committee on the Library____._____
Uniiod States Roanoke Colony Commis-
‘Wathen, Albert L., Bureau of Indian Affairs.
Warn, Charles L., office of Secretary of
Von Gor “P., Federal Trade Com-
partmende. lure ae iillo AUBIN LLL
‘Watt, John B., District fire department._____
Watts, A. W., office of the Third Assistant
Postmaster General io. Cc 0. 80cil Ji0s
Weaver, Benjamin W., District fire depart-
ment
Weaver, Ernest, House document room _____
Weaver, H. B., Official Reporter, House____
Wann, Charles A., secretary to Senator Aus-
‘Webb, W. H., the Coast Guard. _.__.___.._.
‘Weber, Margaret D., United States attor-
ney’soffice. chil Jodi om J 0d
Weber, Stewart M., office of Second Assist-
ant Postmaster General. . o.oo i oau?
Weber, William, chief clerk, Weather Bu-
Weed, 0. K., House Committee on Banking
00 CUITONCY on wm mw imam damn an wan Semin
Page
Individual Index 695
Weeden, Rev. H. Clay, National Memorial
COMMISEION. ci i aes nen = ADE Bath
Wehmhoff, Byron L., technical director,
Government Printing OBC. rn 3
Weidel, Gustaf, Swedish Legation... _.._.
Weightman, R. Hanson, Weather Bureau.---
Weintal, Edward, Polish Rmbassy  _ .e-e-
Weisberg, Molla, House Committee on
Palentarsitiieh dt a Sk in ey a
Weise, E. E., office of Panama Canal ________
Welch, § pd ’ Bureau of Insular Affairs. _____
Welliver, Edward M., assistant District
corperationcounsel ._.. Cio. oo. . 220
Wells, Capt. Chester H., Columbia Hospital
for a
Wells, H. M..:
United States Shipping BoarG...---+<2--
Treasurer, Merchant Fleet Corporation -
‘Welsh, Margaret L., Secretary to Senator
Wenrich, Charles C., office of the First As-
sistant Postmaster General. ooo _acan
Wesley, Marvin, office of Secretary of the
Treasury SR EE TE TR
Wesson, Lieut. Col. C. M., office of the Chief
Of OrdAnanee. o.oo Con mad LeN Saek
West, Charles H., member Mississippi River
COMIN. ys an
West, Mrs. Charles, The Congressional Club._
West, Vernon E., principal assistant District
corporation counsel PEE ORE ASE OR,
‘Westover, Brig. Gen. Oscar:
The Aeronautical Board... =. 3 cucuan--
Office of Chief of the Air Corps--..-__----
Wetmore, Alexander:
Smithsonian Institution... :-----<caiauaa
Nationa] MuSeum. ow como ce 4 2s Sabie mt
Wetmore, James A.: Acting Supervising Architect of the
Treasury I EE CS
Federal Real Estate Board. --...__---
Public Buildings Commission....__._---
National Memorial Commission.__.______
Whaley, Col. Arthur M., Army general dis-
Benalla
Whaley, Richard S., judge, Court of Claims
(DIGIT ADAYY ove waite Ho ig EN of 5m Fe
Whalin, Charles V., Bureau of Agricultural
BOGE. Le a ps 3
Whall, Edward G., superintendent of plate-
making, Government Printing Office______
Wheat, Alfred A., chief justice, District Su-
Bremer Court or rei
‘Wheat, Joseph H.:
Board of Surveys and Maps of the Fed-
OT] CONOPIIVONE oo me ooats nmees
United States Geographic Board________
Wheeler, Helen E., Federal Board for Voca-
tional Bduestion to rr
Wheeler, Katherine, House Committee on
Agriculture FE a Be LT GR Ge Se
Wheeler, Leslie A., Bureau of Agricultural
TOTos Sod Ana FI PE
Whelan, William M., jr., House post office. -
Whitaker, Harry E., Reconstruction Finance
Corporation a a a er vag nih
Whitcomb, Eben M., United States Tarift
Commission... oo a Jo (eT
‘White, Charles P., Bureau of Mines.____.___.
‘White, David, National Academy of Sci-
CRCERS or eh
White, Eugene R., office of Second Assistant
Postmaster General Se LIA oD IL
‘White, Francis, Assistant Secretary of State.
‘White, James A., Senate Committee on
Foreign BeIatione dos oi Sl ua
hei “Dr. Lawrence W., Bureau of Indian
irs
Witte: Wallace H., jr., Board of Visitors to
the Naval Academy... ....L0 oo 0020
White, Mrs. Wallace H., jr., The Congres-
sional Club. rat Lr a os
White, William A., M. D., superintendent,
St, Xlizabeth Hospital... cceeicivanamnaass
Page
351
349
Page
‘White, W. B., Food and Drug Administra-
BB OTE ha rn i i rm in a Se er wri :
White, W. H., Bureau of Entomology..__._. 326
‘Whitehead, Dorothy, House Committee on
Elections. 000 REALS SR Le BOAR ly» 43 EA LANE AY 262
Whitehead, Brig. Gen. Henry C., office of the
Quartermaster General soils. 0 SL Uin 307
Whitehead, Robert F., Patent Office... 332
Whitehorne, E. W, chief clerk, Bureau of
IN ards and Docks... coe rivera does 315
Whitehurst, Elmore, House Committee on
the Judiciary ran aA RT 262
Whitehurst, H. C., District engineer depart-
ment... Soul SLO Ca ate 377
Whiteman, Marjorie M., office of Secretary
of Stateiliull Bolla Ilion wat aaa 300
‘Whiteside, Garrett:
Secretary to Senator Caraway... .-c-... 257
Senate Committee on Enrolled Bills... 254
Whitman, Roy L., House Official Reporter of
DIODAIBS.. coven mannan md Ad Sad ia, 0 263
Whitney, Paul C., Coast and Geodetic Sur- a
en IE lal an HE GSR 1
Whitside, Col. Warren W ., office of the Quar-
termaster. General...Lol ui Bl eit id 307
Whittico, M. T., National Memorial Com-
tb Es PT RR pL A MERRILL 351
Whyte, C. R., District engineer department. 377
Wick, James HT Official Reporter, Senate... 256
Ww lekers, M. Vi, Western Union Telegraph
aa sme Se Rr AAS Tes AN EA 26
Wiggin, A. H., British Embassy_.c-..._.._-.. 507
‘Wight, A. E., ‘Bureau of Animal Industry_.. 325
Wilby, Lieut. Col. Francis B.:
Office of the Chief of Engineers Ba L1 308
Board of Surveys and Maps of the Federal
GOVELITGIIL soonest srs rit as 349
Wilding, William G., assistant District
FEE LY PLY Rn SAI NAO co LCE 375
Wiley, Robert L., House document room..__ 261
Wilkes, Howard v., United States attorneys’
TEE ER NS SRNR ot (BS LeU SSR Le 369
Wilkinson, F. D., Howard University.._.... 322
Wilkinson, Garnet C., District Board of Edu-
cation. Sil aoidiu al Rd nal Los, 375
Wilkinson, Commander 1. S., General Board
of the Navy. il too. Rll fwd DIS 316
Williams, Brig. Gen. Alexander K., office of
the Quartermaster General. ___.___________ 307
Williams, Clarence L., office of the chief post-
office inspection. ~ ois tei dul iL aban cL, 313
Williams, Brig. Gen. Dion:
Marine Examining Beard... ____..._ 318
Marine Retiring Board... ..._.._.__... 318
Williams, E. A., House Committe on Roads. 262
Williams, Floyd M., office of the Fourth As-
sistant Postmaster General. ___._..._______ 313
Wiliams, John, United States Board of Medi-
re Ab te SLI JOE I ah AZT 344
Ww thai John B., United States attorney’s
TPR STR ATR, on A th Bs 369
Williaras, Rev. L. K., National Memorial
Commission. ..0.. Soli Ulas Jeudids fro 351
Williams, Martha W., United States Tariff
Commission. Lo. Li ao. po uli Lon ps Ani 341
Williams, Paul R., National Memorial Com-
anisslond So ll ad SL a La, 351
Williams, R. C., Bureau of the Public Health
BOLVIGO. Lana scuenasovsn nn iNe Joa ante 302
Williams, Robert P., House Committee on
ADDropriationS. easel. pais Lal LC 261
Williams, Sarah Orr:
Secretary to Senator George. _.__________ 257
fo Committee on Privileges and Elec- 255
TORS sas auainnashas in brs ssngamma ois ol :
Williams, thoes S., judge, Court of Claims
(DIOZIADIY Yn oem mms Se 2 Sits = i 367
Williamson, Dr. F. Y., District police sur-
BOON. «0h ra I a sada 378
Willige, Augustus, District board of assistant
assessors of realestate. _. ooo... 375
Willis, Luther J., Senate Committee on Post
Offices-and Post Roads... ........ ..: 0. 255
Wills, Joseph E., Senate Press Gallery_____. 594
Wilmarth, Maj. Raymond O., District Board
of Education er IR RE a i 375
Wilson, Maj. Alexander, office of Chemical
Warlore Service. ..-icwenmmene nase a aaa 309
696 Congressional Directory
Wison, Edwin C., office of Secretary of
Wire. Frances, Senate Committee on Post
Offices and Post Roads... oC _...0
Wilson, Francis C., Public Domain Com-
ETRE A Sa es MRS Re FU (ed et Lh MLR
Win, George S., director of public wel-
Wa Orme, office of Secretary of State_._.
‘Wilson, P. St. I Bureau of Public Roads...
‘Wilson, Peter M, office of Secretary of Senate
Wiens Sarah E., Public Utilities Commis-
BOSONS. ha
Winship, Maj. Gen. Blanton:
Judge Advocate General ._______________.
United States Soldiers’ Home. .__.__.__._
‘Winslow, Dr. Emma A., Children’s Bureau...
Winslow, Samuel E., chairman, United
States Board of Mediation________________
Winter, Charles E., attorney general of
I EE a a
Wirth, Conrad L., National Park Service..
‘Wiseman, Henry N., Bureau of the Budget_-.
Wixcey, Earl B., secretary to Senator Thomas
of Wtah.. ons al a a
‘Wixon, Irving F., Bureau of Immigration__..
‘Wolcott, Clinton L., Patent Office. _________
Wold, Ansel, Joint Committee on Printing,
Capitol. ool Suelo Laem ar Lia
Wolf, G. P., Bureau of Agricultural Engi-
Meering 0. oi a a aa a
Wolfe, Sue V., Senate Committee on Public
Tandsand Surveys. coo
‘Wood, Arthur D., Department of Justice.__.
Wood, Rev., Dr. Charles, Washington Na-
tional Monument Society... _.____
Wood, George L., office of First Assistant
Postmaster General. oc. vores nina
‘Wood, Henry G., office of Legislative Coun-
sel Senate on oon no
Wood, John W., United States attorney’s .
yiil
‘Wood, Wiiliam C., office of Third Assistant
Postmaster General... iii ioinddil LL.
Wood, Will S., Bureau of Narcotics. ..._.._..
Wood#ll, Web, Federal Trade Commission...
‘Woodin, William H.:
Secretary of the Treasury (biography)...
Library of Congress Trust Fund Board._.
Chairman of Federal Reserve Board __..
Rock Creek and Potomac aati Com-
EE IY La Re Tn SH DR A EER
‘War Finance Corporation... .......__...
Puerto Rican Hurricane Relief Com-
Federal Employment Stabilization Board
Reconstruction Finance Corporation...
Foreign Service Buildings Commission. _
‘Woodring, Harry H., The Assistant Secretary
OE War oa Le arene
‘Woodruff, Roy O., Migratory Bird Conserva-
tion mimi LCR Car a TR LT
Worss, Albert W., House Committee on
Public Buildings and Grounds...
‘Woods, Capt. Edgar L., Naval Dispensary...
‘Woodside, J. B., General Accounting Office_.
Woodside, Robert G., American Battle
Monuments Commission_._....___________
Woodson, George H., National Memorial
COMMISSION. oo oni hd nh esa
‘Woodson, Capt. W. B., office of Judge Advo-
cate General of the NaVy-ccaarcaacanannas 5
Page
299
255
348
Page
Woodward, Rear Admiral Clark H., General
Board, Navy. dasa ll 316
‘Woodward, Cliff, secretary to Senator Mur-
} inh Ae LS he LE es a Re aE ie 258
Woodward, Ray L., Civil Service Commis-
ETE DE i is SR Se SR ln Mi SE 337
Woolard, Logan L., District fire department. 377
Woolley, Herbert C., M. D., St. Elizabeths
Hospital roe ie 321
Wormington, L. C., District engineer depart.
MeN os a Lena Tian 377
Worthley, L. H., Bureau of Plant Quaran-
ee A rn sin 828
Wren, Clark C., Inland Waterways Corpora-
DO a ra 348
Wrenn, Augustus C., Bureau of Engineering. 315
‘Wright, Charles C., secretary to Senator
Key EE SR re Sam SL Ed 258
Wright. Charles W., Bureau of Mines...____ 332
‘Wright, Frederick E., National Academy of
STILE Te ee a Me RA Sa na 353
‘Wright, Harrison M., National Memorial
Commission — 2 c= ss = = is Sos 351
‘Wright, Henry H., chief clerk, Government
Printing Office... io 2v ic it 268
‘Wright, J. C., Federal Board for Vocational
Hducation... ae a a 343
‘Wright, Kenney P., deputy District disburs-
Ingoffieer slo i hn eh 376
‘Wright, Dr. Orville, National Advisory Com-
mittee for Aeronautics. ~~. 346
‘Wrong, Hume, Canadian Legation____._____ 504
Wyatt, Walter, Federal Reserve Board. _.___ 339
Wylie, Alexander, Interstate Commerce
COmMMIBBION coins eda wm ana 339
Wyman, Henry C., office of the First Assist-
ant Postmaster General... ________ 312
Wynne, Edward C., office of Secretary of
BIBL0L nai demi hin we Re a ir ees 299
‘Wyzanski, Charles E., jr.:
Solicitor for the Department of Labor... 333
United States Housing Corporation. ._.__ 334
Y
Yaden, James G., Civil Service Commission... 337
Yates, F. L., General Accounting Office. _.___ 336
Yates, J ulian E., Chief of Chaplains, Army... 306
Yauch, C. F., United States Tariff Comimis-
OOTY i em ee i et en a 341
Yeager, William B., Chicago World’s Fair
Centennial Commission... _. __ 358
Yih Raymund T., office of Secretary of
a RA ae rs Pe EA 300
Tora, *H: S., Bureau of Agricultural Eco-
11771 1TH ees en Les Sa 328
Yokoyama, Lieut. Col. Ichiro, Japanese Em-
DAB i nn rin oes i ms PT mn BRR Sa 509
York, Lieut. Robert E., assistant to Engineer
Commissioner, District of Columbia: .._... 375
Yost, Ellis A., Federal Radio Commission... 342
Young, Clarence M., Assistant Secretary for
Aeronautics, Department of Commerce... 329
Young, F. J., office of the Doorkeeper.._...__. 260
Young, Stanley P., Bureau of Biological
UL VOY ios oo ie a nm are mem a ar Bl 327
Young, W. H., office of the Doorkeeper_______ 260
Younger, Thomas L., office of Architect of the
Sehr BERS ere Sh Ren a SE 264
Z
Zahm, Albert F., Library of Congress-------- 267
Zaldumbide, Gonzalo:
Ministerof Ecuador... i. ol. Zi. 506
Governing Board Pan American Union .. 354
Zannelli, Augustus, General Land Office. .._. 319
Zebley, J. S., District engineer department... 377
Zens, Mrs. Lennah Curtiss, Bureau of Home
HB CONOIRICS. oe ver oan 328
Zepp, Christopher M., Bureau of the Census. 330
Zimmerman, Harvey J., Bureau of the Cen-
&
107598
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